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SIR   lllOMAS  BROWNE'S  WORKS, 


voLUMi:  Till-:  rouiiTii, 


CO.NTAIMNCi 


REPERTORlUiM— LETTER  TO  A  FRIEND— CHRISTIAN 

MORALS— MISCELLANY  TRACTS— AND 

UNPUBLISHED  PAPERS. 


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SIK  THOMAS  BJIOWNE'S  WORKS 


INCLUDING  HIS  LIFE  AND  CORRESPONDENCE 


EDITED  BY  SIMON  WILKIN  F.L.S. 


VOLUME  IV 


ALDI 


LONDON 

WILLIAM     PICKERING 

JOSIAH   FLETCHER  NORWICH 

1835 


PR 
3327 

I834> 

iORWIcjl:      •  ^~' 


N 
rniNTED     BY     JOSIAH     FLETCHER, 


/O 


CONTENTS   lO  \ OLl ME  FOURTH. 


i>*f;F. 


Editor's  preface i   to     ii 

IIEPERTOIUUM,  &c 1  to  32 

Editor's  preface  to  Repertorium        ....      3 

A  LETTER  TO  A  FRIEND,  &c 37  to  52 

Editor's  preface  to  Letter,  &c 35 

CHRISTIAN  MORALS,  &c 53  to  11 4- 

Editor's  preface  to  Christian  Morals  ...  55 

Dedication  to  the  Earl  of  Buchan      ...  57 

Archdeacon  JefFcry's  preface 58 

Christian  Morals 59  to  11 1- 

CERTAIN    MISCELLANY    TRACTS,    also 

MISCELLANIES,  &c.      ....      115 
Editor's  preface 117  to  118 

The  publisher  (Dr.  Tenison)  to  the  reader        119  to  120 
Tract  1.   Observations  upon  several  plants  men- 
tioned in  scripture 121  to  173 

Tract  2.    Of  garlands  and  coronary  plants  17 1  to  178 

Tract  3.    Of  the  fishes   eaten  by  our   Saviour 
with  his  Disciples  after  his  resurrection  from 

the  dead 179  to  181 

Tract  4.   In  answer  to  certain  queries  relating 

to  fishes,  birds,  and  insects      .      .      ,      .      182  to  185 
Tract  5.   Of  hawks  and  falconry,   ancient  and 

modern 180  to  190 

Tract  C.   Of  cymbals,  &c 191  to  192 

Tract  7.   Of  ropalic  or  gradual  verses,  &c.        193  to  19i 


VI 

PAGE 


Tract  8.    Of"  languages,  and  particularly  of  the 

Saxon  tongue 195  to  212 

Tract  9.  Of  artificial  hills,  mounts,  or  burrows, 
in  many  parts  of  England  ;  what  they  are, 
to  what  end  raised,  and  by  what  nations        213  to  216 

Tract  10.  Of  Troas,  what  place  is  meant  by 
that  name.  Also  of  the  situations  of  Sodom, 
Gomorrha,  Admah,  Zeboim,  in  the  Red  Sea  217  to  222 

Tract  11.    Of  the    answers    of  the   oracle    of 

Apollo  at  Delphos  to  Croesus  king  of  Lydia  223  to  230 

Tract  12.  A  prophecy  concerning  the  future 
state  of  several  nations,  in  a  letter  written 
upon  occasion  of  an  old  prophecy  sent  to  the 
author  from  a  friend,  with  a  request  that  he 
would  consider  it 231  to  238 

Tract  13.  Musjeum  Clausum,  or  Bibliothcca 
Abscondita ;  containing  some  remarkable 
books,  antiquities,  pictures,  and  rarities  of 
several  kinds,  scayce  or  never  seen  by  any 

man  now  living 239  to  250 

Miscellanies  : — viz,  concerning  the  too  nice  curi- 
osity  of  censuring  the  present,  or  judging 
into  future  dispensations 251  to  252 

Upon  reading  Hudibras 253 

An  account  of  Island  (alias  Iceland,)  in   the 

year  1662 254  to  256 

Latin  letters  from  Theodore  Jonas,  pastor  of 
Ilitterdale,  in  Iceland,  to  Dr.  Browne,  1651, 
1656,  and  1664 256  to  270 

UNPUBLISHED   PAPERS 271  to  456 

J'>agment  on  Mummies  (from  transcript  by  Jas. 

Crossley,  Esq.) 273  to  276 

DePeste(from  MS.  Sloan.  No.  1827,  foL 44-48)277  to  280 
A   brief  reply  to  several   queries    (lb.    1827, 

fol.  49) 281  to  286 

Naval  fights  (lb.  1827,  fol.  59-60)  .  .  287  to  289 
Amico  opus  arduum  meditanti  (lb.    1827,  fol. 

61-64) 290  to  293 

Naumachia  (Ih.  1827,  fol.  65-68)    ...      294  to  297 


vn 

De  Astragalo  aut  Talo  (lb.  1827,  I'ol.  (J})-7())  2J)8  to  299 
Nonnullaa  lectionc  AthcnaM  scripta  (Ih.   1827, 

lol.  71-77) 300  to  301 

Nonuulla  a  lectionc  Athcnx'i,   Platlna^,   Apicii 

dc  lie  Culinaria,  conscripta  (lb.   1827,  iol. 

77-81) 30.>  to  3()S 

Aniico   Clarissimo,  dc    enecantc   Gairulo    Suo 

(lb.  1827,  fol.  83  ad  fine)      ....      309  to  312 
An  account  of  Birds  tbund  in  Norfolk  (lb.  1830, 

tol.  'j-22  and  31) 313  to  321 

An  account  of  Fishes,  &c.  found   in  Norfolk, 

and    on    the  coast    (lb.    1830,   fol.  23-30; 

32-38  :  and  1882,  fol.  Ub-6)      ...      325  to  336 
On    the   ostrich   (lb.    1830,   fol.    10-11;   and 

1817) 337  to  339 

Boulimia    Centenaria    (lb.    1133;    and    ]MS. 

Rawl.  .58) 34.0 

Upon   the  dark  thick  mist   happening   on  the 

27th    of  November,    1671   (lb.   1833,   fol. 

136) 311  to  312 

Oratio   Anniversaria  Harveiana  (lb.  1833,  fol. 

116-150;   and  1839,  fol.  299-316)        .      343  to  352 
Account  of  a  thunder-storm  at  Norwich,  1665 

(lb.  1866,  fol.  96) 3.53  to  351 

On  dreams  (lb.  1874,  fol.  112-120)  .  .  355  to  359 
NotK  in  Aristotelem  (lb.  1871,  fol.  81)  .  360  to  366 
Observations  on  grafting  (lb.  1848,  fol.  44-48: 

1882,  fol.  136-137;  and  Add.  MSS.5233, 

foL  58) 367  to  371 

Fragments  (MS.  Rawl.  58,  fol.  5  and  15)       372  to  374 

Of  Greenland  (lb.  391) 375 

Extracts  from  Commonplace  Books,  from  MSS. 

1843,  1 818,  1862,  1866,  1869,  1874,1875, 

1882,  1885 37(i  to   156 

INDEX      .     .     


xi 


PREFACE  TO  THE  FOURTH  \ OLUAH-:. 


In  completing  this  volume,  I  wish  to  offer  some  observations, 
partly  in  addition  to  the  brief  notices  which  precede  several 
of  the  pieces  it  contains,  and  partly  with  reference  to  those 
which  are  now  first  printed  from  the  original  jNISS.  of  the 
author. 

I  omitted  to  remark,  respecting  the  Posthumous  Works, 
and  the  Christian  Morals,  that  copies  are  in  existence  with 
reprint  titles — that  contemptible  form  of  lying  under  which 
jniblishers  have  endeavoured  to  persuade  the  public  of  the 
rapidity  of  their  sales.  This  was  especially  the  case  with  the 
former  work,   which  was  first  published   in  1712.^     In  the 


1  Willi  this  title: — Posthumous  U'orks  of  the  learned  Sir  Thomas  Browne, Knt. 
M.D.  late  of  Norwich,  printed  from  his  Original  Manuscripts,  viz.  I.  Repertorium  ,- 
or,  the  Antiqtiitics  of  the  Calltedral  Church  (f  Norwich.  11.  Jn  Account  of  some 
Urnes,  ^c.  found  at  Brampton  in  Norfolk,  Anno.  16C7.  III.  Letters  between  Sir 
William  Dugdale  and  Sir  Thomas  Browne.  IV.  Misccl/anies.  To  which  is  prefixed 
his  Life.  There  is  also  added  Jntiquilates  Capella"  D.  Johannis  Evangclislec  ;  hodie 
Scholee  RepitF  Norwicensis.  Authore  ,/ohanne  Burton,  A.M.  ejusdem  Ludimagistro. 
Illustrated  with  Prospects,  Portraitures,  Draugh'sof  Tombs,  Monuments,  Sfc.  Lon- 
don, printed  for  E.  Curll,  at  the  Dial  and  Bible  ;  and  It.  Gosling,  at  the  Mitre  in 
I'leetstrect.   1712.   Price  6s. 

In  a  copj'  which  belonged  to  Mr.  John  Ives,  (the  author  of  Garianonum,  &c.) 
occurs,  in  his  hand  writing,  the  (oUowiurr  list  of  plates,  which  a  perfect  copy  ought 
to  contain.  It  is  remarkable,  however,  that  he  has  not  mentioned  the  portrait  by 
V'aiuler  Guclit,  published  with  the  volume,  but  wanting  in  his  copy,  vyhich  has  in- 
stead of  it  a  copy  of  White's  portrait,  engraved  for  the  folio  of  1G8G, 

"  Plates  in  this  volume,  originally  belonging  to  the  book  ; — 

PACE. 

The  .Author's  Monument xix 

Prospect  of  the  Cathedral I 

I'arkhurst's  Monument -i 

llobari's  Chapel 4 

Goldwell's  Monument '» 

Sir  Thomas  Lrpingham  and  his  Wives S 

Boleyne's  .Arms,  &c 11 

Bp.  Redman's  Herse 1 G 

Elate  of  Arms        20 

Ditto         22 

VOL.  IV.  b 


X 


libraries  of  the  Royal  Institution,  and  of  E.  H.  Barker,  Esq. 
are  copies  (the  former  on  large  paper)  having  a  reprint  title 
with  this  imprint : — Printed  for  W.  Mears,  at  the  Lamb  with- 
out Temple  Bar,  and  I.  FlooJce,  at  the  FJoiver-de-Luce  against 
St.  Dunstans  Church,  in  Fleetstreet.  mdccxxiii.  (Price  six 
shillings.)  Others  are  mentioned  of  the  dates  1715,  1721, 
and  1722  : — the  latter  said  to  be  "edited  by  Owen  Brigstock, 
Esq."  An  assertion  which  was  probably  occasioned  by  a 
passage  in  Curll's  preface." 

We  are  informed  that  the  Posthumous  Works  was  a  specu- 
lation of  Curll's,  by  the  following  passage  in  a  letter  from  Dr. 
(afterwards  Bp.)  Tanner,  to  Dr.  Charlet,  the  master  of  Uni- 
versity College,  Oxford,  Oct.  20,  1712.  "  Curl),  the  book- 
seller, has  bought,  of  Dr.  Browne's  executors,  some  papers  of 
Sir  Thonias  Browne,  one  of  which  is  some  account  of  the 
Cathedral,  whicli  he  is  printing  under  the  title  of  the  Anti- 
quities of  Norwich.  If  I  had  perfectly  liked  the  thing,  I 
should  not  have  been  backward  to  have  given  a  cut ;  but  it 
was  hurried  by  him  into  the  press,  without  advising  with  any 
body  here,  or  with  Mr.  Le  Neve,  who  has  great  collections 
that  way.  However,  out  of  regard  to  Mr.  Hase,  the  herald, 
the  Dean  has  suffered  them  to  reprint  his  catalogue  of 
Bishops,  Deans,  and  Prebendaries,  and,  I  think,  to  send  a 
list  of  the  Chancellours  and  Archdeacons."  Ballard's  MS. 
Letters  in  the  Bodleian  Library,  vol.  iv,  p.  58. 


PACB. 

Gate  into  tlie  Close 24 

West  End  of  tlicCatlu'dral 26 

J!p.  Scamblei's  Monument         38 

Mrs.  Astley's  ditto        41 

Bp.  Overall's  ditto 48 

Dr.  Pepper's  ditto &1 

P>p.  Reynolds's  ditto '3 

liiglott's  ditto 62 

Parsley's  ditto 67 

Bp.  Sparrow's  ditto 74 

Roman  Urn  (Miscellanies)        10 

Free  School        56 

Besides  these  Mr.  Ives  inserted  in  his  copy  a  number  of  other  engravings,  and  1 
apprehend  that  the  enumeration  of  plates  given  in  Mr.  Upcott's  Topography ,  a%  be- 
longing to  this  volume,  may  have  been  taken  from  a  similarly  illustrated  copy,  or 
perhaps  collected  from  several. 

^  a  passage  in  Curll's  preface.']  "  The  public  is  here  presented  with  those  other 
remains  of  the  learned  Sir  Thomas  Browne,  so  long  since  promised,  (and  for  which 
we  are  obliged  to  Owen  Brigstock,  Esq.  grandson  by  marriage  to  the  author.)" 


\l 


It  may  be  prcsiimeJ,  that  the  Repcrtorlutn  was  too  sliglit  a 
sketch  to  satisfy  "  perfectly  "  the  antiquarian  taste  anil  know- 
ledge of  Tanner.  May  we  not,  however,  fairly  urge  in  ex- 
tenuation, a  similar  plea  to  that  which  has  been  offered  by 
O'Israeli,  in  defence  of  Dugdale,  Sir  Thomas's  learned  friend 
and  correspondent.^ — "He  hurried  on  his  itinerant  labours 
of  taking  draughts  and  transcribing  inscriptions,  as  he  says, 
to  preserve  them  for  future  and  better  times.  Posterity  owes 
to  the  prescient  spirit  of  Dugdale,  the  ancient  monuments  of 
England,  which  bear  the  marks  of  the  haste,  as  well  as  the 
zeal,  which  have  perpetuated  them."  Curiosities,  S(C.  Second 
Series,  Chapter  on  Prediction.  Kippis  says  (on  what  autho- 
rity does  not  appear)  that  the  work  was  printed  in  Norwich. 

Of  the  Christian  Morals  I  have  a  co])y  which  belonged  to 
Archdeacon  Wrangham,  with  reprint  title,  dated  17G1  ;^  and 
I  believe  there  are  such  copies  dated  17G5. 

I  will  take  this  opportunity  to  correct  an  error  in  my  preface 
to  the  Christian  Morals,  at  p.  55.  It  was  not  Dodsley,  as  I 
have  there  inadvertently  said,  but  Payne,  who  published  the 
second  edition  of  that  work,  and  for  whom  Dr.  Johnson  wrote 
his  biographical  sketch.  In  the  first  volume,  p.  141,  of  The 
Literary  Magazine,  or  Universal  Review,  (not  Register,  as 
stated  by  Mr.  Croker  in  his  edition  of  BosiceU's  Life  of  John- 
son,) I  have  recently  met  with  the  Doctor's  review  of  the 
work ; — if  that  can  be  called  a  revieu;  which  comprises  in  the 
following  few  words  all  that  is  offered  by  way  of  stricture  or 
opinion  on  the  work  reviewed  : — "  This  little  volume  consists 
of  short  essays,  written  with  great  vigour  of  sentiment,  variety 
of  learning,  and  vehemence  of  style."  A  quotation  of  two 
pages  from  the  Life,  closes  this  article.  In  1773  Davies  re- 
published the  Life,  with  those  of  Blake,  the  King  of  Prussia, 
and  others,  in  his  Fugitive  and  Miscellaneous  Pieces,  3  vols, 
Svo.  vol.  ii,  p.  ^54. 

In  the  half  title  to  Miscellany  Tracts  and  Miscellanies,  I 

^  The  half  title  is,  True  Christian  Morals  :  by  Sir  Thomas  Uroiinc,  M.I).  Title. 
True  Christian  Morals:  by  Sir  Thomas  Browne,  M.D.  .-lulhor  of  licligio  Medici, S^c. 
with  hi*  Life  wri/lcn  by  the  celebrated  Author  of  the  liambUr ;  and  explanatory 
Notes.  The,  Third  Edition.  There  is  an  engraved  vigncltc  of  a  lamb  browsing  in 
a  hedge,  and  this  imprint  below  : — London  :  printed  for,  and  sold  by  Z.  Stuart,  at 
the  Lamb  in  Palerncslir  Roic.   mpcclxi. 


XII 


have  omitted  to  number  the  present  as  the  third  edition  of 
the  former  and  second  of  the  latter.  I  have  also  erroneously 
assigned  to  the  former  1684  as  the  date  of  its  first  appear- 
ance. I  have  a  copy  of  it  bearing  the  date  1683,  which  be- 
longed to  John  Evelyn,  and  contains  several  important,  though 
brief,  MS.  notes  by  himself,  with  his  autograph  and  motto, 
"  Catalogo  J.  Evelyni  inscriptus  : — Meliora  Retinete,"  in- 
scribed above  the  portrait ;  which  is  by  Vander  Banc,  and 
was,  without  doubt,  published  with  the  volume.  I  am  in- 
clined, however,  to  think,  that  only  a  few  early  copies  were 
thus  dated,  and  that  1684  was  the  date  of  the  impression.  I 
have  already  remarked  Browne's  habit  of  multiplying  tran- 
scripts of  his  compositions  in  MS.  On  the  fly  leaf  of  one  of  his 
volumes  (MS.  Sloan.  No.  1827,  folio,)  I  find  two  small  square 
parchment  labels,  probably  cut  from  the  original  cover,  giving 
(in  autograph)  brief  titles  to  the  vol.  with  this  addition,  ''Also 
in  4to."  *  As  No.  1827  contains  copies,  more  or  less  com- 
plete, of  a  greater  number  of  the  pieces  published  under  the 
title  of  Miscellamj  Tracts,  than  are  to  be  found  in  any  other 
of  his  MSS.  now  remaining,  it  may  be  supposed  that  the 
copy  "  also  in  Aio."  is  not  in  existence,  having  been  that  from 
which  the  vol.  was  printed.  Of  several,  however,  there  still  re- 
main in  MS.  two  or  three  copies,  each  differing  from  the  other. 
I  have  collated  these  with  some  care,  and  have  inserted  the 
most  remarkable  variations  ;  but  two  sheets  of  copy  containing 
some  of  these  collations  were  mislaid,  so  that  they  could  not 
be  inserted  in  their  place.  I  shall  therefore  give  them  at  the 
close  of  this  preface. 

Respecting  the  hitherto  unpublished  portion  of  the  present 
volume,  I  shall  say  but  little.  Whether  it  was  judicious  to  pub- 
lish so  much,  and  of  a  character  so  miscellaneous,  must  be  left 
to  the  reader  to  determine.  I  readily  admit,  that  the  greater 
part  was  not  intended  by  its  author  to  meet  the  pubhc  eye ; 

■*  Uvo  small  square,  4'C.]    The  one  thus: 

Of  Oracles 
I)c  Re  Accipitra,SfC. 
Also  in  4/0. 
Tlie  other  label  runs  thus : 

Ainico  Ardua  Med. 

Sfc. 
Ys  in  4to.  also. 


Xlll 


and  none  perhaps  were  prepared  for  that  purpose  (unless  we 
except  the  llarveian  Oration,  which  was  intended  for  his 
son's  use.)  But  on  the  other  hand,  it  must  be  allowed,  that 
the  papers  on  Natural  History,  the  fraoments  on  Dreams,  and 
on  Mummies,  with  some  others,  are  fully  as  characteristick, 
and  as  interesting  as  several  of  those  printed  by  Abp.  Tenison. 
But  the  especial  object  whicli  I  have  had  in  view  in  my  selec- 
tion, is  to  exhibit,  as  far  as  possible,  the  literary  and  scientific 
character,  pursuits,  and  hal)its  of  my  author :  in  natural 
science,  his  unwearied  love  of  experiment  and  observation  ; — 
in  literature,  his  laborious  reading,  and  his  constant  habit  of 
accumulating  treasure  for  future  use  ; — in  every  thing,  that 
intellectual  life  and  activity  which  never  flagged,  that  play  of 
fancy  and  imagination  which  was  ever  on  the  wing.  Now  all 
these,  it  seems  to  me,  will  be  as  strikingly  displayed  by  his 
commonplace  books,  and  occasional  sketches,  as  by  his  more 
digested  or  systematic  productions, — if  not  much  more  so. 

With  these  observations  and  explanations,  I  leave  my  work 
to  the  judgment  of  those  who  may  care  to  read  it. 


ADDITIONAL  NOTES  TO  TRACTS. 


Tract  ix.  p.  215,  line  S.  England-I 
Tlie  following  paragraphs  occur  here  iti 
MS.  Sloan.  1S27.  fol.  41. 

".\nd  whereas  these  are  observed  in  the 
fen  lands,  it  is  not  impossible  that  some 
hereof  may  be  the  nionnments  of  the  no- 
blest of  the  Ginii,  or  fen  inhabitants; 
for  that  there  were  princes  and  mighty 
men  among  them,  you  cannot  doubt, 
from  historical  records,  and  while  you 
read  of  Tombert,  prince  of  the  Southern 
(iirvii,  or  fen  men,  whose  daughter 
Audrie  was  married  to  the  Northumbrian 
King,  and  whose  name  is  yet  observable 
in  these  and  other  parts. 

However  probable  it  is  that  this  part 
of  the  land  hath  been  the  seat  of  many 
notable  exploits,  not  only  since  the  Nor- 
mans, but  in  the  time  of  Saxons,  Danes, 
and  also  of  the  Romans  in  their  conquest 
of  the  Britons,  and  their  own  civil  dis- 
sentions  ;  this  being  a  fast  and  retiring 
place  in  all  ages. 

Nor  wholly  improbable  that  the  dust  of 
Boadicea,  the  famous  queen  of  the  Iceni, 
may  lye  about  these  quarters,    whither 
after  her  overthrow  by  the  Romans  she 
might  best  retreat,  and  where  not  long 
after,  the  surviving  liritons  might  honor- 
ably inter  her,  although  not  after  this 
hilly  and  submontaneous  sepulture  ;  for 
according  to  the  account  of  . .  ?  the  his- 
torian, before  the  battle  she  told  the  Bri- 
tons that  if  they  went  against  them,  they 
would  retire    into   the   fens   where   the 
enemy  should  neither  take  nor  find  them ; 
and  that  they   should  be  able  to  swim 
over  those  rivers  and  waters  which  the 
Romans  could  hardly  pass  with  boats." 
p.  215,  line  23.  lJanes.'\     MS.  Sloan. 
1S27,  ends  with  the  following  continua- 
tion of  the  present  passage  :  "  and  there- 
fore,  though  some  might  conceive  that 
these  hills  might  be  raised  in  this  low 
drowned    country,   as   a   retiring    place 
unto  men  and   cattle,  upon  great  floods 
and  inundations,  yet,   in  regard  of  the 


former  customs  of  the  fore-nicniioncd  na- 
tions, we  rather  entertain  them  in  the 
acception  of  sepulchral  and  funereal 
mountains." 

p.  217,  line  12.  and  Grotiiis.']  Gro- 
tius  and  Vadianus.  MS.  Sloan.  1827. 

p.  217,  line  17.  and  thi.t,  S^-c.'\  In- 
stead of  this  sentence,  the  following  oc- 
curs in  MS.  Sloan.   1827: — 

"And  even  in  some  scripture  relations, 
as  that  of  the  going  of  St.  I'aul  from 
Mysia  unto  Troas,  as  Vadianus  acknow- 
ledgeth,  some  region  may'be  understood. 
And  even  in  our  texts  alledged  this  sense 
may  seem  sufficient  to  salve  the  intention 
of  the  description  when  he  came  to  or 
went  from  Troas,  and  may  also  seem 
strange  unto  many,  how  St.  Paul  should 
be  said  to  go  from  that  city,  which  all 
wriiers  had  laid  in  ashes  about  a  thou- 
sand years  ago." 

p.  218,  line  13.  Strabo.^  'and  the 
tables  of  Ptolemy.'     MS.  Sloan.  1827. 

p.  218,  line  2C.  which  from  Anligonus, 
S(C.]  MS.  Sloan.  1827,  reads  instead; 
"  set  down  by  Ptolemy  under  the  name 
of  .\lexandria-Troas,  together  with  Lec- 
tum  and  Assum.  It  was  also  called,  &c. 
Tract  x,  p.  221,  line  13.]  The  pre- 
ceding part  of  these  remarks  on  the  Dead 
sea  resembles  the  copies  in  the  MSS. 
Sloan,  very  nearly;  but  these  are  so 
much  more  copious,  and  they  differ  so 
considerably  from  the  printed  copy,  that 
I  give  them  at  length. 

"  It  is  also  probable,  that  the  cities  were 
built  on  some  rising  and  eminent  parts 
of  the  valley ;  because  it  was  watered 
like  Egypt,  where  we  find  they  contrive 
their  habitations  on  such  parts. 

\Vhether  any  of  the  cities  should  be 
set  in  or  near  the  bottom  of  the  lake, 
some  question  may  be  made  ;  for  Jordan 
and  other  rivers  running  always  into  the 
valley,  without  any  manifest  effluxion  or 
discharge,  and  Jordan  also  yearly  over- 
flowing,  it  is  not  improbable  the  waters 


XVI 


gathered  into  a  lake,  or  great  water, 
towards  the  bottom  or  lower  part,  and 
was  thereabout  absorbed  and  drunk  up 
by  the  subterraneous  receptacles  :  but, 
where  distinctly  to  place  this  absorption, 
there  is  no  authentic  decision ;  yet  the 
most  probable  place  may  be  the  south- 
ward and  lower  part,  after  the  rivers 
from  the  eastern  and  western  shores  have 
met  with  Jordan  in  the  valley  :  some- 
what agreeable  unto  the  account  which 
Brocardus  received  from  Saracens  living 
near  the  lake.  Jordanem  ingredi  mare 
mortuum  et  rursunt  egredi,  sed  post  ex'i- 
guum  intervallinii  a  terra  absorheri.  And 
from  about  these  parts  the  learned  Kir- 
chcrus  hath  drawn  his  conjectured  sub- 
terraneous channel  unto  Eltor,  unto  the 
Arabian  side  of  the  Red  Sea,  where  this 
bituminous  lake  is  conceived  to  discharge 
and  vent  at  least  some  part  of  itself. 

Though  the  destruction  of  the  cities 
and  valley,  with  all  living  things,  be  only 
mentioned  in  this  text,  Gen.  xix,  yet  the 
superinduction  of  the  lake  is  also  con- 
siderable in  this  story.  The  destruction 
of  the  cities  and  all  things  in  the  plain, 
and  even  the  plain  itself  burnt  and  cover- 
ed with  ashes,  was  performed  by  the 
showers  of  brimstone  and  fire  sent  down 
by  the  hand  of  God,  according  to  the  sin- 
gular expression  of  the  text.  "  The 
Lord  rained  upon  Sodom  and  Gomorrah 
brimstone  and  fire  from  the  Lord  out  of 


heaven  ;  and  he  overthrew  those  cities, 
and  all  the  plain,  and  all  the  inhabitants 
of  the  cities,  and  that  which  grew  upon 
the  ground. 

The  continuation  and  consummation 
of  his  judgment  was  performed  by  the 
lake,  without  which  if  the  cities  and  plain 
had  been  only  burnt  and  destroyed  by 
these  fiery  showers,  time  might  have 
restored  the  place  to  a  tolerable  habita- 
tion again;  for,  besides  the  rains  which 
would  have  fallen  upon  it,  the  rivers  and 
brooks  which  run  into  it,  and  Jordan 
which  yearly  overflowed  it,  might,  in 
process  of  time,  have  made  a  new  mould 
upon  it,  and  so  have  restored  it  to  some 
fertility  and  habitable  uses  again. 

And  therefore,  to  leave  a  lasting  mo- 
nument of  his  wrath,  and  that  it  might 
never  become  the  seat  of  man  and  living 
things  again,  God  let  loose  the  salt  and 
bituminous  treasures  below  it,  which,  in 
a  small  and  competent  measure,  shewed 
tliemselves  before,  and  might  have  lain 
quiet  unto  all  time;  continued  still  by 
salt  and  bituminous  supplies,  which  are 
not  like  to  fail  ;  which,  whether  he 
opened  by  these  fiery  showers  setting  the 
slimc-pits  on  fire,  and  by  the  holes  and 
channels  where  the  river  went  down, 
only  splitting  and  opening  the  earth  by 
these  piercing  storms  of  fire,  by  earth- 
quake, or  otherwise,  is  not  yet  deter- 
mined." 


Ixtpcvtorium : 


OR  SOME  ACCOfVT 
OF  THE  TOMBS  AND  MOMTMENTS  IN  THE  CATHEDRAL  <  IICRCII  OF  NORWiril. 


SECOND    EDITION. 
WITH    N-OTB 

BY  MR.  SAMUEL  WOODWARD, 

l(0!VOKARr    MIMBJUI   OF   THB    VORfCSHIRK    PBaOSOPllICAL   aOCIITTV. 


ORIGINALLY    PUBLISHED    IN 

1712. 


VOL.    IV. 


EDITOR'S  PREFACE. 


The  Repertorium  was  one  of  the  very  last  of  Sir  Tho- 
mas's productions ;  his  especial  object  in  th'awing  it  up,  was, 
to  preserve  from  obhvion,  as  far  as  possible,  the  monuments 
in  the  Cathedral  of  Norwich,  many  of  which  had  been  de- 
faced during  tire  civil  wars.  It  pretends  not  to  the  character 
of  a  history  of  the  antiquities  of  the  church,  and  therefore 
neither  deserves  the  sneer  bestowed  by  Bagford,  (in  his  MS. 
collections  in  the  British  Museum,  No.  8858,)  that  "  it  rather 
feared  than  deserved  publication ; "  nor  justified  the  anxiety  of 
the  author's  friends  to  prevent  its  publication,  on  the  ground 
alleged  by  Archbishop  Tenison,  (Preface  to  Miscellant/ 
Tracts,)  that  "  matter  equal  to  the  skill  of  the  antiquary  was 
not  afforded."  The  volume  containing  it  has  afforded  a 
favourite  subject  of  illustration  for  topographers  :  the  list  of 
monuments  was  continued  to  the  date  of  publication  by  the 
editor,  (said'  to  have  been  John  Hase,  Esq.,  Richmond 
Herald,)  and  very  many  copies  exist  with  nimierous  manu- 
script additional  continuations  and  notes,  some  of  which  I 
have  availed  myself  of.  The  most  valuable  is  that  of  the  late 
Mr.  John  Kirkpatrick,-  now  in  the  hands  of  Dr.  Sutton,  to 

« 

'  On  the  authority  of  a  MS.  note  in  a  copy  wliich  had  belonged  to  Thomas  Raw- 
linson,  Esq.  and  was  presented,  by  his  brother,  Dr.  Richard  Rawlinson,  to  the 
Bodleian  Library. 

*  This  gentleman,  who  was  a^merchant  of  Norwich,  was  indefatigable  in  his  ex- 
ertion? in  collecting  materials,  and  makinjf  drawings  of  public  buildings,  to  fonn  a 
History  of  Norwich  ;  which,  had  he  lived  to  digest  it  properly,  would  have  been  most 
complete  and  invaluable.  He  died  the  20th  of  August,  172S,  aged  12.  (Sec 
Blrmiefield's  Norwich,  part  2nd,  p.  .{79,  Edit,  of  1806.)  In  his  Will,  dated  17th  of 
July,  1727,  (preserved  in  the  Bishop's  Office,)  he  says,  "  I  give  to  my  brother, 
Thomas  Kirkpatrick,  all  my  MSS.  books  and  papers  (which  I  have  with  no  small 
paint  and  expense  collected  and  purchased)  relating  to  the  History  of  Snrwich,  to 

B  2 


4"  EDITORS    PREFACE. 

whom  I  beg  to  offer  my  thanks  for  his  kindness  in  affording 
me  the  use  of  it.  My  object,  however,  has  been  to  give  that 
only  which  proceeded  from  the  pen  of  Sir  Thomas  himself; 
and  I  have,  therefore,  not  re-printed  either  the  continuation 
or  Burton's  History  of  the  Free  School,  &c. 

I  have  great  pleasure  in  acknowledging  the  kind  assistance 
of  my  friend,  Mr.  S.  Woodward,^  in  preparing  explanatory 
and  corrective  notes  throughout,  and  in  giving  a  very  in- 
teresting graphic  and  descriptive  illustration  of  the  notice  at 
page  32,  of  the  green  yard,  in  which  the  combination  ser- 
mons were  of  old  preached. 

On  the  recommendation  of  Mr.  Woodward,  I  have  not 
re-engraved  all  the  plates  which  adorned  the  Posthumous 
Works,  but  a  selection  only  ;  with  the  addition  of  his  plan  of 
the  green  yard. 

enjoy  the  same  during  his  natural  life,  and  after  his  death  I  give  them  all  to  the 
mayor,  sheriffs,  citizens,  and  commonalli/,  of  the  said  city,  to  be  kept  in  the  City 
Treasury,  in  the  Guild  Hall  there,  as  well  for  their  use  and  service  on  occasions,  as 
that  some  citizen  hereafter,  being  a  skilful  antiquary,  may  from  the  same  have  an 
opportunity  (f  completing  and  publishing  the  said  History,  or  such  part  of  it  as  my 
said  brother  shall  not  publish."  We  are  not  aware  that  Mr.  Thomas  Kirkpatrick 
ever  published  any  of  these  interesting  collections,  except  the  large  North-east  view 
of  the  city,  which  has  been  so  frequently  copied.  The  MSS.  referred  to  were  some 
years  ago  in  the  possession  of  the  corporation,  as  were  also  Mr.  K.'s  fine  collection 
of  "  Medals  and  Ancient  Coins  of  Silver  and  Brass;"  but  we  fear  the  original  in- 
tention of  the  donor  has  been  lost  sight  of,  and  that  these  valuable  MSS.  are  for 
ever  lost  to  the  lover  of  local  antiquities.  Mr.  Kirkpatrick's  father  was  a  native  of 
Closeburn,  near  Dumfries,  and  we  believe  Col.  Harvey,  of  Thorpe  Lodge,  is  a  de- 
scendant in  the  female  line. 

^  Who  has  paid  considerable  attention  to  the  local  antiquities  of  his  native  city, 
and  made  several  interesting  communications  to  the  Society  of  Antiquaries  ;  some 
of  which  are  pul)li<hed  in  the  ArclKcologia.  He  has  also  published  "  A  Synoptical 
Table  of  British  Organic  Remains." 


l\rpritonunu 


IX  the  time  of  the  late  civil  wars,  there  were  about  an 
liuiulrod  brass  inscriptions  stolen  and  taken  away  from  grave- 
stones and  tombs,  in  the  catiiedral  church  of  Norwich ;  as  I 
was  informed  by  John  Wright,  one  of  the  clerks,  above  eighty 
years  old,  and  Mr.  John  SandUn,  one  of  the  choir,  who 
lived  eighty-nine  years ;  and,  as  I  remember,  told  me  that  he 
was  a  chorister  in  the  reign  of  Queen  Elizabeth. 

Hereby  the  distinct  places  of  the  burials  of  many  noble 
and  considerable  persons  become  unknown ;  and,  lest  they 
should  be  quite  buried  in  ol)livion,  I  shall,  of  so  many,  set 
down  only  these  following  that  are  most  noted  to  passengers, 
with  some  that  have  been  erected  since  those  unhappy  times. 

First,^  in  the  body  of  the  church,  between  the  pillars  of 
the  south  aisle,  stands  a  tomb,  covered  with  a  kind  of  touch- 
stone; which  is  the  monument  of  ^Nliles  Spencer,  LL.D. 
and  Chancellor  of  Norwich,  who  lived  unto  ninety  years. 
The  top  stone  was  entire,  but  now  quite  broken,  split,  and 
depressed  by  blows.  There  was  more  special  notice  taken  of 
this  stone,  because  men  used  to  try  their  money  upon  it ;  and 
that  the  chapter  demanded  certain  rents  to  be  paid  on  it. 
He  was  lord  of  the  manor  of  Bowthorp  and  Colney,  which 
came  unto  the  Yaxleys  from  him ;  also  owner  of  Chapel  in 
the  Field. 

The  next  monument  is  that  of  Bishop  Richard  Nicks,  alias 
Nix,  or  the  Blind  Bishop,  being  quite  dark  many  years  be- 

'   First.']     Beginning  from  the  west  end. — Kirkpalrick. 


6 


THE    ANTIQUITIES    OF    NORWICH. 


fore  he  died.  He  sat  in  this  see  thirty-six  years,  in  the  reigns 
of  King  Henry  VII.  and  Henry  VIII.  The  arches  are 
beautified  above  and  beside  it,  where  are  to  be  seen  the  arms 
of  the  see  of  Norwich,  unpaling  his  own,  viz.,  a  chevron  be- 
tween three  leopards'  heads.  The  same  coat  of  arms  is  on 
the  roof  of  the  north  and  south  cross  aisle  ;  which  roofs  he 
either  rebuilt,  or  repaired.  The  tomb  is  low,  and  broad,^ 
and  'tis  said  there  was  an  altar  at  the  bottom  of  the  eastern 
pillar.  The  iron-work,  whereon  the  bell  hung,  is  yet  visible 
on  the  side  of  the  western  pillar. 

Then  the  tomb  of  Bishop  John  Parkhurst,  with  a  legible 
inscription  on  the  pillar,  set  up  by  Dean  Gardiner,  running 
thus : 


Johannes  Parkhurst,   Theol. Professor,  Guillbrdias  nalus, 
Oxoniae  educatus,  temporibus  Mariae  Regina?  pro 
N'itida  ronscientia  tuenda  Tigurinse  vixit  exul 
Voluntarius:   Postea  presul  factus,  sanctissime 
Hanc  rexit  Ecdesiani  per  16  an.     Obiit  secundo  die 
Febr.  1574. 


A  person  he  was  of  great  esteem  and  veneration  in  the  reign 
of  Queen  Elizabeth.  His  coat  of  arms  is  on  the  pillars, 
visible  at  the  going  out  of  the  bishop's  hall.^ 

Between  the  two  uppermost  pillars,  on  the  same  side,  stood 
a  handsome  monument  of  Bishop  Edmund  Seamier,  thus : 


Natus  apud  Gressingham,  in  Com.  Lane.  SS.  Theol.  Prof, 
apud  Cantabrigienses.     Obiit  TEtat.  85.  an.  1504  nonis  Maii. 

He  was  household  chaplain  to  the  Archbishop  of  Canterbury, 
and  died  1594.  The  monument  was  above  a  yard  and  a  half 
high,  with  his  effigies  in  alabaster,  and  all  enclosed  with  a 

^  broad.']     It  fills  up  all  the  space  be-  was  buried  in  the  nave  of  the  cathedral, 

tween  the  two  pillars,  and  on  the  two  on  the  south  side,  between  the  eighth 

sides  there  was  a  rail  of  iron,  tiie  going  and    ninth   pillars.     Against    the    west 

up  (on  the  platform  of  the   nionmnent,)  part  of  the  latter  is  a  monument  erected 

was  at  the  west  end  of  the  south  side. —  to   his  memory,  engraved  by  Ilulsberg, 

Kirlip.  in  Browne's  posthumous  works  ;   but  his 

^  bishop's   hall.l      Bishop    Parkhurst  figure   in  a  gown   and  square  cap,  with 

"having    lived    much  at  his  palace,  at  his  hands  in  a  praying  posture,  and  the 

Norwich,  which  he  beautified    and   re-  following  inscription  (that  in  the  text) 

paired,  placing  arms  on  th.e  pillars  going  was  taken  away  in   the   civil   war," — 

out  of  the  hall,  which  lately  were  visible  Ge7its.  Mag.   1807,  vol.  77,  p.  510. 
there,  he  died  February   2,   1574,  and 


THE    ANTIQUITIES    OF    NORWICH.  7 

high  iron  grate.  In  the  late  times  the  grate  was  taken  away, 
the  statue  broken,  and  the  free-stone  pulled  down  as  far  as 
the  inward  brick-work ;  which  being  unsightly,  was  after- 
wards taken  away,  and  the  space  between  the  ])illars  left 
void,  as  it  now  reinaineth. 

In  the  south  side  of  this  aisle,  according  as  the  inscription 
denoteth,  was  buried  George  Garduier,  sometime  Dean. 

Georgius  Gardiner  Barvici  natus,   C'antabrigia;  educatus, 
Primo  minor  C'anonicus,  secundo  Praebendarius,  tertio  Archbidiaconus 
Nordovici,  et  demum  28  Nov.  an.  1573,  (actus  est  Sacellanus 
Dominae  Regina-,  ct  Decanushujus  Ecclesise,  in  quo  loco  per  IG 
Annos  rexit. 

Somewhat  higher  is  a  monument  for  Dr.  Edmund  Porter, 
a  learned  prebendary  sometime  of  this  church. 

Between  two  pillars  of  the  north  aisle  in  the  body  of  the 
church,  stands  the  monument  of  Sir  James  Hobart,  Attor- 
ney-General to  King  Henry  VII.  and  VIII.  He  built  Lod- 
don  church,  St.  Olaves  bridge,  and  made  the  causeway  ad- 
joining upon  the  south  side.  On  the  upper  part  is  the 
achievement  of  the  Hobarts,  and  below  are  their  arms;  as 
also  of  the  Nantons,  (viz.,  three  marlets)  his  second  lady 
being  of  that  family.  It  is  a  close  monument,  made  up  of 
handsome  stone  work :  and  this  enclosure  might  have  been 
employed  as  an  oratory.*  Some  of  the  family  of  the  Hobarts 
have  been  buried  near  this  monument ;  as  Mr.  James  Hobart 
of  Holt.  On  the  south  side,  two  young  sons  and  a  daughter 
of  Dean  Herbert  Astley,  who  married  Barbara,  daughter  of 
John,  only  son  of  Sir  John  Hobart,  of  Hales. 

In  the  middle  aisle,  under  a  very  large  stone,  almost  over 
which  a  branch  for  lights  hangeth,^  was  buried  Sir  Francis 


*  oratory.]  The  enclosure  to  this  mo-  in  the  star  a  crescent  for  difference,  and 

nunient  was  of  stone  work,  in  the  form  on  the  dexter  side  of  the  shield  a  bull 

of  windows,  having  an  entrance  on  the  (the  crcrt  of  Hobart,)  as  one  supporter, 

north    side,    the    south    side    was    sur-  and  on  the  sinister,  a   martlet  from   the 

mounted  by    the  arms  which  are   now  Nanton's  coat  as  the  other  supporter, 
placed  against  the  inside  the  pillar  op-         *  hangeth.]     This  branch  must  have 

posite  the  monument;  the  tomb  was  also  hung  opposite  Bishop   Nix's  monument, 

visible  on   this  side,  having  an  arch  or  and  directly  in  front  of  the  ancient  stone 

canopy  over,  the  upright  wall  of  which  pulpit,  the    remains    of  which    arc    still 

was  covered  with  stars,  on  the   top  the  visible  against  the  pillar,  at  the  cast  end 

arms   of  Hobart,    .lah.    a   star   of  eight  of  the  said  monument, 
points,  or    between  two  flaunches  •'rm.. 


8  THE    ANTIQUITIES    OF    NORWICH. 

Southwell,  descended  from  those  of  great  name  and  estate  in 
Norfolk,  who  formerly  possessed  Woodrising. 

Under  a  fair  stone,  by  Bishop  Parkhurst's  tomb,  was 
buried  Dr.  Masters,  Chancellor. 

Gul.  Maister,  LL.  Doctor  Curiae  Cons.  Epatus  Norwicen. 
Officialis  principalis.     Obiit  2  Feb.  15S9. 

At  the  upper  end  of  the  middle  aisle,  under  a  large  stone, 
was  buried  Bishop  Walter  de  Hart,  alias  le  Hart,^  or  Lyg- 
hard.  He  was  bishop  twenty-six  years,  in  the  times  of 
Henry  VI.  and  Edward  IV.  He  built  the  transverse  stone 
partition  or  rood  loft,  on  which  the  great  crucifix  was  placed, 
beautified  the  roof  of  the  body  of  the  church,  and  paved  it. 
Towards  the  north  side  of  the  partition  wall  are  his  arms,  the 
bull,  and  towards  the  south  side,  a  hart  in  water,  as  a  rebus 
of  his  name,  Walter  Hart.  Upon  the  door,  under  the  rood 
loft,  was  a  plate  of  brass,  containing  these  verses : 

Hie  jacet  absconsus  sub  marmore  presul  honestus. 
Anno  milleno  C  quater  cum  septuageno 
Annexis  binis  iiistabat  ei  prope  finis. 
Scptinia  cum  decinia  lux  Maij  sit  numerata 
Ipsius  est  anima  de  corpore  tunc  separata. 

Between  this  partition^  and  the  choir  on  the  north  side,  is 
the  monument  of  Dame  Elizabeth  Calthorpe,  wife  of  Sir 
Francis  Calthorpe,  and  afterwards  wife  of  John  Colepepper,*^ 
Esq. 

In  the  same  partition,  behind  the  dean's  stall,  was  buried 
John  Crofts,  lately  dean,  son  of  Sir  Henry  Crofts,  of  Suffolk, 
and  brother  to  the  Lord  William  Crofts.  He  was  sometime 
fellow  of  All-Souls  college,  in  Oxford,  and  the  first  dean 
after  the  restoration  of  His  Majesty  King  Charles  II.,  whose 
predecessor.  Dr.  John  Hassal,  who  was  dean  many  years, 
was  not  buried  in  this  church,  but  in  that  of  Creek.  He  was 
of  New  college,  in  Oxford,  and  chaplain  to  the  Lady  Eliza- 
beth, Queen  of  Bohemia,  who  obtained  this  deanery  for  him. 

^  le  Hart.]     Spelt  Hert,  or  de  Hert,  mcnt  removed  to   the  north  aisle  of  the 

in  MS.  Sloan.   1885.  choir  near  the  confessional. 

"^partition.']    This  partition  was  taken  *  Colepepper.]     Cullpeper  on  the  mo- 

away  in  1806,  (when  the  interior  of  the  nument. 
church  was  repaired,)  and    the  nioini- 


TIIl^    ANTKR'ITIF.S    OF    NOKAVICII.  9 

On  the  south  side  of  the  choir,  between  two  pillars,  stands 
the  monument  of  Bishop  .James  Goldwell,  Dean  of  Salisljury, 
and  secretary  to  King  Edward  IV.,  who  sat  in  this  see 
twenty-five  years.  His  effigies  is  in  stone,  with  a  lion  at  his 
feet,  which  was  his  arms,  as  appears  on  his  coat  above  the 
tomb,  on  the  choir  side.  His  arms  are  also  to  be  seen  in  the 
sixth  escutcheon,  in  the  west  side  over  the  choir ;  as  also  in 
St.  Andrew's  church,  at  the  deanery,,  in  a  window ;  at  Trowse, 
Newton  Hall,  and  at  Charta-magna,  in  Kent,  the  place  of  his 
nativity ;  where  he  also  built  or  repaired  the  chai)el.  He  is 
said  to  have  nnich  repaired  the  east  end  of  this  church ;  did 
many  good  works,  lived  in  great  esteem,  and  died  Ann.  119S 
or  1199. 

Next  above  Bishop  Goldwell,  where  the  iron  grates  yet 
stand.  Bishop  John  Wakering  is  said  to  have  been  buried. 
He  was  bishop  in  the  reign  of  King  Henry  V.  and  was  sent 
to  the  council  of  Constance :  he  is  said  also  to  have  built  the 
cloister  in  the  bishop's  palace,  which  led  into  it  from  the 
church  door,  which  was  covered  with  a  handsome  roof, 
before  the  late  civil  war.  Also  reported  to  have  built  the 
chapter-house,  which  being  ruinous  is  now  demolished,  and 
the  decayed  parts  above  and  about  it  handsomely  repaired, 
or  new  l)uilt.  The  arms  of  the  see  imi)aling  his  own  coat, 
the  three  Fleiir  des  Lys,  are  yet  visible  upon  the  wall  by  the 
door.3  He  lived  in  great  reputation,  and  died  142G,  and  is 
said  to  have  been  buried  before  St.  George's  altar. 

On  the  north  side  of  the  choir,  between  the  two  arches, 
next  to  Queen  Elizabeth's  seat,  were  buried  *  Sir  Thomas 
Erpingham,  and  his  wives  the  Lady  Joan,  &c.  whose  pictures 
were  in  the  i)ainted  glass  windows,  next  unto  this  place,  with 
the  arms  of  the  Erpinghams.  The  insides  of  both  the  pil- 
lars were  painted  in  red  colours,  with  divers  figures  and  in- 
scriptions, from  the  top  almost  to  the  bottom,  which  are  now 

"   The  firms,  Sfc.'\     By  him  wiihiii  the  Goodall,   in  17Sl,a  tombstone,  thought 

rayles   under  two  great    marble  stones,  to  be  that  of  Sir  Tliomas  Erpingham,  was 

lye  two  ot'tlie  family  of  tlic  Huileyns,  of  found,  with   its  face  downward;   it   is  of 

which    family    liueen    Klizabeth   was. —  purbeck   marble,  ridge  formed,  and  liav- 

MS.  iinlf  in  Jioil/cian  cop!/.  '"g  a  Calvary  cross  on  the   ridge;    the 

'  were  buried.]   In  removing  the  pave-  rivets  of  a  brass  inscription  on  tlie  edge 

nient  of  the  North  aisle  (near  this  place)  of  the  stone  are  still  visible:  it  remains 

to  make  a  vault  for  the  remains  of  Dr.  near  the  place  where  it  was  found. 


10  THE    ANTIQUITIES    OF    NORWICH. 

washed  out  by  the  late  whiting  of  the  pillars.  He  was  a 
Knight  of  the  Garter  in  the  time  of  Henry  IV.  and  some  part 
of  Henry  V.,  and  I  find  his  name  in  the  Hst  of  the  Lord  War- 
dens of  the  Cinque-Ports.  He  is  said  to  have  built  the  Black 
Friars  church,  or  steeple,  or  both,  now  called  New-Hall  stee- 
ple. His  arms  are  often  on  the  steeple,  which  are  an  escut- 
cheon within  an  Orle  of  Martlets,  and  also  upon  the  out-side 
of  the  gate,-  next  the  school-house.  There  was  a  long  brass 
inscription  about  the  tomb-stone,  which  was  torn  away  in  the 
late  times,  and  the  name  of  Erpingham  only  remaining,  Jo- 
licmnes  Dominus  de  Erpingham,  Miles,  was  buried  in  the 
parish  church  of  Erpingham,  as  the  inscription  still  declareth. 

In  the  north  aisle,  near  to  the  door,  leading  towards  Jesus' 
chapel,  was  buried  Sir  William  Denny,  recorder  of  Nor- 
wich, and  one  of  the  counsellors  at  law  to  King  Charles  I. 

In  Jesus'  chapel  stands  a  large  tomb  (which  is  said  to  have 
been  translated  from  our  Lady's  chapel,  when  that  grew 
ruinous,  and  was  taken  down),  whereof  the  brass  inscription 
about  it  is  taken  away ;  but  old  Mr.  Spendlow,  who  was  a 
prebendary  50  years,  and  Mr.  Sandlin,  used  to  say,  that  it 
was  the  tombstone  of  the  W  indhams ;  and,  in  all  probability, 
might  have  belonged  to  Sir  Thomas  Windham,  one  of  King 
Henry  VIII.'s  counsellors,  of  his  guard,  and  vice  admiral ;  for 
I  find  that  there  hath  been  such  an  inscription  upon  the 
tomb  of  a  Windham  in  this  church.^ 

Orate  pro  anima  Thome  Windham,  militis,  Elianore,  ct  Domiiie 
Elizabethe,  uxorum  ejus,  &c.  qui  ([uidem  Thomas  fait  unus  eonsiliariorum 
Regis  Heiirici  VIII.  et  unus  militum  pro  corpore,  ejusdem  Domini, 

nee  non  Vice  Admirallus. 

And  according  to  the  number  of  the  three  persons  in  the  in- 
scription,* there  are  three  figures  upon  the  tomb. 


^  gate.'\     In  a  nich  of  the  wail  above  would   have  a  tomb   for  him,   with  his 

the   gates   is   an    armed   knight  on  his  arms  and  badges,  and  his  two  wives,  if  his 

knees. — MS.  note  in  a  copy  in  Bib.  BvdI.  wife  Elizabeth  will  be  there  buried,  &c. 

■*  In  Jesus'  chapel,  S(C.]     "That  Sir  See  his  tvitl  among  mij  papers  of  Felbri/ge." 

Thomas  Windham,  Knight,  by  his  will,  — MS.  Note  in  Bod/.  Copy. 

dated  22  Oct.  13  H.  8.  1521,  willed  that  ''  inscription.]     Weever  saith  that  this 

his  body  be  buried  in  the  middle  of  the  (in   his   time  maimed)   inscription    was 

chapel  of  the  blessed  virgin,  within  the  upon    a   goodly    tomb    in   the  Chapter- 

scite  of  the  monastery  of  the  holy  Trin-  house. — Kirlcp.  MS. 
ity  of  the  citv  of  Norwich  ;    where    he 


THE    ANTiyilTIES    OK    NORWICH.  I  I 

On  the  north  wall  of  Jesus'  chapel  there  is  a  le<i;ible  brass 
inscription  in  latin  verses ;  and  at  the  last  line  Pater  Noster.^ 
This  was  the  monument  of  Ran(Uilfus  Pidvcrtoft,  custos 
caronelle.  Above  the  inscription  was  his  coat  of  arms,  viz. 
six  ears  of  wheat  with  a  border  of  cinque-foils  ;  but  now 
washed  out,  since  the  wall  was  whitened. 

At  the  entrance  of  St.  Luke's  chapel,  on  the  left  hand,  is 
an  arched  monument,  said  to  belong  to  one  of  the  family  of 
the  Bosvile's  or  Boswill,  sometime  prior  of  the  convent.  At 
the  east  end  of  the  monument  are  the  arms  of  the  church 
(the  cross)  and  on  the  west  end  another  (three  bolt  arrows), 
which  is  supposed  to  be  his  paternal  coat.  The  same  coat 
is  to  be  seen  in  the  sixth  escutcheon  of  the  south  side,  under 
the  belfry.  Some  inscriptions  upon  this  monument  were 
washed  out  when  the  church  was  lately  whitened ;  as  among 
the  rest,  O  morieris  !  O  mor'wris  !  O  morier'is !  The  three 
bolts  are  the  known  arms  of  the  Bosomes,^  an  ancient  family 
in  Norfolk ;  but  whether  of  the  Bosviles,  or  no,  I  am  uncer- 
tain. 

Next  unto  it  is  the  monument  of  Richard  Brome,  Esq. 
whose  arms  thereon  are  ermines ;  and  for  the  crest,  a  bunch 
or  branch  of  broom  with  fjolden  flowers.  This  miijht  be 
Richard  Brome,  Esq.  whose  daughter  married  the  heir  of 
the  Yaxleys  of  Yaxley,  in  the  time  of  Henry  VII,  And  one 
of  the  same  name  founded  a  chapel  in  the  field  in  Norwich. 

There  are  also  in  St.  Lukes  chapel,  amongst  the  seats  on 
the  south  side,  two  substantial  marble  and  crossed  tombs, 
very  ancient,  said  to  be  two  priors  of  this  convent." 

At  the  entrance  into  the  cloister,  by  the  upper  door  on  the 
right  hand,  next  the  stairs,  was  a  handsome  monument  on 
the  wall,  which  was  pulled  down  in  the  late  times,  and  a  void 
place  still  remaineth.     Upon  this  stone  were  the  figures  of 

*  brasf  inscriplion.']  Inserted  from  Crimina  multa  feram  fuerant  mea  quando  re- 
Burton's  Account  of  the  Freeschool,  p.  22.         Pulv'r'iofl  Kadulphus  cram  '  '  Mo. 

Cliri'le  IJeus  pro  me  pa**"'  'i 

Kn  mnnor,  prodest  michi  quid  prius  hoc  quod  Sic  exoro  petas  qui  nit-a  ^'  :                               r 

liabfbam,  nomer. 

Pre^t^ni  omne  quod  est.  eo  nudus,  sic  venie-  6   Bosomcs.]      Bozouns.-.W.   note   in 

Sola  inichi  rcquies  manet,  hie  non   sunt  mea  Jjodt.  ropy. 

AntlJT'nuUa  quies,  modo  pro  nichilo  michi  '    There  are  also,   ,^c.]      Taken  away 

^cu™.     J                        ,  about   173.S  to  make  room  for  seats. — 

Sed  nco,  dum  tucram  moaicum  rel  nil  bene  ,»,.        ,    .      d  ji 

gessi,  M.S.  note  tii  Boat.  copy. 


12  THE    ANTIQUITIES    OF    NORWICH. 

two  persons  in  a  praying  posture,  on  their  knees.  I  was  told 
by  Mr.  Sandlin,  that  it  was  said  to  be  the  monument  for  one 
of  the  Bigots,  who  built  or  beautified  that  arch  by  it,  which 
leadeth  into  the  church. 

In  the  choir  towards  the  high  altar,  and  below  the  ascents, 
there  is  an  old  tomb,  which  hath  been  generally  said  to  have 
been  the  monument  of  Bishop  William  Herbert,  founder  of 
the  church,  and  commonly  known  by  the  name  of  the  foun- 
der's tomb.  This  was  above  an  ell  high ;  but  when  the  pul- 
pit, in  the  late  confusion,  was  placed  at  the  pillar,  where 
Bishop  Overall's  monument  now  is,  and  the  aldermen's  seats 
were  at  the  east  end,  and  the  mayor's  seat  in  the  middle  at 
the  high  altar,  the  height  of  the  tomb  being  a  hindrance  unto 
the  people,  it  was  taken  down  to  such  a  lowness  as  it  now 
remains  in.^  He  was  born  at  Oxford ,9  in  good  favour  with 
King  William  Rufus,  and  King  Henry  I.  removed  the  epis- 
copal see  from  Thetford  to  Norwich,  built  the  priory  for  60 
monks,  the  cathedral  church,  the  bishop's  palace,  the  church 
of  St.  Leonard,  whose  ruins  still  remain  upon  the  brow  of 
Household  hill ;  the  church  of  St.  Nicholas  at  Yarmouth,  of 
St.  Margaret  at  Lynn,  of  St.  Mary  at  Elmham,  and  instituted 
the  Cluniack  monks  at  Thetford.  Malmsbury  saitli  he  was 
vir  pecuniosus,  which  his  great  works  declare,  and  had  always 
this  good  saying  of  St.  Hierom  in  his  mouth,  erravimus  ju- 
venes,  emendemus  senes. 

Many  bishops  of  old  might  be  buried  about,  or  not  far  from 
the  founder,  as  William  Turbus,  a  Norman,  the  third  bishop 
of  Norwich,  and  John  of  Oxford  the  fourth,  accounted  among 
the  learned  men  of  his  time,  who  built  Trinity  church  in  Ips- 
wich, and  died  in  the  reign  of  King  John ;  and  it  is  delivered, 
that  these  two  bi.shops  were  buried  near  to  Bishop  Herbert, 
the  founder. 

In  the  same  row,  not  far  off,  was  buried  Bishop  Henry  le 
Spencer,  as  lost  brass  inscriptions  have  declared.     And  Mr. 

*  as  it  now  remains  in.]     The  present  Blomefield's  History  of  Norwich,  part  1, 

tomb  was  built  by  the  dean  and  prebend-  p.  471. 

aries  in   1G82,  and  the  latin  inscription         "  Oxford.']      The  present  inscription 

thereon  is  said  to  liave  been  composed  says,   "qui  O.vimi  in  Nonr.ania  natus;" 

by  the  learned  Dr.  Prideaux,  who  was  at  this  is  understood  to  allude  to  Iliems  near 

that  time  one  of  the  prebendaries. — See  Caen. 


THE    ANTKJUITIES    OF    NORWICH.  1.1 

Sandlin  told  me,  that  he  had  seen  an  inscription  on  a  grave- 
stone thereabouts,  with  tlie  name  of  llciiricus  de,  or  le  Spen- 
cer :  '  he  came  young  unto  the  see,  and  sat  longer  in  it  than 
any  before  or  after  him  :  Init  his  time  might  have  been  sliorter, 
if  he  had  not  escaped  in  the  fray  at  Lennam'-  (a  town  of  which 
he  was  lord),  where  forcing  the  magistrate's  tipstaff  to  be  car- 
ried before  him,  the  people  with  staves,  stones,  and  arrows, 
wounded,  and  put  his  servants  to  flight.  He  was  also  wound- 
ed, and  left  alone,  as  John  Fox  hath  set  it  down  out  of  the 
chronicle  of  St.  Albans. 

In  the  same  row,  of  late  times,  was  buried  Bishop  Richard 
Montague,  as  the  inscription,  Depostiim  Muntaciit'ti  Episcopi, 
doth  declare. 

For  his  eminent  knowledge  in  the  Greek  language,  he  was 
much  countenanced  by  Sir  Henry  Savile,  provost  of  Eaton 
college,  and  settled  in  a  fellowship  tliereof :  afterwards  made 
Bishop  of  Chichester ;  thence  translated  unto  Norwich,  where 
he  lived  about  three  years.  He  came  unto  Norwich  with 
the  evil  eflects  of  a  quartan  ague,  which  he  had  about  a  year 
before,  and  which  accompanied  him  to  his  grave ;  yet  he 
studied  and  wrote  very  much,  had  an  excellent  library  of 
books,  and  heaps  of  papers,  fairly  written  with  his  own  hand, 
concerning  the  ecclesiastical  history.  His  books  were  sent 
to  London ;  and,  as  it  was  said,  his  papers  against  Baronius 
and  others  transmitted  to  Rome;  from  whence  they  were 
never  returned. 

On  the  other  side  was  buried  Bishop  John  Overall,  fellow 
of  Trinity  college  in  Cambridge,  master  of  Catherine  Hall, 
regius  professor,  and  dean  of  St.  Paul's  :  and  had  the  honour 
to  be  nominated  one  of  the  first  governors  of  Sutton  hospi- 
tal, by  the  founder  himself,  a  person  highly  reverenced  and 
beloved ;  who  being  buried  without  any   inscription,  had  a 


'  Spencer.'\     The  stoute  and   warlike  coate   of  Spencer,  upon  an   helmet,   his 

Henry  Spencer,  Bishop  of  Norwich,  who  episcopall  miter,  and  upon  (hat  Michael, 

snpprost  by  his  courriage  and  valour,  that  the  archangell,  with  a  drawn  sword. — 

dangerous   rebellion;    and  about   North  Peachem's  Compleat  Gmt.   p.    IGI.  Ed. 

Walsham,  overthrew  Litster  the  captainc,  1634. 

hath  (as  it  is  to  he  scene  upon  his  monu-  *  Lcnjiam.]     Lynn.     Sec  Blomcficld'f 

ment  in  the  body  of  the  quire  of  Christ-  Norwirh,  part  1,  p.  516. 
church,    in    Norwich)    over   his    proper 


14  THE    ANTIQUITIES    OF    NORWICH. 

monument  lately  erected  for  him  by  Dr.  Cosin,  Lord  Bishop 
of  Durham,  upon  the  next  pillar. 

Under  the  large  sandy-coloured  stone  was  buried  Bishop 
Richard  Corbet,  a  person  of  singular  wit,  and  an  eloquent 
preacher,  who  lived  bishop  of  this  see  but  three  years,  being 
before  Dean  of  Christ-church,  then  Bishop  of  Oxford.  The 
inscription  is  as  follows  : 

Ilichardus  Corbet  Theologias  Doctor, 
Ecclesiae  Catliedralis  Cliristi  Oxoniensis 
Primum  alumnus,  inde  Dccanus,  exiiide 
Episcopus,  illinc  liuc  translatus,  et 
Hiiic  ill  ccelum,  Jul.  28,  Ann.  1635. 

The  arms  on  it,  are  the  see  of  Norwich,  impaling,  or.  a  raven 
sab.  Corbet. 

Towards  the  upper  end  of  the  choir,  and  on  the  south  side, 
under  a  fair  large  stone,  was  interred  Sir  William  Boleyn,  or 
Bullen,  great  grandfather  to  Queen  Elizabeth.  The  inscrip- 
tion hath  been  long  lost,  which  was  this  : 

Hie  jacet  corpus  Willelmi  I'oleyn,  militis, 
Qui  obiit  x  Octobris,  Ann.  Dom.  MCCCCCV. 

And  I  find  in  a  good  manuscript  of  the  ancient  gentry  of 
Norfolk  and  Suffolk  these  words.  Sir  William  Boleyn,  heir 
unto  Sir  Thomas  Boleyn,  who  married  Margaret,  daughter 
and  heir  of  Thomas  Butler,  Earl  of  Ormond,  died  in  the  year 
1505,  and  was  buried  on  the  south  side  of  the  chancel  of 
Christ-church  in  Norwich.  And  surely  the  arms  of  few 
families  have  been  more  often  found  in  any  church,  than  those 
of  the  Boleyns,  on  the  walls,  and  in  the  windows  of  the  east 
part  of  this  church.  Many  others  of  this  noble  family  were 
buried  in  Blickling  church. 

Many  other  bishops  might  be  buried  in  this  church,  as  we 
find  it  so  asserted  by  some  historical  accounts ;  but  no  history 
or  tradition  remaining  of  the  place  of  their  interment,  in  vain 
we  endeavour  to  design  and  point  out  the  same. 

As  of  Bishop  Johannes  de  Gray,  who,  as  it  is  delivered, 
was  interred  in  this  church,  was  a  favourite  of  King  John,  and 
sent  by  him  to  the  pope :  he  was  also  Lord  Deputy  of  Ireland, 
and  a  person  of  great  reputation,  and  built  Gaywood  Hall, 
by  Lynn. 


THE    ANTIQUITIES    OF    NORWICH.  15 

As  also  of  Bishop  Roirer  Skerewyng  [or  de  Skerniiig],  in 
whose  time  happened  that  bloody  contention  between  the 
monks  and  citizens,  begun  at  a  fair  kept '  before  the  gate ; 
when  the  churcii  ^vas  fired  :  to  compose  which,  King  Henry 
III.  came  to  Norwich,  and  WilHam  de  Brunham.  prior,  was 
much  to  blame. — See  Holingshcd,  Sfc. 

Or  of  Bishop  William  Middleton,  who  succeeded  him,  and 
was  buried  in  this  church ;  in  whose  time  the  church  that 
was  burnt  while  Skerewyng  sat  was  repaired  and  consecrated, 
in  the  presence  of  King  Edward  I. 

Or  of  Bishop  John  Salmon,  somethne  Lord  Chancellor  of 
England,  who  died  1325,  and  was  here  interred;  his  works 
were  noble.  He  built  the  great  hall  in  the  bishop's  palace ; 
the  bishop's  long  chapel  on  the  east  side  of  the  palace,  which 
was  no  ordinary  fabric ;  and  a  strong  handsome  chapel  at  the 
west  end  of  the  church,*  and  appointed  four  priests  for  the 
daily  service  therein.  Unto  which  great  works  he  was  the 
better  enabled  by  obtaining  a  grant  of  the  first  fruits  from 
Pope  Clement. 

Or  of  Bishop  Thomas  Percy,  brother  to  the  Earl  of 
Northumberland,  in  the  reign  of  Richard  II.,  who  gave  unto 
a  chantry  the  lands  about  Carlton,  Kimberly,  and  Wickle- 
wood ;  in  whose  time  the  steeple  and  belfry  were  blown 
down,  and  rebuilt  by  him  and  a  contribution  from  the  clerg}'. 

Or  of  Bishop  Anthony  de  Beck,  a  person  of  an  unquiet 
spirit,  very  much  hated,  and  poisoned  by  his  servants. 

Or  likewise  of  Bishop  Thomas  Browne,  who,  being  bishop 
of  Rochester,  was  chosen  bishop  of  Norwich,  while  he  was 
at  the  council  of  Basil,  in  the  reign  of  King  Henry  VI.,  was 
a  strenuous  assertor  of  the  rights  of  the  church  against  the 
citizens. 

Or  of  Bishop  William  Rugge,^  in  whose  last  year  happen- 
ed Kett's  rebellion,  in  the  reign  of  Edward  \l.  I  find  his 
name  Guil.  Norwicensis  among  the  bishops,  who  subscribed 


^  fair   kept."]     This  occurred  on   the  end  of  Uie  chureh.'\     St.  John's  Chapel, 

9th     August,     1272. — See    Blomefield's  now  the  Frecschool. 
Norurich,  part  1,  p.  53.  '-  Rugpe.']     He  lies  in  the  midit  of  the 

'  a  xlron^  handsome  chapel  at  the  west  rhoir. — MS.  in  Bodl.  copy. 


16  THE    ANTIQUITIES    OF    NORWICH. 

unto  a  declaration  against  the  pope's  supremacy,  in  the  time 
of  Henry  VIII. 

Or  of  Bishop  John  Hopton,  who  was  bishop  in  the  time 
of  Queen  Mary,  and  died  tlie  same  year  with  her.  He  is 
mentioned,  together  with  his  Chancellor,  Dunning,  by  John 
Fox,  in  his  Martyrology. 

Or  lastly,  of  Bishop  William  Redman,  of  Trinity  College, 
in  Cambridge,  who  was  archdeacon  of  Canterbury.  His 
arms  are  upon  a  board  on  the  north  side  of  the  choir,  near  to 
the  pulpit. 

Of  the  four  bishops  in  Queen  Elizabeth's  reign,  Parkhurst, 
Freake,  Seamier,  and  Redman,  Sir  John  Harrington,  in  his 
History  of  the  Bishops  in  her  Time,  writeth  thus : — For  the 
four  bishops  in  the  queen's  days,  they  liv'd  as  bishops  should 
do,  and  were  not  warriours,  like  Bishop  Spencer,  their  pre- 
decessor. 

Some  bishops  were  buried  neither  in  the  body  of  the 
church  nor  in  the  choir,  but  in  our  Lady's  chapel,  at  the  east 
end  of  the  church,  built  by  Bishop  Walter  de  Suthfield,^  (in 
the  reign  of  Henry  III.)  wherein  he  was  buried,  and  miracles 
said  to  be  wrought  at  his  tomb,  he  being  a  person  of  great 
cliarity  and  piety. 

Wherein  also  was  buried  Bishop  Simeon  de  Wanton,  vel 
Walton,  and  Bishop  Alexander,  who  had  been  prior  of  the 
convent ;  and  also,  as  some  think.  Bishop  Roger  Skerewyng, 
and  probably  other  bishops  and  persons  of  quality,  whose 
tombs  and  monuments  we  now  in  vain  enquire  after  in  the 
church. 

This  was  a  handsome  chapel ;  and  there  was  a  fair  entrance 
into  it  out  of  the  church,  of  a  considerable  height  also,  as  may 
be  seen  by  the  outside,  where  it  adjoined  unto  the  wall  of  the 
church.  But,  being  ruinous,  it  was,  as  I  have  heard,  de- 
molished in  the  time  of  Dean  Gardiner;  but  what  became  of 
the  tombs,  monuments,  and  grave-stones,  we  have  no  account. 
In  this  chapel  the  bishop's  consistory,  or  court,  might  be  kept 
in  old  time :  for  we  find  in  Fox's  Martyrology,  that  divers 
persons  accused  of  heresy  were  examined  by  the  bishop,  or 

•"'  Suthfidd,']  or  Suffield.— 5.  Wd.  Norwich,  p.  l.  ^.—MS.  note  Uj  Le  Neve, 

He    built  the  hospital  of  St.  Giles  in     iv  Bodl.  Copy. 


THL    ANTUiUlTlKS    OF    NORWICH.  17 

his  chancellor,  in  St.  Mary's  chapel.  This  i'amous  bishop, 
Walter  de  Suthteild,  who  built  this  chapel,  is  also  said  to  have 
built  the  hospital  *  not  tar  oft". 

Again,  divers  bishops  sat  in  this  see,,  who  left  not  their 
bones  in  this  church  ;  for  some  died  not  here,  but  at  distant 
places;  some  were  translated  to  other  bishopricks ;  and 
some,  though  they  lived  and  died  here,  were  not  buried  in  this 
church. 

Some  died  at  distant  places,  as  Bishop  Richard  Courtney, 
Chancellor  of  Oxforil,  and  in  great  favour  witii  King  Henry  V. 
by  whom  he  was  sent  unto  the  king  of  France,  to  challenge 
liis  right  unto  that  crown ;  but  he  dying  in  France,  his  body 
was  brought  into  England,  and  interred  in  Westminster-abbey, 
among  the  kings. 

Bishop  William  Bateman,  LL.D.,  born  in  Norwich,  who 
founded  Trinity-hall,  in  Cambridge,  and  persuaded  Gonvil  to 
build  Gonvil-coUege,  died  at  Avignon,  in  France,  being  sent 
by  the  king  to  Rome,°  and  was  buried  in  that  city. 

Bishop  William  Ayermin  died  near  London. 

Bishop  ThouKis  Thirlby,  doctor  of  law,  died  in  Archbishop 
Matthew  Parkers  house,  and  was  buried  at  Lambeth,  with 
this  inscription : — Hie  jacet  Thomas  Thirlby,  olim  Episcopus 
Eliensis,  qui  obiit  26  die  Augusti,  Anno  Domini  1570. 

Bishop  Thomas  Jann,  who  was  Prior  of  Ely,  died  at  Folk- 
ston-abbey,  near  Dover,  in  Kent.^ 

Some  were  translated  unto  other  bishopricks  ;  as  Bishop 
William  Ralegh  was  removed  unto  Winchester,  by  King 
Henry  IIL 

Bishop  Ralph  de  Walpole  was  translated  to  Ely,  in  the 
time  of  Edward  L ;  he  is  said  to  have  begun  the  building  of 
the  cloister,  which  is  esteemed  the  fairest  in  England. 

Bishop  William  Alnwick  built  the  church  gates  at  the 
west  end  of  the  church,  and  the  great  window,  and  was  trans- 
lated to  Lincoln,  in  the  reign  of  Henry  VL 

^  hospital.]  Saint  Giles's  Hospital,  Clement  VI.,  who  lived  at  Avignon." 
Bishopsgate  Street.  "  Kent.]      In     Blomefielirs     Norwich 

"  to  Rome.]     Kirkpatrick,  in  his  copy,  (part  I,  p.  513)  it  is  statt-d,  that  what  is 

has  struck  out  these  words,  and  substi-  here  said  of  his  having  been  prior  of  Kly, 

tuted  "    thither,"   adding  the  following  and  in  Le  Neve's    Fasti   of  his  dying  at 

explanatory  observation,    "  viz.  to  Pope  I'olkston-abbey,  is  a  mistake. 

VOL.    IV.  C 


18  THE    ANTIQUITIES    OF    NORWICH. 

And  of  later  time,  Bishop  Edmund  Freake,  who  succeeded 
Bishop  Parkhurst,  was  removed  unto  Worcester,  and  there 
lieth  entombed. 

Bishop  Samuel  Harsnet,  master  of  Pembroke-hall,  in  Cam- 
bridge, and  bishop  of  Chichester,  was  thence  translated  to  York. 

Bishop  Francis  White,  almoner  unto  the  king,  formerly 
bishop  of  Carlisle,  translated  unto  Ely. 

Bishop  Matthew  Wren,  dean  of  the  chapel,  translated  also 
to  Ely,  and  was  not  buried  here. 

Bishop  John  Jegon,  who  died  1617,  was  buried  at  Aylsham, 
near  Norwich.  He  was  master  of  Bennet-coUege,  and  dean  of 
Norwich,  whose  arms,  two  chevrons  with  an  eagle  on  a  canton, 
are  yet  to  be  seen  on  the  west  side  of  the  bishop's  throne. 

My  honoured  friend,  Bishop  Joseph  Hall,  dean  of  Wor- 
cester, and  bishop  of  Exon,  translated  to  Norwich,  was  buried 
at  Heigham,  near  Norwich,  where  he  hath  a  monument. 
When  the  revenues  of  the  church  were  alienated,  he  retired 
unto  that  suburban  parish,  and  there  ended  his  days,  being 
above  80  years  of  age.  A  person  of  singular  humility, 
patience,  and  piety  :  his  own  works  are  the  best  monument 
and  character  of  himself,  which  was  also  very  lively  drawn  in 
his  excellent  funeral  sermon,  preached  by  my  learned  and 
faithful  old  friend,  John  Whitefoot,  rector  of  Heigham,  a 
very  deserving  clerk  of  the  convocation  of  Norfolk.  His 
arms,  in  the  Register  Office  of  Norwich,  are  sable  three 
talbots'  heads  erased  argent. 

My  honoured  friend  also.  Bishop  Edward  Reynolds,  was 
not  buried  in  the  church,  but  in  the  bishop's  chapel ;  which 
was  built  by  himself.  He  was  born  at  Southampton,  brought 
up  at  Merton-college,  in  Oxford,  and  the  first  bishop  of  Nor- 
wich after  the  king's  restoration :  a  person  much  of  the 
temper  of  his  predecessor.  Dr.  Joseph  Hall,  of  singular  affa- 
bility, meekness,  and  humility ;  of  great  learning ;  a  frequent 
preacher,  and  constant  resident.  He  sat  in  this  see  about  17 
years ;  and,  though  buried  in  his  private  chapel,  yet  his 
funeral  sermon  was  preached  in  the  cathedral,  by  Mr.  Bene- 
dict Rively,  now  minister  of  St.  Andrews.  He  was  suc- 
ceeded by  Dr.  Anthony  Sparrow,  our  worthy  and  honoured 
diocesan. 


THE    ANTIQUITIES    OF    NORWICH.  19 

It  is  thought  that  some  bishops  were  buried  in  the  old 
bishop's  chapel,  said  to  be  built  by  Bishop  John  Salmon,  [de- 
molished in  the  time  of  the  late  war,]  tor  therein  were  many 
grave-stones,  and  some  plain  monuments.  This  old  chapel 
was  higher,  broader,  and  much  larger  than  the  said  new 
chapel  built  by  Bishop  Reynolds ;  l)ut  being  covered  with 
lead,  the  lead  was  sold,  and  taken  away  in  the  late  rebellious 
times;  and,  the  fabric  growing  ruinous  and  useless,  it  was 
taken  down,  and  some  of  the  stones  made  use  of  in  the  build- 
ing of  the  new  chapel. 

Now,  whereas,  there  have  been  so  many  noble  and  ancient 
families  in  these  parts,  yet  we  find  not  more  of  them  to  have 
been  buried  in  this,  the  mother  church.    It  may  be  considered, 
that  no  small  numbers  of  them  were  interred  in  the  churches 
and  chapels  of  the  monasteries  and  religious  houses  of  this 
city,  especially  in  three  thereof;  the  Austin-friars,  the  Black- 
friars,  the  Carmelite,  or  White-friars ;  for  therein  were  buried 
many   persons   of  both    sexes,    of  great   and  good  families, 
whereof  there  are  few  or  no  memorials  in  the  cathedral.     And 
in  the  best  preserved  registers  of  such  interments  of  old,  from 
monuments  and  inscriptions,  we  find  the  names  of  men  and 
women    of  many   ancient   families;  as  of   Ufford,    Hastings, 
Radclifte,  Morley,  Windham,    Geney,   Clifton,  Pigot,  Hen- 
grave,  Garney,  Howell,  Ferris,  Bacon,  Boys,  Wichingham, 
Soterley;  of  Falstolph,  Ingham,  Felbrigge,  Talbot,  I larsick, 
Pagrave,    Berney,    Woodhouse,    Howldich ;    of   Argenton, 
Somerton,    Gros,    Benhall,    Banyard,    Paston,    Crunthorpe, 
^^'ithe,  Colet,  Gerbrigge,  Berry,  Calthorpe,  Everard,  Hether- 
set,  Wachesham.     All  lords,  knights,  and  esquires,  with  divers 
others.     Beside  the  great  and  noble  families  of  the  Bigots, 
Mowbrays,  Howards,  were  the  most  part  interred  at  Thct- 
ford,  in  the  religious  houses  of  which  they  were  founders  or 
benefactors.     The   Mortimers   were  buried   at  Attleburgh ; 
the  Aubeneys  at  Wymondham,  in  the  priory  or  abbey  founded 
by  them.     And  Camden  says,  that  a  great  part  of  the  nobility 
and  gentry  of  those   parts  were  buried  at  Pentney  abbey. 
Many  others  were  buried  dispersedly  in  churches  or  religious 
houses,  founded  or  endowed  by  themselves  ;  and,  therefore, 
it  is  the  less  to  be  wondered  at,  that  so  many  great  and  con- 

c  J 


20  THE    ANTIQUITIES    OF    NORWICH. 

siderable  persons  of  this  counti-y  were  not  interred  in  this 
church. 

There  are  twenty-four  escutcheons/  viz.,  six  on  a  side  on 
the  inside  of  the  steeple  over  the  choir,  with  several  coats  of 
arms,  most  whereof  are  memorials  of  things,  persons,  and 
families,  well-wishers,  patrons,  benefactors,  or  such  as  were  in 
special  veneration,  honour,  and  respect,  from  the  church.  As 
particularly  the  arms  of  England,  of  Edward  the  Confessor; 
an  hieroglyphical  escutcheon  of  the  Trinity,  unto  which  this 
church  was  dedicated.  Three  cups  within  a  wreath  of  thorns, 
the  arms  of  Ely,  the  arms  of  the  see  of  Canterbury  impaling 
the  coat  of  the  famous  and  magnified  John  Morton,  archbishop 
of  Canterbury,  who  was  bishop  of  Ely  before ;  of  bishop 
James  Goldwell,  that  honoured  bishop  of  Norwich.  The 
three  lions  of  England,  St.  George's  cross,  the  arms  of  the 
church  impaled  with  Prior  Bosviles'  coat,  the  arms  of  the 
church  impaled  with  the  private  coats  of  three  priors,  the 
arms  of  the  city  of  Norwich. 

There  are  here  likewise  the  coats  of  some  great  and  wor- 
thy families  ;  as  of  Vere,  Stanley,  De  la  Pole,  Wingfield, 
Heydon,  Townshend,  Bedingfield,  Bruce,  Clere;  which  be- 
ing little  taken  notice  of,  and  time  being  still  like  to  obscure, 
and  make  them  })ast  knowledge,  I  would  not  omit  to  have  a 
draught  thereof  set  down,  which  I  keep  by  me. 


'  escut(-heui>s.~\     These  are  now  cover-       9.  Vere,  Earl  of  Oxford, 

ed  by  the  painted    ceiling.     In    Blom-  10.  Townshend. 

field's    Norwich    the    author   complains  11.  Bedingfield. 

that  these  escutcheons  are  "misplaced,  12.  Clere  impaling  Dovedale. 
and  wrong   described  ; "    the    arrange-  west  side. 

ment  on  the  annexed  plate,  and  in  the  13.  Priory  impaling  Prior  Spynk  (1488). 

following  description,  has   consequently  11.  Priory  impaling  Prior  ]>ozouti(l'171)- 

been  adopted  : —  1.5.  Norwich. 

EAST    SIDE.  ^*'*  ^'*  ^''"'■g'"- 

,     „  1  i^     1     J    "  1  17-  Priory  impaling  Prior  Molet  (14.53). 

1.  France  and  England  quarterly.  io  u  •         •  '     i-         o  •        u        i      i 
„    „,        ,    ,     /-.^r-  18.  Priory    impahng    Prior    Heverlond 

2.  Edward  the  Confessor.  (\i-^c\ 

3.  Emblem  of  the  Trinity.  ^         ''„,„^„  cr^r- 

.      P      ,,  r.u      c  .  NORTH    SIDE. 

4.  Emblem  of  the  Sacrament.  m  u  „     « -.-.     r       r->  i      i 

,     p        .      .  19.  Brewse  impaling  Debenham. 

5.  East  Angles.  ,.       ,,      .  20.  Wingfield  quartering  Bovill. 

6.  Canterbury  See  impaling  Moreton.  „]  \\ex\ 

SOUTH  SIDE.  22.  Stanley    and    his   quarterings,    and 

7.  Stanley,  Earl  of  Derby,  and  his  quar-  Plais  quartering  Ufford. 
terings ;  impaling  France  and  V.ng-  23.  De  la  Pole  impaling  Burwasii. 
land  quarterly.  24.  Norwicli  See  impaling  Bishop  Gold- 

8.  England.  well's  coat  and  devices. 


mm 

Mm 

GI>mm 


--•5 


-s^'^ 


THE    ANTIQUITIES    OF    NORWICH.  ^I 

There  are  also  many  coats  of  arms  on  the  walls,  aiul  in 
the  M  indows  of  the  east  end  of  the  chnrch ;  but  none  so 
often  as  those  of  the  Boleyns,  viz.  in  a  Held  Arg.  a  Chev. 
Gnl.  between  three  bulls  heads'  couped  sab.  armed  or ; 
whereof  some  are  quartered  with  the  arms  of  noble  fami- 
lies. As  also  about  the  church,  the  arms  of  Hastings,  De 
la  Pole,  lieydon,  Stapleton,  Windiiam,  Wichingham,  Clifton, 
Heveningham,  Bokcnham,  Inglos. 

In  the  north  winilow  of  Jesus'  chapel  are  the  arms  of 
lladclift'  and  Cecil ;  and  m  the  east  window  of  the  same 
chapel  the  coats  of  Branch  and  of  Beale. 

There  are  several  escutcheon  boards  fastened  to  the  upper 
seats  of  the  choir:  upon  the  three  lowest  on  the  south  side 
are  the  arms  of  Bishop  Jegon,  of  the  Pastons,  and  of  the 
Hobarts ;  and  in  one  above  the  arms  of  the  Howards.  On 
the  board  on  the  north  side  are  the  arms  of  Bishop  lledmayn; 
and  of  the  Howards. 

Upon  the  outside  of  the  gate,  next  to  the  school,  are  the 
escutcheons  and  arms  of  Erpingham,  who  built  the  gates. 
[Also  the  coats  of  Clopton  and  Walton,]  being  an  orle  of 
martlets  ;  or  such  families  who  married  with  the  Erpinghams. 
The  word  pcrna"  often  upon  the  gates,  shews  it  to  have 
been  built  upon  penance. 

At  the  west  end  of  the  church  are  chiefly  observable  the 
figure  of  King  William  Rufus,  or  King  Henry  I.,  and  a 
bishop  on  his  knees  receiving  the  charter  from  him:  or  else 
of  King  Henry  VI.,  in  whose  reign  this  gate  and  fair  window 
were  built.  Also  the  maimed  statues  of  bishops,  whose 
copes  are  garnished  and  charged  with  a  cross  moline :  and  at 
their  feet,  escutcheons,  with  the  arms  of  the  chu»-ch ;  and 
also  escutcheons  with  crosses  molines.  That  these,  or  some 
of  them,  were  the  statues  of  Bishop  William  Alnwick,  seems 
more  than  probable  ;  for  he  built  the  three  gates,  and  the 
great  window  '  at  the  west  end  of  the  church  ;  ami  where  the 

-  /xr/ia.]     This  word  is  not  Poena  but  his   tombstone. — See   Blonufie/d's    A'or- 

PttlR    f'e  old  way  of  writing   Ihhik,  ""'<■''.  P^rt  H,  p.  30,  :ind  liritton's  Nor- 

(th.s  was  first  suggested  by  the  late  Dr.  "''^''  C""""''-"'- 

Sayers,)  it  appears  to  have  been  intend-         ■*  "'«  *'''<'"'  u-imlow.]     The  great  west 

ed  for  his  motto;   as  was  also  the  word  window  has  been  found  on  a  late  survey 

■Brtoar  on  a  brass  label  at  the  corner  of  "^  'la*'^  "j""  P'"  '"  •'•'^  »  ''r-'mc  '"'o  ''»<■ 


22  THE    ANTIQUITIES    OF    NORWICH. 

arms  of  the  see  are  in  a  roundele,  are  these  words, 

Orate  pro   anima  Domini  Willelmi  Alnwyk. Also  in 

another  escutcheon,  charged  with  a  cross  mohne,  there  is  the 
same  motto  round  about  it. 

Upon  the  wooden  door  on  the  outside,  there  are  also  the 
three  mitres,  which  are  the  arms  of  the  see  upon  one  leaf, 
and  a  cross  moline  on  the  other. 

Upon  the  outside  of  the  end  of  the  north  cross  aisle,  there 
is  a  statue  of  an  old  person ;  which,  being  formerly  covered 
and  obscured  by  plaster  and  mortar  over  it,  was  discovered 
upon  the  late  reparation  or  whitening  of  that  end  of  the  aisle. 
Tliis  may  probably  be  the  statue  of  Bishop  Richard  Nicks,*  or 
the  Blind  Bishop ;  for  he  built  the  aisle,  or  that  part  thereof, 
and  also  the  roof,  where  his  arms  are  to  be  seen,  a  chevron 
between  three  leopards'  heads  gules. 

The  roof  of  the  church  is  noble  and  adorned  v>ith  figures. 
In  the  roof  of  the  body  of  the  church  there  are  no  coats  of 
arms,  but  representations  from  scripture  story,  as  the  story 
of  Pharaoh ;  of  Sampson  towards  the  east  end ;  figures  of 
the  last  supper,  and  of  our  Saviour  on  the  cross,  towards  the 
west  end  ;^  besides  others  of  foliage  and  the  like  ornamental 
figures. 

The  north  wall  of  the  cloister  was  handsomely  beautified, 
with  the  arms  of  some  of  the  nobility  in  their  proper  colours, 
with  their  crests,  mantlings,  supporters,  and  the  whole 
achievement  quartered  with  the  several  coats  of  their  matches, 
drawn  very  large  from  the  upper  part  of  the  wall,  and  took  up 
about  half  of  the  wall.  They  are  eleven  in  number,  parti- 
cularly these.  1.  An  empty  escutcheon.  2.  The  achieve- 
ment of  Howard,  Duke  of  Norfolk.  3.  Of  Clinton.  4. 
Russel.  5.  Cheyney.  6.  The  Queen's  achievement.  7. 
Hastings.     8.  Dudley.     9.  Cecil.     10.  Carey.     11.  Hatton. 


west  front,  and  lieipg  ready  to  fall  out  field's  History  of  Norwich,    part  I,    p. 

was  fastened  witli  irons;   Dean  Bullock,  546. 

about  1748,  cliipt  off  all    the  outer  or-  ^  e«f/.]      This   part  was  done  in  the 

nameiit  of  the  west  front  and  new  eased  time  of,  if  not  by  Bishop  Lyhert,  as  a])- 

it. — MS.  note  probably  by  Ives.  pears  by  his  arms  and  his  rebus  alter- 

■*  Nicks.}     Bishop   Nix  only   re-built  iiately   upon    the   pillars  on    each   side, 

the  roof,  the    effigy  is  of  Herbert,  the  where   the   foundations    of   the  vaulted 

foimder,    it   being  exactly  in  the  same  roof  begin  upon   the  old  work. — Kirh- 

nianner   as    that    on  his    seal. — Blome-  jmtrick's  MS.  notes. 


THE    ANTIQUITIES    OF    NOKWICH.  J?3 

They  were  made  soon  after  Queen  Elizabeth  came  to  Nor- 
wicl),  ann.  lo78,  where  she  reinahied  u  week,  and  lodjLfcil  at 
the  bishop's  palace,  in  the  time  of  Bishop  Freake,  attended  by 
many  of  the  nobility,  and  particularly  by  those  whose  arms 
are  here  set  down. 

They  made  a  very  handsome  show,  especially  at  that  time, 
when  the  cloister  windows  were  painted  unto  the  cross  bars. 
The  figures  of  those  coats,  in  their  distinguishable  and  dis- 
cernable  colours,  are  not  beyond  my  remembrance.  But  in 
the  late  times,  when  the  lead  was  faulty  and  the  stone  work 
decayed,  the  rain  fallhig  upon  the  wall  washed  them  away. 

The  pavement  also  of  the  cloister  on  the  same  side  was 
broken  and  the  stones  taken  away,  a  floor  of  dust  remaining: 
but  that  side  is  now  handsomely  paved  by  the  beneficence  of 
my  worthy  friend  A\'illiam  Burleigh,  Esq. 

At  the  stone  cistern *"  in  the  cloister,  there  is  yet  perceivable 
a  Hon  rampant,  argent,  in  a  field  sable,  which  coat  is  now 
quartered  in  the  arms  of  the  Howards. 

In  the  painted  glass  in  the  cloister,  which  hath  been  above 
the  cross  bars,  there  are  several  coats.  And  I  find  by  an 
account  taken  thereof  and  set  down  in  their  proper  colours, 
that  here  were  these  following,  viz.  the  arms  of  Morley, 
Shelton,  Scales,  Erpingham,  Gournay,  Mowbray,  Savage 
now  Rivers,  three  coats  of  Thorpe's  and  one  of  a  hon  rampant, 
gules  in  a  field  or,  not  well  known  to  what  family  it  belongeth. 

Between  the  lately  demolished  chapter-house  and  St. 
Luke's  chapel,  there  is  an  handsome  chapel,  wherein  the 
consistory  or  bishop's  court  is  kept,  with  a  noble  gilded  roof. 
This  goeth  under  no  name,  but  may  well  be  called  Beauch- 
ampe's  chapel  or  the  chapel  of  our  Lady  and  All  Saints,  as 
being  built  by  William  Beauchampe,  according  to  this  in- 
scription"— In    honore   Beate   Marie    Virginis,    et   omnium 

'  cistern.'^  The  lavatories  at  the  south-  Second's  time,  as  out  of  the  records  of 

west  angle.  the  church  may  be  collected.      The  said 

'   inscription.l      Kirkpatrick,     in    his  William  Uauchuii  being  often  meniioncd 

MS.  notes  to  his  copy  of  the  Posthunioui  therein,     but     Ilcauchamp     never."     It 

Works,  (now   in    the  possession   of  Dr.  also  appears  from    Kirkpatrick 's  sketch 

Sutton,)    says,    "  that    it  was    certainly  of  the    inscription,    that    there   was    not 

William    Bauchun  svho  was   the  founder  sufficient   space   on   the   stone   for   more 

of  this  chapel  and  g^ue  lands  to  it,  in  than  "Hauchun." 
the    latter    end    of    King     Edw.-ird     the 


24  •       THE    ANTIQUITIES    OF    NORWICH. 

sanctorum  Willelmus  Beauchampe  capellam  heme  ordinavit, 
et  ex  propriis  sumptihus  constmxit.     This  incription  is  in  old 
letters  on  the  outside  of  the  wall,  at  the  south  side  of  the 
chapel,  and  almost  obliterated.     He  was  buried  under  an  arch 
in  the  wall  which  was  richly  gilded ;  and  sortie  part  of  the 
gilding  is  yet  to  be  perceived,  though  obscured  and  blinded 
by  the  bench  on  the  inside.     I  have  heard  there  is  a  vault 
below  gilded  like  the  roof  of  the  chapel.     The  founder  of 
this  chapel,  William  Beauchampe  or  de  Bello  Campo,  might 
be  one  of  the  Beauchampes,  who  were  Lords  of  Aberga- 
venny; for  William  Lord  Abergavenny  had  lands  and  manors, 
in  this  country.     And  in  the  register  of  institutions  it  is  to  be 
seen,  that  William  Beauchampe,  Lord  of  Abergavenny,  was 
lord  patron  of  Berg  cum  Apton,  five  miles  distant  from  Nor- 
wich, and  presented  clerks  to  that  living,   1406,  and  after- 
ward :    so  that  if  he  lived  a  few  years  after,   he  might  be 
buried  in  the  latter  end  of  Henry  IV.,  or  in  the  reign  of 
Henry  V.,  or  in  the  beginning  of  Henry  VL     Where  to  find 
Heydon's  chapeP  is  more  obscure,  if  not  altogether  unknown; 
for  such  a  place  there  was,  and  known  by  the  name  of  Hey- 
don's chapel,  as  I  find  in  a  manuscript  concerning  some  an- 
cient families  of  Norfolk,  in  these  words ; — John  Heydon  of 
Baconsthorpe,  Esq.  died  in  the  reign  of  Edward  IV.,  ann. 
1 479.     He  built  a  chapel  on  the  south  side  of  the  cathedral 
church  of  Nortvich,  where  he  was  buried.     He  was  in  great 
favour  with  King  Henry  VI.,  and  took  part  with  the  house 
of  Lancaster  against  that  of  York. 

Henry  Heydon,  Knight,  his  heir,  built  the  church  of  Salt- 
house,  and  made  the  causey  between  Thursford  and  W^al- 
singham,  at  his  own  charge.  He  died  in  the  time  of  Henry 
VII.,  and  was  buried  in  Heydon's  chapel,  joining  to  the  ca- 
thedral aforesaid.  The  arms  of  the  Ileydons  are  argent,  and 
gules  a  cross  engrailed  counter-changed,  make  the  third 
escutcheon  in  the  north-row  over  the  choir,  and  are  in  several 
places  in  the  glass  windows,  especially  on  the  south  side,  and 
once  in  the  deanery. 


•*  Heydon's   chapel.']     This    chapel    is     or  IJachun's  chapel ;  see  plan  in  Blome- 
placed  on  the  west  side  of  Beaucliampc's     field's  Norwich. 


THF,    ANTIQUITIES    OF    NORWICH.  Q5 

There  was  a  chapel^  to  the  south  side  of  the  gaol  or  prison, 
into  which  there  is  one  door  out  of  the  entry  of  the  cloister  ; 
and  there  was  another  out  of  the  cloister  itself,  which  is  now 
made  up  of  brick  work :  the  stone  work  which  reniaineth  on 
the  inside  is  strong  and  handsome.  This  seems  to  have  been 
a  much  freciuented  chapel  of  the  priory  by  the  wearing  of  the 
steppings  unto  it,  which  are  on  the  cloister  side. 

Many  other  chapels  there  were  within  the  walls  and  circuit 
of  the  priory,  as  of  St.  Mary  of  the  Marsh,  of  St.  Ethel- 
bert,  and  others.^  But  a  strong  and  handsome  fabric  of  one 
is  still  remaining,  which  is  the  chapel  of  St.  John  the  Evan- 
gelist, said  to  have  been  founded  by  Bishop  John  Salmon, 
who  died  ann.  IS25,  and  four  priests  were  entertained  for  the 
daily  service  therein :  that  whicii  was  properly  the  chapel,  is 
now  the  free  school:  the  adjoining  buildings  made  up  the 
refectory,  chambers,  and  offices  of  the  society. 

Under  the  chapel,  there  was  a  charnel-house,  which  was 
a  remarkable  one  in  former  times,  and  the  name  is  still  re- 
tained. In  an  old  manuscript  of  a  sacrist  of  the  church,  com- 
municated to  me  by  my  worthy  friend,  Mr.  John  Burton,  the 
learned  and  very  deserving  master  of  the  free  school,  I  find 
that  the  priests  had  a  provisional  allowance  from  the  rectory 
of  Westhall,  in  Suffolk.  And  of  the  charnel-house  it  is  de- 
livered, that  with  the  leave  of  the  sacrist,  the  bones  of  such 
as  were  buried  in  Norwich,  might  be  brought  into  it.  In 
carnario  subtus  dictam  capellam  sancti  Johann'is  constitiito, 
ossa  htimana  in  civitate  Norwici  humata,  de  Ucentia  sacrista', 
qui  dicti  carnarii  claveni  ct  custodiam  habehit  specialon 
lit  usque  ad  resurrectionem  generalem  lione.ste  conserventur  a 
cartiibus  integrc  denudata  reponi  volumus  et  obsignari.  I'ro- 
bably  the  bones  were  piled  in  good  order,  the  skulls,  arms,  and 

•  There  was.  !fC.'\  There  can  be  lit-  in  the  centre  of  which,  in  the  intersect- 
tle  doubt  but  that  this  was  the  original  ing  groins  is  a  boss,  containing  the  re- 
chapter-house  ;  its  octangular  east  end  presentation  of  the  head  of  a  king, 
and  its  situation  corresponding  with  which  I  think  can  be  no  other  than  that 
those  of  the  cathedrals  of  Durham,  Here-  of  St.  Edmund,  and  that  we  may  with 
ford,  Worcester,  Gloucester,  Lincoln,  propriety  consider  this  place  as  the 
&"c.  chapel  dedicated  to  St.  ICdmiind.  Ad- 
'  and  othert.'\  The  chapel  of  St.  joining  this,  north,  was  another  chapel, 
Edmund  has  been  placed  by  Blomefield  with  a  semicircular  cast  end  ;  correspond- 
on  the  site  of  the  chapter-house.  In  ing  with  that  on  the  e;ist  side  of  the 
the  late  repairs,  part  of  the  old  gaol  has  north  transept.  This  was  probably  the 
been  appropriated   to  the  dean'>  vestry.  Triors'  Chapel. 


26  THE    ANTIQUITIES    OF    NORWICH. 

leg  bones,  in  their  distinct  rows  and  courses,  as  in  many  char- 
nel-houses. How  these  bones  were  afterwards  disposed  of 
we  have  no  account ;  or  whether  they  had  not  the  like  re- 
moval with  those  in  the  charnel-house  of  St.  Paul,  kept 
under  a  chapel,  on  the  north  side  of  St.  Paul's  church-yard : 
for  when  the  chapel  was  demolished,  the  bones  which  lay  in 
the  vault,  amounting  to  more  than  a  thousand  cart  loads, 
were  conveyed  into  Finsbury  Fields,  and  there  laid  in  a 
moorish  place,  with  so  much  soil  to  cover  them  as  raised  the 
ground  for  three  windmills  to  stand  on,  which  have  since 
been  built  there,  according  as  John  Stow  hath  delivered  in 
his  survey  of  London. 

There  was  formerly  a  fair  and  large  but  plain  organ  in  the 
church,  and  in  the  same  place  with  this  at  present,  (It  was 
agreed  in  a  chapter  by  the  dean  and  prebends,  that  a  new 
organ  be  made,  and  timber  fitted  to  make  a  loft  for  it,  June 
6,  ann.  1G07,  repaired  1626,  and  £10.  which  Abel  Colls 
gave  to  the  church,  was  bestowed  upon  it.)  That  in  the  late 
tumultuous  time  was  pulled  down,  broken,  sold,  and  made 
away.  But  since  his  Majesty's  restoration,  another  fair,  well- 
tuned,  plain  organ,  was  set  up  by  Dean  Crofts  and  the  chap- 
ter," and  afterwards  painted,  and  beautifully  adorned,  by  the 
care  and  cost  of  my  honoured  friend  Dr.  Herbert  Astley,  the 
present  worthy  dean.  There  were  also  five  or  six  copes  be- 
longing to  the  church  ;  which,  though  they  looked  somewhat 
old,  were  richly  embroidered.  These  were  formerly  carried 
into  the  market-place ;  ^  some  blowing  the  organ  pipes  before 

^  another   organ,    Sfc.']      Finished   in  cost  of  the  founder  and  skill  of  the  ma- 

1664. — MS.  Kirkp.  son  ;  what  piping  on  the  destroyed  organ 

■^  Market  place. '\       This  occurred  on  pipes;   vestments,   both  copes  and   sur- 

the  9th  March,  1644;  of  which  the  fol-  plices,  together    with   the  leaden  cross, 

lowing  curious  account  is  given  in  Bishop  wliich  had  been  newly  sawed  down  from 

Hall's  Hard  Measure,  p.  63.  over  the  greenyard  pulpit,  and  the  sing- 

"  It  is    tragical  to  relate  the  furious  ing  books  and  service  books  were  carried 

sacrilege  committed  under  the  authority  to  the  fire  in  the  public  market-place ;  a 

of  Linsey,  Tofts  the  sheriff,  and  (ireen-  lewd  wretch  walking  before  the  train  in 

wood;   what  clattering  of  glasses,   what  his  cope  trailing  in  the  dirt,  with  a  ser- 

beating    down    of    walls,    what    tearing  vice  book  in  liis   hand,   imitating,  in  an 

down  of  monuments,  what  pulling  down  impious  scorn,   the  tune,    and   usurping 

of  seats,  and  wresting  out  of  irons  and  the    words  of  the  litany,    the  ordnance 

brass    from    the    windows   and   graves ;  being  discharged  on  the  Guild  day,  the 

what  defacing  of  arms,  what  demolishing  cathedral   was   filled    with    musketeers, 

of  curious  stone-work,  that  had  not  any  drinking  and  tobacconing  as  freely  as  if 

representation   in  the  world,  but  of  the  il  had  turned  alehouse," 


THE    ANTIQUITIES    OF    NORWICH.  xJ7 

them,  and  were  cast  into  u  fire  provided  for  that  purpose, 
with  shouting  and  rejoicing  :  so  that,  at  present,  there  is  but 
one  cope  belonging  to  the  church,  which  was  presented 
thereunto  by  PhiHp  liarbord,  Esq.  tlie  present  high  sheriff 
of  Norfolk,  my  honoured  friend. 

Before  the  late  times,  the  combination*  sermons  were 
preached  in  the  summer  time  at  the  cross  in  the  green-yard,* 
where  there  was  a  good  accommodation  for  the  auditors. 
The  mayor,  aldermen,  with  their  wives  and  oificers,  had  a 
well-contrived  place  built  against  the  wall  of  the  bishop's 
palace,  covered  with  lead ;  so  that  they  were  not  oflended  by 
rain.  Upon  the  North-side  of  the  church,"^  places  were 
built  gallery-wise,  one  above  another  ;  where  the  dean,  pre- 
bends, and  their  wives,  gentlemen,  and  the  better  sort,  very 
well  heard  the  sermon :  the  rest  either  stood,  or  sat  in  the 
green,  upon  long  forms  provided  for  them,  paying  a  penny, 
or  halfpenny  apiece,  as  they  did  at  St.  Paul's  cross  in  Lon- 
don. The  bishop  and  chancellor  heard  the  sermons  at  the 
windows  of  the  bishop's  ])alace  :  the  pulpit  had  a  large  cover- 
ing of  lead  over  i^,  and  a  cross  upon  it ;  and  there  were  eight 
or  ten  stairs  of  stone  about  it,  upon  which  the  hospital  boys 
and  others  stood.  The  preacher  had  his  face  to  the  South, 
and  there  was  a  painted  board,  of  a  foot  and  a  half  broad, 
and  about  a  yard  and  a  half  long,  hanging  over  his  head 


'  combination.]      Dr.    Littleton    thus  G.   Part  built  by  Bishop  Salmon,   a.d. 

defines  the  word;   "\  combination,  or  1320. 

circle  of  preachers  in  a  cathedral  or  uni-  H.  Ditto  by  Bishop  Reynolds,  a.d.  1660. 

vcrsity  church." — Vide  Lai.  Dirt.  ^  church.]     St-e  the  elevation  acconi- 

The  combination  preachers  were  ap-  panying  the  plan  shewing  the  extent  of 

pointed  by  the  bishops  from  the  clergy  galleries. 

of  the  diocese;   to  come  and  preach  a  I.   Entrance  to  the  green-yard. 

sermon  in  the  cathedral,  or  its  preaching  K.  Joist  holes  of  the  first  lloor. 

yard,  at  their  own  charges :  the  Suffolk  L.   Ditto  of  the  second  floor, 

preachers  in  the  sununer  half-year  and  M.   Presumed  height  of  the  roof, 

the  Norfolk  in  the  winter;   which  is  still  N.   Series  of  holes,  4  inches  by  3. 

continued.  The  galleries  appear  to  have  extended 

*  preen-yard.']     See  the  annexed  plan,  nearly  across  the  three  compartments: 

A.  North  aisle  of  the  cathedral.  the  masonry  of  the  centre  compartment 

B.  Entrance  to  the  green-yard.  has  been  very  much  altered  and  disturb- 

C.  Gallery  of  the   dean   and    prebend-  ed  ;  the  double  billet  string-course  is  ob- 
aries.  literated  on  each  side  of  the  window  ; 

D.  Ditto  of  the  mayor  and  aldermen.  two  of  the  columns  directly  above   the 

E.  Presumed  site  of  the  pulpit.  centre  of  the  window  are  removed,  ap- 

F.  Remains  of  the  palace  built  by   Bi-  parently    to   form    a   passage    from    the 
shop  Herbert,  a.d.  1100.  i  hurch  into  the  upper  gallery. 


28  THE    ANTIQUITIES    OF    NORWICH. 

before,  upon  which  were  painted  the  arms  of  the  benefactors '' 
towards  the  combination  sermon,  which  he  particularly  com- 
memorated in  his  prayer,  and  they  were  these ;  Sir  John 
Suckling,  Sir  John  Pettus,  Edward  Nuttel,  Henry  Fasset, 
John  Myngay.  But  when  the  church  was  sequestered,  and 
the  service  put  down,  this  pulpit  was  taken  down,  and  placed 
in  New  Hall  green,  which  had  been  the  artillery-yard,  and 
the  public  sermon  was  there  preached.  But  the  heirs  of  the 
benefactors  denying  to  pay  the  wonted  beneficence  for  any 
sermon  out  of  Christ-church,  (the  cathedral  being  now  com- 
monly so  called)  some  other  ways  were  found  to  provide  a 
minister,  at  a  yearly  salary,  to  preach  every  Sunday,  either 
in  that  pulpit  in  the  summer,  or  elsewhere  in  the  winter. 

I  must  not  omit  to  say  something  of  the  shaft  or  spire  of 
this  church,  commonly  called  the  pinnacle,  as  being  a  hand- 
some and  well-proportioned  fabric,  and  one  of  the  highest 
in  England,  higher  than  the  noted  spires  of  Lichfield,  Chi- 
chester, or  Grantham,  but  lower  than  that  at  Salisbury,  (at  a 
general  chapter,  holden  June  4,  1633,  it  was  agreed  that  the 
steeple  should  be  mended  ^)  for  that  spire  being  raised  upon 
a  very  high  tower,  becomes  higher  from  the  ground  ;  but  this 
spire,  considei'ed  by  itself,  seems,  at  least,  to  equal  that.  It 
is  an  hundred  and  five  yards  and  two  feet  from  the  top  of  the 
pinnacle  unto  the  pavement  of  the  choir  under  it.  The 
spire  is  very  strongly  built,  though  the  inside  be  of  brick. 
The  upper  aperture,  or  window,  is  the  highest  ascent  inward- 
ly ;  out  of  which,  sometimes  a  long  streamer  hath  been  hang- 
ed, upon  the  guild,  or  mayor's  day.  But  at  his  Majesty's 
restoration,  when  the  top  was  to  be  mended,  and  a  new 
gilded  weathercock  was  to  be  placed  upon  it,  there  were 
stayings  made  at  the  upper  window,  and  divers  persons  went 
up  to  the  top  of  tlie  })innacle.  They  first  went  up  into  the 
belfry,  and  then  by  eight  ladders,  on  the  inside  of  the  spire, 
till  they  came  to  the  upper  hole,  or  window ;  then  went  out 


'  be nef actors.']     These    gentlemen,  in  each  preaclier  is  paid  one  guinea  towards 

consideration  of  the  expense  necessarily  hisexpences. 

incurred  by  the  preachers  in  coming  to  "  at  a  general  chapter,   c^c]     C'hrist- 

Norwich,  devised  certain  estates,  &c.   to  church  pinnacle  was  re-edilied  lG3(i. — 

the  corporation  in  trust,   out  of  which  MS.  Starling.  Kirkp. 


THE    ANTIQUITIES    OF    NORWICH.  .1*.) 

unto  the  outside,  where  a  staying  was  set,  and  so  ascenik'd 
up  unto  the  top  stone,  on  which  the  weathercock  staudeth. 

The  cock  is  three  quarters  of  a  yard  higli,  and  one  yard 
and  two  inches  long ;  as  is  also  the  cross  bar,  and  top  stone 
of  the  spire,  which  is  not  flat,  but  consists  of  a  half  globe 
and  channel  about  it ;  and  from  thence  are  eight  leaves  of 
stone  spreading  outward,  under  which  begin  the  eight  rows 
of  crockets,  which  go  down  the  spire  at  five  feet  distance. 

From  the  top  there  is  a  prospect  all  about  the  country. 
Mousehold  hill  seems  low,  and  flat  ground.  The  Castle  hill, 
and  high  buildings,  do  very  much  diminish.  The  river  looks 
like  a  ditch.  The  city,  with  the  streets,  make  a  pleasant 
show,  like  a  garden  with  several  walks  in  it.'-^ 

Though  this  church  for  its  spire,  may  compare,  in  a  man- 
ner, with  any  in  England,  yet  in  its  tombs  and  monuments  it 
is  exceeded  by  many. 

No  kincTS  have  honoured  the  same  with  their  ashes,  and 
but  few  with  their  presence.^  And  it  is  not  without  some 
wonder,  that  Norwich  having  been  for  a  long  time  so  consi- 
derable a  place,  so  few  kings  have  visited  it ;  of  which  num- 
ber, among  so  many  monarchs  since  the  conquest,  we  find  but 
four,  viz.  King  Henry  III.  Edward  I.  Queen  Elizabeth,  and 
our  gracious  Sovereign  now  reigning,  King  Charles  II.  of 
which  I  had  particular  reason  to  take  notice. - 

'  walks  in  it.]     The  sea  is  also  to  be  wich  1341,  and  was  there  again  in  1312 

seen  I'roni  the  North-west  towards  Wells,  and  1.144. 

to  the  South-east  off  the  Suffolk  coast;  llichard   II.    visited    Norwicii  in    1383, 

and  with  the  aid  of  a  telescope,  vessels  according  to  IIoHtig-ihed. 

are  to   be  seen  sailing  along  the  coast  Henry  IV.  visited  the  city  in   1406  as 

between  Happisburgh  and  Lowestoft.  appears   by    the    Norwich    Assembly 

'   presence.]        This    is    certainly    an  Book. — lilomefield. 

error  : —  Henry    V.    visited    Norwich.  — Kirkpa- 

Henry  I.  spent  his  Christinas   at    Nor-  trick's  MS.  notes. 

wich. — Scu.  Cliroii.  1122.  Henry  VI.  visited  Norwich  in  1448  and 

Richard    I.   visited    Norwich. — Kirkpa-  1449. — Dlomefield. 

trick's  MS.  notes.  Edward  IV,  was  in  Norwich  in  1469. — 

King  John  was  at  his  castle  in  Norwich  Ibid. 

on  the  12th  and  13th  October,    1205.  Richard   III.   was  in  Norwich  in   1483. 

— .trcliaologia,  vol.  22,  p.  142.  — Ibid. 

Henry  III.  visited   Norwich,    1256  and  Henry  VII.  kept  iiis  Christmas  at  Nor- 

\Ti2.—^ee  Bloniefield.  wich  in  I486.— /6if/. 

Edward  I.  kept  his  Easter  at  Norwich,  Elizabeth  came  on  her  progress  to  Nor- 

1277. — Stowe.  wich  in  1578. — Ibid. 

Edward  II.  was  at  Norwich  in  January,  Charles  1 1. visited  Norwichin  1671,  and  is 

1327. — Blomefield.  the  last  sovereign  who  visited  that  city. 

Edward  III.  held  a  tournament  at  Nor-  '  Sir  Thomas  being  then  knighted. 


.30  THE    ANTIQUITIES    OF    NORWICH. 

The  castle  was  taken  by  the  forces  of  King  WilUam  the 
Conqueror ;  but  we  find  not  that  he  was  here.  King  Henry 
VII.  by  the  way  of  Cambridge,  made  a  pilgrimage  unto  Wal- 
singhani ;  but  records  tell  us  not  that  he  was  at  Norwich.^ 
King  James  I.  came  sometimes  to  Thetford  for  his  hunting 
recreation,  but  never  vouchsafed  to  advance  twenty  miles 
farther. 

Not  long  after  the  writing  of  these  papers.  Dean  Herbert 
Astley  died,  a  civil,  generous,  and  public-minded  person,  who 
had  travelled  in  France,  Italy,  and  Turkey,  and  was  interred 
near  the  monument  of  Sir  James  Hobart :  unto  whom  suc- 
ceeded my  honoured  friend  Dr.  John  Sharpe,  a  prebend  of 
this  church,  and  rector  of  St.  Giles's  in  the  fields,  London  ; 
a  person  of  singular  woi*th,  and  deserved  estimation,  the  ho- 
nour and  love  of  all  men  ;  in  the  first  year  of  whose  deanery, 
1681,  the  prebends  were  these  : 

Mr.  Joseph  Lovclaiul,  ~)   C  Dr.  William  Smith, 
Dr.  Hezekiah   Burton,  >  <  Mr.  Nathaniel  Hodges, 
Dr.  William  Hawkins,  )    (  Mr.  Humphrey  Prideaux. 

(But  Dr.  Burton  dying  in  that  year,  Mr.  Richard  Kidder 
succeeded,)  worthy  persons,  learned  men,  and  very  good 
preachers. 

'  but  records,  Sf-cl     From  the  author-     that  this  sovereign   visited  Norwich   in 
ities  cited  by  151onieficld  (Norwich,   part     his  way  to  Walsingham. 
I,  p.    174)  there  can  be  no  doubt  but 


THE    ANTIQUITIES    OF    NORWICH. 


ADDENDA. 


I  have  by  me  tlie  picture  of  Chancellor  Spencer,*  drawn 
when  he  was  ninety  years  old,  as  the  inscription  doth  declare, 
which  was  sent  unto  nie  from  Colney. 

Though  Bishop  Nix  sat  lonij  in  the  see  of  Norwich,  yet 
is  not  there  much  delivered  of  him  :  Fox  in  his  Martyrology 
hath  said  something  of  him  in  the  story  of  Thomas  Bihiey, 
who  was  burnt  in  Lollard's  pit,  without  Bishopsgate,  in  his 
time. 

Bishop  Spencer  lived  in  the  reign  of  Richard  II.  and  Hen- 
ry IV.,  sat  in  the  see  of  Norwich  37  years  :  of  a  soldier  made 
a  bishop,  and  sometimes  exercising  the  Ufe  of  a  soldier  in  his 
episcopacy  ;  for  he  led  an  army  into  Flanders  on  the  behalf 
of  Pope  Urban  VI.  in  opposition  to  Clement  the  Anti-pope  ; 
and  also  overcame  the  rebellious  forces  of  Litster,  the  dyer,  in 
Norfolk,  by  North  Walsham,  in  the  reign  of  King  Richard  II. 

Those  that  would  know  the  names  of  the  citizens  who  were 
chief  actors  in  tlie  tumult  in  Bishop  Skerewyng's  time,  may 
find  them  set  down  in  the  bull  of  Pope  Gregory  X. 

Some  bishops,  though  they  lived  and  died  here,  might  not 
be  buried  in  this  church,  as  some  bishops  probably  of  old, 
more  certainly  of  later  time. 

Here  concludes  Sir  Thomas  Browne's  MS.^ 


*   the  picture  of  Chnncrllor  Spencer.]  of  Norfolk's    house    in    Norwich,    A.U. 

P.  L.  Neve  saw  this  picture  in  1715,  at  1715." 

the  house  of  Mr.  Stntliam MS.  note  in  '  Here  concludes,   S(r.'\     This   is    the 

his  copy  in  the  Boillcinn.       In   Kirkpa-  editor's  memorandum  in  the  Posthumous 

trick's  copy  occurs  this  note  :      "  This  Works.     His  continuations  arc  omitted 

or  another  such  picture  is  at  the  Duke  in  the  present  edition. 


JLcttcr  to  a  jTrif  nti, 


UPON    OCCASION    or    1HI.    nCATH    Of    HIS    IMIMVTE    KniEND. 


TIM  HI)    EnilloJ*. 


oniGiNALi.Y  pi:bi.isim:i>  in 

1G90. 


VOL.    IV.  D 


EDITOR'S  PREFACE. 


The  Letter  to  a  Friend  was  printed,  after  the  author's 
death,  by  his  son,  as  a  folio  pamplilct,  in  1690.  The  only 
copy  I  ever  saw  is  in  the  library  of  the  British  Museum.  It 
was  re-printed,  in  the  Posthumous  Works,  in  1712;  and  the 
latter  portion  of  it  (from  page  48,  Posthumous  Works,)  was 
included  in  the  Christian  Morals,  and  for  that  reason  is  not 
here  re-printed. 

From  a  collation  with  a  MS.  copy  in  the  British  Museum, 
(MS.  Sloan.   1862,)  several  additional  passages  are  given. 


ilcttrr  to  a  jTrirnti. 


CtH'E  me  leave  to  wonder  that  news  of  this  nature  should 
have  such  heavy  wings  that  you  should  hear  so  little  con- 
cerning your  dearest  friend,  and  that  I  must  make  that  un- 
willing repetition  to  tell  you,  ad  portam  rigidos  calces  ex- 
tendit,  that  he  is  dead  and  buried,  and  by  this  time  no  puny 
among  the  mighty  nations  of  the  dead ;  for  though  he  left 
this  world  not  very  many  days  past,  yet  every  hour  you  know 
largely  addeth  unto  that  dark  society ;  and  considering  the 
incessant  mortality  of  mankind,  you  cannot  conceive  there 
dieth  in  the  whole  earth  so  few  as  a  thousand  an  hour. 

Although  at  this  distance  you  had  no  early  account  or  par- 
ticular of  his  death,  yet  your  affection  may  cease  to  wonder 
that  you  had  not  some  secret  sense  or  intimation  thereof  by 
dreams,  thoughtful  whisperings,  mercurisms,  airy  nuncios  or 
sympathetical  insinuations,  which  many  seem  to  have  had  at 
the  death  of  their  dearest  friends  :  for  since  we  find  in  that 
famous  story,  that  spirits  themselves  were  fain  to  tell  their 
fellows  at  a  distance  that  the  great  Antonio  was  dead,  we 
have  a  sufficient  excuse  for  our  ignorance  in  such  particulars, 
and  must  rest  content  with  the  common  road,  and  Appian 
way  of  knowledge  by  information.  Though  the  uncertainty 
of  the  end  of  this  world  hath  confounded  all  human  pre- 
dictions ;  yet  they  who  shall  live  to  see  the  sun  and  moon 
darkened  and  the  stars  to  fall  from  heaven,  will  hardly  be  de- 
ceived in  the  advent  of  the  last  day  ;  and  therefore  strange 
it  is,  that  the  common  fallacy  of  consumptive  persons,  who 


88 


LETTER    TO    A    FRIEND. 


feel  not  themselves  dying,  and  therefore  still  hope  to  live, 
should  also  reach  their  friends  in  perfect  health  and  judg- 
ment ; — that  you  should  be  so  little  acquainted  with  Plautus's 
sick  complexion,  or  that  almost  an  Hippocratical  face  should 
not  alarum  you  to  higher  fears,  or  rather  despair,  of  his  con- 
tinuation in  such  an  emaciated  state,  wherein  medical  predic- 
tions fail  not,  as  sometimes  in  acute  diseases,  and  wherein  'tis 
as  dangerous  to  be  sentenced  by  a  physician  as  a  judge. 

Upon  my  first  visit  I  was  bold  to  tell  them  who  had  not  let 
fall  all  hopes  of  his  recovery,  that  in  my  sad  opinion  he  was 
not  like  to  behold  a  grasshopper,  much  less  to  pluck  another 
fig ;  and  in  no  long  time  after  seemed  to  discover  that  odd 
mortal  symptom  in  him  not  mentioned  by  Hippocrates,  that 
is,  to  lose  his  own  face,  and  look  like  some  of  his  near  re- 
lations; for  he  maintained  not  his  proper  countenance,  but 
looked  like  his  uncle,  the  lines  of  whose  face  lay  deep  and 
invisible  in  his  healthful  visage  before:  for  as  from  our  be- 
ginning we  run  through  variety  of  looks,  before  we  come  to 
consistent  and  settled  faces ;  so  before  our  end,  by  sick  and 
languishing  alterations,  we  put  on  new  visages :  and  in  our 
retreat  to  earth,  may  fall  upon  such  looks  which  from  com- 
munity of  seminal  originals  were  before  latent  in  us. 

He  was  fruitlessly  put  in  hope  of  advantage  by  change  of 
air,  and  imbibing  the  pure  aerial  nitre  of  these  parts ;  and 
therefore,  being  so  far  spent,  he  quickly  found  Sardinia  in 
Tivoli,^  and  the  most  healthful  air  of  little  effect,  where 
death  had  set  his  broad  arrow;"  for  he  lived  not  unto  the 
middle  of  May,  and  confirmed  the  observation  of  Hippocra- 
tes^ of  that  mortal  time  of  the  year  when  the  leaves  of  the 
fig-tree  resemble  a  daw's  claw.  He  is  happily  seated  who 
lives  in  places  whose  air,  earth,  and  water,  promote  not  the 
infirmities  of  his  weaker  parts,  or  is  early  removed  into 
regions  that  correct  them.  He  that  is  tabidly  inclined,  were 
unwise  to  pass  his  days  in  Portugal:  cholical  persons  will  find 
little  comfort  in  Austria  or  Vienna :  he  that  is  weak-legged 
must  not  be  in  love  with  Rome,  nor  an  infirm  head  with 

'   TivoIL'l       Cum    mors    vcncrit,    in     rests  they  set  the  figure  of  a  broad  arrow 
medio  Tibure  Sardiuia  est.  upon  ticcs  that  are  to  be  cut  down. 

?  where  death,  ^t]     In  the  king's  fo-         '  observation  of,  S(c.'\  See  Hip.  Epidem. 


i,i:tti:k  to  a.  i-rii:nd.  Si) 

Venice  or  Paris.  Death  hath  not  only  particular  stars  in 
heaven,  hut  malevolent  places  on  earth,  which  single  out  our 
infirmities,  and  strike  at  our  weaker  parts  ;  in  which  concern, 
passager  and  migrant  hirds  have  the  great  advantages;  who 
are  naturally  constituted  for  distant  hahitations,  whom  no  seas 
nor  places  limit,  but  in  their  appointed  seasons  will  visit  us 
from  Greenland  and  3Iount  Atlas,  and  as  some  think,  even 
from  the  Antipodes.* 

Though  we  could  not  have  his  life,  yet  we  missed  not  our 
desires  in  his  soft  departure,  which  was  scarce  an  expiration ; 
and  his  end  not  unlike  his  beginning,  when  the  salient  point 
scarce  aflbrds  a  sensible  motion,  and  his  departure  so  like 
unto  sheep,  that  he  scarce  needed  the  civil  ceremony  of 
closing  his  eyes ;  contrary  unto  the  common  way,  wherein 
death  draws  up,  sheep  let  fall  their  eye-lids.  With  what 
strife  and  pains  we  came  into  the  world  we  know  not ;  but  'tis 
commonly  no  easy  matter  to  get  out  of  it :  yet  if  it  could  be 
made  out,  that  such  who  have  easy  nativities  have  commonly 
hard  deaths,  and  contrarily ;  his  departure  was  so  easy,  that 
we  might  justly  suspect  his  birth  was  of  another  nature,  and 
that  some  Juno  sat  cross-legged  at  his  nativity. 

Besides  his  soft  death,  the  incurable  state  of  his  disease 
might  somewhat  extenuate  your  sorrow,  who  know  that 
monsters  but  seldom  happen,  miracles  more  rarely  in  physic.^ 
Angelas  J'ictorius  gives  a  serious  account  of  a  consumptive, 
hectical,  phthisical  woman,  who  was  suddenly  cured  by  the 
intercession  of  Ignatius/'  We  read  not  of  any  in  scripture 
who  in  this  case  applied  unto  our  Saviour,  though  some  may 
be  contained  in  that  large  expression,  that  he  went  about 
Gahlee  healing  all  manner  of  sickness  and  all  manner  of  dis- 
eases.'  Amulets,  spells,  sigils,  and  incantations,  practised  in 
other  diseases,  are  seldom  pretended  in  this ;  and  we  find  no 
sigil  in  the  Archidoxis  of  Paracelsus  to  cure  an  extreme  con- 
sumption or  marasmus,  which,  if  other  diseases  fail,  will  put 
a  period  unto  long  livers,  and  at  last  makes  dust  of  all.     And 

*  Antipodes.']     Belloniux  de  Avihis.        and  rare  escapes  there  happen  sonaelimes 

*  who  know  that  monsters  hut  seldom     in  physic." 

happen,  miracles,  iSfc]     Monstra  coiilin-         **  An-seli  Vietorii  ConsuUationcs. 
gunt  in   medicina.   flippor.  —  "Strange         ^  Matt,  iv,  25. 


40  LETTER    TO    A    FRIEND. 

therefore  the  stoics  could  not  but  think  that  the  fiery  princi- 
ple would  wear  out  all  the  rest,  and  at  last  make  an  end  of 
the  M'orld,  which  notwithstanding  without  such  a  lingering 
period  the  Creator  may  effect  at  his  pleasure :  and  to  make 
an  end  of  all  things  on  earth,  and  our  planetical  system  of 
the  world,  he  need  but  put  out  the  sun. 

I  was  not  so  curious  to  entitle  the  stars  unto  any  concern  of 
liis  death,  yet  could  not  but  take  notice  that  he  died  when 
the  moon  was  in  motion  from  the  meridian ;  at  which  time  an 
old  Italian  long  ago  would  persuade  me  that  the  greatest  part 
of  men  died  :  but  herein  I  confess  T  could  never  satisfy  my 
curiosity ;  although  from  the  time  of  tides  in  places  upon  or 
near  the  sea,  there  may  be  considerable  deductions;  and 
Pliny  ^  hath  an  odd  and  remarkable  passage  concerning  the 
death  of  men  and  animals  upon  the  recess  or  ebb  of  the  sea. 
However,  certain  it  is,  he  died  in  the  dead  and  deep  part  of 
the  night,  when  Nox  might  be  most  apprehensibly  said  to  be 
the  daughter  of  Chaos,  the  mother  of  sleep  and  death,  ac- 
cording to  old  genealogy;  and  so  went  out  of  this  world 
about  that  hour  when  our  blessed  Saviour  entered  it,  and 
about  what  time  many  conceive  he  will  return  again  unto  it. 
Cardan  hath  a  peculiar  and  no  hard  observation  from  a 
man's  hand  to  know  whether  he  was  born  in  the  day  or  night, 
which  I  confess  holdeth  in  my  own.  And  Scaliger  to  that 
purpose  hath  another  from  the  tip  of  the  ear:^  most  men  are 
begotten  in  the  night,  animals  in  the  day  ;  but  whether  more 
persons  have  been  born  in  the  night  or  the  day,  were  a  curi- 
osity undecidablc,  though  more  have  perished  by  violent 
deaths  in  the  day ;  yet  in  natural  dissolutions  both  times  may 
hold  an  indifferency,  at  least  but  contingent  inequality.  The 
whole  course  of  time  runs  out  in  the  nativity  and  death  of 
things ;  which  whether  they  happen  by  succession  or  coinci- 
dence, are  best  computed  by  the  natural  not  artificial  day. 

That  Charles  the  Fifth  was  crowned  upon  the  day  of  his 
nativity,  it  being  in  his  own  power  so  to  order  it,  makes  no 

*  rUny.']     Aristotelcs  nullum  animal  '■'  ScaUpcr,  <^-c.]     Auris  pars  pendula 

nisi  a-stu  recctlcnte  expirare  affirmat :  ob-  lobus  clicitur,  iion  omnibus  ea  ])ars  est 

servatum  id  multuni  in  (lallieo  Oceano  ct  auribus ;  non  cnim  iis  (jui  noctu  nati  sunt, 

dunlaxat  in   hominc  conipertuni,   jib,  2,  sed   qui    intcrdiu,  maxima  ex    parte. — ' 

cap.  101.  Com.  in  Arislot.  de  Animal,  lib.  1. 


LETTER    TO    A    FKIENI).  41 

singular  animadversion ;  but  that  he  should  also  take  Kini; 
Francis  prisoner  upon  that  day,  was  an  unexpected  coinci- 
dence, wliich  made  the  same  remarkable.  Antipater  who 
liad  an  anniversary  feast  every  year  upon  his  birth-day, 
jieeded  no  astrological  revolution  to  know  what  day  he  should 
ilie  on.  ^^'hen  the  fixed  stars  have  made  a  revolution  unto 
the  points  from  whence  they  first  set  out,  some  of  the  an- 
cients thouirht  the  world  would  have  an  end ;  which  was  a  kind 
of  dying  upon  the  day  of  its  nativity.  Now  the  disease  pre- 
vailing and  swiftly  advancing  about  the  time  of  his  nativity, 
some  were  of  opinion  that  he  would  leave  the  world  on  the 
day  he  entered  into  it :  but  this  being  a  lingering  disease,  and 
creeping  softly  on,  nothing  critical  was  found  or  expected, 
and  he  died  not  before  fifteen  days  after.  Notlung  is  more 
common  with  infants  than  to  die  on  the  day  of  their  nativity, 
to  behold  the  worldly  hours,  and  but  the  fractions  thereof; 
and  even  to  perish  before  their  nativity  in  the  hidden  world  of 
the  womb,  and  before  their  good  angel  is  conceived  to  under- 
take them.  But  in  persons  who  out-live  many  years,  and 
when  there  are  no  less  than  three  hundred  and  sixty-five  days 
to  determine  their  lives  in  every  year ;  that  the  first  day 
should  make  the  last,  that  the  tail  of  the  snake  should  return 
into  its  mouth  precisely  at  that  time,  and  they  should  wind  uj) 
upon  the  day  of  their  nativity,'  is  indeed  a  remarkable  coinci- 
dence, which,  though  astrology  hath  taken  witty  pains  to 
salve,  yet  hath  it  been  very  wary  in  making  ])redictions  of  it. 
In  this  consumptive  condition  and  remarkable  extenuation, 
he  came  to  be  almost  half  himself,  and  left  a  great  part  be- 
hind him,  which  he  carried  not  to  the  grave.  And  though 
that  story  of  Duke  John  Ernestus  Mansfield  -  be  not  so  ea- 
sily swallowed,  that  at  his  death  his  heart  was  found  not  to 
be  so  big  as  a  nut ;  yet  if  the  bones  of  a  good  skeleton  weigh 
little  more  than  twenty  pounds,  his  inwards  and  flesh  remain- 
ing could  make  no  bouffage,^  but  a  light  bit  for  the  grave.  I 
never  more  lively  beheld  the  starved  characters  of  Dante  *  in 
any  living  face ;  an  anispex  might  have  read  a  lecture  upon 

'  naliviti/.]     According  to  the  Egyp-         3  bnuffitgc]     Probably    from    houffic, 

lian  hieroglyphic.  iiifliilion. 

'  John  Ernestus  Mansfield.}  Turkish  ^  Danlc]  In  the  poet  Dante's  de- 
history,  scription. 


42  LETTER    TO    A    FRIEND. 

him  without  exenteration,  his  flesh  being  so  consumed,  that 
he  might,  in  a  manner,  have  discerned  his  bowels  without 
opening  of  him:  so  that  to  be  carried,  sexta  cervice,^  to  the 
grave,  was  but  a  civil  unnecessity ;  and  the  complements  of 
the  coffin  might  outweigh  the  subject  of  it. 

Omnibonus  Ferrarius  ^  in  mortal  dysenteries  of  children 
looks  for  a  spot  behind  the  ear;  in  consumptive  diseases  some 
eye  the  complexion  of  moles ;  Cardan  eagerly  views  the  nails, 
some  the  lines  of  the  hand,  the  thenar  or  muscle  of  the  thumb  ; 
some  are  so  curious  as  to  observe  the  depth  of  the  throat-pit, 
how  the  proportion  varieth  of  the  small  of  the  legs  unto  the 
calf,  or  the  compass  of  the  neck  unto  the  circumference  of  the 
head :  but  all  these,  with  many  more,  were  so  drowned  in  a 
mortal  visage,  and  last  face  of  Hippocrates,  that  a  weak 
physiognomist  might  say  at  first  eye,  this  was  a  face  of  earth, 
and  that  Morta'  had  set  her  hard  seal  upon  his  temples, 
easily  perceiving  what  caricatura"  draughts  death  makes 
upon  pined  faces,  and  unto  what  an  unknown  degree  a  man 
may  live  backward. 

Though  the  beard  be  only  made  a  distinction  of  sex,  and 
sign  of  masculine  heat  by  Uhntis,^  yet  the  precocity  and  early 
growth  thereof  in  him,  was  not  to  be  liked  in  reference  unto 
long  life.  Lewis,  that  virtuous  but  unfortunate  King  of 
Hungary,  who  lost  his  life  at  the  battle  of  Mohacz,  was  said 
to  be  born  without  a  skin,  to  have  bearded  at  fifteen,  and  to 
have  shewn  some  grey  hairs  about  twenty ;  from  whence  the 
diviners  conjectured  that  he  would  be  spoiled  of  his  kingdom, 
and  have  but  a  short  life ;  but  hairs  make  fallible  predictions, 
and  many  temples  early  grey  have  out-lived  the  psalmist's 
period.^  Hairs  which  have  most  amused  me  have  not  been 
in  the  face  or  head,  but  on  the  back,  and  not  in  men  but 
children,  as  I  long  ago  observed  in  that  endemial  distemper 
of    little    children   in    Languedoc,    called    the    morgellons," 

^  spxtd  cervice.']     i.  c.   "  by  six  per-  animals,  the  Italians  call  it,  to  be  drawn 

sons."  in  caricatura. 

*  Omnibonus  Ferrarius.'}     Be   Morhis         "   Ulmus.']      Ulmus  de  usu  barba  hu- 
Piirrorum.  mancp. 

'  Morta.']     Morta,  the  deity  of  death         '  period."]     The  life  of  aman  is  three- 

or  fate.  score  and  ten. 

*  caricnlura.]    When  men's  faces  arc         '  morgcUons.]      See  Picotus  dc  Rheu- 
(Irawn  witli  resemblance  to  some  other  matisrrw. 


LETTER    lO    A    FRIEND.  iS 

wherein  tliey  critically  break  out  with  harsh  hairs  on  their 
backs,  which  takes  off  the  unciuiet  symptoms  of  the  disease, 
and  delivers  them  from  coughs  and  convulsions.^ 

The  Egyptian  mummies  that  I  have  seen,  have  had  their 
mouths  open,  and  somewhat  gaping,  which  affordeth  a  good 
opportunity  to  view  and  observe  their  teeth,  wherein  'tis  not 
easy  to  find  any  wanting  or  decayed ;  and  therefore  in  Egypt, 
where  one  man  practised  but  one  operation,  or  tlie  diseases 
but  of  single  parts,  it  must  needs  be  a  barren  profession  to 
confine  unto  that  of  drawing  of  teeth,  and  little  better  than 
to  have  been  tooth-drawer  unto  King  Pyrrhus,*  who  had  but 
two  in  his  head.  How  the  banyans  of  India  maintain  the  in- 
tegrity of  those  parts,  I  find  not  particularly  observed  ;  who 
notwithstanding  have  an  advantage  of  their  preservation  by 
abstaining  from  all  flesh,  and  employing  their  teeth  in  such 
food  unto  which  they  may  seem  at  first  framed,  from  their 
figure  and  conformation :  but  sharp  and  corroding  rheums 
liad  so  early  mouldered  those  rocks  and  hardest  parts  of  his 
fabric,  that  a  man  might  well  conceive  that  his  years  were 
never  like  to  double  or  twice  tell  over  his  teeth. ^  Corruption 
had  dealt  more  severely  with  them  than  sepulchral  fires  and 
smart  flames  with  those  of  burnt  bodies  of  old ;  for  in  the 
burnt  fragments  of  urns  which  I  have  enquired  into,  although 
I  seem  to  find  few  incisors  or  shearers,  yet  the  dog  teeth  and 
grinders  do  notably  resist  those  fires.^ 

'  conrnhiuni.l  The  following  occurs  ^  teeth.'\  Twice  tell  over  his  teeth, 
in  ,1/5.  Sloan,  1862: — 'Though  liairs  af-  never  live  to  threescore  years. 
foul  but  fallible  conjectures,  yet  we  can-  *  fires.l  In  the  MS.  Sloan.  1862,  oc- 
not  but  take  notice  of  iheni.  They  grow  curs  the  following  paragraph : — 
not  equally  on  bodies  after  death:  wo-  'Affection  had  so  blinded  some  of  his 
men's  skulls  afford  moss  as  well  as  men's,  nearest  relation^,  as  to  retain  some  hope 
and  the  best  I  have  seen  was  upon  a  wo-r  of  a  postliininious  life,  and  that  he  might 
man's  skull,  taken  up  and  laid  in  a  room  come  to  life  again,  and  therefore  would 
after  twenty-five  years'  burial.  Though  not  have  him  coffined  before  the  third 
the  skin  be  made  the  place  of  hairs,  yet  day.  Some  such  virbiasscs,  [so  in  MS.]  I 
sometimes  they  are  found  on  the  heart  confess,  we  find  in  story,  and  one  or  two  I 
and  inward  parts.  The  plica  or  gluey  remember  myself,  but  they  lived  not  long 
locks  happen  unto  both  sexes,  and  being  after.  Some  contingent  re-animations 
cut  off"  will  come  again:  but  they  are  are  to  be  hoped  in  diseases  wherein  the 
wary  of  cutting  off  the  same,  for  fear  of  lamp  of  life  is  but  puffed  out  and  seeming- 
headache  and  other  diseases.' — MS. Sloan,  ly  choaked,  and  not  where  the  oil  is 
1862.  quite   spent   and    exhausted.       Though 

*  Kins  Ptirrhus.']       His   upper    and  N'onnus  will  have  it  a  fever,  yet  of  what 

lower  jaw  being  solid,  and  without  dis-  disease  Lazarus  first  died,  is  uncertain 

tinct  rows  of  teeth.  from  the  text,  as  his  second  death  from 


44  LETTER    TO    A    FRIEND. 

In  the  years  of  his  childhood  he  had  languished  under  the 
disease  of  his  country,  the  rickets ;  after  which,  notwithstand- 
ing, many  have  become  strong  and  active  men ;  but  whether 
any  have  attained  unto  very  great  years,  the  disease  is  scarce 
so  old  as  to  aftbrd  good  observation.  Whether  the  children 
of  the  English  plantations  be  subject  unto  the  same  infirmity, 
may  be  worth  the  observing.  Whether  lameness  and  halting- 
do  still  increase  among  the  inhabitants  of  Rovigno  in  Istria, 
I  know  not ;  yet  scarce  twenty  years  ago  Monsieur  du  Loyr 
observed  that  a  third  part  of  that  people  halted  :  but  too  cer- 
tain it  is,  that  the  rickets  encreaseth  among  us  ;  the  small-pox 
grows  more  pernicious  than  the  great :  the  king's  purse 
knows  that  the  king's  evil  grows  more  common.  Quartan 
agues  are  become  no  strangers  in  Ireland  ;  more  common  and 
mortal  in  England :  and  though  the  ancients  gave  that  dis- 
ease ^  very  good  words,  yet  now  that  bell  makes  no  strange 
sound  which  rings  out  for  the  effects  thereof.^ 

Some  think  there  were  few  consumptions  in  the  old  world, 
when  men  lived  much  upon  milk  ;  and  that  the  ancient  inha- 
bitants of  this  island  were  less  troubled  with  coughs  when 
they  went  naked  and  slept  in  caves  and  woods,  than  men  now 


good  authentic  history;  but  since  some  to  live  again  as  far  from  sin  as  death,  and 
persons  conceived  to  be  dead  do  some-  arise  lil<e  om-  Saviour  for  ever,  are  the 
times  return  again  unto  evidence  of  life,  only  satisfactions  of  well-weighed  expect- 
that  miracle  was  wisely  managed  by  our  ations.' 

Saviour;   forbad  he  not  been  dead  four         ^  clisease.'\  '  Aa^puXsgraro: -/Mi  prj/ff- 

days   and  under  corruption,   there  had  ng,  securissima  et  facillima. — Ilippoc. 
not  wanted  enough    who  would    have         s  fj^^i  j^^n^  ^.^j     p^,,  f^jjj.g  qu^rtana 

cavilled  [at]  the  same,  which  the  scrip-  ,.^,.o    g^^^t    campana.      The    following 

tare  now  puts  out  of  doubt:  and  tradition  paragraph    occurs    here    in    MS.  Shuin. 

also  confirmeth,  that  he  lived  thirty  years  \^Q2  : 

after,  and   l)einK   pursued   by   the  Jews,  <  Some  I  observed  to  wonder  how,  in  his 

came  by  sea  into  Provence,  by  Marseilles,  consumptive  state,  his  hair  held  on  so 

with  Mary   Magdalen,   Maximinus,  and  well,  without  that  considerable  defluvium 

others:   where  remarkable  places  carry  ^^hich    is  one  of  the   last  svn)ptoms   in 

their  names  unto  this  day.      15ut  to  arise  sn^h  diseases;   but  they  took  not  notice 

from  the  grave  to  return  again  into  it,  is  ^f  .,  n,.jrk  in  his  face,  which  if  he  liad 

but   an    uncomfortable   reviction.     Few  ji^gj    ^^^^   ^   probable   security    against 

men  would  be  content  to  cradle  it  once  baldness  (if  the  observation  of  Aristotle 

again  :  except  a  man  can  lead  his  second  ^111  hold,  that  persons  are  less  apt  to  be 

life  better  than  the  first,  a  man  may  be  j,ald  who  are  double-chinned),  nor  of  the 

doubly  condemned  for  living  evilly  twice,  various  and  knotted   veins  in  his  legs, 

which    were    but  to    make    the    second  „hich  they  that  have,  in  the  same  au- 

death  in  scripture  the  third,  and  to  ac-  ,i,(,i.'j.    assertions,    are   less    disposed    to 

cumulate  in  the  punishment  of  two  bad  baldness.     (According as  Theodorus  Ga- 

livers  at  the  last  day.     To  have  perform-  j.^  renders  it:  though  Scaliger  renders 

ed  the  duty  of  corruption  in  the  grave,  the  text  otherwise.)' 


LF.TTEU    TO    A    FRIF.NI).  t.') 

in  chambers  ami  featherbeds.  Plato  will  tell  us,  that  there 
was  no  such  disease  as  a  catarrh  in  Homer's  time,  and  that 
it  was  but  new  in  Greece  in  his  age.  Polydore  Virgil  deliver- 
eth  tiiat  pleurisies  were  rare  in  England,  w  ho  lived  but  in  the 
days  of  Henry  the  Eighth.  Some  will  allow  no  diseases  to 
be  new,  others  think  that  many  old  ones  are  ceased :  and  that 
such  which  are  esteemed  new,  will  have  but  their  time  :  how- 
ever, the  mercy  of  God  hath  scattered  the  great  heap  of 
diseases,  and  not  loaded  any  one  country  with  all :  some  may 
be  new  in  one  country  which  have  been  old  in  another.  New 
discoveries  of  the  earth  discover  new  diseases:  for  besides  the 
common  swarm,  there  are  endemial  and  local  infirmities  pro- 
per unto  certain  regions,  which  in  the  whole  earth  make  no 
small  number  :  and  if  Asia,  Africa,  and  America  should  bring 
in  their  list.  Pandora's  box  would  swell,  and  there  must  be  a 
strange  pathology. 

Most  men  expected  to  find  a  consumed  kell,^  empty  and 
bladder-like  guts,  livid  and  marbled  lungs,  and  a  withered 
pericardium  in  this  exsuccous  corpse :  but  some  seemed  too 
much  to  wonder  that  two  lobes  of  his  lungs  adhered  unto  his 
side  ;  for  the  like  I  have  often  found  in  bodies  of  no  suspected 
consumptions  or  difficulty  of  respiration.  And  the  same  more 
often  happeneth  in  men  than  other  animals  ;  and  some  think 
in  women  than  in  men ;  but  the  most  remarkable  I  have  met 
with,  was  in  a  man,  after  a  cough  of  almost  fifty  years,  in 
whom  all  the  lol)es  adhered  unto  the  pleura,^  and  each  lobe 
unto  another ;  who  having  also  been  much  troubled  with  the 
gout,  brake  the  rule  of  Cardan,-  and  died  of  the  stone  in  the 
l)ladder.  Aristotle  makes  a  query,  why  some  animals  cough, 
as  man ;  some  not,  as  oxen.  If  coughing  be  taken  as  it  con- 
sisteth  of  a  natural  and  voluntary  motion,  including  expecto- 
ration and  spitting  out,  it  may  be  as  proper  unto  man  as 
bleeding  at  the  nose ;  otherwise  we  find  that  Vegetius  and 
rural  writers  have  not  left  so  many  medicines  in  vain  against 
the  coughs  of  cattle  ;  and  men  who  perish  by  coughs  die  the 

'  kell.]     The  caul,  or  omentum.  Podagra;  that  they  are  delivered  tliere- 

'  pleura.]     So  A.  F.  by   from  the  phthisis  and    stone  in  the 

^  Cardan.]     Cardan  in  his  Encomium  bladder. 
I'odmrrrr  reckoneth  this  among  the  Donu 


46  LETTER    TO    A    FRIEND. 

death  of  sheep,  cats,  and  lions  :  and  though  birds  have  no  mid- 
riff) yet  we  meet  with  divers  remedies  in  Arrianus  against  the 
coughs  of  hawks.  And  though  it  might  be  thought  that  all 
animals  who  have  lungs  do  cough  ;  yet  in  cetaceous  fishes,  who 
have  large  and  strong  lungs,  the  same  is  not  observed ;  nor 
yet  in  oviparous  quadrupeds :  and  in  the  greatest  thereof,  the 
crocodile,  although  we  read  much  of  their  tears,  we  find  no- 
thing of  that  motion. 

From  the  thoughts  of  sleep,  when  the  soul  was  conceived 
nearest  unto  divinity,  the  ancients  erected  an  art  of  divination, 
wherein  while  they  too  widely  expatiated  in  loose  and  incon- 
sequent conjectures,  Hippocrates  ^  wisely  considered  dreams 
as  they  presaged  alterations  in  the  body,  and  so  afforded 
hints  toward  the  preservation  of  health,  and  prevention  of 
diseases ;  and  therein  was  so  serious  as  to  advise  alteration  of 
diet,  exercise,  sweating,  bathing,  and  vomiting ;  and  also  so 
religious  as  to  order  prayers  and  supplications  unto  respective 
deities,  in  good  dreams  unto  Sol,  Jupiter  coclestis,  Jupiter 
opulentus,  Minerva,  Mercurius,  and  Apollo ;  in  bad  unto 
Tellus  and  the  heroes. 

And  therefore  I  could  not  but  take  notice  how  his  female 
friends  were  irrationally  curious  so  strictly  to  examine  his 
dreams,  and  in  this  low  state  to  hope  for  the  phantasms  of 
health.  He  was  now  past  the  healthful  dreams  of  the  sun, 
moon,  and  stars,  in  their  clarity  and  proper  courses.  'Twas 
too  late  to  dream  of  flying,  of  limpid  fountains,  smooth  waters, 
white  vestments,  and  fruitful  green  trees,  which  are  the  visions 
of  healthful  sleeps,  and  at  good  distance  from  the  grave. 

And  they  were  also  too  deeply  dejected  that  he  should 
dream  of  his  dead  friends,  inconsequently  divining,  that  he 
would  not  be  long  from  them  ;  for  strange  it  was  not  that  he 
should  sometimes  dream  of  the  dead,  whose  thoughts  run 
always  upon  death;  beside,  to  dream  of  the  dead,  so  they 
appear  not  in  dark  habits,  and  take  nothing  away  from  us,  in 
Hippocrates'  sense  was  of  good  signification :  for  we  live  by 
the  dead,  and  every  thing  is  or  must  be  so  before  it  becomes 
our  nourishment.  And  Cardan,  who  dreamed  that  he  dis- 
coursed with  his  dead  father  in  the  moon,  made  tliereof  no 

^  Hippocrates.']     Ilippor.  f/e  Insomniis. 


LETTER    TO    \    FRIEND.  I  , 

mortal  interpretation :  and  even  to  dream  that  we  are  dead, 
was  no  condemnahle  phantasm  in  old  oneirocriticism,  as  having 
a  signification  of  liberty,  vacuity  fi*om  cares,  exemption  and 
freedom  from  troubles  unknown  unto  the  dead. 

Some  dreams  I  confess  may  admit  of  easy  and  feminine  ex- 
position ;  he  who  dreamed  that  he  c6uld  not  see  his  right 
shoulder,  might  easily  fear  to  lose  the  sight  of  his  right  eye  ; 
he  that  before  a  journey  dreamed  that  his  feet  were  cut  oft', 
had  a  plain  Avarning  not  to  undertake  his  intended  journey. 
But  why  to  dream  of  lettuce  should  presage  some  ensuing- 
disease,  why  to  eat  figs  should  signify  foolish  talk,  why  to  eat 
eggs  great  trouble,  and  to  dream  of  blindness  should  be  so 
highly  commended,  according  to  the  oneirocritical  verses  of 
Astrampsychus  and  Nicephorus,  I  shall  leave  unto  your 
divination. 

He  was  willing  to  quit  the  world  alone  and  altogether, 
leaving  no  earnest  behind  him  for  corruption  or  after-grave, 
having  small  content  in  that  common  satisfaction  to  survive  or 
live  in  another,  but  amply  satisfied  that  his  disease  should  die 
with  himself,  nor  revive  in  a  posterity  to  puzzle  physic,  and 
make  sad  mementos  of  their  parent  hereditary.  Leprosy 
awakes  not  sometimes  before  forty,  the  gout  and  stone  often 
later;  but  consumptive  and  tabid  *  roots  sprout  more  early,  and 
at  the  fairest  make  seventeen  years  of  our  life  doubtful  before 
that  age.  They  that  enter  the  world  with  original  dieases  as 
well  as  sin,  have  not  only  common  mortality  but  sick  traduc- 
tions to  destroy  them,  make  commonly  short  courses,  and  live 
not  at  length  but  in  figures  :  so  that  a  sound  Cesarean  nati- 
vity  ^  may  out-last  a  natural  birth,  and  a  knife  may  sometimes 
make  way  for  a  more  lasting  fruit  than  a  midwife ;  which 
makes  so  few  infants  now  able  to  endure  the  old  test  of  the 
river,^  and  many  to  have  feeble  children  who  could  scarce 
have  been  married  at  Sparta,  and  those  provident  states  who 
studied  strong  and  healthful  generations  ;  which  happen  but 
contingently  in  mere  pecuniary  matches  or  marriages  made  by 
the  candle,  wherein  notwithstanding  there  is  little  redress  to 

'  tabid.']     Tabes  maxime  contingunt  child  cut  out  of  the  body  of  the  mother, 

ab  anno  decimo  octavo  ad    trigcsimum  *  river.]     Natos   ad  fluniina  primum 

quintum. — Flippoc.  dcferimns    pavoque    gclu    duramus    ft 

'  a  xound  Ctesarean  ttalivHt/.]  A  sound  undis. 


48  LETTER    TO    A    FRIEND. 

be  hoped  from  an  astrologer  or  a  lawyer,  and  a  good  discern- 
ing physician  were  Uke  to  prove  the  most  successful  counsellor. 

Julius  Scaliger,  who  in  a  sleepless  fit  of  the  gout  could 
make  two  hundred  verses  in  a  night,  would  have  but  five  ^ 
plain  words  upon  his  tomb.  And  this  serious  person,  though 
no  minor  wit,  left  the  poetry  of  his  epitaph  unto  others ; 
either  unwilling  to  commend  himself  or  to  be  judged  by  a 
distich,  and  perhaps  considering  how  unhappy  great  poets 
have  been  in  versifying  their  own  epitaphs :  wherein  Petrarca, 
Dante,  and  Ariosto,  have  so  unhappily  failed,  that  if  their 
tombs  should  out-last  their  works,  posterity  would  find  so 
little  of  Apollo  on  them,  as  to  mistake  them  for  Ciceronian 
poets. 

In  this  deliberate  and  creeping  progress  unto  the  grave, 
he  was  somewhat  too  young  and  of  too  noble  a  mind,  to  fall 
upon  that  stupid  symptom  observable  in  divers  persons  near 
their  journey's  end,  and  which  may  be  reckoned  among  the 
mortal  symptoms  of  their  last  disease ;  that  is,  to  become 
more  narrow  minded,  miserable,  and  tenacious,  vmready  to 
part  with  any  thing,  when  they  are  ready  to  part  with  all,  and 
afraid  to  want  when  they  have  no  time  to  spend ;  mean  while 
physicians,  who  know  that  many  are  mad  but  in  a  single  de- 
praved imagination,  and  one  prevalent  decipiency ;  and  that 
beside  and  out  of  such  single  deliriums  a  man  may  meet  with 
sober  actions  and  good  sense  in  bedlam ;  cannot  but  smile  to 
see  the  heirs  and  concerned  relations  gratulating  themselves 
on  the  sober  departure  of  their  friends  ;  and  though  they  be- 
hold such  mad  covetous  passages,  content  to  think  they  die  in 
good  understanding,  and  in  their  sober  senses. 

Avarice,  which  is  not  only  infidelity  but  idolatry,  either  from 
covetous  progeny  or  questuary  education,  had  no  root  in  his 
breast,  who  made  good  works  the  expression  of  his  faith,  and 
was  big  with  desires  unto  jjublic  and  lasting  charities ;  and 
surely  where  good  wishes  and  charitable  intentions  exceed 
abilities,  theorical  beneficency  may  be  more  than  a  dream. 
They  build  not  castles  in  the  air  who  would  build  churches 
on  earth ;  and  though  they  leave  no  such  structures  here, 
may  lay  good  foundations  in  heaven.     In  brief,  his  life  and 

^  hut  five. 1    Jiilii  Caesaris  Scaligeri  quod  fuit. — Joseph.  Scaliger  in  vita  patris. 


LETTER    TO    A    FRIEND.  49 

death  were  such,  that  I  could  not  blame  them  who  wished 
the  like,  and  almost  to  have  been  himself;  almost,  I  say  ;  for 
though  we  may  wish  the  prosperous  appurtenances  of  others, 
or  to  be  another  in  his  happy  accidents,  yet  so  intrinsical  is 
every  man  unto  himself,  that  some  doubt  may  be  made,  whe- 
ther any  would  exchange  his  being,  or  substantially  become 
another  man. 

He  had  wisely  seen  the  world  at  home  and  abroad,  and 
thereby  observed  under  what  variety  men  are  deluded  in  the 
pursuit  of  that  which  is  not  here  to  l)e  found.  And  although 
he  had  no  opinion  of  reputed  felicities  below,  and  apprehend- 
ed men  widely  out  in  the  estimate  of  such  happiness  ;  yet  his 
sober  contempt  of  the  world  wrought  no  Democritism  or  Cy- 
nicism, no  laughing  or  snarling  at  it,  as  well  understanding 
there  are  not  felicities  in  this  world  to  satisfy  a  serious  mind; 
and  therefore,  to  soften  the  stream  of  our  lives,  we  are  fain  to 
take  in  the  reputed  contentions  of  this  world,  to  unite  w  ith 
the  crowd  in  their  beatitudes,  and  to  make  ourselves  happy 
by  consortion,  opinion,  or  co-existimation  :  for  strictly  to  se- 
parate from  received  and  customary  felicities,  and  to  confine 
unto  the  rigour  of  realities,  were  to  contract  the  consolation 
of  our  beings  unto  too  uncomfortable  circumscriptions. 

Not  to  fear  death,"  nor  desire  it,  was  short  of  his  resolution  : 
to  be  dissolved,  and  be  with  Christ,  was  his  dying  ditty.  He 
conceived  his  thread  long,  in  no  long  course  of  years,  and 
when  he  had  scarce  out-lived  the  second  life  of  Lazarus  f  es- 
teeming it  enough  to  approach  the  years  of  his  Saviour,  who 
so  ordered  his  own  human  state,  as  not  to  be  old  upon  earth. 

But  to  be  content  with  death  may  be  better  than  to  desire 
it:  a  miserable  life  may  make  us  wish  for  death,  but  a  virtu- 
ous one  to  rest  in  it;  which  is  the  advantage  of  those  resolved 
christians,  who  looking  on  death  not  only  as  the  sting,  but 
the  period  and  end  of  sin,  the  horizon  and  isthmus  between 
tiiis  life  and  a  better,  and  the  death  of  tills  world  but  as  a 
nativity  of  another,  do  contentedly  submit  unto  the  common 
necessity,  and  envy  not  Enoch  or  Klias. 

'  dralli.'l     Siimnium  necinctuasilicm     and  tradition,  is  s.-iid  to  liavc  lived  lliirly 
ncc  optes.  years  after  lie  was  rai^'d  by  oiii  S  ivimir. 

''  /.nznrus.'\  Who  upon  some nccoiiiits.     — liarotiiiis. 

VOL.    l\.  E 


50  LETTER    TO    A    FRIEND. 

Not  to  be  content  with  life  is  the  unsatisfactory  state  of 
those  who  destroy  themselves ;  ^  who  being  afraid  to  live, 
run  blindly  upon  their  own  death,  which  no  man  fears  by  ex- 
perience :  and  the  stoics  had  a  notable  docti'ine  to  take  away 
the  fear  thereof;  that  is,  in  such  extremities,  to  desire  that 
which  is  not  to  be  avoided,  and  wish  what  might  be  feared  ; 
and  so  made  evils  voluntary,  and  to  suit  with  their  own  de- 
sires, which  took  off  the  terror  of  them. 

But  the  ancient  martyrs  were  not  encouraged  by  such  fal- 
lacies ;  who,  though  they  feared  not  death,  were  afraid  to  be 
their  own  executioners ;  and  therefore  thought  it  more  wis- 
dom to  crucify  their  lusts  than  their  bodies,  to  circumcise 
than  stab  their  hearts,  and  to  mortify  than  kill  themselves. 

His  willingness  to  leave  this  world  about  that  age,  when 
most  men  think  they  may  best  enjoy  it,  though  paradoxical 
unto  worldly  ears,  was  not  strange  unto  mine,  who  have  so 
often  observed,  that  many,  though  old,  oft  stick  fast  unto  the 
world,  and  seem  to  be  drawn  like  Cacus's  oxen,  backward, 
with  great  struggling  and  reluctancy  unto  the  grave.  The 
long  habit  of  living  makes  mere  men  moi'e  hardly  to  part  with 
life,  and  all  to  be  nothing,  but  what  is  to  come.  To  live  at 
the  rate  of  the  'old  world,  when  some  could  scarce  remem- 
ber themselves  young,  may  afford  no  better  digested  death 
than  a  more  moderate  period.  Many  would  have  thought 
it  an  happiness  to  have  had  their  lot  of  life  in  some  notable 
conjunctures  of  ages  past;  but  the  uncertainty  of  future  times 
hath  tempted  few  to  make  a  part  in  ages  to  come.  And  sure- 
ly, he  that  liath  taken  the  true  altitude  of  things,  and  rightly 
calculated  the  degenerate  state  of  this  age,  is  not  like  to  envy 
those  that  shall  live  in  the  next,  much  less  three  or  four  hun- 
dred years  hence,  when  no  man  can  comfortably  imagine  what 
face  this  world  will  carry  :  and  therefore  since  every  age 
makes  a  step  unto  the  end  of  all  things,  and  the  scripture 
aff()rds  so  hard  a  character  of  the  last  times ;  quiet  minds  will 
be  content  with  their  generations,  and  rather  bless  ages  past, 
than  be  ambitious  of  those  to  come. 

'   themselvcs.'\      In  tlie  speech  of  Vul-  ciipias  quodciinque  necesse  est.'  '  All  fear 

tcius  in  Liican,  animatinjj  his  soldiers  in  is  over,  do  but  resolve  to  die,  and  make 

a  great  struggle  to  kill  one  another. — '  De-  your  desires  meet  necessity.' 
eernitc  lethum,   et   nietus  omnis   ahest, 


LETXrU    TO    A    FRIEND.  .'51 

Thougli  ago  liad  set  no  seal  upon  his  face,  yet  a  tllni  eye 
might  clearly  discover  fifty  in  his  actions;  and  therefore,  since 
wisdom  is  the  grey  hair,  and  an  unspotted  life  old  age;  al- 
though his  years  came  short,  he  might  have  been  said  to  have 
held  uj)  with  longer  livers,  and  to  have  been  Solomon's'-'  old 
man.  And  surely  if  we  deduct  all  those  days  of  our  life 
which  we  might  wish  unlived,  and  which  abate  the  comfort 
of  those  we  now  live  ;  if  we  reckon  up  only  those  days  which 
God  hath  accepted  of  our  lives,  a  life  of  good  years  will  hard- 
ly be  a  span  long  :  the  son  in  this  sense  may  out-live  the  father, 
and  none  be  climacterically  old.  lie  that  early  arriveth  unto 
the  parts  and  prudence  of  age,  is  happily  old  without  the  un- 
comfortable attendants  of  it;  and  'tis  superfluous  to  live  unto 
grey  hairs,  when  in  a  precocious  temper  we  anticipate  the  vir- 
tues of  them.  In  brief,  he  cannot  be  accounted  young  who 
out-liveth  the  old  man.  He  that  hath  early  arrived  unto  the 
measure  of  a  perfect  stature  in  Christ,  hath  already  fulfilled 
the  prime  and  longest  intention  of  his  being :  and  one  day 
lived  after  the  perfect  rule  of  piety,  is  to  be  preferred  before 
sinning  immortality. 

Although  he  attained  not  unto  the  years  of  his  predeces- 
sors, yet  he  wanted  not  those  preserving  virtues  which  confirm 
the  thread  of  weaker  constitutions.  Cautdous  chastity  and 
^^'^f^y  sobriety  were  far  from  him  ;  those  jewels  vf  ere  paragon ^ 
without  flaw,  hair,  ice,  or  cloud  in  him  :  which  aflbrds  me  a 
liint  to  proceed  in  these  good  wishes,  and  few  mementos  unto 
you. 

-  Solomon  s.^     Wisdom,  cap.  iv. 

•«•  The  rest  of  this  letter  served  as  the  basis  for  his  larger  work,  the  Christian 
Aforals,  in  which  having,  with  some  few  alterations,  been  inclu<led,  it  is  here 
omitted. 


i;  2 


Cijristiau  iHorals. 


ri'ULisMLU  raoji  the  oni(Ji\.\L  and  coRiiErr  .manuscmit  of  hie  aitiioh, 
BY  JOHN  JliFrKRY,  D.D. 

ASciinrAco.N  or  Norwich. 
WITH    NOTES,   ADllEU   TO   THE   SECOND    EDITIOV, 

BY  DR.  JOHNSON. 

THIkO    EDITION. 


oi:i(;iN.\Li.Y   rLi;Libiii;u  i.\ 

ITIG. 


EDITOR'S  IMIEFACE. 


The  original  edition  of  the  Christian  Morals,  by  Arch- 
deacon Jeft'ery,  was  printed  at  Cambridge,  in  1716;  and  is 
one  of  tlie  rarer  of  Sir  Thomas's  detached  works.  Dodsley, 
in  17,56,  brought  out  a  new  edition,  with  additional  notes,  and 
a  life  by  Dr.  Johnson.  It  has  been  said  that  Dr.  Johnson 
inserted  in  the  Literary  Magazine  a  review  of  the  work,  but 
I  have  not  been  able  to  find  it.  The  sixth  volume  of  Memoirs 
of  Literature  contains  a  meagre  account  of  the  Posthumous 
Works,  but  no  notice  of  the  Christian  Morals. 

The  latter  portion  of  the  Letter  to  a  Friend  is  incorporated 
in  various  parts  of  the  Christian  Morals ;  except  some  pas- 
sages, which  are  given  in  notes  to  the  present  edition;  toge- 
ther with  some  various  readings  from  MSS.  in  the  British 
Museum. 


TO  THE  RIGHT  HON'OUIIAULE 

DAVID,    EARL    OF    BUCIIAN, 


TISCOINT  ACCIITtRHOl  SE,   LUKII   lAIIDRdSS 

AND  liLENDO\AClllE,    OXt   i>K  TIIK   Loai)S   LUMHISSIONCRM   DP    1-iil.lCU,    AM)   LiXin    I.ILl  It.MM 

OF  THE  COUVTIES   OK  STIRLING    AXD   CLACKMANNAN-    IN    NORIH    HRITAIX 


My  Lord, 

Tlie  honour  you  have  done  our  family  obligeth  us 
to  make  all  just  acknowledgments  of  it:  and  there  is  no  form 
of  acknowledgment  in  our  power,  more  worthy  of  your  lord- 
ship's acceptance,  than  this  dedication  of  the  last  work  of  our 
honoured  and  learned  father.  Encouraged  hereunto  by  the 
knowledge  we  have  of  your  lordsiiip's  judicious  relish  of 
universal  learning,  and  subUme  virtue,  we  beg  the  favour  of 
your  acceptance  of  it,  which  will  very  much  oblige  our  family 
in  general,  and  her  in  particular,  who  is, 

jNIy  Lord, 

Your  lordship's  most  humble  servant, 

ELIZABETH  LITTLETON. 


Till::  PREFACE. 


If  any  one,  after  he  has  read  Religio  Medici,  and  the 
ensuing  discourse,  can  make  doubt  whether  the  same  person 
was  the  author  of  them  both,  he  may  be  assured,  by  the 
testimony  of  Mrs.  Littleton,  Sir  Thomas  Browne's  daughter, 
who  hved  with  lier  father  when  it  was  composed  by  him  ;  and 
who,  at  the  time,  read  it  written  by  his  own  liand  :  and  also 
by  the  testimony  of  others  (of  wliom  I  am  one)  who  read  the 
manuscript  of  the  author,  immediately  after  his  death,  and 
who  have  since  read  the  same ;  from  which  it  hath  been  faith- 
fully and  exactly  transcribed  for  the  press.  The  reason  why 
it  was  not  printed  sooner  is,  because  it  was  unhappily  lost,  by 
being  mislaid  among  other  manuscripts,  for  which  search 
was  lately  made  in  the  presence  of  the  Lord  Archbishop  of 
Canterbury,  of  which  his  Grace,  by  letter,  informed  Mrs. 
Littleton,  when  he  sent  the  manuscript  to  her.  There  is 
nothing  printed  in  the  discourse,  or  in  the  short  notes,  but 
what  is  found  in  the  original  manuscript  of  the  author,  except 
only  where  an  oversight  had  made  the  addition  or  transposi- 
tion of  some  words  necessary. 

JOHN  JEFFERY, 

Archdeacan  of  Norwich. 


Cijvistiau  iHorals- 


PART  THE  FIRST. 

1  READ  softly  and  circumspectly  in  this  funambulatory  track  * 
and  narrow  path  of  goodness  :  pursue  virtue  virtuously  :- 
leaven  not  good  actions,  nor  render  virtue  disputable.  Stain 
not  fair  acts  with  foul  intentions  :  maim  not  uprightness  by 
halting  concomitances,  nor  circumstantially  deprave  substan- 
tial goodness. 

Consider'  whereabout  thou  art  in  Cebes's  '  table,  or  that 
old  philosophical  pinax^  of  the  life  of  man:  whether  thou 
art  yet  in  the  road  of  uncertainties ;  wliether  thou  hast  yet 
entered  the  narrow  gate,  got  up  the  hill  and  asperous  way, 
which  leadeth  unto  the  house  of  sanity  ;  or  taken  that  puri- 
fying potion  from  the  hand  of  sincere  erudition,  which  may 
send  thee  clear  and  pure  away  unto  a  virtuous  and  happy 
life. 

In  this  virtuous  voyage  of  thy  life  hull  not  about  like  the 
ark,  without  the  use  of  rudder,  mast,  or  sail,  and  bound  for 


'  Jiiiiamhulatory  track.']     Narrow,  like  paragraphs  of  the  cloaiiig  rcHeclions  to 

the  walk  of  a  rope-ilancer. — Dr.  J.  tlic  I.i'.trr  to  a  l-'rifiid. 

•  Tread,  S(C.'\  This  sentence  hegins  '  Cehes'slabU:]  The  talilc  or  picture 
the  closing  reflections  to  the  Let/rr  to  a  of  Cebes,  an  allegorical  representation  of 
Friend,  which  were  afterwards  amplified  the  characters  and  conditions  of  inaii- 
into  the  C7(r/5/ia«  .1/or«A<,  and,  therefore,  kind;  which  is  tran>lnted  hy  Mr.  Col- 
have  been  omitted  as  duplicate  in  the  lier,  and  added  to  the  Molltalioiix  oj 
present  edition.  .tntoniiiiis — Dr.  J. 

'  Consider,  yc]     The    remainder   of         '  /liiiar.']     I'icturr. — Dr.  J. 
this  section  comprises  tlie  2nd  and  3rd 


r)0  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

no  port.  Let  not  disappointment  cause  despondency,  nor 
difficulty  despair.  Think  not  that  you  are  sailing  from  Lima 
to  Manilla,^  when  you  may  fasten  up  the  rudder,  and  sleep 
before  the  wind  ;  but  expect  rough  seas,  flaws,^  and  contrary 
blasts:  and  'tis  well,  if  by  many  cross  tacks  and  veerings, 
you  arrive  at  the  port ;  for  we  sleep  in  lions'  skins  ^  in  our 
progress  unto  virtue,  and  we  slide  not  but  climb  unto  it. 

Sit  not  down  in  the  popvdar  forms  and  common  level  of 
virtues.  Offer  not  only  peace-offerings  but  holocausts  unto 
God :  where  all  is  due  make  no  reserve,  and  cut  not  a  cum- 
min-seed with  the  Almighty :  to  serve  Him  singly  to  serve 
ourselves,  were  too  partial  a  piece  of  piety,  not  like^  to  place 
us  in  the  illustrious  mansions  of  glory. 

Sect,  ii.^ — Rest  not  in  an  ovation*  but  a  triumph  over  thy 
passions.  Let  anger  walk  hanging  down  the  head ;  let 
malice  go  manacled,  and  envy  fettered  after  thee.  Behold 
within  thee  the  long  train  of  thy  trophies,  not  without 
thee.  Make  the  quarrelling  Lapithytes  sleep,  and  Centaurs 
within  lie  quiet.-  Chain  up  the  unruly  legion  of  thy  breast. 
Lead  thine  own  captivity  captive,  and  be  Caesar  within  thy- 
self. ' 

*  Ovation,  a  petty  and  minor  kind  of  triumph. 

®  Lima  to  ManiUa.']  Over  the  Paci-  early  batteries  against  those  strong  holds 
fie  Ocean,  in  the  course  of  the  ship  built  upon  the  rock  of  nature,  and  make 
which  now  sails  from  Acapulco  to  Man-  this  a  great  part  of  the  militia  of  thy  life, 
ilia,  perhaps  formerly  from  Lima,  or  The  politic  nature  of  vice  must  be  oppos- 
njore  properly  from  Callao,  Lima  not  ed  by  policy,  and  therefore  wiser  hones- 
being  a  sea-port. — Dr.  J.  ties  project  and  plot  against  sin;  wherein 

'  flaws.^     Sudden  gusts  or  violent  at-  notwithstanding  we  are  not  to  rest  in 

tacks  of  bad  weather. — Dr.  ./.  generals,  or  the  trite  stratagems  of  art : 

•*  lions'  shins,  S(c.']  That  is,  in  armour,  that  may  succeed  with  one  temper  which 
in  a  state  of  military  vigilance.  One  of  may  prove  successless  with  another, 
the  Grecian  chiefs  used  to  represent  open  There  is  no  community  or  common- 
force  by  the  lions'  skin,  and  policy  by  wealth  of  virtue ;  every  man  must  study 
the  fox's  tail. — Dr.  J.  his  own  economy,  and  erect  these  rules 

'  lihe.']     Likely.  unto  the  figure  of  himself.' 

'  Sect,  ii.]     The  first  and  last  two         -  Make  the  quarrelling,  8(c.^     That  is, 

sentences  compose  par.  17th  of  closing  thy  turbulent  and  irascible  passions.   For 

reflections  to  the />c'/er /o  rt /'V«V?if/.    The  the  Lapithytes  and  Centaurs,  see  Ovid, 

succeeding  par.  (18)  is  given  here,  hav-  — Dr.  J. 

'wiQheenounHeA'mtlxe  Christian  Morals:         '^  thy  self. '\     In   MS.   Sloan.    1848,   I 

— '  Give    no  quarter   unto    those   vices  met  with  the  following  passage,    which 

which  arc  of  thine  inward   family,  and,  may  be  fitly  introduced  as  a  continuation 

having  a  root  in  thy  temper,  plead  a  right  to  this  section  : — '  To  restrain  the  rise  of 

and  property  in  thee.      Examine   well  extravagances,    and  timely  to  ostracise 

thy  complexional    inclinations.      Raise  the  most  overgrowing  enormities  makes 


{ 


CHRISTIAN    MORALS.  .  Gl 

Sect,  hi.* — He  that  is  chaste  and  continent  not  to  impair 
his  strength,  or  honest  for  fear  of  contagion,  will  hartlly  be 
heroically  virtuous.  Adjourn  not  this  virtue  until  that  temper, 
when  Cato-^  could  lend  out  liis  wife,  and  impotent  satyrs  write 
satires  upon  lust ;  but  be  chaste  in  thy  flaming  days,  when 
Alexander  dared  not  trust  his  eyes  upon  the  fair  sisters  of 
Darius,  and  when  so  many  think  there  is  no  other  way  but 
Origen's.  * 

Sect,  iv.'' — Show  thy  art  in  honesty,  and  lose  not  thy  vir- 
tue by  the  bad  nuinagery  of  it.  Be  temperate  and  sober ; 
not  to  preserve  your  body  in  an  ability  for  wanton  ends ;  not 
to  avoid  the  infamy  of  connnon  transgressors  that  way,  and 
thereby  to  hope  to  expiate  or  palliate  obscure  and  closer  vices ; 
not  to  spare  your  purse,  nor  simply  to  enjoy  health ;  but,  in 
one  word,  that  thereby  you  may  truly  serve  God,  which  every 
sickness  will  tell  you  you  caimot  well  do  without  health.  The 
sick  man's  sacrifice  is  but  a  lame  oblation.  Pious  treasures, 
laid  up  in  healthful  days,  plead  for  sick  non-performances : 
without  which  we  must  needs  look  back  with  anxiety  upon 
the  lost  opportunities  of  health ;  and  may  have  cause  rather 
to  envy  than  pity  tiie  ends  of  penitent  })ublic  sufferers,  who 
go  witli  healthful  prayers  unto  the  last  scene  of  their  lives, 
and  in  the  integrity  of  their  faculties"  return  their  spirit  unto 
God  that  gave  it. 

Sect.  v. — Be  charitable  before  wealth  make  thee  covetous, 
and  lose  not  the  glory  of  the  mite.     If  riches  increase,  let 

•   Who  is  said  to  have  castrated  himself. 

a  cahn  and  quiet  state  in  the  duniinion  of  nate  us  here,  and  chiefly  condemn  us 
ourselves,  for  vices  have  their  ambitions,  iiereafter,  and  will  stand  in  capital  letters 
and  will  be  above  one  another;  but  over  our  heads  as  the  titles  of  our  suffer- 
though    many    may    possess  us,  yet    is  ings.' 

there  commonly  one  that  hath  the  do-  *  Sect,  hi.]     The  4th  paragraph  of 

minion  over  us  ;  one  that  lordeth  over  closing   reflections    to    the    Letter   to   a 

all,  and  the  rest  remain  slaves  unto  the  Friend. 

humour  of  it.      Such   towering  vices  are  '  Ciito.']     The  censor,  who  is  frequent- 
not   to   be   temporally  cxostracised,    but  ly    confounded,   and   by   I'ope,   amongst 
perpetually  exiled, or  rather  lo  be  served  others,  with  Cato  of  Utica. — Dr.  J. 
like  the  rank  poppies  in  Tarquin's  garden,  *  Sect,  iv.]     Except  ihe   first   sen- 
and  made  shorter  by  the  head  ;   for  the  tertce,   this    section    concludes    the    first 
sharpest  arrows  are  to  be  let  (ly  against  paragraph  of  the  concluding  reflections 
all   such   imperious  vices,  which,  neither  of  Letter  to  a  Friend. 
enduring  priority  or  equality,    Cacsarean  '  and  in  l/ie  iiilep-if;/,S(C.'\     With  (heir 
or  Pompeian  primity,  must  be  absolute  faculties  unimpaired. — Dr.  J. 
over  all ;  for  these  opprobiously  denomi- 


G2  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

thy  mind  hold  pace  with  them ;  and  think  it  not  enough  to 
be  hberal,  but  munificent.  Though  a  cup  of  cold  water  from 
some  hand  may  not  be  without  its  reward,  yet  stick  not  thou 
for  wine  and  oil  for  the  wounds  of  the  distressed ;  and  treat 
the  poor,  as  our  Saviour  did  the  multitude,  to  the  reliques  of 
some  baskets."  Diffuse  thy  beneficence  early,  and  while  thy 
treasures  call  thee  master ;  there  may  be  an  atropos  ^  of  thy 
fortunes  before  that  of  thy  life,  and  thy  wealth  cut  off  before 
that  hour,  when  all  men  shall  be  poor ;  for  the  justice  of  death 
looks  equally  upon  the  dead,  and  Charon  expects  no  more 
from  Alexander  than  from  Irus. 

Sect.  vi. — Give  not  only  unto  seven,  but  also  unto  eight, 
that  is  unto  more  than  many.  *  Though  to  give  unto  every 
one  that  asketh  may  seem  severe  advice,-}-  yet  give  thou 
also  before  asking ;  that  is,  where  want  is  silently  clamorous, 
and  men's  necessities  not  their  tongues  do  loudly  call  for  thy 
mercies.  For  though  sometimes  necessitousness  be  dumb,  or 
misery  speak  not  out,  yet  true  charity  is  sagacious,  and  will 
find  out  hints  for  beneficence.  Acquaint  thyself  with  the 
physiognomy  of  want,  and  let  the  dead  colours  and  first  lines 
of  necessity  suffice  to  tell  thee  there  is  an  object  for  thy 
bounty.  Spare  not  where  thou  canst  not  easily  be  prodigal, 
and  fear  not  to  be  undone  by  mercy ;  for  since  he  who  hath 
pity  on  the  poor  lendeth  unto  the  Almighty  i-ewarder,  who 
observes  no  ides  ^  but  every  day  for  his  payments,  charity 
becomes  pious  usury,  christian  liberality  the  most  thriving  in- 
dustry ;  and  what  we  adventure  in  a  cockboat  may  return  in 
a  carrack  unto  us.  He  who  thus  casts  his  bread  upon  the 
water  shall  surely  find  it  again ;  for  though  it  falleth  to  the 
bottom,  it  sinks  but  like  the  axe  of  the  prophet,  to  rise  again 
unto  him. 

*   Ecclcsiasticus.  f   Luke. 


^  Be  charitahle,  i^r.J     The  prccedirif;  '  ides,  ^r.]     The  ides  was  the  time 

part  of  this  section   constitutes  the  Tjih  when    money  lent  out  at   interest  was 

paragraph  of   the  closing  reflections  of  commonly  repaid. 

Letter  to  a  Friend.  I'cenerator  Alphius 

"  atropoa.]     Atropos    is   the    lady    of  Suani  relcgit  Idibus  pecuniam, 

destiny   that   cuts  the   thread  of  life. —  Quaerit  calendis  ponere. 

/;/•,  J.  HoK.— Dr.  ./. 


CHRISTIAN    MOUALS.  G3 

Sect,  vil- — If  avarice  1)C  thy  vice,  yet  make  it  not  thy 
punishment.  Miserable  men  commiserate  not  tl)em.selves, 
bowelless  unto  others,  and  merciless  unto  their  own  bowels. 
Let  the  fruition  of  things  bless  the  possession  of  them,  and 
think  it  more  satisfaction  to  live  richly  than  die  rich.  For 
since  thy  fj^ood  works,  not  thy  goods,  will  follow  thee ;  since 
wealth  is  an  appurtenance  of  life,  and  no  dead  man  is  rich  ;  to 
f  imish  in  plenty,  and  live  poorly  to  die  rich,  were  a  nudtiply- 
ing  improvement  in  madness,  and  use  upon  use  in  folly. 

Sect,  viii.^ — Trust  not  to  the  omnipotency  of  gold,  and 
say  not  unto  it,  thou  art  my  confidence.  Kiss  not  thy  hand 
to  that  terrestrial  sun,  nor  bore  thy  ear  unto  its  servitude. 
A  slave  unto  mammon  makes  no  servant  unto  God.  Covet- 
ousness  cracks  the  sinews  of  faith ;  numbs  the  apprehension 
of  any  thing  above  sense ;  and,  only  affected  with  the  cer- 
tainty of  things  present,  makes  a  peradventure  of  things  to 
come;  lives  but  unto  one  world,  nor  hopes  but  fears  another; 
makes  their  own  death  sweet  unto  others,  bitter  unto  them- 
selves ;  brings  formal  sadness,  scenical  mourning,  and  no  wet 
eyes  at  the  grave. 

Sect,  ix.* — Persons  lightly  dipt,  not  grained  in  generous 
honesty,^  are  but  pale  in  goodness,  and  faint  hued  in  integrity. 
But  be  thou  what  thou  virtuously  art,  and  let  not  tlie  ocean 
wash  away  thy  tincture.  Stand  magnetically  upon  that  axis,*' 
when  prudent  simplicity  hath  fixt  there  ;  and  let  no  attraction 
invert  the  poles  of  thy  honesty.  That  vice  may  be  imeasy 
and  even  monstrous  unto  thee,  let  iterated  good  acts  and 
long  confirmed  habits  make  virtue  almost  natural,  or  a  second 
nature  in  thee.  Since  virtuous  superstructions  have  com- 
monly generous  foundations,  dive  into  thy  inclinations,  and 
early  discover  what  nature  bids  thee  to  be  or  tells  thee  thou 
mayest  be.  They  who  thus  timely  descend  into  themselves, 
and  cultivate  the  good  seeds  which  nature  hath  set  in  them. 


'  Sect.  VII  ]     Paragraph  Tthofclos-  deeply  tinged,  not  dyed  ingrain. — Dr.  J. 

IngTe&ecUons  o(  Liller  to  a  Friend.  *  thai  ajrii.]     That  is,   "with   a  po- 

^  Sect.  vui.J  Par.  6th  of  closing  sition  as  immutable  as  thai  cif  the  mag- 
reflections  to  the  I.elter  to  a  Friend.  netical   axis,"  which    is   popularly   sup- 

*  Sect.  IX.]  Par.  8th  of  closing  re-  posed  to  be  invariably  parallil  to  the 
flections  to  the  Letter  tn  a  Friend.  meridian,   or  to  stand  exactly-  north  and 

*  not  grained  in  generous,  i^'*^.]     Not  south. — Dr.  J. 


G4  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

prove  not  shrubs  but  cedars  in  their  generation.  And  to  be 
in  the  form  of  the  best  of  the  bad  *  or  the  worst  of  the  good, 
will  be  no  satisftiction  unto  them. 

Sect,  x.'^ — Make  not  the  consequence  of  virtue  the  ends 
thereof.  Be  not  beneficent  for  a  name  or  cymbal  of  ap- 
plause ;  nor  exact  and  just  in  commerce  for  the  advantages  of 
trust  and  credit,  which  attend  the  reputation  of  true  and 
punctual  dealing :  for  these  rewards,  though  unsought  for, 
plain  virtue  will  bring  with  her.  To  have  other  by-ends  in 
good  actions  sours  laudable  performances,  which  must  have 
deeper  roots,  motives,  and  instigations,  to  give  them  the 
stamp  of  virtues.^ 

Sect,  xi.^ — Let  not  the  law  of  thy  country  be  the  non 
ultra  of  thy  honesty ;  nor  think  that  always  good  enough 
which  the  law  will  make  good.  Narrow  not  the  law  of  cha- 
rity, equity,  mercy.  Join  gospel  righteousness  with  legal 
right.  Be  not  a  mere  Gamaliel  in  the  faith,  but  let  the  ser- 
mon in  the  mount  be  thy  targum  unto  the  law  of  Sinai.' 

Sect.  xii. — Live  by  old  ethicks  and  the  classical  rules  of 
honesty.  Put  no  new  names  or  notions  upon  authentic  vir- 
tues and  vices."  Think  not,  that  morality  is  ambulatory;  that 
vices  in  one  age  are  not  vices  in  another;  or  that  virtues, 
which  are  under  the  everlasting  seal  of  right  reason,  may  be 
stamped  by  opinion.  And  therefore,  though  vicious  times  in- 
vert the  opinions  of  things,  and  set  up  new  ethicks  against 
virtue,  yet  hold  thou  unto  old  morality ;  and  rather  than  fol- 

*  OptiiTii  malorum  pessimi  bonorum, 

^  SrxT.  X.]     Par.  Ifltli  of  closing  re-  of  vice  and  iniquity,  as  not  to  find  some 

flections  to  tliL-  Lctler  to  a  Friend.  escape  l)y  a  postern  of  recipisccncy.' 

*  virlues.'l     Tlie  following  (lltli  par.         "  Sect,  xi.]     I'ar.  !)th  of  closing  re- 
ef closing  reflections  to  the  Letter,  Hfc.)  flections  to  the  Letter  to  a  Friend. 
seems    to    have    been    omitted    in    the         '  lar^^inn,  ^■c.'\     A  paraphrase  or  am- 
Christinn  Morals: — 'Tiiough  human  in-  plification. 

firmity  may    betray    thy   heedless    days  ^  fiecv.]      From  MS.  Sloan.  1S47,  the 

into  tiie  popular  ways  of  extravagancy,  following  clause  is  added  : — '  Think  not 

yet  let  not  thine  own  depravity,  or  the  modesty  will  never  gild  its  like  ;  fortitude 

torrent  of  vicious  times,  carry  thee  into  will  not  lie  degraded  into  audacity  and 

desperate  enormities  in  o])inions,  man-  foolhardiness  ;  liberality  will   not  be  put 

ners,  or  actions :   if  thou  hast  dipped  thy  off  with    the    name    of  prodigality,  nor 

foot  in  the  river,  yet  venture   not  over  frugality  exchange  its  name  with  avarice 

Ruhiron  ;  run  not  into  cxiremities  from  and  solid  parsimony,  and  so  our  vices  be 

whence  there  is   no  regression,   nor  be  exalted  into  virtues.' 
ever  so  closely  shut  up  within  the  holds 


CHRISTIAN    MOIIALS.  65 

low  a  multitude  to  do  evil,  stand  like  Pompcy's  pillar  conspi- 
cuous by  thyself,  and  single  in  integrity.  And  since  the  worst 
of  limes  afford  imitable  examples  of  virtue ;  since  no  deluge 
of  vice  is  like  to  be  so  general  but  more  than  eight  will  escape;' 
eye  well  those  heroes  who  have  held  their  heads  above  water, 
who  have  touched  pitch  and  not  been  defiled,  and  in  the 
common  contagion  have  remained  uncorrupted. 

Sect,  xiii.* — Let  age,  not  envy,  draw  wrinkles  on  thy 
cheeks;  be  content  to  be  envied,  but  envy  not.  Emulation 
may  be  plausible  and  indignation  allowable,  but  admit  no 
treaty  with  that  passion  which  no  circumstance  can  make 
good.  A  displacency  at  the  good  of  others  because  they  en- 
joy it,  though  not  unworthy  of  it,  is  an  absurd  depravity, 
sticking  fast  unto  corrupted  nature,  and  often  too  hard  for 
humility  and  charity,  the  great  suppressors  of  envy.  This 
surely  is  a  lion  not  to  be  strangled  but  by  Hercules  himself, 
or  the  liighest  stress  of  our  minds,  and  an  atom  of  that  power 
which  subdueth  all  things  unto  itself. 

Sect,  xiv.^ — Owe  not  thy  humility  unto  humiliation  from 
adversity,  but  look  humbly  down  in  that  state  when  others 
look  upwards  upon  thee.  Think  not  thy  own  shadow  longer 
than  that  of  others,  nor  delight  to  take  the  altitude  of  thy- 
self. Be  patient  in  the  age  of  pride,  when  men  live  by  short 
intervals  of  reason  under  the  dominion  of  humour  and  pas- 
sion, when  it's  in  the  power  of  every  one  to  transform  thee 
out  of  thyself,  and  run  thee  into  the  short  madness.  If  you 
cannot  imitate  Job,  yet  come  not  short  of  Socrates,^  and 
those  patient  Pagans  who  tired  the  tongues  of  their  enemies, 
while  they  perceived  they  spit  their  malice  at  brazen  walls  and 
statues. 

Sect,  xv." — Let  not  the  sun  in  Capricorn*  go  down  upon 
thy  wrath,  but  write  thy  wrongs  in  ashes.     Draw  the  curtain 

•   Even  wher.  the  days  are  shortest. 

»  eieht  iiill  escape.]     Alludinj?  to  the  9'»  P""*'"  ac"P<*  Kcva  inter  TincU  cicute 

n      J     r  V      1  Accu»«tori  uoUet  dare.— Ji'V. 

nooa  ol  .>oall.  \ot  »o  mild  1  halei",  nor  Chry»ippu»  thonplit  ; 

♦  Sect,   xiii.]      Par.   13th  of  closing  >'9'-  '*>*  good  ma.,  who  drank  the  imwuou* 
reflections  to  the  Letter  to  a  Friend.  Wnh  \  and  could  not  wi»h  to  ie« 

*  Sect.   XIV.]     Par.   12th   of  closing  "'»,V  ,  ""'' TH'/rcH -A-  J 
reflections  to  the  Letter  to  a  Friend.                 ,                     t     »,        , ,  i.      r     i    • 

•  Socrates.}  '   Sect,    xv  ]     Par.    15th   of  closing 

Dufcique  ienex  vicinu*  Hjinetto,        reflections  to  the  Letter  to  a  tnend. 

VOL.    IV.  F 


66  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

of  night  upon  injuries,  shut  them  up  in  the  tower  of  obhvion,* 
and  let  them  be  as  though  they  had  not  been.  To  forgive 
our  enemies,  yet  hope  that  God  will  punish  them,  is  not  to 
forgive  enough.  To  forgive  them  ourselves,  and  not  to 
pray  God  to  forgive  them,  is  a  partial  piece  of  charity. 
Forgive  thine  enemies  totally,  and  without  any  reserve  that 
however  God  will  revenge  thee. 

Sect,  xvi." — While  thou  so  hotly  disclaimest  the  devil,  be 
not  guilty  of  diabolism.  Fall  not  into  one  name  with  that 
unclean  spirit,  nor  act  his  nature  whom  thou  so  much  abhor- 
rest ;  that  is,  to  accuse,  calumniate,  backbite,  whisper,  detract, 
or  sinistrously  interpret  others.  Degenerous  depravities,  and 
narrow-minded  vices!  not  only  below  St.  Paul's  noble  Christ- 
ian but  Aristotle's  true  gentleman.f  Trust  not  with  some  that 
the  epistle  of  St.  James  is  apocryphal,  and  so  read  with  less 
fear  that  stabbing  truth,  that  in  company  with  this  vice  "thy 
religion  is  in  vain."  Moses  broke  the  tables  without  break- 
ing of  the  law ;  but  where  charity  is  broke,  the  law  itself  is 
shattered,  which  cannot  be  whole  without  love,  which  is 
"  the  fulfilhng  of  it."  Look  humbly  upon  thy  virtues ;  and 
though  thou  art  rich  in  some,  yet  think  thyself  poor  and 
naked  without  that  crowning  grace,  which  "  thinketh  no  evil, 
which  envieth  not,  which  beareth,  hopeth,  believeth,  en- 
dureth  all  things."  With  these  sure  graces,  while  busy 
tongues  are  crying  out  for  a  drop  of  cold  water,  mutes  may 
be  in  happiness,  and  sing  the  trisagion^  in  heaven. 

Sect.  xvii. — However  thy  understanding  may  waver  in  the 
theories  of  true  and  false,  yet  flisten  the  rudder  of  thy  will, 
steer  straight  unto  good  and  fall  not  foul  on  evil.  Imagina- 
tion is  apt  to  rove,  and  conjecture  to  keep  no  bounds.  Some 
have  run  out  so  far,  as  to  fancy  the  stars  might  be  but  the 
light  of  the  crystalline  heaven  shot  through  perforations  on 
the  bodies  of  the  orbs.  Others  more  ingeniously  doubt 
whether  there   hath  not  been  a  vast  tract  of  land  in   the 

*  Alluding  unto  the  tower  of  ohlivion  mentioned  by  Procopius,  which  was  the 
name  ol'  a  tower  of  imprisonment  among  the  Persians  :  whoever  was  put  therein 
was  as  it  were  buried  alive,  and  it  was  death  for  any  but  to  name  him. 

f  See  Aristotle's  Ethics,  chapter  of  Magnanimity.  %  Holy,  holy,  holy. 

*  Sect,  xvi.]     Par.  14th  of  closing  reflections  to  the  Letter  to  a  Friend. 


CHRISTIAN    MORALS.  UT 

Atlantic  ocean,  which  earthquakes  and  violent  causes  have 
long  ago  devoured.^  Speculative  misapprehensions  may  be 
innocuous,  but  immorality  pernicious;  theoretical  mistakes 
and  physical  deviations  may  condenm  our  judgments,  not 
lead  us  into  judgment.  But  perversity  of  will,  innnoral  and  sin- 
ful enormities  .walk  with  Adraste  and  Nemesis'  at  their  backs, 
pursue  us  unto  judgment,  and  leave  us  viciously  miserable. 

Sect,  xviii. — Bid  early  defiance  unto  those  vices  which 
are  of  thine  inward  family,  and  having  a  root  in  thy  temper 
plead  a  right  and  propriety  in  thee.  Raise  timely  batteries 
against  those  strong  holds  built  upon  the  rock  of  nature,  and 
make  this  a  great  part  of  the  militia  of  thy  life.  Delude  not 
thyself  into  iniquities  from  particijiation  or  community,  which 
abate  the  sense  but  not  the  obliquity  of  them.  To  conceive 
sins  less  or  less  of  sins,  because  others  also  transgress,  were 
morally  to  commit  that  natural  fallacy  of  man,  to  take  com- 
fort from  society,  and  think  adversities  less  because  others 
also  suffer  them.  The  politic  nature  of  vice  must  be  opposed 
by  policy ;  and,  therefore,  wiser  honesties  project  and  plot 
against  it :  wherein,  notwithstanding,  we  are  not  to  rest  in 
generals,  or  the  trite  stratagems  of  art.  That  may  succeed 
with  one,  which  may  prove  successless  with  another :  there  is 
no  community  or  commonweal  of  virtue :  every  man  must 
study  his  own  economy,  and  adapt  such  rules  unto  the  figure 
of  himself 

Sect,  xix.- — Be  substantially  great  in  thyself,  and  more 
than  thou  appearest  unto  others ;  and  let  the  world  be  de- 
ceived in  thee,  as  they  are  in  the  lights  of  heaven.  Hang 
early  plummets  upon  the  heels  of  pride,  and  let  ambition 
have  but  an  epicycle^  and  narrow  circuit  in  thee.  Measure 
not  thyself  by  thy  morning  shadow,  but  by  the  extent  of  thy 
grave  ;  and  reckon  thyself  above  the  earth,  by  the  line  thou 


'  eiirnurcd.]   Add  Irom  MS.  cix  Rawl.  ing  reflections  to  the  Letter  too  Friend. 

"Whether  there  liath  not  been  a  passage  '  epicycle.']     An   epicycle   is  a    small 

from    the   Mediterranean   into   the   Red  revolution    made  by  one  planet  in   the 

Sea,   and  whether  the  ocean  at  first  had  wider    orbit    of    another    planet.     The 

a  passage  into  the  Mediterranean  by  the  meaning  is,    "  Let  not  ambition  form  thy 

straits  of  Hercules."  circle   of  action,  but  move   upon    other 

'  .-tdrastc  and  Nemeiis.]    The  powers  principles;  and  let  ambition  only  opc- 

of  vengeance. — Dr.  J.  rate  as  something  cxtriniic  and  advcn- 

'  Sect.  XIX.]  Paragraph  ICth  of  clos-  titious." — Dr.  J. 


68  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

must  be  contented  with  under  it.  Spread  not  into  boundless 
expansions  either  of  designs  or  desires.  Think  not  that 
mankind  Hveth  but  for  a  few ;  and  that  the  rest  are  born  but 
to  serve  those  ambitions,  which  make  but  flies  of  men  and 
wildernesses  of  whole  nations.  Swell  not  into  vehement 
actions  which  imbroil  and  confound  the  earth ;  but  be  one  of 
those  violent  ones  which  force  the  kingdom  of  heaven.*  If 
thou  must  needs  rule,  be  Zeno's  king,*  and  enjoy  that  empire 
which  every  man  gives  himself.  He  who  is  thus  his  own 
monarch  contentedly  sways  the  sceptre  of  himself,  not  envy- 
ing the  glory  of  crowned  heads  and  elohims  of  the  earth. 
Could  the  world  unite  in  the  practice  of  that  despised  train 
of  virtues,  which  the  divine  ethics  of  our  Saviour  hath  so  in- 
cvdcated  upon  us,  the  fui'ious  face  of  things  must  disappear ; 
Eden  would  be  yet  to  be  found,  and  the  angels  might  look 
down,  not  with  pity,  but  joy  upon  us. 

Sect,  xx.^ — Though  the  quickness  of  thine  ear  were  able 
to  reach  the  noise  of  the  moon,  which  some  think  it  maketh 
in  its  rapid  revolution ;  though  the  number  of  thy  ears  should 
equal  Argus's  eyes ;  yet  stop  them  all  with  the  wise  man's 
wax,^and  be  deaf  unto  the  suggestions  of  tale-bearers,  calum- 
niators, pickthank  or  malevolent  delators,  who,  while  quiet 
men  sleep,  sowing  the  tares  of  discord  and  division,  distract 
the  tranquillity  of  charity  and  all  friendly  society.  These  are 
the  tongues  that  set  the  world  on  fire,  cankers  of  reputation, 
and  like  that  of  Jonas's  gourd,  wither  a  good  name  in  a 
night.  Evil  spirits  may  sit  still,  while  these  spirits  walk  about 
and  perform  the  business  of  hell.  To  speak  more  strictly, 
our  corrupted  hearts  are  the  factories  of  the  devil,  which  may 
be  at  work  without  his  presence ;  for  when  that  circumvent- 
ing spirit  hath  drawn  malice,  envy,  and  all  unrighteousness 

*  Matthew  xi. 


*  Zeno's  l(ing.'\     That  is,   "  the  king  lowed,  without  break,  by  the  whole  of 

of  the  stoics,"  whose  founder  was  Zeno,  the  17th  Section,  with  slight  variations, 

and  who  held,  that  the  wise  man  alone  and  with  the  addition  which  is  now  add- 

had  power  and  royalty. — Dr.  J.  ed  to  that  Section,  in  a  note  at  p.  67. 

'  Sect.  xx."|     The  first  part  of  this         ®  wise  man's  wax.']     Alluding  to  the 

Section,  varying  slightly,  is  preserved  in  story  of  Ulysses,  who  stopped  the  ears  of 

MSS.  in  the  Rawlinson  collection  at  Ox-  liis  companions  with    wax    when   they 

ford,   NO.  cix.     It   is  immediately  fol-  passed  by  the  Sirens. — Dr.  J. 


CHRISTIAN    MORALS.  69 

unto  well  rooted  habits  in  his  disciples,  initjuity  then  goes  on 
upon  its  own  legs ;  and  if  the  gate  of  hell  were  shut  up  for  a 
time,  vice  would  still  be  fertile  and  produce  the  fruits  of  hell. 
Thus  when  God  forsakes  us,  Satan  also  leaves  us  :  for  such 
offenders  he  looks  upon  as  sure  and  sealed  up,  and  his  temp- 
tations then  needless  unto  them. 

Sfxt.  XXI. — Annihilate  not  the  mercies  of  God  by  the  ob- 
livion of  ingratitude ;  for  oblivion  is  a  kind  of  annihilation ; 
and  for  things  to  be  as  though  they  had  not  been,  is  like  unto 
never  being.  Make  not  thy  head  a  grave,  but  a  repository 
of  God's  mercies.  Though  thou  hadst  the  memory  of  Se- 
neca, or  Simonides,  and  conscience  the  punctual  memorist 
within  us,  yet  trust  not  to  thy  remembrance  in  things  which 
need  phylacteries. "  Register  not  only  strange,  but  merciful 
occurrences.  Let  Ephemerides  not  Olympiads^  give  thee 
account  of  his  mercies :  let  thy  diaries  stand  thick  with  duti- 
ful mementos  and  asterisks  of  acknowledgment.  And  to  be 
complete  and  forget  nothing,  date  not  his  mercy  from  thy 
nativity ;  look  beyond  the  world,  and  before  the  a^ra  of  Adam, 

Sect.  xxii. — Paint  not  the  sepulchre  of  thyself,  and  strive 
not  to  beautify  thy  corruption.  Be  not  an  advocate  for  thy 
vices,  nor  call  for  many  hour-glasses  ^  to  justify  thy  imperfec- 
tions. Think  not  that  always  good  which  thou  thinkest  thou 
canst  always  make  good,  nor  that  concealed  which  the  sun 
ddth  not  behold :  that  which  the  sun  doth  not  now  see,  will 
be  visible  when  the  sun  is  out,  and  the  stars  are  fallen  from 
heaven.  Meanwhile  there  is  no  darkness  unto  conscience ; 
which  can  see  without  Hglit,  and  in  the  deepest  obscurity  give 
a  clear  draught  of  things,  which  the  cloud  of  dissimulation  hath 
concealed  from  all  eyes.  There  is  a  natural  standing  court 
within  us,  examining,  acquitting,  and  condemning  at  the  tri- 
bunal of  ourselves ;    wherein   iniquities  have   their   natural 


'  phylacteries.']       A   phylactery    is    a  iiig   several   years   under   one    notation, 

writing  bound  upon  the  forehead,  contain-  An  Ephemeris  is  a  diary,  an   Olympiad 

ing  something  to  be   kept  constantly  in  is  the  space  of  four  years. — Dr.  J. 

mind.      This  was  practised  by  the  Jewish  ^hour-glasses,     ^c]     That    is,    "do 

doctors  with  regard  to  the  Mosaic  law.  not  speak  much  or  long  in  justification 

— Dr.  J.  of  thy    faults."     The    ancient   pleaders 

'  Olympiads.  4"C.]    Particular  journals  talked  by  a  i.lcpsydra,   or  measurer  of 

of  every  day,  not  abstracts  comprehend-  time. — Dr.  J 


70  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

thetas  ^  and  no  nocent-  is  absolved  by  the  verdict  of  himself. 
And  therefore  although  our  transgressions  shall  be  tried  at 
the  last  bar,  the  process  need  not  be  long :  for  the  judge  of 
all  knoweth  all,  and  every  man  will  nakedly  know  himself; 
and  when  so  few  are  like  to  plead  not  guilty,  the  assize  must 
soon  have  an  end. 

Sect,  xxiir. — Comply  with  some  humours,  bear  with  others, 
but  serve  none.  Civil  complacency  consists  with  decent  ho- 
nesty :  flattery  is  a  juggler,  and  no  kin  unto  sincerity.  But 
while  thou  maintainest  the  plain  path,  and  scornest  to  flatter 
others,  fall  not  into  self-adulation,  and  become  not  thine  own 
parasite.  Be  deaf  unto  thyself,  and  be  not  betrayed  at  home. 
Self-creduHty,  pride,  and  levity  lead  unto  self-idolatry.  There 
is  no  Damocles  ^  like  unto  self-opinion,  nor  any  Syren  to  our 
own  fawning  conceptions.  To  magnify  our  minor  things,  or 
hug  ourselves  in  our  apparitions ;  *  to  afford  a  credulous  ear 
unto  the  ckawing  suggestions  ^  of  fancy  ;  to  pass  our  days  in 
painted  mistakes  of  ourselves  ;  and  though  we  behold  our  own 
blood,^  to  think  ourselves  the  sons  of  Jupiter  ;  *  are  blandish- 
ments of  self-love,  v/orse  than  outward  delusion.  By  this  im- 
posture, wise  men  sometimes  are  mistaken  in  their  elevation, 
and  look  above  themselves.  And  fools,  which  are  antipodes  ^ 
unto  the  wise,  conceive  themselves  to  be  but  their  perioeci,^ 
and  in  the  same  parallel  with  them. 

Sect.  xxiv. — Be  not  a  Hercules  furens  abroad,  and  a  pol- 
troon within  thvself.  To  chase  our  enemies  out  of  the  field, 
and  be  led  captive  by  our  vices;  to  beat  down  our  foes,  and 
fall  down  to  our  concupiscences ;  are  solecisms  in  moral 
schools,  and  no  laurel  attends  them.     To  well  manage  our 

*  As  Alexander  the  Great  did. 


'  thetas.]     Q  a  tlieta  inscribed  upon  flattering.     A  chiwback  is  an  old  word 

the  judge's  tessera  or  ballot  was  a  mark  fo>"  »   flatterer.     Jewel  calls  some   wri- 

for   death   or   capital    condemnation.—  ters  for  popery  "  the  pope's  clawbacks. " 

Dr.  ./.  —^'-  J- 

2  iuscent.'\    Se  *  our  own  hlood.']      That  is,  "  though 

Judice  nemo  nocens  absolvittin  ^  _^^    ^  ^.g  bleed  when  we  are  wounded,  though 

'■>  Damocks.']  Damocles  was  a  flatterer  we  find  in  ourselves  the  imperfections  of 

of  Dionysius._Z)r,  J.  humanity."— Z>r.  J. 

*  apparitions.]    Appearances  without  ^  antipodes.]     Opposites.— Z)r.  J. 
realities Dr.  J.  "  periceci.]       Only    placed  at  a  dis- 

*  clawing  suggestions,  Sfc]     Tickling,  t^nce  in  the  same  line — Dr.  ./. 


CHRISTIAN    MORALS.  71 

affections,  and  wild  horses  of  Plato,  arc  the  highest  circcn- 
ses:'^  and  the  noblest  digladiation  '  is  in  the  theatre  of  our- 
selves; for  therein  our  inward  antagonists,  not  only  like 
conunon  gladiators,  with  ordinary  weapons  and  down-right 
blows  make  at  us,  but  also,  like  retiary  and  la({ueary  -  com- 
batants, with  nets,  frauds,  and  entanglements  fall  upon  us. 
Weapons  for  such  combats,  are  not  to  be  forged  at  Lipara:' 
\'ulcan's  art  doth  nothing  in  this  internal  militia ;  wherein  not 
the  armour  of  Achilles,  but  the  armature  of  St.  Paul,  gives 
the  glorious  day,  and  triumphs  not  leading  up  into  capitols, 
but  up  into  the  highest  heavens.  And,  therefore,  while  so 
many  think  it  the  only  valour  to  command  and  master  others, 
study  thou  the  dominion  of  thyself,  and  quiet  thine  own  com- 
motions. Let  right  reason  be  thy  Lycurgus,*  and  lift  up  thy 
hand  unto  the  law  of  it :  move  by  the  intelligences  of  the  su- 
perior faculties,  not  by  the  rapt  of  passion,  nor  merely  by  that 
of  temper  and  constitution.  They  who  are  merely  carried  on 
by  the  wheel  of  such  inclinations,  without  the  hand  and  gui- 
dance of  sovereign  reason,  are  but  the  automatons  ^  part  of 
mankind,  rather  lived  than  living,  or  at  least  underliving 
themselves. 

Sect,  x  w. — Let  not  fortune,  which  hath  no  name  in  scrip- 
ture, have  any  in  thy  divinity.  Let  providence,  not  chance, 
have  the  honour  of  thy  acknowledgments,  and  be  thy  CEdi- 
pus  in  contingencies.  Mark  well  the  paths  and  winding  ways 
thereof ;  but  be  not  too  wise  in  the  construction,  or  sudden 
in  the  application.  The  hand  of  providence  writes  often  by 
abbreviatures,  hieroglyphics  or  short  characters,  which,  like 
the  laconism  on  the  wall,''  are  not  to  be  made  out  but  by  a 
hint  or  key  from  that  spirit  which  indicted  them.  Leave  fu- 
ture occurrences  to  their  uncertainties,  think  that  which  is 

'  c/reewe*.]      Circenses  were  Roman  near  Italy,  being  volcanoes,  were  fublcJ 

liorse  races. — Dr.  J.  to  contain  the  forges  of  the  Cyclops — 

'  digladialion.']       Fencing     niatch. —  iJr.  J. 

Dr.  J.  *  Lycargus.^     Thy  lawgiver. 

-retiary   and   laqueary.]     The   reti-  ^  atttomalous.]     Moved  not  by  choice, 

arius  or  laquearius   was  a  prize-fighter,  but  by  some  mechanical  impulse. — Dr.  J. 

who  entangled  his  opponent    in   a  net,  *  laconism   on   the  wal/.]     The   short 

which  by  some  dexterous  management  sentence  written  on  the  wall  of  Belshaz- 

he  threw  upon  him. — Dr.  J.  zar.     ^ce  Daniel. — Dr.  J. 

■*  Lipara']      The    Liparxan   islands, 


"7^  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

present  thy  own ;  and,  since  'tis  easier  to  foretell  an  eclipse 
than  a  foul  day  at  some  distance,  look  for  little  regular  be- 
low. Attend  with  patience  the  uncertainty  of  things,  and 
what  Heth  yet  unexerted  in  the  chaos  of  futurity.  The  un- 
certainty and  ignorance  of  things  to  come,  makes  the  world 
new  unto  us  by  unexpected  emergencies ;  whereby  we  pass 
not  our  days  in  the  trite  road  of  affairs  affording  no  novity  ; 
for  the  novelizing  spirit  of  man  lives  by  variety,  and  the  new 
faces  of  thinffs. 


'to" 


Sect.  xxvi. — Though  a  contented  mind  enlargeth  the  di- 
mension of  little  things  ;  and  unto  some  it  is  wealth  enough 
not  to  be  poor ;  and  others  are  well  content,  if  they  be  but 
rich  enough  to  be  honest,  and  to  give  every  man  his  due  :  yet 
fall  not  into  that  obsolete  affectation  of  bravery,  to  throw 
away  thy  money,  and  to  reject  all  honours  or  honourable  sta- 
tions in  this  courtly  and  splendid  world.  Old  generosity  is 
superannuated,  and  such  contempt  of  the  world  out  of  date. 
No  man  is  now  like  to  refuse  the  favour  of  great  ones,  or  be 
content  to  say  unto  princes,  '  stand  out  of  my  sun.'  "^  And  if 
any  there  be  of  such  antiquated  resolutions,  they  are  not  like 
to  be  tempted  out  of  them  by  great  ones ;  and  'tis  fair  if  they 
escape  the  name  of  hypocondriacks  from  the  genius  of  latter 
times,  unto  whom  contempt  of  the  world  is  the  most  con- 
temptible opinion ;  and  to  be  able,  like  Bias,  to  carry  all  they 
have  about  them  were  to  be  the  eighth  wise  man.  However, 
the  old  tetrick^  philosophers  looked  always  with  indignation 
upon  such  a  face  of  things  ;  and  observing  the  unnatural  cur- 
rent of  riches,  power,  and  honour  in  the  world,  and  withal 
the  imperfection  and  demerit  of  persons  often  advanced  vmto 
them,  were  tempted  unto  angry  opinions,  that  affairs  were  or- 
dered more  by  stars  than  reason,  and  that  things  went  on 
rather  by  lottery  than  election. 

Sect,  xxvii. — If  thy  vessel  be  but  small  in  the  ocean  of 
this  world,  if  meanness  of  possessions  be  thy  allotment  upon 
earth,  forget  not  those  virtues  which  the  great  disposer  of  all 
bids  thee  to  entertain  from  thy  quality  and  condition ;  that  is, 


'  s/and  out  of  m;/  sun.]     The  answer     ed  him  what  he  had  to  request. — Dr.  J, 
madeby  Diogenes  to  Alexander,  who  ask-         *  tetrick.'}     Sour,  morose. — Dr.  J. 


CHRISTIAN    MORALS.  73 

submission,  humility,  content  of  mind,  and  industry.  Content 
may  dwell  in  all  stations.  To  be  low,  but  above  contempt, 
may  be  high  enough  to  be  happy.  But  many  of  low  degree 
may  be  higher  than  computed,  and  some  cubits  above  the 
common  commensuration  ;  for  in  all  states  virtue  gives  quali- 
fications and  allowances,  which  make  out  defects.  Hough 
diamonds  are  sometimes  mistaken  for  pebbles  ;  and  meanness 
may  be  rich  in  accomplishments,  which  riches  in  vain  desire. 
If  our  merits  be  above  our  stations,  if  our  intrinsical  value  be 
greater  than  what  we  go  for,  or  our  value  than  our  valuation, 
and  if  we  stand  higher  in  God's,  than  in  the  censor's  book ; '-' 
it  may  make  some  equitable  balance  in  the  inequalities  of  this 
world,  and  there  may  be  no  such  vast  chasm  or  gulph  between 
disparities  as  common  measures  determine.  The  divine  eye 
looks  upon  high  and  low  diftbrently  from  that  of  man.  They 
who  seem  to  stand  upon  Olympus,  and  high  mounted  unto 
our  eyes,  may  be  but  in  the  valleys,  and  low  ground  unto  his; 
for  he  looks  upon  tliose  as  highest  who  nearest  approach  his 
divinity,  and  upon  those  as  lowest  who  are  farthest  from  it. 

Sect,  xxviii. — \\'hen  thou  lookest  upon  the  imperfections 
of  others,  allow  one  eye  for  what  is  laudable  in  them,  and  the 
balance  they  have  from  some  excellency,  which  may  render 
them  considerable.  While  we  look  with  fear  or  hatred  upon 
the  teeth  of  the  viper,  we  may  behold  his  eye  with  love.  In 
venemous  natures  something  may  be  amiable  :  poisons  afford 
antipoisons  :  nothing  is  totally,  or  altogether  uselessly  bad. 
Notable  virtues  are  sometimes  dashed  with  notorious  vices, 
and  in  some  vicious  tempers  have  been  found  illustrious  acts 
of  virtue  ;  which  makes  such  observable  worth  in  some  actions 
of  king  Demetrius,  Antonius,  and  Ahab,  as  are  not  to  be 
found  in  the  same  kind  in  Aristides,  Numa,  or  David.  Con- 
stancy, generosity,  clemency,  and  liberality  have  been  highly 
conspicuous  in  some  persons  not  marked  out  in  other  con- 
cerns for  example  or  imitation.  But  since  goodness  is  ex- 
emplary in  all,  if  others  have  not  our  virtues,  let  us  not  be 
wanting  in  theirs  ;  nor  scorninij  them  for  their  vices  whereof 


'  censor's  book.]     The  book  in  which     estate  was  registered  among  the  Romai)». 
the  census,  or  account  of  every   man's     — Dr.  J. 


74  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

we  are  free,  be  conclemndd  by  their  virtues  wherein  we  are 
deficient.  There  is  dross,  alloy,  and  embasement  in  all  human 
tempers ;  and  he  flieth  without  wings,  who  thinks  to  find 
ophir  or  pure  metal  in  any.  For  perfection  is  not,  like  light, 
centered  in  any  one  body ;  but,  like  the  dispersed  seminalities 
of  vegetables  at  the  creation,  scattered  through  the  whole 
mass  of  the  earth,  no  place  producing  all  and  almost  all 
some.  So  that  'tis  well,  if  a  perfect  man  can  be  made  out  of 
many  men,  and,  to  the  perfect  eye  of  God,  even  out  of  man- 
kind. Time,  which  perfects  some  things,  imperfects  also 
others.  Could  we  intimately  apprehend  the  ideated  man, 
and  as  he  stood  in  the  intellect  of  God  upon  the  first  exer- 
tion by  creation,  we  might  more  narrowly  comprehend  our 
present  degeneration,  and  how  widely  we  are  fallen  from  the 
pure  exemplar  and  idea  of  our  nature  :  for  after  this  corrupt- 
ive elongation  from  a  primitive  and  pure  creation,  we  are  al- 
most lost  in  degeneration ;  and  Adam  hath  not  only  fallen  from 
his  Creator,  but  we  ourselves  from  Adam,  our  tycho  ^  and 
primary  generator." 

Srct.  XXIX. — Quarrel  not  rashly  with  adversities  not  yet 
understood ;  and  overlook  not  the  mercies  often  bound  up  in 
them :  for  we  consider  not  sufficiently  the  good  of  evils,  nor 
fairly  compute  the  mercies  of  providence  in  things  afflictive 
at  first  hand.  The  famous  Andreas  Doria  being  invited  to  a 
feast  by  Aloysio  Fieschi,  with  design  to  kill  him,  just  the  night 
before  fell  mercifully  into  a  fit  of  the  gout,  and  so  escaped 
that  mischief.     When  Cato  intended  to  kill  himself,  from  a 

'  li/cJio.l      'O   rvyuv  qui    facit,  'O  of  God,  wherein  we  are  like  to  rest  until 

rivtii-qui  adeptusest:  lie  that  makes,  the    advantage   of  another   being;    and 

or  he  that  nosscses;  as  Adam  might  he  H'Ci-efore  in  vain  we  seek  to  satisfy  our 

said  to  contain  within  him   the  race  of  souls  in  close  apprehensions  and  picMcing 

mankind Dr    J  theories   ot   the    divinity  even  from   the 

^^  irene'rator.i'    Add  from  MS.  Sloan.  ^>'""<=   "■"'"'i-       J^Ieanwhile    we   have    a 

18S5,  the  following  passage:—"  But  at  ^uppy  sufficiency  in  our  own  natures,  to 

this  distance  and  elon;;ation   we  dearly  apprd'end  his  good  will  and  pleasure;  it 

know  that  depravity  hath  overspread  us,  ^^'''^  "°'  "^  our  concern  or  capacity  from 

corruption  entered  like  oil  into  our  bones.  t'"^"''.c  .'«  apprehend  or  reach  his  nature, 

Imperfections  upbraid   us  on  all  hands,  '^e  div.ne  revelation  in  such  points  being 

and  ignorance  stands  pointing  at  u.  in  »°'   ''^'""'^^  ""'°  intellectuals  of  earth, 

every    corner    in  nature.      We   are   un-  J'^^''^"  'I"-'  ='"S<^'^  ^"'1  '^P'"'^  ''»''-"  'T° 

knowing  in  things  which  fall  under  cog-  *»  «'l'""'f  '"  ^^^''  subhmer  created  na- 

nition,  yet  drive  at  that  which  is  above  '"''^s:   admiration  being  the  act  of  the 

our  comprehension.     We  have  a  slender  "f '!">■<;  and  not  of  God,  who  doth   not 

knowledge  of  ourselves,  and  much   less  admire  himself. 


CHRISTIAN    MORALS.  7o 

blow  wliich  lie  gave  his  servant,  who  would  not  reach  his 
sword  unto  him,  his  hand  so  swelled  that  he  had  much  ado 
to  effect  his  design.  Hereby  any  one  but  a  resolved  stoic 
might  have  taken  a  fair  liint  of  consideration,  and  that  some 
merciful  genius  would  have  contrived  his  preservation.  To 
be  sagacious  in  such  intercurrences  is  not  superstition,  hut 
wary  and  pious  discretion;  and  to  contemn  such  hints  were 
to  be  deaf  unto  the  speaking  hand  of  God,  wherein  Socrates 
and  Cardan  ^  would  hardly  have  been  mistaken. 

Sect.  xxx. — Break  not  open  the  gate  of  destruction,  and 
make  no  haste  or  bustle  unto  ruin.  Post  not  heedlessly  on 
unto  the  uon  ultra  of  folly,  or  precipice  of  perdition.  Let 
vicious  ways  have  their  tropics  *  and  deflexions,  and  swim  in 
the  waters  of  sin  but  as  in  tlie  Asphaltick  lake,^  though 
smeared  and  defiled,  not  to  sink  to  the  bottom.  If  thou 
hast  dipped  thy  foot  in  the  brink,  yet  venture  not  over 
Rubicon.^  Run  not  into  extremities  from  whence  there  is  no 
regression.  In  the  vicious  ways  of  the  world  it  mercifully 
falleth  out  that  we  become  not  extempore  wicked,  but  it 
taketh  some  time  and  pains  to  undo  ourselves.  We  fall  not 
from  virtue,  like  Vulcan  from  heaven,  in  a  day.  Bad  dispo- 
sitions require  some  time  to  grow  into  bad  habits ;  bad  habits 
must  undermine  good,  and  often  repeated  acts  make  us  habit- 
ually evil :  so  that  by  gradual  depravations,  and  while  we  are 
but  staggeringly  evil,  we  are  not  left  without  parenthesis  of 
considerations,  thoughtful  rebukes,  and  merciful  interventions, 
to  recall  us  unto  ourselves.  For  the  wisdom  of  God  hath 
methodized  the  course  of  things  unto  the  best  advantage  of 
goodness,  and  thinking  considerators  overlook  not  the  tract 
thereof. 

Sect.  xxxi. — Since  men  ami  women  have  their  proper 
virtues  and  vices ;  and  even  twins  of  different  sexes  have  jiot 
only  distinct  coverings  in  the  womb,  but  differing  qualities 


^  Socrates    ami    Cardan.]       Socrates  *  Asphaltick    lake.]        The    lake    ol" 

and  Cardan,  perhaps  in  imitp.tion  of  him,  Sodom  ;   the  waters  of  which  being  very 

talked  of  an  attendant  spirit  or  genius,  salt,   and   therefore  heavy,  will  scarcely 

that  hinted  from  time  to  time  how  they  suffer  an  animal  to  sink. — Dr.  J. 

should  act. — Dr.  J.  «  Rubicon.]     The    river,   by  crossing 

■*  tropics.]      The  tropic  is   the    point  which  Caesar  declared    war  against  the 

where  the  sun  turns  back. — Dr.  J.  senate. — Dr.  J. 


7(j  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

and  virtuous  habits  after ;  transplace  not  their  proprieties,  and 
confound  not  their  distinctions.  Let  masculine  and  feminine 
accompHshments  shine  in  their  proper  orbs,  and  adorn  their 
respective  subjects.  However,  unite  not  the  vices  of  both 
sexes  in  one  ;  be  not  monstrous  in  iniquity,  nor  hermaphroditi- 
cally  vicious. 

Sect,  xxxir. —  If  generous  honesty,  valour,  and  plain  deal- 
ing be  the  cognisance  of  thy  family,  or  characteristic  of  thy 
country,  hold  fast  such  inclinations  sucked  in  with  thy  first 
breath,  and  which  lay  in  the  cradle  with  thee.  Fall  not  into 
transforming  degenerations,  which  under  the  old  name  create 
a  new  nation.  Be  not  an  alien  in  thine  own  nation  ;  bring  not 
Orontes  into  Tiber ;  "^  learn  the  virtues  not  the  vices  of  thy 
foreign  neighbours,  and  make  thy  imitation  by  discretion  not 
contagion.  Feel  something  of  thyself  in  the  noble  acts  of  thy 
ancestors,  and  find  in  thine  own  genius  that  of  thy  predeces- 
sors. Rest  not  under  the  expired  merits  of  others,  shine  by 
those  of  thy  own.  Flame  not  like  the  central  fire  which  en- 
lightenelh  no  eyes,  which  no  man  seeth,  and  most  men  think 
there's  no  such  thing  to  be  seen.  Add  one  ray  unto  the  com- 
mon lustre  ;  add  not  only  to  the  number  but  the  note  of  thy 
generation ;  and  prove  not  a  cloud  but  an  asterisk  ^  in  thy 


region. 


Sect,  xxxiii. — Since  thou  hast  an  alarum^  in  thy  breast, 
which  tells  thee  thou  hast  a  living  spirit  in  thee  above  two 
thousand  times  in  an  hour ;  dull  not  away  thy  days  in  slothful 
supinity  and  the  tediousness  of  doing  nothing.  To  strenu- 
ous minds  there  is  an  inquietude  in  over  quietness,  and  no  la- 
boriousness  in  labour ;  and  to  tread  a  mile  after  the  slow  pace 
of  a  snail,  or  the  heavy  measures  of  the  lazy  of  Brazilia,^  were  a 
most  tiring  penance,  and  worse  than  a  race  of  some  furlongs  at 
the  Olympics."     The  rapid  courses  of  the  heavenly  bodies  are 


'  Orontes  into  Tiber.'}    In  Tiberim  de-  tion,    which    is    nearer    to    the   number 

fluxit   Orontes:   "Orontes   has   mingled  mentioned. — Dr.  J. 

lier  stream  vvitli  tlie  Tiber,"  says  Juvenal,  '  lazynf  BrazUia.~\     An  animal  called 

speaking  of  the  confluence  of  foreigners  more  commonly  the  sloth,  which  is  said 

to  Rome. — Dr.  J.  to  be  several  days  in  climbing  a  tree. — 

^asterisk.']     A  small  star. — Dr.  J.  Dr.  J. 

^  alarum.']     The  motion  of  the  heart,         ^  Olympics.']     The  Olympic  games,  of 

which  beats  about  sixty  times  in  a  mi-  which  the  race  was  one  of  the   chief. — 

nute;  or,  perhaps,  the  motion  of  respira-  Dr.  J. 


CHRISTIAN     MOltALS.  ,7 

rather  imitable  by  our  tliouiihts,  than  our  corporeal  motions  ; 
yet  tlie  solemn  motions  of  our  lives  amount  unto  a  greater  mea- 
sure than  is  conunonly  apprehended.  Some  few  men  have  sur- 
rounded the  globe  of  the  earth  ;  yet  many  in  the  set  locomo- 
tions and  movements  of  their  days  have  measured  the  circuit 
of  it,  and  twenty  thousand  miles  have  been  exceeded  by  them. 
Move  circumspectly  not  meticulously,^  and  rather  carefully  so- 
licitous than  anxiously  solicitudinous.  Think  not  there  is  a  lion 
in  the  way,  nor  walk  with  leaden  sandals  in  the  paths  of  good- 
ness ;  but  in  all  virtuous  motions  let  prudence  determine  thy 
measures.  Strive  not  to  run  like  Hercules,  a  furlong  in  a 
breath :  festination  may  prove  precipitation ;  deliberating 
delay  may  be  wise  cunctation,  and  slowness  no  slothfulness. 

Sect,  xxxiv. —  Since  virtuous  actions  have  their  own  trum- 
pets, and,  without  any  noise  from  thyself,  will  have  their  re- 
sound abroad ;  busy  not  thy  best  member  in  the  encomium  of 
thyself.  Praise  is  a  debt  we  owe  unto  the  virtues  of  others, 
and  due  unto  our  own  from  all,  whom  malice  hath  not  made 
mutes,  or  envy  struck  dumb.  Fall  not,  however,  into  the 
common  prevaricating  way  of  self-commendation  and  boast- 
ing, by  denoting  the  imperfections  of  others.  He  who  dis- 
commendeth  others  obliquely,  commendeth  himself.  He  who 
whispers  their  infirmities,  proclaims  his  own  exemption  from 
them  ;  and,  consequently,  says,  I  am  not  as  this  publican,  or 
hie  niger*  whom  I  talk  of.  Open  ostentation  and  loud  vain- 
glory is  more  tolerable  than  this  oblicjuity,  as  but  containing 
some  froth,  no  ink,  as  but  consisting  of  a  personal  piece  of 
folly,  nor  complicated  with  uncharitableness.*     Sui)erfluously 

•  Hie  niger  est,  hunc  lu  Romane  caveto — Ilor. 

This  man  is  vile  ;  liere,  Roman,  fix  your  mark; 
His  soul  is  black,  as  his  complexion's  dark. — Francis. 


••  melirnlouslij.]     Timidly. — Dr.  J.  make  us  ashamed  to  speak  evil  of  tiie 

*  uncharitableness.']     Add   from    M.S.  dead,  a  crime  not  actionable  in  Chri.stian 

Sloan.  1817: — "  They  who  thus  closely  governments,  yet  hath    been    prohibited 

and  whisperingly  calumniate  the  absent  by  Pagan  laws  and  the  old  sanctions  of 

living,  will  be  apt  to  strayn  their  voyce  Athens.     Many  persons  are  like   many 

and  be  apt  to  be  loud  enough   in  infamy  rivers,  whose  mouths  are  at  a   vast  dis- 

of  the  dead  ;   wherein  there  should  be  a  tance  from  their  heads,    for  their  words 

civil  amnesty  and  an  oblivion  concern-  are  as  far  from  their  thoughts  as  Cano- 

ing  those  who  are  in  a  state  where  all  pus  from  the  head  of  Nilus.     These  are 

things   are    forgotten;     but   Solon    will  ofthe  former  of  those  men,  whose  punish- 


78  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

we  seek  a  precarious  applause  abroad :  every  good  man  hath 
his  plaudit  ^  within  himself;  and  though  his  tongue  be  silent, 
is  not  without  loud  cymbals  in  his  breast.  Conscience  will 
become  his  panegyrist,  and  never  forget  to  crown  and  extol 
him  unto  himself. 

Sect.  xxxv. — Bless  not  thyself  only  that  thou  wert  born 
in  Athens ;  *  but,  among  thy  multiplied  acknowledgments,  lift 
up  one  hand  unto  heaven,  that  thou  wert  born  of  honest  pa- 
rents ;  that  modesty,  humility,  patience,  and  veracity,  lay  in 
the  same  egg,  and  came  into  the  world  with  thee.  From 
such  foundations  thou  may'st  be  happy  in  a  virtuous  pre- 
cocity,^ and  make  an  early  and  long  walk  in  goodness ;  so 
may'st  thou  more  naturally  feel  the  contrariety  of  vice  unto 
nature,  and  resist  some  by  the  antidote  of  thy  temper.  As 
charity  covers,  so  modesty  preventeth  a  multitude  of  sins ; 
withholding  from  noon-day  vices  and  brazen-browed  iniqui- 
ties, from  sinning  on  the  house-top,  and  painting  our  follies 
with  the  rays  of  the  sun.  Where  this  virtue  reigneth,  though 
vice  may  show  its  head,  it  cannot  be  in  its  glory.  Where 
shame  of  sin  sets,  look  not  for  virtue  to  arise  ;  for  when  mo- 
desty taketh  wing,  Astrea  f  goes  soon  after. 

Sect,  xxxvi. — The  heroical  vein  of  mankind  runs  much 
in  the  soldiery,  and  courageous  part  of  the  world  ;  and  in 
that  form  we  oftenest  find  men  above  men.  History  is  full 
of  the  gallantry  of  that  tribe  ;  and  when  we  read  their  not- 
able acts,  we  easily  find  what  a  difference  there  is  between  a 
a  life  in  Plutarch^  and  in  Laertius."  Where  true  fortitude 
dwells,  loyalty,  bounty,  friendship,  and  fidelity  may  be  found. 


»   As  Socrates  did.     Athens  a  place  of  learning  and  civility, 
t  Astrea,  goddess  of  justice  and  consequently  of  all  virtue. 


ment  in   Dante's  hell  is  to  look  everlast-  of  the  world    which    they  arc    entering 

ingly  backward:   if  you  have  a  mind  to  into. 

laugh  at  a  man,  or  disparage  the  judge-         ^  plaudit.']       Plaiidite    was  the    term 

ment  of  any  one,  set  him  a  talking  of  by  which  the  ancient  theatrical  perforni- 

fhings  to  come  or  events  of  hereafter  con-  ers  solicited  a  clap. — Dr.  J. 

tingency  ;   which  elude  the  cognition  of         ''  precocity.']       A    ripeness   preceding 

such  an  arrogate,  the  knowledge  of  them  the  usual  linjc. — Dr.  J. 

whereto  the  ignorant  pretend  not,  and  the  '   Plutarch.]     Who    wrote    the  lives, 

learned  imprudently  faill ;  wherein  men  for  the  most  part,  of  warriors. — Dr.  J, 

seem   to   talk  but  as  babes  would  do  in         *  Laeriius.]     Who  wrote  the  lives  of 

the  womb  of  their  mother,  of  the  things  pliilosophers. — Dr.  J. 


CHRISTIAN    MORALS.  79 

A  man  may  confide  in  persons  constituted  for  noble  ends,  who 
dare  do  and  suffer,  and  who  have  a  hand  to  burn  for  their 
country  and  their  friend.^  Small  and  creeping  things  are  the 
jiroduct  of  petty  souls.  lie  is  like  to  be  mistaken,  who  makes 
choice  of  a  covetous  man  for  a  friend,  or  relieth  upon  the 
reed  of  narrow  and  poltroon  friendshij).  Pitiful  things  are 
only  to  be  found  in  the  cottages  of  such  breasts  :  but  bright 
thoughts,  clear  deeds,  constancy,  iidelity,  bounty,  and  gener- 
ous honesty  are  the  gems  of  noble  minds;  wherein,  to  dero- 
gate from  none,  the  true  heroic  English  gentleman  hath  no 
peer. 


PART  THE  SECOND. 

Sect.  i. —  Punish  not  thyself  with  pleasure;  glut  not  thy 
sense  with  palative  delights  ;  nor  revenge  the  contempt  of 
temperance  by  the  penalty  of  satiety.  Were  there  an  age  of 
delight  or  any  pleasure  durable,  who  would  not  honour  Volu- 
pia  ?  but  the  race  of  delight  is  short,  and  pleasures  have 
mutable  faces.  The  pleasures  of  one  age  are  not  pleasures  in 
another,  and  their  lives  fall  short  of  our  own.  Even  in  our 
sensual  days,  the  strength  of  delight  is  in  its  seldomness  or 
rarity,'  and  sling  in  its  satiety :  mediocrity  is  its  life,  and  ini- 
moderacy  its  confusion.  The  luxurious  emperors  of  old  in- 
considerately satiated  themselves  with  the  dainties  of  sea  and 
land,  till,  wearied  through  all  varieties,  their  refections  became 
a  study  unto  them,  and  they  were  fain  to  feed  by  invention  : 
novices  in  true  epicurism!  which,  by  mediocrity,  paucity, 
quick  and  healthful  appetite,  makes  delights  smartly  accept- 
able ;  whereby  Epicurus  himself  found  Jupiter's  brain  in  a 
piece  of  Cytheridian  cheese,*  and  the  tongues  of  nightingales 
in  a  dish  of  onions."     Hereby  healthful  and  temperate  poverty 

•   Cerebrum  Jovis,  for  a  delicious  bit. 

^  and  Iheir  friend.]    Like  Mutius  Sex-  '  tongues  of  nightingales, ifc]     A  disli 

vola. — Dr.  J.  used  among  the  luxurious  of  antiquity. 

'   the  strength,  &;c.']     Voluptates  com-  — Dr.  J. 
jnendat  rarior  usus. — Dr.  J. 


80  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

hath  the  start  of  nauseating  luxury;  unto  whose  clear  and 
naked  appetite  every  meal  is  a  feast,  and  in  one  single  dish 
the  first  course  of  Metellus ;  ''*  who  are  cheaply  hungry,  and 
never  lose  their  hunger,  or  advantage  of  a  craving  appetite, 
because  obvious  food  contents  it ;  while  NerOjf  half  famished, 
could  not  feed  upon  a  piece  of  bread,  and,  lingering  after 
his  snowed  water,  hardly  got  down  an  ordinary  cup  of  Calda.^j; 
By  such  circumscriptions  of  pleasure  the  contemned  philoso- 
phers reserved  unto  themselves  the  secret  of  delight,  which 
the  helluos^  of  those  days  lost  in  their  exorbitances.  In 
vain  we  study  delight ;  it  is  at  the  command  of  every  sober 
mind,  and  in  every  sense  born  with  us :  but  nature,  who 
teacheth  us  tlie  rule  of  pleasure,  instructeth  also  in  the  bounds 
thereof,  and  where  its  line  expireth.  And,  therefore,  temper- 
ate minds,  not  pressing  their  pleasures  until  the  sling  appear- 
eth,  enjoy  their  contentations  contentedly,  and  without  regret, 
and  so  escape  the  folly  of  excess,  to  be  pleased  unto  displa- 
cency. 

Sect.  ii. — Bring  candid  eyes  unto  the  perusal  of  men's 
works,  and  let  not  Zoilism  ^  or  detraction  blast  well-intended 
labours.  He  that  endureth  no  faults  in  men's  writings  must 
only  read  his  own,  wherein,  for  the  most  part,  all  appeareth 
white.  Quotation  mistakes,  inadvertency,  expedition,  and 
human  lapses,  may  make  not  only  moles  but  warts  in  learned 
authors  ;  who,  notwithstanding,  being  judged  by  the  capital 
matter,  admit  not  of  disparagement.  I  should  unwillingly 
affirm  that  Cicero  was  but  slightly  versed  in  Homer,  because 
in  his  work,  De  Gloria,  he  ascribed  those  verses  unto  Ajax, 
which  were  delivered  by  Hector.  What  if  Plautus,  in  the 
account  of  Hercules,  mistaketh  nativity  for  conception  ?  Who 
would  have  mean  thoughts  of  Apollinaris  Sidonius,  who  seems 
to  mistake  the  river  Tigris  for  Euphrates  ?  and,  though  a 
good  historian  and  learned  bishop  of  Avergne,  had  the  mis- 

•  His  riotous  pontifical  supper,  the  great  variety  whereat  is  to  be  seen  in  Macrobius. 
t  Nero,  in  his  flight.  %  Caldaa  gelidseque  minister. 


^  Metellus.^     Tlie    supper    was    not         ''  Calda.^     Warm  water — Dr.  J. 
given    by     Metellus,  but    by    Lentulus         *  Helliw's.^     Gluttons. — Dr.  J. 
when  he  was  made  priest  of  Mars,  and         **  Zoilism,    <S-c.]      From    Zoilus,    the 

recorded  by  Metellus. — Dr.  J.  calumniator  of  Homer. — Dr.  J, 


CHRISTIAN    MORALS.  SI 

fortune  to  be  out  in  tlie  story  of  David,  inakiiig  mention  of 
him  when  the  ark  was  sent  back  by  the  PluHstines  upon  a  cart ; 
M'hich  was  before  his  time.  Though  I  have  no  great  opinion 
of  Macliiavel's  learning,  yet  I  siiail  not  presently  say  that  he 
was  but  a  novice  in  Roman  history,  because  lie  was  mistaken 
in  placing  Commodus  after  the  Emperor  Severus.  Capital 
truttisare  to  be  narrowly  eyed;  collateral  lapses  and  circum- 
stantial deliveries  not  to  be  too  strictly  sifted.  And  if  the 
substantial  subject  be  well  forged  out,  we  need  not  examine 
the  sparks  which  irregularly  fly  from  it. 

Sect.  hi. — Let  well-weighed  considerations,  not  stiff  and 
peremptory  assumptions,  guide  thy  discourses,  pen,  and  ac 
tions.  To  berrin  or  continue  our  works  like  Trisme^istus  of 
old,  "  venim  certe  cerum  atqtte  ver'iss'imum  est"''  *  would  sound 
arrogantly  unto  present  ears  in  this  strict  enquiring  age; 
wherein,  for  the  most  part,  'probably'  and  *  perhaps'  will  hardly 
serve  to  mollify  the  spirit  of  captious  contradictors.  If  Car- 
dan saith  that  a  parrot  is  a  beautiful  bird,  Scaliger  will  set  his 
wits  to  work  to  prove  it  a  deformed  animal.  The  compage  of 
all  physical  truths  is  not  so  closely  jointed,  but  opposition  may 
find  intrusion ;  nor  always  so  closely  maintained,  as  not  to  suf- 
fer attrition.  JNIany  positions  seem  quodlibetically "  consti- 
tuted, and,  like  a  Delphian  blade,  will  cut  on  both  sides.^ 
Some  truths  seem  almost  falsehoods,  and  some  falsehoods 
almost  truths ;  wherein  falsehood  and  truth  seem  almost 
aequilibriously  stated,  and  but  a  few  grains  of  distinction  to 
bear  down  the  balance.  Some  have  digged  deep,  yet  glanced 
by  the  royal  vein  ; '  and  a  man  may  come  unto  the  pericar- 
dium,- but  not  the  heart  of  truth.  Besides,  many  things  are 
known,  as  some  are  seen,  that  is  by  parallaxis,''  or  at  some 
distance  from  their  true  and  proper  beings,  the  superficial  re- 

•  In  Tabula  Smaragdina. 

'  verum  eertc,  ^c]  It  is  true,  cer-  was  used  to  difTercnt  purposes. — Dr.  J. 
tainly  true,   true  in   the  higliest  degree.  '   roi/al  vein.]     I    suppose   the    main 

— Dr.  J.  vein  of-a  mine. — Dr.  J. 

'  quodUbelicaUij  ]       Determinable  on  '  jjcricardiitm.^      Tlie    integument  of 

tither  side. — Dr.  J.  the  licart. — Dr.  J. 

^  like   a   Delphian   blade,    <^c.]      The  'parallaxis.]      The  parallax  of  a  star 

Delphian  sword  became  proverbial,   not  is  the  difference  between  its  real  and  ap- 

because  it  cut  on  both  sides,  but  because  it  parent  place. — Dr.  J. 

VOL.    IV.  G 


82  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

gard  of  thingshaving  a  different  aspect  from  their  true  and 
central  natures.  And  this  moves  sober  pens  unto  suspensory 
and  timorous  assertions,  nor  presently  to  obtrude  them  as 
Sibyl's  leaves,*  which  after  considerations  may  find  to  be  but 
foHous  appearances,  and  not  the  central  and  vital  interiors  of 
truth. 

Sect.  iv. — Value  the  judicious,  and  let  not  mere  acquests 
in  minor  parts  of  learning  gain  thy  pre-existimation.  'Tis  an 
unjust  way  of  compute,  to  magnify  a  weak  head  for  some 
Latin  abiHties ;  and  to  undervalue  a  solid  judgment,  because 
he  knows  not  the  genealogy  of  Hector.  When  that  notable 
king  of  France*  would  have  his  son  to  know  but  one  sentence 
in  Latin ;  had  it  been  a  good  one,  perhaps  it  had  been  enough. 
Natural  parts  and  good  judgments  rule  the  world.  States 
are  not  governed  by  ergotisms.^  Many  have  ruled  well,  who 
could  not,  perhaps,  define  a  commonwealth ;  and  they  who 
understand  not  the  globe  of  the  earth,  command  a  great  part 
of  it.  Where  natural  logic  prevails  not,  artificial  too  often 
faileth.  Wliere  nature  fills  the  sails,  the  vessel  goes  smoothly 
on;  and  when  judgment  is  the  pilot,  the  ensvirance  need  not 
be  high.  When  industry  builds  upon  nature,  we  may  expect 
pyramids :  where  that  foundation  is  wanting,  the  structure 
must  be  low.  They  do  most  by  books,  who  could  do  much 
without  them  ;  and  he  that  chiefly  owes  himself  unto  himself, 
is  the  substantial  man. 

Sect.  v. — Let  thy  studies  be  free  as  thy  thoughts  and  con- 
templations :  but  fly  not  only  upon  the  wings  of  imagination  ; 
join  sense  unto  reason,  and  experiment  unto  speculation,  and 
so  give  life  unto  embryon  truths,  and  verities  yet  in  their  chaos. 
There  is  nothing  more  acceptable  unto  the  ingenious  Avorld, 
than  this  noble  eluctation^  of  truth;  wherein,  against  the 
tenacity  of  prejudice  and  prescription,  this  century  now  pre- 
vaileth.  What  libraries  of  new  volumes  aftertimes  will  be- 
hold, and  in  what  a  new  world  of  knowledge  the  eyes  of  our 
posterity  may  be  happy,  a  few  ages  may  joyfully  declare ;  and 

*  Lewis  the  Eleventli.     Qui  nescit  dissiraulaie  nescit  regnare. 

*  Sibyl's  leaves.'l  On  which  the  Sybil  according  to  the  forms  of  logic. — Dr.  J. 
wrote  her  oraculous  answers. —  Virgil.  ^  clucfalion.^       Forcible   eruption. — 

'  ergotisms.^     Conclusions     deduced     Dr.  J. 


CHRrSTIAN    MORALS.  S3 

is  but  a  cold  tliought  unto  those  who  cannot  liope  to  behold 
this  exanthition  of  truth,  or  that  obscured  virgin  half  out  of 
the  pit :  which  might  make  some  content  with  a  commutation 
of  the  time  of  their  lives,  and  to  commend  the  fimcy  of  the 
Pythagorean  metempsychosis;'  whereby  they  might  hope  to 
enjoy  this  happiness  in  their  third  or  fourth  selves,  and  be- 
hold that  in  Pythagoras,  whicli  they  now  but  foresee  in 
Euphorbus.*  The  world,  which  took  but  six  days  to  make,  is 
like  to  take  six  tliousand  to  make  out :  meanwhile,  old  truths 
voted  down  begin  to  resume  their  places,  and  new  ones  arise 
upon  us ;  wherein  there  is  no  comfort  in  the  happiness  of 
TuUy's  Elisium,f  or  any  satisfaction  from  the  ghosts  of  the 
ancients,  who  knew  so  little  of  what  is  now  well  known. 
Men  disparage  not  antiquity,  who  prudently  exalt  new  enqui- 
ries; and  make  not  them  the  judges  of  truth,  who  were  but 
fellow  enquirers  of  it.  Who  can  but  magnify  the  endeavours 
of  Aristotle,  and  the  noble  start  whicli  learning  had  under 
him ;  or  less  than  pity  the  slender  progression  made  upon 
such  advantages  ?  while  many  centuries  were  lost  in  repetitions 
and  transcriptions,  sealing  up  the  book  of  knowledge.  And, 
therefore,  rather  than  to  swell  the  leaves  of  learning  by  fruit- 
Jess  repetitions,  to  sing  the  same  song  in  all  ages,  nor  adven- 
ture at  essays  beyond  the  attempt  of  others,  many  would  be 
content  that  some  would  write  like  Ilelmont  or  Paracelsus  ;'' 
and  be  willing  to  endure  the  monstrosity  of  some  opinions,  for 
divers  singular  notions  requiting  such  aberrations. 

Sect.  vr. — Despise  not  the  oblicjuities  of  younger  ways, 
nor  despair  of  better  things  whereof  there  is  yet  no  prospect. 
Who  would  imagine  that  Diogenes,  who  in  his  younger  days 
was  a  falsifier  of  money,  should  in  the  after-course  of  his  life 
be  so  great  a  contemner  of  metal  ?  Some  negroes  who  be- 
lieve the  resurrection,  think  that  they  shall  rise  white.:|:  J*>en 
in  this  life,  regeneration  may  imitate  resurrection ;  our  black 

•   Ipse  ego,  nam  memini,  Trojani  tempore  belli, 
Panthoides  Euphorbus  cram. — Ovid. 
t  Who  comforted  himself  that  he  should  there  converse  with  the  old  philosophers. 

X  MandeUlo's  travels. 

'  Ptfthagoreaii  mrtempsi/rliosis.'^TTAnf.-  ^  Ilelmont  or  ParaceLtus.~\  Wild  and 
migration  of  the  soul  from  body  to  enthusiastic  authors  of  romantic  chy- 
body. — Dr.  J.  inistry — Dr.  J. 


84  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

and  vicious  tinctures  may  wear  off,  and  goodness  clothe  us 
with  candour.  Good  admonitions  knock  not  always  in  vain. 
There  will  be  signal  examples  of  God's  mercy,  and  the  angels 
must  not  want  their  charitable  rejoices  for  the  conversion  of 
lost  sinners.  Figures  of  most  angles  do  nearest  approach 
unto  circles  which  have  no  angles  at  all.  Some  may  be  near 
unto  goodness,  who  are  conceived  far  from  it ;  and  many 
things  happen,  not  likely  to  ensue  from  any  promises  of  ante- 
cedencies. Culpable  beginnings  have  found  commendable 
conclusions,  and  infamous  courses  pious  retractations.  De- 
testable sinners  have  proved  exemplary  converts  on  earth, 
and  may  be  glorious  in  the  apartment  of  Mary  Magdalen  in 
heaven.  Men  are  not  the  same  through  all  divisions  of  their 
ages :  time,  experience,  self-reflections,  and  God's  mercies, 
make  in  some  well-tempered  minds  a  kind  of  translation  be- 
fore death,  and  men  to  differ  from  themselves  as  well  as  from 
other  persons.  Hereof  the  old  world  afforded  many  exam- 
ples, to  the  infamy  of  latter  ages,  wherein  men  too  often  live 
by  the  rule  of  their  inclinations ;  so  that,  without  any  astral 
prediction,  the  first  day  gives  the  last  :*  men  are  commonly  as 
they  were:  or  rather,  as  bad  dispositions  run  into  worser 
habits,  the  evening  doth  not  crown,  but  sourly  conclude 
the  day. 

Sect.  vii. — If  the  Almighty  will  not  spare  us  according  to 
his  merciful  capitulation  at  Sodom ;  if  his  goodness  please 
not  to  pass  over  a  great  deal  of  bad  for  a  small  pittance  of 
good,  or  to  look  upon  us  in  the  lump  ;  there  is  slender  hope 
for  mercy,  or  sound  presumption  of  fulfilling  half  his  will, 
either  in  persons  or  nations :  they  who  excel  in  some  virtues 
being  so  often  defective  in  others ;  few  men  driving  at  the  ex- 
tent and  amplitude  of  goodness,  but  computing  themselves 
by  their  best  parts,  and  others  by  their  worst,  are  content  to 
rest  in  those  virtues  which  others  commonly  want.  Which 
makes  this  speckled  face  of  honesty  in  the  world  ;  and  which 
was  the  imperfection  ^  of  the  old  philosophers  and  great  pre- 

*  Primusque  dies  dedit  extremum. 

'  few  men,  ^e.]  Instead  of  this  nations,  mainly  settling  upon  some 
passage,  I  find  the  following  in  MS.  Clivistian  particulars,  which  they  con- 
Sloan,     1874: — "Persons,     sectR,     and     ceive   n)ost   acceptable    unto   God,    and 


CHRISTIAN    MORALS.  .  85 

tenders  unto  virtue,  who  well  declining  the  gaping  vices  of 
intemperance,  incontinency,  violence  and  oppression,  were 
yet  blindly  peccant  in  iniquities  of  closer  faces,  were  envious, 
malicious,  contemners,  scotlers,  censurers,  and  stuttl'd  with 
vizard  vices,  no  less  depraving  the  ethereal  particle  and  di- 
viner portion  of  man.  For  envy,  malice,  hatred,  are  the 
(pialities  of  Satan,  close  and  dark  like  himjjelf;  and  where 
such  brands  smoke,  the  soul  cannot  be  white.  Vice  may  be 
had  at  all  prices  ;  expensive  and  costly  iniquities,  which  make 
the  noise,  cannot  be  every  man's  sins :  but  the  soul  may  be 
foully  inquinated  ^  at  a  very  low  rate ;  and  a  man  may  be 
cheaply  vicious,  to  the  perdition  of  himself. 

Sect.  vm. — Opinion  rides  upon  the  neck  of  reason;  and 
men  are  haj)py,  wise,  or  learned,  according  as  that  empress 
shall  set  them  down  in  the  register  of  reputation.  However, 
weigh  not  thyself  in  the  scales  of  thy  own  opinion,  but  let 
the  judgment  of  the  judicious  be  the  standard  of  thy  merit. 
Self  estimation  is  a  batterer  too  readily  intitling  us  unto 
knowledge  and  abilities,  which  others  solicitously  labour  after, 
and  doubtfully  think  they  attain.  Surely  such  confident 
tempers  do  pass  their  days  in  best  tranquillity,  who  resting  in 
the  opinion  of  their  own  abilities,  are  happily  gulled  by  such 
contentation ;  wherein  pride,  self-conceit,  confidence,  and 
opiniatrity,  will  hardlysuffer  any  to  complain  of  imperfection. 
To  think  themselves  in  the  right,  or  all  that  right,  or  only 
that,  which  they  do  or  think,  is  a  fallacy  of  high  content; 
though  others  laugh  in  their  sleeves,  and  look  upon  them  as 
in  a  deluded  state  of  judgment :  wherein,  notwithstanding, 
'twere  but  a  civil  piece  of  complacency  to  suffer  them  to  sleep 
who  would  not  wake,  to  let  them  rest  in  their  securities,  nor 
by  dissent  or  opposition  to  stagger  their  contentments. 


promoting  tlic  interest  of  their  inclina-  would  judpe  and  reckon  himself  by  his 

tions,  parties,   and   divisions;   everyone  worst,  and    others   by   their   best  parts, 

reckoning  and  preferring  himself  by  the  this   deception   mu>t  needs  vanish;  hu- 

particulars    wherein    he    excelieth,    and  mility     would    gain     ground;     charity 

decrying  all  others,   though  highly  emi-  would  overspread  the  face  of  the  church, 

nent  in  other  Christian  virtues.      Which  and   the    fruits  of  the   spirit  not  be   so 

makes   this   speckled  face  of  honesty  in  thinly  found  among  us. 

the   world;    whereas,   if  men  would   nut  "  This  was  the  imperfection,  &c."' 

seek    themselves  abroad  ;  if  every    one  '  ixijuinatid.]     Defiled. — Dr.  J. 


86  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

Sect,  ix.*^ — Since  the  brow  speaks  often  truth,  since  eyes 
and  noses  have  tongues,  and  the  countenance  proclaims  the 
heart  and  inclinations  ;  let  observation  so  far  instruct  thee  in 
physiognomical  lines,  as  to  be  some  rule  for  thy  distinction, 
and  guide  for  thy  affection  unto  such  as  look  most  like  men. 
Mankind,  niethinks,  is  comprehended  in  a  fevv^  faces,  if  we 
exclude  all  visages  which  any  way  participate  of  symmetries 
and  schemes  of  look  common  unto  other  animals.     For  as 
though  man  were  the  extract  of  the  world,  in  whom  all  were 
"in  coagulato,"^  which  in  their  forms  were  "insoluto"'*  and 
at  extension ;  we  often  observe  that  men  do  most  act  those 
creatures,  whose  constitution,  parts,  and  complexion,  do  most 
predominate  in  their  mixtures.     This  is  a  corner  stone  in 
physiognomy,  and  holds  some  truth  not  only   in  particular 
persons   but  also  in  whole  nations.     There  are,  therefore, 
provincial  faces,  national  lips  and  noses,  which  testify  not  only 
the  natures  of  those  countries,  but  of  those  which  have  them 
elsewhere.    Thus  we   may   make  England  the  whole  earth, 
dividing  it  not  only  into  Europe,  Asia,  Africa,  but  the  par- 
ticular regions  thereof;  and  may  in  some  latitude  affirm,  that 
there   are  Egyptians,    Scythians,   Indians   among  us,   who, 
though  born  in  England,  yet  carry  the  faces  and  air  of  those 
countries,  and  are   also   agreeable  and  correspondent  unto 
their  natures.     Faces  look   uniformly  unto  our  eyes:  how 
they  appear  unto  some  animals  of  a  more  piercing  or  differing 
sight,  who  are  able  to  discover  the  inequalities,  rubs,  and 
hairiness  of  the  skin,  is  not  without  good  doubt :  and,  there- 
fore, in  reference  unto  man,  Cupid  is  said  to  be  blind.     Af- 
fection should  not  be  too  sharp-eyed,  and  love  is  not  to  be 
made  by  magnifying  glasses.     If  things  were  seen  as  they 
truly   are,  the  beauty  of  bodies  would  be  much   abridged. 
And,  therefore,  the  wise  contriver  hath  drawn  the  pictures 
and  outsides  of  things  softly  and  amiably  unto  the  natural 
edge  of  our  eyes,  not  leaving  them  able  to  discover  those 
uncomely  asperities,  which  make  oyster-shells  in  good  faces, 
and  hedgehogs  even  in  Venus's  moles. 

-  Sect.  ix. — This  is  a  very  fanciful     congealed  or  compressed  nnass." — Dr.  J. 
and  indefensible  section. — Dr.  J.  ''  in  soliito.^     "  In  a  state  of  expan- 

•^  were  "  in  coagulato."]     i.  e.  "  In  a     sion  and  separation." — Dr.  J. 


CHRISTIAN    MOKALS.  87 

Sect.  x. — Court  not  felicity  too  fur,  and  weary  not  the 
favourable  hand  of  fortune.  Glorious  actions  have  their 
times,  extent,  and  non  ultras.  To  put  no  end  unto  atteni})ts 
were  to  make  prescription  of  successes,  and  to  bespeak  un- 
happiness  at  the  last :  for  the  line  of  our  lives  is  drawn  with 
white  and  black  vicissitudes,  wherein  the  extremes  hold  sel- 
dom one  complexion.  That  Pompey  should  obtain  the  sur- 
name of  great  at  twenty-five  years,  that  men  in  their  young 
and  active  days  should  be  fortunate  and  perform  notable 
things,  is  no  observation  of  deep  wonder ;  they  having  the 
strength  of  their  fates  before  them,  nor  yet  acted  their  parts 
in  the  world  for  which  they  were  brought  into  it ;  whereas 
men  of  years,  matured  for  counsels  and  designs,  seem  to  be 
beyond  the  vigour  of  their  active  fortunes,  and  liigh  exploits 
of  life,  providentially  ordained  unto  ages  best  agreeable  unto 
them.  And,  therefore,  many  brave  men  finding  their  fortune 
grow  faint,  and  feeling  its  declination,  have  timely  withdrawn 
themselves  from  great  attempts,  and  so  escaped  the  ends 
of  mighty  men,  disproportionable  to  their  beginnings.^ 
But  magnanimous  thoughts  have  so  dimmed  the  eyes  of 
many,  that  forgetting  the  very  essence  of  fortune,  and  the 
vicissitude  of  good  and  evil,  they  apprehend  no  bottom 
in  felicity ;  and  so  have  been  still  tempted  on  unto  mighty 
actions,  reserved  for  their  destructions.  For  fortune  lays 
the  plot  of  our  adversities  in  the  foundation  of  our  felici- 
ties, blessing  us  in  the  first  quadrate,^  to  blast  us  more 
sharply  in  the  last.  And  since  in  the  highest  felicities  there 
lieth  a  capacity  of  the  lowest  miseries,  she  hath  this  ad- 
vantage from  our  happiness  to  make  us  truly  miserable  :  for 
to  become  acutely  miserable  we  are  to  be  first  happy.  Afflic- 
tion smarts  most  in  the  most  happy  state,  as  having  some- 
what in  it  of  Belisarius  at  beggar's  bush,  or  Bajazet  in  the 


*  bepiiiniiigs.]    AfS.  Sloan.  187J,  pro-  dies  cum    fine  bonorum  aflluit,  et  ctleri 

ceeds   thus: — "Wisely    stopping    about  praevertit  tristia  lethodtdccori  est  Ibrtuna 

the  meridian  of  their  felicities,  and  un-  prior  quisquam  no  sccundis  tradcrc  ^sc 

willing  to  hazard  the  favours  of  the  de-  fatisaudet  nisi  mortc  parcitu. — Lucan  7." 

scending  wheel,  or   to  fight  downward  •*  quadrate,  SfC.']     That    is,    "in    tlie 

in  the   setting  arch    of  fortune.     "  Sic  first  part  of  our  time,"  alluding  to  the 

longius  aevium  destruit  ingentes  animos,  four  quadratures  of  the  moon. — Dr.  J. 
et   vita  sitperstes   fortunx,  nisi    summa 


88 


CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 


grateJ  And  this  the  fallen  angels  severely  understand ; 
who  have  acted  their  first  part  in  heaven,  are  made  sharply 
miserable  by  transition,  and  more  afflictively  feel  the  contrary 
state  of  hell." 

Sect.  xi. — Carry  no  careless  eye  upon  the  unexpected 
scenes  of  things  ;  but  ponder  the  acts  of  providence  in  the 
public  ends  of  great  and  notable  men,  set  out  unto  tiie  view 
of  all  for  no  common  memorandums.'-'  The  tragical  exits  and 
unexpected  periods  of  some  eminent  persons,  cannot  but 
amaze  considerate  observators ;  wherein,  notwithstanding, 
most  men  seem  to  see  by  extramission,^  without  reception  or 
self-reflection,  and  conceive  themselves  unconcerned  by  the 
fallacy  of  their  own  exemption :  whereas,  the  mercy  of  God 
hath  singled  out  but  few  to   be  the  signals  of  his  justice, 


'  Bellisarius,  i^c.]  Bellisarius,  after 
he  had  gained  many  victories,  is  said  to 
have  been  reduced,  by  the  displeasure 
of  the  emperor,  to  actual  beggary : 
Bajazet,  made  captive  by  Tamerlane,  is 
reported  to  have  been  shut  up  in  a  cage. 
It  may  somewhat  gratify  those  who  de- 
serve to  be  gratified,  to  inform  them 
that  both  these  stories  are  false. — Dr.  J. 

Lord  Mahon,  in  his  recent  life  of 
Bellisarius,  has  related  the  mendicity 
and  loss  of  sight  of  this  great  man,  and 
says  in  his  preface  that  those  facts, 
"  which  every  writer  for  the  last  century 
and  half  has  treated  as  a  fable,  may  be 
established  on  firm  historical  grounds." 

*  /Ind  this  the  fallen  angels,  &;c.'\  In- 
stead of  this  passage,  1  find  the  follow- 
ing in  MS.  Sloan.  1874  :— "  And  this  is 
the  observable  course  ;  not  only  in  this 
visible  stage  of  things,  but  may  be 
feared  in  our  second  beings  and  ever- 
lasting selves  ;  wherein  the  good  things 
past  are  seconded  by  the  bad  to  come  : 
and  many  to  whom  the  embraces  of 
fortune  are  open  here,  may  find  Abra- 
ham's arms  shut  unto  him  hereafter ; 
which  wakes  serious  consideration, 
not  so  much  to  ])ity  as  envy  some  men's 
infelicities,  wherein,  considering  the  cir- 
cle of  both  our  beings,  and  the  succes- 
sion of  good  unto  evil,  tyranny  may 
sometimes  prove  courteous,  and  malice 
mercifully  cruel.  Wherein,  notwith- 
standing, if  swelling  beginnings  have 
found  imcomfortable  conclusions,  it  is 
by  the  method  and  justice  of  providence 
equalizing  one  with  the  other,  and  re- 


ducing the  sum  of  the  whole  unto  a 
mediocrity  by  the  balance  of  extremi- 
ties: that  in  the  sum  the  felicities  of 
great  ones  hold  a  truth  and  parity  with 
most  that  are  below  them  :  whereby  the 
minor  favourites  of  fortune  which  incur 
not  such  sharp  transitions,  have  no 
cause  to  whine,  nor  men  of  middle 
fates  to  murmur  at  their  indifl^erences. 

"By  this  method  of  providence  the 
devil  himself  is  deluded ;  who  malig- 
ning us  at  all  points,  and  bearing  felicity 
from  us  even  in  this  earthly  being,  he 
becomes  assistant  unto  our  future  hap- 
piness, and  blessed  vicissitude  of  the 
next.  And  this  is  also  the  unhappiness 
of  himself,  who  having  acted  his  first 
part  in  heaven,  is  made  sharply  miser- 
able by  transition,  and  more  afHictively 
feels  the  contrary  state  of  hell." 

^  memora)idums.]  This  sentence  is 
thus  continued  in  BIS.  Sloa7i.  1874: — 
"  Whereof  I,  that  have  not  seen  the  six- 
tieth part  of  time,  have  beheld  great 
examples.  Than  the  incomparable 
Montrose,  no  nan  acted  a  more  fortu- 
nate part  in  the  first  scene  of  his  ad- 
ventures ;  but  courageous  loyalty  con- 
tinuing his  attempts,  he  quickly  felt  that 
fortune's  favours  were  out;  and  fell 
upon  miseries  smartly  answering  his  fe- 
licities, which  was  the  only  accomplish- 
ment wanting  before  to  make  him  fit  for 
Plutarch's  pen,  and  to  parallel  the  lives 
of  his  heroic  captains." 

'  e.rtramission.^  By  the  passage  of 
bight  from  the  eye  to  the  object, — Dr.  J, 


CHRISTIAN    .MORALS.  89 

leaving  the  generality  of  mankind  to  the  pa'dagogy  of  exam- 
ple. But  the  inadvertency  of  our  natures  not  well  appre- 
hending this  favourable  method  and  merciful  decimation,'-  and 
that  he  sheweth  in  some  what  others  also  deserve ;  they  en- 
tertain no  sense  of  his  hand  beyond  the  stroke  of  them- 
selves. Whereupon  the  whole  becomes  necessarily  punished, 
and  the  contracted  hand  (jf  God  extended  unto  uni- 
versal judgments:  from  whence,  nevertheless,  the  stupidity 
of  our  tempers  receives  but  faint  impressions,  and  in  the 
most  tragical  state  of  times  holds  but  starts  of  good  motions. 
So  that  to  continue  us  in  goodness  there  must  be  iterated  re- 
turns of  misery,  and  a  circulation  in  afHictions  is  necessary.^ 
And  since  we  cannot  be  wise  by  warnings ;  since  plagues  are 
insignificant,  except  we  be  personally  plagued  ;  since  also  we 
cannot  be  punished  unto  amendment  by  proxy  or  commu- 
tation, nor  by  vicinity,  but  contraction ;  there  is  an  unhapjiy 
necessity  that  we  must  smart  in  our  own  skins,  and  the  i)ro- 
voked  arm  of  the  Almighty  must  fall  upon  ourselves.  The 
capital  sufierings  of  others  are  rather  our  monitions  than  ac- 
quitments. There  is  but  one  who  died  salvifically  *  for  us,  and 
able  to  say  unto  death,  hitherto  shalt  thou  go  and  no  farther; 
only  one  enlivening  death,  which  makes  gardens  of  graves, 
and  that  which  was  sowed  in  corruption  to  arise  and  flourish 
in  glory  :  when  death  itself  bhall  die,  and  living  shall  have  no 
period  ;  when  the  damned  shall  mourn  at  the  funeral  of  death; 
when  life  not   death  shall   be  the    wages  of  sin ;  when   the 

*  decimation.']  The  selection  of  every  "  If  God  liad  not  determined  a  set- 
tenth  ni<in  for  punishment,  a  practice  tied  period  unto  the  world,  and  ordered 
sometimes  used  in  general  mulinics. —  the  duration  thereof  unio  his  mcriiful 
Dr.  J,  iiiteniions.   it   scen's  a   kind  of  impos>i- 

'  npre.Md'-y.]  The  following  passage  bilily  that  he  should  have  thus  lonf?  con- 
occurs  here  in  M.S.  Sloan.  1871: —  tinned  it.  Some  think  there  will  be 
"  Which  is  the  amazing  part  of  that  in-  another  world  after  this.  Surely  God, 
comprehensible  patience,  to  condescend  who  hath  beheld  the  iniquity  of  this, 
to  act  over  these  vicissitudes  even  in  the  will  hardly  make  another  of  the  same 
despair  of  our  betterments:  and  how  nature;  and  some  wonder  why  he  ever 
that  omnipotent  spirit  that  would  not  be  made  any  at  all  since  he  was  so  happy 
exasperated  by  our  forefaihcrs  nbove  in  himself  without  it,  and  self-suflicienily 
1600  years,  should  thus  lastingly  en-  free  from  all  provocation,  wrath,  and 
dure  our  successive  transgressions,  and  indignation,  arising  from  this  world, 
still  contend  with  flesh  ;  or  how  he  can  which  sets  his  justice  and  his  mercy  at 
forgive  those  sins  which  will  be  com-  perpetual  contention." 
mitted  again,  and  accept  of  repentances,  *  salvificallji.]  "So  as  to  procure 
which  must  have  after-penitence.^,  is  the  salvation." — Dr.  J. 
riddle  of  his  mercies. 


90  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

second  death  shall  prove  a  miserable  life,  and  destruction 
shall  be  courted. 

Sect  xii. — Although  their  thoughts  may  seem  too  severe, 
who  think  that  few  ill-natured  men  go  to  heaven  ;  yet  it  may 
be  acknowledged  that  good-natured  persons  are  best  founded 
for  that  place ;  who  enter  the  world  with  good  dispositions 
and  natural  graces,  more  ready  to  be  advanced  by  impres- 
sions from  above,  and  christianized  unto  pieties ;  who  carry 
about  them  plain  and  downright   dealing   minds,    humility, 
mercy,  chanty,  and  virtues  acceptable  unto  God  and  man. 
But  whatever  success  they  may  have  as  to  heaven,  they  are 
the  acceptable  men  on    earth,  and  happy  is  he  who  hath 
his  quiver  full  of  them  for  his  friends.     These  are  not  the 
dens  wherein  falsehood  lurks,  and  hypocrisy  hides  its  head  ; 
wherein  frowardness  makes  its  nest ;  or  where  malice,  hard- 
heartedness,    and  oppression  love   to  dwell ;    nor  those  by 
whom   the  poor  get  little,  and  the  rich  sometime  lose  all; 
men  not  of  retracted  looks,  but  who  carry  their  hearts  in 
their  faces,  and  need  not  to  be  looked  upon  with  perspec- 
tives ;  not  sordidly  or  mischievously  ingrateful ;  who  cannot 
learn  to  ride  upon  the  neck  of  the  afflicted,  nor  load  the 
heavy  laden,  but  who  keep  the   temple  of  Janus ^  shut  by 
peaceable   and  quiet  tempers ;  who  make  not  only  the  best 
friends,  but  the  best  enemies,  as  easier  to  forgive  than  offend, 
and  ready  to  pass  by  the  second  offence  before  they  avenge 
the  first ;  who  make  natural  royalists,  obedient  subjects,  kind 
and  merciful  princes,  verified  in  our  own,  one  of  the  best- 
natured  kings  of  this  throne.     Of  the  old  Roman  emperors 
the  best  were  the  best-natured :  though  they  made  but  a 
small  number,  and  might  be  writ  in  a  ring.     Many  of  the 
rest  were  as  bad  men  as  princes ;  humourists  rather  than  of 
good  humours ;  and  of  good  natural    parts  rather  than  of 
good  natures,  which  did  but  arm  their  bad  inclinations,  and 
make  them  wittily  wicked. 

Sect.  xiii. — With  what  shift  and  pains  we  come  into  the 
world,  we  remember  not :  but  'tis  commonly  found  no  easy 
matter  to  get  out  of  it.     Many  have  studied  to  exasperate  the 

^  Janus.']  The  temple  of  Janus  among     and  opened  at  a  declaration   of  war. — 
the  Romans  was  sliut  in  time  of  peace,     I)?-.  J. 


CIIKlSTrAN    MORALS.  91 

ways  of  death,  but  fewer  hours  have  been  spent  to  soften 
that  necessity.  That  the  smoothest  way  unto  the  grave  is 
made  by  bleeding,  as  common  opinion  presumeth,  beside  the 
sick  and  fainting  languoi's,  which  accompany  that  effusion, 
the  experiment  in  Lucan  and  Seneca  '^  will  make  us  doubt ; 
under  which  the  noble  stoic  so  deeply  laboured,  that,  to  con- 
ceal his  alHiction,  he  was  fain  to  retire  from  the  si<rht  of  his 
wife,  and  not  ashamed  to  implore  the  merciful  hand  of  his 
l)hysician  to  shorten  his  misery  therein.  Ovid,*  the  old 
heroes,  and  the  stoics,  who  were  so  afraid  of  drowning,  as 
dreading  thereby  the  extinction  of  their  soul,  which  they 
conceived  to  be  a  fire,  stood  probably  in  fear  of  an  easier 
way  of  death;  wlierein  the  water,  entering  the  possessions  of 
air,  makes  a  temperate  suffocation,  and  kills  as  it  were  with- 
out a  fever.  Surely  many,  who  have  had  the  spirit  to  de- 
stroy themselves,  have  not  been  ingenious  in  the  contrivance 
thereof.  'Twas  a  dull  way  practised  by  Themistocles,  to 
overwhelm  himself  with  bull's  blood,-}- who,  being  an  Athenian, 
might  have  held  an  easier  theory  of  death  from  the  state 
potion  of  his  country ;  from  which  Socrates  in  Plato  seemed 
not  to  suffer  much  more  than  from  the  fit  of  an  ague.  Cato 
is  much  to  be  pitied,  who  mangled  himself  with  poniards ;  and 
Hannibal  seems  more  subtle,  who  carried  his  delivery,  not  in 
the  point  but  the  pummel  of  his  sword. ^ 

The  Egyptians  were  merciful  contrivers,  who  destroyed 
their  malefactors  by  asps,  charming  their  senses  into  an  in- 
vincible sleep,    and   kiUing  as   it  were   with  Hermes's   rod.^ 


•  Demito  naufrapium,  mors  mihi  munus  erit. 
f   I'lutareh'.s  lives. 
J  Pummel,  wlierein  lie  is  said   to    have  carried  something  whereby,   upon   a 
struggle  or  despair,  he  might  deliver  himself  from  all  misfortunes. 
Juvenal  says  it  was  carried  in  a  ring: 

Cannarum  vindex,  et  tanli  sanguinis  ultor, 
Annulus. 

Nor  swords  at  hand,   nor  hissing  darts  afar, 

Are  doom'd  t'  avenge  the  tedious  bloody  war, 

But  poison  drawn  thro'  a  ring's  hollow  plate. — Dryden. 


•  that  the  smoothest  way  unto  the  grave,  quicken  it  by  going  into  a  warm  bath. — 

cVc]     Seneca,   having  opened  his  veins.  Dr.  J. 

found  the  blood  flow  so  slowly,  and  death  '  rod.'\     Which  procured  sleep   by  a 

linger  so  long,    that  he  was   forced    to  touch. — Dr.  J. 


92  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

The  Turkish  emperor,*  odious  for  other  cruelty,  was  herein 
a  remarkable  master  of  mercy,  killing  his  favourite  in  his 
sleep,  and  sending  him  from  the  shade  into  the  house  of  dark- 
ness. He  who  had  been  thus  destroyed  would  hardly  have 
bled  at  the  presence  of  his  destroyer :  when  men  are  already 
dead  by  metaphor,  and  pass  but  from  one  sleep  unto  another, 
wanting  herein  the  eminent  part  of  severity,  to  feel  them- 
selves to  die ;  and  escaping  the  sharpest  attendant  of  death, 
the  lively  apprehension  thereof.  But  to  learn  to  die,  is  bet- 
ter than  to  study  the  ways  of  dying.  Death  will  find  some 
ways  to  untie  or  cut  the  most  gordian  knots  of  life,  and  make 
men's  miseries  as  mortal  as  themselves ;  whereas  evil  spirits, 
as  undying  substances,  are  inseparable  from  their  calamities; 
and,  therefore,  they  everlastingly  struggle  under  their  an- 
gustias,^  and  bound  up  with  immortality  can  never  get  out  of 
themselves. 


PART  THE  THIRD. 

Sect.  i. — 'Tis  hard  to  find  a  whole  age  to  imitate,  or  what 
century  to  propose  for  example.  Some  have  been  far  more 
approvable  than  others ;  but  virtue  and  vice,  panegyrics  and 
satires,  scatteringly  to  be  found  in  all.  History  sets  down  not 
only  things  laudable,  but  abominable  ;  things  which  should 
never  have  been,  or  never  have  been  known ;  so  that  noble 
patterns  must  be  fetched  here  and  there  from  single  persons, 
rather  than  whole  nations ;  and  from  all  nations,  rather  than 
any  one.  The  world  was  early  bad,  and  the  first  sin  the 
most  deplorable  of  any.  The  younger  world  afforded  the 
oldest  men,  and  perhaps  the  best  and  the  worst,  when  length 
of  days  made  virtuous  habits  heroical  and  immovable,  vici- 
ous, inveterate  and  irreclaimable.  And  since  'tis  said  that 
the  imaginations  of  their  hearts  were  evil,  only  evil,  and  con- 
tinually evil ;  it  may  be  feared  that  their  sins  held  pace  with 

*  Solymaii. 
*  aiigiistias.']     Agonies. — Dr.  J. 


CHRISTIAN    MORALS.  93 

tlieir  lives ;  and  their  longevity  swelling  their  impieties,  the 
loiigiiniinity  of  God  would  no  longer  endure  such  vivacious 
abominations.  Their  impieties  were  surely  of  a  deep  dye, 
which  required  the  whole  element  of  water  to  wash  them 
away,  and  overwhelmed  their  memories  with  themselves  ;  and 
so  shut  up  the  first  windows  of  time,  leaving  no  histories  of 
those  longevous  generations,  when  men  might  have  been  pro- 
perly historians,  when  Adam  might  have  read  long  lectures 
unto  Methuselah,  and  Methuselah  unto  Noah.  For  had  we 
been  happy  in  just  historical  accounts  of  that  unparalleled 
world,  we  might  have  been  acquainted  with  wonders  ;  and 
have  understood  not  a  little  of  the  acts  and  undertakinnrs  of 
Moses's  mighty  men,  and  men  of  renown  of  old  ;  which 
might  have  enlarged  our  thoughts,  and  made  the  world  older 
unto  us.  For  the  unknown  ])art  of  time  shortens  the  esti- 
mation, if  not  the  compute  of  it.  What  hath  escaped  our 
knowledge,  falls  not  under  our  consideration  ;  and  what  is 
and  will  be  latent,  is  little  better  than  non-existent.^ 

Sect.  ii. — Some  things  are  dictated  for  our  instruction, 
some  acted  for  our  imitation  ;  wherein  'tis  best  to  ascend  unto 
the  highest  conformity,  and  to  the  honour  of  the  exemplar. 
He  honours  God,  who  imitates  him  ;  for  what  we  virtuously 
imitate  we  approve  and  admire :  and  since  we  delight  not  to 
imitate  inferiors,  we  aggrandize  and  magnify  those  we  imitate  ; 
since  also  we  are  most  apt  to  imitate  those  we  love,  we  testify 
our  affection  in  our  imitation  of  the  inimitable.  To  affect  to 
be  like,  may  be  no  imitation  :  to  act,  and  not  to  be  wiiat  we 
pretend  to  imitate,  is  but  a  mimical  conformation,  and  carrieth 
no  virtue  in  it.  Lucifer  imitated  not  God,  when  he  said  he 
would  be  like  the  highest;  and  he  ^  imitated  not  Jupiter,  who 
counterfeited  thunder.  \\'here  imitation  can  go  no  farther, 
let  admiration  step  on,  whereof  there  is  no  end  in  the  wisest 
form  of  men.  Even  angels  and  spirits  have  enough  to  admire 
in  their  sublimer  natures  ;  admiration  being  the  act  of  the 
creature,  and  not  of  God,  who  doth  not  admire  himself. 
Created  natures  allow  of  swelling  hyperboles:  nothing  can  be 

'  non-existenl.l     This    sentence  con-     currences,  of  what  hath  been  acted." — 
dudes    thus:— "The  world    is    not    half     MS.  Sloan.  1S48. 
itself,  nor  the  moiety  known   of  its  oc-  '  he.]     Salmoneus. — Dr.  .J. 


94  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

said  hyperbolically  of  God,  nor  will  his  attributes  admit  of 
expressions  above  their  own  exuperances.'-^  Trismegistus's 
circle,  whose  centre  is  every  where,  and  circumference  no 
where,  was  no  hyperbole.  Words  cannot  exceed  where  they 
cannot  express  enough.  Even  the  most  winged  thoughts 
fall  at  the  setting  out,  and  reach  not  the  portal  of  divinity. 

Sect  hi. — In  bivious  theorems,^  and  Janus-faced  doctrines, 
let  virtuous  considerations  state  the  determination.  Look 
upon  opinions  as  thou  dost  upon  the  moon,  and  choose  not 
the  dark  hemisphere  for  thy  contemplation.  Embrace  not 
the  opacous  and  blind  side  of  opinions,  but  that  which  looks 
most  luciferously  or  influentially  unto  goodness.  '  Tis  better 
to  think  that  there  are  guardian  spirits,  than  that  there  are 
no  spirits  to  guard  us ;  that  vicious  persons  are  slaves,  than 
that  there  is  any  servitude  in  virtue  ;  that  times  past  have 
been  better  than  times  present,  than  that  times  were  always 
bad ;  and  that  to  be  men  it  sufficeth  to  be  no  better  than  men 
in  all  ages,  and  so  promiscuously  to  swim  down  the  turbid 
stream,  and  make  up  the  grand  confusion.  Sow  not  thy  un- 
derstanding with  opinions,  which  make  nothing  of  iniquities, 
and  fallaciously  extenuate  transgressions.  Look  upon  vices 
and  vicious  objects  with  hyperbolical  eyes ;  and  rather  en- 
large their  dimensions,  that  their  unseen  deformities  may  not 
escape  thy  sense,  and  their  poisonous  parts  and  stings  may 
appear  massy  and  monstrous  unto  thee  :  for  the  undiscerned 
particles  and  atoms  of  evil  deceive  us,  and  we  are  undone  by 
the  invisibles  of  seeming  goodness.  We  are  only  deceived 
in  what  is  not  discerned,  and  to  err  is  but  to  be  blind  or  dim- 
sighted  as  to  some  perceptions. 

Sect.  iv. — To  be  bonest  in  a  right  line,*  and  virtuous  by 
epitome,  be  firm  unto  such  principles  of  goodness,  as  carry  in 
them  volumes  of  instruction  and  may  abridge  thy  labour. 
And  since  instructions  are  many,  hold  close  unto  those, 
whereon  the  rest  depend :  so  may  we  have  all  in  a  few,  and 

•  Linea  recta  brevissima. 

'  exuperances.^         Exaggerations. —      whicli  open  different  tracks  to  the  mind; 

Dr.  J.  which  lead  tivo  ways Dr,  J. 

^  bivious    theorems.']         Speculations 


CHRISTIAN    MORALS.  95 

the  law  ami  the  prophets  in  sacred  writ  in  stenography,*  ami 
the  Scripture  in  a  nut-sliell.  To  pursue  the  osseous  and 
sohd  part  of  goodness,  which  gives  stabihty  and  rectitude  to 
all  the  rest;  to  settle  on  fundamental  virtues,  and  bid  early 
defiance  unto  mother-vices,  which  carry  in  their  bowels  the 
seminals  of  other  iniquities ;  makes  a  short  cut  in  goodness, 
and  strikes  not  oft'  an  head,  but  the  whole  neck  of  Hydra. 
For  we  are  carried  into  the  dark  lake,  like  the  /Egyptian  river 
into  the  sea,  by  seven  principal  ostiaries  :  the  mother-sins  ^  of 
that  number  are  the  deadly  engines  of  evil  spirits  that  undo 
us,  and  even  evil  spirits  themselves  ;  and  he  who  is  under  the 
chains  thereof  is  not  without  a  possession.  Mary  Magdalen 
had  more  than  seven  devils,  if  these  with  their  imps  were  in 
her ;  and  he  who  is  thus  possessed,  may  literally  be  named 
"  Legion."  Where  such  plants  grow  and  prosper,  look  for 
no  champian  or  region  void  of  thorns ;  but  productions  like 
the  tree  of  Goa,*  and  forests  of  abomination. 

Sect.  v. — Guide  not  the  hand  of  God,  nor  order  the  finger 
of  the  Almighty  unto  thy  will  and  pleasure  ;  but  sit  quiet  in 
the  soft  showers  of  providence,  and  favourable  distributions 
in  this  world,  either  to  thyself  or  others.  And  since  not  only 
judgments  have  their  errands,  but  mercies  their  commissions  ; 
snatch  not  at  every  favour,  nor  think  thyself  passed  by  if  they 
fall  upon  thy  neighbour.  Rake  not  up  envious  displacencies 
at  things  successful  unto  others,  which  the  wise  disposer  of 
all  thinks  not  fit  for  thyself.  Reconcile  the  events  of  things 
unto  both  beings,  that  is,  of  this  world  and  the  next ;  so  will 
there  not  seem  so  many  riddles  in  Providence,  nor  various  in- 
equalities in  the  dispensation  of  things  below."     If  thou  dost 


*  Arbor  Goa  de  Ruyz,  or  Ficus  Indica,  whose  branches  send  down  shoots  which 
root  in  the  ground,  from  whence  there  successively  rise  others,  till  one  tree  becomes 
a  wood. 


*  tUnngrapfty.']  In  short  hand. —  cerous  commotions  which  take  up  every 
Dr.  J.  suffering,  displeasing  at  things  successful 

*  mother-sins.'\  Pride,  covetousness,  unto  others ;  which  the  arch-disposer  of 
lust,  envy,  gluttony,  anger,  sloth. —  ail  thinks  not  fit  for  ourselves.  To  rejoice 
Dr.  J.  only  in  thine  [own]  pood,  exclusively  to 

"  beloic.']     The  following  passage  oc-  that  of  others,  is  a  stiff  piece  of  self-love, 

curs  here  from  ^fS.  Sloan.  1847.     "So  wanting  the  supplying  oil  of  benevolence 

mayst  thou  carry  a  smooth  face,  and  sit  and  charily." 
down  in  contentation,  without  those  can- 


96  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

not  anoint  thy  face,  yet  put  not  on  sackcloth  at  the  felicities 
of  others.  Repining  at  the  good,  draws  on  rejoicing  at  the 
evils  of  others  :  and  so  falls  into  that  inhuman  vice,*  for 
which  so  few  languages  have  a  name.  The  blessed  spirits 
above  rejoice  at  our  happiness  below':  but  to  be  glad  at  the 
evils  of  one  another,  is  beyond  the  malignity  of  hell ;  and  falls 
not  on  evil  spirits,  who,  though  they  rejoice  at  our  unhap- 
piness,  take  no  pleasure  at  the  afflictions  of  their  own  society 
or  of  their  fellow  natures.  Degenerous  heads  !  who  must  be 
fain  to  learn  from  such  examples,  and  to  be  taught  from  the 
school  of  hell. 

Sect.  vi. — Grain  not  thy  vicious  stains;  ^  nor  deepen  those 
swart  tinctures,  which  temper,  infirmity,  or  ill  habits  have  set 
upon  thee  ;  and  fix  not,  by  iterated  depravations,  what  time 
might  efface,  or  virtuous  washes  expunge.  He,  who  thus 
still  advanceth  in  iniquity,  deepeneth  his  deformed  hue  :  turns 
a  shadow  into  ni«ht,  and  makes  himself  a  negro  in  the  black 
jaundice  ;  and  so  becomes  one  of  those  lost  ones,  the  dispro- 
portionate pores  of  whose  bruins  afford  no  entrance  unto  good 
motions,  but  reflect  and  frustrate  all  counsels,  deaf  unto  the 
thunder  of  the  laws,  and  rocks  unto  the  cries  of  charitable 
commisserators.  He  who  hath  had  the  patience  of  Diogenes, 
to  make  orations  unto  statues,  may  moi-e  sensibly  apprehend 
how  all  words  fall  to  the  ground,  spent  upon  such  a  surd  and 
earless  generation  of  men,  stupid  unto  all  instruction,  and  ra- 
ther i-equiring  an  exorcist  than  an  orator  for  their  conversion  ! 

Sect.  vii. — Burden  not  the  back  of  Aries,  Leo,  or  Taurus,^ 
with  thy  faults  ;  nor  make  Saturn,  Mars,  or  Venus,  guilty  of 
thy  follies.  Think  not  to  fasten  thy  imperfections  on  the 
stars,  and  so  despairingly  conceive  thyself  under  a  fatality  of 
being  evil.  Calculate  thyself  within  ;  seek  not  thyself  in  the 
moon,  but  in  thine  own  orb  or  microcosmical  circumference.^ 
Let  celestial  aspects  admonish  and  advertise,  not  conclude  and 
determine  thy  ways.     For  since  good  and  bad  stars  moralize 

*  'Eff;xa/|£xax/'a. 

'  viciotis    stains.']     See  note   ',   page     Bull,    signs    in    the   Zodiack. —  Dr.    J. 

63 Dr.  J.  ^  microcosmical  circumference.]   In  the 

*  Aries.,  Sfc]     The    Ram,    Lion,    or     compass  of  thy  own  little  world. — Dr.  J. 


CIIKISTIAN    MORALS.  DT 

not  our  actions,  and  neither  excuse  or  commend,  acquit  or 
condemn  our  good  or  bad  deeds  at  the  present  or  last  l)ar ; 
since  some  are  astrologically  well  disposed,  who  are  morally 
highly  vicious  ;  not  celestial  figures,  but  virtuous  schemes, 
must  denominate  and  state  our  actions.  If  we  rightly  under- 
steod  the  names  whereby  God  calleth  the  stars  ;  if  we  knew 
his  name  for  the  dog-star,  or  by  what  appellation  Jupiter, 
jMars,  and  Saturn,  obey  his  will;  it  might  be  a  welcome  ac- 
cession unto  astrology,  which  speaks  great  things,  and  is  fain 
to  make  use  of  a-ppellations  from  Greek  and  barbarick  systems. 
AVhatever  influences,  impulsions,  or  inclinations  there  be  from 
the  ligiits  above,  it  were  a  piece  of  wisdom  to  make  one  of 
those  wise  men  who  overrule  their  stars,*  and  with  their  own 
militia  contend  with  the  host  of  heaven.  Unto  which  attempt 
there  want  not  auxiliaries  from  the  whole  strength  of  morality, 
supplies  from  Christian  ethics,  influences  also  and  illumina- 
tions from  above,  more  powerful  than  the  lights  of  heaven. 

Sect,  viii, — Confound  not  the  distinctions  of  thy  life  which 
nature  hath  divided ;  that  is,  youth,  adolescence,  manhood, 
and  old  age  :  nor  in  these  divided  periods,  wherein  thou  art 
in  a  manner  four,  conceive  thyself  but  one.  Let  every  divi- 
sion be  happy  in  its  proper  virtues,  nor  one  vice  run  through 
all.  Let  each  distinction  have  its  salutary  transition,  and  cri- 
tically deliver  thee  from  the  imperfections  of  the  former;  so 
ordering  the  whole,  that  prudence  and  virtue  may  have  the 
largest  section.  Do  as  a  child  but  when  thou  art  a  child,  and 
ride  not  on  a  reed  at  twenty.  He  who  hath  not  taken  leave 
of  the  follies  of  his  youth,  and  in  his  maturer  state  scarce  got 
out  of  that  division,  disproportionately  divideth  his  days, 
crowds  up  the  latter  part  of  his  life,  and  leaves  too  narrow  a 
corner  for  the  age  of  wisdom ;  and  so  hath  room  to  be  a  man 
scarce  longer  than  he  hath  been  a  youth.  Rather  than  to 
make  this  confusion,  anticipate  the  virtues  of  age,  and  live 
long  without  the  infirmities  of  it.  So  may'st  thou  count  up 
thy  days  as  some  do  Adam's ;  f  that  is,  by  anticipation  ;  so 
may'st  tliou  be  coetaneous  unto  thy  elders,  and  a  father  unto 
thy  contemporaries. 

•  Sapiens  domiiiabitur  astris. 
t  Adam,  thought  to  be  created  in  the  state  of  man,  about  thirry  years  old. 

VOL.    I\.  Jl 


98  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

Sect.  ix. — While  others  are  curious  in  the  choice  of  good 
air,  and  chiefly  soHcitous  for  healthful  habitations,  study  thou 
conversation,  and  be  critical  in  thy  consortion.     The  aspects, 
conjunctions,  and  configurations  of  the   stars,  which   mutu- 
ally diversify,  intend,  or  qualify  their  influences,  are  but  the 
varieties  of  their   nearer  or  farther  conversation   with   one 
another,  and  like  the  consortion  of  men,  whereby  they  be- 
come  better  or  worse,    and    even    exchange   their   natures. 
Since  men  live  by  examples,  and  will  be  imitating  something, 
order  thy  imitation  to  thy  improvement,  not  thy  ruin.     Look 
not  for  roses  in  Attalus's  garden,*  or  wholesome  flowers  in 
a  venomous  plantation.     And  since  there  is  scarce  any  one 
bad,  but  some  others  are  the  worse  for  him  ;  tempt  not  con- 
tagion by  proximity,  and  hazard  not  thyself  in  the  shadow  of 
corruption.     He  who  hath  not  early  suffered  this  shipwreck, 
and  in  his  younger  days  escaped  this  Charybdis,  may  make  a 
happy  voyage,  and  not  come  in  with  black  sails  into  the  port.^ 
Self-conversation,  or  to  be  alone,  is  better  than  such  consor- 
tion.    Some  school-men  tell  us,  that  he  is  properly  alone,  with 
whom  in  the  same  place  there  is  no  other  of  the  same  species. 
Nebuchadnezzar  was  alone,  though  among  the  beasts  of  the 
field ;  and  a  wise  man  may  be  tolerably   said  to  be  alone, 
though  with  a  rabble  of  people  little  better  than  beasts  about 
him.     Unthinking  heads,  who  have  not  learned  to  be  alone, 
are  in  a  prison  to  themselves,  if  they  be  not  also  with  others  : 
whereas,  on  the  contrary,  they  whose  thoughts  are  in  a  fair, 
and  hiu"ry  within,  are  sometimes  fain  to  retire  into  company, 
to  be  out  of  the  crowd  of  themselves.     He  who  must  needs 
have  company,  must  needs  have  sometimes  bad  company.  Be 
able  to  be  alone.     Lose  not  the   advantage  of  solitude,  and 
the  society  of  thyself;  nor  be  only  content,  but  delight  to  be 
alone  and  single  with  Onmipresency.     He  who  is  thus  pre- 
pared, the  day  is  not  uneasy  nor  the  night  black  unto  him. 
Darkness  may  bound  his  eyes,  not  his  imagination.     In  his 
bed  he  may  lie,  like  Pompey  and  his  sons,t  in  all  quarters  of 

*  Attalus  made  a  garden  which  contained  only  venomous  plants, 
t  Pompeios  Juvenes  Asia  atque  Europa,  sed  ipsum  Terra  tegit  Libyes. 

'  hlacl;  sails,  <^-c.]     Alluding    to   tlie     when  he  went  to  engage  the  Minotaur 
story  of  Theseus,   who  had    black  sails     in  Crete. — Dr.  J. 


CHRISTIAN    MORALS.  99 

the  earth;  may  speculate  the  universe,  and  enjoy  the  wliole 
world  in  the  hermitage  of  himself.  Thus  the  old  Ascetick 
Christians  found  a  paradise  in  a  desert,  and  with  little  con- 
verse on  earth  held  a  conversation  in  heaven ;  thus  they  as- 
tronomized  in  caves,  and,  though  they  beheld  not  the  stars, 
had  the  glory  of  heaven  before  them. 

Sect.  x. — Let  the  characters  of  good  things  stand  indeli- 
bly in  thy  mind,  and  thy  thoughts  be  active  on  them.  Trust 
not  too  much  unto  suggestions  from  reminiscential  amulets,'-  or 
artificial  memorandums.  Let  the  mortifying  Janus  of  Co- 
varrubias*  be  in  thy  daily  thoughts,  not  only  on  thy  hand  and 
signets.  Rely  not  alone  upon  silent  and  dumb  remembrances. 
Behold  not  death's  heads  till  thou  dost  not  see  them,  nor 
look  upon  mortifying  objects  till  thou  overlookest  them.  For- 
get not  how  assuefaction  unto  any  thing  minorates  the  passion 
from  it ;  how  constant  objects  lose  their  hints,  and  steal  an 
inadvertisement  upon  us.  There  is  no  excuse  to  forget  what 
every  thing  prompts  unto  us.  To  thoughtful  observators, 
the  whole  world  is  a  phylactery  ;  ^  and  every  thing  we  see  an 
item  of  the  wisdom,  power,  or  goodness  of  God.  Happy  are 
they  who  verify  their  amulets,  and  make  their  phylacteries 
speak  in  their  lives  and  actions.  To  run  on  in  despite  of  the 
revulsions  and  pull-backs  of  such  remoras  aggravates  our 
transgressions.  Vv'hen  death's  heads  on  our  hands  have  no 
influence  upon  our  heads,  and  fleshless  cadavers  abate  not  the 
exorbitances  of  the  flesh ;  when  crucifixes  upon  men's  hearts 
suppress  not  their  bad  commotions,  and  his  image  who  was 
murdered  for  us  withholds  not  from  blood  and  murder ;  phy- 
lacteries prove  but  formalities,  and  their  despised  hints  sharpen 
our  condemnation. 

•  Don  Seb.istian  de  Covarrubias  writ  three  centuries  of  moral  emblems  in 
Spanish.  In  the  SSth  of  the  serond  century  he  sets  down  two  faces  averse,  and 
conjoined  Janus-iike ;  the  one,  a  gallant  beautiful  face,  tlic  other,  a  death's  head 
face,  will)  this  motto  out  of  Ovid's  Metamorphoses  : — 

Quid  fuerim,  quid  simquc,  vide. 

You  discern 

What  now  I  am,  and  what  I  was  shall  learn. — Annis. 

*  rtm'miscenlial  amulets.'^  Any  rliing  ^phylactery.']  See  page  69,  note', 
worn  on   the   hand   or  body,  by  way  of     — Dr.  J. 

monition  or  remembrance. — Dr.  •/. 

n  J 


100  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

Sect.  xi. — Look  not  for  whales  in  the  Euxine  sea,  or  ex- 
pect great  matters  where  they  are  not  to  be  found.  Seek 
not  for  profundity  in  shallowness,  or  fertility  in  a  wilderness. 
Place  not  the  expectations  of  great  happiness  here  below,  or 
think  to  find  heaven  on  earth ;  wherein  we  must  be  content 
with  embryon  felicities,  and  fruitions  of  doubtful  faces  :  for 
the  circle  of  our  felicities  makes  but  short  arches.  In  every 
clime  we  are  in  a  periscian  state ;  ■*  and  with  our  light,  our 
shadow,  and  darkness  walk  about  us.  Our  contentments 
stand  upon  the  tops  of  pyramids  ready  to  fall  off,  and  the 
insecurity  of  their  enjoyments  abrupteth  our  tranquillities. 
What  we  magnify  is  magnificent ;  but,  like  to  the  Colossus) 
noble  without,  stuft  with  rubbage  and  coarse  metal  within. 
Even  the  sun,  whose  glorious  outside  we  behold,  may  have 
dark  and  smoky  entrails.  In  vain  we  admire  the  lustre  of  any 
thing  seen  :  that  which  is  truly  glorious  is  invisible.  Para- 
dise was  but  a  part  of  the  earth,  lost  not  only  to  our  fruition 
but  our  knowledge.  And  if,  according  to  old  dictates,  no 
man  can  be  said  to  be  happy  before  death,  the  happiness  of 
this  life  goes  for  nothing  before  it  be  over,  and  while  we 
think  ourselves  happy  we  do  but  usurp  that  name.  Certain- 
ly, true  beatitude  groweth  not  on  earth,  nor  hath  this  world 
in  it  the  expectations  we  have  of  it.  He  swims  in  oil,^  and 
can  hardly  avoid  sinking,  who  hath  such  light  foundations  to 
support  him:  'tis,  therefore,  happy  that  we  have  two  worlds 
to  hold  on.  To  enjoy  true  happiness,  we  must  travel  into  a 
very  far  country,  and  even  out  of  ourselves  ;  for  the  pearl  we 
seek  for  is  not  to  be  found  in  the  Indian  but  in  the  Empy- 
rean ocean.^ 

Sect.  xii. — Answer  not  the  spur  of  fury,  and  be  not  pro- 
digal or  prodigious  in  revenge.  Make  not  one  in  the  Historia 
Horribilis  ;*  flay  not  thy  servant  for  a  broken  glass,'^  nor 

*  A  book  so  intitled,  wherein  are  sundry  horrid  accounts. 

*  periscian  state.'i     "With  shadows  all  light  fluid,  cannot   support   any    heavy 

around  us."     The  Periscii  are  those  who,  body. — Dr.  J. 

living  within  the  polar  circle,  see  the  sun  ''  Emptjreaii  ocean.']     In  the  expanses 

move    round    them,    and,  consequently,  of  the  highest  heaven. — Dr.  J. 

project  their  shadows  in  all  directions. —  '  flay  not   thy  servant,    S(c.]     When 

Dr.  J.  Augustus  supped  with  one  of  the  Roman 

'  He  swims  in  oil.']     Which   being  a  senators,    a  slave  happened  to  break  a 


CHRISTIAN    MORALS.  lOl 

pound  him  in  :i  mortar  who  olVeiulcth  thee;°  supcrerogate 
not  in  the  worst  sense,  and  overdo  not  the  necessities  of  evil ; 
Iiumour  not  the  injustice  of  revenge.     Be  not  stoically  mis- 
taken in  the  ecjuality  of  sins,  nor  conimutatively  inicjuitous 
in  the  valuation  of  transgressions;    but  weigh  them  in  the 
scales  of  heaven,  and  by  the  weijrhts  of  righteous   reason. 
Think  that  revenge  too  high,  which  is  but  level  with  the  of- 
fence.    Let  thy  arrows  of  revenge   fly  short ;  or  be  aimed 
like  those  of  Jonathan,  to  fall  beside  the  mark.     Too  many 
there  be  to  wliom  a  dead  enemy  smells  well,  and  who  find 
musk  and  amber  in  revenge.     The  ferity  of  such  minds  holds 
no  rule  in  retaliations,  requiring  too  often  a  head  for  a  tooth, 
and  the  supreme  revenge  for  trespasses  which  a  night's  rest 
should  obliterate.     But  patient  meekness  takes  injuries  hke 
pills,  not  chewing  but  swallowing  them  down,  laconically  suf- 
fering, and  silently  passing  them  over ;  while  angered  pride 
makes  a  noise,  like  Homerican  Mars,*  at  every  scratch  of  of- 
fences.    Since  women  do  most  delight  in  revenge,^  it  may 
seem  but  feminine  manhood  to  be  vindictive.  If  thou  must  needs 
have  thy  revenge  of  thine  enemy,  with  a  soft  tongue  break 
his  bones,t  heap  coals  of  fire  on  his  head,  forgive  him  and 
enjoy  it.     To  forgive  our  enemies  is  a  charming  way  of  re- 
venge, and  a  short  Caesarian  conquest  overcoming  without  a 
blow ;  laying  our  enemies  at  our  feet,  under  sorrow,  shame, 
and  repentance  ;  leaving  our  foes  our  friends,  and  sollicitously 
inclined  to  grateful  retaliations.     Thus  to  return  upon  our 
adversaries,  is  a  healing  way  of  revenge ;  and  to  do  good  for 

•   Tu  miser  exclamas,  ut  Steiitora  vincere  possis 
Vel  potius  quantum  Gradivus  Homericus. — Juv. 
Thus  translated  by  Creech  ; — 

You  rage  and  storm,  and,  blasphemously  loud, 
As  Stentor  bellowing  to  the  Grecian  crowd, 

Or  Homer's  Mars. 

f  A  soft  tongiie  breaketh  the  bones. — Prov.  xxv.  15. 

gla-s,  for  which  his  master  ordered  him         *  Since  women,  SfC."] 

to  be  thrown  into  his  pond  to  feed  his  , -.Minim 

,  ,  .         /  •  u   L-  Somwr  et  infirrai  e»l  antral  ■  vnluiitM 

lampreys.      .Augustus,  to  punish  his  cru-  vuio sic  coUiire.  ,  ta 

elty.  ordered  all  the  glasses  in  the  house  Nemo  magi*  g«ndei,  quam  in  imna  —lev. 

to  be  broken.— Z;r.  J.  n.  v.r,^-.  •  w!,i  '■  -tni  w^  find 

*  nor  pound   liim    in    a    mortar,    SfC."]  '  J- 

Anaxarchus,  an  ancient  philosopher,  was  u  r,,...-  .....-, <-  .w.. .,   ,».t.— Creech. 

beaten  in  a  mortar  by  a  tyrant. — Dr.  J. 


102  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

evil  a  soft  and  melting  ultion,  a  method  taught  from  heaven/ 
to  keep  all  smooth  on  earth.  Common  forceable  ways  make 
not  an  end  of  evil,  but  leave  hatred  and  malice  behind  them." 
An  enemy  thus  reconciled  is  Uttle  to  be  trusted,  as  wanting 
the  foundation  of  love  and  charity,  and  but  for  a  time  re- 
strained by  disadvantage  or  inability.  If  thou  hast  not  mercy 
for  others,  yet  be  not  cruel  unto  thyself.  To  ruminate  upon 
evils,  to  make  critical  notes  upon  injuries,  and  be  too  acute  in 
their  apprehensions,  is  to  add  unto  our  own  tortures,  to 
feather  the  arrows  of  our  enemies,  to  lash  ourselves  with  the 
scorpions  of  our  foes,  and  to  resolve  to  sleep  no  more ;  for 
injuries  long  dreamt  on,  take  away  at  last  all  rest;  and  he 
sleeps  but  like  Regulus,  who  busieth  his  head  about  them. 

Sect.  xiii. — Amuse  not  thvself  about  the  riddles  of  future 
things.  Study  prophecies  when  they  are  become  histories, 
and  past  hovering  in  their  causes.  Eye  well  things  past  and 
present,  arid  let  conjectural  sagacity  suffice  for  things  to 
come.  There  is  a  sober  latitude  for  prescience  in  contingen- 
cies of  discoverable  tempers,  whereby  discerning  heads  see 
sometimes  beyond  their  eyes,  and  wise  men  become  propheti- 
cal. Leave  cloudy  predictions  to  their  periods,  and  let  ap- 
pointed seasons  have  the  lot  of  their  accomplishments.  'Tis 
too  early  to  study  such  prophecies  before  they  have  been 
long  made,  before  some  train  of  their  causes  have  already 
taken  fire,  lay  open  in  part  what  lay  obscure  and  before 
buried  unto  us.  For  the  voice  of  prophecies  is  like  that  of 
whispering-places  :  they  who  are  near,  or  at  a  little  distance, 
hear  nothing ;  those  at  the  farthest  extremity  will  understand 
all.  But  a  retrograde  cognition  of  times  past,  and  things 
which  have  already  been,  is  more  satisfactory  than  a  suspend- 
ed knowledge  of  what  is  vet  unexistent.  And  the  greatest 
part  of  time  being  already  wrapt  up  in  things  behind  us;  it's 
now  somewhat  late  to  bait  after  things  before  us  ;  for  futurity 
still  shortens,  and  time  present  sucks  in  time  to  come.  What 
is  prophetical  in  one  age  proves  historical  in  another,  and  so 
must  hold  on  unto  the  last  of  time  ;  when  there  will  be  no  room 

'  from  heaven.']  "  Not  to  be  learned  but  leave  unquietiiess  in  the  otlier, — of  a 
elsewhere." — MS.  Sloan.  1847.  seeming  friend  making  but  a  close  ad- 

*  behind  them.}     "Quiet  one  party,     versary.." — MS.  Sloan,  1817. 


CUUISTIAN     MOUALS,  lOJ 

for  prediction,  when  Janus  shall  lose  one  face,  and  the  long 
beard  of  time  shall  look  like  those  of  David's  servants,  shorn 
away  upon  one  side ;  and  when,  if  the  expected  Elias  should 
appear,  he  might  say  much  of  what  is  past,  not  much  of  what's 
to  come. 

Sect.  xiv. — Live  unto  the  dignity  of  thy  nature,  and  leave 
it  not  disputable  at  last,  w  hether  thou  hast  been  a  man  ;  or, 
since  tliou  art  a  composition  of  man  and  beast,  how  thou  hast 
predominantly  passed  thy  days,  to  state  the  denomination. 
Un-man  not,  therefore,  thyself  by  a  bestial  transformation, 
nor  realize  old  fables.  Expose  not  thyself  by  four-footed 
manners  unto  monstrous  draughts,  and  caricature  representa- 
tions. Think  not  after  the  old  Pythagorean  conceit,  what 
beast  thou  may'st  be  after  death.  Be  not  under  any  brutal 
metempsychosis,  ^  while  thou  livest  and  walkest  about  erectly 
under  the  scheme  of  man.  In  thine  own  circumference,  as  in 
that  of  the  earth,  let  the  rational  horizon  be  larger  than  the 
sensible,  and  the  circle  of  reason  than  of  sense:  let  the  divine 
part  be  upward,  and  the  region  of  beast  below  ;  otherwise, 
't  is  but  to  live  invertedly,  and  with  thy  head  unto  the  heels  of 
thy  antipodes.  Desert  not  thy  title  to  a  divine  particle  and 
union  with  invisibles.  Let  true  knowledge  and  virtue  tell  the 
lower  world  thou  art  a  part  of  the  higher.  Let  thy  thoughts 
be  of  things  which  have  not  entered  into  the  hearts  of  beasts  : 
think  of  things  long  past,  and  long  to  come:  acquaint  thyself 
with  the  choragium  *  of  the  stars,  and  consider  the  vast  expan- 
sion beyond  them.  Let  intellectual  tubes  give  thee  a  glance 
of  things  which  visive  organs  reach  not.  Have  a  glimpse  of 
incomprehensibles;  and  thoughts  of  things,  which  thoughts 
but  tenderly  touch.  Lodge  immaterials  in  thy  head  ;  ascend 
unto  invisibles ;  fill  thy  spirit  with  spirituals,  with  the  myste- 
ries of  faith,  the  magnalities  of  religion,  and  thy  life  with  the 
honour  of  God ;  without  which,  though  giants  in  wealth  and 
dignity,  we  are  but  dwarfs  and  pygmies  in  humanity,  and  may 
hold  a  pitiful  rank  in  that  triple  division  of  mankind  into 
heroes,  men,  and  beasts.  For  though  human  sf)uls  are  said  to 
be  equal,  yet  is  there  no  small  inequality  in  tlieir  operations ; 

••  metempsychosis,  S;c.'\     Sec  page  83,  '  rhorafsinm.}     Dance f)r.  J. 

note  ''.—Dr.  J. 


104  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

some  maintain  the  allowable  station  of  men;  many  are  far 
below  it ;  and  some  have  been  so  divine,  as  to  approach  the 
apogeum^  of  their  natures,  and  to  be  in  the  confinium  of 
spirits. 

Sect.  xv. — Behold  thyself  by  inward  opticks  and  the  crys- 
talline of  thy  soul.^  Strange  it  is,  that  in  the  most  perfect 
sense  tliere  should  be  so  many  fallacies,  that  we  are  fain  to 
make  a  doctrine,  and  often  to  see  by  art.  But  the  greatest 
imperfection  is  in  our  inward  sight,  that  is,  to  be  ghosts  unto 
our  own  eyes ;  and  while  we  are  so  sharp-sighted  as  to  look 
through  others,  to  be  invisible  unto  ourselves  ;  for  the  inward 
eyes  are  more  fallacious  than  the  outward.  The  vices  we  scoff 
at  in  others,  laugh  at  us  within  ourselves.  Avarice,  pride, 
falsehood  lie  undiscerned  and  blindly  in  us,  even  to  the  age  of 
blindness;  and,  therefore,  to  see  ourselves  interiorly,  we  are 
fain  to  borrow  other  men's  eyes  ;  wherein  true  friends  are 
good  informers,  and  censurers  no  bad  friends.  Conscience 
only,  that  can  see  without  light,  sits  in  the  areopagy  '  and  dark 
tribunal  of  our  hearts,  surveying  our  thoughts  and  condemn- 
ing their  obliquities.  Happy  is  that  state  of  vision  that  can 
see  without  light,  though  all  should  look  as  before  the  cre- 
ation, when  there  was  not  an  eye  to  see,  or  light  to  actuate  a 
vision  :  wherein,  notwithstanding,  obscurity  is  only  imaginable 
respectively  unto  eyes ;  for  unto  God  there  was  none :  eternal 
light  was  ever  ;  created  light  was  for  the  creation,  not  himself; 
and,  as  he  saw  before  the  sun,  may  still  also  see  without  it. 
In  the  city  of  the  new  Jerusalem  there  is  neither  sun  nor 
moon  ;  where  glorified  eyes  must  see  by  the  archetypal  sun,**  or 
the  hght  of  God,  able  to  illuminate  intellectual  eyes,  and 
make  unknown  visions.  Intuitive  perceptions  in  spiritual 
beings  may,  perhaps,  hold  some  analogy  unto  vision :  but  yet 
how  they  see  us,  or  one  another,  what  eye,  whatlight,  or  what 
perception  is  required  unto  their  intuition,  is  yet  dark  unto  our 
apprehension ;  and  even  how  they  see  God,  or  how  unto  our 
glorified  eyes  the  beatifical  vision  will  be  celebrated,  another 


''  apogeutn,  S^-c]     To  the  utmost  point  crystalline  liumour  of  the  eye. — Dr.  J. 

of    distance    from     earth     and    eartlily  '  nreotmgy.']       The  great  court,    like 

things. — Dr.  J.  tlie  Areopagus  of  Athens. — Dr.  J. 

^  cnjstalline,    ^c]     Alluding    to    the  ^  arcJicfypal  sun.]     Original. — Dr.  J. 


CHRISTIAN    MORALS.  10,') 

world  must  tell  us,  when  perceptions  will  be  new,  ami  we  may 
hope  to  behold  invisibles. 

Sect.  \vi. — ^Vhen  all  looks  fair  about,  and  thou  seest  not 
a  cloud  so  big  as  a  hand  to  threaten  thee,  tbrjTet  not  the 
wheel  of  things  :  think  of  sullen  vicissitudes,  but  beat  not  thy 
brains  to  foreknow  them,  lie  armed  against  such  obscurities, 
rather  by  submission  tiian  fore-knowledge.  The  knowledge 
of  future  evils  mortifies  present  felicities,  and  there  is  more 
content  in  the  uncertainty  or  ignorance  of  thorn.  This  favour 
our  Saviour  vouchsafed  unto  Peter,  when  he  foretold  not  his 
death  in  plain  terms,  and  so  by  an  ambiguous  and  cloudy  de- 
livery damped  not  the  spirit  of  his  disciples.  But  in  the  assured 
fore-knowledge  of  the  deluge,  Noah  lived  many  years  under 
the  affliction  of  a  flood  ;  and  Jerusalem  was  taken  unto  Jere- 
my, before  it  was  besieged.  And,  therefore,  the  wisdom  of 
astrologers,  who  speak  of  future  things,  hath  wisely  softened 
the  severity  of  their  doctrines  ;  and  even  in  their  sad  predic- 
tions, while  they  tell  us  of  inclination  not  coaction  from  the 
stai's,  they  kill  us  not  with  Stygian  oaths  and  merciless  neces- 
sity, but  leave  us  hopes  of  evasion. 

Sect.  xvii. — If  thou  hast  the  brow  to  endure  the  name  of 
traitor,  perjured,  or  oppressor,  yet  cover  thy  face  when  in- 
gratitude is  thrown  at  thee.  If  that  degenerous  vice  possess 
thee,  hide  thyself  in  the  shadow  of  thy  shame,  and  pollute 
not  noble  society.  Grateful  ingenuities  are  content  to  be 
obliged  within  some  compass  of  retribution ;  and  being  de- 
pressed by  the  weight  of  iterated  favours,  may  so  labour 
imder  their  inabilities  of  requital,  as  to  abate  the  content 
from  kindnesses.  But  narrow  self-ended  souls  make  pre- 
scription of  good  ofHces,  and  obliged  by  often  favours  think 
others  still  due  unto  them  :  whereas,  if  they  but  once  fail, 
they  prove  so  perversely  ungrateful,  as  to  make  nothing  of 
former  courtesies,  and  to  bury  all  that's  past.  Such  tempers 
pervert  the  generous  course  of  things  ;  for  they  discourage 
the  inclinations  of  noble  minds,  and  make  beneficency  cool 
unto  acts  of  obligation,  whereby  the  grateful  world  slutuld 
subsist,  and  have  their  consolation.  Common  gratitude  must 
be  kept  alive  by  the  additionary  fuel  of  new  courtesies :  but 
generous  gratitudes,  though  but  once  well  obliged,  without 


106  CIIKISTIAN    MORALS. 

quickening  repetitions  or  expectation  of  new  favours,  have 
thankful  minds  for  ever ;  for  they  write  not  their  obHgations 
in  sandy  but  marble  memories,  which  wear  not  out  but  with 
themselves. 

Sect,  xviir. — Think  not  silence  the  wisdom  of  fools ;  but, 
if  rightly  timed,  the  honour  of  wise  men,  who  have  not  the 
infirmity,  but  the  virtue  of  taciturnity ;  and  speak  not  out  of 
the  abundance,  but  the  well-weighed  thoughts  of  their 
hearts.  Such  silence  may  be  eloquence,  and  speak  thy 
worth  above  the  power  of  words.  Make  such  a  one  thy 
friend,  in  whom  princes  may  be  happy,  and  great  counsels 
successful.  Let  him  have  the  key  of  thy  heart,  who  hath 
the  lock  of  his  own,  which  no  temptation  can  open ;  where 
thy  secrets  may  lastingly  lie,  like  the  lamp  hi  Olybius's  urn,* 
alive,  and  light,  but  close  and  invisible. 

Sect.  xix. — Let  thy  oaths  be  sacred,  and  promises  be 
made  upon  the  altar  of  thy  heart.  Call  not  Jove  f  to  witness, 
with  a  stone  in  one  hand,  and  a  straw  in  another;  and  so 
make  chaff  and  stubble  of  thy  vows.  Worldly  spirits,  whose 
interest  is  their  belief,  make  cobwebs  of  obligations ;  and,  if 
they  can  find  ways  to  elude  the  urn  of  the  Praetor,  ^  will 
trust  the  thunderbolt  of  Jupiter:  and,  therefore,  if  they 
should  as  deeply  swear  as  Osman  to  Bethlem  Gabor;J  yet 
whether  they  would  be  bound  by  those  chains,  and  not  find 
ways  to  cut  such  Gordian  knots,  we  could  have  no  just  as- 
surance. But  honest  men's  words  are  Stygian  oaths,  and 
promises  inviolable.  These  are  not  the  men  for  whom  the 
fetters  of  law  were  first  forged ;  they  needed  not  the  solem- 
ness  of  oaths ;  by  keeping  their  faith  they  swear,  and  evacu- 
ate such  confirmations. § 

Sect.  xx. — Though  the  world  be  histrionical,  and  most 
men  five  ironically,  yet  be  thou  what  thou  singly  art,  and  per- 

*  Which  after  many  hundred  years  was  found  burning  under  ground,  and  went 
out  as  soon  as  the  air  came  to  it. 

+  Jovem  hipidem  jurare. 
X  See  the  oath  of  Sultan  Osman,  in  his  life,  in  the  addition  to  KnoHs's  Turkish 
history. 

§  Colendo  fidem  jurant. — Curtius. 

^  to   elude    the    urn   of  the   Preetor,'\     condemnation    or  acquittal  was   cast. — 
The    vessel,    into    wliich    the    ticket   of    Dr.  J. 


CIIUISTIAN    MOKAl.S.  107 

aonate  only  tliyself.  Swim  smoothly  in  the  stream  of  thy 
nature,  and  live  but  one  man.  To  single  hearts  doubling  is 
discruciating :  such  tempers  must  sweat  to  dissemble,  and 
prove  but  hy})Ocritical  hypocrites.  Simulation  nuist  be  short: 
men  do  not  easily  continue  a  counterfeiting  life,  or  dissemble 
unto  death.  He  who  counterfeiteth,  acts  a  part;  and  is,  as 
it  were,  out  of  himself:  which,  if  long,  proves  so  irksome, 
that  men  are  glad  to  pull  oft'  their  vizards,  and  resume  them- 
selves again ;  no  practice  being  able  to  naturalize  such  un- 
naturals,  or  make  a  man  rest  content  not  to  be  himself.  And, 
therefore,  since  sincerity  is  thy  temper,  let  veracity  be  thy 
virtue,  in  words,  manners,  and  actions.  To  ofter  at  inicjui- 
ties,  which  have  so  little  foundations  in  thee,  were  to  be  vici- 
ous up-hill,  and  strain  for  thy  condemnation.  Persons  vici- 
ously inclined,  want  no  wheels  to  make  them  actively  vicious; 
as  having  the  elater  and  spring  of  their  own  natures  to  facili- 
tate their  iniquities.  And,  therefore,  so  many,  who  are 
sinistrous  unto  good  actions,  are  ambi-dexterous  unto  bad ; 
and  Vulcans  in  virtuous  paths,  Achilleses  in  vicious  motions. 

Sect.  xxi. — Rest  not  in  the  high-strained  paradoxes  of 
old  philosophy,  supported  by  naked  reason,  and  the  reward 
of  mortal  felicity  ;  but  labour  in  the  ethics  of  faith,  built 
upon  heavenly  assistance,  and  the  happiness  of  both  beings. 
Understand  the  rules,  but  swear  not  unto  the  doctrines  of 
Zeno  or  Epicurus.^  liOok  beyond  Antoninus,  and  terminate 
not  thy  morals  in  Seneca  or  Epictetus.'-  Let  not  the  twelve 
but  the  two  tables  be  thy  law :  let  Pythagoras  be  thy  remem- 
brancer, not  thy  textuary  and  final  instructer :  and  learn  the 
vanity  of  the  world,  rather  from  Solomon  than  Phocylydes.^ 
Sleep  not  in  the  dogmas  of  the  Peripatus,  Academy,  or  Por- 
ticus."*  Be  a  moralist  of  the  mount,^  an  Epictetus  in  the  faith, 
and  christianize  thy  notions. 

Sect.  xxii. — In  seventy  or  eighty  years,  a  man  may  have 
a  deep  gust  of  the  world;  know  what  it  is,  what  it  can  aft'ord, 


'   Epiciirtts.'}     The  authors  of  the  Sio-         '  Peripatus,  i^c.]      Three  scliools  of 

icaland  Epicurean  philosophy. — Dr.  J.  philosophy. — Dr.  J. 

'  Antoninus,     .V-]     Stoical     philoso-  •'  mouut.'\     Tliat  is,  according  to  the 

phers. — Dr.  J.  rules  laid  down  in  our  Saviour's  sermon 

^  Phocylydes.^^     A    writer    of    rooral  on  the  mount. — Dr.  J. 
sentences  in  verse. — Dr.  J. 


108  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

and  what  'tis  to  have  been  a  man.  Such  a  latitude  of  years 
may  hold  a  considerable  corner  in  the  general  map  of  time; 
and  a  man  may  have  a  curt  epitome  of  the  whole  course 
thereof  in  the  days  of  his  own  life  ;  may  clearly  see  he  hath 
but  acted  over  his  forefathers  ;  what  it  was  to  live  in  ages  past, 
and  what  living  will  be  in  all  ages  to  come. 

He  is  like  to  be  the  best  judge  of  time,  w-ho  hath  lived  to 
see  about  the  sixtieth  part  thereof.  Persons  of  short  times 
may  know  what  't  is  to  live,  but  not  the  life  of  man,  who, 
having  little  behind  them,  are  but  Januses  of  one  face,  and 
know  not  shigularities  enough  to  raise  axioms  of  this  world  : 
but  such  a  compass  of  years  will  shew  new  examples  of  old 
things,  parallelisms  of  occurrences  through  the  whole  course 
of  time,  and  nothing  be  monstrous  unto  him ;  who  may  in 
that  time  understand  not  only  the  varieties  of  men,  but  the 
variation  of  himself,  and  how  many  men  he  hath  been  in  that 
extent  of  time. 

He  may  have  a  close  apprehension  what  is  to  be  forgotten, 
while  he  hath  lived  to  find  none  who  could  remember  his 
father,  or  scarce  the  friends  of  his  youth  ;  and  may  sensibly 
see  with  what  a  face  in  no  long  time  oblivion  will  look  upon 
himself.  His  progeny  may  never  be  his  posterity  ;  he  may  go 
out  of  the  world  less  related  than  he  came  into  it ;  and  con- 
sidering the  frequent  mortality  in  friends  and  relations,  in 
such  a  term  of  time,  he  may  pass  away  divers  years  in  sorrow 
and  black  habits,  and  leave  none  to  mourn  for  himself;  orbity 
may  be  his  inheritance,  and  riches  his  repentance. 

In  such  a  thread  of  time,  and  long  observation  of  men,  he 
may  acquire  a  physiognomical  intuitive  knowledge;  judge  the 
interiors  by  the  outside,  and  raise  conjectures  at  first  sight ; 
and  knowing  what  men  have  been,  what  they  are,  what  chil- 
dren probal)ly  will  be,  may  in  the  present  age  behold  a  good 
part  and  tlie  temper  of  the  next ;  and  since  so  many  live  by 
tlie  rules  of  constitution,  and  so  few  overcome  their  tempera- 
mental inclinations,  make  no  improbable  predictions. 

Such  a  portion  of  time  will  afford  a  large  prospect  back- 
ward, and  authentic  reflections  how  far  he  hath  performed 
the  great  intention  of  his  being,  in  the  honour  of  his  Maker : 
whether  he  hath  made  good  the  principles  of  his  nature,  and 


CHRISTIAN    MORALS.  10<) 

what  he  was  made  to  be;  what  characteristic  and  special  mark 
lie  hath  left,  to  be  observable  in  his  generation ;  whether  he 
hath  lived  to  purpose  or  in  vain  ;  and  what  he  hath  added, 
acted,  or  performed,  that  might  considerably  speak  him  a 
man. 

In  such  an  age,  delights  will  be  undelightful,  and  plea- 
sures grow  stale  unto  him;  anticpiated  theorems  will  revive, 
and  Solomon's  maxims"  be  demonstrations  unto  him;  hopes 
or  presumptions  be  over,  and  despair  grow  up  of  any  satis- 
faction btlow.  And  having  been  long  tossed  in  the  ocean  of 
this  world,  he  will  by  that  time  feel  the  in-draught  of  another, 
unto  which  this  seems  but  preparatory,  and  without  it  of  no 
high  value.  He  will  experimentally  iind  the  emptiness  of  all 
things,  and  the  nothing  of  what  is  past ;  and  wisely  ground- 
ing upon  true  Christian  expectations,  finding  so  much  past, 
will  wholly  fix  upon  what  is  to  come.  He  will  long  for  per- 
j)etuity,  and  live  as  though  he  made  haste  to  be  happy.  The 
last  may  prove  the  prime  part  of  his  life,  and  those  his  best 
days  which  he  lived  nearest  heaven. 

Sect,  xxiii. —  Live  happy  in  the  Elysium  of  a  virtuously 
composed  mind,  and  let  intellectual  contents  exceed  the  de- 
lights wherein  mere  pleasurists  place  their  paradise.  Bear 
not  too  slack  reins  upon  pleasure,  nor  let  complexion  or  con- 
tagion betray  thee  unto  the  exorbitancy  of  delight.  ^lake 
pleasure  thy  recreation  or  intermissive  relaxation,  not  thy 
Diana,  life,  and  profession.  Voluptuousness  is  as  insatiable 
as  covetousness.  Tranquillity  is  better  than  jollity,  and  to 
appease  pain  than  to  invent  pleasure.  Our  hard  entrance 
into  the  world,  our  miserable  going  out  of  it,  our  sicknesses, 
disturbances,  and  sad  rencounters  in  it,  do  clamorously  tell 
us  we  come  not  into  the  world  to  run  a  race  of  delight,  but  to 
perform  the  sober  acts  and  serious  purposes  of  man ;  which 
to  omit  were  foully  to  miscarry  in  the  advantage  of  humanity, 
to  play  away  an  uniterable  life,  and  to  have  lived  in  vain. 
Forget  not  the  capital  end,  and  frustrate  not  the  opportunity 
of  once  living.     Dream  not  of  any  kind  of  metempsychosis^ 


*  Solomon's    moj-ims.]      That    all    is         '  melempsychcsis.']     Sec    note  ',  page 
vanity,— Dr.  J.  83.— Z>r.  J. 


1)0  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

or  transanimation,  but  into  thine  own  body,  and  that  after  a 
long  time  ;  and  then  also  unto  wail  or  bliss,  according  to  thy 
first  and  fundamental  life.  Upon  a  curricle  in  this  world  de- 
pends a  long  course  of  the  next,  and  upon  a  narrow  scene 
here  an  endless  expansion  hereafter.  In  vain  some  think  to 
have  an  end  of  their  beings  with  their  lives.  Things  cannot 
get  out  of  their  natures,  or  be  or  not  be  in  despite  of  their 
constitutions.  Rational  existences  in  heaven  perish  not  at  all, 
and  but  partially  on  earth :  that  which  is  thus  once,  will  in 
some  way  be  always :  the  first  living  human  soul  is  still  alive, 
and  all  Adam  hath  found  no  period. 

Sect.  xxiv. — Since  the  stars  of  heaven  do  differ  in  glory  ; 
since  it  hath  pleased  the  Almighty  hand  to  honour  the  north 
pole  with  lights  above  the  south ;  since  there  are  some  stars 
so  bright  that  they  can  hardly  be  looked  on,  some  so  dim  that 
they  can  scarce  be  seen,  and  vast  numbers  not  to  be  seen  at 
all,  even  by  artificial  eyes ;  read  thou  the  earth  in  heaven,  and 
things  below  from  above.  Look  contentedly  upon  the  scat- 
tered difference  of  things,  and  expect  not  equality  in  lustre, 
dignity,  or  perfection,  in  regions  or  persons  below ;  where  nu- 
merous numbers  must  be  content  to  stand  like  lacteous  or 
nebulous  stars,  little  taken  notice  of,  or  dim  in  their  genera- 
tions. All  which  may  be  contentedly  allowable  in  the  affairs 
and  ends  of  this  world,  and  in  suspension  unto  what  will  be 
in  the  order  of  things  hereafter,  and  the  new  system  of  man- 
kind which  will  be  in  the  world  to  come ;  when  the  last  may 
be  the  first,  and  the  first  the  last;  when  Lazarus  may  sit 
above  Caesar,  and  the  just,  obscure  on  earth,  shall  shine  like 
the  sun  in  heaven  ;  when  personations  shall  cease,  and  his- 
trionism  of  happiness  be  over  ;  when  reality  shall  rule,  and  all 
shall  be  as  they  shall  be  for  ever. 

Sect.  xxv. — When  the  stoic  said  that  life  *  would  not  be 
accepted,  if  it  were  offered  unto  such  as  knew  it,  he  spoke 
too  meanly  of  that  state  of  being  which  placethus  in  the  form 
of  men.  It  more  depreciates  the  value  of  this  life,  that  men 
would  not  live  it  over  again ;  for  although  they  would  still  live 
on,  yet  few  or  none  can  endure  to  think  of  being  twice  the 
same  men  upon  earth,  and  some  had  rather  never  have  lived 

*  Vitatn  i>cmo  acciperet,  si  dareliir  scientibus.— ^fneca. 


CHRISTFAN    MORALS.  1  I  | 

than  to  tread  over  their  days  once  more.  Cicero  in  a  pros- 
perous state  had  not  the  patience  to  think  of  beginning  in  a 
cradle  again.^  Job  would  not  only  curse  the  day  of  his  nati- 
vity, but  also  of  his  renascency,  if  he  were  to  act  over  his  dis- 
asters and  the  miseries  of  the  dunghill.  But  the  greatest 
underweening  of  this  life  is  to  undervalue  that,  unto  which 
this  is  but  exordial  or  a  passage  leading  unto  it.  The  great 
advantage  of  this  mean  life  is  thereby  to  stand  in  a  capacity 
of  a  better ;  for  the  colonies  of  heaven  must  be  drawn  from 
earth,  and  the  sons  of  the  first  Adam  are  only  heirs  unto  the 
second.  Thus  Adam  came  into  this  world  with  the  power 
also  of  another  ;  not  only  to  replenish  the  earth,  but  the  ever- 
lasting mansions  of  heaven.  Where  we  were  when  the  foun- 
dations of  the  earth  were  laid,  when  the  morninfr  stars  saner 
together,  and  all  the  sons  of  God  shouted  for  joy,*  He  must 
answer  who  asked  it ;  who  understands  entities  of  preordina- 
tion, and  beings  yet  unbeing ;  who  hath  in  his  intellect 
the  ideal  existences  of  things,  and  entities  before  their  ex- 
tances.  Though  it  looks  but  like  an  imaginary  kind  of  exis- 
tency,  to  be  before  we  are ;  yet  since  we  are  under  the  decree 
or  prescience  of  a  sure  and  onmipotent  power,  it  may  be 
somewhat  more  than  a  non-entity,  to  be  in  that  mind,  unto 
which  all  things  are  present. 

Sect.  xxvi. — If  the  end  of  the  world  shall  have  the  same 
foregoing  signs,  as  the  period  of  empires,  states,  and  dominions 
in  it,  that  is,  corruption  of  manners,  inhuman  degenerations, 
and  deluge  of  iniquities ;  it  may  be  doubted,  whether  that 
final  time  be  so  far  off',  of  whose  day  and  hour  there  can  be 
no  prescience.  But  while  all  men  doubt,  and  none  can  de- 
termine how  long  the  world  shall  last,  some  may  wonder  that 
it  hath  spun  out  so  long  and  unto  our  days.  For  if  the  Al- 
mighty had  not  determined  a  fixed  duration  unto  it,  accord- 
ing to  his  mighty  and  merciful  designments  in  it ;  if  he  had 
not  said  unto  it,  as  he  did  unto  a  part  of  it,  hitherto  shalt  thou 
go  and  no  farther ;   if  we  consider  the  incessant  and  cutting 

*  Job  xxxviii. 

'  Cicero,  iVO  S'  1"'*  Dens  inihi  vagiam,  valde  rccujcni. — Cic.  de  Seiirc- 
largiatur,    ut   rcpiierascam   et    in   cunis     lute. — Dr.  ./. 


112  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

provocations  from  the  earth  ;  it  is  not  without  amazement, 
how  his  patience  hath  permitted  so  long  a  continuance  unto 
it ;  how  he,  who  cursed  the  earth  in  the  first  days  of  the  first 
man,  and  drowned  it  in  the  tenth  generation  after,  should 
thus  lastingly  contend  with  flesh,  and  yet  defer  the  last  flames. 
For  since  he  is  sharply  provoked  every  moment,  yet  punish- 
eth  to  pardon,  and  forgives  to  forgive  again ;  what  patience 
could  be  content  to  act  over  such  vicissitudes,  or  accept  of 
repentances  which  must  have  after-penitences,  his  goodness 
can  only  tell  us.  And  surely  if  the  patience  of  heaven  were 
not  proportionable  unto  the  provocations  from  earth,  there 
needed  an  intercessor  not  only  for  the  sins,  but  the  duration 
of  this  world,  and  to  lead  it  up  unto  the  present  computation. 
Without  such  a  merciful  longanimity,  the  heavens  would 
never  be  so  aged  as  to  grow  old  like  a  garment.  It  were  in 
vain  to  infer  from  the  doctrine  of  the  sphere,  that  the  time 
might  come,  when  Cupella,  a  noble  northern  star,  would  have 
its  motion  in  the  e(|uator ;  that  the  northern  zodiacal  signs 
would  at  length  be  tlie  southern,  the  southern  the  northern, 
and  Capricorn  become  our  Cancer.  However,  therefore,  the 
wisdom  of  the  creator  hath  ordered  the  duration  of  the  world, 
yet  since  the  end  thereof  brings  the  accomplishment  of  our 
happiness,  since  some  wovdd  be  content  that  it  should  have 
no  end,  since  evil  men  and  spirits  do  fear  it  may  be  too  short, 
since  good  men  hope  it  may  not  be  too  long ;  the  prayer  of 
the  saints  under  the  altar  will  be  the  supplication  of  the  right- 
eous world,  that  his  mercy  would  abridge  their  languishing 
expectation,  and  hasten  the  accomplishment  of  their  happy 
state  to  come. 

Sect,  xxvii. — Though  good  men  are  often  taken  away 
from  the  evil  to  come ;  though  some  in  evil  days  have  been 
glad  that  they  were  old,  nor  long  to  behold  the  iniquities  of  a 
wicked  world,  or  judgments  threatened  by  them;  yet  is  it  no 
small  satisfaction  unto  honest  minds,  to  leave  the  world  in 
virtuous  well-tempered  times,  under  a  prospect  of  good  to 
come,  and  continuation  of  worthy  w^ays  acceptable  unto  God 
and  man.  Men  who  die  in  deplorable  days,  which  they  re- 
gretfully l)ehold,  have  not  their  eyes  closed  with  the  like  con- 
tent; while  they  cannot  avoid  the  thoughts  of  proceeding  or 


CHRISTIAN    MORALS.  1  13 

growing  enormities,  displeasing  unto  tluit  spirit  unto  wliom 
they  are  then  going,  whose  honour  they  desire  in  all  tin\es  and 
throughout  all  generations.  If  Lucifer  could  be  freed  from 
his  dismal  place,  he  would  Httle  care  though  the  rest  were 
left  behind.  Too  many  there  may  be  of  Nero's  mind,^  who, 
if  their  own  turn  were  served,  would  not  regard  what  became 
of  others ;  and  when  they  die  themselves,  care  not  if  all 
perish.  But  good  men's  wishes  extend  beyond  their  lives, 
for  the  happiness  of  times  to  come,  and  never  to  be  known 
unto  them.  And,  therefore,  while  so  many  question  prayers 
for  the  dead,  they  charitably  pray  for  those  who  are  not  yet 
alive ;  they  are  not  so  enviously  ambitious  to  go  to  heaven  by 
themselves  ;  thoy  cannot  but  humbly  wish,  that  the  little  flock 
might  be  greater,  the  narrow  gate  wider,  and  that,  as  many 
are  called,  so  not  a  few  might  be  chosen. 

Sect,  xxviii. — That  a  greater  number  of  angels  remained 
in  heaven,  than  fell  from  it,  the  school-men  will  tell  us ;  that 
the  number  of  blessed  souls  will  not  come  short  of  that  vast 
number  of  fallen  spirits,  we  have  the  favourable  calculation  of 
others.  What  age  or  century  hath  sent  most  souls  unto  heaven, 
he  can  tell  who  vouchsafeth  that  honour  unto  them.  Though 
the  number  of  the  blessed  must  be  complete  before  the  world 
can  pass  away  ;  yet  since  the  world  itself  seems  in  the  wane, 
and  we  have  no  such  comfortable  prognosticks  of  latter  times ; 
since  a  greater  part  of  time  is  spun  than  is  to  come,  and  the 
blessed  roll  already  much  replenished ;  happy  are  those  pie- 
ties, which  solicitously  look  about,  and  hasten  to  make  one 
of  that  already  much  filled  and  abbreviated  list  to  come. 

Sect.  xxix. — Think  not  thy  time  short  in  this  world,  since 
the  world  itself  is  not  long.  The  created  world  is  but  a  small 
parenthesis  in  eternity,  and  a  short  interposition,  for  a  time, 
between  such  a  state  of  duration  as  was  before  it  and  may 
be  after  it.  And  if  we  should  allow  of  the  old  tradition,  that 
the  world  should  last  six  thousand  years,  it  could  scarce  have 
the  name  of  old,  since  the  first  man  lived  near  a  sixth  part 
thereof,   and   seven   Methuselahs   would   exceed   its   whole 

'  Nero't  mind.]     Nero  often  had  this     dead,  let  the  earth  and  fire  be  jumbled 
saying   in    his   mouth,  'E.ooy  '^dvouro;     together." — Dr.  J. 
yaTa  !ir/Jr,TU>  rruit:  "  „hen  1  am  once 

VOL.    IV.  I 


114  CHRISTIAN    MORALS. 

duration.  However,  to  palliate  the  shortness  of  our  lives, 
and  somewhat  to  compensate  our  brief  term  in  this  world, 
it 's  good  to  know  as  much  as  we  can  of  it ;  and  also,  so  far  as 
possibly  in  us  lieth,  to  hold  such  a  theory  of  times  past,  as 
though  we  had  seen  the  same.  He  who  hath  thus  considered 
the  world,  as  also  how  therein  things  long  past  have  been  an- 
swered by  things  present ;  how  matters  in  one  age  have  been 
acted  over  in  another ;  and  how  there  is  nothing  new  under  the 
sun ;  may  conceive  himself  in  some  manner  to  have  lived  from 
the  beginning,  and  to  be  as  old  as  the  world  ;  and  if  he  should 
still  live  on,  'twould  be  but  the  same  thing. 

Sect,  xxx.^ — Lastly ; "  if  length  of  days  be  thy  portion, 
make  it  not  thy  expectation.  Reckon  not  upon  long  life: 
think  every  day  the  last,  and  live  always  beyond  thy  account. 
He  that  so  often  suvviveth  his  expectation  lives  many  lives, 
and  will  scarce  complain  of  the  shortness  of  his  days.  Time 
past  is  gone  like  a  shadow ;  make  time  to  come  present.  Ap- 
proximate thy  latter  times  by  present  apprehensions  of  them : 
be  like  a  neighbour  unto  the  grave,  and  think  there  is  but 
little  to  come.  And  since  there  is  something  of  us  that  will 
still  live  on,  join  both  lives  together,  and  live  in  one  but  for 
the  other.  He  who  thus  ordereth  the  purposes  of  this  life, 
will  never  be  far  from  the  next ;  and  is  in  some  manner  al- 
ready in  it,  by  a  happy  conformity,  and  close  apprehension 
of  it.  And  if,  as  we  have  elsewhere  declared,^  any  havd 
been  so  happy,  as  personally  to  understand  christian  annihi- 
lation, extacy,  exolution,  transformation,  the  kiss  of  the  spouse, 
and  ingression  into  the  divine  shadow,  according  to  mystical 
theology,  they  have  already  had  an  handsome  anticipation  of 
heaven ;  the  world  is  in  a  manner  over,  and  the  earth  in  ashes 
unto  them. 

'  Sect,  xxx.]     This  Section,  tcrmi-         "  declared.']     In  his  treatise  of  Urn- 

nating  at  the  words  "and  close  appre-  burial.     Some  other  parts  of  these  essays 

hension  of  it,"  concludes  the  Letter  to  a  are  printed  in  a  letter  among  Browne's 

Friend. — Dr.  J.  Posthumous  Works.     Those  references  to 

2   jgcih,  1  '^'^  ""'"  hooks  prove  these  essays  to  be 

Omnem  cre'de  diem  tilii  diluxisse  suprcmum,  gcnume. — Dr.  ./. 

Grata  supervenitt  qua;  noil  siicrabitiir  hora.  J,,     the     present    edition,    the    "other 

Horace.  .   >>  i  •         i  •        , 

„  ,  ,  .     ,  parts      here  mentioned  are  pointed  out. 

Believe,  that  ev  ry  mominp  8  ray  '     ,  ^  m,      t    .i       ^ 

HathliRhted  iip  thy  latest  day ;  an"  some  passages  from   llie  Letter  to  a 

Then,  ifto-morrow's  sun  he  thine,  Friend,  are  given,  which  were  not  includ- 
\Vith  double  lustre  shall  It  shine.  ,  .      /->,    •  /^        ,,       , 

Iv.Kucii.—Dr.  J.  ed  in  (.nristian  Morals. 


iHiscfUanj)  Cracts. 

ORIGINALLY    PfBLISIIEI)    IN 

1684. 


ALSO 


iHtscellanies. 


Or.lCINAM.V    I'lIILISIIED    WITH    HIS    roSTIILMOUS    WOllKS    IN 

1712. 


I  2 


EDITOR'S  PREFACE. 


INIosT  of  these  Tracts  were  (as  Ardibishop  Tenison  re- 
marks in  his  preface,)  Letters,  in  reply  to  encjuirics  addressed 
to  the  autlior,  by  various,  and  some  very  eminent  corre- 
spondents. The  second,  "O/"  Garlands,  ^'C,"  was  written  to 
Evelyn,  as  I  find  from  his  own  hand-writing,  in  the  margin  of 
liis  copy  of  the  original  edition.  On  the  same  authority, 
(probably  from  the  information  of  Sir  Thomas  himself,)  we 
learn  that  the  greater  number  were  addressed  to  Sir 
Nicholas  Bacon.  See  MS.  Note  in  Jirst  page.  The  ninth, 
"  Of  Artificial  Hills,"  was  in  reply  to  Sir  William  Dugdale. 

Such  enquiries  he  delighted  to  satisfy  ;  and  the  immense 
stores  of  information  amassed  durin^  a  long  hfe  of  curious 
reading,  and  inquisitive  research,  eminently  qualified  him  for 
resolving  questions  on  subjects  the  most  dissimilar.  Scarcely 
any  could  be  brought  before  him,  upon  which  he  could  not 
bring  to  bear  the  results  of  reiterated  experiments,  or  of  an 
extensive  acquaintance  with  the  most  singular  and  recondite 
literature ;  and,  where  these  treasures  failed  him,  there  re- 
mained the  inexhaustible  resources  of  his  own  matchless 
fancy. 

The  first  and  second  Tracts  have  been  collated  with  MS. 
Sloan.  No.  1811  ;  the  eighth,  tenth,  and  eleventh,  with  Nos. 
1827  and  1839:  the  thirteenth  with  No.  1874  ;  the  twelfth 
with  MS.  Rawliiison,  No.  58,  in  the  Bodleian — and  all 
the  others  with  MS.  Sloan.  No.  18^37.  Whatever  discre- 
pancies seemed  of  sufficient  importance  have  been  preserved 
in  notes. 

The  second  edition  were  published  with  the  folio  edition  of 
his  works,  in   IG8G  ;    and  none  have  since  been  re-printed, 


118  editor's  preface. 

except  Museum  Clausum,  which,  with  Hydnotajjhia,  and  the 
Letter  to  a  Friend,  were  puhlished  in  a  neat  18mo.  volume, 
by  Mr.  Crossley,  of  Manchester. 

For  the  sake  of  keeping  distinct  the  whole  of  the  unpub- 
lished works,  I  have  added  to  the  Miscellany  Tracts,  his  re- 
marks on  Iceland,  together  with  some  miscellaneous  observa- 
tions, which  made  their  appearance  in  that  ill-assorted  collec- 
tion, the  Posthumous  Works ,  in  1712. 


THE  PUBLISHER  TO  THE  READER. 


The  papers  from  which  these  Tracts  were  printed,  were, 
a  while  since,  delivered  to  me  by  those  worthy  persons,  the 
ladv  and  son  of  the  excellent  author.  He  himself  gave  no 
charge  concerning  his  manuscripts,  either  for  the  suppressing 
or  the  publishing  of  them.  Yet,  seeing  he  had  procured 
transcripts  of  them,  and  had  kept  those  copies  by  him,  it 
seemeth  probai)Ie,  that  he  designed  them  for  public  use. 

Thus  much  of  his  intention  being  presumed,  and  many  who 
had  tasted  of  the  fruits  of  his  former  studies  beins  covetous  of 
more  of  the  like  kind ;  also  these  Tracts  having  been  pci'used 
and  much  approved  of  by  some  judicious  and  learned  men ;  I 
was  not  unwilling  to  be  instrumental  in  fitting  them  for  the 
press. 

To  this  end,  I  selected  them  out  of  many  disordered  pa- 
pers, and  disposed  them  into  such  a  method  as  they  seemed 
capable  of;  beginning  first  with  plants,  going  on  to  animals, 
proceeding  farther  to  things  relating  to  men,  and  concluding 
with  matters  of  a  various  nature. 

Concerning  the  plants,  I  did,  on  purpose,  forbear  to  range 
them  (as  some  advised)  according  to  their  tribes  and  families; 
because,  by  so  doing,  I  should  have  represented  that  as  a 
studied  and  formal  work,  which  is  but  a  collection  of  occasi- 
onal essays.  And,  indeed,  both  this  Tract,  and  those  which 
follow,  were  rather  the  diversions  than  the  labours  of  his  pen: 
and,  because  he  did,  as  it  were,  drop  down  his  thoughts  of  a 
sudden,  in  those  little  spaces  of  vacancy  which  he  snatched 
from  those  very  many  occasions  which  gave  him  hourly  in- 
terruption. If  there  appears,  here  and  tlicro,  any  incor- 
rectness in  the  style,  a  small  degree  of  candour  sufliceth  to 
excuse  it. 

If  there  be  any  such  errors  in  the  words,  I  am  sure  the 
press  has  not  made  them  fewer ;  but  I  do  not  hold  myself 
obliged  to  answer  for  that  which  I  could  not  perfectly  govern. 


120  THE  PUBLISHEK  TO  THE  READER. 

However,  the  matter  is  not  of  any  great  moment:  such 
errors  will  not  mislead  a  learned  reader ;  and  he  who  is  not 
such  in  some  competent  degree,  is  not  a  fit  peruser  of  these 
letters.  Such  these  Tracts  are;  but,  for  the  persons  to 
whom  they  were  written,  I  cannot  well  learn  their  names 
from  those  few  obscure  marks  which  the  author  has  set  at  the 
beginning  of  them.  And  these  essays  being  letters,  as  many 
as  take  offence  at  some  few  familiar  things  which  the  author 
hath  mixed  with  them,  find  fault  with  decency.  Men  are 
not  wont  to  set  down  oracles  in  every  line  they  write  to  their 
acquaintance. 

There  still  remain  other  brief  discourses  written  by  this 
most  learned  and  ingenious  author.  Those,  also,  may  come 
forth,  when  some  of  his  friends  shall  have  sufficient  leisure  ; 
and  at  such  due  distance  from  these  Tracts,  that  they  may 
follow  rather  than  stifle  them. 

Amongst  these  manuscripts  there  is  one  which  gives  a  brief 
account  of  all  the  monuments  of  the  cathedral  of  Norwich. 
It  was  written  merely  for  private  use :  and  the  relations  of  the 
author  expect  such  justice  from  those  into  whose  hands  some 
imperfect  copies  of  it  are  fallen,  that,  without  their  consent 
first  obtained,  they  forbear  the  publishing  of  it. 

The  truth  is,  matter  equal  to  the  skill  of  the  antiquary,  was 
not  there  afforded :  had  a  fit  subject  of  that  nature  offered 
itself,  he  would  scarce  have  been  guilty  of  an  oversight  like 
to  that  of  Ausonius,  who,  in  the  description  of  his  native 
city  of  Bordeaux,  omitted  the  two  famous  antiquities  of  it, 
Palais  de  Tutele,  and  Palais  de  Galien. 

Concerning  the  author  himself,  I  choose  to  be  silent,  though 
I  have  had  the  happiness  to  have  been,  for  some  years, 
known  to  him.  There  is  on  foot  a  design  of  writing  his  life ; 
and  there  are  already,  some  memorials  collected  by  one  of 
his  ancient  friends.  Till  that  work  be  perfected,  the  reader 
may  content  himself  with  these  present  Tracts;  all  which 
commending  themselves  by  their  learning,  curiosity,  and  bre- 
vity, if  he  be  not  pleased  with  them,  he  seemeth  to  me  to  be 
distempered  with  such  a  niceness  of  imagination,  as  no  wise 
man  is  concerned  to  humour. 

THOMAS  TENISON. 


iHisccUanj)  Cvacts* 


TRACT    I.i 

observations  upon  several  plants  mentioned  in 

scripture. 

Sir, 

1  HOUGH  many  ordinary  heads  run  smoothly  over  the  Scrip- 
ture, yet  I  must  acknowledge  it  is  one  of  the  hardest  books 
I  have  met  with  ;  and  therefore  well  deserveth  those  nu- 
merous comments,  expositions,  and  annotations,  which  make 
up  a  good  part  of  our  libraries. 

However,  so  affected  I  am  therewith,  that  I  wish  there  had 
been  more  of  it,  and  a  larger  volume  of  that  divine  piece, 
which  leaveth  such  welcome  impressions,  and  somewhat 
more,  in  the  readers,  than  the  words  and  sense  after  it.  At 
least,  who  would  not  be  glad  that  many  things  barely  hinted 
were  at  large  delivered  in  it  ?  The  })articulars  of  the  dispute 
between  the  doctors  and  our  Saviour  could  not  but  be  wel- 
come to  those  who  have  every  word  in  honour  which  pro- 
ceeded from  his  mouth,  or  was  otherwise  delivered  by  him ; 
and  so  would  be  glad  to  be  assured,  what  he  wrote  with  his 
finger  on  the  ground  :  but  especially  to  have  a  particular  of 
that  instructing  narration  or  discourse  which  he  made  unto 
the  disciples  after  his  resurrection,  where  'tis  said:    "And 

'  Tract  i.]     "  Most  of  these  letters     in  a  copy  formerly  belonging  to  him,  now 
were  written  to  Sir  Nicholas  Kacon.'' —     in  the  Editor's  possession. 
.V.V.  Sulf,   tcrilfcn  in  frncil.   Inj  Evelyn, 


122  OBSERVATIONS   UPON    PLANTS  [tRACT   I. 

beginning  at  Moses,  and  all  the  prophets,  he  expounded 
unto  them,  in  all  the  Scriptures,  the  things  concerning 
himself." 

But,  to  omit  theological  obscurities,  you  must  needs  ob- 
serve that  most  sciences  do  seem  to  have  something  more 
nearly  to  consider  in  the  expressions  of  the  Scripture. 

Astronomers  find  herein  the  names  but  of  few  stars,  scarce 
so  many  as  in  Achilles's  buckler  in  Homer,  and  almost  the 
very  same.  But  in  some  passages  of  the  Old  Testament 
they  think  they  discover  the  zodiacal  course  of  the  sun  ;  and 
they,  also,  conceive  an  astronomical  sense  in  that  elegant  ex- 
pression of  St.  James  "  concerning  the  father  of  lights,  with 
whom  there  is  no  variableness,  neither  shadow  of  turning :" 
and  therein  an  allowable  allusion  unto  the  tropical  conversion 
of  the  sun,  whereby  ensueth  a  variation  of  heat,  light,  and 
also  of  shadows  from  it.  But  whether  the  stellce  crraticce, 
or  wandering  stars,  in  St.  Jude,  may  be  referred  to  the  ce- 
lestial planets  or  some  metereological  wandering  stars,  ignes 
fatui,  stellcB  cadentes  et  erraticce,  or  had  any  allusion  unto 
the  impostor  Barchochebas"  or  Stella?  Filius,  who  afterward 
appeared,  and  wandered  about  in  the  time  of  Adrianus,  they 
leave  unto  conjecture. 

Chirurgeons  may  find  their  whole  art  in  that  one  passage, 
concerning  the  rib  which  God  took  out  of  Adam ;  that  is, 
their  8/a/gsff;;  in  opening  the  flesh ;  I'^ai^idig  in  taking  out  the 
rib ;  and  G\jv%6tg  in  closing  and  healing  the  part  again. 

Rhetoricians  and  orators  take  singular  notice  of  very  many 
excellent  passages,  stately  metaphors,  noble  tropes  and  ele- 
gant expressions,  not  to  be  found  or  paralleled  in  any  other 
author. 

Mineralists  look  earnestly  into  the  twenty-eighth  of  Job ; 
take  special  notice  of  the  early  artifice  in  brass  and  iron, 

*  Darclwchcha.i.^     One     of    the    im-  Bossuet   supposes   him   to   be   the    star 

posters  who   assumed   tlie    character  of  mentioned  in  the  8th  chap,  of  Revelation. 
Messias  ;    he   changed    his   true    name,         The  apostle  Jude  more  probably  allud- 

Bar-Coziha,  son  of  a  lie,   to  that  oi  Bar-  ed  to  the  term  '  star,'  by  which  the  Jews 

chorhehas,  son  of  a  star  I      He  excited  a  often  designated  their  teachers,  and  ap- 

revolt  against  the    Romans  which  led  to  plied  it   here  to  some  of  the  Christian 

a  very   sanguinary  contest,   terminating  teachers,  whose  unholy  motives,  erroneous 

with  his  death,  at  the  storming  of  Bither,  doctrines,   or   wandering   and    unsettled 

by  the  Romans,  under  Julius   Scverus.  habits  exposed  Ihcm  to  his  rebuke. 


TRACT    I.]  MENTIONED    IN    SCKIl'TURE.  123 

under  Tubal  Cain  :  and  find  also  mention  of  golil,  silver, 
brass,  tin,  lead,  iron;  beside  refining,  soldering,  dross,' nitre, 
salt-pits,  and  in  some  manner  also  of  antimony.* 

Gemmary  naturalists  read  diligently  the  precious  stones  in 
the  holy  city  of  the  Apocalypse  ;  examine  the  breast  plate  of 
Aaron,  and  various  gems  upon  it;  and  think  the  second  row  * 
the  nobler  of  the  four.  They  wonder  to  find  the  art  of  en- 
gravery  so  ancient  upon  precious  stones  and  signets;  together 
with  the  ancient  use  of  earrings  and  bracelets.  And  are 
pleased  to  find  pearl,  coral,  amber,  and  crystal,  in  those 
sacred  leaves,  according  to  our  translation.  And  when  they 
often  meet  with  flints  and  marbles,  cannot  but  take  notice 
that  there  is  no  mention  of  the  magnet  or  loadstone,  which 
in  so  many  similitudes,  comparisons,  and  allusions,  could 
hardly  have  been  omitted  in  the  works  of  Solomon :  if  it 
were  true  that  he  knew  either  the  attractive  or  directive 
power  thereof,  as  some  have  believed. 

Navigators  consider  the  ark,  which  was  pitched  without  and 
within,  and  could  endure  the  ocean  without  mast  or  sails : 
they  take  special  notice  of  the  twenty-seventh  of  Ezekiel ;  the 
mighty  traffic  and  great  navigation  of  Tyre,  with  particular 
mention  of  their  sails,  their  masts  of  cedar,  oars  of  oak,  their 
skilful  pilots,  mariners,  and  caulkers  ;  as  also  of  the  long  voy- 
ages of  the  fleets  of  Solomon  ;  of  Jehosaphat's  ships  broken 
at  Ezion-Geber ;  of  the  notable  voyage  and  shipwreck  of  St. 
Paul  so  accurately  delivered  in  the  Acts. 

Oneirocritical  diviners  apprehend  some  hints  of  their  know- 
ledge, even  from  divine  dreams  ;  while  they  take  notice  of  the 
dreams  of  Joseph,  Pharaoh,  Nebuchadnezzar,  and  the  angels 
on  Jacob's  ladder ;  and  find,  in  Artemidorus  and  Achmetes, 
that  ladders  signify  travels,  and  the  scales  thereof  preferment ; 
and  that  oxen  lean  and  fat  naturally  denote  scarcity  or  })lenty, 
and  the  successes  of  agriculture. 

I'hysiognomists  will  largely  put  in  from  very  many  passages 
of  scripture.     And  when  they  find  in  Aristotle,  quihus  J'roiis 

*   DcpinxiC  oculos  stibio.     2  Kings  ix,   30;  Jcreni.  iv,   30;   lizck.  xxiii,  40. 

^  iros.t.]     .Vi\     Sloan.     ISIl,    adds,  '  second    row.'\     The    emerald,    sap- 

"  sulphur."  phire,  and  diamond. 


124  OBSERVATIONS    UPON    PLANTS  [tRACT    I. 

quadrangula  commensiirata,  fortes,  referunttir  ad  leones,  can- 
not but  take  special  notice  of  that  expression  concerning  the 
Gadites ;  mighty  men  of  war,  fit  for  battle,  whose  faces  were 
as  the  faces  of  lions. 

Geometrical  and  architectonical  artists  look  narrowly  upon 
the  description  of  the  ark,  the  fabric  of  the  temple,  and  the 
holy  city  in  the  Apocalypse. 

But  the  botanical  artist  meets  every  where  with  vegetables, 
and  from  the  fig  leaf  in  Genesis  to  the  star  wormwood  in  the 
Apocalypse,  are  variously  interspersed  expressions  from 
plants,  elegantly  advantaging  the  significancy  of  the  text : 
whereof  many  being  delivered  in  a  language  proper  unto  Ju- 
dsea  and  neighbour  countries,  are  imperfectly  apprehended 
by  the  common  reader,  and  now  doubtfully  made  out,  even 
by  the  Jewish  expositor. 

And  even  in  those  which  are  confessedly  known,  the  ele- 
gancy is  often  lost  in  the  apprehension  of  the  reader,  unac- 
quainted with  such  vegetables,  or  but  nakedly  knowing  their 
natures  :  whereof  holding  a  pertinent  apprehension,  you  can- 
not pass  over  such  expressions  without  some  doubt  or  want  of 
satisfaction  ^  in  your  judgment.  Hereof  we  shall  only  hint 
or  discourse  some  few  which  I  could  not  but  take  notice  of 
in  the  I'eading  of  holy  Scripture. 

Many  plants  are  mentioned  in  Scripture  which  are  not  dis- 
tinctly known  in  our  countries,  or  under  such  names  in  the 
original,  as  they  are  fain  to  be  rendered  by  analogy,  or  by  the 
name  of  vegetables  of  good  affinity  unto  them,  and  so  maintain 
the  textual  sense,  though  in  some  variation  from  identity. 

1.  That  plant  which  afforded  a  shade  unto  Jonah,*  men- 
tioned by  the  name  of  Jcikaion,  and  still  retained,  at  least 
marginally,  in  some  translations,  to  avoid  obscurity  Jerome 
rendered  hedera  or  ivy;^  which  notwithstanding  (except  in 

*  Jonali,  iv,  G.  a  gourd. 

'  want  of  satisfaction.']     "  Insatisfac-  the  r/ciwi/.t;  and  according  to  Dioscorides, 

tion."  MS.  Sloan.  1S41.  of  rapid  {;rowlh  ;   bearing  a  berry  from 

^  Jerome  rendcreth  ivy.]  Augustine  which  an  oil  is  expressed  ;  rising  to  the 
called  it  a  gourd,  and  accused  Jerome  of  lieight  often  or  twelve  feet,  and  furnish- 
heresy  for  the  opinion  he  held.  Yet  ed  with  very  large  leaves,  like  those  of 
they  both  seem  to  have  been  wrong.  It  the  plane-tree  ;  so  that  the  people  of  the 
was  in  all  probability  the  l.iki  of  the  East  plant  it  before  their  shops  for  the 
Egyptians,  a  plant  of  the  same  family  as  sake  of  its  shade. 


TRACT    1.]  MENTIONED    IN    SCIUI'TURE.  1  !25 

its  scandent  nature)  agreed  not  fully  with  the  other,  tlmt  is, 
to  grow  up  in  a  night,  or  h6  consumed  witli  a  worm ;  ivy  being 
of  no  swift  growth,  little  subject  unto  worms,  and  a  scarce 
plant  about  Babylon. 

'2.  That  hyssop"  is  taken  for  that  plant  which  cleansed  the 
leper,  being  a  well  scented  and  very  abstersive  simple,  may 
well  be  admitted ;  so  we  be  not  too  confident,  that  it  is  strictly 
the  same  with  our  common  liyssop  :  the  hyssop  of  those  parts 
ilifterin'i  from  that  of  ours  :  as  Bellonius  hath  observed  in  the 
hyssop  which  grows  in  Judaea,  and  the  hyssop  of  the  wall 
mentioned  in  the  works  of  Solomon,  no  kind  of  our  hyssop ; 
and  may  tolerably  be  taken  for  some  kind  of  minor  capillary, 
which  best  makes  out  the  antithesis  with  the  cedar.  Nor 
when  we  meet  with  Uhanotis,  is  it  to  be  conceived  our  com- 
mon rosemary,  which  is  rather  the  first  kind  thereof  amongst 
several  others,  used  by  the  ancients. 

3.  That  it  must  be  taken  for  hemlock,  which  is  twice  so 
rendered  in  our  translation,*  will  hardly  be  made  out,  other- 
wise than  in  the  intended  sense,  and  implying  some  plant, 
wherein  bitterness  or  a  poisonous  quality  is  considerable. 

4.  What  Tremellius  rendereth  spina,  and  the  vulgar  trans- 
lation paliiirus,  and  others  make  some  kind  of  rhamnus,  is  al- 
lowable in  the  sense ;  and  we  contend  not  about  the  species, 
since  they  are  known  thorns  in  those  countries,  and  in  our 
fields  or  gardens  among  us  :  and  so  common  in  Judaea,  that 
men  conclude  the  thorny  crown  "  of  our  Saviour  was  made 
either  o{  pallurus  or  rhavnius. 

5.  AVhether  the  bush  which  burnt  and  consumed  not,  were 
properly  a  rubus  or  bramble,  was  somewhat  doubtful  from 
the  original  and  some  translations,  had  not  the  Evangelist, 
and  St.  Paul  expressed  the  same  by  the  Greek  word  /3aro;, 
which,  from  the  description  of  Dioscorides,  hcrbarists  accept 

•   Ilosea,  X,  4  ;  Amos,  vi,  2. 

'  hyssop.l     A    diminutive   herb  of   a  •*  thorny  croun.'\      Our  Lord's  crown 

very  bitter  taste,  which  Hasselquist  men-  was  supposed  by  Bodaus  and  Theophy- 

tions  as  growing  on  the  mountains  near  lact  to  have  been  made  of  some  species 

Jerusalem,  as  well  as  on  the  walls  of  the  of  acacia.     Hasselquist  considers   it    to 

city.      Pliny  mentions  it    in  connection  have  been  the  r/iamni/i,  or  nHica/)a/(«n<4 

with  the  vinegar  and  the  sjHivge.  Nat.  Athenei. 
Hist,  lib.  xxiii,  c.  1. 


126  OBSERVATIONS    UPON    PLANTS  [tRACT    J. 

for  rubus ;  although  the  same  word  ^arog  expresseth  not  only 
the  in/bus  or  kinds  of  bramble,  but  other  thorny  bushes,  and 
the  hip-briar  is  also  named  xwoa^drog,  or  the  dog-briar  or 
bramble, 

6.  That  myrica  is  rendered  heath,^*  sounds  instructively 
enough  to  our  ears,  who  behold  that  plant  so  common  in  bar- 
ren plains  among  us :  but  you  cannot  but  take  notice  that 
erica,  or  our  heath,  is  not  the  same  plant  with  myrica  or  ta- 
marice,  described  by  Theophrastus  and  Dioscorides,  and 
which  Bellonius  declareth  to  grow  so  plentifully  in  the  deserts 
of  Judaea  and  Arabia. 

7.  That  the  ^or^ug  rrjg  ku't^ov,  boirus  cypri,  or  clusters  of  cy- 
press,^ t  should  have  any  reference  to  the  cypress  tree,  accord- 
ing to  the  original,  copher,  or  clusters  of  the  noble  vine  of 
Cyprus,  which  might  be  planted  into  Judaea,  may  seem  to 
others  allowable  in  some  latitude.  But  there  seeming  some 
noble  odour  to  be  implied  in  this  place,  you  may  probably 
conceive  that  the  expression  drives  at  the  xuTgog  of  Dioscorides, 
some  oriental  kind  of  ligusirum  or  alcharma,  which  Dios- 
corides and  Pliny  mention  under  the  name  of  xu^go;  and  Cy- 
prus, and  to  grow  about  Egypt  and  Ascalon,  producing  a 
sweet  and  odorate  bush  of  flowers,  and  out  of  which  was 
made  the  famous  oleum  cyprinum. 

But  why  it  should  be  rendered  camphor  your  judgment 
cannot  but  doubt,  who  know  that  our  camphor  was  unknown 
unto  the  ancients,  and  no  ingredient  into  any  composition  of 
great  antiquity :  that  learned  men  long  conceived  it  a  bitu- 
minous and  fossil  body,  and  our  latest  experience  discovereth 
it  to  be  the  resinous  substance  of  a  tree,  in  Borneo  and  China ; 
and  that  the  camphor  that  we  use  is  a  neat  preparation  of 
the  same. 

8.  When  'tis  said  in  Isaiah  xli,  "  I  will  plant  in  the  wilder- 
ness the  cedar,  the  shittah  tree,  and  the  myrtle,  and  the  oil 

*  Myrica,  Cant,  i,  H.  f  Cant,  i,  14. 

^  healh,'\     "  Be  as  the  heath   in  the  tion,  and  others,  consider  the  tree  t'lus 

wilderness." — ^fS.  Sloan.  1847.  called  in   Isa.  xliv,   14,  to  be  rather  the 

The  Ixx,  in  Jer.  xlviii,  G,  instead  of  wild  oak,   or  ilex;   Bishop   Lowtli    and 

orur  evidently  read  orud,  'a  wild  ass;'  Parkhurst    think   the  pine  is  intended, 

which  snits  that  passas^e  (as  well  as  Jer.  But  the  wood  of  the  cypress  was  more 

xvii,  6)  better  than  "heath!"  adapted  to  the  purpose  specified. 

'  f;/p>'ess.]     Aqiiila,  the  Ixx,  Tlicodo- 


TRACT    I.]  MENTIONED    IN    SCllIl'TURE.  If27 

tree,  I  will  set  in  the  desert,  the  fir  tree,  and  the  pine,  and 
the  box  tree:  "  though  some  doubt  may  be  made  of  the  sliit- 
tah  tree,-  yet  all  these  trees  here  mentioned  being  such  as  are 
ever  green,  you  will  more  emphatically  apprehend  the  mer- 
ciful meaning  of  God  in  this  mention  of  no  fading,  but  always 
verdant  trees  in  dry  and  desert  places. 

9.  "And  they  cut  down  a  branch  with  one  cluster  of 
grapes,*  and  they  bare  it  between  two  upon  a  staff,  and  they 
brought  pomegranates  and  figs."  This  cluster  of  grapes 
brought  upon  a  staff  by  the  spies  was  an  incredible  sight,  in 
Philo  Juda^us,  seemed  notable  in  the  eyes  of  the  Israelites, 
but  more  wonderful  in  our  own,  who  look  only  upon  northern 
vines.  I3ut  herein  you  are  like  to  consider,  tiiat  the  cluster 
was  thus  carefully  carried  to  represent  it  entire,  without 
bruising  or  breaking;  tiiat  this  was  not  one  bunch,  but  an 
extraordinary  cluster,  made  up  of  many  depending  upon  one 
gross  stalk.  And,  however,  might  be  paralleled  with  the  east- 
ern clusters  of  Margiana  and  Caramania,  if  we  allow  but  half 
the  expressions  of  Pliny  and  Strabo,  whereof  one  would  lade 
a  curry  or  small  cart ;  and  may  be  made  out  by  the  clusters 
of  the  grapes  of  Rhodes  presented  unto  Duke  Radzivil,* 
each  containing  three  parts  of  an  ell  in  compass,  and  the 
grapes  as  big  as  prunes. 

10.  Some  things  may  be  doubted  in  the  species  of  the 
holy  ointment  '  and  perfume. f  With  amber,  musk,  and  civet 
we  meet  not  in  the  Scripture,  nor  any  odours  from  animals  ; 
except  we  take  the  onijcha  of  that  perfume,  for  the  covercle 
of  a  shell-fish,  called  unguis  odoratus,  or  hlalla  hyzunt'ina, 
which  Dioscorides  affirmeth  to  be  taken  from  a  shell-fish  of 
the  Indian  lakes,  which  feedeth  upon  the  aromatical  })lants, 
is  gathered  when  the  lakes  are  dry.     But  whether  that  which 

•   Radzivil  in  his  Travels.  f  Exod.  xxx,  34,  35. 

'  shitlah-tree.]       According    to     Dr.  Religious,  who  liad  long  resided  in  Pa- 
Shaw  and  others,  it  was  the  acacia  hera,  lestine,  says,  that  there  grew  in  the  val- 
or j/>i«rt  f^ry^/iVjcfl,  which  grows  to  about  ley  of    Hebron    bunches   so  large   that 
the  size  of  the  mulberry,  and  produces  two  men  could  scarcely  carry  one. 
yellow  flowers  and  pods  like  lupines.  *  ho/i/    ointment.']     Frankincense  was 

•"  cluster  nf  prapex.]      Doubdan  {t'oij-  one  of  the  ingredients  therein  ;  an  aro- 

age  de  la   Terre  Sainte,  ch.  xxi)  speaks  matic  gum  produced   by  a  tree  not  cer- 

of    bunches    weighing    ten    or    twelve  tainly   known,    called  by    the    ancients 

pounds.     Forster,  on  the  authority  of  a  thurifcrn. 


1^8  OBSERVATIONS    UPON    PLANTS  [tPcACT    I. 

we  now  call  blatta  byzantina  or  unguis  odoratus,  be  the  same 
with  that  odorate  one  of  antiquity,  great  doubt  may  be  made  ; 
since  Dioscorides  saith  it  smelled  hke  castoreum,  and  that 
which  we  now  have  is  of  an  ungrateful  odour. 

No  little  doubt  may  be  also  made  oi galbanum^  prescribed 
in  the  same  perfume,  if  we  take  it  for  galbanum,  which  is  of 
common  use  among  us,  approaching  the  evil  scent  of  assa- 
fcctida;  and  not  rather  for  galbanum  of  good  odour,  as  the 
adjoining  words  declare,  and  the  original  chelbena  will  bear; 
which  implieth  a  fat  or  resinous  substance ;  that  which  is 
commonly  known  among  us  being  properly  a  gummous  body 
and  dissoluble  also  in  water. 

The  holy  ointment  of  stacte  or  pure  myrrh,^  distilling  from 
the  plant  without  expression  or  firing,  of  cinnamon,  cassia, 
and  calamus,  containeth  less  questionable  species,  if  the  cin- 
namon of  the  ancients  were  the  same  with  ours,  or  managed 
after  the  same  manner.  For  thereof  Dioscorides  made  his 
noble  unguent.  And  cinnamon  was  so  highly  valued  by 
princes,  that  Cleopatra  carried  it  unto  her  sepulchre  with  her 
jewels ;  which  was  also  kept  in  wooden  boxes  among  the  ra- 
rities of  kings  :  and  was  of  such  a  lasting  nature,  that  at  his 
composing  of  treacle  for  the  Emperor  Severus,  Galen  made 
use  of  some  which  had  been  laid  up  by  Adrianus. 

11.  That  the  prodigal  son  desired  to  eat  of  husks  given 
unto  swine,  will  hardly  pass  in  your  apprehension  for  the 
husks  of  pease,  beans,  or  such  cduHous  pulses ;  as  well 
understanding  that  the  textual  word  xs^ar/ov,  or  ceration,  pro- 
perly intendeth  the  fruit  of  the  siliqua  tree,  so  common  in 
Syria,  and  fed  upon  by  men  and  beasts ;  called  also  by  some 
the  fruit  of  the  locust  tree,  and  panis  sanctt  Johannis,  as  con- 
ceiving it  to  have  been  part  of  the  diet  of  the  baptist  in  the 
desert.  The  tree  and  fruit  is  not  only  common  in  Syria  and 
the  eastern  parts,  but  also  well  known  in  Apuleia  and  the 
kingdom  of  Naples ;   growing  along  the   Via  Appia,  from 

*  galbamim.~\       A  gum   issuiiip;    from  *  myrrhJ]     The  gum  of  a  tree  grow- 

an  umbelliferous  plant,  growing  in  Per-  iiig  in  Egypt,  Arabia,  and  Abyssinia  : — 

sia  and  Africa; — when  first  drawn,  white  believed  to  possess  the  power  of  resisting 

and   soft ; — afterwards    reddish  ; — of    a  putrefaction,  and  therefore  used  by  tlie 

strong  smell,    bitter  and  acid,    inflam-  Jews  and  Egyptians  in  embalming, 
mable,  and  soluble  in  water. 


TRACT    I.]  MENTIONED    IN    SCRIl'TURF.  lf?9 

r\incli  unto  Mola  ;  the  hard  cods  or  husks  niakin;;-  a  rattling 
noise  in  windy  weather,  by  beating  against  one  another : 
called  by  the  Italians,  caroba  or  cardbala,  and  by  the  French, 
carotigc.s.  With  the  sweet  pulp  hereof  some  conceive  that 
the  Indians  preserve  ginger,  inirabolans,  and  nutmegs.  Of 
the  same  (as  Pliny  delivers)  the  ancients  made  one  kind  of 
wine,  strongly  expressing  the  juice  thereof;  and  so  they 
might  after  give  the  expressed  and  less  useful  part  of  the 
cods  and  remaining  pulp  unto  their  swine  :  which,  being  no 
gustless  or  unsatisfying  oftal,  might  be  well  desired  by  the 
prodigal  in  his  hunger. 

12.  No  marvel  it  is  that  the  Israelites,  having  Hved  long  in 
a  well-watered  country,  and  been  acquainted  with  the  noble 
water  of  Nilus,  should  complain  for  water  in  the  dry  and  bar- 
ren wilderness.  More  remarkable  it  seems  that  they  should 
extol  and  linger  after  the  cucumbers  "^  and  leeks,  onions  and 
garlick  of  Egypt ;  wherein,  notwithstanding,  lies  a  pertinent 
expression  of  the  diet  of  that  country  in  ancient  times,  even  as 
high  as  the  building  of  the  pyramids,  when  Herodotus  de- 
livereth,  that  so  many  talents  were  spent  in  onions  and  garlick, 
for  the  food  of  labourers  and  artificers  ;  and  is  also  answer- 
able unto  their  present  plentiful  diet  in  cucumbers,  and  the 
great  varieties  thereof,  as  testified  by  Prosper  Alpinus,  who 
spent  many  years  in  Egypt. 

13.  What  fruit  that  was  which  our  first  parents  tasted  in 
Paradise,  from  the  disj)utes  of  learned  men,  seems  yet  inde- 
terminable." ]More  clear  it  is  that  tliey  covered  their  naked- 
ness or  secret  parts  with  fig  leaves  ;'-*  which,  when  I  read,  I 
cannot  but  call  to  mind  the  several  considerations  which  anti- 
quity  had  of  the  fig  tree,  in  reference    unto   those   parts, 

'  cucKmhers.'\  Hasselquist  thus  de-  yet  known." — llasselquisl'sTrav.^.25%. 
scribes   the   cucumis  clialc,  or  queen  of         *  yet  indeterminable.']  Jewish  tradition 

cucumbers.     "It   grows    in    the    fertile  considers    it    to    have    been    tlie   citroti, 

earth  round  Cairo,  after  the  inundation  wliich,   in  all  probability,  was  the  fruit 

of  the  Nile,  and  not  in  any  other  place  spoken  of  in  Cant,  ii,  l.'i,  rather  than  the 

in    Egypt,   nor   in    any   other    soil.     It  apple,  as  it  is  translated, 
ripens    with    water   melons :   its  flesh   is         "  fg  leaves.']     The  fig   tree  is   called 

almost  of  the  same  substance,  but  is  not  ianeh,   or    the    "grief  tree,"    from    its 

near  so  cool.     The  grandees  eat  it  as  the  rough  leaves.     Hence   the  Rabbins  and 

most  pleasant  food  they  find,  and    that  others  represent  Adam  to  have  selected 

from  which  they  have  least  to  apprehend,  it  as  a  natural  sackcloth,  to  express  his 

It  is  the  most  excellent  of  this  tribe  of  any  cuntriticn. 

VOL.    IV.  K 


130  OBSERVATIONS    UPON    PLANTS  [tRACT    I. 

particularly  how  fig  leaves,  by  sundry  authors,  are  described 
to  have  some  resemblance  unto  the  genitals,  and  so  were  aptly 
formed  for  such  contection  of  those  parts  ;  how  also,  in  that 
famous  statua  of  Praxiteles,  concerning  Alexander  and  Bu- 
cephalus, the  seci'ct  parts  are  veiled  with  fig  leaves ;  how  this 
tree  was  sacred  unto  Priapus,  and  how  the  diseases  of  the 
secret  parts  have  derived  their  name  from  figs. 

14.  That  the  good  Samaritan,  coming  from  Jericho,  used 
any  of  the  Judean  balsam  ^  upon  the  wounded  traveller,  is  not 
to  be  made  out,  and  we  are  unwilling  to  disparage  his  charita- 
ble surgery  in  pouring  oil  into  a  green  wound ;  and,  therefore, 
when  'tis  said  he  used  oil  and  wine,  may  rather  conceive  that 
he  made  an  ohielceum,  or  medicine  of  oil  and  wine  beaten  up 
and  mixed  together,  which  was  no  improper  medicine,  and  is 
an  art  now  lately  studied  by  some  so  to  incorporate  wine  and 
oil,  that  they  may  lastingly  hold  together,  which  some  pre- 
tend to  have,  and  call  it  oleum  Samaritanum,  or  Samaritan's 
oil. 

15.  When  Daniel  would  not  pollute  himself  with  the  diet 
of  the  Babylonians,  he  probably  declined  pagan  commensa- 
tion,  or  to  eat  of  meats  forbidden  to  the  Jews,  though  com- 
mon at  their  tables,  or  so  much  as  to  taste  of  their  Gentile  im- 
molations, and  sacrifices  abominable  unto  his  palate. 

But  when  't  is  said  that  he  made  choice  of  the  diet  of  pulse  * 
and  water,  whether  he  strictly  confined  unto  a  leguminous 
food,  according  to  the  vulgar  translation,  some  doubt  may  be 
raised  from  the  original  word  zeragnhn,  which  signifies  semi- 
nalia,  and  is  so  set  down  in  the  margin  of  Arias  Montanus  ; 
and  the  Greek  word  spermata,  generally  expressing  seeds, 
may  signify  any  edulious  or  cerealious  grains  besides  oW^w  or 
leguminous  seeds. 

'  balsam.']  An  evergreen,  rising  to  mum,  made  by  a  decoction  of  the  buds 
about  fourteen  feet  high,  indigenous  in  and  young  twigs.  The  tree  has  entirely 
Azab  and  all  along  the  coast  of  Babel-  disappeared  from  Palestine, 
mandcl ;  bearing  but  few  leaves,  and  ^  pulse.]  Parched  peas  or  corn  ;  both 
small  white  flowers,  like  those  of  the  of  which  make  part  of  the  food  of  the 
acacia.  Three  kinds  of  balsam  were  ex-  Eastern  people.  "  On  the  road  from  Acra 
tracted  from  this  tree: — 1.  The  opohal-  to  Seide,"  says  liasselquist,  "we  saw  a 
samum,  the  most  valuable  sort,  which  herdsman  eating  his  dinner,  consisting  of 
flowed,  on  incision,  from  the  trunk  or  half-ripe  ears  of  wheat,  which  lie  toast- 
branches.  2.  Carpobalsamum,  from  pres-  ed,  and  ate  with  as  good  an  appetite  as 
sure  of  the    ripe    fruit.     3.  Hylobalsa-  a  Turk  does  his  pillars." 


TRACT    1.]  MENTIONED    IN    SCRIPTURE.  131 

Yet,  if  lie  strictly  made  choice  of  Ji  leguminous  food,  and 
water,  instead  of  his  portion  from  the  king's  table,  he  hand- 
somely declined  the  diet  which  might  have  been  put  upon 
him,  and  particularly  that  which  was  called  the pot'ibasts  of 
the  king,  which,  as  Athemrus  informcth,  implied  the  bread  of 
the  king,  made  of  barley,  and  wheat,  and  the  wine  of  Cyprus, 
which  he  drank  in  an  oval  cup.  And,  therefore,  distinctly 
from  that  he  chose  plain  Aire  of  water,  and  the  gross  diet  of 
pulse,  and  that,  perhaps,  not  made  into  bread,  but  parched 
and  tempered  with  water. 

Now  that  herein  (beside  the  special  benediction  of  God)  he 
made  choice  of  no  improper  diet  to  keep  himself  fair  and 
plump,  and  so  to  excuse  the  eunuch  his  keeper,  physicians 
will  not  deny,  who  acknowledge  a  very  nutritive  and  impin- 
guating  faculty  in  pulses,  in  leguminous  food,  and  in  several 
sorts  of  grains  and  corns,  is  not  like  to  be  doubted  by  such 
who  consider  that  this  was  probably  a  great  part  of  the  food 
of  our  forefathers  before  the  flood,  the  diet  also  of  Jacob ; 
and  that  the  Romans  (called,  therefore,  pultifagi)  fed  much 
on  pulse  for  six  hundred  years ;  that  they  had  no  bakers  for 
that  time :  and  their  pistours  were  such  as,  before  the  use  of 
mills,  beat  out  and  cleansed  their  corn.  As  also  that  the 
athletic  diet  was  of  pulse,  alphiton,  maza,  barley  and  water ; 
whereby  they  were  advantaged  sometimes  to  an  exquisite 
state  of  health,  and  such  as  was  not  without  danger.  And, 
therefore,  though  Daniel  were  no  eunuch,  and  of  a  more  fat- 
ning  and  thriving  temper,  as  some  have  fancied,  yet  was  he  by 
this  kind  of  diet  sufficiently  maintained  in  a  fair  and  carnous 
state  of  body  ;  and,  accordingly,  his  picture  not  improperly 
drawn,  that  is,  not  meagre  and  lean,  like  Jeremy's,  but  plump 
and  fair,  answerable  to  the  most  authentic  draught  of  the 
Vatican,  and  the  late  German  Luther's  bible. 

The  cynicks  in  Athena?us  make  iterated  courses  of  lentils, 
and  prefer  that  diet  before  the  luxury  of  Seleucus.  The  pre- 
sent Egyptians,  who  are  observed  by  Alpinus  to  be  the  fattest 
nation,  and  men  to  have  breasts  like  women,  owe  much,  as  he 
conceiveth,  unto  the  water  of  Nile,  and  their  diet  of  rice, 
pease,  lentils,  and  white  cicers.  The  pulse-eating  cynicks 
and  stoicks  are  all  very  long  livers  in  Laertius.     And  Daniel 

K  2 


132  OBSERVATIONS    UPON    PLANTS  [tRACT    I. 

must  not  be  accounted  of  few  years,  who,  being  carried  away 
captive  in  the  reign  of  Joachim,  by  King  Nebuchadnezzar, 
lived,  by  Scripture  account,  imto  the  first  year  of  Cyrus. 

1(3.  "And  Jacob  took  rods  of  green  poplar,  and  of  the 
hazel,  and  the  chesnut  tree,  and  pilled  white  streaks  in  them, 
and  made  the  white  appear  which  was  in  the  rods,  &c." 
Men  multiply  the  philosophy  of  Jacob,  who  beside  the  bene- 
diction of  God,  and  the  powerful  effects  of  imagination,  raised 
in  the  goats  and  sheep  from  pilled  and  party-coloured  objects, 
conceive  that  he  chose  out  these  particular  plants  above  any 
other,  because  he  understood  they  had  a  particular  virtue 
unto  the  intended  effects,  according  unto  the  conception  of 
Georgius  Venetus.* 

Whereto  you  will  hardly  assent,  at  least  till  you  be  better 
satisfied  and  assured  concerning  the  true  species  of  the 
plants  intended  in  the  text,  or  find  a  clearer  consent  and  uni- 
formity in  the  translation :  for  what  we  render  poplar,  hazel, 
and  chesnut,  the  Greek  translateth  virgam  sti/rncinam, 
micinam,  plantaninam,  which  some  also  render  a  pomegranate ; 
and  so  observing  this  variety  of  interpretations  concerning 
common  and  known  plants  among  us,  you  may  more  reason- 
ably doubt,  with  what  propriety  or  assurance  others  less 
known  be  sometimes  rendered  unto  us. 

17.  Whether  in  the  sermon  of  the  mount,  the  lilies  of  the 
field  did  point  at  the  proper  lilies,'  or  whether  those  flowers 
grew  wild  in  the  place  where  our  Saviour  preached,  some 
doubt  may  be  made  ;  because  %oim,  the  word  in  that  place,  is 
accounted  of  the  same  signification  with  l.ii^iov,  and  that  in 
Homer  is  taken  for  all  manner  of  specious  flowers;  so  re- 
ceived by  Eustachius,  Hesychius,    and  the  scholiast  upon 

*   G.  Venetus,  Problem.  200. 

■''  lilks.']      "  At    ii    few   miles    from  was  sweet  scented,  and  its  smell,  though 

Adowa,  we  discovered  a  new  and  beau-  much  more  powerful,  resembled  that  of 

lifiil    species    of   amaryliis,   which    bore  the  lily  of  the  valley.      This  superb  plant 

from  ten  to  twelve  spikes  of  bloom  on  excited    the    admiration    of    the    whole 

each  stem,  as  large  as  those  of  the  bcUa-  party;  and  it  brought  immediately  to  my 

donna,  springing  from  one  common  re-  recollection  the  beautiful  comparison  used 

ceptaele.     The   general   colour    of    the  on  a  particular  occasion  by  our  Saviour, 

corolla  was  white,  and  every  petal  was  '  I  say  unto  you,  that  Solomon  in  all  his 

marked  with  a  single    streak   of  bright  glory  was  not  arrayed  like  one  of  these.'" 

purple    down   the    middle.     The  flower  — Salt's  Voyage  to  Abyssinia,  \f.  A\9. 


TRACT    l.J  Mf-NTIONED    IN    SCRIPTURE.  1 3.J 

Appollonius,  KolioXoy  ra  av3>j  Xs/'s/a  Xiysrui.  And  x^ivov  is  also  re- 
ceived in  the  same  latitude,  not  signifyin^r  only  lilies,  but  applied 
unto  daflbdils,  hyacinths,  irises,  and  the  flowers  of  colocynthis, 

I  nder  the  like  latitude  of  acception,  are  many  expressions 
in  the  Canticles  to  be  received.  And  when  it  is  said  "  he 
feedeth  among  the  lilies,"  therein  may  be  also  implied  other 
specious  flowers,  not  excluding  the  proper  lilies,  liut  in  that 
expression,  "  the  lilies  drop  forth  myrrh,"  neither  proper 
lilies  nor  proper  myrrh  can  be  apprehended,  the  one  not  pro- 
ceeding from  the  other,  but  may  be  received  in  a  metaphori- 
cal sense  :  and  in  some  latitude  may  be  made  out  from  the 
roscid  and  honey  drops  observable  in  the  flowers  of  marta- 
gon,  and  inverted  flowered  lilies,  and,  't  is  like,  is  the  standing 
sweet  dew  on  the  white  eyes  of  the  crown  ijnperial,  now  com- 
mon amons  us. 

And  the  proper  lily  may  be  intended  in  that  expression  of 
1  Kings,  7.  that  the  brazen  sea  was  of  the  thickness  of  a 
hand  breadth,  and  the  brim  like  a  lilv.  For  the  figure  of 
that  flower  being  round  at  the  bottom,  and  somewhat  repan- 
dous,  or  inverted  at  the  top,  doth  handsomely  illustrate  the 
comparison. 

But  that  the  lily  of  the  valley,  mentioned  in  the  Canticles, 
*•'  I  am  the  rose  of  Sharon,  and  the  lily  of  the  valley,"  is  that 
vegetable  which  passeth  under  the  same  name  with  us,  that  is 
liiiiim  conraUiiwi,  or  the  May  lily,  you  will  more  hardly  be- 
lieve, who  know  with  what  insatisfliction  the  most  learned 
botanists  reduce  that  jdant  unto  any  described  by  the  ancients; 
that  Anguillara  will  have  it  to  be  the  wnantlie  of  Athena^us, 
Cordus,  the  pollios  of  Theophrastus,  and  Lobehus,  that  the 
Greeks  had  not  described  it ;  who  find  not  six  leaves  in  the 
flower,  agreeably  to  all  lilies,  but  only  six  small  divisions  in  the 
flower,  who  find  it  also  to  have  a  single,  and  no  bulbous  root, 
nor  leaves  shooting  about  the  bottom,  nor  the  stalk  round,  but 
angular.  And  that  the  learned  Bauhinus  hatli  i:ot  placed  it 
in  theclassis  of  lilies,  but  nervifolious  plants. 

IS.  "  Doth  he  not  cast  abroad  the  fitches,'  and  scatter  the 
cummin  seed,   and  cast  in  the  principal  wheat,  and  the  ap- 

*  fitchcs.'\     Tlicrc    are    two    Hebrew     Ar/satA  and /rMw/c/ ;  ihc  latter  probably 
words  rendered /f<f Acs  by  our  translators,     njf,  the  Ibimer  is  considered  by  Jeroni, 


134  OBSERVATIONS   UPON    PLANTS  [tRACT    I. 

pointed  barley,  and  the  rye  in  their  place?"  Herein  though 
the  sense  may  hold  under  the  names  assigned,  yet  is  it  not  so 
easy  to  determine  the  particular  seeds  and  grains,  where  the 
obscure  original  causeth  such  differing  translations.  For  in 
the  vulgar  we  meet  with  juUium  and  gith,  which  our  trans- 
lation declineth,  placing  fitches  for  gith,  and  rye  for  mi- 
lium or  millet,  which,  notwithstanding,  is  retained  by  the 
Dutch. 

That  it  might  be  melanthium,  nigella,  or  git/t,  may  be  al- 
lowably apprehended,  from  the  frequent  use  of  the  seed 
thereof  among  the  Jews  and  other  nations,  as  also  from  the 
translation  of  Tremellius ;  and  the  original  implying  a  black 
seed,  which  is  less  than  cummin,  as,  out  of  Aben  Ezra,  Bux- 
torfius  hath  expounded  it. 

But  whereas  milium  or  xsyxi^'^  ^^  ^^^^  Septuagint  is  by  ours 
rendered  rye,  there  is  little  simihtude  or  affinity  between 
those  grains ;  for  milium,  is  more  agreeable  unto  spelta  or 
espaut,  as  the  Dutch  and  others  still  render  it. 

That  we  meet  so  often  with  cummin  ^  seed  in  many  parts 
of  Scripture  in  reference  unto  Judaea,  a  seed  so  abominable 
at  present  unto  our  palates  and  nostrils,  will  not  seem  strange 
unto  any  who  consider  the  frequent  use  thereof  among  the 
ancients,  not  only  in  medical  but  dietetical  use  and  practice : 
for  their  dishes  were  filled  therewith,  and  the  noblest  festival 
preparations  in  Apicius  were  not  without  it ;  and  even  in 
the  polenia,  and  parched  corn,  the  old  diet  of  the  Romans, 
(as  Pliny  recordeth),  unto  every  measure  they  mixed  a  small 
proportion  of  linseed  and  cummin  seed. 

And  so  cummin  is  justly  set  down  among  things  of  vulgar 
and  common  use,  when  it  is  said  in  Matthew  23.  v.  23. 
*'  You  pay  tithe  of  mint,  anise,  and  cummin."  But  how  to 
make  out  the  translation  of  anise  we  are  still  to  seek,  there 
being  no  word  in  that  text  which  properly  signifieth  anise : 
the  original  being  avr^w^  which  the  Latins  call  anethiim^  and 
is  properly  Enghshed  dill. 

Maimonides,  and  the  Rabbins  to  be  gith,         ^  cummin.'\     An   umbelliferous    plant 

in    Greek   fJ,SAaiDuv,   in    Latin  ni^rc//a.  resemblinj' fennel ;  producing  a  bitterish, 

Parkhurst    supposes    it    to    have   been  warm,  aromatic  seed. 
fennel. 


TRACT    I.]  MENTIONED    IN    SCRIPTURE.  135 

That  among  many  expressions,  allusions,  and  illustrations 
made  in  Scripture  from  corns,  there  is  no  mention  made  of 
oats,  so  useful  a  grain  among  us,  will  not  seem  very  strange 
unto  you,  till  you  can  clearly  discover  that  it  was  a  gram  of 
ordinary  use  in  those  parts ;  who  may  also  find  that  Theo- 
phrastus,  who  is  large  about  other  grains,  delivers  very  little 
of  it.  That  Dioscorides  is  also  very  short  therein.  And 
Galen  delivers  that  it  was  of  some  use  in  Asia  Minor,  especi- 
ally in  Mysia,  and  that  rather  for  beasts  than  men :  and  Pliny 
affirmeth  that  the  pult'ictda  thereof  was  most  in  use  among  the 
Germans.  Yet  that  the  Jews  were  not  without  all  use  of  this 
grain  seems  confirmable  from  the  Rabbinical  account,  who 
reckon  five  grains  liable  unto  their  ofterings,  whereof  the 
cake  presented  might  be  made  ;  that  is,  wheat,  oats,  rye,  and 
two  sorts  of  barley. 

19.  N\  hy  the  disciples  being  hungry  plucked  the  ears  of 
corn,  it  seems  strange  to  us,  who  observe  that  men  half-starved 
betake  not  themselves  to  such  supply;  except  we  consider  the 
ancient  diet  of  alphiton  and  polenta,  the  meal  of  dried  and 
parched  corn,  or  that  which  was  uifhrikustg,  or  meal  of  crude 
and  unparched  corn,  wherewith  they  being  well  acquainted, 
might  hope  for  some  satisfaction  from  the  corn  yet  in  the 
husks ;  that  is,  from  the  nourishing  pulp  or  mealy  part 
within  it. 

20.  The  inhuman  oppression  of  the  Egyptian  task-masters, 
who,  not  content  with  the  common  tale  of  brick,  took  also 
from  the  children  of  Israel  their  allowance  of  straw,  and 
forced  them  to  gather  stubble  where  they  could  find  it,  will 
be  more  nearly  apprehended,  if  we  consider  how  hard  it  was 
to  acquire  any  quantity  of  stubble  in  Egypt,  where  the  stalk 
of  corn  was  so  short,  that  to  acquire  an  ordinary  measure  it 
required  more  than  ordinary  labour ;  as  is  discoverable  from 
that  account  which  Plhiy  hath  happily  left  unto  us.*  In  the 
corn  gathered  in  /Egypt  the  straw  is  never  a  cubit  long :  l)e- 
cause  the  seed  heth  very  shallow,  and  hath  no  other  nourish- 
ment than  from  the  mud  and  slime  left  by  the  river;  for  under 
it  is  nothing  but  sand  and  gravel. 

•  Lib.  IS.  Kat.  lint. 


136  OBSERVATIONS   UPON    PLANTS  [tRACT    1. 

So  that  the  expression  of  Scripture  is  more  emphatical  than 
is  commonly  apprehended,  when  't  is  said,  "  The  people  were 
scattered  abroad  through  all  the  land  of  /Egypt  to  gather 
stubble  instead  of  straw."  For  the  stubble  being  very  short, 
the  acquist  was  difficult;  a  few  fields  afforded  it  not,  and 
they  were  fain  to  wander  far  to  obtain  a  sufficient  quantity 
of  it. 

21.  It  is  said  in  the  So?;g  of  Solomon,  that  "  The  vines  with 
the  tender  grape  give  a  good  smell."  That  the  flowers  of  the 
vine  should  be  emphatically  noted  to  give  a  pleasant  smell 
seems  hard  unto  our  northern  nostrils,  v/hich  discover  not 
such  odours,  and  smell  them  not  in  full  vineyards;  whereas 
in  hot  regions,  and  more  spread  and  digested  flowers,  a  sweet 
savour  may  be  allowed,  denotable  from  several  human  expres- 
sions, and  the  practice  of  the  ancients,  in  putting  the  dried 
flowers  of  the  vine  into  new  wine  to  give  it  a  pure  and  floscu- 
lous  race  or  spirit,  which  wine  was  therefore  called  ohdv^mv, 
allowing  unto  every  cadus  two  pounds  of  dried  flowers. 

And  therefore,  the  vine  flowering  but  in  the  spring,  it  can- 
not but  seem  an  impertinent  objection  of  the  Jews,  that  the 
apostles  were  "  full  of  new  wine  at  Pentecost,"  when  it  was 
not  to  be  found.  Wherefore  we  may  rather  conceive  that  the 
word  yXiuxu  in  that  place  implied  not  new  wine  or  must,  but 
some  generous  strong  and  sweet  wine,  wherein  more  especially 
lay  the  power  of  inebriation. 

But  if  it  be  to  be  taken  for  some  kind  of  must,  it  might  be 
some  kind  of  ahiyXivy.og,  or  long  lasting  must,  which  might  be 
had  at  any  time  of  the  year,  and  which,  as  Pliny  delivereth, 
they  made  by  hindering  and  keeping  the  must  from  fermenta- 
tion or  working,  and  so  it  kept  soft  and  sweet  for  no  small 
time  after. 

22.  When  the  dove,  sent  out  of  the  ark,  returned  with  a 
green  olive  leaf,  according  to  the  original :  how  the  leaf,  after 
ten  months,  and  under  water,  should  still  maintain  a  verdure 
or  greenness,  need  not  much  amuse  the  reader,  if  we  consider 
that  the  oHve  tree  is  ahi(pvXKov,  or  continually  green;  that  the 
leaves  are  of  a  bitter  taste,  and  of  a  fast  and  lasting  substance. 
Since  we  also  find  fresh  and  green  leaves  among  the  olives 
which  we  receive  from  remote  countries  ;  and  since  the  plants 


TRACT    I.]  MENTIONED    IN    SCRirTUKE.  137 

at  the  bottom  of  tlie  sea,  and  on  the  sides  of  rock;>,  maintain 
a  deep  and  fresh  verdure. 

How  tlie  tree  should  stand  so  lon^r  in  the  deluge  under 
water,  may  partly  be  allowed  from  the  uncertain  determination 
of  the  flows  and  currents  of  that  time,  and  the  qualification 
of  the  saltness  of  the  sea,  by  the  admixture  of  fresh  water, 
when  the  whole  watery  element  was  together. 

And  it  may  be  signally  illustrated  from  the  like  examples 
in  Theophrastus  *  and  Pliny  f  in  words  to  this  effect  :  even 
the  sea  afibrdeth  shrubs  and  trees  ;  in  the  lied  sea  whole 
woods  do  live,  namely  of  bays  and  olives  bearing  fruit.  The 
soldiers  of  Alexander,  who  sailed  into  India,  made  report, 
that  the  tides  were  so  high  in  some  islands,  that  they  over- 
flowed, and  covered  the  woods,  as  high  as  plane  and  po])lar 
trees.  The  lower  sort  wholly,  the  greater  all  but  the  tops, 
whereto  the  mariners  fastened  their  vessels  at  high  water, 
and  at  the  root  in  the  ebb  ;  that  the  leaves  of  these  sea-trees 
while  under  water  looked  green,  but  taken  out  presently 
dried  with  the  heat  of  the  sun.  The  like  is  dehvered  by 
Theophrastus,  that  some  oaks  do  grow  and  bear  acorns 
under  the  sea. 

23.  "  The  kingdom  of  heaven  is  like  to  a  grain  of  mustard- 
seed,  which  a  man  took  and  sowed  in  his  field,  which  indeed 
is  the  least  of  all  seeds;  but  when  't  is  grown  is  the  greatest 
among  herbs,  and  becometh  a  tree,  so  that  the  birds  of  the 
air  come  and  lodge  in  the  branches  thereof." 

Luke  xiii,  19.  "It  is  like  a  grain  of  mustard-seed,  which  a 
man  took  and  cast  it  into  his  garden,  and  it  waxed  a  great 
tree,  and  the  fowls  of  the  air  lodged  in  the  branches  thereof." 

This  expression  by  a  grain  of  mustard-seed,  will  not  seem 
so  strange  unto  you,  who  well  consider  it.  That  it  is  simply 
the  least  of  seeds,  you  cannot  apprehend,  if  you  have  beheld 
the  seeds  of  ropunculus,  marjorane,  tobacco,  and  the  smallest 
seed  of  /itnaria. 

But  you  may  well  understand  it  to  be  the  smallest  seed 
among  herbs  which  produce  so  big  a  i)lant,  or  the  least  of 
herbal  plants,  which  arise  unto  such  a  proportion,  implied  in 

'    Theophrast.  Hist.  lib.  iv,  cnp.  7,  8,  f  Pliny,  lib.  xiii,  cap.  ultimo. 


138  OBSERVATIONS    UPON    PLANTS  [tRACT    I. 

the  expression ;  the  smallest  of  seeds,    and   becometh   the 
greatest  of  herbs. 

And  you  may  also  grant  that  it  is  the  smallest  of  seeds  of 
plants  apt  to  dmdfi^siv,  arborescere,  fruticescere,  or  to  grow 
unto  a  ligneous  substance,  and  from  an  herby  and  oleraceous 
vegetable,  to  become  a  kind  of  tree,  and  to  be  accounted 
among  the  dendrolachana  or  arhoroleracea  :  as  upon  strong 
seed,  culture,  and  good  ground,  is  observable  in  some  cab- 
bages, mallows,  and  many  more,  and  therefore  expressed  by 
yivfTai  rh  dsvS^ov  and  ymrai  vg  rh  dsvd^ov,  it  becometh  a  tree,  or 
arborescit,  as  Beza  rendereth  it. 

Nor  if  warily  considered  doth  the  expression  contain  such 
difficulty.  For  the  parable  may  not  ground  itself  upon  gene- 
rals, or  imply  any  or  every  grain  of  mustard,  but  point  at  such 
a  grain  as,  from  its  fertile  spirit,  and  other  concurrent  advan- 
tages, hath  the  success  to  become  arboreous,  shoot  into  such 
a  magnitude,  and  acquire  the  like  tallness.  And  unto  such 
a  grain  the  kingdom  of  heaven  is  hkened,  which  from  such 
slender  beginnings  shall  find  such  increase  and  grandeur. 

The  expression  also  that  it  might  grow  into  such  dimen- 
sions that  birds  might  lodge  in  the  branches  thereof,  may  be 
literally  conceived  ;  if  we  allow  the  luxuriancy  of  plants  in  Ju- 
daea, above  our  northern  regions  ;  if  we  accept  of  but  half 
the  story  taken  notice  of  by  Tremellius,  from  the  Jerusalem 
Talmud,  of  a  mustard  tree  that  was  to  be  climbed  like  a  fig 
tree ;   and   of  another,   under   whose  shade  a   potter   daily 
wrought :  and  it  may  somewhat  abate  our  doubts,  if  we  take 
in  the  advertisement  of  Herodotus  concerning  lesser  plants  of 
milium  and  sesamum,  in  the  Babylonian  soil :  milium  ac  se- 
samutii  in  proceritatem  instar  arborum  crescere,  etsi  mihi 
comperhim,  tamen  memorare  supersedeo,  probt  sciens  eis  qui 
nunquam   Jjcibyloniam   regionem   adierunt    perquam    incre- 
dibile  visum  iri.     We  may  likewise  consider  that  the  word 
y.ara67>.rivojeai  doth  not  necessarily  signify  making  a  nest,  but 
rather  sitting,  roosting,  cowering,  and  resting  in  the  boughs, 
according  as  the  same  word  is  used  by  the  Septuagint  in 
other  places,*  as  the  vulgate  rendereth  it  in  this,  inhabitant, 

•  Diiu.  iv,  f).     Psal.  i,  11,  Vl. 


TRACT    I.]  MENTIONED    IN    SCRIPTURE.  ISO 

as  our  translation,  *  lod-ifeth,'  and  the  Ilhcmish,  *  resteth  in 
the  branches.' 

~1.  "  And  it  came  to  })ass  tliat  on  the  morrow  jMoscs  went 
into  the  tabernacle  of  witness,  and  behuld  the  rod  of  Aaron 
for  the  house  of  Levi  was  budded,  and  brought  forth  buds, 
and  bloomed  blossoms,  and  yielded  almonds."  * 

In  the  contention  of  the  tribes  and  decision  of  priority  and 
primogeniture  of  Aaron,  declared  by  the  rod,  which  in  a 
night  budded,  Howered,  and  brought  forth  almonds,  you  can- 
not but  apprehend  a  ])ropriety  in  the  miracle  from  that  spe- 
cies of  tree  which  leadeth  in  the  vernal  germination  of  the 
year,  unto  all  the  classes  of  trees ;  and  so  apprehend  how 
properly  in  a  night  and  short  space  of  time  the  miracle  arose, 
and  somewhat  answerable  unto  its  nature  the  flowers  and 
fruit  appeared  in  this  precocious  tree,  and  whose  original 
name  f  implieth  such  speedy  efflorescence,  as  in  its  proper 
nature  flowering  in  February,  and  shewing  its  fruit  in  March. 

This  consideration  of  that  tree  maketh  the  expression  in 
Jeremy  more  emphatical,  when 't  is  said,  "  What  seest  thou  ? 
and  he  said,  a  rod  of  an  almond  tree.  Then  said  the  Lord 
unto  me,  thou  hast  well  seen,  for  I  will  hasten  the  word  to 
perfonn  it."  1^  I  will  be  quick  and  forward  like  the  almond 
tree,  to  produce  the  effects  of  my  word,  and  hasten  to  dis- 
play my  judgments  upon  them. 

And  we  may  hereby  more  easily  apprehend  the  expression 
in  Ecclesiastes ;  "when  the  almond  tree  shall  flourish," § 
that  is,  when  the  head,  which  is  the  prime  part,  and  first 
sheweth  itself  in  the  world,  shall  grow  white,  like  the  flowers 
of  the  almond  tree,  whose  fruit,  as  Athena^us  deUvereth,  was 
first  called  xd»r,m,  or  the  head,  from  some  resemblance  and 
covering  parts  of  it. 

How  properly  the  priority  was  confirmed  by  a  rod  or  stafT, 
and  why  the  rods  and  stafls  of  the  princes  were  chosen  for 
this  decision,  philologists  will  consider.  For  these  were  the 
badges,  signs,  and  cognisances  of  their  places,  and  were  a 
kind  of  sceptre  in  their  hands,  denoting  their  super-eminen- 

•   The  Rod  of  Aaron,  Numb,  xvii,  8. 
t  Shachcr,  from  Shachar  festinus  fuit  or  maturuit.  I  Jer.  i.  II. 

§  Eccles,  xii,  5. 


140  OBSERVATIONS    UPON    PLANTS  [TRACT    I. 

cies.  The  staff  of  divinity  is  ordinarily  described  in  the 
hands  of  gods  and  goddesses  in  old  draughts.  Trojan  and 
Grecian  princes  were  not  without  the  like,  whereof  the  shoul- 
ders of  Thersites  felt  from  the  hands  of  Ulysses.  Achilles 
in  Homer,  as  by  a  desperate  oath,  swears  by  his  wooden 
sceptre,  which  should  never  bud  nor  bear  leaves  again ; 
which  seeming  the  greatest  impossibility  to  him,  advanceth 
the  miracle  of  Aaron's  rod.  And  if  it  could  be  well  made 
out  that  Homer  had  seen  the  books  of  Moses,  in  that  expres- 
sion of  Achilles,  he  might  allude  unto  this  miracle. 

That  power  which  proposed  the  experiment  by  blossoms 
in  the  rod,  added  also  the  fruit  of  almonds ;  the  text  not 
strictly  making  out  the  leaves,  and  so  omitting  the  middle 
germination ;  the  leaves  properly  coming  after  the  flowers, 
and  before  the  almonds.  And  therefore  if  you  have  well  pe- 
rused medals,  you  cannot  but  observe  how  in  the  impress  of 
many  shekels,  which  pass  among  us  by  the  name  of  the  Jerusa- 
lem shekels,  the  rod  of  Aaron  is  improperly  laden  with  many 
leaves,  whereas  that  which  is  shewn  under  the  name  of  the 
Samaritan  shekel,  seems  most  conformable  unto  the  text, 
which  describeth  the  fruit  without  leaves. 

25.  "Binding^  his  foal  unto  the  vine,  and  his  ass's  colt  unto 
the  choice  vine." 

That  vines,  which  are  commonly  supported,  should  grow 
so  large  and  bulky,  as  to  be  fit  to  fasten  their  juments,  and 
beasts  of  labour  unto  them,  may  seem  a  hard  expression  unto 
many :  which  notwithstanding  may  easily  be  admitted,  if  we 
consider  the  account  of  Pliny,  that  in  many  places  out  of 
Italy  vines  do  grow  without  any  stay  or  support :  nor  will  it 
be  otherwise  conceived  of  lusty  vines,  if  we  call  to  mind  how 
the  same  author  *  delivereth,  that  the  statua  of  Jupiter  was 
made  out  of  a  vine;  and  that  out  of  one  single  cyprian  vine  a 
scale  or  ladder  was  made  that  reached  unto  the  roof  of  the 
temple  of  Diana  at  Ephesus. 

*  Plin.  lib.  xiv. 

''  Bintiing,  ^■c.'\  In  some  parts  of  the  vintage,  to  browse  on  the  vines.,  some 
Persia,  it  was  formerly  the  custom  to  of  which  are  so  large  that  a  man  can 
turn  their  cattle  into  the  vinejards  after     scarcely  compass  their  trunks  in  his  arms. 


TRACT    I.]  MENTIONED    IN    SCKIPTI'RE.  !  1  I 

i?6.  "I  was  cxaltetl  as  a  palm  tret'  in  iMigaddi,  and  as  a 
rose  plant'  in  Jericlio."  Tiiat  the  rose  of  Jericho,  or  that 
plant  wliich  passcth  among  us  under  that  denomination,  was 
signified  in  this  text,  you  are  not  like  to  ajiprehend  with  some, 
who  also  name  it  the  rose  of  St.  31ary,  and  deliver,  that  it 
openeth  the  branches,  and  flowers  upon  the  eve  of  our  Savi- 
our's nativity :  but  rather  conceive  it  some  proper  kind  of 
rose,  which  thrived  and  prospered  in  Jericho  more  than  in 
the  neighbour  countries.  For  our  rose  of  Jericho  is  a  very 
low  and  hard  plant,  a  few  inches  above  the  ground ;  one 
whereof  brought  from  Juda?a  I  have  kept  by  me  many  years, 
nothing  resembling  a  rose  tree,  either  in  flowers,  branches, 
leaves,  or  growth  ;  and  so  improper  to  answer  the  emphatical 
word  of  exaltation  in  the  text :  growing  not  only  aljout 
Jericho,  but  other  parts  of  Juda}a  and  Arabia,  as  Bellonius 
hath  observed:  which  being  a  dry  and  ligneous  plant,  is  pre- 
served many  years,  and  though  crumpled  and  furled  up,  yet, 
if  infused  in  water,  will  swell  and  display  its  parts. 

27.  Quasi  Terebiitthus  extendi  ramos,  when  it  is  said  in 
the  same  chapter,  "as  a  turpentine  tree"  have  I  stretched 
out  my  branches."  It  will  not  seem  strange  unto  such  as 
have  either  seen  that  tree  or  examined  its  description  :  for  it 
is  a  plant  that  widely  displayeth  its  branches :  and  though  in 
some  European  countries  it  be  but  of  a  low  and  fruticeous 
growth,  yet  Pliny  obscrveth  that  it  is  great  in  Syria*  and  so 
allowably,  or  at  least  not  improperly  mentioned  in  the  ex- 
pression of  lloseaf   according  to  the  vulgar  translation,  Su- 

•  Terebinthus  in  Macedonia  fruticat,  in  Syria,  magna  est,  lib.  xiii,  PUn. 

t  Hos.  iv,  13. 

"  rose  plant  in  Jericho.']     Sir   R.    K.  vated,  and  prized  by  the  natives.     Tbeir 

Porter  gives  the  following  description  of  gardens  and  courts  are  crowded  with  its 

the  oriental  rose  trees  probably   here  in-  plants,     their    rooms    ornamented    with 

tended: — *' On  first  entering  this  bower  vases   filled  with   its   gathered    bunches, 

of  luiry  land,  I  was  struck  with  the  ap-  and   every    bath    strewed   with   the   full 

pearance  of  two  rose  trees ;  full /bur/fen  blown   flowers,    plucked   from  the  ever 

feet  high,  laden  with  thousands  of  flow-  replenished  stems." 
ers,  in  every  degree  of  expansion,  and  "  turpentine  /rc.-.J     An    evergreen  of 

of  a  bloom   and  delicacy  of  scent,   that  moderate  size,  with  a  top  and  branches 

imbued  the  whole  atmosphere  with   the  large  in  proportion;  leavi-s  like  the  olive, 

most  exquisite   perfume;  indeed,    I   be-  but  green,   mixed  with  red  and  purple  ; 

lieve  that  in  no  country  of  the  world,  the  tlowers  purple,  growing  in  branches, 

does  the  rose  grow  in  such  perfection,  a»  like  the   vine;   fruit  like  that  of  theju- 

in   Persia,   in  no   country  is  it  r,o  cuUi-  niper,   and  of  a  ruddy  purple. 


142  OBSERVATIONS    UPON    PLANTS  [tRACT    I. 

per  capita  montium  sacrijicant^  S^c,  sub  qnercu,  popido,  et 
terebtntho,  quomam  bona  est  umbra  ejus.  And  this  diffu- 
sion and  spreading  of  its  branches,  hatli  afforded  the  proverb 
of  terebintho  .stultior,  appliable  unto  arrogant  or  boasting  per- 
sons, who  spread  and  display  their  own  acts,  as  Erasmus  hath 
observed. 

28.  It  is  said  in  our  translation,  "  Saul  tarried  in  the  up- 
permost parts  of  Gibeah,  under  a  pomegranate  tree  which  is 
in  Migron :  and  the  people  which  were  with  him  were  about 
six  hundred  men."  And  when  it  is  said  in  some  Latin  trans- 
lations, Satil  morabatur  jixo  tentor'io  sub  malogranato,  you 
will  not  be  ready  to  take  it  in  the  common  literal  sense,  who 
know  that  a  pomegranate  tree  is  but  low  of  growth,  and  very 
unfit  to  pitch  a  tent  under  it ;  and  may  rather  apprehend  it 
as  the  name  of  a  place,  or  the  rock  of  Rimmon,  or  Pome- 
granate ;  so  named  from  pomegranates  which  grew  there,  and 
which  many  think  to  have  been  the  same  place  mentioned  in 
Judges.* 

29.  It  is  said  in  the  book  of  Wisdom,  "  Where  water  stood 
before,  dry  land  appeared,  and  out  of  the  red  sea  a  way  ap- 
peared without  impediment,  and  out  of  the  violent  streams  a 
green  field ;"  or  as  the  Latin  renders  it,  canqnis  germinans 
de  profunda :  whereby  it  seems  implied  that  the  Israelites 
passed  over  a  green  field  at  the  bottom  of  the  sea:  and 
though  most  would  have  this  but  a  metaphorical  expression, 
yet  may  it  be  literally  tolerable ;  and  so  may  be  safely  appre- 
hended by  those  that  sensibly  know  what  great  number  of 
vegetables  (as  the  several  varieties  of  alga,  sea  lettuce, 
phasganium,  conferva,  caid'is  marina,  abies,  erica,  tamarice, 
divers  sorts  of  muscus,  fncus,  qucrcus  marina,  and  corallines) 
are  found  at  the  bottom  of  the  sea.  Since  it  is  also  now  well 
known,  that  the  western  ocean,  for  many  degrees,  is  covered 
with  sargasso  or  lenticida  marina,  and  found  to  arise  from 
the  bottom  of  that  sea ;  since,  upon  the  coast  of  Provence 
by  the  isles  of  Eres,  there  is  a  part  of  the  Mediterranean 
sea,  called  la  Prairie,  or  the  meadowy  sea,  from  the  bottom 
thereof  so  plentifully  covered  with  plants :  since  vast  heaps 
of  weeds  are  found  in  the  bellies  of  some  whales  taken  in  the 

*  Judges  XX,  45,  47.  cli,  xxi,  13. 


TRACT    I.]  MFNTIDNED    IN    SCRITTURE.  Mo 

northern  ocean,  and  at  a  great  distance  from  the  shore:  and 
since  tlie  providence  of  nature  hath  providetl  this  .sheher  for 
mmor  fishes  ;  both  for  their  spawn,  and  safety  of  their  young 
ones.  And  this  might  be  more  peculiarly  allowed  to  be 
spoken  of  the  red  sea,  since  the  Hebrews  named  it  siqjh  or 
the  weedy  sea:  and,  also,  seeing  Theophrastus  and  Pliny, 
observing  the  growth  of  vegetables  under  water,  have  made 
their  chief  illustrations  from  those  in  the  Red  sea. 

30.  You  will  readily  discover  how  widely  they  are  mistaken, 
who  accept  the  sycamore  mentioned  in  several  parts  of  Scrip- 
ture for  the  sycamore  or  tree  of  that  denomination  with 
us;  which  is  properly  but  one  kind  or  diflerence  of  acer,  and 
bears  no  fruit  with  any  resemblance  unto  a  fig. 

But  you  will  rather,  thereby,  apprehend  the  true  and 
genuine  sycamore  or  sycamiiuis,  which  is  u  stranger  in  our 
parts.  A  tree  (according  to  the  description  of  Theophrastus, 
Dioscorides,  and  Galen,)  resembling  a  mulberry  tree  in  the 
leaf,  but  in  the  fruit  a  fig  ;'-*  which  it  produceth  not  in  the 
twigs  but  in  the  trunk  or  greater  branches,  answerable  to  the 
sycamore  of  Egypt,  the  Egyptian  fig  or  giamez;  of  the  Ara- 
liians,  described  by  Prosper  Alpinus,  with  a  leaf  somewhat 
broader  than  a  mulberry,  and  in  its  fruit  like  a  fig.  Inso- 
much that  some  have  fancied  it  to  have  had  its  first  produc- 
tion from  a  fig  tree  grafted  on  a  mulberry.  It  is  a  tree  com- 
mon in  Judaea,  whereof  they  made  frequent  use  in  buildings; 
and  so  understood,  it  cxplaineth  that  expression  in  Isaiah  :* 
"  Sycamori  excisl  sunt,  cedroa  stibstitiiemiis.  The  bricks  ai'e 
fallen  down,  but  we  will  build  with  hewen  stones :  tlie  syca- 
mores are  cut  down,  but  we  will  change  them  into  cedars." 

It  is  a  broad  spreading  tree,  not  only  fit  for  walks,  groves, 
and  shade,  but  also  affording  profit.  And  therefore  it  is 
said  that  King  Davidf  appointed  Baalhanan  to  be  over  his 
olive  trees  and  sycamores,  which  were  in  great  plenty;  and  it 
is  accordingly  delivered,  that  "  Solomon  made  cedars  to  be 
as  the  sycamore  trees  that  are  in  the  vale  for  abundance.":|: 

•  Isaiah,  ix,  10.  f   1  Chron.  xxvii,  28.  X   1  Kings,  x,  27. 

^resemblinpinfruitafig.'}  In  smell  growth;  they  grow  in  clusters  at  the  end 
and    figiire,    but    not    in    the    mode   of    of  a  fruit  stalk,  not  singly  like  figs. 


144  OBSERVATIONS    UPON    PLANTS  [tRACT    I. 

That  is,  he  planted  many,  though  they  did  not  come  to  per- 
fection in  his  days. 

And  as  it  grew  plentifully  about  the  plains,  so  was  the  fruit 
good  for  food ;  and,  as  Bellonius  and  late  accounts  deliver, 
very  refreshing  unto  travellers  in  those  hot  and  dry  countries  : 
whereby  the  expression  of  Amos*  becomes  more  intelligible, 
when  he  said  he  was  an  herdsman,  and  a  gatherer  of  syca- 
more fruit.  And  the  expression  of  David  f  also  becomes 
more  emphatical ;  "  He  destroyed  their  vines  with  hail,  and 
their  sycamore  trees  with  frost."  That  is,  their  sicmoth  in  the 
original,  a  word  in  the  sound  not  far  from  the  sycamore. 

Thus,  when  it  is  said,  "  If  ye  had  faith  as  a  grain  of  mustard 
seed,  ye  might  say  unto  this  sycamine  tree,  be  thou  plucked 
up  by  the  roots,  and  be  thou  placed  in  the  sea,  and  it  should 
obey  you : "  :|:  it  might  be  more  significantly  spoken  of  this 
sycamore  ;  this  being  described  to  be  arbor  vasta,  a  large  and 
well-rooted  tree,  whose  removal  was  more  difficult  than  many 
others.  And  so  the  instance  in  that  text,  is  very  properly 
made  in  the  sycamore  tree,  one  of  the  largest  and  less  remov- 
able trees  among  them.  A  tree  so  lasting  and  well-rooted, 
that  the  sycamore  which  Zaccheus  ascended,  is  still  shewn  in 
Judaea  unto  travellers ;  as  also  the  hollow  sycamore  at  Matu- 
rsea  in  Egypt,  where  the  blessed  virgin  is  said  to  have  re- 
mained :  which  though  it  relisheth  of  the  legend,  yet  it  plainly 
declareth  what  opinion  they  had  of  the  lasting  condition  of 
that  tree,  to  countenance  the  tradition  ;  for  which  they  might 
not  be  without  some  experience,  since  the  learned  describer 
of  the  pyramids  §  observetb,  that  the  old  Egyptians  made 
coffins  of  this  wood,  which  he  found  yet  fresh  and  undecayed 
among  divers  of  their  mummies. 

And  thus,  also,  when  Zaccheus  climbed  up  into  a  sycamore 
above  any  other  tree,  this  being  a  large  and  fair  one,  it  cannot 
be  denied  that  he  made  choice  of  a  proper  and  advantageous 
tree  to  look  down  upon  our  Saviour. 

31.  Whether  the  expression  of  our  Saviour  in  the  parable 
of  the  sower,  and  the  increase  of  the  seed  unto  thirty,  sixty. 


*  Amos,  vii,  11.  \  Psalm,  Ixxviii,  47. 

X  Luke,  xvii,  6.  §   D.  Greaves, 


TRACT    I.]  .MENTIONED    IN    SCRIPTURE.  145 

and  a  huiulrcd  fold,  had  any  reference  unto  the  ages  of  be- 
lievers, and  measure  of  tlieir  faith,  as  children,  young  and 
old  persons,  as  to  beginners,  well  advanced  and  strongly  con- 
finned  Christians,  as  learned  men  have  hinted  ;  or  whether  in 
this  progressional  ascent  there  were  any  latent  mystery,  as 
the  mystical  interpreters  of  numbers  may  apprehend,  I  pre- 
tend not  to  determine. 

But,  how  this  multiplication  may  well  be  conceived,  and  in 
what  way  apprehended,  and  that  this  centesimal  increase  is 
not  naturally  strange,  you  that  are  no  stranger  in  agriculture, 
old  and  new,  are  not  like  to  make  great  doubt. 

That  every  grain  should  produce  an  ear  affording  an  hun- 
dred grains,  is  not  like  to  be  their  conjecture  who  behold  the 
growth  of  corn  in  our  fields,  wherein  a  common  grain  doth 
produce  far  less  in  number.  For  barley,  consisting  but  of  two 
versus  or  rows,  seldom  exceedeth  twenty  grains,  that  is,  ten 
upon  each  croTyjK,  or  row;  rye,  of  a  square  figure,  is  very 
fruitful  at  forty  :  wheat,  besides  the  frit  and  unoicits,  or  im- 
perfect grains  of  the  small  husks  at  the  top  and  bottom  of 
the  ear,  is  fruitful  at  ten  treble  glumi  or  husks  in  a  row,  each 
containing  but  three  grains  in  breadth,  if  the  middle  grain 
arriveth  at  all  to  perfection  ;  and  so  maketli  up  threescore 
grains  in  both  sides. 

Yet  even  this  centesimal  fructification  may  be  admitted  in 
some  sorts  of  cerealia,  and  grains  from  one  ear :  if  we  take  in 
tr'itlctim  centlgraniim,  or  fert'ilissbnum  Plinii,  Indian  wheat, 
and  paniciim ;  which,  in  every  ear,  containeth  hundreds  of 
grains. 

But  this  increase  may  easily  be  conceived  of  grains  in  their 
total  multiplication,  in  good  and  fertile  ground,  since,  if  every 
grain  of  wheat  produceth  but  three  ears,  the  increase  will 
arise  above  that  number.  Nor  are  we  without  examples  of 
some  grounds  which  have  produced  many  more  ears,  and 
above  this  centesimal  increase :  as  Pliny  hath  left  recorded 
of  the  Byzacian  field  in  Africa.*  Misit  ex  eo  loco  procurator 
ex  wio  grano  quadragintu  i^aucis  mu}us  gcrinina.  Misit  et 
Ncroni  similiter  tercentum  qiiadraginta  stipulas  ex  uno 
grano.       Cum   centesimos   quidcm   Leontini    Sirilicv   rampi 

'    I'li-i.  Hist.  Xtil.  lib.  xviii,  cap.  21. 
VOL.    IV.  L 


146  OBSERVATIONS    UPON    PLANTS  [tRACT    I. 

fundunt,  aUique,  ei  iota  Bcstica,  et  imprimis  /Egyptiis.  And 
even  in  our  own  country,  from  one  grain  of  wheat  sowed  in 
a  garden,  I  have  numbered  many  more  than  an  hundred.^ 

And  though  many  grains  are  commonly  lost  which  come 
not  to  sprouting  or  earing,  yet  the  same  is  also  verified  in 
measure ;  as  that  one  bushel  should  produce  a  hundred,  as  is 
exemplied  by  the  corn  in  Gerar;  "Then  Isaac  sowed  in 
that  land,  and  received  in  the  same  year  an  hundred  fold.'"'^' 
That  is,  as  the  Chaldee  explaineth  it,  a  hundred  for  one, 
when  he  measured  it.  And  this  Pliny  seems  to  intend,  when  he 
saith  of  the  fertile  Byzacian  territory  before  mentioned,  ex  uno 
centeni  quinquaginta  modii  reddunlur.  And  may  be  favour- 
ably apprehended  of  the  fertility  of  some  grounds  in  Poland ; 
wherein,  after  the  accounts  of  Gaguinus,  from  rye  sowed  in 
August,  come  thirty  or  forty  ears,  and  a  man  on  horseback 
can  scarce  look  over  it. 

In  the  sabbatical  crop  of  Judaja,  there  must  be  admitted  a 
large  increase,  and  probably  not  short  of  this  centesimal 
multiplication  :  for  it  supplied  ])art  of  the  sixth  year,  the 
whole  seventh,  and  eighth  until  the  harvest  of  that  year. 

The  seven  years  of  plenty  in  Egypt  must  be  of  high  in- 
crease ;  when,  by  storing  up  but  the  fifth  part,  they  supplied 
the  whole  land,  and  many  of  their  neighbours  after :  for  it  is 
said,  "  the  famine  was  in  all  the  land  about  them,"  t  And 
therefore  though  the  causes  of  the  dearth  in  Egypt  be  made 
out  from  the  defect  of  the  overflow  of  Nilus,  according  to  the 
dream  of  Pharaoh  ;  yet  was  that  no  cause  of  the  scarcity  in 
the  land  of  Canaan,  vvhi(;;h  may  rather  be  ascribed  to  the 
want  of  the  former  and  latter  rains,  for  some  succeeding 
years,  if  their  famine  held  time  and  duration  with  that  of 
Egypt ;  as  may  be  probably  gathered  from  that  expression  of 
Joseph,  "  come  down  unto  me  (into  Egypt)  and  tarry  not, 
and  there  will  I  nourish  thee  :  for  yet  there  are  five  years  of 
famine,  lest  thou  and  thy  household,  and  all  that  thou  hast, 
come  to  poverty."  % 

*   Gen,  xxvi,  12. 
f  Gen.  xli,  5fi.  :   Gen    \\v,  9,  11. 

'  many  more  than  an  hundred.']  The  "no  less  than  three  hundred  stalks  and 
manuscript  in  the  British  Museum  reads,     cars." — MS.  Sloari,  1841. 


TRACT    I.]  MENTIONED    IN    SCRIPTURI'.  147 

How  they  preserved  their  corn  so  long  in  Egypt  may  seem 
hard  unto  nortiiern  and  moist  climates,  except  we  consider 
the  many  ways  of  preservation  practised  by  anticjuity,  and 
also  take  in  tliat  handsome  account  of  PHny ;  what  corn  so- 
ever is  laid  up  in  the  ear,  it  taketli  no  harm  keep  it  as  long 
as  you  will,  although  the  best  and  most  assured  way  to  keep 
corn  is  in  caves  and  vaults  under  ground,  according  to  the 
j)ractice  of  Cappadocia  and  Tiiracia. 

In  Egypt  and  Mauritania  above  all  things  they  look  to 
this,  that  their  granaries  stand  on  high  ground;  and  how  dry 
soever  their  floor  be,  they  lay  a  course  of  chaft'  betwixt  it 
and  the  ground.  Besides,  they  put  up  their  corn  in  grana- 
ries and  bins  together  with  the  ear.  And  Varro  delivereth 
that  wheat  laid  up  in  that  manner  will  last  fifty  years  ;  millet 
an  hundred  ;  and  beans  so  conserved,  in  a  cave  of  Ambracia, 
were  known  to  live  an  hundred  and  twenty  years ;  that  is, 
from  the  time  of  King  Pyrrhus,  unto  the  Pyratick  war  under 
the  conduct  of  Pompey. 

INIore  strange  it  may  seem  how,  after  seven  years,  the 
grains  conserved  should  l)e  fruitful  for  a  new  production.  For 
it  is  said  that  Joseph  delivered  seed  unto  the  Egyptians,  to 
sow  their  land  for  the  eighth  year:  and  corn  after  seven 
years  is  like  to  afford  little  or  no  production,  according  to 
Theoplirastus  ;  "  ad  sementcm  semen  anniculi/m  oj)timum  ])u- 
tatur,  binum  deteriiis  et  trinuni ;  ultra  sterile  ferine  est,  quan- 
qiiam  ad  tisum  c'lbarium  idonei/m.^' 

Yet  since,  from  former  exemplifications,  corn  may  be  made 
to  last  so  long,  the  fructifying  power  may  well  be  conceived 
to  last  in  some  good  proportion,  according  to  the  region  and 
place  of  its  conservation,  as  the  same  Theoplirastus  hath  ob- 
served, and  left  a  notable  example  from  Cappadocia,  where 
corn  might  be  kept  sixty  years,  and  remain  fertile  at  forty  ; 
according  to  his  expression  thus  translated ;  ///  Cappadocirv 
loco  quodam  Petra  dicto,  triticum  ad  quadragiuta  annos 
foecundum  est,  et  ad  semenfem  percommodum  durare  pro- 
ditum  est,  sexagenos  ant  septuagenos  ad  vsuni  ci barium  ser- 
rari  posse  idonenm.  The  situation  of  that  conservatory,  was, 
as  he  delivereth,  b-^rCKhv,  tu-mouv,  rja-otov,  high,  airy,  and  exposed 

•    Theoph.  Hifl.  lib.  viii. 


148  OBSERVATIONS    UPON    PLANTS  [tRACT    I. 

to  favourable  winds.  And  upon  such  consideration  of  winds 
and  ventilation,  some  conceived  the  Egyptian  granaries  were 
made  open,  the  country  being  free  from  rain.  However  it 
was,  that  contrivance  could  not  be  without  some  hazard :  for 
the  great  mists  and  dews  of  that  country  might  dispose  the 
corn  unto  corruption.* 

More  plainly  may  they  mistake,  who  from  some  analogy  of 
name  (as  if  pyramid  were  derived  from  -rvoov,  triticum),  con- 
ceive the  Egyptian  pyramids  to  have  been  built  for  granaries, 
or  look  for  any  settled  monuments  about  the  deserts  erected 
for  that  intention ;  since  their  store-houses  were  made  in  the 
great  towns,  according  to  Scripture  expression,  "  He  gather- 
ed up  all  the  food  for  seven  years,  which  was  in  the  land  of 
Egypt,  and  laid  up  the  food  in  the  cities :  the  food  of  the  field 
which  w^as  round  about  every  city,  laid  he  up  in  the  same."f 

32.  "  For  if  thou  wert  cut  out  of  the  olive  tree,  which  is 
wild  by  nature,  and  wert  grafted,  contrary  to  natiu*e,  into  a 
good  olive  tree,  how  much  more  shall  these  which  be  the  na- 
tural branches,  be  grafted  into  their  own  olive  tree  ?  "  In 
which  place,  how  answerable  -  to  the  doctrine  of  husbandry 
this  expression  of  St.  Paul  is,  you  will  readily  apprehend  who 
understand  the  rules  of  insition  or  grafting,' and  that  way  of 
vegetable  propagation ;  wherein  it  is  contrary  to  nature,  or 
natural  rules  which  art  observeth  :  viz.  to  make  use  of  scions 
more  ignoble  than  the  stock,  or  to  graft  wild  upon  domestic 
and  good  plants,  according  as  Theophrastus  hath  anciently 
observed,;!:  and,  making  instance  in  the  olive,  hath  left  this 
doctrine  unto  us ;  urbanum  sylvestribus  ut  satis  oleastris  in- 
serere.  Nam  si  e  conlrario  sylrestrem  in  urbanos  severis, 
etsi  differentia  quccdam  erit,  tamen  bonce  J'n/gis  arbor  nun- 
q7iam  prnfecto  reddetur  :  §  which  is  also  agreeable  unto  our 
present  practice,  who  graft  pears  on  thorns,  and  apples  upon 
crab  stocks,  not  using  the  contrary  insition.  And  when  it  is 
said,  "how  much  more  shall  these,  which  are  the  natural 

*  Egypt  oiU'/X(jihrfi,  xa!  b^offifog.    Vide  Theophrastum. 
t   Gen.  xli,  48.       "  %  Dc  Cnnsis  Plant,  lib.  i,  cap.  7. 

'  how  answerable.']     "  How  geographically  answerable." — MS.  Slonn.  1841. 


TRACT    I.]  MENT10Ni:U    IN    SCKIl'TURE.  \ VJ 

branches,  be  graftod  into  tlieir  own  natural  olive  tree  ?  "  this  is 
also  agreeable  unto  the  rule  of  the  same  author ;  tsn  di  /3sXt/wi' 
lyKitresifioi  6fj/)iu*  n';  o/xo/a,  insitlo  itwlior  est  similiuin  in  simi- 
libtis :  for  the  nearer  consanguinity  there  is  between  the 
scions  and  the  stock,  the  readier  comprehension  is  made,  and 
tile  nobler  fructification.  According  also  unto  the  later  cau- 
tion of  Laurenbergius;*  arborcs  doincsticce  insltion'i  dcstinatcc, 
semper  anteponcndce  sylrestribiis.  And  though  the  success 
be  good,  and  may  sulHce  upon  stocks  of  the  same  denomina- 
tion ;  yet,  to  be  grafted  upon  their  own  and  mother  stock,  is 
the  nearest  insition :  which  way,  though  less  practised  of  old, 
is  now  much  embraced,  and  found  a  notable  way  for  meliora- 
tion of  the  fruit,  and  much  the  rather,  if  the  tree  to  be  graft- 
ed on  be  a  good  and  generous  plant,  a  good  and  fair  olive,  as 
the  apostle  seems  to  imply  by  a  peculiar  word,t  scarce  to  be 
found  elsewhere. 

It  must  be  also  considered,  that  the  oleaster,  or  wild  olive, 
by  cutting,  transplanting,  and  the  best  managery  of  art,  can  be 
made  but  to  produce  such  olives  as  Theophrastus  saith,  were 
particularly  named  phauUa,  that  is,  but  bad  olives  ;  and  that  it 
was  among  prodigies,  for  the  oleaster  to  become  an  oHve  tree. 

And  when  insition  and  grafting,  in  the  text,  is  applied  unto 
the  olive  tree,  it  hath  an  emphatical  sense,  very  agreeable 
unto  that  tree  which  is  best  propagated  this  way ;  not  at  all 
by  surculation,  as  Theophrastus  observeth,i  nor  well  by  seed, 
as  hath  been  observed.  Omne  semen  simile  genus  per/icit, 
prccter  oleam,  oleastrum  enim  general,  hoc  est  sylcestrem 
oleam,  et  nan  oleam  reram. 

"If,  therefore,  thou  Roman  and  Gentile  branch,  which 
wert  cut  from  the  wild  olive,  art  now,  by  the  signal  mercy  of 
God,  beyond  the  ordinary  and  commonly  expected  way, 
grafted  into  the  true  olive,  the  church  of  God  ;  if  thou,  which 
neither  naturally  nor  by  human  art  canst  be  made  to  produce 
any  good  fruit,  and,  next  to  a  miracle,  to  be  made  a  true 
olive,  art  now  by  the  benignity  of  God  grafted  into  tiie  proper 
oHve  ;  how  much  more  shall  the  Jew,  and  natural  branch,  be 
grafted  into  its  genuine  and  mother  tree,  wherein  proi)inquity 

*   Dc  horticulliira.  +    ■/.a/.'>j':}MiOv.      lOtm.  x\,  24 

;    ticopomc    lib.  X. 


150  OBSERVATIONS    UPON    PLANTS  [tRACT    I. 

of  nature  is  like,  so  readily  and  prosperously,  to  effect  a  coal- 
ition ?  And  this  more  especially  by  the  expressed  way  of 
insition  or  implantation,  the  olive  being  not  successfully  pro- 
pagable  by  seed,  nor  at  all  by  surculation." 

So.  "As  for  the  stork,  the  fir  trees  are  her  house."*  This 
expression,  in  our  translation,  which  keeps  close  to  the  ori- 
ginal chasideJi,  is  somewhat  different  from  the  Greek  and 
Latin  ti'anslation ;  nor  agreeable  unto  common  observation, 
whereby  they  are  known  commonly  to  build  upon  chimneys,  or 
the  tops  of  houses  and  high  buildings,  which  notwithstanding, 
the  common  translation  may  clearly  consist  with  observation, 
if  we  consider  that  this  is  commonly  affirmed  of  the  black 
stork,  and  take  notice  of  the  description  of  Ornithologus  in 
Aldrovandus,  that  such  storks  are  often  found  in  divers  parts, 
and  that  they  do  in  arboribus  nidulari,  prfjesertim  in  abie- 
tibiis ;  make  their  nests  on  trees,^  especially  upon  fir  trees. 
Nor  wholly  disagreeing  unto  the  practice  of  the  common 
white  stork,  according  unto  Varro,  nidalantur  in  agris  :  and 
the  concession  of  Aldrovandus  that  sometimes  they  build  on 
trees:  and  the  assertion  of  Bellonius,-)-  that  men  dress  them 
nests,  and  place  cradles  upon  high  trees,  in  marish  regions, 
that  storks  may  breed  upon  them :  which  course  some  ob- 
serve for  herons  and  cormorants  with  us.  And  this  building 
of  storks  upon  trees,  may  be  also  answerable  unto  the  origi- 
nal and  natural  way  of  building  of  storks  before  the  political 
habitations  of  men,  and  the  raising  of  houses  and  high  build- 
ings ;  before  they  were  invited  by  such  conveniences  and  pre- 
pared nests,  to  relincjuish  their  natural  places  of  nidulation. 
I  say,  before  or  where  such  advantages  are  not  ready  ;  when 
swallows  found  other  places  than  chimneys,  and  daws  found 
other  places  than  holes  in  high  fabricks  to  build  in. 

34.  "And  therefore,  Israel  said,  carry  down  the  man  a 
present,  a  little  balm,  a  little  honey,  and  myrrh,  nuts,  and  al- 
monds." it  Now  whether  this,  which  Jacob  sent,  were  the 
proper  balsam  extolled  by  human  writers,  you  cannot  but 
make  some  doubt,  who  find  the  Greek  translation  to  be  ^tiGivri, 

*  Psalm  civ,   17.  f  Bellonius  de  Avihus.  %  Gen.  xliii,  11. 

^  viake  their  nests  07t  trecs.l  Doubdan  Galilee  resting  in  the  evening  on  trees.— 
saw  immense  numbers  of  these  birds  in     llarmer's  Obscnalions,  vol.  iii,  p.  323. 


TKACT    1,]  MF.NTIONKI)    IN    SCRli'TURL.  \oi 

that  is,  rcsina,  and  so  may  liavc  some  suspicion  thai  it  might 
be  some  pure  distillation  from  the  turpentine  tree  ;  whicli 
grows  prosperously  and  plentifully  in  Juda\i,  and  seems  so 
understood  by  the  Arabic ;  and  was  indeed  esteemed  by 
Theo{)hrastu3  and  Dioscorides,  the  chiefest  of  resinous 
bodies,  and  the  word  rcsina  emphatically  used  for  it. 

That  the  balsam  plant  hath  grown  and  prospered  in  Judica 
we  believe  without  dispute.  For  the  same  is  attested  by 
Theophrastus,  Pliny,  Justinus,  and  many  more.  From  the 
commendation  that  Galen  aftbrdeth  of  the  balsam  of  Syria, 
and  the  story  of  Cleopatra,  that  she  obtained  some  plants  of 
balsam  from  Herod  the  Great  to  transplant  into  Egypt. 
But  whether  it  was  so  anciently  in  Judea  as  the  time  of  Jacob ; 
nay,  whether  this  plant  was  here  before  the  time  of  Solomon, 
that  great  collector  of  vegetable  rarities,  some  doubt  may  be 
made  from  the  account  of  Josephus,  that  the  Queen  of  Sheba, 
a  jiart  of  Arabia,  among  presents  unto  Solomon  brought 
some  plants  of  the  balsam  tree,  as  one  of  the  peculiar  esti- 
mables  of  her  country. 

\\  hether  this  ever  had  its  natural  growth,  or  were  an  ori- 
ginal native  plant  in  Judiua,  much  more  that  it  was  peculiar 
unto  that  country,  a  greater  doubt  may  arise :  while  we  read 
in  Pausanias,  Strabo,  and  Diodorus,  that  it  grows  also  in 
Arabia,  and  find  in  Theophrastus,*  that  it  grew  in  two  gar- 
dens about  Jericho  in  Judaea.  And  more  especially  while  we 
seriously  consider  that  notable  discourse  between  Abdella, 
Abdachim,  and  Alpinus,  concluding  the  natural  and  original 
place  of  this  singular  plant  to  be  in  Arabia,  about  Mecha  and 
Medina,  where  it  still  plentifully  groweth,  and  mountains 
abound  therein ;  f  from  whence  it  hath  been  carefully  trans- 
planted by  the  Bashas  of  grand  Cairo,  into  the  garden  of 
Matarea:  where,  when  it  dies,  it  is  repaired  again  from  those 
parts  of  Arabia,  from  whence  the  grand  Siguier  yearly  re- 
ceiveth  a  present  of  balsam  from  the  Xeriff  of  iNIecha,  still 
called  by  the  Arabians  halessan ;  whence  they  believe  arose 
the  Greek  appellation  balsam.  And  since  these  balsam  plants 
are  not  now  to  be  found  in  Judtca,  and  though  purposely  cul- 
tivated, arc  often  lost  in  Judcca,  but  everlastingly  live,  and 

•    Thcopltrast.  lib.  ix,  cap.  6.  f  Prosper  Alpinus,  dc  Baltamo. 


152  OBSERVATIONS    UPON    PLANTS  [tRACT    I. 

naturally  renew  in  Arabia,  they  probably  concluded,  that  those 
of  Judaea  were  foreign  and  transplanted  from  these  parts. 

All  which  notwithstanding,  since  the  same  plant  may  grow 
naturally  and  spontaneously  in  several  countries,  and  either 
from  inward  or  outward  causes  be  lost  in  one  region,  while  it 
continueth  and  subsisteth  in  another,  the  balsam  tree  might 
possibly  be  a  native  of  Judaea  as  well  as  of  Arabia ;  which 
because  de  facto  it  cannot  be  clearly  made  out,  the  ancient 
expressions  of  scripture  become  doubtful  in  this  point.  But 
since  this  plant  hath  not  for  a  long  time  grown  in  Judaea,  and 
still  plentifully  prospers  in  Arabia,  that  which  now  comes  in 
precious  parcels  to  us,  and  still  is  called  the  balsam  of  Judaea, 
may  now  surrender  its  name,  and  more  properly  be  called 
the  balsam  of  Arabia.  * 

35.  "  And  the  flax  and  the  barley  was  smitten ;  for  the 
barley  was  in  the  ear,  and  the  flax  was  boiled,  but  the  wheat 
and  the  rye  w^ere  not  smitten,  for  they  were  not  grown  up."  * 
How  the  barley  and  the  flax  should  be  smitten  in  the  plague  of 
hail  in  Egypt,  and  the  wheat  and  rye  escape,  because  they  were 
not  yet  grown  up,  may  seem  strange  unto  English  observers, 
who  call  barley  summer  corn,  sown  so  many  months  after  wheat, 
and  [who]  beside  {hordeum  polyst'ichon,  or  big  barley),  sow 
not  barley  in  the  winter  to  anticipate  the  growth  of  wheat. 

And  the  same  may  also  seem  a  preposterous  expression 
unto  all  who  do  not  consider  the  various  agriculture,  and  dif- 
ferent husbandry  of  nations,  and  such  as  was  practised  in 
Egypt,  and  fairly  proved  to  have  been  also  used  in  Judaea, 
wherein  their  barley  harvest  was  before  that  of  wheat;  as  is 
confirmable  from  that  expression  in  Ruth,  that  she  came  into 
Bethlehem  at  the  beginning  of  barley  harvest,  and  staid  unto 
the  end  of  wheat  harvest ;  from  the  death  of  Manasses  the 
father  of  Judith,  emphatically  expressed  to  have  happened  in 
the  wheat  harvest,  and  more  advanced  heat  of  the  sun ;  and 
from  the  custom  of  the  Jews,  to  offer  the  barley  sheaf  of  the 
first-fruits  in  March,  and  a  cake  of  wheat  flour  but  at  the 
end  of  Pentecost,  consonant  unto  the  practice  of  the  Egyptians, 

•  Exod.  ix,  31. 
^  Ara\m,'\     Stc  note  on  the  balsam,  or  Balm  of  Gilead,  at  page  130. 


TRACT    1.]  MENTIONED    IN    SCIIIPTURE.  1 


OO 


who  (as  Tlieophrastus  deliveretli)  sowed  their  barley  early 
in  reference  to  tlieir  first-fruits  ;  and  also  the  common  rural 
practice,  recorded  by  tlie  same  author,  mature  .serif /tr  tr'it'i- 
cioH,  lionleiini,  quod  etiain  viaturius  ser'itur  ;  wheat  and  bar- 
ley are  sowed  early,  but  barley  earlier  of  the  two. 

Flax  was  also  an  early  plant,  as  may  be  illustrated  from 
the  neighbour  country  of  Canaan.  For  the  Israelites  kept 
the  passover  in  Gilgal,  in  the  fourteenth  day  of  the  first 
month,  answering  unto  part  of  our  March,  having  newly  pass- 
ed Jordan  :  and  the  spies  which  were  sent  from  Shittim  unto 
Jericho,  not  many  days  before,  were  hid  by  Rahab  under  the 
stalks  of  flax,  which  lay  cbying  on  the  top  of  her  house ; 
which  sheweth  that  the  flax  was  already  and  newly  gathered. 
For  this  was  the  first  preparation  of  flax,  and  before  fluvia- 
tion  or  rotting,  which,  after  Pliny's  account,  was  after  wheat 
harvest. 

"  But  the  wheat  and  the  rye  were  not  smitten,  for  they 
were  not  grown  up."  The  original  signifies  that  it  was  hid- 
den, or  dark,  the  vulgar  and  septuagint  that  it  was  serotinous 
or  late,  and  our  old  translation  that  it  was  late  sown.  And 
so  the  expression  and  interposition  of  Moses,  who  well  under- 
stood the  husbandry  of  Egypt,  might  emphatically  declare 
the  state  of  wheat  and  rye  in  that  particular  year ;  and  if  so, 
the  same  is  solvable  from  the  time  of  the  flood  of  Nilus,  and 
the  measure  of  its  inundation.  For  if  it  were  very  high,  and 
over  drenching  the  ground,  they  were  forced  to  later  seed- 
time ;  and  so  the  wheat  and  the  rye  escaped  ;  for  they  were 
more  slowly  growing  grains,  and,  by  reason  of  the  greater 
inundation  of  the  river,  were  sown  later  than  ordinary  that 
year,  especially  in  the  plains  near  the  river,  where  the  ground 
drieth  latest. 

Some  think  the  plagues  of  Egypt  were  acted  in  one  month, 
others  but  in  the  compass  of  twelve.  In  the  delivery  of 
Scripture  there  is  no  account  of  what  time  of  the  year  or 
particular  month  they  fell  out ;  but  the  account  of  these 
grains,  which  were  either  smitten  or  escaped,  makes  the  pla- 
gue of  hail  to  have  probably  happened  in  February.  This 
may  be  collected  from  the  new  and  old  account  of  the  seed- 
time and  harvest  in  Egypt.     For,  according  to  the  account 


154  OBSERVATIONS    UPON    PLANTS  [TRACT    I. 

of  Radzivil,*  tlie  river  rising  in  June,  and  the  banks  being 
cut  in  September,  they  sow  about  St.  Andrew's,  when  the 
flood  is  retired,  and  the  moderate  dryness  of  the  ground 
permitteth.  So  that  the  barley,  anticipating  the  wheat, 
either  in  time  of  sowing  or  growing,  might  be  in  ear  in 
February. 

The  account  of  Pliny  f  is  little  different.  They  cast  their 
seed  upon  the  slime  and  mud  when  the  river  is  down,  which 
commonly  happeneth  in  the  beginning  of  November.  They 
begin  to  reap  and  cut  down  a  httle  before  the  calends  of 
April,  or  about  the  middle  of  March,  and  in  the  month  of 
May  their  harvest  is  in.  So  that  barley,  anticipating  wheat, 
it  might  be  in  ear  in  February,  and  wheat  not  yet  grov/n  up, 
at  least  to  the  spindle  or  ear,  to  be  destroyed  by  the  hail. 
For  they  cut  down  about  the  middle  of  March,  at  least  their 
forward  corns,  and  in  the  month  of  May  all  sorts  of  corn 
were  in. 

The  "  turning  of  the  river  into  blood "  shews  in  what 
month  this  happened  not.  That  is,  not  when  the  river  had 
overflown ;  for  it  is  said,  "  the  Egyptians  digged  round  about 
the  river  for  water  to  drink,"  which  they  could  not  have  done 
if  the  river  had  been  out  and  the  fields  under  water. 

In  the  same  text  you  cannot,  without  some  hesitation,  pass 
over  the  translation  of  rye,  which  the  original  nameth  cassu- 
meth,  the  Greek  rendereth  olyra,  the  French  and  Dutch 
spclta,  the  Latin  zea,  and  not  secale,  the  known  word  for  rye. 
But  this  common  rye,  so  well  understood  at  present,  was  not 
distinctly  described,  or  not  well  known  from  early  antiquity. 
And,  therefore,  in  this  uncertainty,  some  have  thought  it  to 
have  been  the  tupha  of  the  ancients.  Cordus  will  have  it  to 
be  olyra,  and  Ruellius  some  kind  of  oryza.  But  having  no 
vulgar  and  well-known  name  for  those  grains,  we  warily  em- 
brace an  appellation  of  near  affinity,  and  tolerably  render 
it  rye. 

While  flax,  barley,  wheat,  and  rye  are  named,  some  may 
wonder  why  no  mention  is  made  of  rice,  wherewith,  at  pre- 
sent, Egypt  so  much  aboundeth.  But  whether  that  plant 
grew  so  early  in  that  country,  some  doubt  may  be  made ;  for 

*  Radziiil's  Travels.  f   Plin.  lib.  xviii,  cap.  !8 


lltACr    1.]  MKNTlDNtO    IN    SCKirfUKE.  loo 

rice  is  originally  a  grain  of  India,    and  might    not  then  be 
transplanted  into  Egypt. 

oG.  '*  Let  them  become  as  the  grass  growing  upon  the 
house  top,  which  withereth  before  it  be  i)lucked  up,  wherewith 
the  mower  filleth  not  his  hand,  nor  he  that  bindeth  sheaves 
his  bosom."*  Though  the  '*  lillii>g  of  the  hand,"  and  mention 
of  "sheaves  of  hay"  may  seem  strange  unto  us,  who  use 
neither  handfull  or  sheaves  in  that  kind  of  husbandry,  yet 
may  it  be  properly  taken,  and  you  are  not  like  to  doubt  there- 
of, who  may  find  the  like  expressions  in  the  authors  De  lie 
Rust'ica,  concerning  the  old  way  of  this  husbandry. 

Columella,-}-  delivering  what  works  were  not  to  be  permitted 
upon  the  Roman  ferlcv,  or  festivals,  among  others,  sets  down 
that  upon  such  days  it  was  not  huvful  to  carry  or  bind  up 
ha}.  Sec  fwntim  ciiicire  nee  vehere  /;('/■  religiones  ponl'iji- 
ciini  licet. 

Marco  Varro  %  is  more  particular ;  Primtim  de  pratls  her- 
barum  cum  crescere  desiit,  siihsecarifalcibus  debet,  et  quoad 
peracescat  furcUUs  versari,  cum  peracuit,  de  his  mauipulos 
fieri  et  vchi  in  villam. 

And  their  course  of  mowing  seems  somewhat  different 
from  ours.  For  they  cut  not  down  clear  at  once,  but  used  an 
after  section,  which  they  peculiarly  called  sicditium,  accord- 
ing as  the  word  is  expounded  by  Georgius  Alexandrinus  and 
Beroaldus,  after  Pliny  :  Sicilire  estfalcibus  consectari  quccfoc- 
niseccc  prccterierunt,  nut  eii  secure  quce faniseccc prceterierunt. 

o7.  When  'tis  said  that  Elias  lay  and  slept  under  a  juniper 
tree,  some  may  wonder  how  that  tree,  which  in  our  parts 
groweth  but  low  and  shruljby,  should  afford  him  shade  and 
covering.^  But  others  know  that  there  is  a  lesser  and.  a  larger 
kind  of  that  vegetable ;  that  it  makes  a  tree  in  its  proper  soil 
and  region.  Antl  may  ffntl  in  Pliny  that  in  the  temple  of 
Diana  Saguntina,  in  Spain,  the  rafters  were  made  of  juniper. 

In  that  expression  of  David, §  "Sharp  arrows  of  the 
mighty,  with  coals  of  juniper."     Though  juniper  be  left  out  in 

•  Psahn  cxxix,   7.  f  Columella,  lib.  ii,  cap.  '12. 

f    /arro,  lib.  i,  cap.  It).  §   I'.salm  cxx,    1. 

'■"   U'Ucn  't   is  sitiil,  i^c]      Parkliiirst     tliis  humble  shelter /or  M.'an<  q/"  «  &c//cr. 
suggests  that  the  prophet  took  up  with 


156  OBSERVATIONS    UPON    PLANTS  [tRACT    I. 

the  last  translation,  yet  may  there  be  an  emphatical  sense 
from  that  word ;  since  juniper  abounds  with  a  piercing  oil, 
and  makes  a  smart  fire.  And  tlie  rather,  if  that  quality  be 
half  true,  which  Pliny  affirmeth,  that  the  coals  of  juniper 
raked  up  will  keep  a  glowing  fire  for  the  space  of  a  year. 
For  so  the  expression  will  emphatically  imply,  not  only  the 
"  smart  burning  but  the  lasting  fire  of  their  malice." 

That  passage  of  Job,*  wherein  he  complains  that  poor  and 
half-famished  fellows  despised  him,  is  of  greater  difficulty ; 
"  For  want  and  famine  they  were  solitary,  they  cut  up  mallows 
by  the  bushes,  and  juniper  roots  for  meat."  Wherein  we 
might  at  first  doubt  the  translation,  not  only  from  the  Greek 
text,  but  the  assertion  of  Dioscorides,  who  affirmeth  tliat  the 
roots  of  juniper  are  of  a  venomous  quality.  But  Scaliger  hath 
disproved  the  same  from  the  practice  of  the  African  physi- 
cians, who  use  the  decoction  of  juniper  roots  against  the  vene- 
real disease.  The  Chaldee  reads  it  genista,  or  some  kind  of 
broom,  which  will  be  also  unusual  and  hard  diet,  except 
thereby  we  understand  the  orobanche,  or  broom  rape,  which 
groweth  from  the  roots  of  broom  ;  and  which,  according  to 
Dioscorides,  men  used  to  eat  raw  or  boiled,  in  the  manner  of 
asparagus. 

And,  therefore,  this  expression  doth  highly  declare  the 
misery,  poverty,  and  extremity  of  the  persons  who  were  now 
mockers  of  him  ;  they  being  so  contemptible  and  necessitous, 
that  they  were  fain  to  be  content,  not  with  a  mean  diet,  but 
such  as  was  no  diet  at  all,  the  roots  of  trees,  the  roots  of  ju- 
niper, which  none  would  make  use  of  for  food,  but  in  the 
lowest  necessity,  and  some  degree  of  famishing. 

38.  While  some  have  disputed  whether  Theophrastus 
knew  the  scarlet  berry,  others  may  doubt  whether  that  noble 
tincture  were  known  unto  the  Hebrews,  which,  notwithstand- 
ing, seems  clear  from  the  early  and  iterated  expressions  of 
Scripture  concerning  the  scarlet  tincture,  and  is  the  less 
to  be  doubted,  because  the  scarlet  berry  grew  plentifully  in 
the  land  of  Canaan,  and  so  they  were  furnished  with  the  ma- 
terials of  that  colour.  For  though  Dioscorides  saith  it  grow- 
eth in  Armenia  and  Cappadocia ;  yet  that  it  also  grew  in 

*  Job  XXX,   ;!,   4. 


TRACT    I.]  MF.NTIONrD    IN    SCRIPTURE.  1 .57 

Judiva,  seems  more  than  probable  from  tlie  account  of  Bello- 
nius,  who  observed  it  to  be  so  plentiful  in  that  country,  that 
it  afforded  a  profitable  commodity,  and  great  quantity  thereof 
was  transported  by  the  Venetian  merchants. 

How  this  should  be  fitly  expressed  by  the  word  tolagnoth, 
rermis,  or  worm,  may  be  made  out  from  Pliny,  who  calls  it 
coccus  scolecius,  or  the  wormy  berry  ;  as  also  from  the  name 
of  that  colour  called  vermilion,  or  the  worm  colour :  and 
which  is  also  answerable  unto  the  true  nature  of  it.  For  this 
is  no  proper  berry  containin<f  the  fructifying  part,  but  a  kind 
of  vesicular  excrescence,  adhering  commonly  to  the  leaf  of 
the  ilex  coccigera,  or  dwarf  and  small  kind  of  oak,  whose 
leaves  are  always  green,  and  its  proper  seminal  parts  acorns. 
This  little  bag  containeth  a  red  pulp,  which,  if  not  timely 
gathered,  or  left  to  itself,  produceth  small  red  flies,  and  ])art- 
ly  a  red  powder,  both  serviceable  unto  the  tincture.  And, 
therefore,  to  prevent  the  generation  of  flies,  when  it  is  first 
gathered,  they  sprinkle  it  over  with  vinegar,  especially  such 
as  make  use  of  the  fresh  pulp  for  the  confection  of  alkernies  ; 
which  still  retaineth  the  Arabic  name,  from  the  kermes-herry; 
which  is  agreeable  unto  the  description  of  Bellonius  and  Quin- 
queranus.  And  the  same  we  have  beheld  in  Provence  and 
Languedoc,  where  it  is  plentifully  gathered,  and  called  manna 
rusticorum,  from  the  considerable  profit  which  the  peasants 
make  by  gathering  of  it. 

39.  Mention  is  made  of  oaks  in  divers  parts  of  Scripture, 
which  though  the  Latin  sometimes  renders  a  turpentine  tree, 
yet  surely  some  kind  of  oak  may  be  understood  thereby ;  but 
whether  our  common  oak,  as  is  commonly  apprehended,  you 
may  well  doubt ;  for  the  common  oak,  which  prospcrcth  so 
well  with  us,  delighteth  not  in  hot  regions.  And  that  diligent 
botanist,  Bellonius,  who  took  such  particular  notice  of  the 
plants  of  Syria  and  Juda-a,  observed  not  the  vulgar  oak  in 
those  parts.  But  he  found  the  ilex,  chesne  vert,  or  evergreen 
oak,  in  many  places  ;  as  also  that  kind  of  oak  which  is  properly 
named  esciilns :  and  he  makes  mention  thereof  in  places 
about  Jerusalem,  and  in  his  journey  from  thence  unto  Da- 
mascus, where  he  found  mantes  ilicc,  et  esculo  virentes ;  which 
in    his    discourse    of   Lemnos,    he    saith    are   always    green. 


158  OBSERVATIONS    UPON    PLANTS  [tRACT    I. 

And  therefore  when  it  is  said  of  Absalom,  that  "  his  mule 
went  under  the  thick  boughs  of  a  great  oak,  and  his  head 
caught  hold  of  the  oak,  and  he  was  taken  up  between  the 
heaven  and  the  earth,"'  *  that  oak  might  be  some  ilex  or  rather 
esculus.  For  that  is  a  thick  and  bushy  kind,  in  orhem  comosa, 
as  Dalechampius ;  ramis  in  orhem  dispositis  comans,  as  Rene- 
almus  describeth  it.  And  when  it  is  said  that  "  Ezechias 
broke  down  the  images,  and  cut  down  the  groves," -j-  they 
might  much  consist  of  oaks,  which  were  sacred  unto  Pagan 
deities,  as  this  more  particularly,  according  to  that  of  Virgil, 


•  Nemorumque  Jovi  quae  maxima  frondet 
Esculus. ^ • 


And,  in  Judaea,  where  no  hogs  were  eaten  by  the  Jews,  and 
few  kept  by  others,  'tis  not  unlikely  that  they  most  cherislied 
the  esculus,  which  might  serve  for  food  for  men.  For  the 
acorns  thereof  are  the  sweetest  of  any  oak,  and  taste  like 
chesnuts ;  and  so,  producing  an  edulious  or  esculent  fruit,  is 
properly  named  esculus. 

They  which  know  the  ilex  or  evergreen  oak,  with  some- 
what prickled  leaves,  named  rroiyoQ,  will  better  understand  the 
irreconcileable  answer  of  the  two  elders,  when  the  one  ac- 
cused Susanna  of  incontinency  under  a  rr^mg  or  evergreen 
oak,  the  other  under  a  cyjwi,  lentiscus,  or  mastic  tree,  which 
are  so  different  in  bigness,  boughs,  leaves,  and  fruit,  the  one 
bearing  acorns,  the  other  berries :  and  without  the  know- 
ledge, will  not  emphatically  or  distinctly  understand  that  of 
the  poet, 

Flavaque  de  viridi  stillabant  ilice  mella. 

40.  When  we  often  meet  with  tlie  cedars  of  Libanus,  that 
expression  may  be  used,  not  only  because  they  grew  in  a 
known  and  neighbour  country,  but  also  because  they  were  of 
the  noblest  and  largest  kind  of  that  vegetable  :  and  we  find 
the  Phoenician  cedar  magnified  by  the  ancients.  The  cedar 
of  Libanus  is  a  coniferous  tree,  bearing  cones  or  clogs,  (not 

*  2  Sam.  wiii,  9,  M.  f  2  Kings  wiW,  4. 


TRACT    1.]  MKNTIONFO    IN    SCniPTlRr,.  1  ."if) 

berries)  of  such  a  vastness,  that  Mclchior  Lussy,  a  great 
traveller,  found  one  upon  Libanus,  as  big  as  seven  men  could 
compass.  Some  are  now  so  curious  as  to  keep  the  branches 
and  row^5  thereof  among  their  rare  collections.  And,  thouixh 
nuich  cedar  wood  be  now  brought  from  America,  yet  'tis 
time  to  take  notice  of  the  true  cedar  of  Libanus,  employed 
in  the  temple  of  Solomon  :  for  they  have  been  much  de- 
stroyed and  neglected,  and  become  at  last  but  thin.  Bello- 
nius  could  reckon  but  twenty-eight,  Rowolfius  and  Radzivil 
but  twenty-four,  and  Bidulphus  the  same  number.  And  a 
later  account  of  some  English  travellers*  saith,  that  they 
arc  now  but  in  one  place,  and  in  a  small  compass,  in 
Libanus.  ^ 

Qtiando  ingressi  fueritis  terram,  ct  plantaverit'is  in  ilia 
Ug)ia  pomifera,  auferetis  pra-putia  eorum.  Poma  qiice  ger- 
m'nnint,  immunda  erunt  I'obis,  nee  edetis  ex  eis.  Quarto 
autcm  anno,  own'isfruetiis  eorum  sanct'ijicahitnr,  laudabUis 
domino.  Quinto  autcm  anno  comedetisfructus.  By  this  law 
they  were  enjoined  not  to  eat  of  the  fruits  of  the  trees  which 
they  planted  for  the  first  three  years :  and,  as  the  vulgar 
expresseth  it,  to  take  away  the  prejjuces,  from  such  trees, 
during  that  time ;  the  fruits  of  the  fourth  year  being  holy 
unto  the  Lord,  and  those  of  the  fifth  allowable  unto  others. 
Now  if  auferrc  praputia  be  taken,  as  many  learned  men 
have  thought,  to  pluck  away  the  bearing  buds,  before  they 
proceed  unto  flowers  or  fruit,  you  will  readily  apprehend  the 
met^xphor,  from  the  analogy  and  similitude  of  those  sprouts 
and  buds,  which,  shutting  up  the  fruitful  particle,  resembleth 
the  preputial  part. 

•  A  Journey  to  Jenisalevi,   1C72. 

*  in  a  tmall  compass,  ^■c.']  Burck-  liase;  the  branches  and  foliage  of  tlie 
hardt  thus  describes  the  cedars  of  Li-  others  were  lower,  but  I  saw  none  whose 
banus: — "  They  stand  on  uneven  ground,  leaves  touched  the  ground,  like  those  in 
and  form  a  small  wood.  Of  the  oldest  Kew  Gardens.  The  trunks  of  the  old 
and  best-looking  trees,  I  counted  eleven  trees  are  covered  with  the  names  of  tra- 
or  twelve;  twenty-five  very  large  ones :  vellers  and  other  persons  who  have  vi- 
about  fifty  of  middling  size  ;  and  more  sited  them  :  I  saw  a  date  of  the  seven- 
than  three  hundred  smaller  and  younger  teenth  century.  The  trunks  of  the  old- 
ones.  The  oldest  trees  are  distinguished,  est  trees  seem  to  be  quite  dead;  the 
by  having  tl!e  foliage  and  small  branches  wood  is-  of  a  grey  lint." — Travels  in 
at  the  top  only,  and  by  four,  five,  or  Syria,  19,  20. 
even  seven   trunks   springing   from  one 


IGO  OBSERVATIONS    UPON    PLANTS  [tRACT   I. 

And  you  may  also  find  herein  a  piece  of  husbandry  not 
mentioned  in  Theophrastus  or  Columella.  For  by  taking 
away  of  the  buds  and  hindering  fructification,  the  trees  be- 
come more  vigorous,  both  in  growth  and  future  production. 
By  such  a  way  King  Pyrrhus  got  into  a  lusty  race  of  beeves, 
and  such  as  were  desired  over  all  Greece,  by  keeping  them 
from  generation  until  the  ninth  year. 

And  you  may  also  discover  a  physical  advantage  in 
the  goodness  of  the  fruit,  which  becometh  less  crude  and 
more  wholesome,  upon  the  fourth  or  fifth  year's  produc- 
tion. 

41.  While  you  read  in  Theophrastus  or  modern  herbalists, 
a  strict  division  of  plants,  into  arbor,  frutex,  siiffrutex  et 
herha,  you  cannot  but  take  notice  of  the  Scriptural  division 
at  the  creation,  into  tree  and  herb:  and  this  may  seem  too 
narrow  to  comprehend  the  class  of  vegetables ;  which,  not- 
withstanding, may  be  sufficient,  and  a  plain  and  intelligible 
division  thereof.  And  therefore  in  this  difiiculty  concerning 
the  division  of  plants,  the  learned  botanist,  Ciesalpinus,  thus 
concludeth,  clarius  agemus  si  altera  divisione  neglecta,  duo 
tantum  plantarum  genera  siibstituamus,  arborem  scilicet,  et 
herbam,  conjungentes  cum  arboribus  frutices,  et  cum  herba 
suffrutices ;  frutices  being  the  lesser  trees,  and  suffrutices 
the  larger,  harder,  and  more  solid  herbs. 

And  this  division  into  herb  and  tree  may  also  suffice,  if 
we  take  in  that  natural  ground  of  the  division  of  perfect 
plants,  and  such  as  grow  from  seeds.  For  plants,  in  their 
first  production,  do  send  forth  two  leaves  adjoining  to  the 
seed ;  and  then  afterwards,  do  either  produce  two  other 
leaves,  and  so  successively  before  any  stalk;  and  such  go 
under  the  name  of  rrda,  ^ordvn  or  herb ;  or  else,  after  the 
two  first  leaves  succeeded  to  the  seed  leaves,  they  send  forth 
a  stalk  or  rudiment  of  a  stalk,  before  any  other  leaves,  and 
such  fall  under  the  classes  of  bivdoov  or  tree.  So  that,  in  this 
natural  division,  there  are  but  two  grand  differences,  that  is, 
tree  and  herb.  The  frutex  and  suffrulex  have  the  way  of 
production  from  the  seed,  and  in  other  respects  the  suffruti- 
ces or  cremia,  have  a  middle  and  participating  nature,  and 
referable  unto  herbs. 


TRACT    I.]  MENTIONED    IN    SCRIPTUIU-  IGl 

4ii.  "  I  have  seen  the  ungodly  in  great  power,  and  flourish- 
ing hke  a  green  bay  tree.""  Both  Scripture  and  human 
writcr.s  draw  frequent  ilhistrations  from  plants.  JScribonius 
Largus  illustrates  the  old  cymbals  from  the  coiyledun  palus- 
tris  or  umbilicus  veneris.  Who  would  expect  to  find  Aaron's 
mitre  in  any  plant?  Yet  Josephus  hath  taken  some  panis  to 
make  out  the  same  in  the  seminal  knop  of  /i//osci/amus  or 
lienbane.  The  Scripture  compares  the  figure  of  manna  unto 
the  seed  of  coriander.  In  Jeremy  *  we  find  the  expression, 
"  straight  as  a  palm  tree."  And  here  the  wicked  in  their 
flourishing  state  are  likened  unto  a  bay  tree.  Which,  sufti- 
ciently  answering  the  sense  of  the  text,  we  are  unwiUing  to 
exclude  that  noble  plant  from  the  honour  of  having  its  name 
in  Scripture.  Yet  we  cannot  but  observe,  that  the  septu- 
agint  renders  it  cedars,  and  the  vulgar  accordingly,  tidi 
inipium  superexaltatum,  et  elevaium  sicut  ceclros  Libani ;  and 
the  translation  of  Tremellius  mentions  neither  bay  nor  cedar ; 
sese  ejcplicantem  tanquam  arbor  indigena  virens ;  which 
seems  to  liave  been  followed  by  the  last  low  Dutch  transla- 
tion. A  private  translation  renders  it  like  a  green  self-grow- 
ing laurel.f  The  high  Dutch  of  Luther's  Bible  retains  the 
word  laurel ;  and  so  doth  the  old  Saxon  and  Iceland  transla- 
tion ;  so  also  the  French,  Spanish,  and  Italian  of  Diodati : 
yet  his  notes  acknowledge  that  some  think  it  rather  a 
cedar,  and  others  any  large  tree  in  a  prospering  and  natural 
soil. 

But  however  these  translations  differ,  the  sense  is  allow- 
able and  obvious  unto  apprehension:  when  no  particular 
plant  is  named,  any  proper  to  the  sense  may  be  supposed ; 
where  either  cedar  or  laurel  is  mentioned,  if  the  preceding 
words  (exalted  and  elevated)  be  used,  they  are  more  appli- 
ablc  unto  the  cedar ;  where  the  word  (flourishing)  is  used,  it 
is  more  agreeable  unto  the  laurel,  which,  in  its  prosperity, 
abounds  with  pleasant  flowers,  whereas  those  of  the  cedar 

•  Jer.  X,   5.  f  Ainsworth. 

'  flourUhing,  &;c.']     "  Spreading  him-  native  soil,  not  having  sufTered  by  trans- 
self   (is    the    English   version)    like    a  plantation,  and  therefore  spreading  itself 
green  bay  tree:" — more  accurately  "like  luxuriantly. — Psalm  xxxvii,  35. 
a  native  tree  " — a    tree  growing   in   its 

VOL.    IV.  M 


162  OBSERVATIONS    UPON    PLANTS  [trACT    I. 

are  very  little,  and  scarce  perceptible,  answerable  to  the  fir, 
pine,  and  other  coniferous  trees. 

43.  "And  in  the  morning,  when  they  were  come  from 
Bethany,  he  was  hungry ;  and  seeing  a  fig  tree  afar  off 
having  leaves,  he  came,  if  haply  he  might  find  any  thing 
thereon ;  and  when  he  came  to  it,  he  found  nothing  but 
leaves :  for  the  time  of  figs  was  not  yet."  Singular  concep- 
tions have  passed  from  learned  men  to  make  out  this  passage 
of  St.  Mark  which  St.  Matthew*  so  plainly  delivereth  ;  most 
men  doubting  why  our  Saviour  should  curse  the  tree  for 
bearing  no  fruit,  when  the  time  of  fruit  was  not  yet  come ;  or 
why  it  is  said  that  the  time  of  figs  was  not  yet,^  when,  not- 
withstanding, figs  might  be  found  at  that  season. 

Heinsiusjf  who  thinks  that  Ehas  must  salve  the  doubt,  ac- 
cording to  the  received  reading  of  the  text,  undertaketh  to 
vary  the  same,  reading  o'j  yao  riv,  zai^hc,  euxoov,  that  is,  for  where 
he  was,  it  was  the  season  or  time  for  figs. 

A  learned  interpreter;}:  of  our  own,  without  alteration  of 
accents  or  words,  endeavours  to  salve  all,  by  another  inter- 
pretation of  the  same,  ou  yao  xa/gog  euxuv,  for  it  was  not  a  good 
or  seasonable  year  for  figs. 

But,  because  men  part  not  easily  with  old  beliefs  or  the  re- 
ceived construction  of  words,  we  shall  briefly  set  down  what 
may  be  alleged  for  it. 

And,  first,  for  the  better  comprehension  of  all  deductions 
hereupon,  we  may  consider  the  several  differences  and  dis- 
tinctions both  of  fig  trees  and  their  fruits.  Suidas  upon  the 
word  ic^x'^i  makes  four  divisions  of  figs,  oXw%c,  <pnMt,,  <Jv>cov 
and  lax"'^'  But  because  (prjXri^  makes  no  considerable  distinc- 
tion, learned  men  do  chiefly  insist  upon  the  three  others; 

*  MarJc  xi,    13.     Matt.  x\\,  19.  f  Ileinsius  in  Nonnum. 

X  Dr.  Hammond. 

*  for  the  time  of  figs,  S(e.'\     The  difii-  figs,  was,  in  fact,  to  find  a  barren  fig  tree. 
culty  of  this  passage  is  simply  and  ade-  In  reference  to  the  mode  in  which  the 

quately   solved,  by   reading,   though  the  fig  tree  vegetates,  Jortin  has  the  foUow- 

fig  harvest  was  not  yet.     When  it  is  con-  iiig  beautiful  remark  :—"  A   good  man 

sidered  that  the  fig  tree  produces  its  fruit  may  be  said  to  resemble  the  fig  tree  ; 

before  its  leaves,  our  Saviour  was  justi-  which,   without  producing  blossoms  and 

fied  in   looking  for  fruit  on  a   fig   tree  flowers,  like  some  other  trees,  and  rais- 

which  was  in  leaf,  and  before  the  time  ing  expectations  which  are  often  deceitful, 

for  gathering  figs  had  arrived.     To  find  seldom  fails  to  produce  fruit  in  its  season." 

a  tree  which  was,  at  that  time,  without  — Jortin's  Tracts,  vol.  2,  p.  537. 


TRACT    I.]  MENTIONED    IN    SCKirTL'RE.  163 

that  is,  lXw%;,  or  grossus,  which  are  the  buttons,  or  small 
sort  of  figs,  either  not  ripe,  or  not  ordinarily  proceeding  to 
ripeness,  but  fall  away  at  least  in  the  greatest  part,  and  espe- 
cially in  sharp  winters,  which  are  also  named  a-jxad:;,  and  dis- 
tinguished from  the  fruit  of  the  wild  fig,  or  caprificiis,  which 
is  named  «f/vso;,  and  never  comcth  unto  ripeness.  The  second 
is  called  oZxov  or  Jiciis,  which  commonly  proceedeth  unto  ripe- 
ness in  its  due  season.  A  third,  the  ripe  fig  dried,  which 
maketh  the  lexo-h;  or  carrier. 

Of  fig  trees  there  are  also  many  divisions :  for  some  are 
prodromi  or  precocious,  which  bear  fruit  very  early,  whether 
they  bear  once  or  oftner  in  the  year ;  some  are  protericce, 
which  are  the  most  early  of  the  precocious  trees,  and  bear 
soonest  of  any ;  some  are  cestivce,  which  bear  in  the  common 
season  of  the  summer,  and  some  serotince  which  bear  very 
late. 

Some  are  b'lferous  and  triferotis,  which  bear  twice  or 
thrice  in  the  year,  and  some  are  of  the  ordinary  standing 
course,  which  make  up  the  expected  season  of  figs. 

Again,  some  fig  trees,  either  in  their  proper  kind,  or  fer- 
tility in  some  single  ones,  do  bear  fruit  or  rudiments  of  fruit 
all  the  year  long ;  as  is  annually  observable  in  some  kind  of 
fig  trees  in  hot  and  proper  regions;  and  may  also  be  observed 
in  some  fig  trees  of  more  temperate  countries,  in  years  of  no 
great  disadvantage,  wherein,  when  the  summer  ripe  fig  is 
past,  others  begin  to  appear,  and  so  standing  in  buttons  all 
the  winter,  do  either  fall  away  before  the  spring,  or  else  pro- 
ceed to  ripeness. 

Now  according  to  these  distinctions,  we  may  measure  the 
intent  of  the  text,  and  endeavour  to  make  out  the  expression. 
For,  considering  the  diversity  of  these  trees  and  their  several 
fructifications,  probable  or  possible  it  is  that  soqie  thereof 
were  implied,  and  may  literally  afford  a  solution. 

And  first,  though  it  was  not  the  season  for  figs,  yet  some 
fruit  might  have  been  expected,  even  in  ordinary  bearing 
trees.  For  the  grossi  or  buttons  appear  before  the  leaves, 
especially  before  the  leaves  are  well  grown.  Some  might 
have  stood  during  the  winter,  and  by  this  time  been  of  some 
growth  :  though  many  fall  ofl,  yet  some  might  remain  on,  and 

M   'J 


164  OBSERVATIONS    UPON    PLANTS  [TRACT    I. 

proceed  towards  maturity.  And  we  find  that  good  husbands 
had  an  art  to  make  them  hold  on  as  is  dehvered  by 
Theophrastus. 

The  cfuxov  or  common  summer  fig,  was  not  expected ;  for 
that  is  placed  by  Galen  among  the  Jructus  horarii  or  horcei, 
which  ripen  in  that  part  of  summer,  called  wpa,  and  stands 
commended  by  him  above  other  fruits  of  that  season.  And 
of  this  kind  might  be  the  figs  which  were  brought  unto 
Cleopatra  in  a  basket  together  with  an  asp,  according  to  the 
time  of  her  death,  on  the  nineteenth  of  August.  And  that 
our  Saviour  expected  not  such  figs,  but  some  other  kind, 
seems  to  be  implied  in  the  indefinite  expression,  "  if  haply  he 
might  find  any  thing  thereon ;"  which  in  that  country,  and 
the  variety  of  such  trees,  might  not  be  despaired  of,  at  this 
season,  and  very  probably  hoped  for  in  the  first  jjrecocious 
and  early  bearing  trees.  And  that  there  were  precocious 
and  early  bearing  trees  in  Judeea,  may  be  illustrated  from 
some  expressions  in  Scripture  concerning  precocious  figs ; 
calatlms  tinus  hahehat  ficus  bonus  tiimis,  sicut  solent  essejicus 
primi  temporis;  "  one  basket  had  very  good  figs,  even  like 
the  figs  that  are  first  ripe."*  And  the  like  might  be  more 
especially  expected  in  this  place,  if  this  remarkable  tree  be 
rightly  placed  in  some  maps  of  Jerusalem ;  for  it  is  placed, 
by  Adrichomius,  in  or  near  Bcthphage,  which  some  con- 
jectures will  have  to  be  the  house  of  figs  :  and  at  this  place 
fig  trees  are  still  to  be  found,  if  we  consult  the  travels  of 
Bidulphus. 

Again,  in  this  great  variety  of  fig  trees,  as  precocious,  pro- 
terical,  biferous,  triferous,  and  always  bearing  trees,  some- 
thing might  have  been  ex])ected,  though  the  time  of  common 
figs  was  not  yet.  For  some  trees  bear  in  a  manner  all  the 
year;  as  may  be  illustrated  from  the  epistle  of  the  Emperour 
Julian,  concerning  his  present  of  Damascus  figs,  which  he 
commcndeth  from  their  successive  and  continued  growing 
and  bearing,  after  the  manner  of  the  fruits  which  Homer  de- 
scribeth  in  the  garden  of  Alcinous.  And  though  it  were 
then  but  about  the  eleventh  of  March,  yet,  in  the  latitude  of 
Jerusalem,  the  sun  at  that  time  hath  a  good  power  in  the 

*  Jer,  xxiv,  2. 


TRACT    I.]  MCNTIOXKI)    IN    SCRIPTURE.  IGJ 

clay,  ami  might  advance  the  maturity  of  precocious  often- 
beariiiti  or  ever-beariuij  fiss.  And  therefore  when  it  is  said 
that  St.  Peter*  stood  and  warmed  himself  by  the  fire  in  the 
judgment  hall,  and  the  reason  is  added  ("for  it  was  cold"f), 
that  expression  might  be  interposed  either  to  denote  the 
coolness  in  the  morning,  according  to  hot  countries,  or  some 
extraordinary  and  unusual  coldness,  which  happened  at  that 
time.  For  the  same  Bidulphus,  who  was  at  that  time  of  the 
year  at  Jerusalem,  saith,  that  it  was  then  as  hot  as  at  Mid- 
summer in  England  :  and  we  find  in  Scripture  that  the  first 
sheaf  of  barley  was  offered  in  March. 

Our  Saviour,  therefore,  seeing  a  fig  tree  with  leaves  well 
spread,  and  so  as  to  be  distinguished  afar  off^,  went  unto  it, 
and  when  he  came,  found  nothing  but  leaves ;  he  found  it  to 
be  no  precocious  or  always-bearing  tree  :  and  though  it  were 
not  the  time  for  summer  figs,  yet  he  found  no  rudiments 
thereof;  and  though  he  expected  not  common  figs,  yet  some- 
thing might  haply  have  been  expected  of  some  other  kind, 
according  to  different  fertility  and  variety  of  production;  but, 
discovering  nothing,  he  found  a  tree  answering  the  state  of 
the  Jewish  rulers,  barren  unto  all  expectation. 

And  this  is  consonant  unto  the  mystery  of  the  story, 
wherein  the  fig  tree  denoteth  the  synagogue  and  rulers  of  the 
Jews,  whom  God  having  peculiarly  cultivated,  singularly 
blessed  and  cherished,  he  expected  from  them  no  ordinary, 
slow,  or  customary  fructification,  but  an  earliness  in  good 
works,  a  precocious  or  continued  fructification,  and  was  not 
content  with  common  after-bearing;  and  might  justly  have 
expostulated  with  the  Jews,  as  God  by  the  prophet  Micah 
did  with  their  forefathers ;  |  prcccoquas  Jicus  deslderavit 
an'itna  mea,  "  my  soul  longed  for  (or  desired)  early  ripe  fruits, 
J)ut  ye  are  become  as  a  vine  already  gathered,  and  there  is 
no  cluster  upon  you." 

Lastly,  in  this  account  of  the  fig  tree,  the  mystery  and 
symbolical  sense  is  chiefly  to  be  looked  upon.  Our  Saviour, 
therefore,  taking  a  hint  from  his  hunger  to  go  unto  this  spe- 
cious tree,  and  intending,  by  this  tree,  to  declare  a  judgment 

•  St.  Mark  xiv,  67.     St.  Luke  xxii,  .55,  5G. 
t  St.  John  xviii,  18.  J  Micah,  vii,  1. 


166  OBSERVATIONS  UPON  PLANTS       [TRACT  I. 

upon  the  synagogue  and  people  of  the  Jews,  he  came  unto 
the  tree,  and,  after  the  usual  manner,  inqmred,  and  looked 
about  for  some  kind  of  fruit,  as  he  had  done  before  in  the 
Jews,  but  found  nothing  but  leaves  and  specious  outsides,  as 
he  had  also  found  in  them ;  and  when  it  bore  no  fruit 
like  them,  when  he  expected  it,  and  come  to  look  for  it, 
though  it  were  not  the  time  of  ordinary  fruit,  yet  failing  when 
he  required  it,  in  the  mysterious  sense,  't  was  fruitless  longer 
to  expect  it.  For  he  had  come  unto  them,  and  they  were 
nothing  fructified  by  it,  his  departure  approached,  and  his 
time  of  preaching  was  now  at  an  end. 

Now,  in  this  account,  besides  the  miracle,  some  things  are 
naturally  considerable.  For  it  may  be  questioned  how  the 
fig  tree,  naturally  a  fruitful  plant,  became  barren,  for  it  had 
no  show  or  so  much  as  rudiment  of  fruit :  and  it  was  in  old 
time,  a  signal  judgment  of  God,  that  "  the  fig  tree  should 
bear  no  fruit :  "  tind  therefore  this  tree  may  naturally  be  con- 
ceived to  have  been  under  some  disease  indisposing  it  to  such 
fructification.  And  this,  in  the  pathology  of  plants,  may  be 
the  disease  of  <p-jXXo/Mavia,  IfKpvWiaijjhi,  or  superfoliation  mention- 
ed by  Theophrastus ;  whereby  the  fructifying  juice  is  starved 
by  the  excess  of  leaves ;  which  in  this  tree  were  already  so 
full  spread,  that  it  might  be  known  and  distinguished  afar  off. 
And  this  was,  also,  a  sharp  resemblance  of  the  hypocrisy  of 
the  rulers,  made  up  of  specious  outsides,  and  fruitless  osten- 
tation, contrary  to  the  fruit  of  the  fig  tree,  which,  filled  with 
a  sweet  and  pleasant  pulp,  makes  no  shew  without,  not  so 
much  as  of  any  flower. 

Some  naturals  are  also  considerable  from  the  propriety  of 
this  punishment  settled  upon  a  fig  tree  :  for  infertility  and 
barrenness  seems  more  intolerable  in  this  tree  than  any,  as 
being  a  vegetable  singularly  constituted  for  production  ;  so  far 
from  bearing  no  fruit  that  it  may  be  made  to  bear  almost  any. 
And  therefore  the  ancients  singled  out  this  as  the  fittest  tree 
whereon  to  graft  and  propagate  other  fruits,  as  containing  a 
plentiful  and  lively  sap,  whereby  other  scions  would  prosper  : 
and,  therefore,  this  tree  was  also  sacred  unto  the  deity  of  fer- 
tility ;  and  the  statua  of  Priapus  was  made  of  the  fig  tree  ; 

Olim  truucus  cram  ficulncus  inutile  lignum. 


TKACT    1.]  MENTIONED    IN    SCRIPTURE.  1()7 

It  hutli  also  a  peculiar  advantage  to  produce  and  maintain 
its  fruit  above  all  other  plants,  as  not  subject  to  miscarry  in 
flowers  and  blossoms,  from  accidents  of  wind  and  weather. 
For  it  beareth  no  flowers  outwardly,  and  such  as  it  hath,  arc 
within  the  coat,  as  the  later  examination  of  naturalists  hath 
discovered. 

Lastly,  it  was  a  tree  wholly  constituted  for  fruit,  wherein  if 
it  failetli,  it  is  in  a  manner  useless,  the  wood  thereof  being 
of  so  little  Use,  that  it  aftbrdeth  proverbial  expressions, 
liomo  Jicidneus,  urgitmenlum  Jiculneiim,  or  things  of  no 
validity. 

44.  '-I  said  I  will  go  up  into  the  palm  tree,  and  take  hold 
of  the  boughs  thereof."  *  This  expression  is  more  agreeable 
unto  the  pahn  than  is  commonly  apprehended,  for  that  it  is 
a  tall  bare  tree,  bearing  its  boughs  but  at  the  top  and  upper 
part ;  so  that  it  must  be  ascended  before  its  boughs  or  fruit 
can  be  attained  :  and  the  going,  getting,  or  chmbing  up,  may 
be  emphatical  in  this  tree ;  for  the  trunk  or  body  thereof  is 
naturally  contrived  for  ascension,  and  made  with  advantage 
for  getting  up,  as  having  many  welts  and  eminences,  and  so 
as  it  were  a  natural  ladder,  and  staves  by  which  it  may  be 
clindjcd,  as  Pliny  observeth  pahnce  teretes  atque  proceres, 
densis  quadratisquc  poUicibus  fac'des  se  ad  scandendtun 
pr(vbent,\  by  this  way  men  are  able  to  get  up  into  it.  And 
the  figures  of  Indians  thus  climbing  the  same  are  graphically 
described  in  the  travels  of  Linschoten.  This  tree  is  often 
mentioned  m  Scripture,  and  was  so  remarkable  in  Judaea,  that 
in  after-times  it  became  the  emblem  of  that  country,  as  may 
be  seen  in  that  medal  of  the  Emperor  Titus,  with  a  captive 
woman  sitting  under  a  pahn,  and  the  inscription  of  Judcca 
citpta.  And  Pliny  confirmeth  the  same  when  he  saith  Ju- 
dcca pahnis  inclijta. 

45.  Many  things  are  mentioned  in  Scripture,  which  have 
an  emphasis  from  this  or  the  neighbour  countries :  for  besides 
the  cedars,  the  Syrian  lilies  are  taken  notice  of  by  writers. 
That  expression  in  the  Canticles,  "  thou  art  fair,  thou  art 
fair,  thou  hast  dove's  eyes,''|  receives  a  particular  character, 

•  Cant,  vii,  8.  f  PWn.  xiii,  cap.  -1.  J  Cant,  iv,  1. 


168  OBSERVATIONS    UPON    PLANTS  [tRACT    I. 

if  we  look,  not  upon  our  common  pigeons,  but  the  beauteous 
and  fine  eyed  doves  of  Syria. 

When  the  rump  is  so  strictly  taken  notice  of  in  the  sacrifice 
of  the  peace  offering,  in  tliese  words,  "  the  whole  rump,  it 
shall  be  taken  off  hard  by  the  back-bone,"*  it  becomes  the  more 
considerable  in  reference  to  this  country,  where  sheep  had  so 
large  tails;  which,  according  to  Aristotle,-]-  were  a  cubit 
broad  ;  and  so  they  are  still,  as  Bellonius  hath  delivered. 

When  't  is  said  in  the  Canticles,  "  thy  teeth  are  as  a  flock 
of  sheep  which  go  up  from  the  washing,  whereof  every  one 
beareth  twins,  and  there  is  not  one  barren  among  them  ;"  :{:  it 
may  seem  hard  unto  us  of  these  parts  to  find  whole  flocks 
bearing  twins,  and  not  one  barren  among  them;  yet  may  this 
be  better  conceived  in  the  fertile  flocks  of  those  countries, 
where  sheep  have  so  often  two,  sometimes  three,  and  some- 
times four,  and  which  is  so  frequently  observed  by  writers  of 
the  neighbour  country  of  Egypt.  And  this  fecundity,  and 
fruitfulness  of  their  flocks,  is  answerable  unto  the  expression 
of  the  psalmist,  "  that  our  sheep  may  bring  forth  thousands 
and  ten  thousands  in  our  streets."  §  And  hereby,  besides 
what  was  spent  at  their  tables,  a  good  supply  was  made  for 
the  great  consumption  of  sheep  in  their  several  kinds  of  sacri- 
fices ;  and  of  so  many  thousand  male  unblemished  yearling 
lambs,  which  were  required  at  their  passovers. 

Nor  need  we  wonder  to  find  so  frequent  mention  both  of 
garden  and  field  plants ;  since  Syria  was  notable  of  old  for 
this  curiosity  and  variety,  according  to  Pliny,  Syria  hortis 
operosissima ;  and  since  Bellonius  hath  so  lately  observed  of 
Jerusalem,  that  its  hilly  parts  did  so  abound  with  plants,  that 
they  might  be  compared  unto  mount  Ida  in  Crete  or  Candia  ; 
which  is  the  most  noted  place  for  noble  simples  yet  known. 

46.  Though  so  many  plants  have  their  express  names  in 
Scripture,  yet  othei's  are  implied  in  some  texts  which  are  not 
explicitly  mentioned.  In  the  feast  of  tabernacles  or  booths, 
the  law  was  this,  *'  thou  shalt  take  unto  thee  boughs  of  goodly 
trees,  branches  of  the  palm,  and  the  boughs  of  thick  trees, 


*  Levit.  iii,  9.  f  /Irisl.  Hist.  /Inimal.  lib.  viii.  J  Cant,  iv,  2. 

(j  Psalm  cxliv,  1.3. 


TllACT    1.]  MT-NTIONCn    IN    SCniTTURE.  1(JU 

and  willows  of  the  brook."  Now  though  the  text  desceiuleth 
not  unto  particulars  of  the  goodly  trees  and  thick  trees ;  yet 
.Maimonides  will  tell  us  that  for  a  goodly  tree  they  made  use 
of  the  citron  tree,  whicli  is  fair  and  goodly  to  the  eye,  and 
well  prospering  in  that  country  :  and  that  for  the  thick  trees 
tlu'v  used  the  myrtle,  which  was  no  rare  or  infrequent  plant 
among  them.  And  though  it  groweth  but  low  in  our  gar- 
dens, was  not  a  little  tree  in  those  parts ;  in  which  plant  also 
the  leaves  grew  thick,  and  almost  covered  the  stalk.  And 
Curtius  Symphorianus  *  in  his  description  of  the  exotic  myr- 
tle, makes  it  folio  denslsshuo  senis  in  ordinem  cersibiis.  The 
paschal  lamb  was  to  be  eaten  with  bitterness  or  bitter  herbs, 
not  particularly  set  down  in  Scripture  :  but  the  Jewish  writers 
declare,  that  they  made  use  of  succory,  and  wild  lettuce, 
w  hich  herbs  wliile  some  conceive  they  could  not  get  down,  as 
being  very  bitter,  rough,  and  prickly,  they  may  consider  that 
the  time  of  the  passover  was  hi  the  spring,  when  these  herbs 
are  young  and  tender,  and  consequently  less  unpleasant :  be- 
sides, according  to  the  Jewish  custom,  these  herbs  were  dip- 
ped in  the  charoseih,  or  sauce  made  of  raisins  stamped  with 
vinegar,  and  were  also  eaten  with  bread  ;  and  they  had  four 
cups  of  wine  allowed  unto  them  ;  and  it  was  sufficient  to  take 
but  a  pittance  of  herbs,  or  the  quantity  of  an  olive. 

47.  Though  the  famous  paper  reed  of  Egypt  be  only  par- 
ticularly named  in  scripture ;  yet  when  reeds  are  so  often 
mentioned  without  special  name  or  distinction,  we  may  con- 
ceive their  differences  may  be  comprehended,  and  that  they 
were  not  all  of  one  kind,  or  that  the  common  reed  was  only 
implied.  For  mention  is  made  in  Ezekielf  of  "a  measuring 
reed  of  six  cubits ; "  we  find  that  they  smote  our  Saviour  on 
the  head  with  a  reed,:|:  and  put  a  sponge  with  vinegar  on  a 
reed,  which  was  long  enough  to  reach  to  his  mouth,'-'  while  he 
was  upon  the  cross.  And  with  such  differences  of  reeds, 
vcdlatonj,  sagittary,  scripfori/,  and  others  they  might  be  fur- 
nished in  Judiea.     For  we  find  in  the  portion  of  Ephraim,§ 

•   CurltM  de  Ilortis.  t  Ezek.  xl.  5. 

J  St.  Mali,  xxvii.  30,  18.  §  Joth.  xvi.  17 

'  //  reed  which   wax   lanp   enonph   to     hood  of  Suez   some  reeds  grow  to  the 
reach  to  his  vioiiih.]     In  the  neighbour-     height  of  twelve  yards. 


170  OBSERVATIONS    UPON    PLANTS  [tRACT   I. 

vallis  arundineti ;  and  so  set  down  in  the  maps  of  Adricomius, 
and  in  our  translation  the  river  Kana,  or  brook  of  Canes. 
And  Bellonius  tells  us  that  the  river  Jordan  affordeth  plenty 
and  variety  of  reeds ;  out  of  some  whereof  the  Arabs  make 
darts  and  light  lances,  and  out  of  others,  arrows ;  and  withal 
that  there  plentifully  groweth  the  fine  calamus,  arundo  scrip- 
toria, or  writing  reed,  which  they  gather  with  the  greatest 
care,  as  being  of  singular  use  and  commodity  at  home  and 
abroad ;  a  hard  reed  about  the  compass  of  a  goose  or  swan's 
quill,  whereof  I  have  seen  some  polished  and  cut  with  a  web 
[neb  ?  or  nib?] ;  which  is  in  common  use  for  writing  throughout 
the  Turkish  dominions,  they  using  not  the  quills  of  birds. 

And  whereas  the  same  author,  with  other  describcrs  of 
these  parts,  affirmeth,  that  the  river  Jordan,  not  far  from 
Jericho,  is  but  such  a  stream  as  a  youth  may  throw  a  stone 
over  it,  or  about  eight  fathoms  broad,  it  doth  not  diminish  the 
account  and  solemnity  of  the  miraculous  passage  of  the 
Israelites  under  Joshua.  For  it  must  be  considered,  that  they 
passed  it  in  the  time  of  harvest,  when  the  river  was  high,  and 
the  grounds  about  it  under  water,  according  to  that  pertinent 
parenthesis ; — "  As  the  feet  of  the  priests,  which  carried  the 
ark,  were  dipped  in  the  brim  of  the  water,  for  Jordan  over- 
floweth  all  its  banks  at  the  time  of  harvest."  ^  In  this  con- 
sideration it  was  well  joined  with  the  great  river  Euphrates, 
in  that  expression  in  Ecclesiasticus,  "  God  maketh  the  under- 
standing to  abound  like  Euphrates,  and  as  Jordan  in  the 
time  of  harvest." -j- 

48.  The  kingdom  of  heaven  is  likened  unto  a  man  which 
sowed  good  seed  in  his  field,  but  while  men  slept,  his  enemy 
came  and  sowed  tares,"  or  as  the  Greek,  sizania,  "  among  the 
wheat." 

Now,  how  to  render  zizania,  and  to  what  species  of  plants 
to  confine  it,  there  is  no  slender  doubt ;  for  the  word  is  not 
mentioned  in  other  parts  of  Scripture,  nor  in  any  ancient 
Greek  writer :  it  is  not  to  be  found  in  Aristotle,  Theophras- 
tus,  or  Dioscorides.  Some  Greek  and  Latin  fathers  have 
made  use  of  the  same,  as  also  Suidas  and  Phavorinus ;  but 
probably  they  have  all  derived  it  from  this  text. 

*  Josh,  iii,  15.  +  Erdes.  xxiv,  ?f). 


lUACT    I.]  MKNTIONTD    IN    SCUIPTUKE,  171 

And,  therefore,  this  obscurity  might  easily  occasion  such 
variety  in  translations  and  expositions.  For  some  retain  the 
word  zizania,  as  the  vulgar,  that  of  Beza,  of  Junius,  and  also 
the  Italian  and  Spanish.  The  low  Dutch  renders  it  oncruhU, 
the  German  oncraut,  or  herba  mala,  the  French  yuroije  or 
loUum,  and  the  English  tares. 

Besides,  this  being  conceived  to  be  a  Syriac  word,  it 
may  still  add  unto  the  uncertainty  of  the  sense.  For  though 
this  gospel  were  first  written  in  Hebrew  or  Syriac,  yet  it  is 
not  unquestionable  whether  the  true  original  be  any  where 
extant.  And  that  Syriac  copy  which  we  now  have,  is  con- 
ceived to  be  of  far  later  time  than  St.  Matthew. 

Expositors  and  annotators  are  also  various.  Hugo  Grotius 
hath  passed  the  word  zhania  without  a  note.  Diodati,  re- 
taining the  word  zizania,  conceives  that  it  was  some  peculiar 
herbjirowinij  amonjj  the  corn  of  those  countries,  and  not  known 
in  our  fields.  But  Emanuel  de  Sa  interprets  it  ^;/««^a*  semi- 
ni  nuxlas,  and  so  accordingly  some  others. 

Buxtorfius,  in  his  Rabbinical  Lexicon,  gives  divers  inter- 
pretations, sometimes  for  degenerated  corn,  sometimes  for  the 
black  seeds  in  wheat,  but  withal  concludes,  an  hcec  sit  eadem 
vox  aut  species  cum  zizaniu  apud  evangclistam,  qucerant  alii. 
But  lexicons  and  dictionaries  by  zizania  do  almost  generally 
understand  loUum,  which  we  call  darnel,  and  commonly  con- 
fine the  signification  to  that  plant.  Notwithstanding,  since 
lolium  had  a  known  and  received  name  in  Greek,  some  may 
be  apt  to  doubt  why,  if  that  plant  were  particularly  intended, 
the  proper  Greek  word  was  not  used  in  the  text.  For  Theo- 
phrastus  *  named  lolium  aJ^a,  and  hath  often  mentioned  that 
plant ;  and  in  one  place  saith,  that  corn  doth  sometimes  lolie- 
scerc  or  degenerate  into  darnel.  Dioscorides,  who  travelled 
over  Juda;a,  gives  it  the  same  name,  which  is  also  to  be  found 
in  Galen,  /Etius,  and  yEgineta ;  and  Pliny  hath  sometimes 
Latinized  that  word  into  (cra. 

Besides,  lolium  or  darnel  shews  itself  in  the  winter,  grow- 
ing up  with  the  wheat;  and  Theophrastus  observed,  that  it 
was  no  vernal  plant,  but  came  up  in  the  winter;  which  will 

•   (i\j  ^cu^oiai.      Theophratl.  Hist.  Plant.  lib.  8, 


172  OBSERVATIONS    UPON    PLANTS  [tRACT    I. 

not  well  answer  the  expression  of  the  text,  "  And  when  the 
blade  came  up,  and  brought  forth  fruit,"  or  gave  evidence  of 
its  fruit,  the  zizania  appeared.  And  if  the  husbandry  of  the 
ancients  were  agreeable  unto  ours,  they  would  not  have  been 
so  earnest  to  weed  away  the  darnel ;  for  our  husbandmen  do 
not  commonly  weed  it  in  the  field,  but  separate  the  seed  after 
thrashing.  And,  therefore,  Galen  delivereth,  that  in  an  un- 
seasonable year,  and  great  scarcity  of  corn,  when  they  ne- 
glected to  separate  the  darnel,  the  bread  proved  generally 
unwholesome,  and  had  evil  effects  on  the  head. 

Our  old  and  later  translators  render  zhania  tares,  which 
name  our  English  botanists  give  unto  aracus,  cracca,  vicia 
syluestris,  calling  them  tares  and  strangling  tares.  And  our 
husbandmen  by  tares  understand  some  sorts  of  wild  fitches, 
which  grow  amongst  corn,  and  clasp  unto  it,  according  to  the 
Latin  etymology,  vicia  a  vinciemio.  Now  in  this  uncertainty 
of  the. original,  tares,  as  well  as  some  others,  may  make  out 
the  sense,  and  be  also  more  agreeable  unto  the  circumstances 
of  the  parable.  For  they  come  up  and  appear  what  they  are, 
when  the  blade  of  the  corn  is  come  up,  and  also  the  stalk  and 
fruit  discoverable.  They  have  likewise  little  spreading  roots, 
which  may  entangle  or  rob  the  good  roots,  and  they  have  also 
tendrils  and  claspers,  which  lay  hold  of  what  grows  near 
them,  and  so  can  hardly  be  weeded  without  endangering  the 
neighbouring  corn. 

However,  if  by  zizania  we  understand  herbas  segeti  noxias, 
or  vitia  segetum,  as  some  expositors  have  done,  and  take  the 
word  in  a  more  general  sense,  comprehending  several  weeds 
and  vegetables  offensive  unto  corn,  according  as  the  Greek 
word  in  the  plural  number  may  imply,  and  as  the  learned 
Laurcnbergius*hath  expressed,  r?/wcare,  quod  apud  nostrates 
lueden  dicitur,  zizanias  inutiles  est  evellere.  If,  I  say,  it  be 
thus  taken,  we  shall  not  need  to  be  definite,  or  confine  unto 
one  particular  plant,  from  a  word  which  may  comprehend 
divers.  And  this  may  also  prove  a  safer  sense,^  in  such  ob- 
scurity of  the  original. 

*  Be  Horti  Cullura. 

'  This  may  also  prove  n  safer  sch.sc.]  disposed,  with  Forskiil,  to  consider  it  to 
But  the  later  comnicntiitors  seem  ratlicr     have  been  the  darnel. 


TRACT    I.]  MKNTIONED    IN    SCRIl'TURi:.  173 

Anil,  therefore,  since  in  this  parable  the  sower  of  the  ziza- 
/iia  is  the  devil,  anil  the  z'izania  wicked  persons;  if  any  from 
this  larger  acception  will  take  in  thistles,  darnel,  cockle,  wild 
strajrslinir  fitches,  bindweed,  tr'ihiilus,  restharrow  and  other 
rifia  .sem'fiim  ;  he  may,  both  from  the  natural  and  symbolical 
qualities  cif  those  vegetables,  have  plenty  of  matter  to  illustrate 
the  variety  of  his  mischiefs,  and  of  the  wicked  of  this  world. 

49.  When  't  is  said  in  Job,  "  Let  thistles  grow  up  instead 
i»f  wheat,  and  cockle-  instead  of  barley,"  the  words  are  intel- 
ligible, the  sense  allowable  and  significant  to  this  purpose : 
but  whether  the  word  cockle  doth  strictly  conform  unto  the 
original,  some  douljt  may  be  made  from  the  different  transla- 
tions of  it ;  for  the  vulgar  renders  it  spina,  Tremellius  vitia 
fruffiini,  and  the  Geneva  ijuroye,  or  darnel.  Besides,  whetiier 
cockle  were  common  in  the  ancient  agriculture  of  those  parts, 
or  what  word  they  used  for  it,  is  of  great  uncertainty.  For  the 
elder  botanical  writers  have  made  no  mention  thereof,  and  the 
moderns  have  given  it  the  name  oi 2)seudomeIanlli'ium,  nigel- 
lastruni,  lychnoides  segelum,  names  not  known  unto  anti- 
quity. And,  therefore,  our  translation  hath  warily  set  down 
'  noisome  weeds '  in  the  margin. 

'  urkh-.]  Celsius,  and  after  him  Michaclis,  supposes  this  to  have  been  the  aconite. 


174  OF   GARLANDS   AND  [tRACT    II. 


TRACT    II. 

of  garlands  and  coronary  or  garland  plants.^ 

Sir, 
The  use  of  flowery  crowns  and  garlands  is  of  no  slender 
antiquity,  and  higher  than  I  conceive  you  apprehend  it.  For, 
besides  the  old  Greeks  and  Romans,  the  Egyptians  made  use 
hereof;  who,  besides  the  bravery  of  their  garlands,  had  little 
birds  upon  them  to  peck  their  heads  and  brows,  and  so  to 
keep  them  [from]  sleeping  at  their  festival  compotations.  This 
practice  also  extended  as  far  as  India:  for  at  the  feast  of 
the  Indian  King,  it  is  peculiarly  observed  by  Philostratus, 
that  their  custom  was  to  wear  garlands,  and  come  crowned 
with  them  unto  their  feast. 

The  crowns  and  garlands  of  the  ancients  were  either  gesta- 
tory,  such  as  they  wore  about  their  heads  or  necks ;  portatory, 
such  as  they  carried  at  solemn  festivals ;  pensile  or  suspen- 
sory, such  as  they  hanged  about  the  posts  of  their  houses  in 
honour  of  their  Gods,  as  Jupiter  Thyraeus  or  Limeneus  ;  or 
else  they  were  depository,  such  as  they  laid  upon  the  graves 
and  monuments  of  the  ^ead.     And  these  were  made  up  after 


'   In  the  margin  of  Evelyn's  copy  is  was  the  only  part  ever  published,)  that 

this  manuscript  note : — "  This  letter  was  Browne's  assistance  was  asked  and  given. 

written  in  me  from  Dr.  Browne,-  more  at  Among  the  subjects  named  in  that  plan 

large  in  the  Coronarie  Plants."  tlie   following  are  referred  to  in  the  pre- 

In  order  to  preserve  unaltered,  as  far  sent  Tract,  and  in  other   of    Browne's 

as   possible,    tlie   order  of  Sir   Thomas  Letters  to  Evelyn: — 

Browne's  published  works,  I  have  thought  Book  II.  chap.  6.  Of  a  seminary;  nur- 

proper  not  to  transplant  into  the  "  Cor-  series  ;  and  of  propagating  trees,  plants, 

respondence  "    the    present    and   several  and  flowers ;  planting  and  transplanting, 

other  Tracts,  though  they  were,  in  fact,  &c. 

epistolary,  and  it  has  been  ascertained  Chap.  Hi.  Of  the  coronary  garden. 
to  whom  they  were  addressed.     In  the  Chap.  18.  Of  stupendous  and  wonder- 
preface  to  Evelyn's  Acetaria,  (re-printed  ful  plants. 

by  Mr.  Upcott,  in  his  Collection  of  Eve-  Book  III.  chap.  9.  Of  garden-burial. 

lyn's   Miscellaneous   Writings,)  we   find  Chap.  10.  Of    paradise,    and    of    the 

his    "  Plan    of  a    Royal   Garden,    in    3  most  famous  gardens  in  the  world,  an- 

Books."     It  was  in  reference  to  this  pro-  cient  and  modern, 
jected  work,  (of  which  however  Acetaria 


TRACT    II.]  COROXAKV    PLANTS.  I7o 

all  ways  of  art,  compactilc,  sutile,  j)lc'ctilc;  for  which  work 
there  were  c-^aio-TAcxoi,  or  expert  persons  to  contrive  thcni  after 
the  best  grace  and  propriety. 

Though  we  yield  not  unto  them  in  the  beauty  of  flowery 
garlands,  yet  some  of  those  of  antiquity  were  larger  than  any 
we  lately  met  with  ;  for  we  find  in  Athenacus,  that  a  myrtle 
crown,  of  one  and  twenty  foot  in  compass,  was  solemnly  car- 
ried about  at  the  Hellotian  feast  in  Corinth,  together  with  the 
bones  of  Europa. 

And  garlands  were  surely  of  frequent  use  among  them  ;  for 
wc  read  in  Galen,*  that  when  Hippocrates  cured  the  great 
plague  of  Athens  by  fires  kindled  in  and  about  the  city :  the 
fuel  thereof  consisted  much  of  their  garlands.  And  they 
must  needs  be  very  frequent  and  of  common  use,  the  ends 
thereof  being  many.  For  they  were  convivial,  festival,  sacri- 
ficial, nuptial,  honorary,  funebrial.  We  who  propose  unto 
ourselves  the  pleasures  of  two  senses,  and  only  single  out  such 
as  are  of  beauty  and  good  odour,  cannot  strictly  confine  our- 
selves unto  imitation  of  them. 

For,  in  their  convivial  garlands,  they  had  respect  unto 
plants  preventing  drunkenness,  or  discussing  -  the  exhala- 
tions from  wine ;  wherein,  beside  roses,  taking  in  ivy,  vervain, 
melilote,  &c.  they  made  use  of  divers  of  small  beauty  or  good 
odour.  Tlie  solemn  festival  garlands  were  made  properly 
unto  their  gods,  and  accordingly  contrived  from  plants  sacred 
unto  such  deities  ;  and  their  sacrificial  ones  were  selected 
under  such  considerations.  Their  honorary  crowns  trium- 
phal, ovary,  civical,  obsidional,  had  Httle  of  flowers  in  them : 
and  their  funebrial  garlands  had  little  of  beauty  in  them  be- 
side roses,  while  they  made  them  of  myrtle,  rosemary,  apium, 
&c.  under  symbolical  intimations  ;  but  our  florid  and  purely 
ornamental  garlands,  delightful  unto  sight  and  smell,  nor 
framed  according  to  any  mystical  and  symbolical  considera^ 
tions,  are  of  more  free  election,  and  so  may  be  made  to  excel 
those  of  the  ancients  :  we  having  China,  India,  and  a  new  world 
to  supply  us,  beside  the  great  distinction  of  flowers  unknown 

•  De  Theriaca  ad  Pisonem. 

'  discussing.']      Dr.    Johnson    quotes     the   word   discuss   in   the  sense  of  dis- 
tbis  passage  as  his  example  of  the  use  of    perse. 


176  OF  GARLANDS  AND  [tRACT  II. 

unto  antiquity,  and  tlie  varieties  thereof  arising  from  art  and 
nature. 

But,  beside  vernal,  aestival  and  autumnal,  made  of  flowers, 
the  ancients  had  also  the  hyemal  garlands  ;  contenting  them- 
selves at  first  with  such  as  were  made  of  horn  dyed  into  seve- 
ral colours,  and  shaped  into  the  figures  of  flowers,  and  also 
of  ces  coronarium  or  cllncquant,  or  brass  thinly  wrought  out 
into  leaves  commonly  known  among  us.  But  the  curiosity 
of  some  emperors  for  such  intents  had  roses  brought  from 
Egypt  until  they  had  found  the  art  to  produce  late  roses  in 
Rome,  and  to  make  them  grow  in  winter,  as  is  delivered  in 
that  handsome  epigram  of  Martial. 

At  tu  Romanae  jussus  jam  cedere  brumoE 
Mitte  tiias  messes,  accipc,  Nile,  rosas. 

Some  American  nations,  who  do  much  excel  in  garlands, 
content  not  themselves  only  with  flowers,  but  make  elegant 
crowns  of  feathers,  whereof  they  have  some  of  greater  ra- 
diancy and  lustre  than  their  flowers  :  and  since  there  is  an 
art  to  set  into  shapes,  and  curiously  to  work  in  choicest  fea- 
thers, there  could  nothing  answer  the  crowns  made  of  the 
choicest  feathers  of  some  tomineios  and  sun  birds. 

The  catalogue  of  coronary  plants  is  not  large  in  Theo- 
phrastus,  Pliny,  Pollux,  or  Athenaius  :  but  we  may  find  a 
good  enlargement  in  the  accounts  of  modern  botanists ;  and 
additions  may  still  be  made  by  successive  acquists  of  fair  and 
specious  plants,  not  yet  translated  from  foreign  regions,  or 
little  known  unto  our  gardens ;  he  that  would  be  complete 
may  take  notice  of  these  following, 

Flos  Tigridis. 

Flos  Lyncis. 

Pinea  Indica  Reeclii,  Talamu  Ouiedi. 

Herba  Parndisea. 

VoluhiUs  Mexicanus. 

Narcissus  Indicus  Serpentarius. 

Helichrysum  Mexicanum. 

Xicama. 

Aquilegia  novcc  Hispanicc  Cacoxochitli  Recchi. 

Aristochcea  Mexicana. 


i 


TRACT    II.]  CORONARY    I'LANTS.  1 


(  4 


Camarot'niga  s'lve  Caragunta  quarto  Pisonis. 

Marocitia  GranadiUa. 

Cambaif  sire  Myrtus  Americana. 

Flos  Auriculcc  Flor  dc  la  Ore} a. 

Floripemlio  norcc  Hispan'uc. 

Rosa  liidica. 

Ziliuin  Indicum. 

Fttla  Magori  Garcirr. 

Champe  Garcia:  Champacca  Botifii. 

Daullontas  frutcx  odoratus  sen  Cliamfvmehnn  arhores- 

cens  Bofif/i. 
Beidelsar  Alpiiii. 
Sambiic. 

Amberboi  Turcarum. 
Ntipliar  .Fgtjptiuni. 
Lilionarcissi/.s  I/idicus. 
Banima  /Egyptiacum. 
Hiucca  Canadensis  liorti  Farnesiani. 
Bnptltalmum  novce  Hispaniev  Alepocapaili. 
f  aleriana  seu  Chrysanthemum  Americanum  Acocntlis. 
Flos  Corrinus  Coronarius  Americanus. 
Capolin  Cerasus  dulcis  Indicus  Flnribus  racemosis. 
Asphodelus  Americanus. 
Syringa  Lutea  Americana. 
Bulbus  iinifolius. 
Muly  lutifolium  Flore  luteo. "' 
Conyza  Americana  purpurea. 
Salvia  Crctica  pomifera  Bellonii. 
Lausus  Serrata  Odora. 
Ornithogalus  Promontorii  Bona;  Spei. 
Fritillaria  crassa  Soldanica  Promontorii  Bonce  Spei. 
Sigillum  Solomonis  Indicum. 
Tulipa  Promontorii  Bona;  Spei. 
Iris  L'varia. 
Wopolxoch  sedum  elegans  nova'  Ilispania". 


'  Moly   latifoUum    Flore    luteo.']  Sir  name; — "  for  Afoly  Fhre  lulco,"  he  S!i\%, 

Thomas,    in    a    Mibscqiient    letter,  (see  "  you  may  plea<!e  to  put  in  Afoly  lloiidi-  I 

Correxpondenre,    p.    3S0,)    correct?  this  aniivi  iioriim."  j 

VOL.    IV.  N  i 


178        OF  GARLANDS  AND  CORONARY  PLANTS.   [tRACT  II. 

More  might  be  added  unto  this  list ;  *  and  I  have  only 
taken  the  pains  to  give  you  a  short  specimen  of  those,  many 
more  which  you  may  find  in  respective  authors,  and  which 
time  and  future  industry  may  make  no  great  strangers  in 
England.  The  inhal)itants  of  nova  Hispania,  and  a  great 
part  of  America,  Mahometans,  Indians,  Chinese,  are  eminent 
promoters  of  these  coronary  and  specious  plants;  and  the 
annual  tribute  of  the  King  of  Bisnaguer  in  India,  arising  out 
of  odours  and  flowers,  amounts  unto  many  thousands  of 
crowns. 

Thus,  in  brief,  of  this  matter.     I  am,  &c. 

''  More  might  he  added  unto  this  list.']     of  from  Norwich. — MS.  note  of  Evelyn's. 
Which  Sir  Thomas  sent  me  a  catalogue         This  list  has  not  been  found. 


TRACT    HI.]       OF    THE    FISHES    EATEN    DV    CHRIST.  179 


TRACT    III. 

of  the  fishes  eaten  by  our  saviour  with  his  disciples 
after  his  resurrection  from  the  dead. 

Sir, 
I  HAVE  thought  a  little  upon  the  question  proposed  by  you 
[viz.  what  kind  of  fishes  those  were,*  of  which  our  Saviour 
ate  with  his  disciples  after  his  resurrection?*]  and  I  return 
you  such  an  answer,  as,  in  so  short  a  time  for  study,  and  in 
the  midst  of  my  occasions,  occurs  to  me. 

The  books  of  Scripture  (as  also  those  which  are  apocry- 
phal) are  often  silent  or  very  sparing,  in  the  particular  names 
of  fishes ;  or  in  setting  them  down  in  such  manner  as  to  leave 
the  kinds  of  them  without  all  doubt  and  reason  for  farther 
inquiry.  For,  when  it  declareth  M'hat  fishes  were  allowed  the 
Israelites  for  their  food,  they  are  only  set  down  in  general  which 
have  fins  and  scales :  whereas,  in  the  account  of  quadrupeds 
and  birds,  there  is  particular  mention  made  of  divers  of  them. 
In  the  book  of  Tobit  that  fish  which  he  took  out  of  the  river 
is  only  named  a  great  fish,  and  so  there  remains  much  uncer- 
tainty to  determine  the  species  thereof.  And  even  the  fish 
which  swallowed  Jonah,  and  is  called  a  great  fish,  and  com- 
monly thought  to  be  a  great  whale,  is  not  received  without 
all  doubt ;  while  some  learned  men  conceive  it  to  have  been 
none  of  our  whales,  but  a  large  kind  of  lam'ta. 

And,  in  this  narration  of  St.  John,  the  fishes  are  only  ex- 
pressed by  their  bigness  and  number,  not  their  names,  and 
therefore  it  may  seem  undeterminable  what  they  were  :  not- 
withstanding, these  fishes  being  taken  in  the  great  lake  or 
sea  of  Tiberias,  something  may  be  probably  stated  therein. 

•  St.  John  xxi,  0,    10,    11  —  13. 

'  what  kind,  S^-c]     ^fS.  Sloan.  1827,     were,  which    fed    the   multitude  in  the 
reads,  "of  what  kind    those   little   fish     wilderness,  or,  &c." 

N  2 


180  OF    THE    FISHES  [tRACT    III. 

For  since  Bellonius,  that  diligent  and  learned  traveller,  in- 
formeth  us,  that  the  fishes  of  this  lake  were  trouts,  pikes, 
chevins,  and  tenches ;  it  may  well  be  conceived  that  either 
all  or  some  thereof  are  to  be  understood  in  this  Scripture. 
And  these  kind  of  fishes  become  large  and  of  great  growth, 
answerable  unto  the  expression  of  Scripture,  "  one  hundred 
fifty  and  three  great  fishes ;"  that  is,  large  in  their  own  kinds, 
and  the  largest  kinds  in  this  lake  and  fresh  water,  wherein  no 
great  variety,  and  of  the  larger  sort  of  fishes,  could  be  ex- 
pected. For  the  river  Jordan,  running  through  this  lake, 
falls  into  the  lake  of  Asphaltus,  and  hath  no  mouth  into  the 
sea,  which  might  admit  of  great  fishes  or  greater  variety  to 
come  up  into  it. 

And  out  of  the  mouth  of  some  of  these  forementioned 
fishes  might  the  tribute  money  be  taken,  when  our  Saviour, 
at  Capernaum,  seated  upon  the  same  lake,  said  unto  Peter, 
"  go  thou  to  the  sea,  and  cast  an  hook,  and  take  up  the  fish 
that  first  Cometh ;  and  when  thou  hast  opened  his  mouth 
thou  shalt  find  a  piece  of  money  ;  that  take  and  give  them 
for  thee  and  me." 

And  this  makes  void  that  common  conceit  and  tradition  of 
the  fish  called  faber  marinus,  by  some,  a  peter  or  penny  fish  ; 
which  having  two  remarkable  round  spots  upon  either  side 
these  are  conceived  to  be  the  mai-ks  of  St.  Peter's  fingers  or 
signatures  of  the  money :  for  though  it  hath  these  marks, 
yet  is  there  no  probabihty  that  such  a  kind  of  fish  was  to  be 
found  in  the  lake  of  Tiberias,  Gennesareth,  or  Gahlee,  which 
is  but  sixteen  miles  long  and  six  broad,  and  hath  no  commu- 
nication with  the  sea ;  for  this  is  a  mere  fish  of  the  sea  and 
salt  water,  and  (though  we  meet  with  some  thereof  on  our 
coast)  is  not  to  be  found  in  many  seas. 

Thus  having  returned  no  improbable  answer  unto  your 
question,  I  shall  crave  leave  to  ask  another  of  yourself  con- 
cerning that  fish  mentioned  by  Procopius,*  which  brought  the 
famous  King  Theodorick  to  his  end :  his  words  are  to  this 
eflfect :  "  the  manner  of  his  death  was  this  ;  Symmachus  and 
his  son-in-law  Boethius,  just  men  and  great  relievers  of  the 
poor,  senators,  and  consuls,    had  many  enemies,   by  whose 

'    De  Brilo  Oolhlro,  lib.  i. 


TRACT    III.]  EATEN    UY    CHRIST.  li>l 

false  accusations  Tlieodorick  being  persuaded  that  they  plot- 
ted against  him,  put  them  to  death,  and  conHscated  their 
estates.  Not  long  after  his  waiters  set  before  him  at  supper 
a  great  head  of  a  fish,  which  seemed  to  him  to  be  the  head  of 
Symmachus  lately  murdered:  and  with  his  teeth  sticking  out, 
and  fierce  glaring  eyes  to  threaten  him:  being  frighted,  he 
grew  chill,  went  to  bed,  lamenting  what  he  had  done  to 
Symmachus  and  Boethius;  and  soon  after  died."  What  fish 
do  you  apprehend  this  to  have  been  ?  I  would  learn  of  you ; 
give  me  your  thoughts  about  it. 

I  am,  &c. 


182  ANSWER.    TO    QUERIES    ABOUT  [tRACT    IV. 


TRACT    IV. 

an  answer  to  certain  queries  relating  to  fishes, 
birds,  and  insects. 

Sir, 
I  RETURN    the    following  answers  to    your   queries,  which 
were  these: — 

1 .  What  fishes  are  meant  by  the  names,  halec  and  mvgll  ? 

2.  What  is  the  bird  which  you  will  receive  from  the  bearer, 
and  what  birds  are  meant  by  the  names  halcyon,  nysus,  ciris, 
nycticorax  ? 

S.  What  insect  is  meant  by  the  word  cicada  ? 

Answer  1 .  The  word  halec  we  are  taught  to  render  an 
herring,  which,  being  an  ancient  word,  is  not  strictly  appro- 
priable unto  a  fish  not  known  or  not  described  by  the  ancients ; 
and  which  the  modern  naturalists  are  fain  to  name  harengus : 
the  word  halecula  being  applied  unto  such  Httle  fish  out  of 
which  they  are  fain  to  make  pickle  ;  and  halec  or  alec,  taken 
for  the  liquamen  or  liquor  itself,  according  to  that  of  the  poet, 

-Ego  fecem  primus  et  alec 


Primus  et  inveni  aibum- 


And  was  a  conditure  and  sauce  much  affected  by  antiquity, 
as  was  also  muria  and  garum. 

In  common  constructions  ningil  is  rendered  a  mullet,  which, 
notwithstanding,  is  a  different  fish  from  the  miigil  described 
by  authors ;  ^  wherein,  if  we  mistake,  we  cannot  so  closely 
apprehend  the  expression  of  Juvenal, 

Quosdam  ventres  et  mugilis  intrat. 

And  misconceive  the  fish  whereby  fornicators  were  so  oppro- 
brfously  and  irksomely  punished  ;   for  the  mugil,  being  some- 

'  authors.']  MS.  Sloan,  proceeds  tlius:  lish  ;  and  otlicr  nations  nearly  imitate 
"  for  which  I  know  not,  perhaps,  wlic-  the  Latin,  wherein,  &c." — MS,  Sloan, 
thei"  we  have  any  proper  name  in  Eng-     1S27. 


TRACT    IV.]  FISHES,    BIRDS,    AND    INSECTS.  18ii 

wliat  rou^h  and  hard  skinned,  did  more  exasperate  the  guts 
of  such  ortenders:  whereas  the  mullet  was  a  smooth  fish,  and 
of  too  hiijh  esteem  to  be  employed  in  such  offices. 

Answer  t2.  1  cannot  but  wonder  that  this  bird  you  sent 
should  be  a  stranger  unto  you,  and  unto  those  who  had  a  sight 
thereof;  for,  though  it  be  not  seen  every  day,  yet  we  often 
meet  with  it  in  this  country.  It  is  an  elegant  bird,  which 
he  that  once  beholdeth  can  hardly  mistake  any  other  for  it. 
From  the  proper  note  it  is  called  an  hoopebird  with  us ;  in 
Greek  epops,  in  Latin  upupa.  ^^'e  are  little  obliged  unto 
our  school  instruction,  wherein  we  are  taught  to  render  upupa 
a  lapwing,  which  bird  our  natural  writers  name  vanncllus ;  for 
thereby  we  mistake  this  remarkable  bird,  and  apprehend  not 
rightly  what  is  delivered  of  it. 

We  apprehend  not  the  hieroglyphical  considerations  which 
the  old  Egyptians  made  of  this  observable  bird  ;  who,  con- 
sidering therein  the  order  and  variety  of  colours,  the  twenty- 
six  or  twenty-eight  feathers  in  its  crest,  his  latitancy,  and 
mewing  this  handsome  outside  in  the  winter :  they  made  it  an 
emblem  of  the  varieties  of  the  world,  the  succession  of  times 
and  seasons,  and  signal  mutations  in  them.  And,  therefore, 
Orus,  the  hieroglyphic  of  the  world,  had  the  head  of  an  hoope- 
bird upon  the  top  of  his  staff. 

Hereby  we  may  also  mistake  the  duchiphath,  or  bird  for- 
bidden for  food  in  Leviticus ;  *  and,  not  knowing  the  bird, 
may  the  less  a])prehend  some  reasons  of  that  prohibition ; 
that  is,  the  magical  virtues  ascribed  unto  it  by  the  Egyptians, 
and  the  superstitious  apprehensions  which  that  nation  held  of 
it,  whilst  they  precisely  numbered  the  feathers  and  colours 
thereof,  while  they  placed  it  on  the  heads  of  their  gods,  and 
near  their  Mercurial  crosses,  and-  so  highly  magnified  this 
bird  in  their  sacred  symbols. 

Again,  not  knowing  or  mistaking  this  bird,  we  may  misap- 
prehend, or  not  closely  apprehend,  that  handsome  expression 
of  Ovid,  when  Tereus  was  turned  into  an  ?//;///;«,  or  hoope- 
bird :— 

N'crtitur  in  volucrcm  cui  sunt  pro  vertice  crista;, 
I'rolinus  imniodiciim  surgit  pro  cuspidc  rostrum 
N'onicn  cpops  volucri,  facies  arinala  videtur. 

•   Lfvil.  xi,  19. 


184  ANSWER    TO    QUERIES    ABOUT  [tRACT    IV. 

For,  in  this  military  shape,  he  is  aptly  fancied  even  still  re- 
vengefully to  pursue  his  hated  wife,  Progne :  in  the  propriety 
of  his  note  crying  out,  pon,  jmu,  ubi,  ubi ;  or.  Where  are  you? 
Nor  are  we  singly  deceived  in  the  nominal  translation  of 
this  bird :  in  many  other  animals  we  commit  the  like  mistake. 
So ^Tttccw/wA- is  rendered  a  jay,  which  bird,  notwithstanding, 
must  be  of  a  dark  colour  according  to  that  of  Martial, 

Sed  quandam  volo  nocte  nigriorem 
Formica,  pice,  gracculo,  cicada. 

Halcyon  is  rendered  a  kingfisher,*  a  bird  commonly  known 
among  us,  and  by  zoographers  and  naturals  the  same  is  named 
ispidOf  a  well  coloured  bird,  frequenting  streams  and  rivers, 
building  in  holes  of  pits,  like  some  martins,  about  the  end 
of  the  spring;  in  whose  nests  we  have  found  little  else  than 
innumerable  small  fish  bones,  and  white  round  eggs  of  a 
smooth  and  polished  surface,  whereas  the  true  halcyon  is  a  sea 
bird,  makes  an  handsome  nest  floating  upon  the  vvater,  and 
breedeth  in  the  winter. 

That  nysus  should  be  rendered  either  an  hobby  or  a  spar- 
row-hawk in  the  fable  of  Nysus  and  Scylla  in  Ovid,  because 
we  are  much  to  seek  in  the  distinction  of  hawks  according  to 
their  old  denominations,  we  shall  not  much  contend,  and  may 
allow  a  favourable  latitude  therein  :  but  that  the  ciris  or  bird 
into  which  Scylla  was  turned  should  be  translated  a  lark,  it 
can  hardly  be  made  out  agreeable  unto  the  description  of 
Virgil,  in  his  poem  of  that  name, 

Inde  alias  volucres  mimoque  infecta  rubenti  crura 


But  seems  more  agreeable  unto  some  kind  of  hcemantopus  or 
redshank;  and  so  the  nysus  to  have  been  some  kind  of  hawk, 
which  delighteth  about  the  sea  and  marishes,  where  such  prey 
most  aboundeth,  which  sort  of  hawk,  while  Scaliger  deter- 
mineth  to  be  a  merlin,  the  French  translator  warily  expound- 
eth  it  to  be  some  kind  of  hawk. 

Nycl'icorax  we  may  leave  unto  the   common  and  verbal 
translation  of  a  night-raven,  but  we  know  no  proper  kind  of 

*  See  Vulg.  En:  b.  iii,  c.  10. 


TRACT    IV.]  riSHES,    BIRDS,    AND    INSECTS.  185 

raven  unto  whicli  to  confine  the  same,  and,  therefore,  some 
take  the  hberty  to  ascribe  it  unto  some  sort  of  owls,  and 
others  unto  the  bittern;  which  bird,  in  its  common  note, 
which  lie  useth  out  of  the  time  of  coupHngand  upon  the  wing, 
so  well  resemblcth  the  croaking  of  a  raven,  that  I  have  been 
deceived  by  it.- 

Answer  3.  While  cicada  is  rendered  a  grasshopper,  we 
commonly  think  that  which  is  so  called  among  us  to  be  the 
true  cicada ;  wherein,  as  we  have  elsewhere  declared,*  there 
is  a  great  mistake :  for  we  have  not  the  cicada  in  England,^ 
and,  indeed,  no  proper  word  for  that  animal,  which  the 
French  nameth  cigale.  That  which  we  commonly  call  a 
grasshopper,  and  the  French  saiilterellc,  being  one  kind  of 
locust,  so  rendered  in  the  plague  of  Egypt,  and,  in  old  Saxon, 
named  gersthop.* 

I  have  been  the  less  accurate  in  these  answers,  because  the 
queries  are  not  of  difficult  resolution,  or  of  great  moment : 
however,  I  would  not  wholly  neglect  them  or  your  satisfaction, 
as  being,  Sir,  Yours,  &c. 

•   Vulg.  Err.  b.  v,  c.  3. 

'  Nycticorax,  SfC."]     Very  possibly  the  for  a  considerable  period,  nearly  twenty 

night-raven,  ardea  nycticorax,  Lin.  years  since.      It  has  been  named  C.  An- 

••  tpc  have  not  the  cicada  in  England.^  gl'ca,  and  is  figured  by  Samouelle,  Coinp. 

Of  the  true  Linnsan  cicadte  ( Tetligonia  pi.  5,  fig.  2,  and  by  Curtis,  British  Eii- 

Fabr.J,  the  first  British  species  was  dis-  tomology,  Feb.  1st,  1832,  No.  392. 
covered  in  the  New  Forest,  by  Mr.  Byd-         *  gersthop.'\      "  Gerstrappa,"  iii  MS. 

der,  a  collector  whom  I  employed  theie  Sloan.  1827. 


186  OF    HAWKS    AND    FALCONRY.  [TRACT    V. 


TRACT    V. 

of  hawks  and  falconry,  ancient  and  modern. 

Sir, 
In  vain  you  expect  much  information,  de  re  accijntraria,  of 
falconry,  hawks,  or  hawking,  from  very  ancient  Greek  or 
Latin  authors ;  that  art  being  either  unknown  or  so  httle  ad- 
vanced among  them,  that  it  seems  to  have  proceeded  no 
higher  than  the  daring  of  birds :  which  makes  so  httle  thereof 
to  be  found  in  Aristotle,  who  only  mentions  some  rude  prac- 
tice thereof  in  Thracia ;  as  also  in  /Elian,  who  speaks  some- 
thing of  hawks  and  crows  among  the  Indians ;  little  or  no- 
thing of  true  falconry  being  mentioned  before  Julius  Firmicus, 
in  the  days  of  Constantius,  son  to  Constantino  the  Great. 

Yet,  if  you  consult  the  accounts  of  later  antiquity  left  by 
Demetrius  the  Greek,  by  Symmachus  and  Theodotius,  and 
by  Albertus  Magnus,  about  five  hundred  years  ago,  you, 
who  have  been  so  long  acquainted  with  this  noble  recreation, 
may  better  compare  the  ancient  and  modern  practice,  and 
rightly  observe  how  many  things  in  that  art  are  added,  va- 
ried, disused,  or  retained,  in  the  practice  of  these  days. 

In  the  diet  of  hawks,  they  allowed  of  divers  meats  which 
we  should  hardly  commend.  For  beside  the  flesh  of  beef,^ 
they  admitted  of  goat,  hog,  deer,  whelp,  and  bear.  And 
how  you  will  approve  the  quantity  and  measure  thereof,  I 
make  some  doubt ;  while  by  weight  they  allowed  half  a  pound 
of  beef,  seven  ounces  of  swines'  flesh,  five  of  hare,  eight 
ounces  of  whelp,  as  much  of  deer,  and  ten  ounces  of  he- 
goats'  flesh. 

In  the  time  of  Demetrius  they  were  not  without  the  prac- 
tice of  phlebotomy  or  bleeding,  which  they  used  in  the  thigh 
and  pounces ;  ^  they  plucked  away  the  feathers  on  the  thigh, 

'  irr/.]  Lamb,  mutton,  beef  — M.^.  *  pounces.]  The  pounce  is  the  taioii 
Sloan.  1827.  or  claw  of  a  bird  of  prey. 


TRACT    v.]  OF    HAWKS    AND    FALCONRY.  187 

and  rubbed  the  part;  but  if  tlie  vein  appeared  not  in  that 
part,  they  open  the  vein  of  the  fore  talon. 

In  the  days  of  Albertus,  they  made  use  of  cauteries  in 
divers  places  :  to  advantage  their  sight  they  seared  them 
under  the  inward  angle  of  the  eye ;  above  the  eye  in  distill- 
ations and  diseases  of  the  head ;  in  upward  pains  they  seared 
above  the  joint  of  the  wing,  and  in  the  bottom  of  the  foot, 
against  the  gout ;  and  the  chief  time  for  these  cauteries  they 
made  to  be  the  month  of  JNIarch. 

In  great  coldness  of  hawks  they  made  use  of  fomentations, 
some  of  the  steam  or  vapour  of  artificial  and  natural  baths, 
some  wrapt  them  up  in  hot  blankets,  giving  them  nettle  seeds 
and  butter. 

No  clysters  are  mentioned,  nor  can  they  be  so  profitably 
used;  but  they  made  use  of  many  purging  medicines.  They 
purged  with  aloe,  which,  unto  larger  hawks,  they  gave  in 
the  bigness  of  a  Greek  bean  ;  unto  lesser,  in  the  quantity  of 
a  c'lcer^  which  notwithstanding  I  should  rather  give  washed, 
and  with  a  few  drops  of  oil  of  almonds:  for  the  guts  of  flying 
fowls  are  tender  and  easily  scratched  by  it ;  and  upon  the  use 
of  aloe  both  in  hens  and  cormorants  I  have  sometimes  ob- 
served bloody  excretions. 

In  phlegmatic  cases  they  seldom  omitted  stavesaker,*  but 
they  purged  sometimes  with  a  mouse,  and  the  food  of  boiled 
chickens,  sometimes  with  good  oil  and  honey. 

They  used  also  the  ink  of  cuttle  fishes,  with  smallage, 
betony,  wine,  and  honey.  They  made  use  of  stronger  me- 
dicines than  present  practice  doth  allow.  For  they  were  not 
afraid  to  give  coccus  baphicus;^  beating  up  eleven  of  its 
grains  unto  a  lcntor,^v;\\\c\\  they  made  up  into  five  pills  wrapt 
up  with  honey  and  pepper :  and,  in  some  of  their  old  medi- 
cines, we  meet  with  scammony  and  euphorbium.  Whether, 
in  the  tender  bowels  of  birds,  infusions  of  rhubarb,  agaric 
and  mcchoaclian,  be  not  of  safer  use,  as  to  take  of  agaric 
two  drachms,  of  cinnamon  half  a  drachm,  of  liquorice  a 
scruple,  and,  infusing  them  in  wine,  to  express  a  part  into 

^  cicer.]     The  seed  of  a  Tetch.  *  forcas   baphicus.']     Or   mczcrion. — 

'  stavesaker.^  Or«/(irc'*-arrc,  a  plant;      MS.  Sloan.  1S27. 
Delphinium  ttaphisacria,  L'ln.  ^  Icnlor,]     Asliffpastc. 


188  OF    HAWKS    AND    FALCONRY.  [tRACT    V. 

the   mouth   of  the   hawk,   may   he   considered   by   present 
practice. 

Few  mineral  medicines  were  of  inward  use  among  them : 
yet  sometimes  we  observe  they  gave  filings  of  iron  in  the 
straightness  of  the  chest,  as  also  lime  in  some  of  their  pecto- 
ral medicines. 

But  they  commend  unguents  of  quicksilver  against  the 
scab  :  and  I  have  safely  given  six  or  eight  grains  of  mercurius 
dulcis  unto  kestrils  and  owls,  as  also  crude  and  current 
quicksilver,  giving  the  next  day  small  pellets  of  silver  or  lead 
till  they  came  away  vuicoloured :  and  this,  if  any  [way],  may 
probably  destroy  that  obstinate  disease  of  the  filander  or 
back- worm. 

A  peculiar  remedy  they  had  against  the  consumption  of 
hawks.  For,  filling  a  chicken  with  vinegar,  they  closed  up 
the  bill,  and  hanging  it  up  until  the  flesh  grew  tender,  they 
fed  the  hawk  therewith :  and  to  restore  and  well  flesh  them, 
they  commonly  gave  them  hog's  flesh,  with  oil,  butter,  and 
honey ;  and  a  decoction  of  cumfory  to  bouze.^ 

They  disallowed  of  salt  meats  and  fat ;  but  highly  esteemed 
of  mice  in  most  indispositions;  and  in  the  falling  sickness  had 
great  esteem  of  boiled  bats :  and  in  many  diseases,  of  the 
flesh  of  owls  which  feed  upon  those  animals.  In  epilepsies 
they  also  gave  the  brain  of  a  kid  drawn  through  a  gold  ring ; 
and,  in  convulsions,  made  use  of  a  mixture  of  musk  and 
stercus  humanum  aridiim. 

For  the  better  preservation  of  their  health  they  strewed 
mint  and  sage  about  them ;  and  for  the  speedier  mewing  of 
their  feathers,  tiiey  gave  them  the  slough  of  a  snake,  or  a 
tortoise  out  of  the  shell,  or  a  green  lizard  cut  in  pieces. 

If  a  hawk  were  unquiet,  they  hooded  him,  and  placed  him 
in  a  smith's  shop  for  some  time,  where,  accustomed  to  the  con- 
tinual noise  of  hammering,  he  became  more  gentle  and 
tractable. 

They  used  few  terms  of  art,  plainly  and  intelligibly  ex- 
pressing the  parts  affected,  their  diseases  and  remedies. 
This  heap  of  artificial  terms  first  entering  with  the  French 

'  hou,ze.'\     MS.    Sloan.    1827,    reads     against  the  inflammation  of  the  eyes,  by 
"  drink ;    and  had   a   notable   medicine    juitc  of  purslain,  opium,  and  saffron." 


TRACT    v.]  OF    HAWKS    AND    FALCONRY.  189 

artists :  who  seem  to  have  been  the  first  and  noblest  falconers 
in  the  western  part  of  Europe  ;  although,  in  their  language, 
they  have  no  Mord  which  in  general  expresseth  an  hawk. 

They  carried  their  hawks  in  the  left  hand,  and  let  them  fly 
from  the  right.  They  used  a  bell,  and  took  great  care  that 
their  jesses  should  not  be  red,  lest  eagles  should  fly  at  them. 
Though  they  used  hoods,  we  have  no  clear  description  of 
them,  and  little  account  of  their  lui-es. 

The  ancient  writers  lefl  no  account  of  the  swiftness  of 
hawks  or  measure  of  their  flight :  but  Heresbachius*  delivers, 
that  William  Duke  of  Cleve  had  an  hawk,  which  in  one  day, 
made  a  flight  out  of  Westphalia  into  Prussia.  And  upon 
good  account,  an  hawk  in  this  county  of  Norfolk  made  a 
flight  at  a  woodcock  near  thirty  miles  in  one  hour.  How  far 
the  hawks,  merlins,  and  wild  fowl  which  come  unto  us  with  a 
north-west  wind  in  the  autumn,  fly  in  a  day,  there  is  no  clear 
account :  but  coming  over  sea  their  flight  hath  been  long  or 
very  speedy.  For  I  have  known  them  to  light  so  weary  on 
the  coast,  that  many  have  been  taken  with  dogs,  and  some 
knocked  down  with  staves  and  stones. 

Their  perches  seemed  not  so  large  as  ours  :  for  they  made 
them  of  such  a  bigness  that  their  talons  might  almost  meet :  and 
they  choose  to  make  them  of  sallow,  poplar,  or  lime  tree. 

They  used  great  clamours  and  hallowing  in  their  flight, 
which  they  made  by  these  words,  on  lot,  la,  la,  la ;  and  to 
raise  the  fowls,  made  use  of  the  sound  of  a  cymbal. 

Their  recreation  seem  more  sober  and  solemn  than  ours  at 
present,  so  improperly  attended  witli  oaths  and  imprecations. 
For  they  called  on  God  at  their  sitting  out,  according  to  the 
account  of  Demetrius,  rdv  Qdv  IrrixaXkavTi;,  in  the  first  place 
calling  upon  God. 

The  learned  Rigaltius  thinketh,  that  if  the  Romans  had 
well  known  this  airy  chase,  they  would  have  lefl  or  less  re- 
garded their  Circensial  recreations.  The  Greeks  understood 
hunting  early,  but  little  or  nothing  of  our  falconry.  If  Alex- 
ander had  known  it,  we  might  have  found  something  of  it 
and  more  of  hawks  in  Aristotle  ;  who  was  so  unacquainted 
with  that  way,  that   he  thought  that  hawks  would   not  feed 


•   Dc  Re  Riisfkn. 


190  OF    HAWKS   AND    FALCONRY.  [tRACT   V. 

upon  the  heart  of  birds.  Though  he  hath  mentioned  divers 
hawks,  yet  Juhus  Scaliger,  an  expert  falconer,  despaired  to 
reconcile  them  unto  ours.  And  't  is  well  if  among  them,  you 
can  clearly  make  out  a  lanner,  a  sparrow  hawk,  and  a  kestril, 
but  must  not  hope  to  find  your  gier  falcon  there,  which  is  the 
noble  hawk ;  and  I  wish  you  one  no  worse  than  that  of  Henry 
King  of  Navarre  ;  which,  Scaliger  saith,  he  saw  strike  down 
a  buzzard,  two  wild  geese,  divers  kites,  a  crane,  and  a  swan. 

Nor  must  you  expect  from  high  antiquity  the  distinctions 
of  eyes  and  ramage  hawks,  of  stores  and  entermewers,  of 
hawks  of  the  lure  and  the  fist ;  nor  that  material  distinction 
into  short  and  long  winged  hawks :  from  whence  arise  such 
differences  in  their  taking  down  of  stones ;  in  their  flight, 
their  striking  down  or  seizing  of  their  prey,  in  the  strength 
of  their  talons,  either  in  the  heel  and  fore  talon,  or  the  mid- 
dle and  the  heel :  nor  yet  what  eggs  produce  the  different 
hawks,  or  when  they  lay  three  eggs,  that  the  first  produceth 
a  female  and  large  hawk,  the  second  of  a  middler  sort,  and 
the  third  a  smaller  bird,  tercellene,  qr  tassel,  of  the  male  sex; 
which  hawks  being  only  observed  abroad  by  the  ancients, 
were  looked  upon  as  hawks  of  different  kinds,  and  not  of  the 
same  eyrie  or  nest.  As  for  what  Aristotle  affirmeth,  that 
hawks  and  birds  of  prey  drink  not ;  although  you  know  that 
it  will  not  strictly  hold,  yet  I  kept  an  eagle  two  years,  which 
fed  upon  cats,  kitlings,  whelps,  and  rats,  without  one  drop 
of  water. 

If  anything  may  add  unto  your  knowledge  in  this  noble  art, 
you  must  pick  it  out  of  later  writers  than  those  you  enquire 
of.  You  may  peruse  the  two  books  of  falconry  writ  by  that 
renowned  Emperor,  Frederick  the  Second;  as  also  the  works 
of  the  noble  Duke  Belisarius,  of  Tardifte,  Francherius,  of 
Francisco  Sforzino  of  Vicensa  ;  and  may  not  a  little  inform  or 
recreate  yourself  with  that  elegant  poem  of  Thuanus.*  I 
leave  you  to  divert  yourself  by  the  perusal  of  it,  having,  at 
present,  no  more  to  say  but  that  I  am,  &c. 

*  De  Re  Accipitraria,  in  3  books,  f 
t  Or  more  of  late  by  P.  Rapinus  in  verse. — MS.  Note  of  Evelyn's. 


TRACT    VI.]  OF    CYMBALS.  ID  I 


TRACT    Yl. 

of  cymbals,  etc. 

Sir, 
With  wliat  difficulty,  if  possibility,  you  may  expect  satisfac- 
tion concerning  the  music,  or  musical  instruments  of  the 
Hebrews,  you  will  easily  discover  if  you  consult  the  attempts 
of  learned  men  upon  that  subject :  but  for  the  cymbals,  of 
whose  figure  you  enquire,  you  may  find  some  described  in 
Jiayfius,  in  the  comment  of  Rhodius  upon  Scribonius  Largus, 
and  others. 

As  for  xj/i^aXov  akakdZpv  mentioned  by  St.  Paul,*  and  ren- 
dered a  tinkling  cymbal,  whether  the  translation  be  not  too 
soft  and  diminutive,  some  question  may  be  made:  for  the 
word  dXaXa^ov  implieth  no  small  sound,  but  a  strained  and 
lofty  vociferation,  or  some  kind  of  hallowing  sound,  according 
to  the  exposition  of  Hesychius,  aXaXa^ars  ivu-^utean  ttjv  (puvriv. 
A  word  drawn  from  the  lusty  shout  of  soldiers,  crying  dXuXoc 
at  the  first  charge  upon  their  enemies,  according  to  the  cus- 
tom of  the  eastern  nations,  and  used  by  the  Trojans  in 
Homer ;  and  is  also  the  note  of  the  chorus  in  Aristophanes 
aXaXcti  ^,  rrai'Siv.  In  other  parts  of  scripture  we  read  of  loud 
and  high  sounding  cymbals ;  and  in  Clemens  Alexandrinus, 
that  the  Arabians  made  use  of  cymbals  in  their  wars  instead 
of  other  military  music ;  and  Polya^nus  in  his  Stratagems  af- 
firmeth  that  Bacchus  gave  the  signal  of  battle  unto  his  nu- 
merous army,  not  with  trumpets  but  with  tympans  and 
cymbals. 

And  now  I  take  the  opportunity  to  thank  you  for  the  new 
book  sent  me,  containing  the  anthems  sunfj  in  our  cathedral 
and  collegiate  churches:  't  is  probable  there  will  be  additions, 
tlie  masters  of  music  being  now  active  in  that  aflair.  licside 
my  naked  thanks  I  have  yet  nothing  to  return  you  but  this 

•  1  Cor.  xiii,  1. 


192  OF    CYMBALS.  [tRACT    VI. 

enclosed,  which  may  be  somewhat  rare  unto  you,  and  that  is 
a  Turkish  hymn,  translated  into  French  out  of  the  Turkish 
metre,  which  I  thus  render  unto  you. 

"  O  what  praise  doth  he  deserve,  and  how  great  is  that 
Lord,  all  whose  slaves  are  as  so  many  kings  ! 

"Whosoever  shall  rub  his  eyes  with  the  dust  of  his  feet, 
shall  behold  such  admirable  things  that  he  shall  fall  into  an 
ecstacy. 

"  He  that  shall  drink  one  drop  of  his  beverage,  shall  have 
his  bosom  like  the  ocean,  filled  with  gems  and  precious 
liquors. 

"  Let  not  loose  the  reins  unto  thy  passions  in  this  world : 
he  that  represseth  them  shall  become  a  true  Solomon  in  the 
faith. 

"  Amuse  not  thyself  to  adore  riches,  nor  to  build  great 
houses  and  palaces. 

"  The  end  of  what  thou  shalt  build  is  but  ruin. 

"  Pamper  not  thy  body  with  delicacies  and  dainties ;  it  may 
come  to  pass  one  day  that  this  body  may  be  in  hell. 

"Imagine  not  that  he  who  findeth  riches,  findeth  hap- 
piness.    He  that  findeth  happiness  is  he  that  findeth  God. 

"  All  who  prostrating  themselves  in  humility  shall  this  day 
believe  in  Vele,*  if  they  were  poor,  shall  be  rich ;  and  if  rich, 
shall  become  kings." 

After  the  sermon  ended,  which  was  made  upon  a  verse  in 
the  Alcoran  containing  much  morality,  the  Dervises  in  a  gal- 
lery apart  sung  this  hymn,  accompanied  with  instrumental 
music,  which  so  affected  the  ears  of  Monsieur  du  Loir,  that 
he  would  not  omit  to  set  it  down,  together  with  the  musical 
notes,  to  be  found  in  his  first  letter  unto  Monsieur  Bouliau, 
prior  of  Magny. 

Excuse  my  brevity  :  I  can  say  but  little  where  I  understand 
but  little.  1  am,  &c. 

*    Vele,  tlie  foundei-  ol'tlie  convent. 


TJIACT    VII.]  OF    GRADUAL    VERSES.  193 


TRACT    VII. 

OF    ROPALIC   OR   GRADUAL   VERSES,    ETC. 


A  fens  mea  sublimes  rationes  pramedilalur. 


Sir, 
Though  I  may  justly  allow  a  good  intention  in  this  poem 
presented  unto  you,  yet  I  must  needs  confess,  I  have  no  af- 
fection for  it ;  as  being  utterly  averse  from  all  affectation  in 
poetry,  which  either  restrains  the  fancy,  or  fetters  the  inven- 
tion to  any  strict  disposure  of  words.  A  poem  of  this  nature 
is  to  be  found  in  Ausonius,  beginning  thus, 

Spes  Deus  aeternae  stationis  conciliator. 

These  are  verses  ropalici  or  clavales,  arising  gradually 
like  the  knots  in  a  go^dXri  or  club ;  named  also  fistnlares  by 
Priscianus,  as  Elias  Vinetus  *  hath  noted.  They  consist 
properly  of  five  words,  each  thereof  encreasing  by  one  syl- 
lable. They  admit  not  of  a  spondee  in  the  fifth  place,  nor 
can  a  golden  or  silver  verse  be  made  this  way.  They  run 
smoothly  both  in  Latin  and  Greek,  and  some  are  scatteringly 
to  be  found  in  Homer. 

'n  1X0.7.0.0  '  Arid  or,  fMi^yivsi  o^Sicdaifiov, 

Libere  dicam  sed   in    aurem,   ego  versibus  liojusmodi  ropalicis,  longo  syrmate 
protractis,  Ceraunium  affigo. 

He  that  affecteth  such  restrained  poetry,  may  peruse  the 
long  poem  of  Hugbaldus  the  monk,  wherein  every  word  be- 
ginneth  with  a  C,  penned  in  the  praise  of  calvities  or  bald- 
ness, to  the  honour  of  Carolus  Calvus,  King  of  France, 

Carmina  clarisonae  calvis  cantate  Camsnx. 

The  rest  may  be  seen  at  large  in  the  Adversaria  of  Bar- 
thius:  or  if  he  delighteth  in  odd  contrived  fancies,  may  he 
please  himself  with  antistrophes,  counterpetories,  retrogrades, 

*    El    J'inet.  in  yfiison. 
VOL.     IV.  O 


194  OF    GRADUAL    VERSES.  [tRACT    VII. 

rebuses,  leonine  verses,  &c.  to  be  found  in  Sieiir  des  Ac- 
cords. But  these  and  the  like  are  to  be  looked  upon,  not 
pursued.  Odd  work  might  be  made  by  such  ways ;  and  for 
your  recreation  I  propose  these  few  lines  unto  you.^ 

Arcu  paratur  quod  arcui  sufficit. 

Misellorum  clamoribus  accurrere  non  tam  humanum  quam  sulphureum  est. 

Asino  teratur  quae  asino  teritur. 

Ne  asphodelos  comedas,  phoenices  manduca. 

Coelum  aliquid  potest,  sed  quae  mira  praestat  papilio  est. 

Not  to  put  you  unto  endless  amusement,  the  key  hereof  is 
the  homonomy  of  the  Greek  made  use  of  in  the  Latin  words, 
which  rendereth  all  plain.  More  enigmatical  and  dark  ex- 
pressions might  be  made  if  any  one  would  speak  or  compose 
them  out  of  the  numerical  characters  or  characteristical  num- 
bers set  down  by  Robertus  de  Fluctibus.^  * 

As  for  your  question  concerning  the  contrary  expressions 
of  the  Italians  and  Spaniards  in  their  common  affirmative  an- 
swers, the  Spaniard  answering  cy  Sennor,  the  Italian  Signior 
cy,  you  must  be  content  with  this  distich, 

Why  saith  the  Italian  Signior  ci/,  the  Spaniard  Sy  Sennor  ? 
Because  the  one  puts  that  behind,  the  other  puts  before. 

And  because  you  are  so  happy  in  some  translations,  I  pray 
return  me  these  two  verses  in  English, 

Occidit  heu  tandem  multos  quae  occidit  aniantes, 
Et  cinis  est  hodie  quae  fuit  ignis  heri.^ 

My  occasions  make  me  to  take  off  my  pen.         I  am,  &c. 

*   Tract  2,  part  lib.  i. 

'  a7id,  Sfc]     MS.  Sloan,  reads  thus,  mention,  though  scarce  worth  your  no- 

"  And    I    remember    I   once   pleased    a  tice : — Two    pestels   and    a   book   come 

young  hopeful  person  with  a  dialogue  short  of  a  retort,  as  much  as  a  spear  and 

between    two    travellers,    beginning   in  an  ass  exceed  a  dog's  tail.     This  to  be 

this  manner :  well  drunk,  my  old  friend,  expounded  by  the  numerical  characters, 

the  famous  King  of  Macedon ;  that  is,  or  characteristical  numbers  set  down  by 

well  overtaken,  my  old  friend  Alexan-  Robertus  de  Fluctibus,  and  speaks  only 

der,    your  friend   may  proceed.     With  this  text: — two  and  four  come  short  of 

another  way  I  shall  not  omit  to  acquaint  six,  as  much  as  ten  exceed  six ;  the  figure 

you,   and  for  your  recreation  I  present  of  an  ass  standing  for  a  cipher." 

these  few  lines."  ■*  Occidit  heu  tandem,  ^c.^     In  MS. 

*  More  enigmatical,  cS-c]     These  are  Sloan.  1827,  is  the  following  translation 

more    largely    noticed     in     MS.     Sloan.  "  She  is  dead  at  last,  who  many  made  expire 

1837:    thus,  "One    way  more  I    shall  Is  dust  to  day  which  yesterday  was  fire." 


TRACT    VIII.]  Of    LANGUAGES.  ]9.') 


TRACT    VIII. 

OF  LANGUAGES,  AND  PARTICULARLY  OF  THE  SAXON 

TONGUE. 

Sir, 
The  last  discourse  we  had  of  the  Saxon  torifruc  recalled  to 
my  mind  some  forgotten  considerations.'  Though  the  earth 
were  widely  peopled  before  the  flood,  (as  many  learned  men 
conceive)  yet  whether,  after  a  large  dispersion,  and  the  space 
of  sixteen  hundred  years,  men  maintained  so  uniform  a  lan- 
guage in  all  parts,  as  to  be  strictly  of  one  tongue,  and  readily 
to  understand  each  other,  may  very  well  be  doubted.  For 
though  the  world  preserved  in  tlie  family  of  Noah  before  the 
confusion  of  tongues  might  be  said  to  be  of  one  lip,  yet  even 
permitted  to  themselves  their  humours,  inventions,  necessi- 
ties, and  new  objects  (without  the  miracle  of  confusion  at  first), 
in  so  long  a  tract  of  time,  there  had  probably  been  a  Babel. 
For  whether  America  were  first  peopled  by  one  or  several 
nations,  yet  cannot  that  number  of  different  planting  nations 
answer  the  multiplicity  of  their  present  different  languages, 
of  no  aflinity  unto  each  other,  and  even  in  their  northern 
nations  and  incommunicating  angles,-  their  lanfruaires  are 
widely  difl^ering.  A  native  interpreter  brought  from  Cali- 
fornia proved  of  no  use  ^  unto  the  Spaniards  upon  the  neigh- 
bour shore.  From  Chiapa  to  Guatemala,  S.  Salvador, 
Honduras,  there  are  at  least  eighteen  several  languages;  and 
so  numerous  are  they  both  in  the  Peruvian  and  Mexican 
regions,  that  the  great  princes  are  fain  to  have  one  common 
language,  which,  besides  their  vernaculous  and  mother 
tongues,  may  serve  for  commerce  between  them. 

And  since  the  confusion  of  tongues  at  first  fell  only  upon 
those  which  were   present  in  Sinaar  at  the  work  of  Babel, 

'  forgotten  considerations.]     "  Botli  of    conceived  to  have  most  single  originals." 
that  and  other  languages."— .V.S.  Sloan.         '  of  no  use.]     "Of  little  use."— iV.S'. 
^angles.]     "  Where  they  may  be  best     Sloati. 

O  J 


19G  OF   LANGUAGES.  [XRACT    VII. 

whether  the  pnmitive  language  from  Noah  were  only  pre- 
served in  the  family  of  Heber,  and  not  also  in  divers  others, 
which  might  be  absent  at  the  same,  whether  all  came  away, 
and  many  might  not  be  left  behind  in  their  first  plantations 
about  the  foot  of  the  hills,  whereabout  the  ark  rested,  and 
Noah  became  an  husbandman,*  is  not  absurdly  doubted. 

For  so  the  primitive  tongue  might  in  time  branch  out  into 
several  parts  of  Europe  and  Asia,  and  thereby  the  first  or 
Hebrew  tongue,  which  seems  to  be  ingredient  into  so  many 
languages,  might  have  larger  originals  and  grounds  of  its 
communication  and  traduction  than  from  the  family  of  Abra- 
ham, the  country  of  Canaan,  and  words  contained  in  the 
Bible,  which  come  short  of  the  full  of  that  language.  And 
this  would  become  more  probable  from  the  Septuagint  or 
Greek  Chronology  strenuously  asserted  by  Vossius;  for 
making  five  hundred  years  between  the  deluge  and  the  days 
of  Peleg,.  there  ariseth  a  large  latitude  of  multiplication  and 
dispersion  of  people  into  several  parts,  before  the  descent  of 
that  body  which  followed  Nimrod  unto  Sinaar  from  the  east. 

They  who  derive  the  bulk  of  European  tongues  from  the 
Scythian  and  the  Greek,  though  they  may  speak  probably 
in  many  points,  yet  must  needs  allow  vast  difference  or  cor- 
ruptions from  so  few  originals,  which,  however,  might  be 
tolerably  made  out  in  the  old  Saxon,  yet  hath  time  much 
confounded  the  clearer  derivations.  And  as  the  knowledge 
thereof  now  stands  in  reference  unto  ourselves,  I  find  many 
words  totally  lost,  divers  of  harsh  sound  disused  or  refined 
in  the  pronunciation,  and  many  words  we  have  also  in  com- 
mon use  not  to  be  found  in  that  tongue,  or  venially  derivable 
from  any  other  from  whence  we  have  largely  borrowed,  and 
yet  so  much  still  remaineth  with  us  that  it  maketh  the  gross 
of  our  language. 

The  religious  obhgation  unto  the  Hebrew  language  hath 
so  notably  continued  the  same,  that  it  might  still  be  under- 


^  hnsbmidman.'l  MS.  Slomi.  1827,  northward,  eastward,  or  southward,  and 
adds  here  the  following  clause  ;  "  whether  many  of  the  posterity  of  Noah  might  not 
in  that  space  of  150  years,  according  to  disperse  themselves  before  the  great  mi- 
common  compute,  before  the  conduct  of  gration  unto  Sinaar,  and  many  also  after- 
Nimrod,    many    might    not    expatriate  wards ;  is  not,  &c." 


TRACT    Mil.]  or    LANGUAGES.  1^7 

Stood  by  Abraham,  whereas  by  the  Mazorite  points  and 
Chaldee  character  the  old  letter  stands  so  transformed,  that 
if  Moses  were  alive  again,  he  must  be  taught  to  read  his 
own  law.* 

The  Chinese,  who  live  at  the  bounds  of  the  earth,  who 
have  admitted  little  communication,  and  sufiered  successive 
incursions  from  one  nation,  may  possibly  give  account  ot  a 
very  ancient  language :  but,  consisting  of  many  nations  and 
tongues,  confusion,  admixtion,  and  corruption  in  length  of 
time  might  probably  so  have  crept  in,  as,  without  the  virtue 
of  a  common  character  and  lasting  letter  of  things,  they  could 
never  probably  make  out  those  strange  memorials  which  they 
pretend,  while  they  still  make  use  of  the  works  of  their  great 
Confucius  many  hundred  years  before  Christ,  and  in  a  series 
ascend  as  high  as  Poncuus,  who  is  conceived  our  Noah. 

The  present  Welch,  and  remnant  of  the  old  Britons,  hold  so 
much  of  that  ancient  language,  that  they  make  a  shift  to  under- 
stand the  poems  of  Merlin,  Enerin,  Telesin,  a  thousand  years 
ago,  whereas  the  Ilerulian  Paier  Noster,  set  down  by  Wolf- 
gangus  Lazius,  is  not  without  much  criticism  made  out,  and  l)ut 
in  some  words  ;  and  the  present  Parisians  can  hardly  hack  out 
those  few  lines  of  the  league  between  Charles  and  Lewis,  the 
sons  of  Ludovicus  Pius,  yet  remaining  in  old  French. 

The  Spaniards  in  their  corruptive  traduction  and  romance, 
have  so  happily  retained  the  terminations  from  the  Latin, 
that,  notwithstanding  tlie  Gothic  and  ^Moorish  intrusion  of 
words,  they  are  able^  to  make  a  discourse  completely  consist- 


*  /aw.]     In  MS.  Sloan.  1827,  the  fol-  biguous,  that  translations  so  little  agree; 

lowing  additional    paragraph   occurs  ; —  and  since,  though  the  radices  consist  but 

"  Though  this  language  be  duly  inagni-  of  three  letters,  yet  they  make  two  syl- 

fied.  and  always  of  high  esteem,  yet  if,  lables  in  speaking;  and  since  the  pronun- 

with  Geropius   Hecanus,  we   admit   that  elation  is  such,  as  St.  Jerome,  who  was 

tongue  to  be  most  perfect  which  is  most  born  in  a  barbarous  country,  thought  the 

copious  or  expressive,  most  delucid  and  words  anhelent,    strident,    and    of  very 

clear  unto  the  understanding,  most  short,  harsh  sound. 

or  soon  delivered,  and  best  pronounced  *  the;/    are    ahlr.]      "  This  will    ap- 

with  most  ease  unto  the  organs  of  speech,  pear  very  unlikely  to  a  man  that  consi- 

the    Hebrew    now   known    unto   us   will  dcrs    the     Spanish     terminations;     and 

hardly  obtain  the  place  ;  since  it  consist-  Howcl,  who  was  eminently  skilful  in  the 

eth   of  fewt-r  words  than   many  others,  three  provincial  languages,  declares,  that 

and  its  words  begin  not  with  vowels,  since  after  many  essays  he  never  could  eflect 

it  is  so  full  of  homonymies,  and  words  it." — Dr.  Johnson. 


which  signify  many  things,  and  so  am- 


198  OF    LANGUAGES.  [XRACT   VIII. 

ing  of  grammatical  Latin  and  Spanish,  wherein  the  Italians 
and  French  will  be  very  much  to  seek.^ 

The  learned  Casaubon  conceiveth  that  a  dialogue  might 
be  composed  in  Saxon,  only  of  such  words  as  are  derivable 
from  the  Greek,  which  surely  might  be  effected,  and  so  as 
the  learned  might  not  uneasily  find  it  out.  Verstegan  made 
no  doubt  that  he  could  contrive  a  letter  which  might  be  un- 
derstood by  the  English,  Dutch,  and  East  Frislander,  which, 
as  the  present  confusion  standeth,  might  have  proved  no  very 
clear  piece,  and  hardly  to  be  hammered  out :  yet  so  much  of 
the  Saxon  still  remaineth  in  our  English,  as  may  admit  an  or- 
derly discourse  and  series  of  good  sense,  such  as  not  only  the 
present  English,  but  /Elfric,  Bede,  and  Alfred  might  under- 
stand after  so  many  hundred  years. 

Nations  that  live  promiscuously  under  the  power  and  laws 
of  conquest,  do  seldom  escape  the  loss  of  their  language  with 
their  liberties ;  wherein  the  Romans  were  so  strict,  that  the 
Grecians  were  fain  to  conform  in  their  judicial  processes;*^ 
which  made  the  Jews  lose  more  in  seventy  years  dispersion 
in  the  provinces  of  Babylon,  than  in  many  hundred  in  their 
distinct  habitation  in  Egypt ;  and  the  English  which  dwelt 
dispersedly  to  lose  their  language  in  Ireland,  whereas 
more  tolerable  reliques  there  are  thereof  in  Fingall,  where 
they  were  closely  and  almost  solely  planted ;  and  the 
Moors  which  were  most  huddled  together  and  united  about 


^&* 


'  iccA".]      The    following  paragraphs  consent  and  study  of  all  ages  since,  it  had 

occur  here,  in  MS.  Sloan.  1827.  found  the  same  fate,  and  been  swallowed 

"  The  many  mother  tongues  spoke  in  like  other  languages  ;  since,  in  its  an- 
divers  corners  of  Europe,  and  quite  dif-  cient  state,  one  age  could  scarce  under- 
ferent  from  one  another,  are  not  recon-  stand  another,  and  that  of  some  genera- 
cileable  to  any  one  common  original;  tions  before  must  be  read  by  a  dictionary 
whereas  the  great  languages  of  Spain,  by  a  few  successions  after;  as,  beside  the 
France,  and  Italy,  are  derivative  from  famous  pillar  of  Quillius,  may  be  illus- 
the  Latin  ;  that  of  Greece  and  its  islands  trated  in  these  few  lines,  '  Eundo  om- 
from  the  old  Greek ;  the  rest  of  the  fa-  nibus  honestitudo  prseterbitunda  nemo 
mily  of  the  Dutch  or  Schlavotiian.  As  escit.  Quianam  itaque  istucefiexishaus- 
for  the  lingua  Fullana,  spoken  in  part  of  cio,  temperi  et  toppertutemet  tarn  hibus 
Friuli,  and  the  lingua  Curvallea  in  Kha:-  insegne,  quod  ningribus  potestur  aut 
tia,  they  are  corruptions  of  the  Italian,  ruspare  nevolt.  Sapsam  saperda;  sene- 
as  that  of  Sardinia  is  also  of  the  Spanish,  clones  sardare  nequinunt  cuoi  siempset 

"  Even  the    Latin  itself,   which  hath  socienum  quissis  sperit  ?  '  " 
embroiled  so  many  languages  of  Europe,  ''  to  conform  in  their,  §-c.]     "  To  con- 

if  it  had  been  the  speech  of  one  country,  fonn,  and  make  use  of  Latin  in  their,  S:c." 

and  not  continued  by  writers,  and  the  — MS.  'Sloan. 


TRACT    VIII.]  OF    LANGUAGES.  VJ9 

Granada  have  yet  left  their  Arvirage  among  the  Granadian 
Spaniards. 

But  shut  up  in  angles  and  inaccessihle  corners,  divided  by 
laws  and  manners,  they  often  continue  long  with  little  mixture, 
which  hath  atlbrded  that  lasting  life  unto  the  Cantabrian  and 
British  tongues,  wherein  the  Britons  are  remarkable,  who 
having  lived  four  hundred  years  together  with  the  Romans, 
retained  so  much  of  the  British  as  it  may  be  esteemed  a  lan- 
guage ;  which  either  they  resolutely  maintained  in  their  co- 
habitation with  them  in  Britain,  or  retiring  after  in  the  time 
of  the  Saxons  into  countries  and  parts^  less  civilized  and  con- 
versant with  the  Romans,  they  found  the  people  distinct,  the 
language  more  entire,  and  so  fell  into  it  again. 

But  surely  no  languages  have  been  so  straitly  locked  up 
as  not  to  admit  of  commixture.  The  Irish,  although  they 
retain  a  kind  of  a  Saxon  character,^  yet  have  admitted  many 
words  of  Latin  and  English.  In  the  Welch  are  found  many 
words  from  Latin,  some  from  Greek  and  Saxon.  In  what 
parity  and  incommixture  the  language  of  that  people  stood, 
which  were  casually  discovered  in  the  heart  of  Spain,  be- 
tween the  mountains  of  Castile,  no  longer  ago  tiian  in  the 
time  of  Duke  D'Alva,  we  have  not  met  with  a  good  account; 
any  farther  than  that  their  words  were  Basquish  or  Canta- 
brian: but  the  present  Basquensa,  one  of  the  minor  mother 
tongues  of  Europe,  is  not  without  commixture  of  Latin  and 
Castilian,  while  we  meet  with  santijica,  tentationeten,  gloria, 
puissanea,  and  four  more  [words]  in  the  short  form  of  the 
Lord's  prayer,  set  down  by  Paulus  Merula :  but  although  in 
this  brief  form  we  may  find  such  commixture,  yet  the  bulk  of 
their  language  seems  more  distinct,  consisting  of  words  of  no 
affinity  unto  others,  of  numerals  totally  different,  of  ditlering 
grammatical  rules,  as  may  be  observed  in  the  Dictionary  and 
short  Basquensa  Grammar,  composed  by  Raphael  Nicoleta, 
a  priest  of  Bilboa. 

And  if  they  use  the  auxiliary  verbs  of  equin  and   ysan, 


"  into  countries,  c^r.]     "  Into   Wales,  Anglo-Saxons,   does  not  prove  any  affi- 

and  countries,  &c." — .V.?.  Sloan.  nity    of   language,    nor    does    it    exist. 

'   The  Irish,  although  theif,  i^r.]     The  Tliey  both  took  their  alphabet  from  the 

Irish  using  the  same  characters  with  the  Roman. — 6'- 


200  OF    LANGUAGES.  [tRACT    VIII. 

answerable  unto  hazer  and  ser,  to  have,  and  be,  in  the 
Spanish,  which  forms  came  in  with  the  northern  nations 
into  the  ItaHan,  Spanish,  and  French,  and  if  that  form 
were  used  by  them  before,  and  crept  not  in  from  imitation 
of  their  neighbours,  it  may  shew  some  ancienter  traduc- 
tion from  northern  nations,"  or  else  must  seem  very  strange : 
since  the  southern  nations  had  it  not  of  old,  and  I  know 
not  whether  any  such  mode  be  found  in  the  languages  of 
any  part  of  America. 

The  Romans,  who  made  the  great  commixture  and  alter- 
ation of  languages  in  the  world,  effected  the  same,  not  only 
by  their  proper  language,  but  those  also  of  their  military 
forces,  employed  in  several  provinces,  as  holding  a  standing 
militia  in  all  countries,  and  commonly  of  strange  nations  ;  so 
while  the  cohorts  and  forces  of  the  Britons  were  quartered 
in  Egypt,  Armenia,  Spain,  Illyria,  &c.,  the  Stablassians  and 
Dalmatians  here,  the  Gauls,  Spaniards,  and  Germans,  in 
other  countries,  and  other  nations  in  theirs,  they  could  not 
but  leave  many  words  behind  them,  and  carry  away  many 
with  them,  M^hich  might  make,  that,  in  many  words  of  very 
distinct  nations,  some  may  still  remain  of  very  unknown  and 
doubtful  genealogy. 

And  if,  as  the  learned  Buxhornius  contendeth,^  the  Scy- 
thian language  as  the  mother  tongue  runs  through  the  nations 
of  Europe,  and  even  as  far  as  Persia,  the  community  in  many 
words,  between  so  many  nations,  hath  a  more  reasonable  ori- 
ginal traduction,  and  were  rather  derivable  from  the  common 
tongue  difiused  through  them  ail,  than  from  any  particular 
nation,  which  hath  also  borrowed  and  holdeth  but  at  second 

hand. 

The  Saxons,  settling  over  all  England,  maintained  an  uni- 
form language,  only  diversified  in  dialects,  idioms,  and  minor 
differences,  according  to  their  different  nations  which  came 
in  unto  the  common  conquest,  which  may  yet  be  a  cause  of 

*  Iraditctinn    from    iiorlhcrii  natiojis.']  also  classes  it  by  itself.—  G. 

Addling  considers  the  Basiiiie  to  be  ra-  ^  And  if,  <S)c.]     Dr.  Jamieson  has  dis- 

dicallij  different  i'roni  any  European  Irihe  cussed  this  subject  in  his  Hermes  Scy- 

of  languages — though  many   words   are  thicus,  the  object  of  which   work  is  to 

Teutonic  borrowed  from  the  Visigoths.  connect  the  Goths  and  Greeks,  through 

The  great    Danish  philologist,    Rask,  the  Pelasgi  and  Scythians. —  O. 


TRACT    VIII.]  OF    LANGUAGES.  201 

the  variation  in  the  speech  and  words  of  several  parts  of 
Entrland,  where  diflerent  nations  most  abode  or  settled,  and 
having  expelled  the  Britons,  their  wars  were  chiefly  among 
themselves,  with  little  action  with  foreign  nations  until  the 
union  of  the  heptarchy  under  I'^gbert:  after  which  time,  al- 
though the  Danes  infested  this  land,  and  scarce  left  any  part 
free,  yet  their  incursions  made  more  havoc  in  buildings, 
churches,  and  cities,  than  [in]  the  language  of  the  country,* 
because  their  language  was  in  effect  the  same,  and  such  as 
wherebv  they  might  easily  understand  one  another. 

And  if  the  Normans,  which  came  into  ISeustria  or  Nor- 
mandy with  Rollo  the  Dane,  had  preserved  their  language  in 
their  new  acquists,  the  succeeding  conquest  of  England,  by 
Duke  ^^■illiam  of  his  race,  had  not  begot  among  us  such 
notable  alterations;  but  having  lost  their  language  in  their 
abode  in  Normandy,  before  they  adventured  upon  England, 
they  confounded  the  English  with  their  French,  and  made 
the  grand  mutation,  which  was  successively  increased  by  our 
possessions  in  Normandy,  Guien,  and  Acquitain,  by  our  long 
wars  in  France,  by  frequent  resort  of  the  French,  who,  to  the 
number  of  some  thousands,  came  over  with  Isabel,  Queen  to 
Edward  the  Second,  and  the  several  matches  of  England 
with  the  daughters  of  France  before  and  since  that  time. 

But  this  commixture,  though  sufficient  to  confuse,  proved 
not  of  ability  to  abolish  the  Saxon  words,  for  from  the  French 
we  have  borrowed  many  substantives,  adjectives,  and  some 
verbs,  but  the  great  body  of  numerals,  auxihary  verbs,  articles, 
pronouns,  adverbs,  conjunctions,  and  prepositions,  which  are 
the  distinguishing  and  lasting  part  of  a  language,  remain  with 
us  from  the  Saxon,  whiqh,  having  suffered  no  great  alteration 
for  many  hundred  years,  may  probably  still  remain,  though 
the  English  swell  with  the  inmates  of  Italian,  French,  and 
Latin.  An  example  whereof  may  be  observed  in  this 
following: — 


'O  ' 


*  yet  their  incursions,  SfC."]  Yet  the  from  the  former  part,  and  it  is  called  the 
Danes  had  a  great  effVct  upon  the  Saxon  Dano-Saxon — it  is  not,  however,  so 
language.  The  portion  of  the  Saxon  marked  a  departure  from  the  early  Anglo- 
Chronicle  written  during  their  sway  in  Saxon,  as  the  next  dialect — the  Norinan- 
Kngland,  is  quite  in  a  different  dialect  Saxon. — C. 


202  OF    LANGUAGES.  [TRACT    Vill. 

English  i. — The  first  and  foremost  step  to  all  good  works 
is  the  dread  and  fear  of  the  Lord  of  heaven  and  earth,  which 
through  the  Holy  Ghost  enlightneth  the  blindness  of  our  sin- 
ful hearts  to  tread  the  ways  of  wisdom,  and  leads  our  feet 
into  the  land  of  blessing. 

Saxon  i. — The  erst  and  fyrmost  sta^p  to  eal  gode  weorka 
is  the  draed  and  feurt  of  the  Lauord  of  heofan  and  eorth, 
while  thurh  the  Heilig  Gast  onlihtneth  the  blindnesse  of  ure 
sinful!  heorte  to  trasd  the  waeg  of  wisdome,  and  thone  laed 
ure  fet  into  the  land  of  blessung. 

English  ii. — For  to  forget  his  law  is  the  door,  the  gate, 
and  key  to  let  in  all  unrighteovisness,  making  our  eyes,  ears, 
and  mouths  to  answer  the  lust  of  sin,  our  brains  dull  to  good 
thoughts,  our  lips  dumb  to  his  praise,  our  ears  deaf  to  his  gos- 
pel, and  our  eyes  dim  to  behold  his  wonders,  which  witness 
against  us  that  we  have  not  well  learned  the  word  of  God, 
that  we  are  the  children  of  wrath,  unworthy  of  the  love  and 
manifold  gifts  of  God,  greedily  following  after  the  ways  of 
the  devil  and  witchcraft  of  the  world,  doing  nothing  to  free 
and  keep  ourselves  from  the  burning  fire  of  hell,  till  we  be 
buried  in  sin  and  swallowed  in  death,  not  to  arise  again  in 
any  hope  of  Christ's  kingdom. 

Saxon  ii. — For  to  fuorgytan  his  laga  is  the  dure,  the  gat, 
and  cffig  to  let  in  eal  unrightwisnysse,  makend  ure  eyge,  eore, 
and  muth  to  answare  the  lust  of  sin,  ure  braegan  dole  to  gode 
theoht,  ure  lippan  dumb  to  his  preys,  ure  earen  deaf  to  his 
gospel,  and  ure  eyge  dim  to  behealden  his  wundra,  while  ge 
witnysse  ongen  us  that  wee  oef  noht  wel  gelasred  the  weord 
of  God,  that  wee  are  the  cilda  of  ured,  unwyrthe  of  the  lufe 
and  maenigfeald  gift  of  God,  grediglice  felygend  a^fter  the 
waegen  of  the  deoful  and  wiccraft  of  the  weorld,  doend  no- 
thing to  fry  and  caep  ure  saula  from  the  byrnend  fyr  of  hell, 
till  we  be  geburied  in  synne  and  swolgen  in  death,  not  to  arise 
agen  in  aenig  hope  of  Christes  kynedome. 

English  hi. — Which  draw  from  above  the  bitter  doom  of 
the  Almighty  of  hunger,  sword,  sickness,  and  brings  more  sad 
plagues  than  those  of  hail,  storms,  thunder,  blood,  frogs, 
swarms  of  gnats  and  grasshoppers,  which  ate  the  corn,  grass, 
and  leaves  of  the  trees  in  Egypt. 


TRACT    VIII.]  OF    LANGUAGES.  t20o 

Saxon  hi. — Wliilc  drag  from  buf  the  bitter  dome  of  the 
Almagan  of  hunger,  sweorde,  seoknesse,  and  bring  mere  sad 
plag,  thone  tliey  of  hagal,  stornie,  thunner,  l)lode,frog,  swearme 
of  gnat  and  giersupper,  while  eaten  the  corn,  gaers,  and  leaf 
of  the  treowen  in  /Egypt. 

English  iv. — If  we  read  his  book  and  holy  writ,  these, 
among  many  others,  we  shall  find  to  be  the  tokens  of  his  hate, 
whicli  gathered  together  might  mind  us  of  his  will,  and  teach 
us  when  his  wrath  beginneth,  which  sometimes  comes  in  open 
strength  and  full  sail,  oft  steals  like  a  thief  in  the  night,  like 
shafts  shot  from  a  bow  at  midnight,  before  we  think  upon 
them. 

Saxon  iv. — Gyf  we  raed  his  boc  and  lieilig  gewrit,  these 
gemong  ma?nig  othern,  we  sceall  findan  the  tacna  of  his  ha- 
tung,  while  gegatherod  together  miht  geniind  us  of  hiswillan, 
and  teac  us  whone  his  ured  onginneth,  while  sometima  come 
in  open  strength  and  fill  seyle,  oft  stael  gelyc  a  theof  in  the 
niht,  gelyc  sceaft  scoten  fram  a  boge  at  midneoht,  befor  an  we 
thinck  uppen  them. 

English  v. — And  though  they  were  a  deal  less,  and  rather 
short  than  beyond  our  sins,  yet  do  we  not  a  whit  withstand 
or  forbear  them,  we  are  wedded  to,  not  weary  of  our  misdeeds, 
we  seldom  look  upward,  and  are  not  ashamed  under  sin ;  we 
cleanse  not  ourselves  from  the  blackness  and  deep  hue  of  our 
guilt ;  we  want  tears  and  sorrow,  we  weep  not,  fiist  not,  we 
crave  not  forgiveness  from  the  mildness,  sweetness  and  good- 
ness of  God,  and  with  all  livelihood  and  steadfastness  to  our 
uttermost  will  hunt  after  the  evil  of  guile,  pride,  cursing, 
swearing,  drunkenness,  over-eating,  uncleanness,  all  idle  lust 
of  the  flesh,  yes  many  uncouth  and  nameless  sins,  hid  in  our 
inmost  breast  and  bosoms,  which  stand  betwixt  our  forgive- 
ness, and  keep  God  and  man  asunder. 

Saxon  v. — And  theow  they  wa?re  a  da^l  lesse,  and  rcither 
scort  thone  begond  oure  sinnan,  get  do  we  naht  a  whit  with- 
stand and  forbcare  them,  we  eare  bewudded  to,  noht  werig  of 
ure  agen  misdeed,  we  seldon  loc  upweard,  and  ear  not  ofschai- 
mod  under  siune,  we  cleans  noht  ure  selvan  from  the  blacnesse 
and  da^p  hue  of  ure  guilt ;  we  wan  teare  and  sara,  we  weope 
noht,  facst  noht,  we  craft  noht  foregyfnesse  fram  the  mildnesse. 


204f  OF    LANGUAGES.  [tRACT   VIII. 

sweetnesse  and  goodnesse  of  God,  and  mit  eal  lifelyhood  and 
stedfastnesse  to  ure  uttermost  will  hunt  sefter  the  ufel  of  guile, 
pride,  cursung,  swearung,  druncennesse,  overeat,  uncleannesse 
and  eal  idle  lust  of  the  flffisc,  yis  maenig  uncuth  and  nameleas 
sinnan,  hid  in  ure  inmaest  brist  and  bosome,  while  stand  be- 
twixt ure  foregyfnesse,  and  ca^p  God  and  man  asynder. 

English  vi. — Thus  are  we  far  beneath  and  also  worse 
than  the  rest  of  God's  works;  for  the  sun  and  moon,  the 
king  and  queen  of  stars,  snow,  ice,  rain,  frost,  dew,  mist, 
wind,  fourfooted  and  creeping  things,  fishes  and  feathered 
birds,  and  fowls  either  of  sea  or  land,  do  all  hold  the  laws 
of  his  will. 

Saxon  vi. — Thus  eare  we  far  beneoth  and  ealso  wyrse 
thone  the  rest  of  Gods  weorka;  for  the  sun  and  mone, 
the  cyng  and  cquen  of  stearran,  snaw,  ise,  ren,  frost,  deaw, 
miste,  wind,  feower  fet  and  crypend  dinga,  fix  yefetherod 
brid,  and  faslan  auther  in  sae  or  land  do  eal  heold  the  lag 
of  his  willan. 

Thus  have  you  seen  in  few  words  how  near  the  Saxon  and 
English  meet.^ 

Now  of  this  account  the  French  will  be  able  to  make  no- 
thing; the  modern  Danes  and  Germans,  though  from  several 
words  they  may  conjecture  at  the  meaning,  yet  will  they  be 
much  to  seek  in  the  orderly  sense  and  continued  construction 
thereof.  Whether  the  Danes  can  continue  such  a  series  of 
sense  out  of  their  present  language  and  the  old  Runick,  as  to 
be  intelligible  unto  present  and  ancient  times,  some  doubt 
may  well  be  made ;  and  if  the  present  French  would  attempt 
a  discourse  in  words  common  unto  their  present  tongue  and 
the  old  Romana  Rustica  spoken  in  elder  times,  or  in  the  old 
language  of  the  Francks,  which  came  to  be  in  use  some  suc- 


*  how  near  the  Saron,  ^c]  Johnson  coincides  with  tliat  of  a  still  higlierautho- 
observes,  "  the  words  are,  indeed,  Sax-  rity,MissGurney,  of  Northrepps  Cottage, 
on,  but  the  phraseology  is  English  ;  and,  the  translator  of  the  S^axon  Chronicle  ;  on 
I  think,  would  not  have  been  understood  whose  recommendation  I  have  preferred 
by  Bede  or  yLU'ric,  notwithstanding  the  to  reprint  the  Saxon  passages  as  they 
confidence  of  our  author.  He  has,  how-  siand,  rather  than  to  adopt  any  additions 
ever,  sufficiently  proved  his  position,  or  variations  from  partial  transcripts  of 
that  the  Knglish  resembles  its  parental  them  in  the  British  Museum  and  Bod- 
language  more  than  any  modern  Euro-  Ician. 
pcan    dialect."     This    opinion    exactly 


TRACT    Vlll.] 


OF    LANGUAGES. 


205 


cessions  after  Pharamond,  it  might  prove  a  work  of  some 
trouble  to  eW'cct. 

It  were  not  impossible  to  make  an  original  reduction  of 
many  words  of  no  general  reception  in  England,  but  of  com- 
mon use  in  Norfolk,  or  peculiar  to  the  East  Angle  countries; 
as,  l)awnd,  bunny,  thurck,  enemmis,  sammodithee,  mawther, 
kedge,  seele,  straft,  clever,  matchly,  dere,  nicked,  stingy, 
noneare,  feft,  thepes,  gosgood,  kamp,  sibrit,  fangast,  sap, 
cothish,  thokish,    bide  owe,   paxwax:''    of  these  and  some 


•  Bawnd,  SfC."]  Some  time  before  the 
appearance  of  "  The  f'ocabulary  of  East 
Aitgtia,  by  the  Rev.  If.  Forby,"  I  had 
been  favoured  with  valuable  illustrations 
of  this  curious  list  of  words  in  common 
use  in  Norfolk  during  Sir  Thomas's  life, 
by  Miss  Gurney,  and  Mr.  Black,  of  the 
British  Museum,  of  which  I  have  availed 
myself  in  the  following  notes. 

Bawnd  ; — swollen.  Not  in  present 
use  ;  at  least,  not  known  to  be  so.  Isl. 
bon,  tumidus — Forby. 

Bunny  ; — a  common  word  for  a  rabbit, 

especially  among  children. — Blk. A 

small  swelling  caused  by  a  fall  or  blow. 
Perhaps  a  diminutive  bump.  One  would 
be  glad  to  derive  it  from  the  Greek 
poynoj,  a  hillock.  It  may  be  so  through 
the  Gothic. —  Furby. 

Thurck ; — appears  to  mean  dark,  if  it 
be  the  same  as  in  the  Promploriiim  Piir- 

vulorum    Clericorum MS.    Hurl.    221, 

"  Therke  or  dyrk,  tenebrosus,  cali- 
ginosus  ;  terknesse  or  derknesse." — lil/:. 

Dark.     So  say   Hickes   and   Ray; 

may  have  been  for  ought  we  can  say  to 
the  contrary. — Forby. 

Enemrnis; — Qu.  et  neanmotns? — G. 

I  will  not  say  tiiat  this  is  the  old  word 
anempst  for  anenst  (anenl  in  modern 
Scottish),  about,  concerning;  because  I 

know   not  its   proper  collocation Blk. 

Of  very  obscure  and  doubtful  mean- 
ing, like  most  of  Sir  Thomas  Browne's 
words.  Hickes  says  it  means  lest  (ne 
forte),  and  he  derives  it  from  Isl.  einema, 
an  adv.  of  exclusion,  as  he  says.  It 
may  mean,  notwithstanding,  N.  Fr. 
nevus.  Or  it  may  be  an  adjective,  signi- 
fying variable,  as  enimis  is  in  l.  sc. 
which  Jam.  derives  from  Isl.  ymhs, 
varius.  But  as  the  word  is  quite  extinct, 
it  is  impossible  to  decide  upon  its  mean- 
ing,  wiien    it  was  in   use. — Forby. 

The  word  is  not  extinct,  but  still  used  in 


Norfolk  in  the  sense  of  lest :  though  its 
usual  sound  would  rather  lead  us  to  spell 
it  enatnmons. 

Sammodithee: — Samod  o  'thi ;  the  like  of 

that. — G. Sammodithee  is  an  old  oath 

or  asseveration,  sd  mot  I  the,  so  may  I 
thrive.  "  Ah  mote  I  the  "  is  common  in 
ancient  English,  and  "  So  the  ik "  in 
Chaucer.  See  Tyrwhitt's  and  other 
Glossaries,  in  v.  The,  which  is  the  A.  S. 

dean,  to  thrive. — Blk. This  uncouth 

cluster  of  little  words  (for  such  it  is)  is 
recorded  by  Sir  Thomas  Browne  as  cur- 
rent in  his  lime.  It  is  now  totally  ex- 
tinct. It  stands  thus  in  the  eighth  tract, 
"  On  Languages."  Dr.  Hickes  has  taken 
the  liberty  of  changing  it  to  san.modiiha, 
and  interprets  it,  "  Say  me  how  dost 
thou;"  in  pure  Saxon  "  sai;  me  hit 
destthu."  "Say  me,"  for  "tell  me," 
is  in  use  to  this  day  in  some  coun- 
ties. It  is  in  the  dialect  of  Scdgmoor. 
Kay  adduces,  as  a  sort  of  parallel  to  this 
jumble  of  words,  one  which  he  says  was 
common  in  his  time ;  muchgoodittc, 
"  much  good  do  it  thee." — F. 

Mawther; — the  same    as   the   vulgar 

mawkes,  a  wench — Blk. A  girl.   Tus- 

ser  uses  it.  So  docs  B.  Johnson  : — •'  Vou 
talk  like  a  foolish  mouther,"  says  Restive 
to  Dame  Pliant,  in  the  Alchemist.  It 
seems  peculiarly  an  East  Anglian  word. 
So  at  least  it  was  considered  by  Sir 
Henry  Spelman.  It  is  highly  amusing 
to  find  so  grave  an  antiquary  endeavour- 
ing earnesily,  and  at  no  inconsiderable 
length,  to  vindicate  the  honour  of  his 
mother-tongue  ;  and  to  rescue  this  impor- 
tant word  from  the  contempt  with  which 
some,  as  it  seems,  through  their  igno- 
rance, were  disposed  to  treat  it.  "  Quod 
rident  cateri  .Angli,"  says  he,  "  vocis 
nescientes  probitatem."  He  assures  us 
that  it  was  applied  by  our  very  early  an- 
cestors, even  to  the  noble  virgins  who 


206 


OF    LANGUAGES. 


[tract   VIII. 

others  of  no  easy  originals,  when  time  will  permit,  the  resolu- 
tion may  be  attempted ;  which  to  effect,  the  Danish  language 


were  selected  to  sing  the  praises  of  hei'oes. 
They  were  called  scald-mocrs,  q.  d.  sing- 
ing mauthers!  "En  quantum  in  spreta 
jam  voce  antiqure  gloria.-!"  He  com- 
plains that  the  old  word  jnoer  had  been 
corrupted  to  mother,  and  so  confounded 
with  a  very  different  word.  We  distin- 
guish them  very  effectually  by  pronuncia- 
tion, and,  what  is  more,  we  actually 
come  very  near  to  the  original  word  in 
the  abbreviated  form  we  use  in  address- 
ing a  mauther.  We  commonly  call  her 
tnau'r.  Dan.  moer.  Belg.  modde,  in- 
nupta  puella Forhy. 

Kedge  ; — I  should  rather  think  is  the 
"  Kygge  or  Joly,  Jocundus,  Hillaris,"  of 
Prompt,  than  "cadge,  to  carry,  of  Jf'ilbr. 

Appendix." — Bile.  Brisk,    active. 

This  is  Sir  Thomas  Browne's  spelling. 
We  pronounce  it  kidgc,  and  apply  it  ex- 
clusively, or  nearly  so,  to  hale  and  cheer- 
ful old  persons.  In  Ray,  the  word  cadge 
has  the  same  meaning.  It  is  by  mere 
change  of  vowels  cadge,  Icedge,  kidge. 
Dan.  kaud,  lascivus.  Lowland  Scotch 
kedgie  and  caigie. — Forhy. 

Seek ; — is  this  our  sell,  haysell,  or  seel 

time? — G. Take  these  from  Prompt. 

"«e/fi,horsys  barneys,  arquillus."  "Selle, 
stoddyng  liowse  cella."  "  Sylle  of  an 
hovvse.     Silla    Solma."     I   cannot   offer 

any    thing   else. — Blk. Seal,     time, 

season.  Hay-«ea/,  v/heat-seal,  barley- 
seal,  are  the  respective  seasons  of  mow- 
ing or  sowing  those  products  of  the  earth. 
But  it  goes  as  low  as  hours.  Of  an  idle 
and  dissipated  fellow,  we  say  that  he 
"  keeps  bad  seals,"  of  poachers,  that  they 
are  out  at  all  seals  of  the  night;  of  a 
sober,  regular,  and  industrious  man,  that 
he  attends  to  his  business  at  all  seals," 
or  that  "  he  keeps  good  seals  and  meals." 
Sir  Thomas  Browne  spells  it  seele  ;  but 
we  seem  to  come  nearer  to  the  Saxon 
stsl,  opportunitas. — Forhy. 

Strafl ; — Iratus,  ira  exclamans,  vox  in 
agro  Norf.  usitata.  Hickes  derivat  ab  Is. 
strnffa,  objurgerc,  corripere,  increpare. 
L.  Junius  Etymol.  I  cannot  find  the 
passage  on  a  cursory  examination  of 
Hickes  in  his  little  Diet.  Islandicum.  In 
the  2nd  vol.  of  the  Thesaur.  p.  89, 
Hickes  gives  "  Straff,  gannitus,"  but  the 
usual  meaning  is  punishment,  and  this  is 
themeaninggivcnby  Biorn  llalderson.-C 

1  will  adduce  a  word  from  Wachtcr's 

German  Glossary.     "  Si  raff,  rigidus,  du- 


rus,   astrictus,    severus." — Blk. A 

scolding  bout ;  an  angry  strife  of 
tongues.     Isl.  straffa,  iratus Forhy. 

Clever ; — perhaps  some  unusual  mean- 
ing of  our  present  adj.  unless  the  first 
vowel  should  be  pronounced  long. — Blk. 

Dextrous,  adroit ;   Ray  says,  neat, 

elegant:  in  either  sense  it  is  so  very 
common  and  general,  and  appears  so  to 
have  been  for  so  many  years,  that  it 
seems  difficult  to  conceive  how  Sir  Tho- 
mas Browne  should  have  been  struck  with 
it  as  a  provincialism,  and  still  more,  how 
Ray,  long  afterwards,  should  have  let  it 
pass  as  such  without  any  remark.  If 
not  when  Sir  Thomas  wrote  his  tract, 
certainly  long  before  the  second  edition 
of  Ray,  S.E.C.,  published  by  the  author, 
it  had  been  used  by  Butler,  L'Estrange, 
and  South.  In  L'Estrange,  indeed,  it 
might  be  positively  provincial ;  in  Butler 
low,  ludicrous,  or  even  burlesque ;  ia 
South  too  familiar  and  undignified  for 
the  pulpit ;  but  in  neither  provincial. 
But  what  shall  we  say  of  Addison,  who 
had  also  used  it?  In  Todd's  Johnson  it 
is  said  to  be  low,  and  scarcely  ever  used 
but  in  burlesque,  and  in  conversation. 
A  colloquial  and  familiar  term  it  certainly 
is ;  but  assuredly  not  provincial,  nor  even 
low.  Sir  Thomas  Browne  is  the  only 
guarantee  of  its  insertion  here.  And  if 
it  must  be  ours,  let  it  by  all  means  be 
taken  with  our  own  rustic  pronunciation, 

claver.  —  Forhy.  i\Iy   friend   Mr, 

Black's  suggestion, — that  there  is  some 
unusual  meaning  attached  in  Norfolk  to 
this  word,  which  justifies  its  insertion 
among  provmciulisms, — is  correct.  The 
poor  in  this  county,  speaking  of  any  one 
who  is  kind  and  liberal  towards  them, 
say  very  commonly,  "  He  is  a  claver 
gentleman  !  "  "  'Twas  a  claver  thing  he 
did  for  us  !  "     "  He  always  behave  very 

claver  to  the  poor." Moor  says  that 

it  means  handsome,  good-looking  ; — e. 
g.  a  clever  horse,  a  clever  gal  (girl). 

Matchly ; — perhaps  may  mean  pro- 
portionately, or  corresponding.. — Blk. 
Exactly  alike,  fitting  nicely.  Ano- 
ther of  Sir  Thomas  Browne's  words, 
happily  explained  by  modern  pronuncia- 
tion, mackly.     A.  S.  maka,  par. — Forhy. 

Dere  ; — dire,  sad.  But  it  is  Old  Eng- 
lish. Chaucer  has  it,  and  Shakspeare, 
in  "Love's  Labour  Lost : "-- -"  Deafd 
with    the   clamoiu-   of    their    own   dear 


OF    LANGUAGES. 


207 


TRACT    VIII.] 

new  and  more  ancient  may  prove  of  good  advantage :   which 
nation  remained  here  fifty  years  upon  agreement,  and  have 


groans."  Ur.  Johnson  observes  that 
dear  is  for  dere.  And  yet  the  words 
"own  dear"  may  seem  to  come  very 
nearly  to  the  sense  of  the  adjective  (pi'kog 
in  Homer;  f/Xov  riTOf,  f/'Xov  o/Mfia, 
f />.a  yoj'iara.  It  is  a  sense  of  close 
and  particular  endearment,  in  which  cer- 
tainly we  often  use  those  two  words,  in 
speaking  of  any  thing  we  particularly 
cherish,  as  our  beloved  kindred  or  friends, 
or,  as  in  Homer,  the  limbs  or  organs  of 

our  bodies Forbij. 

Nicked; — cheated,   as  yet  among  the 
vulgar.     I  think  to  have  seen  (in  Wach- 

ter)  iiicken,  obstinate — Blk. Exactly 

hit ;  in  the  very  nick :  at  the  precise 
point.  Another  of  Sir  Thomas  Browne's 
word*,  at  which  one  cannot  but  marvel. 
The  very  same  authorities  are  produced 
by  Johnson,  for  the  verb  nick  in  this 
sense,  as  for  the  adjective  clever  ; — 
those  of  Butler,  LEstrange,  and  South. 
It  is  not  possible  to  conceive  that  the 
word  had  at  that  time  any  other  sense  in 
which  it  might  be  considered  as  a  provin- 
cial word.  Kay  explains  it  thus :  Nick- 
led,  beaten  down  and  intricately  en- 
tangled, as  growing  corn  or  grass  by  rain 
and  wind.  Might  not  this  be  the  word 
meant  by  Sir  Thomas  Browne,  and  im- 
perfectly heard  ? — Forby. Both  these 

are  wrong ;  the  following  is  the  correct 
explanation: — To  iiirk  is  to  notch  the 
under  part  of  a  horse's  tail,  to  make  it 
stand  out  or  erect,  .^n  instance  occurs 
in  the  Monthly  Mag.  for  1812,  part  I,  p. 
2S,  in  the  memoir  of  John  Fransham  ; 
who,  when  at  Norwich,  could  not  bear 
"  the  cruel  practices  there  carried  on  of 
cropping,  nickinp,  and  docking  horses." 
I  transcribe  this  from  a  more  recent  com- 
munication from  Mr.  Black.  But  that  a 
Norfolk  man  (Mr.  Forby)  should  have 
been  ignorant  of  the  meaning  of  so  com- 
mon a  provincialism,  seems  singular. 
Stingy  ; — with    a    soft  g,     commonly 

means  parsimonious. — Blk. This    is 

its  commonly  received  sense.  Its  pro- 
vincial acceptation  is  given  by  Forby  : — 
1.  Cross,  ill-humoured  ;  2.  Churlish,  bit- 
ing ;  as  applied  to  the  state  of  the  air.  It 
was  most  probably  in  one  or  in  both  these 
senses  in  which  Sir  Thomas  Browne  re- 
marked it  as  provincial.  He  must  surely 
h.ave  been  acquainted  with  it  in  its  com- 
monly   current     sense.     That,    indeed, 


seems  to  be  perverted  from  another  word, 
of  very  different  origin.  This  of  ours,  in 
both  its  senses,  is  very  clearly  from  A.S. 
ttingc,  aculeus. — Forby. Moor  re- 
marks that,  "  in  bees  the  propensity  to 
hoard  and  reseiit  is  proverbial;"  here 
the  two  principal  meanings  of  the  word 
i/Zniry  equally  apply. 

Noneare; — Lye  thus  explains  this 
word  between  brackets,  marking  it  as  an 
addition  of  his  own  to  Junius's  Etymol. 
Angl.  [Modo — vox  Norf.  etiamnuni  in 
usu,  ai)  Isl.  imnocr  idem  significante,  ut 
monet  Hickesius.  L.]  I  cannot  find  it  in 
Hickes.  Nor  is  the  compound  word 
nitnacr  in  Biorn  Halderson's  Ice.  Diet, 
but  it  is,    in   fact,  now-near,  anon. — G. 

Not  till  now.     So  says  Ray.     But 

we  know  nothing  of  the  word  whatever. 
Sir  Thomas  Browne  might.     Isl.  nunocr. 

modo Forby. 

Feft ; — Prontft.  feffyd,  feofatus  ;   but 

not  likely   to  be  the   right  word Blk. 

To  persuade,  or  endeavour  to  per- 
suade, says  Hay  in  pref.  to  N.  C.  W. 
Yet  he  adds  that  in  his  own  county, 
Essex,  it  meant,  to  "put  off  wares;" 
but  that  he  was  to  seek  for  an  etymon. 
So  are  we.  But  it  is  of  no  importance. 
It  is  one  of  Sir  Thomas  Browne's  words 
become  obsolete — Forby. 

Thepes; — or  rather  thapes.  Gooseberries. 

I  cannot  find  any  word  resembling  this  as 

a  fruit ;  but  Tap  in  Danish  is  the  uvula  of 

the  throat.     V.  Fapes. — Forby,  yi.  110. 

Gosgood  ; — A  vulgar  London  word  for 

a  gooseberry  isgoosgog. — Blk Yeast. 

Ray  says,  that  in  his  time,  it  was  in  use 
also  in  Kent.  But  he  does  not  say,  nor 
is  it  possible  to  conceive,  how  it  is  entitled 
to  so  exalted  an  interpretation  as  he  be- 
stows upon  it — God's  Good  I  A  meaning 
much  more  suitable  and  seemly,  and 
surely  not  improbable,  may  be  conjectur- 
ed. It  may  have  had  its  origin  from 
A.  S.  gos,  anser.  In  Norfolk,  if  not  in 
every  part  of  East  Anglia,  yeast  dump- 
lings have  been  immemorially  a>^sociated 
with  a  roasted  goose;  and  when  proper- 
ly soaked  in  the  natural  gravy  of  the 
fowl,  are  of  a  very  delicious  savour  to  a 
true  East  Anglian  palate.  In  this  sense 
yeast  may  be  said  to  be  good  with  goose, 
and  called  goose-good,  or  in  the  most  an- 
cient form,  gos-good.  But  the  word  is 
now  utterly  extinct.  The  taste  remains. 
— Forby. 


208 


OF    LANGUAGES. 


[tract    VIII. 


left  many  families  in  it,  and  the  language  of  these  parts  had 
surely  been  more  commixed  and  perplext,  if  the  fleet  of  Hugo 


Kamp ; — May,  perhaps,  be  the  game  of 
foot-ball,  from  these  words  in  Prompt. 
"  Camper,  or  player  at  foot-ball,"  also 
"camping.^'  I  suppose  so  named  by 
reason  of  the  space  required  for  this  game. 
—Bill. 

Sihrit ; — or  Sibberet,  means  the  bands 
of  marriage;     "  sibberidge  "  in    IViibr. 

and  "  sybrede  banna"  in  Prompt Blk. 

It  is  one  of  Sir  Thomas  Browne's 

words,  and  in  full  use  at  this  day.  It  is 
explained  by  Hickes,  A.  S.  syb,  cognatio, 
and  byrht,  manifestus,  q.  d.  a  public  an- 
nouncing or  proclamation  of  an  intended 
affinity.  This  is  unquestionably  prefer- 
able to  the  unfounded  notion,  that  the 
word  is  corrupted  from  "  Siquis  sciverit," 
the  supposed  first  words  of  the  publica- 
tion of  banns  in  the  Roman  Latin  service. 

— Forby. This  word  has  been  derived 

from  sib,  said  to  mean  akin ;  and  to  im- 
ply, that  by  banns  the  parties  have  a 
right  to  become  akin,  that  is,  sib-right. 
Some  say  it  is  rib-right, the  right  to  take 
a  rib.  Ray  has  this  proverb  : — As  mucli 
sibVd  as  sieve  and  riddle  that  grew  in 
the  same  wood.  p.  22o.  And  he  says 
that  "sibb'd  means  akin,  and  that  in 
.Suffolk  the  banns  of  matrimony  are  call- 
ed sibberidge,"  which  is  correct ;  though 
sibrit  be  most  common.  Both  are  in  ex- 
tensive use.  Sib  is  also  Scottish.  It 
occurs  twice  in  the  sense  of  relationship 
in  Scottish  colloquialism  in  Guy  Manner- 
ing,  ii,  183,  219.  It  occurs  also  in  the 
Antiquary,  iii,  7.5; — "By  the  religion 
of  our  holy  church  they  are  ower  sibb 
thegithcr."  Again,  "  They  may  be 
brought  to  think  themselves  sae  sibb  as 
on  Christian  law  will  permit  them  wed- 
lock." I  do  not  find,  however,  that  sib- 
rit or  sibridgc  is  Scottish. — Moor. 

Fangasl ; — A  marriageable  maid.  The 
word  is  not  now  known,  and  is,  there- 
fore, given  with  Ray's  interpretation  and 
etymon.  A.  S.  fangan,  capere,  and  gast, 
amor. — Forby. 

Sap  ; — sapy,  foolish  ;  perhaps  only 
sappy,  ill  pronounced G. Mr.  For- 
by was  unaccjuainted  with  the  meaning 
suggested  by  Miss  Gurney,  and  in  which 
I  have  often  heard  the  word  used  : — a 
silly  fellow  is  called  a  sap ;  he  is  also 
termed  sapy  or  sappy.  The  comparison 
intended  is  possibly  to  the  sap  in  tim- 
ber, which  is  of  little  value,  and  soon  be- 
comes unsound  and  useless. 


Cothish ; — is  likely  to  be  an  adj.  from 
this  noun  in  Prompt,  "  cothe,  orswown- 

ing,  sincopa." — Blk. Cothish,  cothy, 

adj.  faint,  sickly,  ailing.  There  can 
surely  be  no  doubt  of  the  identity  of 
these  words ;  the  former  is  Sir  Thomas 
Browne's,  the  latter  the  modern  fornri. 
Yet  in  the  pref.  to  R.  N.  C.  it  is  inter- 
preted morose,  without  a  word  of  expla- 
nation or  proof.  It  never  could  have 
been  used  in  that  sense.  Its  derivation 
is  so  very  obvious,  that  it  is  wonderful  it 
escaped  Ray.  It  is  amply  justified  by 
modern  and  very  frequent  use.  A  dog 
is  said  to  be  cothy  when  he  is  meek  and 
delicate.  A.  S.  cothe,  morbus. 

Thokish ; — thoke,  as  on-sadde  {sad 
meant  firm)  fysh,  humorosns,insolidus, 
Prompt,  applied    to  boggy    land. — Blk. 

Slothful:  sluggish.     This  is  Ray's 

interpretation,    and    may    be    right   for 

ought  we  know. — Forby. The  sense 

suggested  by  Mr.  Black  I  believe  to  be 
the  true  one. 

Bide-owe; — interpreted  by  Ray  (Pr. 
to  N.  C.)  "  poenas  dare."  It  may  be  so. 
It  is  impossible  to  assent  or  gainsay,  as  it 
is  totally  extinct.  It  is  one  of  Sir  Tho- 
mas    Browne's   words. —  Forby. Let 

us,  in  such  failure  of  authorities,  hazard 
a  conjecture ;  that  it  means  "  wait  a 
while," — bide  a  wee. 

"Pax  war; — synewe,"  Prompt.  It  is 
still  used  dialectically  for  our  pathtvax  or 

packwax Blk. The  strong  tendon 

in  the  neck  of  animals.  It  is  a  word 
which  has  no  proper  claim  to  admission 
here,  for  it  is  quite  general ;  yet  must  be 
admitted,  because  it  is  on  Sir  Thomas 
Browne's  list.  It  must  certainly  have 
been  in  use  in  his  time.  And  it  is  very 
strange  he  should  not  have  heard  it  till 
he  came  into  Norfolk.  Ray,  in  the  pre- 
face to  N.  C,  makes  no  remark  to  this 
effect,  but  takes  this  as  he  finds  it  with 
the  other  words.  Yet  he  had  himself 
used  it  in  his  great  work  on  the  Creation, 
and  to  all  appearance  as  a  word  well 
known.  He  spells  it  pack-wax,  indeed, 
but  that  can  surely  make  no  difference. 
He  not  only  gives  no  derivation,  but  de- 
clines giving  one,  at  the  same  time  de- 
claring his  own  knowledge  of  the  very 
extensive,  if  not  general,  use  of  the  word. 
The  fact  is,  that  it  is  not  even  confinc-d 
to  the  English  language.  It  is  used  by 
Linnaeus,  somewhere  in  the  Upsal  Amoe- 


TRACT    Mil.] 


OP    LANGUAGES. 


209 


tie  Bones  had  not  been  cast  away,  wherein  tlireescore  tliou- 
sarul  soldiers  out  of  Britany  and  Flanders  were  to  be  wafted 
over,  and  were  by  king  John's  appointment  to  have  a  settled 
habitation  in  the  counties  of  Norfolk  and  Suffolk.^ 

But  beside  your  laudable  endeavours  in  the  Saxon,  you  are 
not  like  to  repent  you  of  your  studies  in  the  other  European 
and  western  languages,  for  therein  are  delivered  many  excel- 
lent historical,  moral,  and  philosophical  discourses,  wherein 
men  merely  versed  in  the  learned  languages  are  often  at  a 
loss :  but  although  you  are  so  well  accomplished  in  the 
French,  you  will  not  surely  conceive  that  you  are  master  of 
all  the  languages  in  France,  for  to  omit  the  Briton,  Britonant 
or  old  British,  yet  retained  in  some  part  of  Britany,  I  shall 
only  propose  this  unto  your  construction. 

Chavalisco  d'aquestes  Boemes  chems  an  freitado  lou  cap 
cun  taules  Jargonades,  ero  necy  chi  voluiget  bouta  sin  tens 


nitates  Academicae.  A  friend,  who  un- 
dertook the  search,  has  not  been  able  to 
find  the  passage  ;  but  it  is  not  likely  that 
any  thing  explanatory  would  be  found. 
Indeed,  it  is  a  sort  of  cru.c  elymologorum. 
They,  very  reasonably,  do  not  care  to 
coine  near  it.  And  they  might  all 
frankly  avow,  as  Hay  does,  that  they 
"have  nothing  to  say  to  it."  Br.  has 
ji-t-fax. —  For  by. 

'  the  Danish  language,  Jj-c]  I  do  not 
see  the  Danish  original  of  most  of  the 
Norfolk  words  here  given  ;  but  there  are 
several  which  can  be  traced  to  no  otlicr, 
and  I  have  found  several  which  are,  I 
suspect,  peculiar  to  the  coast : — 

Hefty ; — stormy.     Dan.  hejtig,  angry. 

Swale ; — shade.  Dan.  or  Ice.  svala, 
cold. 

K'illocli ; — a  guillemot,  or  any  sea 
bird  of  the  awk  or  diver  kind. 

Roke  ; — fog   or    sea    haze. Ral;, 

wet,  Ice.,  "With  cloudy  gum  and  rak 
ouerquhelmst  the  are." — Gauin  Douglas. 

To  threpe  ; — used  by  the  fishermen  in 
the  sense  of  "  to  clear."  "The  fog  begins 
to.threpeyonitT."  Ice.  skrcppa.  Uila- 
bi,  se  subducere. 

Lum  ; — the  handle  of  an  oar.  Icel. 
hlummr.  In  other  parts  of  Kngland, 
however,  it  is  called  the  loom  of  an  oar. 

Rooms;  —  the  spaces  between  the 
thwarts  of  a  boat.  Ice.  rum,  used  only 
in  this  sense. 

To  go  driving  ; — to  go  fishing  :  chiefly 

VOL.    IV. 


applied  to  the  herring  fishers,  I  think. — 
G. 

I  have  added,  from  a  list  of  Norfolk 
words  furnished  me  by  the  same  corres- 
pondetit,  the  following,  which  are  either 
new  to  Forby,  or  with  different  deriva- 
tions : — 

"  If'ips  and  strays,"  not  waifs  and 
strays,  but  "  wipper  and  straae."  Dan. 
"  heads  and  straws  of  corn,"  odds  and 
ends.  I  found  this  expression  in  a  list  of 
provincialisms  of  the  Danish  island  of 
Zealand. 

To  lope; — to  stride  along.  Ger.  hlaup- 
en,  to  run. 

Unstowly ; — applied  to  children;  un- 
ruly. 

Car  ; — a  low  marshy  grove.  Alder 
car,  osier  car.     Kior,  Ice.,  marsh. 

Skep  or  skip  ; — a  basket ;  toad's  skep, 
(not  cap,  I  think).  Skieppe  is  a  Danish 
half  bushel  measure. 

Pottens  ; — crutches. 

Hobby; — small  horse.  Dan.  hoppe,a 
mare. 

U'unt ; — to  sit  as  a  hen.  Sax.  wuni- 
an,  to  abide. 

Shacking.  In  German  yechen  is  to 
club — and  "  zur  yeche  gehen,"  literally, 
"  to  go  to  shack"  is  an  expression  in  use, 
meaning  to  take  a  common  share.  The 
essence  of  our  shacking  is  that  the  pigs 
and  geese  run  in  common  over  the  fields 
to  pick  up  the  remains  of  the  harvest. 
—G. 


210  OF    LANGUAGES.  [tRACT    VIII. 

embe  aquelles.  Anin  k  lous  occells,  che  dizen  tat  prou  ben 
en  ein  voz  L'  ome  nosap  comochodochi  yen  ay  jes  de  plazer, 
d'  ausir  la  niitat  de  parauUes,  en  el  mon. 

This  is  a  part  of  that  language  which  Scaligei*  nameth 
Idiotismus  Tectofagicus  or  Langue  d'oc,  counterdistinguish- 
ing  it  unto  the  Idiotismus  Francicus  or  Langue  d'ouy,  not 
understood  in  a  petty  corner  or  between  a  few  mountains,  but 
in  parts  of  early  civiHty,  in  Languedoc,  Provence  and  Cata- 
lonia, which  put  together  will  make  little  less  than  England. 

Without  some  knowledge  herein  you  cannot  exactly  under- 
stand the  works  of  Rabelais  :  by  this  the  French  themselves 
are  fain  to  make  out  that  preserved  relique  of  old  French, 
containing  the  league  between  Charles  and  Lewis  the  sons  of 
Ludovicus  Pius.  Hereby  may  tolerably  be  understood  the  se- 
veral tracts,  written  in  the  Catalonian  tongue  ;  and  in  this  is 
published  the  Tract  of  Falconry  written  by  Theodosius  and 
Symmachus  ;  in  this  is  yet  conserved  the  Poem  Vilhuardine 
concerning  the  French  expedition  in  the  holy  war,  and  the 
taking  of  Constantinople,  among  the  works  of  Marius  ^qui- 
cola  an  Italian  poet.  You  may  find  in  this  language,  a  plea- 
sant dialogue  of  love  ;  this,  about  an  hundred  years  ago,  was 
in  high  esteem,  when  many  Italian  wits  flocked  into  Provence; 
and  the  famous  Petrarcha  wrote  many  of  his  poems  in  Vau- 
cluse  in  that  country.^ 

^country.']     In  the  MS,  Sloan.   1827,  que  vos  dependants.     II  s'est  desi'a  queri 

I  find  the  following  very  odd  passage  ;  do  mal  St.   Francois,   et  bride  sa  mule 

respecting   wiiicli,    most   certainly,    the  a  vostre    despens.     Croyez   moi,    il    ne 

author's    assertion    is    incontrovertible,  s'amusera    pas   a   la    moutarde ;    niais, 

that   "  the  sense  may  afford  some  trou-  vous  ayant  mine  et  massacre  vos  affaires, 

ble."  1  insert  it,  not  expecting  that  many  au  dernier  coup  il  vous  rendra  Monsieur 

readers  will  take  that  trouble — but  it  ap-  sans  queue, 

peared  too  characteristic  to  be  omitted.  "  Mais  pour  I'autre  goulafie  et  benueur 

"  Now  having  wearied  you  with  old  Ian-  a  tire  la  rigau,  qui  vous  a  si  rogneraent 

guages  or  little  understood,   I  shall  put  fait  la  barbe,  I'envoyes  vous  a  Pampe- 

an  end   unto   your    trouble   in    modern  lunc.     Mais  auparavant,  a  mon  advis,  il 

French,  by  a  short  letter  composed  by  auroit  a  miserere  jusques  a  vitulos,  etje 

me  for  your  sake,  though  not  concerning  le  ferois  un  moutton  de  Berry.     En  le 

yourself;  wherein,  though  the  words  be  traittant   bellement   et    de   bon    conseil, 

plain  and  genuine,    yet  the  sense  may  vous  assuyes  de  rompre  un  anguille  sur 

afford  some  trouble.  les  genoux.     Ne    lui  fies   poynt:  il   ne 

"Monsieur, — Ne    vous  laisses    plus  rabbaissera  le  meiiton,  et  rnourra  dans 

manger  la  laine  sur  le  dors.     Regardes  sa   peau.     II   scait  bien    que   les   belles 

bien  ce  gros  magot,  lequel  vous  voyez  de  paroles    n'escorchent   pas    la   guele,    les 

si  bon  ceil.     Assurcment  il  fait  le  mitou.  quelles   il    payera  a  sepmaine  de   deux 

Monsieur,  vous  chausses  les  lunettes  de  Jeudies.      Chasses   le   de   chez    vous   a 

travers,  ne  voyant  point  comma  il  prati-  bonne  heure,  car  il  a  cste  a  Naples  sans 


TRACT    VIII.]  OF    LANGUAGES.  211 

For  the  word  (Dread)  in  the  royal  title  (Dread  sovereign)  of 
which  you  desire  to  know  the  meaning,  I  return  answer  unto 
your  question  briefly  thus. 

Most  men  do  vulgarly  understand  this  word  dread  after 
the  common  and  EngUsh  acceptation,  as  implying  fear,  awe,  or 
dread. 

Others  may  think  to  expound  it  from  the  French  word 
droit  or  droyt.  For,  whereas,  in  elder  times,  the  presidents 
and  supremes  of  courts  were  termed  sovereigns,  men  might 
conceive  this  a  distinctive  title  and  proper  unto  the  king  as 
eminently  and  by  right  the  sovereign. 

A  third  exposition  may  be  made  from  some  Saxon  original, 
particularly  from  Driht,  Doniine,  or  Drihten,  Domlnus,  in  the 
Saxon  language,  the  word  for  Dominus  throughout  the  Saxon 
Psalms,  and  used  in  the  expression  of  the  year  of  our  Lord 
in  the  Decretal  Epistle  of  Pope  Agatho  unto  Athelred  King 
of  the  Mercians,  anno  680. 

Verstegan  would  have  this  term  Drihten  appropriate  unto 
God.  Yet,  in  the  constitutions  of  Withred  King  of  Kent,* 
we  find  the  same  word  used  for  a  Lord  or  Master,  si  in  ves- 
peru  prcecedente  solem  servus  ex  mandato  Domini  aliquod 
opus  servile  egerit,  Dominus  (Drihten)  80  solidis  luito. 
However,  therefore,  though  Driht,  Domine,  might  be  most 
eminently  applied  unto  the  Lord  of  heaven,  yet  might  it  be 
also  transferred  unto  potentates  and  gods  on  earth,  unto 
whom  fealty  is  given  or  due,  according  unto  the  feudist  term 

•   y.  Cl.  Spelmanni  Concil. 

passer  les  monts  ;  et  ancorc  que  parle  en  loran  *    lui    vault  autant   que    I'isle   dc 

maistre,  est  patient  de  St.  Cosme.  France,  et  la  tour  de  Cordan  +  lui  vault 

"  Soucies  vous  aussi  de  la  garcionaire,  le  mesme  avec  la  Louvre, 
chez  vous,  qu'elle  n'ayst  le  mal  de  neuf  "  Serviteur  tres- humble, 
mois.     Assurement  elle  a  le  nez  tourne  "  THOMAS  BROUN'E." 
a  la  friandise,  et    les  talons   bien  courts.  •  Note  ; — "Alloran,  Allusatna,  or  In- 
Elle  jouera  voluntiers  a  I'Home;  et  si  le  sula  Erroris  ;     a  small  desolate   barren 
hault  ne  defend  le  bas,  avant  la  venue  island,  whereon  nothing  livelh  but  co- 
des cicoignes,  lui  s'enlevcra  la  Juppe.  neys,  in  the  Mediterranean  sea,  between 

"  Mais,    pour  le  petit  Gymnosophistc  Carthagena  and   Calo-de-trcs-furcus,    in 

chez    vous,    caresses   le    vous   aux   bras  Barbary." 

ouverts.      Voyez    vous    pas    comme    a  f  Note; — "  A  small  island  or  rock,  in 

toutes  les  menaces  de  Fortune  il  branle  the  mouth  of  the   river  Garonne,   with 

comme   la    Bastille  ?      Vrayment  il   est  one  tower  in  it,  where  a  man  liveth,   to 

Stoic  a  vingt-quatre  carrats,  etde  mesme  take  care  of  lights  for  such  as  go  to,  or 

calibre  avec  les    vieux   .Ascetiques.     Al-  come  from.  Bordeaux." 


2\2  OF    LANGUAGES.  [tRACT    VIII. 

Ugeus,^  a  Uganda,  unto  whom  they  were  bound  in  fealty. 
And  therefore  from  Driht,  Doinine,  dread  sovereign,  may, 
probably,  owe  its  original. 

I  have  not  time  to  enlarge  upon  this  subject :  pray  let  this 
pass,  as  it  is,  for  a  letter  and  not  for  a  treatise.     I  am. 

Yours,  &c. 

'  ligeus.']     "  Or  liege  lord."— M.S'.  Sloan.  1827. 


TUACT    1\.]  or    Tin:    TUMULI.  ;.M, 


1^  11  A  C  T    I  X  . 

OF    ARTIFICIAL    HILLS,    MOUNTS,    OR    BURROWS, 

IN    MANY    PARTS    OF    ENGLAND:    WHAT    THEY    ARE,    TO    WHAT 

END    RAISED,    AND    BY    WHAT    NATIONS. 

Mij  Honoured  Friend  Mr.  JV.  D.'s '  Query. 

In  my  last  journey  through  Marshland,  Holland,  and  a  great 
part  of  the  Fens,  I  observed  divers  artificial  heaps  of  earth 
of  a  very  large  magnitude,  and  I  hear  of  many  others  which 
are  in  other  parts  of  those  countries,  some  of  them  are  at 
least  twenty  foot  in  direct  heiglit  from  the  level  whereon  they 
stand.  I  would  gladly  know  your  opinion  of  them,  and 
whether  you  think  not  that  they  were  raised  by  the  Romans 
or  Saxons,  to  cover  the  bones  or  ashes  of  some  eminent 
persons  ? 


Mij  Answer. 

Worthy  Sir, 
Concerning  artificial  mounts  and  hills,  raised  without  fortifi- 
cations attending  them,  in  most  parts  of  England,  the  most 
considerable  thereof  I  conceive  to  be  of  two  kinds ;  that  is, 
either  signal  boundaries  and  land  marks,  or  else  sepulchral 
monuments  or  hills  of  interment  for  remarkable  and  eminent 
persons,  especially  such  as  died  in  the  wars. 

'  Mr.  U:  D.]     "  The  initials,  in  both  shew  that  he  availed  liimself  of  the  re- 

the    preceding  editions,    are  "  E.   D. :"  ply  he  obtained   to    his   enquiry:   for  he 

but  it  has  been  clearly  ascertained  that  lias  transcribed   the  quotations  fron»  Le- 

this   is  an    error.      The    query   was    Sir  land  and  Worniius  in  illustration  of   the 

William  Dugdale's  ;   and  his  reply  to  the  Saxon  and    Danish    mode   of  sepulture  ; 

present  discourse    will  be   found   vol.  i,  and  has  given   almost  verbatim  the  pas- 

p.  381.     A  reference  to   Dugdale's  His-  sage  referring  to  Germanicus. 
tory  of  Embanking    and   Draining,   will 


214  OF  THE  TUMULI.  [tRACT  IX. 

As  for  such  which  are  sepulchral  monuments,  upon  bare 
and  naked  view,  they  are  not  appropriable  unto  any  of  the 
three  nations  of  the  Romans,  Saxons,  or  Danes,  who,  after 
the  Britons,  have  possessed  this  land ;  because  upon  strict 
account,  they  may  be  appliable  unto  them  all.'^ 

For  that  the  Romans  used  such  hilly  sepultures,  beside 
many  other  testimonies,  seems  confirmable  from  the  practice 
of  Germanicus,  who  thus  interred  the  unburied  bones  of  the 

slain  soldiers  of  Varus  ;  and  that  expression  of  Virgil,  of  high 

antiquity  among  the  Latins, 

facit  ingens  monte  sub  alio 


Regis  Dercenni  terreno  ex  aggere  bustum. 

That  the  Saxons  made  use  of  this  way  is  collectible  from 
several  records,  and  that  pertinent  expression  of  Lelandus,* 
Saxoties,  gens  Christi  ignara,  in  hortis  amcenis,  si  domi  forte 
cegroti  moriehantur ;  sin  forts  et  hello  occisi,  in  egestis  per 
campos  terrce  tumulis,  (qiios  biirgos  appellabant)  sepulti  sunt. 

That  the  Danes  observed  this  practice,  their  own  antiqui- 
ties do  frequently  confirm,  and  it  stands  precisely  delivered 
by  Adolphus  Cyprius,  as  the  learned  Wormius  f  hath  ob- 
served. Danl  olim  i?i  memoriam  regum  et  heroum,  ex  terra 
coacervata  ingentes  moles,  montium  instar  eminentes,  erex- 
isse,  credibile  omnino  ac  probahile  est,  atque  illis  in  loots  ut 
plurimum,  quo  scepe  homines  commearent,  atque  iter  liahe- 
rent,  ut  in  viis  publicis  posteritati  memoriam  consecrarent, 
et  quodammodo  immortalitaii  mandarent.  And  the  like  monu- 
ments are  yet  to  be  observed  in  Norway  and  Denmark  in  no 
small  numbers. 

*  Le.land  in  Assertione  Ren'is  Arlkuri. 
f   Wormius  in  Monumentis  Danicis. 

^  appliahk  unto  them  all.]  Mr.  Peggc,  muU  generally  are.     The   Danish  lows 

in  a  paper  published  in  the  Archaeologia,  would  frequently  exhibit  a  circle  of  stones 

on  the  Arbour  Lows,  in  Derbyshire,  ex-  round    their   base.       But   the   contents 

presses   the   same    opinion; — ascribing  would  furnish  the  best  and  perhaps  the 

these  burrows  or  luviuli  to  Britons,  Ro-  only  sure  criterion   to  judge  by ;    kist- 

mans,  Saxons,  and  Danes, — and  not  to  vaens   and   stone  coflBns,  rings,    beads, 

any    one    of   those   people   exclusively,  and  other  articles,  peculiar  to  the  Bri- 

Some  he  supposes  to  be   British,  from  tons,  being  found  in  some;  Roman  coins, 

their  being  dispersed  over  moors,  and  urns,  and  implements  in  others,  and  the 

usually  on  eminences;  not  placed  with  arms  and  utensils  of  the  Saxons  or  Danes 

any  regard  to  roads,  as  the  Roman  tn-  in  others — Archceologia,  vii,  131,  &c. 


TRACT  i.\,]  OF  Tnt:  TL'MULi.  ;il5 

So  that  upon  a  single  view  and  outward  observation  they 
may  be  the  monuments  of  any  of  these  three  nations :  although 
the  greatest  number,  not  improbably,  of  the  Saxons;  who 
fought  many  battles  with  the  Britons  and  Danes,  and  also 
between  their  own  nations,  and  left  the  proper  name  of  bur- 
rows for  these  hills  still  retained  in  many  of  them,  as  the 
seven  burrows  upon  Salisbury  plain,  and  in  many  other  parts 
of  England. 

But  of  these  and  the  like  hills  there  can  be  no  clear  and 
assured  decision  without  an  ocular  exploration,  and  subter- 
raneous enquiry  by  cutting  through  one  of  them  either  di- 
rectly or  cross-wise.  For  so  with  lesser  charge  discovery 
may  be  made  what  is  under  them,  and  consequently  the  in- 
tention of  their  erection.  For  if  they  were  raised  for  remark- 
able and  eminent  boundaries,  then  about  their  bottom  will  be 
found  the  lasting  substances  of  burnt  bones  of  beasts,  of  ashes, 
bricks,  lime,  or  coals. 

If  urns  be  found,  thev  might  be  erected  by  the  Romans 
before  the  term  of  urn-burying  or  custom  of  burning  the  dead 
expired :  but  if  raised  by  the  Romans  after  that  period,  in- 
scriptions, swords,  shields,  and  arms,  after  the  Roman  mode, 
may  afford  a  good  distinction. 

But  if  these  hills  were  made  by  Saxons  or  Danes,  disco- 
very may  be  made  from  the  fashion  of  their  arms,  bones  of 
their  horses,  and  other  distinguishing  substances  buried  with 
them. 

And  for  such  an  attempt  there  wanteth  not  encouragement. 
For  a  like  mount  or  burrow  was  opened  in  the  days  of  King 
Henry  the  Eighth  upon  Barham  Down,  in  Kent,  by  the  care 
of  Mr.  Thomas  Digges,  and  charge  of  Sir  Christopher  Hales ; 
and  a  large  urn  with  ashes  was  found  under  it,  as  is  delivered 
by  Thomas  Twinus,  dc  Rebus  Albionicis,  a  learned  man  of 
that  country,  sub  'incredlbili  terrce  acervo,  urna  c'lnere  ussium 
ma^norum  fragmentis  plena,  cum  galcis,  cli/peis  fcneis  et 
ferreis  rubigincfere  consumptis,  inusitatcc  tnagnitudinis,  eruta 
est :  sed  nulla  Inscriptio  nomen,  nullum  testimonium  tcmpus, 
uut  fortunam  exponebant :  and  not  very  long  ago,  as  Camden 
delivereth,*  in  one  of  the  mounts  of  Barklow  hills,  in  Essex, 

•    Camd.  Brit  p.  .I'Jfi. 


l> 


16  OF    THE    TUMULI.  [tRACT    IX. 


being  levelled,  there  were  found  three  troughs,  containing 
broken  bones,  conceived  to  have  been  of  Danes  :  and  in  later 
time  we  find,  that  a  burrow  was  opened  in  the  Isle  of  Man, 
wherein  fourteen  urns  were  found  with  burnt  bones  in  them; 
and  one  more  neat  than  the  rest,  placed  in  a  bed  of  fine  white 
sand,  containing  nothing  but  a  few  brittle  bones,  as  having 
passed  the  fire  ;  according  to  the  particular  account  thereof 
in  the  description  of  the  Isle  of  Man.*     Surely  many  noble 
bones  and  ashes  have  been  contented  with  such  hilly  tombs ; 
which  neither  admitting  ornament,  epitaph,  or  inscription, 
may,  if  earthquakes  spare  them,  out-last  all  other  monuments. 
Su(B  sunt  metis  7netce.     Obelisks  have  their  term,  and  pyra- 
mids  will  tumble,  but  these   mountainous  monuments  may 
stand,  and  are  like  to  have  the  same  period  with  the  earth. 

More  might  be  said,  but  my  business  of  another  nature, 
makes  me  take  off  my  hand.     I  am, 

Yours,  &c. 

*   Published  ICjG,  bij  Dan.  King. 


TRACT    X.]  or    TKOAS.  217 


TRACT    X. 

of  tkoas,  what  place  is  meant  by  that  name. 

also,  of  the  situations  of  sodom,  gomoukha,  admah, 

zeboim,  in  the  dead  sea. 

Sir, 
To  your  geographical  queries,  I  answer  as  follows : — 

In  sundry  passages  of  the  New  Testament,  in  the  Acts  of 
the  Apostles,  and  Epistles  of  St.  Paul,  we  meet  with  the 
word  Troas;  ^  how  he  went  from  Troas  to  Philippi,  in  Mace- 
donia, from  thence  unto  Troas  again  :  how  he  remained  seven 
days  in  that  place  :  from  thence  on  foot  to  Assos,  whither  the 
disciples  had  sailed  from  Troas,  and,  there  taking  him  in, 
made  their  voyage  unto  CEesarea. 

Now,  whether  this  Troas  be  the  name  of  a  city  or  a  certain 
region  of  Phrygia  seems  no  groundless  doubt  of  yours :  for 
that  it  was  sometimes  taken  in  tlie  signification  of  some  coun- 
try, is  acknowledged  by  Ortelius,  Stephanus,  and  Grotius  ; 
and  it  is  plainly  set  down  by  Strabo,  that  a  region  of  Phrygia 
in  Asia  minor,  was  so  taken  in  ancient  times  ;  and  that  at  the 
Trojan  war,  all  the  territory  which  comprehended  the  nine 
principalities  subject  unto  the  King  of  Ilium  T^olrj  Xiyov/Mevri, 
was  called  by  the  name  of  Troja.  And  this  might  seem  suffi- 
ciently to  solve  the  intention  of  the  description,  when  he  came 
or  went  from  Troas,  that  is  some  part  of  that  region  ;  and  will 
otherwise  seem  strange  unto  many  how  he  should  be  said  to 
go  or  come  from  that  city  which  all  writers  had  laid  in  the 
ashes  about  a  thousand  years  before. 

Troas.]     Troas  was  a  small  country  Alexandri,  in  honour  of  his  master  Alex- 

lyuig   to  llic  west  of  My=ia,  upon   the  antler  ;  who  began  the  work,  but  lived 

^ea.     It  took  tins  name  from  its  princi-  not  to  hung  it  to  any  perfection.     But 

nal  city,  Troas,  a  se;i-port,  and  built,  as  in   following  times  it  came  to  be  called 

is  said,  about  some  four  miles  from  the  simply  Troas.      The  name  may  be  un- 

situation  of  old  Troy,  by  Lysimachus,  derstood  as  taken  by  the  sacred  writers 

one  of  Alexander  the  Great's  captains,  to  denote  the  country  as  well  as  city  so 

who  peopled   it  from  the   neighbiBurinp  called,  but  chiefly  the  latter, 
iiies,  and  called  it  .\lcxandria.  or  Troas 


218  OF    TROAS.  [tract    X. 

All  which  notwithstanding, — since  we  read  in  the  text  a 
particular  abode  of  seven  days,  and  such  particulars  as  leav- 
ing of  his  cloak,  books,  and  parchments  at  Troas,  and  that 
St.  Luke  seems  to  have  been  taken  in  to  the  travels  of  St. 
Paul  at  this  place,  where  he  begins  in  the  Acts  to  write  in 
the  first  person — this  may  rather  seem  to  have  been  some  city 
or  special  habitation,  than  any  province  or  region  without 
such  limitation. 

Now,  that  such  a  city  there  was,  and  that  of  no  mean  note, 
is  easily  verified  from  historical  observation.  For  though  old 
Ilium  was  anciently  destroyed,  yet  was  there  another  raised 
by  the  relicts  of  that  people,  not  in  the  same  place,  but  about 
thirty  furlongs  westward,  as  is  to  be  learned  from  Strabo. 

Of  this  place  Alexander,  in  his  expedition  against  Darius, 
took  especial  notice,  endowing  it  with  sundry  immunities, 
with  promise  of  greater  matters,  at  his  return  from  Persia ; 
inclined  hereunto  from  the  honour  he  bore  unto  Homer, 
whose  earnest  reader  he  was,  and  upon  whose  poems,  by  the 
help  of  Anaxarchus  and  Callisthenes,  he  made  some  obser- 
vations :  as  also  much  moved  hereto  upon  the  account  of 
his  cognation  with  the  ^acides  and  Kings  of  Molossus, 
whereof  Andromache,  the  wife  of  Hector,  was  Queen.  After 
the  death  of  Alexander,  Lysimachus  surrounded  it  with  a 
wall,  and  brought  the  inhabitants  of  the  neighbour  towns 
unto  it ;  and  so  it  bore  the  name  of  Alexandria  ;  which,  from 
Antigonus,  was  also  called  Antigonia,  according  to  the  in- 
scription of  that  famous  medal  in  Goltsius,  Colonia  Troas 
Antigonia  Alexandrea,  legio  vicesima  prima. 

When  the  Romans  first  went  into  Asia  against  Antiochus, 
it  was  but  a  KuiM'rrokig,  and  no  great  city ;  but,  upon  the  peace 
concluded,  the  Romans  much  advanced  the  same.  Fimbria, 
the  rebelHous  Roman,  spoiled  it  in  the  Mithridatick  wars, 
boasting  that  he  had  subdued  Troy  in  eleven  days,  which 
the  Grecians  could  not  take  in  almost  as  many  years.  But  it 
was  again  rebuilt  and  countenanced  by  the  Romans,  and  be- 
came a  Roman  colony,  with  great  immunities  conferred  on 
it ;  and  accordingly  it  is  so  set  down  by  Ptolemy.  For  the 
Romans,  deriving  themselves  from  the  Trojans,  thought  no  fa- 
vour too  great  for  it ;  especially  Julius  Caesar,  who,  both  in 


TRACT    X.]  OF    TROAh.  tilH 

imitation  of  Alexander,  and  for  his  own  descent  from  Julus, 
of  the  posterity  of  ^i^neas,  with  much  passion  affected  it,  and 
in  a  discontented  humour,*  was  once  in  mind  to  translate  the 
Roman  wealth  unto  it ;  so  that  it  became  a  very  remarkable 
place,  and  was,  in  Strabo's  time,f  one  of  the  noble  cities  of 
Asia. 

And,  if  they  understood  the  prediction  of  Homer  in  refer- 
ence unto  the  Romans,  as  some  expound  it  in  Strabo,  it  might 
much  promote  their  affection  unto  that  place ;  which  being  a 
remarkable  prophecy,  and  scarce  to  be  paralleled  in  Pagan 
story,  made  before  Rome  was  built,  and  concerning  the  lasting 
reign  of  the  progeny  of  i^neas,  they  could  not  but  take  es- 
pecial notice  of  it.  For  thus  is  Neptune  made  to  speak,  when 
he  saved  /Eneas  from  the  fury  of  Achilles. 

Verum  agite  hunc  subito  prsesenti  ^  morte  trahamus 
Ne  Cronides  ira  flammet  si  foitis  Achilles 
Hunc  mactet,  fati  quern  lex  evadere  jussit. 
Ne  genus  iritereat  de  laeto  semine  totum 
Dardani  ab  excelso  prse  cunctis  prolibusolim, 
Dilecti  quos  e  mortal!  stirpe  creavit, 
Nunc  etiam  Priami  stirpem  Saturnius  odit, 
Trojugenuni  post  hasc  yEneas  sceptra  lenebit 
£t  nati  natorum  et  qui  nascentur  ab  illis. 

The  Roman  favours  were  also  continued  unto  St.  Paul's 
days ;  for  Claudius, J  producing  an  ancient  letter  of  the  Ro- 
mans unto  King  Seleucus  concerning  the  Trojan  privileges, 
made  a  release  of  their  tributes ;  and  Nero  elegantly  pleaded 
for  their  immunities,  and  remitted  all  tributes  unto  them.  § 

And,  therefore,  there  being  so  remarkable  a  city  in  this 
territory,  it  may  seem  too  hard  to  lose  the  same  in  the  gene- 
ral name  of  the  country  ;  and  since  it  was  so  eminently  fa- 
voured by  emperors,  enjoying  so  many  immunities,  and  full 
of  Roman  privileges,  it  was  probably  very  populous,  and  a 
fit  abode  for  St.  Paul,  who  being  a  Roman  citizen,  might  live 
more  quietly  himself,  and  have  no  small  number  of  faithful 
well-wishers  in  it. 

Yet  must  we  not  conceive  that  this  was  the  old  Troy,  or 
re-built  in  the  same  place  with  it :  for  Troas  was  placed  about 
thirty  furlongs  west,  and  upon  the  sea  shore  :  so  that,  to  hold 

•  Sueton.  t   iX>jCr/i/J.UV  T(i>.jw>,  {  Suelon.         §   Tacit.  Ann.  1.  13. 


220  OF    TKOAS.  [tract    X. 

a  clearer  apprehension  hereof  than  is  commonly  delivered  in 
the  discourses  of  Troy,  we  may  consider  one  inland  Troy,  or 
old  Ilium,  which  was  built  fiirther  within  the  land,  and  so  was 
removed  from  the  port  where  the  Grecian  fleet  lay  in  Homer ; 
and  another  maritime  Troy,  which  was  upon  the  sea  coast, 
placed  in  tlie  maps  of  Ptolemy,  between  Lectum  and  Sigaeum 
or  Port  Janizam,  southwest  from  the  old  city,  which  was  this 
of  St.  Paul,  and  whereunto  are  appliable  the  particular  ac- 
counts of  Bellonius,  when,  not  an  hundred  years  ago,  he  de- 
scribed the  ruins  of  Troy  with  tlieir  baths,  aqueducts,  walls, 
and  towers,  to  be  seen  from  the  sea  as  he  sailed  between  it 
and  Tenedos  ;  and  where,  upon  nearer  view,  he  observed  some 
signs  and  impressions  of  his  conversion  in  the  ruins  of  chui'ches, 
crosses,  and  inscriptions  upon  stones. 

Nor  was  this  only  a  fomous  city  in  the  days  of  St.  Paul, 
but  considerable  long  after.  For,  upon  the  letter  of  Adria- 
nus,  Herodes,  Atticus,*  at  a  great  charge,  repaired  their 
baths,  contrived  aqueducts  and  noble  water  courses  in  it. 
As  is  also  collectible  from  the  medals  of  Caracalla,  of  Severus, 
and  Crispina ;  with  inscriptions,  Colonia  Alexandria  Troas, 
bearing  on  the  reverse  either  an  horse,  a  temple,  or  a  woman; 
denoting  their  destruction  by  an  horse,  their  prayers  for  the 
emperor's  safety,  and,  as  some  conjecture,  the  memory  of  Si- 
bylla Phrygia,  or  Hellespontica. 

Nor  wanted  this  city  the  favour  of  christian  princes,  but 
was  made  a  bishop's  see  under  the  archbishop  of  Cyzicum  ; 
but  in  succeeding  discords  was  destroyed  and  ruined,  and  the 
nobler  stones  translated  to  Constantinople  by  the  Turks  to 
beautify  their  mosques  and  other  buildings. 

Concerning  the  Dead  Sea,  accept  of  these  few  remarks. 

In  the  map  of  the  Dead  Sea  we  meet  with  the  figure  of  the 
cities  which  were  destroyed :  of  Sodom,  Gomorrah,  Admah, 
and  Zeboim ;  but  with  no  uniformity  ;  men  placing  them  va- 
riously, and  from  the  uncertainty  of  their  situation,  taking  a 
fair  liberty  to  set  them  where  they  please. 

For  Admah,  Zeboim,  and  Gomorrah,  there  is  no  light 
from  the  text  to  define  their  situation.  But,  that  Sodom 
could  not  be  far  from  Segor  which  was  seated  under  the 

*  Philostral.  in  Vila  llcrodis  Attki. 


TRACT    X.]  OF    TllOAS,  f>^l 

mountains  near  the  lake,  seems  interrible  from  the  siuUlen 
arrival  of  Lot,  who  coming  from  Sodom  at  day  break,  at- 
tained to  Segor  at  sun  rising;  and  therefore  Sodom  is  to 
be  placed  not  many  miles  from  it,  not  in  the  middle  of 
the  lake,  which  against  that  place  is  about  eighteen  miles 
over,  and  so  will  leave  nine  miles  to  be  gone  in  so  small  a 
space  of  time. 

The  valley  being  large,  the  lake  now  in  length  about 
seventy  English  miles,  the  river  Jordan  and  divers  others 
running  over  the  plain,  'tis  probable  the  best  cities  were 
seated  upon  those  streams ;  but  how  the  Jordan  passed  or 
winded,  or  whei'e  it  took  in  the  other  streams,  is  a  point  too 
old  for  geography  to  determine. 

For,  that  the  river  gave  the  fruitfulness  unto  this  valley  by 
over-watering  that  low  region,  seems  plain  from  that  expres- 
sion in  the  text,*  that  it  was  watered,  s'lcut  Paradisus  et 
.■Egyptiis,  like  Eden  and  the  plains  of  Mesopotamia,  where 
Euphrates  yearly  overfloweth ;  or  like  Egypt  where  Nilus 
doth  the  like ;  and  seems  probable  also  from  the  same  course 
of  the  river  not  far  above  this  valley  where  the  Israelites  pas- 
sed Jordan,  where  't  is  said  that  "  Jordan  overfloweth  its  banks 
in  the  time  of  harvest." 

That  it  must  have  had  some  passage  luider  ground  in  the 
compass  of  this  valley  before  the  creation  of  this  lake,  seems 
necessary  from  the  great  current  of  Jordan,  and  from  the 
rivers  Arnon,  Cedron,  Zaeth,  which  empty  into  this  valley ; 
but  where  to  place  that  concurrence  of  waters  or  place  of  its 
absorbition,  there  is  no  authentic  decision. 

The  probablest  place  may  be  set  somewhat  southward, 
below  the  rivers  that  run  into  it  on  the  east  or  western  shore: 
and  somewhat  agreeable  unto  the  account  which  Brocardus 
received  from  the  Saracens  which  lived  near  it,  Jordancm 
ingrcdi  mare  inortuiim  ct  rursum  cgrcdi,  sed post  exiguiini  in- 
teriaUtim  a  terra  absorberl. 

Strabo  speaks  naturally  of  this  lake,  that  it  was  first  caused 
by  earthcjuakes,  by  sulphureous  and  bituminous  eruptions, 
arising  from  the  earth.  But  the  Scripture  makes  it  plain  to 
have  been  from  a  miraculous  hand,  and  by  a  remarkable  ex- 

•   Gen.  xiii,    10. 


222  OF  TROAs,  [tract  X. 

pression,  jjluit  domhius  igneyn  et  sulphur  a  domino."  See 
also  Deut.  29,  in  ardore  salis:  burning  the  cities  and  destroy- 
ing all  things  about  the  plain,  destroying  the  vegetable  na- 
ture of  plants  and  all  living  things,  salting  and  making  barren 
the  whole  soil,  and,  by  these  fiery  showers,  kindling  and  set- 
ting loose  the  body  of  the  bituminous  mines,  which  shewed 
their  lower  veins  before  but  in  some  few  pits  and  openings, 
swallowing  up  the  foundation  of  their  cities ;  opening  the 
bituminous  treasures  below,  and  making  a  smoke  like  a  fur- 
nace able  to  be  discerned  by  Abraham  at  a  good  distance 
from  it. 

If  this  little  may  give  you  satisfaction,  I  shall  be  glad,  as 
being.  Sir,  Yours,  &c. 

*  But  the  Scripture,  <^c.]     Dr.  Wells    arguments.     See  Geography  of  the  Old 
supports    this    opinion    at    considerable     and  New  Testament,  i,   153. 
length  and  by  a  series  of  very  satisfactory 


TRACT  XI.]  ANSWERS  OF  THE  DELPHIAN  ORACLE. 


223 


TRACT    XI. 

of  the  answers  of  the  oracle  of  apollo  at  delphos 
to  crcesus  king  of  lydia. 

Sir/ 
Among  the  oracles  of  Apollo*  there  are  none  more  cele- 
brated than  those  which  he  delivered  unto  Croesus  Kinjr  of 
Lydia ;  f  who  seems  of  all  princes  to  have  held  the  greatest 
dependence  on  them.  But  most  considerable  are  his  plain  and 
intelligible  replies  which  he  made  imto  the  same  king,  when 
he  sent  his  chains  of  captivity  unto  Delphos,  after  his  over- 
throw by  Cyrus,  with  sad  expostulations  why  he  encouraged 
him  unto  that  fatal  war  by  his  oracle,  saying  rrsQ^yweai  Kso/Vw, 
r,),  eT:arvjr,Tai  i-ri  Yl'sscai,  ij.iy6Xr,v  asr.r,v  iliv  xaraXvCBiv,  Croesus,  if 
he  wars  against  the  Persians,  shall  dissolve  a  great  empire.  J 
AMiy,  at  least,  he  prevented  not  that  sad  infelicity  of  his  devot- 
ed and  bountiful  servant,  and  whether  it  were  fiiir  or  honourable 


•  See  Vul.  Err.  1. 
t  Herod.  1.  J,  46.  47,  S(c.  90,  91. 


vii,  c.  12 


Herod,  ibid.  54. 


'  5ir.]  The  copy  of  this  tract  in 
MS.  Sloan,  is  thrown  more  into  the  form 
of  an  essay,  by  the  following  introduc- 
tory passage : — "  Men  looked  upon  ancient 
oracles  as  natural,  artificial,  demoniacal, 
or  all.  They  conceived  something  na- 
tural of  them,  as  being  in  places  afford- 
ing exhalations,  which  were  found  to 
operate  upon  the  brains  of  persons  unto 
raptures,  strange  utterances,  and  divi- 
nations; which  being  observed  and  ad- 
mired by  the  people,  an  advantage  was 
taken  thereof;  an  artificial  contrivance 
made  by  subtle  crafty  persons  confeder- 
ating to  carry  on  a  practice  of  divination  ; 
pretending  some  power  of  divinity  there- 
in ;  but  because  they  sometimes  made 
very  strange  predictions,  and  above  the 
power  of  human  reason,  men  were  in- 
clined to  believe  some  demoniacal  co- 
operation,   and    that    some    evil    spirit 


ruled  the  whole  scene ;  having  so  fair  an 
opportunity  to  delude  mankind,  and  to 
advance  his  own  worship ;  and  were 
thought  to  proceed  from  the  spirit  of 
Apollo  or  other  Heathen  deities  ;  so  that 
these  oracles  were  not  only  apprehended 
to  be  natural,  human,  or  artificial,  but 
also  demoniacal,  according  to  common 
opinion,  and  also  of  learned  men  ;  as 
Vossius  hath  declared  : — "  Constitere 
quidem  oracula  fraudibus  vatum,  sed 
non  soils ;  solertia  humana,  scd  sxpc 
etiam  diabolica.  Cum  multa  predixerint, 
ad  quae  nulla  ratione  humana  mentis 
acumen  perlegisset  in  natura  |humana 
non  est  subsistendum,  sed  assurgendum 
ad  causas  superioris  naturx,  quales  sunt 
daemones."  According  to  which  sense 
and  opinion  we  shall  enlarge  upon  this 
following  oracle  of  Delphos." 


f224  ANSWERS  OF  THE  DELPHIAN  ORACLE     [tRACT    XT. 

for  the  gods  of  Greece  to  be  ungrateful :  which  being  a  plain 
and  open  delivery  of  Delphos,  and  scarce  to  be  paralleled  in 
any  ancient  story,  it  may  well  deserve  your  farther  consider- 
ation. 

1.  His  first  reply"  was,  that  Croesus  suffered  not  for  him- 
self; but  paid  the  transgression  of  his  fifth  predecessor, 
who  killed  his  master,  and  usurped  the  dignity  unto  which  he 
had  no  title. 

Now  whether  Croesus  suffered  upon  this  account  or  not, 
hereby  he  plainly  betrayed  his  insufficiency  to  protect  him ; 
and  also  obliquely  discovered  he  had  a  knowledge  of  his  mis- 
fortune ;  for  knowing  that  wicked  act  lay  yet  unpunished,  he 
might  well  divine  some  of  his  successors  might  smart  for  it: 
and  also  understanding  he  was  like  to  be  the  last  of  that  race, 
he  might  justly  fear  and  conclude  this  infelicity  upon  him. 

Hereby  he  also  acknowledged  the  inevitable  justice  of  God ; 
that  though  revenge  lay  dormant,  it  would  not  always  sleep ; 
and  consequently  confessed  the  just  hand  of  God  punishing 
unto  the  third  and  fourth  generation,  nor  suffering  such  ini- 
quities to  pass  for  ever  unrevenged.^ 

Hereby  he  flatteringly  encouraged  him  in  the  opinion  of 
his  own  merits,  and  that  he  only  suflfered  for  other  men's 
transgressions  :  meanwhile  he  concealed  Croesus  his  pride, 
elation  of  mind  and  secure  conceit  of  his  own  unparalleled  fe- 
licity, together  with  the  vanity,  pride,  and  height  of  luxury 
of  the  Lydian  nation,  which  the  spirit  of  Delphos  knew  well 
to  be  ripe  and  ready  for  destruction. 

2.  A  second  excuse  was,  that  it  is  not  in  the  power  of  God 
to  hinder  the  decree  of  fate.  A  general  evasion  for  any  fal- 
sified prediction  founded  upon  the  common  opinion  of  fate, 
which  impiously  subjecteth  the  power  of  heaven  unto  it ; 
widely  discovering  the  folly  of  such  as  repair  unto  him  con- 


*  His  first  replij.']     This  is  a  mistake  ;  ^  unrevenged.'}     In  MS.  Sloan,  occurs 

the  oracle  began  Ills  answer  by  alleging  here  tliis passage: — "The  devil,  who  sees 

the  impossibility  of  avoiding  the  deter-  how  things  of  this  nature  go  on  in  king- 

mination   of   fate.      It   was   the   second  doms,  nations,  and  families,  is  able  to 

observation,  that  Crcesus  was  expiating  say  much  on  this  point;  whereas,   we, 

the  crimes  of  Gyges,  his  ancestor  in  the  that  understand  not  the  reserved  judg- 

fifth_  descent.     (Ardys,    Sadyattes,   and  ments  of  God,  or  the  due  time  of  their 

Atyattcs,  were  the  intervening  descend-  executions,    are    fain    to   be    doubtfully 

ants.)  silent." 


TRACT    Xt.]  TO  CRCESUS  KING  OF  LVDIA.  '225 

cerning  future  events:  whicli,  according  unto  this  rule,  must 
go  on  as  tlie  fates  have  ordered,  beyond  his  power  to  prevent 
or  theirs  to  avoid ;  and  consequently  teaching  that  his  oracles 
had  only  this  use  to  render  men  more  miserable  by  foreknow- 
ing their  misfortunes ;  whereof  Croesus  himself  had  sensible 
experience  in  that  dajmoniacal  dream  concerning  his  eldest 
son,  that  he  should  be  killed  by  a  spear,  which,  after  all  care 
and  caution,  he  found  inevitably  to  befall  him. 

3.  In  his  third  apology  he  assured  him  that  he  endeavoured 
to  transfer  the  evil  fate  and  to  pass  it  upon  his  children ;  and 
did,  however,  procrastinate  his  infelicity,  and  deferred  the  de- 
struction of  Sardis  and  his  own  captivity  three  years  longer 
than  was  fatally  decreed  upon  it. 

AVlierein  while  he  wipes  oft'  the  stain  of  ingratitude,  he 
leaves  no  small  doubt  whether,  it  being  out  of  his  power  to 
contradict  or  transfer  the  fates  of  his  servants,  it  be  not  also 
bevond  it  to  defer  such  signal  events,  and  whereon  the  fates 
of  whole  nations  do  depend. 

As  also,  whether  he  intended  or  endeavoured  to  bring  to 
pass  what  he  pretended,  some  question  might  be  made.  For 
that  he  should  attempt  or  think  he  could  translate  his  infeli- 
city upon  his  sons,  it  could  not  consist  with  his  judgment, 
which  attempts  not  impossibles  or  things  beyond  his  power; 
nor  with  his  knowledge  of  future  things,  and  the  fates  of 
succeeding  generations  :  for  he  understood  that  monarchy 
was  to  expire  in  himself  and  could  particularly  foretell  the 
infelicity  of  his  sons,  and  hath  also  made  remote  predictions 
unto  others  concerning  the  fortunes  of  many  succeeding  de- 
scents, as  appears  in  that  answer  unto  Attalus, 

Be  of  good  courage,  Attalus,  ihou  shalt  reign, 
And  thy  sons'  sons,  but  not  their  sons  again. 

As  also  unto  Cypselus,  King  of  Corinth. 

Happy  is  the  man  who  at  my  altar  stands, 
Great  Cypselus,   who  Corinth  now  commands. 
Happy  is  he  ;  his  sons  shall  happy  be; 
But  for  their  sons,  unhappy  days  they'll  see. 

Now,   being  able  to  have  so  large  a  prospect  of  future 
things,  and  of  the  fate  of  many  generations,  it  might  well  be 

VOL.    IV.  Q 


226  ANSWERS  OF  THE  DELPHIAN  ORACLE      [tRACT    XI. 

granted  he  was  not  ignorant  of  the  fate  of  Croesus's  sons, 
and  well  understood  it  was  in  vain  to  think  to  translate  his 
misery  upon  them. 

4.  In  the  fourth  part  of  his  reply,  he  clears  himself  of  in- 
gratitude, which  hell  itself  cannot  hear  of;  alleging  that  he 
had  saved  his  hfe  when  he  was  ready  to  be  burnt,  by  sending 
a  mighty  shower,  in  a  fair  and  cloudless  day,  to  quench  the 
fire  already  kindled,  which  all  the  servants  of  Cyrus  could 
not  do.  Though  this  shower  might  well  be  granted,  as  much 
concerning  his  honour,  and  not  beyond  his  power  ■*  yet  whe- 
ther this  merciful  shower  fell  not  out  contingently,  or  were 
not  contrived  by  an  higher  power,^  which  hath  often  pity  upon 
Pagans,  and  rewardeth  their  virtues  sometimes  with  extraor- 
dinary temporal  favours  ;  also,  in  no  unlike  case,  who  was  the 
author  of  those  few  fair  minutes,  which,  in  a  showry  day, 
gave  only  time  enough  for  the  burning  of  Sylla's  body,  some 
question  might  be  made. 

5.  The  last  excuse  devolveth  the  error  and  miscarriage  of 
the  business  upon  Crcesus,  and  that  he  deceived  himself  by 
an  inconsiderate  misconstruction  of  his  oracle  ;  that  if  he  had 
doubted,  he  should  not  have  passed  it  over  in  silence,  but 
consulted  again  for  an  exposition  of  it.  Besides,  he  had 
neither  discussed,  nor  well  perpended  his  Oracle  concerning 
Cyrus,  whereby  he  might  have  understood  not  to  engage 
against  him. 

Wherein,  to  speak  indifferently,  the  deception  and  miscar- 
riage seems  chiefly  to  lie  at  Croesus's  door,  who,  if  not  in- 

"^  not  beyond  his  power.]     MS.  Sloan,  the  mere  juggle  of  the  piiests,  imposing 

adds  '  when  countenanced  by  divine  per-  on  the  ignorance  and  superstition  of  the 

mission  or  decree.'  people  ;    but,   assuming  the  fact  that   a 

^  or  were  not  contrived  by  an  higher  real  divination,  through  the  agency  of 
poiver.l  — i.  e.  "  that  of  the  devil."  Satan,  was  permitted  to  exist  in  Pagan 
The  whole  course  of  these  observations  antiquity,  he  only  discusses  the  question 
on  the  Delphian  oracle  reminds  us  of  how  and  when  such  permission  was  with- 
what  ill  his  former  works  Sir  Thomas  drawn  and  oracles  ceased  to  exist, 
had  declared  to  be  his  opinion — viz.  that  Since  the  preceding  remarks  were 
it  was  a  Satanic  agency.  And  several  pas-  written,  I  turned  to  Dr.  Johnson's  brief 
sages  of  Religio  Medici  betray  this  sen-  account  of  these  Miscellany  Tracts,  in 
timent — (see  §§  13  and  46)  :  and  in  his  his  life  of  the  author,  and  find  the  follow- 
larger  work,  Pseud.  Epid.  he  devotes  a  ing  observation: — "  In  this  tract  nothing 
chapter  (the  13th  of  book  7)  to  the  sub-  deserves  notice,  more  than  that  Browne 
jcct  of  the  "cessation  of  oracles;"  in  considers  the  oracles  as  evidently  and  in- 
which  he  takes  no  pains  to  prove  them  dubitably  supernatural,  and  founds  all 
to  have  existed  in  any  other  way  than  by  his  disquisition  upon  that  postulate." 


TRACT    XI.]  TO  CRCESUS  KING  OF  LYDIA.  227 

fatuated  with  confidence  and  security,  might  justly  have 
doubted  the  construction ;  besides,  he  had  received  two 
Oracles  before,  which  clearly  hinted  an  unhappy  time  unto 
him  :  the  first  concerning  Cyrus. 

Whenever  a  mule  shall  o'er  the  Medians  reign, 
Stay  not,  but  unto  Hermus  fly  amain. 

Herein,  though  he  understood  not  the  Median  mule,  or  Cyrus, 
that  is,  of  his  mixed  descent  from  Assyrian  and  Median 
parents,  yet  he  could  not  but  apprehend  some  misfortune  from 
that  quarter. 

Though  this  prediction  seemed  a  notable  piece  of  divina- 
tion, yet  did  it  not  so  highly  magnify  his  natural  sagacity  or 
knowledge  of  future  events  as  was  by  many  esteemed ;  he 
having  no  small  assistance  herein  from  the  prophecy  of 
Daniel  concerning  the  Persian  monarchy,  and  the  prophecies 
of  Jeremiah  and  Isaiah,  wherein  he  might  read  the  name  of 
Cyrus,  who  should  restore  the  captivity  of  the  Jews,  and 
must,  therefore,  be  the  great  monarch  and  lord  of  all  those 
nations. 

The  same  misfortune  was  also  foretold  when  he  demanded 
of  Apollo  if  ever  he  should  hear  his  dumb  son  speak. 

O  foolish  Croesus !  who  hast  made  this  choice, 
To  know  when  thou  shall  hear  thy  dumb  son's  voice  ; 
Better  he  still  were  mute,  would  nothing  say  ; — 
When  he  first  speaks,  look  for  a  dismal  day  I 

This,  if  he  contrived  not  the  time  and  the  means  of  his 
recovery,  was  no  ordinary  divination  .-  yet  how  to  make  out 
the  verity  of  the  story,  some  doubts  may  yet  remain.  For, 
though  the  causes  of  deafness  and  dumbness  were  removed, 
yet  since  words  are  attained  by  hearing,  and  men  speak  not 
without  instruction,  how  he  should  be  able  immediately  to 
utter  such  apt  and  significant  words,  as  "A/i^&Krs,  firi  xrine  K^Taov, 
"  O  man !  slay  not  Croesus,"  ^  it  cannot  escaj)e  some  doubt ; 
since  the  story  also  delivers,  that  he  was  deaf  and  dumb,  that 
he  then  first  began  to  speak,  and  spake  all  his  life  after. 

•   Herod.  I.  i,  S5. 


228  ANSWERS  OF  THE  DELPHIAN  ORACLE      [tRACT    XI. 

Now,  if  Croesus  ^  had  consulted  again  for  a  clearer  exposi- 
tion of  what  was  doubtfully  delivered,  whether  the  Oracle 
would  have  spake  out  the  second  time,  or  afforded  a  clearer 
answer,  some  question  might  be  made  from  the  examples  of 
his  practice  upon  the  like  demands. 

So,  when  the  Spartans  had  often  fought  with  ill  success 
against  the  Tegeates,  they  consulted  the  Oracle,  what  God 
they  should  appease,  to  become  victorious  over  them.  The 
answer  was,  "  That  they  should  remove  the  bones  of  Orestes." 
Though  the  words  were  plain,  yet  the  thing  was  obscure,  and 
like  finding  out  the  body  of  Moses.  And,  therefore,  they 
once  more  demanded  in  what  place  they  should  find  the 
same;  unto  whom  he  returned  this  answer, 

When  in  the  Tegean  Plains  a  place  thou  find's  t 
Where  blasts  are  made  by  two  impetuous  winds, 
Where  that  that  strikes  is  struck,  blows  follow  blows, 
There  doth  the  earth  Orestes'  bones  enclose. 

Which  obscure  reply  the  wisest  of  Sparta  could  not  make 
out,  and  was  casually  unriddled  by  one  talking  with  a  smith, 
who  had  found  large  bones  of  a  man  buried  about  his  house ; 
the  Oracle  implying  no  more  than  a  smith's  forge,  expressed 
by  a  double  bellows,  the  hammer  and  anvil  therein. 

Now,  why  the  Oracle  should  place  such  consideration 
upon  the  bones  of  Orestes,  the  son  of  Agamemnon,  a  mad 
man  and  a  murderer,  if  not  to  promote  the  idolatry  of  the 
Heathens,  and  maintain  a  superstitious  veneration  of  things  of 
no  activity,  it  may  leave  no  small  obscurity. 

Or  why,  in  a  business  so  clear  in  his  knowledge,  he  should 
affect  so  obscure  expressions  it  may  also  be  wondered  ;  if  it 
were  not  to  maintain  the  wary  and  evasive  method  in  his  an- 
swers :  for,  speaking  obscurely  in  things  beyond  doubt  within 
his  knowledge,  he  might  be  more  tolerably  dark  in  matters  be- 
yond his  prescience. 

Though  EI  were  inscribed  over  the  gate  of  Delphos,  yet 
was  there  no  uniformity  in  his  deliveries.  Sometimes  with 
that  obscurity  as  argued  a  fearful  prophecy  ;  sometimes  so 
plainly  as  might  confirm  a  spirit  of  divinity  ;  sometimes  moral- 

^  New,     if    Croesus.  ]       MS.    Sloan,     plausible  apology  and  evasion,  if  Croe- 
reads     "  Now,     notwithstanding     this     sus." 


TRACT    XI.]  TO  CRfKSUS  KING  OF  LYDIA.  2ii9 

ly,  deterring  from  vice  and  villany  ;  another  time  vitiously, 
and  in  the  i^pirit  of  blood  and  cruelty  ;  observably  modest  in 
his  civil  ivnigma  and  periphrasis  of  that  part  which  old  Numa 
would  plainly  name,*  and  ]Medea  would  not  understand,  when 
he  advised  /ilgeus  not  to  draw  out  his  foot  before,  until  he 
arrived  upon  the  Athenian  ground  ;  whereas  another  time  he 
seemed  too  literal  in  that  unseemly  epithet  unto  Cyanus,  King 
of  Cyprus,f  and  j)ut  a  beastly  trouble  upon  all  Egypt  to  find 
out  the  urine  of  a  true  virgin. 

Sometimes,  more  beholding  unto  memory  than  invention,  he 
delighted  to  express  himself  in  the  bare  verses  of  Homer. 
But  that  he  principally  affected  poetry,  and  that  the  priest 
not  only  nor  always  composed  his  prosal  raptures  into  verse, 
seems  plain  from  his  necromantical  prophecies,  whilst  the  dead 
head  in  Phlegon  delivers  a  long  prediction  in  verse ;  and  at 
the  rising  of  the  ghost  of  Commodus  unto  Caracalla,  when 
none  of  his  ancestors  would  speak,  the  divining  spirit  versified 
his  infelicities  ;  corresponding  herein  unto  the  apprehensions  of 
elder  times,  who  conceived  not  only  a  majesty  but  something 
of  divinity  in  poetry,  and,  as  in  ancient  times,  the  old  theo- 
logians deUvered.  their  inventions. 

Some  critical  readers  might  expect  in  his  oraculous  poems 
a  more  than  ordinary  strain  and  true  spirit  of  Apollo ;  not 
contented  to  find  that  spirits  make  verses  like  men,  beating 
upon  the  filling  epithet,  and  taking  the  licence  of  dialects  and 
lower  helps,  common  to  human  poetry ;  wherein,  since  Scali- 
ger,  who  hath  spared  none  of  the  Greeks,  hath  thought  it 
wisdom  to  be  silent,  we  shall  make  no  excursion. 

Others  may  wonder  how  the  curiosity  of  elder  times,  hav- 
ing this  opportunity  of  his  answers,  omitted  natural  questions ; 
or  how  the  old  magicians  discovered  no  more  philosophy ; 
and  if  they  had  the  assistance  of  spirits,  could  rest  content 
with  the  bare  assertions  of  things,  without  the  knowledge  of 
their  causes ;  whereby  they  had  made  their  acts  iterable  by 
sober  hands,  and  a  standing  part  of  philosophy.  Many  w  ise  di- 
vines hold  a  reality  in  the  wonders  of  the  I'^gyptian  magicians, 
and  that  those  viagnulia  which  they  performed  before  Pha- 
raoh were  not  mere  delusions  of  sense.     Rightly  to  under- 

•    Pint,  in  Thes.  f    J'.  Herod. 


230  ANSWERS  OF  THE  DELPHIAN  ORACLE.    [tRACT    XI. 

stand  how  they  made  serpents  out  of  rods :  frogs,  and  blood 
of  water,  were  worth  half  Porta's  magic. 

Hermolaus  Barbarus  was  scarce  in  his  wits,  when,  upon  con- 
ference with  a  spirit,  he  would  demand  no  other  question  than 
an  explication  of  Aristotle's  Entelecheia.  Appion,  the  gram- 
marian, that  would  raise  the  ghost  of  Homer  to  decide  the 
controversy  of  his  country,  made  a  frivolous  and  pedantic 
use  of  necromancy,  and  Philostratus  did  as  little,  that  called 
up  the  ghost  of  Achilles  for  a  particular  of  the  story  of  Troy. 
Smarter  curiosities  would  have  been  at  the  great  elixir,  the 
flux  and  reflux  of  the  sea,  with  other  noble  obscurities  in  na- 
ture ;  but,  probably,  all  in  vain :  in  matters  cognoscible  and 
framed  for  our  disquisition,  our  industry  must  be  our  Oracle, 
and  reason  our  Apollo. 

Not  to  know  things  without  the  arch  of  our  intellectuals, 
or  what  spirits  apprehend,  is  the  imperfection  of  our  nature, 
not  our  knowledge,  and  rather  inscience  than  ignorance  in 
man.  Revelation  might  render  a  great  part  of  the  creation 
easy,  which  now  seems  beyond  the  stretch  of  human  indaga- 
tion ;  and  welcome  no  doubt  from  good  hands  might  be  a 
true  almagest,  and  great  celestial  construction ;  a  clear  sys- 
tem of  the  planetical  bodies  of  the  invisible  and  seeming  use- 
less stars  unto  us;  of  the  many  suns  in  the  eight  sphere; 
what  they  are ;  what  they  contain ;  and  to  what  more  imme- 
diately those  stupendous  bodies  are  serviceable.  But  being 
not  hinted  in  the  authentic  revelation  of  God,  nor  known  how 
far  their  discoveries  are  stinted ;  if  they  should  come  unto  us 
from  the  mouth  of  evil  spirits,  the  belief  thereof  might  be  as 
unsafe  as  the  enquiry.^ 

This  is  a  copious  subject ;  but  having  exceeded  the  bounds 
of  a  letter,  I  will  not  now  pursue  it  further.     I  am, 

Yours,  &c. 

'  enquiry-']      MS.    Sloan,    adds    this     truth,   might  yet  be  obscure  unto   us." 
sentence,    "and  how  far  to   credit  the     Here  the  J/^.  terminates, 
father  of  darkness  and  great  obscurer  of 


TRACT    XII.] 


A    PROPHECY    ETC. 


231 


TRACT    XII.^ 

A  PROPHECY"  CONCERNING  THE  FUTURE  STATE  OF  SEVERAL 
NATIONS,  IN  A  LETTER  WRITTEN  UPON  OCCASION  OF  AN 
OLD  PROPHECY  SENT  TO  THE  AUTHOR  FROM  A  FRIEND 
WITH    A    REQUEST    THAT    HE    WOULD    CONSIDER    IT. 


Sir, 
I  TAKE  no  pleasure  in  prophecies  so  hardly  intelligihle,  and 
pointing  at  future  things  from  a  pretended  spirit  of  divina- 
tion ;  of  which  sort  this  seems  to  he  which  came  unto  your 
hand,  and  you  were  pleased  to  send  unto  me.  And  there- 
fore, for  your  easier  apprehension,  divertisement,  and  con- 


'  Tract  xii.]  Dr.  Johnson  remarks, 
that  in  this  tract  the  author  plainly  dis- 
covers his  expectation  to  be  the  same 
with  that  entertained  lately  with  more 
confidence  by  Dr.  Berkley,  "  that  Ame- 
rica will  be  the  seat  of  the  fifth  em- 
pire." 

If  this  alludes  to  Berkley's  favourite 
"  Scheme  for  Converting  the  Savage 
Americans  to  Christianity,"'  no  just  com- 
parison can  be  drawn  between  it  and 
Browne's  speculations  on  the  possible 
advancement  of  the  New  World  in  poli- 
tical consequence.  I  can,  however,  find 
nothing  in  Berkley  about  "  America  be- 
coming the  seat  of  the  filth  empire,"  un- 
less it  be  in  his  "  Verses  on  the  prospect 
of  planting  arts  and  learning  "  there  ; — 
which  he  closes,  after  an  allusion  to  the 
four  ages,  (viz.  of  gold,  silver,  brass, 
and  iron,)  by  anticipating  the  arrival 
of  a  second  age  of  gold,  which  he  terms 
the  '•  fifth  act  in  the  course  of  em- 
pire." 

Many  of  the  more  important  specula- 
tions of  our  author,  respecting  the  New 
World,  remain,  after  a  lapse  of  nearly 
two  centuries,  matter  of  speculation  still; 
— though,  perhaps,  to  judge  from  the 
course  of  events  since  Sir  Thomas  wrote, 
we  may  not  unreasonably  look  forward 
to  their  more  complete  fulfilment. 

A  very  spirited  writer  in  our  own  days 
has  indulged  himself  (in   the  specimen 


number  of  The  Argus  newspaper,)  with 
a  similar  anticipation  of  events  yet  (if 
ever)  to  come. — By  the  provisions  of 
that  abomination — in  a  land  of  liberty 
and  literature — the  stamp  act,  it  was 
forbidden  to  relate  real  incidents,  unless 

on  stamped  paper He  therefore  filled 

his  paper  with  imaginary  events.  Some 
of  his  paragraphs  relating  to  "  Foreign 
Affairs"  may  afford  an  amusing  parallel 
to  the  present  tract. 

"  Despatches  have  been  this  morning 
received  at  the  Foreign  Office,  from  the 
allied  Greek  and  Polish  army  before  Mos- 
cow, announcing  a  truce  between  the  al- 
lies and  the  besieged,  under  the  media- 
ation  of  the  federative  republic  of  France. 
Ncgociations  for  a  final  pacification  are 
to  be  immediately  entered  on,  under  the 
joint  mediation  oi"  Great  Britain,  France, 
and  Austria  ;  and  it  is  confidently  hoped 
that  the  united  efforts  of  these  powers  to 
put  an  end  to  the  destructive  five  years' 
war,  will  be  finally  successful,  and  will 
end  in  the  acknowledgement,  by  the 
Emperor  Nicholas,  of  the  independence 
of  the  crown  of  Warsaw,  in  the  person 
of  Constantine." 

"  As  we  gather  these  facts  from  what 
may  be  considered  official  sources,  we 
give  them  this  prominent  place,  out  of 
the  general  order  of  our  foreign  news, 
on  which  we  now  enter,  however,  in  de- 
tail, having  carefully  examined  all  the 


A    PROPHECY    CONCERNING 


[tract    XII. 

sideratlon,  I  present  you  with  a  very  different  kind  of  pre- 
diction :  not  positively  or  peremptorily  telling  you  what  shall 
come  to  pass,  yet  pointing  at  things  not  without  all  reason  or 
probability  of  their  events ;  not  built  upon  fatal  decrees  or 
inevitable  designations,  but  upon  conjectural  foundations, 
whereby  things  wished  may  be  promoted,  and  such  as  are 
feared  may  more  probably  be  prevented. 


The  Prophecy. 


When  New  England  shall  trouble"  New  Spain; 

When  Jamaica  shall  be  lady  of  the  isles  and  the  main 

When  Spain  shall  be  in  America  hid. 

And  Mexico  shall  prove  a  Madrid  ; 

When  Mahomet's  ships  on  the  Baltic  shall  ride. 

And  Turks  shall  labour  to  have  ports  on  that  side  f 


letters  of  this  morning's  mail,  from  our 
established  and  exclusive  correspondents; 
not  doubting  but  that  many  will  be  a 
little  surprised  at  the  extent  and  variety, 
to  say  nothing  of  the  novelty  and  inter- 
est, of  the  facts  thus,  for  the  first  time, 
made  public." 

"  United  Empire  of  America. — Since 
the  last  census  of  the  United  Empire  of 
North  and  South  America,  it  has  been 
found  that  the  population  now  amounts 
to  180,620,000  inhabitants,  including 
the  whole  country,  from  Cape  Horn  to 
the  Frozen  Sea;  Upper  and  Lower  Ca- 
nada, as  well  as  Peru  and  Patagonia, 
being  now  incorporated  in  the  Union. 
The  General  Senate  still  holds  its  Parlia- 
ment in  the  magnificent  city  of  Colum- 
bus, which  reaches  quite  across  the  Isth- 
mus of  Daricn,  and  has  its  fortifications 
washed  by  the  Atlantic  on  one  side,  and 
the  Pacific  on  the  other,  while  the  two 
Provincial  Senates  are  held  at  Washing- 
ton for  the  north,  and  at  Bolivar  for  the 
south,  thus  preserving  the  memory  of  the 
first  great  discoverer,  and  the  two  great- 
est patriots,  of  this  magnificent  quarter 
of  the  globe." 

*' Turkey. — Since  the  elevation  of 
Count  Capo  d'Istria  to  the  throne  of  the 
New  Greek  Kingdom  of  the  East,  tran- 
quillity reigns   at   Constantinople,    and 


that  city  promises  again  to  be  the  centre' 
of  commerce  and  the  arts." 

"  China. — Letters  from  the  capital  of 
China  state,  that  there  are  now  not  less 
than  fifty  commission -houses  of  Liver* 
pool  merchants  established  at  Pekin  alone, 
besides  several  agents  from  London  es- 
tablishments, and  a  few  depots  for  Bir- 
mingham and  Manchester  goods.  The 
English  nankeens  are  much  preferred  by 
the  Chinese  over  their  own,  and  Staf- 
fordshire porcelain  is  sold  at  nearly  twice 
the  price  of  the  original  china  manufac- 
ture, in  the  bazaars." 

"  Syria. — Lady  Hester  Stanhope  had 
left  her  beautiful  residence  between  Tyre 
and  Sidon,  as  well  as  her  summer  retreat 
amid  the  snows  and  cedars  of  Lebanon, 
and  taken  up  her  new  abode  in  the  valley 
of  Jehoshaphat,  between  the  Mount  of 
Olives  and  l\Iount  Zion,  at  Jerusalem. 
Her  ladyship,  though  growing  old,  still 
retained  all  her  benevolence  and  vivacity ; 
and  her  house  was  the  chief  resort  of  all 
the  intelligent  visitors  to  the  Jewish  ca- 
pital, which  was  increasing  in  splendour 
every  day." 

2  trouble.']  '  Terrify.'— M^.  Ilawl. 
58. 

3  Jnd  Turks,  ^c]  '  When  we  shall 
have  ports  on  the  Pacific  side.' — 3IS. 
liawl.  58. 


TRACT    XII.]  SEVERAL    NATIONS.  ^33 

When  Africa  shall  no  more  sell  out  their  blacks, 

To  make  slaves  and  drudges  to  the  American  tracts;  * 

When  Batavia  the  Old  shall  be  contemn'd  by  the  New ; 

When  a  new  drove  of  Tartars  shall  China  subdue  ; 

When  America  shall  cease  to  send  out^  its  treasure, 

But  employ  it  at  home  in''  American  pleasure  ; 

When  the  new  world  shall  the  old  invade, 

Nor  count  them  their  lords  but  their  fellows  in  trade  ; 

When  men  shall  almost  pass  to  Venice  by  land. 

Not  in  deep  water  but  from  sand  to  sand  ; 

When  Nova  Zembla  shall  be  no  stay 

Unto  those  who  pass  to  or  from  Cathay  ; — 

Then  think  strange  things  are  come  to  light, 

Whereof  but  few^  have  had  a  foresight. 


T/ie  Exposition  of  the  Prophecy. 

When  New  England  shall  trouble  New  Spain ; 

That  is,  when  that  thriving  colony,  which  hath  so  much  en- 
creased  in  our  days,  and  in  the  space  of  about  fifty  years, 
that  they  can,  as  they  report,  raise  between  twenty  and  thirty 
thousand  men  upon  an  exigency,  shall  in  process  of  time  be 
so  advanced,  as  to  be  able  to  send  forth  ships  and  fleets,  and 
to  infest^  the  American  Spanish  ports  and  maritime  dominions 
by  depredations  or  assaults ;  for  which  attempts  they  are  not 
like  to  be  unprovided,  as  abounding  in  the  materials  for  ship- 
ping, oak  and  fir.  And  when  length  of  time  shall  so  far  en- 
crease  that  industrious  people,  that  the  neighbouring  country 
will  not  contain  them,  they  will  range  still  farther  and  be 
able,  in  time,  to  set  forth  great  armies,  seek  for  new  pos- 
sessions, or  make  considerable  and  conjoined  migrations,  ac- 

*■  To  make  staves.  *r."]     '  But  slaves  «  /n.]     '  For.'— .V.S.  Raul.  58. 

must   be  had  from    incognita   tratts.' —  "/«•«•.]     'Few eves.' — M.S.  liawl.  5H. 

MS.  Raul.  oS.  "infest.]     '  He  "a    tcrr  .r    to.'— .US'. 

*  out.]     •  Forth.'— MS.  Rnwl.  58.  Rawl.  58. 


234  A   PROPHECY    CONCERNING  [tRACT   XII. 

cording  to  tlie  custom  of  swarming  northern  nations ;  wherein 
it  is  not  likely  that  they  will  move  northward,  but  toward  the 
southern  and  richer  countries,  which  are  either  in  the  domini- 
ons or  frontiers  of  the  Spaniards :  and  may  not  improbably 
erect  new  dominions  in  places  not  yet  thought  of,  and  yet, 
for  some  centuries,  beyond  their  power  or  ambition. 

When  Jamaica  shall  be  lady  of  the  isles  and  the  main ; 

That  is,  when  that  advantageous  island  shall  be  well  peo- 
pled, it  may  become  so  strong  and  potent  as  to  overpower  the 
neighbouring  isles,  and  also  a  part  of  the  main  land,  especi- 
ally the  maritime  parts.  And  already  in  their  infancy  they 
have  given  testimony  of  their  power  and  courage  in  their 
bold  attempts  upon  Campeche  and  Santa  Martha;  and  in 
that  notable  attempt  upon  Panama  on  the  western  side  of 
America:  especially  considering  this  island  is  sufficiently 
large  to  contain  a  numerous  people,  of  a  northern  and  war- 
like descent,  addicted  to  martial  affairs  both  by  sea  and  land, 
and  advantageously  seated  to  infest  their  neighbours  both  of 
the  isles  and  the  continent,  and  like  to  be  a  receptacle  for  co- 
lonies of  the  same  originals  from  Barbadoes  and  the  neigh- 
bour isles. 

When  Spain  shall  be  in  America  hid. 
And  Mexico  shall  prove  a  Madrid  ; 

That  is,  when  Spain,  either  by  vmexpected  disasters  or 
continued  emissions  of  people  into  America,  which  have  al- 
ready thinned  the  country,  shall  be  flirther  exhausted  at 
home  ;  or  when,  in  process  of  time,  their  colonies  shall  grow 
by  many  accessions  more  than  their  originals,  then  Mexico 
may  become  a  Madrid,  and  as  considerable  in  people,  wealth, 
and  splendour:  wherein  that  place  is  already  so  well  advanced, 
that  accounts  scarce  credible  are  given  of  it.  And  it  is  so  ad- 
vantageously seated,  that,  by  Acapulco  and  other  ports  on  the 
south  sea,  they  may  maintain  a  communication  and  commerce 
with  the  Indian  isles  and  territories,  and  with  China  and 
Japan,  and  on  this  side,  by  Porto  Bello  and  others,  hold  cor- 
respondence with  Europe  and  Africa. 


TllACT    XII.]  SEVERAL    NATIONS.  ^35 

When  Mahomet's  ships  in  tlie  Baltic  shall  ride, 

Of  this  we  cannot  be  out  of  all  fear ;  for  if  the  Turk  should 
master  Poland,  he  would  be  soon  at  this  sea.  And  from  the 
odd  constitution  of  the  Polish  government,  the  divisions 
among  themselves,  jealousies  between  their  kingdom  and  re- 
public ;  vicinity  of  the  Tartars,  treachery  of  the  Cossacks,  and 
the  method  of  Turkish  policy,  to  be  at  peace  with  the  Em- 
peror of  Germany  when  he  is  at  war  with  the  Poles,  there 
may  be  cause  to  fear  that  this  may  come  to  pass.  And  then 
he  would  soon  endeavour  to  have  ports  upon  that  sea,  as  not 
wanting  materials  for  shipping.  And,  having  a  new  acquist 
of  stout  and  warlike  men,  may  be  a  terror  unto  the  confiners 
on  that  sea,  and  to  nations  which  now  conceive  themselves 
safe  from  such  an  enemy.^ 

When  Africa  shall  no  more  sell  out  their  blacks,^ 

That  is,  when  African  countries  shall  no  longer  make  it  a 
common  trade  to  sell  away  their  people  to  serve  in  the  drud- 
gery of  American  plantations.  And  that  may  come  to  pass 
whenever  they  shall  be  well  civilized,  and  acquainted  with 
arts  and  affairs  sufficient  to  employ  people  in  their  countries : 
if  also  they  should  be  converted  to  Christianity,  but  especially 
unto  Mahometism ;  for  then  they  would  never  sell  those  of 
their  religion  to  be  slaves  unto  Christians.*^ 

When  Batavia  the  old  shall  be  contemn'd  by  the  new ; 

When  the  plantations  of  the  Hollander  at  Batavia  in  the 
East  Indies,  and  other  places  in  the  East  Indies,  shall,  by 

"  enemy.]     MS.  liawl.    58,   proceeds  the  emancipation  of  the   slaves  in    the 

thus; — "  When  we  shall  have  ships,  S:c.  West    Indies: — a  measure  of  equity — 

on  the  Pacific  side,  or  west  side  of  Ame-  which,  if  not  carried  by  legislation,  will, 

rica,  which  may  come  to  pass  hereafter,  ere  long,  be  effected  by  means  far  less 

upon  enlargement  of  trade  or  industrious  desirable. — Dec.  1S32. 
navigation,  when  the  streights  of  Magel-         ="  Christians.']     MS.  Rawl.  adds  this 

Ian,  or  more  southerly  passages  be  well  sentence  ; — "then  slaves  must  be  sought 

known,  and  frequently  navigated."  for  in  other  tracts,  not  yet  well  known, 

'  Uhen  Ajrica,  ^c]  The  abolition  or  perhaps  from  some  parts  of  terra  in- 
of  the  slave  trade,  and  the  American  ef-  cognita,  whenever  hereafter  they  shall 
forts  to  colonize  and  evangelize  Africa,  be  discovered  and  con(iuered,  or  else 
may  be  regarded  as  two  important  steps  when  that  trade  shall  be  left,  and  slaves 
towards  the  fulfilment  of  this  prophecy,  be  made  from  captives,  and  from  male- 
One  measure  remains  to  be  adopted, —  factors  of  the  respective  countries. 


236  A  PROPHECY  CONCERNING      [tRACT  XII. 

their  conquests  and  advancements,  become  so  powerful  in 
the  Indian  territories  ;  then  their  original  countries  and  states 
of  Holland  are  like  to  be  contemned  by  them,  and  obeyed 
only  as  they  please.  And  they  seem  to  be  in  a  way  unto  it 
at  present  by  their  several  plantations,  new  acquists,  and  en- 
largements :  and  they  have  lately  discovered  a  part  of  the 
southern  continent,  and  several  places  which  may  be  service- 
able unto  them,  whenever  time  shall  enlarge  them  unto  such 
necessities. 

And  a  new  drove  of  Tartars  shall  China  subdue  ; 

Which  is  no  strange  thing  if  we  consult  the  histories  of 
China,  and  successive  inundations  made  by  Tartarian  nations. 
For  when  the  invaders,  in  process  of  time,  have  degenerated 
into  the  effeminacy  and  softness  of  the  Chinese,  then  they 
themselves  have  suffered  a  new  Tartarian  conquest  and  in- 
undation. And  this  hath  happened  from  time  beyond  our 
histories:  for,  according  to  their  account,  the  famous  wall 
of  China,  built  against  the  irruptions  of  the  Tartars,  was 
begun  above  a  hundred  years  before  the  incarnation. 

When  America  shall  cease  to  send  forth  its  treasure, 
But  employ  it  at  home  in  American  pleasure  ; 

That  is,  when  America  shall  be  better  civilized,  new  poli- 
cied  and  divided  between  great  princes,  it  may  come  to  pass 
that  they  will  no  longer  suffer  their  treasure  of  gold  and  sil- 
ver to  be  sent  out  to  maintain  the  luxury  of  Europe  and  other 
parts :  but  rather  employ  it  to  their  own  advantages,  in  great 
exploits  and  undertakings,  magnificent  structures,  wars,  or 
expeditions  of  their  own. 

When  the  new  world  shall  the  old  invade. 

That  is,  when  America  shall  be  so  well  peopled,  civilized, 
and  divided  into  kingdoms,  they  are  like  to  have  so  little  regard 
of  their  originals,  as  to  acknowledge  no  subjection  unto  them  : 
they  may  also  have  a  distinct  commerce  between  themselves, 


TRACT    Xll.]  SEVERAL    NATIONS.  237 

or  but  independently  with  those  of  Europe,' and  may  hostilely 
and  piratically  assault  them,  even  as  the  Greek  and  Roman 
colonies  after  a  long  time  dealt  with  their  original  countries. 

When  men  shall  almost  pass  to  Venice  by  land, 
Not  in  deep  waters  but  from  sand  to  sand  ; 

That  is,  when,  in  long  process  of  time,  the  silt  and  sands 
shall  so  choke  and  shallow  the  sea  in  and  about  it.  And  this 
hath  considerably  come  to  pass  within  these  fourscore  years : 
and  is  like  to  encrease  from  several  causes,  especially  by  the 
turning  of  the  river  Brcnta,  as  the  learned  Castelli  hath  de- 
clared. 

When  Nova  Zembla  shall  be  no  stay 
Unto  those  who  pass  to  or  from  Cathay  ; 

That  is,  when  ever  that  often  sought  for  north-east  passage  * 
unto  China  and  Japan  shall  be  discovered ;  the  hindrance 
whereof  was  imputed  to  Nova  Zembla  ;  for  this  was  conceived 
to  be  an  excursion  of  land  shooting  out  directly,  and  so  far 
northward  into  the  sea,  that  it  discouraged  from  all  naviga- 
tion about  it.  And  therefore  adventurers  took  in  at  the 
southern  part  at  a  strait  by  Waygatz  next  the  Tartarian 
shore :  and  sailing  forward  they  found  that  sea  frozen  and 
full  of  ice,  and  so  gave  over  the  attempt.  But  of  late  years, 
by  the  diligent  enquiry  of  some  Muscovites,  a  better  discovery 
is  made  of  these  parts,  and  a  map  or  chart  made  of  them. 
Thereby  Nova  Zembla  is  found  to  be  no  island  extending 
very  far  northward,  but,  winding  eastward,  it  joineth  to  the 
Tartarian  continent,  and  so  makes  a  peninsula:  and  the  sea 


'  Europe-I        Here    ends    the    MS.  liopc ;  indeed    the    various  unsuccessful 

Rawl.  58.  attempts  by  the  English  and  the  Dutch 

*  North-east  poisage.l     These  specu-  on  the  one  side,  and  by  the  Russians  on 

lations  may  well  be  contrasted  with  some  the  other,  go  far  to  pro\e  the  utter  im- 

observations  of  Mr.  Barrow  on  the  same  practicability     of    a    navigable    passage 

subject,  in  his  Chronological  History  of  round   the  northern  extremity  of  Asia  ; 

Voyages  into  the  .Irctic  Regions,  p.  370.  though  tiie  whole  of  this  coast,  with  the 

"  Of  the  three  directions  in  which  a  pas-  exception  perhaps  of  a  single  point,  has 

sage  has  been  sought  for   from  the  At-  been  navigated  in  several  detached  parts, 

lantic  to  the  Pacific,  that  by  the  north-  and  at  different  times." 
east    holds   out    the   least    encouraging 


238  A   PROPHECY    ETC.  [tRACT    XII. 

between  it  which  they  entered  at  Waygatz,  is  found  to  be 
but  a  large  bay,  apt  to  be  frozen  by  reason  of  the  great  river  of 
Oby,  and  other  fresh  waters,  entering  into  it ;  whereas  the 
main  sea  doth  not  freeze  upon  the  north  of  Zembla  except 
near  unto  shores ;  so  that  if  the  Muscovites  were  skilful  navi- 
gators, they  might,  with  less  difficulties,  discover  this  passage 
unto  China ;  but,  however,  the  English,  Dutch,  and  Danes 
are  now  like  to  attempt  it  again. 

But  this  is  conjecture,  and  not  prophecy :  and  so  (I  know) 
you  will  take  it.     I  am,  Sir,  &c. 


TRACT    XIII.]  MUS/EUM    CLAUSUM.  239 


TRACT    XIII. ^ 

mus.eum  clausum,  or,  bibliotiieca  abscondita:  contain- 
ing some  remarkable  books,  antiquities,  pictures,  and 
rarities  of  several  kinds,  scarce  or  never  seen  by 
any  man  now  living. 

Sir, 
With  many  thanks  I  return  that  noble  catalogue  of  books, 
rarities,  and  singularities  of  art  and  nature,  which  you  were 
pleased  to  communicate  unto  me.  There  are  many  collections 
of  this  kind  in  Europe.  And,  besides  the  printed  accounts 
of  the  Museum  Aldrovandi,  Calceolarianum,  Moscardi,  AVor- 
imanum ;  the  Casa  Abbellita  at  Loretto,  and  Tresor  of  St. 
Dennis,  the  Repository  of  the  Duke  of  Tuscany,  that  of  the 
Duke  of  Saxony,  and  that  noble  one  of  the  Emperor  at 
Vienna,  and  many  more,  are  of  singular  note.  Of  what  in 
this  kind  I  have  by  me  I  shall  make  no  repetition,  and  you 
having  already  had  a  view  thereof,  I  am  bold  to  present  you 
with  the  list  of  a  collection,  which  I  may  justly  say  you  have 
not  seen  before. 

The  title  is  as  above  : — Musccum  Clausum,  or  Bibliotheca 
Abscond'ita ;  containing  some  remarkable  books,  antiquities, 
pictures,  and  rarities  of  several  kinds,  scarce  or  never  seen  by 
any  man  now  living. 

'   Tract  xiii.]     This  curious  Tract  is  had  been  suggested  to  me  by  a  passage 

well  characterised  by   Mr.   Crosslcy,  as  in   Rcligio  Medici   (Part  I,  §   21);  and 

"  the  sport  of  a  singular   scholar.     War-  seems  to  be  in  perfect  consonance  with 

burton,  in  one  of  his  notes  on  Pope,  is  Sir  Thomas's  character  as  a  writer.     He 

inclined  to   believe    that    this    list    was  delighted,   perhaps  from  the  very  origi- 

imitated  from  Rabelais's  Catalogue  of  the  nality  of  his  oxvn  mind,  to  emulate  the 

Books    in   the  library  of  St.  Victor ;  but  singularities    of  others.     The  preceding 

the  design  of  the  two  pieces  appears  so  Tract   was  occasioned  by  some   similar 

different,  that  this  suggestion  seems  en-  production  which  had  been  submitted  to 

titled  to  little  regard." — Preface  to  Tracts,  liis  criticism.     U\s  Cliristian  Morals  np- 

18mo.  Edin.  1822.  pears  to  have  been  written  on  the  model 

Bishop  Warburton's  opinion  seems  to  of  the  lioo/c  of  Proverbs ;  see  an  allusion, 

me,    nevertheless,    highly  probable.     It  in  his  21st  section,  p.  107. 


24^0  MUSEUM    CLAUSUM.  [TRACT    XIII. 

1.  Rare  and  generally  miknown  Books." 

1.  A  Poem  of  Ovidius  Naso,^  written  in  the  Getick  lan- 
guage, *  during  liis  exile  at  Tonios  ;  found  wrapt  up  in  wax, 
at  Sabaria,  on  the  frontiers  of  Hungary,  where  there  remains 
a  tradition  that  he  died  in  his  return  towards  Rome  from 
Tomos,  either  after  his  pardon  or  the  death  of  Augustus. 

2.  The  Letter  of  Quintus  Cicero,  which  he  wrote  in  an- 
swer to  that  of  his  brother,  Marcus  Tullius,  desiring  of  him  an 
account  of  Britany,  wherein  are  described  the  country,  state 
and  manners  of  the  Britans  of  that  age. 

3.  An  ancient  British  Herbal,  or  description  of  divers 
plants  of  this  island,  observed  by  that  famous  physician  Scri- 
bonius  Largus,  when  he  attended  the  Emperor  Claudius  in 
his  expedition  into  Britany, 

4.  An  exact  account  of  the  Life  and  Death  of  Avicenna,  con- 
firming the  account  of  his  death  by  taking  nine  clysters  together 
in  a  fit  of  the  cholic,  and  not  as  Marius,  the  Italian  poet,  de- 
livereth,  by  being  broken  upon  the  wheel :  left  with  other 
pieces,  by  Benjamin  Tudelensis,  as  he  travelled  from  Sa- 
ragossa  to  Jerusalem,  in  the  hands  of  Abraham  Jarchi,  a 
famous  Rabbi  of  Lunet,  near  Montpellier,  and  found  in  a  vault 
when  the  walls  of  that  city  were  demolished  by  Lewis  the 
Thirteenth. 

5.  A  punctual  relation  of  Hannibal's  march  out  of  Spain 
into  Italy,  and  far  more  particular  than  that  of  Livy  :  where- 
about he  passed  the  river  Rhodanus,  or  Rhone ;  at  what 
place  he  crossed  the  Isura,  or  L'lsere ;  when  he  marched 
up  towards  the  confluence  of  the  Soane  and  the  Rhone,  or  the 
place  where  the  city  of  Lyons  was  afterward  built :  how 
wisely  he  decided  the  difference  between  King  Brancus  and 

*  Ah  pudet  et  scrips!  Getico  sermone  libellum. 

^  BooksJ}    The  Irish  antiquaries  men-  ^  A  Poem  of  Ovidius,  SfC."]     Mr.  Tay- 

tion  public    libraries    that    were  before  lor,   in  his  Historic  Survey  of  German 

the    flood  :    and    Paul    Christian     lis-  Poetry,    has    a   curious  section  on    this 

ker,    with    profounder     erudition,    has  Poem  of  Ovid,  whom  he  considers  as  the 

given  an   exact  catalogue  of  Adam's ! —  earliest  German    Poet    on   record. — See 

Dr.  Israeli's  Cur.  of  Lit.  7th  edit.  vol.  vol,  i,  §  2. 
ii,   250. 


TRACT    XIII.]  MUS.-EUM    CLAUSUM.  211 

his  brotlicr;  at  wliat  place  he  passed  the  Alps  ;  what  vinegar 
he  used  ;  and  where  he  obtained  such  a  quantity  as  to  break 
and  calcine  the  rocks  made  hot  with  fire. 

6.  A  learned  comment  upon  the  Periplus  of  Hanno  the 
Carthaginian  ;  or  his  navigation  upon  the  western  coast  of 
Africa,  with  the  several  places  he  landed  at ;  what  colonies 
he  settled;  what  ships  were  scattered  from  his  fleet  near  the 
/Equinoctial  Line,  which  were  not  afterward  heard  of,  and 
which  probably  fell  into  the  trade  winds,  and  were  carried 
over  into  the  coast  of  America. 

7.  A  particular  Narration  of  that  famous  Expedition  of  the 
English  into  Barbary,  in  the  ninety-fourth  year  of  the  Hegira, 
so  shortly  touched  by  Leo  Africanus,  whither  called  by  the 
Goths,  they  besieged,  took  and  burnt  the  city  of  Arzilia  pos- 
sessed by  the  Mahometans,  and  lately  the  seat  of  Guyland ; 
with  many  other  exploits,  delivered  at  large  in  Arabic,  lost  in 
the  ship  of  books  and  rarities  which  the  King  of  Spain  took 
from  Siddy  Hamet,  King  of  Fez,  whereof  a  great  part  were 
carried  into  the  Escurial,  and  conceived  to  be  gathered  out  of 
the  relations  of  Hibnu  Nachu,  the  best  historian  of  the 
African  aftliirs. 

8.  A  Fragment  of  Pytha?as,  that  ancient  traveller  of  Mar- 
seilles ;  which  we  suspect  not  to  be  spurious  ;  because,  in  the 
description  of  the  northern  countries,  we  find  that  passage 
of  Pythaias  mentioned  by  Strabo  ;  that  all  the  air  beyond 
Thule  is  tliick,  condensed  and  gellied,  looking  just  like  sea 
lungs. 

9.  A  Submarine  Herbal,  describing  the  several  vegetables 
found  on  the  rocks,  hills,  vallies,  meadows,  at  the  bottom  of  the 
sea,  with  many  sorts  of  alga,fucus,  qucrcus,  i^objgomim,  gra- 
vwn,  and  others  not  yet  described. 

10.  Some  Manuscripts  and  Rarities  brought  from  the  li- 
braries of /Ethiopia,  by  Zaga  Zaba,  and  afterwards  transport- 
ed to  Home,  and  scattered  by  the  soldiers  of  the  Duke  of 
Bourbon,  when  they  barbarously  sacked  that  city. 

11.  Some  Pieces  of  Julius  Scaliger,  which  he  complains  to 
have  been  stolen  from  him,  sold  to  the  Bishop  of  Mendc,  in 
Languedoc,  and  afterward  taken  away  and  sold  in  the  civil 
wars  under  the  Duke  of  Rohan. 

VOL.    IV.  R 


24:2  MUSEUM    CLAUSUM.  [tRACT    XIII 

12.  A  Comment  of  Dioscorides  upon  Hippocrates,  procur- 
ed from  Constantinople  by  Amatus  Lusitanus,  and  left  in  the 
hands  of  a  Jew  of  Ragusa. 

13.  Marcus  Tullius  Cicero  his  Cxeography ;  as  also  a  part 
of  that  magnified  piece  of  his,  De  Bepublica,  very  little 
answering  the  great  expectation  of  it,  and  short  of  pieces 
under  the  same  name  by  Bodinus  and  Tholosanus. 

14.  King  Mithridates  his  Oneirocritica. 
Aristotle,  De  Precationibus. 

Democritus,  de  his  quce  Jiimt  apud  orcum,  et  oceani  ch' 
cmnnavigatio.* 

Epicurus  De  Pietate. 

A  Tragedy  of  Thyestes,  and  another  of  Medea,  writ  by 
Diogenes  the  Cynick. 

King  Alfred,  upon  Aristotle  de  Plantis. 

Seneca's  Epistles  to  St.  Paul. 

King  Solomon,  de  Umbris  Idccarum,  which  Chicus  Ascu- 
lanus,  in  his  comment  upon  Johannes  de  Sacrobosco,  would 
make  us  believe  he  saw  in  the  library  of  the  Duke  of  Ba- 
varia. 

15.  Ariemidori  Onelrocritici  Geographia. 
Pythagoras,  de  Mare  Rubro. 

The  works  of  Confutius,  the  famous  philosopher  of  China, 
translated  into  Spanish. 

16.  Josephus,  in  Hebrew,  written  by  himself. 

17.  The  Commentaries  of  Sylla  the  Dictator. 

18.  A  Commentary  of  Galen  upon  the  Plague  of  Athens, 
described  by  Thucydides. 

19.  Duo  Cccsaris  Anti-Catones,  or  the  two  notable  books 
writ  by  Julius  Caesar  against  Cato ;  mentioned  by  Livy,  Sal- 
lustius,  and  Juvenal;  which  the  Cardinal  of  Liege  told  Lu- 
dovicus  Vives  were  in  an  old  library  of  that  city. 

Mazhapha  Einuk  or  the  prophecy  of  Enoch,  which  iEgi- 
dius  Lochiensis,  a  learned  eastern  traveller,  told  Peireschius 
that  he  had  found  in  an  old  library  at  Alexandria,  containing 
eight  thousand  volumes. 


'&' 


*  Dcmnnrittta,  S^c."]    MS.  Sloan.  1847,     cd  Postellus   conceived  to  be  the  author 
adds  the  following  article : — A  defence  of    oi  De  Tribus  Imposloribus. 
Arnoldus  de  Villa  Nova,  whom  the  learn- 


TRACT    XIII.]  MUSEUM    CLAUSUM.  243 

20.  A  collection  of  Hebrew  Epistles,  which  passed  be- 
tween the  two  learned  women  of  our  age,  Maria  Molineu  of 
Sedan,  and  Maria  Schurman  of  Utrecht. 

A  wondrous  collection  of  some  writings  of  Ludovica  Sara- 
cenica,  daughter  of  Philibcrtus  Saraccnicus,  a  physician  of 
Lyons,  who,  at  eight  years  of  age,  had  made  a  good  progress 
in  the  Hebrew,  Greek,  and  Latin  tongues. 


2.  Rarities  in  Pictures. 

L  A  picture  of  the  three  remarkable  steeples  or  towers  in 
I'^uropo,  built  purposely  awry,  and  so  as  they  seem  falling. 
Torre  Pisana  at  Pisa,  Torre  Garisenda  in  Bononia,  and  that 
other  in  the  city  of  Colein. 

2.  A  draught  of  all  sorts  of  sistrums,  crotaloes,  cymbals, 
tympans,  &:c.  in  use  among  the  ancients. 

3.  Large  submarine  pieces,  well  delineating  the  bottom  of 
the  Mediterranean  sea ;  the  prairie  or  large  sea-meadow  upon 
the  coast  of  Provence:  the  coral  fishintj:  the  jratherincf  of 
sponges ;  the  mountains,  valleys,  and  deserts ;  the  subterra- 
neous vents  and  passages  at  the  bottom  of  that  sca.^  Toge- 
ther with  a  lively  draught  of  Cola  Pesce  or  the  famous  Sici- 
lian swimmer,  diving  into  the  Voragos  and  broken  rocks  by 
Charybdis,  to  fetch  up  the  golden  cup,  which  Frederick, 
King  of  Sicily,  had  purposely  thrown  into  that  sea. 

4.  A  moon  piece,  describing  that  notal)Ie  battle  between 
Axalla,  General  of  Tamerlane,  and  Camares  the  Persian, 
fought  by  the  light  of  the  moon. 

5.  Another  remarkal)le  fight  of  Inghimmi,  the  Florentine, 
with  the  Turkish  galleys,  by  moonlight;  who  being  for  three 
hours  grappled  with  the  Basha  galley,  concluded  with  a  sig- 
nal victory. 

6.  A  delineation  of  the  great  fair  of  Almachara  in  Arabia, 
which,  to  avoid  the  great  heat  of  the  sun,  is  kept  in  the  night, 
and  by  the  light  of  the  moon. 

*  passages,    ^V"-]     ^f^-    '^'o""-    1S74,     al)out  Egypt,  and  rose  again  in  the  Red 
reads — 'the  passage  of  Kirchcrus  in  his     Sea.' 
Iter  Siihmariuns  when    he    went    down 

R  1 


244  MUSiEUM    CLAUSUM.  [tRACT    XIII. 

7.  A  snow  piece,  of  land  and  trees  covered  with  snow  and 
ice,  and  mountains  of  ice  floating  in  the  sea,  with  bears,  seals, 
foxes,  and  variety  of  rare  fowls  upon  them. 

8.  An  ice  piece,  describing  the  notable  battle  between  the 
Jaziges  and  the  Romans,  fought  upon  the  frozen  Danubius ; 
the  Romans  settling  one  foot  upon  their  targets  to  hinder 
them  from  slipping ;  their  fighting  with  the  Jaziges  when  they 
were  fallen  ;  and  their  advantages  therein,  by  their  art  in  vo- 
lutation  and  rolling  contention  or  wrestling,  according  to  the 
description  of  Dion. 

9.  Socia,  or  a  draught  of  three  persons  notably  resembling 
each  other.  Of  King  Henry  the  Fourth  of  France  and  a  mil- 
ler of  Languedoc ;  of  Sforza,  Duke  of  Milan,  and  a  soldier ; 
of  Malatesta,  Duke  of  Rimini,  and  Marchesinus  the  jester.^ 

10.  A  picture  of  the  great  fire  which  happened  at  Con- 
stantinople in  the  reign  of  Sultan  Achmet.  The  janizaries 
in  the  mean  time  plundering  the  best  houses,  Nassa  Bassa, 
the  vizier,  riding  about  with  a  symetre  in  one  hand  and  a 
janizary's  head  in  the  other  to  deter  them ;  and  the  })riests 
attempting  to  quench  the  fire,  by  pieces  of  Mahomet's  shirt 
dipped  in  holy  water  and  thrown  into  it. 

11 .  A  night  piece  of  the  dismal  supper  and  strange  enter- 
tain of  the  senators  by  Domitian,  according  to  the  descrip- 
tion of  Dion. 

12.  A  vestal  sinner  in  the  cave,  with  a  table  and  a  candle. 

13.  An  elephant  dancing  upon  the  ropes,  with  a  negro 
dwarf  upon  his  back. 

14.  Another  describing  the  mighty  stone  falling  from  the 
clouds  into  /Egospotamos  or  the  goats'  river  in  Greece;  which 
anti({uity  could  believe  that  Anaxagoras  was  able  to  foretel 
half  a  year  before. 

15.  Three  noble  pieces ;  of  Vercingetorix,  the  Gaul,  sub- 
mitting his  person  unto  JuHus  Caesar ;  of  Tigranes,  King  of 
Armenia,  humbly  presenting  himself  unto  Pompey ;  and  of 
Tamerlane  ascending  his  horse  from  the  neck  of  Bajazet. 

16.  Draughts  of  three  passionate  looks ;  of  Thyestes  when 
he  was  told  at  the  table  that  he  had  eaten  a  piece  of  his  own 

*  jester.}     "  Of  Charles  the  First,  and     employ." — MS.  note  hy  Evelyn. 
one   Osburn,  an  hedger,  whom   I  often 


TRACT    XIII.]  MUS.F.UM    CLAUSUM.  245 

son ;  of  Bajazet  when  lie  went  into  the  iron  cage  ;  of  (lulij)us 
when  he  first  came  to  know  that  he  had  killen  his  father  and 
married  his  own  motlier. 

17.  Of  the  Cymbrian  mother  in  Plutarch,  who,  after  the 
overthrow  by  Marius  hanged  herself  and  her  two  children  at 
her  feet. 

18.  Some  pieces  delineating  singular  inhumanities  in  tor- 
tures. The  Scajihismus  of  the  Persians.  The  living  trunca- 
tion of  the  Turks.  The  hanging  sport  at  the  feast  of  the 
Thracians.  The  exact  method  of  Haying  men  alive,  begin- 
ning between  the  shoulders,  according  to  the  description  of 
Thomas  ^Nlinadoi,  in  his  Persian  war.  Together  with  the 
studied  tortures  of  the  French  traitors  at  Pappa,  in  Hungaria: 
as  also  the  wild  and  enormous  torment  invented  by  Tiberius, 
designed  according  unto  the  description  of  Suetonius.  Ex- 
cogi/arenoit  inter  genera  cruciatus,  ttt  largd  mcri  pot'ione 
per  fallaciam  oneratos  repentc  veretris  deligatis Jidictilartim 
simnl  urhucque  tormefiio  distenderet. 

19.  A  j)icture  describing  how  Hannibal  forced  his  passage 
over  the  river  Rhone  with  his  elephants,  baggage,  and  mixed 
army;  with  the  army  of  the  Gauls  opposing  him  on  the  con- 
trary shore,  and  Ilanno  passing  over  with  his  horse  much 
above  to  fall  upon  the  rear  of  the  Gauls. 

20.  A  neat  piece  describing  the  sack  of  Fundi  by  the  fleet 
and  soldiers  of  Barbarossa,  the  Turkish  adjuiral,  the  confu- 
sion of  the  people  and  their  flying  up  to  the  mountains,  and 
Julia  Gonzaga,  the  beauty  of  Italy,  flying  away  with  her 
ladies  half  naked  on  horseback  over  the  hills. 

21.  A  noble  head  of  Franciscus  Gonzaga,  who  being  im- 
prisoned for  treason,  grew  grey  in  one  night,  with  this 
inscription, 

O  noz  quam  loiiga  est  quse  facit  una  senem. 

22.  A  large  picture  describing  the  siege  of  \'ienna  by  So- 
lyman  the  Magnificent,  and  at  the  same  time  the  siege  of 
Florence,  by  the  Emperur  Charles  the  Fifth  and  Pope  Cle- 
ment the  Seventh,  with  this  subscription, 

Tum  vacui  capitis  populuiu  Phxaca  piilarcs  ? 


246  MUSEUM    CLAUSUM.  [tRACT    Xlll. 

23.  An  exquisite  piece  properly  delineating  the  first  course 
of  Metellus's  pontificial  supper,  according  to  the  description 
of  Macrobius ;  together  with  a  dish  of  Pisces  Fossiles,  gar- 
nished about  with  the  little  eels  taken  out  of  the  backs  of 
cods  and  perches ;  as  also  with  the  shell  fishes  found  in  stones 
about  Ancona. 

24.  A  picture  of  the  noble  entertain  and  feast  of  the  Duke 
of  Chausue  at  the  treaty  of  Collen,  1673,  when  in  a  very 
large  room,  with  all  the  windows  open,  and  at  a  very  large 
table  he  sat  himself,  with  many  great  persons  and  ladies ; 
next  about  the  table  stood  a  row  of  waiters,  then  a  row  of 
musicians,  then  a  row  of  musketeers. 

25.  Miltiades,  who  overthrew  the  Persians  at  the  battle  of 
Marathon,  and  delivered  Greece,  looking  out  of  a  prison 
grate  in  Athens,  wherein  he  died,  with  this  inscription, 

Non  hoc  terribiles  Cymbri  non  Britones  unquam, 
Sauromataeve  truces  aut  immanes  Agathyrsi. 

26.  A  fair  English  lady  drawn  Al  Negro,  or  in  the  Ethi- 
opian hue  excelling  the  original  white  and  red  beauty,  with 
this  subscription, 

Sed  quandam  volo  node  nigriorem. 

27.  Pieces  and  draughts  in  caricaitira,  of  princes,  cardi- 
nals, and  famous  men ;  wherein,  among  others,  the  painter 
hath  singularly  hit  the  signatures  of  a  lion  and  a  fox  in  the 
face  of  Pope  Leo  the  Tenth. 

28.  Some  pieces  a  la  ventura,  or  rare  chance  pieces,  either 
drawn  at  random,  and  happening  to  be  like  some  person,  or 
drawn  for  some,  and  happening  to  be  more  like  another; 
while  the  face,  mistaken  by  the  painter,  proves  a  tolerable 
picture  of  one  he  never  saw. 

29.  A  draught  of  famous  dwarfs  with  this  inscription, 

Nos  facimus  Bruti  puerum  nos  Lagona  vivum. 

30.  An  exact  and  proper  delineation  of  all  sorts  of  dogs 
upon  occasion  of  the  practice  of  Sultan  Achmet ;  who  in  a 


TRACT    XIII.]  MUSEUM    CLAUSUM.  247 

great  pla<;fue  at  Constantinople,  transported  all  the  dogs 
therein  nnto  Pera,  and  from  thence  into  a  little  island,  where 
they  perished  at  last  by  famine :  as  also  the  manner  of  the 
priests  curing  of  mad  dogs  by  burning  them  in  the  forehead 
with  Saint  BelHn's  key. 

31.  A  noble  picture  of  Thorismund,  King  of  the  Goths, 
as  he  was  killed  in  liis  palace  at  Tholouzc,  who  being  let 
blood  by  a  surgeon,  while  he  was  bleeding,  a  stander  by  took 
the  advantage  to  stab  him. 

32.  A  picture  of  rare  fruits  with  this  inscription, 

Credere  qux  possis  surrepta  sororibus  Afris. 

33.  An  handsome  piece  of  deformity  expressed  in  a  no- 
table liard  face,  with  this  inscription, 

Ora 

Julius  in  Satyris  qualia  Rufus  habet. 

34.  A  noble  picture  of  the  famous  duel  between  Paul  Manes- 
si  and  Caragusa  tlie  Turk,  in  the  time  of  Amurath  the  Second  ; 
the  Turkish  army  and  that  of  Scanderbeg  looking  on ;  wherein 
Manessi  slew  the  Turk,  cut  off  his  head,  and  carried  away 
the  spoils  of  his  body. 


3.  Antiquities  and  Rarities  of  several  sorts. 

1.  Certain  ancient  medals  with  Greek  and  Roman  inscrip- 
tions, found  about  Crim  Tartary  :  conceived  to  be  left  in  those 
parts  by  the  soldiers  of  Mithridates,  when  overcome  by  Pom- 
l)ey,  he  marched  round  about  the  north  of  the  Euxine  to 
come  about  into  Thracia. 

2.  Some  ancient  ivory  and  copper  crosses  found  with  many 
others  in  China ;  conceived  to  have  been  brought  and  left 
there  by  the  Greek  soldiers  who  served  under  Tamerlane  in 
his  expedition  and  conquest  of  that  country. 

3.  Stones  of  strange  and  illegible  inscriptions,  found  about 
the  great  ruins  which  Vincent  le  Blanc  describeth  about  Ce- 
phala  in  Africa,  where  he  opinioncd  that  the  Hebrews  raised 


248  MUSiEUM    CLAUSUM.  [tRACT    XIII. 

some  buildings  of  old,  and  that  Solomon  brought  from  there- 
about a  good  part  of  his  gold. 

4.  Some  handsome  engraveries  and  medals  of  Justinus  and 
Justinianus,  found  in  the  custody  of  a  Banyan  in  the  remote 
parts  of  India,  conjectured  to  have  been  left  there  by  the 
Friars  mentioned  in  Procopius,  who  travelled  those  parts  in 
the  reign  of  Justinianus,  and  brought  back  into  Europe  the 
discovery  of  silk  and  silk  worms. 

5.  An  original  medal  of  Petrus  Aretinus,  who  was  called 
Jlagellum  principum,  wherein  he  made  his  own  figure  on  the 

obverse  part  with  this  inscription, 

II  Divino  Arelino. 

On  the  reverse  sitting  on  a  throne,  and  at  his  feet  ambas- 
sadors of  kings  and  princes  bringing  presents  unto  him,  with 
this  inscription, 

I  Principi  tributati  dai  Popoli  tributano  il  Servitor  loro. 

6.  Mummia  Tholosana ;  or  the  complete  head  and  body  of 
father  Crispin,  buried  long  ago  in  the  vault  of  the  cordeliers 
at  Tholousc,  where  the  skins  of  the  dead  so  dry  and  parch 
up  without  corrupting,  that  their  persons  may  be  known  very 
long  after,  with  this  inscription, 

Ecce  iteriim  Crispinus. 

7.  A  noble  quaiidros  or  stone  taken  out  of  a  vulture's  head. 

8.  A  large  ostrich's  egg,  whereon  is  neatly  and  fully 
wrought  that  famous  battle  of  Alcazar,  in  which  three  kings 
lost  their  lives. 

9.  An  Etiudros  Alherti  or  stone  that  is  apt  to  be  always 
moist :  useful  unto  dry  tempers,  and  to  be  held  in  the  hand 
in  fevers  instead  of  crystal,  eggs,  lemons,  cucumbers. 

10.  A  small  vial  of  water  taken  out  of  the  stones  therefore 
called  Enhydri,  which  naturally  include  a  little  water  in  them, 
in  like  manner  as  the  /Elites  or  Eagle  stone  doth  another 
stone. 


TRACT    XIII.]  MCS.EUM    CLAUSUM.  249 

11.  A  neat  painteil  ami  gilded  cup  made  out  of  the  con- 
Jiti  di  Tii'oli,  and  formed  up  with  powdered  egg-shells ;  as 

Nero  is  conceived  to  have  made  his  piscina  admirabilis,  sin- 
gular against  fluxes  to  drink  often  therein. 

12.  The  skin  of  a  snake  bred  out  of  the  spinal  marrow  of 
a  man. 

lo.  Vegetable  horns  mentioned  by  Linschoten,  which  set 
in  the  ground  grow  up  like  plants  about  Goa. 

14.  An  extract  of  the  ink  of  cuttle  fishes  revivintr  the  old 
remedy  of  Hippocrates  in  hysterical  passions. 

15.  Spirits  and  salt  of  Sargasso,  made  in  the  western 
ocean  covered  with  that  vegetable;  excellent  against  the 
scurvy. 

10.  An  extract  of  Cachunde  or  Liherans,  that  famous  and 
highly  magnified  composition  in  the  East  Indies  against  me- 
lancholy. 

1 7.  Diarrhizon  mirijicum  ;  or  an  unparalleled  composition 
jf  the  most  effectual  and  wonderful  roots  in  nature. 

II  Kad.  Butuie  Cuamensis. 
Rad.  Moniche  Cuamensis. 
Rad.  Mongus  Bazainensis. 
Rad.  Casei  Bazainensis. 
Rad.  Columbtc  Mozambiguensis. 
Gim.  Sem.  Sinicic. 
Fo.  Lim.  lac.  Tigridis  dicta?. 
Fo.  seu  Cort.  Rad.  Soldae. 
Rad.  Ligni  Solorani. 

Rad.  JNIalacensis  madrededios  dictae  an.  3!). 
M.   fiat  pulvis,  qui  cum  gelatina  Cornu    Cervi    Moschati 
Chincnsis  formetur  in  massas  oviformes. 

18.  A  transcendent  perfume  made  of  the  richest  odorates 
of  both  the  Indies,  kept  in  a  book  made  of  the  Muschic  stone 
of  Niarienburg,  with  this  inscription. 


Deos  rogato, 

Totum  ut  tc  faciant,  Fabulle,  Nasutn. 

19.  A  Clepsclcca,  or  oil  hour  glass,  as  the  ancients  used 
those  of  water. 


250  MUSiEUM    CLAUSUM.  [tRACT    XIII. 

20.  A  ring  found  in  a  fish's  belly  taken  about  Gorro ;  con- 
ceived to  be  the  same  wherewith  the  Duke  of  Venice  had 
wedded  the  sea. 

21.  A  neat  crucifix  made  out  of  the  cross  bone  of  a  frog's 
head. 

22.  A  large  agath,  containing  a  various  and  careless  figure, 
which  looked  upon  by  a  cylinder  representeth  a  perfect  cen- 
taur. By  some  such  advantages  King  Pyrrhus  might  find 
out  Apollo  and  the  nine  Muses  in  those  agaths  of  his  whereof 
Pliny  maketh  mention. 

23.  BatrachomyomacJiia,  or  the  Homerican  battle  between 
frogs  and  mice,  neatly  described  upon  the  chisel  bone  of  a 
large  pike's  jaw. 

24.  Pyxis  Pandorce,  or  a  box  which  held  the  ungiientum 
pestiferum,  which  by  anointing  the  garments  of  several  per- 
sons begat  the  great  and  horrible  plague  of  Milan. 

25.  A  glass  of  spirits  made  of  ethereal  salt,  hermetically 
sealed  up,  kept  continually  in  quick-silver;  of  so  volatile  a 
nature  that  it  will  scarce  endure  the  light,  and  therefore  only 
to  be  shewn  in  winter,  or  by  the  light  of  a  carbuncle,  or  bo- 
nonian  stone. 

He  who  knows  where  all  this  treasure  now  is,  is  a  great 
Apollo.     I  'm  sure  I  am  not  he.     However,  I  am, 

Sir,  Yours,  &c. 


iHisccUantcs* 


CONCERNING    THE    TOO    NICE    CURIOSITY    OF    CENSURING    THE 
PRESENT,  OR  JUDGING  INTO  FUTURE  DISPENSATIONS.' 

[posthumous  works,  p.  23.     ms.  sloan.  1885  &  1869.] 

VV  E  have  enough  to  do  rightly  to  apprehend  and  consider 
things  as  they  are,  or  have  been,  without  amusing  ourselves 
how  they  might  have  been  otherwise,  or  what  variations,  con- 
sequences, and  differences  might  have  otherwise  arisen  upon 
a  different  face  of  things,  if  they  had  otherwise  fallen  out  in 
the  state  or  actions  of  the  world. 

The  learned  King  Alphonso  would  have  Iiad  the  calf  of  a 
man's  leg  placed  before  rather  than  behind  :  and  thinks  he 
covdd  find  many  commodities  from  that  position. 

If,  in  the  terraqueous  globe,  all  that  now  is  land  had  been 
sea,  and  all  that  is  sea  were  land,  wh;it  wide  difference  there 
would  be  in  all  things,  as  to  constitution  of  climes,  tides,  dis- 
parity of  navigation,  and  many  other  concerns,  were  a  long 
consideration. 

If  Sertorius  had  pursued  his  designs  to  pass  his  days  in 
the  Fortunate  Islands,  who  can  tell  but  we  might  have  had 
many  noble  discoveries  of  the  neighbouring  coasts  of  Africa ; 
and  perhaps  America  had  not  been  so  long  unknown  to  us. 

'  Concerning,   Sfc.'}     This  most  incor-  Place  Book. — Different  copies  of  the  first 

rect  title  I  strongly  incline  to  suspect  is  occur   in  two  volumes  of   MSS.  in  the 

not  genuine.  Sloanian  Collection,  from    which  I   have 

This  piece  and  the  following  are  mere  inserted  several  additional  passages, 
extracts    from    Sir    Thomas's   Common 


252  AGAINST    CENSURE. 

If  Nearchus,  Admiral  to  Alexander  tlie  Great,  setting  out 
from  Persia,  had  sailed  about  Africa,  and  come  into  the  Me- 
diterranean, by  the  straits  of  Hercules,  as  was  intended,  we 
might  have  heard  of  strange  things,  and  had  probably  a  bet- 
ter account  of  the  coast  of  Africa  than  was  lost  by  Hanno. 

If  King  Perseus  had  entertained  the  barbarous  nations  but 
stout  warriors,  which  in  so  great  numbers  offered  their  ser- 
vice unto  him,  some  conjecture  it  might  be,  that  Paulus  Emi- 
lius  had  not  conquered  Macedon. 

If  [Antiochus  ?]  had  followed  the  counsel  of  Hannibal,  and 
come  about  by  Gallia  upon  the  Romans,  who  knows  what 
success  he  might  have  had  against  them  ? 

If  Scanderbeg  had  joined  his  forces  with  Hunniades,  as 
might  have  been  expected  before  the  battle  in  the  plains  of 
Cossoan,  in  good  probability  they  might  have  ruined  Maho- 
met, if  not  the  Turkish  empire. 

If  Alexander  had  marched  westward,  and  warred  with  the 
Romans,  whether  he  had  been  able  to  subdue  that  little  but 
valiant  people,  is  an  uncertainty :  we  are  sure  he  overcame 
Persia ;  histories  attest,  and  prophecies  foretell  the  same.  It 
was  decreed  that  the  Persians  should  be  conquered  by  Alex- 
ander, and  his  successors  by  the  Romans,  in  whom  Provi- 
dence had  determined  to  settle  the  fourth  monarchy,  which 
neither  Pyrrhus  nor  Hannibal  must  prevent ;  though  Hanni- 
bal came  so  near  it,  that  he  seemed  to  miss  it  by  fatal  infatua- 
tion: which  if  he  had  effected,  there  had  been  such  a  traverse 
and  confusion  of  affairs,  as  no  oracle  could  have  predicted. 
But  the  Romans  must  reign,  and  the  course  of  things  was 
then  moving  towards  the  advent  of  Christ,  and  blessed  dis- 
covery of  the  Gospel :  our  Saviour  must  suffer  at  Jerusalem, 
and  be  sentenced  by  a  Roman  judge ;  St.  Paul,  a  Roman 
citizen,  must  preach  in  the  Roman  provinces,  and  St.  Peter 
be  Bishop  of  Rome,  and  not  of  Carthage. 


UPON    READING    Hl'DIUKAS.  253 


UPON    READING    HUDIBRAS. 


[posthumous  works,  p.  24.] 


The  way  of  Burlesque  Poems  is  very  ancient,  for  there  was 
a  ludicrous  mock  way  of  trausferrinir  verses  of  famous  poets 
into  a  jocose  sense  and  argument,  and  they  were  called  fib'-ai, 
or  Parodicc ;  divers  examples  of  which  are  to  be  found  in 
Athenajus. 

The  first  inventor  hereof  was  Hipponactes,  but  Ilegemon, 
Sopater  and  many  more  pursued  the  same  vein  ;  so  that  the 
Parodies  of  Ovid's  Bufibon,  Metamorphoses,  Burlesques, 
Le  Eneiade  Travastito,  are  no  new  inventions,  but  old  fan- 
cies revived. 

An  excellent  Parody  there  is  of  both  the  Scaligers  upon  an 
Epigram  of  Catullus,  which  Stephens  hath  set  down  in  his 
Discourse  of  Parodies:  a  remarkable  one  among  the  Greeks 
is  that  of  Matron,  in  the  words  and  epithets  of  Homer,  de- 
scribing the  feast  of  Xenocles,  the  Athenian  Rhetorician,  to 
be  found  in  the  fourth  book  of  Athcnajus,  page  131-,  Edit. 
Casaub. 


254  AN    ACCOUNT   OF    ICELAND. 


AN  ACCOUNT  OF  ISLAND,  aliaS  ICELAND,  IN  THE  YEAR 


MDCLXII.^ 


[posthumous  works,  p.   1.] 

Great  store  of  drift-wood  or  float-wood,  is  every  year  cast 
up  on  their  shores,  brought  down  by  the  northern  winds, 
which  serveth  them  for  fuel  and  other  uses,  the  greatest  part 
whereof  is  fir. 

Of  bears  there  are  none  in  the  country,  but  sometimes 
they  are  brought  down  from  the  nortli  upon  ice,  while  they 
follow  seals,  and  so  are  carried  away.  Two  in  this  manner 
came  over  and  landed  in  the  north  of  Island,  this  last  year, 
1662. 

No  conies  or  hares,  but  of  foxes  great  plenty,  whose  white 
skins  are  much  desired,  and  brought  over  into  this  country. 

The  last  winter,  1662,  so  cold  and  lasting  with  us  in  Eng- 
land, was  the  mildest  they  have  had  for  many  years  in  Island. 

Two  new  eruptions,  with  slime  and  smoke,  were  observed 
the  last  year  in  some  mountains  about  Mount  Hecla. 

Some  hot  mineral  springs  they  have,  and  very  effectual, 
but  they  make  but  rude  use  thereof. 

The  rivers  are  large,  swift,  and  rapid,  but  have  many  falls, 
which  render  them  less  commodious;  they  chiefly  abound 
with  salmons. 

They  sow  no  corn,  but  receive  it  from  abroad. 

They  liave  a  kind  of  large  lichen,  which  dried,  becometh 
hard  and  sticky,  growing  very  plentifully  in  many  places ; 


'  An  account,  &c.]  Tlie  following  land ; — three  of  wliose  letters  have  been 
brief  notices  respecting  Iceland  were  col-  preserved  in  the  British  Museum.  These 
lectcd  nt  the  request  of  the  Royal  Soci-  letters  I  have  preferred  to  place  imnnedi- 
ety.  They  were  partly  obtained  through  ately  after  the  paper  to  which  they  re- 
correspondence  with  Theodore  Jonas,  a  late,  rather  than  in  the  Correspondence. 
Lutheran  minister,  resident  in   the   Is- 


AN  ACCOUNT  OF  ICELAND.  255 

whereof  they  make  use  for  food,  either  in  decoction  or  pow- 
der, some  whereof  I  have  by  me,  different  from  any  with  us. 

In  one  part  of  the  country,  and  not  near  the  sea,  there  is 
a  large  black  rock,  which,  polished,  resembleth  touchstone, 
as  I  have  seen  in  pieces  thereof,  of  various  figures. 

There  is  also  a  rock,  whereof  I  received  one  fragment, 
which  seems  to  make  it  one  kind  of  p'tsoUthes  or  rather  oro- 
hites,  as  made  up  of  small  pebbles,  in  the  bigness  and  shape 
of  the  seeds  of  ervum  or  orobus. 

They  have  some  large  well-grained  white  pebbles,  and 
some  kind  of  white  cornelian  or  agath  pebbles,  on  the  shore, 
which  polish  well.  Old  Sir  Edmund  Bacon,  of  these  parts, 
made  use  thereof  in  his  peculiar  art  of  tinging  and  colouring 
of  stones. 

For  shells  found  on  the  sea  shore,  such  as  have  been 
brought  unto  me  are  but  coarse,  nor  of  many  kinds,  as  ordi- 
nary turbines,  chamas,  aspers,  lasves,   &c. 

I  have  received  divers  kinds  of  teeth  and  bones  of  cetace- 
ous fishes,  unto  which  they  could  assign  no  name. 

An  exceeding  fine  russet  down  is  sometimes  brought  unto 
us,  which  their  great  number  of  fowls  afford,  and  sometimes 
store  of  feathers,  consisting  of  the  feathers  of  small  birds. 

Beside  shocks  and  httle  hairy  dogs,  they  bring  another  sort 
over,  headed  like  a  fox,  which  they  say  are  bred  betwixt 
dogs  and  foxes  ;  these  are  desired  by  the  shepherds  of  this 
country. 

Green  plovers,  which  are  plentiful  here  in  the  winter,  are 
found  to  breed  there  in  the  beginning  of  summer. 

Some  sheep  have  been  brought  over,  but  of  coarse  wool, 
and  some  horses  of  mean  stature,  but  strong  and  hardy ;  one 
whereof  kept  in  the  pastures  by  Yarmouth,  in  the  summer, 
would  often  take  the  sea,  swimmin^r  a  ureat  wav,  a  mile  or 
two,  and  return  the  same :  when  its  provision  failed  in  the 
ship  wherein  it  was  brought,  for  many  days  fed  upon  hoops 
and  cask ;  nor  at  the  land  would,  for  many  months,  be 
brought  to  feed  upon  oaths. 

These  accounts  I  received  from  a  native  of  Island,  who 
comes  yearly  into  England ;  and  by  reason  of  my  long  ac- 
quaintance and  directions  I  send  unto  some  of  his  friends 


Q56  LETTERS    FROM    THEODORE    JONAS. 

against  tlie  elep/tontiasis,  (leprosy,)  constantly  visits  me  before 
his  return ;  and  is  ready  to  jierform  for  me  what  I  shall  desire 
in  his  country ;  wherein,  as  in  other  ways,  I  shall  be  very  am- 
bitious to  serve  the  noble  society,  whose  most  honouring  ser- 
vant I  am, 

THOMAS  BROWNE. 

Norwicli,  January];),   1CG3. 


Theodore  Jonas  to  Dr.  Broivne. 

[MS.   SLOAN.  3418,  fol.    189.] 

Prima,  qvam  instituit  Auctor,  ^/irncig  difRcilis  mihi  et  sub- 
obscura  videtur. 

1.  De  Arboribus  et  Herbis  in  Island ia  quales  vulgo  occur- 
rant,  qva  ratione  cum  Anglicis  conveniant,  qva  discrepent.'' 
Cum  nunquam  contigit  olim  felicem  illam  Terram  Anglicam 
adire  ac  lustrare,  nedum  in  pernoscendis  discernendisque 
istius  soli  proventibus  operae  qvicqvam  sumere,  frustra  mco 
judicio,  de  Arborum  aut  Herbarum  convenientia  cum  nos- 
tratibus,  compelletur.  Verum  ne  videar,  vel  faciendo  inhu- 
manus,  vel  in  patria  recensendo,  qvas  fert  Islandia,  [primum] 
sejungam,  deindeetiam  illas,  non  omnes  qvidem  sed  prtecipuas 
et  mihi  visas,  succincte  memorem. 

INIulti  patriam  nostram,  pra3ter  solam  Betulam,  ne  qvic- 
qvam arborum  sunt  procreare  rati,  sed  falso :  proveniunt  vero 
hie  Arbuscula)  permultas,  et  qvidem  frugifera? ;  ut  Morus, 
Buxus,  Juniperus,  Rubus,  Myrtillus,  cum  suis  qvajlibet  bac- 
cis:  qvanquam  libcnter  do  has  arborum  species  non  altius 
assurgere  qvam  ut  Virgulta  merito  dicantur;  impediuntur 
vero  frigore,  et  assiduis  opprimuntur  nivibus,  qvo  minus  ad 
excellentem  et  justam  qvantitatem  naturaliter  possint  per- 
venire.  Abundat  etiam  Islandia  Sahce,  nee  unius  tantum- 
modo  generis  sed  cum  Punicea,  qvae  Plinio  Viminalis,  tum 
Candida,  eidem  Vitellina,  tum  Cinerea.  Ilabet  praeterea 
qvoddam  Arboris  Genus,  nostratibus  Reyner  dictum,  Sam- 
buci  nomine  a  nonnuUis  insignitum,  nee  refragabor  tantisper 


LETTF.RS    FROM    THEODOKF,    JONAS.  257 

diiin  Auctorcs  ct  licrlKirios  cmii  ipsa  conloro  oxpcvicntia. 
Sj)inas,  vepres,  sentoscpie  pruilcns  oinittu  ;  nee  ejus  generis 
niiniuni  t'erax  lute  terra. 

2.  Niini  hyenis  hie  aut  icstas  virescat,  qvavc  alia  facie  tel- 
lus  gaudeat  ?  Prior  pars  rrig  ^rirrissu;  vix  est  vestigationis 
nomine  digna,  cum  ubique  locorum  restas  inducat  viriditatcm 
tcrni?,  et  hyems  contra  marcorem  ac  flacccdineni.  Posterior 
scriptionis  est  longioris :  id  saltern  nunc  significabo,  ab  aqvi- 
noctio  autumnali  procellis  et  imbribus  ut  plurimum  nos  con- 
cuti,  Kalendas  usque  Novembrias,  circa  Solstitiuni  brumale 
nivosissimam  esse  cccli  constitutionem.  Sole  [autcm]  pe- 
ragrante  signa  Aqvarii  et  Piscium  frigus  vehementer  aflligere 
ct  intendi,  raroque  hyems  se  remittet  ante  Kal.  April. 
/Estas  ])lerumque  siccior  initio,  ac  ver  ipsum,  media  calidior, 
fine  pluviosa  et  turbida.  Nox  fere  nulla  aut  notabilis  umbra 
in  nostro  hemisphasrio  sentitur  icstivali  solstitio  pnusertim  in 
septcntrionali  plaga.  Et  tamen  brumali  die  brevissimo,  du- 
arum  nempe  horarum,  aut  fere  trium,  solem,  sereno  ca2lo, 
clare  conspicimus,  terras  collustrantem,  caloremque  sentimus ; 
ut  pro  commento  sit  habendum  qvod  Cosmographi  et  Astro- 
nonii  (jvidam  de  Islandia  scripserunt,  corpus  solare  bruma 
non  videri  nobis,  nee  verum  diem  oriri. 

3.  Qvi  Hores  aut  herba-  in  littore  aut  alibi  reperiantur  ? — 
({vamvis  animo  intendam  annotare,  vix  tamen  vacat,  sed  li- 
bclli  alicujus  paginis  inserere  qva?  commode  ad  vos  integrae 
veniant :  operam  omnino  luderam,  si  tentarem  herbas  ac 
olera,  ut  jam  sunt  matura,  foliis  floribusque  gravia,  libro  in- 
volvere,  in  Angliam  usque  perferenda.  Nominatim  vcro 
rccensebo  nonnullas,  qva?  hie  nascuntur  herba?  vulgatiores, 
et  qvae  usibus  humanis  esse  solent,  alioqvi  multitudine  ct 
varietate  obruerer.  Seqvar  autem  ordinem  D.  Adami 
Leoniceri  Medico-Physici  Francfurt :  Herbarii  non  contcm- 
ncndi,  qvo  cum  sedulo  species  arborum  ct  hcrbarum  contuli, 
at(|ue  ex  lib.  iido  didici,  seqventes  II.  Islandiam  nostram  pro- 
ducere.  Sempervivam  seu  Sedum  majus  et  minus,  caj),  8. 
delineatum.  Trixaginom  et  Teucrion,  c.  15.  Lapathi  et 
Rumicis  genera  varia,  c.  G2,  G.3,  C4.  Chrysanthemum,  c.  65. 
Buphthalnuun,  (>(i.  Calthum,  c.  ()7.  Chamomillum,  c.  G8. 
Hieracium  seu  Traxacon  majus  ct  minus,  c.  71.  Auriculuni 

VOL.    IV.  s 


258  LETTERS    FROM    THEODORE    JONAS. 

Muris,  vulgo  Pilosellam,  c.  80.  Titliy malum  Myarinites  seu 
faeminam  et  Tithymalium  paralium,  seu  Esulam  marinam,  c. 
82.  Melissam,  c.  99.  Calamintliam,  c.  100.  Mentham,  c.  lOL 
Serpillum,  c.  109.  Bellem  seu  Solidaginem  minimam;  Lysi- 
machiam  seu  Salicariam,  herbam  pedicularem,  sive  Staphi- 
sagriam,  c.  146.  Tanacetum,  c.  175.  Geranium  rostrum- 
ciconiae.  Ibid.  Chelidonium  seu  Gratiam  Dei,  c.  177. 
Ranunculum,  c.  197.  Asinen  seu  morsum  Gallina?,  c.  204. 
Arundinem,  c.  217.  Gramen  et  Caricem,  c.  218.  Holosteon, 
vel  denticulum  canis,  c.  219.  Eqvisetum,  c.  223.  Rapunculum 
Rapum,  c.  244,  245.  Cepas,  c.  248.  Bulbos,  249.  Porrum,  et 
c.  250.  Allium,  c.  251.  Fragariam,  c.  275.  Tormentillam  et 
Pentaphyllum,  c.  277.  Saniculam,  c.  278.  Ledum  Leonis,  c. 
279.  Filicis  genera  nonnuUa,  c.  291.  Gyllitem  seu  lingvam 
cervinam,  c.  294.  Angelicam,  c.  .302.  Petroselinum,  c.  316. 
Millefolium,  321.  Potentillam,  322.  Gallium,  c.  326.  Aperi- 
nens  vulgo  Aspergulam,  c.  327.  Matrisylvam  seu  herbam 
stellarem,  c.  328.  Crithmnm  vulgo  cretam  marinam,  c.  330. 
Ornithogalum,  c.  337.  Vicia,  c.  364,  et  Lentem,  3G6.  Alias- 
que  innumeras,  qvae  licet  non  omnimodo  et  vsque  qvoque 
congruant  cum  herbariorum  descriptionibus  et  pigmentis, 
specie  tamen  easdem  esse  nuUi  dubitamus,  ideoque  et  depic- 
tis  annumerandas.  Multas,  ut  ubique  obvias  prudens  praete- 
reo ;  plurima?  quoque  neglecta?,  nobis  etiam  non  visae,  qvas 
patrium  fert  solum,  sunt  omissas.  Nonnullas,  in  iisque  igno- 
tas  hand  paucas,  libello  et  fasciculo  involvi,  Dno  Literatiss. 
perferendas,  si  fortasse  nativam  repra?sentent  arefactas  figu- 
ram  et  innotescant.  Nemini  vero  videbitur  mirum  si  tum 
qvantitate  tum  forma  utcunque  et  qvalitate  nonnihil  nostr£e 
dissideant  ab  Anglicis,  aut  exoticis,  et  ob  soli  sterilitatem 
et  aeris  asperitatem.  Adjunxi  etiam  Culmos  cum  spica,  in 
australi  Islandiae  plaga  sponte  nascentes,  qvos  resectos  et  are- 
factos  nostrates  quotannis  concutiunt  et  copiosum  eliciunt 
frumentum,  qvale  sacculo  inclusum  mittimus.  Sed  et  alibi 
tritico  simile  frumentum  provenit,  ab  incolis  annuatim  resec- 
tum,  arefactum,  molaque  subactum,  panibus  et  pulmentariis 
utiliter  aptatum,  terreni  quidem  saporis,  eo  qvod  non  seritur, 
nihilo  tamen  minus  frugaliter  atque  ad  satietatem  alere  fertur. 
HaGC  autem  qua?  intuenda  mittuntur,  eo  exhibentur  fine,  ut 


LETTERS  FROM  THEODORE  JONAS.  259 

et  sagaci  indagatori  fiat  satis,  et  nos  in  pleniorcm  liarum  re- 
ruin  notitiani,  per  amicani  vestram  informationem,  mutuara- 
que  collatit)nem,  si  Diis  placet,  perclucamnr. 

4.  Crustuluni  vel  placentam  panis  istius  qvi  fit  ^  pulvere 

confusorum  piscium,  non  habemus  Pise siccatus  aut 

sole  induratus  lunditur  hie  comnniniter  (qvemadniodum  etiam 
Ilasa,  sahno  etc.  indurati)  et  qvidem  in  supcrficiarium  ut  ita 
dicam,  pulvereni,  sed  qvi  vel  mox  cum  butyro  et  sale  comme- 
ditur  vel  ex  lacte  aut  alio  jure  pro  obsonio  habetur.  Estque 
hie  piscium  apparatus  IslandiciU  plebi  cocti  panis  instar, 
qvanqvani  ditiores  et  nobiliores,  eo  non  content!,  pane  exotico 
ut  plurinmm  bis  cocto  niensas  solent  adornare  suas.  Interim 
non  obliviscendum  reor,  moris  esse  vulgi  nautici,  ad  le  van  dam 
panis  penuriam,  ova  piscium  advectitio  frumento  ut  admis- 
ceant,  depsant  in  formam  placenta?,  et  pro  pane  utantur 
escarito. 

5.  Chylus  stomachis  vitulorum  contentus,  hie  ut  in  aliis 
regionibus  usui  qvidem  est,  omni  parte  anni,  ad  lac  coagulan- 
dum,  quo  tum  in  caseum,  tum  in  oxy galas  concrescat,  qvales 
nee  Anglia  nee  Dania  vidit,  utpote  crassas,  pingves,  consis- 
tentes  et  sine  singulari  aciditate  perdurantes  in  annum,  ut 
non  Islandis  solum,  sed  extraneis  etiam,  cibum  gratissimum 
et  fere  dixerim  Jovis  cerebrum  esse  censendum. 

6.  Qvid  rerum  ferat  Ilekla  mons  pene  friget  referre,  prop- 
ter variorum  scriptorum  commenta  et  aniles  [fabulas],  qvibus 
Heklam  Islandia?  modo  Orcum,  modo  glacialem  Infernvm 
esse,  petulanter  astruere,  imperitisque  persvadere  velle  viden- 
tur.  Verissime  I)ns  Arngrinus  Jonas  Islandus  de  monte  hoc 
mirabili  scripsit,  Apologet.  suo,  par.  I,  §  6,  7,  ubi  commenta 
solide  refutavit  et  cxplosit.  Mons  Hekla  sulplmre  et  bitu- 
mine  dives  ardorem  in  cavernis  ab  exhalationum  et  ventorum 
motu  confiictuque  concipiens  sa^penumero  fumum  flammamque 
eructavit.  Prima  ha?c  ignis  eruptio  Icgitur,  Anno  Dni  HOG, 
facta;  qvam  varia?,  per  dissimilia  temporum  intervalia,  sunt 
subsecuta?,  nee  tantum  ex  Hekla,  sed  aliis  etiam  sublimiori- 
bus  montibus  et  alpibus,  austraUs  et  maxime  orientalis  Islandiae 
partis,  imo  et  ex  mari,  prope  promontorium  Keylianes,  plae- 
risque  Anglis  qvi  hue  veliHcati  sunt  pernotum,  flamma  non 
semel  erupit,  et  ignis  per  aliqvot  dies  arsit.     Imprimis  fuit 

S2 


260  LETTERS  FROM  THEODORE  JONAS. 

memorabilis  ignis  eruptio,  Ao.  1625,  cum  aqvarum  et  cineris, 
pumicisque  ingenti  eluvie,  ex  alpium  ruptura  et  commotione 
prope  Heklani,  concoinitantibus  fragoribus  tremendis  et  terrae 
motu,  ccelo  cinere,  ceu  nubilissimo  imbre,  aut  eclipsi,  ob- 
ducto  et  obscurato  ;  unde  magnus  orientalis  Islandiae  tractus, 
difFugicntibus  hominibus  et  pecoribus  est  evastatus.  Nee 
multo  remissior  fuit  ignis  vis  Anno  1636,  cum  Hekla  ipsa  jam 
octavum  (ut  habent  annales)  tremere  et  conflagrare  coepit  idi- 
bus  Maijs  ad  vesperam,  erumpente  flamma,  prima  ad  austrum 
ex  montis  illius  baratbro,  deinde  per  bina,  tandem  sena,  sep- 
tena,  vel  octona  spiracula  se  vis  eifudit  ignea,  large  diffundens 
fumum,  cineres,  et  pumices,  atros  seu  lapideos  carbones,  qvi- 
bus  terra  circumqvaque  obducta,  pabulum  denegat  armentis 
in  bunc  usque  diem.  In  hac  eruptione  tellus  itidem  tremuit, 
flamma  longe  conspecta,  fragores  eminus  auditi,  maximo  cum 
stupore  et  consternatione  incolarum  ad  remotiora  tutioraque 
loca  dilabentium  ;  lux  etiam  diurna  faviliis  et  fumo  intercepta, 
cinis  in  nubem  coactus  ad  loca  remotissima,  prout  venti  flaver- 
unt,  deferebatur,  ipse  mons  ignivomus,  alioqui  cum  alpibus 
nive  certans,  ab  hac  eruptione  denigratus  magnitudinem  rei 
diu  testatus  est,  tota  ilia  aestate  ignes  in  monte  conspecti  sunt, 
sub  initium  hyemis  paulatim  se  remiserunt  et  qvanquam 
rarius  postea  apparuerunt,  primo  tamen  vere  tandem  ex 
defectu  materiei,  imo  ex  divina  dispensatione  penitus  defer- 
buerunt;  nee  indidem  ab  uUo  hactenus  animadversi.  Atque 
baec  de  Monte  mirabili  scripsisse  sat  sit. 

7.  De  Noctuis,  Vespertilionibus,  Ranis,  et  Talpis  eo 
brevior   ero  qvo  in   Islandia  sunt   animalcula  rariora,   mihi 

*   neque  visa  hie   neque   audita.     Animalia   qua^ 

habent  nostrates  omnis  generis  castrant,  ii  jumentis,  eqvos 
et  boves,  ex  pecudibus,  oves,  imo  canes,  feles,  etc.,  adeo  ut 
parc^  ministrent  admissarios,  cuique  gregi  sobolis  procre- 
andae  gratia. 

8.  Morborum  genere  vario  vexantur  Islandi.  Universalis 
et  vernaculus  esse  videt  morbus  pustularum,  quo  plerique  in 
adolescentia  et  juventute  semel  tantum  corripiunter,  paucissi- 
mi  in  senectute,  idque  lethaliter ;  recurrit  autem  fere  vicenorum 
annorum  interstitio,  diramque  falcem  in  nostram  solct  immit- 

*  The  paper  is  torn  here. 


LETTERS    FROM    THEODORE    JONAS.  QG\ 

tere  mcssein.  Ccplialea  imilti  ntriiisque  sexus  et  catarrho 
^'ravantur,  Plcvritis,  peripneumonia  et  ussiuni,  ut  vocant, 
dolor,  liaiul  paucos  deijcit.  Interim  Morbus  Comitialis, 
Cholera,  Dysenteria,  Spasmus,  Ophthalmia,  Odontalgia,  An- 
gina, Asthma,  Morbus  regius,  Dysuria,  Hydrops,  Gangrivna  ; 
Erysipelas  non  nullos  afWigit,  sed  raro  ad  mortem  dueit. 
Nidlus  Elephantiasi,  vel  abominabilior  vel  pcstilentior  hie  ex- 
istimatur,  et  tamen  postremo  hoc  seculo  pavendus  se  diftundit. 
Fluentem  morbum  non  agnoscimus  alium,  Febris  itidem  spe- 
cies prorsus  ignoramus,  nisi  medicos  cvolvamus. 

y.  De  Canitie  et  Calvitio  nihil  habeo  notabile  scribere,  nisi 
diverse  nostrates  alliciantur  prout  cujusque  ferat  complexio. 
Alii  ante  30  annum  rzoXiag  conseqvuntur,  alii  vix  SOm  canes- 
cunt.  Qvidam  septimo  lustro  calvescunt,  qvidam  bene  criniti 
promissoque  capillo  seculum  simul  et  vitam  absolvunt,  tarn 
longLVvos  namque  senes  vidimus. 

10.  /Etites  an  in  nidis  acpilarum  aliqvando  fuerit  repertus, 
nescio,  nostra  certe  memoria  Islandis,  etiam  inqvirentibus  non 
contigit  invenisse  qvare  in  fabuiis  habendum. 

1 1.  Ccrvos  Islandia  non  vidit,  nedum  deciduaeorumcornua 
uutumamus. 

13.  INIinutula  testaceorum  conchyliorumque  genera  qvie 
apud  nos  reperiuntur  sigillatim  indigitare  aut  describere,  non 
opis  est  nostras,  qvippe  qvi  mediterranea  incohmus  et  hoc 
studium  liberale  otium  et  industriam  poscit.  Qvat;  vero 
poteram  obiter  ac  quasi  in  transcursu  conqvirerc  collecta 
niittuntur,  precor  amanter  et  qua  par  est  observantia,  llev. 
et  Doct.  Lectorem  in  qvemcunque  perfunctus  hsec  inciderit 
epistola,  ut  dexter,  qvas  scripsi  candido  animo,  accipiat,  nee 
existimet  ullus  honori  proprio  me  velificari  voluisse,  dum  nude 
strictimque  res  patrias  memoro  rogatus ;  malui  autem  l;onesta_>, 
viri  Nalura'  stuuiosi  f/Xiffofou  xa."  f/Xo'f^ovo;  Islandia;que  nustraj 
bene  cu})ientis  petitioni,  accedente  Charissimi  bympatriotas 
mei  in  Anglia  degentis  appellatione  morem  gerere  laconico  et 
rudi  responso,  ({vam  vel  inciviliter  abnuere,  vel  occupationcs 
meas  laboriosissimohoc  anni  tempore,  inhumanitati  obtendere. 
Qvpd  si  D.no  Literat.  qvi  qvaesita  huic  transferri  voluit,  qvibus 
utcunque  respondi,  porro  libucrit,  super  his  vel  aliis  di^qvirere, 
nosque  suis   propriis  dignari  lileris,  habebit  me,  Deo  vitam 


262  LETTERS    FROM    THEODORE    JONAS. 

prorogante,  facilem  et  sibi,  pro  mca  tenuitate,  gratificandi 
studiosissimum. 

Christus  Jesus,  ajterni  Sapientia  Patris  suo  nos  collustret 
spiritu,  ut,  qvae  nobis  saluti  maxiine  sunt,  impense  sectemur, 
fidem  veram  retinentes,  et  charitatem  non  fucatam  invicem 
exercentes,  donee  in  pleniorem  Salvatoris  nostri  cognitionem 
transformemur  et  aeternam  consequamur  haereditatem  in  ccelis. 
Amen. 

Dabam  Hitterdalae,  2  ids.  Julias,  Anno  1651. 

THEODOllUS  JONAS,  ISLANDUS, 

Ecclesia)  Hitterd.  Pastor. 

The  first  account  from  Island,  T.  Jonar  1651.* 


Theodore  Jonas  to  Dr.  Broiune. 

[MS.  SLOAN,  3418,  fol.    191.] 

Salve  Vir  Humanissime, 
QvANTi  amicam  tuam  compellationem  faciam,  vir  eruditissi- 
me  et  solertissime,  D.  Thoma  Broune,  et  aftlitum  tuum  ami- 
cum,  facilius  sentio  qvam  exprimo.  Beneficium  enim  est,  sic 
interpretor,  meliores  istas  mentes  ad  me  sub  extremo  fere 
Cffili  climate  constitutum,  inclinare  et  ignotum  complecti. 
Pauci  liodie  ita  comparati,  saltem  in  aliqvo  honoris  apice,  et 
blandientis  fortuna?  cumulo,  vel  sub  apricante  sole  viventes, 
ut  in  stcrili  Musarum  contubernio  qvacrant  qvcm  amicitia  sua 
dignentur.  Opum  aut  dignitatum  splendor  passim  aflectum 
conciliat;  &  ut  solem  orientem  omnes  adorant,  sic  crescentem 
fortunam  minorum  gentium  bomunculi,  vappa?  fere  apud  eos, 
qvi  se  et  sua  tantum  sus})iciunt.  Tu  melius,  Vir  Humanissi- 
me, qvi  virum  non  purpura  et  pecunia?  censu  metiri  didicisti, 
sed  doctriniu  et  virtutis,  qvanqvam  ego  milii  ipse  neutrum  fere 
arrogo,  aliorum  benevolentia  abblandiente  qvidem,  verum  non 
titillante :  qua  certe  inductus,  D.  Broune,  non  semel  me, 
de  uno  atque  altero,  per  literas  sciscitando  consuluisti,  sed 
irrito  conatu,  cum  ab  occupationibus  meis  anniversariis,  hoc 

*  The  indorse. 


LETTERS    FROM    THEODORE    JONAS.  263 

pot'isslniiim  tempore  usque  ad  adultam  a'statem  qvotannis  in- 
cumbentibus,  tuni  ab  imperitiA  mea  et  ignorantia  rcrum  de 
(jvibus  qva'ritur.  Et  qvantum  ad  proximas  D.  Thomie  lite- 
ras,  a  viro  probo  synipatriuta  ineo  Jona  Aruivo  mihi  redditas, 
cvni  adjuncto  munusculo,  ad  unciiu  argentea?  plus-minus  pre- 
tium,  qvorum  utrumque  longc  nobis  gratissimum.  Non  us- 
civeqvatjve  diihcile  videbitur,  qva3  sitis,  respondere,  si  plus  otii 
luuic  haberemus.  De  Avibus,  qvas  vocas  migratorias,  an  sint 
in  Islandia,  nullus  dubitat,  et  qvidem  variarum  specierum  ;  qvo 
vero  nomine  insigniendiv,  qvove  exulent,  magis  in  dubio  re- 
linqvitur.  Anseres  agrestes  liabemus  duum  generum  :  sunt 
quos  appellant  Tardam,  Tetracem ;  Anatumque  varia,  qvas 
vocantur,  Boscas,  Penelops,  Qverqvedula,  et  Anas  torqvata. 
Commorantur  nobiscum,  magno  numero  Alauda?,  sed  sine 
crista ;  item  INIotaciila,  annuus  et  certus  exterarum  nationum 

j)ra?sertim  Anglicarum ;    turn  Fringilla,   Cuculus, 

et  id  genus;  ali;c  avicula?,  qvorum  latina  nomina  non  ex- 
acte  nunc  memini :  hx  vero  omnes  verno  terram  nostram 
tempore  assiliunt,  primo  autem  autumno,  vel  exeunte  lestate, 
nemine  advertente  avolant.  Qvo  ?  disqvirant  ingenia  acutiora, 
et  otio  abundantiora.  Continue  nobiscum  inhabitant  insulam 
Aqvila,  olor,  corvus,  perdix,  Falco,  ^salo  seu  merillus,  pas- 
ser, curruca  :  nee  multo  pluras  memini  nobiscum  hyemantes, 
in  media?  hiijus  insula?  regione  :  de  maritimis  enim  volatilibus 
cum  adventitijs,  tum  permanentibus,  hactenus  non  fui  soUici •• 
tus.  Longiorem  qvippe  disqvisitionem  pra?  varietate  et  mul- 
titudine  postulant.  Ilabito  autem  in  meditullio  hujus  insula?, 
vallem  saltuosam  Ilitterdal,  (jvam  in  bonis  allodiabus  numera- 
mus,  beneficio  Serenissimi  Danorum  et  Norvegorum  Regis 
patri  meo,  venerando  seniori  (nunc  /xaxa5/V») ;)  mihicjue  succes- 
sori  concessam.  Qvare  mari  navigatoribusque  rcmotior  ex- 
istens,  postulatis  tuis,  qvanqvam  a?qvissimis  et  jucundis,  tem- 
pestive  non  qveo  facere  satis,  Ca?tera  qva?sitorvm  qvod  at- 
tinet,  nescit  nostra  terra  Serpentes,  id  est  Colubros,  Ranas, 
Talpas.  A  morl)orum  variis  generibus,  Divina  disponente 
dementia,  liberi  qvidem  sunt  Islandi,  non  tamen  omnibus,  ut 
nee  ii  morbillis  et  variolis,  qva?  ut  pituitosae  aut  biliosae  erup- 
tiones,  ceu  congenita  scabies,  plurimis  hie  accidunt  in  pueritia 
vel  in  cunabulis :  raro  adultis :  prxtcrfpam  (jvod  ;etati  dccri- 


264  LETTERS    FROM    THEODORE    JONAS. 

pitae  sua  Psora  adheret.  Plantas,  qvas  (p-ora,  herbas  nempe  et 
frutices  intelligo,  olim  a  nobis  designatas,  expetivisti,  sicco 
pede  nunc  transeo;  tot  enim  hie  suppetunt  genera,  forma, 
flore,  fructu,  usu  varia,  ut  vel  ipsi  Chironi  negotium  facerent: 
interim  diversas,  et  contrarias  etiam  facultates  habere  nemo 
nostrum  nescit.  Maxima  autem  difficultas,  de  his  scribere  vo- 
lenti metuenda,  ab  auctorum  dissensu,  discrepantiaque,  cum 
circa  nomenclaturam  cujusvis  plantae,  turn  multo-maxime  for- 
mam  et  efficaciam,  quorum  Htem  si  qvis  suam  facit,  omnium 
Aristarchus  audiat  necesse  est.  Verum  antequam  manum  de 
tabula,  dominum  meum  et  amicum  D.  Thomam  Brounium 
cupio  rogatum,  velit  anno  seqvente,  vitam  Deo  prorogante 
distincte  mihi  significare  per  Uteras  et  statum  suarum  rerum, 
astatis,  professionis,  habitationis,  conjugii:  et  Anglicanai  Rei- 
publicas  formam,  administrationem,  [itemque]  religionem.  Tunc 
qvae  floreant  Academia?,  qvi  Doctores  sen  professores  celeberri- 
mi  vel  sint  vel  habeuntur?  qvot  Episcopi,  Archiepiscopi,  qvse 
eorum  authoritas,  et  vis  sive  in  rehgione  propaganda  et  refor- 
manda,  sive  in  rebus  civilibus  administrandis  dijudicandisque. 
Haec  enim  oraniaque:  somnium  nobis  enarrant  a  morte  Regis 
Caroli  I.  vestrates,  qvare  commentarium  rerum  Anglicarum 
latino  idiomate  in  D.no  Amico,  nisi  est  molestum,  expeterem : 
[cui]  vicissim  pro  meo  modulo,  qvu  possim  gratificaturus. 
Qvod  restat,  Deum  patrem  omnis  misericordiae  obsecro,  nos 
in  sui  cognitione  et  amore  aeternum  conservet,  vitam  et  valetu- 
dinem  nobis  pro  suo  beneplacito  protoUat,  et  in  caelcstem  pa- 
triam,  qvos  fide  hie  et  charitate  conjunxit,  olim  benigne  susci- 
piat.  Vale  vir  Humanissimc;  dabam  Ilitterdala;  idib.  Jul. 
Tibi  addictissimus.     Anno  1650. 

TIIEODORUS  JONAS,  ISL. 

Verbi  M. 

Viro  Virtute  et  Doctiiiifi  piocstantissimo,   Hunianiss : 

D.  Tlioinae  I'lrounio,  Arlis  Machaonica;  pcritissimo, 

in  Norvick  ad  Caurrum  in  Anglia  U.no  ct  Amico 

mco,  dcntur  L. 
To  Noruic  in  England. 

Indorsed. — Read  at  a  meeting  of  the  Royal  Society, 
I'cb.  7tli,  1711-12 — the  second  letter,  KJjfi — the 
third  and  last  niiscarytd,  tlic  shippe  being  taken. 


LETTEIIS    FROM    TIIEODORL    JoNAS.  '^Oo 

I'ltcodore  Junas  to  Dr.  Browne . 

[ms.  SLOAN.   ;MKS,  IoI.  205.] 

Salvi:  PLuniMiM,  \ni  Reverende  et  Doctissime  Domino 

TllOMA     BkOUNE QVA    ClIKISTO NoRVlCI 

IN  Anglia ET   Moderator ^ 

DoMiNE  ET  Amice  cum  primis  observande, 
Et  ipsa?  tua?  litera?,  Vir  lionorande,  mihi  gratissinur,  ot  gratior 
causa  qva?  te  inipulit  ad  scribemlum,  amor  enim  liumanitas- 
que  [erat],  qvemque  nisi  amciu  nuituum,  [haurientem]  a  tain  pu- 
ro  fonte,  durus  sim  et  inhumanus.  At(jue  ego  te,  mi  Brouiie 
(vere  et  [sine]  blanditiis  dicam)  jam  ante  inter  junctos  habebaiu 
et  inter  charos,  ita  multa  de  virtute  tua  audiebam,  et  ex  alto 
adorabam  studium  sapiential  et  doctrina?  tua?,  qvod  rarum  in 
lioc  ancipiti  statu  rerum  et  tumultuum.  Nunc  autem  nierito 
te  colloco  inter  familiarissimos,  postqvani  non  semel  legi  et  ma- 
nibus  versavi  nunciuni  aftectus  tui  in  nos  benevoli  et  constantis  : 
intermisimus  sane  ad  tempus  officium  illud  invicemcompellan- 
di  alterum,  et  fortasse  culpa  in  me  reciderit,  verum  baud  obli- 
vione  tui,  sed  mera  dulcedine  cessationis,  qva  facillime  scri- 
bcndi  occasio  nobis  abscinditur  tam  procul  disjunctis.  Tu 
autem  redintegras  amicitia}  \ices,  et  defectum  gratis  resarcis, 
non  modo  blanda  et  docta  tua  epistola,  per  virum  probum  nos- 
tratem  Sigvardum  Jugemundi  (vobis  forte  Ingramum)  niissa, 
sed  simul  etiam  trigemina  prole  recentium  motuum  in  Mag- 
na Britannia,  quorum  Historian!  admodum  desideravimvs  et 
nunc  tandem  tuo  dono  nacti  sumus,  qvo  nos  habeo  tibi  ob- 
strictiores.  Quamvis  autem  haec  opuscula  Doctissimi  \\r\, 
Georgii  Batei  Med  :  luculente  nos  edoceant,  tristia  fata,  va- 
riamque  fortunam  duorum  M.  Britanniae  Kcgum ;  oi)tarem 
tamen  adhuc  potiri,  superis  faventibus,  uno  opusculo  ejusdem 
farina?,  qvod  in  lucem  jam  prodijsse  nullus  dubito,  ncnipe  de 
introductione  et  plenaria  ab  exilio  exaltatione  Augustissimi 
Regis  Caroli  II.  Kt  qva?  poena?  manserint  immanes  regicidas 
ac  persecutores  liujus  jam  regnantis.    Qva'  cl  qvanta?  rerum  ac 

'  Ql'A  Curisto,   &.C.]     These  words  arc  struck  out  in  MS. 


266  LETTERS    FROM    THEODORE    JONAS. 

statuum  mutationes  sint  subsecutse.     Turn  imprimis  aveo  vi- 
dere  formulam  vestrae  reformatas  religionis,    qvas   in  Regno 
Anglise  nunc  obtinet.     Summam  puta  fidei  et  cercmoniarum, 
qvam  Ecclesiffi  Anglican®,  cum  catbedrales,  et  universitates, 
turn  oppidani  et  suburbani  coetus  profitentur  et  sectantur :  Qvot 
et  qvae  sect®  apud  vos  tolerentur?     Qvid  Prfesbyteriani  ab 
aliis  difFerant?      Usee  ante  libuit  Domino  Amico  vota  sig- 
nificare,  qvam  ad  ejus  ^n'^ri/j.^ra  devenirem,  qvorum  brevem  et 
simplicem  avdXusiv  subjungam.      1.  Qvae  Historia  vel  traditio 
extet  de  Frislandia,  Insula  non  longe  k  nobis  remota  ?     Uno 
verbo  absolvam ;  nulla  qvas  vel  aures  vel  oculos  nostros  per- 
strinxerit.     Habemus  qvidem  Frislandiam,  insulam  in  tabulis 
hydrographicis  delineatam,  sed  qvod  sciam,  nee  nostra  nee 
patrum  memoria  ulli  visam,  nedum  calcatam.     Navarchae  eti- 
am,  qvi  qvotannis  hacc  maria  sulcant  (ut  verbo  utar  poetico) 
dictam  insulam  vel  ex  industria  ne  qvierunt  invenire;  qvam 
ob  rem  banc,  aut  nunquam  exstitisse,  aut,  qvod  verisimjlius, 
jamdudum  insanis  obrutam  aqvis,  et  oceano  absorptam  arbi- 
trantur.     Et  frustra  sunt,  qvi  banc  Frislandiam,  eandem  ac 
Winlandiam  bonam  seu  felicem,  qvo  nonnulli  ex  primoribus 
nostrse  terras  incolis  olim  migraverint  et  coloniam  deduxerint, 
rati  sint.     Autumarem  potius  Winlandiam  illam,  sive  insulam 
sive  continentem,  partem  fuisse  Gronlandiae  lybonotum  ver- 
sus, feliciore  gleba  et  mitiore  tempestate  qvam  Meditullium 
tunc  temporis  babitata?  Gronlandiae,  ac  propterea  dictam  vete- 
ribus  illis,  felicem.     Sunt  et  qvi  banc  Gronlandic«  partem  ipsi 
Americoe  boreali  cobaerentem,  et  qvasi  continentem  et  con- 
tiguamt  crram  esse  fluctuent,  nee  absimile  vero. 

Gronlandiae  historia  dudum  est  divulgata,  qvamvis  jam 
aliqvot  retro  seculis  nil  novi  de  ilia  percrebuit.  Dani  vero 
nostri,  non  ita  multis  ante  annis  eo  cursum  instituentes,  naves 
appulerunt :  homines,  lustrata  terra,  pncdati,  si  modo  id  ho- 
mines licebit  nuncupare,  qvibus  nee  Deus,  nee  religio,  nee 
discrimen  honestorum  et  turpium,  neque  ratio  aeqvi  bonique 
ulla  est;  vescuntur  crudis  et  sangvinolentis  carnibus  avium, 
animalium  et  piscium,  qvorum  copiam  illud  mare  suppeditat, 
prsesertini  Balaenas  et  Phocas.  Lingvam  illorum  aut  orati- 
onem  ncc  audiverunt,  nee  murmur  aut  nutationes  intellexerunt 
Dani,  qvanqvam  ultra  bimatum  apud  se  captos  retinuerint, 


LETTERS    FROM    THEODORE    JONAS.  2G7 

sperantes  bcncvolentisi  ct  blanda  conversationc    tandem  lio- 
mulos  illos  mansvcficri,  sed  frustra  fuerunt. 

2.  Qvirstio.  Ligna  fluctuantia  qva.^  ad  terras  nostra?  cre- 
pidines  feruntur,  Gronlandia  avulsa  plurimi  consent.  Cum 
qvod  ventorum  vi,  qvi  exinde  spirant,  Septentrionis,  Acivilonis 
et  Cori  plurimum  agitentur,  et  Islandiam  appellant  tum  (jvia 
mare  illud  glaciale  navigantes,  inter  Islandiam  et  Gronl.  mul- 
titudinem  lignorum  Huitantium,  imo  et  glaciei  inha^rentium  et 
concomitantinm  Sivpiuscule  reperierunt.  Potius  tamen  ad- 
ducor  ut  credani,  istiusmodi  ligna  a  Norvegia  seu  Finnmar- 
chia  nostro  bono  afttuere,  utpote  terra  sylvarum  feracissima, 
insignis  denique  magnitudinis,  et  ad  arctum  longissime  expor- 
recta,  ultra  scilicet  70  gr.  ut  Aqvilo  vel  Corus  exinde  nullo 
negotio  ligna  ferat  Islandiiu  ;  divina  sic  dispensante  provi- 
dentia,  cum  sylvis  ad  extruendas  domus  destituamur.  Gron- 
landiam  autem  prtrdivitem  esse  sylvarum  non  vidctur  vero 
simile.  Porro  an  inundatione  et  »stu  maris  subinde  terris 
aliqvid  abscindatur,  an  vero  fluvialium  vel  pluvialium  aqvarum 
immodcrata  violentia  et  eluvie,  qvibus  qviEvis  obvia  in  declivi 
potissimum  rapisolent,  hujusmodi  ligna  eradicentur,  et  nostro 
bono  in  mare  proijciantur,  in  dubio  relinquo.  Species  ligno- 
rum qvod  attinet,  duum  vel  plurium  sunt :  unum  Abietis, 
Alni  altcrum,  denique  et  Piceae  seu  potius  Piceastri. 

3.  Qv.  An  veneficis  abundet  Islandia  et  qva  dignosci  com- 
periantur  ?  Dolet  nol)is  serio,  patriam  eo  nomine  male  audi- 
visse.  Et  qvanqvam  non  negamus  adhuc  temporis  tales  ali- 
qvando  depra?hendi  (nunqvam  enim  desistit  Diabolus,  liostis 
divini  cultus  et  bominum  salutis,  omnibus  vijs  suas  extendere 
plagas  et  agro  Christiano  sua  inserere  si  potest  zizania)  mul- 
tum  tamen  malum  illud  remisit  ct  elanguit:  cum  ex  mera  Dei 
bonitate,  puram  doctrime  vocem  apud  nos  conservante  et 
adjuvantc,  tum  ex  severiore  Magistratus  sentcntia  et  inquisi- 
tione,  atrocissima  poena  talibus  Diaboli  mancipiis  iri'ogata. 

4.  5,  6.  Quajstio.  Sciuros,  Lutras  et  talia  animalcula  non 
alit  Islandia.  Ncque  Asinos,  qvamobrem  an  ferre  possint 
bruniam  Isl.  nee  ne,  incertum  est.  An  boves  omnes  excornes, 
uti  refert  Ortelius  ?  Sensus  est,  an  viderit  Islandia  vel  habuc- 
rit  boves  cornutos  ?  quasi  vero  omnes  hie  carerent  cornibus ! 
Id  autem,  in  gratiam  Doctiss :  Ortelii,  affirmamns,  duplo  vel 


268  LETTERS    FROM    THEODORE    JONAS. 

triple  niajug  esse  sine  coniibiis  liic  armeiitum,  qvani  bicorne  : 

7.  Qva^stio.  Qvid  sentias  per  animalia  aliqva  endemica  et 
propria  non  satis  asseqvor.  Huic  antea  regioni  animalia  ali- 
qva esse  peculiaria,  qvasi  connata,  nee  ullus  hominum  [dene- 
gare  est]  ausus,  de  Ursis,  lupis,  vulpibus  et  id  genus  anima- 
libus,  nocuis  qvam  utilibus,  qvae  majores  nostri  hie  antea  se 
reperierunt,  non  est,  ut  videtur  qusestio. 

8.  Q.  An  pisces  in  lacubus  congelatis  supervivant  ?  an  ma- 
jori  ex  parte  depereant.  Rotunda  est  solutio,  niori  pisces 
constrictis  omnino,  et  in  glaciem  conversis  funditis  aquis.  Sin 
autem  pro  cortice  aut  crustulo  glacies  saltern  innatet  et  obte- 
gat  aqvas,  nihil  detrimenti,  forsan  et  non  nihil  recrementi 
piscibus  aflert,  unde  etiam,  qvi  tunc  per  fenestras  ab  hamiotis 
venantur,  dulciores  et  pingviores  a^stimantur. 

9.  Q.  Febribus  raro  vexantur  Islandi,  adeo  ut  nee  species, 
nee  paroxysmum  febris  qvisqvam  hie  observet. 

10.  Q.  Elevationem  Poll  qvod  spectat,  et  situm  Islandiae 
cosmographicum.  Qvanqvam  variant,  inter  nos  qvi  Astrono- 
micai  rei  operam  aliqvam  navarunt,  a  naucleris  seu  ruv  xu- 
^i^r/jTixuv,  qvi  Islandiam  freqventer  et  summa  cum  attentione 
circum  quaque  naves  adpellunt,  tamen  ut  de  horum  autoritate 
et  sententia  aliqvid  scribam ;  ponunt  isti  Insulas  Westmanno- 
runi,  qvai  ad  austrum,  vel  verius  evronotum  ab  hac  terra  dis- 
tant circiter  10  mill.  Latitudinis  ab  ^Eqvatore,  63  grad. 
25  m.  Reitenes,  qvod  est  Promontorium  Islandise  australe 
latit.  64  gr.  0  m.  atq.  fere  ejusdem  latit.  statuimus  Skalhol- 
tiam  sedem  Episcopalcm  Isl.  australis,  ut  et  Heklam  niontem 
satis  fiimosum  a  sulphurea  flamma,  qvi  hinc  non  longe  versus 
orientem,  2  fortasse  mill,  distat.  Aliud  Isl.  promontorium  ab 
altissimis  Alpibus  et  continua  nive  omnibus  hue  navigantibus 
pcrnotum,  Sna^felsnef  dictum  lybonotum  respiciens,  scribitur 
latit.  65  g.  0  m.  Latitudo  Ejafiord,  qvi  est  sinus  Islandiae 
Septentrionalis,  ab  astronomicis  deprashensa,  gr.  66  m.  8.  ar- 
guit.  Holas,  sedem  alteram  Episcopalem,  Islandiae  Boreahs 
ab  iEqvatoris  circulo,  non  distare  plus  66  gr.  atque  adeo  gr. 
67  Islandia  non  excedit,  Arctum  versus. 

11.  Q.  Fristas  aut  grana  segetis  spontanea?  transmittere 
(quod  est  postrcmum  Epistola?  postulatum)  in  priesentiarum 
duxi  supervacaneum. 


LETTERS    FROM    THEODOUE    JONAS.  209 

Reliqnim  est  ut  Doctissimum  Dn.  Amicum  olinixe  rogem, 
[ut]  levem  banc  animi  niei  significationeni,  et  proletariam  qva3s- 
tionum  ejus  solutionem  in  dextram  accipiat  partem.  Certum 
jubeo  ac  spondee  me  ad  omnia  illi  obseqvia  fore  paratissi- 
miun.  Cujus  rei  testimonium  crint  Biblia  SS.  vernaculo 
idiomate  translata,  et  h  nostrate  bibliopcgo  qvalitcrcunque 
adornata,  qvae  rogo  Dns.  Amicus,  ii  me  missa,  serena  fronte 
difmetur  accinere  et  boni  consulere.  ^'aleat  in  Christo  Jesu, 
revcr.  ct  literatissimus  D.  Amicus  mens  (cum  uxore  lec- 
tissima,  liberis  dulcissimis,  et  tota  sua  familia)  Deo  Triuni 
a^ternum  commendatus. 

Dabam  Hitterdahu  in  Islandia,  Idibus  Julijs,  Anni  k  nato 
Xo.  16G4.     Rev.  tuam  dign.  amans  et  colens, 

THEODORUS  JONAS, 
Ilitterdakc  Parcecus  et  Ecclesiae  Christi  mystes  indignus. 

Viro    Eximio,   qva    virtute,     qva    doctrina,     Domino 

Thoniac  Brounio.  Norvici  in  Anglia,  dimissio  Verbi 

dei  fidelissiino,  D.no  .^mico  et '    fratri  in  Christo 

conjunctis*.    Dentur  [L.] 
Of  Xorwitz  in  England. 

'  Xorvici,  Sfc^     These  words  arc  blotted  out  in  MS. 


©inpuftlisljrti  ^Dapcrs* 


©npublisljrti  $)aprv6* 


FRAGMENT  ON  MUALAIIES. 

[from    a    copy    in   TUE    hand   writing    of   J.    CROSSLEV,    ESQ.'] 

Wise  Egypt,  prodigal  of  her  embalmments,  wrapped  up  her 
princes  and  great  commanders  in  aromatical  folds,  and,  studi- 
ously extracting  from  corruptible  bodies  their  corruption,  am- 
bitiously looked  forward  to  immortality ;  from  which  vain- 
glory we  have  become  acquainted  with  many  remnants  of  the 
old  world,  who  could  discourse  unto  us  of  the  great  things 
of  yore,  and  tell  us  strange  tales  of  the  sons  of  Misraim,  and 
ancient  braveries  of  Egypt.  Wonderful  indeed  are  the 
preserves  of  time,  which  openeth  unto  us  mummies  from 
crypts  and  pyramids,  and  mammoth  bones  from  caverns  and 
excavations;  whereof  man  hath  found  the  best  preservation, 
appearing  unto  us  in  some  sort  fleshly,  while  beasts  must  be 
fain  of  an  osseous  continuance. 

In  what  original  this  practice  of  the  Egyptians  had  root, 
divers  authors  dispute ;  while  some  place  the  origin  hereof  in 
the  desire  to  prevent  the  separation  of  the  soul,  by  keeping 
the  body  untabified,  and  alluring  the  spiritual  part  to  remain 
by  sweet  and  precious  odours.  But  all  this  was  but  fond  in- 
consideration.  The  soul,  having  broken  its  *  *  *  *,  is 
not  stayed  by  bands  and  cerecloths,  nor  to  be  recalled  by 
Sabaean  odours,  but  fleeth  to  the  place  of  invisibles,  the  ubi 
of  spirits,  and  needeth  a  surer  than  Hermes's  seal  to  imprison 

'  J.    Crossley,   Esq.l     I    have   given  contained  it,  nor  could   lie  inform  inc; 

this  fragment  on   the  authority   of  Mr.  having  transcribed  it  himself  in  the  Mu- 

Crossley  ;  but  have  not  been  able  to  find  i.eum,  but  omittled  to  note  the  volume 

the  vol.   in  the  British  Museum  which  in  which  he  met  with  it. 

VOL.    IV.  T 


274  FRAGMENT    ON    MUMMIES. 

it  to  its  medicated  trunk,  which  yet  subsists  anomalously  in 
its  indestructible  case,  and,  like  a  widow  looking  for  her  hus- 
band, anxiously  awaits  its  return. 

***** 

Of  Joseph  it  is  said,  that  they  embalmed  him  ;  and  he  was 
put  in  a  coffin  in  Egypt.  When  the  Scripture  saith  that  the 
Egyptians  mourned  for  him  three  score  and  ten  days,  some 
doubt  may  be  made,  from  the  practices  as  delivered  by  Hero- 
dotus, who  saith  that  the  time  allowed  for  preserving  the  body 
and  mourning  was  seventy  days.  Amongst  the  Rabbins,  there 
is  an  old  tradition,  that  Joseph's  body  was  dried  by  smoke, 
and  preserved  in  the  river  Nile,  till  the  final  departure  of  the 
children  of  Israel  from  Egypt,  according  to  the  Targum  of 
Uzziel.  Sckichardus  delivereth  it  as  the  opinion  of  R.  Abra- 
ham Seba,  that  this  was  done  in  contempt  of  Egypt,  as  un- 
worthy of  the  depositure  of  that  great  patriarch ;  also  as  a 
type  of  the  infants  who  were  drowned  in  that  river,  whereto 
Sckichardus  subjoineth  that  it  was  physically  proper  to  pre- 
vent corruption.  The  Rabbins  likewise  idly  dream  that  these 
bones  were  carried  away  by  Moses  about  a  century  after, 
when  they  departed  into  Egypt,  though  how  a  coffin  could 
be  preserved  in  that  large  river,  so  as  to  be  found  again,  they 
are  not  agreed ;  and  some  fly  after  their  manner  to  Schem-ham- 
phorasch,  which  most  will  regard  as  vain  babblings. 

That  mummy  is  medicinal,  the  Arabian  Doctor  Haly  de- 
livereth and  divers  confirm  ;  but  of  the  particular  uses  there- 
of, there  is  much  discrepancy  of  opinion.  While  Hofmannus 
prescribes  the  same  to  epileptics,  Johan  de  Muralto  com- 
mends the  use  thereof  to  gouty  persons  ;  Bacon  likewise 
extols  it  as  a  stiptic  :  and  Junkenius  considers  it  of  efficacy 
to  resolve  coagulated  blood.  Meanwhile,  we  hardly  applaud 
Francis  the  First,  of  France,  who  always  carried  mummies 
with  him  as  a  panacea  against  all  disorders ;  and  were  the 
efficacy  thereof  more  clearly  made  out,  scarce  conceive  the 
use  thereof  allowable  in  physic,  exceeding  the  barbarities  of 
Cambyses,  and  turning  old  heroes  unto  unworthy  potions. 
Shall  Egypt  lend  out  her  ancients  unto  chirurgeons  and  apo- 
thecaries, and  Cheops  and  Psammitticus  be  weighed  unto  us 
for  drugs  ?  Shall  we  eat  of  Chamnes  and  Amosis  in  electua> 


FRAGMENT    ON    MUMMIES.  275 

ries  and  pills,  and  be  cured  by  cannibal  mixtures?  Surely 
such  diet  is  dismal  vampirism;  and  exceeds  in  horror  the 
black  banquet  of  Domitian,  not  to  be  paralleled  except  hi 
those  Arabian  feasts,  wherein  Ghoules  feed  horribly. 

But  the  common  opinion  of  the  virtues  of  mummy  bred 
great  consumption  thereof,  and  princes  and  great  men  con- 
tended for  this  strange  panacea,  wherein  Jews  dealt  largely, 
manufacturing  mummies  from  dead  carcasses,  and  giving 
them  the  names  of  kings,  while  specifics  were  compounded 
from  crosses  and  gibbet  leavings.  There  wanted  not  a  set  of 
Arabians  who  counterfeited  mummies  so  accurately,  that  it 
needed  'a-eat  skill  to  distinfjuish  the  false  from  the  true. 
Queasy  stomachs  would  hardly  fiincy  the  doubtful  potion, 
wherein  one  might  so  easily  swallow  a  cloud  for  his  Juno,  and 
defraud  the  fowls  of  the  air  while  in  conceit  enjoying  the 

conserves  of  Canopus. 

«  *  «  4>  « 

Radzivil  hath  a  strange  story  of  some  mummies  which  he  had 
stowed  in  seven  chests,  and  was  carrying  on  ship  board  from 
Egypt,  when  a  priest  on  the  mission,  while  at  his  prayers, 
was  tormented  by  two  ethnic  spectres  or  devils,  a  man  and  a 
woman,  both  black  and  horrible  ;  and  at  the  same  time  a 
great  storm  at  sea,  which  threatened  shipwreck,  till  at  last 
they  were  enforced  to  pacify  the  enraged  sea,  and  put  those 
demons  to  flight  by  throwing  their  nmmmy  freight  overboard, 
and  so  with  difficulty  escaped.  What  credit  the  relation  of 
the  worthy  person  deserves,  we  leave  unto  others.  Surely 
if  true,  these  demons  were  Satan's  emissaries,  appearing  in 
forms  answerable  unto  Horus  and  Mompta,  the  old  deities  of 
Eg)pt,  to  delude  unhappy  men.  For  those  dark  caves  and 
mummy  repositories  are  Satan's  abodes,  wherein  he  specu- 
lates and  rejoices  on  Imman  vain-glory,  and  keeps  those 
kings  and  conquerors,  whom  alive  he  bewitched,  whole  for 
that  great  day,  when  he  will  claim  his  own,  and  marshal  the 
kings  of  Nilus  and  Thebes  in  sad  procession  unto  the  pit. 

Death,  that  fatal  necessity  which  so  many  v,ould  overlook, 
or  blinkingly  survey,  the  old  I'>gyptians  held  continually  be- 
fore their  eyes.  Their  embalmed  ancestors  they  carried 
about  at  their  banquets,  as  holding  them  still  a  part  of  their 

T  -2 


276  FRAGMENT    ON    MUMMIES. 

families,  and  not  thrusting  them  from  their  places  at  feasts. 
They  wanted  not  likewise  a  sad  preacher  at  their  tables  to 
admonish  them  daily  of  death,  surely  an  unnecessary  dis- 
course while  they  banqueted  in  sepulchres.  Whether  this 
were  not  making  too  much  of  death,  as  tending  to  assuefac- 
tion,  some  reason  there  is  to  doubt,  but  certain  it  is  that  such 
practices  would  hardly  be  embraced  by  our  modern  gour- 
mands who  like  not  to  look  on  faces  of  morta,  or  be  elbowed 
by  mummies. 

Yet  in  those  huge  structures  and  pyramidal  immensities, 
of  the  builders  whereof  so  little  is  known,  they  seemed  not 
so  much  to  raise  sepulchres  or  temples  to  death,  as  to  con- 
temn and  disdain  it,  astonishing  heaven  with  their  audacities, 
and  looking  forward  with  delight  to  their  interment  in  those 
eternal  piles.  Of  their  living  habitations  they  made  little  ac- 
count, conceiving  of  them  but  as  hospitia,  or  inns,  while  they 
adorned  the  sepulchres  of  the  dead,  and  planting  thereon 
lasting  bases,  defied  the  crumbling  touches  of  time  and  the 
misty  vaporousness  of  oblivion.  Yet  all  were  but  Babel  vani- 
ties. Time  sadly  overcometh  all  things,  and  is  now  domi- 
nant, and  sitteth  upon  a  sphinx,  and  looketh  unto  Memphis  and 
old  Thebes,  while  his  sister  Oblivion  reclineth  semisomnous  on 
a  pyramid,  gloriously  triumphing,  making  puzzles  of  Titanian 
erections,  and  turning  old  glories  into  dreams.  History  sink- 
eth  beneath  her  cloud.  The  traveller  as  he  paceth  amazedly 
through  those  deserts  asketh  of  her,  who  builded  them  ?  and 
she  mumbleth  something,  but  what  it  is  he  heareth  not. 

Egypt  itself  is  now  become  the  land  of  obliviousness  and 
doteth.  Her  ancient  civility  is  gone,  and  her  glory  hath 
vanished  as  a  phantasma.  Her  youthful  days  are  over,  and 
her  face  hath  become  wrinkled  and  tetrick.  She  poreth  not 
upon  the  heavens,  astronomy  is  dead  unto  her,  and  knowledge 
makcth  other  cycles.  Canopus  is  afar  off,  Memnon  resound- 
eth  not  to  the  sun,  and  Nilus  heareth  strange  voices.  Her 
monuments  are  but  hieroglyphically  sempiternal.  Osiris  and 
Anubis,  her  averruncous  deities,  have  departed,  while  Orus 
yet  remains  dimly  shadowing  the  principle  of  vicissitude  and 
the  effluxion  of  things,  but  receiveth  little  oblation. 

^  ^  ^  ^  'Sic- 


I)E    TESTIi.  277 


D  E    P  E  S  T  E  . 

[MS.  SLOAN.  1827.] 

The  learned  Kirclieriis  in  his  book,  De  Peste,  cap.  7,  par- 
ticularly delivers  what  medicines  Hippocrates  made  use  of  in 
the  great  plague  of  Athens,  and  })articularly  mentions  sul- 
phur, assafoetida,  and  vipers,  as  may  be  seen  in  that  tract ; 
which  being  not  to  be  found  in  the  works  of  Hippocrates,  the 
question  is,  "  What  is  to  be  said  herein  ?" 

A\'hen  I  had  read  the  seventh  chapter  of  Kircherus  above- 
mentioned,  I  found  it  very  singular ;  nor  could  I  confirm  it 
by  any  ancient  author.  And  since,  upon  inquiry,  I  find  his 
own  expression  true,  that  they  are  jjan/m  cognita ;  for  I  meet 
not  therewith  in  any  author  which  might  most  probably  men- 
tion the  same ;  not  in  Hippocrates,  Galen,  /Etius,  /Egineta, 
Massarias,  Jordanus,  and  others,  who  have  })articularly  writ- 
ten De  Peste ;  not  in  Paulinus,  who  hath  largely  commented 
upon  the  narration  of  Thucydidcs,  concerning  the  plague  of 
Athens.  Not  in  Nardius,  or  any  comment  upon  Lucretius, 
where  he  makes  a  large  description  of  this  plague,  conceived 
to  be  the  same  wherein  Hippocrates  exercised  this  cure. 

Franciscus  Rota,  a  learned  Italian,  having  read  in  jMarini, 
an  eminent  poet  of  Italy,  that  Avcrrhoes  was  put  to  death  by 
the  cruel  death  of  the  wheel,  consulted  many  learned  men  in 
Europe  where  such  a  passage  might  be  found  in  any  other 
writer;  and  none  could  satisfy  his  question.  But  this  learned 
author,'  yet  living,  is  able  to  afford  a  resolution,  and  may  pro- 
bably do  it  in  following  editions  of  this  or  some  other  work, 
which  he  shall  hereafter  pubhsh,  though  he  hath  not  per- 
formed it  in  his  Mundus  Subterraneus,  wherein  he  largely 
discourses  upon  sulphur. 

Meanwhile  referring  unto  further  inquiry,  this  account  may 
be  taken  from  some  unusual  manuscript,  from  some  ancient 
comment  on  Hippocrates  or  some  work  ascribed  unto  him  or 

'  aulhor,'\     Kircherus. 


278  DE    PESTE. 

his  successors,  known  only  to  some  libraries,  or  else  from 
some  Arabic  writer ;  the  Arabians  being  very  careful  to  pre- 
serve the  works  of  ancient  Greeks,  which  they  often  trans- 
lated, and  sometimes  fathered  other  works  upon  the  best  of 
them,  which  are  now  very  rare  or  quite  lost  among  us. 

Now,  although  the  whole  relation  be  allowed,  and  the  re- 
medies to  be  approved,  yet,  whether  these  were  the  secrets 
of  Hippocrates  in  the  plague  of  Athens,  or  whether  they 
were  so  successful  in  that  pestilence,  some  doubt  may  be  al- 
lowed; for  Thucydides,  who  passed  the  same  disease,^  af- 
firmeth  that  there  was  no  remedy  (probably  meaning  inward) 
that  did  any  good ;  but  that  which  did  profit  one  did  hurt 
another:  *' nee  ullum  prorsus  remedium  repertum  est^  quod 
adhibitum  prodesset;  nullumque  corpus,  sive  firmas  sive  in- 
firmee  valetudinis  esset,  tanti  mali  violentite  resistere  potuit ; 
sed  omnia  absumpsit."  From  which  description  some  doubt 
may  arise  whether  Hippocrates  came  not  to  Athens  rather  in 
the  declination  than  in  the  raging  time  of  the  disease. 

Galen,  '^  De  Theriaca  ad  Pisone?7i"*  ascribeth  this  cure 
of  Hippocrates  only  unto  his  fires.  "  Vehementer  laudo  ad- 
mirandum  Hippocratem,  quod  pestem  illam  quae  ex  ^Ethiopia 
Grsecos  invasit  non  alia  ratione  curavit  quam  aerem  immutan- 
do.  Jussit  igitur  per  totam  civitatem  accendi  ignem,  qui  non 
simplicem  incendii  materiam  habeat,  sed  coronas  et  flores 
odore  fragrantissimos.  Hajc  consuluit  ad  ignem  alendum,  et 
ipsi  ctiam  inspergere  unguenta  delibata  et  suavissimi  odoris." 
And  the  same  course  they  put  in  practice  at  Venice,  in  the 
great  plague  which  happened  under  Duke  Foscaro,  about 
two  hundred  years  ago. 

Again,  if  this  account  of  the  cure  of  Hippocrates,  set  down 
by  Kircherus,  be  ancient,  and  in  times  when  it  might  have 
best  been  known,  some  wonder  it  is  how  it  escaped  the  pen 
of  Galen,  a  superlative  admirer  of  him,  and  who  had  good 
opportunity  to  know  what  elder  times  had  delivered  on  this 
subject;  for  Thessalus,  the  son  of  Hippocrates,  left  exposi- 
tions upon  his  epidemics.  Lycus,  Sabinus,  Satyrus,  and  Quin- 
tus,  the  preceptors  of  Galen,  had  also  left  tracts  upon  the 

'  who  passed,  .S-c]  Auro'j  n  vo<sr,-  ^  necyS^c.']  ovbh-/.ar$gTri'ia/j,a.-lh,vd. 
mg. — Thuc.  13.  firi.  *  De  Theriaca,  Sfc.}     Cap.  16. 


DE    PESTE. 


tno 


narration  of  Tluicycliclcs;  and  Galen  himself  had  written  a  dis- 
course upon  the  same,  as  he  testifies  in  his  work,*  mp  dvamoia;. 

Actuarius,  an  author  of  good  esteem,  who  wrote  many  hun- 
dred years  ago,  undertakes  to  set  down  the  antidote  of  Hip- 
pocrates, which  he  used  against  the  plague  ;  which  he  helieved 
to  be  this:— R.  Calami  aromatici,  junci  odorati,  sabina?,  ana 
5iii;  cardamomi,  cypcri,  crocomagmatis,  ana  5v;  nardi  Cel- 
tici,  lib.  o;  aspalathi,  5vii;  cupressi  ros.  an.  siii.  Ladani, 
myrrluv,  thuris,  an.  lib.  1  ;  bac.  junip.  40 ;  mastic,  sun ;  nardi 
spicjv  lib.  5 ;  costi,  siiii ;  fol.'^  5viii;  cassias,  lib.  5;  amomi,  =111; 
styracis  $\ ;  terebinthinir,  lib.  3 ;  uiellis  Attici,  lib.  5 ;  vini  ve- 
teris,  q.  s.  This  he  afHrmeth  to  be  the  same  which  he  used  at 
the  plague  of  Athens;  et  cujus  causa  coronatus  fuit.  This, 
however  learned  by  him,  is  admitted  by  Massarias  and  others; 
and  is  a  very  different  medicine  from  those  so  highly  com- 
mended by  Kircherus,  who  in  all  equity  is  obliged  to  make 
use  of  some  author  of  equal  credit  and  authority  with  him. 

Now,  while  I  discourse  of  this  obscurity,  some  others  arise 
which  I  cannot  omit  to  propound  unto  you ;  particularly,  why 
Hippocrates  left  no  distinct  description  of  this  plague,  to- 
gether with  his  remedies?  Why  Thucydides,  in  his  large 
description  of  the  plague  of  Athens,  makes  no  mention  of 
Hippocrates  ;  and  may  ^  also  consider  that  this  cure  of  the 
plague  by  fires,  and  even  in  Athens  itself,  was  elder  than 
Hippocrates,  and  practised  by  Acron  Agrigentinus,  (as  testi- 
fied by  Pliny,  yEtius,  Paulus,)  and  also  made  use  of  by  Ja- 
chen  the  Egyptian  physician,  who  lived  in  the  days  of  Senies, 
King  of  Egypt,  as  is  delivered  by  Suidas,  and  may  be  ga- 
thered from  the  practice  afterwards  of  the  Egyptian  priests, 
to  kindle  their  fire  at  the  tomb  of  Jachen,  and  so  to  diffuse  it 
through  the  city;  and  from  what  is  delivered  by  Plutarch,^ 
concerninjT  the  Egyptian  priests ; — de  nocte  soliti  consurgere 
et  inquinatum  aerem  odoratis  incendiis  purgare ;  to  emit  their 
purifying  fumes  of  the  great  and  lesser  cyphi,  or  odorate  com- 
position, containing  twenty-eight  and  thirty-six  ingredients, 
which  they  used  in  their  daily  sacrifices  unto  the  sun  and  moon. 

*  work.]     Hist.  lib.  5,  cap.  6.  '  andmaij.]  Sic.  in  MS.  yoK  is  doubtless 

*  /o/.]    Folium  indicum  or  malabathri.     the  word  left  out  by  a  Latinism. — Or. 
_Cr.  •*  Phttnrrh.']     De  hide  et  Osir. 


280  DE    PESTE. 

But  before  I  dismiss  you  I  shall  not  omit  to  entertain  you 
with  a  few  other  queries,  whereof  perhaps  you  have  not  taken 
much  notice. 

An  pestis  sit  ex  lege  naturae,  ut  dubitat  Cardanus ;  id  est,' 
ne  terra  hominum  numero  non  sufficeret  ? 

An  detur  pestis  artificialis,  "  uti  fertur  de  pulvere  et  un- 
guento  pestifero  in  peste  Mediolanensi  ?" 

An  pisces  sint  a  peste  immunes  ? 

An  ignis  sit  maxima  pesti  pestis  ? 

An  pestis  fuerit  ante  diluvium  ? 

An  a  mundo  condito  plures  occiderit  pestis  an  gladius  ? 

An  atomi  pestiferi  sint  animalia,  ut  vult  Kircherus  ? 

An  dentur  temperamenta  aloimodea  pesti  parum  aut  nihil 
subdita? 

Cur  inter  maximas  Europae  urbes  pestis  Lutetiae  minus 
grassetur  ? 

Cum  pestis  sudoribus  optime  discutiatur,  cur  detur  pestis 
sudatoria,  ut  sudor  Anglicus  ? 

An  pestis  sit  perpetuo  ambulatoria,  nunquam  ubique  ex- 
tincta? 

An  ubicunque  grassetur  pestis,  quatuor  tempora,  id  est, 
principii  incrementi  status  et  declinationis,  manifesto  absolvet? 

An  non  aeque  mirum  sit,  quomodo  desinat  quam  quomodo 
incipcrit  pestis? 

Cur  in  peste  Hebraica  nulla  fiat  mentio  de  separatione  sano- 
rum  ab  infectis,  quae  tamen  specialiter  notatur  in  lepra  ? 

Unde  verbum  plague,  emphatice  pestem  significans  apud 
Anglos  ? 

An  musica  conferat  in  sananda  peste?  Questio  oritur  a 
praxi  Thaletis  Cretensis,  qui  pestem  Spartanam  musica  cu- 
rasse  dicitur  ?     Plutarch. 

An  qui  carbunculis  et  bubonibus  liberantur  a  peste,  sanan- 
tur  simul  a  lue  venerea  ? 

An  quis  variolis  et  peste  simu  laboret  ? 

An  aeri  infecto  purgando  sulphurata  non  praestent  aroma- 
ticis;  quibus  tamen  maxime  secundum  Galenum  usus  est 
Hippocrates? 

An  balsamum  sulphuris  non  sit  addendum  Theriacis? 

An  alexipharmacisabsq.  opiocompositissit  nimisfidendum? 


REPLY   TO   SEVERAL    QUERIES.  281 


A  BRIEF  REPLY  TO  SEVERAL  QUERIES. 

[mS.    SLOAN.    1827.] 

"An  Irish  soldier  who  died  phrenitical,  in  the  hospital  of 
Paris,  made  great  vociferations,  always  having  in  his  mouth 
words  of  this  sound,  bebcithe,  bebaithe,  bckelle ;  scarce  af- 
fording any  other  words  to  any  question  or  proposal ;  and 
therefore  some,  conceiving  it  had  been  his  native  language, 
brought  one  of  his  country  unto  him,  who  could  make  nothing 
of  it." 

This  account  of  yours  seemed  not  at  first  very  strange  unto 
me,  as  I  conceived  them  to  be  some  fantastical  words,  pro- 
ceeding from  his  phrenzy  :  nor  could  I  aflord  any  sense  or  so- 
lution thereof,  till  I  fell  upon  the  Epistle  of  Johannes  Milesius 
unto  Georgius  Sabinus,  De  Funeribus  Bonissorum ;  whereof 
I  found  this  description.  "  Cum  ad  sepulchrum  efiertur  ca- 
daver, plerique  in  equis  funus  prosequuntur,  et  currum  ob- 
equitant  quo  cadaver  vehitur,  eductisque  gladiis  verberant 
auras,  soc'i'iQY^rxiQs,  geygeithe,  begaithe,  pcheUc ;  id  est,  aufu- 
gite,  vos  dicmones,  in  infernum !  " 

Now,  therefore,  this  person,  having  been  a  soldier  about 
Russia,  and  under  the  Poles  in  Prussia,  might  probably  have 
heard  of  this  custom  ;  and  so,  in  the  delirium  and  suggestion 
from  his  inflamed  spirits,  migiit  fall  into  like  apprehension  of 
evil  spirits,  which  produced  this  iterated  conjuration  from  him. 

Upon  an  old  picture  of  a  man  riding  upon  a  bear,  and  a 
dead  torn  horse  lying  by. 

He  that  would  amuse  himself  about  odd  pictures,  especially 
CI  bears,  may  have  enough  to  do  to  interpret  the  prophetical 
figures  of  Ansclmus,  and  Abbot  Joachim,  which  liavc  some- 


282  REPLY    TO    SEVERAL    QUERIES. 

times  passed  under  the  name  of  the  magical  figures  of  Para- 
celsus, and  after  set  forth  by  Paulus  de  la  Scala ;  wherein 
you  may  meet  with  no  less  than  three  bears  in  one  figure,  one 
upon  the  pope's  shoulders,  and  two  by  his  sides. 

But,  as  for  this  picture,  I  am  not  of  your  opinion,  that  it  is 
some  emblematical  piece,  but  rather  historical,  and  made  out 
of  the  legend  of  St.  Corbinian,  bishop  of  Fi'eisingen,  in  Bava- 
ria, who,  travelling  towards  Rome,  and  coming  late  to  a 
town  in  the  Alps,  when  the  gates  were  shut,  was  fain  to  lodge 
abroad,  and  his  horse,  straying,  was  killed  and  torn  by  a 
bear;  which  news  being  brought  unto  him  by  his  servant 
Ansericus,  he  bade  him  go  boldly  on,  and  put  the  saddle  of 
the  horse  upon  the  bear :  which  being  done,  St.  Corbinian 
rode  upon  the  bear  to  Rome,  and  then  dismissed  him. 

As  to  your  other  question,  how  the  common  expression, 
*  to  tell  noses,'  implying  the  number  of  persons,  came  up,  I 
can  return  you  no  distinct  original,  either  for  the  time  or  oc- 
casion ;  and  perhaps  there  needed  no  other  than  to  account 
by  the  most  visible  and  extant  part  of  the  face,  except  it  had 
some  such  original  as  is  to  be  met  with  in  the  history  of  Cus- 
pinianus,  concerning  the  great  slaughter  which  Bajazet  the 
second  made  of  the  Christian  Hungarians  and  Croatians. 
"Maxima  clades  illata  est,  et  scptem  millia  hominum  uno 
prelio  interfecta.  Victor  hostis  ut  ceesorum  numerus  commo- 
dius  iniretur,  nares  jacentium  exsectas  baltheolisque  insertas 
secum  extulit ;  "  and  so  in  a  short  way,  by  telling  the  number 
of  the  noses  which  were  brought  to  him,  he  knew  how  many 
he  had  slain  in  that  battle. 

But,  before  I  conclude,  give  me  leave  to  propose  these  few 
queries  concerning  epitaphs  unto  you. 

Whether  the  epitaph  of Mn  Herodotus  be  not  the 

most  ancient  in  good  history  or  record  ? 

Though  Joshua  be  said  by  Rabbins  to  have  had  the  sun 
upon  his  tomb,  and  we  find,  in  the  annals  of  Saliom,-  an  epi- 
taph of  Abel,  yet  whether,  from  any  good  account,  the  an- 
cient Hebrev/s  used  epitaphs  ? 

'....]     Left  blank  in  original.  '^Saltern.'}     "Salian." — Crossley. 


IIEPLY    TO    SEVERAL    QUERIES.  2So 

A\'liithcr  si^'iic  viator  be  not  improperly  used  in  rluircli 
epithets ;  that  form  being  proper  unto  sepulchres  placed  ot" 
old  by  highways,  and  where  travellers  daily  passed  ? 

Wlicther  jocular  and  enigmatical  ej)itaphs  be  allowable  ? 

A\'hat  to  think  of  epitaphs  upon  brutes,  as  that  upon  Bo- 
risthenes,  the  horse  of  Adrian  ?  and  that  upon  lloldano, 
Prince  Doria's  dog,  still  to  be  seen  and  read  in  his  garden  at 
Genoa  ? 

AVhen  that  form  of  hiabi  xurai,  or  liic  jucet,  came  up,  or 
where  the  most  ancient  to  be  met  with  in  that  form? 

What  to  think,  that  in  the  great  number  of  old  epitaphs 
and  inscriptions  collected  by  Gruterus,  there  are  so  few  per- 
sons above  fifty  or  sixty  years  old  ? 

A\'hat  to  think  of  that  inscription  set  down  by  Procopius,^ 
upon  a  pillar  not  far  from  Tingis,  "  Nos  Maurisi  sumus  qui 
fugimus  a  facie  JehoschuaL'  iilii  Nunis  predatoris?  " 

As  for  the  other  queries  concerning  John  Port,  Lammas, 
and  O  aaplentla  !  upon  the  16th  of  December,  I  must  crave 
your  patience  till  another  opportunity. 

Upon  the  picture  of  a  learned  physician,  iNIr,  S.  of  Bury,  not 
drawn  at  large,  but  to  the  waist,  was  this  obscure  inscrip- 
tion. 

Hie  meus  Nausiphanes 

ut  abortivus  fuit  olim 
Sisyphus. 
The  first  part  1  remember  to  have  read  either  in  the  Frafr- 
ments  of  Lucillius,  or  some  ancient  poet,  in  this  order: 

hie  meus  esto 
Nausiphanes. 
The  second  is  in  the  third  Satire  of  Horace, 

strabonem 

Adpellat  Pactum  pater;  et  Pullum,  male  parvus 
Si  cui  filius  est,  ut  abortivus  fuit  olim 
Sisyphus. 
Nausiphanes  I  find  mentioned  as  a  philosopher  in  Cicero, 
De  Natura  Dcorum.     It  is  a  name  not  easily  to  be  met  with, 

^  Frocopius.'^     This  epitaph  is  also  mentioned  by  Bociiart. — Gr. 


284  REPLY    TO    SEVERAL    QUERIES. 

cither  historically  for  any  person,  or  grammatically  for  any 
signification ;  but  literally  expresseth  "  appearing  in  ships." 
Sisyphus  was  a  person  of  short  and  low  stature,  and  a  famous 
dwarf  of  Marc  Antony,  Staturce  vix  bipedalis,  as  Torrentius 
upon  that  place. 

And  therefore  this  inscription  seems  to  refer  unto  the  pic- 
ture, name,  stature,  or  all ;  that  is,  "  this  my  Nausiphanes,  this 
curtailed  and  small  piece  which  you  behold  drawn  scarce  to 
the  waist,  and  as  a  man  appearing,  or  as  far  as  a  man  appear- 
eth,  above  the  deck  of  a  ship,  is  such  another  as  was  Sisyphus, 
the  dwarf  of  Antonius,  of  short  and  abortive  stature,  or  much 
about  the  same  measure." 

A  thick  piece  of  lead,  about  the  compass  of  half  a  crown, 
found  near  North  Walsham,  in  Norfolk. 

This  piece  upon  one  side  containeth  the  heads  of  St.  Peter 
and  St.  Paul,  with  their  names.  On  the  other  side  this  in- 
scription :   BONIFACIUS  VIII. 

This  seems  to  have  been  the  seal  of  a  papal  bull.  Boni- 
ftice  VIII  was  the  first  pope  who  introduced  the  solemn  ce- 
lebration of  jubilees  at  Rome ;  and,  to  attract  the  greater  con- 
course, sent  bulls  abroad  into  most  part  of  Christendom,  with 
indulgences  and  pardons  unto  such  as  should  resort  unto 
Rome,     Of  some  of  these  bulls  this  might  be  the  seal. 

Upon  a  copper  medal  sent  me,  of  the  compass  of  a  shilling, 
but  the  figures  much  embossed.  Upon  the  obverse  side  it 
representeth  the  head  of  Malatesta,  with  this  inscription: 
Sigismundus  Pandulphus  Malatesta.  Upon  the  reverse  an 
arm  extended  out  of  the  sky,  with  a  rod  in  the  hand.  The 
inscription :  Pontificii  exercitus  Imp.  MCCCCXLVII. 

This  piece  seems  to  have  been  made  in  honour  of  Pandul- 
phus Malatesta,  the  Venetian  general  against  the  Bohemians, 
Istrians,  and  Furlans ;  ^  more  particularly  for  a  great  over- 
throw given  them  at  Udine,  where  he  took  about  seven  hun- 
dred prisoners;  for  which  the  Venetians  highly  honoured 
him,  and  purchased  for  him  the  house  of  Luigi  Taneri,  in 

*  Furlans.]  Malatesta  defeated  tlic  These  are  probably  the  Furlans  here 
Lord  of  Forli,  in  Italy,  along  with  Sforza.     meant. 


REPLY  TO  SEVERAL  QUERIES.  285 

Venice,  at  the  price  of  twelve  thousand  ducats.  He  was 
hrother  to  Carlo  Malatesta.  I  have  seen  a  noble  medal  of 
gold  in  this  country,  of  the  value  of  fifty  pounds,  with  the  fi- 
gure of  a  soldier  completely  armed,  and  kneeling  before  a 
crucifix,  with  this  inscri4)tion :  Malatesta  dux  equitum 
PR/ESTANS.  Whether  pertaining  to  this  Pandulfo,  or  Carlo, 
when  I  behold  the  piece  again,  I  may  be  able  to  determine. 

-Many  noble  large  ponderous  medals  of  gold  are  to  be 
seen  in  the  custody  of  princes  and  great  ones,  but  I  doubt 
whether  any  to  be  compared  with  the  noble  medallion  of  gold 
in  the  treasury  of  the  emperor  at  Vienna,  with  the  figures  of 
the  emperor  and  Imperial  arms  upon  it.  It  exceedeth  a 
round  trencher  plate  in  compass,  and  esteemed  in  value  2200 
ducats,  or  a  thousand  pounds  English,  as  I  am  informed  by 
an  ocular  witness,  who  had  a  sight  thereof,  at  Vienna,  in  l()()f). 

Of  ancient  medals,  the  largest  I  have,  or  have  seen,  is  that 
of  the  Emperor  Heraclius,  of  about  two  inches  diameter,  and 
containing  his  triumph  for  the  reduction  of  the  holy  cross, 
with  many  Greek  and  Latin  inscriptions,  which  you  may  see 
and  read  in  Lipsius,  Casalius,  and  others. 

Upon  a  medal  of  gold,  of  the  value  of  six  pounds,  in  the 
hands  of  a  most  worthy  person,  and  my  honoured  friend,  of 
this  country.  This  piece  upon  the  obverse  or  face  side,  hath 
the  head  of  King  Henry  VIII  with  this  inscription:  Henri- 
cusOctavusAngll'E  Francis  etHib.  Rex Fidei  Defensor, 

ET    IN  TERRA    ECCLESfyE   AnGLI/E    ET   HiBERNI^  SUB  ChRISTO 

CAPUT  suPREMUM.  On  the  reverse  an  inscription  of  the 
same   sense  in  Greek  and  Hebrew:  'Evs/xoi  oyooo;  r^iclSuoiXivg 

axsn  r,  x£faX»].  Londini,  15-1o.  About  the  same  an  Hebrew 
inscription  to  the  same  ellect. 

This  is  a  memorial  piece,  coined  by  King  Henry,  when,  hav- 
ing disclaimed  the  power  of  the  pope,  he  assumed  the  style 
of  supreme  head  of  the  church  in  his  dominions.  This  piece 
is  now  become  rare ;  not  easily  to  be  met  with,  and  omitted  by 
Luckius  in  his  description  of  medals  of  the  last  century.* 

*  Luckius,  .^c]     Luckii  Syllogc  numinorum  clariorum  ab  anno  1500  ad  ICOO. 


286  reply  to  several  queries. 

Sir, 
Whereas  you  find  yourself  obliged  by  the  articles  of  your 
tenures,  to  pay  a  mark  yearly  unto  the  crane's-pot  of  the  ab- 
bey of  Ramsey,  and  you  have  not  obtained  satisfaction  con- 
cerning that  crane's-pot,  till  you  meet  with  better  information, 
I  shall  offer  this  unto  you.^  In  former  times  there  were  many 
gold  and  silver  utensils  belonging  unto  rich  and  well-endowed 
abbeys  and  churches,  chiefly  employed  about  the  high  altar. 
Hereof  some  were  made  in  the  figure  and  form  of  cranes, 
with  long  and  extended  necks,  serving  especially  for  fumiga- 
tion or  perfuming  with  sweet  perfumes  conveyed  into  their 
bellies,  which  being  fired,  or  heated,  exhaled  out  of  their 
mouths,  and  afforded  a  pleasant  odour. 

Of  these  we  find  clear  mention  in  the  enumeration  of  the 
list  of  the  precious  treasure  of  the  church  of  Mentz,  in  a 
description  thereof  about  four  hundred  years  ago,  observed 
by  Rhenanus,  in  his  notes  upon  Tertullian,  in  these  words : — 
"  Calyces  aurei,  griies  argenteee  impositorvm  in  cavo  ventre 
thymtamatum  'per  rostra  ac  colliim  mira  arte  exhalentes,  jux- 
ta  aram  max'imam.  Now  these  being  vessels  consuming 
costly  odours,  and  often  used,  required  some  revenue  to  main- 
tain them.  And  therefore  this,  whether  by  fee,  donation,  or 
charge,  whether  from  the  bounty  of  the  first  donor,  or  other- 
wise, was  probably  the  first  occasion  of  your  rent. 

^  uiiloi/oii.'j  Probably  to  Sir  Nicholas  L'Esf  range,  lordof  the  manor  of  Ringstead. 


NAVAL    FIGHTS.  287 


NAVAL  FIGHTS.' 

[MS.   SLOAN.    1S27.] 

Ix  most  naval  fights,  some  notable  advantage,  error,  or  un- 
expected occurrence,  hath  determined  the  victory.  The  great 
fleet  of  Xerxes  was  overthrown  by  the  disadvantage  of  a  nar- 
row place  for  battle.  In  the  encounter  of  Duillius,  the  Ro- 
man, with  the  Carthaginian  fleet,  a  new  invention  of  the  iron 
corvi  made  a  decision  of  the  battle  on  the  Roman  side.  The 
unexpected  falling  off'  of  the  galleys  of  Cleopatra,  lost  the 
battle  of  Actium.  In  the  figlit  between  King  Philip  and 
Attalus,  the  great  excursion  which  Attains  made  from  his 
squadron,  unto  the  loss  of  his  galley,  made  the  victory  dis- 
putable ;  though  Philip  suffered  so  great  a  loss  and  destruc- 
tion of  his  men,  that  he  had  but  two  arguments  left  to  pre- 
tend unto  the  victory  :— that  he  had  kept  his  station,  and 
taken  the  galley  of  Attalus. 

Even  in  the  battle  of  Lepanto,  which  you  particularly  en- 
quire of,  if  Caracoza  had  given  unto  the  Turks  orders  not  to 
narrow  on  account  of  the  number  of  the  Christian  galleys, 
they  had,  in  all  probability,  dechned  the  adventure  of  a  bat- 
tle :  and,  even  when  they  came  to  fight  the  unknown  force, 
an  advantage  of  the  eight  ^'enctian  galleasses  gave  the  main 
stroke  unto  the  victory ;  otherwise  the  whole  rencounter  was 
stoutly  performed,  and  in  no  passage  with  derogation  unto 
the  Turkish  valour.  An  account  hereof  you  may  read  in 
Sabellicus,  in  Peruzzi  "  of  Famous  Islands,"  and  in  the  Turk- 
ish History  of  Knollis  in  English,  which,  since  you  take  most 
notice  of,  I  shall  propose  unto  you  these  queries  and  obser- 
vations, grounded  upon  his  account.- 

'  Naval  Fights.]     I  suspect  this  to     son  Thomas,  who  was  in  the  naval  service, 
be  a  passage  from  a  letter  to  his  younger        '  account.']  Knollys,  Vol.  I,p.589-.')9'j. 


288  NAVAL    FIGHTS. 

How  the  patience  of  Don  John  is  to  be  justified,  who, 
havinir  hidden  four  hundred  vaUant  men  under  the  hatches, 
for  a  reserve  in  extremity,  would  be  thrice  repulsed  after  he 
had  boarded  the  Turkish  admiral,  before  he  called  up  that 
reserve. 

And,  though  it  succeeded  well  upon  a  tired  enemy,  yet, 
whether  it  was  handsomely  done  to  cut  off  Ali  Bassa,  the  ad- 
miral's head,  and  fastening  it  on  the  top  of  a  pole,  to  erect  it 
in  his  own  galley  ? 

How  to  justify  the  noble  Andreas  Doria,  in  being  so  far  off 
in  the  fight,  till  a  great  part  of  his  confederates  suffered  ? 
Why  our  Turkish  historian,  speaking  so  often  of  the  eight 
galleasses  which  did  such  signal  service,  should  not  so  much 
as  mention  their  commander,  and  whom  Peruzzi  nameth 
Dodo? 

Whether  it  were  not  here  verified  that  bad  news  flieth 
apace,  since,  in  eight  days'  space,  Selimus,  being  at  Adri- 
anoplc,  understood  of  this  defeat  ? 

Whether  it  be  commendable  in  great  generals  to  carry  their 
sons  or  noble  young  relations  with  them,  in  adventurous  and 
hazardous  actions,  whose  miscarriages  may  blot  their  victories 
or  add  unto  their  overthrows ;  since,  in  this  fight,  both  All 
Bassa's  sons  were  taken,  and  one  of  them  but  thirteen  years 
of  age,  who  was  presented  to  the  Pope  ? 

What  different  effects  bad  news  hath  on  the  spirits  of  men, 
dejecting  some,  and  fairly  inflaming  others ;  for,  upon  going 
unto  the  fight,  the  Christian  fleet  received  news  that  the 
Turks  had  taken  Cyprus,  which,  nevertheless,  was  so  far  from 
discouraging  them,  that  it  the  more  enraged  them  to  revenge? 

How  you  like  that  argument  of  Mahomet  Bassa,  whereby 
he  somewhat  pacified  the  enraged  SeHmus,  and  saved  a  ge- 
neral massacre  of  the  Christians,  when  he  told  him  the  bat- 
tle was  not  lost  by  the  valour  of  the  Christians,  but  by  some 
fatal  and  unknown  cause  unto  them  ?  Or  whether  Selimus 
would  have  thought  there  had  been  any  force  in  such  words, 
if  the  Venetians  had  so  flattered  themselves  upon  the  loss  of  j 
Cyprus  unto  him  ? 

Though  SeHmus  threatened  a  general  massacre  of  the 
Christians  in  his  dominions,  yet,  whether  he  himself  or  any 


NAVAL    FIGHTS.  389 

of  his  successors,  and  seriously  perform  the  same,  especially 
in  their  European  dominions,  since  thereby  he  would  so  much 
weaken  his  power,  leave  scarce  people  to  cultivate  his  grounds, 
pay  his  rents,  and  continue  his  revenues,  may  very  well  be 
doubted  ? 

Whether  the  Christians  committed  not  a  great  error  in  not 
pursuing  so  signal  a  victory  without  any  considerable  advan- 
tage but  that  of  honour.''  Or  what  considerable  benefit  may 
hereafter  be  expected  from  the  auxiliary  forces  of  Christian 
princes  united  against  the  Turk  in  any  expedition;  since  they 
are  commonly  long  in  drawing  together,  and  after  the  attempt 
or  exploit,  are  ready  to  return  into  their  respective  countries  ? 


TOL.    IV.  u 


290  AMICO    OPUS    ARDUUM    MEDITANTI. 


AMICO  OPUS  ARDUUM  MEDITANTI. 


[MS.  SLOAN.   1827,  fol.  61—64.] 

De  Opusculo  quod  meditaris,  iterum  atque  iterum  cogita:  sci- 
as  quid  valeant  humeri ;  ut  sis  natator  bonus,  immo  Delius,  in 
hoc  tamen  procelloso  pelago,  noli  sine  cortice  natare ;  enucle- 
andi  sunt  tibi  Hbelli  non  proletarii,  immo  i/x-^u^oi. 

Nosti  quam  petulca  sit  tribus  Hteraria,  quam  ad  commissi- 
ones  prona,  ut  non  teniere  profecto  xwofiviag  hinc  inde  expa- 
vescas.  Quod  candidiores  anima?  utroque  poUice  collaudant, 
(piXavroi  tristiores  obducta  fronte  aspicient.  Nasuti^  sunt,  im- 
mo nasi,  literionum  plurimi,  non  tantum  tuberibus,-  sed  ne 
verrucis  parcituri.  Si  rem  minus  attigeris,  abund^  cachinno- 
rum  est ;  sin  ad  amussim,  invidiam  plus  quam  satis. 

Nonnulli  vocibus  inhiantes  rem  ipsam  laxa  cervice  inspici- 
ent;  alii  (quod  caput  rei  est)  ad  sensumpotius  intenti  vocabu- 
la  et  voces  sicco  pede  praetereunt.  Quod  Prasini  ad  coelum 
evehunt,  Veneti"'  sannis  accipient.  Geniorum  varietas,  stu- 
diorum  discordia,  partes,  ai^k=ig,  lucubrationum  clarissimarum 
fota  dividunt :  quibus  omnibus  ut  facias  satis,  frustra  sis,  ni 
ultra  Jovem  sapias. 

Dum  itaque  huic  opellai  insudas,  nolim  te  credas*  Aspara- 
gos  coquere.  Dele,  reple,  incudi  redde,  Annalibus  Volusii^ 
Cinnai  Smyrnam  antepone.  Viro  tamen  erudito,  cui  ingeni- 
um  in  numerato,  cui  otii  et  secessus  impendio  satis,  seram  co- 
ronidem  et  cunctationem  manuum  vix  indulsero. 

'  Naxuti.^     Vid.  Martialis  Epigram.  "  Si    Veiicto    Prasinove    faves,    &c." — 

Lib.  xiii,   2,  I. — "  Nasutus  sis  usque  li-  A'ide  etiain  Suet.  Cees.  /lug.  87  ; — Calig.          J 

cet,  sis  dcuique  nasus."  55.                                                                              * 

*  tuheribus.]   " ne  tuberibus  pro-  *  credas.l     Vid.    Suet,    in   Fit.   Cees. 

priis ignoscet  verrucis  illius." — Hor.  -^ug.  87. 

S.  i,  3,  73.  *  Folusii.^     "Annalcs   Volusi    cacata 

"  Feneti.]     Mart.  Epigr    xiv,  131,1.  charta."     Crt<«//.  37— 20. 


AMICO    OPUS    ARDUUM    MEDITANTI.  *?91 

Nuda?  veritati  oleum  atque  opcram  spondens,  videris  tauien 
ne  dum  veritati  olHciiim  pr;rtexas,  propri.T  gloriolte  inservias. 
Authores  neotericos,  perquos  profeceris,  nequaquam  perstrin- 
gas.  Si  quid  erraverint,  omisso  nomine  rem  corripias,  nee 
pneclaros  viros  honorifice  hinc  inde  compelles,  ut  alil)i  incul- 
patam  vellices.  Et,  quamvis''  nulli  gravis  est  percussus  Achil- 
les, antiquis  tamen  nominibus,  et  ivvi  veteris  scriptoribus,  ter- 
ram  optes  faciasque  levem/     Dandum  est  a?tati  ad  tarn  lon- 

ginqua  ca?cutienti,  clarissimus  corum  quisque  nostrum 

dilatus  in  tvvum^  detererct  sibi  multa. 

Quod  undiquaque  sartum  tectum  est  animitus  amplectere,  de 
dubiis  cunctarc,  immo  rebus  reapse  aut  specie  falsis  indicto  die 
noli  illico  renunciare,  ne  dum  ob  primaevam  rerum  imperitiam 
tffa>,aara  nonnulla,  aut  arorra  paginis  interjecta,  veneranda  no- 
!iiina  in  solidum  damnare,  aut  integris  operibus  iniquissimum 
Theta  privfigere. 

Ut  sis  acerrimus  veritatis  hyperaspistes  et  jaculator  opti- 
mus,  rem  tamen,  non  hostem  jugules.  Scommata,  cavillas,'-^  dic- 
teria,  longe  amoveas,  immo  salibus  urbanis,  et  intra  pomoeria 
natis,*  parce  et  invitus  indulgeas,  nedum  genuinum  etiam,  vel 
licsus,  infigas. 

De  summa  cavea  soUicitus  non  sis,  orchestras  et  podio  stu- 
deas.  Itaque  ut  sis  parcus  in  paralogis  desi-  oculis  tamen  et 
lippis  nota  ne  congeras  ;  et  ut  rationum  momenta  pro  numero 
transigant,  quod  Achilleum  est  duntaxat  efFeras  ;  levicula  et 
nota?  minoris  reculas  summis  digitis  attingas. 

In  suspensa  rerum  veritate,  ubi  Sibyllic  folia  literatores  po- 
tius  quam  literati  quii-ritant,  videris  ne  ^oi^a^iiv  prae  te  feras. 
Quicquid  libuerit  efllitire,  a  fonte  relatum  Ammonis  rcputare, 
leviculi  est  animi,  et  in  naturae  strophis  parum  exercitati,  scio- 
lisque  potius  solenne,  qui,  ut  nihil  non  sapiant,  baud  aliquid 
in  dubio  relinquunt. 

LeviculiL-  fidei  historiolas,  et  quas  in  re  aliena  insuper  ha- 
beas, cave  ne  in  rem  tuam  tranferas,  ne  propria?  sentential  an- 
cillantior  tittivillitia  asserere  quam  causa  cadere  malis. 

*>  Quampii.]     Vid.    Juvenal.    Sat.    1,  9  cavillas.']     Cavilla,    MS. 

Ifi3.  '  tiatis.]     "  Et  salibus  veliemens  intra 

'  levem.]    Wii.  Mart.  Epigr.   Lib.    ix,  pomoeria  natls."     Jtnen.  Sat.  9,   11. 

30,   10,  "sit  libi  terra  levis "  2  rf.ti.]     Sic  MS.  qii.  dcsis  si  ? 

'  frritm.]     Ilorat.     S.  i,    10,   09. 

U  2 


292  AMICO    OPUS    ARDUUM    MEDITANTI. 

Argumenta  domi  nata  mutuatis  adjicias,  nee  analectis,  syl- 
labis,  coUectaneis  multum  debeas,  ne  summo  improperio  py- 
rata  Cilicum  audias. 

Nee  gyris  brevioribus  rem  amplain  coerceas ;  nee  ut  mille- 
sima  pagina  ^  crescat,  prolixo  syrmate  in  re  tenvii  excurras. 
Quod  ut  felicius  praestes,  unilinguis  fere  sit  quam  pingis  ta- 
bella.  'AXk6<puXa  et  e  dialectis  alienis  notanda  in  oram  pagellffi 
transferas,  cum  ut  eruditis  orexim  expleas,  turn  ne  sciolis  fa- 
stidio  fueris. 

Itaque  nee  verbis  humidis  et  lapsantibus  diffluas,  nee  aciem 
sententiee  curto  sermone  stringas.  Et  ne  te  AUobroga^  di- 
cant,  qui  ad  numeros  Tullianos  tantum  saltant,  purissimae  ser- 
monis  setatulae  cum  primis  studeas.  Si  quae  tamen  occurrant 
vocabula  extra  classem  petita,  sensui  tamen  magis  accommoda, 
ne  te  stigmaticis  annumerent  animi  liberiores.  Ludo  critico 
non  ita  demisse  inservias,  ut  vel  Plautina,  Apuleiana,  vel  do- 
mi nata  respuas. 

Phraseologia  modo  materiae  non  impar,  compta  an  libera 
perinde  erit ;  sed  cum  sis  Isaeo  torrentior,  ne  verborum  ca- 
taclysm© rem  obruas,  etiam  atque  etiam  cures ;  et  ne  quid  li- 
berius  excidat,  Stradano  periculo  caveas. 

Quod  si  in  hoc  opere  texendo,  (uti  vix  aliter  operandum,) 
obscura  aliquot  et  spinosa  te  fatigent,  libere  et  subinde  studia 
nostra  exerceas.  Is  sane  non  sum  qui  benefacta  imputem, 
aut  ea  in  rationibus  et  meriti  loco  numerem,  It/Xuc/i/  qualem- 
qualem  sub  manum  remissurus.  Opusculo  denique  ad  um- 
bilicum  ducto,  illimatum,  nee  virgula  censoria  notatum,  me 
authore, 

Nulla  taberna  tuum  videat  ncque  pila  libellum.5 

Nee  hoc  officium  privatis  tantum  et  continuis  in  rebus  ami- 
corum  omissioribus,^  sed  et  egrcgiis  et  publicae  famee  viris  sub- 
misse  deputandum,  qui  minus  accurate  dictis,  x^upa,  x^/av^a, 
etiam  ceraunia  affigant,  maculasque  ^  quas  aut  incuria  fudit, 


'  pagina.l  \\d.  Juv.  7,  100.  "  Namq.  "Nulla  taberna  meos  habeat  neque  pila 

oblita  modi  millesima  pagina  surgit."  libellos." 

*  /lllobroga.']    "  Ciceronem  AUobroga         6  omissioribus,']     Sic  MS.  qu.  remissi- 
dixn"  Juv.  Sat.  1 ,  214.  orihus? 

*  libellim.']     Hor.  Sal.    Lib.  i.  4,  71.         7  maculasque.']  Horatii /Irx  Poet.  352, 


AMirO    OPUS    AKUUUM    MEUITANTI.  l20'o 

aiit  luinuuKi  })arum  cavit  iiatiira,  oiniii  cura  et  ciiratura  cmeii- 
tleiit.  (Juando  cleuique  in^enium,  igne  literario  tentatum, 
veiiale  destiiiaveris,  summo  viro  et  Miucenati  tuo  inscribas. 
Quo  viiidice  ncc  Probum  timebis;"  quicquid  scripseris,  coe- 
luin-'  sit  precor.  Vale,  et  qiue  nos  liinpidissimo  viro/  ingcnio 
pomeridiano,  et  spirante  Austro  scripsimus,  lequi  precor  con- 
sules  ac  boni. 

THOMAS  BROWNE. 

8  /ime/iW.]     Mart.     L.  iii,    •_',    12 —         '^  cceliim.]     Sic  MS.  qu.  coelatum  ? 
"  lllo   viiidiix-    nee   Probum   tiineto." —         I  viro.]     Sic  MS.  qu.  vino  ? 
\'iil.    Siirtoii.      Dc  I/tiist.  (iranviKtt.  24. 


294 


NAUMACIIIA. 


NAUMACHIA. 

[Description  of  a  Sea-Fight.^] 

[MS.  SLOAN.   1827,  fol.  65—68.] 

Labilis  rerum  memoria,  astas,  tempus,  averticula,^  plurima  ob- 
livioni  tradunt;  parandi  itaque  mature  commentavii,  qui  tanto 
malo  subveniant.  Non  qui  sententias  authorum  in  loca  com- 
munia  disponant,  (quod  erit  actum  agere,)  sed  a  recenti  libro- 
rum  lectione,  libero  filo  scliedam  exarare,  quge  difficilia  quaeque 
et  notatu  digna  contineat.  Qualia  vel  author  ipse,  similium 
memoria,  vel  propria  Minerva  suppeditat.  Exemplo  sit  inter 
alia,  Naumachia  ista,  a  lectione  Bayfii,^  Revii,^  Schefferi,-'^  illico 
a  me  depicta. 

Peracta  lustratione,  votis  nuncupatis,  facto  deinde  Ne- 
ptuno,  Zephyris,  et  Tempestatibus,  sacrificio,  fausta  ominante 
multitudine  in  littoribus  adstante,  solvit  e  portu  sub  praefec- 
tura  Cornelii  procinctissima  Romanorum  classis.  Sed  chelis 
vix  superatis,  dum  ventos  aucuparet  et  brevia  exploraret  pro- 
reta  navarchalis,  classcm  Graecorum,  constructissimam  sub 
stolarcho  Mentore  conspexit. 

Aderant  e  partibus  Grajcorum  inhabilis  fere  magnitudinis 
hepteres  duae,  hexeres  quatuor,  triremes,  gauli,  pistres,  he- 
miolia^  pentecontori  plures,   dromonum,  myoparonum,  hip- 


'  Description,  ^-c.^  "  Appears  to  be  a  Fianciscum  Stephamim,  1537,  12mo.  ;or 

fictitious  one,  and  to  have  been  written  to  Lazari  Bayfii  Armotationes  in   L.  II. 

for   the    purpose    of  exercising   himself  de   Captivis  ct   Postliminis  reversis,   in 

with  the  Latin  naval  terms,  from  these  quihis  iraclatur  dc  Re  Navali,   Lutelia:, 

words:  pugnatuni  est  juxta  manuni,  &c."  ex  Officina  Roherti  Stephani,  15'19,  4to. 
— Cr.  *  Rcvii.']     This  seems  the  reading  of 

*  avcrticula.']  Sic  MS.cju.  diverticula  ?  the  IMS.  but  I  have  not  been  able  to  find 

^  Bayfii.]      Referring  probably    to   a  any  writer,  on  naval  affairs,  of  that  name, 
little  work  entitled,   "  De  Re  Navali  Li-         *  Schejferi']      Joannis  Schefferi,    Jr- 

livllus,  in  /Idolcscen/ulorvm  hoiianan  Li-  gcntoratensis,  dc  militia  Navali  Vetcrum, 

terarttm  Studiosurnm  I'dvorem,  ck  Bai/fii  libri  quatuor,  Aio.  Vpsal.  1654. 
Vigiliis  e.icerpta,  i]c."  8vo.  Paris,  upud         6  liemiolia.j     Sic  MS.  qu. hcmiola; ? 


NAUMACUIA.  tiOo 

paginum'  praeter  acatia,  dicrota,  et  catascopia,  ingcns  nu- 
nierus. 

Classem  Iloinanam  magna  mole  et  numero  constituerunt 
quinqueremes,  quadriremes,  triremes,  actuariie  longae,  e  sylvis 
publicis  cjesie  lignis(jue  tempestivis  fabricata^,  praeter  onera- 
rias,  speculatorias,  et  liburnas,  relicta  in  naustatbmo,  navalibus, 
et  textrinis,  non  levi  navium  vi. 

Classes  in  propinquo  posita*  armamenta  componunt,  vela 
contrahunt,  malos  dimittunt,  tubicines  classicum  insonant 
polemicum,  et  piPanem  multitudo  utrinque  toUit. 

Initio  pra-toria  Romana  in  Navarchidem  Gra^cam  irruit,  et 
Imperator  aciem  prascedens  strenu^  cum  hoste  conflixit. 
Primo  missilibus  telis,  rutris  demum,  drepanis,  et  gladiis  res 
acta  est.  llomani  magnum  bello  diem  imponere  satagentes 
caedibus  insistunt,  ictus  densant,  ora  mucronibus  quasrunt. 
Sed  cum  virtu tem  propugnatorum  in  turribus  et  catastromatis 
minus  feliciter  lacesserent,  rostris  et  chalcembolis  impetus 
in  liostem  faciendos  imperator  publico  signo  indicavit. 

Acriter  exinde  pugnatum  est ;  inter  triremes  acerrima  con- 
certatio.  Tarentina  in  Rhodiam  a  latere  impetum  faciens, 
remos  detersit,  hypozomata  et  spondas  concussit,  encopum 
quassavit,  periton;cum  confregit,  et  thalamitarum  versus  pes- 
sundedit. 

lluicextemplo  succurrens  Gra^corum  altera,  cui  parasemon 
equus,  tutela  Neptunus  erat,  magno  conatu  in  prumnam  ho- 

stileni  irruit,  pedalium  dextrum  inter  clavum dimi- 

diavit,  parexiresiam  concussit,  parodum,  fores,  et  hedolia 
contrivit,  omniaque  puppis  ornamenta  cestro  aut  vinculo  facta 
comminuit,  stylum  cum  taenia,  anserculi  medium  cum  aplustre 
sustulit.  Fractis(|ue  remis  zygitas  et  thranitas  posteriores 
per  columbaria  clibanarii  confoderunt. 

Sed  duni  ilia  Romanos  male  mulctat,  occurrit  ocyus  sub- 
pnefectoria  Romanorum  magnoque  impetu,  Rostro  tridente, 
et  chalcomatis  proram  hostilem  feriens  illam  inter  embolidem 
et  stiram  tercbravit,  parasemon,  epotides,  tutelam  connninuit, 
stolum  cum  acrostolio  et  oculo  laxavit,  adeo  ut  epibata  et 
classiarii  in  encopum  confugerint,  classiarii  et  milites  in  pup- 
pim  se  reccperint.     Sed  ictu  exitiali  aqua  per  vulnus  succe- 

7  hippaginum.'\     Sic   MS.    qu.    hippagogarum  ? 


296  NAUMACIIIA. 

dens,    frustra  nitentibus    antliariis    et    naupegis    triremem 
praecipitio  demersat. 

Sed  dum  utrinque  secus  dubio  Marte  certaretur  tollenoni- 
bus,  manibus  ferreis,  corvis,  harpagonibus,  etiam  maricibus 
frustra  tentatis,  Rouiani  missilia  ignita,  faces  ardentes,  oUas 
pice  et  carbone  ref'ertas  conjiciunt,  qua^  in  corbitam  strategidis 
impingentes  carcbesia,  trachelum,  orloremque  omnem  usque 
ad  carcheriam  concremaverunt.  Faciliori  incendio  tumices 
omnes,  calones,  protones,  byperse,  ceruchi,  funes  chalatorii, 
et  propedes  absumpti. 

Exinde  omnia  in  confuso  esse,  quodlibet  officii  munus  a 
quovis  obvio  obiri.  Harmeneus,"  celeustes  per  interscalmia 
decurrere,  classiarii  in  encelia  confugere.  Sed  irrito  conatu. 
Solis  cubistis  saluls.  Ignis  enim  non  tantum  statumina  cor- 
ripuit,  sed  et  dryochum  combamque  ipsam  occupavit,  virosque 
omnes  tanquam  in  rogo  combussit. 

Reliquse  navium  incendio  perculs^e  et  de  fuga  sollicitae 
sublatis  dolonibus  efilise  confugerunt.  Samiorum  tres  lacerae, 
dehiscentes,  succinctas,  et  fluctibus  impares,  tumultuoso  re- 
migio  nee  monitis  pausarii  morigero,  venilibus^  adjutas  ad  littus 
vicinum  contendunt. 

NoniiulltB  OByyofMa^oumi,  crebris  ictibus  et  vento  non  suo  tan- 
dem Piraeum  dilabuntur;  ubi  natantibus  oculis  et  vultuos^ 
accepti  acerbas  rerum  vices  et  funesta  Neptunalia  enunciant. 

Romanus,  j)arta  victoria,  miiitibus  strenu^  se  gerentibus 
prsemia,  ignavis  pasnas  statuit,  sequebatur  inde  cum  funibus 
castigatio,  per  tbalamum  trajectio,  in  aquam  immersio,  cum 
saliva  et  sputis  incessatio,  manuuni  praecisio,  exiliuni,  in  insu- 
lam  deportatio,  mors,  ut  cuj  usque  aianiO-yiioM  demeritum  po- 
stulavit. 

Ducibus  perclare  se  gerentibus  collatte  corona?  navales 
rostratae,  miiitibus  donativum,  subsidiales  et  exteri  jure  civitatis 
donati,  honesta  missione,  exemptione  a  tributis,  aut  singular! 
sepultune  loco  accepti. 

Decretus  Imperatori  titulus  et  triumpbus  navalis,  quem 
obvium  in  curru  accipiebat  senatus.  Przcccdebant  tubicines, 
fidicines,  navium  devictarum  imagines,  spolia  navalia,  rostra, 

S /(armenras.]  Sic  iMS.qii.liarmcnistfs?         0  venilil.us.}     Sic  MS.  qii.  ventis? 


NAUMACIIIA.  Ji07 

ucrostolia  plaustvis  vecta,  et  captiva  pecimia.  Rostra  naviuni 
Integra  in  Canipo  Martio  servata.  Krecti  clenique  arciis  tri- 
luiiphales  et  columnae  rostratae,  nee  minora  honoramenta  Cor- 
nelio  quam  olim  Duillio  a  senatu  collata. 

Capta»  GriBCorum  triremes  untlecem,  flammis  absinnptae 
quatuor,  septem  fundo  data>.  Capta  et  remulco  ducta  tha- 
lamcgus  unica  deliciis  jocisque  triuniplialibus  sub  propitio 
Marte  deslinata.  Spolia  ampla  et  prai'da  non  levis  pra^ter 
commeatum  nauticum.  Denique  littus  omne  exuviis,  arma- 
mentis,  ct  cadaverihus  crepidatis  oppletum.  Romanoriim  in- 
terierunt  triremes  (luatuor,  mutilata^  plures,  ciesa  volonum  pars 
non  exigua;  classiariorum  manus  (prater  mediastinos,  caculas, 
et  metellos,)  passa  non  ultra  cladem  Fabianam. 

Inchoata  acies  luna  maxima,  sole  minimo,  vento  afllatili  ct 
Grace,  circa  horam  Gracorum  fortissimo  funestam,  et  die 
quasi  ad  umbilicum  ducto  eversa. 

Pugnatum  est  juxta  manum  Gigantis  non  longe  a  Rape 
Faminea  et  fabuloso  mari,  ubi  Syrius  ^  ostentat  admirabilem 
morganam. 

Causa  hujus  belli  eadem  qua  omnium,  nimia  felicitas. 
Glisccntibus  opibus  crevere  animi,  unde  libido  ct  ardor  do- 
minandi:  exinde  nihil  modicum  sentirc,  alicnam  felicitatem 
agris  oculis  introspicere,  irrequieta  animo  volvere,  composita 
turbare  ;  ne  firmiter  constent  aliena,  propria  in  lubrico  sta- 
tuere ;  tandemque,  (ut  in  liumanis  fieri  amat,)  ne  pariant,  ser- 
vire,  et  quam  rcverenter  fortunam  habere,  ima  experiri. 

'  Stfrius.]     Sic  MS.  qu.  Sirius  ? 


298  DE    ASTRAGALO    AUT    TALO. 


DE  ASTRAGALO  AUT  TALO. 

[ms.  SLOAN,  1827,  69.] 

ARISTOT.    DE   HISTORIA   ANIMALIUM    LIB.   2,   CAP.    L    VERSIONIS 

SCALIGERIANiE. 

Quod  est  pronum,  foris;  quod  est  supinum,  introrsum  spec- 
tat  :  ita  ut  qu«  Coa  et  felicia  dicuntur,  intus  inter  se  obversa ; 
quas  Cilia  et  infelicia,  foris ;  quae  Antennae  sive  cornua  dicun- 
tur, superne. 

Quod  est  pronum,  id  est  pars  gibba  seu  Ternio  in  Ludo 
dicta  foris  versus  caudam  spectat. 

Quod  est  supinum  seu  pars  cava  suppa  Quaternio  in  Ludo 
Talorum  dicta  introrsum  versus  crus  anterius  spectat. 

Ita  ut  Coa  et  felicia  latera  quorum  unum  auriculam  referens 
et  Venus  in  Ludo  dictum  et  crus  compar  aspiciens,  aliud  item 
Quaternio  dictum  introrsum  inter  se  obversa  sunt. 

Item  ^Ta  Chia  et  in  ludo  infausta  latera  quorum  unum  canis 
dicitur  pars  Veneri  contraria  exterius  laterorsum  spectans, 
alterum  Ternio  seu  pars  prona  versus  caudam  aspiciens  foris, 
sibimet  obversa  sunt,  sive  ut  Aristoteles,  ilg  uXkrika  kr^ufifiiva, 
non  enim  situ  contraria,  sed  fausta  infaustis  opposita,  felicia 
felicibus,  infelicia  infelicibus  obversa. 

PLAUTUS  IN  CURCUL.   (ii,  3,   79.) 

*'  Facit  Vulturios  quatuor, 

Tabs  abripio,  invoco  almam  meam  nutricem  Heram, 

Jacto  basilicum." 

Dictum  hoc  Plautinum  de  Ludo  Talorum  composito,  sicut 

de  simplici  Astragalismo  dictum  illud  Aristotelicum.     Lusere 

l)rimum  veteres  talo  simplici,  postea  multiplici,  numero  plerum- 

que  quatcrnario :  ubi  facicrum  concordia  jactus  infaustissimus. 


DE    ASTRAGALO    AUT   TALO.  299 

et  Vulturiiis  dictus,  ubi  omnium  discordia  ielicissimus  et  Ba- 
silicus.  Facit  \'ulturios  quatuor  jactus  infelix.  Ego  Talos 
abripio,  jacto  basilicum,  id  est  omnes  dispari  facie,  itaque  om- 
nia vinco,  totum  depositum  tollo. 

MARTIALIS,    (ePIGR.    XIV,    14.) 

"Cum  '  steterit  nullus  vultu  tibi  talus  eodem, 
iVIuneia  me  dices  magna  dedisse  tibi." 
Id  est,  Munusculum  hoc  est  quod  tibi  e  Talis  offero,  quod 
si  felicissimus   tibi  jactus    contigerit   et  omnes   tali  diverse 
vultu  tibi  in  ludo  steterint,  poterit  tibi  in  lucrum  non  par- 
vum  cedere  et  magni  muneris  vices  explere. 

Sed  ut  omnia  de  Talo  simplici  physice  aut  ludicre  dicta  me- 
lius capias,  attente  consulas  hosce  versiculos  in  tui  gratiam  a 
me  compositos ;  ubi  Lusor  felicem  Astragalismum  et  faustam 
manum  precatur ; — 

Astragalisme  fave,  non  Chi,  sed  da  mihi  Kappa, 
Non  uncum,  gibbum,  sed  suppum,  sed  sinuosum, 
Externas  remove  facies,  monstra  interiores. 
Da  jactu  baud  facilem  dubio  fulcimine  nixam. 
Da  quod  in  horrendo  torte  protuberat  urso, 
Quodque  refcrt  mutila  et  facies  monstrosa  Caballi, 
Aspiciam  Conchas,  Helicem,  pterygomata  Lobum, 

Auritam  et  Vcnerem qua?  nectitur  ossi, 

Da  Cotylam,  latum  atque  ubi  tibia  sistitur  antrum, 
Quodque  situs  primum  ludus  statuitque  secundum, 
Cornuanec  videam  nisi  majus  cerno  supernum, 
Non  Dorsuosum  calcis  sub  ventre  locatum, 
Non  (juod  multifidis  facie  stat  dimidiata, 
Quodque  stat  in  talo  nutans  rccubansque  suillo, 
Quodque  Canis  dictum  canibus  male  competit  uncum, 
Nee  latus  ossiculo  quod  vix  annectitur  uni. 

1   Cum.]     "  Si  "  in  MS. 


^00 


ATHEN.12US. 


NONNULLA  A  LECTIONE  ATHEN^I  SCRTPTA. 

[MS.  si.oAN.  1827,  f.  71—77.] 

Utinam  extaret  pars  multo  minima  scriptorum,  e  quibus 
egregia,  paradoxa,  et  jucundissime  dicta  sparsim  hinc  iliinc 
interserit,  et  lectori  inhianti  quasi  salivam  commovet  Athe- 
nasus.  Quis  Parodum  matronis  legens  prosopolepsiam  tem- 
poris  non  incusat  ?  Quis  in  Antiphanis,  Antigoni,  Alexidis, 
aliorumque  libris  deperditis  mitiorem  non  desideret  -/ol""^^  -/Mra- 
rg/-vj/;v?  cum  ut  acutissimam  nancisceremur  Graecorum  indolem, 
tum  ut  nudatam  spectaremus  Latinam  corniculam,  quae  nunc 
assumentis  Gra^cis  ornata,  nullo  asvo  denudabitur.  Quid  di- 
ciB  super  hac  re  inter  Grascos  Latinosque  apud  inferos  sit, 
optime  diceret  Lucianus,  sed  cum  sic  fata  volunt,  et  operum 
egregiorum  non  paucaoblivioni  debentur,plures  optamus  Athe- 
na3os,  plures  Grsecorum  Plinios.  Condonamus  Homero  Man- 
tuano  luxuriantem  transferendi  genium,  cui  unictj  debemus 
oraculum  Sibyllinum  ;  cuperem  et  plura  transtulisset,  cum  ple- 
raque  meliora  reddiderit.  Utinam  vel  sub  quovis  nomine  su- 
peresset  pars  aliquotula  librorum  Aristotelis,  quos  expes  lego 
relegoque  in  Catalogo  Laertiano ;  fertur  et  vir  summus  nonni- 
liil  in  poesin  retulissc,  quam  ego  certe  poesi  Ciceroniana  non 


gravate  redimerem. 


Omnifariai  lectionis  vir  Ulpianus  cum  de  singulis  vocibus 
y.i7-ai  ri  oj  TuTTai,  extarentne  an  non  apud  quempiam  scriptorum, 
tlisquireret,  Ksiro-Mnrog  a  Dipnosopliistis  dictus  est ;  liberrimo 
impropcrio  et  GraDcis,  quibus  nihil  est  negatum,  impune  con- 
cesso.  Idem  fere  priscas  Latinorum  schola?  indultum.  Anti- 
quiores  cnim  in  componendis  fingendisque  vocabulis  libere 
Griecissant,  quibus  voces  sensui  accommodatissinias  proferrc 


ATHEN-IEUS.  ,'101 

non  erat  barbare  et  cum  Evandro  loqui.     Facetissimus  Plau- 
tus^  plagipat'ulas  ef-  ferritribaces  plaiulcnte  Roma  dixit ;  mine 
carceribus  Nizolianis  inclusuni,  pecus  Latinum,  nisi  per  Mae- 
andros,    nihil    audet   novi,    et   allophyliam    metuens,    frigide 
m»/fou^ii.      Interim   decompositissimos  llegesandri    Delphici 
versiculos,  Lucillianis  verbis  reddidit  criticorum  princeps  Sca- 
liger ;  et  elegantiorum  pleroscjue  ctianinum  videas  or/Xurril^iiv. 
Nolim  sane  ego  quempiam  in  verborum  copia,  anti(jua  ve- 
nari,  nova  autnovatadecerpere;  justo  satis  discrimine  Latina? 
linguae  a^tates  partimur ;  ted  dum  a  rebus  vocabula  superan- 
tur,  et  nemo  authorum  omnia  complectitur,  brevissima  classi- 
cal Latinitatis  epocha  frustra  claudimur,  uniusqne  vel  scripto- 
ris,  vel  aetatulae  Augustilis,  iniqua  lege  mancipamur.      Plu- 
rima  occurrunt  vocabula  apud  autliores  extra  classem  positos, 
quit  avidissimos  captus  explent  animique  recessus  intrant,  quo- 
rum ego  nonnuUa  amplector  in  Sidonio,  Apuleio,  &c.  qua?  in 
maximo  oratorum  desidero. 

Graeca?  Latin;e(jue  linguffi  peritum  Laurentium  Asteropa?- 
um  sive  ambidextrum  dixit  Athena-us.  AiyXarrro;  sane  apud 
Galenum  mirus  homo,  immo  miraculum  uvOiu-rog  dxp(3u)-j  diaX'z- 
y.ro-j;  dvoj.  Barbarorum  tamen  reperiuntur  polyglotti  plurimi. 
Quotilinguisenini  Ponti  rex,  qui  viginti  dialectis  loquacem  ma- 
sculuni  exercuit ;  aut  .^gypti  regina  Celebris  fluvii  sui  ostiis 
laayXuesog.  Inter  Juda^os  legas  non  tantum  ' AmyJi^ovra  Philonem 
et  Josephum,  sed  et  septuaginta  seniores  Gra^ciu  callentissi- 
mos  necnon  ante  Imperium  Graicorum  sacerdotes  Hebra?os 
vaticinium  Danielis  Alexandro  Magno  exponentes.  Et  certe 
Graecanica?  lingua'  apud  Jud^eum  notitiaD  im})utandum,  si  quae, 
uti  fertur,  philosophia?  arcana  a  Clearcho  Judaco  perceperit 
Stagirites. 

Ipsi  tamen  Graeci  etiam  Roma?  Atticissant,  quod  in  Galeno 
mirumet  Plutarcho,  qui,  cum  res  Romanas  fuse  traderet  Lati- 
ne  non  niagis  quam  forte  philo-IIebraice  potuit,  cum  nisi  Pu- 
nice  etiam  Philo  Biblius,  oblivioni  deberetur  clarissimum  San- 
choniathonis  monumentum. 

Interim  Romani  mire  Gra^cam  coluerunt,  cum  etiam  Griccite 
concumberent.     Laudandus  poetarum   facetissinuis,  quod  et 

'  Plauliis.]   Capt.  iii,  1,  l.'.  »  el.]     I'ln<il.  Mn.l.  ii.  I.  !). 


302  ATHEN^US. 

Punice  aliqua  dixerit.  Uncle  de  lingua  Cananaea  Hebrasae 
consentanea  judicium  utinam  etiam  Herodotus,  rerum  Egy- 
ptiarum  callentissimus,  inscriptiones  et  monumenta  non  tantum 
Graece,  sed  et  ^Egyptiace  protulisset ;  eo  enim  adminiculo  tria 
tantum  linguae  ^gyptiacae  vocabula  in  sacro  Codice  relicta  non 
adeo  anxie  exercuerint  polyglottos. 

Vereor  tamen  ne  ab  authoribus  Latinis  in  transferendis  vo- 
cabulis  non  corrumpantur  plurima,  et  instar  Anchiali  apud 
Martialem  Oi'ientalium  verborum  non  pauca  efferantur.  Quod 
etiam  Graecis  commune;  Delio^  natatore  interdum  indigent 
Celticae  etPunicae  apud  Dioscoridem  nomenclaturae.  Antiquis- 
simus  Chaerilus  Judaeos  ita  Ta^a^ga^s/,  ut  Syros  an  Arabes  velit, 
in  medio  relinquat.  Hellanicus  et  Graeci  antiquiores,  qui  vel 
lectura  vel  tralatione  aliqua  Ptolemaicam  praeeunte  Hebraica- 
rum  rerum  notitiam  habuerunt,  ita  plerumque  verba  et  voces 
transformant,  ut  notariaco  et  temula'*  indigeant,  ut  non  mirum 
sane  falli  potuisse  Spartanos  in  Machabaica  ad  Judaeos 
Epistola,  ab  Abrabamo  originem  ducentes. 

Sit  suus  polyglossiae  honos ;  multilinguae  tamen  par  est,  qui 
unicam  Graecam  dxPilSiT.  In  simplicitate  sermonis  ne  deficiat 
critice  non  est  quod  vereantur  Grammatici.  Consule  in  unica 
dialecto  criticorum  principem  Galenum,  nee  non  minutientem 
in  Cratylo  Platonem. 

Duo  supra  septuaginta  glossemata  a  cvvyjjau  Babelis  statuunt 
eruditi.  Utinam  non  excurreret  iste  numerus  vel  unico  in 
orbe  novo.  Millesima  minor  aetas  gentibus  Babelem  reddit, 
unde  majores  nobis  barbari,  futuri  etiam  nosmetipsi  posteris 
nostris  Scythae. 

Amcenissimus  est  illc  Charmi  Syracusani  convivandi  mos, 
ut  versiculi  et  adagia  singulis  ccenarum  ferculis  lepide  accom- 
modata  apponantur.  Lepidiora  tamem  apponi  posse  non 
dubito  quam  quae  notantur  apud  Atbenaeum.  Mimi,  moriones, 
Gnatbones,  psaltriae,  tolcrabilia  sunt,  nee  a'Tr^ochmvca.  sym- 
posiorum  ludicra.  Sed  prodigiorum  convivalium  Coryphasum 
est  illud  apud  veteres  jocosi  liomicidii  genus  ^Ayj(u)vr\v  'raiZ^siv 
dum  atrocissima   kri^ai^ixaxlag  specie   homines  ante  mensas 

3  Delia.]     Vitl.    Efist.    Amico    Opns     Rev.    J.     Mitford    happily   conjectures, 
Arduum  mcdilanti ; — antea,  page  290.         "  notario  coetaneo." 
*    notariaco   et    temula.]       Sic    MS. 


ATHENii:US.  303 

ludicre  illaqucatos  risu  ct  cachinno  accipiunt.^  INIos  istc 
Tliracibus  conviviis  proprius,  Scythicum  omne  supcrat.  His 
ego  flammulani  ct  apiuin  risus  in  postcccnio  apponerem  ut  et 
ipsi  ridicule  plcctcrentur.  Quo  etiam  sannae  genere  dignus 
Thracici  iioniinis  imperator  Nero,  cum  lugubre  Ilomericuni 
canons  ardentcm  Romani,  (juod  vultu  non  audebat,  animo 
subrisit.  His  ego  sane  barbarorum  epulis,  Plutonias  coenas 
aut  nocturnas  Domitiani  dapes  antefero. 

Lepidissinia  est  ilia  apud  Athena'um  de  adolescentibus  in 
pandocheo  Agrigentino  fabula.  Temulenti  adeo  dementantur, 
ut  horrenda  tempestate  jactari  et  in  triremi  navigare  se  cre- 
dant.  Exoneranda?  itaque  navis  causa,  stragula,  vasa  omnia 
foras  ejiciunt,  magistratus  Tritones  appellant,  objurgantibus 
soteria  vovent,  nee  a  })opulo  spectante  et  bona  deripiente,  ad 
sanam  mentem  redeunt. 

Mirum  unde  totuplici  capiti  unica  delirii  facies,  ut  eandam 
puram  putam  insaniam  omnes  insanirent.  Sed  ita  stultitias 
luunt,  qui  liberum  invitum  quatiunt,  et  a  doloso  luctatore  pa- 
rum  cavent,  qui  Baccbo  recto  non  faciunt,  et  afivffr!  potantes, 
inclusos  utribus  Euros  non  cogitant. 

Triremis  ista  Agrigentina  mundus  est.  In  quo  quotus  quis- 
que  non  desipit.  Cui  ita  cerebrum  afl'abre  ab  Jove  concinna- 
tum  est,  ut  mtBuxPoveiv  aliqualem  non  prodat.  Vanas  rerum 
species  imbibimus,  imagunculis  enutrimus,  serio  dcliramus  ; 
et,  (quod  Heradito  dignum,)  dementati  juvenes  helleborum 
non  ferunt  senes.  Frustra  temulentiam  aut  vini  venenum 
causamur,  siccos  circumagit  uom;  fisdri  et  citra  vinum  ebrietas. 
Somnia  hominum  sunt  et  somnambulones  plurimi,"  vigilantes 
stertunt,  apertis  oculis  peragunt,  qua-  clausis  palpcbris  sobrii 
delirant.  Per  tempestates,  turbellas,  et  procellosa  errorum 
sufHamina  sic  mimus  vita?  transagitur,  sic  in  circo  rerum  de- 
curritur,  ubi  debacchantium  instar  non  sine  fanuf,  fortuna?, 
vita?,  dispendio,  magno  molimine  nugas  canoras  agimus,  ct 
((juod  infortunii  caput,)  ambiguo  aevi  curriculo,  vita?  prius 
quam  virtutis  metam  attingimus. 

Agonistice  dicam :  vita  nostra  curriculum  est,  ad  quod  e 
carceribus  fati  sortibus  evocati,  sive  in  summa  sive  in  ima 
quadriga    statuti,    funalibus  equis   male  imperamus.      Sa^pe 

5  accipiunt.]     Vid.  Iloral. 


304  ATHEN^US. 

ante  delphinos  impingimus,  raro  obeliscum  a  tergo  relinqui- 
mus,  plerumque  ante  ova  sistitur,  vix  unquam  missus  peragitur. 
Magna  colluvione  in  theatrum  vitae  efFundimur,  nee  inani- 
bus  spectaculis  sufficiunt  vomitoria,  viae,  6/a^w,aara,  cunei.  A 
sumnia  cavea  ad  imam  pauci  subselliis  acquiescunt.  Equestria 
orchestrae,  equestribns  popularia  se  immiscent.  Nemo  lec- 
tium  curat,  vix  quispiam  oceanum  cogitat.  A  foraminibus 
ad  podium  omnes  eadem  fronte  ludicra  juxta  ac  saeva  aspi- 
ciunt,  pauci  digitum  tollunt,  plures  premunt.  Ipsi  denique 
in  arena  mortis  serias  amentiae  vices  rependentes,  morbis  lani- 
ati  multis  telis  saueii,  nulla  missionis  spe  in  spoliarium  Ditis 
subtrahimur. 


DE    RE    CULI.NAUIA.  305 


NONNULLA, 

A  LECTIONE   ATHEN/EF,  PLATIN.E,  APICII, 

DE  RE  CULINARIA,  CONSCRIPTA. 

[ms.  SLOAN.   1S27,  fol.  77— SI.] 

QuiBUS  praeter  famem  condimentis  usa  sit  aetas  ilia  heibivora 
et  diluvium  przegressa,  utinam  dicerent  Columnae  Sethianae. 
Condimentorum  Corypbaeum  negant,  qui  acetum  tollunt.  Id- 
que  faciunt  severiores,  qui  vinum  inventum  Noae  tribuunt. 
Interim  a  pomis,  palmarum  fructlbus,  uvis,  succisque  acescen- 
tibus  fieri  vix  potuit,  quia  vel  casu  acetum  innotesceret. 
Quin  et  sicarorum  genera  aliquot  et  fructibus,  baccis,  aut  fru- 
gibus,  quibus  incalesceret  piinncva  severitas,  olim  confecta 
fuisse,  cui  non  ignota  multifaria  Americanorum  temeta,  quis 
neget  ?  ut  non  sit  purum  putum  a  diluvio  vitium,  sed  ex  pec- 
catis  cataclysmum  provocantibus  etiamsi  citra  vinum  vineale, 
ebrietas.  Zytlii  insuper  sive  vini  ex  cerealibus  confecti  extat 
apud  /Egyptios  usus  antiquissimus,  Osiridi  autbori  adscriptus. 
Quod  si  Osiris  non  alius  quam  Mizraim,  uti  doctissimi  conji- 
ciunt,  quid  ni  boc  a  Chamo  patre  traditum  nee  orbi  demerso 
incognitum? 

Utinam  clarius  innotescerent  antiquorum  columina,  gara, 
oxygara,  laserata,  oxypora,  gusta,  succidia,  apotberma,  et 
muriarum  genera  omnia.  Nescio  tamen  an  a/a  "ru-iiya.  sturionum, 
encrasicnoli  liquamen,  aut  murias  regales  nostras,  post  se 
relinquerent. 

Sylvestre  quiddam  et  virus  sapiunt  pleraque  priscorum 
condimenta,  qua.'  ligusticum,  rutam,  foenugraecum,  viride  cori- 
andrum,  immo  cuminum,  capiunt,  ut  mibi  sane,  qui  culices 
pati  rotundos  inter  equuleos  babeo,  et  cimices  redolentia 
grana  cumini  a  mensa  longe  amoveo,  stomacbum  conquassent 
lucanica,  volvuli,  oflTelUv  et  olus  smaragdinum  Apicii,  apque 

VOL.    IV.  X 


506  DE    RE   CULINARIA. 

mihi  ferenda  regis  Zeilani  niensa,  qui  patinas  assa  fcetida  con- 
fricat,  aut  siniuli  moretum  cum  vel  allium  spiret. 

Famelicae  nomen  sortitur  apud  veteres  Zoroastri  in  deserto 
mensa,  quae  non  nisi  melle  et  caseo  constabat.  Cum  tamen 
mel  et  caseus  farcimina  Parthica,  Numidica,  Eleogara,  Hypo- 
trimmata  impleant  Apicii ;  nee  non  Cyceonem  Homericum,  et 
celebrem  Victoris  Attici  calicem,  pentaploon  dictam. 

Empedocles  equis  in  Olympico  certamine  victor,  Pythagori- 
cus  et  animalisabstemiusjbovem  e  myrrha,  thure,  et  aromatibus 
compactum  occurrentibus  in  conventu  distribuit.  Huic  certe 
curricaenarum  pauci  manum  porrigerent,  qui  ventrem,  non 
nares  pascere  in  delitiis  habent. 

Isiciis  de  sepia  et  loligine  quis  non  praetulerit  Bononiensia, 
aut  minutalibus  Apicianis  Hispanorum  ollas  putres !  Lentes 
et  cicerum  omne  genus  Stoicorum  dapes,  coloni  nostri  prae- 
sepibus  damnant.  Ab  Asphodelo  nescio  quid  magnum  spon- 
det  Hesiodus ;  nos  inferorum  fercula  posthabentes,  sisaris 
batatis  vescimur.  Struthiones,  grues,  ciconias,  hirundines, 
longo  apparatu  inferunt  Platina  et  Apicius,  quas  tamen  deli- 
catuli  nostrates  ne  summis  quidem  labiis  attingerent.  Anseris 
exta,  (quibus  olim  nepotatum  est,)  hodie  inter  plebeia  fercula. 
Et  cum  callos  aprugnos  nullus  non  ministret  December,  im- 
brices, sumina,  et  contusa  scrofarum  ubera  canibus  aman- 
dantur. 

Torta  de  anguillis,  ova  in  veru  quis  ferret?  ad  primam 
pontificis  Metelli  mensam  hodiernas  gulae  contremiscerent. 
Cristas  gallorum,  capita  psittacorum,  ungulas  mulorum,  quas 
nequissimus  helluonum  apposuit  nemo  vel  famelicus  gustaret. 
Quid  gula  insanius  ?  a  centum  aviculis  unica  patella  congestis 
esurit  yEsopus,  oleribus  et  caseo  satiatur  Epicurus.  Adsit 
quod  orexim  leniat,  et  naturae  satisfaciat ;  stulte  ultro  expec- 
tamus  quid  parturiat  porcus  Trojanus.* 

Pipiones  exossatos  Apicio  laudatos  tanquam  edentulorum 
cibos  hodi^.  non  moramur.  Nobis  tergus  bovillum  coenae 
caput ;  quod  et  Heroibus  Homericis  solenne.  Hoc  post  con- 
gressum  cum  Hectore,  Ajaci  dono  misit  Agamemnon ;  quod 
et  Menelao  Telemachus  apposuit.     Alcinous  etiam  delicatis- 

•  A  hog  roasted  with  great  variety  of  other  flesii  in  the  belly ;  so  called  from 
the  Trojan  horse,  which  concealed  so  many  men  in  its  cavity. 


DE    RE   CULINARIA.  307 

s'lmw  vita^  vir  bubula  vescitur;  proci  iticlem  et  Antinous  pede 
bovino  e  nieiisa  rapto  Ulyssem  adstantem  iratus  petit.  Car- 
neni  fere  assutam  eamque  bubulam,  pisces  vero  aut  fructus 
mensis  Heroum  inferri  nusquam  prodidit  Honierus ;  quan- 
tumvis  mare  piscosum  dicat,  et  hortos  Alcinoi  ampliter  cele- 
bravcrit.  Nee  proci  Penelopes  pctulantes  et  voluptate  disso- 
luti,  piscibus,  avibus,  aut  inellitis  vescuntur. 

Cerebrum  suillum  mensis  veterum  interdictum  eoque  })ari 
flagitio  vescebantur  ac  si  fabam  roderent,  omnibusque  capiti- 
bus,  in  quibus  sensus  vigent,  abstinebant,  cum  tamen  quidquid 
delicatulum  est  cerebrum  Jovis  dicerent :  interim  porcelli 
cerebrum  cum  sale  et  salvia  nostratibus  mirum  sapit,  nee  pe- 
riodum  Hippocratis  religiose  expectamus,  qui  ante,  senioris 
victimie  a?tatem  porcellos  mensis  non  apponit.  Cerebra  vola- 
tilium  oXtyuuva  et  sicca  a  struthiocamelo  ad  passerculum  Tur- 
conum  mensis  illata  sa?pius  legimus ;  piscium  vero  paucissima, 
cum  a  coctione  vix  oculos  adsequent.  Cerebra  cuniculorum 
nobis  in  deliciis,  medicorum  nonnullis  minus  commendata. 
Quod  animal  ivx:r,,ij,ida  et  pelle  ocreatum  ne  pro  fele  imponant, 
cauponse  Gallici  inferunt,  cum  tamen  dentes  et  spina  impo- 
sturam  satis  prodant.  Caput  polypi  veteres  a  mensis  amovent, 
cautela  abundante;  cum  id  nemo  nostratium  attingeret. 
Caput  jecinoris  ejusque  pars  fumiliaris  et  hostilis  Aruspeini 
non  culinarii  discriminis  est.  Illud  enim  in  avxurui  seu  jecore 
ficato  non  distinijuunt  ganeones. 

Inepta  sunt  omnia  et  animo  luxurianti  et  opsoniorum  avido 
magis  quam  sensuum  delectamento  commoda,  quae  dicuntur 
de  Pliiloxeno,  JNIelanthio,  de  collo  gruino,  linguis  item  et  di- 
gitis,  thecis  et  elytris  coopertis,  ut  calidissima  opsonia  pra?vo- 
rent.  Frivola  item  dubio  procul,  necnon  perditissima  erat 
Apicii  cupedia  qua?  iocustas  va^grandes  et  toto  orbe  quipsitas 
inaximo  pretio  comparavit.  Edulius  siquidem  mediucrium 
genus  et  coctu  facilius  ;  sed  omnium  fatuissima  Nicomedis 
Bithynia?  regis  gula,  cui  procul  a  mari  dissito,  rapam  incisam 
et  culinariter  confectam  cum  oleo,  sale,  et  papaveris  nigri 
seminc,  coquus  pro  pisciculo  apposuit. 

Bacchum  noviter  natum  nympha?  lavantes  vinum  aquatem- 
perandum  pulchre  innuunt.  Heroes  certe  apud  Homerum 
magna  mensura  diluunt,  et  Hector  egrcssurus  ad  pugnam  et 

X  2 


308  DE    RE    CULINARIA. 

rediens  omnino  vinum  respuit.  Agamemnon  gravl  improperio 
om^aor\g  ab  Achille  dictus  est.  An  vina  veterum  nostra  longe 
antecellant  in  medio  relinquimus.  In  aetate  certe  aut  potandi 
termino  non  leviter  discrepant.  Vinum  Falernum  apud  vete- 
res  ab  anno  decimo  quinto  usque  ad  vigesimum  potui  tempe- 
stivum :  Albano  ab  anno  decimo  vigor,  Surrentinum  post  viges- 
simum  quintum  incipit  esse  mrifj.ov.  Horatii  pia  testa  consule 
Manlio  sibimet  connata  longe  annosior.  Jam  vini  veteris  apud 
nos  nomen  sortitur  triennale.  Oleum  etiam  Ulyssei  canis 
a^tatem  dimidians  antiquum  audit.  Interim  pharmaca  quae- 
dam  medicorum  oleum  vetus  centum  annorum  postulant. 
Quod  an  alibi  quam  in  sepulcris  antiquorum  reperiatur,  vide- 
rint  pharmacopoei. 

Nectar  et  ambrosia  laudatissimae  deorum  dapes  quid  sint,  e 
coelo  delapsus  nondum  edidit  Vulcanus.  Nectar  divinum 
Homerus  pater  potulentum  quid  describit,  esculentum  diserte 
asserit  Alcman  cum  Alexandride,  sed  cum  ambrosiam  raelle 
novies  dulciorem  dicat  Ibycus  apud  Athenaeum,  habeant  suam 
sibi  Glyceram  caelestes  gulae,  Chiam  male  ficum. 


AMICO    CLAKlSblMO    ETC.  300 


AMICO  CLARISSLMO,  DE  ENECANTE  GARRULO 

SUO. 

[MS.  SLOAN.   1S27,  fol.  83-S6.] 

QuiNTO  me  foramine*  distendit,  et  acerbissimo  equiileo  tor- 
quet  glossogastorille  tuus,  Ligurinusf  et  viae  sacrae  Ardelio,J 
qui  me  secessus  qua?ritantem,  fabellis,  nugaculis,  et  importunis 
verborum  tricis  enecat,  nee  dormiturienti  parcens,  semiso- 
mnem  Cadmo  tradit.§ 

Cruento  verborum  tanlio  diem  ad  umbilicum  duco,  lunas 
insomnes  ago,  naso  vigilanti  frustra  sterto.  Citius  silebit  Luna 
quam  lunaticus  iste ;  quem  nisi  Caduceo  demulserit  aut  pi- 
seem  fecerit  Mercurius,  exspes  somnum  cogito. 

Frustra  a  te  struuntur  mensa?,  temcre  advocantur  convive  ; 
ubi  ciceris  iste  ac  nucis  emptor  coenitat,  Transtiberinus  am- 
bulator aut  aliquis  de  ponte  negabit.  Emortualem  umbram 
quam  tuam  minus  fugiunt,  etiam  qui  umbram  decempedam 
colunt.  Domiccenium'  fanielici  quam  hujus  ineptias  malunt; 
et  nisi  huic  in  ccena  obstrepenti,  modimperator  insiliat,  incoe- 
nati  aufugient,  etiam  qui  domi  salem  lingunt. 

In  scena  rerum  novitius  trita  pro  novis  venditat.  Quibus 
cffutiendis  terram  caelo  miscet,  Araxi  Tiberim,  Ligeri  Tagum 
maritat.  Ut  ganniendi  ansam  arripiat  de  cometis,  diluviis, 
terrae  motibus  gaudet,  ostenta,  prodigia,  n^arla/iutrar  qua?  de- 
precantur  alii,  ipse  gratulanter  aspicit.     Quae  si  defecerint^ 

fabulonum  avias,  menalogorum  liras  eftundit.     Aut  quid  sibi 

•   Tlie  utmost  stretch  or  rack,  in  the  old  equuUus,  or  tormenting  engine,  was 
at  the  fifth  hole.     Vide  Magium  dp  Equuten. 

f  The  great  prater  in  Martial,  of  whom  the  Epigram. 
^   See  Horace,  Sat  ix,  "  Ibam  forte  via  sacra." 
§  Cadmus,  the  hangman  in  Juvenal,  "  dejicere  e  saxo  cives  et  tradere  Cadmo." 

'  Domicaeuiam.]     Vide    Martial    12,         -    rE^ar/ff/xara.]       Sic   MS-  qu.    n- 
Ixxvii,  6.  panvfiara  ? 


310  AMICO    CLARISSIMO    DE 

vagienti  olim  accident,  quid  heri  in  somniis  viderit  importune 
obtrudens,  figuligerulus  et  famigerator  effutilis  astantibus 
febrem  facit. 

Quod  iiumero  dicenduni  est,  amplo  fasce  complectitur,  nun- 
quam  nisi  fodiam  latus  de  tribus  capellis  dicturus :  dum  ho- 
ram  diei  sciscito,  si  ad  clepsydram  dimidiam  sileat,  pro  La- 
conismo  reputo ;  si  forte  de  ffitate  quasrito,  vitae  annales 
exaudio ;  ubi  ut  trivialia  acciderint,  longo  syrmate  diducens, 
languente  tandem  sole,  taedio  me  confossum  et  ranam  Seri- 
phiam^  dimittit. 

'TS.yjn-jyiav,  et  taciturnitatem  Pythagoricam,  rabiosa  silentia 
et  aegroti  somnia  reputat.  Harpocrati  laqueum  mandat,  ante 
aras  gannit,  et  sibimet  ipsi  Siren,  etiam  surdis  canit.  Fusti- 
bus  ogganiendum  est,  si  voles  obmutescat,  quo  solo  argumen- 
to  habet. 

Phonasco  indiget  Xa^uyy/^ws;  iste  et  Gradivus  Homericus,  qui 
mihi  assidue  intonat :  Cui  ego  vocem  nigram,  fuscam,  Nero- 
nianam  imprecor,  ut  vel  Ulysseo  commento  evadam,  aut  mol- 
liori  fato  cedam. 

Nescit  nugivendulus  linguulaca  y.ayXaZojv  et  littore  loqua- 
cior  quantos  loquatur  lapides,*  dum  me  multiloquio  captat, 
nee  quas  comica  facie  tragcedias  agat,  dum  renidente  ore  ju- 
gulat. 

Vappae  verborum  splendidam  suspendens  complacendi  he- 
deram  amici  specie  jugi  sermone  diffluit.  Interim  ruris  ple- 
nus  et  inficetiarum,  insulso  verborum  stromate,  salibus  pa- 
ganis  et  extra  poniEeria  natis,  bilem  mihi  ac  stomachum  com- 
movet  homunculus  iste  palmo  et  sago  dignus,  necnon  sudore 
quasi  Anglico  me  perfundit. 

Nee  mihi  tantum  crux.  Solitudinem  in  circo  facit  /U-a-vJ/;? axaj 
iste,  et  Alpha  blateratorum,  quo  cornicante  prassto  elabitur 
quicquid  uspiam  est  bucconum :  Tibicines,  Ascaules,  neenia- 
trices,  et  quae  laboranti  lunas  acclamant,  fuga  sibi  consulunt. 

Nee  lingua  tantum,  sed  et  calamo  furit  Ardelio  iste,  loquax 
scribaxque  eadem  vi.  Cujus  mihi  nugas  legere,  nedum  exi- 
gere  libet,  quare  dum  eas  oscitanter  percurro,  semper  leyaro- 

^  Seripliiavi.']  \i(\.  Tlin.  IJistcr.  Natu-         ^  lapidesJ]     Vid.  Phut.  Aulid,  2,  \, 
ral.  8,  68.  30,  "lapides  loquerjs." 


ENECANTE    GARRULO   SUO.  311 

xuXtxhv  spccto,  soppius  interjungo.  Quuntumlibct  cnini  chartae 
speciem  exaret,  me  opisthographis,  et  in  aversa  scriptis  male 
mulctat.  Nee  chartaj  sinu  satiatus  oram  plaguhi;  replet,  cam- 
pum  hinc  inde  et  inane  spatium  sulcat.  Nee  semper  intcgro 
vocum  diictu,  seel  et  notulis  niinutis  scriptitat.  A  quorum 
omnium  fastidio  flamma  et  ferro  unice  me  expedio :  atque  ita 
codicillorum  tyrannidem  ct  Cassiani  martyrium*  effugio. 

Nee  tantum  missilibus  nugis,  trici.sque  epistolicis,  sed  et 
schedarum  cumulis  sera  coronide  metuendis,  (quod  a  locute- 
leis  fieri  amat,)  amlcorum  optimos  lacessit.  Hujus  autem  ego 
ossa  potius  quam  scripta  legerem,  qua?  veratro^ebria,  iiuUoque 
ApoUine  concinnata,  Attalicis  conditionibus  non  evolverem ; 
ilia  itaque  aut  cloacina?  devoveo  aut  circum,  tonstrinas,  tur- 
bamque  si  quam  liabet  Pompeius,  vel  Agenoris  puella  otiosio- 
rem,*'  ablego. 

Seru  miselli  illicet  exaudiunt,  qui  huic  bombylio  aures 
mancipant,  dictum  enim  dicere  potius  quam  sermoni  colopho- 
nem  statuere  satagens  nunquam  ita  verborum  decoctor  est  ut 
conturbet,  nonunquam  ita  prodigus  ut  proterviam  faciat  nihil- 
que  dicendum  relinquat.  Invisentibus  itaque  de  plebe  ami- 
culis/  utramque  auriculam  nequiter  flagellat ;  obvios  quosque 
devorato  pudore  fabulamentis  atterit,  nee  nisi  elumbes  et  va- 
ricosos  dubio  sole  dimittit.  Nee  tantum  vitrea  fracta,  sed  et 
venena  loquitur  Niger  iste  et  rimosissimus  Ardelio,  dum 
(quod  linguacibus  solenne  est,)  susurro  nequissimus,  et  in  au- 
rem  garrulus,  convitia  hinc  inde  serit,  lites  nectit,  arcana  eli- 
minat,  quibus  mutiendis  amicos  una  ac  diem  lacerat.  Luscis 
invideat,  qui  reculas  amicorum  tarn  acute  inspicit,  ut  suas 
inepte  pervideat ;  nee  semet  ipsum  concutiens  aliena  resu- 
pinet. 

Si  quis  commento  Pythagorico  locus,  hunc  ego  cuculum  ex- 
uentem  hominem  subiisse,  nee  tamen  humano  indumento  vo- 
ealem  posuisse  characterem  autumo.  In  cicadam  dcnuo  diis 
iratis  migraturus ;  ut  in  deviis  fritinniens  arbusta  potius  quam 

•  Sanctus  Cassianus,  qui  cudicillis  et  stylis  discipulorum  confossus  et  contusus  interiit. 

^  veralro.]   Vid.  Persii,  1,51.— "non     .Partialis  Epigr.  lib.  ii,    1.   10. 
hie  est  Uias  Acti  Ebria  veratro. "  ,  „,bam  non  hahet  ofo«orem 

°  titrbamque  si  quam  habet,  Sfc]    Vid.  Pompeius,  vel  Agenoris  pocUa. 


312  AMICO   CLARISSIMO  ETC. 

auriculas  humanas  rumpat.  Ex  eo  forte  numero,  qui  in 
utero  materno  ante  ortum  vagiunt,  qui  in  somniis  ganniunt, 
Anginosi  strepunt,  nuUo  Gorgone  obmutescunt.  In  custodi- 
endis  Capitoliis  omnibus  certe  anseribus  potior.  Quo  presente 
nemo  in  excubiis,  nedum  in  contuberniis  dormitat.  Spartam, 
non  Anticyram  me  authore  religandus,  ut  vel  polymythiam 
Laconismo  commutet,  aut  flagris  ante  aras  caesus  fortem  taci- 
turnitatem  ediscat. 

Dimissis  manibus  et  grandi  gradu  frustra  hunc  effugio,  quern 
ludis  vix  evaserit.  Hue  aliquis  incitatum  Acbilles  sane  aut 
sub  Delphino  natus  sit  oportet,  cui  spem  fuga  fecerit.  Sed 
chiragra  ferocius  nianum  mihi  corripiens,  vinculis  quasi  Vulea- 
niis  fugam  mihi  sistit,  quam  dum  anhelanter  tento,  duni  chla- 
myde  excussa  mercari  satago,  deridiculo  sum  et  astantibus 
scenam  prassto. 

Totus  itaque  in  fermento  Scythicam  solitudinem  expeto, 
beatos  ad  Catadupas  Nili  natos  praedico,  et  surdos  in  ccelis 
statuo.  Latibula  misellus  quaerito,  ad  tenebras  confugio ;  so- 
lem  tamen  citius  quam  Aturopum  huncce  lateo.  Nisi  me 
nube  involutum  subduxerit  dea  quaepiam  Homerica,  illico  ad 
plures  propero. 

Desperabundus  itaque,  fractus,  ilia  ducens,  et  ut  ipsa  me 
salvetsalus,  nullo  thure  litaturus,  temere  'AXi^Ixumv  invoco, 
frustra  ccelum  peto,  quae  me  liberabit  Innocentia  aut  Mica 
Aurea?*  Ursis,  tigribus,  elepbantis,  ultro  nee  auctoratus 
adsto,  arenas  insuper  habeo,  qui  in  unico  Ardelione  tot  peril- 
los  reperio. 

Sed  glandium  satis.  Importunum  bunc  abige,  aut  postico 
falle.  Ocyus  Norvicum  advola,  ubi  te  opperiuntur  animae 
Candidas  juxta  ac  literatae.     Quare  si  sapias,  viam  vorabis. 

Vale! 

THOMAS  BROWNE. 


*  Alluding  unto  the  two  bears,  which  Constantius,  the  Enipeior,  kept;  the  one 
named  Innocentia,  the  other  Mica  Aurea;  which  he  purposely  kept,  lo  set  upon 
such  as  displeased  him,  as  Ammianus  Marcellinus  recordeth  ;  whereby  I  might  be 
delivered  from  the  tediousness  of  this  prater. 


ON    NORFOLK    BIRDS.  313 


[AN  ACCOUNT  OF  BIRDS  FOUND  IN  NORFOLK.] 

[MS.  SLOAK.   1830,  fol.  5—22;  &  31.] 

I  WILLINGLY  obey  your  command ;  in  setting  down  .such  birds, 
iishes,  and  other  animals,  which  for  many  years  I  have  ob- 
served in  Norfolk. 

Besides  the  ordinary  birds,  which  keep  constantly  in  the 
country,  many  arc  discoverable,  both  in  winter  and  summer, 
which  are  of  a  migrant  nature,  and  exchange  their  seats  ac- 
cording to  the  season.  Those  which  come  in  the  spring,  com- 
ing for  the  most  part  from  the  southward  ;  those  which 
come  in  the  autumn  or  winter,  from  the  northward ;  so  that 
they  are  observed  to  come  in  great  flocks,  with  a  north-east 
wind,  and  to  depart  with  a  south-west :  nor  to  come  only  in  flocks 
of  one  kind,  but  teal,  woodcocks,  fieldfares,  thrushes,  and  small 
birds,  to  come  and  hght  together ;  for  the  most  part  some 
hawks  and  birds  of  prey  attending  them. 

The  great  and  noble  kind  of  eagle,  called  aqiiila  Gesnert^ 
I  have  not  seen  in  this  country ;  but  one  I  met  with  in  this 
country,  brought  from  Ireland,  which  I  kept  two  years,  feed- 
ing with  whelps,  cats,  rats,  and  the  like  ;  in  all  that  while 
not  giving  it  any  water ;  which  I  afterward  presented  unto 
my  worthy  friend  Dr.  Scarburgh. 

Of  other  sorts  of  eagles,  there  are  several  kinds,  especi- 
ally of  the  liahjcetus  or  fen  eagles ;  some  of  three  yards 
and  a  quarter  from  the  extremity  of  the  wings ;'-  whereof  one 
being  taken  ahve,  grew  so  tame,  that  it  went  about  the  yard 
feeding  on  fish,  red  herrings,  flesh,  and  any  ofikls,  without 
the  least  trouble. 


'  aqui'aGcineri.'\  Fakochrytatos,  the  specimens,  however,  measure  more  than 

golden  eagle  ;  the  largest  of  the  genus,  seven  or  eight  feet  from  the  extremities 

known  to  breed  in  the  mountainous  parts  of  the  wings, 
of  Ireland.  A  specimen  of  F.  fulcus,   the  ring- 

'  some,   Sfc.'\     Haliertus    nisus, — falro  tailed  eagle,  has  been  caught  at  Cromer. 

ossifragui,   Lin.     The   sea  eagle.     Few  — G. 


i314  ON    NORFOLK    BIRDS. 

There  is  also  a  lesser  sort  of  eagle,  called  an  osprey,'  which 
hovers  about  the  fens  and  broads,  and  will  dip  his  claw,  and 
take  up  a  fish,  ofttimes ;  for  which  his  foot  is  made  of  an 
extraordinary  roughness,  for  the  better  fastening  and  hold- 
ing of  it ;  and  the  like  they  will  do  unto  coots. 

Aldrovandus  takes  particular  notice  of  the  great  number  of 
kites*  about  London  and  about  the  Thames.  We  are  not 
without  them  here,  though  not  in  such  numbers.  Here  are 
also  the  grey^  and  bald^  buzzard;  of  all  which  the  great 
number  of  broad-waters  and  warrens  make  no  small  number, 
and  more  than  in  woodland  counties. 

Cranes  are  often  seen  here  in  hard  winters,  especially  about 
the  champian  and  fieldy  part.  It  seems  they  have  been 
more  plentiful ;  for,  in  a  bill  of  fare,  when  the  mayor  enter- 
tained the  Duke  of  Norfolk,  I  met  with  cranes  in  a  dish.'^ 

In  hard  winters,  elks,''  a  kind  of  wild  swan,  are  seen  in  no 
small  number ;  in  whom,  and  not  in  common  swans,  is  re- 
markable that  strange  recurvation  of  the  wind  pipe  through 
the  sternon — and  the  same  is  also  observable  in  cranes.^  It 
is  probable  they  come  very  far ;  for  all  the  northern  discover- 
ers have  observed  them  in  the  remotest  parts ;  and  like  divers 
and  other  northern  birds,  if  the  winter  be  mild,  they  com- 
monly come  no  farther  southward  than  Scotland  ;  if  very 
hard,  they  go  lower,  and  seek  more  southern  places ;  which 
is  the  cause  that,  sometimes,  we  see  them  not  before  Christ- 
mas or  the  hardest  time  of  winter. 

A  white  large  and  strong-billed  fowl,  called  a  ganet,^  which 
seems  to  be  the  greater  sort  of  larus  ;  whereof  I  met  with  one 
killed  by  a  greyhound,  near  Swaff  ham ;  another  in  Marsh- 
land, while  it  fought,  and  would  not  be  forced  to  take  wing : 
another  entangled  in  a  herring-net,  which,  taken  alive, 
was  fed  with  herrings  for  a  while.     It  may  be  named  larus 


'  osprey.']     Falco  halitetus,  Lin.   The  tlic    osprey,   must    here   refer   to   some 

osprey.     Sometimes  met  witli  near  Cro-  other  species— perhaps  F.  arughwsus. 

mer G.  ''  dish.]     Cranes   are  no   longer  met 

*  kites.]     F.milvus.   L.  within  this  coimtry. 

*  greii.]     Probably  /'.  butco.  "  elks.]     Elk  ;    one    of    the    popular 
^  bald.]     The    bald     buzzard    is     a  names  given  to  the  wild  swan,  ^.  cy^was. 

name  usually  given  to  the  osprey.      Dr.         "  cranes.]     Willoughby. 
Browne,  however,  having  just  spoken  of        '  ganct.]     Pelecanm  ba.isarms,  L. 


ON    NORIOLK    BIRDS.  315 

major,  leticophcvoptenis ;  as  being  white  and  the  top  of  the 
wings  brown. 

In  hard  winters  I  have  also  met  with  that  large  and  strong- 
billed  fowl,  which  Clusius  describeth  by  the  name  of  skua 
Hoyerif-  sent  him  from  the  Faro  Islands,  by  Hoierus,  a  physi- 
cian ;  one  whereof  was  shot  at  Ilickling,  while  two  thereof 
were  feeding  upon  a  dead  horse. 

As  also  that  large  and  strong-billed  fowl,  spotted  like  a 
starling,  which  Clusius  nameth  mergus  major  Farrensis,^  as 
frequenting  the  Faro  Islands,  seated  above  Shetland  ;  one 
whereof  I  sent  unto  my  worthy  friend  Dr.  Scarburgh. 

Here  is  also  the  pica  marina*  or  sea-pie. 

Many  sorts  of  lari,  sea-mews,  and  cobs.  The  lams  major,^ 
in  great  abundance,  in  herring  time,  about  Yarmouth. 

Larus  alba^  or  pewits,  in  such  plenty,  about  Horsey,  that 
they  sometimes  bring  them  in  carts  to  Norwich,  and  sell  them 
at  small  rates  ;  and  the  country  people  make  use  of  their  eggs 
in  puddings,  and  otherwise,  great  plenty  thereof  have  bred 
about  Scoulton  Meers,  and  from  thence  sent  to  London. 

Larus  cinereus,''  greater  and  smaller,  but  a  coarse  meat, 
commonly  called  sterns. 

Hirumlo  marina  "  or  sea-swallow,  a  neat  white  and  forked- 
tail  bird  ;  but  much  longer  than  a  swallow. 

The  ciconia  or  stork,  I  have  seen  in  the  fens ;  and  some 
have  been  shot  in  the  marshes  between  this  and  Yarmouth. 

The  platea  or  shovelard,^  which  build  upon  the  tops  of  high 
trees.     They  have  formerly  built  in  the  Hernery,  at  Claxton 

'  skua  Hoyeri,']  Larus  catarractes,  L.  '  larus  a/6a.]     Larus  ridibundus,   L. 

Lestris  catarractes,  Teniin.     Skua  gull,  The  pewit  gull. 

Latham,  Pennant,  and  Bewick.  '  larus  cinereiis.'\     It  seems  not  very 

^  mergus  major  Farrensis.]  Doctor  easy  to  determine  the  species  here  re- 
Browne's  description  leaves  little  doubt  ferred  to: — certainly  not  the  "greater 
that  he  refers  to  colyvihus  glacialis,  L.  and  lesscr "  terns,  sterna  hiruiido  and 
the  great  northern  diver;  though  his  viinuta,  the  former  of  which  is  certainly 
synonym  is  not  correctly  given.  It  is  the  bird  next  mentioned  ;  and  neiilier  of 
called  by  Clusius,  colymbus  maiivius  fer-  which  is  called  the  stern,  which  is  sterna 
roensis,  sen  arclirus  ; — by  Willoughby,  fissipes.  He  may  refer  to  S.  vtiiiutn  and 
mergus  maximus  faroen.iis.  Jissipes ;  or  possibly,  but  not  su  probably, 

*  pica  marina.  ]  Ifrfmatopiis  ostrale-  to  L.  cinerarias  and  r/nius,  L.  the  red- 
^«*,   L.     The  oyster-catcher.  legged  and   common    gulls,  L.   cincreus 

*  larus  majorj]    This  name  was  given  major  and  minor  of  Aldrovandus. 

long  after,  by  Catesby,  to />.  a/r/ci7/a,  L.  "  hirundo  marina.'\     Sterna    liirundv, 

Dr.  Browne,  quoting  from  memory,  may  L. 

probably  refer  to //. /«jr;«,  L.     L.  rinc-  '  shnvcUird.'\    Plalalca  Icucorodia,  L. 

reus  maximus,  Will.     The  wagcl  gull.  fipoonbill. 


31G  ON    NORFOLK    BIRDS. 

and  Reedham ;  now  at  Trimley,  in  Suffolk.  They  come  in 
March,  and  are  shot  by  fowlers,  not  for  their  meat,  but  the 
handsomeness  of  the  same ;  remarkable  in  their  white  colour, 
copped  crown,  and  spoon  or  spatule-like  bill. 

Corvus  marinus,^  Cormorants ;  building  at  Reedham,  upon 
trees,  from  whence  King  Charles  the  First  was  wont  to  be 
supplied.  Beside  the  rock  cormorant,-  which  breedeth  in  the 
rocks,  in  northern  countries,  and  cometh  to  us  in  the  winter, 
somewhat  differing  from  the  other  in  largeness  and  whiteness, 
under  the  wings. 

A  sea-fowl  called  a  sherewater,^  somewhat  billed  like  a  cor- 
morant, but  much  lesser ;  a  strong  and  fierce  fowl,  hovering 
about  ships  when  they  cleanse  their  fish.  Two  were  kept  six 
weeks,  cramming  them  with  fish  which  they  would  not  feed  on 
of  themselves.  The  seamen  told  me  they  had  kept  them  three 
weeks  without  meat ;  and  I,  giving  over  to  feed  them,  found 
they  lived  sixteen  days  without  taking  anything. 

Bernacles,  brants,  (branta)*  are  common. 

Sheldrakes.     Sheledracus  Jonstoni. 

Barganders,  a  noble-coloured  fowl  (vulpanser)^  which  herd 
in  coney-burrows  about  Norrold  and  other  places. 

Wild  geese.     Anser ferns ^ 

Scotch  goose.     Anser  scoticus. 

Goosander.     Merganser? 

Mergus  acutirostris  speciosiis  or  loon,  a  handsome  and  spe- 
cious fowl,  cristated,''  and  with  divided  fin  feet  placed  very 
backward,  and  after  the  manner  of  all  such  which  the  Dutch 
call  arsvoote.  They  have  a  peculiar  formation  in  the  leg  bone, 
which  hath  a  long  and  sharp  process  extending  above  the 
thigh  bone.  They  come  about  April,  and  breed  in  the  broad- 
waters  ;  so  making  their  nest  on  the  water,  that  their  eggs 
are  seldom  dry  while  they  are  set  on. 

'  corvtts  marinus.]     Pclecamis   carbo,  Vulpanser,  Gesner  and   Aldiov,     Shel- 

L.     The  cormorant.  drake  or  burrow  duck.     "Barganders," 

'  rock  connorani.'\  Probably  the  crest-  the  name   given    this   species    by    Dr. 

cd  cormorant,  thought  to  be  but  a  variety  Browne,  may  possibly  be  a  corruption  of 

of  the  preceding.  burrow-ganders. 

^  s/icrewater.]       Procellaria    puffiiius,         ^  anser  ferus.']     Anas  anser  ferus,  L. 

L.     The  shearwater.  the  grey  lag  or  grey  leg. 

'^  branta.'\     /Ijias  erythropus  and  ber-         ''merganser.]    Mergus  merga7iser,L. 
nicla,  L.    The  bernacle  and  brent  goose.         ^  cristated.]  Podiceps  cristatus,  Lath. 

'^  vulpanser.]        Anas    tadorna,       L.  Cohjmbus,  L. 


ON    NORFOLK    BIRDS.  317 

Mergus  actttirostris  cinereus,^  which  seemeth  to  be  a  dif- 
ference of  the  fonner. 

Mergus  minor,^  the  smaller  divers  or  dab-chicks,  in  rivers 
and  broad  waters. 

Mergus  serratus,'  the  saw-billed  diver,  bigger  and  longer 
than  a  duck,  distinguished  from  other  divers  by  a  notable 
saw-bill,  to  retain  its  slippery  prey,  as  Hving  much  upon  eels, 
whereof  we  have  seldom  failed  to  find  some  in  their  bellies. 

Divers  other  sorts  of  dive-fowl  -.  more  remarkable  the  t?ius- 
tela  fusca,^  and  mustela  rariegata,*  the  grey  dun,  and  the 
variegated  or  partj-coloured  weasel,  so  called  from  the  re- 
semblance it  beareth  unto  a  weasel  in  the  head. 

Many  sorts  of  wild  ducks  which  pass  under  names  well- 
known  unto  fowlers,  though  of  no  great  signification,  as  smee, 
widgeon,  arts,  ankers,  noblets: — 

The  most  remarkable  are,  anas  plaiyrhinchos^  a  remark- 
ably broad-billed  duck. 

And  the  sea-pheasant.^  holding  some  resemblance  unto 
that  bird  in  some  feathers  in  the  tail. 

Teals,  querquedula,'  wherein  scarce  any  place  more  abound- 
ing. The  condition  of  the  countrv ,  and  the  very  many  de- 
coys,  especially  between  Norwich  and  the  sea,  making  this 
place  very  much  to  abound  in  wild  fowl. 

FuUcee  cottce,^  coots,  in  verj-  great  flocks  upon  the  broad 
waters.  L  pon  the  appearance  of  a  kite  or  buzzard,  I  have 
seen  them  unite  from  all  parts  of  the  shore,  in  strange  num- 
bers ;  when,  if  the  kite  stoops  near  them,  they  will  fling  up, 
and  spread  such  a  flash  of  water  with  their  wings,  that  they 
will  endanger  the  kite,  and  so  keep  him  off*  again  and  again 
in  open  opposition;  and  a  handsome  provision  they  make 
about  their  nest  against  the  same  bird  of  prey,  by  bending  and 


»  merpu  aaUirottrit  cimercut.}   Podi-         *  pZa/yrAwcfcot.]    J.  ctypeaU,  L.  The 
eefu  vimmUr,  Ltth.  ShoreUer. 


•  mergut  mimm:']    Ptdieept  wumer,  lb.  ''  ata-pheasant.']     J.  acuta,  L.     The 
'  mtrgut  MTTotet.]     ProbaUy  •frjiu  pintail  duck.     Sometimes  taken  in  the 

frmUr,  L.  Hercpstead  decoy. — G. 

'  wtutUla  futca.']     itcrpit  cattor,  L.  "  qmerqwedMUu]    A.  crrrra.   L.    Qtirr- 

Tbe  dun  diver  ?  qwedmla    of  Gesner.     Aldrovandn*  and 

*  wuutela  mriegaU.}     Probablv  «Ber-  Ray  scarcely  disdt«aisbed  tbe  teal  from 
gms  aileUtu,  L.    The  saew  ;  whidi  Ges-  the'  forgamy,  A.  gmtr^mttiulm,  L. 

ner  calls  .V.  wmtUlmru.  •  fu^licr  «>/<«■.]  f.  «tr«,  L.  The  coot. 


318  ON    NORFOLK    BIRDS. 

twining  the  rushes  and  reeds  so  about  them,  that  they  cannot 
stoop  at  their  young  ones,  or  the  dam  while  she  sitteth. 

Gallimda  aquatica,^  moor  hen,  and  a  kind  of  ralla  aqua' 
tica,^  or  water  rail. 

An  onocrotahis,  or  pelican,  shot  upon  Horsey  Fen,  May 
22,  1663,  which,  stuffed  and  cleansed,  I  yet  retain.  It  was 
three  yards  and  a  half  between  the  extremities  of  the  wings ; 
the  chowle  and  beak  answering  the  usual  description ;  the 
extremities  of  the  wings  for  a  span  deep  brown ;  the  rest  of 
the  body  white  ;  a  fowl  which  none  could  remember  upon  this 
coast.  About  the  same  time  I  heard  one  of  the  king's  pelicans 
was  lost  at  St.  James's;  *  perhaps  this  might  be  the  same. 

Anas  arctica  Clusii,^  which  though  he  placeth  about  the 
Faro  islands,  is  the  same  we  call  a  puffin,  common  about  An- 
glesea,  in  Wales,  and  sometimes  taken  upon  our  seas,  not  suf- 
ficiently described  by  the  name  of  puffinus  ;  the  bill  being  so 
remarkably  differing  from  other  ducks,  and  not  horizontally, 
but  meridionally,  formed,  to  feed  in  the  clefts  of  the  rocks,  of 
insects,  shell-fish,  and  others. 

The  great  number  of  rivers,  rivulets,  and  plashes  of  water 
makes  herns  and  herneries  to  abound  in  these  parts  ;  young 
herns  being  esteemed  a  festival  dish,  and  much  desired  by 
some  palates. 

The  arclea  stellaris,  botaurus,  or  bitour,  is  also  common, 
and  esteemed  the  better  dish.  In  the  belly  of  one  I  found  a 
frog  in  a  hard  frost  at  Christmas.  Another,  kept  in  a  gar- 
den two  years,  feeding  it  with  fish,  mice,  and  frogs ;  in  de- 
fect whereof,  making  a  scrape  "*  for  sparrows,  and  small  birds, 
the  bitour  made  shift  to  maintain  herself  upon  them. 

Bistardce,  or  bustards,  are  not  unfrequent  in  the  champian 
and  fieldy  part  of  this  country.  A  large  bird,  accounted  a 
dainty  dish,  observable  in  the  strength  of  the  breast-bone  and 
short  heel.     Lays  an  egg  much  larger  than  a  turkey. 


®  gaUinula  aquatica.^     The  moor  hen  Ur.  Browne. — See  Bray's  Evelyn,  i,  373. 

is  gallinula  chloropus,  Lath,  (fidica,  h.)  ■*  anas  arctica  Clusii.\  Alca  arctica,  L. 

'  ralla   aquatica.'\    llallus    uquaticus,  *  scrape.]     A   scrape,  or  scrap,  is  a 

L.      G.  aqaatica,  of  some  authors.  term  used  in  Norfolk,  for  a  quantity  of 

'  St.  James's.']      Hut  for  this  informa-  chaff,  mixed  witli  grain,  frequently  laid 

tion,  the  pelican  might  probably  have  been  as  a  decoy  to  attract  small  birds,  for  the 

added  to  our  Fauna  on  the  authority  of  purpose  of  shooting  or  netting  them. 


ON    NORFOLK    BIRDS.  319 

Morinellns,^  or  dotterell,  about  Thetford,  and  tlie  chain- 
pian,  which  comes  unto  us  in  September  and  March,  staying 
not  long,  and  is  an  excellent  dish. 

There  is  also  a  sea  dotterell  somewhat  less  but  better  co- 
loured than  the  former. 

Godwyts;  taken  chiefly  in  marshland;  though  other  parts 
are  not  without  them ;  accounted  the  daintiest  dish  in  Enff- 
land  ;  and,  I  think,  for  the  bigness,  of  the  biggest  price. 

Gnats,  or  knots,^  a  small  bird,  which,  taken  with  nets,  grow 
excessively  fat,  being  mewed  and  fed  with  corn.  A  candle 
lighted  in  the  room,  they  feed  day  and  night;  and  when  they 
are  at  their  height  of  fatness,  they  begin  to  grow  lame,  and 
are  then  killed,  as  at  their  prime,  and  apt  to  decline. 

Erythrojitis,  or  red-shank  ;^  a  bird  common  in  the  marshes, 
and  of  common  food,  but  no  dainty  dish. 

A  may  chit,^  a  small  dark  grey  bird,  little  bigger  than  a 
stint,  of  fatness  beyond  any.  It  comes  in  May  into  Marsh- 
land and  other  parts,  and  abides  not  above  a  month  or  six 
weeks. 

Stints  ^  in  great  number  about  the  sea  shore  and  marshes, 
about  Stift'key,  Burnham,  and  other  parts. 

Another  small  bird,  somewhat  larger  than  a  stint,  called  a 
churr,^  and  is  commonly  taken  among  them. 

Plucialis,  or  plover,"  green  and  grey,  in  great  plenty  about 
Thetford,  and  many  other  heaths.  They  breed  not  with  us, 
but  in  some  parts  of  Scotland,  and  plentifully  in  Iceland. 

The  lapwing  or  vatiellus,^  common  over  all  the  heaths. 

Cuckoos  of  two  sorts  ;  the  one  far  exceeding  the  other  in 
bigness.*  Some  have  attempted  to  keep  them  in  warm  rooms 
all  the  winter,  but  it  hath  not  succeeded.  In  their  migration 
they  range  very  far  northward ;  for  in  the  summer  they  are 
to  be  found  as  high  as  Iceland. 

Avis  pugnaiisi^  ruffe  ;  a  marsh  bird  of  the  greatest  variety 
of  colours,  every  one  therein  somewhat  varying  from  other. 

*  morinellus.]CharadriusmorineUus,L.  *  cluirr.]     Or  pitrre  .' 

'knots.]      Trinpa  canutus,   L.  ^  jAmer.]  Charadri-j.i  phivialis,   L. 

''  red-shank.]     Scolopoj  calidris,   L.  '  vanellus.]     Tringa  lanellus,   L. 

*  a  may  chit.]     Probably  one  of  the         *  bigness,]  Diflering  only  in  age  or 
genus  tringfi.  sex. 

^stints.]      Tringa  cinclus.  ^  avis  pugnans.]     Tringa  pugnax.   L. 


320  ON    NORFOLK    BIRDS. 

The  female  is  called  a  reeve,  without  any  ruff  about  the  neck, 
lesser  than  the  other,  and  hardly  to  be  got.  They  are  al- 
most all  cocks,  and,  put  together,  fight  and  destroy  each 
other ;  and  prepare  themselves  to  fight  like  cocks,  though 
they  seem  to  have  no  other  offensive  part  but  the  bill.  They 
lose  their  ruffs  about  the  autumn,  or  beginning  of  winter,  as 
we  have  observed,  keeping  tliem  in  a  garden  from  May  till 
the  next  spring.  They  most  abound  in  Marshland,  but  are 
also  in  good  number  in  the  marshes  between  Norwich  and 
Yarmouth. 

O^picus  tnartius,^  or  wookspeck,  many  kinds.  The  green, 
the  red,^  the  leucomelanus,^  or  neatly  marked  black  and  white, 
and  the  cinereus  ^  or  dun-coloured  little  bird,  called  a  nut- 
hack.  Remarkable,  in  the  larger,  are  the  hardness  of  the 
bill  and  skull,  and  the  long  nerves  which  tend  unto  tlie 
tongue,  whereby  it  shooteth  out  the  tongue  above  an  inch 
out  of  the  mouth,  and  so  hcks  up  insects.  They  make  the 
holes  in  trees  without  any  consideration  of  the  winds  or  quar- 
ters of  heaven ;  but  as  the  rottenness  thereof  best  affordeth 
convenience. 

Black  heron. ^  Black  on  the  sides,  the  bottom  of  the  neck, 
with  white  grey  on  the  outside,  spotted  all  along  with  black 
on  the  inside.  A  black  coppe  of  small  feathers  some  a  span 
long;  bill  pointed  and  yellow,  three  inches  long;  back,  heron- 
coloured,  intermixed  with  long  white  feathers;  the  strong 
feathers  black ;  the  breast  black  and  white,  most  black ;  the 
legs  and  feet  not  green,  but  an  ordinary  dark  cock  colour. 

The  number  of  rivulets,  becks,  and  streams,  whose  banks 
are  beset  with  willows  and  alders,  which  give  occasion  of 
easier  fishing  and  stooping  to  the  water,  makes  that  hand- 
some-coloured bird  abound,  which  is  called  alcedo  ispida,  or 
the  king-fisher.  They  build  in  holes  about  gravel-pits, 
wherein  is  to  be  found  a  great  quantity  of  small  fish-bones  ; 
and  lay  very  handsome  round  and,  as  it  were,  polished  eggs. 


"  picas  martius.^     The  black   wood-  ^  cinerens.'\    Sitta  Europea,  Lin.   Nut- 
pecker,  extremely  rare  in  this  country,  hatch. 
"  Habitat  vix  iriAnglia,"  says  L'mnxus,  1  black  Aero?;.]      No    British    species 

7  red.]     Probably  P.  major,  L.  appears  to  correspond  so  nearly  with  Dr. 

*  Icucomelanus.']     P.  minor,  L.  Browne's  description  as  Ardea  Purpurea. 


ON    NORFOLK    BfRDS.  O.'.U 

An  hobby-bird  ;  ^  so  called  because  it  comes  cither  with, 
or  a  little  before,  the  hobbies,  in  the  spring.  Of  the  bigness 
of  a  thrush,  coloured  and  paned  like  a  hawk ;  marvellously 
subject  to  the  vertigo,  and  are  sometimes  taken  in  those 
fits. 

Upiipa,  or  lioopebird,  so  named  from  its  note ;  a  gallant 
marked  bird,  which  I  have  often  seen,  and  it  is  not  hard  to 
shoot  them. 

Ringlestones,^  a  small  white  and  black  bird,  like  a  wagtail, 
and  seems  to  be  some  kind  of  motacilla  marina,  common 
about  Yarmouth  sands.  They  lay  their  eggs  in  the  sand  and 
shingle,  about  June,  and,  as  the  Eringo  diggers  tell  me,  not 
set  them  flat,  but  upright,  like  eggs  in  salt. 

The  arcuata '  or  curlew,  frequent  about  the  sea-coast. 

There  is  also  a  handsome  tall  bird,  remarkably  eyed,  and 
with  a  bill  not  above  two  inches  long,  commonly  called  a  stone 
curlew;^  but  the  note  thereof  more  resembleth  that  of  a  green 
plover,  and  breeds  about  Thetford,  about  the  stone  and  shin- 
gle of  the  rivers, 

Avoseta  called  [a]  shoeing-horn,  a  tall  black  and  white  bird, 
with  a  bill  semicircularly  reclining  or  bowed  upward  ;  so  that 
it  is  not  easy  to  conceive  how  it  can  feed;  answerable  unto 
the  avoseta  Ihalorum,  in  Aldrovandus,  a  summer  marshbird, 
and  not  unfrequent  in  Marshland. 

A  yarwhelp,''  so  thought  to  be  named  from  its  note,  a  grey 
bird  intermingled  with  some  whitish  yellowish  feathers,  some- 
what long-legged,  and  the  bill  about  an  inch  and  a  half;  es- 
teemed a  dainty  dish. 

Loxlas''  or  currirosfra,  a  bird  a  little  bigger  than  a  thrush, 
of  fine  colours  and  pretty  note,  diflercntly  from  other  birds, 
the  upper  and  lower  bill  crossing  each  other ;  of  a  very  tame 
nature  ;  comes  about  the  besinning  of  summer.  I  have  known 
them  kept  in  cages ;  but  not  to  outlive  the  winter. 

*  hobby-bird.]       Surely    tliis   may   be  *  curlew.]    Charadriiis  cedicnemus,  L. 
1/unx   torquilla,    L.    the    wryneck  ;     the  The  great  or   Norfolk  plover,   or  thick- 
singular  motion  of  its  head  and  neck  was  kneed  bustard, 
probably  attributed  to  vertigo.                             »  i/arwhelp.]  Scolopax  /Egocephala,  L. 

^  ringlcsloties.]      Charadrius  hiaticula,  is  called  the  yarwhclp  : — but  the  bill  is 

L.     The   ring  dotterel.     Plentiful   near  four  inches  long. 
Blakeney.— 6'.  i  loxias.]     The  crossbill.      Aoria  cur. 

'  areHala,]     Scolopai  arqiiata,   L.  virostra,  L. 

VOL.    IV.  V 


322  ON    NORFOLK    BIRDS. 

A  kind  of  coccothraustes,^  called  a  coble-bird,  bigger  than 
a  thrush,  finely  coloured  and  shaped  like  a  bunting.  It  is 
chiefly  seen  in  summer,  about  cherry-time. 

A  small  bird  of  prey,  called  a  birdcatcher,  about  the  big- 
ness of  a  thrush,  and  linnet-coloured,  with  a  longish  white 
bill,  and  sharp ;  of  a  very  fierce  and  wild  nature,  though 
kept  in  a  cage,  and  fed  with  flesh ; — a  kind  of  lanius. 

A  dorhawk  9  or  kind  of  accipiter  imiscarius,  conceived  to 
have  its  name  from  feeding  upon  flies  and  beetles  ;  of  a  wood- 
cock colour,  but  paned  like  a  hawk ;  a  very  little  pointed  bill; 
large  throat ;  breedeth  with  us ;  and  lays  a  marvellous  hand- 
some spotted  egg.  Though  I  have  opened  many,  I  could 
never  find  any  thing  considerable  in  their  maws.  Caprimnlgus. 
Avis  trogloiUtica^  or  chock,  a  small  bird,  mixed  of  black 
and  white,  and  breeding  in  coney-burrows  ;  whereof  the  war- 
rens are  full  from  April  to  September ;  at  which  time  they 
leave  the  country.  They  are  taken  with  an  hobby  and  a  net ; 
and  are  a  very  good  dish. 

Spermalegous  rooks,  which,  by  reason  of  the  great  quantity 
of  corn-fields  and  rook  groves,  are  in  great  plenty.  The 
young  ones  are  commonly  eaten  ;  sometimes  sold  in  Norwich 
market,  and  many  are  killed  for  their  livers,  in  order  to  the 
cure  of  the  rickets. 

Crows,  as  every  where ;  and  also  the  corvus  variegatus,~ 
or  pied  crow,  with  dun  aud  black  interchangeable.  They 
come  in  the  winter,  and  depart  in  the  summer ;  and  seem  to 
be  the  same  which  Clusius  describeth  in  the  Faro  Islands, 
from  whence  perhaps  these  come.  I  have  seen  them  very 
common  in  Ireland  ;  but  not  known  in  many  parts  of  England. 
Corvus  major;  ravens;  in  good  plenty  about  the  city; 
which  makes  so  few  kites  to  be  seen  hereabout.  They  build 
in  woods  very  early,  and  lay  eggs  in  February. 

Among  the  many  monedidas  or  jackdaws,  I  could  never  in 
these  parts  observe  the  jujrrhocorax  or  Cornish  chough,  with 

*  coccothraustes.^     Loria  coccothraus-  tended  a  kind  of  wren.     He  refers  very 

ie.i,  L.     The  grossheak.  possibly    to    the    wheatear,     MotacUla 

^  dorhawk.l     Caprimulgiis  Europmis,  ccnanthe,  L. 

L.     The  goat-sucker.  '  cm-vns  variegalus.']     Corvus  comix, 

'  avis  trogloditica.J     By  the  term  avis  L.     The  hooded  crow. 
frnglodi/ica,     Dr.    Browne  probably   in- 


ON  NouroLK  nir.Ds.  .'J23 

red  legs  and  bill,  to  be  commonly  seen  in  Cornwall;  and, 
though  there  be  here  very  great  store  of  partridges,  yet  the 
French  red-legged  partridge  is  not  to  be  met  with.'  The 
ralla  or  rail,  we  have  counted  a  dainty  dish ;  as  also  no  small 
number  of  quails.  The  heathpoult,'  common  in  the  north, 
is  unknown  here,  as  also  the  grouse ;  though  I  have  heard 
some  have  been  seen  about  Lynn.  The  calandrier  or  great- 
crested  lark,  (galcrita)  I  have  not  met  with  here,^  though 
with  three  other  sorts  of  larks; — the  ground-lark,  wood-lark, 
and  tit-lark. 

Stares  or  starlings,  in  great  numbers.  Most  remarkable  in 
their  numerous  flocks,  which  I  have  observed  about  the  au- 
tumn, when  they  roost  at  night  in  the  marshes,  in  safe  places, 
upon  reeds  and  alders ;  which  to  observe,  I  went  to  the 
marshes  about  sunset;  where  standing  by  their  usual  place 
of  resort,  I  observed  very  many  flocks  flying  from  all  quar- 
ters, which,  in  less  than  an  hour's  space,  came  all  in,  and 
settled  in  innumerable  numbers  in  a  small  compass. 

Great  variety  of  finches  and  other  small  birds,  whereof 
one  very  small,  called  a  whin-bird,  marked  with  fine  yellow 
spots,  and  lesser  than  a  wren.  There  is  also  a  small  bird, 
called  a  chipper,  somewhat  resembling  the  former,  which 
comes  in  the  spring,  and  feeds  upon  the  first  buddings  of 
birches  and  other  early  trees. 

A  kind  o^  anthus,  goldfinch,  or  fool's  coat,  commonly  called 
a  draw-water,  finely  marked  with  red  and  yellow,  and  a  white 
bill,  which  they  take  with  trap-cages,  in  Norwich  gardens, 
and,  fastening  a  chain  about  them,  tied  to  a  box  of  water,  it 
makes  a  shift,  with  bill  and  leg,  to  draw  up  the  water  in  to  it 
from  the  little  pot,  hanging  by  the  chain  about  a  foot  below. 

On  the  14th  of  ]May,  1664,  a  very  rare  bird  was  sent  me, 
killed  about  Crostwick,  which  seemed  to  be  some  kind  of  jay. 
The  bill  was  black,  strong,  and  bigger  than  a  jay's ;  some- 
what yellow  claws,  tipped  Idack ;  three  before  and  one  claw 
behind.     The  whole  bird  not  so  big  as  a  jay. 


'  French,  S;c.]     Our  Norfolk  sporls-  *  heatlipoiilt.]     Or  black  grouse, 

men  can  bear  witness  that  this  species  is  ^  tiere.^  Nor  any  one  else,  in  England, 

now  to  be   iVnind  in  various  parts  of  the  if  he   refers    to   alanda  crhtala,  which 

county.  is  the  -/.  sylvestris   ^alerita  of  Frisch. 

V  -2 


324  ON    NORFOLK    BIRDS. 

The  head,  neck,  and  throat,  of  a  violet  colour ;  the  back 
and  upper  parts  of  the  wing,  of  a  russet  yellow ;  the  fore  part 
of  the  wing,  azure ;  succeeded  downward  by  a  greenish  blue ; 
then  on  the  flying  feathers,  bright  blue ;  the  lower  parts  of 
the  wing  outwardly,  of  a  brown;  inwardly,  of  a  merry  blue; 
the  belly,  a  light  faint  blue ;  the  back,  toward  the  tail,  of  a 
purple  blue ;  the  tail,  eleven  feathers  of  a  greenish  colour ; 
the  extremities  of  the  outward  feathers  thereof,  white  with  an 
eye  of  green. — Garrulus  argentoratensis.^ 

6  garrulus  argcuioratensis,]     Coracias  garrula,  L.     The  roller. 


</ 


OF    FlSlltS.  .'JJio 


[AN  ACCOUNT  OF  FISHES,  etc.  FOUND  IN 
NORFOLK  AND  ON  THE  COAST.] 

[ms.  SLOAN.  1S30,  fol.  23—30,  &  32— 3S  ;  &  1S82,'  Ibl.  145,  6.] 

It  may  well  seem  no  easy  matter  to  give  any  considerable  ac- 
count of  fishes  and  animals  of  the  sea ;  wherein,  't  is  said, 
that  there  are  things  creeping  innumerable,  both  small  and 
great  beasts,  because  they  live  in  an  element  wherein  they  are 
not  so  easily  discoverable.  Notwithstanding,  probable  it  is 
that  after  this  long  navigation,  search  of  the  ocean,  bays,  creaks, 
estuaries,  and  rivers,  that  there  is  scarce  any  fish  but  hath 
been  seen  by  some  man ;  for  the  large  and  breathing  sort 
thereof  do  sometimes  discover  themselves  above  water,  and 
the  other  are  in  such  numbers  that  at  one  time  or  other  they 
are  discovered  and  taken,  even  the  most  barbarous  nations 
being  much  addicted  to  fishing  ;  and  in  America  and  the  ncM 
discovered  world  the  people  were  well  acquainted  with  fishes 
of  sea  and  rivers,  and  the  fishes  thereof  have  been  since  de- 
scribed by  industrious  writers.  Pliny  seems  too  short  in  the 
estimate  of  their  number  in  the  ocean,  who  reckons  up  but 
one  hundred  and  seventy-six  species ;  but  the  seas  being  now 
farther  known  and  searched,  Bellonius  much  enlargeth  ;  and 
in  his  book  of  birds  thus  delivereth  himself: — "  Although  I 
think  it  impossible  to  reduce  the  same  unto  a  certain  number, 
yet  I  may  freely  say,  that  't  is  beyond  the  power  of  man  to 
find    out  more    than   five  hundred  species  of  fishes,  three 


'   1SS2.]      The  first  para^aph  of  this  tended  the  account  of  fishes,  &c..    to  be 

paper  I  met  with  in   18S2  Ms.  sloan.  distinct  from  that  of  birds,   and  wrote 

preceded  by  the  words  " /ff(7/in^/y  oicy  this   as   an   introductory    paragraph.     I 

your  CO ■'  which  were  left  unfi-  have    therefore   so  preserved  it ;   though 

nished,  and  struck  througlj  with  the  pen.  both  subjects  are  mentioned  in  the  first 

The    author  probably  at  one    time   in-  paragraph  of  the  tract  on  birds. 


) 


326  OF  FISHES. 

hundred  sorts  of  birds,  more  than  three  hundred  sorts  of 
four-footed  animals,  and  forty  diversities  of  serpents." '^ 

Of  fishes  sometimes  the  larger  sort  are  taken  or  come 
ashore.  A  spermaceti  whale,  of  sixty-two  feet  long,  near 
Wells ;  another  of  the  same  kind,  twenty  years  before,  at 
Hunstanton ;  and,  not  far  off,  eight  or  nine  came  ashore,  and 
two  had  young  ones  after  they  were  foi'saken  by  the  water.^ 

A  grampus,  above  sixteen  feet  long,  taken  at  Yarmouth, 
four  years  ago.* 

The  Tursio,  or  porpoise,  ^is  common.  The  dolphin''  more 
rare,  though  sometimes  taken,  which  many  confound  with  the 
porpoise  ;  but  it  hath  a  more  waved  line  along  the  skin ; 
sharper  toward  the  tail ;  the  head  longer,  and  nose  more  ex- 
tended ;  which  maketh  good  the  figure  of  Rondeletius ;  the 
flesh  more  red,  and,  well  cooked,  of  very  good  taste  to  most 
palates,  and  exceedeth  that  of  porpoise. 

The  miuliis  marinus^  sea-calf,  or  seal,  which  is  often  taken 
sleeping  on  the  shore.  Five  years  ago,  one  was  shot  in  the 
river  of  Norwich,  about  Surlingham  Ferry,  having  continued  in 
the  river  for  divers  months  before.  Being  an  amphibious  ani- 
mal, it  may  be  carried  about  alive,  and  kept  long  if  it  can  be 
brought  to  feed.  Some  have  been  kept  for  many  months  in 
ponds.  The  pizzell,  the  bladder,  the  cariilago  eyisiformis, 
the  figure  of  the  throttle,  the  clustered  and  racemose  form 
of  the  kidneys,  the  flat  and  compressed  heart,  are  remark- 


'  serpents.']  Naturalists  now  enumc-  low  in  folds.  There  were  two  spout- 
rate  800  species  of  beasts;  and  at  least  holes  close  together,  in  the  middle  of 
50,000  of  insects Gray.  the   head.      Almost   an    inch   and    half 

^  sometimes,  t'jc.]  A  whale,  .58  feet  thickness  of  blubber ;  and  the  oil  which 
long,  was  cast  ashore  at  Overstrand,  \\\  has  been  made  from  it  is  remarkably 
the  spring  of  IS22  (I  think);  and  ano-  <ino.  'i\\e  wliale-bone  friiiirc'miii  monlh 
ther  went  spouting  past  Cromer,  in  the  ivas  nearly  white:  the  length  of  the  jaw- 
autumn  of  the  same  year.  bones,  3  feet  7  inches.     It  did  not  look 

Towards   the  end  of  1829,  a  whale,  tempting  enough  to  make  me  bring  any  of 

only  24  feet  long,  was  cast  ashore  and  the  Uieataway;   but  at  Northrepps  hall, 

killed  at  Uunton.     He  was  of  the  Bahpna  a  steak  was  cooked,  and  tasted  like  teu- 

(iivision,  with  a  whale-bone  mouth,  and  der  beef. — G, 

no  teeth;  and,  as  far  as  I  could  make  ^  grampus,  c^r.]  Oct.  1827,  the  fish- 
out,  I  think  it  was  one  of  the  Loops  balcv-  ernien  saw  a  fish  which  they  called  a 
na  species — as  the   man  who  made  the  grampus. — G. 

capture  told  me,  the  nose  was  very  sharp  ^  tursio  or  porpoise.]     Delphinus  pho- 

pointed — but  it  was  much  hacked  before  coena,    L. 

I  saw  it.     I  found  the  extreme  width  of  <>  dolphin.]     D-  Delphis,  L. 

the  tail  was 'i  feet  11  inches.  It  was  dark,  ''  riliclns  marinus,]  J'hocavllitUna,L. 
nearly  black  on  the  back,  and  white  be- 


OF  risuEs.  0^7 


able  ill  it.     In  stonuiclis  of  all  that  I  have  opencii,  I  have 
Ibiind  many  worms. 

1  have  also  observed  a  scolopendra  cetacea  of  about  ten 
[inches]  long,  answering  the  figure  in  Rondeletius,  which  the 
maruiers  told  me  was  taken  in  these  seas. 

A  pristis  serra,^  or  saw-Hsh,  taken  about  Lynn,  commonly 
mistaken  for  a  sword-fish,  and  answers  the  figure  in  Ronde- 
letius. 

A  sword-fish,  {iph'ins,  or  gladlus,^)  entangled  in  the  her- 
ring-nets at  Yarmouth,  agreeable  unto  the  icon  in  Johnsto- 
nus,  with  a  smooth  sword,  not  unlike  the  gladius  of  Ronde- 
letius, about  a  yard  and  a  half  hmg ;  no  teeth ;  eyes  very 
remarkable ;  enclosed  in  a  hard  cartilaginous  coverclc,  about 
the  bigness  of  a  good  apple ;  the  vitreous  humour  plentiful ; 
the  chrystalline  larger  than  a  nutmeg,  remaining  clear,  sweet, 
and  untainted,  when  the  rest  of  the  eye  was  under  a  deep  cor- 
ruption, which  we  kept  clear  and  limpid  many  months,  until 
an  hard  frost  split  it,  and  manifested  the  foliations  thereof. 

It  is  not  unusual  to  take  several  sorts  of  canis,  or  dog-fish, 
great  and  small,  which  pursue  the  shoal  of  herrings  and  other 
fish;  but  this  year  [1G62]  one  was  taken  entangled  in  the 
herring-nets,  about  nine  feet  in  length,  answering  the  last 
figure  of  Johnstonus,  lib.  7,  under  the  name  of  canis  carc/ia- 
rias  alter ;  and  was,  by  the  teeth  and  five  gills,  one  kind  of 
shark,  particularly  remarkable  in  the  vastness  of  the  optic 
nerves  and  three  conical  hard  pillars,  which  supported  the 
extraordinary  elevated  nose,  which  we  have  reserved  with  the 
skull.     The  seamen  called  this  kind,  a  scrape. 

Sturio,  or  sturgeon,  so  common  on  the  other  side  of  the 
sea,  about  the  mouth  of  the  Elbe,  come  seldom  into  our 
creeks,  though  some  have  been  taken  at  Yarmouth,  and  more 
in  the  great  Ouse,  by  Lynn;  but  their  heads  not  so  sharp 
as  represented  in  the  icons  of  Rondeletius  and  Johnstonus. 

Sometimes  we  meet  with  a  mola,  or  moon-fish,'  so  called 
from  some  resemblance  it  hath  of  a  crescent  in  the  extreme 
part  of  the   body  from  one  fin  unto  another.     One  being  ta- 

^  prist  is  scrra.]     Squalns  pristis,  V,.  '  mold,  or  mooti -fish.]    Tctraodonmola, 

9  iphias  or  gladiits.]     Xiphias  glarii-      L.      Sun-fi^'i. 
IIS,  L. 


328  OF  risiiES. 

ken  near  the  shore  at  Yarmouth,  before  break  of  day,  seemed 
to  shiver,  and  grunt  like  a  hog,  as  authors  dehver  of  it. 
The  flesh  being  hard  and  nervous,  it  is  not  hke  to  afford  a 
good  dish  ;  but  from  the  Uver,  which  is  large,  white,  and  ten- 
der, somewhat  may  be  expected.  The  gills  of  these  fish 
we  found  thick  beset  with  a  kind  of  sea-louse.  In  the  year 
1667,  a  mola  was  taken  at  Monsley,  which  weighed  200  pounds. 

The  rana  piscatrix,  or  frog-fish,^  is  sometimes  found  in  a 
very  large  magnitude,  and  we  have  taken  the  care  to  have  them 
cleaned  and  stuffed,  wherein  we  observed  all  the  appendices 
whereby  they  catch  fishes,  but  much  larger  than  are  described 
in  the  icons  of  Johnstonus,  lib.  xi,  fig.  8. 

The  sea-wolf,^  or  lupus  nostras,  of  Schoneveldus,  remark- 
able for  its  spotted  skin  and  notable  teeth, — incisores,  dog- 
teeth and  grinders.  The  dog-teeth,  both  in  the  jaws  and 
palates,  scarce  answerable  by  any  fish  of  that  bulk,  for  the 
like  disposure,  strength,  and  solidity. 

Mustela  Marina;^  called  by  some  a  weazel  ling,  which, 
salted  and  dried,  becomes  a  good  Lenten  dish. 

A  lump,  or  lumpus  angloriim ;^  so  named  by  Aldrovandus, 
by  some  esteemed  a  festival-dish,  though  it  afibrdcth  but  a 
glutinous  jelly,  and  the  skin  is  beset  with  stony  knobs,  after 
no  certain  order.  Ours  most  answereth  the  first  figure  in 
the  13th  table  of  Johnstonus,  but  seems  more  round  and  ar- 
cuated than  that  figure  makes  it. 

Before  the  herrings,  there  commonly  cometh  a  fish,  about 
a  foot  long,  by  fishermen  called  a  horse,  resembling,  in  all 
points  the  trachurus  ^  of  Rondeletius,  of  a  mixed  shape,  be- 
tween a  mackerel  and  a  herring ;  observable  from  its  green 
eyes,  rarely  sky-coloured  back,  after  it  is  kept  a  day,  and  an 
oblique  bony  line  running  on  the  outside  from  the  gills  unto 
the  tail :  a  dry  and  hard  dish,  but  makes  a  handsome  picture. 

The  rubelUones,  or  rochets,  but  thinly  met  with  on  this 
coast.     The  gornart  cuctilus,  or  lycce  species,''  more  often ; 


2  frog-Jtsli.]     Lnphius  piscatorius,  L.  pits,  L.    The  lump-fish,  or  lump-sucker, 

3  sea-ifo!J'.\     Jiiarliichiis  lupus,  L.  ^  traclmnis.]     Scomber  Trachurus,  L. 
■•  viustela   marina.]       Perhaps  gadus  The  scad  or  horse  mackerel :  caught  with 

mustela,   L.   or  petronnjion  marinus,   L.  the  inackcrel. — G. 

The  lamprey.  '  hjcer  species.']     Trivia  cuculus,   L. 

•■  lumpus aiiglorum.]    Cijcloptcrus lum-  The  red  gurnard. 


OF  FISHES.  3-39 

>vliich  they  seliloni  eat,  but  bending  the  back  and  spreading 
the  fins  into  a  large  posture,  do  hang  them  up  in  their 
houses. 

Beside  the  common  mulliis,  or  mullet,"  there  is  another  not 
unfrequent,  which  some  call  a  cunny-fish,  but  rather  a  red 
mullet,^  of  a  flosculous  red,  and  somewhat  rough  on  the 
scales,  answering  the  description  and /Vow  of  Ilondeletius,  un- 
der the  name  o^  mull  us  ruber  aspcr ;  but  not  the  taste  of  the 
usually-known  mullet,  as  aflbrding  but  a  dry  and  lean  bit. 

Several  sorts  of  fishes  there  are  which  do  or  may  bear  the 
names  of  sea-woodcocks ;  as  the  acus  major,  scolopax,  and 
saurus}  The  saurus  we  sometimes  meet  with  young,  llon- 
deletius  confesseth  it  a  very  rare  fish,  somewhat  resembling 
the  acus  or  needle-fish  before,  and  mackerel  behind.  We 
have  kept  one  dried  many  years  ago. 

The  acus  major,"  called  by  some  a  garfish,  and  greenback, 
answerinor  the  figure  of  Rondeletius,  under  the  name  of  acus 
jjrima  species,  remarkable  for  its  quadrangular  figure,  and 
verdigrease-green  backbone. 

A  scolopax^  or  sea  woodcock,  of  Rondeletius,  was  given 
me  by  a  seaman  of  these  seas.  About  three  inches  long,  and 
seems  to  be  one  kind  of  acus  or  needle-fish,  ansAvering  the 
description  of  Rondeletius. 

The  acus  of  Aristotle,*  lesser,  thinner,  corticated,  and  sex- 
angular  ;  by  divers  called  an  addercock,  and  somewhat  re- 
sembling a  snake ;  ours  more  plainly  finned  than  Rondeletius 
describeth  it. 

A  little  corticated  fish,  about  three  or  four  inches  long, 
answering  that  which  is  named  piscis  octangularis,  by  A\  or- 
mius ;  cataphractus,  by  Schoneveldeus.  Octagouius  versus 
caput ;  versus  caudam  /lexagouius.'' 

'ihej'aber  marinus,^  sometimes  found  very  large,  answering 
the  fifTure  of  Rondeletius,  which  though  he  mentioneth  as  a 


*  mullfl.l      Mugil  crphalus,  L.  '  scolopajc.'\      Cenlriscus  sculopni,  L- 

'  red    mullet.']     MuUut    barhatus,  L.  *  acus  of  JrUlotle.]      Si/ii/:al litis   ty 

Sur-inullet.     Sumetiines  caught  at  Cro-     phle,  L.  ? 
mer. — G.  *  liexaponius.'\      Possibly  a    gurnard, 

1  saurus.'\     Eiox  tanrut,  L.  ?  trigla  rnlaphracta,  L. 

•  acus  major.']     Syngnalhus  acus,  I,.  ''  fnhrr    marintis.]       Zeus   fabcr,    L. 
Nccdlc-fish.                                                       John  Uorec  or  Dorv. 


0  OF    FISHES. 


rare  fish,  and  to  be  found  in  the  Atlantic  and  Gaditane 
ocean,  yet  we  often  meet  with  it  in  these  seas,  commonly 
called  a  peter-fish,  having  one  black  spot  on  either  side  the 
body ;  conceived  the  perpetual  signature,  from  the  impression 
of  St.  Peter's  fingers,  or  to  resemble  the  two  pieces  of  money 
which  St.  Peter  took  out  of  this  fish ;  remarkable  also  from 
its  disproportionable  mouth,  and  many  hard  prickles  about 
other  parts. 

A  kind  of  scorpius  marinus ;  "^  a  rough,  prickly,  and  mon- 
strous headed  fish,  six,  eight,  or  twelve  inches  long,  answer- 
able unto  the  figure  of  Schoneveldeus. 

A  sting-fish,  wiver,  or  kind  of  opthidion,"  or  araneus ;  slen- 
der ;  narrow-headed ;  about  four  inches  long,  with  a  sharp, 
small,  prickly  fin  along  the  back,  which  often  venemously 
pricketh  the  hands  of  fishermen. 

Aphia  cehites  marina,  or  a  sea-loche. 

Belenmis;  a  sea  miller's  thumb. 

Fundidi  jnarini ;  sea  gudgeons. 

Aloscc,  or  chads  ;  ^  to  be  met  with  about  Lynn. 

Spirinches,  or  smelt,^  in  great  plenty  about  Lynn;  but 
where  they  have  also  a  small  fish,  called  a  priame,  answering 
in  taste  and  shape  a  smelt,  and  perhaps  are  but  the  younger 
sort  thereof. 

AselU,  or  cod,  of  several  sorts. — Asellus  alius,  or  whitings," 
in  great  plenty. — Asellus  niger,  carhonarius,  or  coal-fish.^ — 
Asellus  minor  Schoneveldei  (callarias  PliniiJ,  or  haddocks;  * 
with  many  more.  Also  a  weed-fish,  somewhat  like  a  had- 
dock, but  larger,  and  drier  meat.  A  basse,^  also  much  re- 
sembling a  flatter  kind  of  cod. 

Scombri  are  mackerel;  in  great  plenty.  A  dish  much 
desired  ;  but  if,  as  llondeletius  affirmeth,  they  feed  upon  sea- 
stars  and  squalders,  there  may  be  some  doubt  whether  their 
flesh  be  without  some  ill  quality.  Sometimes  they  are  of  a 
very  large  size;   and   one  was  taken  this  year,  1668,  which 

"^  scorpius  marinus.']    Collus  scorpio,  L.  *  smelt.]      Salmo  eperianus,  L.  Sme\t. 

Father  Lasher  ?  ^  whitivgs.']     Gadus  merlangus,  L. 

8  opthidion.']    Probably  Irachinus  dra-  ^  coal-fish.]     G.  carhonarius,  L. 

CO,  L.     Tlie  sting-bull  or  common  uca-  ''  haddochs.]     G.  cegksinus,  L. 

ver.  ^  basse]     Pcrca  labraj.;  L. 

'*  chads.]     Clupca  alosa,  L.  Sliad. 


Ol     IISIIES.  Sol 

was  by  measure  an  ell  long ;  and  of  the  length  of  a  good  sal- 
mon, at  Lowestoft. 

Herrings  departed,  sprats,  or  sardcc,  not  long  after  succeed 
in  great  plenty,  which  are  taken  with  smaller  nets,  and  smok- 
ed and  dried  like  herrings,  become  a  sapid  bit,  and  vendible 
abroad. 

Among  these  are  found  bleak,  or  blicce,^  a  thin  herring- 
like fish,  which  some  will  also  take  to  be  young  herrings. 
And  though  this  sea  aboundeth  not  with  pilchards,  yet  they 
are  commonly  taken  among  herrings ;  but  few  esteem  there- 
of, or  eat  them. 

Congers  are  not  so  common  on  these  coasts  as  in  many  seas 
about  England ;  but  are  often  found  upon  the  north  coast  of 
Norfolk,  and  in  frosty  weather  left  in  pulks  and  plashes  upon 
the  ebb  of  the  sea. 

The  sand  eels  ( Anglones  of  Aldrovandus,  or  Tobianus  of 
Schoneveldeus)  commonly  called  smoulds,^  taken  out  of  the 
sea-sands  with  forks  and  rakes  about  Blakeney  and  Burnham  : 
a  small  round  slender  fish,  about  three  or  four  inches  long, 
as  big  as  a  small  tobacco-pipe ;  a  very  dainty  dish. 

PunglUus  tnarinus,  or  sea-bansticle,  having  a  prickle  on 
each  side.  The  smallest  fish  of  the  sea,  about  an  inch  long, 
sometimes  drawn  ashore  with  nets,  together  with  weeds  and 
fragments  of  the  sea. 

Many  sorts  of  flat-fishes.  The  j)(tstinaca  oxi/ri/ic/ius,  with 
a  long  and  strong  aculeus  in  the  tail,  conceived  of  special 
venom  and  virtues. 

Several  sorts  of  raias  (skates),  and  thornbacks.  The  raia 
clarata  oxyrlnclius ;  raia  oculaia,  aspeni,  spinosa,faUotuca. 

The  great  rhombus,  or  turbot,^  aculcatus  et  leiis. 

The  passer,  or  place. 

Butts,  of  various  kinds. 

The  passer  squamosits ;  bret,  brctcock,  and  skulls  ;  com- 
parable in  taste  and  deHcacy  unto  the  sole. 

"  blictr.]  Cifprinus albumut,L.  Bleak.  ^'1^'"°'"^''  ^^'  ^'^''  '""  "**''"  "^" 

'  smouliis-l     Ammo<iyte$  tobianus,   L.  F.icrpt' the   sole,  ♦  which   haib  the   noblest 

Sand  launce.  trntck. 

*  turbol.]     In  AfS.  Sloan.  1784,1  find  ,  „  ^^^,  ,„,  ,,,,^„,^  ,^„, 

this  distich,  with  the  subsequent  CXplan-  t   JIAirA    n  tUei  en   llit  rigUl  tide;     as  alio 

atorv  notes  attached:—  *"'"•  '"•"''f'  ""d/louHdcr.. 


S32  OF    FISHES. 

The  bughssus  solea,  or  sole,  itlana  et  oculata ;  as  also  the 
Ungula,  or  small  sole ;  all  in  very  great  plenty. 

Sometimes  a  fish  about  half  a  yard  long,  like  a  butt  or 
sole,  called  aspragc,  which  I  have  known  taken  about  Cro- 
mer. 

Sepia,  or  cuttle-fish,  and  great  plenty  of  the  bone  or  shelly 
substance,  which  sustaineth  the  whole  bulk  of  that  soft  fish 
found  commonly  on  the  shore. 

The  loUgo  sieve,  or  cctlamar,^  found  often  upon  the  shore, 
from  head  to  tail  sometimes  about  an  ell  long,  remarkable  for 
its  parrot-like  bill  ;  the  gladiolus  or  celanus  along  the  back, 
and  the  notable  crystalline  of  the  eye,  which  equalleth,  if  not 
exceedeth,  the  lustre  of  oriental  pearl. 

A  polypus,  another  kind  of  the  moUia,  sometimes  we  have 
met  with. 

Lobsters  in  great  number,  about  Sherringham  and  Cromer, 
from  whence  all  the  country  is  supplied. 

Astacus  marinus  pedicuU  marini  facie,  found  also  in  that 
place.  With  the  advantage  of  the  long  fore  claws  about  four 
inches  long. 

Crabs,  large  and  well-tasted ;  found  also  on  the  same  coast. 

Another  kind  of  crab,  taken  for  canisfliwialis ;  little,  slen- 
der, and  of  a  very  quick  motion,  found  in  the  river  running 
through  Yarmouth,  and  in  Bliburgh  river. 

Oysters  exceeding  large  about  Burnham  and  Hunstanton, 
like  those  of  Pool,  St.  INIallows,  or  Civita  Vecchia,  whereof 
many  are  eaten  raw  ;  the  shells  being  broken  with  cleavers ; 
the  greater  part  pickled,  and  sent  weekly  to  London  and 
other  parts. 

Mituli,  or  muscles,  in  great  quantity,  as  also  chams  or 
cockles,  about  Stifkay  and  the  north-west  coast. 

Pcctines  pectuncuU  varii,  or  scallops  of  the  lesser  sort. 

7'urbines,  or  smaller  wilks,  leves,  striati,  as  also  trocM,  tro- 
chili,  or  sea  tops,  finely  variegated  and  pearly.  Likewise 
purpura;  minores,  nerites,  cochlecc,  tcllince. 

"  loligo,  i^-c]    In  digging  for  soles  and  lieve  of  the  species  loligo),  about  twelve 

shrimps,  I  have  taken  numbers  of  little  or  eighteen  inches  long  in  the  sleeve  or 

sepia,  an  inch  or  two  in  length,  in  July  trunk,  in  the  autumn  ;  Cromer. — G. 
and  August,  and  have  seen  others  (1  be- 


OF    FISHES.  333 

Lepades,  patellce :  limpets,  of  an  univalve  shell,  wherein  an 
animal  like  a  snail  cleaving  fast  unto  the  rocks. 

Solenes,  "  cappe  lunge"  Venetorum ;  commonly  a  razor- 
fish  ;  the  shell  thereof  dentalia,  by  some  called  pin-patches, 
because  the  pin-meat  thereof  is  taken  out  with  a  ])in  or 
needle. 

Cunct'llus  ttirh'tyium  et  Jieritls.  Bernard  the  hermit  of  Ron- 
deletius.  A  kind  of  crab,  or  astacus ;  living  in  a  forsaken 
wilk  or  ne rites. 

Echinus  EcJtinonietrltes,  sea  hedgehog,  whose  neat  shells 
ai*e  common  on  the  shore.  The  fish  alive  often  taken  by  the 
drags  among  the  oysters. 

Balani,  a  smaller  sort  of  univalve  growing  commonly  in 
dusters.  The  smaller  kinds  thereof  to  be  found  ofttimes 
upon  oysters,  wilks,  and  lobsters. 

Concha  anai'ijera,  or  ansifera,  or  barnacle-shell,  whereof 
about  four  years  past  were  found  upon  the  shore  no  small 
number  by  Yarmouth,  hanging  by  slender  strings  of  a  kind 
of  alga  unto  several  splinters  or  cleavings  of  fir-boards,  unto 
which  they  were  severally  fastened,  and  hanged  like  ropes  of 
onions  ;  their  shell  flat,  and  of  a  peculiar  form,  differing  from 
other  shells ;  this  being  of  four  divisions ;  containing  a  small 
imperfect  animal,  at  the  lower  part  divided  into  many  shoots 
or  streams,  which  prepossessed  spectators'  fancy  to  be  the 
rudiment  of  the  tail  of  some  goose  or  duck  to  be  produced 
from  it.  Some  whereof  in  the  shell,  and  some  taken  out  and 
spread  upon  paper,  we  still  keep  by  us. 

Stella  marincc,  or  sea-stars,  in  great  plenty,  especially 
about  Yarmouth.  Whether  they  be  bred  out  of  the  urticus, 
squalders,  or  sea-jellies,  as  many  report,  we  cannot  confirm  ; 
but  the  s{jualders  in  tiic  middle  seem  to  have  some  lines  or 
first  draughts  not  unlike.  Our  stars  exceed  not  five  points, 
though  I  have  heard  that  some  with  more  have  been  found 
about  Hunstanton  and  Burnham  ;  where  are  also  found  stelloe 
marincc  tcstacc(V,  or  handsome  crusted  and  brittle  sea-stars, 
much  less. 

The  pediculus  and  cnlea:  marinns,  the  sea  louse  and  fly, 
are  also  no  strangers. 

Physsalus  linndrlrfii,  or  ernca  marina  pinjssaloides,  ac- 


334'  OF    FISHES. 

cording  to  the  icon  of  Rondeletius,  of  very  orient  green  and 
purple  bristles. 

Urtica  marina  of  divers  kinds  ;  some  whereof  called  squal- 
ders.  Of  a  burning  and  stinging  quality,  if  rubbed  in  the 
hand.     The  water  thereof  may  afford  a  good  cosmetic. 

Another  very  elegant  sort  there  is  often  found  cast  up  by 
shore  in  great  numbers,  about  the  bigness  of  a  button,  clear 
and  welted,  and  may  be  called /?Z*«/a  marina  crystallina. 

Hirudines  marini,  or  sea-leeches. 

Vermes  marini,  very  large  worms,  digged  a  yard  deep  out 
of  the  sands  at  ebb,  for  bait.  It  is  known  where  they  are  to 
be  found  by  a  little  flat  over  them,  on  the  surface  of  the 
sand.  As  also  vermes  in  tuhnlis  testacei.  Also  tethya,  or 
sea-dogs;  some  whereof  resemble  fritters.  The  resicaria 
marina  also,  axxAfanago,  sometimes  very  large;  conceived  to 
proceed  from  some  testaceous  animals,  and  particularly  from 
the  iinrpura  ;  but  ours  more  probably  from  other  testaceous, 
we  have  not  met  with  any  large  purpura  vipon  this  coast. 

Many  river  fishes  also  and  animals.  Salmon  no  common 
fish  in  our  rivers,  though  many  are  taken  in  the  Ouse  ;  in  the 
Bure  or  North  river ;  in  the  Waveney  or  South  river;  in  the 
Norwich  river  but  seldom,  and  in  the  winter.  But  four  years 
ago  fifteen  were  taken  at  Trow^se  mill,  at  Christmas,  whose 
mouths  were  stuck  w  ith  small  worms  or  horseleaches,  no  big- 
ger than  fine  threads.  Some  of  these  I  kept  in  water  three 
months.  If  a  few  drops  of  blood  were  put  to  the  water,  they 
would  in  a  little  time  look  red.  They  sensibly  grew  bigger 
than  I  first  found  them,  and  were  killed  by  a  hard  frost  freez- 
ing the  water.  Most  of  our  salmon  have  a  recurved  piece  of 
flesh  in  the  end  of  the  lower  jaw,  which,  when  they  shut 
their  mouths,  deeply  enters  the  upper,  as  Scaliger  hath  noted 
in  some. 

The  rivers,  lakes,  and  broads,  abound  in  the  luciiis  or 
pikes  of  a  very  large  size,  where  also  is  found  the  hrama  or 
bream,  large  and  well  tasted.  The  tinea  or  tench  ;  the  au~ 
lecula,  roach ;  as  also  rowds  and  dare  or  dace ;  perca  or  perch, 
great  and  small ;  whereof  such  as  are  taken  in  Breydon,  on 
this  side  Yarmouth,  in  the  mixed  water,  make  a  dish  very 
dainty  ;  and,  I  think,  scarce  to  be  bettered  in  England.    But 


OF    FISHES.  S3i) 

the  blea,  the  chul)be,  the  barbie,  to  be  found  in  divers  other 
rivers  in  England  1  have  not  observed  in  these.  As  also  fewer 
niinows  than  in  many  other  rivers. 

The  trutta  or  trout ;  the  gammarus  or  crawfish  ;  but  scarce 
in  our  rivers;  but  frequently  taken  in  the  Bure  or  North  river* 
and  in  the  several  branches  thereof.  And  very  remarkable 
large  crawfishes  to  be  found  in  the  river  which  runs  by  Castle- 
acre  and  Nerford. 

The  aspredo  perca  minor,  and  probably  the  ceniua  of  Car- 
dan, commonly  called  a  rufl';  in  great  plenty  in  Norwich 
river,  and  even  in  the  stream  of  the  city  ;  which  though  Cam- 
den appropriates  unto  this  city,  yet  they  are  also  found  in  the 
rivers  of  Oxford  and  Cambridge. 

Lampetra,  lampreys,  great  and  small,  found  plentifully  in 
Norwich  river,  and  even  in  the  city,  about  May ;  whereof 
some  are  very  large  ;  and,  well  cooked,  are  counted  a  dainty 
bit  collared  up,  but  especially  in  pies. 

Mustela  Jluviatills  ox  eel-poult,  to  be  had  in  Norwich  river, 
and  between  it  and  Yarmouth,  as  also  in  the  rivers  of  Marsh- 
land; resembling  an  eel  and  a  cod;  a  very  good  dish;  and  the 
liver  whereof  well  answers  the  commendations  of  the  ancients. 
Gudgeons  or  fundidi  Jluvlatilcs ;  many  whereof  may  be 
taken  within  the  river  in  the  city. 

Capitones  Jiuriatiles  or  millers'  thumb ;  pungitias  JIuriatUis 
or  stanticles.  Ap/tia  cobites  JIuriatUis  or  loches.  In  Nor- 
wich river,  in  the  runs  about  Heveningham  Heath,  in  the 
North  river  and  streams  thereof. 

Of  eels,  the  common  eel,  and  the  glot,  which  hath  some- 
what a  different  shape  in  the  bigness  of  the  head,  and  is  af- 
firmed to  have  young  ones  often  found  within  it;  and  we 
have  found  an  uterus  in  the  same,  somewhat  answering  the 
icon  thereof  in  Senesinus. 

Carpiones,  carp ;  plentiful  in  ponds,  and  sometimes  large 
ones  in  broads.  Two  of  the  largest  I  ever  beheld  were  taken 
in  Norwich  river. 

Though  the  woods  and  drylands  abound  with  adders  and 
vipers,  yet  are  there  few  snakes  about  our  rivers  or  meadows; 
more  to  be  found  in  Marshland.  But  ponds  and  plashes 
abound  in  lizards  or  swifts. 


33G  OF    FISHES. 

The  g7'7/llotalpa  or  fen  cricket,  common  in  fenny  places ; 
but  we  have  met  with  them  also  in  dry  places,  dunghills,  and 
churchyards,  of  this  city. 

Besides  horseleaches  and  periwinkles,  in  plashes  and  stand- 
ing waters,  we  have  met  with  vermes  setacei  or  hard  worms; 
but  could  never  convert  horsehairs  into  them  by  laying  them 
in  water.  As  also  the  great  hydrocaniharus  or  black  shining 
water-beetle,  theforjicida,  sqv'iUa,  corcxdum,  and  notonecton, 
that  swimmeth  on  its  back. 

Camden  reports  that  in  former  time  there  have  been  beavers 
in  the  river  of  Cardigan  in  Wales.  This  we  are  too  sure  of, 
that  the  rivers,  great  broads,  and  carrs,  afford  great  store  of 
otters  with  us  ;  a  great  destroyer  of  fish,  as  feeding  but  from 
the  vent  downwards ;  not  free  from  being  a  prey  itself;  for 
their  young  ones  have  been  found  in  buzzards'  nests.  They 
are  accounted  no  bad  dish  by  many ;  are  to  be  made  very 
tame ;  and  in  some  houses  have  served  for  turnspits. 


ON   rnr  ostrich.  3.'}7 


ON  THE  O.STRICII.i 

[MS,   SLOAN.    1S30,  fol.    10,    11;    1SI7.] 

The  Ostrich  hath  a  compouiulcd  name  in  Greek  anil  Latin — 
Stnithio-Camchis,  borrowed  from  a  bird  and  a  beast,  as  being 
a  feathered  and  biped  animal,  yet  in  some  ways  like  a  camel; 
somewhat  in  the  long  neck;  somewhat  in  the  foot;  and,  as  some 
imagine,  from  a  camel-like  position  in  the  part  of  generation. 
It  is  accounted  the  largest  and  tallest  of  any  winged  and 
feathered  fowl ;  taller  than  the  gruen  or  cassowary.  This 
ostrich,  though  a  female,  was  about  seven  feet  high,  and  some 
of  the  males  were  higher,  either  exceeding  or  answerable  unto 
the  stature  of  the  great  porter  unto  King  Charles  the  First. 
The  weight  was  a-  in  grocer's  scales. 

Whosoever  shall  compare  or  consider  together  the  ostrich 
and  the  tomineio,  or  humbird,  not  weighing  twelve  grains, 
may  easily  discover  under  what  compass  or  latitude  the  cre- 
ation of  birds  hath  been  ordained. 

The  head  is  not  large,  but  little  in  proportion  to  the  whole 
body.  And,  therefore,  Julius  Scaliger,  when  he  mentioned 
birds  of  large  heads  (comparatively  unto  their  bodies),  named 
the  sparrow,  the  owl,  and  the  woodpecker ;  and,  reckoning  up 
birds  of  small  heads,  instanceth  in  the  hen,  the  peacock,  and 
the  ostrich.* 

The  head  is  looked  upon  by  discerning  spectators  to  re- 
semble that  of  a  goose  rather  than  any  kind  of  er^oZOoi,  or 
passer :  and  so  may  be  more  properly  called  cheuo-camelus, 
or  anscrO'Camclus. 

There  is  a  handsome  figure  of  an  ostrich  in  Mr.  W'ill- 
oughby's  and  Ray's  Ornitholog'ia :  another  in  Aldrovandus 

•  See  Scaliger's  Eiercitations. 

1   Ox  THE  Ostrich.]  This  was  drawn  evidently  was  inserted  by  mistake  in  tlie 

up  for  his  son  Edward,  to  be  delivered  in  binding;   it  is  written  on   larger  paper. 

the  course  ot'  his  lectures.     It  occurs  in         -  a ]     Utterly  undccypherable 

the  middle  of  the  paper   on  Birds  ;   but  in  the  original. 

VOL.    IV.  Z 


338  ON    THE    OSTRICH. 

and  Jonstoniis,  and  Bellonius;  but  the  lieads  not  exactly  agree- 
ing. "  Rostrum  liabet  exiguum,  sed  acutum,"  saith  Jonstoun  ; 
"un  long  bee  et  poinctu,"  saith  Bellonius;  men  describing- 
such  as  they  have  an  op])ortunity  to  see,  and  perhaps  some 
the  ostriches  of  very  distant  countries,  wherein,  as  in  some 
other  birds,  there  may  be  some  variety. 

In  Africa,  where  some  eat  elephants,  it  is  no  wonder  that 
some  also  feed  upon  ostriches.  They  flay  them  with  their 
feathers  on,  which  they  sell,  and  eat  the  flesh.  But  Galen 
and  physicians  have  condemned  that  flesh,  as  hard  and  indi- 
gestible.'' The  Emperor  Hehogabalus  had  a  fancy  for  the 
brains,  when  he  brought  six  hundred  ostriches'  heads  to  one 
supper,  only  for  the  brains'  sake  ;  yet  Leo  Africanus  saith  that 
he  ate  of  young  ostriches  among  the  Numidians  with  a  good 
gust ;  and,  perhaps,  boiled,  and  well  cooked,  after  the  art  of 
Apicius,  with  peppermint,  dates,  and  other  good  things,  they 
might  go  down  with  some  stomachs. 

I  do  not  find  that  the  strongest  eagles,  or  best-spirited 
hawks,  will  offer  at  these  birds ;  yet,  if  there  were  such  gyr- 
falcons  as  Julius  Scaliger  saith  the  Duke  of  Savoy  and  Henry, 
king  of  Navarre,  had,  it  is  like  they  would  strike  at  them,  and, 
making  at  the  head,  would  spoil  them,  or  so  disable  them, 
that  they  might  be  taken.*' 

If  these  had  been  brought  over  in  June,  it  is,  perhaps, 
likely  we  might  have  met  with  eggs  in  some  of  their  bellies, 
whereof  they  lay  very  many ;  but  they  are  the  worst  of  eggs 
for  food,  yet  serviceable  unto  many  other  uses  in  their  coun- 
try ;  for,  being  cut  transversely,  they  serve  for  drinking  cups 
and  skull-caps ;  and,  as  I  have  seen,  there  are  large  circles  of 
them,  and  some  painted  and  gilded,  which  hang  up  in  Turkish 
mosques,  and  also  in  Greek  churches.  They  are  preserved 
with  us  for  rarities  ;  and,  as  they  come  to  be  common,  some 
use  will  be  found  of  them  in  physic,  even  as  of  other  egg- 
shells and  other  such  substances. 

*  See  Scaligei's  Excrcitations,  and  in  his  Comment,  on  Arist.  De  Historia  Animal. 

••  as  hard  and  indigestible. '\      "  And,  liaid  of  digestion  to  their  stomachs,  but 

therefore,  when, according  to  Lampridius,  also  to  their  consciences,  as  being  a  for- 

the  EmpcrorlleliogabalusforcedtheJews  biddun  meat  food." — Addition  from  MS. 

to  eat  ostriches,  it  was  a  meat  not  only  Sloan.  1847. 


ON  Till:  osTiucii.  33!) 

M'licn  It  first  came  into  my  garden,  it  soon  ate  up  all  the 
gilliflowcrs,  tulip-leaves,  and  fed  greedily  upon  what  was 
green,  as  lettuce,  endive,  sorrell ;  it  would  feed  on  oats,  bar- 
ley, peas,  beans  ;  swallow  onions ;  eat  slieeps'  lights  and  livers. 
Then  you  mention  what  you  know  more.^ 

When  it  took  down  a  large  onion,  it  stuck  awhile  in  the 
gullet,  and  did  not  descend  directly,  but  wound  backward 
l)ehind  the  neck ;  whereby  I  might  perceive  that  the  gullet 
turned  much  ;  but  this  is  not  peculiar  unto  the  ostrich  ;  but 
the  same  hath  been  observed  in  the  stork,  when  it  swallows 
down  frogs  and  pretty  big  bits. 

It  made  sometimes  a  strange  noise ;  had  a  very  odd  note, 
especially  in  the  morning,  and,  perhaps,  when  hungry. 

According  to  Aldrovandus,  some  hold  that  there  is  an  an- 
tipathy between  it  and  a  horse,  which  an  ostrich  will  not  en- 
dure to  see  or  be  near  ;  but,  while  I  kept  it,  I  could  not 
confirm  this  opinion  ;  which  might,  perhaps,  be  raised  because 
a  common  way  of  hunting  and  taking  them  is  by  swift  horses. 

It  is  much  that  Cardanus  should  be  mistaken  with  a  great 
part  of  men,  that  the  coloured  and  dyed  feathers  of  ostriches 
were  natural ;  as  red,  blue,  yellow,  and  green ;  whereas,  the 
natural  colours  in  this  bird  were  white  and  greyish.  Of 
[the]  fashion  of  wearing  feathers  in  battles  or  wars  by  men,  and 
women,  see  Scaligcr,  Contra  Cardan.  Exercitaf.  2f30. 

If  wearing  of  feather-fans  should  come  up  again,  it  might 
much  increase  the  trade  of  plumage  from  Barl^ary.  Bellonius 
saith  he  saw  two  hundred  skins  with  the  feathers  on  in  one 
shop  of  Alexandria. 

*  Then  you  mention,  ^c]     This  must  be  considered  as  spoken  "aside  "  to  liis  son. 


340  BOULIMIA    CENTENARIA. 


BOULIMIA  CENTENARIA.' 

[mS.    SLOAN.     1833,    &  MS.    RAWL.    LVIII.] 

There  is  a  woman  now  living  in  Yarmouth,  named  Elizabeth 
Michell,  an  hundred  and  two  years  old  ;  a  person  of  four 
feet  and  half  high,  very  lean,  very  poor,  and  living  in  a  mean 
room  with  pitiful  accommodation.  She  had  a  son  after  she 
was  past  fifty."  Though  she  answers  well  enough  unto  ordi- 
nary questions,  yet  she  apprehends  her  eldest  daughter  to  be 
her  mother  ;  but  what  is  most  remarkable  concerning  her  is 
a  kind  of  houUmia  or  dog-appetite  ;  she  greedily  eating  day 
and  night  what  her  allowance,  friends,  or  charitable  persons 
afford  her,  drinking  beer  or  water,  and  making  little  dis- 
tinction or  refusal  of  any  food,  either  of  broths,  flesh,  fish, 
apples,  pears,  and  any  coarse  food,  which  she  eateth  in  no 
small  quantity,  in  so  much  that  the  overseers  for  the  poor 
have  of  late  been  fain  to  augment  her  weekly  allowance.  She 
sleeps  indifferently  well,  till  hunger  awakes  her ;  then  she 
must  have  no  ordinary  supply,  whether  in  the  day  or  night. 
She  vomits  not,  nor  is  very  laxative.  This  is  the  oldest  ex- 
ample of  the  sal  esurlnum  chymicorum,  which  I  have  taken 
notice  of;  though  I  am  ready  to  afford  my  charity  imto  her, 
yet  I  should  be  loth  to  spend  a  piece  of  ambergris  I  have 
upon  her,  and  to  allow  six  grains  to  every  dose  till  I  found 
some  effect  in  moderating  her  appetite ;  though  that  be  es- 
teemed a  great  specific  in  her  condition. 

•  BouLiMiA.]      Brutus  was  attacked  copy  of  this  paper  in  the  Bodleian  (MS. 

with  this  disease  on  his  inarch  to  Dur-  Rawl.  Iviii,^  reads  "  her   j'oungest  son 

rachium. — Plutarch.  is  forty-five  years  old." 

^  She  had  a  son,  ^c-]      A  duplicate 


UPON    Tin:    DAUK    THICK    MIST.  341 


UPON  THE  DARK  THICK  INHST  HAPPENING 
ON  THE  27TII  OF  NOVEMBER,  1G74. 

[ms.  SLOAN.   1853,  fol.  136.] 

Though  it  be  not  strange  to  see  frequent  mists,  clouds,  and 
rains,  in  England,  as  many  ancient  dcscribers  of  tliis  country 
have  noted,  yet  I  could  not  [but]  take  notice  of  avery  great  ni'st 
which  happened  upon  the  27th  of  the  last  November,  and  from 
thence  have  taken  this  occasion  to  propose  something  of  mists, 
clouds,  and  rains,  unto  your  candid  considerations. 

Herein  mists  may  well  deserve  the  first  place,  as  being,  if 
not  the  first  in  nature,  yet  the  first  meteor  mentioned  in  Scrip- 
ture and  soon  after  the  creation,  for  it  is  said.  Genesis  ii,  that 
"  God  had  not  yet  caused  it  to  rain  upon  the  earth,  but  a  mist 
went  up  from  the  earth,  and  watered  the  whole  face  of  the 
fjround,"  for  it  mifjht  take  a  lonirer  time  for  the  elevation  of 
vapours  sufficient  to  make  a  congregation  of  clouds  able  to 
aflfbrd  any  store  of  showers  and  rain  in  so  early  days  of  the 
world. 

Thick  vapours,  not  ascending  high  but  hanging  about  the 
earth  and  covering  the  surface  of  it,  are  commonly  called  mists; 
if  they  ascend  high  they  are  termed  clouds.  They  remain 
upon  the  earth  till  they  either  fixll  down  or  are  attenuated, 
rarified,  and  scattered. 

The  great  mist  was  not  only  observable  about  London,  but 
ill  remote  parts  of  England,  and  as  we  hear,  in  Holland,  so 
that  it  was  of  larger  extent  than  mists  arc  commonly  appre- 
hended to  be  ;  most  men  conceiving  that  they  reach  not  much 
beyond  the  places  where  they  behold  them.  Mists  make  an 
obscure  air  but  they  beget  not  darkness,  for  the  atoms  and 
particles  thereof  admit  the  light,  but  if  the  matter  thereof  be 
very  thick,  close,  and  condensed,  the  mist  grows  consider- 
ably obscure  and  like  a  cloud,  so  the  miraculous  and  palpa- 
ble darkness  of  Egypt  ii  conceived  to  have  been  effected  by 


342  UPON    THE    DARK    THICK    MIST. 

an  extraordinary  dense  and  dark  mist  or  a  kind  of  cloud 
spread  over  the  land  of  Egypt,  and  also  miraculously  re- 
strained from  the  neighbour  land  of  Goshen, 

Mists  and  fogs,  containing  commonly  vegetable  spirits,  when 
they  dissolve  and  return  upon  the  earth,  may  fecundate  and 
add  some  fertihty  unto  it,  but  they  may  be  more  unwhole- 
some in  great  cities  then  in  country  habitations;  for  they  con- 
sist of  vapours  not  only  elevated  from  simple  watery  and  hu- 
mid places,  but  also  the  exhalations  of  draughts,  common 
sewers,  and  foetid  places,  and  decoctions  used  by  unwholesome 
and  sordid  manufactvu*es :  and  also  hindering  the  sea-coal 
smoke  from  ascending  and  passing  away,  it  is  conjoined  with 
the  mist  and  drawn  in  by  the  breath,  all  which  may  produce 
bad  effects,  inquinate  the  blood,  and  produce  catarrhs  and 
coughs.  Sereins,  well  known  in  hot  countries,  cause  head- 
ache, toothache,  and  swelled  faces,  but  they  seem  to  have  their 
original  from  subtle,  invisible,  nitrous,  and  piercing  exhala- 
tions, caused  by  a  strong  heat  of  the  sun,  which  falHng  after 
sun-set  produce  the  effects  mentioned. 

There  may  be  also  subterraneous  mists,  when  heat  in  the 
bowels  of  the  earth,  working  upon  humid  parts,  makes  an 
attenuation  thereof  and  consequently  nebulous  bodies  in  the 
cavities  of  it. 

There  is  a  kind  of  a  continued  mist  in  the  bodies  of  ani- 
mals, especially  in  the  cavous  parts,  as  may  be  observed  in 
bodies  opened  presently  after  death,  and  some  think  that  in 
sleep  there  is  a  kind  of  mist  in  the  brain ;  and  upon  exceed- 
ing motion  some  animals  cast  out  a  mist  about  them. 

When  the  cuttle  fish,  polypus,  or  loligo,  make  themselves 
invisible  by  obscuring  the  water  about  them ;  they  do  it  not 
by  any  vapourous  emission,  but  by  a  black  humour  ejected, 
which  makes  the  water  black  and  dark  near  them:  but  upon 
excessive  motion  some  animals  are  able  to  afford  a  mist  about 
them,  when  the  air  is  cool  and  fit  to  condense  it,  as  horses 
after  a  race,  so  that  they  become  scarce  visible. 


ORATIO    JlAltVKlANA.  oi 


J.IO 


[OllATlO  ANNIVERSARIA  JIARVEIANA.'] 

[MS.  SLOA.N.  1S33,  fol.  lie— IJO;  COLLATED  WITH  1S39,  fol.  299— 3IC.] 

Commentatiiro  niilii  insignes  benefactoruni  munificentias, 
nobilesque  Patronoium  h:syr,aia;,  liceat,  colendissinie  Prieses, 
collegae  ornatissimi,  et  auditores  humanissimi,  liceat  inquani 
prudentissinio  Cartlani  *  consilio  cjusque  de  civili  prudentiii 
verbis  pra^fari.  "  ^Maximum  est  in  humana  vita  beneficia  bene 
collocasse,  ideoque  iiigratos  cavere  oportet.  Ingrati  autem 
sunt  pueri,  niuliercs,  rustici,  utpoto  parvi  sensus  ;  invidi,  avari, 
sibi  quippe  tantum  prospiciunt ;  perfidi,  inconstantes  aut  stu- 
pid!, qui  beneficia  non  sentiunt." 

Summii  itaque  prudentia  beneficia  collocasse  beneficen- 
tissimos  viros  et  Miecenates  nostros  memorandissimos,  solen- 
nitas  hodierna  satis  dictat,  immo  clamitat.  Quorsum  etenim 
conventus  hie  solennis  Panegyris  anniversaiia,  et  oratio  lau- 
datoria,  quorsum  inquam  tot  gratitudinis  /Mir,fLiTa  et  yjxstarr,sia, 
quibus  benefactores  meritissinios  et  dignos  laude  viros  recog- 
nitionum  symbolis  gratissimis  celebramus  ?  Neque  certe  co- 
natu  perfunctorio,  aut  uyaueria;  infamiam  tantum  vitantes,  diem 
hunc  gratulatoriuni  observamus,  sed  uti  viros  probos  decet, 
debitum  virtuti  oflicium  pricstantes  quicquid  est  hodiern;p 
solennitatis,  quicquid  enconiiastici  honoris,  illud  tantorum 
virorum  memorial  gratissime  dicamus,  et  ne  qua?  hodie  apud 
nos  vigent,  interjecto  spatio  apud  alios  absolescant,  ea  institu- 
tis  et  consuetudine  clavo  quasi  trabali  figimus. 

Laudessane  postulant,f  non  precibuspetunt,  egrcgia  opera, 
praeclara  facta ;  etiamsi  laudatores  non  inveniant,  non  esse  mi- 
nus pulcbra  ultro  profitemur.     /Equissimum  tamen  censcmus, 

•  llie  works  of  Cardanus  arc  printed  in  ten  volumes  :  in  the  moral  volumes  there 
is  a  tract  De  civili  prudentia,  where  these  words  here  quoted  are  to  be  found, 
t  Imperio  posco,  precibus  peto,  postulo  jure. 

1  Okatio,  &c.]  This  is  the  oration  mentioned  in  the  fir^t  volume,  page  291,  note. 


344 


ORATIO    HARVEIANA. 


ut  praeclare  merentibus  suus  reddatur  honos,  et  quos  bona 
opera  sequuntur  eos  etiam  gratissima  memoria  et  laudibus 
prosequamur.  Laudibus  itaque  digni  et  laudationibus  effer- 
endi  sunt  hodie  munificentissimi  viri  de  Collegio  medico  Lon- 
dinensi  et  Societate  prtEclare  meriti.  Hi  licet  viritim  cele- 
brandi,  quia  tamen  celeberrimi  Harvei  institutioni  solennem 
hujus  diei  conventum  primario  debemus,  clarissimi  ejusdem 
viri  memoriae  encomiorum  initia  et  laudum  primitias  deferimus. 

Quo  de  viro  consummatissimo  dicturus,  in  laudes  ejus  am- 
plissimas  tanquam  in  oceanum  descend o,  ubi  initium  facilius 
est  quam  exitum  reperire.  Hie  itaque,  si  unquam  alibi  plurcs 
sunt  poscendae  clepsydra?,  hie  implorandus  charitum  et  mu- 
sarum  omnium  chorus,  hue  in  auxilium  advocandus  disertis- 
simus  Millingtonus,  doctissimus  Charltonus,  aliique  facundis- 
simi  oratores,  olim  hoc  in  loco  et  themate  perpolite  versati : 
est  enini  sublimis  vir  nostra  panegyri  major,  sive  eximias 
animi  dotes,  sive  indulta  nobis  beneficia,  sive  in  literatorum 
orbem  merita  jiensitemus. 

Sibi  nasci,  sibi  tantum  vivere,  rebusque  propriis  inhiare  in- 
dolis  arctioris  et  ingenii  angustioris  indicium  est.  Animi 
erectiores  et  divino  propiores,  charius  sibi  nihil  habent  quam 
ut  diffusa  bonitate  aliis  insuper  liberali  manu  prospiciant. 
Quibus  sane  virtutibus  cumulatus  incomparabilis  Harveus, 
alienas  felicitati  munifice  prospexit ;  nee  rebus  tantum  propriis 
sed  et  publicis  generose  consuluit :  ne  quid  etenim  benefac- 
torum  memoriae  et  pulchre  de  nobis  meritorum  honori,  ne 
quid  mutuas  inter  nos  amicitiaj  fovenda?  deesset,  diem  hunc 
nobis  solennem  et  festivum  fecit,  favores  favoribus,  munera 
rnuneribus  cumulavit,  et  post  tot  collata  beneficia,  ne  patri- 
monio  quidem  proprio  parcens,  societatem  banc  haeredem  ex 
asse  reliquit,  atque  ita  sapientissimus  vir  fortunse  bona  extra 
fortunam  *  statuit. 

Plurima  in  lucem  eruunt  et  in  apricum  proferunt,  multa  in- 
veniunt,  aut  inventis  superaddunt,  Naturae  curiosi  et  quasi 
Philosophi  nati,  qui  sagaci  scrutinio  et  industria  perspicaci 
res  ipsas,  non  rerum  simulachra,  penetrant ;  qui  non  ex  dog- 
matibus  traditis,  aut  aliorum  dictatis,  sed  ex  iterata  observa- 
tione  et  experimcntis  sensatis,  de  rebus  optinie  dijudicant. 

*  Extra  fortunam  est  qiiicquid  largitur  amicis. — Mar/ialis. 


ORATIO    IIARVEIANA.  345 

Fecuiulam  ct  vere  philosophicam  hanc  aninii  crasiii  I  larve- 
anaiii,  ut  alia  praHercam,  nobilitarunt  duo  nuiKiuam  satis 
coUaudantla  heurcmata,*  sanguinis  scilicet  m^ix-uxXitjai;,  atque 
ex  ovo  genesis.  Ad  primam  circulationis  tubam  fremuerunt 
universte  Europae  scholae :  quam  statim  lapillo  nigro  notarunt, 
nee  non  communibus  suftragiis  damnarunt,  paulatiin  vero 
dies  diem  docuit,  et  niagni  viri  vicit  sententia;  eacpic  tandem 
a  clarissimis  medicis  recepta  et  confirmata,  adeo  ubique  cla- 
ruit  adniirandus  inventor,  ut  maxiini  noniinis  anatomicus  f  in 
tam  prajclarte  inventionis  consortium  admitti,  bonorem  partiri, 
particepsque  aliquomodo  fieri,  ambiverit,  novam  circulationis 
regulam  commentus,  illamque  argumentis  et  scriptis  propa- 
gare,  sed  Diis  iratis,|  satagens. 

Improles  denuo  et  in  aetate  efFoeta,  prolem  immortalem,  ob- 
servationibus  admirandis  novis,  incognitis,  fecundam  genuit ; 
sanTuinisc^uc  circulo  orbi  prius  demonstrate,  miram  ex  ovo 
"enesin  superaddidit,  duoque  natura?  magnalia  experimentis 
inauditis  et  ratione  irrefragabili  explicuit :  atque  ita  tandem 
praetermissam  ab  Angliic  rege  §  primam  America?  sive  novi  or- 
bis  noticiam,  inventis  domi  natis,  et  sciential  thesauris,  Po- 
tosianis  certe  praferendis,  Anglus  compensavit.  Exile  quid- 
dam  fama  est  quod  tanto  viro  conferre  patria  poterat,  qui  tot 
bonoribus  patriam  cumulavit.  Cumulata  superaddunt  sym- 
bola  omni  ex  ora  exteri.  Scriptis  oscula  litant.  Serta,  co- 
ronas, tumulo  inspergunt,  terramque  exoptant  levem,  Galli, 
Itali,  Germani ;  laudant  quotquot  sub  Aquilone,  et  Jove  fri- 
gido,  musas  severiores  colunt;  '  norunt  et  Tagus  et  Ganges; 
forsan  et  Antipodes/ 1| 

Revera  et  in  sese  vir  ille  magnus,  cui  tot  debentur  magna- 
lia, immo  rigidissimi  stoici  sententia  magnus,  si  voles  veram 
bominis  astimationem  inire  et  scire  qualis  sit,  nudum  aspice ; 
ponat  patrimonium,  ponat  bonores  et  alio  fortuna*  mcndacia, 
corpus  ipsum  exuat ;  animum  intuere,  ut  scias  qualis  (juan- 
tusque  sit,  alieno  an  suo  magnus.     Harveus  certe,  si  ciuispiam 

•   Inventa.  t  Riolanus. 

I  UiisiratU;   uniuccessfully,  unfortunately. 

§  Henry  the  Seventh,  unto  whom  Columbus  first  applied,  but  was  refused. 

II  "Johannes  jacet  hie  Mirandula  ;  ca:tcra  norunt  ct  Tapus  ct  fiangcs,  forsan  ct 

Antipodes:"  the  epitaph   of  the  learned   Job.   Mirnndula,  in  Paulus  Jovius  his 

Elogia  virorum  Ulustrium,  capitc  dc  Joliannc  Mirandula. 


t:J4'6  ORATIO    IIARVEIANA. 

alius  se  sibi  debuit,  sine  Tlieseo  Hercules,  nullo  fultus  atlmi- 
niculo,  et  Minerva  propria,  tot  tantaque  praestitit,  errorum 
tenebras  dissipavit,  veritatem  Oreo  latentem  eruit.  Naturae 
(lenique  omnia  explorare,  nihil  ignorare,  Harveanum  erat. 
Libet  itaque  tanto  Heroi,  quod  olim  vir  eruditus  celebri  phi- 
losopho,  occinere ; 

Naturae  renini  si  quid  te  forte  latebat, 
Hoc  legis  in  magno  nunc  Gulielme  Deo.* 

Posthuma  contenti  fama  mortalium  mvdti  aotatem  transigunt 
et  ....  si  post  fata  venit  gloria  non  properant.  Vixisti  au- 
tem  Harvee  magna  vitse  parte  annisque  plurimis  ba.yiTu'k6kixrog,f 
digitis  et  ore  fere  omnium  honoratus ;  vixisti,  inquam,  octo- 
genarius  ideoque  cseteris  aliquanto  beatius,  ut  scilicet  immor- 
talitati  tuae  justa  gloria  plenus  interesses.  Quid  enim  majus 
dare  poterant  cgelestia  numina,  quam  ut  diu  in  terris  vivus  et 
incolumis,  inusitatee,  nee  nisi  post  fata  obvenientis  gloriae, 
fructum  perciperes  ?  j^ 

Vixere  fortes  ante  Agamemnona  et  pragclari,  §  sane  ante 
Harveum  bencfactores,  quorum  celeberrim^e  memoriae  elogia 
et  pergrata  recognitio  meritissime  debentur.  Rex  enim 
Regalissimus  et  /MiyaXo^^i-xv];,  Henricus  Octavus,  ob  tot  Pala- 
tia,  Xenodochia,"  et  Collegia  fundata  illustris,  societatem 
etiam  banc  medicam  instituit  nee  non  privilegiis  exornavit, 
principem  nempe  dignitati  metropolitanas  a  patre  designatum,|| 
ideoque  literis  imbutum,  latere  non  potuit  regum  sapientissimi 
dictatum,  "in  multitudine  populi  dignitas  Regis  et  in  pauci- 
tate  plebis  ignominia  Principis."  Prudcnter  itaque  cavere 
voluit,  ne  vitae  subditorum  proroganda)  debita  deessent  subsi- 
dia,  nee  praeceps  Agyrtarum  ^  inscitia  stragem  peste  funesti- 

*  These  verses  are  in   Paulus  Jovius  his  Elogia  doctoium,  cajnle  de  Lenonico 
Tkomao,  a  noted  Philosopher. 

f  Oa'/.TUAcOuy.TOC,  digitis  monstratus. 
X  This  is  borrowed  from  Faulus  Jovius  in  his  Elogia  doclortim — capile  de  Alberto 
Magno. 

§  Vixere — this  is  in  Horace  and  here  used  to  another  intention. 
II  H.  8.  designed  by  H.  7.  liis  father  to  be  Archbishop  of  Canterbury;  Prince 
Arthur  his  elder  brother  then  living. 

'  Xenodochia.']  Xsi/oooyj/a ;  more  pro-     hospitals  or  other  charitable  institutions, 
perly,  inns  ;  but  used  here  in  the  sense  of         ^  Agyrtanm.']      Ayj^TYig,  a  quack. 


ORATIO    IIARVEIANA.  317 

orem  cclerct ;  quo  ctiam  nomine  Screnissinia^  tanti  Rc"is 
filia',  ]Maria  et  Elizabetha,  cum  clarissimis  successoribus,  pa- 
trociniis  et  favoribus  collegium  colionorarunt. 

Inter  Mecienates  insignes  llarveo  antiquiores,  prastermit- 
tendus  non  est  Thomas  Linacrus,  vir  doctorum  elogiis  et 
Epitapliio  olim  in  /Ede  Paulina  celebratus.  Principis  nempe 
Artluui,  Henrici  septimi  filii  primogcniti,  pra?ceptor,  Rcms 
llenrici  octavi  medicus,  qui  collegium  medicorum  Londinensc 
sua  industria  fieri  curavit,  ejusquc  Pneses  primus  electus  est, 
qui  etiam  Mcdicinas  studiosis  Oxonii  lectiones  duas,  Canta- 
brigian *  unam,  in  perpetuum  stabilivit.  Graece  et  Latine 
eruditissimus,  multa  Galeni  opera  singular!  facundia  vertit; 
>ir  fraudes  dolosque  mire  perosus,  amicis  fidus,  omnibus  or- 
duiibus  juxta  charus,  clarissimo  Angelo  Politiano  et  Her- 
molao  Barbaro  notissimus.j- 

Sequenti  serie  commemorandi  viri  benefici  Harveo  (S-jyy?om, 
aut  aliquiv  saltern  potatis  parte  contemporanei.  Doctor  Jo- 
hannes xVtkinsius,  Collegii  Medicorum  Priuses,  olim  meritissi- 
mus.  Foxius,  cujus  Bibliotheca  insignis,  collegio  medicorum 
a  generossissimo  viro  forte  designata,  a  belli  civilis  pra?donibus 
direpta  atque  dissipata  est.  Theodorus  Gulstonus,  vir  Praxi 
medica  et  egregiis  in  Aristotelem  commentariis  X  clarus. 
Readus  peritia  Anatomica  et  Chirurgica  Celebris.  Doctor 
Otwellus,  Meverellus,  et  Nathan  Pagetus,  medici  humanissi- 
mi  et  nulla  non  laude  eflerendi. 

Clarissimus  denique  Doctor  Baldwinus  Hama?us,  auditorum 
plerisque  non  ignotus,  nobisque  in  perpetuum  celebrandus. 
Collegium  etenim  Medicum,  iniquis  temporibus  quasi  sub 
hasta  positum,  pro  mercale  et  pretio  alienandum,  benignissi- 
mus  patronus,  Xur^w  voluntario  et  nummis  numeratis  redimens, 
quasi  ex  lupinis  faucibus  eripuit.  Quo  itaque  sostro  *  et 
salutis  pra?mio,  quibus  gratiarum  cumulis  bcneficentissimum 
virum,  et  quasi  fundatori  comparem,  celebrabimus  ?     Corona 

•  If  exception  be  taken  for  naming  Oxford  before  Cambridge,  it  is  so  in  his 
epitapli,  and  he  was  an  Oxford  man. 

t  Angelo  Politiano,  etc.,  as  appears  by  Paulus  Jovius  in  Elogia  virorum  docto- 
rum capite  fie  Thoma  JAnacro. 

X  Upon  Aristotclis  Rhetorica. 

*  soi/ro.]     2&;(77ff&v,   a  fee. 


348  on  ATI  O    HARVEIANA. 

certe  querna  ob  cives  servatos  dignissimus :  quique  monumen- 
tis  marmoreis  et  statuis  asreis,  non  imaginibus  depictis  (uti 
nunc  in  senaculo  nostro),  honoretur.  Neque  tamen  animus 
ad  beneficia  natus  hie  constitit ;  Collegii  aedificium  magnis 
sumptibus  ornando,  reditus  augendo,  plurima  legando,  animos 
pergratos  in  perpetuuni  devinxit.  Tantac  certe  virtutes  soli- 
tariffi  non  ambulant ;  non  illo  melior  quisquam  nee  amantior 
aBqui  vir  fuit.  Mellita  morum  suavitate,  et  humanitate  gra- 
tissima,  omnium  amorem  et  benevolentiam  promeritus,  nus- 
quam  clariora  bonitatis  indicia,  nemo  virtutibus  ornatior,  nul- 
lus  cumulatior,  quern,  certe  medicorum  ornamentuni;  in  du- 
biis  oraculum,  in  arduis  asylum,  in  honestis  exemplum,  merito 
recognoscimus. 

Fautoribus  nostris  dignissimis  annumerandus  deinde  est 
multis  nominibus  honorabilis,  Dominus  Henricus  Dorchestria^ 
Marchio,  vir  meritis  propriis  et  literatura  quam  titulis  ornatior, 
in  hoc  sane  praeclaros  aliquot  veteris  prosapiae  viros  sapienter 
imitatus.  Julius  Caesar  Scaliger,  medicus  c/Xoco^^oVaroc,  familia; 
suffi  nobilitatem,  capta  frequenter  occasione,  sumniis  laudibus 
attollit,  atque  urbe  Cairina  antiquiorem  pra^dicat.  lUe  vero 
talis  tantusque  vir,  nisi  rerum  omnium  scientiam  et  incompa- 
rabilem  doctrinam  honorificis  natalibus  adjecisset,  cum  ma- 
joribus  suis  dominio  et  potestate  claris  in  oblivionis  tumu- 
lum  una  descendisset.  Nunc  autem  Agenni  Nitiobrigum  in 
Gallia  sepultus,  non  absconditus,  ubique  terrarum  claret, 
similisque  gemma?  electro  inclusas  et  latet  et  lucet.  Pari  fere 
modo  Nobilissimus  Henricus,  avis  licet  proavis,  abavis,  illus- 
tris,  solis  tamen  stemmatibus  *  decorari  aut  longo  sanguine 
censeri,  velut  alienum  quiddam  nee  satis  fidum  honoris  sem- 
piterni  fundamentum  ducens,  fortunje  bonis  animi  thesauros 
addidit,  titvdos  insignes  propriis  virtutibus  ornavit,  rerum  om- 
nium scientiag  et  liberali  cognitioni  incubuit,  Philosophia; 
adyta  et  medicina;  arcana  penetravit,  authorcs  eximios  et 
classici  nominis  indefessa  manu  versans,  honorem  mori  nesci- 
um,  nee  perituram  virtutis  ftimam  bonorum  omnium  calculo  ob- 
tinuit.  Prudenter  itaque  insignissimus  vir  verborum  insigni- 
bus  propriis  et  scuto  militari  adseriptorum  (Pie  rcpone  tej  f 

*  Juvenal.  Sat.  8.  Stemmata  quid  faciunt,  etc. 
t  Pie  repotic  le  is  the  motto  of  liis  coat  of  arms,  alluding  to  his  name. 


ORATIO    HAKVEIANA.  oI9 

contiiiuo  incmov,  atate  ingravesccnte,  a  strepitu  et  colluvie 
inuiulana,  a  moribus  vitiisque  publicis,  se  subducens,  studiis 
privatis,  eleemosynis,  pauperum  sublcvationibus,  prccibus  et 
divini  nuniinis  cultui,  se  fere  totum  dicavit. 

Qmd  itatjuc  ab  animo  benevolo  et  Principe  dignissimo  spe- 
rare  nobis  non  licuit,  qui  pro  singulari  in  medicinam  ej usque 
mystas  benevolentia,  catalogo  collcgarum  nomcn  suum  hono- 
rificum,  literisque  aureis  dignum  adscribi  voluit  ?  Qui  libros 
selectissimos  nee  levi  pretio  comparatos  Collcgio  jam  flamniis 
absumpto  impertivit,  plures  etiani  auroque  contra  a^stimandos 
et  bibliothcca  nostra  hodie  inclusos  donavit,  damnunKjue  illud 
funestum  animo  plan^  regio  resarcivit.  Qui  meliori,  uti  spc- 
ramus,  fato,  tanti  Miecenatis  munilicentiam  privdicabunt,  no- 
bisque  ac  posteris  in  emolumentum  cedent. 

Bibliotheca  Fessana  *  a  celeberrimo  rege  Almanzore  aliis- 
que  compilata,  erat,  uti  ferunt,  manuscriptis  ]Mauritanicis 
refertissima.  Cum  vero  Fezzai  monarcha  victus,  fugiens  rebus- 
que  suis  male  fidens,  libros  in  tutiorem  Regni  sedem  transfe- 
rendos  navi  commisisset,  capta  nave  et  librorum  parte  aliqua 
bine  inde  dispersa,  reliqua  in  Ilispanorum  manus  pervenit,  hi, 
uti  ex  auditu  accepi,  in  Bibliotheca  sancti  Laurentii  in  Escu- 
riali  hodie  conservantur,  ubi  a  paucis  legibiles,  a  j)aucioribus 
lecti,  a  nuUis  bene  intellecti,  rarioris  supellectilis  vicem  magis 
quam  studiorum  emolumentum  pra-stant  et  ornamento  potius 
quam  utilitati  inserviunt.  In  Bibliotheca  Durnovariana  et  li- 
bris  Petrapontanis  dispar  omnino  ratio  est;  sint  enim  licet  et 
isti  ornatu  et  specie  decori,  in  recessu  tamen  habent,  quod 
nullo  ornatu  pensatur.  Linguis  et  dialectis  constant  orbi  lite- 
rate non  incognitis ;  editionibus  optimis :  subjectis  etiam  lec- 
toribus  pergratis,  adco  ut  animos  sciential  avidos  et  alliciant 
et  expleant,  nunquam  certe  blattarum  et  tinearum  sed  docto- 
rum  epuUe  futura?. 

Generossimi  Cutleri  nomen  hoc  in  loco  silentio  pra?terire, 
absurdissima  certe  oblivionis  species,  et  monstrum  ayasisria; 
horrendum  foret.  Hie  enim  priuclari  viri  beneficentiam  et 
famam,  si  homines  tacerent,  lapides  loquerentur.     IIujus   si- 


•  This  in  some   accounu  of  Barbary  ;  and  I  have  heard  it  long  ago  from  old 
merchantj;   and  that  library  is  mentioned  l>v  divert  writers. 


350  ORATIO    HARVEIANA. 

quidem  munificentiae  speciosum  hoc  in  quo  convenimus  tliea- 
trum  gratulanter  agnoscimus,  huic  uni  debemus.  Noverat 
quippe  vir  cordatus  medicorum  liujusce  societatis  solertiam, 
et  indefessum  in  corporibus  dissecandis  scrutinium.  Senserat 
vir  sensatus  inventa  nova  et  omnibus  retro  sseculis  ignota,  hac 
ex  societate  prodiisse.  Ut  itaque  non  deesset  theatrum  tantis 
ausibus,  talibus  inventionibus,  et  futuris  sectionibus,  apprime 
accommodatum,  sumptibus  propriis  et  fisyaXoTr^iTiia  singulari, 
hoc  ipsum  exstruendum  curavit.  Hoc,  inquam,  adeo  affabre 
fabricatum,  muniisque  publicis  concinnatum,  ut  omnium  in 
Europa  quae  mihi  videre  contigit  longe  sit  pulcherrimum ; 
quod  ne  gratis  dixisse  videar,  favore  vestro  fretus,  auditores 
humanigsimi,  instantias  ahquot  adjiciam. 

Theatrum  Anatomicum  Viennense  forma  est  satis  liumili, 
nee  fornice  nee  tholo  superbum,  neque  ducentorum  audito- 
rum  capax.  Altorphinum  prope  Norinbergum,  quod  primo  et 
ante  aha  in  Germania  exstructum  fuisse,  preesenti  mihi  narra- 
vit  clarissimus  professor  Doctor  Mauritius  HofFmannus ;  ejus- 
dem  fere  dignitatis  cum  Viennensi  est,  neque  auditores  rnulto 
plures  capit.     Leydense  a3dificio  satis  eleganti,  lectoribus  eru- 
ditis  et  auditoribus  peregrinis  clarum,  Londinensi  nequaquam 
aequiparandum.     Theatrum  Patavinum  antiquitate  et  lectori- 
bus priEclaris  nobile,  a  Theatre  nostro  hcet  Tramontane  se 
superari,  Palladio  vel  Scaniozzio  judice  facile  fatebitur.    Mon- 
spelicnse  ex  lapide  quadrato  fabricatum,  formje  est  arctioris, 
pro  numero  tamen  auditorum  satis  amplum,     Theatrum  Pa~ 
risiense,  sectionum  frequentia  et  praelectionibus  egregiis  cla- 
rum, maximas  tamen  Europa?  civitati  minime  congruum,  nee 
cum  Cutleriano  conferendum.     Ne  vos  taedio  afficiam,  Roma- 
num,  Pisanum,  Lovaniense,  lubens  practereo,  unum  pro  cunc- 
tis  fama  loquatur  opus.*     Vivas  itaque  munificentissime  Cut- 
lere,  merito  sane  viventi  tibi    prtcsentes    largimur  honores, 
qui  non  solibus  tantum  sed  et  beneficiis  annos  metiris,  qui 
anteactas  vita?  fruitione  bis  vivis,f  etiam  cum  viverc  desinis 
gloria  immortahs  etiamnum  victurus,  laudibus  et  encomiis  a 


*  Omnis  Ca-sareo  ccdat  labor  Ampliillicatro, 

Unum  pro  ciiiictis  iama  loijuatiir  opus Marital. 

I   Ampliat  aetatis  spatiuni  sibi  vir  bonus  :  hoc  est,  Vivere  bis,  vita  posse  priore 
t'nu. — Morlinh 


1 


OKATIO    IIAUVEIANA.  S5\ 

virtiitis  cultoribus  nou  tantum  quotanuis  seel  quotidie  cele- 
brari  ilifTiiissinnis. 

Veram  certe  virtutis  ct  gloria?  senipiterntu  semitaiu  calca- 
runt  qui  virtutes  beneficas  coluerunt,  virtutisque  cultoribus, 
donariis  et  liberali  inanu  prospexerunt.  Nullum  virtuti  sepul- 
chrum  est,  nullibi  sepelitur  qu;e  nunciuain  moritur,  u])iquc 
decantatur  quie  undiquaque  colitur.  Diuturnum  certe  hunc 
honoreni  non  donant  statu;v,  non  marmora  conferunt.  Tunc 
enini,  cum  marmora  Messala?  findet  caprificus:*  cum  Curios 
jam  diniidios,  cum  Galbam  auricuiis  nasoque  carentom,  edax 
amiorum  reddiderit,  tunc,  inquam,  perennabunt  illustria  iio- 
mina,  et  immortalis  Ileroum  memoria  vitabit  Libitinam.f 

Nos  interim  in  vivis  tantorum  virorum  muneribus  beati,  ad 
grati  auimi  oilicia,  pares  laudes  et  encomia,  nostro  pra?unte 
exemplo,  posteros  incitabimus.  Ita  enim  futura  saecula  non 
solum  fautores  nostros  munificos,  sed  et  nosmetipsos  nostra- 
que  ha?c  instituta  coUaudabunt,  neque  nos  tantorum  bonorum 
immemores  censebunt  aut  iugratitudinis  infamia  mulctabunt. 

Quandoquidem  veru  beatius  est  dare  quam  accipere,  lau- 
dari  itidem  quam  laudare,  nunquam  uti  speramus  deerunt 
animi  generosi,  qui  beatorum  hunc  numerum  expleant,  etiam- 
que  in  hac  societate  ornatissima  genii  publici  viri,  qui  laudan- 
dorum  catalogum  adaugeant.  Hoc  enim  erit,  colendissime 
Prseses  et  Collega?  honoratissimi,  non  tantum  luce  aliena,  sed, 
cum  A])olline  medicorum  patre,  propriis  radiis  fulgere. 

Dot  bonorum  omnium  Largitor,  ut  (piibus  beneAiciendi 
animus  non  deest,  iisdem  et  facultates  suppetant,  quibus  vero 
facultates  suppetunt,  iisdem  animus  non  deficiat.  Ut  vero 
beneficiis  non  indigni,  aut  ea  minus  promereri  videamur,  bc- 
nefactorum  non  tantum  memoriam,  sed  et  virtutes  colamus. 
Justitia  quae  regnum  firmat,  collegium  etiam  Regia  autliori- 
tate  nuuiitum,  stabiliat.  Pra'sidi  Colcndissimo  reverentiam 
et  obsequium  pra.^stemus,  mutuam  inter  nos  amicitiam  et  con- 


•  Marmore  MessaljB  findet  caprificus.  Jnvnial.  When  a  wild  fig  tree  shall 
cieave  the  monument  of  Mcssala  the  great  family  of  Rome  :  as  we  see  elders  and 
wall  flowers  and  shrubby  plants  with  us  in  the  clefts  of  old  walls  and  spoil  thcni. 

t  Libitina  the  goddess  of  funerals,  from  whose  temple  they  provided  funeral 
necessaries,  taken  figuratively  for  death  itself;  as  Horace,  "  I'ars  inei  vitabit  Libiti- 
nam."     and  Juvenal,  "  quando  Libitmam  cvaserit  scger." 


352  ORATIO    HARVEIANA. 

cordiam  amplectamur,  prajclaris  collegarum  inventis  nova  ad- 
jicere  conemur,  humanitate,  comitate,  et  morum  suavitate, 
ornemur  :  nihil  denique  iEsculapio  indignum,  nihil  a  dignitate 
medica  alienum  perpetremus.  Ita  enim,  Amplissime  Praeses, 
et  Collegaj  ornatissimi,  in  saeculo  generoso  et  civitate  munifi- 
centissima  erit  certe,  erit  inquam,  cur  praeclara  additamenta, 
inimo  et  montes  speremus.* 

*  Montes,  great  matters  :  "  promitterc  montes." 


!l 


I 


THUNDER    STORM.  353 


[ACCOUNT  OF  A  THUNDER  STORM  AT 
NORWICH,  IGGo.] 

[MS.    SLOAN.     ISGO,    tbi.    9G.] 

June  28,  IGGo. 
After  seven  o'clock  in  the  evening  there  was  almost  a  con- 
tinued thunder  until  eight,  wherein  the  tonltru  andj'ulfrur,  the 
noise  and  lightning  were  so  terrible,  that  they  put  the  whole 
city  into  an  amazement,  and  most  unto  their  prayers.  The 
clouds  went  low,  and  the  cracks  seemed  near  over  our  heads 
during  the  most  part  of  the  thunder.  About  eight  o'clock, 
an  ignis  fulmineus,  jnla  ignea  fulminans,  telum  ig?ieiimful- 
mineiim,  or  fire-ball,  hit  against  the  Uttle  wooden  pinnacle 
of  the  high  leucome  window  of  my  house,  toward  the  market- 
place, broke  the  flue  boards,  and  carried  pieces  thereof  a 
stone's  cast  off;  whereupon  many  of  the  tiles  fell  into  the 
street,  and  the  windows  in  adjoining  houses  were  broken. 
At  the  same  time  either  a  part  of  that  close-bound  fire,  or 
another  of  the  same  nature  fell  into  the  court-yard,  and  where- 
of no  notice  was  taken  till  we  began  to  examine  the  house, 
and  then  we  found  a  freestone  on  the  outside  of  the  wall  of 
the  entry  leading  to  the  kitchen,  half  a  foot  from  the  ground, 
fallen  from  the  wall ;  a  hole  as  big  as  a  foot-ball  bored  through 
the  wall,  which  is  about  a  foot  thick,  and  a  chest  which  stood 
against  it,  on  the  inside,  split  and  carried  about  a  foot  from 
the  wall.  Tlie  wall  also,  behind  the  leaden  cistern,  at  five 
yards  distance  from  it,  broken  on  the  inside  and  outside  ;  the 
middle  seeming  entire.  The  lead  on  the  edges  of  the  cistern 
turned  a  little  up ;  and  a  great  washing-bowl,  that  stood  by 
it,  to  recover  the  rain,  turned  upside  down,  and  split  quite 
through.  Some  chimneys  and  tiles  were  struck  down  in  other 
parts  of  the  city.  A  fire-ball  also  struck  down  the  walk  in 
the  market-place.  And  all  this,  God  be  thanked !  without 
mischief  unto  any  person.     The  greatest  terror  was  from  the 

VOL.    IV.  2  A 


354  THUNDER    STORM. 

noise,  answerable  unto  two  or  three  cannon.  The  smell  it 
left  was  strong,  like  that  after  the  discharge  of  a  cannon. 
The  balls  that  flew  were  not  like  fire  in  the  flame,  but  the 
coal ;  and  the  people  said  it  was  like  the  sun.  It  was  discu- 
tiens,  terebrans,  but  not  nrens.  It  burnt  nothing,  nor  any 
thing  it  touched  smelt  of  fire ;  nor  melted  any  lead  of  window 
or  cistern,  as  I  found  it  do  in  the  great  storm,  about  nine 
years  ago,  at  Melton  hall,  four  miles  off",  at  that  time  when 
the  hail  broke  three  thousand  pounds  worth  of  glass  in  Nor- 
wich, in  half-a-quarter  of  an  hour.  About  four  days  after, 
the  like  fulminous  fire  killed  a  man  in  Erpingham  church,  by 
Aylsham,  upon  whom  it  broke,  and  beat  down  divers  which 
were  within  the  wind  of  it.  One  also  went  oW  in  Sir  John 
Hobart's  gallery,  at  Blickling.  He  was  so  near,  that  his  arm 
and  thigh  were  numbed  about  an  hour  after.  Two  or  three 
days  after,  a  woman  and  horse  were  killed  near  Bungay ;  her 
hat  so  shivered  that  no  piece  remained  bigger  than  a  groat, 
whereof  I  had  some  pieces  sent  unto  me.  Granades,  crack- 
ers, and  squibs,  do  much  resemble  the  discharge,  and  aurum 
fulminans  the  fury  thereof.  Of  other  thunderbolts  or  lapi- 
des  fulminei,  I  have  little  opinion.  Some  I  have  by  me  under 
that  name,  but  they  are  i  genere  fossil'mm. 

THOMAS  BROWNE. 
Norwich,  1665. 


ON    DREAMS.  3r)5 


[ON  DREAMS.] 

[MS.  SLOAN.  1S74,  fol.  112,  120.] 

Half  our  days  we  pass  in  the  shadow  of  the  earth  ;  and  the 
brother  of  death  exacteth  a  third  part  of  our  lives.  A  good 
part  of  our  sleep  is  peered  out  with  visions  and  fantastical 
objects,  wherein  we  are  confessedly  deceived.  The  day  sup- 
plieth  us  with  truths  ;  the  night  with  fictions  and  falsehoods, 
which  uncomfortably  divide  the  natural  account  of  our  beings. 
And,  therefore,  having  passed  the  day  in  sober  labours  and 
rational  enquiries  of  truth,  we  are  fain  to  betake  ourselves 
unto  such  a  state  of  being,  wherein  the  soberest  heads  have 
acted  all  the  monstrosities  of  melancholy,  and  which  unto 
open  eyes  are  no  better  than  folly  and  madness. 

Happy  are  they  that  go  to  bed  with  grand  music,  like  Py- 
thagoras, or  have  ways  to  compose  the  fantastical  spirit, 
whose  unruly  wanderings  take  off  inward  sleep,  filling  our 
heads  with  St.  Anthony's  visions,  and  the  dreams  of  Lipara 
in  the  sober  chambers  of  rest. 

Virtuous  thoughts  of  the  day  lay  up  good  treasures  for  the 
night ;  whereby  the  impressions  of  imaginary  forms  arise  into 
sober  simiUtudes,  acceptable  unto  our  slumbering  selves  and 
preparatory  unto  divine  impressions.'  Hereby  Solomon's 
sleep  was  happy.  Thus  prepared,  Jacob  might  well  dream 
of  angels  upon  a  pillow  of  stone.  ^Vnd  the  best  sleep  of 
Adam  might  be  the  best  of  any  after.- 

That  there  should  be  divine  dreams  seems  unreasonably 
doubted  by  Aristotle.     That  there  are  demoniacal  dreams 

'   f'iriuous  thoughts,    .^r.]       See   an  which  resulted  in  the  creation  of  woman, 

exquisite   passage,    in    Rellgio    Medici,  It  does  not  very  clearly  appear  whether 

P-  113.  Sir    Thomas   calls  it  the   best   sleep  of 

'  the  bzst  sleep  of  Adam,  Jj-c]     The  Adam,  in  allusion  to  its  origin,  or  its  re- 
only    sleep  of  Adam   recorded,    is  that  suit, 
which  God  caused  to  fall  upon  him,  and 


35G  ON    DREAMS. 

we  have  little  reason  to  doubt.  Why  may  there  not  be  an- 
gelical? If  there  be  guardian  spirits,  they  may  not  be  in- 
actively about  us  in  sleep;  but  may  sometimes  order  our 
dreams :  and  many  strange  hints,  instigations,  or  discourses, 
which  are  so  amazing  unto  us,  may  arise  from  such  founda- 
tions. 

But  the  phantasms  of  sleep  do  commonly  walk  in  the  great 
road  of  natural  and  animal  dreams,  wherein  the  thoughts  or 
actions  of  the  day  are  acted  over  and  echoed  in  the  night. 
Who  can  therefore  wonder  that  Chrysostom  should  dream 
of  St.  Paul,  who  daily  read  his  Epistles  ;  or  that  Cardan, 
whose  head  was  so  taken  up  about  the  stars,  should  dream 
that  his  soul  was  in  the  moon !  Pious  persons,  whose 
thoughts  are  daily  busied  about  heaven,  and  the  blessed  state 
thereof,  can  hardly  escape  the  nightly  phantasms  of  it,  which 
though  sometimes  taken  for  illuminations,  or  divine  dreams, 
yet  rightly  perpended  may  prove  but  animal  visions,  and  na- 
tural night-scenes  of  their  awaking  contemplations. 

Many  dreams  are  made  out  by  sagacious  exposition,  and 
from  the  signature  of  their  subjects  ;  carrying  their  interpre- 
tation in  their  fundamental  sense  and  mystery  of  similitude, 
whereby,  he  that  understands  upon  what  natural  fundamental 
every  notion  dependeth,  may,  by  symbolical  adaptation,  hold 
a  ready  way  to  read  the  characters  of  Morpheus.  In  dreams 
of  such  a  nature,  Artemidorus,  Achmet,  and  Astrampsichus, 
from  Greek,  ^Egyptian,  and  Arabian  oneiro-criticism,  may 
hint  some  interpretation :  who,  while  we  read  of  a  ladder 
in  Jacob's  dream,  will  tell  us  that  ladders  and  scalary  ascents 
signify  preferment ;  and  while  we  consider  the  dream  of  Pha- 
raoh, do  teach  us  that  rivers  overflowing  speak  plenty,  lean 
oxen,  famine  and  scarcity ;  and  therefore  it  was  but  reason- 
able in  Pharaoh  to  demand  the  interpretation  from  his  magi- 
cians, who,  being  /Egyptians,  should  have  been  well  versed 
in  symbols  and  the  hieroglyphical  notions  of  things.  The 
greatest  tyrant  in  such  divinations  was  Nabuchodonosor, 
while,  besides  the  interpretation,  he  demanded  the  dream  it- 
self; which  being  probably  determined  by  divine  immission, 
might  escape  the  common  road  of  phantasms,  that  might 
have  been  traced  by  Satan. 


ON    DREAMS.  357 

\Mien  Alcxantlcr,  going  to  besiege  Tyre,  dreamt  of  a  Sa- 
tyr, it  was  no  hard  exposition  for  a  Grecian  to  say,  "  Tyre 
will  be  thine."'  He  that  dreamed  that  he  saw  his  father 
washed  by  Jupiter  and  anointed  by  the  sun,  had  cause  to 
fear  that  he  miglit  be  crucified,  whereby  his  body  would  be 
washed  by  tlie  rain,  and  drop  by  the  heat  of  the  sun.  The 
dream  of  Vespatian  was  of  liarder  exposition ;  as  also  that  of 
the  emperor  Mauritius,  concerning  his  successor  Phocas. 
And  a  man  might  have  been  hard  put  to  it,  to  interpret  the 
language  of  /Esculapius,  when  to  a  consumptive  person  he 
held  forth  his  fingers ;  implying  thereby  that  his  cure  lay  in 
dates,  from  the  homonomy  of  the  Greek,  which  signifies 
dates  and  fingers. 

"NVe  owe  unto  dreams  that  Galen  was  a  physician,  Dion  an 
historian,  and  that  the  world  hath  seen  some  notable  pieces  of 
Cardan  ;  yet,  he  that  should  order  his  aflairs  by  dreams,  or 
make  the  night  a  rule  unto  the  day,  might  be  ridiculously  de- 
luded ;  wherein  Cicero  is  much  to  be  pitied,  who  having  ex- 
cellently discoursed  of  the  vanity  of  dreams,  was  yet  undone 
by  the  flattery  of  his  own,  which  urged  him  to  apply  himself 
unto  Augustus. 

However  dreams  may  be  fallacious  concerning  outward 
events,  yet  may  they  be  truly  significant  at  home ;  and  where- 
by we  may  more  sensibly  understand  ourselves.  Men  act  in 
sleep  with  some  conformity  unto  their  awaked  senses ;  and 
consolations  or  discouragements  may  be  drawn  from  dreams 
which  intimately  tell  us  ourselves.  Luther  was  not  like  to 
fear  a  spirit  in  the  night,  when  such  an  apparition  would  not 
terrify  him  in  the  day.  Alexander  would  hardly  have  run 
away  in  the  sharpest  combats  of  sleep,  nor  Demosthenes 
have  stood  stoutly  to  it,  who  was  scarce  able  to  do  it  in 
his  prepared  senses.  Persons  of  radical  integrity  will  not 
easily  be  perverted  in  their  dreams,  nor  noble  minds  do  j)iti- 
ful  things  in  sleep.  Crassus  would  have  hardly  been  boun- 
tiful in  a  dream,  whose  fist  was  so  close  awake.  But  a 
man  might  have  Hved  all  his  life  upon  the  sleeping  hand  of 
Antonius.^ 

'  sleeping  hand  of  Antonius.'\     Who,     sus,  and  therefore  would  have  been  mu- 
awake,  was  open-handed  and  liberal,  in     nificcnt  in  his  dreams. 
contrast  with  the  dosc-fistcdncss  of  Cras- 


358  ON    DREAMS. 

There  is  an  art  to  make  dreams,  as  well  as  their  interpre- 
tations ;  and  physicians  will  tell  us  that  some  food  makes  tur- 
bulent, some  gives  quiet,  dreams.  Cato,  who  doated  upon 
cabbage,  might  find  the  crude  effects  thereof  in  his  sleep ; 
wherein  the  ^Egyptians  might  find  some  advantage  by  their 
superstitious  abstinence  from  onions.  Pythagoras  might 
have  [had]  calmer  sleeps,  if  he  [had]  totally  abstained  from 
beans.  Even  Daniel,  the  great  interpreter  of  dreams,  in  his 
leguminous  diet,  seems  to  have  chosen  no  advantageous  food 
for  quiet  sleeps,  according  to  Grecian  physic. 

To  add  unto  the  delusion  of  dreams,  the  phantastical  ob- 
jects seem  greater  than  they  are ;  and  being  beheld  in  the 
vaporous  state  of  sleep,  enlarge  their  diameters  unto  us ; 
whereby  it  may  prove  more  easy  to  dream  of  giants  than  pig- 
mies. Democritus  might  seldom  dream  of  atoms,  who  so 
often  thought  of  them.  He  almost  might  dream  himself  a 
bubble  extending  unto  the  eighth  sphere.  A  little  water 
makes  a  sea;  a  small  puff  of  wind  a  tempest.  A  grain  of  sul- 
phur kindled  in  the  blood  may  make  a  flame  like  JEtna. ;  and 
a  small  spark  in  the  bowels  of  Olympias  a  lightning  over  all 
the  chamber. 

But,  beside  these  innocent  delusions,  there  is  a  sinful  state 
of  dreams.  Death  alone,  not  sleep,  is  able  to  put  an  end  unto 
sin ;  and  there  may  be  a  night-book  of  our  iniquities ;  for 
beside  the  transgressions  of  the  day,  casuists  will  tell  us  of 
mortal  sins  in  dreams,  arising  from  evil  precogitations  ;  mean- 
while human  law  regards  not  noctambulos ;  and  if  a  night- 
walker  should  break  his  neck,  or  kill  a  man,  takes  no  notice 
of  it. 

Dionysius  was  absurdly  tyrannical  to  kill  a  man  for  dream- 
ing that  he  had  killed  him;  and  really  to  take  away  his  life, 
who  had  but  fantastically  taken  away  his.  Lamia  was  ridi- 
culously unjust  to  sue  a  young  man  for  a  reward,  who  had 
confessed  that  pleasure  from  her  in  a  dream  which  she  had 
denied  unto  his  awaking  senses :  conceiving  that  she  had 
merited  somewhat  from  his  fantastical  fi-uition  and  shadow  of 
herself.  If  there  be  such  debts,  we  owe  deeply  unto  sympa- 
thies ;  but  the  common  spirit  of  the  world  must  be  ready  in 
such  arrearages. 


ON    DREAMS.  359 

If  some  liave  swooned,  they  may  have  also  died  in  dreams, 
since  death  is  but  a  confirmed  swooning.  Whether  Plato 
died  in  a  dream,  as  some  deliver,  he  must  rise  again  to  inform 
us.  Tiiat  some  have  never  dreamed,  is  as  improbable  as  that 
some  have  never  laughed.  That  children  dream  not  the  first 
half  year ;  that  men  dream  not  in  some  countries,  with  many 
more,  are  unto  me  sick  men's  dreams  ;  dreams  out  of  the  ivory 
gate,*  and  visions  before  midnight. 

i  llie  ivory  gale."]     The  poets  suppose     which  true  dreams  proceed;  the  other  of 
two  gates  of  sleep,  the  one  of  horn,  from    ivory,  which  sends  forth  false  dreains. 


360  NOT^    IN    ARISTOTELEM. 


[NOT^  IN  ARISTOTELEM.] 

[MS.   SLOAN.    1874,   fol.    81.] 

LiBELLUM  edidit,  non  ita  pridem,  Johannes  de  Launoy,  Tlieo- 
logus  Parisiensis,  de  varia  Aristotelis  fortuna ;  unde  celeberri- 
mum  philosophum,  interdum  publice  comhustum,  interdmn 
restitutum,  nunc  decretis  solennibus  damnatum,  alias  iterum 
honoratum,  octonam  denique  varietatem  passum,  in  eadem 
Academia,  constat. 

Habuerunt  sane  antiqui  Christiani,  Justinus,  Clemens,  Ter- 
tullianus,  Augustinus,  aliique  plurimi,  qua  scriptis  tanti  viri 
opponerent.  Qui  hodie  a  neotericis  acrius  et  ad  vivum 
sectus,  tantum  non  animam  agit :  ut  videatur  mihi  peripate- 
tica  jam  quasi  ad  incitas  redacta,  et  vix  aut  ne  vix  eluctatura. 

Sed  cum  in  Aristotele  multa  deficiant,  multa  fallant,  multa 
itidem  contradicant,  non  pauca  tamen  prosunt.  Noli  itaque 
integro  operi  valedicere;  sed  dum  physica  parum  teris  et 
metaphysica  oscitanter  legis,  ca2tera  quidem  magni  facias,  et 
indefessa  manu  verses. 

Problemata  Aristotelis  magno  labore,  sed  successu  itn- 
pari,  illustraverunt  Petrus  Aponensis  et  Alexander  Aphro- 
disaeus ;  prsEclarius  sane  Petrus  Septalius,  magni  nominis  me- 
dicus.  Sed  cum  genio  minus  iibero,  nee  nova  philosophia 
imbuto,  ad  mentcm  philosophi  omnia  fere  exponat,  saepe 
saepius  rem  minus  attingit,  nee  animum  veritatis  avidum 
explet. 

Itaque  ut  quasitorum  Veritas  et  ratio  melius  constet, 
opera  pretium  erit  ea  ad  examen  revocare,  et,  ubi  fallunt 
antiqui  canones,  ad  nova  theoremata  transire.  Quod  ut 
faciliori  negotio  praestes,  en  tibi  selectiora  aliquot,  quibus 
intelligendis,  examinandis,  clucidandis,  operam  pras  ceteris 
impendas. 


notie  in  aristotelem.  361 

Sect.  i.  Proc.  17. 

A  Vergiliis  ad  Zcphyrum  usque,  qui  longis  morbis  laborant, 
tolluntur  e  medio;  id  est,  ab  occasu  pleiadum,  circa  14  No- 
vcnibris, — ad  principium  veris,  cum  spirare  solent  Zephyri. 
Sive  brevius,  ab  initio  liyemis  medicjr  ad  veris  initium. 

In  locis  humidis,  ulcera  in  capite  cito  sanantur,  in  tibiis  scgre. 

Hyems  Borealis  cum  vera  Austrino  et  pluvia,  et  sicca 
a?state,  lethales  facit  Autumnos,  potissimum  pueris,  aliis  autem 
dyscnteriae  et  quartana?  fiunt. 

Si  quis  a3re  vuleneretur  citius  sanatur  quam  si  ferro. 

Dentium  stuporem  (ai/xubiav)  solvunt  portulaca  et  sal. 

^stivi  labores  balneo,  hyemales  inunctionibus,  curandi. 

Odorata  urinam  movent,  tam  semina  quam  plantas. 

Ad  sanitatem  carnem  densare  non  oportet,  sed  rarefacere. 

In  febribus  paulatini,  et  sa^pe  potio  dari  debet. 

In  quartanis  oportet  non  extenuare,  sed  ignem  in  corpori- 
bus  adaugere. 

Sect.  ii. 

Sudamus  magis  tergo  quam  anteriore  parte ;  superiores 
magis  sudant  quam  inferiores  partes  ;  in  aqua  etiamsi  calida 
non  sudant ;  sudores  in  capite  [minus]  gravis  odoris  ;  maxime 
sudamus  in  facie. 

Sect,  [iv.] 

Moriens  oculos  sursum  vertit,  dormiens  deorsum. 
Albi  homines  et  quia  maxima  ex  parte  glauci,   colorem 
corporis  oculi  color  sequitur.' 

Sect.  vi. 

Inflexo  corpore  cubare  melius. 

Surgentibus  vertigo  magis  evenit  quam  sedentibus:  ova 
cruda  nequeunt  circumvolvi. 

Super  dextram  cubantibus  facilius  somnus  advenit. 

Sect.  vir. 

Juxta  ignem  stantes  non  mingimus,  si  juxta  fluvium  irri- 
tamur. 

'  Jlbi,  Sfc]     This  passage  is  almost  illegible  in  MS. 


362  NOTiE    IN    ARISTOTELEM. 

Ad  tristium  auditum  exhorrescimus,  ut  cum  serra  acuitur 
aut  pumex  secatur. 

Oscitantibus  contra  oscitamus. 

Sect,  ix. 

Medium  carnis  ferula  percussum  album  redditur,  extremum 
rubrum ;  ligno  vero  rubicundius  medium. 
Spleneticorum  cicatrices  nigrae. 
Caetera)  cicatrices  nigrae,  in  oculo  albae. 
JEs  et  cyathus  applicatus  sugillata  dissolvunt. 

Sect.  x. 

1.  Animalium  alia  tussiunt,  alianon,  ut  homo,  non  autem  bos. 

2.  Homini  soli,  inter  alia  animalia,  sanguis  e  naribus  fluit. 
5.  Homo  tantum  habet  vitiliginem  Aeuxjji/, 

12.  Proles  caeterorum  animantium,  magis  quam  hominum, 
similem  parentibus  gerit  naturum. 

17.  Inter  animalia  homo  habet  minimum  intervallum  ocu- 
lorum,  pro  suo  magnitudine. 

19.  Qua?  collum  non  habent,  caput  non  movent. 

20.  Homo  inter  animantia  maxime  sternutat. 

21.  Lingua  nulli  animali  pinguis. 

23.  Animalia  quae  non  volant  deponunt  hymales  pilos, 
prater  suem.  Oves  et  homines,  bos  et  canis,  et  equi,  de- 
ponunt. 

24.  Ovibus  expilatis  moUiores  pili  subnascuntur,  homini 
duriores. 

25.  Ovis  pili  quanto  longiores  tanto  duriores,  homini  mol- 
liores. 

27.  Homo  jubam  non  habet,  quia  barbam. 

28.  Omnia  animalia  pares  pedes  habent. 

33.  Minori  tem])ore  animalia  dormiunt,  quam  vigilant. 

36.  Ubi  vitiligo  ibi  canities. 

40.  Omnium  animalium  homo  maxime  a  nativitate  claudus. 

42.  Animalium  solus  homo  calculo  laborat. 

43.  Non  eructant  jumenta,  non  boves  et  cornigera,  nee 
etiam  aves. 

45.  Hominibus  umbilici  magni,  aliis  non  manifesti. 


SOTJE    IN    ARISTOTELEM.  363 

48.  Quicunqiie  sectioneni,  quae  est  per  manum,  habent  per 
totain  traductani,  longa}vi. 

50.  Aninialium  homo  niaxime  fumo  afficitur. 

52.  Bipcda  in  aiiterioribus  pilosiora,  quadrupeda  in  pos- 
terioribus. 

63.  Quibus  sub  umbilicum  niajores  sunt  partes,  quam  qua? 
sunt  versus  pectus,  iis  brevis  vita  et  imbecillis. 

Sect.  xi. 

Sensibus  a  nativitate  maxime  auditu  privamur. 

Surdi  per  nares  loquuntur. 

Magna  voce  prajditi  natura  calidi. 

Melius  exaudiri  qua?que  nocte  sclent. 

Si  quis  dolia  et  fictilia  vasa  vacua  sepeliat,  magis  sonant 
aedificia  quam  si  puteas  aut  fovea  fuerit  in  domo. 

Aqua  frigida  ex  eodem  vase  eflusa,  acutiorem  sonuni  red- 
dit  quam  calida. 

Plorantes  acutiorem  vocem  edant,  ridentes  gravioreni. 

Voces  hyeme  graviores. 

Oscitantes  minus  audiunt. 

Lingua  haesitantes  (leyjfuvoi)  melancholici. 

Melius  audimus,  spiritum  continentes,  quam  emittentes. 

Sect.  xv. 

Onines  Barbari  quam  Gracci  in  decern  numerant. 

Sol  per  quadrilatera  transiens,  non  rectilineas  figuras  sed 
circulares,  ut  in  cratibus. 

Parelius  non  fit  neque  in  medio  coelo  constitute  sole,  neque 
supra  nee  infra  sed  ad  latus. 

Extremum  umbrae  solis  tremere  videtur. 

Sect.  xvi. 

Bulla?  haemisphaericae. 

Sect.  xix. 

iEqualium  doliorum  et  similium  si  ununi  sit  vacuum,  dia- 
pason consonat  echo. 

Sect.  xx. 
Cur  irrigant  mane,  nocte,  aut  occidcnte  sole  ? 


364  NOT^    IN    ARISTOTELEM. 

Cur  citius  excaulescat  olus,  quod  e  semine  vestustiore,  bimo 
aut  trimo,  quani  quo  de  nova  producitur  ? 

Cur  cepe  solum  tarn  acriter  oculos  mordet,  origanus  autem 
non ;  atque  alia  acria  ? 

Quae  frigida  aqua  irrigantur  dulciora  evadunt,  quam  quae 
calida. 

Sect.  xxi. 

Panes  albidiores  videntur  frigidi,  quam  calidi. 

Cur  panes  non  saliti  plus  ponderant  quam  saliti,  cum  sal 
aqua  gravius  ? 

Frigidi  panes  madefacti,  si  se  invicem  tangunt,  non  coheerent, 
calidi  autem  cohaerent. 

Farina  aqua  subacta  melius  coit  quam  oleo. 

Sect.  xxii. 

Dulcia  minus  dulcia  videntur  calida,  quam  frigida. 

Sect,  xxiir. 

Mare  albius  est  in  Ponto,  quam  in  /Egaeo. 

Mare,  etiamsi  crassius,  ivdiovn^a,  perspectius,  aqua  potabili. 

In  Borealibus  perspectius,  quam  in  regionibus  Australibus. 

Salem  prius  liquefacit  aqua  salsa,  quam  dulcis. 

In  mare  lavantes  citius  resiccantur. 

Maris  partes  prope  terram  dulcioi'es. 

In  lacubus  arena  non  fit,  ut  in  mari  et  fluviis. 

In  mari  lapides  et  testae  rotunda?  fiunt. 

Sect.  xxiv. 

Fundus  vasorum  non  urit  cum  aquam  bullientem  contineat. 

Non  super  cffervescit  (^'ffEf^s/')  aqua  hyeme  perinde  ac 
acstate. 

Aqua  ebuUiens  non  exilit,  ut  pulmentum  ex  pisis  et  elixis 
leguminibus,  et  argentum  cum  aqua  injicitur. 

Pede  quiescente  in  aqua  calida,  cur  minus  calida  scntiatur 
quam  mota. 

Calida  in  sole  magis  quam  in  umbra  refrigeratur. 


not/e  in  aristotelem.  365 

Sect.  xxv. 

Media  in  nocte  et  meridie  maxima  fit  tranquillitas. 
Noctu  sercnitas  magis  fit  (juam  intcrdiu. 
Noctibus  iustus  pra^focatiores  (miyriBori^ai.) 

Sect.  xxvi. 

Cur  dicitur,  "Tertia  lux  iiunquam  nocturno  aquilone  calo- 
rat,  laborat  ? " 

Auster  foetidus. 

Ventus  ante  eclipses,  magna  ex  parte. 

Auster  non  incipiens,  sed  Aniens  pluvius. 

Venti  hyeme  ab  oriente,  aestate  ab  occidcnte. 

Spirantibus  austris,  gravius  se  babent,  et  imbccillius, 
homines. 

Auster  incipiens" parvus,  Aniens  magnus,  Boreas  e  contra; 
unde  proverbium,  "  bonum  est  navigare  incipiente  Austro  et 
finiente  Aquilone." 

Post  Austrum  cito  Aquilo,  post  hunc  non  cito  Auster  spirat. 

Austri  sicci,  et  inaquosi,  febriculosi. 

Ventus  mane  incijjiens,  durat  magis. 

Aquilo  interdiu  vehemens,  noctu  autem  cadit. 

Sect,  xxvii. 

Fortes  et  plurimum  vinosi. 

Timentes  maxinie  tremunt  voce,  manibus,  et  labro  inferiori. 
Timentes  sitiunt  et  algent,  alvo  soh  untur,  mingunt,  et  testes 
contrahuntur. 

Sect.  xxxi. 

Perfricato  oculo  cessat  sternutatio. 

Irati  oculis  maxime  rubore  tentantur,  pudefacti  auribus. 

Ilominibus  solis  inter  animalia  oculi  pervertuntur. 

Sect,  xxxii. 

Cur  urinatores  sibi  dissecant  aures  et  nares. 
Aliqui,  dum  aures  scalpunt,  tussiunt. 

Sinistra  auris  ocius  consolidatur  magna  cx  parte  cum  per- 
foratur. 


3GG  NOT/E    IN    ARISTOTELEM. 


Sect,  xxxiii. 


Sternutatio  singultum  solvit ;  eructatio  autem  non  sedat. 
Singultum  solvit  sternutatio,  spiritiis  cohibitio,  acetum. 
Sternutatio  dormientibus  non  fit. 


Etid  of  Problems. 


OBSERVATIONS    ON    GRAFTING.  3G7 


[OBSERVATIONS  ON  GRAFTING.^] 

[us.  SLOAN.  1848,  fol.  44—48;    1SS2,  Ibl.   136,    137;    and  additional    mss. 

NO.  5233,  fol.    58.] 

In  the  doctrine  of  all  insitions,  those  are  esteemed  most  suc- 
cessful which  are  practised  under  these  rules : — 

That  there  be  some  consent  or  similitude  of  parts  and 
nature  between  the  plants  conjoined. 

That  insition  be  made  between  trees  not  of  very  different 
barks  :  nor  very  differing  fruits  or  forms  of  fructification ;  nor 
of  widely  different  ages. 

That  the  scions  or  buds  be  taken  from  the  south  or  east 
part  of  the  tree. 

That  a  rectitude  and  due  position  be  observed  ;  not  to  in- 
sert the  south  part  of  the  scions  unto  the  northern  side  of 
the  stock,  but  according  to  the  position  of  the  scions  upon 
his  first  matrix. 

Now,  though  these  rules  be  considerable  in  the  usual  and 
practised  course  of  insitions,  yet  were  it  but  reasonable  for 
searching  spirits  to  urge  the  operations  of  nature  by  conjoin- 
ing plants  of  very  different  natures  in  parts,  barks,  lateness, 
and  precocities,  nor  to  rest  in  the  experiments  of  hortensial 
plants  in  whom  we  chiefly  intend  the  exaltation  or  variety  of 
their  fruit  and  flowers,  but  in  all  sorts  of  shrubs  and  trees  ap- 
plicable unto  physic  or  mechanical  uses,  whereby  we  might 
alter  their  tempers,  moderate  or  promote  their  virtues,  ex- 
change their  softness,  hardness,  and  colour,  and  so  render 
them  considerable  beyond  their  known  and  trite  employments. 

'  Observations,  &c.]    '^Generation     probability,  was  written  for  and  address- 
of  Plants,"  was  the  title  given  by  Dr.     cd  to  Evelyn. 
Ayscough    to  this    paper:    which,   in  all 


368  OBSERVATIONS    ON    GRAFTING. 

To  which  intent  curiosity  may  take  some  rule  or  hint  from 
these  or  the  Hke  following,  according  to  the  various  ways  of 
propagation : — "^ 

Colutea  upon  anagris 

Arbor  judas  upon  anagris 

Cassia  poetica  upon  cytisus 

Cytisus  upon  periclymenum  rectum 

Woodbine  upon  jasmine 

Cystus  upon  rosemary 

Rosemary  upon  ivy 

Sage  or  rosemary  upon  cystus 

Myrtle  upon  gall  or  rhus  myrtifoha 

Whor tie-berry  upon  gall,  heath,  or  myrtle 

Coccygeia  upon  alaternus 

Mezereon  upon  an  almond 

Gooseberry  and  currants  upon  mezereon,  barberry,  or 

blackthorn 
Barberry  upon  a  currant  tree 
Bramble  upon  gooseberry  or  raspberry 
Yellow  rose  upon  sweet  briar 
Phyllerea  upon  broom 
Broom  upon  furze 
Anonis  lutea  upon  furze 
Holly  upon  box 
Bay  upon  holly 
Holly  upon  pyracantha 
A  fig  upon  chesnut 
A  fig  upon  mulberry 
Peach  upon  nuilberry 
Mulberry  upon  buckthorn 
Walnut  upon  chesnut 
Savin  upon  juniper 
Vine  upon  oleaster,  rosemary,  ivy 

i  propagation.']   A  brief  memoran Jum  met    with   such    a   Catalogue    (in    MS. 

occurs   here   in   the   original,    in    these  Sloan.  1843,  fol.  44—48)  1  have  not  he- 

\vords:_"  To    insert    the    Catalogue,"  sitated  to  transplant  it  hither  as  the  one 

evidently  showinj?   that  the  author  in-  intended.     Several  of  the  names  are  so 

tended  the  list  of  his  proposed  experi-  illegible,  that  it  is  impossible  not  to  fear 

ments  to  be  here   introduced.     Having  ihcy  may  be  incorrectly  given. 


OBSERVATIONS   ON    ORAFTINC.  ']fi9 

An  arbutus  upon  a  fig 

A  pcadi  upon  a  fig 

White  jjoplar  upon  black  poplar 

Asp  upon  white  poplar 

\\'ych  ehn  upon  common  chn 

Hazel  upon  elm 

Sjcamore upon  wych  elm 

Cinnamon  rose  upon  hipberry 

A  whitetliorn  upon  a  blackthorn 

Hipberry  u])on  a  sloe,  or  skeye,  or  bullace 

Apricot  upon  a  mulberry 

Arbutus  upon  a  mulberry 

Cherry  upon  a  peach 

Oak  upon  a  cbesnut 

Katherine  pcacb  upon  a  quince 

A  warden  upon  a  quince 

A  cbesnut  upon  a  beecb 

A  beech  upon  a  cbesnut 

An  hornbeam  upon  a  beech 

A  maple  upon  an  hornbeam 

A  sycamore  upon  a  maple 

A  medlar  upon  a  service  tree 

A  sumack  upon  a  quince  or  medlar 

An  hawthorn  upon  a  service  tree 

A  quicken  tree  upon  an  ash 

An  ash  upon  an  asp 

An  oak  upon  an  ilex 

A  poplar  upon  an  elm 

A  black  cherry  tree  upon  a  tilea  or  lime  tree 

Tilea  upon  beech 

Alder  u])on  birch  or  poplar 

A  fill)ert  upon  an  almond 

An  almond  upon  a  willow 

A  nux  vesicaria  upon  an  almond  or  pistachio 

A  cerasus  avium  upon  a  nux  vesicaria 

A  cornelian  ^  upon  a  cherry  tree 

A  cherry  tree  upon  a  cornelian 

An  hazel  upon  a  willow  or  sallow 

'  Cornelian.^     Cornel-tree. 
VOL.     IV.  o   B 


370  OBSERVATIONS    ON    GRAFTING. 

A  lilac  upon  a  sage  tree 

A  syi'inga  upon  lilac  or  trec-niallow 

A  rose  elder  upon  syringa 

An  water  elder  upon  rose  elder 

Buckthorn  upon  elder 

Frangula  upon  buckthorn 

Hirga  sanguinea  upon  privet 

Phyllerea  upon  vitex 

Vitex  upon  evonymus 

Evonymus  upon  viburnum 

Ruscus  upon  pyracantha 

Paleurus  upon  hawthorn 

Tamarisk  upon  birch 

Erica  upon  tamarisk 

Polemonium  upon  genista  hispanica 

Genista  hispanica  upon  colutea. 

Nor  are  we  to  rest  in  the  frustrated  success  of  some  single 
experiments,  but  to  proceed  in  attempts  in  the  most  unlikely 
unto  iterated  and  certain  conclusions,  and  to  pursue  the  way 
of  ablactation  or  inarching.  Whereby  we  might  determine 
whether,  according  to  the  ancients,  no  fir,  pine,  or  picea,  would 
admit  of  any  insition  upon  them  ;  whether  yew  will  hold 
society  with  none  ;  whether  walnut,  mulberry,  and  cornel 
cannot  be  ])ropagated  by  insition,  or  the  fig  and  quince  admit 
almost  of  any,  with  many  others  of  doubtful  truths  in  the 
propagations. 

And  while  we  seek  for  varieties  in  stocks  and  scions,  we  are 
not  to  omit  the  ready  practise  of  the  scion  upon  its  own  tree. 
Whereby,  having  a  sufficient  number  of  good  plants,  we  may 
improve  their  fruits  without  translative  conjunction,  that  is,  by 
insition  of  the  scion  upon  his  own  mother,  whereby  an  hand- 
some variety  or  melioration  seldom  faileth — we  might  be  still 
advanced  by  iterated  insitions  in  proper  boughs  and  positions. 
Insition  is  also  made  not  only  with  scions  and  buds,  but  seeds, 
by  inserting  them  in  cabbage  stalks,  turnips,  onions,  &c.,  and 
also  in  ligneous  plants. 

Within  a  mile  of  this  city  of  Norwich,  an  oak  growethupon 
the  head  of  a  pollard  willow,  taller  than  the  stock,  and  about 


OBSERVATIONS    ON    fi RAFTING.  371 

luilf  a  foot  ill  diameter,  probably  by  some  acorn  fallinn-  or 
fastening  upon  it.  I  could  shew  you  a  branch  of  the  same 
willow  which  shoots  forth  near  the  stock  which  beareth  both 
willow  and  oak  twigs  and  leaves  upon  it.  In  a  meadow  I  use 
in  Norwich,  beset  with  willows  and  sallows,  I  have  observed 
these  plants  to  grow  upon  their  heads;  bylders,*  currants, 
gooseberries,  cijnocrambe,  or  dog's  mercury,  barberries,  bit- 
tersweet, elder,  hawthorn. 

''  Bifldcrs.'\     Qu.  bilberry  .' 


•-'    B  •-■ 


372  FRAGMENTS. 


[FRAGMENTS.^] 

[bIBL,    EODL.    MS.    RAWL.    LVIII,    f)    &     15.] 

[Part  of  a  Lecture.] 

Cetaceous  animals,  as  whales,  grampusses,  dolphin.s,  though 
they  live  in  water  are  not  without  lungs.  I  shall  instance  in 
the  dolphin,  as  having  had  the  opportunity  to  be  at  the  dis- 
section of  two  of  them.  The  lungs  are  in  situation  and  figure 
like  those  of  viviparous  quadrupeds,  but  not  so  spongy,  and  of 
a  thicker  and  flesh-like  substance,  and  probably  they  may 
have  a  strong  and  forcible  respiration.  And  because  they 
live  and  feed  in  the  water,  Providence  hath  provided  them 
with  an  A'jXog,  fistula,  or  spout,  by  which  both  air  may  be  ad- 
mitted and  water  ejected,  which  hath  been  taken  in  at  the 
mouth ;  so  that  if  they  be  kept  too  long  under  water  they 
perish.  Now  because  this  remarkable  passage  is  so  variously 
delivered  by  writers,  it  may  not  be  improper  from  ocular  view 
to  state  something  in  this  point. 

Pliny  delivers  that  this  fistula  is  on  the  back  ;  Aristotle,  in 
his  History  of  Animals,  placeth  it  also  in  the  back.  Julius 
Scaliger,  in  his  comment  upon  that  place,  hath  these  words. 
"  Aut  delphinum  ignoravit  Aristoteles  aut  nos  ;  nam  quos  in 
Adriatico  quos  in  oceano  Britannico  vidimus  fistulam  versus 
occiput  habent,"  have  the  fistula  toward  the  occiput.  Bello- 
nius  saith  it  is  between  the  eyes,  and  Rondeletius  above  the 
rostrum  or  snout. 


'  Fragments.]  The  first  of  these  The  second  was  very  probably  a  siigges- 
"  Fragments"  was  evidently  intended  tion  to  Evelyn— as  a  passage  in  his  pro- 
for  a  passage  in  one  of  his  son's  lectures,     posed  "  Chapter  on  Echoes." 


FRAGMENTS.  o73 

Now  tliat  you  may  cxpeiiniontally  behokl  who  is  in  the 
truth,  anil  who  widest  from  it ;  that  you  may  see  that  siglit  is 
the  best  juil;[Te  ;  and  indeed  tliat  you  may  doubt  no  more,  I 
shall  produce  the  skull  of  a  dolphin  ;  wherein  you  may  ob- 
serve this  passage  contrived  by  nature  and  its  situation ;  not 
on  the  back  as  Aristotle  and  Pliny  aflirmed ;  not  clearly 
enough  expressed  by  Scaliger,  when  he  saith  'versus  occiput ; 
nor  suHiciently  by  Bellonius  between  the  eyes;  but  rather  as 
Koniloletius  de  piscibus;  "post  rostrum  sive  supra  rostrum  fis- 
tulam  habct  gcminam  qutc  ad  caput  asperac  arterial  pertingit 
interius:"  you  may  see  its  situation  about  the  rostrum,  but  the 
ductus  is  double  and  divided  by  a  septum  osseum,  that  it 
somewhat  resembleth  the  foramina  descending  from  the  nos- 
trils unto  the  palate.  This  ductus  is  filled  with  a  soft  carnous 
substance,  which  openelh  on  the  outside  with  a  single  orifice, 
resembling  an  old  Greek  sigma,  or  our  letter  C,  at  which  the 
water  is  spouted  out. 

(In  the  Chapter  of  Echoes,  S^'c.) 

It  would  be  of  no  small  moment  and  curiosity  to  contrive  a 
whispering  place  ;  for  if  the  arching  be  elliptical,  made  by  a 
line  of  a  double  centre,  denoting  the  two  foci  of  the  ellip- 
sis, these  whispering  places  may  be  made.  For  in  the  long- 
est diameter  of  an  ellipsis  there  are  two  points,  named  the 
foci,  always  equi-distant  from  the  centre,  from  one  whereof  if 
a  line  be  drawn  unto  the  circumference  so  reflecting,  that 
the  angle  of  reflection  be  equal  unto  that  of  incidence,  they 
will  reflect  unto  the  other  focus,  and  so  the  sound  be  convey- 
ed unto  him  whose  ear  lieth  at  it.  And  therefore  if  wc  wliis- 
per  at  one  focus,  all  the  vocal  rays  which  are  carried  unto  the 
circumference  of  the  ellipsis,  are,  by  reflexion,  all  ended  in 
the  other  focus ;  and  by  the  multitude  and  union  of  these  re- 
flected rays,  the  voice  be  strongly  heard  at  the  other  extreme, 

or  focus ;  not  easily  in  the  middle,  unto  which  one 

the  ray  only  arriveth. 

Nor  to  rest  in  the  bare or  fabric,  but  upon  the 

same  to  inscribe  the  mechanical  draught,  wherein  lie  the 
causes  and  reasons  of  this  admirable  effect ;  the  figure  being 


374  FRAGMENTS. 

drawn  in  red  or  blue,  extending  the  whole  length  of  the  arch, 
and  each  focus  denoted  by  some  mark  or  special  colour, 
whereat  may  stand  two  figures  of  cupids,  boys,  or  handsome 
draughts,  with  the  mouth  to  one  focus,  the  ear  unto  the 
other,  according  to  the  rule  which  containeth  the  mystery  of 
this  effect. 


OF    r.KEENLANn.  375 


OF    G  R  E  E  N  L  A  N  D/ 

[ms.  rawlinson.  rcfxci.] 

If  any  trees  grow  in  tlie  country,  and  wliat  sorrel  and  scurvy 
grass  said  to  grow  there  :  what  others  either  on  the  land  or 
sea  shore  :  what  shells  likewise  or  other  substances  commonly 
or  rarely  found. 

To  put  the  leaves  of  those  few  herbs  which  may  be  found 
in  some  book,  so  preserving  their  figure  between  the  leaves 
of  the  book. 

Whether  any  bees,  flies,  and  the  like  insects,  and  to  bring 
some  thereof. 

Whether  any  such  birds  as  we  have  here. 

Whether  any  snakes,  worms  or  snails :  whether  any  kinds 
of  shell  fish,  what,  cither  agreeable  to  ours  or  not. 

AV'hethcr  all  or  any  of  their  whales  have  teeth — to  bring 
one  of  the  least :  what  is  found  in  their  stomachs  ;  whether 
herbs,  fish,  both  or  neither :  what  is  also  found  in  the  sto- 
machs of  sea  horses  or  morses :  what  herb  it  is  they  are  said 
to  feed  on  at  the  bottom  of  the  sea  :  to  bring  a  leaf  thereof 
if  it  may  be  gotten. 

To  bring  the  white  of  a  whale's  eye  made  hard  by  boiling. 

Whether  the  country  be  plane  or  mountainous :  how  the 
tides  to  ours :  whether  it  raineth  often,  thundereth  and  light- 
eneth  often  :  what  winds  most  common. 

What  quantity  of  salt  a  gallon  or  any  other  greater  mea- 
sure of  sea  water  aftbrdeth,  if  taken  up  at  flowing  water. 

What  use  they  make  of  the  stones  or  seed  of  whales. 

To  bring  the  bladder  of  a  whale  or  morse,  cleansed  and 
dried  so  that  it  may  be  blown  up. 

The  bigness  of  the  stones  and  kidneys  of  whales,  if  not 
too  big,  to  bring  one  dried,  or  one  of  a  sea  horse. 

'  Of    Grkknland.]     These   queries     desirous  of  obtaining  information  respect- 
were   in  all  probability  instructions   for     iug  Greenland, 
some  friend,  by  whom  Sir  Thomas  was 


<»— J» 


Ol 


6  EXTRACTS    FROM 


[EXTRACTS  FROM  COMMON  PLACE  BOOKS.] 

[mS.    SLOAN,    1843.] 

Verses  which  I  made  upon  several  occasions.^ 

To  one,  to  study  and  enquire  into  the  occult  and  inside  of  his 
gold,  not  only  to  please  himself  in  looking  on  it. 

Opto  tihi  Daricos,  obryzos "  opto  Philippos, 

Cajsareos  necnon  opto  tibi  aureolos ; 
Sed  prajter  faciem  nosce  interiora  metalli, 
Ingenio  nee  sit  ditior  area  tuo. 

O  my  love  !  when  shall  it  be 
That  these  eyes  those  eyes  shall  see, 
And  in  them  once  more  discover 
The  image  of  thy  truest  lover  1 
But  since  thou  hast  inconstant  been. 

Inconstant  still  remain. 
For  so  perhaps  by  changing  still, 

Thou  may'st  be  mine  again. 

Upon  a  covetous  person  in  the  jaundice. 

Aurescat  deformi  aurigine  qui  colit  aurum ; 
Auratus  non  sis,  aureus  esse  velis. 

Alloquitur  podagram  nanus  podagricus  ; — 
Quid  sedere  in  presso  nanorum  poUicc  figis, 

Cogeris  hie  parva  nempe  habitare  casa. 
Latins  ut  regnes,  magna  et  domineris  in  aula, 

Quaere  Giganteos  Herculeosque  pedes. 

'  Verses  tvJiieh,  iVc]  T'le  arrange-  Icct  all  the  verses  together  iiiulcr  this  lillr. 
nient  of  the  extracts  from  this  volume  -  obryzos.'l  Aurum  obryzani,  finest 
have  been  slightly  altered,  in  order  to  col-     gold.     J' /in.  23,  '3. 


COMMON    PLACE    BOOKS.  o77 

Optans  optat  poclagiiu  paroxysnuim  brcvcni. 

Duin  mens  /Etiuro  sulllaininc  dactylus  artlet; 
Ut  milii  dactylicus  sit  precor  iste  dolor 
Sit  brevis  exopto  dactylicusque  dolor. 

Sum  Davus  jiulchre  ^  vates,  non  Oedipus,  iuquit. 
Oedipus  haud  fiam,  sini  (pioque  Davus  ego. 

Oue  ill  the  gout  wishing  for  King  Pyrrhus's  toe,  which 
could  not  be  burnt  at  his  funeral  pyre. 
O  for  a  toe,  such  as  the  funeral  *  pyre 
Could  make  no  work  on — proof  'gainst  flame  and  fire ; 
^^'hich  lay  un1)urnt  when  all  the  rest  burnt  out, 
Such  amianthine  toes  might  scorn  the  gout ; 
And  the  most  flaming  blast  the  gout  could  blow 
Prove  but  an  ignis  lambens  to  that  toe. 

An  inscription  upon  a  silver  cup  given  to  a  physician  for 
his  free  cure. 

Venderc  (juam  poteras  malles  donarc  salutem. 
Mutua  donatae  dona  salutis  habe. 

Being  in  the  country,  a  few  miles  from  Norwich,  I  observed  a 
liandsome  bower  of  honey-suckles  over  the  door  of  a  cottage  of 
a  right  good  man;  which  bower  I  fancied  to  speak  as  foUoweth  : 
Hie  humilcm  et  sanum  potius  recreare  colonum 

jMallem,  quam  nasos  pascere  patritios, 
Et  nares  mulicbre  luc  turpesque  mephyti, 

Gallia  quam  pepcrit  fiudave  Parthenope. 
Nee  fauces  olidas  perjuraque  guttura  carpo 

Decocto  ex  foliis  at(|ue  limare  meis. 
Sed  neque  magnatum  crudelia  limina  ciiigo, 

Et  queis  collatus  Cerberus  agnus  erit. 
At  domini  doniina-que  mejc  pia  limina  adorno 

Et  quam  non  intrant  visque  dolusque  domum. 
Talcm,  si  peterent  de  coelo  numina  terras, 

Jupiter  intraret  Mercuriusque  casam. 

Spulclire.]  "riacide,"  MS,  SloanAb7l.         *  funeral.]  "  Kcgal."  MS.  Sluan.  1S7J. 


378  EXTRACTS    rilOM 


[Miscellanies.^ 


The  cliarnel  house  of  St.  Paul's,  of  London,  was  under  a 
chapel  on  the  north  side  of  the  church-yard.  When  that 
chapel  was  demolished,  the  bones  which  lay  in  the  vault, 
amounting  to  more  than  a  thousand  cart-loads,  were  conveyed 
into  Finsbury  fields,  and  there  laid  in  a  moorish  place,^  with 
so  much  soil  to  cover  them  as  raised  the  ground  for  three 
windmills,  which  have  since  been  built  there,  which  J.  Stowe 
hath  delivered  in  his  Survey  of  London. 

To  make  an  epigram  or  a  few  verses  upon  this  subject,  or 
of  a  windmill  upon  a  mount  of  bones. 

The  picture  of  Signor  Verdero  in  a  proper  habit : — 
A  suit  of  a  mandrake  or  nightshade  green, 
A  cloak  of  a  thistle-colour,  faced  with  holly-green, 
A  burdock-green  hat,  with  a  hatband  of  poppy-leaf,  vert, 

set  with  emeralds  and  beryls,  and  a  plume  of  parrot-green 

feathers. 
Stockings  of  an  ivy-green,  with  sage-coloured  garters, 
A  rue-coloured  sash  or  girdle,  with  brake-green  fringe, 
Pantoffles  of  cabbage-colour,  laced  with  sea-holly  or  eryngo 

green, 
Ribands  all  about,  of  fig-laurel  and  box  green. 

In  yellow  meadows  I  take  no  delight ; 

Let  me  have  those  which  are  most  red  and  white. 
That  which  makes  meadows  look  so  yellow,  is  the  great 
abundance  of  ranunculus  or  crow-foot  flowers.  But  of  this 
burning  and  bhstcring  plant  neither  horse  nor  cow  will  feed  ; 
which  made  me  the  more  observe  it,  when  I  have  seen  pea- 
cocks crop  the  flowers  of  it.  Meadows  are  also  yellow  by 
the  flowers  of  caltha  palustris  or  marsh  marigold,  of  which 

"  into  Finsbury  fields,  ^-c]  This  spot  bury;  and  this  gives  the  title  of  Lord 
is  now  coveicd  with  a  beautiful  square,  Mayor,  as  Lord  of  the  Manor  of  Finsbury. 
faking  its  name  from  liie  manor  of  i'"ins-     — Gray, 


COMMON    PLACE    BOOKS.  371) 

cattle  will  not  eat,  nor  also  of  argent'ina,  which  leaves  a  yellow 
flower,  nor  of  jacolnca  or  ragweed,  which  overruns  some 
•rrounds.  But  the  flowers  of  sorrel  are  reddish,  of  clover- 
grass  red,  of  sweet  trefoil  or  suckling  three-leaved  grass,  red 
or  white  ;  of  nlmaria  or  meadow-sweet  white,  as  also  of  saxi- 
frage, chervill,  cow-parsley,  cardaiuDW  lactea  or  meadow- 
cresses,  as  also  of  lingua  passcr'nia  ;  of  all  which  cattle  will 
feed . 

What  way  King  Mithridates  took  when  being  overcome  by 
Pompey,  he  marched  with  his  army,  and  took  a  strange  and 
unknown  journey  on  the  north  side  of  the  Euxine  sea,  to 
come  round  about  into  Thracia,  and  so  to  war  upon  the  Ro- 
mans. Again,  whether  he  went  by  the  north  of  the  iMa2otis 
Palus,  crossing  the  Tanais,  or  made  a  short  cut,  crossing  the 
Bosphorus  Cinunerius,  and  so  marching  through  the  Taurica 
Chersonesus,  which  is  a  much  shorter  cut. 

I  cannot  fancy  unto  myself  a  more  acceptable  representa- 
tion or  state  of  things,  than  if  I  could  see  all  my  best  friends 
and  worthy  acquaintance  of  forty  years  last  past  upon  the 
stage  of  the  world  at  one  time. 

I  attained  my  purpose,  and  came  to  reach  this  port  by  a 
bare  wind,  much  labour,  great  pains,  and  little  assistance. 

A  way  to  know  men  from  boys,  or  boyish  men  and  manly 
boys,  deducible  from  the  character  in  Homer. 

A  dialogue  between  an  inhabitant  of  the  earth  and  of  the 
moon. 

A  ilialogue  between  two  twins  in  the  womb,  concerning  the 
world  they  were  to  come  into. 

Question — Why  do  you  give  so  much  unto  the  poor? 
Answer — I  have  no  less  for  what  I  give  unto  the  poor,  and 
1  am  also  still  indebted  to  them. 


380  EXTRACTS    FIIOM 

A  woodcock,  in  the  total,  weighed  twelve  ounces;  and  the 
feathers  weighed  three  quarters  of  an  ounce. 

A  goose  weighed  three  pounds  ten  ounces  in  the  total ;  the 
feathers,  ten  ounces. 

A  turkey  weighed,  in  the  total,  twelve  pounds  eleven 
ounces ;  the  feathers  weighed  eleven  ounces. 

A  wild  duck  weighed,  in  the  total,  two  pounds  six  ounces ; 
the  feathers,  in  all,  two  ounces. 

A  partridge,  in  the  whole,  weighed  ten  ounces ;  the  fea- 
thers weighed  half  an  ounce. 

Robert  Huchinson,  at  the  Wheatsheaf,  in  St.  Peter's,  in 
Norwich,  drank  a  gallon  of  brandy,  burnt  and  sweetened,  in 
the  month  of  June,  1675,  in  the  space  of  fourteen  hours  ;  he 
drank  it  hot,  fell  into  a  fever,  and  complained  of  an  extraor- 
dinary burning  in  the  stomach,  but  recovered  in  seven  days, 
with  a  great  loathing  of  brandy  after :  he  is  aged  fifty-six. 
Another  man  who  drank  with  him  drank  also  a  sallon  of 
burnt  brandy  for  his  share,  and  rode  home  into  the  country 
after  it,  and  seemed  not  to  suffer  any  more  than  a  burning 
heat  in  his  stomach  for  some  days.  He  drunk  a  good  quan- 
tity of  beer  after  he  had  made  an  end  of  his  gallon  of  brandy. 


[MS.    SLOAN.    1818.] 

\_Scripture  Criticism.^ 

"And  they  brought  unto  him  one  that  was  deaf,"  &c.  unto 
"  dumb  to  speak."     [^MarJc  vii,  32.] 

One  that  was  deaf,  and  had  an  impediment  in  his  speech  ; 
/uyiXaAov.  That  is,  one  that  suffered  in  both  the  nerves  ;  the 
])rimary  wliereby  he  was  chiefly  deaf,  and  the  other  branch- 
ing into  the  tongue  and  larynx,  whereby  his  speech  was  very 
imperfect;  so  that  what  words  he  could  utter  were  abrupt, 
and  dissonantly  delivered. 

He  put  his  fingers  into  his  ears,  and  touched  his  tongue. 
lie  applied  the  visible  way  of  cure  unto  both  the  suffering 
parts. 


COMMON  ri.ACF.  nooKs.  ;>81 

And  his  ears  were  opened,  and  the  string  of  his  tongne 
was  loosed.  His  cars  were  opened  when  the  obstruction  of 
the  auditory  nerve  was  relieved.  The  string  of  his  tongue, 
the  v'niculuiu  of  his  speech,  was  released  when  the  second 
branch  descending  upon  the  larynx  and  tongue,  implicated 
with  tlie  motive  nerve  of  the  seventh  conjugation,  was  opened 
and  restored  to  its  natural  function. 

So  that  he  spake  plain,  as  he  did  before  he  was  deaf. 
For,  if  he  had  been  born  deaf,  we  must  multiply  the  miracle 
to  conceive  him  to  speak  without  instruction. 


[MS.  SLOAN.  1869,  fol,  12— 60,C2— lis,  collated  with  1871  &  1885.] 

[Hints  and  Extracts;  to  /lis  Son,  Dr.  Edward  Browne.] 

Several  hints  which  may  be  serviceable  unto  you  and  not 
ungrateful  unto  others  I  present  you  in  this  paper;  they  are 
not  trite  or  vulgar,  and  very  few  of  them  any  where  to  be 
met  with.  I  set  them  not  down  in  order,  but  as  memoi'y, 
fancy,  or  occasional  observation  produced  them  ;  whereof  you 
may  take  the  pains  to  single  out  such  as  shall  conduce  unto 
your  purpose. 

That  Elias  was  a  type  of  our  Saviour,  and  that  the  mock- 
ins  iind  railinix  of  the  children  had  reference  unto  the  deri- 
sion  and  reviling  of  our  Saviour  by  the  Jews,  we  shall  not  deny, 
but  whether  their  calling  of  him  bald  ])ate,  crying,  asccndc 
calrc,  had  any  relation  unto  Mount  Calvary,  we  shall  not  be 
ready  to  aflirni. 

That  Charles  the  Fifth  was  crowned  ui)on  the  day  of  his 
nativity  carrieth  no  remarkable  consideration,  but  that  he  also 
took  King  Francis  prisoner  upon  that  day,  was  a  concurrence 
of  accidents  which  must  make  that  day  observable. 

Antipater  that  died  on  his  birth-day,  had  an  anniversary 
fever  all  his  life  upon  the  day  of  his  nativity,  needed  not  aii 


■382  EXTRACTS    FROM 

astrological  revolution  of  his  nativity  to  know  the  day  of  his 
death. 

Who  will  not  commend  the  wit  of  astrology ; — Venus  born 
out  of  the  sea  hath  her  exaltation  in  Pisces. 

Whosoever  understandeth  the  fructifying  quaUty  of  water 
will  quickly  apprehend  the  congruity  of  that  invention  which 
made  the  cornucopia  to  be  filled  with  flowers  by  the  naiades 
or  water  nymphs. 

Who  can  but  wonder  that  Fuchsius  should  doubt  the  purg- 
ing quality  of  manna,  or  derive  aloe  sucotina  from  succus  citri- 
nus,  which  every  novice  now  knows  to  be  from  Socotara,  an 
island  from  whence  't  is  brought. 

Take  heed  of  confidence  and  too  bold  an  opinion  of  your 
work :  even  the  fomous  Phidias  so  erred  in  that  notable  statua 
of  Jupiter  made  in  a  sitting  posture,  yet  so  that  if  he  had 
risen  up  he  had  borne  up  the  top  of  the  temple. 

Transcriptional  erratas,  ignorance  in  some  particulars,  ex- 
pedition, inadvertency,  make  not  only  moles  but  wens  in  learn- 
ed works,  which  notwithstanding  being  judged  by  their  better 
parts  admit  not  of  reasonable  disparagement.  I  will  not  say 
that  Cicero  was  slightly  versed  in  Homer,  because  in  his  books 
De  Gloria  he  ascribeth  those  verses  unto  Ajax  which  were 
dehvered  by  Hector.  In  the  account  of  Hercules,  Plautus 
mistakes  nativity  for  conception.  Pliny,  who  was  well  seen  in 
tlomer,  dcnieth  the  art  of  picture  in  the  Trojan  war,  and 
whereas  it  is  plainly  said,  Iliad  2,  483,  that  Vulcan  engraved 
in  the  arras  of  Achilles  the  earth  and  stars  of  heaven.  And 
thouo-h  I  have  no  great  opinion  of  Machiavell's  learning, 
yet  am  I  unwiUing  to  say  he  was  but  a  weak  historian,  be- 
cause he  cominonly  exemplified  in  Ca;sar  Borgia  and  the 
petty  princes  of  Italy  ;  or  that  he  had  but  a  slight  knowledge 
in  Roman  story,  because  he  was  mistaken  in  placing  Commo- 
dus  after  the  emperor  Severus. 


COMMON    PLACE    BOOKS.  38o 

Wonderful  witliout  doubt  and  of  excellent  signification  are 
the  mysteries,  allegories,  and  figures  of  Holy  Scripture,  had 
we  a  true  intelligence  of  them,  but  whether  they  signified  any 
such  thing  as  Gamaliel,  Rampcgnoli,  Venetus,  and  others,  do 
put  upon  them,  is  a  great  obscurity  and  Urim  and  Thummim 
imto  me. 

That  the  first  time  the  Creator  is  called  the  Lord,  in  Holy 
Scripture,  was  twenty-eight  times  after  he  was  called  Cod, 
seems  an  excellent  propriety  in  Scripture;  which  gave  him  the 
relative  name  after  the  visible  frame  and  accomplishment  of 
the  creation,  but  the  essential  denomination  and  best  agreeable 
unto  him  before  all  time  or  ere  the  world  began. 

Whether  there  be  any  numerical  mystery  in  the  omission 
of  the  benediction  of  the  second  day,  because  it  was  the  first 
recess  from  unity  and  beginning  of  imperfection  :  and  ac- 
cording to  which  mystery  three  angels  appeared  unto  Abra- 
ham to  bring  him  happy  tidings,  but  two  at  the  destruction 
of  Sodom. 

Whether  Tubal  Cain,  the  inventor  of  smith's  work,  be 
therefore  joined  with  Jubal,  the  father  of  musicians,  because 
musical  consonances  were  first  discovered  from  the  stroke  of 
hammers  upon  anvils,  the  diversities  of  their  weights  disco- 
vering the  proportion  of  their  sounds  as  is  also  reported  from 
the  observation  of  Pythagoras,  is  not  readily  to  be  believed. 

The  symbolical  mysteries  of  Scripture  sacrifices,  cleansings, 
feasts,  and  expiations,  is  tolerably  made  out  by  Rabbins  and 
ritual  commentators,  but  many  things  arc  obscure,  and  the 
Jews  themselves  will  say  that  Solomon  understood  not  the 
mystery  of  the  red  cow.  Even  in  the  Pagan  lustration  of  the 
people  of  Rome,  at  the  y;a//7/V/,  why  they  made  use  of  the 
ashes  of  a  calf  taken  out  of  the  belly  of  the  dam,  the  blood 
of  an  horse,  and  bean  straw,  hath  not  yet  found  a  convincing 
or  probable  conjecture. 

Certainlv  most  things  are  known  as  many  are  seen,  that  is, 


384 


EXTRACTS    FROM 


by  parallaxes,  and  in  some  difference  from  their  true  and 
proper  beings ;  the  superficial  regard  of  things  being  of  dif- 
ferent aspect  from  their  central  natures ;  and  therefore  fol- 
lowing the  common  view,  and  living  by  the  obvious  track  of 
sense,  we  are  insensibly  imposed  upon  by  consuetude,  and 
only  wise  or  happy  by  coestimation ;  the  received  apprehen- 
sions of  true  or  good  having  widely  confounded  the  substan- 
tial and  inward  verity  thereof,  which  now  only  subsisting  in 
the  theory  and  acknowledgement  of  some  few  wise  or  good 
men,  are  looked  upon  as  antiquated  paradoxes  or  sullen  the- 
orems of  the  old  world  :  whereas  indeed  truth,  which  is  said 
not  to  seek  corners,  lies  in  the  centre  of  things  ;  the  area  and 
cxterous  part  being  only  overspread  with  legionary  vanities 
of  error,  or  stuffed  with  the  meteors  and  imperfect  mixtures 
of  truth. 

Discoveries  are  welcome  at  all  hands ;  yet  he  that  found 
out  the  line  of  the  middle  motion  of  the  planets,  holds  an 
higher  mansion  in  my  thoughts  than  he  that  discovered  the 
Indies,  and  Ptolemy,  that  saw  no  further  than  the  feet  of  the 
centaur,  than  he  that  hath  beheld  the  snake  by  the  southern 
pole.  The  rational  discovery  of  things  transcends  their  sim- 
ple detections,  whose  inventions  are  often  casual  and  secondary 
unto  intention. 

Gupid  is  said  to  be  blind ;  affection  should  not  be  too 
sharp-sighted,  and  love  not  to  be  made  by  magnifying  glasses ; 
if  things  were  seen  as  they  are,  the  beauty  of  bodies  would 
be  much  abridged  ;  and  therefore  the  wisdom  of  God  hath 
drawn  the  pictures  and  outsides  of  things  softly  and  amiably 
unto  the  natural  edge  of  our  eyes,  not  able  to  discover  those 
milovely  asperities  which  make  oystershells  in  good  faces, 
and  hedgehogs  even  in  Venus'  moles. 

When  God  commanded  Abraham  to  look  up  to  heaven 
and  number  the  stars  thereof,  that  he  extraordinarily  en- 
larged his  sight  to  behold  the  host  of  heaven,  and  the  innu- 
merable heap  of  stars  which  telescopes  now  shew  unto  us, 
some  men  might  be  persuaded  to  believe.    Who  can  think  that 


COMMON    I'LAC  K    BOOKS.  385 

wlion  't  is  saiil  that  the  blood  of  Abel  cried  unto  heaven,  Abel 
fell  a  l)leeding  at  the  sight  of  Cain,  according  to  the  observa- 
tion of  nuMi  slain  to  bleed  at  the  presence  of  the  mm-dcrer  ? 

The  learned  Caspar  Scliottus  dedicates  his  Thaumuturgns 
Matheniaticus  unto  his  tutelary  or  guardian  angel ;  in  which 
epistle  he  useth  these  words :  citi,  ])o.st  Deum  cond'itorcm  Dei- 
quc  maguam  matrcm  Mariam,  omnia  debco.  Now,'  though 
we  must  not  lose  God  in  good  angels,  and  because  they  are 
always  supposed  about  us,  hold  lesser  memory  of  him  in  our 
prayers,  addresses,  and  consideration  of  his  presence,  care, 
and  protection  over  us,  yet  they  which  do  assert  them  have 
l)oth  antiquity  and  Scripture  to  confirm  them ;  but  whether 
the  angel  that  wrestled  with  Jacob  were  Esau's  good  angel ; 
whether  our  Saviour  had  one  deputed  him,  or  whether  that 
was  his  good  angel  which  appeared  and  strengthened  him 
before  his  passion  ;  whether  antichrist  shall  have  any  ;  whe- 
ther all  men  have  one,  some  more,  and  therefore  there  must 
be  more  angels  than  ever  were  men  together  ;  whether  angels 
assist  successively  and  distinctly,  or  whether  but  once  and 
singly  to  one  person,  and  so  there  must  be  a  greater  number 
of  them  than  ever  of  men  or  shall  be  ;  whetlier  we  arc  under 
the  care  of  our  mother's  good  angel  in  the  womb,  or  whether 
that  spirit  undertakes  us  when  the  stars  are  thought  to  con- 
cern us,  that  is,  at  our  nativity,  men  have  a  liberty  and  lati- 
tude to  opinion. 

Aristotle,  who  seem.^  to  have  borrowed  many  things  from 
Hippocrates,  in  the  most  favourable  acceptation,  makes  men- 
tion but  once  of  him,  and  that  by  the  bye,  and  without  refer- 
ence unto  his  doctrine.  Virjiil  so  much  beholding  unto  Ho- 
mer  hath  not  his  name  in  his  works ;  and  Pliny,  that  seems  to 
horrow  many  authors  out  of  Dioscorides,  hath  taken  no  notice 
of  him.  Men  are  still  content  to  plume  themselves  with 
others  feathers.  Fear  of  discovery,  not  single  ingenuity,  makes 
quotations  rather  than  transcriptions  ;  of  which,  notwithstand- 
ing, the  plagiarism  of  many  holds  little  consideration,  where- 

'    The  learned  Caspar  Srholliis,  <^r.]     prefent  paragraph   in  MS.  Sloan,   1874 
This  passage  is  from  a  duplicate  of  ihe 

\OL.    IV.  -1  C 


38G  EXTRACTS    FROM 

of,  though  great  authors  may  complain,  small  ones  cannot  but 
take  notice.  Mr.  Philips,  in  his  Villare  Cantianum,  trans- 
cribes half  a  side  of  my  Hydrotaphiuy  or  Urn  Burial,  with- 
out mention  of  the  author." 

Many  things  are  casually  or  favourably  superadded  unto 
the  best  authors,  and  the  lines  of  many  made  to  contain  that 
advantageous  sense  which  they  never  intended.  It  was 
handsomely  said,  and  probably  intended  by  Virgil,  when  on 
every  word  of  that  verse  he  laid  a  significant  emphasis,  zma 
dolo  dlrum  si  fcemina  capta  duorum ;  and  tis  not  unlikely 
that  in  that  other,  consisting  altogether  of  slow  and  heav- 
ing spondees,  he  intended  to  humour  the  massive  and  heav- 
ing strokes  of  the  gigantic  forgers,  illi  inter  sese  magna  vi 
hrachia  tollunt ;  but  in  that  which  admitteth  so  numerous 
a  transposition  of  words,  as  almost  to  equal  the  ancient  num- 
ber of  the  noted  stars,  I  cannot  believe  he  had  any  such 
scope  or  intention,  much  less  any  numerical  magic  in  another, 
as  to  be  a  certain  rule  in  that  numeration  practised  in  the 
handsome  trick  of  singUng  Christians  and  Turks,  which  is 
due  unto  later  invention ;  or  that  Homer  any  otherwise  than 
casually  began  the  first  and  last  verse  of  his  Tiiad  with  the 
same  letter. 

Some  plants  have  been  thought  to  have  been  proper  unto 
peculiar  countries,  and  yet  upon  better  discovery  the  same 
have  been  found  in  distant  countries  and  in  all  community  of 
parts. 

Jid.  Scalig.  in  Questionibus  Familiaribits ; — 
Extra  fortunam  est  quicquid  donatur  amicis. 

Many  things  are  casually  or  favourably  superadded  unto 
the  best  authors,  and  sometimes  conceits  and  expressions 
common  unto  them  with  others,  and  that  not  by  imitation  but 
coincidence,  and  concurrence  of  imagination  upon  harmony  of 
production.     Scahger  observes  how  one  Italian  poet  fell  upon 

*  Mr.  Philips,  §-c.]     Tliis  paragrapli  has  a  mark  of  erasure  in  the  original. 


COMMON    PLACE    BOOKS.  387 

the  verse  of  aiiotlier,  and  one  that  understood  not  metre,  or 
liad  ever  read  Martial,  fell  upon  one  of  his  verses.  Tlm.s  it 
is  not  strange  that  Homer  should  Hebraise,  and  that  many 
sentences  in  human  authors  seem  to  have  their  original  in 
Scripture.  In  a  piece  of  mine,  published  long  ago,"  the  learn- 
ed annotator  hath  parallelled  many  passages  with  others  of 
Montaigne's  Essays,  whereas,  to  deal  clearly,  when  I  penned 
that  piece,  I  had  never  read  three  leaves  of  that  author,  and 
scarce  any  more  ever  since. 

Truth  and  falsehood  hang  almost  equilibriously  in  some 
assertions,  and  a  few  grains  of  truth  which  bear  down  the 
balance. 

To  begin  our  discourses  like  Trismegistus  of  old,  with 
"  verum  certe  verum  atque  verissimum  est,"  would  sound  ar- 
rogantly unto  new  ears,  in  this  strict  enquiry'  of  things ; 
wherein,  for  the  most  part,  probabbj  and  perhaps,  will  hardly 
serve  the  turn,  or  serve  to  mollify  the  spirits  of  positive  con- 
tradictors. 

If  Cardan  saith  a  parrot  is  a  beautiful  bird,  Scaliger  will 
set  his  wits  on  work  to  prove  it  a  deformed  animal. 

Few  men  expected  to  find  so  grave  a  philosopher  of  Po- 
lemo,  who  spent  the  first  part  of  his  Hfe  in  all  exorbitant 
vices.  Who  could  imagine  that  Diogenes  in  his  younger 
days  should  be  a  falsifier  of  money,  who  in  the  aftercourse  of 
his  life  was  so  great  a  contemner  of  metal,  as  to  laugh  at  all 
that  loved  it  ?  But  men  are  not  the  same  in  all  divisions  of 
their  ages :  time,  experience,  contemplation,  and  philosophy, 
make  in  many  well  rooted  minds  a  translation  before  death, 
and  men  to  vary  from  themselves  as  well  as  other  persons. 
^^  hereof  old  philosophy  made  many  noble  examples,  to  the 
infamy  of  later  times:  wherein  men  merely  live  by  the  line  of 
their  inclinations  ;  so  that  without  any  astrall  prediction,  the 
first  day  gives  the  last,  "  primusque  dies  dedit  extremum." 
Seneca.     Men  are  as  they  were ;  and  according  as  evil  dis- 

3  in  a  piece   of  mine.'^     Viz.   Religio     sage    lia*    been    introduced    in    a    note. 
Mtdiri ;  see  page   10.   where    tlii?  pa*- 

•1  C   -2 


.388  EXTRACTS    THOU 

positions  ran  into  worse  habits,  being  bad  in  the  first  race, 
prove  rather  worse  in  the  hist. 

In  vain  we  seek  to  satisfy  our  souls  in  narrow  theories  and 
close  apprehensions  of  the  divine  essence,  even  from  the  re- 
vealed word,  since  we  have  a  happy  sufficiency  in  our  own 
natures  to  apprehend  the  will  and  pleasure  of  God  delivered 
in  Holy  Scripture  ;  it  being  neither  of  our  concern  nor  capa- 
city to  comprehend  or  reach  his  nature.  The  divine  revela- 
tion in  such  points  being  not  framed  unto  intellectuals  of 
earth.  Even  the  best  of  creatures  have  enough  to  admire  in 
their  higher  created  natures.  Admiration  being  the  act  of 
the  creature  and  not  of  God,  who  doth  not  admire  himself. 

We  consider  not  sufficiently  the  good  of  evils,  nor  fairly 
compare  the  mercy  of  providence,  in  things  that  are  afflictive 
at  first  hand.  The  famous  Andreas  D'Oria  invited  to  a  feast 
by  Aloisio  Fieschi,  with  intent  to  dispatch  him,  fell  oppor- 
tunely into  a  fit  of  the  gout,  and  so  escaped  that  mischief. 
When  Cato  intended  to  kill  himself,  with  a  blow  which  he 
gave  his  servant  that  would  not  bring  him  his  sword,  his  hand 
so  swelled  that  he  had  much  ado  to  effect  it,  whereby  any  but 
a  resolved  stoic  might  have  taken  a  hint  of  consideration  and 
that  some  merciful  genius  would  have  contrived  his  preser- 
vation. 

The  virtues,  parts,  and  excellencies  both  of  men  and  nations 
are  allowable  by  aggregation,  and  must  be  considered  by 
coacervation  as  well  as  single  merit.  The  Romans  made  much 
of  their  conquests  by  the  conquered ;  and  the  valour  of  all 
nations,  whose  acts  went  under  their  names,  made  up  the 
glory  of  Rome.  So  the  poets  that  writ  in  Latin  built  up  th.e 
credit  of  Latium,  and  passed  for  Roman  wits ;  whereas  if  Car- 
thage deducted  Terence,  /Egypt  Cluudian,  if  Seneca,  Lu- 
can.  Martial,  Statins,  were  restored  unto  Spain,  if  Marseilles 
should  call  home  Petronius,  it  would  much  abridge  the  glory 
of  pure  Italian  fancy  ;  and  even  in  Italy  itself,  if  the  Cisal- 
pine Gauls  should  take  away  their  share,  if  Verona  and  Man- 
tua should  challenge  Catullus  and  Virgil,  and  if  in   other 


COMMON    I'LACi:    liOOKS.  J8U 

parts  out  of  Campagiia  ili  Koina,  tlie  N'enusinc  Apulians 
should  pull  away  their  Horace,  the  Umbrians  their  Plautus, 
the  A(iuinatians  Juvenal,  \'oIaterrani  Persius,  and  the  Pelig- 
nians  of  Abruzzo  their  Ovid,  the  rest  of  Rome  or  Latium 
would  make  no  large  volume. 

"Where  'tis  said  in  the  book  of  Wisdom  that  the  earth  is  unto 
God  but  as  a  sand,  and  as  a  drop  of  morning  dew,  therein 
may  be  implied  the  earth  and  water  or  the  whole  terraqueous 
globe;  but  when  't  is  delivered  in  the  Apocalypse  that  the 
angel  set  his  right  foot  upon  the  sea  and  his  left  upon  the 
earth,  what  farther  hidden  sense  there  is  in  that  distinction 
mav  farther  be  considered. 

Of  the  seven  wise  men  of  Greece  'twas  observed  by  Plutarch, 
that  only  Thalcs  was  well  versed  in  natural  things,  the  rest 
obtained  that  name  for  their  wisdom  and  knowledge  in  state 
aft'airs. 

Whether  the  ancients  were  better  architects  then  their 
successors  many  discourses  have  passed.  That  they  were 
not  only  good  builders,  l:)ut  expedite  and  skilful  demolishers, 
appears  by  the  famous  palace  of  Publicola,  which  they  pulled 
down  and  rased  to  the  ground  by  his  order  in  one  day. 

We  are  noway  doubtful  that  there  are  witches,  but  have  not 
been  always  satisfied  in  tiie  application  of  their  witchcrafts, 
or  whether  the  parties  accused  or  suft'ering  have  been  guilty 
of  that  abomination,  or  persons  under  such  affliction  suffered 
from  such  hands.  In  ancient  time  we  read  of  many  possessed 
and  probably  there  are  many  still ;  but  the  common  cry  and 
general  opinion  of  witches  hath  confounded  that  of  possession; 
men  salving  such  strange  effects  from  veneficial  agents  and 
out  of  the  party  suffering.  Many  strange  things  have  been 
done  beyond  the  salvo  of  human  reason,  which  might  proceed 
as  well  from  possession  as  venefication.  If  the  man  in  the 
gospel  had  now  lived,  who  would  not  have  said  he  had  been 
bewitched,  which  few  or  none  might  then  suspect?  Or  who 
now  sayeth  that  Saul  was  bewitched  ?     Many  examples  may 


390  EXTRACTS    FROM 

occur  of  the  like  nature  among  us ;  wherein,  whether  pos- 
session be  not  sometimes  mistaken  for  venefication,  may  well 
be  considered. 

Whether  it  might  not  be  fitly  added  unto  the  questlones 
2JeregrincB  of  Bartholoma^us ; — how  tender  conceptions  shall 
be  ordered  at  the  last  day,  and  whether  those  before  anima- 
tion shall  be  improved  unto  perfection? 

Whether  that  fiction  be  elegantly  contrived,  when  Somnus 
is  made  to  make  Endymion  sleep  with  his  eyes  open,  that 
Luna  might  look  upon  them?  since  there  is  no  beauty  in 
open  sleeping  eyes,  but  a  seeming  deformity  in  them. 

Whether  it  were  not  more  dulness  in  Polyphemus  to  omit  to 
praise  the  eyes  of  his  Mrs.  Galatea,  while  he  commendeth 
her  other  parts,  than  weariness  to  pass  them  over,  lest  he 
should  consequently  condemn  his  own  ? 

Whether  it  be  general  that  lepers  have  no  lice  ? 

Whether  great  ear'd  persons  have  short  necks,  long  feet, 
and  loose  bellies  ? 


Whether  in  voracious  persons  and  gourmands  the  distance 
itween  the  navel  and 
sternon  unto  the  neck  ? 


between  the  navel  and  the  sternon  be  greater  than  from  the 


"  An  misericordes  sint  dyiX-jyovoi,  faeminigenitores ;"  how  veri- 
fied by  your  observation  and  historical  example  ?  since  pity  and 
mercy  are  affections  of  generosity,  and  generous  persons  are 
commonly  of  a  masculine  temper. 

How  to  make  out  those  physiognomical  notes  of  Aristotle 
concerning  soft  and  effeminate  persons ;  "  genuflexibilitas,  in- 
clinatio  capitis  ad  dextram,  ambulationes  duplices,  oculoruni 
circumspectiones  ?" 

Whether  haloes  be  so  rare  betwixt  May  and  September 


COMMON    PLACE    BOOKS.  391 

as  Gassenclus  delivereth  from  his  observations  in  France, 
and  whetlier  his  observation  there  be  verified  in  other  cU- 
niates  ? 

To  observe  that  httle  spot  behind  the  ear  whereof  Onini- 
bonus  Ferrarius  takes  notice  and  makes  it  a  mortal  sign  in 
dysenterical  persons ;  and  is  also  mentioned  in  the  book  Dc 
Pitstu/i.s;  ascribed  unto  Hippocrates,  and  translated  by  Golius, 
as  Barthohnus  hath  delivered.     Centur.  Gta. 

To  observe  whether  animals  drowned  have  no  water  in 
their  lungs  and  weason. 

Wjicther,  as  there  be  most  female  witches,  so  most  females 
are  bewitched  and  why  ? 

Whether,  if  observable  occurrences  were  strictly  taken 
notice  of  before  the  appearance  of  comets,  they  may  not 
prove  as  remarkable  as  those  that  follow  after,  an  equal  space 
of  time  being  taken  before  as  after  ? 

Whether  as  remarkable  and  gi*eat  occurrences  have  not 
happened  without  the  appearance  of  comets  as  any  with,  or 
some  after  them  ? 

Whether  northern  comets  or  on  this  side  of  the  equator 
have  proved  more  fatal  than  southern,  and  whether  smaller 
not  sometimes  more  ominous  than  greater  ? 

Since  there  be  two  major  remedies  in  physic,  bleeding  and 
purging,  which  thereof  deserves  the  preeminency ;  since  in 
the  general  purging  cures  more  diseases :  since  the  whole 
nation  of  the  Chinese  use  no  phlebotomy,  and  many  other 
nations  sparingly,  but  all  some  kind  of  purgative  evacuation : 
and  since  besides  in  man  there  are  so  few  hints  for  bleeding 
from  any  natural  attempt  in  horses,  cows,  dogs,  birds,  and 
other  creatures. 

W^hether  it  be  safe  for  obtaining  a  bass  or  deep  voice  to 
make  freciucnt  use  of  vitriol,  and  whether  it  hath  such  an 


rflect  ? 


•'392  EXTRACTS    FROM 

Whether  posssession  be  not  often  mistaken  for  witclicraft, 
and  many  thought  to  be  bewitched  which  are  indeed  pos- 
sessed ? 

If  in  the  terraqueous  globe  all  that  now  is  land  were  sea, 
and  all  that  is  sea  were  land,  to  discover  what  great  differ- 
ences there  would  be  in  all  things,  as  to  constitution  of  climes, 
tides,  navigation,  and  many  other  considerables. 

To  observe  whether  the  juice  of  the  fruit  o{  ficus  Indica, 
taken  inwardly,  will  cause  the  urine  to  have  a  red  and  bloody 
colour,  as  is  delivered  by  some  and  commonly  received  in 
parts  of  Italy  where  it  plentifully  groweth  ;  and  whether  the 
juice  of  the  prickly  fig  from  America  will  not  do  the  like? 

Whether  ice  be  to  be  found  in  subterraneous  cavities  and 
deep  caves  in  the  earth  ? 

To  observe  the  gangleon  in  birds  that  are  apt  to  imitate  the 
speech  of  man,  and  w'hat  advantage  they  have  by  any  such 
like  part  ? 

What  to  be  hoped  from  that  feminine  practice,  which  I  have 
known  in  pearl  of  the  eye,  to  put  a  louse  into  the  eye  at  night  ? 

Whether  mare's  milk  be  properly  used  against  worms,  or 
sow's  milk  to  procure  sleep,  to  which  end  many  women  among 
us  give  it  unto  children  ? 

Whether  thistle  apples,  that  is  the  bunches  found  upon  the 
common  small  thistle,  running  into  knops  without  flower  or 
seed,  do  any  thing  to  the  intent  that  they  are  so  much  sought 
for  by  many  ? 

The  left  rib  of  roasted  beef  powdered,  a  sovereign  remedy 
against  fluxes. 


*a 


That  if  a  woman  with  child  looks  upon  a  dead  body,  the 
child  will  be  pale  complexioned. 


COMMON    PLACE    BOOKS.  o93 

Why  little  lap  ilo^s  have  :i  hole  in  tiicir  heads,   and  often 
other  little  holes  out  of  the  place  of  the  sutures  ? 

Why  a  pig's  eyes  drop  out  in  roasting  rather  than  other 
animals? 

M'hy  a  pig  held  up  by  the  tail  leaves  squeaking  ? 

Why  a  low  signed  horse  is  commonly  a  stumbler? 

What  is  the  use  of  dew  claws  in  doss  ? 


'O' 


W^hether  that  will  hold,  which  I  have  sometimes  observed, 
that  lice  combed  out  of  the  head  u})on  a  paper,  will  turn  and 
move  towards  the  body  of  the  party,  and  so  as  often  as  the 
paper  is  turned  about  ? 

An  pestis  sit  ex  lege  natura?,  ut  quaerit  Cardanus  ? 

An  dctur  pestis  artificialis  ? 

An  detur  unguentum  pestifevum,  ex  cadaveribus  j)este  nior- 
tuorum  confectum,  ut  in  historia  pestis  ^lediolanensis? 

An  pestis  unquam  grassetur  inter  pisces  ? 

Whether  services  and  cornel-trees  be  so  dangerous  unto 
persons  which  have  been  bit  by  a  mad  dog,  as  Codronchi  and 
others  mention. 

What  kind  of  motion  natation  or  swimming  is,  and  to  which 
to  be  referred;  whether  not  compounded  of  a  kind  of  salition, 
and  volation,  the  one  performed  by  the  hands,  the  other  by  the 
legs  and  feet?  What  kind  of  motion  slidincc  is;  whether  it 
imitateth  not  the  inotus  projectorum  upon  a  plane,  wherein 
the  corpus  motitm  is  not  separated  a  motore  ? 

An  foculi  portatiies  Belgarum  sint  monstrifici  ? 

An  Lastaurocacabus  Athena*!  sit  olla  patris  (olla  podrida) 
Hispanorum  ( 


394  EXTRACTS    FROM 

Whether  the  name  of  a  palatium,  or  palace,  began  first  to 
be  used  for  prince's  houses  in  the  time  of  Augustus,  when  he 
dwelt  in  Monte  Palatino,  as  Dion  dehvereth,  or  whether  the 
word  is  not  to  be  found  in  authors  before  his  time  ? 

Whether  the  heads  of  all  mummies  have  the  mouth  open, 
and  why  ? 

Why  sohpeds,  or  whole  hoofed  animals,  arise  with  their 
fore  legs  first,  bisulcous  with  their  hinder? 

If  a  child  dieth  and  the  neck  groweth  not  stiff',  but  con- 
tinueth  flaccid  many  hours  after,  another  will  not  long  after 
die  in  the  same  house ;  a  groundless  opinion  of  many  women 
with  us. 

Whether,  where  it  is  said  ( Wisdom  7.),  "  Deus  dedit  mihi 
horum  quae  sunt  veram  cognitionem,"  that  text  implieth  his 
knowledge  in  the  metaphysics,  that  being  a  science  de  ente, 
as  the  other  expressions  imply  his  natural  and  moral  know- 
ledge ? 

Whether  Noah  might  not  be  the  first  man  that  compassed 
the  globe  ?  Since,  if  the  flood  covered  the  whole  earth,  and 
no  lands  appeared  to  hinder  the  cui'rent,  he  must  be  carried 
with  the  wind  and  current  according  to  the  sun,  and  so  in  the 
space  of  the  deluge,  might  near  make  the  tour  of  the  globe. 
And  since,  if  there  were  no  continent  of  America,  and  all  that 
tract  a  sea,  a  ship  setting  out  from  Africa  without  other  help, 
would  at  last  fall  upon  some  part  of  India  or  China. 

Whether  that  of  David,  "  convertentur  ad  vesperam  et  fa- 
mem  patientur  ut  canes,"  may  be  prophetically  appHed  to  the 
late  conversion  of  the  wild  Americans,  as  it  is  delivered  in 
Gloriosus  Franciscus  Redivivus,  or  the  Chronicles  of  the 
Acts  of  the  Franciscans,  lib.  3. 

Hesiod  delivers  that  none  who  planted  the  olive  gathered 
of  the  fruit  thereof. 


COMMON    PLACE    BOOKS.  ',V,)5 

Theoplirastus  affirmeth,  that  the  olive  grew  not,  except 
near  the  sea  or  within  forty  miles  of  it. 

Fenestclla  dehvereth  that  olives  were  not  to  be  found  in 
Africa,  Spain,  France,  nor  Italy. 

How  the  Macroocphali,  or  long-headed  people,  arose,  Hip- 
pocrates hath  instructed  us.  How  the  Chinese  come  to  have 
such  Httle  feet,  every  history  of  that  country  delivereth.  But 
how  the  people  of  llovigno  come  to  be  lame,  so  that  among 
seven  thousand  of  that  city,  about  a  third  part  are  lame,  as 
Du  Loir  hath  observed,  is  yet  to  be  enquired. 

Diogenes,  the  Cynick,  being  asked  what  was  the  best  re- 
medv  arrainst  a  blow,  answered  a  helmet.  This  answer  he 
gave,  not  from  any  experience  of  his  own,  who  scarce  wore 
any  covering  on  his  head  ;  yet  he  that  would  see  how  well  a 
helmet  becometh  a  cynick,  may  behold  it  in  that  draught  of 
Diogenes,  prefixed  to  his  life,  in  the  new  edition  of  the  Epi- 
tome of  Plutarch's  Lives,  in  English  ;  wherein,  in  the  addi- 
tional lives,  he  is  set  forth,  soldier-like,  with  a  helmet  and  a 
battle  axe. 

Aristotle,  lib.  animal. 

Whether  till  after  forty  days,  children,  though  they  cry, 
weep  not ;  or,  as  Scaliger  expresseth  it,  "  vagiunt  sed  oculis 
siccis." 

Whether  they  laugb  not  upon  tickling  ? 

Why  though  some  children  have  been  heard  to  cry  in  the 
womb,  yet  so  few  cry  at  their  birth,  though  their  heads  be 
out  of  the  womb? 

Traitte  de  la  politique  de  France.  In  this  French  dis- 
course, a  hard  character  is  given  of  the  English,  and  this 
among  the  rest ; — a  people  fit  only  for  handy  strokes,  and 
ready  execution,  but  incapable  of  managing  a  war  with  dis- 
cretion. To  refute  this  by  many  examples,  and  even  in  our 
wars  with  the  French. 

Whether  there  be  anv  such  consent  between  the  horns; 


39G  EXTRACTS    FROI\I 

and  the  hoofs  in  oxen,  that  the  anointhig  of  the  horns  may 
be  of  effect  in  the  diseases  of  the  hoofs,  as  Aristotle  dehvers, 
and  Scaliger  directly  rejecteth  not,  lib.  8,  Hist.  Ajiimal.  "In 
podagra  pedes  tument  verum  non  intereunt,  sed  ungulas 
amittant,  melius  continent  delibatis  pice  cahda  cornibus." 

That  a  horse  is  a  tftiov  (piXoXour^ov  xai  ^iXvdgov,  may  be  granted ; 
that,  farther  considered,  which  Scaliger  addeth  in  his  com- 
ment, "Gaudent  lavacris  equi  praesertim  nigri,  et  maxime  qui 
in  fine  aestatis  nati  sunt :  "  lib.  8. 

"  Faeniculorum  umbellffi,  antequam  comedantur,  aperiantur 
et  diligenter  concutiantur,  ut  a  vermibus  emundentur,  a  quo- 
rum esu,  pessima  deveniunt  symptomata ;"  ex  Balthasaro  Pi- 
sanello.  Enquire  more  diligently  after  these  worms  in  due 
season. 

Observe  farther  the  effect  of  Jacobus  Doviretus's  remedy 
against  the  elephantiasis,  by  a  decoctio  uJmi,  used  for  many 
days  in  common  drink  and  a  little  white  wine. 

Observe  farther  the  remedy  of  Marquardus  against  angi- 
nas and  aposthemes  of  the  throat ;  "  observatum  est  come- 
dentem  ex  cochleari  hederas  ligneo,  et  bibentem  in  aliquo 
vase  ligneo  hederas,  nunquam  vel  raro  in  gutturis  vel  uvulse 
apostema  incurrere." 

Whether  the  feeding  on  carp  be  so  apt  to  bring  on  fits  of 
the  gout,  as  Julius  Alexandrinus  affirmeth  ? 

"  Mespili  lignum  collo  appensum,  mire  ab  abortu  gravidas 
defendere.  Confiteor  in  pleurisi  tale  remedium  fuisse  a  me 
expertum  idque  certum  et  sanum  remedium  semper  inven- 
isse."  Baricellus.  This  is  an  euporeston,  and  worth  the 
trying ;  the  like  we  have  known  often  to  succeed  upon  the 
wearing  of  a  girdle  of  sea  horse  leather,  and  the  eaglestone. 

Cardanus,  to  try  the  alteration  of  the  air,  exposeth  a 
sponge,  which  groweth  dark  when  the  air  is  inclined  to  mois- 
ture. Another  way  I  have  made  more  exact  trial ;  by  putting 
a  dry  piece  of  sponge   into  one  balance  of  a  gold  scale,  so 


(•().MM(JN    ri.AC-K    BOOKS.  .'>J)T 

equally  poisetl,  \vitli  weights  in  the  other  balance,  that  it  Nvili 
hano-  without  inclinin''  either  way.  For  then  upon  alteration 
of  the  air  to  moisture,  the  scale  with  the  sponge  will  fall,  and 
when  the  air  grows  hot  and  dry  will  rise  again.  The  like  may 
be  done  hyforago  marina,  found  conmionly  on  the  sea  shore. 
The  change  of  the  weather  I  have  also  observed  by  hang- 
ing up  a  dry  apbjssalus  mariiius,  which  grows  moist  and  dry 
according  to  the  air  ;  as  also  phasganiuni  inari/i/tm,  sea  laces, 
and  others. 

To  observe  that  carbo  odoratiis,  qui  sub  arthemisicc  ra- 
dicibus  solstitio  (Tstivo  coUigitur,  because  it  is  so  highly  com- 
mended by  Hugenius,  for  a  remedy  against  the  ejjilepsy,  if 
given  forty  days ;  and  Baricellus  confirmeth  it  by  his  own  ex- 
perience. 

Sijrupus  de  spina  cervina  is  of  frequent  and  excellent  use. 
Try  it  in  tenesnw,  which  was  the  experienced  medicine  of 
Baricellus  in  that  case,  in  the  quantity  of  31  aut  3ii  in  vino 
a/bo  aut  aqua  :  the  patient  to  eat  sparingly  after  it,  and  to 
sleep. 

To  observe  that  insect  which  a  countryman  shewed  Bari- 
cellus, found  in  the  flowers  of  Knjngiuni  cichoreuni,  which 
readily  cure  warts ;  est  colons  TItalassini  cum  maculis  rubris, 
et  assimulatur  proportionc  corporis  cantJtaridi,  licet  parvu- 
lutn  sit.  Acceperat  ea  rusticus,  et  singula  in  singulis  ver- 
rucis  digitis  exjnessit  unde  exibat  liquor. 

\\'hether  the  flowers  of  rcrbascum  or  mullein  shake  and 
fall  most  in  the  morning  ;  illius  enim  planicc  luce  est  proprie- 
fas,  ut  sole  accedente  Jlores  decidant. 

To  make  trial  of  this ;  whether  live  crawfish  put  into  spirits 
of  wine  will  presently  turn  red,  as  though  they  had  been 
Ijoiled,  and  taken  out  walk  about  in  that  colour. 

In  the  head  of  the  reddish  grey  snails  without  shells,  I  have 
often  found  stones  or  flat  testaceous  substances.     To  acquire 


398  EXTRACTS    FROM 

some  quantity  of  them ;  to  make  trial  of  those  qualities  in 
them,  as  against  quartans,  by  way  of  amulet ;  in  the  strangu- 
ry, and  for  easy  delivery  if  taken  inwardly;  and  against  dry- 
ness and  thirst,  if  held  in  the  mouth  in  distempers. 

'T  is  a  ludicrous  experiment  in  Baricellus  ;  to  rub  napkins 
and  handkerchiefs  with  powder  of  vitriol  for  such  as  sweat 
or  have  used  to  wipe  their  faces ;  for  so  they  become  black  and 
sullied.  Whether  shirts  thus  used  may  not  do  something 
against  itch  and  lice.  Whether  shirts  washed  or  well  rubbed 
in  quicksilver  would  not  be  good  to  that  end. 

Since  you  are  so  much  unsatisfied  with  the  many  rational 
medicines  which  you  say  you  have  tried  for  the  gout,  you 
have  leisure  enough  to  make  trial  of  these  empirical  medi- 
cines : — 

W^ear  shoes  made  of  a  lion's  skin. 

Wear  a  plaster  of  montacana  upon  your  feet. 

Try  the  way  of  transplantation ;  give  poultices  taken  from 
the  part  unto  dogs,  and  let  a  whelp  lie  in  the  bed  with  you. 

Use  an  ointment  of  ostrich,  vulture,  and  hern's  grease. 

Suffocate  an  eel  or  frog  in  your  wine,  to  make  thee  little 
affected  to  wine. 

If  you  ai*e  not  afraid  to  be  lame  without  pain,  try  the  re- 
medy of  Agrippa,  to  put  your  feet  in  vinegar. 

Try  the  magnified  amulet  of  MufFetus,  of  spider's  legs 
worn  in  a  deer's  skin  ;  or  of  tortoise's  legs  cut  off  from  the 
living  tortoise,  and  wrapped  up  in  the  skin  of  a  kid. 

Since  you  find  no  benefit  in  the  noble  plasters  of  the  Duke 
of  Wirtemberg,  of  King  James  and  of  Charles  the  Fifth,  try 
the  empl.  ciconice  made  up  oi  stercus  ciconice. 

If  you  have  a  mind  to  proceed  ftirther  you  may  see  what 
cure  may  be  had  from  transplantation.  And  may  also  con- 
sider of  the  sigil  of  Paracelsus. 

To  consider  that  of  Cardan  in  his  Encommm  Podagree, 
whether  the  gout  freetli  and  preserveth  from  the  stone  in  the 
bladder  and  the  pthysis  of  the  lungs,  which  he  reckons  in 
many  the  dona  podagra. 

Yet  Sir  Arthur  Jenny,  who  had  often  fits  of  the  gout,  died 


COMMON    PLACE    BOOKS.  oOI) 

of  the  stone  in  the  bladder.     He  had  a  remarkable  coutrh 
above  forty  years,  but  no  proper  pthysis  when  he  died. 

A^'hether  podagrical  persons  have  the  best  palates,  and  are 
the  choicest  tasters  of  wine,  and  commonly  discursive  persons. 

Cur  claudi  venerei,  gibbosi  dolosi,  strabi  fraudulcnti,  calvi 
in  actionibus  prompti  I 

The  emperor  Severus,  Buda?us,  Erasmus,  Julius  Scaliger, 
great  examples  of  the  gout. 

Erasmus  e  cubili  podagra?  quicquid  legi  meretur  expromp- 
sit :  prceclarissima  scriptorum  nionumenta  j)odagra?  debemus. 

Three  magnified  plasters  set  down  by  Zozelius  de  poda- 
gra: one  of  the  Duke  of  Wirtemberg,  another  of  King 
James,  a  third  of  Charles  the  Fifth ;  to  examine  these  well, 
and  whether  a  plain  anodyne  cataplasm  aflordeth  not  better 
relief  in  red  and  inflamed  gouts,  which  so  impatiently  endure 
plasters. 

Eat  partridge's  eggs. 

To  consider  and  try  the  two  notable  amulets  in  that  case, 

one from  the  feet  of  a  tortoise  cut  off  alive  and 

worn  in  kid's  skin  ;  the  other  of  MufTetus  from  spider's  legs 
worn  in  a  deer's  skin. 

To  examine  the  success  and  cures  said  to  be  wrought  by 
transplantation  in  that  disease. 

To  try  that  way  of  purging  by  lapis  lazuli,  unto  which 
Brasavolus,  de  medicamentis  purga/itibi/s,  so  much  encou- 
rageth.  R  Lap.  lazuli  prepar.  5j  camphora?,  anisi,  cin.  zin- 
zib.  mastick  ;  ana  gr.  vj.  cum  sue.  salvia?,  vel  diacatholicon,  q.  s. 
fiant  pilula?x.  Z.  first  trying  1.  laz.  jij,  which  is  also  commended 
by  Gioravanti  to  try  also  what  effect  it  hath  by  infusion. 

Whether  purging  pomanders  may  prove  of  any  effectual  use. 

Gaddius  in  Scriptores  upon  \\'illiam  the  Conqueror,  writes 
that  he  wrote  a  book  de  Supremo  puniendi  Judicio ;  whether 
hereby  be  any  more  meant  than  that  register  which  is  called 
Doomsday  Book. 

To  cleanse  and  clear  pearls  by  washing  or  steej)ing  them 
in  May  dew  taken  from  lettuces.     Jioet. 


4'0()  EXTRACTS    FROM 

Wlietlier  a  true  emerald  feels  colder  in  the  mouth  than 
another. 

Whether  the  way  of  Amatus  Lusitanus  be  to  be  followed, 
to  clip  the  leeches  after  they  are  fastened  unto  the  haemor- 
rhoids or  other  parts.     Centuria  5ta. 

Whether  aloe  be  so  powerful  a  foecundating  medicine  as 
lie  confidently  promiseth.     5ta. 

Whether  his  test  of  foecundity  which  he  peculiarly  com- 
mended, be  to  be  insisted  upon ;  coaguli  leporis  ^j.  aqua 
calida  dissoluti,  et  mulieri  in  halneo  eocistenti  exhihiti ;  si  ventri 
dolores  accidant  jcecunda  est,  si  non,  inj'cecimda.     Cent,  6ta. 

How  far  to  rely  upon  his  remedy  for  the  increase  of  milk, 
from  the  powder  of  hippocampe,  or  cavallo  marino,  found  in 
many  shores  of  Italy.  Cejititria  4<fa.  Since  neither  Diasco- 
rides,  Mathiolus,  nor  others  mention  such  quality,  and  chiefly 
receive  it  as  remedy  against  the  biting  of  a  mad  dog. 


Since  these  few  observations  please  you,  for  your  farther 
discourse  and  consideration,  I  would  not  omit  to  send  you  a 
larger  list,  scatteringly  observed  out  of  good  authors,  relating 
unto  medical  enquiry,  and  whereof  you  may  single  out  one 
daily  to  discourse  upon  it ;  which  may  be  a  daily  recreation 
unto  you,  and  employ  your  evening  hours,  where  your  affairs 
afford  you  the  conversation  of  studious  and  learned  friends. 

Plut.  in  vita  Tim. 

Timoleon  his  sisht  bes;inninG[  to  fail  he  lost  it  at  last  alto- 

o  o  o 

gether.  Athantpus  writes  that  as  he  was  in  his  camp  at  Mylles, 
there  came  a  white  spot  in  his  eyes  that  dimmed  [his]  eyes 
somewhat,  so  that  every  one  perceived  that  he  should  lose  his 
sight  altogether. 

Plut.  in  vita  Cleomenis. 

It  chanced  that  Cleomencs  marching  thither,  being  very 
hot,  drank  cold  water,  and  fell  on  such  a  bleeding  withal  that 
Iiis  voice  was  taken  from  him  and  he  almost  stifled. 


COMMON    PLACE    DOCKS.  401 

Hippotus  piiekeil  Cleoniencs  in  the  heel,  to  see  if  lie  were 
yet  alive;  uhetlier  this  wore  not  a  good  way  of  trial  upon  so 
sensible  a  part. 

Now  a  disease  took  Antigonus,  King  of  Maccdon,  whereon 
he  died,  which  appeared  a  phthisis  mixed  with  a  sore  catarrh, 
and  fiercely  crying  in  the  fight,  he  tore  his  lungs  worse  than 
they  were  before. 

In  vita  Pyrrlti. 

Men  hold  opinion  that  lie  did  heal  those  that  were  sick  of 
the  spleen,  by  sacrificing  a  white  cock,  and  touching  the  j)lace 
of  the  spleen  with  his  right  foot,  they  lying  on  their  backs. 
There  was  none  so  poor  that  he  denied  that  remedy,  and  took 
the  cock  he  sacrificed  for  a  reward,  which  pleased  him  very 
well. 

Ammiatuis  MarccUinits  in  vita  JtiUani. 

A  horseman's  javelin  pierced  within  his  short  ribs  and  stuck 
fast  in  the  nether  lappet  or  fillet  of  his  liver :  and  l)y  reason 
the  wound  opened  very  wide,  and  the  tumour  of  the  veins 
and  arteries  stopped  his  spirits,  as  also  with  drinking  of  a 
draught  of  cold  water,  he  was  easily  dispatched  this  life. 

Ammianus  MavcclUntis  in  vita  Joviani. 

He  was  found  dead  in  his  bed.  It  is  said  he  could  not  en- 
dure the  smell  of  his  bedchamber  newly  plastered  with  mor- 
tar made  of  lime,  or  that  he  came  to  his  end  occasioned  by 
an  huge  fire  kindled  of  coals,  others  that  he  crammed  his 
belly  so  full  that  he  died  of  a  surfeit.  Whether  all  these  causes 
be  not  allowable  ? 

Pint,  in  vita  Jnlii  Cccsaris. 

There  fell  a  pestilent  disease  among  them,  which  came  by 
ill  meats  which  hunger  drove  them  to  eat ;  but  after  he  had 
taken  the  city  of  Gomphes,  in  The.ssalie,  he  met  not  only 
with  plenty  of  victuals,  but  strangely  did  rid  them  of  that 
disease;  for  the  soldiers  meeting  with  ])Ienty  of  wine,  drank 
hard,  and   making   merry,  drank  away   the  infection  of  the 

VOL.    IV.  -1    D 


402  EXTRACTS    FROM 

pestilence :  in  so  much  that  drinking  drunk  they  overcame 
their  disease  and  made  their  bodies  new  again.  The  soldiers 
were  driven  to  take  sea  weeds,  called  alga,  and  washing  away 
the  brackishness  thereof  with  sea  water,  putting  to  it  a  httle 
herb,  called  dogstooth,  to  cast  it  to  their  horses  to  eat. 

The  country  of  Thessaly  became  the  more  considerable 
unto  me,  because  it  hath  produced  many  famous  persons,  and 
been  the  seat  of  many  notable  actions :  and  more  especially 
because  the  famous  Hippocrates,  and  father  of  physicians, 
lived  and  practised  in  it,  as  may  be  collected  from  the  oration 
of  his  son  Thessa  unto  the  Athenians,  and  the  description  of 
his  life,  by  Soranus,  annexed  unto  his  works ;  wherein  't  is 
delivered  that  he  was  admonished  by  dream  to  live  in  Thes- 
saly, that  he  had  an  habitation  in  Thessaly,  that  the  princes 
and  rulers  of  the  barbarian  nation  of  Illyria  and  Peeonia  sent 
unto  him,  as  also  the  King  of  Macedonia,  that  he  died  in  or 
about  Larissa  ;  that  he  was  buried  between  Gyrton  and  La- 
rissa,  and  has  had  of  old  a  monument  in  those  parts.  And  it 
may  be  also  observed  that  in  the  books  of  Hippocrates,  where 
he  sets  down  the  particular  progress  of  diseases  of  his  patients, 
unto  life  and  death,  together  with  their  names  and  places  of 
habitation,  it  may  be  observed  that  he  mentions  many  places 
of  Thessaly,  but  of  any  one  place  the  greatest  number  of 
his  patients  were  of  Larissa. 

That  America  was  peopled  of  old,  not  from  one,  but  se- 
veral nations,  seems  probable  from  learned  discourses  con- 
cerning their  originals  :  and  whether  the  Tyrians  and  Car- 
thaginians had  not  a  share  therein  may  be  well  considered; 
and  if  the  periplus  of  Hanno  or  his  navigation  about  Africa 
be  warily  perpended,  it  may  fortify  that  conjecture ;  for  he 
passed  the  straits  of  Hercules  with  a  great  fleet  and  many 
thousand  persons  of  both  sexes ;  founded  divers  towns,  and 
placed  colonies  in  several  parts  of  that  shore  ;  and  sailed  in 
tolerable  account  as  far  about  as  that  place  now  called  Cabo 
de  Tres  Puntas. 

To  these  there  is  little  question  but  the  Carthaginians 
sometimes   repaired,   and    held   communication   with   them. 


COMMON    PLACE    BOOKS.  403 

The  colonies  also  being  a  people  of  civility  could  not  but 
continue  the  use  of  navigation ;  so  that  either  the  Carthagi- 
nians in  their  after  researches  might  be  carried  away  by  the 
trade  winds  between  the  tropics,  or  finding  therein  no  difficult 
navigation  might  adventure  on  such  a  voyage ;  and  also  their 
colonies  left  on  so  convenient  a  shore  might  casually,  if  not 
purposely,  make  the  same  adventure. 

The  Chinese  also  could  hardly  avoid,  at  least  might  easily 
have,  a  part  in  their  originals.  For  the  east  winds  being  very 
rare,  and  the  west  almost  constantly  blowing  from  their 
shore,  being  once  at  sea  they  were  easily  carried  to  the  back 
])art  of  America. 

If  there  were  ever  such  a  great  continent  in  the  western 
ocean,  as  was  hinted  of  old  by  Plato,  and  the  learned  Kir- 
cherus  considers  might  by  subterraneous  eruptions  be  partly 
swallowed  up  and  overthrown,  and  partly  leave  the  islands 
yet  remaining  in  the  ocean,  it  is  not  impossible  or  improbable 
that  from  great  antiquity  some  might  be  carried  from  thence 
upon  the  American  coast,  or  some  way  be  peopled  from  those 
parts. 

While  Attahualpa,  King  of  Peru,  and  Montezuma,  King 
of  Mexico,  might  owe  their  originals  unto  Asia  or  Africa, 

Since  the  Indian  inhabitants  are  found,  at  least  conceived, 
to  have  peopled  the  southern  continent,  whether  these,  after 
debating  over  terra  iticoi^/iita,  might  not  pass  or  be  carried 
over  into  Magellanica  or  the  south  of  America,  may  also  be 
enquired,  and  some  might  not  come  in  at  this  door. 

If  any  plantations  of  civil  nations  were  ever  made  from 
civil  nations,  how  it  comes  to  pass  that  letters  and  writing  was 
luiknown  unto  all  the  parts  of  America. 

Why  no  wonder  is  likewise  made  how  the  Islas  de  los  La- 
drones,  or  islands  of  thieves,  were  peopled,  since  they  are  so 
far  removed  from  any  neighbour  continent. 

Strain,  lib.  4. 
Garumna  et  Ligeris. — Hi  duo  fluvii  (juodammodo  parallel 

2   0  -1 


4<04  EXTRACTS    FROM 

sunt  respectu  Pyrenes,  ac  cum  ea  duas  includunt  parallel- 
ogramnias  areas,  quarum  reliqua  latera  oceano  et  Cemmenis 
montibus  describuntur. 

Whether  Strabo  rightly  understood  the  whole  current  of 
these  rivers  while  he  illustrates  their  content  by  two  parallel- 
ograms, which  must  be  made  out  with  so  great  a  latitude, 
especially  if  you  take  not  in  the  river  Tarne,  which  runs  into 
the  Garonne,  and  whether  this  illustration  be  not  more  agree- 
able unto  the  Isara  and  Druentia,  the  Lisere,  and  the  Du- 
'  ranee,  and  the  Mediterranean  sea,  the  two  other  sides  being 
made  by  the  Rhodanus  and  the  Alps  ? 

To  reconcile  the  differences  between  Hippocrates,  de  acre, 
aquis,  et  locis,  and  Avianus  de  Periplo  Ponti  Euxini,  about 
the  description  of  the  river  Phasis  ;  which  the  one  makes 
a  stagnant,  the  other  a  swift  river ;  Hippocrates  a  corrupt- 
ing water,  Avianus  affirms  it  will  keep  uncorrupted  many 
years. 

Aristot.  lib.  8,  cap.  22,  de  hist.  Animalium. 

How  to  make  out  that  of  Aristotle  that  all  creatures  bit  by 
a  mad  dog  become  mad,  excepting  man  :  since  by  unhappy 
experience  so  many  men  have  been  mischieved  thereby ;  or 
whether  it  holdeth  not  better  at  second  than  at  first  hand,  so 
that  if  a  dog  bite  a  horse,  and  that  horse  a  man,  the  evil 
proves  less  considerable,  as  we  seem  to  have  observed  in 
many.  Whether  St.  Bellin's  priests  cure  any  after  the  hy- 
drophobia ;  whether  hellebore,  tin,  garlick,  treacle,  and  ptdvis 
pahiarii  be  the  })rime  remedies  against  this  poison ;  and  why 
the  use  o^ abjssum  galcni  is  not  more  in  request ;  and  how  the 
cornel  and  service  tree  become  such  mischievous  promoters 
of  that  venom;  and  how  far  this  venom  takes  place  in  Ireland, 
where  they  have  no  venomous  creature,  and  not  long  ago  very 
fevf  quartan  agues. 

What  intent  or  what  advantage  the  Helvetians  might  have, 
when  quitting  their  country  in  Cassar's  time,  being  hindered 
from  coming  into  Province,  they  designed  to  march  into  Xan- 
toigne  a  country  so  remote  from  them. 


COMMON    PLACE    BOOKS.  405 

IIow  to  make  out  that  of  Stiabo,  that  the  river  Rhine  runs 
j)arallcl  to  that  of  Seine  wliereon  Paris  standeth,  or  that  from 
the  mouth  of  Rhine  a  man  may  see  a  part  of  Kent. 

Urbs  Nemansus  Arecomicoruin  caput.  Sita  est  urbs  in 
via  (jujv  ex  Ilispania  in  ItaHam  ducit  per  a^statem  commoda, 
hyenie  et  vere  lutosa  ac  fluvioruni  eluvie  molesta,  fluviorum 
(juithun  scaphis  trajiciuntur,  ahi  pontibus  instrati."  How  this 
to  be  construed  when  't  is  seated  in  a  dry  soil,  and  the  ordi- 
nary rivers  of  the  Vidurle,  and  the  Gardon  eight  miles  from 
it,  and  since  for  the  commodity  of  water  they  were  fain  to 
convey  it  by  a  subterraneous  aqueduct,  about  ten  miles  off, 
conveying  the  water  over  the  Gardon,  by  an  unparalleled 
bridge,  yet  standing,  and  making  that  fomous  antiquity  of 
Port  du  Gard,  near  Remolins,  not  flir  out  of  the  way  be- 
tween Avignon  and  Nismes. 

When  Strabo  delivereth  that  Nismes  exceeded  Narbona 
in  dominion  but  not  in  populosity,  whether  it  must  not  be  un- 
derstood in  order  to  his  time,  who  lived  in  the  reign  of  Au- 
gustus ;  and  not  so  verifiable  in  the  reign  of  Domitian,  Ad- 
rian, and  Antoninus,  who  being  born  in  that  place,  added  all 

advantages  unto  it,  as  did  also  Adrian  in  raising to 

his  empress.  And  since  he  that  beholds  the  circuit  of  the 
old  ruined  wall,  will  hardly  conceive  it  to  have  been  much 
less  than  Paris,  and  larger  at  least  than  any  other  city  in  Gal- 
lia ;  and  bearing  still  for  its  arms  the  crocodile  bound  to  a 
palm  tree,  so  often  to  be  met  with  in  ancient  medals,  whether 
it  doth  not  retain  as  ancient  arms  as  any  city  in  Europe  ? 

Whether  the  Romans  had  not  as  many  or  more  theatres 
and  amphitheatres  in  a  piece  of  Gallia,  than  in  all  their  other 
conquests  of  Europe,  out  of  Italy  ;  since  southward  of  the 
Loir  they  left  no  less  than  fourteen ;  as  namely,  at  Poictiers, 
Pont  de  Sey,  Sainctes,  Perigueux,  Bourdeaux,  Bourges, 
Lyons,  Vienne,  Aurange,  Tholouse,  Nismes,  Aries,  Antibes, 
and  Narbonne. 

When  Annibal  marched  out  of  Spain  for  Italy,  no  mention 


40G  EXTRACTS    FROM 

is  made  how  he  passed  the  river  Atax  or  Aude  with  his  ele- 
phants ;  whether  he  declined  the  Vidurle,  or  forded  the  Gar- 
don  ;  no  mention  I  say  is  made  of  passing  the  rivers  till  he 
arrived  at  the  Rhosne,  which  with  great  artifice,  labour,  and 
unquietness  of  his  elephants,  and  also  opposition  of  the  Gauls 
on  the  other  side,  he  got  over ;  how  he  passed  the  Isere,  a 
great  and  rapid  river,  is  not  at  all  dehvered  ;  at  what  part  he 
crossed  the  Rhosne  is  not  directly  specified ;  but  since  the 
Volcse  and  Arecomici  which  had  fled  to  the  other  side  op- 
posed him,  't  is  most  probable  he  passed  over  from  Vivarez, 
between  Valence  and  Oi*ange,  or  below  the  great  and  swift 
river  of  Isara,  or  L'Isere.  For  Hanno  went  twenty-five  miles 
above,  and  crossed  the  Rhosne  with  his  horse,  to  fall  upon 
the  rear  of  the  Gauls,  which  faced  Annibal's  camp  below, 
and  where  he  was  to  pass ;  so  that  they  passed  below  the 
Isere  to  prevent  a  second  troul^le  and  have  a  better  retreat, 
'T  is  also  said  by  Livy,  that  Annibal  being  got  over,  sent  a 
party  of  Numidian  scouts  to  discover  the  Roman  army, 
whereof  the  main  body  lay  in  Province  ;  which  he  probably 
would  not  have  done  if  he  had  been  encamped  above  the 
Isere.  It  is  likewise  delivered,  that  Cornelius  Scipio,  march- 
ing out  of  Province  unto  the  place  of  Annibal's  camp,  found 
him  gone  three  days,  so  that  probably  concluding  he  must  be 
passed  the  Isere,  he  thought  it  not  safe  to  force  his  pass  over 
the  river  against  so  strong  a  power,  which  was  now  beyond 
his  approach.  And  whereas  it  is  affirmed  by  Livy  and  Plu- 
tarch, that  in  four  encampings  he  arrived  to  the  concurrence 
of  the  river  Soane  and  Rhosne,  where  Lyons  now  standeth, 
it  may  be  conceived  he  made  speedy  marches  to  avoid  Scipio 
behind  him,  and  by  all  means  declined  battle,  until  he  might 
come  into  Italy,  when  he  hoped  to  have  the  Cisalpine  Gauls 
to  join  with  him. 

And  surely  though  the  longest  this  was  the  wisest  way,  to 
decline  the  maritime  Alps,  or  march  through  Province,  where 
the  Roman  army  must  have  met  him ;  wherein  Scipio  seemed 
to  have  committed  the  oversight ;  for  if  he  had  hastened  to 
join  with  the  many  thousand  Gauls  which  opposed  Annibal's 
passing  over  the  Rhosne,  he  had  probably  prevented  the  en- 
suing calamity  of  Italy  ;  whereas  having  lost  that  opportunity, 


COMMON    PLACE    BOOKS.  407 

he  made  hard  sliift  to  return  into  Italy,  and  could  not  meet 
with  Annibal  before  he  came  to  the  Tesin  by  Pavia,  where 
himself  was  like  to  lose  his  life,  and  the  Romans  lost  the 
battle. 

'T  was  surely  a  noble  sight  to  behold  that  numerous  and 
mixed  army,  with  elephants  and  baggage  to  force  their  way 
over  this  impetuous  river,  and  only  second  unto  the  siege  of 
Alexia,  and  confederate  strength  of  Gallia.  Though  the 
memorable  battle  of  Charles  Martel  with  the  Saracens  and 
numerous  forces  of  Atius  the  Roman  general,  and  Attila  the 
Hun,  and  his  great  defeat  by  Tholouse,  [he  of  high  con- 
sideration. 

Which  way  Annibal  took  towards  the  Alps  or  over  them, 
is  very  uncertain,  till  we  more  clearly  understand  that  passage 
of  Livy,  that  parting  towards  them  he  marched  not  the  direct 
way,  but  took  the  left  hand  toward  the  Tricastines,  and  so  on 
the  borders  of  the  \'ocontians  unto  the  Tricorians ;  and  had 
no  impediment  till  he  came  at  the  river  Druentia,  which  is 
rendered  the  Durance.  Now  if  he  took  the  left  hand  in  re- 
ference unto  Gallia,  he  could  not  well  come  at  the  Vocontians 
and  the  Durance  ;  if  the  left  accounting  from  Rome,  he  could 
not  well  pass  at  the  Pennine  Alps,  and  mount  Bernard,  as  is 
commonly  conceived,  nor  fall  upon  the  Durance. 

"Whether  the  commodity  of  situation  have  not  always  been 
the  great  advantage  of  places,  and  especially  that  of  Lyons. 
When  Hannibal  marched  to  the  concurrence  of  the  Soane  and 
the  Rhosne,  where  that  city  now  standeth,  there  was  no  men- 
tion of  Lyons,  which  upon  the  best  record  was  built  by  Lu- 
cius Munacius  Plancus ;  and  yet  not  longer  after  than  in  the 
time  of  Strabo,  it  was  in  his  expression  the  most  populous 
place  of  all  Gallia,  except  Narbonne.  And  by  this  conveni- 
ence, it  still  maintaineth  the  second  place  of  France,  as  mak- 
ing the  passage  from  England,  France,  Italy,  Spain,  and  Ger- 
many ;  and  had  been  more  advanced  if  the  lieutenant  of  Nero 
had  gone  through  with  his  design  to  unite  the  Soane  and  the 
Moselle,  and  so  to  have  made  a  water  passage  from  the  mid- 
land sea  unto  the  German  ocean ;  and  the  like  some  of  the 


408  EXTRACTS    FROM 

kings  of  France  have  seriously  designed  between  the  Aiide 
and  the  Garonne. 

How  to  make  good  the  account  of  Benjamin  Tudelensis, 
the  Jew,  concerning  MontpelHer,  or  as  he  calls  it,  Montpes- 
lier,  who  passing  that  way  from  Spain  unto  Jerusalem,  about 
five  hundred  years  ago,  hath  thus  delivered  himself.  "  Locus 
est  quo  ex  omni  loco  ad  mercaturam  confluunt  Christianorum 
et  Mohammedanorum  plurimi,  e  regionibus  Algarbia?,  Loni- 
bardia},  et  regno  magno  illius  Romae,  universo  Regno  ^gyp- 
tio,  terra  Israelitica,  et  Grgecia,  Gallia,  Hispania  et  Anglia, 
adeo  ut  ex  omnium  linguarum  populo  ibidem  reperientur,  una 
cum  Gervensibus  et  Pisanis."  Whether  this  may  be  made 
out  from  history  or  probability  since  it  hath  no  port  nor  any 
considerable  river,  and  Marseilles  not  far  off  hath  carried  a 
main  trade  as  the  same  author  deUvers,  "  h^ec  civitas  maritima 
celeberrima  est  commerciis." 

Whether  after  all  the  mutations  of  Gallia,  by  nations,  laws, 
and  customs,  the  temper  of  the  present  Gauls  makes  not 
good  that  of  the  old,  as  Strabo  hath  set  it  down,  "  Animosi, 
stolidi,  arrogantes,  ornatus  studiosi." 

Whether  the  Burgundians,  who  possessed  both  Burgun- 
dies, Lyonois,  Dauphiny,  and  much  of  Provence,  did  poHti- 
cally  place  the  seat  of  their  kingdom  at  Aries  ? 

Whether  the  observation  of  Strabo  concerning  Gallia  hold 
true  in  all  nations,  that  the  maritime  inhabitants  are  the  most 
ficjhtinfj  men? 

How  to  salve  that  of  Ptolemy  who  placeth  the  mouth  of 
Rhenus  in  the  latitude  of  51',  which  is  rather  agreable  unto 
the  mouth  of  the  river  Elbe  or  Albis. 

Whether  it  must  not  be  rather  taken  for  an  extraordinary 
then  ordinary  course  of  passage  when  'tis  delivered  by  Strabo, 
lib.  5.  "  A  Placentia  autem  Ravennam  secundo  Pado  naviga- 
tur,  duobus  diebus  naturalibus,"  as  Xilander  hath  rendered  it? 


COMMON    PLACE    BOOKS.  101) 

Since  Italy  at  first  view  so  tolerably  rescinbleth  a  leg,  wiie- 
tlier  if  the  ancients  had  handsome  or  tolerable  maps,  it  be  not 
somewhat  strange  how  Pliny  should  compare  it  unto  an  oak 
leaf,  or  Eustathius  to  an  ivy  ? 

Since  a  great  part  of  Gallia  Cisalpina  was  confessedly  over- 
run and  inhabited  by  Gallic  nations,  and  the  Galli,  Senones, 
and  Cenoniani,  are  brought  as  far  as  from  the  countries  about 
Sens  and  Lemaine,  whether  it  be  not  more  probable  that  the 
Heneti  or  A  eneti  came  rather  from  the  Gallic  \eneti  in  Bri- 
tanie,  when  A'annes  yet  retains  their  name,  than  from  the  an- 
cient Trojans,  as  Strabo  hath  left  some  account,  may  well 
admit  of  doubt. 

How  Ausonius,  in  a  large  description  of  Burdeaux,  his  own 
native  city,  omitteth  any  mention  of  the  two  famous  antiqui- 
ties, thereof  Palais  de  Tutele  and  Palais  de  Galien,  or  the 
Amphitheatre,  the  ruins  thereof  are  yet  to  be  seen  in  that 
city  ? 

How  Strabo,  who  mentioneth  many  ordinary  rivers  in  Gal- 
lia, should  omit  the  considerable  streams  of  the  Mosa  and  the 
Scaldis,  the  Maze  and  the  Scheldt,  and  mention  none  between 
the  Sequana  and  the  Rhine. 

How  Strabo  can  be  made  out,  when  he  delivcreth  that  that 
part  of  Britany  which  lieth  against  Gallia  is  the  largest  side 
thereof;  or  whether  the  Komans  well  understood  the  dimen- 
sions of  this  island  before  the  time  of  Vespasian,  when  Agri- 
cola  his  lieutenant  caused  some  ships  to  sail  about  the  island. 

^^'hen  Strabo  saith  that  the  old  Britans  paid  for  tribute 
"frana  eburnea,"  whether  this  must  not  be  rather  taken  for 
such  as  were  made  of  the  teeth  of  cetaceous  and  great  fishes, 
rather  resembling  than  proper  ivory  or  elephant's  teeth,  since 
Solinus  observeth  that  they  made  use  of  such  and  made  hafts 
of  swords  therewith,  as  they  still  do  in  more  northern  regions. 

Whether  Corah,  Dathan,  and  Abiram,  >\crc  swallowed  up 


410  EXTRACTS    FROM 

in  the  earth  as  'tis  commonly  conceived,  or  rather  Dathan  and 
Abiram,  and  yet  not  Corah ;  who  was  burnt,  if  we  strictly 
consult  the  original.  And  what  in  that  point  is  alleged  for 
it  by  Estius  ? 

Whether  that  passage  of  Deut.  28,  verse  68,  "  classibus 
reducet  in  iEgyptum,"  be  not  sufficiently  made  out  by  the 
record  of  Josephus,  when  Titus,  after  the  taking  of  Je- 
rusalem, sent  all  or  most  under  seventeen  years  of  age  into 
Egypt. 

If  the  prophet  Jonah  were  contemporary  unto  Jeroboam  and 
Osias,  as  good  commentators  determine,  it  is  in  vain  to  think 
he  was  the  woman  of  Sareptha's  son. 

Whether,  when  he  intended  from  Joppa  unto  Tarsis,  he 
was  bound  for  Tarsis  in  Cilicia,  Tartessus  in  Bgetica,  of  Spain, 
or  Tarsis  by  which  sometimes  Carthage  is  called,  it  is  not  of 
moment  to  decide.  'T  is  plain  that  they  were  strangers  of  the 
ship,  since  every  one  called  upon  his  God,  and  since  they  de- 
manded from  whence  he  was ;  which,  although  they  did  not 
by  an  interpreter,  yet  if  they  were  of  the  colonies  of  the 
Phasnicians,  either  of  Tartessus  or  Carthage,  their  lanffua^e 
having  no  small  affinity  with  the  Hebrew,  they  might  have 
been  understood. 

The  story  of  Jonah  might  afford  the  hint  unto  that  of  An- 
dromeda and  the  sea  monster,  that  should  have  devoured  her ; 
the  scene  being  laid  at  Joppa  by  the  fabulists :  as  also  unto 
the  fable  of  Hercules  out  of  Lycophron,  three  nights  in  the 
whale's  belly,  that  is  of  Hercules  Plicenicius. 

Some  nations  of  the  Scythians  affi^cted  only  or  chiefly  to 
make  use  of  mares  in  their  wars,  because  they  do  not  stop  in 
their  course  to  stale  like  horses.     Qusere. 

Plutarch.— Hq  that  killed  Caius  Gracchus  and  cut  off  his 
head,  was  to  be  rewarded  with  the  weight  thereof  in  gold  ;  to 
advance  the  weight  thereof  he  took  out  the  brains  and  putting 


COMMON    PLACE    BOOKS.  Ill 

lead  into  it,  made  it  weigh  seventeen  pounds  and  the  third  part 
of  a  pound.  How  much  this  exceedeth  the  ordinary  weight 
of  a  head  ? 

Plutarch. — To  render  their  iron  money  unserviceahle  to 
other  uses,  the  Lacedannonians  quenched  it  in  vinegar.  This 
way  miglit  make  it  hrittle,  but  withal  very  apt  to  rust.  In- 
(juire  farther  of  their  drinking  cup  named  cothon. 

Whether  that  rigid  commonwealth  were  not  more  strict  in 
the  rule  and  order,  than  measure,  of  their  diet,  or  how  their 
provision  cometh  short  of  a  regular  and  collegian  diet,  when 
every  one  brought  monthly  into  the  hall  one  bushel  of  meal, 
eight  gallons  of  wine,  five  pounds  of  cheese,  and  two  pounds 
and  half  of  figs,  beside  money  for  sudden  and  fresh  diet. 

AVhat  to  judge  of  that  law  that  permitted  them  not  to  have 
lights  to  guide  them  home  from  the  common  hall  in  the  night, 
that  so  they  might  be  emboldened  to  walk  and  shift  in  the  dark. 

Though  many  things  in  that  state  promoted  temperance, 
fortitude,  and  prudence ;  yet  were  there  many  also  culpable 
to  high  degrees ;  as  justifying  theft,  adultery,  and  murder: 
while  they  encouraged  men  to  steal,  and  the  grand  crime 
thereof  was  to  be  taken  in  the  action :  while  they  admit  of 
others  to  lie  with  their  wives,  and  had  not  the  education  of 
their  own  children :  while  they  made  no  scruple  to  butcher 
their  slaves  in  great  numbers :  and  while  they  had  apothctes 
or  places  to  make  away  with  their  children  which  seemed 
weak  or  not  to  strongly  shapen  as  to  ])romise  lusty  men  :  and 
therefore  well  needed  that  Pagan  fallacy  that  these  ways  were 
confirmed  and  ratified  by  the  oracle  of  Delphos. 

It  was  the  custom  of  their  midwives  not  to  wash  their  child- 
ren with  water  but  with  wine  and  water,  whereby,  if  they  were 
weak,  they  extenuated  and  much  pined.  A\'hich  whether  a 
reasonable  test  of  constitutions  may  be  doubted. 

Cato  Utican  being  to  convey  a  great  treasure  from  Cyprus 
unto  Rome,  he  made  divers  little  chests  and  put  into  every 
one  two  talents  and  five  hundred  drachms,  and  tied  unto  each 
a  long  rope  with  a  large  piece  of  cork,  that,  if  the  ship  should 


412  EXTRACTS    FROM 

miscarry,  the  corks  might  shew  where  the  chests  laid  at  the 
bottom  of  the  sea.  A  good  piece  of  providence,  and  done 
like  Cato.  Whether  not  still  to  be  practiced,  if  the  make  of 
our  ships,  with  deck  upon  deck,  would  admit  of  it. 

Upon  the  16th  day  of  October,  Caspio  was  overcome  by 
the  Cambrians,  and  Lucullus  obtained  a  battle  over  Tigranes 
and  the  Asian  forces,  scarce  to  be  matched  since.  From  this 
and  the  like  a  hint  may  be  taken  to  compose  an  historical  ca- 
lendar, affixing  unto  each  day  the  famous  battles,  actions, 
events,  and  occurrences,  which  authentic  accounts  and  best 
records  afford  from  ancient  and  not  too  late  delivery.  Which 
may  daily  serve  to  revive  to  mind,  the  greatest  memorials  of 
time ;  wherein  may  be  observed  how  thin  some  days,  how  full 
some  others  have  been,  in  the  great  concerns  of  the  world,  and 
some  days  sufficient  to  afford  the  discourse  of  a  volume. 

How  the  ancients  made  the  north  part  of  Britain  to  bend 
so  unseasonably  eastward,  according  to  the  old  map,  agree- 
able unto  Ptolemy  ?  Or  how  Pliny  could  so  widely  mistake 
as  to  place  the  Isle  of  Wight  between  Ireland  and  England, 
if  it  be  not  mistaken  for  the  Isle  of  Man  or  Anglesea. 


'«3' 


Juhus  Caesar  being  hard  put  to  it  near  Alexandria,  leaped 
into  the  sea,  and,  laying  some  books  on  his  head,  made  shift 
to  swim  a  good  way  with  one  hand.  Sertorius  being  wound- 
ed in  a  battle  with  the  Cambrians,  with  his  corslet  and  tai'get 
swam  over  the  river  Rhosne.  He  that  hath  seen  that  river 
may  doubt  which  was  the  harder  exploit. 

Upon  the  memorable  overthrow  of  the  Cambrians,  not  far 
from  Verona,  by  Marius  and  Catullus,  the  contention  arose 
whose  soldiers  were  most  effective  to  the  victory.  For  that 
decision  Catullus  conducted  the  ambassadors  of  Parma,  then 
in  the  camp,  to  view  the  bodies  of  the  dead,  where  they  might 
behold  the  pila,  or  Roman  javelots,  in  their  bodies,  which 
Plutarch  saith  had  Catullus's  name  upon  them.  Whether 
this  were  not  extraordinary,  for  we  read  not  of  such  a  con- 
stant custom  to  set  their  leader's  names  upon  them. 


COMMON    I'LACE    BOOKS.  113 

The  apolosy  of  Socrates  in  Plato,  concliulcth  tiius,  when 
he  was  to  drink  the  cup  of  poison.  "  Verum  jam  abcundi 
tempus  et  mihi  niorituro,  vobis  autem  victuris:  utri  autem 
nostrum  sit  melius,  omnibus  quidem  incognitum,  soli  autem 
deo  notum,  existimo."  Whether  this  be  fairly  rendered  by 
Cicero  f  Tiisculan  Qucvst.  lib.  i.\  "  Utrum  sit  melius  dii  im- 
mortales  sciunt,  hominum  autem  neminem  existimo?"  For 
herein  for  deus  he  puts  in  dii  ininiortcdes,  whereas  his  charge 
was  that  he  contemned  the  gods  of  Athens ;  and  in  his  last 
words,  when  men  speak  freely  and  without  fear,  he  delivers 
himself  not  plurally,  but,  according  as  he  believed,  makes 
mention  but  of  one  God. 

When  Julius  Ca?sar,  after  a  hard  siege,  took  the  city  of 
^Marseilles,  he  spared  the  same,  and  would  not  demolish  it  for 
the  antiquity  thereof.  And  whether  it  be  not  the  most  an- 
cient city  of  Gallia,  as  having  a  known  erection  by  a  colony  of 
the  Phocenses,  about  the  reign  of  Tarquinius  Priscus,  some 
doubt  may  be  made.  For  though  these  may  be  more  ancient 
habitations,  yet  none  of  that  continued  story,  civility,  place, 
and  walled  ;  especially  if  that  be  true  which  Justin  dcliver- 
eth,  that  the  Massilians  first  taught  the  Gauls  to  wall  their 
towns. 

Whether  not  also  the  place  of  most  ancient  civility,  since 
Cirsar  delivers  that  the  Belgians  were  the  most  fierce  and 
warlike  nation  of  Gallia,  as  being  less  civilized  and  most  re- 
mote a  cultu  Provincice.  Which  country  was  civilized,  and 
much  peopled  by  the  ^lassilians,  and  who  extended  their  co- 
lonies along  that  shore  from  Aries  to  Niza  and  Antibes.  And 
though  it  be  no  university  at  present,  whether  it  hath  not 
been  the  most  ancient  place  of  study,  in  this  western  part  of 
Europe  ;  since  in  Strabo's  time  not  only  the  Gauls  but  the 
Romans  resorted  tliither  rather  than  unto  Athens. 

Upon  a  very  great  exclamation  of  a  multitude,  at  the  plays 
and  shows,  some  crows  flying  at  that  time  over,  fell  unto  the 
•rround,  as  Plutarch  delivereth  in  the  life  of  Titus  Fhunminius. 
Whether  the  reasons  alledged  by  him  attain  the  cause  there- 
of?    Plutarcli.  in  vita  Titi  Flaniminii. 


414 


EXTRACTS    FROM 


At  the  city  of  Gratianopolis,  or  Grenoble,  in  Dauphine, 
upon  the  swift  river  L'Isere,  there  is  a  bridge  of  boats,  some- 
.  what  like  that  of  Rouen  in  Normandy  ;  contrived  at  first  with 
great  cost  and  pains.  In  the  like  kind  the  Roman  labours 
were  more  notably  carried  on.  Plancus,  the  Roman  general, 
made  a  bridge  over  it  in  one  day.  What  time  was  taken  in 
building  the  admirable  bridge  of  Trajan  over  the  Danube, 
whose  ruins  are  to  be  seen  near  Severin,  in  the  confines  of 
Valachia  and  Transylvania ;  it  is  not  delivered  in  Dion,  who 
so  wonderingly  writeth  of  it.  But  Ctesar's  bridge  over  the 
Rhine  was  raised  in  ten  days,  after  that  the  materials  were 
brought.  In  not  many  days  they  could  build  a  large  fleet, 
since  we  read  in  Valerius,  that  in  sixty  days  the  same  trees 
made  both  a  wood  and  a  complete  navy.  Among  the  many 
strange  and  stupendous  bridges  of  China,  that  of  Phogen 
were  worth  the  sight ;  which  being  made  over  the  river  Cro- 
ceus,  from  one  hill  unto  another,  consisted  but  of  one  arch  of 
no  less  than  four  hundred  cubits  over. 

The  rivers  of  countries  may  commodiously  be  divided  into 
principal,  capital,  or  sea  rivers,  which  immediately  discharge 
into  the  sea;  or  else  into  accessionary,  or  such  as  are  dis- 
charged into  main  rivers,  and  so  immediately  enter  the  sea. 

To  exemplify  in  France  :  where  are  considerable,  four  less 
principal  streams,  Charente,  Some,  the  river  of  Baiona,  the 
Atax  or  Aude  at  Narbona ;  four  also  main  principal  rivers* 
the  Sequana  or  Seine,  Ligeris  or  La  Loire,  the  Rhodanus  or 
Rhone,  and  the  Garumna  or  Garonne. 

The  considerable  accessionary  rivers  run  into  one  of  the 
four  great  ones. 

Into  the  Seine  run  the  Marne,  the  Oyse,  the  Yonne. 

Into  the  Loire  on  the  south  runneth  the  Allier,  the  Cher, 
La  Crease,  Vienne.     On  the  north  Le  Loire,  Sarire. 

Into  the  Rhone  passeth  the  Araris  or  Soane,  (having  before 
received  into  itself  the  Doubis  or  Dou)  the  Isare  or  Lisere, 
and  the  Druentia  or  Durance. 

Into  the  Garonne  are  discharged  the  Dordanne,  the  Loch, 
and  the  Tarne. 

The  advantages  of  these  rivers  were  not  neglected  by  the 


COMMON    PLACE    BOOKS.  415 

old  Gauls  and  Romans  in  the  conveyance  of  their  commodi- 
ties ;  which  as  Strabo  delivers  they  sent  up  by  the  Atax,  and 
so  over  land  unto  the  Garunna,  and  likewise  up  the  Ilhosne, 
and  so  over  land  to  the  Seine,  and  so  into  the  ocean.  But 
when  Diodorus  Siculus  delivers  that  the  Romans  broufjht 
their  tin  out  of  Cornwall  into  Gaul,  and  so  by  horses  in  thirty 
days,  either  unto  the  heads  of  the  Po,  or  to  the  city  Narbona  ; 
they  undertook  a  hard  journey,  and  with  little  or  no  advan- 
tage of  rivers. 

The  considerable  cities  of  countries  are  likewise  commodi- 
ously  divided  into  three  magnitudes,  subdividing  every  mag- 
nitude into  as  many  degrees. 

To  exemplify  in  France.  In  the  first  magnitude,  and  the 
first  degree  of  that  magnitude,  Paris  ;  in  the  second  degree 
of  that  magnitude,  Lyons  ;  and  the  third,  Rouen,  Tholouse, 
Poictiers. 

In  the  second  magnitude,  and  first  degree  thereof,  Orleans, 
Bourdeaux,  Anglers. 

In  the  second  degree,  Aix,  Nantes  ; 

In  the  third,  Dijon,  Grenoble,  Marseilles,  Avignon,  Nevers, 
Tours. 

In  the  third  magnitude,  and  first  degree  thereof,  Rennes, 
Carcassonne,  Rochelle ; 

In  the  second  of  the  third  magnitude,  Troies,  Montpellier, 
Amiens  ; 

In  the  third,  Agcn,  Vienne,  Valance,  Sainctes. 

St.  Vincent,  whose  name  the  noble  cathedral  of  Lisbon 
beareth,  was  a  courageous  and  undaunted  martyr  in  the  per- 
secution of  Dioclesianus  and  Maximianus.  Attacked  at 
Evora,  by  Dacianus  the  Roman  governor,  and  afterwards 
racked  and  tortured  to  death  at  Abyla,  the  Moors  dispersed 
his  bones  at  St.  Vincent's,  a  place  upon  the  Promontorium 
Sacrum  of  Ptolemy,  now  called  the  Cape  of  St.  Vincent,  the 
most  western  head-land  of  Europe.  Upon  my  print  of  St. 
Vincent  these  few  lines  may  be  inscribed, 

Extorque,  si  potes,  fidem, 

Toi-menta,  career,  ungulae, 

Stridensque  flammis  lamina, 


41G  EXTRACTS    FROM 

Atque  ipsa  poenarum  ultima, 
Mors,  Christianis  ludus  est. 

Prudentius  in  hymno  St.  Vincentii. 

Though  in  point  of  devotion  and  piety,  physicians  do  meet 
with  common  ohloquy,  yet  in  the  Roman  calendar  we  find  no 
less  than  twenty-nine  saints  and  martyrs  of  that  profession,  in 
a  small  piece  expressly  described  by  Bzovius  (in  his  Nomen- 
clatiira  sanctorum  jJrofessione  medicortim).  A  clear  and  na- 
ked history  of  holy  men,  of  all  times  and  nations,  is  a  work 
yet  to  be  wished.  Many  persons  there  have  been,  of  high 
devotion  and  piety,  which  have  no  name  in  the  received 
canon  of  saints  ;  and  many  now  only  live  in  the  names  of 
towns,  wills,  tradition,  or  fragments  of  local  records.  Where- 
in Cornwall  seems  to  exceed  any  place  of  the  same  circuit, 
if  we  take  an  account  of  those  obscure  and  probably  Irish 
saints  to  be  found  in  Carew's  survey  of  that  country,  afford- 
ing names  unto  the  churches  and  towns  thereof;  which  clearly 
to  historify  might  prove  a  successless  attempt.  Even  in 
France,  many  places  bear  the  names  of  saints,  which  are  not 
commonly  understood.  St.  Malo,  is  Maclovius;  Disier,  De- 
siderius;  St.  Arigle,  St.  Agricola ;  St.  Omer,  St.  Audomarus. 
Many  more  there  are,  as  St.  Chamas,  St.  Uriei',  St.  Loo, 
Sainc^e  Menehoud,  St.  Saulye,  St.  Trouve,  St.  Riquier,  St. 
Papoul,  St.  Oaen ;  and  divers  others  which  may  employ  your 
enquiry. 

Plutarch  in  the  Life  of  Agesilaus. 

Menecrates,  the  physician,  arrogantly  usurped  the  name  of 
Jupiter,  presuming,  in  a  letter,  he  wrote  unto  Agesilaus,  to 
subscribe  in  this  manner,  "Menecrates  Jupiter  unto  King 
Agesilaus,  greeting."  Agesilaus  wrote  again  unto  him,  "Age- 
silaus unto  IMenecrates,  health." 

Whether  this  translation  be  not  made  rather  unto  the  pre- 
sent practise,  to  subscribe  names  unto  our  letters,  than  unto 
the  ancient  mode  either  above  or  at  the  beginning  of  the  let- 
ter, according  as  we  may  observe  from  many  in  Laertius,  the 
epistolary  works  of  Greek  authors,  and  the  epistle  of  Festus 
unto  Felix,  may  be  doubted.     Or  whether  I'TianlXai,  in  the 


COMMON  PLACF.  BOOKS.  417 

original,  ought  to  be  translated,  to  subscribe ;  and  when  the 
present  manner  of  subscribing  names  began,  and  what  ancient 
copy  niiglit  be  produced  for  our  practise,  may  also  be  en- 
quired. 

Agesilaus  was  going  up  into  the  counsel  house  in  the  castle, 
where  suddenly  took  him  a  great  cramp  in  his  left  leg,  that 
swelled  extremely  and  \nit  him  to  great  pain.  Men  thinkuig 
it  had  been  but  blood  which  filled  the  vein,  a  physician  being 
there  opened  a  vein  under  the  ancle  of  his  foot,  which  made 
the  pain  to  cease,  but  there  came  such  abundance  of  blood 
that  they  could  not  stanch  it,  so  that  he  swooned  often,  and 
was  in  danger  of  present  death.  In  fine  a  way  was  found  to 
stop  it,  and  they  carried  him  to  Laceda?mon ;  where  he  lay 
sick  a  long  time,  so  that  he  was  past  going  to  the  wars  any 
more.  Herein  to  consider  the  nature  of  the  disease,  the  ra- 
tionality t)f  the  cure,  and  by  what  way  i)robably  they  stanched 
the  bleeding. 


•o" 


Xenophon  writes  that  his  daughter's  canathnim  was  no- 
thing more  sumptuous  than  any  others  were.  X  canathrum 
in  LacediEmon,  is  a  kind  of  coach  or  chariot,  after  the  like- 
ness of  griffins,  harts,  or  goats,  upon  which  they  carried  young 
wenches  in  solemn  procession  in  the  city.  To  make  an  icon, 
figure,  or  draught,  of  a  canathrmn,  according  to  the  best  ac- 
counts which  are  left  thereof. 

The  punishment  of  such  as  fled  from  the  battle,  whom  they 
called  at  Sparta  irepiclaules,  was  this.  They  can  bear  no 
office  in  the  commonwealth ;  it  is  a  shame  and  reproach  to 
give  them  any  wives,  and  also  to  marry  any  of  theirs ;  whoso- 
ever meeteth  them  may  lawfully  strike  them,  and  they  must 
abide  it,  not  giving  them  any  word  again  ;  they  are  compelled 
to  wear  poor  tattered  cloth  gowns,  patched  with  cloth  of  divers 
colours;  and  woi'st  of  all,  to  shave  one  side  of  their  beards 
and  the  other  not.  ^^'hcther  the  severity  of  this  law  of  La- 
ceda?mon,  and  which  sometimes  they  durst  not  put  in  execu- 
tion, were  ingenious,  rational,  and  commodious,  or  to  be  drawn 
into  example. 

VOL.    IV,  -1   L 


418  EXTRACTS    FROM 

Whether  Pompey  committed  not  two  great  oversights  in 
the  war  against  Julius  Caesar ;  the  one  in  not  returning  out  of 
Greece  with  his  army  into  Italy,  while  Caesar  was  gone  into 
Spain  ;  the  other  in  deferring  battle,  and  not  setting  upon 
CiEsar  when  he  was  so  distressed  for  victuals. 

In  the  city  of  Padua,  Cornelius,  an  excellent  soothsayer, 
was  by  chance,  at  that  time  when  the  battle  of  Pharsalia  was 
fought,  set  to  behold  the  flying  of  birds.  He,  as  Livy  re- 
porteth,  knew  the  very  time  when  the  battle  began,  and  told 
them  that  were  present,  even  now  they  give  the  onset  on  both 
sides,  and  after  cried  out,  O  Caesar,  the  victory  is  thine.  And 
every  man  wondering,  he  took  the  crown  from  his  head,  and 
said  he  would  never  put  it  on  again,  till  the  event  had  proved 
his  art  true. 

Plut.  in  vita  Julii  C. — Si  questa  relatione  non  si  debbia 
riporre  fra  farfalloni  degl'  istorichi  antichi  di  Lancellotto. 

In  Vila  Alexandri. 

He  understood,  by  the  countrymen,  that  the  river  Ganges 
was  tvvo-and-thirty  furlongs  over,  and  an  hundred  fathoms 
deep.  Whether  this  may  not  be  made  out  upon  comparison 
with  the  river  of  Amazons,  according  unto  the  late  descrip- 
tion thereof  translated  out  of  French. 

Thither  came  Nearchus's  admiral  unto  him,  who  made  re- 
port of  what  he  had  seen  and  done  in  his  navigation.  Alex- 
ander was  so  glad  of  that,  as  he  was  desirous  to  sail  by  sea 
himself,  and  so  entering  into  the  ocean  by  the  mouth  of  Eu- 
phrates, to  compass  in  all  the  coasts  of  Arabia  and  Africa, 
and  thence  into  the  Mediterranean  sea,  by  the  straights  of  the 
pillars  of  Hercules.  Who  can  but  wish  this  had  been  per- 
formed, although  not  by  himself.  A  bold  design  it  may  seem 
in  those  days,  and  yet  seeming  far  greater  unto  us  than  unto 
them,  who  might  hope  the  coast  of  Africa  ran  nothing  near 
so  far  southward  as  we  now  find  it ;  nor  how  the  coast  of  Af- 
rica bore  out  to  make  a  large  sail  before  they  could  attain 
the  straits  of  Hercules.     Yet  Herodotus  reports  the  same 


COMMON    PLACr    HOOKS.  Ml) 

was  done  before ;  that  Neclio,  King  of  ICgypt,  by  the  help  of 
Phoenicians,  sailed  from  the  Red  Sea,  round  about  Africa, 
unto  Cadiz. 

A  Macedonian,  as  he  digged  in  a  certain  place  by  tlie 
river  of  Oxus,  to  set  up  the  king's  tent,  he  found  a  certain 
fat  and  oily  vein,  which,  after  he  had  drawn  out  the  first,  there 
came  out  also  another  clearer,  which  differed  nothing,  either 
in  smell,  taste,  or  savour,  from  natural  oil,  having  the  gloss 
and  fatness  so  like,  as  there  could  be  discerned  no  difference 
between  them ;  the  which  was  so  much  the  more  to  be  won- 
dered at,  because  that  in  all  that  country  there  were  no  olives  : 
nor  needed  there  any,  tliis  being  a  kind  of  petroleum  spring 
and  natural  oil,  not  vegetable  and  artificial. 

Alexander,  having  won  the  city  of  Susa,  he  found  to  the 
value  of  five  thousand  talents  weight  of  purple  Ilcrmione  silk, 
which  they  had  locked  up  safe,  and  kept  the  space  of  two 
liundred  years,  and  yet  the  colour  kept  as  fresh  as  if  it  had 
been  newly  made.  Some  say  the  cause  why  it  was  so  well 
kept,  came  by  means  of  the  dying  of  it  witli  honey  in  silks 
wliich  before  had  been  dyed  red,  and  with  white  oil  in  white 
silks,  which  before  had  been  dyed  red.  For  there  are  silks 
seen  of  that  colour  that  keep  colour  as  long  as  the  other. 
(To  be  fartlier  considered  by  inquiries  into  tinctures). 

Plutarch  in  rita  Crassi. 

riyrodcs  the  king  fell  into  a  disease  that  became  a  dropsy 
after  he  had  lost  his  son  Pacorus.  Phraates,  his  second  son, 
thinking  to  set  his  father  forwards,  gave  him  drink  of  the 
juice  o?  aconitum.  The  dropsy  received  the  poison,  and  one 
drove  the  other  out  of  Ilyrodes'  body,  and  set  Iiim  on  foot 


agam. 


Pluf.  hi  rita  Them'ist, 

L  pon  the  difference  of  the  Athenians  with  the  Lacedirmo- 
nians,  before  the  sea  fight  with  Xerxes,  Themistocles  said 
unto  them,  "  If  you  will  needs  go  your  ways  and  forsake  us, 
you  shall  hear,  ere  it  be  long,  that  the  Athenians  have  another 

•1  y.  -1 


4f20  EXTRACTS    FROM 

free  city,  and  have  possessed  again  as  nuicli  free  land  as  they 
have  already  lost." 

Sir  Walter  Raleigh,  lib.  iii,  History  of  the  World;  here 
withal  he  mentions  a  town  in  Italy  belonging  of  old  to  the 
state  of  Italy,  of  which  town  he  said,  an  oracle  had  foretold 
that  the  Athenians  in  process  of  time  should  build  it  anew ; 
"and  here,"  quoth  he,  "will  we  plant  ourselves,  leaving  unto 
you  a  sorrowful  remembrance  of  my  words." 

What  city  this  was  of  Italy  which  he  meaneth  in  his  speech. 

To^  be  sure  that  no  day  pass,  without  calling  upon  God  in 
a  solemn  formed  prayer,  seven  times  within  the  compass  there- 
of; that  is,  in  the  morning,  and  at  night,  and  five  times  be- 
tween ;  taken  up  long  ago  from  the  example  of  David  and 
Daniel,  and  a  compunction  and  shame  that  I  had  omitted  it 
so  long,  when  I  heedfuUy  read  of  the  custom  of  the  Maho- 
metans to  pray  five  times  in  the  day. 

To  pray  and  magnify  God  in  the  night,  and  my  dark  bed, 
when  I  could  not  sleep ;  to  have  short  ejaculations  when  ever 
I  awaked,  and  when  the  four  o'clock  bell  -  awoke  me,  or  my 
first  discovery  of  the  light,  to  say  the  collect  of  our  liturgy, 
"Eternal  God,  who  hath  safely  brought  me  to  the  beginning 
of  this  day,  &c." 

To  pray  in  all  places  where  privacy  inviteth ;  in  any  house, 
highway,  or  street ;  and  to  know  no  street  or  passage  in  this 
city  which  may  not  witness  that  I  have  not  forgot  God  and 
my  Saviour  in  it ;  and  that  no  parish  or  town  where  I  have 
been,  may  not  say  the  like. 

To  take  occasion  of  praying,  upon  the  sight  of  any  church, 
which  I  see  or  pass  by,  as  I  ride  about. 

Since  the  necessities  of  the  sick,  and  unavoidable  diversions 


'    To  be  sure,  Sf-c]     This,  and  tlie  fol-  dcring  about  for  a  considerable  time  on 

lowing  nine  paragraphs,   seem    to   have  Mousehold    Fleath,  having  lost  his  way 

lieen  inserted  in  this  volume  by  mistake,  in  a  winter  night's  >torm,   at  length  was 

They  were  evidently  not  intended  for  the  directed  to  the  city,  by  the  tolling  of  a  bell 

perusal  of  his  son,  or  of  any  one  else.  iu  tliis  church  of  St.  Peter  Mancroft,  the 

^  four    o'clock    liell.']      A    bell    which  rchidence  of  Sir  Thomas  Brown,  when  he 

tolls  (or  ought  to  toll,  if  the  old  sexton  wrote  this  passage,  and  that  of  his  editor, 

does  not  oversleep  himself)  in  pursuance  wlien  he  writes  this  note, 
of  the  will  of  a  person  who,  after  wan- 


COMMON    rLA(  i:    BOOKS.  \2l 

of  my  prolbssion,  keep  lue  often  from  eluireli,  yet  to  take  all 
possible  care  that  I  might  never  miss  sacraments  upon  their 
accustomed  days. 

To  pray  daily  and  particularly  for  sick  patients,  and  in  ge- 
neral for  others,  whei'esoevcr,  howsoever,  under  whose  care 
soever ;  and  at  the  entrance  into  the  house  of  the  sick,  to  say, 
"  The  peace  and  mercy  of  God  be  in  this  place." 

After  a  sermon,  to  make  a  thanksgiving,  and  desire  a  bless- 
ing, and  to  pray  for  the  minister. 

In  tempestuous  weather,  lightning,  and  thunder,  either 
night  or  day,  to  pray  for  God's  merciful  protection  upon  all 
men,  and  his  mercy  upon  their  souls,  bodies,  and  goods. 

Upon  sight  of  beautiful  persons,  to  bless  God  in  his  crea- 
tures, to  pray  for  the  beauty  of  their  souls,  and  to  enrich  them 
with  inward  graces  to  be  answerable  unto  the  outward.  Upon 
sight  of  deformed  ])ersons,  to  send  them  inward  graces,  and 
enrich  their  souls,  and  give  them  the  beauty  of  the  resurrection. 

Marcus  Antoninus  Philosophus  wanted  not  the  advice  of 
the  best  physicians ;  yet  how  warrantable  his  practice  was,  to 
take  his  repast  in  the  night,  and  scarce  any  thing  but  treacle 
in  the  day,  may  admit  of  great  doubt. 

U'hy  Conunodus,  heated  in  the  theatrical  recreations, 
would  drink  his  refrigerated  wine  only  from  the  hand  of  a 
woman.  If  not  for  being  over  heated  by  the  hotter  hands  of 
men. 

How  to  make  out  the  effect,  or  what  antidotal  property 
there  might  be  in  the  bodies  of  eunuchs,  who  only  were  able 
to  bear  that  bituminous  exhalation  at  Hieropolis,  which  prov- 
ed mortal  unto  other  men  and  animals,  as  is  positively  deliv- 
ered by  Dion. 

Every  tenth  day,  the  young  Spartan  striplings  were  pre- 
sented unto  the  Ephori,  and  such  as  were  found  to  be  fat 
were  punished,  as  conceiving  they  used  not  sufficient  exercise; 
whether  this  rigour  of  Lycurgus  were  tolerable,  or  not  too 
generally  extended  upon  all  constitutions,  to  punish  thus  in- 


422  EX'IKACTS    FKOM 

definitely,  and  such  which  might  probahly  be  only  peccant  by 
constitution. 

Plutarch  in  vita  Alexandri. 

They  found  Darius  laid  on  a  couch,  having  many  wounds  ; 
and  being  almost  at  the  last  gasp,  he  called  for  cold  water,  and 
drank  it ;  and  after  a  few  words  gave  up  the  ghost.  Gravi- 
tur  vulneratos  et  multum  sanguinem  effundentes  admodum 
sitire  notissimum. 

After  Philip,  the  physician,  had  given  the  potion  unto 
Alexander,  the  medicine  beginning  to  work,  overcame  the 
disease,  and  drove  for  the  time  all  his  natural  strength  and 
powers  into  the  lowest  parts  of  his  body,  insomuch  that  his 
strength  failed  him,  and  his  pulse  did  scarce  beat,  &c.  An 
hoc  satis  medice  dictum  ? 

Callisthenes,  being  kept  a  prisoner,  and  being  very  fat,  was 
eaten  in  the  end  by  lice,  and  so  died. 

Of  others,  who  fell  to  quaffing  who  should  drink  mostj 
there  died  forty-one  persons,  of  an  extreme  cold  that  took 
them  in  their  drunkenness.  Eodem  funguntur  fato  ebriones 
plurimi  apud  nos. 

Hephestion  fell  sick  of  an  ague,  but  being  a  young  man  of 
war,  he  did  not  regard  his  moutb,  but  having  spied  an  op- 
portunity, when  his  physician  was  gone  unto  the  theatre  to 
see  sports  and  pastimes,  he  went  to  dinner  and  ate  a  roasted 
capon  whole,  and  drank  a  great  pot  full  of  wine,  which  he  had 
caused  to  be  set  in  water,  whereupon  his  fever  took  him  so 
sorely  that  he  lived  not  long  after. 

Lysippus,  of  all  others,  hath  perfectly  drawn  Alexander, 
holding  his  neck  somewbat  hanging  downwards  towards  the 
left  side :  which  was  more  agreeable  to  a  person  of  a  generous 
temper;  incliuatio  capitis  ad  dextram  being,  according  to 
Aristotle,  among  the  physiognomical  notes  of  an  efleminate 
temper ;  and  how  well  this  is  observed  in  the  picture  and  sta- 
tue made  of  him. 

Plut,  in  vita  Antonii. 

In   the  end  they  were  compelled   to  live  on  herbs  and 


COMMON    I'LACi:    HOOKS. 


4.23 


roots,  but  they  t'ouiul  tew  of  them  tliat  men  do  commonly  cut, 
and  were  enforced  to  taste  of  them  that  were  never  eaten  be- 
fore. amonfT  the  which  there  was  one  that  killed  them,  and 
made  them  out  of  their  Mits  ;  for  he  that  had  once  eaten  of 
it,  his  memory  was  gone  from  him,  and  knew  no  manner  of 
thing,  but  only  busied  himself  in  digging  and  hurling  of 
stones  from  one  place  to  another,  as  though  it  had  been  a 
great  weight,  and  to  be  done  with  all  possible  speed.  All 
the  cimp  over  were  busily  stooping  to  the  ground,  digging 
and  carrying  of  stones  from  one  place  to  another.  But  at 
last  they  cast  up  a  great  deal  of  choler  and  died  suddenly, 
because  they  lacked  wine  which  was  the  only  sudden  remedy 
to  cure  that  disease. 

What  plant  this  might  be,  considerable  from  the  symptoms 
and  cure  by  wine. 

Turkish  History,  in  the  Life  of  Morah,  p.  1483. 

Count  Mansfield  died :  the  news  whereof  coming  to  Duke 
John  Ernestus,  already  weakened  with  a  fever  fourteen  days, 
he  fell  into  an  apoplexy.  His  body  was  opened,  and  not  one 
drop  of  blood  found,  but  his  heart  withered  to  the  smallness 
of  a  nut. 

Plutarch  in  Demosthene. 

Touching  the  stammering  of  his  tongue,  which  was  very 
fat,  and  made  him  that  he  could  not  ])ronounce  all  syllables 
distinctly,  he  did  help  it  by  putting  of  little  pebble  stones  into 
his  mouth,  which  he  found  upon  the  sands  by  the  river  side, 
and  so  pronounced  with  open  mouth  the  orations  he  had 
without  book.  How  this  might  not  produce  the  effect  upon 
the  causes  of  balbuties  or  bla^sity  assigned  by  Sanctorius, 
De  vitandis  error ibus  in  inedicina. 

He  went  into  the  temple,  as  though  he  would  dispatch 
some  letters,  and  ])ut  the  end  of  the  quill  into  his  mouth  and 
bit  it  as  his  manner  was,  when  he  did  use  to  write,  and 
held  the  quill  in  his  mouth  a  pretty  while  together  ;  then  feel- 
ing the  poison  to  work,  he  spoke  unto  Archias,  after  which 
he  prayed  them  to  stay  him  up  by  the  arm  holes,  for  his  feet 
began  already  to  fail  him,  and  as  he  passed  by  the  altar  of 


424  EXTRACTS    FROM 

Neptune,  he  fell  down,  and  giving  one  gasp,  gave  up  tlie  ghost. 
What  poison  this  was ;  whether  the  common  and  state  poi- 
son of  Athens,  made  out  of  the  hemlock,  whereof  a  drachm 
of  the  juice  inspissated  was  a  sufficient  dose,  as  appears  in 
the  life  of  Phocion,  whereby  Socrates  perished,  and  the  ef- 
fects seem  to  have  been  somewhat  like  in  Demosthenes. 

Suet,  in  vita  Calig.  sect.  23. 

Tiberius's  brother  he  surprised  and  killed,  because  he 
snielled  strongly  of  a  preservative  or  antidote,  as  if  he  had 
taken  the  same  to  prevent  his  poisons  ;  whereas,  for  a  con- 
tinual cough  that  grew  still  upon  him,  he  used  a  medicine. 

Life  of  Dion.     Plutarch. 

The  surgeons  were  to  search  the  wound  of  Sothis,  who 
fovmd  that  it  was  rather  a  scratch  than  any  violent  wound 
given  him,  for  the  wounds  or  cuts  of  a  sword  are  ever  deeper 
in  the  middest ;  whether  this  may  not  be  solved  from  the 
fashion  and  make  of  their  swords,  different  from  ours. 

Olearius. 

In  the  travels  of  Olearius,  and  in  his  description  of  Persia, 
he  delivers  that  the  Persians  commonly  cure  the  sting  of  a 
scorpion  by  applying  a  piece  of  copper  upon  the  wound  ;  and 
that  himself,  being  stung  in  the  throat  by  a  scorpion,  w^as 
cured  by  the  application  of  oil  of  scorpions,  and  taking  trea- 
cle inwardly ;  but  that  for  some  years  after  he  was  troubled 
with  a  pricking  in  that  part,  when  the  sun  was  in  Scorpius. 

The  princess  of  Coreski,  taken  prisoner  by  the  Tartars, 
received  a  precious  stone  of  rare  virtue,  which  applied  unto 
the  eyes  of  the  brother  of  the  Tartar,  whose  prisoner  she 
was,  in  a  short  time  recovered  his  sight.  Whether  any  such 
virtue  probable  or  possible  by  that  means.  Turk.  Hist,  in 
the  Life  of  Achmet. 

Ameida,  intending  to  take  away  the  sight  of  his  father, 
MuUeasses,  with  a  hot  knife  cut  the  sight  of  his  eyes :  the 
manner  of  this  operation  would  be  farther  enquired. 


COMMON     I'l.ACK    BOOKS.  425 

Whether  that  of  Psahn  viii,  may  not  be  literally  verified 
and  fulfilled,  when  Christ  entered  Jerusalem,  since  according 
to  that  of  Maccabees  vii,  "  lac  triennio  dedi,"  the  Jewish  wo- 
men suckled  their  children  three  years,  and  they  could  speak, 
before,  or  at  that  age. 


[MS.    SLOAN.     1875.]  ' 

[On  the  Laws  of  Motion  and  Gravitation.] 

Two  very  considerable  qualities  there  are,  concerning  the  na- 
tural motion  of  bodies  in  the  universe,  which  order  all  bodies 
in  due  place  and  situation. 

That  which  disposes  the  situation  and  fastens  them  to  the 
poles  is  the  quality  magnetical,  which  is  discoverable  in  iron 
and  loadstone,  and  some  few  others,  beyond  which  nothing  is 
strictly  magnetical ;  as  is  also  discovered  in  the  globe  of  the 
earth,  whereby  it  is  tied  unto  its  poles,  and  making  a  constant 
elevation  of  every  place,  the  pole  constant,  and  the  latitude 
and  lonsitude  of  each  region  invariable;  whether  the  same 
dis})Ositive  quality  or  dispositive  power  unto  one  situation,  be 
not  in  the  stars  of  heaven  is  very  questionable ;  nor  altoge- 
ther without  reason  that  this  power  maintains  the  spots  of 
the  moon  in  one  constant  face,  unto  all  eyes,  and  makes  the 
moles  in  the  western  cheek  invariably  to  regard  us.  Whe- 
ther the  natures  of  things  have  not  something  magnetical, 
whereby  disturbed  from  themselves  they  still  return  into  their 
former  point ;  and  whether  temperamental  inclinations  stay 
not  so  firm  by  this  or  anatomical  quality,  may  be  also  consi- 
dered. 

The  other  doth  order  and  dispose  every  body  to  take  up 
his  proper  place  ;  that  is,  in  order  to  the  centre,  nearer  or  far- 

'  .MS.  SLOAN.  1875.]  This  volume  Books,  but,  being  principally  on  scientific 
contains  many  very  curious,  and  some  subjects,  it  has  been  printed  as  a  fit  com- 
erroncous  and  fallacious  experiments,  and  panion  to  No.  18C9,  which  is  almost  en- 
observations.  It  appears  both  from  the  tirely  literary.  It  should  be  observed 
hand  writing  and  spelling,  and  from  that  the  hand-writing  in  this  volume  is 
occasional  dates,  to  have  been  written  so  bad,  that  it  cannot  but  be  apprehended 
earlier  than  otJicr  of  his  Common  Place  that  many  errors  will  remain. 


4ii6  EXTRACTS    FROM 

ther  from  it,  wliich  is  by  gravity  and  levity,  or  rather  less  gra- 
vity ;  for  things  are  not  absolutely  light,  but  comparatively 
to  each  other,  ascending  or  descending  according  to  their 
conjunction  with  other  bodies.  Wood  will  descend  in  the 
air,  but  bear  from  the  centre  in  water.  In  this  motion  all 
heavy  bodies  bear  not  to  the  centre,  as  greedy  of  that  posi- 
tion, every  body  remaining  content  in  that  place  which  is  be- 
low a  less  heavy  body,  that  could  not  sustain  [it,]  and  ready 
to  give  place  to  another  if  not  hindered ;  and  therefore  the 
centre  properly  is  due  unto  the  heaviest  body,  and  gold  may 
challenge  that  place,  which  is  the  simply  heavy,  and  never  light 
in  reference  to  other  bodies.  And  though  there  lay  a  circle  of 
a  globe  of  liquefied  gold,  and  such  as  were  penetrate  and 
drossive  of  other  bodies,  though  the  earth  were  perforated 
nothing  would  reach  the  centre,  because  the  centre  would 

and  all  things  swim  in  gold,  and  the  central  relation 

would  not  break  the  rule  of  nature  which  ordereth  every 
thing  its  place  according  to  its  gravity.'-  But  things  useful 
unto  man  were  set  where  man  might  come  at  them,  nor  is  it 
hkely  any  thing  lies  at  the  centre  but  what  is  subservient  vmto 

the  earth, through  it  fire,  which  men  are  so  far 

from  placing  the  heaviest  body  that  they  have  placed  it  the 
lightest;  that  is,  fire,  inservient  to  the  generation  of  all  things 
under  the  earth,  and  the  greater  circulation  of  nature  without; 
and  if  the  earth  be  divided  into  three  orbs,  two  thereof  con- 
tain but  little  of  what  we  know  and  may  only  serve  the  other. 

They  speak  reason  who  say,  if  the  earth  were  perforated 
and  a  bullet  let  fall,  it  would  not  rest  immediately  at  the  cen- 
tre, but  by  the  impetus  it  conceiveth,  move  almost  as  far  as 
the  opposite  surface. 

Clymical  earth,  as  being  lightest,  hath  least  title  unto  the 
centre;  for  though  the  clementatcd  earth,  as  it  stands  im- 
pregnated with  other  principles,  be  the  heaviest  body  in  the 
universe,  yet  resolved  near  its  element  it  proves  the  lightest 
part  of  any  body  except  the  oil  or  inflammable  part,  as  will  be 


2  and  though,  SjC.']     There  aic  seve-  of  litiiiid  gold  nothing  could  displace  it, 

lal  words  in  this  sentence  very  illegible,  because  every  other  body,  being  lighter, 

He  probably  means  that  supposing  the  would  remain  on  its  surface.    , 
centre  of  tiic  earth  occupied  by  a  globe 


COMMON    I'LACE    BOOKS.  1.21 


evident  unto  any  that  shall  separate  the  salt  and  ashes,  shall 
so  urge  a  body  as  to  disturb  the  volate  principles,  oil,  water, 
and  then  having  the  earth  shall  extract  all  salt  from  it ;  for 
the  dry  and  discontinued  carcase  remaining  will  weigh  less  in 
an  equal  ratio  than  so  much  water,  but  come  very  short  of 
salt  which  maketh  ashes  heavy,  so  many  bodies  that  abound 
in  earth  are  lighter  than  others  which  have  it  in  smaller  quan- 
tity. So  are  we  deceived  in  buying  of  ashes,  conceiving  we 
have  especial  pennyworths  if  we  have  a  great  bulk  and  mea- 
sure, although  in  some  there  is  much  earth  that  greatens  the 
bulk  without  store  of  salt  which  is  the  expected  principle. 

Tanner's  stufi'  having  been  long  infused  in  their  pits  burns 
well  dryed,  but  makes  a  weak  lye,  unfit  for  cleansing  of  linen. 

[On  Coagulation.^ 

So  many  coagulations  there  are  in  nature ;  and  though  we 
content  ourselves  with  one  in  the  running  of  milk,  yet  many 
will  perform  the  same. 

The  maws  or  stomachs  of  other  animals,  as  of  pigeons. 

The  inner  coat  of  the  gizzard  of  wild  ducks  and  teal,  not 
the  pike,  or  maw  of  a  pike,  which  seems  of  strong  digestion. 

Several  seeds  may  do  it,  the  best  the  seeds  of  carthamus, 
not  too  much  dried. 

Many  others  not,  as  not  the  seed  of  pasony.  Myrobalans 
powdered  do  it. 

The  milk  of  spurge  doth  it  actively ;  the  milk  of  fig ;  that 
of  lettuce;  succory  ;  tragopogon  ;  apocinon.  Whether  saler- 
dine? 

Whereby  whey  and  cheese  might  be  made  more  medical ; 
milk  of  lettuce  and  sowthistle  will  not  hold  the  colour,  but 
grow  black  and  gummy,  yet  strongly  coagulate  milk. 

The  opium  and  scammony. 

The  inward  ^-kin  of  the  gizzard  of  turkies  will  actively  co- 
agulate ;  so  will  the  crop  ;  the  chylus  or  half  digesteil  matter 
in  the  crop  did  the  like,  and  strongly.  That  in  the  gizzard 
was  too  dry. 

The  milk  of  a  woman  full  of  the  jaundice,  that  nursed  a 
child,  infected  the  same ;  yet  the  milk  was  blue  and  a  laud- 


428  EXTRACTS    FROM 

able  colour,  and  would  not  be  coagulated  by  runnet,  nor  after 
long  stirring  did  manifest  any  colour  or  febrical  tincture. 

To  try  and  observe  the  several  sorts  of  coagulations  or 
runnets  ;  whether  any  will  turn  all  kinds  of  milk,  or  whether 
they  be  appropriate.  That  of  a  hare  we  find  will  turn  that 
of  the  cow.  To  observe  further  whether  it  will  coagulate 
that  of  a  mare  or  ass,  or  woman,  and  how  the  coagulum  stands 
in  multifidous  animals;  as  in  whelps  and  kittens,  and  also 
in  swine  and  bats.  The  runnet  of  cows  is  strong,  for  it  co- 
agulates the  milk  of  herbs.  The  milk  in  whelps'  maws  did 
the  milk  of  cows,  but  the  runnet  of  cows,  as  we  have  tried  in 
several  womens'  milk,  will  not  coagulate  the  same.  The  run- 
net of  rabbit  coagulates  well  the  milk  of  a  cow.  Neither  that 
nor  calf's  runnet  did  make  a  good  coagulum  of  mare's  milk, 
leaving  only  a  gross  thickness  therein,  without  serous  separa- 
tion. 

Of  the  several  sorts  of  milk  and  lacical  animals ;  of  the 
several  sorts  of  coagulums ;  of  all  kinds  of  mineral  coagula- 
tion. 

of  tin  with  aquafortis 

of antimony 

of  soap 

of  the  coagulum  of  blood 

of  milk 

How  several  sayings  concerning  coagulum  in  authors  may 
be  understood  ? 

How  in  the  Scripture  "  sicut  lac  coagulasti  me  ? " 

How  far  the  coagulating  principle  operateth  in  generation 
is  evident  from  eggs  which  will  never  incrassate  without  it ; 
from  the  incrassation  upon  incubiture,  when  heat  difFuseth 
the  coagulum,  from  the  chalaza  or  gellatine,  which  sometime 
three  nodes,  the  head,  heart,  and  liver. 

How  its  qualities  made  good  in  physic  ? 

How  in  natural  observations  ? 

What  runnet  the  kjcythians  used  to  separate  mare's  milk 
is  uncertain;  cow's  runnet  we  have  not  found  to  do  it,  but  the 
same  we  have  effected  by  the  maws  of  turkies.  A\' hether 
the  buttons  of  figs  or  the  milk  of  spurge  which  arc  strong 
coagulators  ?     Qugere. 


COMMON    rLACi:   nooKs.  129 

Coagiilum  in  the  first  digestion,  in  the  second  or  blood,  whe- 
ther not  also  in  the  last  digestion  or  stomach,  of  every  parti- 
cular part,  when  the  coagulate  parts  become  fine  and  next  to 
flesh,  and  the  rest  into  cambium  and  gluten. 

Whether  the  first  mass  were  but  a  coagulation,  whereby 
the  water  and  earth  lay  awhile  together,  and  the  watery  or 
serous  part  was  separated  from  the  sole  and  continuating  sub- 
stance, the separated  by  coagulation,  and  the  inner 

part  flowing  about  them. 

The  practice  of  the seems  convenient  unto 

experiment ;  for  the  blood  of  man  and  pig,  fiilling  upon  vine- 
gar, would  not  coagulate,  but  lie  thin  and  turn  of  the  colour 
of  muscadell. 

Bled  upon  aquavit.x,  it  did  coagulate,  though  weaker,  and 
maintained  its  colour. 

Upon  vinegar,  it  keeps  long  without  corruption,  and  be- 
cometh  blackish. 

Bled  upon  a  solution  of  saltpetre  in  water,  it  coagulates 
not,  keeps  long,  and  shoots  into  nitrous  branched  particles, 
which  separated,  it  lasteth  long,  and  contracteth  the  smell  of 
storax  liquida,  and  the  glass  or  urinal  being  inchned,  it  strokes 
long  figures conjoined  by  right  lines. 

^^'hite  dung  of  hens  and  ijeese  coagulates  milk. 

Mare's  milk  very  serous,  not  equally  running  with  coagulum 
[of]  fig,  except  some  cow's  milk  be  added  ;  perhaps  the  Scy- 
thians used  a  mixture  of  goat's  milk.  Spirits  of  salt  poured 
upon  mare's  milk,  makes  a  curdling  which  in  a  little  space  to- 
tally dissolved  into  serum. 

Woman's  milk  will  not  coagulate  with  common  rumiet, 
try  whether  the  milk  of  nurses  that  are  concerned  may  be 
run. 

Mrs.  King's  milk,  Octob.  23,  (I6o0)  would  not  run,  but 
only  curdled  in  small  roundles  like  pin's  heads,  as  vinegar 
will  curdle  milk. 

The  semichylus  or  half-digested  humour  of  young  lobsters, 
in  a  cod's  stomach,  did  it  very  well. 

The  entrails  of  soles  coagulated  milk,  so  also  the  stomach 
of  sandlin^s.  The  stomach  of  a  tench  would  not,  nor  of  a 
rat,  nor  of  a  whitincr  or  gudgeon  ;  and  tliat  of  smelts  did  it  in 


4o0  EXTRACTS    FROM 

winter ;  the  maw  of  a  cod  did  it  well ;  the  appendages  about 
the  maw  indifferently  also  of  smelts. 

Milk  of  different  nature  according  to  the  different  times  of 
gestation,  which  is  to  be  observed  to  know  the  differences  of 
milk  in  several  seasons,  it  being  so  commonly  ordered,  that 
cows  come  in  the  spring,  so  that  milk  grows  thick  about 
Christmas. 

Camborgia,  which  some  suspect  to  be  the  juice  of 

coloured  with  saffron  or  other  yellow  tincture,  would  not  co- 
agulate. 

The  verum  coagulum  seems  seated  in  the  inner  skin  of  the 
gizzard,  for  the  outward  and  carnous  part  would  not  do  it. 

The  maw  of  a  bittern  did  it  well. 

The  mutings  also  of  a  bittern  and  a  kestrell. 

The  inward  skin  in  the  maws  of  partridges,  or  the  sub- 
stance contained  therein,  not  yet  fully  digested. 

Sow's  milk  run  very  well  with  runnet  and  skin  of  green 
figs  ;  even  ripe  do  it  well. 

Runnet  beat  up  with  the  whites  of  eggs,  seems  to  perform 
nothing,  nor  will  it  well  incorporate,  without  so  much  heat  as 
will  harden  the  egg. 

The  peculiar  coagulum  of  stomachs  to  make  stones,  as  be- 
zoar. 

Milk  of  poppy  runs  milk. 

The  stomachs  of  turkies  dry  and  powdered  doth  it  well ; 
so  also  the  dry  and  chaffy  substance  in  the  gizzard  after  some 
months,  but  the  carnous  substance  not. 

The  buttons  of  figs,  which  prove  figs  the  next  year,  doth 
it  very  well,  either  green  or  dried  ;  salt  alone  will  do  it  if  plen- 
tiful; whether  saltpetre,  salt  upon  saltpetre,  or  sal-gemmae; 
vide. 

The  curdled  milk  in  the  stomach  of  a  pig  coagulates  cow's 
milk. 

Adding  salt  cleanly,  runnet  may  be  made  out  of  milk  put 
into  the  maw  of  a  turkey. 

As  also  a  pig  will  do  it  very  well. 

The  appendages  below  the  lower  orifice  of  the  stomach 
will  coagulate  milk,  when  the  substance  will  not  do  it;  as 
tried  in  cods,  these  are  filled  with  a  little  thick  humour,  very 


COMMON    PLACr    BOOKS.  I.'ll 

remarkable  in  salmon,  wherein  llicy  arc  of  exceeding  large- 
ness. 

Buttermilk,  or  churn  milk,  will  not  be  turned  with  runnot, 
but  being  warm  will  run  itself,  as  will  also  milk  in  the  sunmier. 

Try  whether  the  inward  part  of  the  duodenum  will  do  it, 
as  the  inwaril  tunicle  of  the  stomach. 

^^'hethe^  if  in  quadrupeds  ruminant  the  three  former  sto- 
machs, and  not  only  the or  last  division  next  the  guts. 

Tliat of  a  sheep  coagulated  strong  and  soon ;  the 

parcels  of  the  great  stomach  not  at  all,  or  very  slowly  and 
weakly,  the  upper  part  of  the  duodenum  did  also  coagulate 
milk. 

The  milk  of  mares  is  very  serous,  and  will  not  run  with  the 
cow's  runnet;  in  the  summer  we  made  it  run  with  turkies  giz- 
zard, and  fig's  buttons  ;  the  same  in  October  we  could  not  ef- 
fect, neither  with  Turkey  figs,  cow's,  nor  pig's  runnet ;  whe- 
ther it  be  so  serous  that  the  caseous  parts  cannot  hold  together 
the  other,  may  be  doubted;  although,  if  unto  an  ounce  of 
cow's  milk  you  add  an  ounce  of  water,  it  will,  notwithstanding, 
coagulate  in  the  caseous  part,  leaving  the  whey  asunder. 

And  if  you  mix  equal  parts  of  mare's  and  cow's  milk,  the 
runnet  will  take  place. 

The  skin  of  a  peacock's  gizzard  very  well. 

As  also  the  dried  milk  of  spurge  and  lettuce,  above  a  year 
old;  the  chylus  of  animals;  the  chylus  of  plants;  the  stomach 
of  an  horse,  and  chylus  contained  in  it,  did  very  well  coagu- 
late. 

Beef  taken  out  of  the  paunch  of  a  kestrell  four  hours  after, 
turned  very  strongly. 

A  clean  and  neat  seeming  runnet  may  be  made  in  the  cro]) 
of  a  turkey,  and  milk  and  salt  put  therein  will  coagulate  and 
grow  hard  like  runnet ;  but  surely  the  same  must  be  old  to 
be  effectual,  for  after  a  month  upon  trial,  we  could  not  find  it 
to  run  cows'  milk. 

The  strawy  substances  in  the  stomach  of  a  pig,  turned  milk 
well  in  October,  also  the  fresh  white  dung  of  a  goose  did  very 
well,  that  best  which  is  whitest  probably. 

The  inward  skin  of  a  duckling,  six  days  old,  as  also  the 
hard  and  chaffy  substances  in  the  same  did  it  very  well. 


432  EXTRACTS    FROM 

Spirits  of  salt  and  aquafortis,  gently  poured  on  milk,  will 
strongly  coagulate ;  but  in  a  woman's  milk  we  find  it  not  ef- 
fectual, whicli  would  not  coagulate  upon  a  large  quantity, 
nor  would  salt  in  gross  body  effect  it,  nor  the  other  common 
coagulums. 

Try  whether  the  milk  of  children  vomited  will  do  it. 

The  dung  of  chickens  in  some  degree. 

The  shells  and  half-digested  fragments  in  a  lobster's  sto- 
mach that  had  nearly  cut  the  skin  did  it. 

How  butchers  make  sheep's  blood  to  hold  from  concretion  ; 
whether  by  agitation  when  it  is  fresh,  and  so  dispersing  the 
fibres  which  are  thought  to  make  the  concretion  ?  Unto  such, 
a  great  quantity  of  runnet  added  could  make  no  concretion. 

Eggs  seem  to  contain  within  themselves  their  own  coagu- 
lum,  evidenced  upon  incubation,  which  makes  incrassation  of 
parts  before  very  fluid. 

Rotten  eggs  will  not  be  made  hard  by  incubation  or  de- 
coction, as  being  destitute  of  that  spirit ;  or  having  the  same 
vitiated.  They  will  sooner  be  made  hard  if  put  in  before  the 
water  boileth. 

They  will  be  made  hard  in  oil,  but  not  so  easily  in  vinegar, 
which  by  the  attenuating  quality  keeps  them  longer  from  con- 
cretion ;  for  infused  in  vinegar  they  lose  the  shell,  and  grow 
big  and  much  heavier  than  before. 

Salt  seems  to  be  the  principal  agent  in  this  coagulation,  for 
bay  salt  will  run  milk  alone  if  strongly  mixed,  and  so  it  will, 
though  mixed  with  some  vinegar.  Vinegar  alone  will  curdle 
it,  not  run  it. 

In  the  ovary,  or  second  cell  of  the  matrix,  the  white  comes 
upon  the  yolk,  and  in  the  later  and  lower  part,  the  shell  is 
made  or  manifested.  Try  if  the  same  parts  will  give  any  co- 
agulation unto  milk.     Whether  will  the  ovary  best  ? 

The  whites  of  eggs  drenched  in  saltpetre  will  shoot  forth 
a  long  and  hairy  saltpetre,  and  the  egg  become  of  a  hard  sub- 
stance ;  even  in  the  whole  egg  there  seems  a  great  nitrosity, 
for  it  is  very  cold,  and  especially  that  which  is  without  a  shell, 
(as  some  are  laid  by  fat  hens,)  or  such  as  are  found  in  the  egg 
poke  or  lowest  part  of  the  matrix,  if  an  hen  be  killed  a  day 
or  two  before  she  layeth. 


COMMON    PLACF.    1500KS,  43.'> 

Several  hens  proiluoe  egfjs  commonly  of  the  same  form, 
some  round,  some  long,  neither  .strictly  distinguishing  the 
sex. 

The  proper  uses  of  the  shell ;  for  the  defence  of  the  chick- 
en in  generation,  promotion  of  heat  upon  incubation,  and  pro- 
tection therein  least  it  be  broken  by  the  hen,  either  upon  in- 
cubation or  treading  with  her  claws  upon  them,  as  also  to 
keep  and  restrain  the  chicken  until  due  time,  when  the  hen 
often  breaks  the  shell. 

Difference  between  the  sperm  of  frogs  and  eggs. 

Spawn  though  long  boiled,  would  not  grow  thick  or  coagu- 
late. 

In  the  eggs  of  skates  or  thornbacks,  upon  long  decoction 
the  yolk  coagulates,  not  the  greatest  part  of  the  white. 

If  in  spawn  of  frogs  the  little  black  specks  will  concrete, 
thoufjh  not  the  other. 

The  white  part  of  the  mutings  of  birds  dried  run  milk,  not 
leaving  any  ill  savor.  Try  in  that  of  cormorants,  hens,  tur- 
keys, geese,  kestrels. 

The  chvlus  in  the  stomach  of  a  younfi  hen  stronrjly  coacju- 
lated,  the  stomach  also  itself  though  washed. 

The  white  and  cretaceous  mutings  of  a  bittern  made  a  sud- 
den coagulation,  the  like  hath  the  dung  of  ducks  and  hens. 

The  coagulate  stomach  of  kittens  would  not  convert  wo- 
men's milk,  nor  cows,  though  in  good  quantity ;  which  after 
coagulated  by  addition  of  calf's  runnet. 

The  chylus  in  a  young  rabbit  run  cow's  and  bitch's  milk, 
lGa3. 

The  seeds  of  the  silver  or  milk  thistle  run  milk  also. 

Mucilaginous  concretions  are  made  by  liquid  infusions  and 
decoctions,  imbibing  the  gum  and  tenacious  jiarts,  until  they 
fix  and  determine  their  fluidity. 

As  is  observable  in  gums,  hartshorn,  and  seeds,  especially 
lentous  natures,  as  quince,  psyllium,  mallows,  &c.,  when  these 
tenacious  parts  are  forced  out  by  ignition,  they  afford  no  far- 
ther concretion,  as  in  burnt  hartshorn,  wherein  there  are  lost 
most  of  the  separable  parts,  and  so  little  of  salt  as  makes  the 
preparation  questionable,  if  given  with  the  same  intentions 
with  the  other. 

VOL.  n.  -2  I 


434  EXTRACTS    FROM 

Wherein  it  is  presumable  the  water  may  also  imbibe  some 
part  of  the  volatile  salt,  as  is  manifested  sometimes  when  it  is 
exposed  to  congelation,  and  standeth  long  in  pewter  dishes  ; 
some  part  fastening  upon  the  crown  or  upper  circle,  and  also 
discolouring  the  pewter. 

But  whether  the  mucilages  or  jellies  do  answer  our  expec- 
tation of  their  quantities,  while  we  think  we  have  a  decoction 
made  of  two  ounces  and  half  which  affordeth  a  jelly  of  almost 
a  pint ;  the  horns  again  after  they  were  dried  wanted  not  a 
drachm,  the  jelly  dried  left  little  but  a  small  gummy  substance. 

Half  an  ounce  of  icJdhyocolla  or  isinglass,  will  fix  above  a 
pint  of  water ;  and  in  half  a  pint  of  jelly  of  hartshorn  there 
is  not  above  two  drachms. 

Much  hartshorn  is  therefore  lost  in  the  usual  decoction  of 
hartshorn  in  shavings  or  raspings,  where  the  greatest  part  is 
cast  away. 

For  the  same  may  be  performed  from  the  solid  horn  sav/ed 
into  pieces  of  two  or  three  ounces  or  less,  and  the  same 
pieces  will  serve  for  many  jellies. 

The  calcination  of  hartshorn  by  vapour  of  water  is  a  neat 
invention,  but  whether  very  much  of  the  virtue  be  not  impaired, 
while  the  vapour  insinuating  into  the  horn  hath  carried  away 
the  tenacious  parts  and  made  it  butter,  and  hath  also  dissolved 
those  parts  which  make  the  jelly ;  which  may  be  tried  if  a  de- 
coction be  made  of  the  water  from  whence  the  vapour  pro- 
ceedeth,  and  especially  if  the  calcination  hath  been  made  in 
vessels  not  perspirable. 

[On  Co)}gelafion.'\ 

Natural  bodies  do  variously  discover  themselves  by  conge- 
lation. 

Bodies  do  best  and  [most]  readily  congelate  which  are  aque- 
ous, or  water  itself. 

Of  milk  the  wheyish  part,  in  eggs  we  observe  the  white, 
will  totally  freeze,  the  yolk,  with  the  same  degree  of  cold, 
grow  thick  and  clammy  like  gum  of  trees,  but  the  sperm  or 
tread  hold  its  former  body,  the  white  growing  stiff  that  is 
nearest  it. 


COMMON    PLACE    BOOKS.  4oO 

Tlio  spirits  of"  tilings  do  not  freeze  ;  if  they  be  plentiful,  they 
keep  their  bodies  from  congelation ;  as  spirits  of  wine,  cu/un- 
vitce,  nor  is  it  easy  to  freeze  such,  when  French  wine  cannot 
resist  it.  But  congelation  seems  to  destroy  or  separate  the 
spirits,  for  beer  or  wine  are  dead  and  flat  after  freezing,  and 
in  glasses  ofttimes  the  most  flying  salts  will  settle  themselves 
above  the  surface  of  the  water. 

Waters  freezing  do  carry  a  vegetable  crust  foliated  surface 
upon  them,  representing  the  leaves  of  plants,  and  this  they 
do  best  which  carry  some  salt  or  vegetable  seminals  in  them. 
Rain  water  which  containeth  seminal  atoms,  elevated  by  ex- 
halations, making  the  earth  fruitful  where  it  falleth.  Snow 
water  will  also  do,  as  containing  these  seeds,  and  salt  nitrous 
coagulum.  whereby  it  was  formerly  concreted.  The  lyes  or 
lixivium  of  herbs  will  do  it  well,  but  the  juices  of  herbs  or 
waters  wherein  these  essential  salts  have  been  dissolved,  far 
better,  as  we  have  tried  in  that  of  scurvy  grass,  chalie,  net- 
tles. Jellies  of  flesh  will  do  the  like,  as  we  have  tried  in  that 
of  cow's  and  calf's  foot,  wherein,  though  the  surface  be  ob- 
scured, yet  will  there  be  several  glaciations  intermixed,  and  so 
excellently  foliated,  that  they  will  leave  their  impression  or 
figure  in  the  next  part  of  the  jelly  which  remaincth  uncon- 
gealed,  and  being  beheld  in  a  magnifying  glass,  either  in  the 
day  or  night  against  a  candle,  aflbrdeth  one  of  the  most  cu- 
rious spectacles  in  nature,  nor  will  these  little  conglaciated 
plates  so  easily  dissolve  as  common  ice,  as  carrying  perhaps  a 
greater  portion  of  carnel  nitre  in  them. 

But,  what  is  remarkable  most  of  congelations,  simple  or 
compounded,  they  seem  to  carry  in  their  surface  a  leaf  of  one 
figure,  which  somewhat  representeth  the  leaf  of  a  fern  or 
brake,*  from  a  middle  and  long  rib  spreading  forth  jagged 
leaves;  so  a  lixivium  of  nettles,  wormwood,  wild  cucumber, 
scurvy  grass,  will  shoot  in  the  same  shapes  ;  a  solution  of  salt 
or  sugar  will  do  the  like  and  also  a  decoction  of  hartshorn, 
and  the  salt  distilled  of  the  blood  of  a  deer  and  dissolved  in 
water,  carried  the  same  shape  upon  calcination ;  but  the  shoot- 


•  Tliere  is  some  re':vnt  salt  which  cnrrieth  ihem  into  the  form  of  brake  or  long 
rib  jagged  plant. 

•1    V   '1 


436  EXTRACTS    FROM 

ings  in  the  jellies  of  flesh  carry  smaller  branches  and  like  twigs 
without  that  exact  distinction  of  leaves. 

But  the  exact  and  exquisite  figurations,  s>,nd  such  as  are 
produced  above  the  surface  of  the  liquor,  in  the  side  of  glasses 
by  exhalation  from  the  liquor  compounded  with,  is  best  dis- 
coverable in  urinals  and  long  bellied  glasses,  and  often  hap- 
peneth  over  urines,  where  the  figures  are  very  distinct  arising 
from  a  root,  and  most  commonly  resembling  coralline  mosses 
of  the  sea,  and  sometimes  larger  plants,  whereof  some  do  rise 
in  so  strong  a  body,  as  to  hold  their  shapes  many  months,  and 
some  we  have  kept  two  or  three  years  entire. 

Water  and  oil  behave  diflferently  from  congelation ;  a  glass- 
ful of  water  frozen  swells  above  the  brim,  oil  congelated  sub- 
sideth. 

Congelation  is  a  rare  experiment ;  is  made  by  a  mixture  of 
salt  and  snow  strongly  agitated  in  a  pewter  pot,  which  will 
freeze  water  that's  poured  about  it.  But  an  easier  way  there 
is,  by  only  mixing  salt  and  snow  together  in  a  basin,  and  place- 
ing  therein  a  cup  of  water,  for  when  the  snow  cloth  thaw  and 
the  congealing  spirits  fly  away,  they  freeze  the  neighbour  bo- 
dies which  are  congealable ;  and,  if  the  vessel  wherein  the 
snow  melteth  stand  in  water,  it  freezeth  the  water  about  it, 
which  is  excellently  discerned  by  mixing  snow  and  salt  in  an 
urinal,  and  placing  it  in  water. 

This  way  liquors  will  suddenly  freeze  which  a  long  time  re- 
sist the  diffused  causes  in  the  air,  as  may  be  experienced  in 
wine,  and  urine,  and  excellently  serveth  for  all  figurations ; 
this  way  will  in  a  short  time  freeze  rich  sack,  and  crust  aqua- 
vita;  about  the  side  of  the  cup  or  glass,  if  weak  and  with  a 
light  addition  of  water. 

A  small  quantity  of  aquav'itce,  mingled  with  water,  is  not 
able  to  resist  this  way  of  congelation ;  but  therein  the  ice 
will  not  be  so  hard  and  compact,  and  hollow  spaces  will  be 
left  at  the  surface. 

That  the  sea  was  salt  from  the  beginning,  when  that  prin- 
ciple was  cast  into  the  whole  mass  of  this  globe,  and  not  oc- 
casioned by  those  ways  the  ancients  dreamt  of,  seems  almost 
beyond  doubt :  wherein salt  was  so  tenderly  sprink- 
led as  not  to  make  that  part  inhabitable,  and  therefore,  how- 


COMMON    I'LACE    DOCKS.  'loT 

ever  some  seas  near  the  tropic  where  the  same  is  strongest 
be  conceived  so  to  contain  more  salt,  the  seas  with  us  do 
liardly  make  good  five  in  the  huiuh'cd. 

It  is  no  easy  effect  to  condense  water  and  make  it  take  up 
a  lesser  space  than  in  its  fluid  body  ;  congealed  into  ice  it 
seems  to  lose  nothing,  but  rather  acquireih  a  greater  space 
and  swelleth  higher,  as  is  manifestible  in  water  frozen  in  eau- 
res'  and  glasses. 

This  way  e^^s  will  suddenly  freeze  throuijh  their  whole 
bodies. 

Eyes  will  freeze  through  all  the  humours  and  become  in 

short  time  like  stones.     By  this  way  upon only  the 

watry  humour  will  congelate  under  the  cornea,  and  shew  like 
a  cataract  or  albugo,  the  iris  also  loses  its  colour,  and  this  way 
the  humours  may  be  taken  out  distinctly ;  the  hardest  to  freeze 
is  the  crystalline,  yet  laid  upon  snow  and  salt  it  groweth  hard 
and  dim,  as  though  it  had  been  boiled. 

Whether  such  a  congealing  spirit  be  not  the  raiser  of  catar- 
acts, gutta  Serena,  apoplexies,  catalepsies,  and  the  like  may 
be  inquired. 

In  the  congelation  of  snow  there  is  much  space  required, 
and  dissolved  it  will  not  occupy  half  the  space  it  possessed 
before,  for  it  is  congealed  in  a  vapourous  body  and  in  some 
rarefaction  from  its  original  of  water. 

Mineral  water  or  quicksilver by  taking  off  the 

fluidity,  takes  up  a  greater  space  than  before,  although  al- 
lowance be  made  for  the  body  that  forceth  it. 

Salt  and  snow  pursue  their  operations  most  actively,  while 
it  freezeth  :  and  in  coldest  weather  dissolve  sooner,  for  when 
it  begins  to  thaw,  the  operation  is  troublesome ;  the  snow 
loselh  his  tenacity,  grows  hard  and  brittle,  and  salt  thrown 
upon  it  makes  it  harder  for  a  little  space,  and  is  longer  in  dis- 
solving it.  Salt  answereth  awhile  to  sentl  back  the  jjarting 
spirit  upon  itself,  and  mixing  with  it  while  it  holdeth  fast, 
makes  a  little  congelation. 

Lime  unslaked  mixed  with  snow  would  dissolve  it ;  not 
freeze  water  set  into  it. 

I  rnurct.  ]  This  may  be  paiiiu-s  in  meant  ewers — spelt,  according  to  Frenrli 
MS.  but  I  am  inclined  railicrto  iliink  he     derivation,  eaitrcs. 


438  EXTRACTS    FROM 

Snow  dissolved,  without  salt,  would  not  freeze  water  set  in 
it.  Herein  we  may  also  sometimes  observe  the  very  motion 
and  stroke  of  the  coagulum ;  for  when  the  snow  and  salt  are 
aptly  conjoined,  and  the  liquor  to  be  congealed  be  put  in  a 
flat  thin  cup  of  silver,  if  it  chance  to  dissolve  at  that  time, 
in  any  quantity,  it  will  instantly  run  curdled  whey  ;  the  spirit 
separated  will  make  a  curdled  cloud  at  the  bottom  or  side  of 
the  cup,  and  fix  that  part  first ;  for,  contrary  unto  common 
congelation,  if  the  cup  standeth  upon  -snow,  and  that  at  the 
bottom  thaweth  it,  the  liquor  first  freezeth  at  the  bottom,  and 
while  the  liquor  in  the  flat  cup  freezeth  within  the  basin,  the 
outside  of  the  basin  will  be  thick  frosted,  and  if  it  stands  will 
adhere  unto  the  table. 

It  is  observable  in  this  way  of  congelation,  that  the  liquor 
freezeth  last  in  the  middle  of  the  surface,  as  being  furthest 
from  the  action  of  the  snow  and  flying  spirit ;  nor  is  this 
only  effected  by  snow  and  salt,  but  by  snow  and  saltpetre  or 
alum ;  but  the  quickest  congelation  [is]  by  snow  and  salt,  the 
other  mixture  remaining  longer  without  dissolution:  and 
therefore,  on  some  earth  snow  lieth  longest,  and  seldom  long 
near  the  sea  side  ;  and  if  two  vessels  be  filled,  the  one  with 
snow  alone,  the  other  with  a  mixture  of  salt,  the  salt  snow 
will  dissolve  in  half  the  time,  and  ice  in  the  like  manner. 

This  way  it  is  possible  to  observe  the  rudiments  and  pro- 
gress of  congelation  ;  it  beginning  first  with  strice,  and  having 
shoots  like  the  filamental  shoots  of  pure  nitre,  and  the  inter- 
stitial water  becomes  after  conjoined. 

The  same  is  also  effected  by  ice  powdered  or  broken  like 
sugar  between  dry  bodies,  and  mixed  with  salt ;  and  is  also 
performable  without  mixture  of  salt  bodies,  by  snow  alone,  as 
it  falleth  to  solution,  and  the  congclating  spirit  separateth ; 
so  water  in  a  very  thin  glass  set  in  a  porringer  of  snow,  and 
set  upon  salt  will  freeze,  the  salt  being  able  to  dissolve  it 
through  the  pewter.  And,  therefore,  catarrhs  and  colds  are 
taken  and  encreased  upon  thaws  ;  the  leaves  of  trees  wi- 
thered and  blasted  where  snow  dissolves  upon  them ;  and 
something  more  than  mere  water  fixed,  because  it  spoileth 
leather,  and  alters  the  colour  thereof  to  walk  long  in  snow, 
especially  when  it  melteth :  and  this  congclative  spirit,  that 


COMMON    PLACE    BOOKS.  439 

))enetratetli  glass  and  metal,  is  probably  the  same  which  is 
felt  so  penetrating  and  cutting  in  winds,  and  according  to 
frequent  relations,  hath  left  whole  bodies  of  men  rigid  and 
stirt",  even  to  petrification,  in  regions  near  the  pole ;  and  may 
assign  some  reason  of  that  strange  effect  on  our  men,  some 
that  were  left  in  Greenland,  when  they  touched  iron  it  seemed 
to  stick  to  the  fingers  like  pitch,  the  same  being  mollified  and 
made  in  the  same  temper  as  it  is,  by  the  acid  spirits  of  sul- 
])hur,  if  a  red  hot  iron  be  thrust  into  a  roll  thereof. 

In  the  congealing  of  tinctures,  as and  saftron,  if  we 

narrowly  observe  it,  there  still  remaineth  whiteness,  and  the 
tincture  seemeth  to  lie  distant  and  less  congealed.  Starch,  a 
strong  congelation  may  be  made,  wherein  the  atoms  of  the 
powder  may  be  distinguished,  and  sensibly  observed  to  cast 
their  colour  upon  parts,  which  they  do  not  corporally  attain. 

To  freeze  roughly,  or  make  ice  with  elevated  superficies, 
the  water  must  be  exposed  warm,  and  the  liquor  thick,  the 
better  as  in  jellies,  while  the  exhalation  elevating  the  surface, 
is  held  in  and  frozen  in  its  passage. 

Oil  put  upon  snow,  in  an  open  mouth  glass,  and  sharp  at 
the  bottom,  makes  a  curdling  which  lasts  a  long  time,  and 
gives  a  mixed  taste  of  snow  and  oil,  pleasant  unto  the  palate, 
and  excellent  against  burning. 

Snow  upon  a  thaw  freezeth  itself,  while  the  spirits  of  some 
j)arts  dissolved,  flying  out,  do  fix  the  neighbour  parts  unto 
them. 

Snow  closely  pressed,  dissolves  into  about  half  its  measure  ; 
lying  loose,  and  as  it  fallcth,  dissolving,  takes  up  little  more 
than  a  fifth  part. 

Snow  upon  a  thaw  ncedeth  no  addition,  and  ice  at  that 
time  will  freeze,  the  pot  being  melted  in  it. 

Salt  maketh  snow  to  melt ;  so  may  you  bore  a  hole  through 
ice  with  salt  laid  tiiereon,  with  armoniac.  Sugar  will  also 
do  the  like  but  in  a  slower  manner  ;  the  like  dully  with  pep- 
per. 

To  make  ice  crack,  throw  salt  upon  it. 

Ice  splits  star-wise. 

In  the  making  of  ice  with  snow  and  salt,  we  find  little  va- 
riety in  practice,  and  the  reasons  drawn  peculiar  upon  the 


440  EXTRACTS    FROM 

salt ;  but  this  we  have  observed  to  be  eftected  by  other  bo- 
dies, of  no  probabihty  to  produce  such  an  eifect,  as  without 
salt  to  effect  it  in  a  pot  of  snow,  with  ginger,  pepper,  liquorice, 
sugar,  chalk,  white-lead,  wheat-flour,  sulphur,  husk  of  al- 
monds, charcoal. 

Water  that  is  easily  rarified  will  hardly  or  not  at  all  admit 
of  pressure,  or  be  made  to  take  up  a  lesser  space  than  its  na- 
tural body,  and  as  it  stands  in  its  natural  consistence. 

In  snow  it  takes  up  a  very  much  larger  space  than  in  water ; 
even  in  ice,  which  takes  ofl'  the  fluidity,  and  is  a  kind  of  fixa- 
tion, it  will  not  be  contained  in  the  same  circumference  as 
before  in  its  fluid  body,  a  glass  filled  with  water  and  frozen  in 
salt  and  snow,  will  manifestly  rise  above  the  brim.  Eggs 
frozen,  the  shell  will  crack,  and  open  largely,  and  there  will 
be  found  no  hollow  space  at  the  top  or  blunter  part  which 
comes  first  out  upon  exclusion  of  the  hen,  and  yet  it  will  re- 
main of  the  same  weight  upon  exact  ponderation.  Ice  is 
spongy  and  porous,  as  may  be  observed  upon  breaking,  and 
in  glasses  wherein  it  is  frozen  and  seems  not  to  be  so  close 
and  continued  as  in  its  liquid  form.  Beside  there  are  many 
bubbles  ofttimes  in  it,  which  though  condensed,  are  not  of  the 
congelable  parts,  and  take  up  a  room  in  the  congelation  ; 
which  may  be  air  mixed  with  the  water,  or  the  spirits  thereof, 
which  will  not  freeze,  but  separating  from  the  pure  water,  set 
themselves  in  little  cells  apart,  which  upon  the  liquation  make 
the  spaws  and  froth  which  remaineth  after,  in  standing  ves- 
sels thawed,  which  makes  all  things  frozen  lose  their  quick- 
ness ;  the  spirits  chased  into  several  conservations,  flying  away 
upon  liquefciction,  and  not  returning  to  an  intrinsical  and  close 
mixture  with  their  bodies  again  ;  and  therefore  an  apple  froz- 
en, and  thawed  in  warm  water,  the  spirits  are  called  out,  and 
giving  a  sudden  exhalation,  the  same  never  tastes  well  after ; 
whereas  put  into  cold  water,  they  are  kept  in,  and  while  they 
raise  themselves  through  the  mass  again,  and  are  not  carried 
out  by  a  warm  thaw ;  and  this  way  are  noses  and  cheeks  pre- 
served in  cold  regions,  by  a  sudden  application  of  snow  unto 
them. 

The  same  assertion  is  verified  in  metallical  water,  or  quick- 
silver, which  is  closer  in  its  own  boily  than  by  any  fixation ; 


COMMON    PLACE    BOOKS.  -I-U 

for  either  mortiticd  or  fixed,  it  takes  up  u  much  hirger  space 
than  in  its  Huid  hody. 

Quane  how  oil ; — and  whether  metal,  silver,  and  gold,  li- 
quefied, takes  not  up  lesser  room  than  when  it  is  cold  and 
cono-ealed  ajrain  :  but  these  having  attained  their  natural  con- 
sistence  and  closeness,  seem  to  take  up  a  larger  space  when 
thev  are  forced  from  it,  and  therefore  seem  to  shrink  as  in 
moulds ;  and  then  in  their  cruding  before  solution  to  stretch 
and  dilate  themselves  ;  as  is  observable  in  iron  pierced,  which 
smoothly  admitting  a  nail  when  it  is  cold,  will  not  so  easily  ad- 
mit it  being  red  hot. 

Why  the  snow  lies  not  long  near  the  sea  side  ;  by  reason  it 
is  dissolved  by  salt  exhalation  of  the  sea,  or  from  the  like  in 
the  earth  near  the  sea,  which  partaketh  of  that  temper. 

Why  it  is  so  cold  upon  a  thaw  ;  by  reason  of  the  exhaling 
of  those  freezing  parts  which  lie  quiet  in  the  snow  before. 

Why  snow  maks  a  fruitful  year  and  is  good  for  corn  ;  be- 
cause it  keeps  in  the  terreous  evaporatives,  concentrates  the 
heat  in  seeds  and  plants,  destroys  mice  and  the  principles  of 
putrefaction  in  the  earth,  which  breedeth  vermin. 

Why  it  changeth  the  colour  of  leather,  making  black  shoes 
russet,  which  water  doth  not ;  by  reason  of  the  admixture  of 
nitrous  and  ssaline  parts,  which  drink  in  the  copperas  parts 
which  made  the  deej)  colour. 

The  common  experiment  of  freezing  is  made  by  salt  and 
snow  ;  where  salt  dissolving  the  snow  sends  out  the  congealing 
spirit  thereof,  which  actively  is  able  to  fix  the  fluid  element 
about  it. 

But  the  same  effect  will  follow  from  other  conjunctions, 
from  vitriol,  nitre,  alum  ;  and  what  is  remarkable,  from  bodies 
which  promise  no  such  effect,  as  we  have  tried  in  pepper, 
ginger,  chalk,  white  lead,  charcoal-powder,  liquorice. 

And  from  ice  itself  stirred  and  beaten  in  a  pint  pot. 

[(hi  Buhhles.] 

That  the  last  circumference  of  the  universe  is  but  the  bub- 
ble of  the  chaos  and  pellicle  arising  from  the  grosser  founda- 
tion of  the  first  matter,  containing  all  the  higher  and  diapha- 


442  EXTRACTS    FROM 

nous  bodies  under  it,  is  no  affirmation  of  mine ;  but  that 
bubbles  on  watery  or  fluid  bodies  are  but  the  thin  gumbs  of 
air,  or  a  diaphanous  texture  of  water  arising  about  the  air,  and 
holding  it  awhile  from  eruption.  They  are  most  lasting  and 
large  in  viscous  humidities,  wherein  the  surface  will  be  best 
extended  without  dissolving  the  continuity,  as  in  bladders 
blown  out  of  soap.  Wine  and  spirituous  bodies  make  bubbles, 
but  not  long  lasting,  the  spirit  bearing  through  and  dissolving 
the  investiture.  Aqua-fortis  upon  concussion  makes  few,  and 
soon  vanishing,  the  acrimonious  effluvia  suddenly  rending 
them :  some  gross  and  windy  wines  make  many  and  lasting, 
which  may  be  taken  away  by  vinegar  or  juice  of  lemon.  And 
therefore  the  greatest  bubbles  are  made  in  viscous  decoctions, 
as  in  the  manufacture  of  soap  and  sugar,  wherein  there  is 
nothing  more  remarkable  than  that  experiment,  wlierein  not 
many  grains  of  butter  cast  upon  a  copper  of  boiling  sugar,  pre- 
sently strikes  down  the  ebullition  and  makes  a  subsidence  of 
the  bubbling  liquor. 

Boiling  is  literally  nothing  but  bubbling ;  any  liquor  attenu- 
ated by  decoction  sends  forth  evaporous  and  attenuated  parts, 
which  elevate  the  surface  of  the  liquor  into  bubbles ;  even  in 
fermentations  and  putrefactions  wherein  attenuation  of  parts 
are  made,  bubbles  are  raised  without  fire. 

Glass  is  made  by  way  of  bubble,  upon  the  blowing  of  the 
artificer. 

Blisters  are  bubbles  in  leaves,  wherein  the  exhalation  is 
kept  in  by  the  thickness  of  the  leaf,  and  in  the  skin,  when  the 
[membrane]  thereof  holds  in  the  attenuated  or  attracted  hu- 
mour under  it. 

Fire  blisters  even  dead  flesh,  forcibly  attenuating  the  water 
in  the  skin  and  under  it ;  and  cantharides  and  crowfoot  raise 
blisters  by  a  potential  fire  and  armoniac  salt  in  them,  attenu- 
ating the  humour  in  the  skin  and  under,  which  stretches  and 
dilateth  the  parts,  prohibiting  its  evolution. 

Bubbles  are  white,  because  they  consist  of  diaphanous  hu- 
mour or  air.  fermented  ;  and  air  under  ice  a  thicker  ^^r^?/;*^ 
makes  a  grosser  and  stronger  white,  but  in  icterical  and  jaun- 
diced urine  the  bubbles  are  yellow,  according  to  the  tincture 
diffused  tiirough  the  water,  which  invcstctli  the  airy  contents 


COMMON    I'LACE    BOOKS.  4-Io 

of  its  bubbles.  Even  man  is  a  bubble,  if  we  take  his  consi- 
deration in  his  rudiments,  and  consider  the  vesicula  or  bulia 
pulsan.s,  wherein  begins  the  rudiment  of  life. 

Froth  or  spume  is  but  a  coagulation  or  conglobation  of 
bubbles,  and  gross  skins  are  but  the  coats  of  bubbles  sub- 
siding, or  at  least  bodies  which  are  fat  and  subphureous, 
keeping  the  surface,  are  apt  to  make  them,  and  therefore  are 
not  without  the  active  parts  as  is  observable  in  the  spume  of 
iron  and  steel. 

Pitch  and  resinous  bodies  have  also  their  bubbles,  but  they 
rise  highest  at  the  first,  whilst  the  aqueous  parts  are  attenuated, 
do  copiously  and  crowdingly  fly  up,  do  elevate  the  viscous 
parts  which  largely  dilate  before  their  division,  for  that  being 
spirit  these  bubbles  are  less,  and  if  water  be  thrown  upon  it 
recover  their  force  again ;  as  is  also  discernable  in  the  ebulli- 
tion of  soap,  till  the  aqueous  parts  be  spent,  and  the  salt  of 
the  lixivium  and  oil  and  tallow  entirely  mixed. 

The  bubbles  of  oil  will  not  last,  the  air  pierceth,  opening  or 
perspiring  their  thin  coats  ;  water  under  oil  makes  not  bubbles 
into  the  oil,  but  at  the  side  or  bottom. 

Water  and  oil  do  best  concur  to  the  making  of  bubbles,  air 
or  exhalation  included  in  a  watery  coat,  or  air  in  an  oily  habit, 
as  in  oil  boiled  wherein  there  are  some  watery  parts  or  va- 
porous attenuations  that  are  invested  in  their  eruption. 

Fire  makes  none,  for  that  is  too  subtle  to  be  contained  and 
too  fluid  and  moving  to  be  contained  ;  not  affecting  a  circle 
but  a  piramidal  ascension,  which  destroys  inclusion  ;  the  near- 
est resemblance  thereof  is  in  water  thrown  upon  strong  oil, 
wherein  the  water  suddenly  rising  seemeth  to  carry  up  a  strong 
bubble  about  it. 

Quicksilver  seems  to  have  bubbles,  being  shaken  together, 
but  they  are  but  small  spherical  bodies  like  drops  of  water, 
which  hold  in  .some  bodies,  to  avoid  discontinuation. 

[0/i  I  cgctatiun,  j^-c] 

To  manifest  how  lasting  the  seminal  princi])les  of  bodies  are, 
how  long  they  will  lie  incorrupted  in  the  earth,  or  how  the 
earth  that  hath  been  once  impregnated  therewith,  may  retain 


444  EXTRACTS    FROM 

the  power  thereof,  unto  opportunity  of  actuation,  or  visible 
production, — a  remarkable  garden  where  many  plants  had. 
been,  being  digged  up,  and  turned  a  fruitless  ground,  after 
ten  years  being  digged  up,  many  of  the  plants  returned  which 
had  laid  obscure ;  the  plants  wei'e  blattaria,  stramonium,  hyos- 
cyamus  flore  albo,  &c. ;  and  little  less  have  we  observed  that 
some  plants  will  maintain  their  seminality  out  of  the  earth,  as 
we  have  tried  in  one  of  the  least  of  seeds,  that  is  of  marjorum. 

How  little  snails  or  perriwinkles  rely  upon  the  water,  and 
how  duck-weed  is  bred,  some  light  may  be  received  from  this 
experiment.  In  April  we  took  out  of  the  water  little  herbs 
of  crow-foot  and  the  like,  whereon  hung  long  cods  of  jelly; 
this  put  in  water,  and  so  into  an  urinal  exposed  unto  the  sun, 
many  young  perriwinkles  were  bred  sticking  to  the  side  of 
the  glass,  some  aselli,  or  sows,  which  fled  from  the  water,  and 
much  duck-weed  grew  over,  which,  cleared  once  or  twice,  now 
hath  grown  again. 

That  water  is  the  principle  of  all  things,  some  conceive ; 
that  all  things  are  convertible  into  water,  others  probably  argue ; 
that  many  things  which  seem  of  earthly  pi'inciples  were  made 
out  of  water  the  Scripture  t.estifieth,  in  the  genealogy  of  the 
fowls  of  the  air ;  most  insects  owe  their  original  thereto,  most 
being  made  of  dews,  froths,  or  water  ;  even  rain  water,  w-hich 
seemeth  simple,  contains  the  seminals  of  animals.  This  we 
observed,  that  rain  water  in  cisterns,  growing  green,  there  aris- 
cth  out  of  it  red  maggots,  swimming  in  a  labouring  and  con- 
tortile  motion,  which  after  leaving  a case  behind  them, 

turn  into  gnats  and  ascend  above  the  water. 

When  the  red  worm  tends  to  transformation,  it  seems  to 
acquire  a  new  case,  and  continues  most  at  the  surface  of  the 
water ;  two  motions  are  observable,  the  one  of  the  red  worm 
by  a  strong  and  laborious  contorsion,  the  other,  a  little  before 
it  comes  to  a  gnat,  and  that  is  by  jaculation  or  sudden  spring, 
which  if  it  use  not,  it  ariseth  to  the  surface,  and  soon  after 
ariseth  into  a  gnat. 

Little  red  worms  and  less  than  threads  are  found  in  great 
numbers  in  ditches  and  muddy  places,  where  the  water  is  al- 
most forsaken  ;  whereof  having  taken  a  large  number  included 
in  a  glass,  they  would  stir  and  move  continually  in  fair  wea- 


fOMMON    PLACE    BOOKS.  1  1,> 

tlicr  like  eels,  ]>ulling  some  part  of  their  botlics  above  tlie 
nuul,  ami  uptin  the  least  touch  of  the  glass  would  all  disappear 
and  contract  into  the  nuul.  They  lived  that  remaining  part 
of  summer,  and  after  a  hard  winter,  showed  themselves  again 
in  the  succeeding  summer.  Therein  I  observed  two  things, 
the  exquisite  sense  and  vivacity  of  these  imperfect  animals, 
which  extended  unto  two  years. 

All  solid  bodies  are  rendered  liquid  before  they  are  quali- 
fied for  nutriment ;  and  the  solidest  bodies  seem  to  be  sus- 
tained by  the  thin  bodies  of  waters,  as  is  very  remarkable  in 
trees,  especially  oak,  and  birch,  and  sycamore,  wherein  the 
nutriment  ascendeth  in  a  mere  body  of  water,  as  by  wounding 
them  at  the  spring  is  very  discernible. 

Thus  we  also  observe  that  plants  will  be  nourished  long 
in  rain  water,  as  is  very  observable  in  mint,  basil,  and  other 
plants,  which  being  cropped,  will  shoot  out  roots,  which  will 
augment  them  by  mere  attraction  of  watery  nutriment. 

A^'hether  the  quantities  of  plants  may  not  this  way  be  sen- 
sibly altered  deserves  experiment ;  whether  the  liquor  im- 
pregnated with  colours  may  not  communicate  the  same  upon 
necessity  of  this  single  aliment ;  whether  smells  may  not  be 
impressed ;  whether  when  it  purges  corrected,  and  purgative 
qualities  imbibed. 

If  others  answer,  mint  and  basil,  though  they  sprout  largely, 
yet  they  will  hardly  aflbrd  flowers,  much  less  seed; — senecio, 
or  groundswell,  seems  best  to  promise  it. 

Groundswell,  put  into  water  in  December,  lived,  was  frozen 
in  January,  sent  forth  flowers  in  the  end  of  February,  flow- 
ered and  vanished  in  the  beginning  of  May. 

Bulbous  roots,  once  shot,  will  flower  there,  and  no  wonder 
therein,  for  some  will  flower  being  hungup,  having  a  suflicient 
stock  of  moisture  for  flowers  that  are  precocious. 

Plants  will  not  only  grow  in  the  summer,  but  also  in  the 
winter  if  they  be  such  as  then  continue  green,  as  scurvy  grass 
and  groundswell.  They  will  hold  best  which  are  put  into  the 
water  with  their  roots,  otherwise  they  will  either  not  shoot 
them  forth  in  the  winter,  or  be  long  about  it ;  as  we  tried  in 
scurvy  grass.  Rue  stood  almost  three  months,  without  put- 
ting any  roots  forth,  fresh  and  verdant ;    spurge  stood  well 


i4G  EXTRACTS    FROM 

with  the  root,  as  chamomile,  and  featherfew,  and  parsley. 
Mint  and  scordium,  put  in  about  July,  stood  and  grew  all 
summer,  shot  plentiful  roots,  from  whence  came  fresh  sprouts 
out  of  the  glass  when  the  other  decayed,  and  some  now  stand 
under  water,  Feb.  17.  Mint  grew  up  in  several  branches  in 
April,  and  now  groweth,  June  28.  Mint,  set  in  water  in  May, 
grew  up,  and  seemed  to  die,  but  sprouted  again  about  Oc- 
tober, stood  all  winter,  and  grew  up  in  many  branches  the 
next  spring. 

Rue,  set  in  October,  without  shooting  any  roots,  grew 
about  two  inches  in  the  winter,  shot  forth  above  forty  roots 
in  the  spring,  and  grew  much  all  the  summer,  flowered  July 
and  August. 

Scurvy  grass  grew  all  winter,  flowered  in  the  spring,  but 
seeded  not,  other  put  in  in  February,  near  to  flower,  shot 
roots,  flowered  and  seeded  in  May,  and  shot  new  leaves  under 
water. 

Try  how  they  will  thrive  in  aqua  vitae,  wine,  vinegar,  oil, 
salt  water. 

Many  were  put  in,  none  grew  or  thrived,  but  suddenly  de- 
cayed in  aqua  vitae,  wine,  vinegar,  salt  water ;  oil  draweth  not 
at  all,  and  so  it  dieth. 

Mint  would  not  grow  in  water  and  sugar,  nor  in  strong  rose 
water,  but,  unto  two  ounces  of  water  adding  but  two  or  three 
spoonfulls,  it  thrived  and  acquired  a  richer  smell.  Seeds  of 
plants  which  seed  in  the  water  of  glasses,  prove  fruitful,  as 
tried  in  those  of  scurvy  and  spurge,  which  now  grow  at  the 
spring,  being  sowed  about  September  before. 

Asarum  which  had  stood  about  two  years  in  water,  and 
twice  cast  the  leaves ;  of  these  the  leaves  given  maintained 
their  vomitive  quality. 

How  little,  beside  water  alone,  will  support  or  maintain  the 
growth  of  plants,  beside  the  experiment  of  Helmont  we  have 
seen  in  some  which  have  lived  six  years  in  glasses ;  and  asa- 
rum which  grew  two  years  in  water  and  lived  ;  cast  the  leaves, 
maintained  its  vomiting  quality. 

Fertile  seeds  sink,  but  when  they  germinate  they  rise  up 
and  come  up  to  the  top  of  the  water,  for  then  the  seed  fer- 
ments and  swells,  and  breaks  the  closure  or  covering. 


COMMON    FLACK    BOOKS.  447 

The  seed  of  an  alniDiul  or  plum,  at  first  when  it  is  hollow 
and  windy  swimmeth,  afterward  sinketh,  yet  take  out  the  nib 
and  it  sinketh. 

In  bay  leaves  commonly  used  at  funerals,  we  unknowingly 
hold  in  our  hands  a  singular  emblem  of  the  resurrection ;  for 
the  leaves  that  seem  dead  and  dry,  will  revive  into  a  perfect 
green,  if  their  root  be  not  withered  ;  as  is  observable  in  bay 
trees  after  hard  winters,  in  many  leaves  half,  in  some  almost 
wholly  withered,  wherein  though  the  alimental  and  aqueous 
juice  be  exhausted  the  radical  and  balsamical  humour  remain- 
ing though  in  a  slender  quantity  is  able  to  refresh  itself  again, 
the  like  we  have  observed  in  dead  and  withered  furze. 

[Ow  Tobacco.'] 

Although  of  ordinary  use  in  physic,  the  anatomy  of  tobacco 
is  not  discovered,  nor  hath  lioftinanus  in  his  work  of  thirty 
years  relieved  us.  That  which  comes  fermented  and  dyed 
unto  us  aftbrds  no  distinct  account,  in  regard  it  is  infected  with 
a  decoction  or  lixivium,  which  is  diverse  according  to  diflerent 
places,  and  some  ascend  no  higher  than  urine.  Adulterations 
proceed  further,  adding  euphorbium  or  pepper,  and  some  do 
innocently  temper  it  with  gum  of  guaiacum. 

The  herb  simply  in  itself  and  green  or  dried,  is  but  Hat, 
nor  will  it  hold  fire  well  upon  ordinary  exsiccation.  Other 
plants  are  taken  in  the  pipe  but  they  want  quickness  and  hold 

not  fire  only  prick  and  draw by  their  fuligo,  which 

all  smoke  will  do  ;  and  probably  other  herl)s  might  be  made 
quick  and  fire  well,  if  prepared  the  same  way,  that  is  by  fer- 
mentation, for  in  that  alteration  the  body  is  opened,  the  fixed 
parts  attenuated  by  the  spirit,  the  oily  ])arts  diffused  and  the 
salt  raised  from  the  earthly  bed  wherein  it  naturally  lieth  ob- 
scure and  heavy. 

It  containeth  three  eminent  qualities,  sudorific,  narcotic, 
and  purgative;  from  the  subtle  spirits  and  flying  salt,  sweat 
seems  to  proceed,  for  the  ashes  will  not  do  it.  The  narcotic 
depends  on  the  humor  hnpuriis ;  for  the  vapour  thereof  con- 
tains it,  and  the  burnt  part  loseth  it,  as  in  opium.  Poppy 
seeds  dried  are  ineffectual,  and  the  green  heads  work  most 


448  EXTRACTS    FROM 

powerfully ;  the  same  is  observable  in  the  mandtchoca  root, 
which  being  a  strong  poison,  is  harmless,  being  dried.  The 
purgative  quality  lieth  in  the  middle  principle,  which  goes  not 
away  by  a  gentle  heat ;  for  the  water  purgeth  not,  the  smoke 
but  very  doubtfully,  and  seldom  in  clysters  of  the  smoke  of 
three  or  four  pipefuls,  nor  in  the  salt  thereof,  neither  inci- 
neration, but  in  the  middle  principles  of  the  nitrous  salt,  and 
such  parts  as  are  to  be  extracted  by  tincture,  infusion,  or  de- 
coction, whose  actives  remain  in  the  menstruum,  and  therefore 
that  which  is  decocted,  and  after  dried,  grows  faint  in  the 
purgative  quality,  if  it  returneth. 

Of  tobacco  there  is  the  male  and  female  ;  the  male  the  best. 
Yellow  rhubard  is  often  taken  for  the  true  plant. 

Tobacco  may  be  made  or  cured  without  a  caldo,  and  will 
ferment  and  grow  brown  long  laid  together,  and  hung  up  will 
grow  brown.  To  advance  the  same  the  caldo  may  be  added 
before  the  rolling  up,  for  then  it  will  have  a  quicker  taste  and 
sweeter  smell. 

The  leaves  first  ripe  make  the  best  when  they  grow  gummy 
and  brittle ;  they  must  be  often  cleared  of  the  sprouts  that 
grow  upon  the  same  stem,  and  the  baschros  left  out. 

To  make  the  best  tobacco,  these  to  be  taken,  and  of  the 
male  ;  and  a  good  caldo  used,  and  kept  awhile,  till  time  digest 
remaining  crudities. 


CJ 


[0«  the  Ivi/.] 

Concerning  ivy  these  remarkable : — The  leaves  less  indented, 
scarce  angular  toward  the  top ;  like  many  herbs  which  laci- 
niate  at  the  lower  leaves,  little  at  the  upper. 

It  beareth  twice  a  year,  spring  and It  groweth 

not  about  every  tree ;  most  about  oak,  ash,  elm,  thorn ;  less 
about  wich  hasel ;  hardly  observed  about  firs,  pine,  yew. 

Whether  it  will  not  delight  about  trees  that  are  perpetually 
green  may  be  inquired.  It  seldom  ariseth  about  holly  or  not 
to  great  bigness ;  the  perpetual  leafing  prevents  the  arise,  or 

hindring  the  growth  or  twisting  of to  provide  for 

themselves. 

Whether  there  be  not  also  a  dissimilitude  in  their  motions, 
not  one  enduring  the  approximation  of  the  other. 


COMMON    PLACC    BOOKS.  419 

That  tlicv  follow  the  sun  in  their  windings  is  hard  to  make 
out  upon  ini})artial  observation  ;  hops  do  it  more  clearly,  which 
nothing  turning  are  commonly  directed  that  way  by  the  hus- 
bandman. 

Inquire  how  it  ariseth  from  the  primary  root. 

Try  whetlier  ivy  w  ill  bear  when  cut  from  the  root ;  whether 
it  may  have  sufficient  stock  remaining  for  once,  or  whether  it 
may  not  attract  somewhat  by  the  cerni. 

[On  the  Fig  Tree.] 

Concerning  the  fig  tree,  some  things  are  remarkable  from 
its  proper  nature ;  that  it  is  a  tree  of  plentiful  sap  and  milk 
diffused  throughout,  which  will  drop  from  the  trunk  and 
branches  if  seasonably  cut  at  the  spring. 

That  it  is  the  general  plant  for  admission  of  insition,  en- 
grafting ;  and  though  misletoe  seldom  or  never  groweth  there- 
on, yet  it  becomes  a  fit  stock  for  most  plants. 

That  it  was  the  coagulum  or  runnet  of  the  ancients,  where- 
with they  turned  their  milk  and  made  cheese,  as  is  remark- 
able from  Aristotle  de  Animal,  and  illustrates  that  passage  in 
Homer  and  Euripides,  and  might  frustrate  all  the  use  of  other 
I)erbs,  and  hath  its  name  from  thence  and  which  we  find  so 
great  eflfect ;  and  might  therefore  be  medically  used  in  the 
place  of  coagulum,  which  having  that  virtue  may  serve  for 
dissolution  of  blood  coagulated. 

That  they  have  fruits  without  any  flower,  as  jessamine 
flowers  without  fruit  or  seeds  ;  that  these  are  the  forerunners 
of  fruit  the  year  following,  and  stay  in  buttons  all  the  winter, 
making  figs  the  year  after. 

Of  this,  two  parables,  remarkable  in  the  Scripture. 

Cursed  for  barrenness,  as  being  less  tolerable  in  that  tree 
than  any,  which  is  the  stock  of  all  other  trees,  and  therefore 
more  considerable  that  nothing  grew  upon  it,  on  which  all 
other  trees  will  grow,  and  in  this  consideration  probably  the 
phaUtis  or  lirile  neuter  and  the  image  of  Priapus  the  god  of 
fertility  and  semblance  of  fecundation  was  formed  out  of  a  fig 
tree.  And  whether  in  the  Hebrew  notation  there  be  any  na- 
tural fertility  implied,  whilst  we  find  it  from  a  word  that  sig- 
VOL.  IV.  2  G 


450  EXTRACTS    FROM 

nifieth  twins  and  plural  generations,  may  admit  of  consider- 
ation. 

That  our  first  parents  covered  their  secret  parts  with  fig- 
leaves,  which  tree  was  after  sacred  unto  Priapus,  I  shall  not 
deduce  upon  genteel  imagination. 

[Scripture  Criticism.^ 

How  properly  the  priority  was  conferred  unto  Aaron  by  a  rod 
or  staft^  and  why  the  staflT  and  sceptre  of  the  princes  were 
chosen  for  this  intention,  philologists  may  conjecture ;  in  that 
they  were  the  bodies  and  cognizances  of  their  places,  and 
were  a  kind  of  sceptre  in  their  hands,  denoting  their  power 
and  supremacy,  without  which  we  find  the  princes  of  the 
Trojans,  and  which  rod  was  ready  in  the  hand  of  Ulysses. 
Thersites'  shoulders  felt  it  from  the  hand  of  Ulysses ;  and 
Achilles,  as  the  deepest  oath,  swears  by  his  sceptre,  that  should 
never  bud  nor  bear  leaves  again,  as  a  thing  impossible.  This 
lash  of  divinty  is  in  the  hands  of  gods  and  goddesses. 

Whether  there  be  any  such  implied  in  the  vision  of  Jere- 
my, video  virgam  vigilantem  or  amijgdalimim,  as  it  is  trans- 
lated, may  be  considered,  for  thereby  the  power  and  stafF  of 
the  Assyrian  king  is  implied.  But  in  the  contention  of  the 
children  of  Israel,  and  miraculous  decision  of  priority  testified 
by  the  rod  of  Aaron,  which  flowered  and  brought  forth  al- 
monds, you  cannot  but  discern  a  look  at  the  propriety  of  the 
miracle  in  that  species  of  tree  which  is  the  first  that  blossom- 
eth,  and  leadeth  in  the  vernal  geniture  unto  all  the  body  of 
trees.  That  most  famous  allegory  of  Scripture  implies  the 
head  in  that  expression,  "  when  the  almond  tree  shall  flou- 
rish," that  is,  "  the  head  grow  white  like  the  flowers  of  al- 
monds," whose  fruit  was  anciently  called  Kasuoi/,  or  the  head. 

God  that  proposed  the  experiment  only  by  blossoms,  added 
also  the  fruit  of  almonds,  the  text  not  clearly  making  out 
leaves,  but  the  buds  of  flowers,  open  flowers,  and  almonds ; 
and,  therefore,  if  you  have  perused  medals,  you  cannot  but 
observe  how  derogatory  unto  the  miracle  the  Jews  have  de- 
scribed in  them,  shewing  the  rod  of  Aaron  laden  only  with 
leaves^  and  whether  the have  attained  it  best,  and 


COMMON    TLACE    BOOKS.  451 

done  it  after  the  original  when  they  describe  it  only  almonds, 
and  the  fruit  without  leaves. 

How  the  dove  sent  out  of  the  ark  should  bring  in  a  green 
olive  leaf  according  to  the  original,  hath  nothing  of  such  won- 
der as  to  amaze  expositors,  how  after  ten  months  it  should 
maintain  that  verdure,  since  the  tree  is  continually  green,  the 
leaves  dry,  thick,  and  lasting,  since  plants  at  the  bottom  of 
the  sea  maintain  that  verdure,  and  since  we  receive  the  leaves 
fresh  among  the  olives  which  come  from  far  countries  and  very 
late  unto  us. 

How  it  should  stand  thus  long  under  water,  may  partly  be 
allowed  from  the  uncertain  detention  of  the  currents,  and 
ebbs  and  flows  at  that  time,  and  the  mixture  of  the  fresh 
water  from  the  whole  ocean  of  that  element,  and  notably 
iUustrated  from  like  examples  in  Theophrastus  and  Pliny. 
Thcoplirasti  Hist,  iv,  cap.  7.     Plin.  lib.  xiii,  cap.  ult. 

[On  Chiromancy.^ 

To  make  further  inquiry  into  that  chiromantical  doctrine  of 
Bartholomeus  Codes,  that  the  acuteness  of  the  Uuea  mensal'is 
denotes  the  acuteness  of  fevers,  and  great  disposition  thereto, 
in  persons  where  it  extendeth  high  and  near  the  fore  finger, 
Chironianticfc  parvcc,  lib.  vi,  cap.  28. 

Great  variety  there  is  in  the  lines  of  the  hand ;  almost  no 
strict  conformity.  In  the  palm,  they  seem  to  be  made  by  the 
articulation  of  the  metacarpus,  or  middle  hand,  from  whence 
the  fingers  begin.  The  inflexion  of  the  little  and  fourth  fin- 
ger makes  the  table  of  the and  middle  the  natural  line, 

that  of  the  thumb  the  line  of  life.  The  other  lines  are  made 
out  of  the  ligaments  or  ties  of  the  broad  tendons  unto  the 
bones,  or  of  divers  lines  of  fibres  under  the  skin. 

Of  the  first  sort  there  are  also  master  and  principal  lines, 
in  some  analogy  to  these,  in  creatures  of  five  divisions  of  foot, 
as  apes,  monkeys,  in  frogs,  with  like  lesser  also,  and  in  great 
variety. 

These  are  also  observed  in  most  digitate  animals,  and  vari- 
ously disposed,  as  in  dogs,  cats,  &c. ;  in  fin-footed  birds,  swans, 
geese,  ducks. 

2  G  2 


452  Extracts  from 

[Experiments  on  Animals.'] 

Observe  how  purges  and  narcotics,  aloe  and  opium,  do  work 
with  other  animals ;  in  what  quantity  purges  work  .well  with 
hawks ;  whether  they  will  with  hens,  and  birds  with  craws 
and  gizzards  ;  what  they  will  do  with  herons  and  cormorants, 
that  seem  to  have  but  one  gut,  what  they  will  do  with  fishes, 
as  a  pickerel  or  carp  or  eel. 

Three  grains  of  opium  works  strongly  upon  a  dog.  Ob- 
serve how  much  will  take  place  with  a  horse,  which  subsisteth 
with  little  sleep.  Fishes  are  quickly  intoxicated  with  baits  ; 
in  what  quantity  with  opium  ?  What  quantity  will  take,  in 
birds  and  animals  with  Uttle  heads  ? 

From  wo  grains  unto  five  we  have  given  unto  a  cockerel, 
without  any  discernible  sopition.  Observe  what  place  it  will 
take  in  birds  without  craws  ;  where,  falling  into  the  maw,  the 
heat  may  quicklier  liquate  it. 

Four  unto  a  crow,  without  visible  effect. 
Six  and  eight  unto  dogs,  making  them  dull,  not  profoundly 
to  sleep. 

Ten  grains  of  aloe  given  unto  a  cock,  produce  bloody  ex- 
cretions, carrying  off  the  mucus  of  Uie  guts ;  which  in  birds 
are  tender,  and  might  be  employed  in  puddings. 

Five  grains  we  have  also  given  unto  turkeys  without  effect 

of  sleep ;  four  unto  a  crow,  and  as  much  unto  cocks  and  hens. 

Two  grains  given  a  pickerel,  above  a  quarter  long ;  died  in 

twelve  hours,  stooled  not ;  another,  who  had  nothing  given, 

survived. 

Six  grains  of  white  hellebore  given  unto  a  young  quail  pro- 
duced vertigo,  but  it  survived.  Ten  of  black  hellebore  unto 
another  produced  no  sensible  alteration,  but  only  frequent 
ejections  or  mutings. 

We  entered  a  mole,  a  toad,  and  a  viper,  in  one  glass :  within 
half  an  hour  the  mole  eat  up  half  the  viper,  leaving  the  tail 
and  harder  parts ;  destroyed  the  toad,  eat  part  of  the  entrails  ; 
died  the  next  day;  which  I  imputed  not  unto  eating  so  large 
a  meal,  for  they  will  rot  commonly  live  above  a  day  or  two  out 
of  the  earth. 

Fifteen  grains  of    pium  given  unto  a  young  cor^iorant,  it 


COMMON    PLACF,    GOOKS. 


45^ 


seemed  for  some  hours  to  be  a  little  vertiginous  and  to  go  but 
weakly,  but  seemed  not  to  sleep  at  all. 

Five  grains  unto  a  young  kestrel,  did  seem  the  like  vertigi- 
nous and  a  little  more  sleepy ;  not  profoundly. 

Five  unto  a  young  heron  did  nothing ;  given  in  paste  it  was 
excluded  in  an  hour. 

Twenty-one  grains  of  aloes  powdered,  given  unto  a  young 
cormorant,  wrouglit  often,  thin  and  yellow,  the  bird  well  after  it. 

Two  drachms  of  hemlock  given  unto  a  cormorant ;  died  in 
two  hours  after,  vertiginous. 

Of  crocus  metallorum,  a  drachm  given  unto  a  cormorant; 
lived  a  week  after,  vomited  mucli ;  being  dead  it  was  found 
still  remaining  in  the  bottom  of  the  maw. 

[Receipts.'] 

Two  neat  pickles  may  be  contrived,  the  one  of  oysters  stewed 
in  their  own  vinegar,  with  thyme,  lemon  peel,  onion,  mace, 
pepper;  adding  Rhenish  wine,  elder  vinegar,  three  or  four 
pickled  cucumbers. 

Another  with  equal  parts  of  the  liquor  of  oysters,  and  the 
liquor  that  runs  from  herrings  newly  salted,  dissolving  an- 
chovy therein,  or  pickling  therein  a  few  smelts,  or  garUck, 
especially  the  seeds  thereof. 

High  esteem  was  made  of  garum  by  the  ancients,  and  was 
used  in  sauces,  puddings,  &c.  If  simply  made  witli  aromatic 
mixture,  as  is  delivered,  it  cannot  but  have  an  ungrateful  smell, 
however  a  haut  gout,  for  it  was  the  liquor  or  the  resolution 
of  guts  of  fishes,  salt  and  insolated. 

This  same  way  may  be  tried  by  us  yearly,  and  is  still  con- 
tinued in  Turkey. 

And  may  be  made  out  of  the  entrails  of  mackarel,  the  liquor 
that  runs  from  the  herrings  which  may  dissolve  anchovies,  and 
with  a  mixture  of  oysters  and  lir^pets  and  the  testaceous 
fishes,  whereof  every  one  makes  his  own  pickle,  and  varieth 
the  taste  of  sea  water. 

The  neatest  way  is  to  have  pickles  always  ready,  wherein 
we  may  make  additions  at  pleasure,  or  use  them  simply  in 
sauces.  The  ancients  loaded  their  pickles  with  cummin  seed 
and  the  like,  distateful  unto  our  senses. 


454  CLASSICAL    PASSAGES, 

[MS.    SLOAN.    1882,   FOL.   143.] 

[Fossil  Remains  found  in  Norfolk.']  ^ 

This  bone  was  found  about  a  year  past,  by  Winterton,  on  the 
sea  shore,  in  Norfolk. 

The  cliff  had  been  much  broken  by  high  tides  and  the  rage 
of  the  sea,  many  hundred  loads  falling  down  as  it  often  doth 
upon  this  coast,  the  cliffs  being  not  rock  but  earth. 

Upon  the  same  coast,  but  at  some  miles  distance,  divers 
great  bones  are  said  to  have  been  found,  and  I  have  seen  one 
side  of  a  lower  jaw  containing  very  large  teeth  petrified,  far 
exceeding  the  teeth  of  the  biggest  ox. 

It  was  found  after  a  great  flood  near  to  the  cliff,  some  thou- 
sand loads  of  earth  being  broken  down  by  the  rage  of  the  sea. 

That  it  came  not  out  of  the  sea  it  might  be  conjectured, 
because  it  was  found  so  far  from  it,  and  from  the  colour,  for 
if  out  of  the  sea  it  would  have  been  whiter. 

When  the  outward  crust  is  taken  off,  it  answereth  the  grain 
of  the  bones  of  whales  and  other  cetaceous  animals,  compar- 
ing it  with  a  piece  of  whale's  scull  that  I  have  by  me. 

This  last  month  in  a  grave  of  Earsham  churchyard,  were 
found  sixteen  large  teeth  but  of  a  different  bigness,  whereof 
this  is  one  brought  me  and  taken  for  a  giant's  tooth,  but  it 
very  well  resembleth  the  tooth  of  an  ox,  as  you  may  observe 
by  comparing  it. 


[MS.  SLOAN.    1862  AND   18GC.] 

[Classical  passages  selected  for  mottoes.]- 
Boletus  domino. — Juvenal,  The  best  meat  for  the  best. 

'  And  presented  to  the  Royal  Society,  Valete  aiiagrammata!  Nil  mild  vohisaim  ! 

IGGR.-Hooke's Poslhiwioun  lVor/cs,Tp. ',i]3.  — shows  his  estimation  of  such  things. 

2  In  MS.  Shaft.  1843,  there  occur  se-  The  following  sentences  are  selected  from 

mtvlI  Anagrams  sent  mt  by  viy  ever  honor-  Nos.   18fi2-lS(Uj,  (which   form    but   one 

ed  friend   Sir    Philip     Jl'ode/wnse,    and  volume)  in  order  to  shew  one  of  the  uses 

others :    some,  however,  are  not  altoge-  to    which    Browne    turned   bis  classical 

tlier  fit  for  j)ubiication ;  and  Sir  Thomas's  reading, 
own  exclamation  immediately  following, 


SLLLCTEP    FOR    MOTTOES.  155 

refert, 

Quo  gestu  lejjores,  et  quo  gallina  secetur.     Jiiv.  S<tt.  v,  /.  \'2\; 
In  small  mattcra  a  decorum  is  to  be  observed. 

Plurima  sunt,  qujc 

Non  auJent  liomines  pertusa  dicere  la?na.  lb.  I.  loi). 

Poor  men  dare  not  speak  what  they  think  ; 
Or  must  not,  ijijou  make  it  debent. 

Oppida  tota  canem  venerantur,  nemo  Dianani.       lb.  xv,  /.  8. 
The  servant  more  honoured  than  the  master — 
The  man  honored ;  the  lord  neglected. 

Nefas  illic  foetum  jugulare  capella?:  lb.  lin.  13. 

Carnibus  humanis  vcsci  licet .... 

They  strain  at  a  gnat,  and  swallow  a  camel. 

Quis  gremio  Encladi,  doctique  Palaemonis  ad  fort 
Quantum  grammaticus  meruit  labor?  lb.  viii,  /.  215. 

Upon  the  Free  school  door  at  Norwich. 

Qui  nunquam  visa?  flagrabat  amore  puella?. 

Juv.  lib.  i,  Sat.  iv,  /.  114. 
A  blind  man  in  love. 


Pocula  adoraiulae  rubiginis.  lb.  xiii,  /.  148. 

Upon  an  antique  vessel. 


Hoc  pretio  squamas?  lb.  iv,  /,  25. 

]Vho  would  give  such  high  prices  for  trijles  ^ 

Quare  si  sapics  viam  vorabis.  Cattd.  xxxvi,  7. 

To  a  friend  to  conic  in  haste. 

.  nimis  uncis 
Naribus  indulges.  lb.  I.  40. 

I  pan  one  that  exceedeth  in  scoffing. 

Tencrum  ct  laxa  cervicc  Icgendum.  Pers.  i,  98. 

Upon  a  smooth  and  easy  poem. 


456  CLASSICAL    PASSAGES,    ETC. 

Et  qui  coeruleum  dirimebat  Nerea  delphin.  Pers.  \,  94. 

Upon  my  picture  of  a  dolphin. 

Per  me  equidem  sint  omnia  protimis  alba.  Pers.  i,  110. 

All  is  well  for  me. 

Qui  sale  multo 

Urbem  defricuit.  Horat,  S.  i,  x.  4. 

Be7i  Jonson. 

Hoc  meruit  fundi  de  Ganimede  merum.  Mart,  13,  cviii. 

Upon  super-excellent  wine. 

Libros  non  legit  ille,  sed  libellos.  lb.  xi,  i,  5. 

Upon  a  book  dedicated  to  a  prince. 

Qui  scribit  nibil,  et  tamen  poeta  est.  lb.  x,  cii. 

U2J071  a  stolen  piece,  or  piece  of  plagiarism. 

Ha3redem  scripsit  me  Numa :  convaluit. 
Upon  one  whose  hopes  are  unexpectedly  and  narrowly 
disappointed. 

Neronianas  hie  refrigerat  thermas.  Mart,  iii,  xxv,  4. 

Upon  one  of  a  very  cold  temper. 

O  nox,  quam  longa  est,  quae  fecit  una  senem. 
UjiOJi  Gonzaga  imprisoned,  ivho  in  one  night  grew  grey. 

Et  mare  percussum  puero,  fabrumque  volantem.  Juv.  i,  I.  54. 
Upon  my  large  picture  of  Icarus  and  Daedalus. 

Unde  epulum  possis  centum  dare  Pythagorajis.    Jb.  iii,  I.  229. 
An  inscription  upon  the  kitchen-garden  door. 

Omnes  tanquam  ad  vivaria  currunt.  lb.  I.  303. 

Whither  all  sharking  or  shifting  people  resort,  as  it  were 
their  pasture,  to  London. 


Dr,  Cijomasj  ^roUinf's>  Journrp 


WITH 


DR.    PLOT. 

[mS.  SLOAN.  NO.   1899,] 

Auguste  the  loth,  1693. 

This  morninge  I  went  to  Greenwhiche  with  Dr.  Plot ;  from 
the  landing  place  wee  went  directly  up  to  Blackeheath.     X 
little  beyonde  the  bowlingrcen,  Watlingstreet,  one  of  the  Ro- 
man highways,  appeard  very  conspicuous,  running  directly  to 
the  comer  of  the  parke,  where  we  loste  it,  but  recoverd  it 
againe  in  lesse  then  halfe  a  mile,  where  it  passes  by  two 
tumuli  in  a  pointe  of  lande  between  Dover  roade  and  an  other 
running  towards  Liegh  ;  and  some  of  the  present  roade  going 
up  Shooters   hill  is  parte  of  it.     Upon  the   heathe  between 
AVellinge  and  Crayforde  it  passes  on  the  righte  hand  of  the 
great  roade,  and  somtimes  between   two   horse  ways.     Att 
Crayforde  wee  inquired   for  some   deep  perpendicular  pits, 
mentiond  by  Lambert?    and  placed  in  this  parishe,  thouglie 
wee  coulde  finde  none  here  :  in  halfe  a  mile  of  Dartforde  and 
in  that  parishe  wee  met  with  several,  some  of  chaike  and 
some  of  sand.     I  had  not  the  opportunity  of  being  lett  downe 
into  any  of  them,  but  as  far  as  I  can  perceive  they  are  of  the 
same  forme  of  some  others  in  Chadwell  wood,  in  Essex,  about 
three  miles  from   Grayes.     There  are   two  cuts  of  them  in 
Camden,  and  he  supposes  that  the  Britains  dug  chaike  out 
of  them,  but  surely  that  was  not  iheire  purpose,  for  it  seems 
improbable  that  they  shoulde  dig  several  fathom   deep  for 


458  DR.  THOMAS  Browne's  journey 

clialke  when  they  might  haue  it  neer  the  surface  of  the  earth, 
and  I  was  in  one  which  was  9  fathoms  deep  which  had  nothing 
but  sande  in  it ;  this  pit  was  scarce  a  fathom  broade  till  I 
came  within  three  yards  of  the  botom  where  it  expatiates  it- 
selfe  and  is  of  a  circular  form,*  belieue  the  Britains  upon  an 
incursion  of  the  enemie  hid  themselves,  their  cattle,  goods, 
and  corne,  in  these  caverns,  as  Tacitus  says  the  Germans  did, 
and  as  the  Hungarians  doe  at  present,  when  they  are  invaded 
by  the  Turkes ;  the  countrey  people  in  Essex  call  them  the 
Danes  holes :  att  Dartforde  they  haue  noe  name  for  them, 
one  John  Lowe  who  Hues  nearest  them  tells  us  that  in  Dart- 
forde and  neer  it  there  are  about  fortie  of  these  pits. 

On  the  sixteenth,  on .  Dartforde  Brent,  we  perceived  the 
Roman  waye  running  on  the  righte  hande  of  the  great  roade  ; 
it  strikes  downe  a  lane,  and  passes  on  the  *****  hand  of  a 
farme,  called  Woodcocks  hall,  and  an  other  named  Blacke  sole ; 
some  remains  of  wee  found  in  stone  wood,  and  these  led  us 
to  Bettysham,  a  hamlet  in  Southfleet :  here  we  left  the  Roman 
waye  and  went  to  Swanscombe,  which  takes  its  name  from 
Swaine,  the  Dane;  who,  in  one  of  his  invasions,  came  up 
Ebsfleet,  now  a  rivulet,  which  passes  under  Stone  bridge;  he 
incamped  here  or  very  neer  it.  Lamberte  says  it  was  att 
Greenhithe ;  but  after  a  stride  inquiry  att  both  these  places, 
wee  coulde  neither  hear  of  or  see  any  remains  of  Swains  in- 
trenchments,  or  Swanscombe  castle,  which  Philpot  says  was 
an  honour :  perhaps  Mr.  Weldons  house  stands  on  the  cas- 
tle, and  the  Danishe  fortifications  ar  dug  away  att  Greenhithe. 

On  the  seventeenth  wee  found  something  of  the  way  at 
Chinglewell,  and  on  the  north  side  of  Cobham  parke,  they 
haue  taken  the  advantage  here  to  set  the  parke  pale  on  it. 
Cobham  house  is  an  antient  noble  bricke  building ;  the  rooms 
are  stately  and  well  furnished ;  the  chymney  pieces  are  moste 
of  them  marble,  well  carvde  and  polished ;  in  order  to  finde 
where  the  Roman  way  passed  the  Medway  at  Durobrovis, 
now  Rochester,  it  was  rational  to  enquire  for  the  moste  ford- 
able,  and  were  informed  that  att  the  pointe  of  lande  over 
against  Fricndsbury  churcli,  att  lowe  water,  it  was  not  aboue 
three  or  foure  foote  water  and  that  in  our  grandfathers  days, 

»   Sic. 


WITH     DR.    PLOT.  459 

by  the  liclpc  of  an  horses  head,  any  one  might  passe  the 
river ;  we  coulde  finde  nothing  of  the  wayc  att  either  of  these 
places  ;  in  the  afternoone  going  up  Chatliam  hill  wee  coulde 
perceive  nothing  of  the  waye,  but  aboue  the  hill  it  runs  on 
the  left  hand  hedge  going  to  Raynham,  the  burying  place  of 
the  Tuftons  Ivirles  of  Thanet;  on  the  right  hand  of  the  wayc 
to  Newington  it  passes  on  the  right  hand  of  the  waye,  and 
neer  the  towne  it  seems  to  fall  into  the  Dover-roadc  about 
halfe  a  mile  from   Newington;  on  the  left  hand  is  a  fielde 
called  Crockefielde  (from  the  infinite  number  of  urns  that 
have  been  found  here)  Burton  says  that  some  thousand  of 
urns  were  here  dug  up,  and  will  haue  this  to  bee  Durolevum, 
thouah  the  distance  between  that  and  Durovernum,  now  Can- 
terbury,  does  not  agree,  and  I  belieue  that  these  bones  were 
reposited  here  after  some  suddain  ingagement,  and  that  it 
was  never  a  Roman  station.     About  two  miles  from  hence 
there  is  a  hill  called  Standarde  hill,  and  is  saide  to  haue  been 
once  graced  with  the  Roman  eagle.      Watling  street  falls 
into  the  roade  at  Caicolhill,  between  that  and  Greenstreet ; 
it  is  much  demolished  but  fair  enough  in  this  village.     On 
the  left  hand  about  a  mile  from  hence  in  Castlewoode,  wee 
founde  some  trenches  running  one  into  an  other,  and  perhaps 
mi'dite  bee  the  olde  Durolevum,  the  distance  between  that 
and  Durovernum  agree  better  then  any  other  place  that  we 
haue  met  with.     Att  Ospringe  beacon  wee  met  with  some  of 
it  again,  att  Ospringe  beacon  nothing  of  it  appears  between 
that  and  Fevershani,  it  being  worne  away  here  as  it  is  in  all 
valleys ;  here  wee  sought  for  the  chalke  pits  as  Dr.  Childery 
supposes  they  doe  not  resemble  those  att  Crayforde,  but  are 
as  broade  att  the  top  as  any  where  and  containe  a  good  com- 
passe  of  grounde;  it  is  likely  that  the  Britains  might  builde 
their  hovels  or  place  their  tents  in   these  bottoms   to  protect 
them  from  ill  weather :  the  next  daye  till   wee  came  to  the 
lower  end  of  Bougton  street  it  appeard  not  att  all ;  but  here 
is  prittie  plaine  on  the  right  hand  of  the  roade,  thence  run- 
ning to  the  beacon,  and  so  to  be  seen  at  divers  places  between 
that  and  Ilarble  downe.    About  a  quarter  of  a  mile  from  hence, 
on  the  left  hand,  is  a  round  hill  steep  and  high,  on  all  sides  but 
the  easte.     Wee  haue  met  with  several  such,  but  whether  they 


"^60  DR.    THOMAS    BROWNE's    JOURNEY 

bee  fort'fied  by  art  or  nature  is  disputable.  Between  this  and 
Canter:  -iry  the  wave  is  worne  out.  At  Canterbury  there 
are  two  remarkable  things  not  taken  notice  of  by  Sumner, 
viz.  in  the  N.  E.  staircase  in  the  castle  are  several  verses 
of  the  psalms  curiously  cut  in  Hebrew  characters,  yet  visible 
in  the  stone  worke.  Mrs.  Elizabeth  Moore,  daughter  to  Sir 
Thomas  Moore,  Chancellour  of  England,  after  his  fathers 
execution  kept  his  head  in  her  closet  till  her  death,  and  then 
orderd  it  to  bee  inclosed  in  lead  and  placed  on  her  coffin. 
She  married  one  Mr.  Roper,  whose  successours  are  now  liv- 
ing in  St.  Dunstans  parishe,  in  Canterbury,  in  the  vaulte  of 
which  family,  her  body  and  Sir  Thomas's  head  are  reposited. 
Wee  made  an  excursion  to  Chilham  to  view  the  burial  place 
of  Quintus  Durus  Laberius,  a  Roman  tribune,  slaine  by  the 
Britains ;  his  tumulus  is  not  rounde  as  all  other  Roman  ones  I 
have  yet  met  with,  but  is  a  ridge  of  earth,  much  resemblinge 
a  Roman  waye,  seventy  paces  long  and  twentie  broad,  it  is  in 
a  fielde  of  Mr.  Diggs's  neer  a  mill,  and  within  a  *  of  a 

mile  of  his  house,  which  was  raised  out  of  the  ruins  of  Chilham 
castle,  whose  trenches  incompasse  moste  of  the  towne,  and 
the  keep  is  att  present  Mr.  Diggs's  brewhouse.  Three  mile 
and  an  halfe  from  Canterbury,  in  Iffin  wood,  wee  founde  a 
fortification  on  a  rising  grounde,  the  possession  of  John  Le 
Mot  Honeywoode,  Esq.  of  Cogshul,  in  Essex ;  it  has  two 
trenches ;  the  innermoste  contains  two  acres  and  the  other 
seven  att  least.  If  we  coulde  distinguish  the  Britishe  for- 
tresses from  others,  wee  might  conclude  that  this  was  one, 
and  that  to  which  Caasar  forced  the  Britains  to  retire  to,  for 
after  he  had  left  his  navy  (which  laye  then  wide  of  Sand- 
whiche)  under  the  commando  of  Q.  Atrius,  says  thus  of  him- 
selfe,  progresstts  milUa  passuiim  circiter  duodecim  hosilum 
cojnas  consincatus  est  illi  esse  dis  ad  flumen  jJrogressi  ex 
loco  superiore  nostros  'prohlhcrCi  ^t  jrraiUum  commtttere 
cosperunt  repidsl  ah  cqtt'itatu  in  silvis  se  abdiderunt  locum 
nacti  egregie  natura  et  opere  munilum  quod  domestici  belli 
ccmsa  id  videcdiir  ante  prccpar  aver  ant.  This  fortification  is 
the  exact  distance  from  his  navy,  which  he  assigns  it  is  neer 
a  river,  and  has  several  wells  neer  it  which  must  bee  requisite 

*  Sic. 


WITH    DR.    I'LOT.  461 

for  such  an  intrcncliment.  Aug.  27,  wee  went  to  Snndwhich, 
anil  in  our  waj  e  founilc  the  Roman  Watling  street,  on  the  left 
liand  of  the  roacle  where  my  Lorde  Winclielsheas  parkc- 
wall  stands  upon;  it  is  conspicuous  att  Fishepoole  hill  and 
I^ittle  Bourne,  hut  moste  aparent  hy  Wyngham  churche  in 
the  mill  nicdowe ;  and  on  a  grten  ahout  halfe  a  mile  on  tliis 
side  of  Ashe,  it  is  prittie  plain,  having  a  large  tumulus  neer 
it.  On  the  left  hand  of  the  green  it  pointed  S.  E.  hy  S.,  and 
was  worne  awaye  between  that  and  Ilichhoroughe. 

From  Sandwhich  wee  went  to  llichborowe,  the  olde  Ilutu- 
pium,  the   ruins  of  which  station  are  of  a  square  forme  con- 
taning  about  hue  acres  of  'and.     Tlie  northe  wall  is  1G8  paces 
longc,  the  soutlu;  12G,  and  the  weste  IGO,  the  easte  wall  is 
fallen  away  and  overgro\\ne  with  buohes  the'  the  other  three 
are  loftie,  and  thicke  composed  of  flinte,  and  double  ridges 
of  Jloman  bricke,  compacted  together  with  a  mortar  made  of 
ct)v:kleshclls  and   sand ;  the  chief  entrance  was  on  the  weste 
side;  in  the  northe  wall  there  is  a  little  posterne.    Neer  this  is 
an  ether  fortification  of  earth  having  foure  entrances  to  it;  it 
takes  up  about  an  acre  of  lande.     Some  anthers  giue  an  ac- 
counte  K.  Ethelberte  received  St.  Augustine  in  his  palace  of 
Richboroughe  in  the  Isle  of  Thanet,  whether  Richboroughe 
was  in  that  islande  is  not  certaine ;  though  possible,  for  the 
Stowre  might  formerly  haue  its  course  over  Goshall  and  Fleet 
marshes,  that   parte   of  the  countrie  being  as  lowe  as  the 
channel  in  which  the  river  now  runs,  and  upon  the  digging 
f  ditches  in  this  parte  of  the  level  great  quantities  of  cockles, 
eviwinkles,  and   other  shels  are  found.     W'hilste  wee  were 
heie   wee   gathered   some   from   the  surface  of  the  earthe, 
which  is  no  small  argument  to  proue  that  Richboroughe  was 
once  in  the  isle  of  Thanet.     Neer  the  ferry  from  Sandwiche  is 
a  rounde  risinge  ground,  including  neer  thirtie  acres ;  here 
stood  Stonar,by  some  thought  to  bee  liapisTituli.  The  found- 
ations of  buildings  arc  turnde  up  by  the  plowe  every  daye. 
Peter  Van  Slade  who  had  one  of  the  farms  here,  raised  the 
bancke  that  lies  between  the  two  farms  with  parte  of  the 
foundation  he  dug  up  here.     In  our  returne  to  Canterbury 
wee  sawe  W'ingham  churche,  it  is  in  very  good  repair,  and 
amongst  other  monuments  has  one  very  1)eautifull  erected  in 


462  DR.    THOMAS    BROM^NE's    JOURNEY,  ETC. 

memory  of  several  of  that  branch  of  the  Oxendine  family, 
which  is  now  seated  att  Deane  here  in  this  parishe,  this  tombe 
is  in  a  neat  chappel  paved  with  blacke  and  white  marble,  here 
is  an  other  handsome  tombe  for  Sir  Ed.  Palmer  and  his 
lady. 

On  Iffindowne  about  halfe  a  mile  beyond  Stubbington,  that 
part  of  Watlingstreet  which  is  paved  and  raisd  high  with 
flinte  is  to  bee  seen,  it  runs  by  Eye  and  Divels  courte  hall, 
leaving  it  on  the  right  hand  as  it  had  done  Stubbington  before 
and  goes  to  Harmansoale  and  points.*  It  is  yet  so  entire 
that  passeingers  is  for  the  ease  of  their  horses,  where  they  can, 
leaue  this  waye,  and  choose  the  sof  ground  ;  so  that  in  divers 
places  the  Roman  waye  is  overgrowne  with  bushes ;  att  Hemp- 
ton  hill,  within  lesse  then  three  miles  of  Hyde,  it  turns  to  the 
right  hand  and  winds  about  to  the  left  againe,  going  downe 
that  hill  to  Stanforde  where  it  is  quite  worne  out;  between 
this  and  Hyde,  is  an  anticnt  seat  called  Oustern  hanger  parke, 
builte  by  Oeske  King  of  Kent,  and  as  tradition  goes  his  sworde 
was  kepte  here  in  succeeding  ages,  and  gaue  name  to  the 
house.  Halfe  a  mile  from  hence  is  Saltwood  castle  the  firste 
builte  by  Vske  a  Kinge  of  Kent,  and  much  repaired  by  Wil- 
liam Montforde,  constable  of  Dover  castle,  and  afterwards 
by  William  Courtney,  archbishop  of  Canterbury,  his  arms 
are  over  the  easte  gate,  the  only  parte  of  the  castle  which 
is  inhabited,  tis  of  an  oval  forme  from  caste  to  weste,  it  is 
twentie  five  rods  in  lengthe,  in  1580  it  suffered  much  by  an 
earthquake. 

*  Sic. 


AN  ACCOUNT  OF 


%\)t  iHauuscript  CoUcrtious 


OP 


SIR  THOMAS  &  DR.  E.  BROWNE. 


Sir  Thomas  Browne  left  a  very  consulcral)le  mass  of  letters 
and  manuscripts,  principally  his  own,  but  including  also  some 
which  he  had  collected  ; — especially  the  MSS.  of  Dr.  Arthur 
Dee.  A  small  portion  found  their  way  into  the  Bodleian 
Library,  through  the  medium  of  Dr.  Rawlinson  ;  but  how  or 
when  he  obtained  them,  I  have  not  been  able  to  ascertain. 
They  are  in  Nos.  58,  108,  390,  and  391,  of  the  Rawlinson 
INISS.  No.  58  is  composed  very  largely  of  fragments  and 
letters  relating  to  Dr.  Edward  Browne's  travels ;  but  bound 
up  without  any  arrangement.  I  have  printed  several  of  the 
letters,  and  one  or  two  fragments  from  it.  From  No.  108  I 
have  printed  about  :20  letters :  it  contains  also  some  extracts, 
probably  by  Dr.  Jul  ward  Browne,  from  various  authors,  and 
some  memoranda  and  commonplaces  by  Sir  Thomas.  From 
No.  390  has  been  obtained  the  "  Catalogue  of  MSS.  Sfc" 
which  has  enabled  me  to  determine,  with  some  degree  of  cer- 
tainty, what  unpublished  papers  Browne  left,  and  thus  to 
satisfy  myself,  that  the  present  is  a  complete  collection  of 
HIS  WORKS.  No.  391  is  occupied  almost  entirely  with  letters  ; 
— of  which  I  have  printed  about  25.  The  fragment  Of  Green- 
land, vol.  iv,  p.  375,  is  from  this  volume ;  which  contains,  be- 
sides, copies  of  Sir  K.  I)i<r/jf.s  Letter  to  Broune,  and  the 
Brampton  Urns,  both  which  have  l)ecn  collated  with  the 
printed  editions. 

But  the  far  greater  portion  of  the  Browne  MSS.  comprising 
those  of  the  father,  son,  and  grandson,  with  large  medical  and 


4G1'  ACCOUNT    OF    THE    MANUSCRIPTS 

miscellaneous  collections  which  had  fallen  into  their  hands, 
were  disposed  of,  soon  after  the  death  of  the  latter,  to  Sir 
Hans  Sloane.  On  his  decease,  they  ultimately  reached  the 
National  Library  in  the  British  Museum  ;  where  they  are 
now  contained  in  about  100  volumes,  occupying,  with  few  ex- 
ceptions, the  consecutive  numbers  from  1825  to  1923,  inclu- 
sive, besides  some  other  numbers.  ^ 

In  order  to  exhibit  these  collections  with  some  degree  of 
clearness,  I  have  printed  the  llawlinson  catalogue, — drawn 
up,  in  all  probability,  but  just  before  they  were  sold; — and 
have  attached  to  each  article  the  number  which  I  have  ascer- 
tained it  to  bear  at  present.  Some,  however,  have  escaped 
my  search.  Of  the  100  consecutive  numbers  between  1824' 
and  1924,  some  are  blank,  not  attached  to  any  volume  ;^  some 
refer  to  MSS.  not  belonging  to  the  Browne  collection;'  and 
some  to  articles  which,  though  they  belong  to  it,  are  not  in- 
cluded in  the  Rawlinson  catalogue.  Among  the  latter  are 
some  volumes  of  correspondence,^  two  MSS.  of  the  younger 
Dr.  T.  Browne,^  and  several  commonplace  books,^  whereas 

1  Nos.  1745,  3418,  and  4039,  contain  letters;  and  No.  1797,  a  catalogue  of 
plants,  and  a  number  of  Medical  Observations  in  Dr.  Edward  Broxvne's  handwrit- 
ing. No.  2,  among  the  MisceUanrons  Papers,  8fC..  of  the  catalogue,  is  No.  5233,  of 
the  Additional  MSS.  of  the  British  Museum. 

2   1849,  1855,  1879. 

3  1829,  1831,  1832,  1835,  1840,  1850,  1858,  1871. 

4   1847, 1911,  1912,  1913. 

"  Nos.  1845  and  1846.  The  former  contains  Extracts  and  Medical  Exercises,, 
by  Dr.  Thomas  Browne,  Jun.  The  latter  is  the  vokime  spoken  of  Mr.  D'Israeli, 
in  his  Curiosities  of  Literature,  as  "  the  imperfect  MS,  collection  made  by  tlie  cele- 
brated Sir  Thomas  Browne," — and  from  which  he  has  given  some  extracts.  Mr. 
D'Israeli  relied  (as  the  consulter  of  these  MSS.  ought  to  be  able  safely  to  rely)  on  the 
description  given  in  Ayscough's  catalogue  of  them,  at  p.  882,  viz.  "Sir  Thomas 
Ukowne.  Extracts  from  Books,  ayid  Miscellaneous  Observations :" — whereas,  the 
volume  is  in  the  handwriting  of  his  grandson.  In  his  first  edition,  Mr.  D'Israeli 
was  led  to  refer  his  extract  to  Plot's  Staffordshire,  by  tlie  fact  of  the  MS.  opening  with 
two  pages  of  transcript  from  that  work :  but  the  passage  was  from  Ilacket's  Memo- 
rial of  Ahp.  Williams,  p.  213,  fol.  Lond.  1C93.  The  volume  is  a  jumble  (sadly 
confused  in  the  binding)  of  extracts  from  Thomas  of  VValsingham,  Bartolomeus  de 
Cotton,  Mat.  Paris,  and  a  score  others. 

6  For  example,  1843;  See  Rawl.  Cat.  No.  7,  4to. — 1848;  which  is,  in  truth,  a 
mere  mass  of  rough  papers,  bound  together;  from  which  I  have  gleaned  nothing 
but  the  collation  of  one  or  two  passages,  in  the  Tracts,  a  Catalogue,  at  p.  368,  and 
a  criticism,  at  p.  380,  vol.  iv. —  18(i2;  see  No.  25,  4to. — ]8fi5;  No.  31,4tn. — 
1869;  36,  4to. — 1874.  Several  portions  of  which  are  enumerated  in  the  catalogue, 
Nos.  40 — 44  ;  but  a  considerable  pavt  is,  in  fact,  a  commonplace  book. — 1882  and 
1885,  also  contain  similar  rough  drafts,  and  hints  for  passages  in  his  various  works. 
— The  fact  is  that  when  the  collection  passed  into  Sir  Hans  Sloane's  possession, 
it  contained  a  number  of  letters  and  miscellaneous  papers,  which  were  so  mentioned 
in  his  own  M3.  catalogue,  and  were  not  bound  up  till  after  he  had  them. 


OF  SIR  THOMAS  AND  DR.  E.  BROWNE.  iC5 

tlie  catalogue  names  but  one,  which  I  have  referred  to  MS. 
Sloan.  18GG."  In  several  instances  I  find  that  a  vohnne 
containin"-  one  or  more  of  the  articles  enumerated  in  the 
catalojrue,  also  contains  some  not  in  it.^ 

But  my  great  object  in  making  so  careful  an  analysis  of  the 
present  catalogue  has  been,  to  ascertain  whether  any  of  the 
works  which  Sir  Thomas  left  in  manuscript,  had  escaped  me. 
Of  the  ll^J  numbers  contained  in  the  catalogue,  there  are  but 
IG  which  I  have  not  either  found  or  accounted  for;  and  of 
these  one  only  (No,  23,  4to.)  is  ascribed  to  Browne.  Ano- 
ther article  (No.  7,  4to.)  for  some  time  eluded  my  search  :  yet 
I  was  satisfied  that  the  two  dialogues  there  mentioned  must 
have  been  written,  or  "^hey  would  not  have  been  described  so 
fully :  but  a  reference  to  Sir  Hans  Sloane's  own  catalogue 
at  lenfjth  satisfied  me  that  such  was  not  the  fact,  and  that 
the  article  in  question  was  MS.  Sloan.  No.  lS4o;  in  which 
the  titles  only,  and  not  the  dialogues,  are  to  be  found : — he 
calls  the  volume  "  Subjects  for  Tracts,  Sir  T.  B.  &c."  The 
only  remaining  article  (No.  23,  4to. —  Tractatiis  Var'ii  per 
T.  Browne,  M.D.)  appears  certainly  to  have  passed  into  Sir 
Hans  Sloane's  possession,  for  he  mentions  it  and  ascribes  it 
to  Sir  Thomas  Browne :  but,  as  certainly,  it  is  no  longer  to 
be  found ;  and  my  consolation  is,  the  probability  that  it  was 
the  "  duplicate  in  4to."  of  the  Latin  Tracts  contained  in  No. 
1827,  and  printed  in  my  fourth  volume. — (See  No.  5,  fol.  and 
No.  23,  4to.)  Supposing  this  conjecture  to  be  true,  and  sup- 
posing that  the  following  catalogue  comprises  a  complete  list 
of  the  works  of  Sir  Thomas,  which  remain  in  MS.  excepting 
those  in  the  Bodleian  Library, — tlien  it  follows,  that  I  may 
safely  assure  my  readers,  that  the  present  is  a  Complete 
Collection  of  the  works  of  that  distinguished  writer. 

7  See  Rawl.  Cat.  \o.  32,  4fo. 
*  In  \o.  1828,  for  example,  the  last  two,  on  the  Philosopher's  Stone,  and  on  the 
Art  of  Navigation,  (yli/sc.  p.   510  and  701.)     Again  at  fols.    207  to  2'JC  of  MS. 
Sloan,  1839,  Moral  Essays,  ( Aysc.  Nos.  9  to  11 :)  and  in  No.  1844,  Astronomical 
Tables,  (No.  2.  .lysc.) 


VOL.   IV.  2   H 


466  ACCOUNT    OF    THE    MANUSCRIPTS 


[bibl.  bodl.  mss.  rawlinson.  390.  no.  1].] 

A  Catalogue  of  MSS.  ivrttten  hy  and  in  the  possession  of 
Sir  Thomas  Browne,  M.D.  late  of  Norwich,  and  of  his 
Son,  Dr.  Edivard  Browne,  late  President  of  the  College  of 
Physicians,  Lojidon. 

Folio. 

No.  1.  A  very  ancient  MS.  (Poetry)  upon  vellum,  finely  illumi- 
nated. 

MS.  Sloan.  1825  : — thus  described  in  AyscougKs  Catalogue,  p.  819  ; — 1825,  1. 
Thos.  Occleve,  De  Rcgimhie  Principis.  Aug.  In  Perg.  lb.  p.  832; — 1825,  2. 
An  Old  Poem  on  Death,  on  vellum. 

No.  2.  Relatione  del  Clariss"*  Vincentio  d'Alessandri,  Ambascia- 
dore  al  Re  di  Persia,  per  la  Ser"""-  Republica  di  Venetia. 

MS.  Sloan.  1826.  Aysc.  p.  364. — Besides  this  article,  (the  only  one  men- 
tioned either  in  Ayscough's  or  the  present  catalogue,)  which  occupies  but 
9  folios,  the  volume  contains  narratives  of  embassies  to,  or  particulars  re- 
specting, the  Papal  States,  Tuscany,  Savoy,  Ferrara,  the  Venetian  Republic, 
Spain,  France,  Poland,  Muscovy  and  Tartary. 

No.  3.  Some  Anatomical  Lectures. 

These  Lectures  were  probably  bound  up  with  other  papers;  perhaps  in  MS. 
Sloan.  1833.  Nos.  1914  and  1915  contain  Dr.  E.  Browne's  Lectures,  from 
1675  to  1678;  and  2  vols,  entitled  Syllabus  Musculorum  Corporis  humani ; 
1687  to  1698.     But  these  volumes  are  4to.  not  folio. 

No.  4.  Mr.  Thos.  Browne's  (second  son  of  Sir  Thomas)  Account 
of  his  journey  from  Bordeaux  to  Paris. — Letters  on  several  occa- 
sions.— Sea-coasts  described  and  neatly  drawn. 

MS.  Sloan.  1745.     Now  first  printed  :— vol.  i,  p.  1  7-22,  and  128-149. 

No.  5.  Miscellanies,  by  Sir  Thos.  Browne. —  1.  Discourse  upon 
the  Ancient  Oracles.  2.  Observations  upon  the  place  Troas,  so 
often  mentioned  by  St.  Paul,  in  his  Epistles.  3.  Some  remarks 
upon  the  Impropriety,  Falsity,  or  Mistakes  in  Pictural  Draughts. 
4.  De  Re  Accipitraria,  or  a  Discourse  of  Falconry,  Hawks,  or 
Hawking.  5.  Of  Languages.  6.  Remarks  upon  several  Texts  of 
Scripture; — with  several  other  Tracts  on  various  subjects. 

MS.  Sloan.  1827.  Upon  the  fly-leaf  of  this  volume  are  fastened  two  slips  of 
parchment,  (probably  cut  from  the  original  cover,)  thus  labelled,  in  Sir 
Thomas's  hand  writing: — Of  Oracles.  De  lie  Accipitra.  S;c.  (also  in  4to.J 
Amico  Ardua  Med.  (  Ys  in  A.tn.  also.)  The  duplicate  of  the  former  portion 
was  very  possibly  the  copy  from  which  Abp.  Tenison  printed  \.\\e  Miscellany 
Tracts.  That  of  the  latter  portion,  (the  Latin  Tracts,)  1  suppose  may  have 
been  No.  23,  4to.  of  the  present  catalogue,  which  1  cannot  discover  in  Br. 
Mus.  The  present  volume  (like  most  of  the  other  Browne  MSS.  in  the 
Br.  Mus.)  has  been  so  deranged  in  the  binding,  and  Ayscough's  catalogue 


OF  SIR  THOMAS  AND  DR.  E.  BROWNE.  4G7 

of  it  is  so  inaccurate,  that  I  shall  give  a  fresh  slvetch  of  its  contents,  stating 
what  use  lias  been  made  ot"  tlicui. 
t'jjL.    1 1).  On  Oracles — Collaled  willi  Tract  xi. 

10—13.   On  Troas—Cnllated  with  Tr.  x. 

14  —  IC.  On  Impropriety  or  Falsity,  &c. — Now  first  printed,  vol.  iii, 
p.  157-160. 

17,  18.     On  the  Dead  Sea— Collaled  with  Tract  x. 

19.  Of  what  kind  those  little  fishes — Collated  with  Tr.  iii. 

20—22.   On  Haman  hanged— Co//n^<f  with  Ps.  Ep.  v,  21. 

23—26.   On  Hawks  and  Hawking— CW/n/erf  with  Tr.  v. 

27 — ^0  and  50.   On  Languages,  but  intermixed  in  the  binding — Collated 
with  Tr.  viii,  and  various  readings  given,  vol.  iv,  p.  195-212. 

40 — 43.   On  Tumuli — Collaled  with  Tr.  ix. 

4  I— 4S.   De  I'este — Now  first  Printed,  iv,  277-380. 

49—55  and  57.   Urief  Reply  to  Queries — Ditto  iv,  281-286. 

55 — 57.   Ditto,  On  the  Jloopi  bird tysc. — ^  part  of  Tr.  iv. 

58,  59.     Mustek  of  the  Ancients,  &c. — Collated  with  Tr.  vi,  and  vii. 

59,  60.     Naval  Fights— Xow  first  printed,  iv,  287-289. 

60 — 85.   To  the  end  of  the  volume  extend  the  Latin  Tracts — And  are 
now  first  printed,  vol.  iv,  290-312. 

No.  6.  A  Genealogical  Account  of  the  Families  in  Suffolk,  with 
their  arms  variously  drawn  and  illuminated. 

Does  not  seem  to  have  passed  into  the  Sloanian  Collection ;  at  least  I  have  not 
been  able  to  trace  it. 

No.  7.  Modo  breve  a  prender  la  lengua  Biscayna.  Conipuesto 
por  ell"*"' Rafael  Nicoleta,  presby'^'de  la  muy  leal  y  noble  Villa  de 
Bilboa,  1653. 

Neither  can  I  find  this  in  Mus.  Br.     See  it  mentioned,  vol.  iv,  199. 

No.  8.  Receipts  for  making  Syrupi  et  Pilulae  Alterantes  et  pur- 
gantes. 

MS.  Sloan.  1828,  (No.  4,  Aysc.)  is  headed  aa  above,  with  "  Gvalteri  Charlton," 
in  addition,  .\yscough  calls  it,  Pharmacopoeia  Londinemis,  correct,  a  Gualt. 
Charlton. 

No.  9.  An  Account  of  the  Bishops  and  Deans  of  Norwich. 

Not  found  in  Mus.  Br.  This  was  probably  sold,  together  with  "  Reperto- 
rium,"  (No.  9,  4to. )  to  Curll,  tor  the  Posthumous  (forks.  I  have  not  re- 
printed it,  as  it  was  not  written  by  Sir  Thomas.  It  is  mentioned  in  the 
4th  Vol.  of  Ballard's  MS.  Letters  in  the  Bodleian  Library,  p.  58  ;  as  hav- 
ing been  printed  in  the  Posthumous  Works,  by  permission  of  the  Dean  of 
Norwich,  then  Dr.  Prideaux. 

No.  10.  Original  Letters  written  by  King  Charles  I. 

MS.  Sloan.  1828,  (No.  3,  .'Ujsc.J  This  is  called  by  Ayscough,  A'.  James  I, 
Letter  to  his  Parliametil,  Ifc.  ifc.  It  is  entered  in  Sr.  Hans  Sloane's  MS. 
Cat.,  Letters  by  King  James  and  King  Charles  the  First  to  tfie  Parliament. 

No.  11.  A  Genealogical  Account  of  the  Family  of  Norfolk. 

MS.  Sloan.  1928? 

No.    12.  Zoroastres,  a  Tragedy,  written    by  the  late    Earl  of 
Orrery,  also  a  Comedy. 

MS.  Sloan.  1828,  (Nos.  1  and  2,  Aysc.) 


468  ACCOUNT    OF    THE    MANUSCRIPTS 

No.  13.  Missale  Romanum,  upon  vellum. 

Numbered  1S29,  in  the  MS.  Sloanian  Catalogue;  but  not  now  bearing  that 
No.,  which  is  attached  to  an  8vo.  vol.  oi Remarks  on  French  Poetry,  S;c. 

No.  14.  Sir  Thos.  Browne's  Observations  upon  uncommon  Birds, 
Fish,  and  other  aniiuals  discovered  in  Norfolk. 

MS.  Sloan.  1830.  Besides  the  papers  on  Birds,  Fishes,  and  the  Ostrich, 
(printed  in  our  4th  vol.  pp.  313-339,)  this  vol.  contains  3  letters  to,  and 
2  from,  Dr.  Merrett,  (printed  vol.  i,  pp.  395-403;)  and  on  the  last  leaf  a 
memorandum  on  the  comparative  height  of  Antwerp  and  Utrecht  Steeples, 
and  St.  Peter's  at  Rome. 

No.  15.  Mr.  Thomas  Browne's  Journal  with  Sir  Jeremy  Smith, 
anno  1661,  to  Alicant,  Tangier,  &c.  with  curious  draughts. 

MS.  Sloan.  1910,  fol.  1-45— The  date  however  is  1665.— Printed,  vol.  i, 
p.  119-12S.  The  vol.  also  contains  Miscel.  No.  4,  No.  7,  and  4to.  No.  26, 
of  the  present  catalogue,  qu.  vide. 

No.  16.  An  account  of  Ancient  Medals. 

The  Sloanian  MS.  Cat.  adds  in  two  parts,  and  numbers  it  1832:  which 
number  however  is  now  attached  to  a  small  oblong  4to.  vol.  (see  Jysc. 
p.  384.)  I  am  inclined  to  think  the  present  article  may  be  MS.  Sloan.  1828, 
No.  5,  Aysc. ;)  which  is  a  catalogue  of  120  Roman  Coins,  in  two  parts. 

No.  17.  Anatomical  Dissections  of  several  creatures ;  with  exact 
draughts,  and  some  Physical  Tracts. 

I  am  persuaded  that  this  article  has  been  cut  up,  and  bound,  here  a  bit  and 
there  a.h\t.,  (comme  a  rordinaire,)m  MS.  Sloan.  1833,  amidst  other  and 
various  subjects; — viz.  lists  of  places  visited  by  Dr.  E.  B.,  books  which  he 
had  read,  Latin  Orations,  Collections  for  his  lectures,  recipes  and  prescrip- 
tions, medical  cases,  letters,  &c.  I  have  printed  a  very  small  portion  of  the 
vol.  viz.  Letters  ;  four  to  his  son  Edward,  one  to  Dr.  Merrett,  and  one  to 
Mr.  Talbot,  in  vol.  i,  pp.  222,  231,  291,  309,  393,  and  415.  BouUmia 
Centenaria;  Upon  the  dark  thick  mist,  ^-c. ;  and  Oratio,  Sfc,  vol.  iv,  pp. 
340-352. 

No.  18.  Relatione  della  Republica  di  Venetiafatta  dal  Marchess 
di  Bedmare,  Ambasc.  del  Re  Catt''^^' presso  della  Republica. 

MS.  Sloaii.  1834. 

No.  19.  An  account  of  Europe. 

See  the  next  article. 

No.  20.  An  account  of  Africa. 

MSS.  Sloan.  1836,  1837.  The  vols,  comprise  accounts  of  Europe,  Africa, 
and  Asia,  and  their  principal  states  and  countries,  in  1G75. 

Quarto. 
No.  1 .  Excerpta  e  Procli  Elementis,  &c. 

MS.  Sloan.  1838.  A  large  4to.  called  by  Ayscough  a  folio. — Proclus,  Elementa 
Theologica.  Very  probably  by  Dr.  Lushington  :  see  vol.  i,  p.  467,  Letter 
from  Browne  to  Aubrey. 


OF  SIR  THOMAS  AND  DR.  E.   RKCJWNi:.  4G9 

No.  2.  Miscellany  Tracts,  by  Sir  Thos.  Browne. 

MS.  Slonn.  18.J9,  fol.  1-48— Tracts  11,  10,  S— Collated  uitli  the  former  edi- 
tion. For  the  remaining  contents  of  No.  IS.'JO,  sec  articles,  -Ito.  14,  4,  15, 
16,  3,  and  37.  The  I'O  pages  intervening  between  the  hist  two  numbers 
are  occupied  by  a  series  of  Moral  Essays,  whicli  seem  not  enumerated  in 
tlie  present  catalogue. 

No.  3.  Physical  Receipts. 

MS.  Sloan.  1S39,  fol.  176-20(j. 

No.  4.  Observations  on  Sir  Thomas  Browne's  Vulgar  Errors. 

MS.  Sloan.  1839,  fol.  104-145.  This  was  written  by  Sir  llamon  L'Estrange, 
and  sent  by  him  to  Sir  Thos.  Br.  with  a  letter  dated  Jan.  16,  1053  ;  which 
I  have  printed  (vol.  i,  p.  3G9,  from  MS.  Raul.  391.)  See  notice  of  the 
MS.  vol.  ii,  p.  173. 

No.  5.  Critical  notes  upon  several  texts  of  Scripture,  by  Sir 
Thomas  Browne. 

MS.  Sloan.  1841,  fol.  191-262;  Collated  with  Tract  u 

No.  6.  Chemical  and  Alchemical  Receipts. 

MS.  Sloan.  1842.  See  Sir  Thomas's  detail  of  contents  of  the  volume  among 
Dee's  MSS.— vol.  ii,  p.  464. 

No.  7.  Tracts  by  Sir  Thomas  Browne:  viz,  1.  A  Dialogue  be- 
tween an  Inhabitant  of  the  Earth  and  of  the  Moon.  2.  A  Dialogue 
between  two  twins  in  the  womb,  concerning  the  world  they  were  to 
come  into,  and  other  pieces. 

Who  would  have  believed  that  a  volume  so  distinctly  described  as  containing 
Tracts  on  these  two  most  curious  subjects,  would  be  found,  on  examination, 
to  contain  nothing  more  than  the  titles  of  them  ?  Yet  such  is  the  fact. 
Surely  the  catalogue  must  have  been  drawn  up  either  with  intention  to  mis- 
lead, or  by  some  one  utterly  incompetent  to  the  task.  Sir  Hans  Sloane 
has  described  the  volume  as  containing  "  Subjects  for  Tracts,  i^-c.  ^-c."  and 
it  is  numbered  1843: — correctly. 

MS.  Sloan.  1843  is  a  commonplace  book,  a  very  thin  volume,  containing 
Anagrams,  Epigrams,  Mottoes,  and  detached  sentences,  among  which  occur 
the  two  in  question,  as  if  memoranda  for  tracts  to  be  written  ;  see  vol.  iv, 
379.  The  latter  of  the  two  subjects  is  mentioned  in  Jfi/driutajjliia  as  affording 
an  opportunity  "handsomely  to  illustrnte  our  ignorance  of  the  next  world, 
&c." — see  vol.  iii,  486. 

No.  8.  Differentia  Verborum  [  ?  ]  usuve  similium,  una  cum 
diversis  ejusdem  vocabuli  significationibus,  per  E.  Browne,  ]M.D. 

MS.  Sloan.  1844,  (1,  Jysc.) 

No.  9.  Repertorium,  or  some  account  of  the  Tombs  and  Monu- 
ments in  the  Cathedral  Church  of  Norwich,  1680. 

Not  in  Mus.  Br.   Probably  the  copy  used  in  printing  the  Posthumous  Works. 

No.  10.  A  Diary  of  the  Conferences  and  Proceedings  in  the 
Treaty  at  London,  1604,  between  King  James  I,  King  Philip  III, 
of  Spain,  and  Albertus  Archduke  of  Austria. 

MS.  Sloan-  1851. 


470  ACCOUNT    OF    THE    MANUSCRIPTS 

No.  11.  Physical  and  Chirurgical  Receipts. 

MS.  Sloan.  1852. 

No.  12.  A  Poetical  Paraphrase  on  the  VII  Penitential  Psalms, 
finely  written  upon  vellum. 

3IS.  Sloan.  1853. 

No.  13.  Speculum  Philosophise,  Johannis  Dastini. 

M.S'.  Sloan.  1854.     Mentioned  by  Browne,  among  Dee's  MSS.  vol.  i,  p.  465. 

No.  14.  Travels  in  Bohemia,  Austria,  &c.  by  Sir  Tho.  Browne. 

MS.  Sloan.  1839,  fol.  50-103,  probably. — From  the  name  attached  to  this  ar- 
ticle, it  is  clear  that  the  catalogue  was  drawn  up  by  some  one  ignorant  of  the 
history  of  the  family,  or  he  would  not  have  ascribed  these  Travels  to  the 
father  instead  of  the  son. 

No.  15.  Tractatus  de  Peste,  &c. 

MS.  Sloan.  1839,  fol.  146-161.  This  is  not  a  duplicate  of  the  paper  on  the 
plague,  printed  vol.  iv,  p.  277.  Ayscough  has  called  the  article  Qiuestiones 
Mediae. 

No.  16..  Fraus  Pia,  Comoedia.  Lat.  Elegant. 

MS.  Sloan.  1839,  fol.  162-175. 

No.  17.  Miscellaneous  Tracts,  written  by  the  Lord  Bacon,  Sir 
Walter  Raleigh,  Oliver  St.  John's,  &c.  Also  Speeches  in  the 
House  of  Lords,  in  the  Reign  of  Charles  I,  with  other  papers. 

MS.  Sloan.  1856,  (Nos.  1-11,  ^ysc.) 

No.  18.  Theriaca  Divina  Benedict!;  scripsit  Anno  1599. 

MS.  Sloan.  1857.     Among  Dee's  MSS.  see  vol.  i,  p.  464. 

No.  19.  A  Course  of  Chemistry. 

Not  found  in  the  museum.  The  Sloanlan  catalogue  numbers  it  1858;  but  Mis'. 
Sloan.  1858  is  a  very  different  thing. 

No.  20.  An  Historical  and  Chorographical  Description  of  Suf- 
folk, written  in  the  year  1602. 

Not  found. 

No.  21.  Moral  Discourses,  English,  upon  vellum,  very  ancient. 

MS.  Sloan.  1859. 

No.  22.  A  Game  at  Chesse,  a  Comedy,  written  by  Tho.  Mid- 
dleton,  an.  1620. 

Not  found. 
No.  23.  Tractatus  Varii,  per  T.  Browne,  M.D. 

In  the  Sloanian  catalogue  this  is  said  to  he  per  Sir  Thos.  Browne,  M.D.  and 
is  numbered  1860  ;  which  however  is  not  to  be  found  in  Mus.  Brit.  See 
the  remarks  under  the  next  article. 


OF  SIR  THOMAS  AND  DH.   K.   HKOWNE.  471 

No.  24.  An  Account  of  a  Voyac;e  to  F.ast  India.  Also  several 
Letters  from  Dr.  Edward  Browne  to  Sir  Thomas,  relating  to  Anti- 
quities, &c.  in  foreign  parts,  never  printed. 

In  Cat.  Sloan,  numbered  ISGl.  In  Mus.  Br.  I  found  a  vol.  numbered  1  SCO- 
ISC  1,  containing  the  articles  in  the  present  number,  but  not  the  Tractatus 
f'arii,  which  therefore  is  nussing.  Ayscough  however  catalogues  18C0  as 
containing  the  f'oyage  of  M.  Escaliot  (which  is  primed,  vol.  iv,  p.  43)  and 
the  letters,  some  few  of  which  also  are  printed;  i,  pp.  154,  15S,  )G9,  171, 
18C  :  but  of  18C1,  he  says  dcest :  but  erroneously  ;  for  it  is  ISCO  which  deest. 

No.  25.  Concerning  some  Urns  found  in  Brampton  Field  in 
Norfolk,  1667. 

In  my  preface  to  Garden  of  Ci/rus,  Ilydriotaph'ia,  and  Brampton  Urns,  I  have 
conjectured  the  copy  of  the  latter,  contained  in  1SG2,  fol.  2G-37,  to  have 
been  that  from  which  Curll  printed.  Perhaps  however  it  is  more  probable 
that  it  was  a  duplicate,  as  well  as  those  in  18C9,  p.  CO — and  MS.  Rawl. 
391. — No.  1SC2  now  contains  mere  sketches  of  passages  for  several  of  his 
works — \\z.  Hydriotaphia  and  Christian  Morals,  fol.  1-8,  and  ."8-94  ;  Letter 
to  a  Friend,  8-25  ;  Brampton  Cms,  2G-37.  It  forms  one  volume  with 
1806,  and  is  in  fact,  a  Commonplace  Book. 

No.  26.  The  Diary  of  George  Weldon  and  Abraham  Navarro's 
Journey  to  the  Court  of  the  Great  Mogul,  anno  1688,  with  the 
account  of  an  Expedition  to  Carthagena. 

MS.  Sloan.  1910,  fol.  89— fin. 

No.  27.  An  Historical  and  Chorograpliical  Description  of  Norfolk. 

Probably  with  No.  20. 

No.  28.  Chymical  Experiments. 

MS.  Sloan.  1863? 

No.  29  and  30.  Traite  de  rEuchariste. 

MS.  Sloan.  18C4. 

No.  31.  Treatise  of  Geography  and  other  Tracts. 

.^fS.  Sloan.  1SC5  ?  It  is  possible  that  this  may  be  the  voliunc  ;  but  I  strongly 
doubt  it,  and  if  it  be,  it  is  very  ill  described.  It  contains  in  Dr.  Ed.  B's 
hand  writing,  Prescriptions,  Anatomical  Observations,  many  pages  of  Ex- 
tracts from  various  authors,  Hobbes's  I)e  Mirabilibus  Pecci,  a  paper  of  36 
pages,  Inititiilioiies  Logicie,  and  Flamstcad's  .Account  of  the  Comet  of  IfiSO. 
Besides  these,  is  an  account  of  Europe,  in  the  early  part  of  the  volume,  and 
this  is  the  only  geographical  paper  it  contains. 

No.  32.  Commonplace  Book,  by  Sir  Thomas  Browne. 

Sir  Hans  Sloane's  catalogue  determines  this  to  be  the  MS.  Sloan.  No.  1866: 
yet  I  have  preferred  to  select  my  specimens  of  his  Commonplace  Books 
from  1869,  1874,  and  1875— only  comparing  ISOG  with  the  others  in 
similar  passages.  The  only  extract  I  havi-  printed  from  it,  is  the  Account 
of  a  Thunderstorm," — at  p.  353,  vol.  iv,  and  some  latin  passages  at  p.  453. 

No.  33.  Holy  Bible  Epitomized,  in  latin  verse,  upon  vellum. 

MS.  Sloan.  1870. 


472  ACCOUNT    OF   THE    MANUSCRIPTS 

No.  34.  Verses,  Epigrams,  &c.  English  and  Latin. 

MS.  Sloan.  1867. 

No.  35.  Letters  from  Dr.  Edward  Browne  in  his  Travels. 

MS.  Sloan.  1868.  Many  printed  in  the  early  part  of  vol.  i,  from  page  60 
10  114. 

No.  36.  Essays  upon  several  subjects,  by  Sir  Thos.  Browne. 

MS.  Sloan.  1869?  This  number  has  supplied  a  considerable  portion  of  the 
Commonplace  Books  which  I  have  printed;  see  iv,  p.  381.  It  contains  a 
copy  of  Brampton  Urns,  fol.  60. 

No.  37.  Oratio  Celeberrima  Dom  T.  Browne,  coram  Prs.  Coll. 
Med. 

MS.  Sloan.  1839,  fol.  299-316  and  1833,  fol.  146-150,  See  vol.  iv,  343. 

No.  38.  Probationes  ex  Grotio.  Graece. 

MS.  Sloan.  1872. 

No.  39.  Thomas  Norton's  Ordinal,  being  a  Treatise  of  x\lchymie 
in  Verse;  very  ancient;  neatly  written. 

MS.  Sloan.  1873.     Among  Dee's  MSS.  vol.  i,  464. 

No.  40.  A  Book  of  the  Use  of  the  Crosse  StafFe,  by  Thos  Gol- 
ding;  written  in  1660. 

MS.  Sloan.  1874,  fol.  1-17. 

No.  41.  Ordinances  made  by  the  Lord  Keeper  Coventry,  with  the 
advice  and  assistance  of  Sir  Julius  Csesar,  master  of  the  RoUes, 
for  the  Redress  of  Sundry  Errors,  Defaults  and  Abuses  in  the  High 
Court  of  Chancery, 

MS.  Sloan.  1874,  fol.  18-20. 

No.  42.  Brevis  Aniraalium  Adumbratio  ad  mentem  et  methodum 
Peripatheticani. 

71/^.  Sloan.  1874,  fol.  21-37. 

No.  43.  Fragmenta  Miscellanea,  by  Sir  T.  Browne. 

MS.  Sloan.  1874,  fol.  38-91.  For  Notes  in  Aristotelem, — a  portion  of  these 
"I'ragmenta,"  See  vol  iv,  360. 

No.  44.  Museum  Clausum;  orBibliotheca  Abscondita;  containing 
some  remarkable  things.  Books,  Antiquities,  Pictures,  Rarities  of 
several  kinds,  scarce  or  never  seen  by  any  man  living.  By  Sir 
Thos.  Browne. 

MS.  Sloan.  1874,  fol.  ^2-\\(i— Collated  with  Tract  xiii,  vol.  iv,  p.  239. 

No.  46.2  Area  Arcanorum,  abstrusae  HermeticseScientiae  Ingres- 
'  No  45  is  omitted  in  MS. 


OF  SIR  THOMAS  AND  DR.  E.  BROWNE.  473 

sum,  Projrcssuni,  Coronidem,  verbis  apertissimis  explicans.  Ex 
selectissiuiis,  et  celebenimis  Authoribus  cullecta,  et  antehac  a 
nemine  hac  methodo  distributa.  Opera  et  Studio  Arthuri  Dee, 
RIagni  Imperatoris  totius  Russioe,  per  annos  bis  septeni,  Archiatri. 

MS.  Sloan.  1876. 

No.  47.  Physical  receipts  by  Dr.  Ponder. 
MS.  Sloan.  1877. 

No.  48.  (Left  Blank  in  MS.) 

Note.  Xo  187S  is  a  volume  of  Medical  instructions  apparently  from  Dr.  E.  B. 
to  his  Son.  But  we  have  no  other  ground  for  placing  it  here  than  the  order 
of  its  number. 

No.  49.  Occasional  Reflections  on  Several  Subjects  by  Sir.  Thos. 
Browne. 

MS.  Sloan.  \S7A,  fol.  111-167.  On  Dreams,  fol.  111-120,  voliv,  35b~CoUaled 
with  1869,  Commonplace  Book,  iv,  381,  &:c. 

No.  50.    An  Account  of  the  Emperor's  Curiosities,  by  Sir.  T. 
Browne. 

MS.  Sloan.  1874,  fol.  lCS-177.     By  Dr.  E.  B.  and  printed  in  his  Travels. 

No.  51.  A  Volume  of  Italian  Poetry,  neatly  ^oritten. 

MS.  Sloan.  1880. 

No.  52.  The  Golden  Rotation,  Conversion,  Circulation,  Purifi- 
cation, and  Concatenation  of  the  Elements, 
MS.  Sloan.  1881. 

No.  53.  A  Treatise  of  Generation.     By  Sir  Thomas  Browne. 

MS.  Sloan.  1882,  fol.  125-151.  The  title  ought  to  have  been  A  treatise  on 
the  Generation  of  Plants: — or,  as  Sir  Thomas  would  have  called  it,  On  the 
doctrine  of  Insitions.  In  the  middle  of  this  paper  occurs  a  memorandum 
of  some  fossil  bones  dug  up  at  Winterton,  printed,  vol.  iv,  p.  454 :  and  at  fol. 
145-6,  the  first  paragrapii  of  the  Account  of  Fishes,  printed  at  p.  325,  vol.  iv. 

No.  54.  Antiquities  in  the  City  of  Norwich,  by  Sir  Thos.  Browne. 

MS.  Sloan.  1885,  fol.  1-4  ?  This  is  but  a  slight  sketch  for  the  licpcrtorium  :  and 
the  Volume  consists  of  similar  brouillons  for  his  other  works,  Christian  Morals 
especially. 

No.  55.  Physical  Receipts  by  Dr.  Ponder. 

MS.  Sloan.  1883? 

Octavo. 

No.  1.  Observations  upon  several  parts  of  France,  &c. 

MS.  Sloan.  1SS6,  fol.  1-11  and  32-52.  The  rest  of  the  Volume  consists  of 
French  exercises,  and  Medical  receipts,  extracts,  and  memoranda. 

No.  2.   Physical  receipts  by  Dr.  Tearnc. 

MS.  Sloan.  1887. 

VOL.  IV.  2  I 


474  ACCOUNT    OF    THE    MANUSCRIPTS 

No.  3.  Speculum  Salutifcrum,  Boni  et  Mali,  upon  Vellum. 
MS.  Sloan.  1888. 

No.  4.  Old  English  Epigrams. 
MS.  Sloan.  1889. 

No.  5.  A  Treatise  of  Anatomy,  by  Dr.  Tearne. 

MS.  Sloan.  1890. 

No.  6.   Algebra  and  Analytical  Arithmetick,  in  two  Books,  by 
Thos.  Golding,  1660. 

MS.  Sloan.  1891. 

No.  7.   The  Alcoran,  in  Arabic,  on  Persian  Paper,  pointed  and 
ruled  with  gold. 

Not  found  in  Br.  Museum. 
No.  8.  Physical  Receipts,  by  Dr.  Edward  Browne. 

MS.  Shan.  1892. 

No.  9.  The  Investigation  of  Causes,  neatly  written. 

Written  on  large  8vo.  paper,  bound  in  a  4to.  vol.  No.  1893.  One  of  Dee's 
Mss. — see  vol.  i,  464. 

No.  10.  Chirurgical  Receipts,  by  I.  S.  Surgeon. 

MS.  Sloan.  1894. 

No.  11.  Physical  Receipts,  by  Sir  Theodore  Mayerne,  &c. 

1895.  This  Vol.  is  all  in  Dr.  E.  B's.  hand-writing.  Besides  Sir  T.  Mayerne's, 
it  contains  a  vast  number  of  the  receipts  of  other  medical  men:  some  for 
the  Plague,  with  the  initials  T.  B.  attached;  many  used  at  St.  Thomas's  and 
Bartholomew's  Hospitals:  among  a  number  of  Dr.  E.  B's  patients,  are 
mentioned  some  persons  of  rank. 

No.  12.  Poems  written  by  Robert  Smith,  &c.  Sufferers  in  Q. 
Mary's  Day. 

MS.  Sloan.  1896. 

No.  13.  Methodus  curand.  Morbis,  per  C.  Tearne,  M.D. 

MS.  Sloan.  1897. 

No.  14.  Tractatus  varii:     viz.  1.  Series  Regum  West-Saxonum. 
2.  Diarium  Itineris  Gall.     3.  Inscriptiones  Antiquce,  &c. 
MS.  Sloan.  1898. 

No.  1 5.  Dr.  Thos.  Browne's  journal  of  his  Travels  to  several  parts 
of  England,  in  Company  with  Dr.  Robert  Plot.  Anno  1693. 

MS.  Sloan.  1S99.    The  Vol.  is  in  the  younger  Dr.  T.  Browne's  hand-writing, 
and  contains  at  the  close  some  inscriptions  from  gravestones,  in  pencil.     The 
our  will  be  found  vol.  iv,  p.  457. 


OF  SIR  THOMAS  AND  Dll.  E.  BROWNE.  475 

No.  16.  Remarks  on  several  parts  of  England,  anno  1662. 

MS.Slvan.  1900: printed  vol.  i,  p.  22-12.     It  contains  also  bills  of  cxpences, 

a  list  of  plays,  prescriptions,  &c. 

No.  17.  Statuta  Collcgii  Medicorum  Loudinensium. 

MS.  Sloan.  1901. 

No.  18.  HermeticiE  Philosophioc  Medulla,  upon  vellum. 

MS.  Sloan.  1902.  Called  by  Ayscough,  Arthur  Dee's  collections,  &;c.  in  Astro- 
logy, tvith  Jigures  of  some  nativities.  Yet  the  title  given  in  the  present 
cat.  occurs  in  the  volume.  Among  the  Nativities  I  find  Johannis  Dee,  na- 
tus  1606,  with  some  others  of  his  family — see  vol.  i,  'ICl. 

No.   19.  Oratio  Dom.  C.  Tearne,  coram  Pra}s.  Coll.  Med.  in 
laudera  G.  Hervei,  M.D. 

MS.  Sloan.  1903. 

No.  20.  Statuta  Nova  CoUegii  Medicorum,  Lend.  1687. 

MS.  Sloan.  1904. 

No.  21.  Observations   on  several  parts  of  Turkey,  by  Dr.  E. 
Browne. 

MS.  Sloan.  1905. 

No.  22.  Dr.   Edw.    Browne's   Journal   of   his  Travels  through 
France,  &c. 

MS.  Sloan.  1906:  printed  vol.  i,  p.  65. 

No.  23.  Icon  Basilike.  Vers.  Lat.  neatly  written. 

A/5.  Sloan.  1907. 

No.  24.  Dr.  Ponder's  Journal  of  his  Travels  though  France. 

MS.  Sloan.  190S,  is  called  by  Ayscough,  Dr.  E.  Ts.  Journal  of  his  Travels 
through  France  in  16G8  :  I  have  little  doubt  of  its  identity  with  this  article. 
Though  (on  that  supposition)  the  present  catalogue  is  wrong  both  in  the 
traveller's  name  and  the  scene  of  his  travels.  Ayscougii  has  corrected 
the  former  but  retained  the  latter  error.  The  whole  volume  is  written  by 
Dr.  E.  B.  and  is  a  regular  Journal  of  his  travels  in  Holland,  Germany  and 
Austria  from  Aug.  2(3,  1668,  to  July  21,  1G69.  See  vol.  i,  461.  pp.  151- 
191.  It  contains  the  Greek  letter  to  Dr.  Pearson  and  others  at  Cambridge; 
sec  p.  171. 

No.  25.  Collection  of  Romish  Missals,  Lat.  upon  Vellum. 

MS.  Sloan.  1909. 

No.  26 Scriptus  fuit,  120.5,  a  quodum  Monacho  Monasterii 

Rochiensis  in  Comitat.  Eboracensi  nomine  Britom,  critico  maximo. 
I  cannot  find  this  in  Mu5.  Brit.  In  Sir  H.  L's  MS.  Cat.  it  is  called  Glostarium. 


476  ACCOUNT    OF    THE    MANUSCllIPTS,    ETC. 


Miscellaneous  Papers,  &c. 

No.  1.  Nouvelles  Figures  de  Proportion  et  d'Anatomie  du 
Corps  Humain. 

Not  found  in  Br.  Museum. 

No.  2.  A  collection  of  90  very  curious  drawings  (some  in  colours) 
of  public  buildings,  habits,  fishes,  mines,  rocks,  tombs,  and  other 
antiquities,  observed  by  Sir  Thos.  and  Dr.  Edwd.  Browne,  in  their 
travels. 

MS.  Addit.  5233 ;  large  folio. 

No.  3.  A  large  draught,  (in  colours)  of  the  Island  of  Jamaica, 
presented  by  Captain  Hacke  to  King  Charles  II,  done  on  a  skin 
of  parchment. 

No.  4.  An  account  of  Persia,  16  sheets,     English. 
MS.  Sloan.  1910,  fol.  46-76. 

No.  5.  Draught  of  a  strange  bird  (in  colours,)  on  a  large  sheet 
of  royal  paper. 

Not  found  in  Br.  Museum. 

No.  6.  Historical  and  Philosophical  collections,  by  Dr.  Tearne. 
MS.  Sloan.  1916,  21.     No  1884  is  also  one  of  the  Tearne  MSS.  but  is  in  4to. 

No.  7.  Notes  taken  out  of  the  General  History  of  the  Turks 
before  the  rising  of  the  Othoman  Family,  with  all  the  Notable 
expeditions  of  the  Christian  Princes  against  them,  by  Richard 
Knolles,  once  Fellow  of  Lincoln  College  in  Oxford,  1603. 

MS.  Sloan.  1910,  77-89. 
No.  8.  A  Journey  from  Genoa  to  Bordeaux. 

Not  found  in  Br.  Museum. 

No.  9.  A  catalogue  of  medals. 
Possibly  this  may  be  MS.  Sloan.  1923. 

No.  10.  Papers  of  Dr.  Edwd.  Browne,  designed  as  a  Supple- 
ment to  his  Travels. 

MS.  Shan.  1922. 

No.  11.  Collection  of  Plants. 


(Central  Sfntjcjc* 


GENERAL  INDEX. 


A.  B.  Strictures  on  Digby's  Observations 
on  R.  M.  ii,  xxx. 

Abgarus,  king  of  Edessa,  his  picture  of 
our  Saviour,  iii,  111. 

Abraliam,  picture  of,  sacrificing  Isaac, 
P.  E.  V,  ch.  8,  iii,  113,  114.  How 
incorrect;  Isaac  not  then  a  little  boy, 
113,  A  type  of  Ciirist  bearing  his 
cross,  ib.  Slore  absurd  pictures  of 
this  incident,  ib.  n.  His  grave  at 
Beersheba,  392. 

Absalom,  whether  hanged  by  his  hair? 
iii,  328. 

Acadfmia  naturep  ciiriosorum,  i,  309. 

Aconitum  liyemale,  in  flower  in  Jan.  i,  48. 

Acta  eruditomm,  i,  Ixv,  n.  Remarks 
un  R.  M.  and  on  the  author,  ii,  xv,  n. 

ActsEon,  fable  of  explained,  ii,  221. 

Adam,  whether  an  hermaphrodite,  ii,  30. 
Thought  by  some  to  have  been  thirty 
years  old  at  his  creation,  57.  Au- 
gustine hereon,  ib.  n.  Whether  a 
negro?  iii,  272.   His  apple,  what,  296. 

Adaro  and  Eve  drawn  with  navels,  P.  E. 

V,  ch.  5,  iii,  99-102.  By  whom  so 
drawn,  90  and  99,  n.  incorrectly — and 
why,  99-102.  This  opinion  examin- 
ed and  controverted,  99,  n.  Adopted 
by  Dr.  J.  Buhver,  100,  n.  Still  more 
absurd  pictures  of,  99,  n. 

Adam,  Dr.  Walter,  on  the  osteological 
symmetry  of  the  camel,  &c.  iii,  424,  n. 

.\dams,  description  of  England,  with 
maps,  i,  33S. 

Adipo-cire,  iii,  479. 

Adolphus  Cyprus,  i,  Ixxiii. 

yElian  Claudius,  his  Hist.  Animalium  and 
I'aria  Ilistoria  contain  some  false, 
some  impossible  things,  ii,  23S. 

itlneas  Sylvius,  his  epp.  quoted,  i,  188. 

iEschylus,  said  to  have  been  brained  by 
a  tortoise  dropped  by  an  eagle  on  his 
pate  in  mistake  for  a  rock,  iii,  305. 
An  argument  drawn  from  this  against 
the  motion  of  the  earth,  ib. 


^sop,  his  Fables,  done  into  Eng.  by 
L'Estrange,  i,  370,  n. 

iEtites,  or  eaglcstone,  fabled  to  promote 
delivery,  ii,  3j(j.     What  it  is,  355,  n. 

yEtius,  mention  of  the  basilisk,  ii,  414. 

Agat,  his  collection,  i,  103. 

Agen,  E.  B.  at,  i,  105. 

Agricola,  Geo.  De  Mineral,  et  Metall.  i, 
183,  185,  1S8. 

Agriculture,  Jewish,  iv,  152.  Ancient, 
155. 

Agues,  a  powder  against,  i,  47.  Quar- 
tan, many  cases,  228.  Seldom  twice, 
227.  At  what  seasons,  2G6.  A  charm 
against,  iii,  182. 

Ahasuerus,  iii,  ICO. 

Ahaz,  sundial  of,  iii,  142,  297,  n. 

.\ikin,  John,  M.  D.  his  life  of  B. ;  parti- 
culars respecting,  i,  Pref.  11,  n.  Re- 
probates the  asperity  of  German  criti- 
cism on  Br.  Ixviii.  Remarks  on  B. 
Ixxxiii. 

Air,  Boyle's  Experiments  on,  i,  1G9. 
Curious  particulars  respecting  its  na- 
ture, ii,  485-489.  Safety  lamps,  489,  n. 
Change  of,  sometimes  too  late  to  try, 
iv,  38. 

Aix,  see  Aken. 

.\ken,  [or  Aix-la-chapelle,]  i,  Ixxix,  243. 
E.  B's.  account  of,  102. 

Albertus,  Magnus,  his  works  on  natural 
science  to  be  received  with  caution, 
ii,  241.  His  error  concerning  crystal, 
267.  Says  that  garlick  hinders  the 
attraction  of  loadstone,  306.  Says 
the  diamond  is  broke  by  goat's  blood, 
334. 

Alboin,  tragical  history  of  alluded  to, 
iii,  370.     More  correctly  stated,  ib.  n. 

Alboran,  a  desolate  island,  T.  B's.  ac- 
count of,  i,  123. 

D'Albrct,  family  of,  kings  of  Navarre, 
lords  of  Pons,  i,  18. 

Alchymy,  B's.  opinions  respecting,  i, 
xcvi. 

.■Mciat,  J.  Emhlemata,  ii,  xxv. 

Alcoran,  see  Koran. 


480 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


Aldouvrand,  his  Museum,  i,  89.  Names 
in  Dutch  and  Latin,  177.  Quoted, 
326,  330,  331. 

Aldrovandus,  see  Aldouvrand. 

Alexander,  Dp.  iv,  IG. 

Alexander  the  Great,  why  represented 
on  an  elephant,  iii,  127.  His  dream, 
iv,  357.  Some  incidents  respecting, 
418,  419. 

Alexander  VII,  Pope,  Jesuits  readmitted 
into  Venice  by  the  influence  of,  ii,  xxi. 

Alexander  ab  Alexandre,  Geniales  Dies, 
ii,  3,  n. 

Alexandrian  library,  loss  of  deplored, 
ii,  35. 

Algiers,  Guiland  fled  to,  i,  106.  Sir  T. 
Allen  made  peace  with,  169,  346. 

Alicant,  T.  B's.  account  of,  i,  124. 

Allen,  Sir  Thomas,  a  friend  of  Sir  T. 
B's.  i,  131.  Commandant  of  Swan- 
wick  castle,  137  and  n.  At  Ply- 
mouth with  a  squadron,  147.  His 
high  opinion  of  T.  B.  151.  Made 
peace  with  Algiers,  169. 

Ahnanzor,  ii,  209. 

Almonds  bitter ;  whether  an  antidote 
against  drunkenness,  ii,  374.  Aaron's 
rod  producing,  iv,  189,  140,  450. 

Alnwick,  Wm.  Bp.  iv,  17.  Statue  of,  21. 

Aloe  tree,  E.  B.  saw  flower,  i,  99.  One 
in  Guernsey  castle,  103, 

Alsted,  J.  H.  prof,  of  theology  in  Nas- 
sau, his  Pyrotechiiia,  i,  358. 

Alvarez,  the  Jesuit,  his  account  of  porce- 
lain, ii,  353. 

Amber,  where  found  and  how  large,  i, 
397.     Accounts  of,  411.     Black,  445. 

Amber  and  Jet,  the  electricks  of  the 
ancients,  ii,  320.  B's.  opinion  re- 
specting them,  330.  Said  not  to  at- 
tract basil,  ih.  Ancient  opinions  re- 
specting its  nature,  331.  Modern 
ditto,  ib.  n.    Flies  in,  333,  n. 

Ambergriese,  what,  ii,  517,  n. 

Ambrosius,  his  Ilcrameron,  ii,  240.  Says 
the  elcpliant  lias  no  joints,  3S7.  On 
John  Baptist's  food,  iii,  320. 

America,  lay  buried  ibr  thousands  of 
years,  iii,  455.  How  peopled,  iv,  402, 
403.  South,  voyage  to  S.  coast  of, 
i,  450. 

Americans,  make  their  garlands  and 
crowns  of  feathers  as  well  as  flowers, 
iv,  170. 

yhnico  Clarissimo,  de  enecante  Garrulo 
Suo,  iv,  309-312. 

ylmico  Opus  Arduum  Medilanti,  iv,  290- 
293. 

Amphisb.xna,  that  it  has  two  heads,  P. 
i-;.  iii,  ch.  15,  ii,  455-458.  By  whom 
afl[irmed,  456.     Its  improbability,  456, 


457.     Occasion  of  it,  457.     Descrip- 
tion  of  tlie    animal,    ib.   n.     Similar 
mistakes    respecting  the  scolopendra, 
458. 
Amphitheatre,  at  Bourdeaux,  i,  3,   17, 

105.  Perigueux,    7.      Xainctes,    18, 

106.  Rome,  77.  Verona,  most  en- 
tire extant,  99.  Aries,  102.  Monaco, 
100. 

Amsterdam,  E.  B.  at,  i,  Ixxviii,  155. 

Amulets,  some  remarks  on,  ii,  340,  n. 

Amyot,  Jaques,  Bp.  of  Auxerre,  first 
translator  of  Plutarch's  Lives,  i,  332. 

Amyot,  Thomas,  Esq.  F,  R.  S.,  Treas. 
Soc.  Ant.,  assistance  rendered  by  him 
to  the  editor  in  preparing  this  edition, 
i,  Pref.  16. 

Anabaptists,  risings  of,  in  London,  i,  4. 

Anatomy,  comparative,  of  the  bear,  i, 
251.  Boar,  217.  Brain,  217.  Bus- 
tard, 311.  Camel,  215.  Dolphin, 
210.  Elephant,  215.  Fishes,  364. 
Glutton,  217.  Monkey,  46,  &c.  Por- 
poise, 254. 

Anatomy  epitomized,  see  Gibson. 

Anatomy,  practical,  the  foundation  of 
medical  science,  i,  356. 

Anaxagoras,  ii,  75.  Quoted  by  mistake 
for  Anaxarchus,  ib.  n.  Affirms  that 
snow  is  black,  263. 

Ancenis,  city,  walls  and  castles  rased,  i, 
21. 

Ancient  writers,  many  of  their  sayings 
too  highly  extolled,  ii,  223.  Their 
authority  often  adduced  where  none  is 
needed,  224,  Curious  example  of  this, 
ib.  n. 

Ancona,  E.  B.  at,  i,  89,  95. 

Andreas,  an  ancient  writer  on  popular 
errors,  ii,  180.  Brief  note  respecting, 
ib.  n. 

Angels,  guardian,  ii,  34,  M,  Their 
courteous  revelations,  45,  47.  Hist, 
of  writers  on,  45,  n.  47,  n.  Dr.  John- 
son's belief  in,  46,  n.  Not  a  new 
opinion  of  the  church  of  Rome,  but  an 
old  one  of  Pythagoras  and  Plato.  Por- 
phyry's definition  of,  48.  Their  na- 
ture, ib.  Opinions  of  Epicurus  and 
Augustin  on,  ib.  n.  Their  nature  and 
abode,  50.  Writers  thereon,  ib.  n. 
Deceivable  as  well  as  man,  187. 

Angers,  capital  of  Anjou,  frequented  by 
nobility,  i,  21.      E.  B.  at,  106. 

Anguish,  Aid.  Alex,  of  Norwich,  i,  xcii,n. 

Animals,  that  sleep  all  winter,  i,  363. 
Noticed  by  Sir  T.  B.  393. 

Anise,  iv,  134. 

Annibal,  his  marches  traced,  iv,  405 — 
408. 

Anomai,  ii,  17,  n. 


GENERAL    INDEX, 


481 


Answer  to  queries  relating  to  fishes,  birds, 
and  iusecls,  Tr.  4,  iv,  1S2  — 185. 
1.  What  fishes  are  those  called  halve 
and  mugil?  1S2.  2.  Concerning  the 
hoopoe  and  those  birds  called  halcyon, 
nijsits,  ciris,  nycticorax?  183,  184. 
3.   What  is  the  ficarfa.''   ISj. 

Ant,  see  Tisniire. 

Anthropoinorpiiitcs,  heresy  of  the,  advo- 
cated hy  Biddle,  whom  Dr.  Owen  an- 
swered, 195  n. 

Anticyra,  famous  for  hellebore,  ii,  211. 

Antimony  and  ore  wanted  by  the  Sec.  to 
the  R.  Soc.  i,  172.  Two  sorts  of,  173. 
Kegtilus  of — its  medical  cflicacy  ex- 
amined, ii,  341.  Particulars  respect- 
ing the  antimonial  cup,  341,  n. 

Antipater,  kept  his  birth-day  iv,  41,381. 

Antipathies,  disclaimed  as  to  anything, 
ii,  85.  National,  SG,  n.  Sympathies, 
&:c.  list  of  writers  upon,  242. 

Antipodes,  denied  by  Augustin,  ii,  227. 
.Xsserted  by  ^■irgilius,  ;i9,  n. 

Antiquities,  B's.  slender  respect  for  them, 
ii,  41 

Antiquities  and  Rarities,  list  of,  iv,  247 — 
250. 

Antiquity,  obstinate  adherence  to,  a  cause 
of  error,  P.  E.  i,  ch.  C,  ii,  214-224. 
Its  fables  increase  the  danger  of  ad- 
herence to  it,  219. 

Antwerp,  E.  B.  at,  i,  Ixxviii,  15f).  Cita- 
del, 207. 

Apicius,  De  Re  CuUnaria,  iv,  305-308, 

Apocryphal  Scriptures,  ii,  256,  n. 

Apparitions  of  plants,  ii,  5G,  n. 

Apparitions  and  ghosts,  B.  attributes  to 
the  devil,  ii,  5C.  Opinions  of  others, 
ib.  n. 

Apuleius  suspected  of  magic,  ii,  1,  n. 
His  apology  in  answer  to  the  charge, 
ib.  His  Jitreus  .tsinus  stolen  from 
Lucius  I'ratensis,  217. 

Aquapendente,  a  medical  author  to  be 
read,  i,  357. 

Aqueduct,  at  Arcueil,  i,  CS.  Frejus, 
101.      Loretn,  95.      Xainctes,  IS. 

Aquila  Gesneri,  found  in  Ireland,  iv,  313. 

Arabians,  diet  of,  li,  85,  n.  Heresy  of 
the,  11.  \\  hat  it  was;  Pope  John 
22nd  fell  into  it ;  successfully  opposed 
by  Origen,  11,  n. 

.\rabic  historians  of  Egypt,  Vanslcb 
drew  from,  i,  221.  Physicians,  if 
worth  reading,  3fi0. 

Arbenga,  town  and  island,  i,  100. 

Archidoxes,  ii,  27, 

Archimedes,  his  setting  fire  to  the  ships 
of  Marcellus  examined,  iii,  3C4. 

Arden,  declared  himself  the  Messias,  ii, 
199. 


Arembold,  Bp.  treasurer  of  indulgences, 
ii,  3,  n. 

Areihusa,  river,  ii,  10.  Fountain,  men- 
tioned by  Seneca,  Strabo,  and  Swin- 
borne,  ib.  n. 

Argiers,  see  Algiers. 

Aristoteles,  his  idea  of  fortitude,  i,  149, 
FuUilled  in  T.  B.  150.  Obs.  on  ele- 
phants, 215.  Porpoises,  254.  Stags, 
278.  Milk,  312.  Muscles,  mistaken, 
322.  Conceived  the  world  eternal,  ii, 
16.  Not  likely  to  have  drowned  him- 
self on  account  of  the  flux  and  reflux 
of  Guripus,  104.  Some  errors  no- 
ticed, 21G.  Defended,  ib.  n.  On  the 
period  of  gestation,  228.  His  opinion 
considered,  ib.  n.  Natural  history  of 
the  elephant,  383,  n.  386,  n.  Said 
that  a  horse  has  no  gall,  396.  His 
meaning  cleared,  ib.  n.  On  the  alleg- 
ed longevity  of  deer,  424.  Counte- 
nances the  fable  of  the  salamander, 
452,  And  the  viper,  458.  Respect- 
ing the  mole,  473.  On  the  eyes  of 
snails,  &c.  479,  On  comets,  iii,  292,  n. 
On  the  vineal  plantations  of  Greece, 
391,  Dc  Mtragalo  aut  talc,  IV,  'ids. 
NotfE  in,  3G0-3C6.  His  remarks  on 
mad  dogs,  404. 

Aristotle's  death,  P.  E.  vii,  ch.  13,  iii, 
332-338.  Generally  supposed  that  he 
drowned  himself  in  Guripus,  because 
he  could  not  explain  its  flux  and  re- 
flux, 332.  Very  improbable,  333. 
Other  accounts  of,  ib.  The  locality 
of  Euripus,  332.  The  fact  of  its  flux 
and  reflux  not  clear,  334.  Contra- 
dicted by  Duloir,  335.  Another  hy- 
pothesis proposed,  336.  Modes  of 
accounting  for  such  phenomena,  337. 

Ark,  the,  how  could  it  contain  all  the  crea- 
tures, ii,  31.  Fragments  of  the  wood 
of  it  in  the  days  of  Josephus,  iii,  472, 

Aries,  E.  B.  writes  from,  i,  Ixxvii,  100. 

Armstrong,  his  Hist,  of  Norfolk  quoted, 
i,  3G9,  n. 

Arrowsmiih,  of  a  Norwich  family,  travels 
with  Ld.  Bruce,  i,  2  15. 

Arthur,  King,  iii,  453. 

Artijicial  Hills,  see  Tumuli. 

Arundel,  E.  of,  his  rarities  kept  at  the 
Duke's  Palace,  Norwich,  i,  44.  House 
and  gardens  in  the  Strand,  52. 

Arundel,  Countess  of,  a  marvellous  story 
told  by,  ii,  173. 

Arzyla,  a  strong  place,  held  by  Guyland, 
i,  127.     Jews  at,  MS. 

Aselli,  Caspar,  prof,  of  anatomy  at  Pa- 
via,  De  I'cnis  Lacteis,  i,  3C0. 

Ash,  Sir  Joseph,  Ld.  Townshend  mar- 
ried his  daughter,  i,  250. 


VOL.  IV. 


2  K 


482 


GENEUAL    INDEX. 


Ashes,  whether  a  pot  full  of  ashes  will 
still  contain  as  much  water  as  it  would 
without  the  ashes?  ii,  342. 

Ashmole,  Elias,  accepts  B's.  offer,  i,  382. 
Dugdalc's  good  friend,  389.  Letters 
to,  413,  403-467. 

Ashmolean  MSS.  B's.  letters  preserved 
among,  communicated  by  Mr.  W.  H. 
Black,  i,  xcv. 

Asphaltites,  of  the  lake  P.  E.  vii,  ch.  15, 
iii,  341-345.  That  heavy  bodies  do 
sink  not  therein,  341.  Dr.  Pococke's 
evidence,  ib.  n.  Various  testimonies, 
342.  Supposed  causes,  343.  Proba- 
bly the  water  may  be  so  that  things 
do  not  easily  sink,  342,  313.  Diffi- 
culty not  to  be  called  impossibility,  344. 

Asphaltum,  ii,  27,  n.  Said  not  to  be 
electrical,  327. 

Asterias,  and  similar  fossils,  how  formed, 
ii,  276. 

Astley,  Herb,  dean  of  Norwich  after  Dr. 
Crofts,  i,  203,  n.  In  London,  223, 
309,  313.  To  attend  the  convocation, 
311.  At  Norwich,  245,  279,  312. 
Ill,  309.  His  wife,  whose  daughter, 
306,  iv,  7.  B's.  cousin,  i,  l.\ii,  n. 
313,  317.  B's.  esteem  for,  316.  Let- 
ter to,  416.  His  children's  monu- 
ment, iv.  7.  Painted  and  beautified 
the  organ  in  Norwich  cathedral,  26. 
His  death,  30. 

Astrology,  of  Satanic  origin,  ii,  258- 
259.  Be  Astragalo  aid  Tah,  iv,  298- 
299. 

Astronomy,  see  Copernican  System. 

Athcncrum,  critique  on  author,  in  No.  93, 
1829,  i,  Iv.  n. 

Athenaeus,  his  Deipnosopisla,  a  delect- 
able author,  but  so  miscellaneous  that 
he  must  be  received  with  caution,  ii, 
239.  Nonnulla  a  lectione  Athencei 
Scripla,  iv,  300-304.  Be  Re  CuUna- 
ria,  305-308. 

Athens,  plague  of,  iv,  175. 

Aubrey,  John,  antiquary,  a  friend  of  B's. 
i,  xcv.  B's.  letters  to,  407-471.  His 
Tcmpla  Driddum,  468. 

Augustinus,  ii,  11,  n.  15,  20,  n.  32,  n. 
35,  n.  Dc  Ileresibus,  205.  Denial 
of  the  Antipodes,  227.  Error  con- 
cerning crystal,  267.  And  the  dia- 
mond, 334.  Concerning  the  pigeon, 
399.  Motive  he  assigns  for  Rachel's 
requesting  the  mandrakes  of  Leah,  iii, 
315. 

Aungier,  Garrard,  br.  to  Ld.  i,  432.  And 
the  council  of  Surat,  440. 

Aurange,  William,  prince  of,  came  over, 
when,  i,  220,  n. 

Aureng,  Zeb.   the  Great  Mogol,  at  war 


with  his  tributary  kings  and  rajahs, 
i,  428-436. 

Aiisonius,  his  oversight,  iv,  120.  How 
he  omitted  the  two  most  famous  anti- 
quities of  Bourdeaux  in  his  description 
of  it,  iv,  409. 

Austin  Friars,  see  Monasteries. 

Authority,  adherence  to,  promotes  error, 
P.  E.  j,  ch.  7,  ii,  225  232.  Of  no 
validity  alone,  220.  Absurdities  which 
have  pleaded  it,  220,  n.  Of  those  of 
one  profession  of  little  validity  on  ques- 
tions of  other  professions — examples 
given,  227,  Of  the  best  writers,  some- 
times to  be  rejected  even  in  their  own 
profession,  228.  Some  examples,  ih, 
229.      Discussed  in  notes,  ib.  n. 

Authors,  list  of  those  who  have  directly 
promoted  popular  errors,  ii,  232-244. 
Of  those  who  have  indirectly  so  done, 
244-247.  Their  many  strange  rela- 
tions should  deter  our  reliance  on  au- 
thority, 230.  Who  have  written  on 
sympathies,  &c.  242.  Some  errors  in 
the  most  celebrated  iv,  382. 

Auxerre,  E.  B.  at,  i,  69. 

Avala,  J.  J.  de,  Pictor  Christianus  Eru- 
ditus,  iii,  161,  n. 

Avarice,  rather  a  madness  than  a  vice,  ii, 
114. 

Ave  IMary,  bell,  ii,  5. 

Averrhoes,  his  relation  of  a  woman  who 
conceived  in  a  bath,  iii,  345.  Very 
possible  according  to  Ross,  ib.  n.  Mode 
of  his  death,  iv,  278. 

Avicenna,  ii,  209. 

Axholme,  isle  of,  trees  found  under  ground 
in,  i,  389. 

Ayermin,  W'ra.  Bp.  iv,  17. 

Aylesbury,  R.  Bruce,  E.  of,  a  patient  of 
E.  B's.  i,  cii.  E.  B.  had  a  MS.  from, 
214.  Left  out  of  the  Privy  Council, 
238.  His  son,  not  elected,  236.— See 
Ld.  Bruce. 


B. 


Babel,  tower  of,  why  built?  ii,  33. 
What  was  the  unconfounded  language 
of,  iii,  175,  n.  City  and  tower  of, 
distinct  both  from  the  Babel  of  Nim- 
rod  and  from  Babylon  of  Nebuchad- 
nezzar, 229,  n.  The  tower  of,  whe- 
ther erected  against  a  second  deluge, 
P.  E.  vii,  ch.  6,  iii,  310-312.  Ab- 
surd, for  the  deluge  would  have  swept 
it  away,  311.  Modern  passage  on 
this  awful  catastrophe,  ib.  n.  The 
height  attained  by  the  flood,  and  the 
situation  of  Babel  rendered  it  quite 
improbable,  311.     And  the  true  mo- 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


4S3 


live  is  expressly  given  in  the  scriptural 
account,  312. 

Bacci,  Andrea.  <l<:  Thermis,  i,  ITfi,  1S3. 

Back,  de,    M.  D.  of  Uotcrdam,  i.   3G-!. 

Bacon,  Arthur,  ol' Yarmoutli.i,  SfiS,  SCI). 

Bacon,  Fr.  Lord,  specuhited  on  the  mak- 
ing of  gold,  i,  xcvi.  His  Essays,  ii, 
I,  n.  On  the  Use  of  Doubts,  161. 
Mr.  Basil  Mantague's  lectures  on — 
extracts  iVoni,  ib.  Stories  about  the 
charming  away  of  warts,  iii,  IS'2,  n. 

Bacon,  Friar,  his  brazen  head,  iii,  360. 

Bacon,  Sir  Ed.  had  a  quartan  twice,  i, 
228.  ^Vho  married  his  daughter,  269. 
His  fatiier,  of  Redgrave,  272. 

Bacon,  Sir  Edmund,  Bart,  his  family,  iii, 
384,  n. 

Bacon,  Sir  Nicholas,  of  Gillingham,  soli- 
cited B.  to  settle  in  Norwich,  i,  Ix. 
learned,  421. 

Bacon,  Nicholas,  Garden  of  Cyrus  dedi- 
cated to,  iii,  3S1-3S4.  Some  account 
of  his  family,  ib.  n. 

Badger,  said  to  have  legs  of  unequal 
length,  P.  E.  iii,  ch.  5,  ii,  40S-409. 
His  mode  of  walking,  409. 

Bagford,  his  sneer  on  the  Repertorium, 
iv,  3. 

Bakewell,  T.  B.  visits,  i,  29-31. 

Baldavia,  in  the  S.  Sea,  voyage  to,  i, 
450. 

Baldness,  panegyrick  thereof,  iii,  365. 

Balearian  mode  of  sepulture,  iii,  459. 

Balsam  of  Judxa,  what,  iv,  130  n.  150- 
152. 

Bantam,  Embassador,  i,  341. 

Barberigo, Cardinal,  Bp.  of  Padua,  i,  107. 

Barbier,  Diet,  dt-s  Oucrages  Anonymes  et 
Pseudonymes,  ii,  xxii. 

Barchochebas,  iv,  122,  n. 

Baricellus,  ludicrous  experiment  by,  iv, 
398. 

Bark,  Peruvian,  or  Quinana,  notice  of, 
i,  445.      Dear  and  r-carce,  294. 

Barker,  Sir  John,  i,  50. 

Barker,  Henry,  Esq.  of  Hurst,  co.  Berks, 
his  d.  Frances  m.  Henry,  2nd  son  of 
Thomas,  Ld.  Vise.  Fairfax,  i,  Ixxvi,  n. 
His  grandson,  Henry  F.  m.  Anne 
Browne,  ib.  Ixxxi. 

Barker,  William,  B's.  cousin,  i,  11. 
K.  B's.  cousin,  at  Norwich,  48.  Lives 
at  Clerkenwell,  50.  Anne  B.  living 
with  him,  i,  Ixxvi. 

Barker  and  Fairfax  families,  how  they 
became  related,  i,  Ixxvi,  n.  Monu- 
mental inscriptions  to  them  in  Hurst 
church,  cv,  cvi. 

Barley,  iv,  133.  Harvest,  preceded  that 
of  wheat,  152. 

Barlow,  Professor,  remarks  on  the  pola- 


rity acquired  by  heated  iron  on  cooling, 
ii,  2SS,  n. 

Baronius,  C.  his  .Innale.i,  ii,  1,  n. 

Barrington,  Hon.  Daines,  some  legal 
errors  noticed  by,  ii,  173. 

Barrow,  I.  Tr.  Col.  Camb.  note  to  from 
a  Greek  priest,  i,  171. 

Barrows,  see  Tumuli. 

Bartas,  Du,  ii,  21,  n.  His  Six  Days 
— translated  bv  Vida  and  Sylvester, 
ii,  241,n. 

Bartholin,  his  Centuries  of  Medical  Ep. 
i,  210,  211,  217,  219,  222,  232,  356, 
360. 

Basil,  a  plant  said  to  propagate  scorpions, 
ii,  380. 

Basilisk,  metaphorically  used,  ii,  92. 
Quotation  thereon,  93,  n.  N'arious  fa- 
bles concerning,  ii,  4 13-422,  Its  exist- 
ence fabulous,  4 1 4.  Its  poisoning  at  a 
distance,  416.  Its  generation,  419. 
What  probably  occasioned  these  fables, 
421.  The  Catoblepas  of  Pliny  and 
the  Dryinus  of  /Etius,  414.  What  is 
now  called  so,  ib.  n.  Occurs  in  I'ie- 
rius's  Hieroglyphics,  415,  n.  One  kept 
in  the  physick  schools  at  Oxford,  416, 
n.  Wren's  hypothesis,  418,  n.  Said 
to  be  engendered  of  a  cock's  egg,  419. 
Ross's  hearty  belief  of  this  story,  ib.  n. 
Scripture  mention  of,  421. 

Basilius,  his  assertion  respecting  the  ser- 
pent, ii,  230.  His  Hexameron,  240. 
Error  concerning  crystal,  267. 

Bateman,  Wm.  Bp.  iv,  17. 

Bates,  Henry,  a  court  wit,  his  letter  to 
B.  i,  353-356. 

Baths,  at  Baden,  near  Vienna,  i,  176. 

Battel,  Ralph,  I'ulgar  Errors  in  Divinity 
Removed,  ii,  172. 

Bauderoni,  Buci,  his  P/iarmacapttia,  i, 
357. 

Bay  Leaves,  said  to  be  found  green  in 
the  tomb  of  S.  Humbert,  iii,  471. 

Bay  Tree,  absurdly  said  to  protect 
against  lightning,  ii,  372.  Compari- 
son drawn  from  it,  iv,  161,  and  n. 

Bayle,  in  his  CEuvrcs  Dlvcrses,  cites  Guy 
1       Patin's  strictures  on  the  author,  i,lxv,n. 

ii,  XV,  n. 
,  Bean,  council  of  the,  ii,  203.     Pytha- 
goras's  injunction  concerning,  i7>.     .-\n- 
cient   superstitions   concerning   beans 
and  peas,  ib.  n. 

Bear,  if  it  has  a  breast  bone,  &c.  i,  351. 
That  it  produces  its  cubs  unshapcd, 
P.  £.  iii,  ch.  6.  410-412.  The  Egyp- 
tians in  their  hieroglyphics,  and  se- 
veral ancient  writers  countenance  the 
fable.  Its  absurdity,  410.  Unreason- 
ableness,   and   almost   impiety,    411. 


484 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


The    probable    grounds    of    it,    412. 
Physiology   of  it,  412,  n.     Only  in- 
cidentally found  in  Iceland,  iv,  254. 
Beauchamp,    Rd.    E.  of   Warwick,    his 

tomb,  finest  in  England,  i,  39. 
Beauchamp,    William,    account   of,    iv, 

23,  24. 
Beaver,    story    of    his    self-mutilation, 
P.  E.  iii,  ch.   4,  ii,  403-407.     Very 
ancient; — when  met   with,   403-404. 
By  whom  denied  ;  its  probable  hiero- 
glyphical  origin,  404.     Its  anatomical 
inaccuracy,  ii,   40G-407.     Ross's  re- 
marks,   403,    n.       Wren's    proposed 
etymology,  404,  n.     The  tail  oi",  divi- 
ded quincuncially,  iii,  417. 
Beck,  Anthony  de,  Bp.  iv,  15. 
Beda,  supports  the  story  of  the  pigeon 

having  no  gall,  ii,  399. 
Bedingfield,  his  travels,  i,  56. 
Beguinus,  Johannes,  concerning  the  ga- 
thering of  coral,  ii,  350. 
Beke,  C.  T.  Esq.  his  Origines  Biblicce, 
iii,  175,  n.     Opinion  of  Babel,  229,  n. 
Opinion  as  to  the  ages  of  Noah's  sons, 
308,  n. 
Belgrad,  hot  baths  at,  i,  175. 
Belief,  only  to  be   obtained  by  experi- 
ment   in    things    doubtful    or   novel : 
mere     assertions    not    sufficient,   iii, 
368-369. 
Belisarius,    inquiry    into    the    generally 
received  account  of,   iii,    353.      Lord 
Mahon's  opinion,  ib.  n.     Various  ac- 
counts of,  354.     His  fate  alluded  to, 
iv,  87-88,  n. 
Bellarmine,  Card,  his  religion  indigesti- 
ble, i,  359. 
Bellerophon,  his  horse,  said  by  Beda,  to 
be  made  of  iron,  and  suspended  be- 
tween two  loadstones,  ii,  316. 
Belon,  Pierre,  dc  la  Nature  des  Oi/seaux, 

i,  326,  327. 
Belshazzar,    picture  of  his    feast,   whe- 
ther his   queen   ought   to   have   been 
introduced,  iii,  ICO. 
Bembine,  (or  Isiac)  table,  Dr.  Young's 

account  of,  ii,  415,  n. 
Bendibh,    Madam,   T.   B's.  aunt,  i,  45. 

Gives  E.  B.  a  ring,  56. 
Benjamin,  Tudelensis,  concerning  Mont- 

pellier,  iv,  408. 
Benlowes,    Edward,    Esq.    Ross's    Med. 

Medicat.  dedicated  to,  ii,  viii. 
Benoti,  Theophilus,  his  Anatomia  Prac- 

tica,  i,  309. 
Bentham,  Jeremy,  on  Fallacies,  ii,  163. 
Bently,    Wm.    Halifax    and    its   gibbet- 
law,  &c.  i,  Iviii. 
Beohme,    Hans    Sebalde,    an    engraver, 
i,47. 


Beringuccio,  in  his  Pyrotechnia,  sheweth 
how  to  make  red  gunpowder,  ii,  346. 

Bernacles,  and  goose-trees,  marvellous 
stories  of,  ii,  537.    Correction  of,  ib.  n. 

Bernardus,  Caesius,  says  that  needles 
touched  with  a  diamond  contract  ver- 
ticity,  ii,  311.  Gilbert's  solution  of 
sutli  false  assertions,  311. 

Bernini,  J.  L.  equal  to  Michel  Angelo,  i, 
83.  His  works,  81,  87.  Mislikes 
the  design  of  the  Louvre,  107. 

Bevis,  Sir,  of  Southampton,  ii,  29. 

Bibliotheca,  see  Musccujn. 

Bigot  family,  iv,  12. 

Bilney,  Thomas,  burnt  in  Nix's  time,  iv, 

u  1. 

Bills,  Lewis  de,  his  preserving  bodies,  i, 
158, 

Birch,  T.  Life  of  P.  Henry,  i,  Ivii,  n. 

Birds,  their  skins  and  feet  quincuncially 
marked,  iii,  418. 

Biron,  Marshal  de,  brought  up  at  Bri- 
sambourg,  i,  19. 

Bisciola,  Laelius,  says  that  10  ounces  of 
loadstone,  added  to  one  of  iron,  weighs 
but  10  ounces  still,  ii,  311. 

Bishe,  or  Bisse,  his  comment  on  Upton, 
i,  385. 

Bishops,  right  of  peerage  restored,  i,  10. 

Bishops  of  Norwich,  whose  monuments 
are  named  in  Reperiorium: — Corbet, 
iv,  14.  Goldwell,  9.  Hart,  8.  Herbert, 
12.  Montagu,  13.  Nix,  5  and  n. 
Overall,  13.  Parkhurst,  6.  Seamier, 
6.  Spencer,  12.  Wakering,  9.  Whose 
monuments  are  unknown,  14-19. 

Bisnaguer,  in  India,  King  of,  his  tribute 
of  flowers  and  odours,  iv,  178. 

Bittern,  how  he  makes  his  cry,  ii,  521- 
523.  His  name  in  Greek,  522,  n.  Cu- 
rious incident  told  by  Fovarque,  ib. 

Bitumen,  ii,  27. 

Black,  whether  it  absorbs  heat  more  than 
white,  &c.  iii,  273,  n. 

Black,  W.  H.  of  the  Brit.  Mus.  ii,  xvii. 
Letters,  in  Ashmole's  Museum,  found 
by,  i,  461. 

Black  Friars,  see  Monasteries. 

Blackness,  a  digression  concerning;  in 
which  causes  natural,  casual,  artificial, 
and  chemical,  are  detailed,  P.  E.  vi, 
ch.  12,  iii,  281-287. 

Blackwall,  wet-dock,  largest  in  England, 
i.  135. 

Blasius,  or  Blaise,  Gerard,  his  Anatomi- 
cal Obs.  i,  215.  Anatomc  Animalium, 
330. 

Blaye,  described,  i,  18.      E.  B.  at,  105. 

Blegny,  de,  surgeon  to  the  Q.  of  France, 
on  the  French  disease,  i,  211. 

Blocklandt,  an  engraver,  i,  47. 


GENEKAL    INDEX. 


485 


Blois,  E.  B.  at,  i,  lOo- 

BloineRcId,  Kev.  F.  Jlistory  of  Xorfol/:, 
i,  l.\,  n.,  Ixii,  n.,  xci,  n.,  xcii,  n.,  xcvi, 
n.,  xcviii. 

Blount,  Sir  Henry,  I'oijage  into  the  Le- 
vant, ii,  14,  n. 

Bliinieiibuch,  Prof,  supposed  Achim  to 
liuve  been  of  Caucasian  complexion, 
iii,  272,  n. 

Bocihius,  ii,  ^0,  n. 

Bois  le  Due,  E.  B.  at,  i,  ixxviii. 

Boleyn,  Sir  ^V^l.  account  of  his  family, 
iv,  U. 

Bologna,  E.  B.  at,  i,  89.     Account  of,  97. 

Bolsover,  T.  B.  passes,  i,  20. 

Bones,  of  King  Arthur,  iii,  453.  Papin's 
way  of  softening,  i.  252,  255,  250. 

Book-lore,  makes  not  statesmen  nor  phy- 
sicians, i,  350. 

Books,  useful  for  medical  students,  list 
of,  i,  350.  Borrowed  by  E.  B.  from 
emperor's  library,  Ixxix,  n.  B.  pro- 
poses, for  the  benefit  of  learning,  to 
burn  a  great  number,  ii,  30.  List  of 
rare  and  unknown,  iv,  240-243. 

Boot,  Bociius  de,  De  Lapidibus  et  Gem- 
mis  commended,  ii,  311. 

Borametz,  or  vegetable  lamb  of  Tartary, 
ii,  530.     Modern  account  of  it,  ib.  n. 

Bordeaux,  T.  B.  at.  i,  2,  5.  His  de- 
scription of,  17.  E.  B's.  account  of, 
105. 

Boret,  on  muscles,  gentle  censure  of,  i, 
322. 

Boringdon,  Lord,  afFfcling  and  fatal  acci- 
dent which  befel  him,  ii,  330,  n. 

Borio,  Jac.  Roma  Sotlerranea,  iii,  101. 

Boston  Wash,  two  roads  across,  i,  23. 
Steeple,  church,  &c.  24. 

Bosville,  .Mr.  of  Yorkshire,  said  by  Lc 
Neve  to  have  married  Frances  Fairfax, 
i,  civ.  Supposed  rather  to  have  mar- 
ried Frances  Browne,  ib. 

Bosvile,  or  Boswill,  iv,  11. 

Boswell,  Sir  Wm.  Eng.  resident  in  Hol- 
land, had  some  MSS.  of  Dr.  Dee's,  i, 
405.      Never  published,  400. 

Botcrus,  his  hyberbolc  on  the  pope,  ii, 
173. 

Boirie,  J.  supposed  author  of  lieligio 
Jurisconsiilti,  ii,  xvi. 

Bower's  History  of  the  Popes,  ii,  11,  n. 

BouUmia  Centeuaria,  narrative  of  a  wo- 
man with  this  disease — a  ravenous  ap- 
petite, iv,  310.  Brutus  attacked  by 
it,  ib.  n. 

Boulogne,  E.  B.  at,  i,  Ixxvii,  5S. 

Bourdclut,  Abbe,  physician  to  P.  de 
Conde,  i,  112. 

Boyle,  Hon.  Robt.  his  new  experiments 
on  air,   out,   i,    109.     Trial  of  black 


amber,  445.  Testimony  to  B's.  accu- 
racy as  an  experimentalist,  given  in 
Essaij  upon  Unsucceeding  Experiments, 
Ixxviii.  Remarks  on  B.  Ixxxviii.  Ab- 
surd explanation  of  a  cure,  ii,  340,  n. 

Bradford,  preached  at  N.  i,  8,  10,  40. 

Bradwall,  lead  mines  at,  i,  32. 

Brahe,  Tycho,  his  opinion  on  comets,  iii, 
292,  n. 

Brain,  dissection  of,  E.  B's.  new  way,  i, 
217.  Duncan's,  230.  Comparative 
size  of  the  human,  and  others,  iii,  0. 
Cuvier's  remarks  hereon,  ib.  n. 

BiiAMi'ToN  Ukns,  iii,  497-505.  Found 
in  a  field  at  Brampton,  between  it 
and  Buxton,  499.  Particulars  of  them 
and  their  discovery,  ib.  Their  ma- 
terials, coverings,  positions,  and  in- 
scriptions, 501.  A  silver  coin  found 
in  one,  described,  501-502.  Glass  and 
other  vessels  found  with  thcin,  502. 
And  various  other  articles,  503.  Re- 
markable piece  of  brickwork  found 
near  ;  and  pots  found  in  it ;  especially 
one  very  large,  503,  504. 

Brancaster,  iii,  402. 

Brandaris,  on  Skelling  island,  burnt  by 
the  fleet,  i,  131. 

Brande,  Professor,  his  theory  of  thunder, 
ii,  345,  n. 

Brandenburg,  Elector  of,  his  countries  in 
danger,  i,  228,   n. 

Brandy,  two  men  who  drank  a  gallon 
each,  iv,  380. 

Brassavolus,  error  concerning  crystal,  ii, 
207. 

Braun,  Rev.  Geo.  Dean  of  Cologne,  his 
Book  of  Cities,  quoted,  i,  140,  148,  lOS. 

Brayley,  Edw.  William,  his  notes  to  I's. 
Ep.  ii,  171.  On  the  office  of  the  feel- 
ers of  snails,  479. 

Brearcliffe,  W.  J.  a  correspondent  of  B's. 
i,  iix. 

Breiiiburge,  an  engraver,  i,   17. 

Brerewood,  Edw.  Enquiries  touching  the 
Dieersities  of  Language,  and  Religion 
in  the  World,  1014,  rel".  ii,  2,  n. 

Briarcus,  fable  of  explained,  ii,  221. 

Bricks  and  tiles  contract  verlicity,  ii,  290, 
why,  ib,  n.   • 

Bridges,  remarks  on  several,  iv,  414. 

Bridgwater,  Benj.  nominal  author  of 
Religio  Dibliopolce,  notice  of  his  life 
and  character,  ii,  xix. 

Briggs,  Alderman,  and  burgess  of  Nor- 
wich, T.  B.  dined  with,  i,  45.  Rob- 
bed on  his  way  to  London,  290.  Ill 
there,  sent  for  E.  B.  300.  Not  yet  re- 
turned, 303.      Rc-elcclid,  300. 

Briggs,  Alex,  the  Dr's.  brother,  in  London, 
i,  327-335. 


48G 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


Briggs,  Mr.  Austin,  brother  to  Dr.  \Vm. 
B.  i,  2G2.    Visits  London,  265. 

Briggs,  Mrs,  Mary,  brouglit  from  E.  B.  ;i 
paper  book,  i,  301. 

Briggs,  Wm.  M.D.  son  of  the  Alderman, 
i,  300,  His  Ophtha^mo^raplna,  203,  n. 
Wrote  to  Sir  T.  B.  209.  Sent  him  a 
Philosoph.  Collection,  344. 

Brigstoclce,  Augustus,  Esq.  of  Blaenpant 
CO.  Cardigan.  Obliging  communica- 
tion to  the  Editor,  i,  cvii. 

Brigstocke  Owen,  Esq.  marr.  Anne,  d. 
of  E.  B.  i,  cvii.  Ilis  family  not  by 
her,  but  by  his  2nd.  wife,  ib. 

Briot,  Pierre,  liad  leave  to  translate  Ps. 
Ep.  into  French,  i,  110,  ii,  108.  Ac- 
count of,  ih.  n.  ib.  n. 

Brisambourg,  town  and  castle,  i,  19. 

British  Museum,  MS.  Collections  of  Sir 
T.  and  E.  B.  still  preserved  in  it,  i, 
cix.  Catalogue  of  their  library,  a  copy 
of  the,  preserved  there,  ib. 

Broadgate  Hall,  Oxon.  now  Pembroke 
Coll.  principals,  &c.  of,  i,  469,  470. 

Brome,  Alex,  lines  on  B.  i,  Ixviii,  n. 

Brome,  Rich,  iv,  11. 

Brookes,  Capt.  of  the  Foresight,  T.  B. 
praised  by,  i,  151. 

Brouage,  Fort,  near  Rochelle,  impregna- 
ble, i,  20. 

Browne,  Ann,  eldest  d.  of  Sir  T.  B.,  at 
her  cousin  Barker's,  i,  Ixxvi,  174.  Had 
been  in  France,  233.  Married  H. 
Fairfax,  Esq.  i,  Ixxvi,  Ixxxi.  Some 
account  of  her  family,  i,  civ-cvi,  Ped.  3. 
When  and  where  buried,  Pi'd.  3.  Her 
descendants,  the  Earl  of  Buchan  and 
Lord  Erskine,  the  only  existing  repre- 
sentatives, i,   Prcf.   13,  Ixxxi,  n.  civ. 

Browne  Anne,  6th  d.  of  E.  B.  m.  Owen 
Brigstocke  I'^sq.  no  family,  i,  cvii. 

Browne,  Dame  Dorothy,  i,  ciii.  Daugh- 
ter of  Edw.  Jlilcham,  Esq.  i,  xxvi,  Ixi. 
Married  B.  ib.  Her  family  connex- 
ions, Ixii.     Her  letters  to  her  son  Thos. 

I,  2,  5,  119.  To  her  son  Edw.  1, 
178,  221,  226,  229,  234,  268,  292, 
297,  307,  315,  319,  450.  To  Mrs.  E. 
B.  225,  232,  248,  251,  253,  266,  284, 
332,  335,  343.  Letters  to,  from  E. 
B.  189,  196.  Fromllev.  Mr.  White- 
foot,  mentioned  by   Kippis,   i,    Pref. 

II,  n.  Her  death  and  monument, 
i,  civ. 

Browne,  Edward,  eldest  son  of  Sir  T.  B. 
when  born  ?  i,  Ixxvii,  see  Pedigrees. 
At  Norwich  Freeschool,  Ixxv.  Admit- 
ted Trin.  Coll.  Cambridge,  1657,  Ixxv, 
n.,  3.  A.  B.  about  1660-1  ?  Ixxv,  6. 
'.Journal  nf  Tour  in  Derbyshire,  with  his 
brother,16G2,22-42.  M,  B.  1663,lxxv, 


n.  42.  Journal  of  a  winter  in  Nor- 
wich, 1663-4,  Ixxvi,  43-49.  Begins 
to  practice  in  Norwich,  his  first  fee,  49. 
Journey  to  London  and  back,  50-55. 
Goes  to  London,  and  thence  abroad, 
56-58.  Account  of  his  tour  in  France 
and  Italy,  Ixxvi,  Ixxvii,  58-114.  In- 
corporated of  Merton  Coll.  Oxon.  1666, 
and  M.  D.  1667,  Ixxvii,  152.  Fel- 
low of  the  Royal  Society,  Ixxvii.  His 
German  and  Hungarian  travels,  1668, 
1669,  Ixxviii-lxxxi.  His  acquaintance 
w  ith  Lambecius;  list  of  books  which  he 
borrowed  from  the  emperor's  library, 
Ixxix,  n.  Letters  during  his  tour, 
152-201,  446-450.  His  professions  of 
obedience,  not  practised,  152.  Mar- 
ries, 1672,  and  settles  in  London, 
Ixxxi,  201.  Visits  Cologne,  1673, 
xcvii,  20i.  Chosen  Lecturer  in  Sur- 
geon's Hall,  and  Fellow  Coll.  Phys. 
1675,  xcviii,  201.  His  father  advises 
him  to  publish  his  travels,  xcvii,  202, 
204.  His  works,  xcvii,  n.  202,  n. 
His  lectures,  208,  211.  Assisted  there- 
in by  his  father,  xcviii.  Dr.  Witherly 
praises,  2 1 2.  His  translations  of  Plu- 
tarcli,  cii.  Chosen  Censor  of  the  Coll. 
cii.  230,  n.  And  Physician  to  St. 
Bartholomew's  Hospital,  cii.  Attends 
E.  of  Rochester's  last  illness,  cii,  202. 
Also  the  Marquis  of  Dorchester,  and 
other  men  of  rank,  cii.  His  family, 
cvi-cviii.  Attend  Chas.  II  in  his  dying 
illness,cvii,n.l2.  Wrote  to  Le  Clerc  in 
favour  of  Beverland  at  the  request  of 
John  Locke  and  Ld.  Carbury,  ib. 
Attended  K.  William,  ib.  President 
Coll.  Phys.  ib.  Left  his  Northfleet 
estate  in  reversion  between  St.  Bar- 
tholomew's Hospital  and  the  Coll.  of 
Phys.  cviii.  His  death  and  monumen- 
tal inscription,  cviii,  n.  Character, 
cix,  n. 

Brown,  Mr.  Edw.  (a  merchant,)  Travels 
and  Adventnrea,  sometimes  mistaken 
for  Dr.  Edward  B's.  i,  xcviii,  n. 

Browne,  Elizabeth,  d.  of  Sir  T.  B.  i, 
153,  154,  161.  Writes  to  E.  B.  164, 
178.  Letters  to,  from  E.  B.  180. 
Mentioned  in  her  father's  will,  ciii. 
Her  marriage  to  Capt.  Lyttleton,  ci, 
297.     See  Lyttleton. 

Browne  Francis,  mentioned  in  her  fa- 
ther's will,  i,  ciii.  Married  to  Mr.  Bos- 
ville,  or  Boswell  ?  civ.  Pedigrees. 

Browne,  Isaac  Hawkins,  Esq.  his  Fras- 
mentum  sive  Anti- BoUrigbrokius  trans- 
lated by  Sir  Wm.  Browne,  ii,  xx. 

Browne,  John,  a  surgeon  at  Norwich,  i 
414.     His  Treatise  on  Tumours,  xcix. 


GENERAL   INDEX. 


4S" 


B's.  opinion  of,  411.  Surgeon  to  the 
king,  .'{3S,  n.  411,  n.  llis  Adeno- 
choiradelogia,  xci.x.  Story  of  B.  in  it, 
scix,  n. 

Browne,  Jolin,  B's.  fatlicr,  erroneously  so 
culled  by  IJloinfield,  i,  xviii,  n. 

Browne,  Mary,  d.  of  Sir  T.  B.  i,  xcviii. 

Browne,  Susunn^ih,  d.  of  E.  B.  married 
to  Arthur  Moore  ;  buried  with  her  two 
infants  at  Northlicet,  i,  cvi. 

Browne,  Thomas,  father  of  Sir  T.  B. 
resided  in  London ;  a  tradesman,  a 
mercer,  but  a  gentleman  of  a  good  fa- 
mily in  Cheshire,  i,  xviii.  His  prayer 
over  his  child — related  by  Mrs.  Lyt- 
tleton,  ex.  Picture  of  himself,  wife, 
and  family,  at  Devonshire  House, 
I'ref.  1 5,  ex.  Walpole's  error  resjiect- 
ing  it,  ib.  Duke  of  Devonshire's 
opinion,  fr*/.  13.  Conjecture  respecting 
the  painter  of  it,  ex,  n.  Said  by  Mrs. 
Lyttleton  to  be  related  to  a  Countess 
of  Devonshire,  ex.  This  relationship 
not  ascertained,  ib.  n. 

Browne,  Sir  Thomas. 

1.  Some  of  the  more  remarkable  incidevts 
respecting  him.  Conjectures  as  to  the 
ages  of  his  elder  children,  i,  I'xxvii,  n. 
Situation  of  his  house  in  Norwich  de- 
termined, xcii,  n.  His  marriage,  Ixi. 
His  management  of  his  family,  Ixxiii. 
Trial  of  the  witches,  Ixxxii-lxxxv. 
Chosen  Honorary  Member  of  the  Coll. 
of  Physicians,  Ixxxvii.  Knighted,  xci. 
Hefused  to  subscribe  in  aid  of  the  lie- 
publicans,  xcii.  Confounded  with  Tom 
Browne, xcii,  n.  Kvelyn's  visit  tohim, 
xciii.  Attended  Bp.  Hall  in  his  dying 
illness,  ci.  Death  ;  will,  ciii.  Monu- 
ment, xxxix. 

2.  Some  of  his  more  striking  opinions, 
sayings,  and  peculiarities.  On  alchy- 
my,  i,  xcvi.  Soul-sleeping,  ii,  11. 
Universal  restoration,  12.  Prayer  for 
the  dead,  ib.  100.  Oracles,  i,  xxxvii,  ii, 
42,  43,  253;  iii,  329-332;  iv,  223- 
230.  Witchcraft  and  Satanic  influence, 
i,  Ixxxii  Ixxxvi;  ii,  43-45,  56.  Guar- 
dian angels,  ii,  4fi-l9.  Ghosts  and 
apparitions,  50.  .\stronomy,  i,  xxviii ; 
ii,  llfi,  164,  210;  iii.  213- 219.  A 
singular  remark  attributed  to  him  by 
Dr.  Johnson,  i,  liv.  Calls  himself 
naturally  bashful,  ii,  58.  Asserts  that 
he  had  never  been  in  love,  99.  Molt- 
ke's  note  on  this,  ib.  n.  Wishes  men 
could  procreate  like  trees,  105.  Calls 
his  life  a  miracle  of  thirty  years,  110. 
His  observations  on  some  who  have 
died  on  their  birth-day,  (as  did  he,) 
iv,  4L    Describes  his  attainments  and 


studies,  ii,  104.  His  humble  view  of 
liimself  before  God,  95.  His  reflexions 
in  the  course  of  his  correspondence  ; 
religious,  i,  2S5,  31S,  220;  moral, 
307,  322;  medical,  293;  political,  307 
His  pious  resolutions,  iv,  420,  421. 
His  ini|uisitive  turn  of  mind,  ii,  1G3. 

3.  Opinions  (f  him  and  his  works.  By 
some  called  a  Catholic,  by  others  a 
Protestant,  i,  Ixiii.  Accused  of  Athe- 
ism by  Budde,  Muller,  Reiser,  Wagner, 
Ixv,  &c. ;  ii,  XV,  n.  Defended  by  F. 
Heister,  II.  Conring,  J.  !•".  Reinmian, 
Morhof,  &c.  i,  Ixvii;  ii,  xv.  Suspect- 
ed of  imitating  Montaigne,  ii,  9,  10,  n. 
Classed  among  Humourists,  in  the 
Alhenaum,  i,  Iv,  n.  And  compared  to 
Sir  Roger  de  Covcrly,  i,  Ivi,  n.  Dr. 
Johnson's  observations  on  him :  see 
his  Life  of  B.  Sir  K.  Digby's:  see 
l>igby.  Samuel  Duncon's,  Ixiii.  Dr. 
Jortin's ;  Archbishop  Tillotson's,  ib. 
Dr.  Watts's,  xlviii.  Hon.  W.  Boyle's, 
Ixxxviii.  Dr.  Aikin's,  Ixxxiii.  Em- 
peror Leopold's  on  Rel.  Med.,  Ixxix. 
Coleridge's  on  a  passage  of  Quincunx, 
iii,  417. 

4.  His  Correspondents  and  Correspond- 
ence. Account  of  his  principal  corres- 
pondents, i,  Ixix-lxxiii,  Ixxxvi,  xc, 
xcv,  xcvi.  Correspondence  with  Dig- 
by,  ii,  xxvii-xxix.  With  his  children, 
interspersed  with  their  journals, i  1-350, 
446-460.  With  his  friends,  351-446, 
461-471  ;  iv,  256-270. 

5.  His  Published  Works : — See  licligio 
J\frdici,  Pseudodoxia  Epidemica,  Gar- 
den of  Cyrus,  llydriotaphia,  Bramp- 
ton Urns,  Repertorium,  Letter  to  a 
Friend,  Christian  Morals,  Miscellany 
Tracts,  Miscellanies,  and  Introductory 
Prefaces  to  them,  ii,  i-xxii,  153- 15S, 
160-176;  iii,  377-3S0;  iv,  ix-xiii,  3, 
35,  55,  117,  118.  Works  falsely  as- 
cribed to  him,  i,  Pref.  12,  n. 

6.  His  Unpublished  Works,  iv,  Pref.  xii, 
.\iii,  463-465.  For  the  subjects  of 
those  now  first  published,  see  contents 
to  vol.  iv. 

7.  His  Manuscripts,  and  his  Son's,  ac- 
count of;  to  whom  sold  afier  their 
death  ;  and  where  now  existing,  i,  cix, 
371,  n.  A  catalogue  of  the  MSS. 
with  Preface  and  copious  Notes  by  the 
Editor,  iv,  463-476.  How  some  let- 
ters are  supposed  to  have  found  their 
way  into  the  Tanner  Coll.  of  MSS.  i, 
371,  n. 

8.  His  and  his  Son's  Library,  advertise^ 
ment  of  its  sale,  i,  cix,  n.  A  catalogue 
of  it  is  in  the  British  Museum,  ib.  n. 


488 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


9.  Ills  Family,  for  full  accounts  of,  see 
Pedigrees,  by  hinisolf,  Le  Neve,  and 
tlie  Editor,/(7C/«iT!,xvii.  and  described, 
Pnf.  13.  His  descendants  to  the  pie- 
sent  time,  only  in  the  family  of  Ers- 
kine.  Ear!  of  Buchan,Pn/.  13,  Ixxxi,  n. 
civ.  His  cousins,  Astley,  Ixii,  371,  n. 
see  Asllt'ij.  Barker,  Ixxvi,  n, :  see 
Barker.  Bendish,  3  13.  Cradock,  324, 
3b5,  417.  Hobart,  Ixii,  371,  372. 
Hobbs,  341.  Townshend,  Ixii,  325, 
330.     His  sister  Whiting,  340. 

10.  Portraits  of  him,  enumerated,  ii, 
167,  168.  Account  of  that  engraved 
for  tliis  edition,  i,  Prrf.  14,  15.  Pic- 
ture in  Devonsliire  House  of  his  father, 
and  mother,  and  family,  ib.  15,  ex, 
and  n. 

11.  Memoirs  of  1dm,  viz.  his  autobiogra- 
phical communication  to  Aubrey,  i, 
467-470.  His  daughter's  account  of 
him,  ex.  Rev.  J.  Whitefoot's  iMiuutrs, 
comprised  in  Jolinson's  Life,  xli-xlvii. 
Dr.  Johnson's  Life,  xviii-liv.  The 
Editor's  Supplementary  Memoir, \\-cix. 
For  analyses  of  the  two  latter  articles 
see  .lolinsoii's  Life  and  Supplementary 
jMemoir. 

Browne,  Thomas,  younger  son  of  Sir  T. 
B.  sent  to  France  ;  his  character ;  his 
father's  advice  to,  i,  Ixxiv,  1.  Letters 
to,  from  his  father,  2,  4,  6-10,43,  116, 
117,  143,  149.  From  his  mother,  2, 
5,  117,  119.  From  E.  B.  00,  73. 
His  journey  from  Bordeaux  to  Paris, 
17-22.  Returned  from  France  in  sum- 
mer, 1062,  22.  Tour  through  Derby- 
shire, &c.  22-42.  In  1663  at  Cam- 
bridge, 43.  Sketch  of  his  career  at 
sea,  from  1064,  to  1607,  114.  His 
journals  in  1000,  at  sea,  120-134. 
Noticed  by  P.  Rupert,  133.  Letters 
from  sea,  128,  142,  145.  Praised  by 
hisfiither  and  others,  150.  Date  of  his 
decease  doubtful,  Ixxv,  see  Pedigrees, 

Browne,  Thomas,  eldest  son  of  E.  B., 
lived  with  his  grandfather  at  Norwich; 
called  Lille  Tomey  by  Dame  Dorothy 
B. ;  Fell.  Coll.  Phys.  and  F.  R.  S.  in- 
timate with  Dr.  Robt.  Plot;  married 
his  cousin,  Alethea  Fairfax,  who  died, 
leaving  no  children,  and  was  buried 
at  Hurst ;  his  death  ;  cause  alleged  by 
Le  Neve,  cvi.  Tour  with  Dr.  Plot, 
iv,  457-452. 

Browne,  Thomas,  of  facetious  memory, 
confounded  with  Sir  T.  B.  i,  xcii,  n. 

Browne,  Thomas,  Bp.  iv,  15. 

Browne,  Sir  Wm.  M.  D.  translated  a 
fragment  of  L  II.  Browne  for  a  second 
Rel.  Med.,  ii,  xx. 


Bruce,  Ld.  eldest  son  of  L.  Aylesbury,  i, 
230.  His  journey,  243,  209,  279. 
Who  went  with  him,  245.  His  son 
ill  at  Ampthill,  298. 

Bruce,  Mr.  John,  Supplies  Editor  with 
information  respecting  a  purchase  of 
B's.  i,  ciii,  n. 

Brun,  Le  Pierre,  L'Hist^  Critique  des 
Pratiques  Supersfitiei/ses,  SfC.  ii,  172. 

Bruno,  St.  founder  of  the  Carthusians, 
his  retreat  near  Grenoble,  i,  71. 

Brussels,  E.  B.  at,  i,  Ixxix,  156. 

Bubbles,  remarks  on,  iv,  441-443. 

Burlianan,  Dr.  Claudius,  on  the  Ten 
Tribes  of  Israel,  iii,  37. 

Buchanan,  G.  Strictures  on  the  conduct 
of  Henry  viii,  ii,  6,  n. 

Buda,  burned  down,  i,  185. 

Budde,  Johan,  Franc,  in  his  Theses  de 
Athcismo,  S^c.  ranks  B.  with  Lord 
Herbert,  Hobbes,  and  Toland,  i,  Ixvi: 
ii,  XV,  n. 

Budden,  D.  C.  L.  principal  of  Broadgate 
Hall.i,  470. 

Buffalo,  hunting,  E.  B.  saw  at  Fondi,  i,  80. 

Bullets,  said  to  melt  or  become  red-hot 
in  their  flight,  ii,  348.  How  explain- 
ed, ih.  n. 

Bulwer,  Dr.  John,  cites  B.  on  pigmies, 
and  on  Adam's  having  a  navel,  iii,  1  GO. 

Burial,  of  the  Saxons,  i,  386.  Of  Adam, 
Abraham,  Moses,  &c.  iii,  456.  British 
mode  of,  not  described  by  Caesar, 
Tacitus,  and  Strabo,  467.  Position 
observed  in,  478.  I^Iore  ancient  than 
burning,  456.  These  the  two  more 
usual  modes  of  disposing  of  the  dead, 
ib. 

Burleigh  House,  T.  B.  saw,  i,  41 . 

Burnet,  Thomas,  D.  D.  his  opinion  of 
comets,  iii,  292,  n. 

Burnett,  Gilbert,  D.  D.  his  book  on  Ld. 
Rochester's  life,  &c,  i,  303.  Sermon, 
307. 

Burning,  or  Cremation,  very  ancient,  iii, 
456,  457.  V'arious  examples,  ib.  Mo- 
tives for  the  practice,  457.  Avoided, 
by  what  nations,  458,  459.  When 
disused,  465.  Great  reduction  of  bulk 
occasioned  by,  476. 

Burning  Bush,  iv,  125. 

Burton,  Dr.  of  Philadelphia,  on  the  stu- 
])ifying  power  of  several  of  the  serpent 
tribe,  ii,  417,  n. 

Burton,  Hezekiah,  D.  D.  Prebendary  of 
Norwich,  i,  216,  iv,  30. 

Burton,  Mr.  John,  Master  of  the  Free- 
school  at  Norwich,  iv,  25.  His  his- 
tory of  it,  4. 

Bury  St.  Edmund's,  Trial  of  witches,  i, 
Ixxxii. 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


489 


Busbequius,  ii,  36,  n. 

Buseina,  town  and  Ibrt,  on  tlie  Barbary 
coast,  i,  124. 

Bush,  ii,  8S.  Good  wine  needs  none, 
ib.  n. 

Bustard,  crop,  ncck-boiie,  &c.  of,  i, 
311. 

Butterfly,  head  of  the  canker  becomes 
tail  of  the  butterfly,  iii,  4215.  An  erro- 
neous assertion,  ib.  n. 

Buttet,  M.  plays  on  one-string'd  instru- 
ment, i,  4(). 

Buxton,  T.  B.  visiLs,  i,  34.  Poole's-hole 
and  chamber,  near,  35. 


C. 


Cabala  of  the  stars,  iii,  29. 

Cabbala,  ii,  17,  n. 

Cabeus,  his  experiment  on  congelation, 
ii,  277.  His  theory  of  electricity, 
329. 

Cadiz,  by  T.  B.  called  Cales,  i,  1 2 1 .  His 
account  of,  1 46. 

Ca;sar,  de  Bello  Gallico,  ii,  3,  n.  Inci- 
dents in  his  life,  !v,  412,  413,  418. 

Cain,  whether  he  intended  to  slay  his 
brother,  ii,  186. 

Caitiff",  how  explained  ?  ii,  90,  n. 

Cajetun,  Cardinal,  a  Dominican,  by  his 
imprudence  hastens  Luther's  Refor- 
mation, ii,  3,  n. 

Calais,  Sir  H.  Cheke  killed  before,  i, 
hii,  n.  E.  B's.  passage  to,  57.  Ac- 
count of,  58. 

Calendar,  proposed  plan  for  an  histori- 
cal, iv,  4  12. 

Cales,  see  Cadiz. 

Calthorpc,  Dame  Eliz.  iv,  8. 

Camden,  W.  mentioned,  i,  470.  His 
Britannia  quoted,  3Sl.  Contradicted, 
444.  His  Tomiis  alter  et  idem  ascrib- 
ed falsely  to  Browne,  Pref.  12,  n. 

Cambridge,  Trinity  Coll.,  E.  B.  there,  i, 
Ixxv,  Ixxvi,  n. 

Camel,  the  bunch  of,  what,  i,  215.  Its 
mode  of  walking,  ii,  409,  n. 

Cameron,  Rev.  Mr.  minister  of  Hurst, 
Co.  Berks,  valuable  information  receiv- 
ed from,  i,  cv. 

Camphor,  absurd  fable  respecting,  ii, 
378.      What  it  is,  iv,  126. 

Candia,  B.  asks  about  siege  of,  i,  170, 
268. 

Candles,  burning  dim  or  blue  at  the  ap- 
proach of  a  spirit,  iii,  177. 

Canicular,  see  Dog-days. 

Canterbury,  E.  B's.  account  of,  i,  57. 

Carbuncle,  said  to  flame  in  the  dark,  ii, 
354.  Doubted  by  B.,  but  since  fully 
proved,  ib.  n. 


Cardanus,  Hieronymus,  too  greedy  a 
receiver  of  assertions,  and  therefore 
to  be  read  suspiciously,  ii,  242.  Mr. 
Crossley's  account  of,  ib.  n.  A  be- 
liever in  the  signs  drawn  from  nail- 
spots,  iii,  174. 

Carinthia,  E.  B.  travels  in,  i,  Ixxx. 

Carnival,  at  Bologna,  i,  89.  Venice,  90. 
Senigaglia,  96. 

Carpenter,  N.  Philosophia  Libera,  ii, 
20,  n. 

Cartes.  Rene  des,  commended,  i,  362. 
His  theory  of  electricity,  ii,  329. 

Casaubon,  his  translation  of  Polybius,  i, 
383.  A  book  On  Spirits,  set  out  bv, 
4C5. 

Cashel,  Abp.  of,  see  Price. 

Cassiodorus  says  the  elephant  has  no 
joints,  ii,  387. 

Castor  and  Helena,  fable  of  explained,  ii, 
222. 

Cataract,  couching  for,  cases  of,  i,  245. 

Catharina,  Infanta  of  Portugal,  sent  for, 
to  be  Q.  i,  10. 

Cathedral,  of  Norwich,  i,  8.  Bordeaux, 
17,105.  Xainctes,  IS.  Nantes,  20.  An- 
gers, 21.  Lincoln,  24.  Chester,  37. 
Lichfield,  39.  Peterboro',  41.  Ely 
seen  from,  ib.  St.  Paul's,  width  of, 
compared  with  Westminster,  Norwich, 
and  Canterbury,  56.  With  Notre 
Dame  at  Paris,  62.  Gatherings  for 
repair  of,  224.  Rochester,  56,  Can- 
terbury, 57.  Abbeville,  58.  Beau- 
vais,  59.  Paris,  62.  64.  Sens,  69. 
Chalons-sur-Saonc,  ib.  Florence,  76. 
Narbonne,  104.  Tlioulouse,  105. 

Cato  Major,  his  three  regrets,  ii,  86,  n. 

Cato  of  Utica,  clan  of  conveying  treasure, 
iv,  411. 

Cecil,  Sir  Edw.  i,  Ivii,  n. 

Cedar  of  Lebanon,  what,  iv,  126,  158. 
Burckhardt's  description  of  159,  n. 

Cerumtn,  bitterness  of,  i,  222.  Account 
of,  234,  235. 

Censorinus,  De  Die  Nalali,  i,  415. 

Centaurs,  origin  of  the  fable,  ii,  202. 
Similar  incident  related,  ib.  n. 

Century  of  Short  Characters  of  Books  and 
Authors,  a  MS.  quoted  in  Biog.  Brit,  i, 
Ixiv. 

Cicadfi,  what  ?  iv,  185  and  n.  Its  French 
and  Saxon  names,  ih. 

Cicero,  M.  T.  ii,  10,  n.  Pro  Deiolaro, 
3,  n.  His  Dc  Officiis,  B.  praises, 
i,  209.  His  Ora/io7)j  quoted,  415.  His 
lost  lives  deplored,  ii,  35.  Pro  Archia 
begins  with  a  hexameter,  107.  Not 
the  author  of  that  oration,  ib.  n. 

Cinnaber,  native  in  Hungary,  wanted 
for  R.   Soc.    i,   172.       Two  sorts  of, 


VOL.  IV. 


2  L 


490 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


173.     To  be  had  in  powder,  not  in 
pieces,  175.     Best  in  lumps,  176. 

Cinnamon,  ginger,  clove,  mace,  and  nut- 
meg, said  to  be  the  produce  of  the 
same  tree;  disproved,  ii,  3G5,  366. 
What,  366,  n. 

Circles,  number  of  in  the  heavens,  iii, 
51,  n. 

Citadels,  E.  B.  saw,  what,  i,  207. 

Chaldeans,  abhorred  burning,  iii,  45S. 

Chalons-sur-Soane,  E.  B.  at,  i,  69. 

Chambers,  John,  Esq.  pointed  out  to 
editor  an  important  document  in  the 
European  Mag.  i,  ex. 

Chameleon,  that  he  lives  on  air,  P.  E. 
iii,  ch.  21,  ii,  482-493.  Contradict- 
ed by  many,  482.  Highly  improbable 
for  many  reasons,  483-48.').  The  na- 
ture of  air  considered,  485.  Jordan's 
observations  on  fire  struck  from  cane, 
488.  Confirmed  by  Sir  H.  Davy, 
ib.  n.  Inflammable  air  in  mines,  489, 
Safety  lamps,  ib.  n.  Air  incapable  of 
aftbrdiiig  nutriment,  490.  Grounds 
of  the  fable,  491-493.  Its  fabulous 
change  of  colour,  482,  n. 

Champollion,  notice  of  hieroglyphicks,  ii, 
415,  n. 

Changelings,  ii,  44.     What,  lb.  n. 

Channel,  English,  coast  of,  T.  B's.  ac- 
count of,  i,  137-140. 

Chantilly,  Prince  of  Conde's  house,  de- 
scription of,  i,  112. 

Chapels  in  Norwich  cathedral,  of  Our 
Lady,  iv,  16.  Bp.  lleynolds'.s,  18. 
Old  Bishop's,  19.  Of  Jesus,  21.  Of 
St.  Luke,  23.  Beauchamp's,  or  Bau- 
chan's,  ib.  Heydon's,  24.  The  Chap- 
ter-house, 25.  Of  St.  Edmund,  i6.  n. 
Of  St.  Mary  of  the  Marsh,  ib.  Of  St. 
Ethelbert,  ib.  The  Prior's,  ib.  n.  Of 
St.  John  the  Evangelist,  ib. 

Charity,  due  to  all,  even  Turks,  Infidels, 
and  Jews,  ii,  2.  Forbids  our  abuse  or 
ridicule  of  what  we  may  consider  the 
superstitious  ceremonies  and  observ- 
ances of  Roman  Catholics  and  others, 
ii,  4,  5.  Condemns  the  popular  scur- 
rilities and  opprobrious  epithets  be- 
stowed on  the  Pope.  7.  Should  make 
us  slow  to  doubt  the  salvation  of  those 
who  differ  from  us,  82.  Opinions  on 
this  point,  ib.  n.  Faith  a  mere  notion 
without  it,  85.  B's.  disposition  to- 
wards it,  ib.  The  motives  whence  it 
ought  to  proceed,  88.  To  be  exercised 
towards  mental  as  well  as  bodily  wants, 
90,  91,  Offended  by  violent  con- 
troversies, especially  about  trifles,  91. 
Censures  criticks,  92,  n.  Condemns 
all  attacks  upon  whole  nations  or  pro- 


fessions, 93.  Such  as  are  given, 
ib.  n.  Has  regard  to  the  pains  and 
sorrows  of  others,  compared  with  our 
own,  9G.  Inconsistent  with  self-love, 
97,  n.  Various  quotations  on,  from 
Hierocles,  Barrow,  &c.  97,  98.  Con- 
demns all  resentments,  100.  To  love 
God  for  himself,  and  our  neighbour 
for  God,  115. 

Charles  I,  his  murder  to  be  expiated 
yearly,  i,  10.  Tried  the  Sortes  Fir- 
giliancc,  iii,  179,  n.  Said  by  Evelyn 
to  be  like  one  Osburn,  a  hedger,  iv, 
244,  n. 

Charles  II,  knighted  B.  in  1G71,  i, 
xxxviii.  Why,  xei,  xcii.  His  arms 
in  B's.  house,  probably  as  a  memorial, 
ib.  Account  of  his  Norfolk  progress 
on  the  occasion,  xci.  At  Blickling, 
Oxnead,  and  Rainham,  ib.  Steven- 
son's lines  in  celebration  of,  xciii.  At- 
tended by  E.  B.  in  his  dying  illness, 
cvii,  n. 

Charles  V,  crowned  on  his  birth-day,  iv. 
40,  381. 

Charlton,  Walter,  M.  D.  his  Oration,  i, 
291,  295,  302.     Monasticon,  U4. 

Charms,  Amulets,  &c.  of  Satanic  origin, 
ii,  2G0. 

Charnel-house,  under  St.  John's  chapel, 
iv,  25.     St.  Paul's,  26. 

Charon,  fable  of  explained,  ii,  221.  Fur- 
ther explanation,  ib.  n. 

Chartres,  city,  as  old  as  the  Druids,  de- 
scribed, i,  21. 

Chatsworth-housc,  T.  B.  passes,  i,  29. 

Cheek-burning,  ominous,  iii,  165. 

Cheke,  Sir  Ilatton,  mentioned  in  Birch's 
Life  of  P.  Henry,  killed  by  Sir  T. 
Dutton,  i,  Ivii,  n. 

Chelmsford,  E.  B.  slept  at,  i,  53. 

Cherubim,  picture  of,  iii,  147. 

Chesnut  tree,  iv,  132. 

Chester,  T.  B.  visits  and  describes,  i,  37. 

Chesterfield,  T.  B.  visits,  i,  26. 

Cheynel,  Francis,  his  religion  indigesti- 
ble, i,  359. 

Chicken,  see  Egg. 

Child,  Dr.  William,  Master  in  Chancery, 
i,  4C8. 

Childerick  I,  his  monument  found  at 
Tournay,  treasures  in  it,  iii,  466,  472. 

Chillingworth  castle,  near  Warwick, T.B. 
saw  the  ruins  of,  i,  39. 

China,  wall  of,  how  long,  &c.  i,  46. 
N.  E.  passage  to,  possible,  i,  212,  n. 

Chinese,  language,  iv,  197. 

Chiromancy,  author's  disposition  to,  ii, 
89,  n.     Remarks  on,  iv,  451. 

CiiuiSTiAN  MoiiALS,  iv,  53-114.  Some 
copies  with  reprint  titles,   iv,  ix,   xi. 


geni:kai.  index. 


4f)l 


Publislifd    by    Payne,    ib.       Kditor's 
pri'taco,  5 ').     ("orrcctL'tl  at  iv,  xi.     De- 
dicated   to   the   Earl  of  Buchan,   57. 
Archdeacon  Jetll-ry 's  preface,  58.    Ex- 
liortations  to  practice  virtue  on  riglit 
grounds;  and  from  virtuous  motives, 
.09.      To  overcome  anger,    CO.      To 
practise  chastity,  honesty,  charity,  Gl- 
(52.    Acquire  habits  of  virtue.  Go.    To 
carry  honesty  beyond  mere  law,  and 
judge  thereof  by  gospel  rules,  CI.     To 
avoid  envy,  and  cultivate  humility,  G5. 
To  forgive  injuries,  CC.     To  controul 
propensities  towards  evil,  fi7.     To  he 
deaf  to  talc  bearers,  CS.      To  be  grate- 
ful for  the  mercies  of  .God,  CD.     Not 
to  extenuate  our  faults,  nor  praise  our 
own  deeds,  70.     To  govern  ourselves, 
71.       To   observe    and   acknowledge 
Providence,  not  to  neglect  or  refuse 
the  blessings  placed  within  reach,  72. 
But  to  be  content  with  our  station;  to 
extenuate    the   errors   of  others,   73. 
Not  to  be  impatient  of  apparent  mis- 
fortunes, 74.     Not  to  persevere  rashly 
in  error,  75.     Nor  to  waste  our  mo- 
ments in  indolence,  7C.     Not  to  sound 
our  own  praises,  77.     Rather  to  value 
honest  and  virtuous  than  exalted  par- 
entage, 78.     The  true  English  gentle- 
man has  no  peer,  79. 
Part  II.   Exhortations  to  avoid  luxury, 
79.    Detraction,  80.    Dogmatism,  81. 
To  value  solidity  of  judgment  rather 
than  imagination,  82.      To  avoid  cen- 
soriousness,  83-85.'      Self-estimation, 
85.     To   observe  physiognomical  in- 
dications, SG.     To  observe  the  provi- 
dences befalling  others,  89.    Good  dis- 
positions of  great  value  in  this  life,  90. 
Remarks  on   various   contrivances  to 
soften  death,  90-92. 
Part  III.  Good  examples  hard  to  select, 
92.     It  were  good  to  imitate  God,  9.J. 
In  doubtful  cases,  to  enquire  which  is 
the  more  virtuous  alternative,  94.    To 
wait  for  Providence,  95.      Not  to  in- 
dulge propensities  to  evil,  90.      To  act 
upon  principle,  not  fate  or  omens,  97. 
To  act  consistently  with  our  age,  ib. 
To  be  choice  in  our  companions,  98. 
To  be   moderate  in  our  hopes,    100. 
To  study  to  be  meek  and  patient,  101. 
Not  to  speculate  as  to  futurity,   102. 
Not  to  degrade  the  diijnity  of  our  na- 
ture, 103.      Nor  be  blind  to  our  true 
character,   101.      In  prosperity  to  re- 
member the  uncertainty  of  all  things 
here,  105.     To  abhor  ingratitude,  IOC. 
To  be  sometimes  silent,  and  ever  to 
keep  our  vows,    106.     To  endeavour 


singlehcartedness;  to  aim  at  Christian, 
not  Heathen  ethics,  107.    Remarks  on 
long    life:    whose    close    may    be    its 
brightest  portion,  109.      Exhortations 
to  be  happy  in  virtue,  109.     And  con- 
tent with  our  sphere,  110.     General 
reflexions  on  life, — God's  merciful  pro- 
vidence,— the    number    who    will    be 
saved,  111-113.      And  concluding  ex- 
hortations not  to  complain  of  our  life  as 
loo  short;  not  to  reckon  upon  length  of 
days,  but  spend  them  in  a  near  appre- 
hension of  eternity,  ll'l. 
Chrysostom,  on  Joh'i  Baptist's  food,  iii, 
320.      Asserts  the  death  and  burial  of 
St.  John,  322. 
Church    of  England,    B.    a  sworn  sub- 
ject to  her  faith,  i,  6. 
Churchman,  Sir  John,  of  Thetford,  his 

family  and  character,  i,  273. 
Churchman's,    epistle,    (Rel.    Ckrici,) 
ii,  XX.    Second  character  of,  xxi.    An- 
swer to,  ib. 
Clagenfurt,  E.  B.  at,  i,  186. 
Clark,  Richard,  Chamberlain  of  London, 
presented  to  Trin.  Coll.  Camb.  in  1824 
a  drawing,  formerly  B's.  i,  Ixxv,  n. 
Classical  passages  for  mottoes,  iv,  454- 

456. 
Claudian,  error   concerning  crystal,    ii, 

267. 
Clavell,  set  out  a  catalogue  of  books,  i, 

308. 
Clavicles,  monkeys  have,  i,  46. 
Clay,  used  for  coffins  as  well  as  urns,  iii, 

470. 
Clayton,  Dr.  C.  L.  Principal  of  Broad- 
gate  Hall,  i,  470. 
Clayton,  Sir  Robt.  Lord  Mayor,  &c.  i, 

260  and  n. 
Cleopatra,  picture  of  her  death,  P.  E.  v, 
ch.  12,  iii,  121-126.      As  to  the  man- 
ner of  her  death;    whether   by  asps, 
125.     As  to  the  number  of  asps,  TiC. 
Why  the  breast  was  the  place  chosen 
for  the  wound,   120.     Long  and  very 
curious  account  of  an  ancient  encaustic 
picture  of  tliis  event,  by  R.  R.  Rein- 
agle,  Esq.  124,  125,  n. 
Civpsydrec,  iii,  141. 
Clergymen,  of  old,  left  little  behind  them, 

i,  203. 
Clevcs,  Duke  of,  i,  Ivii,  n. 
Climacterical  year,  P.  E.  iv,  ch.  12, 
iii,  47-C8.  Introductory  reflexions  re- 
specting numbers,  47.  Bp.  Hall's 
reflexions,  ib.  n.  Enumeration  of 
special  numbers,  48,  49.  Many  ex- 
amples respecting  the  numbers  seven 
and  nine,  49-5C.  Number  of  mouths 
of  the  Nile,   50,  n.     Decretory  d.-iys^ 


492 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


52,  n.     Months,    lunary  and  solary, 

53.  Medical  month,  55.  Scriptural 
testimony,  55,  56.  Apparent  discre- 
pancy in,  ib.  n.  General  discussion 
upon,  and  comparison  of  opinions,  57- 
C3.  Nature  not  exact  in  her  measure 
of  time,  G3.  The  calendar,  old  and 
new  style,  64-68.  Wren's  calcula- 
tions on  the  calendar,  64,  65,  n. 
Several  references  to  authors  on  this 
subject,  68,  n. 

Clocks,  when  invented,  iii,  141. 

Clouds,  remotest  distance  of,  ii,  346. 

Clove,  what,  ii,  366,  n. 

Clusius,  Carl,  a  botanist,  De  SHrpibtis 
Pannonicis,i,  177.  His  epitaph,  257. 
Quoted,  394. 

Coaches,  in  London  and  Mexico,  how 
many,  i,  288.  In  Elizabeth's  time, 
289. 

Coagulation,  remarks  on,  iv,  427-434. 

Cock,  see  Lion. 

Cock's  eggs,  curious  account  of,  ii,  419,n, 

Cockle,  what,  iv,  173. 

Cognac,  a  pleasant  town,  i,  19. 

Coins,  B.  a  collector  of,  i,  7.  Ro- 
man, found  at  Xainctes  castle,  IS. 
Cologne,  206.  E.  B.  bought  at  Venice, 
97.  B's.  account  of  one,  415.  One 
brought  from  Persia,  285.  Roman, 
Norman,  Danish,  and  Saxon,  found 
in  Britain,  iii,  463.  British  silver 
at  Thorpe,  near  Norwich,  464.  One 
found  by  Sir  Robert  Paston,  504, 
505. 

Colchester,  E.  B's.  account  of,  i,  53. 

Colebrooke,  Mr.  on  quinary  arrange- 
ments, iii,  413-415,  n. 

Coleridge,  S.  T.  remarks  on  Quincunx, 
iii,  380.  On  the  concluding  passage 
of  Garden  of  Cyrus,  iii,  447,  n. 

Coley,  Henry,  son-in-law  to  Lilly,  i,  468. 

College  of  Physicians,  admitted  Ij.  Socius 
Honorarius,  1664,  i,  Ixxxvil.  Gave 
his  diploma  in  the  following  year, 
Ixxxviii,  n.  The  original  presented 
by  O.  Brigstocke,  Esq.  to  Dr.  Rawlin- 
son,  Ixxxviii. 

CoUot,  Francis,  surgeon,  operated  for  the 
slone,  i,  278,  n.     Successfully,  279. 

Cologne,  i,  Ixxix.  E.  B.  visits,  206. 
The  three  kings  of,  P.  E.  vii,  ch.  8,  iii, 
317-319.  Conceived  to  be  the  wise 
men  who  visited  the  infant  Jesus,  317. 
No  evidence  exists  to  prove  this  cor- 
rect, 318.  Whence  the  probable 
ground  of  the  fable,  319.  Twelfth- 
night  said  by  Selden  to  originate  from 
this  fable  ;  by  others  referred  to  a  Ro- 
man custom.  Royal  offerings  at  St. 
James's  still  continued,  318,  n. 


Columbus,  Reald.  prof,  at  Padua  and 
Rome,  De  Re  /Inatomicd,  T.  Smith 
read,  i,  362. 

Combination  Sermons,  account  of,  iv,  27, 
and  n.     How  supported,  28. 

Comes,  Natalis,  quoted,  i,  386. 

Comestor,  ii,  15,  n. 

Comet,  in  1664-5,  T.  B.  saw  first  at 
Sessa,  i,  80,  84.  Till  it  disappeared, 
88.  A  speech  about  at  Padua,  92. 
B.  saw,  and  in  1618  another,  118, 
296,  300.  One  in  1580,  seen  by 
Maestlin,  ib.  In  1680,  E.  B.  saw, 
296.     And  B.,  299,  300. 

Comets,  Petit's  theory  of,  diiferent  from 
Des  Cartes'  i,  113.  Maestlin  wrote 
on,  118.  How  to  measure  the  tail  of, 
299.  Several  opinions  respecting  them , 
iii,  292,  n. 

Comines,  Philippe  de,  a  saying  of  his 
applied  to  B.  by  Patin,  ii,  xv. 

Common  Place  Books,  Extracts  from,  iv, 
376-456.  Verses  made  on  several  occa- 
sions, 376,  377.  Miscellanies,  378, 380. 
Scripture  criticism  on  Mark  vii,  32, 
380,  381.  Hints  and  extracts:  to 
Dr.  E.  B.  381-425.  On  the  law  of 
motion  and  gravitation,  425-427.  On 
coagulation,  427-434.  On  congelation, 
434-441.  On  bubbles,  441-443.  On 
vegetation,  443-447.  On  tobacco,  447- 
448,  On  ivy,  448-449.  On  the  fig 
tree,  449-450.  Scripture  criticism, 
450,451.  On  Chiromancy,  451.  Ex- 
periments on  animals,  452.  Receipts, 
453.  Fossil  remains  found  in  Nor- 
folk, 454.  Classical  passages  selected 
for  mottoes,  454-456. 

Commons,  house  of,  in  1661,  received 
the  Eucharist  at  Westminster  Abbey 
church,  i,  10. 

Company,  E.  India,  B's.  opinion  of, 
i,  310. 

Compass,  mariner's,  ii,  298.  Gilbert's 
researches  thereon,  ib.  n.  Whether 
known  to  the  ancients,  299.  Sir  J. 
Leslie's  and  Sir  J.  Herschell's  opinion 
of  the  date  of  this  invention,  301,  n. 
Exchange  of  the  sovereign  point  in  the 
southern  hemisphere,  ii,305. 

Conceit,  of  some  men  of  slender  attain- 
ments, ii,  104.  Often  diminishes  in 
proportion  to  the  increase  of  know- 
ledge, 105. 

Conclave  Alexandri,  VII,  &c.  ascribed 
by  Niceron  to  Molike,  the  editor  of 
R.  M.  i,  xxv. 

Concoction,  Sir  T.  B's.  tenets  on,  i,  363. 

Conformity,  in  1661,  expected  to  be 
general,  i,  8. 

Congelation,  remarks  on,  iv,  434-441. 


GENERAL    INDKX. 


493 


Conner,  Bernard,  author  of  Evangelium 
Mfdici,  ii,  xix. 

Conring,  Herman,  opinion  of /f .  ^f.  and 
the  author,  ii,  XV.  quoted  in  Cuiiringi- 
ana,  i,  Ixvii. 

Conscience,  its  conflicts  with  our  pas- 
sions, ii,  101. 

Constaiis,  liis  dream,  iii,  179,  n. 

Constaiitius,  his  two  bears,  iv,  312. 

Consumption,  observations  on,  iv,  39. 

Conciigion,  see  Plague,  &"c.  in  Antwerp, 
i,  157.  Flanders,  158.  Fumes  to 
guard  against,  372. 

Convocation  of  the  clergy  in  June  1661, 
i,  10.      Dean  of  Norwich  attends,  311. 

Conybeare,  Rev.  J.  J.  account  of  Vincent 
of  Reauvais,  ii,  241,  n. 

Conybeare,  Rev.  W.  U.  on  the  origin  of 
Hebrew,  iii,  177,  n. 

Cookworthy,  Mr.  Wm.  of  Plymouth,  on 
the  divining,  or  mining  rod,  iii,  17S,  n. 

Copernican  system  of  astronomy,  B's. 
opinions  respecting,  i,  x.xviii ;  iii,  1 16, 
164,210;  iii,  213-219,  365.  Oppos- 
ed by  Dean  Wren,  ii,  210,  n. 

Copes,  destroyed,  iv,  26,  n.  One  pre- 
sented by  Mr.  llarbord,  27. 

Copper  ore,  if  mixed  with  iron  or  lead, 
i,  173.  Iron  changed  into  at  a  spring 
in  Transylvania,  174.  Fine  Japan, 
244. 

Coqua-us,  ii,  11,  n. 

Corah,  Dathan,  and  Abiram,  query  re- 
specting, iv,  410. 

Coral,  whether  soft  under  water,  ii, 
330.  The  author  right  as  to  this 
question,  but  wrong  in  considering 
coral  a  mineral ;  its  description  given, 
352,  n.  Why  worn  by  children,  iii, 
178. 

Corbet,  Rd.  D.  D.  Bp.  of  Norwich, 
1632-5,  his  chaplain,  i,  467.  Burial, 
469.     Where,  and  when,  471. 

Corbinian,  St.  supposed  picture  of,  iv, 
282. 

Corn,  very  dear  in  1061,  i,  14.  Much 
exported  from  Marans,  2C.  The  ears 
of,  plucked,  iv,  135. 

Cornwall,  his  collection  of  engravings, 
E.  B.  !>aw,  i,  47. 

Coronary  plants,  see  Garlands. 

Coronation,  of  Charles  il  kept  solemnly 
at  Norwich,  &c.  i,  8,  9. 

Correspondence,  Domestic,  i,  1-350, 
446-460.  Miscellaneous,  351-446, 
461-471. 

Corse,  Mr.  C.  Scott,  his  statement  con- 
cerning the  postures  of  elephants,  ii, 
388,  n. 

Cortex,  see  Bark,  Peruvian. 

Coryat,  Thomas,  his  travels,  i,  37. 


Cottenberg,  near  Prag, silver  mines  work- 
ed for  centuries,  i,  195. 

Cotterell,  Madam,  i,  Ixxvi. 

Cottcrell,  Sir  Charles,  married  Sir  T.  B's. 
daughter,  i,  51,  More  probable  that  it 
was  Sir  C.  C's.  son,  Ixxvii.  E.  B. 
saw  his  son  at  Vienna,  195. 

Cotton,  Sir  Robert,  i,  385.  A  griffin's 
claw  in  his  library,  ii,    174. 

Cotton,  Sir  Thomas,  i,  382. 

Cough,  why  man  is  liable  to  and  not 
oxen,  ii,  216. 

Council  of  the  bean,  ii,  203. 

Courtney,  Rich.  Bp.  iv,  17. 

Coventry,  its  walls  rased,  i,  40.  Famous 
for  its  cross,  ib. 

Coverly,  Sir  Roger  de,  B.  compared  to, 
i,  Ivi,  n. 

Cranach,  or  Goldecranach,  in  Hungary, 
i,  ISS.  Gold  and  silver  ore  found  at, 
by  the  Emperor  Rudolf,  172. 

Crassus,  that  he  never  laughed  but  once, 
iii,  347. 

Crane's  pot,  what,  iv,  286. 

Craven,  Isaac,  of  Trin.  Coll.  Camb.  his 
play  to  be  acted,  i,  45.  Sent  to  thank 
the  M.  of  Newcastle,  55.  E.  B.  his 
friend,  writes  to  from  Naples,  77. 
Rome,  80. 

Creation,  term  defined,  ii,  50,  51.  A 
mystery ;  especially  that  of  man,  52, 
Opinions  of  Plato  and  Aristotle  there- 
on, ib.  Basil  and  Ambrose  history 
of  in  their  Uexameron,  240.  other 
hexamerists,  ib.  n. 

Credulity  and  supinitv,  causes  of  error, 
P.  E.  i,  ch.  5,  ii,  208  214. 

Cremnitz,  in  Hungary,  E.  B.  visits  the 
gold  mines  of,  i,  ixxx.  Veins  of  gold 
and  quicksilver  at,  172.  Myrrh  dug 
out  of  the  gold  mines  at,  185.  E.  B. 
at,  181. 

Crete,  labyrinth  of,  iii,  400. 

Crevise,  or  crayfish,  stones  on  the  head  of, 
i.  279. 

Croatian  provender,  what,  i,  205. 

Crocodile,  supposed  never  to  cease  grow- 
ing, iii,  344.     Truth  of  this,  ib.  n. 

Croesus,  see  Delphos. 

Crofts,  John,  Dean  of  Norwich,  his  death, 
character,  i,  203.  And  successor,  ib.  n. 
Account  of,  and  his  family,  iv,  8.  .And 
the  chapter,  built  a  new  organ,  26. 

Croone,  William,  M.  D.  his  work  on 
muscles,  i,  259. 

Crook,  Andrew,  R.  Af.  printed  for,  ii, 
vii-x.  Told  Sir  K.  Digby  of  the  print- 
ing of  his  Obs.  xxviii. 

Crown  of  Hungary,  not  shaped  like 
others,  i,  203.    Held  sacred,  why,  204. 

Crows,  funerally  burnt,  iii,  457. 


491^ 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


Crossley,  James,  Esq.  of  Manchester, 
communications  fVoni  him,  ii,  xiv,  xvii. 
His  reviewal  of  Cardan,  242,  n.  Pub- 
lished a  volume  of  B's.  Tracts,  iii,  178  ; 
iv,  lis.  Remarks  on  Museum  Clau- 
sum,  239,  n. 
Crystal,  wrongly  supposed  to  be  nothing 
but  ice  strongly  congealed,  P.  E.  ii, 
ch.  l,ii,  2G7-28;5.  Authors  who  have 
so  said,  207.  Those  who  have  denied, 
2fi8.  Reasons  against  it,  first,  from 
considering  what  crystal  is  not,  268- 
277.  Then  what  it  is,  277-280. 
Brayley's  notes  on  several  points  in 
this  chapter,  281-283.  Ross's  note 
about  crystal,  208,  n.  Forms  of, 
275,  n.  Where  found,  276.  Its  qua- 
lities, 277.  Probable  grounds  on  which 
the  error  was  founded,  280,  281.  B's. 
notions  of  its  chemical  nature  wrong, 
283,  n. 

Ctesias,  accused  of  having  said,  in  his 
Indian  History  what  he  had  neither 
seen  nor  heard,  ii,  23.5.  An  examina- 
tion of  the  charge,  ib.  n.  Examina- 
tion of  his  authority  on  Persian  affairs, 
ib.  n.  Strabo's  censure  upon  him, 
ih.  n.  His  story  of  a  horse  pismire, 
337,  n.  Originated  the  fable  that  an 
elephant  has  no  joints,  38,5,  n.  387,  n. 

Cuckoo,  several  superstitions  concerning, 
iii,  103,  n. 

Cucumbers,  what,  iv,  129,  n. 

Cummin  seed,  iv,  133,  134,  n. 

Curtis,  Mr.  John,  exquisite  figure,  but 
too  sparing  account,  of  Cicada  Anglica, 
iii,  92. 

Cuvier,  Regne  Animal  quoted  to  shew 
that  elephant's  tusks  are  teeth,  ii, 
392,  n.  His  account  of  the  bear, 
412,  n.  His  reflections  on  those  crea- 
tures which  serve  as  connecting  links 
between  different  tribes,  4;i5,  n.  In- 
teresting account  of  tlie  rattle  snake, 
400.  His  remarks  on  the  supposed 
social  feelings  of  the  dolphin,  iii,  91,  n. 

Cymbals,  Tr.  6,  iv,  191,  192.  Tinkling, 
an  inappropriate  term,  191.  By  whom 
described,  ib. 

Cynthia,  beryl  ring  on  the  finger  of  her 
ghost,  iii,  400. 

Cypress,  iv,  126  and  n. 

Cyprian  says  that  goat's  blood  will  break 
a  diamond,  ii,  334.  Supposes  the 
pigeon  to  have  no  gall,  399. 

Cyrus,  see  Garden  of  Cyrus. 


D. 


Dacre,  Lord,  (of  the  North,)  story  that 
his  sheep  always  produced  twins — on 


the  scite  of  an  old  abbey  in  his  grounds, 
ii,  173. 
Daedalus,  the  fable  of  explained,  ii,  222. 
Dalton,  Dr.  On  the  Effects  of  Atmosfhcric 
Pressure   on  the  Human  Frame,    iii, 
28,  n. 
Damps,  in  the  mines  in  Hungary,  E.  B's. 
account  of,  i,   180.      Sent  to  II.  Soc. 
187.      In   coal   mines,    270.      Safety 
lamp  invented  as  a  security  against,  ii, 
489,  n. 
Danasus,  ii,  17,  n. 
Dancing,  in  Italy,  i,  96.     Diaholino,  or 

puppet,  94. 
Dandolo,    Doge  of  Venice,  conducts  the 
siege  of  Zara  in  defiance  of  the  Roman 
pontiff,  ii,  7,  n. 
Danes,  had  probably  disused  their  prac- 
tice of  urn-burial  before  their  invasion 
of  Britain,   iii,  408.     Plain  circles  of 
stone  around  their  urns  in  Denmark, 
469. 
Daniel,  destroying  the  dragon,  ii,  337. 
Dean    Wren's  comment  upon,  ih.  n. 
In  the  fiery  furnace,  various  represent- 
ations of,  iii,  101.     Erected  a  monu- 
ment to  the  Median  and  Persian  kings, 
460. 
Danish  language,  iv,  204. 
Danube,  Danow,  i,  165,  or  Thonaw,  170. 
Daru,   Hist,  de  Venise,  ii,  xxi,  7,  n. 
Davenport,  Christopher,  alias  Francis  de 
Sta.  Clara,   born  a  Catholic,  bred  at 
Oxford,  but  turned  papist,  and  Fran- 
ciscan, missionary,  and  chaplain  to  the 
queens  of  Charles  the   1st  and  2nd; 
author  of  Religio  Philosuphi  Peripate- 
tici ;  notice  of  his  life  and  works,  ii, 
xvii. 
David,  why  he  was  punished  for  number- 
ing the  people,  iii,  327. 
Davy,   Sir  Humphrey,  his  confirmation 
of   Dr.   Jordan's   observation   on    the 
production  of  sparks  by  rubbing  canes 
together,  ii,  488,  n.      His  invention  of 
the  safety  lamp,   489,  n.     His  argu- 
ments against   the  existence  of  mer- 
maids, iii,  144,  n.     Mistaken  for  one 
himself,  145,  n. 
Days  of  the  week,  their  names  whence 
derived,  iii,    181.     Different  in  their 
length   at  different  seasons,   210-213. 
Calendarian  differences,   211.     Prog- 
nosticks  as  to  temperature,  from  festi- 
val-days,   ib.     Unfortunate  or   lucky 
days,   212.     Circumnavigators  lose  a 
day,   212,  213.     Wren's  example   of 
this,  from  a  captain  who  sailed  with 
Drake,  ib.  n. 
I)c  Projundis,  of  the  Romish  church,  ii, 
12,  n. 


GENERAL   INDEX. 


495 


De  Re  Citlimtria,  iv,  305-308. 

De  Tribus  Im}iostoribus,  niithor  of,  dou))t- 
ful,  ii,  xxii.  E.  B.  read  in  German,  i, 
200.     Author  of  suggesieil,  iv,  212,  n. 

Dead  Sea,  ii,  27,  n.;  iv,  220,  222. 

Deafness,  causes  of,  i,  234,  235.  Curi- 
ous mode  of  curing,  309. 

Deal,  T.  B's.  account  of,  i,  13G. 

Death,  B's.  contemolations  on  the  fear  of 
it,  ii,  5C, 57.  Dr.  Drake's  remarks  on 
the  passage,  57,  n.  The  very  disgrace 
of  our  nature,  58.  Some  submit  to  it 
the  more  contentedly,  because  they 
live  in  their  children,  59.  Caesar's 
wish  respecting  it,  63.  Not  death,  but 
the  mode  of  dying  to  be  feared,  ib. 
Quotation  to  this  effect  from  Cicero, 
out  of  Epicharmus,  ib.  n.  Its  cha- 
racter as  the  mortal  right-lined  circle, 
iii,  491.  Various  attempts  to  soften  it, 
iv,  91, 

Death-watch,  an  evil  omen,  ii,  375. 
What  it  is,  ib.  n. 

Dec,  .\rthur,  M.  D.  son  of  Dr.  John  D. 
B.  knew,  i,  414,  4C5.  Account  of, 
403. 

Dee,  John,  D.  C.  L.  his  converse  with 
spirits,  i,  175.  Banished  by  the  em- 
peror, 177.  Notice  of,  413.  And 
works,  463-467. 

Deepham,  lime  tree,  i,  Ixvii.  Elm-tree, 
lb.  n. 

Deer,  its  longevity,  ii,  424.  Why  sup- 
posed, 425.  Period  of  gestation,  ib. 
Salaciousuess,  ib.  Said  to  be  a  hie- 
roglyphic for  long  life,  427.  A  pas- 
sage from  Hesiod,  428.  Probably  lives 
36  or  40  years,  429.  Said  annually 
to  lose  their  pizzle,  430.  Note  on  the 
reproduction  of  lost  limbs,  ib.  n.  New 
inarching  of  noses,  ib.  n. 

Defeat  of  Spaniards  by  Portuguese,  in 
1003,  [at  Ebora,]  i,  43. 

Delft,  E.  B.  at,  i,  155. 

Delphos,  of  the  answers  of  the  oracle  of 
Apollo,  at,  Tr.  2,  iv,  223-230.  That 
delivered  to  Croesus,  king  of  Lydia, 
discussed  in  various  respects,  223-226. 
Attributed  to  Satan,  220.  Other  ora- 
cular replies  considered,  227-229. 
Concluding  reflexions,  229,  230. 

Delrio,  ii,  15,  n. 

Demoniacal  possession  still  existing  in 
India,  i,  Ixxxv. 

Demosthenes,  the  son  of  a  blacksmith? 
iii,  353. 

Denham,  Sir  Jn.  the  poet,  died,  when,  i, 
184. 

Denmark,  witches  in,  i,  l.x.\xiii.  Eng. 
Envoy's  account  of,  i,  412. 

Denny,  Sir  William,  account  of,  iv.  10. 


Denton,  M.  D.  much  senior  to  B.,  calls  in 
E.  B.  i,  294. 

Dereham,  most  part  bumf  down,  i,  254. 

Des  Cartes,  see  Cartes. 

Devil,  the,  generally  supposed  to  have  a 
cloven  foot,  iii,  172.  Why,  i^.  andn. 
Of  Delphos,  ii,  IS,  42,  66. 

Devonshire,  Duke  of",  his  picture  of  B's. 
family  :  kindness  respecting  it ;  opi- 
nion of  Walpole's  account  of  it,  I, 
Pref.  15. 

Dialogue  between  an  inhabitant  of  the 
earth  and  of  the  moon,  iv,  379.  Be- 
tween two  twins  in  the  womb,  ib. 

Diamond,  one  worth  X^llOO  at  Arundle 
House,  i,  52.  Said  by  ancient  writers 
to  be  broke  by  the  blood  of  goats,  ii, 
334.      Examination  of  the  fable,  335. 

Diepenbicck,  A.  an  engraver,  i,  47. 

Diet  of  various  nations,  ii,  85.  On  our 
various  choice  of  it,  P.  E.  iii,  ch.  25, 
ii,  507-514.  Scriptural  account  of  the 
food  originally  assigned,  507.  First 
use  of  animal  food,  508.  Motives  of 
selection,  510.  Various  ancient,  Jew- 
ish, and  national  dishes,  510-513. 
Summing  up  of  the  question,  513,  514. 
A  tale  told,  512,  n. 

Digby,  Sir  Kenelin,  Knt.  Recommend- 
ed by  Ld.  Dorset  to  read  R.  M.  i, 
xxi.  His  opinion  of  it,  given  in  24 
hours,  x.\ii,  .\.\iv.  His  complimentary 
disclaimer  of  any  intention  to  reply  in 
print  to  R.  M.  ii,  x.wiii,  .vxix.  His 
observations  published,  when,  viii. 
Translated  into  Latin,  but  not  pub- 
lished, XV.  Opinions  of,  i,  354.  Mis- 
take as  to  the  /?<■  Tribus  Impostor,  ii, 
xxii.  Discourse  on  Sympathetic  Pow- 
der, 27,  n.  Large  extract  from  it,  re- 
specting the  cure  of  wounds  by  sympa- 
thetic powder,  322,  n.  Dean  Wren's 
experience  hereof,  ib.  n.  His  theory 
of  electricity,  329.  His  mode  of  tak- 
ing away  warts,  iii,  183,  n.  In  his 
Observations  on  Religio  Medici,  ii,  1 1 9- 
152,  he  accuses  B.  of  not  having  fol- 
lowed the  wheel  of  the  church  in  being 
a  Protestant,  120.  Comments  on  B's. 
remarks  upon  the  soul,  121.  Concern- 
ing the  soul  sleeping  till  the  resurrec- 
tion, 122.  Commends  B's.  demanding 
more  impossibilities  in  religion  for  his 
faith  to  feed  upon,  ib.  Jortin  and 
Tillotson  hereon,  ib.  n.  Is  not  con- 
tent with  the  author's  definition  of 
light,  123.  Of  eternity,  ib.  Pre- 
destination, ib.  The  trinity,  ib.  First 
matter,  ib.  Commends  White's  book, 
De  Mundo,  125.  Some  account  of 
him,  126,  n.     Notices  B's  remarks  on 


496 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


the  knowledge  of  devils,  127.  Speaks 
of  B.  Ochinus,  128.  Attacks  B.  for 
having  said  that  Ptolemy  condemned 
the  Alcoran,  ib.  Which  B.  did  not 
say,  ib.  n.  Falls  into  another  mis- 
understanding of  B's.  meaning,  129,  n. 
Remarks  on  what  B.  says  of  angels, 

130.  Of  the  creation  of  man's  soul, 

131.  Of  long  life  and  apparitions,  zi. 
Asserts  that  slain  bodies  bleed  at  tl;e 
approach  of  the  murderer,  132.  Ross's 
speculations  on  both  these  matters, 
ib.  n.  Commends  highly  B's.  thoughts 
on  life  and  death,  133.  Makes  a  hit 
at  B.  for  his  egotism,  134.  Discusses 
B's.  opii\ions  about  virtue,  134-138. 
Touches  upon  grace,  136.  Examines 
B's.  apprehension  of  the  end  of  those 
who  died  before  Christ,  138.  Com- 
pliments the  author  for  his  wit,  even 
where  he  goetli  astray,  on  the  subject 
of  the  resurrection,  139-142.  Specu- 
lates as  to  identity,  142.  Complains 
of  B's.  definition  of  charity,  143.  Of 
liis  comparison  of  God  and  man,  144. 
Of  his  overstrained  expression  of  his 
love  for  his  friend,  145.  Denounces 
his  resolution  of  giving  up  the  labori- 
ous pursuit  of  knowledge,  because  in 
the  next  world  it  will  be  perfect  with- 
out labour,  146.  Speaks  of  the  delight 
of  study,  &c.  147.  Exclaims  against 
his  want  of  gallantry,  148.  Doubts 
his  dreaming  facilities,  149.  Com- 
plains of  his  conclusion,  as  below  the 
dignity  of  its  theme,  lb.  Concludes  in 
complimentary  phrase  to  his  noble  cor- 
respondent, 151.  Postscript,  defining, 
grace,  151-152. 

Dill,  iv,  134. 

Diodorus  Sicnlus  says  the  elephant  has 
no  joints,  ii,  387. 

Diogenes,  his  reply  to  a  query,  iv,  395. 

Diomed,  fable  of  his  horses,  ii,  221. 

Dioscorides,  to  be  read  by  medical  stu- 
dents, i,  357.  But  not  received  im- 
plicitly, ii,  237.  His  fables  about  the 
loadstone,  320.  Concerning  coral, 
350.  AVhere  he  made  his  observa- 
tions, iii,  381. 

Diseases,  certain  places  unfavourable  to 
certain  complaints,  iv,  38,  39,  43-45. 
Languedoc  and  Istria,  43,  44. 

Dissections,  bodies  for,  hard  to  get,  i, 
309. 

Diuturnity,  reflections  upon  tlie  desire 
of,  natural  to  man,  iii,  489. 

Diving  in  the  Nile,  stories  of,  in  Radzi- 
vil,  i,4G. 

Divining,  by  Rod,  sec  Rod.  By  Book, 
see  Sortes.     By  Staff',  iii,  180. 


Dodder,  quincuncial  arrangement  of  the 

rural  charm  against,  iii,  397. 
Dodo,  seen  by  L'Estrange,  ii,  174. 
Dodonseus,  or  Dodoens,  Rembert,  prof,  of 
physic  at  Leyden,  liis  Ilcrbarium  Bel- 
giciim,  to  be  read  by  medical  students, 
i,  357.     Compared  with  Englisli,  361. 

Dog-days,  their  fabled  influence  in  medi- 
cine, P,  E.  iv,  ch.  xiii,  iii,  69-86. 
What  they  are,  and  from  vyhat  star 
named,  69.  General  opinion  that  all 
medicine  is  to  be  disused  during  them, 
69,  70.  Wlience  arising — from  the 
unfounded  notion  of  the  influence  of 
the  star  on  temperature,  70.  The 
Egyptians  the  great  magnifiers  of  this 
star,  and  why,  iii,  71.  Galen  assigns 
the  reason  of  the  use  of  the  stars  as 
rules  in  medical  practice,  71.  Astro- 
nomical considerations,  72-78.  The 
authority  of  Hippocrates  on  the  point, 
in  several  of  his  pieces,  79-80.  His 
maxims  must  be  taken  with  reference 
to  his  place  of  abode,  and  the  time 
when  he  lived,  80,  81.  Different 
kinds  of  purgative  medicines  then  and 
now  to  be  considered,  81-83.  As  well 
as  the  nature  of  the  complaint,  83. 
Astrological  considerations,  84.  Hy- 
drophobia and  its  cures,  ib.  n.  Apo- 
logy for  the  length  of  the  discussion, 
on  account  of  the  importance  of  the 
subject,  85. 

Dogs,  edible,  iii,  273,  n.  Of  Iceland, 
iv,  255. 

Dog-star,  what,  iii,  69.      See  Dog-days. 

Dolphin  the,  shewn  and  opened,  i,  210, 
215.  Drest  and  eaten,  by  the  king  at 
Newmarket,  211.  Picture  of,  P.  E. 
V,  ch.  2,  iii,  90-92.  Wrongly  painted 
crooked,  90.  No  more  so  than  other 
cetaceous  animals,  ib.  Distinct  from 
the  porpoise,  /'/;.  n.  Persian  accounts 
of,  91,  n.  Ijieroglyphick  of  celerity, 
ib.  Or,  as  others  say,  of  society  ; 
Cuvier's  account  of  their  alleged  affec- 
tion to  man,  ib.  n.  Used  as  a  device 
by  some  learned  printers,  92,  n. 

Dominican  Friars,  sale  of  indulgences 
transferred  to,  from  the  Eremites,  ii, 
3,  n. 

Donne,  Dr.  sermon  of,  good,  i,  307. 

Dorado,  ii,  87,  n. 

Dorchester,  My.  Pierrepoint,  1st  M.  of, 
an  amateur  in  medicine,  i,  287,  n.  E.  B. 
attends  him,  cii,  287.  Ill  again,  292, 
Dead,  295.  His  library,  292,  294, 
295.  Given  to  Phys.  Coll.  by  E.  B's. 
means,  308. 

Doria,  Andreas,  his  providential  escape, 
iv,  74. 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


497 


Dorset,  Kilw.  Sackvillc,  Earl  of,  i,  xxi ; 
ii,  iv. 

Dorset,  Tlionias,  Maniuis  of,  liis  body 
iincorniptcil  at"!er  7S  years'  iiueriiicnt, 
iii,   17*1. 

Dort,  E.  R.  at,  i,  Ixxviii.  Synod  of,  not 
in  all  points  rigiit,  ii,  6. 

Dover,  E.  H.  at,  i,  57.  His  letter  from, 
CO.     T.  B's.  account  of,  1j7. 

Doves  of  Syria,  remarkable  for  their 
eyes,  iv,  UJS. 

Dowdswell,  Dr.  Prcb.  of  Worcester,  i, 
■1(JS. 

Downs,  the,  T.  B's.  account  of,  i,  136. 

D'Oyley,  Sir  \Vm.  fossils  on  his  estate  at 
Shottisham,  i,  Ixxxvi.  Account  of,  ib.  n. 

Drabitius,  his  prophecies,  talked  of,  I,  45. 

Drake,  Sir  Francis,  his  island,  i,  451. 

Drake,  Nathan,  M.  D.  Evenings  in  Au- 
tumn, i,  l.wiii,  n. 

Drayton,  Michael,  his  Polyolbion,  and 
Selden's  comment,  praised,  i,  315. 

Drclincourt,  Charles,  defence  of  the  pro- 
fessors of  medicine,  quoted  by  Drake 
in  his  Evenings  in  Jutunni,  i,  Ixviii. 

Dreams,  reflections  on,  iv,  355-359. 
Happy  dreams;  divine;  d.T:moniacal, 
355-35C.  Angelical ;  usually  on  the 
business  .'of  the  day,  some  of  natural 
interpretation,  356.  Alexander's,  Ves- 
patian's,  Mauritius's,  357.  Some  re- 
sults of;  generally  in  accord  with  cha- 
racter, 357.  Sinful  dreams,  358.  End- 
ing sometimes  in  death,  359. 

Dread,  explanation  of  the  term,  iv,  211, 
212. 

Dresden,  E.  15.  visits  the  Elector  of  Sax- 
ony's collections  there,  i,  l.xxxi. 

Drexel,  Jeremiah,  a  Jesuit,  quoted,  i, 
360. 

Dropsy,  when  brought  on  by  ague,  i, 
2(ir). 

Druids,  their  sepulture,  iii,  407. 

Drunkenness,  monthly,  why  recommend- 
ed, and  with  what  medical  and  moral 
propriety,  iii,  171.  Wren's  remarks 
on,  ib.  n.  Hp.  Hall's  excellent  obser- 
vation, ib.  n. 

Dryden,  John,  Religio  Laid;  or,  A 
Lai/vtan's  Fiiilh,  Svo.  Lond.  16S5,  ii, 
xviii.  lilount's  Ihl.  Laid,  dedicated 
to,  ib.  Attacked  for  his  change  of 
faith  by  J.  U.  in  Rd.  Laid,  16S8,  ib. 

Du  I'etit,  Thouars,  in  liingrajjhie  Univer- 
selle,  mentions  R.  as  the  discoverer  of 
adipo-cire,  i,  Ixxii. 

Dugdale,  Wni.  of  Blyth  Hall,  letters  of, 
to  15.  from  Warwickshire,  i,  380. 
London,  381,  388,  391,  392.  Of  B. 
to,  383,  387.  His  Monasticon,  3S6, 
387.     How  far  assisted  by  B.  in  his 


History  of  Embanking  and  Draining, 
l.\.\ii,  385,  392. 

Dunion,  or  Duncoinbc,  Samuel,  his  letter 
to  B.  with  a  book,  i,  352.  Account 
of,  Ixiii,  352,  n. 

Dunkirk,  held  in  166 1  by  English,  i,  10. 
Citadel,  E.  B.  saw,  207. 

Duns,  John,  the  Scot,  his  tomb  at  Co- 
logne, i,  206. 

Dunton,  John,  publisher,  perhaps  com- 
piler, of  Religio  Bibtiopohe,  ii,  xix. 
Dun  ton's  Creed:  or,  The  Religion  of  a 
Bookseller,  ib.  n. 

Dunwich,  members  for,  i,  307. 

Dutch,  character  in  war,  i,  269. 

Dutton,  Sir  Thomas,  married  B's.  mo- 
ther, i,  xviii,  Ivii,  ex.  In  Ireland  with 
B.  ex.  Ditl'erent  accounts  of,  ib.  Call- 
ed Sir  Ralph  by  Le  Neve,  Ivii.  Well 
spoken  of  by  Mrs.  Lyttleton ;  sup- 
posed by  Birch  to  be  the  same  person 
mentioned  in  his  Life  of  Prince  Henry, 
as  having  killed  Sir  llatton  Cheke  in  a 
duel,  ib.  n.  ex.  B's  verses  on  that  oc- 
casion, Iviii,     Dies,  1634,  Iviii. 

Dyers,  their  art,  iii,  286. 


E. 


Ear,  horse-leeches  getting  into,  remedy 
for,  i,  223.  Remarks  on,  234.  Ting- 
ling of  it,  ominous,  iii,  165.  Wren 
accounts  for  it,  ib.  n. 

Earth,  Lactantius's  opinion  of  its  figure, 
ii,  227.  A  magnetical  body,  2S4. 
In  what  senses  it  is  not  so,  ib.  n.  In 
what  senses  it  is  so,  286,  n. 

Earthquake  in  Persia,  news  of,  i,  171. 
Absurd  account  of  the  cause  and  na- 
ture of,  ii,  209.  I.emery's  experiment 
respecting,  316,  n. 

Earwig,  whether  wingless,  ii,  525. 

East  and  west,  proprieties  thereof,  P.E. 
vi,  ch.  7,  236-246.  Strictly  speaking, 
there  is  no  east  and  west,  236-238. 
Consequently  their  effects  are  non-ex- 
istent, 238-240.  We  impute  effects 
to  the  sun  which  more  properly  arise 
from  other  causes,  239-210.  Neigh- 
bour countries  or  pl.iccs  do  not  always 
produce  alike,  210.  No  adders  at 
Bletchinton;  no  venomous  things  in 
Ireland  ;  no  spiders  in  the  roof  of 
King's  College,  Camb.  240,  n.  Many 
fallacious  preferences  given  to  the  east, 
241-246.  .Astrological  account  begins 
from  it,  241.  Aristotle  advises  to 
to  place  a  city  towards  it,  ib.  Varro 
so  placcth  his  farm,  242.  Columella 
his  house,  ib.  ievts  and  Mahometans 
bow    to   the    east,   242-244.     In   the 


VOL  IV 


2  M 


498 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


camp  of  Israel  the  east  is  assigned  to  the 
noblest  tribe,  244.  Learning  and  arts 
from  the  east,  ib. 

Echoes,  said  to  speak  with  a  mouth,  ii, 
395.  Correction  of  this,  ib.  n.  Frag- 
ment on,  iv,  373,  374. 

EckiiKs,  OK  van  Ecke,  John,  a  Dominican, 
writes  against  Luther,  ii,  3,  n. 

Eclipse,  in  1681-2,  lunar,  total,  B's.  ob- 
vations  on,  i,  334. 

Edinburgh,  Physicians'  Coll.  and  E.  I. 
Company,  founded,  i,  334. 

Edward  I,  II,  III,  IV,  all  visited  Nor- 
wich, iv,  29,  n. 

Eels,  account  of  some,  by  Dean  Wren, 
ii,  442,  n. 

Effluxions,  doctrine  of,  ii,  286.  Note 
respecting  it,  ib.  n. 

Egg,  within  an  egg,  i,  253.  Hatched  on 
the  bodies  of  women,  ii,  420.  Wren's 
exact  directions  for  effecting  this,  ib.  n. 
)Vhether  the  chicken  proceeds  from 
the  yolk,  533.  Harvey's  great  prin- 
ciple, omtiia  ex  nvo,  confirmed  by  mo- 
dern investigation,  534,  n.  B's.  high 
eulogium  upon  Harvey,  534.  Sex  erro- 
neously supposed  to  be  discoverable 
from  the  figure,  ib.  The  Egyptian  and 
Babylonian  methods  of  hatching  their 
eggs  compared,  ib.  Diflerence  be- 
tween a  boiled  and  a  roasted,  535. 
Theory  of  coagulation,  ib.  n.  Some 
odd  queries  briefly  disposed  of,  535. 
Unlucky  not  to  break  its  shell,  iii, 
164,  and  n. 

Egypt,  description  of,  by  Van  Sleb,  i, 
221.  It  is  said  never  to  rain  there,  iii, 
256.     Incorrectly,  257. 

Egyptian  hieroglyphics,  have  been  the 
means  of  advancing  popular  conceits, 
ii,  246,  247. 

Egyptian  papyrus,  iv,  169,  170. 

Egyptian  sepulture,  iii,  458. 

Elden-hole,  fathomless,  i,  33. 

Elder  tree,  with  white  berries,  rare,  \, 
275.  Berries  falsely  supposed  poi- 
sonous, ii,  381. 

Electrical  bodies,  concerning  them,  P.E. 
ii,  ch.  4,  ii,  325-333.  Definition  and 
enumeration  of,  326.  Their  attraction 
very  various,  ib.  Several  bodies  enu- 
merated which  do  not  attract,  327. 
Correction  of  B's  assertion,  ib.  n. 

Electricity,  how  excited  in  crystal,  ii, 
282,  n.  The  philosophy  of  its  opera- 
tion, various  explanations  of,  328,  329, 
and  n. 

Electuary,  receipt  for  an,  i,  349.  Anti- 
dote for  plague,  372. 

Elephant,  how  his  knees  bend,  &c.  i, 
215.      Two  in  London,  255.      Popular 


errors  respecting,  P.  E.  iii,  ch.  1,  ii, 
385-396.  That  he  hath  no  joints, 
385-392.  Whence  arose  this  fable, 
and  who  have  supported  it,  387.  Va- 
rious grounds  of  its  absurdity,   387- 

392.  That  he  never  lies  down,  388. 
How  far  this  is  true,  ib.  n.  Modern 
prevalence  of  these  fables,  390,  n. 
A  commentary  on  the  author's  treat- 
ment of  the  subject  extends  in  the 
notes  from  385  to  392.  That  he  is 
terrified  by  the  grunting  of  swine,  393. 
That  some  elephants  have  spoken,  ib. 
B's.  speculations  on  the  possibility  of 
this,  394.  Discussed,  ib.  n.  Ex- 
amination of  these  points,  ib.  n.  Whe- 
ther his  tusks  are  horns,  392  and  n. 
His    apprehension   of  lesser  animals, 

393,  n.  Figured  with  castle  on  back, 
iii,  146. 

Elias.  the  prophet,  a  type  of  our  Saviour, 

iv,  381. 
Elias  the  rabbin,  his  prophecy,  iii,  191. 
Elizabeth,  Hist,  of  the  famous  Princesse, 

i,  Pref  12,  n. 
Elve-locks,  iii,  167,  see  Hair. 
Emeu,  or  cassowary,  Chas.  I.  had  one,  i, 

281, 
Empedocles,  ii,  21,  n. 
Enoch's  pillar,  ii,  35. 
Ent,  Sir  Geo.  his  /Intidiatribe,  i,  277. 
Entozoa,  parasytic  vvorms,  iii,  411,  n. 
Epamenides,  his  proverb  respecting  the 

Cretians,  ii,  94,  n. 
Ephialtes,  see  Nightrnare. 
Epicureans    deny  a    soul    to  plants,    ii, 

21,  n. 
Epicurus,  his  character  and  doctrines,  iii, 

362.      Remarks  on  him,  ib.  ii. 
Epiphanius,  ii,  ll,n.      Contra  Octaginta 

Ueereses,  205,  n.  His  work  on  phy- 
siology   to  be  received  with  caution, 

from  its  implicit  adherence  to  former 

writers,  241. 
Epirus,   cows    of,    large,   spoken    of  by 

Aristotle,  probably  buffalos,  i,  312. 
Epitaph  of  Carl.  Clusius  and  Jos.  Scali- 

ger.  i,  257.      Of  Gordianus,  iii,  495. 

Of  Scaliger,  Petrarca,  Dante,  and  Ari- 

osto,  iv,  48. 
Equivocations    in   words  and  phrases — 

the  source  of  delusion  and  error,  ii, 

202-207. 
Erasmus  on  Mat.  xvii,  5,  ii,  33,  n.     His 

absurd  story  of  a  toad,  525,  n. 
Eratosthenes,  his  De  Insults  copied  from 

Timotheus,  ii,  217. 
Eremite  friars,  usually  published  indul- 

gencies,  ii,  3,  n.      Luther  one  of  them 

ib.     This  trade  taken  from  them,  ib. 
Erker,  Lazarus,  on  minerals,  i,  183. 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


499 


Erpingham,    on    Sir    John    of,*   reputed 
tbuiiiItT  of  B.  Friars',  Norwich,  i,  .'{S7. 
Krpin^ham,    Sir    Thonuis,  account    of, 
iv,  'J. 

Errata,  a  reniarliuble  one,  i,  Ixix,  n. 
Anil  additional  notes  and  various  read- 
ings to  R.  M.  ii,  xxi,  xxii.  Corrected 
in  editor's  postscript  lo  R.  M.  157. 
In  editor's  preface  to  the  C/iristiaii 
Morals  ;  corrected  in  preface  to  vol.  iv, 
p.  xi. 

Errors ;  common,  popular,  or  vulgar, 
various  causes  of,  P.  E.  i;  ii,  1 83-265. 
And  falsehood  incurred  by  the  fall, 
ISS.  Various  examples,  I S8- 192.  Of 
the  continuance  of,  in  Eve,  Cain,  La- 
niech,  ib.  Concerning  mineral  and 
\egetable  bodies,  P.  E.  ii ;  ii,  207- 
384.  Compendious  discussion  of  vari- 
ous erroneous  tenets  concerning  mine- 
rals, P.  E.  V,  ch.  5,  ii,  3o4-3jS.  The 
same  concerning  vegetables,  P.  E.  vi ; 
ii,  359-375.  Concerning  insects,  &c. 
P.  E.  \ii,  ch.  (j,  ii,  375-384.  Concern- 
ing animals,  P.  E.  iii  ch.  7,  ii,  385-538. 
Compendious  notice  of  some  individual 
erroneous  notions,  P.  E.  iii,  ch.  27, 
517-532.  Examination  of  some  other 
queries,  P.  E.  iii,  ch.  28,  ii,  533-540. 
Concerning  man,  P.  E.  iv,  iii,  1-8C. 
In  pictures,  popular  customs,  &c. 
P.  K.  v,  iii,  87-184.  Popular  cus- 
toms, omens,  &c.  P.  E.  v,  ch.  23, 
24,  iii,  102-184.  Examination  of 
some  superstitions,  183.  Cosmogra- 
pliical,  geographical,  and  historical, 
P.  E.  vi,  iii,  1S5-294.  Several  geo- 
graphical and  astronomical  errors  brief- 
ly mentioned,  P.  E.  vi,  ch.  14,  iii, 
290-293.  Chiefly  historicaj,  and  some 
deduced  from  scripture,  P.  E.  vii, 
iii,  295-374.  Enumeration  of  seve- 
ral stories  which  admit  of  doubt, 
308. 

Er.skine,  David,  Earl  of  Buchan,  married 
Frances  Fairfax,  i,  civ.  The  ancestor 
of  Lord  Chancellor  Erskine,  cv. 

Erskine,  the  Hon.  Frances,  married  Col. 
Gardiner,  i,  cv. 

Erskine,  Thomas,  Lord  High  Chancellor, 
and  ISarun  Erskine,  i,  cv. 

Escaillot,  see  L'EscailloL. 

Escutcheons  in  Norwich  cathedral,  iv, 
20,  21-22. 

Espagnc,  Jean  d',  Erreurs  Populaires,ffC. 
ii,  171. 

Este,  d',  Cardinal,  his  garden,  at  Tivoli, 
i,  86. 

Estrange,  sec  L' Estrange. 

•  This  is  an  error  of  l>r.   B'«.     1 1   was  Sir 
Tkmias  ErpiDKliam. 


Ethiopians,  their  diet,  ii,  85,  n. 

Etymology  run  mad,  ii,  300. 

Eugubinus,  ii,  15,  n. 

Euscbius,  ii,  11,  n.  Relates  the  death 
and  burial  of  John,  iii,  322.  On  the 
cessation  of  oracles,  330.  Account  of 
a  wonderful  plant  near  the  statue  of 
Christ,  309. 

Eusebius  Nicrembergius,  says  that  the 
human  body  is  magnetical,  ii,  310. 

Euthymius,  ii,  33,  n. 

Euiropius,  St.  martyred  and  buried  at 
Xainctes,  i,  18. 

Evangelists,  emblems  of  the  four,  iii, 
119,  n. 

Evangeliiim  Mi-dici,  ii  Bernardo  Con- 
ner, a  curious  work,  ii,  xix. 

Eve,  from  which  side  of  Adam  was  she 
framed,  ii,  30.  Manner  of  her  origi- 
nal temptation,  ii,  184-187.  Washer 
sin,  or  Adam's  the  greater,  ii,  ISO. 
Picture  of  tlie  serpent  tempting  her, 
iii,  95. 

Evelyn,  John,  introduced  by  Sir  Uobt. 
Paston  to  13.  i,  Ixxi.  His  intended  Eli/- 
sium  Britannicum,  and  B's.  contribu- 
tions to,  xxxiv,  n;  Ixxi,  and  374,  n. 
Communication  from  B.  respecting  a 
Tilia,  in  Eveli/n's  Silva,  i,  Ixxi,  and  n. 
Letters  from  B.  373,  379.  To  B. 
374.  Visits  B.  with  Ld.  H.  Howard, 
i,  xciii.  His  copy  of  Miscellany 
Tracts,  iv,  xii.  Tract  2,  was  a  letter 
written  to  him,  iv,  174,  n.  His  plan 
of  a  royal  garden,  ib.  n. 

Exchange,  new,  i,  284. 

Ercursioiis  through  Norfolk,  i,  Ixxii,  n. 

Experiments,  on  animals,  iv,  452. 

Extracts  from  Commonplace  Boohs,  iv, 
376-456. 

Eye-wash,  absurd  one  proposed  by  Al- 
bertus,  ii,  23 1. 


F. 


Fabii,  iii,  364. 

Fables  of  antiquity,  ii,  219,  n.  Used 
for  moral  and  religious  illustrntion, 
may  indirectly  promote  error,  ii,  244. 

Fairfax,  Madam,  supposed  to  be  the 
mother  of  Henry  Fairfax,  i,  Ixxvi. 

Fairfax,  Mrs.  A.  see  Browne,  Ann. 

Fairfax,  Nat.  M.D,  of  Woodbridge,  i, 
273,  n. 

Fairfax,  Thomas,  Ld.  Viscount,  i,  Ixxvi. 

Fairfax,  Henry,  2nd  son  of  the  preced- 
ing, mar.  Frances  Barker,  i,  l.xxvi,  n. 
His  monument,  i,  cvi. 

Fairfax,  Henry,  grandson  of  Thomas 
Lord  \'iscount  Fairfax,  i,  Jxxvi,  n. 
Married  Ann  Browne,  i,  Ixxvi,  Ixxxi. 


500 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


Account   of  their  residences,  family, 
and  descendants,  i,  Ixxxi,  n.  civ-cvi. 

Fairfax,  Anne  A'.ethea,  monument  of,  ib. 

Fairfax,  Barker,  i,  Ixxxi. 

Fairfax,  Frances,  two  of  the  name,  men- 
tioned by  Le  Neve  as  daughters  of 
Henry  Fairfax,  i,  civ.  One  supposed 
to  have  been  the  daughter  of  B.  and 
to  have  married  Mr.  Bosville,  ih. 

Fairfax,  Frances,  third  daughter  of  II.  F. 
married  David,  Earl  of  Buchan,  i,civ. 
The  only  one  of  B's.  grandchildren, 
who  left  any  family  ; — her  descendants 
to  the  present  time,  i,  civ,  cv.  Xee 
Pedigrees. 

Fairfax,  William,  monument,  i,  cv.  Wal- 
ler's poetic  inscription  to,  ib. 

Fairystones,  popularly  commended  for 
the  stone,  ii,  356.  Their  true  nature, 
ib.  n. 

Faith  and  reason  at  variance,  ii,  27-29. 
A  mere  notion  without  charity,  85. 

Falconry,  see  Hawks. 

Fall,  see  Man,  Temptation. 

Fallacy,  Bentham's  work  on,  ii,  163. 
Misapprehension  great  cause  of  er- 
ror, P.  E.  i,  ch.  4.  ii,  202-208.  Va- 
rious forms  of,  with  examples,  ib. 

Fallopio,  Gabriel,  prof,  of  anatomy  at 
Padua,  to  be  read,  i,  357.  De  vicdi- 
cat.  aquis,  E.  B.  read,  446. 

Falmouth,  rock  and  town,  account  of, 
newly  named  by  the  King,  i,  140. 

Fano,  E.  B.  at,  i,  89,  QQ. 

Fast,  on  Jan.  30,  to  be  kept  for  ever,  i, 
5,  16.     See  Lent. 

Feasts,  posture  of  sitting  at,  among  the 
Jews,  as  represented  in  many  pictures, 
erroneous,  iii,  102.  Accubation  or  re- 
cumbency, the  oriental  posture,  adopted 
by  the  Persians,  ib.  by  the  Parthians  ; 
Cleopatra;  the  Greeks  and  Romans, 
103.  Detailed  explanation  of  festal  ar- 
rangements, 103-106.  Used  by  the 
Jews  and  our  Saviour, — certainly  at 
the  last  supper,  106-110. 

Fee,  E.  B's.  first,  i.  49. 

Fens,  of  Lincoln,  and  Norfolk,  drained, 
by  whom,  i,  381.  Origin  of,  what, 
389. 

Ferdinand  iii,  Emp.  his  work  Princeps  in 
Compendio,  presented  by  P.  Lambe- 
cius  to  E.  B.  i,  Ixxx.  | 

Fernel,  Jean    Fran9ais,   RLD.  of  Paris,  i 
to  be  read  on  diseases,  i,  357,  362.       j 

Ferrarius,  Omnibonus,  iv,  42.  i 

Fe.rrum  equiimm,  absurd  story  concerning 
it,  ii,  372. 

Fez,  see  Morocco,  B.  inquires  after,  i, 
145.  T.  B's.  account  of,  148.  Jews 
at,  ib. 


Fibres  of  the  intestines  structure  of,  spi- 
ral, not  annular,  i,  211. 

Field,  a  green,  described  as  appearing  at 
the  bottom  of  the  Red  Sea,  explana- 
tion of  it,  iv,  142,  143. 

Fienus,  Thomas,  M.D.  prof,  at  Louvain, 
T.  Smith  read,  i,  360. 

Fifth  Monarchy  men,  risings  of,  i,  4. 

Fig-tree  cursed  by  our  Lord,  explana- 
tion of  the  narrative,  iv,  162-167. 
Brief  solution  of  the  difficulty,  iv, 
162,  n.  Dr.  Jortin's  remark  on  the 
mode  of  its  vegetation,  ib.  n.  Rab- 
binical conceit  respecting,  iv,  129,  n. 
Remarks  on,  iv,  449,  450. 

Finch,  Sir  Jn.  M.  D.  of  Padua,  in  high 
esteem,  i,  91.  Promises  to  write  on 
vipers,  108. 

Finsbury  Fields,  iv,  26,  378. 

Fioravanti  Leonardo  says  that  pellitory 
never  grows  in  sight  of  the  nortli  star, 
ii,  230. 

Fir-trees,  dug  up  in  the  marsh  land,  i, 
389.  The  habitation  of  the  stork,  iv, 
150. 

Fire-damp,  experiments  on,  ii,  489,  n. 

Fires,  St.  German's  or  Corpo-Santos, 
what,  i,  130. 

Fishes,  anatomy  of,  i,  364.  Their  scales 
quincuncial,  ii,  418.  Did  not  escape 
the  deluge,  iii,  456.  Ofu'hat  kind  those 
eaten  b}/  our  Saviour  with  his  disciples, 
Tr.  3,  iv,  179,  181.  Tobit's,  Jonah's, 
ib.  Those  of  the  sea  of  Tiberias,  what, 
ISO.  Peter's  not  a  fresh  water  fish,  ib. 
Query  touching  the  fisli  which  occa- 
sioned Theodorick's  death,  181.  Birds 
and  insects,  queries  respecting,  iv,  182- 
185.  Those  called  Halec  and  Mugil, 
what,  182.  An  Account  of  Fishes,  Sec. 
found  in  Norfolk  and  on  the  Coast,  iv, 
325-336. 

Fitches,  what,  iv,  133,  and  n. 

Five,  see  Garden  of  Cyrus,  Mystical 
notions  respecting,  iii,  439,  442,  446. 

Flagelet,  improved,  i,  206. 

Flamsted,  i,  334. 

Flatman,  Mr.  Thomas,  i,  229,  E.  B's 
frictid.  His  narrative  of  the  popish 
mode  of  converting  Jews  by  strang- 
ling them,  54. 

Flax,  how  smitten,  when  the  wheat  and 
rye  escaped,  iv,  152,  153. 

Fleche  la,  a  Jesuit  University,  i,  21. 

Flies,  &c.  in  oak  apples,  ii,  376,  see  Oak. 
How  flies,  bees,  &c.  make  their  hum- 
ming noise,  ii,  526.  De  Geer's  expe- 
riment on  it,  ib.  n. 

Flint,  why  it  strikes  fire,  ii,  273,  n. 

Flood,  of  Noah  and  Deucalion,  ii,  31. 
List  of  writers  on,  32,  n. 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


.501 


Florence,  E.  B's.  account  of,  i,  76.  \ 

Flos  Afriranus,  said  to  poison  dogs,  ii,  3S2.  i 
Several  sorts  of  it,  lb.  n.  j 

Flowers,  fruits,  and  seeds,  in  which  the  i 
number  5  obtains,  iii,  401-105,  112,  j 
413.  1 

Fltirtus  Dfcumanu-f,  see  Wave. 
FluJ,  Rob.  Hht.  Microcosmi,  ii,  17,  n. 
Flushing,  see  Vlussinfj. 
Foligni,  H.  B.  at,  i,  88.  93. 
Foiitainbleau,  E.  B.  visits,  i,  108. 
Forbidden    fruit,    ii,    15.      That  it  was 
an  apple,  P.  E.  vii.  ch.  i,  iii,    293- 
299.     Some  consider  it  a  vine ;  some 
a  fig-tree  ;  some  a  citron.  295.     What 
is  commonly  sold  under  this  appella- 
tion, 296,  n.   No  decision  from    scrip- 
ture ;  as  unnecessary  to  be  known,  29C. 
E.xamples  of  similar  vain  and  unim- 
portant  queries,    297-299.       Dial    of 
Ahaz,  note  respecting,  ib.  n.     Exten- 
sive application  of  the  term,  ib.     Un- 
determinable iv,  129,  and  n. 
Ford,   a  Bookseller   at    Manchester,   an 
article  in  his  Catal.  attributed  errone- 
ously to  B.  i,  Ixii,  n. 
Foreland,  N.  and  S.,  T.  B's.  account  of,  i, 

136. 
Forster's  Researches  on  Atmospheric  Phe- 
nomena, contains  a  chapter  on   Prog- 
nostics, ii,  43 1,  n. 
Fougade,  ii,  26,  n. 

Fouquet,  finance  minister  to  Louis  XIV. 
His    house    at    Vau.x,    i,     109.      His 
fall,  ib.  n. 
Fovargue,  Rev.  S.  Kew  Catalogue  of  Vul- 
gar Errors,  \\,  172.     Incident  respect- 
ing a  bittern,  522,  n. 
Foxes,  in  Iceland,  iv,  255. 
Frairments,  iv,  372-374.   Part  of  an  anat- 
omical lecture,  iv,  374.     On  echoes, 
373,  374. 
Frankfort,  E.  B.  at,  i,  Ixxix. 
Freake,  Edm.  Bp.  iv.  IS.    Queen  Eliza- 
beth at  his  palace,  23. 
Free-school  at  Norwich,  iv,  25. 
Freezing,  of  egg>,  gall,  blood,  and  mar- 
row, i,  272.     Philosophy  of,  ii,  282,  n. 
Freiburg,  silver  and  sulphur  mines,  E.  B. 

visits,  i,  Ixxxi. 
Frt-nch,  war  with,  i,  2  1.1.  and  Dutch,  269. 
King   got   Savoy  and  Pie<ln)ont,  249. 
Character  of,    269.     Their    dishes  of 
frog<,  ii,  85. 
French,  J.  O.  his  paper  on  instinct,  ii, 

394,  n. 
Friendship,  its  wonders,  ii,  100. 
Friars  Black,  convent  of,  at  Norwich,  i, 

387. 
Frogs,  toads,  and  toadstonc,  various  par- 
ticulars concerning,^.  E.  iii.  cli.  13,  ii. 


446-452.  Venom  of  toads,  446-44S, 
Modern|physiology  of  theirmatter,446, 
n.  Horrible  story  told  by  the  dean. 
447,  n.  Of  the  toadstone,  41S-450. 
Another  story  of  the  dean's,  448,  n. 
Species  of  rock  called  toadstone,  or 
bufonite,  ib.  n.  Toad  found  in  a  duck's 
egg,  449,  n.  Of  the  generation  of 
frogs,  450.  Various  species  of  frogs, 
ib.  n.  Frog-spawn  said  to  be  of  medi- 
cal use,  450.  An  example  given  by  the 
dean,  ib.  n.  Of  tadpoles,  451.  Dean 
Wren's  observations  thereon,  ib.  n. 

Funeral  rites,  great  variety  of,  iii,  482- 
485. 

Fungus,  B's.  account  of  various  kinds  of, 
i,  395. 


G. 


Gabriel,  Signor,  E.  B.  waiting  for,  to  go 
to  Turkey,  i,  185. 

Gadbury,  John,  his  astrology  charged 
with  treason,  i,  265. 

Gaddius,  supposed  error  of  his,  iv,  399. 

Gage,  Rev,  Thos.  his  travels  in  America, 
i,  288. 

Galenus,  De  Usu  Partinm,  ii,  20.  Seem- 
ed to  doubt  the  immortality  of  the 
soul,  29.  Plagiarised  by  Oribasius, 
iEtinus,  and  .^gineta,  218.  A  volu- 
minous writer,  247,  n.  He  and  Hippo- 
crates, the  fathers  of  medicine,  i,  356. 
His  conscientious  silence  as  to  poisons, 
iii,  373. 

Galileo,  his  system  of  the  universe,  iii, 
336. 

Gall,  said  to  be  wanting  in  the  horse  and 
pigeon,  ii,  396-403.  Wren's  opinion 
as  to  its  ofBce,  403,  n. 

Galley-slaves  at  Genoa,  i.  75. 

G.\RDEN  OF  Cyrus,  iii,  375-448.  Why 
placed  in  this  edition,  before  instead  of 
after  Ilydriotaphia,  377.  Various  edi- 
tions of,  37S.  Present  edition,  notes 
to,  379.  Dr.  Power's  remarks  on,  in 
a  letter  to  B.  379.  Johnson's  and 
Coleridge's  remarks  on,  3  SO.  M'Leay's 
quinary  arrangement,  how  far  antici- 
pated, ib.  Dedication  to  Nicholas  Ba- 
con, of  Gillingham,  Esq.  381-384. 
Account  of  his  family,  380,  n. 
Chap.  I.  On  the  Gardens  of  Antiquity. 
Gardens  of  Paradise,  iii,  386.  Pensile 
or  hanging,  of  Babylon,  ascribed  to 
Semiramis,  ib.  Those  of  Nabuchod- 
nosor,  387.  Name,  paradise  Persian 
origin  of,  3S7.  Cyrus,  the  elder,  so 
improved  the  gardens  of  Babylon,  that 
he  was  thought  the  author  of  them, 
387.     Cyrus,  the  younger,  brother  of 


50f^> 


GENETxAL    INDEX. 


Artaxerxes,  a  manual  planter  of  gar- 
dens, 388.  Xenophon's  description  of 
his  plantation  at  Sardis,  388.  Expla- 
nation of  the  rhomboidal  or  lozenge 
formation,  388.  Compared  to  St.  An- 
drew's cross,  389.  And  the  Egyptian 
crux  aiisala,  ib.  Dr.  Young's  remark 
on  this  last,  ib.  n.  the  tenupha  of 
the  Jewish  rabbins,  390.  The  quin- 
cunx much  used  by  the  ancients;  little 
discoursed  of  by  the  moderns,  391. 
Considerable,  for  its  several  commodi- 
ties, mysteries,  parallelisms,  and  resem- 
blances, both  in  nature  and  art,  ib. 
Used  in  the  gardens  of  Babylon  and 
Alcinous  ;  the  plantations  of  Diomed's 
father,  and  Ulysses  ;  in  those  describ- 
ed by  Theophrastus  and  Aristotle,  and 
in  later  plantations,  391.  Probably 
by  Noah,  and  if  so,  why  not  before  the 
flood  ?  In  Abraham's  grove  at  Beer- 
sheba ;  in  the  garden  of  Solomon, 
392.  In  paradise  the  tree  of  know- 
ledge would  supply  a  centre  and  rule 
of  decussation,  393. 

Chap.  II.  The  quincimcial  form  adupted 
in  the  Arts,  It  is  employed  in  va- 
rious 'contrivances ;  in  architecture, 
394.  In  the  crowns  of  the  ancients; 
their  beds,  seats,  lattices,  395.  In 
nets,  by  lapidaries  and  sculptors,  39G. 
In  the  rural  charm  against  dodder;  in 
the  game  of  penialithismus ;  in  liga- 
tures, and  forcipal  instruments,  397. 
In  the  Roman  battalia,  and  Grecian 
cavalry,  398.  In  the  Macedonian  pha- 
lanx ;  the  ancient  cities  built  in  square, 
or  parallelogram,  399.  In  the  labyrinth 
of  Crete,  probably  in  the  ark,  the  table 
of  shew  bread,  and  those  of  the  law, 
400.  Several  beds  of  the  ancients 
mentioned,  401. 

Chap.  111.  The  quinr.iincial  form  ob- 
servable, in  manij  of  the  ivorks  of  Na- 
ture. To  pass  over  the  constellations, 
we  find  it  in  gypsum,  401.  In  the 
asterias;  in  the, ;!f/i  of  several  plants; 
in  the  flowers  and  seed-heads  of  others  ; 
in  some  fruits  ;  in  the  net-work  of  some 
sea-weeds,  402.  In  tctixcl,  bar,  thistle, 
and  elder,  403.  In  sun-flower,  fir-ap- 
ples, &c.  404.  In  the  rudimental 
spring  of  seeds,  405.  The  process  of 
germination  considered,  405-412.  Dr. 
Power's  letter  on  this  sui)ject,  with  B's. 
answer,  405-408,  n.  Digression,  on 
the  production  of  one  creature  from  the 
body  of  another,  411.  Explained  of 
tlie  ichueumonida,  and  entozoa,  ib.  n. 
The  number  five  exists  in  a  number  of 
instances  in  the   leaves  and    parts   of 


flowers,  and  is  remarkable  in  every 
circle,  4  12,  413.  Notice  of  Mr.  Cole- 
brooke's  paper  on  dichotomous  and 
quinary  arrangements,  413-415,  n. 
Other  instances  of  the  number  five, 
415.  In  animal  figurations;  in  some 
insects;  and  in  honey-comb,  416.  In 
the  eyes,  eggs,  and  cells  of  insects  ;  in 
the  skins  of  snakes,  the  tail  of  the  bea- 
ver, 417.  In  the  skins  and  feet  of 
birds,  the  scales  of  fish,  the  skin  of 
man,  &c.  418.  In  many  of  the  in- 
ternal membranes  of  man  and  animals, 
419,  420.  The  motion  of  animals  quin- 
cuncial,  420.  Cruciform  appearances 
in  many  plants,  421.  Various  analo- 
gies traced  in  vegetables,  animals,  and 
insects,  421-423.  Proportions  in  the 
motive  parts  of  animals  and  birds,  and 
obscurely  in  plants,  423-425.  Modern 
observations  hereon,  ib.  n. 
Chap.  IV.  On  the  various  conveniences 
and  delights  of  the  quinrAinx.  In  the 
due  proportion  of  earth,  allowed  by  it, 
42G.  In  the  room  aiforded  for  equal 
spreading  of  the  trees,  and  the  due  cir- 
culation of  air.  427.  In  the  action  of 
the  sun,  428.  In  the  greatest  economy 
of  space,  429.  In  mutual  shelter  from 
currents  of  winds,  430.  Effect  of  wa- 
ter and  oil  on  the  germination  of  seeds, 
431.  Note  thereon,  i/).  n.  Whether 
ivy  would  do  less  injury  in  this  ar- 
rangement? 431.  Great  variety  afford- 
ed by  this  order,  433-434.  Grateful 
to  the  eye  by  its  regular  green  shade, 
434-436.  Seeds  lie  in  perpetual  shade, 
436.  This  order  is  agreeable  to  the 
eye,  as  consonant  to  the  angles  observ- 
able in  the  laws  of  optics  and  acous- 
tics, 437.  Plato  chose  this  figure  to 
illustrate  the  motion  of  the  soul,  438. 
Chap.  V.  On  the  Mysteries  and  Secrets  of 
tills  Order.  Five  the  number  of  jus- 
tice, called  by  Plutarch  the  divisive 
number,  justly  dividing  the  entities  of 
the  world,  439.  Opinions  of  the  ablest 
modern  naturalists  on  the  quinary 
arrangement,  439,  440,  n.  The  conju- 
gal number;  character  of  generation, 
442.  A  stable  number,  as  we  never 
find  animals  with  five  legs,  nor  with 
ten,  443.  Query  as  to  Phalangium, 
ib.  n.  This  number  often  to  be  ob- 
served in  scriptural,  medical,  astrologi- 
cal, cabalistical,  magical  examples, 
442-446.  Splendid  concluding  pas- 
sage, and  Coleridge's  critique  thereon, 
447,  n. 
Gardens,  reference  to  several  articles 
thereon,  iii,  447^  n.     Evelyn's  chapter 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


503 


on,  i,  .377-379.  Of  Pliysic,  at  Paris, 
67.  Pisa,  7G.  Venici-,  il.i.  Of  Baby- 
lon, &c.     See  (Sarden  of  Cyrus. 

Garilincr,  Dean,  iv,  7. 

Ciardiner,  Col.  James,  mar.  Lady  Frances 
Erskine,  great  granddaughter  of  B. 
i,  cv. 

Garlands  and  Coronary  or  Garland  Plants, 
Tr.  2,  iv,  171-178.  Antiquity  of  their 
use,  among  various  nations,  their  dif- 
ferent kinds,  171.  Great  siie  of  some, 
used  on  a  variety  of  occasions,  for  what 
purjioses,  175.  Made  with  Howcrs  of 
ditil'rent  seasons,  170.  Catalogue  of 
them,  17(i,  177.  Indian  tribute  of 
odours  and  flowers,  17.S. 

Garlick,  said  to  destroy  the  power  of  the 
loadstone,  ii,  .30fi. 

Gataker,  on  lots,  quoted,  ii,  xxii. 

Gawdie,  Sir  Philip,  of  Marling,  versed  in 
the  Latin  poets,  i,  .301. 

Gay  ton,  Edm.  The  Relig.  of  a  Physician, 
ii,  xvii. 

Gazettes,  French, in  16C1,  weekly,!, 8, 10. 

Gcber,  ii,  209. 

(ieilius,  AuUis,  notes  books  with  odd 
titles,  ii,  xxiii. 

Gems,  how  many  truly  so  called,  ii, 
358,  n. 

Genebrand,  defence  of  Origen,  ii,  11,  n. 

Generation,  equivocal,  believed  by  B.  ii, 
3C2,  303.  Harvey's  maxim  destruct- 
ive of  the  system,  302,  n.  Curious 
note  respecting,  538,  n.  Of  the  phoe- 
nix, ii,  442.     Of  .some  fishes,  ib.  n. 

Genesis,  meaning  of  the  fir.tt  chap,  ii,  50, 
51.  Jews  not  allowed  to  read  it  till 
thirty  years  old,  ib.  n. 

Genoa,  E.  B.  at,  i,  Ixxvii.  His  letters 
from,  i,  73,  71,     Passes  through,  100. 

Geographers,  some  elder  ones  have  in- 
accurately described  the  forms  of  seve- 
ral countries,  iii,  290. 

Geography  of  religion,  ii,  2,  and  n. 

George  David,  of  Leyden  deemed  the 
Messias,  ii,  199,  n. 

Georgewitz,  Bartolomeus,  quoted,  i,  208. 

Georgi,  Theophil.  Europaisrhen  Bucher 
Lexiro,  Suppl.  1750,  ii,  xiii,  n. 

Gerard,  John,  gardener  to  Ld.  Burleigh, 
his  Ifcrbal,  i,  24C.  With  Johnson's 
additions,  361.  Ileferred  to,  i,  391, 
404. 

Germany,  B's.  queiies  about,  i,  1S3.  The 
ihreegreat  inventions  of,  ii,36.  What  ? 
ib.  n.     The  maid  ot",  ii,  44. 

Germination,  examination  of  the  process 
of,  iii,  405-412.  Of  seeds  in  water 
and  oil,  431,  n. 

Gervon  and  Cerberus,  fable  of,  explained, 
ii",  220. 


(iesner,  i,  100. 

Ghent,  citaikl,  E.  B.  saw,  i,  207. 

Ghosts  and  apparitions,  B's.  opinions 
respecting,  ii,  5G. 

Gibeonites,  ii,  154. 

Gibson,  Thomas,  NL  D.  his  Epitome  of 
.■inatomy,  i,  321,  322,  n.  B's.  obs. 
on,  325. 

Gihon,  the  river,  how  lost,  iii,  247. 

Gilbert,  Dr.  W.  work  on  magnetism,  ii, 
29S,  n.  His  theory  of  electric  ejjlit- 
via,  329. 

Ginseng,  a  Chinese  plant,  account  of,  ii, 
23G. 

Ginger,  thrives  at  the  foot  of  a  hill,  near 
Presburg,  i,  1S3.      What,  ii,  305,  n. 

Girdle,  of  the  bride,  iii,  165. 

Glanvil,  Bartholomxus,  ii,  242.  Bor- 
rowed from  Vincent  of  Beauvais,  ii, 
241,  n. 

Glass,  Neri  on  making,  i,  168.  Magical, 
of  the  Emperor  Rudolf,  175.  Looking 
how  to  make,  193.  Said  to  be  poison, 
330.  Probable  ground  of  this  error,  ib. 
A  glass  repaired  for  Tiberius,  33S,  ib. 
X^3000  worth  of,  broken  in  a  storm, 
iv,  354. 

Glastonbury,  see  Thorn. 

Glesson,  Francis,  M.  D.  his  last  work, 
i,  231. 

Glow-worm,  various  wonders  asserted  of, 
ii,  528,  531.  W^ren's  notice  of  the 
male,  which  is  winged,  528,  n.  Loses 
its  luminousncss  with  its  life,  529.  As 
the  torpedo  loses  his  power,  ib.  The 
power  of  animal  poisons  not  terminated 
by  death,  ib.  n. 

Glutton,  Miislela  Gulo,  account  of,  218. 

God,  serve,  i,  0,  12,  13,  14,  10.  And 
never  forget,  3,  5,  9,  10.  His  ser- 
vice truest  happiness,  321.  His 
eternity,  ii,  15.  His  wisdom,  to  be 
contemplated  in  the  works  of  creation, 
17-23.  Beauty  and  regularity  of 
his  works,  23.  Nature  is  the  art  of, 
ib.  His  providence  too  often  called 
chance,  23-20.  Various  instances  of 
this,  24.  His  word,  compared  with 
the  Koran,  34.  Is  all  things,  51. 
Saurin's  remarks  on  this  passage,  ib.  n. 
His  infinite  mercy  a  more  powerful  in- 
centive to  holiness  than  the  lire  of  his 
vengeance,  75,  70.  On  the  pic- 
tures of,  with  some  others,  /'.  E.  v, 
ch.  22,  iii,  150-101.  Danger  of  at- 
tempting, 150,  and  n.  On  his  wisdom 
in  the  motion  of  the  sun,  P.  E.  vi, 
ch.  0,  213-219.  When  first  called 
Lord,  in  scripture,  iv,  383. 

Godard,  Mr.  recorder  of  Lynn.  His 
(intended)  work  on  that  town,  i,  380. 


504 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


His  account  of  trees  dug  up  in  the 
fens,  389. 

Godfrey,  of  Boulogne,  refused  to  wear 
a  crown  of  gold  where  his  Saviour 
■wore  one  of  thorns,  iii,  350. 

Godfrey,  Sir  Edmund  Bury,  medal  of 
his  murder,  i,  254. 

Gold,  conversion  of  other  metals  into. 
Specimens  among  the  Emperor's  rari- 
ties, i,  108.  True  ore,  found  at  Cranach, 
172.  Veins  of,  at  Cremnitz,  ai.  Trials 
to  dissolve,  413.  Its  use  in  medicine, 
ii,  338.  Its  medical  estimation  at  the 
present  day,  ib.  n.  Whether  used  as 
an  amulet,  340.  Remarks  on  this,  ib.  n. 

Golden  hen,  of  Wendlerus,  ii,  340. 

Goldwell,  James,  Bp.  iv,  '.). 

Good,  Dr.  J.  Mason,  a  lecture  in  his 
JJook  of  Nature  on  the  fascination  of 
serpents,  ii,  418,  n. 

Goodyecre,  Mr.  i,  394. 

Gordon,  Major,  some  recent  particulars 
respecting  the  fascination  of  serpents, 
ii,  418,  n. 

Gorris,  Jean  de,  M.D.  of  Paris,  his  De- 
finiiiones  Med.  i,  358. 

Goukerk,  the  oldest  house  in  Holland 
at,  i,  155. 

Gout,  list  of  queer  remedies  for,  iv,  398. 

Gradsco,  nearOlniutz,  in  Moravia,  myrrh 
found  at,  i,  177,  183,  185. 

Grafting,  Observations  on,  iv,  367-371. 
Rules  to  be  observed  in,  367.  Proba- 
bly addressed  to  Evelyn,  367,  n. 
List  of  plants  to  be  grafted,  3()8-37p. 
Persevering  and  reiterated  experiments 
required,  370.  Some  instances  of 
natural  grafting ;  an  oak  on  a  pollard 
willow  ;  a  branch  of  which  bears  both 
oak  and  willow  twigs  and  leaves,  371. 

Granates  [i.e.  garnets]  in  Bohemia,  i, 
168. 

Grandgousier's  feast,  iii,  365. 

Grand  Signer,  [Mahmoud  IV.]  In- 
tent on  the  siege  of  Candia,  i,  171. 
Sick,  185.  E.  B.  saw,  in  Thessaly, 
191.      Dead,  278. 

Grapes,  enormous  size  of  the  bunches ; 
compared  witli  pure  modern  accounts, 
iv,  127,  and  n. 

Grass,  how  mowed,  iv,  155. 

Grasshopper,  picture  of,  P.  E.  v,  ch.  3, 
iii,  92-95.  No  such  insect  as  the  true 
cicada  found  in  England,  92.  Till  dis- 
covered by  the  editor,  as  figured  in 
Curlis's  Entomology,  ib.  n.  Its  spe- 
cies discriminated,  93.  The  locust 
intended,  94,  95. 

Gravesandt,  in  Holland,  its  steeple,  a  sea- 
mark, i,  154. 

Gravesend,  T.  B's.  account  of,  i,  135. 


Gray,  Johannes  de,  Bp.  iv,  14. 

Greaves,  Mr.  his Pyramidography,  ii,  308. 

Grecian  cavalry  quincuncially  arranged, 
iii,  398. 

Greece,  ancient,  maps  of,  i,  220. 

Greeks  used  garlands,  iv,  174. 

Green,  colour,  advantages  of,  iii,  435. 

Greenland,  some  queries  respecting,  iv, 
375. 

Greenwich,  an  ancient  seat  of  the  King's, 
rebuilding,  i,  135.  B.  there,  when  a 
schoolboy,  281. 

Green  Yard,  in  Norwich  cathedral,  ac- 
count and  plan  of,  iv,  27,  n. 

Greffonius,  a  surgeon — an  operation  by, 
ii,  430,  n. 

Gregorius,  Magnus,  his  error  concerning 
crystal,  ii,  267. 

Gregory  X,  Pope,  his  bull  against  the 
citizens  of  Norwich,  iv,  31. 

Grenoble,  E.  B's.  account  of,  i,  71. 

Gresham  College,  two  letters  from  Ice- 
land, to  be  sent  to,  i,  46. 

Grew,  (Nehemiah)  M.D.  his  book,  [Ra- 
rities of  Gresham  Coll.?']  E.  B.  often 
mentioned  in,  i,  315.  Anatomy  of 
Plants,  proposals  for  printing,  339,  n. 
B.  and  others  subscribe  for,  342. 

Griffins,  P.  E.  3,  ch.  2,  ii,  434-437. 
Various  fables  concerning,  among  the 
ancients,  434.  Hieroglypliical  testi- 
mony, 436,  437,  n. 

Gros,  Le,  Capt.  at  Norwich,  233. 

Gros,  Le,  Thomas,  [or  Grosse,]  E.  B. 
visits,  i,  49.  Ilydriotaphia  dedicated 
to,  iv,  451.   Account  of  his  family,  j&.  n. 

Grotius,  Hugo,  a  civilian,  wrote  excel- 
lently on  the  truth  of  Christianity,  ii, 
228. 

Grotto  at  Padua,  i,  98. 

Grinidahl,  Johan.  said  to  be  the  Dutch 
translator  of /?.  M.  ii,  xii,  108.  With 
notes,  and  Digby's  Obs.  xiii.  Of  the 
works,  ib. 

Grater,  Isaac,  translator  of  some  of  Lord 
Bacon's  works — his  letters  to  B.  why 
not  printed,  i,  Ixv,  351  ;  ii,  169.  His 
letters  to  llawley,  in  Abp.  Tenison's 
Baconiana,  ib.  n.  ii,  169,  n. 

Gualdi,  Galeazzi,  notice  of,  i,  276,  n. 

Guardian  angels,  B's.  opinions  respect- 
ing, ii,  46-49. 

Guernsey,  B's.  daughter  with  her  hus- 
band at,  i,  317.  Her  voyage  to,  de- 
scribed, 318.  Capt.  L's.  account  of, 
ib.  Further,  336,  346.  Great  storm 
and  flood  at,  344. 

Guinea,  sheep  in  St.  James's  Park,  i,  50. 
English  plantation  there,  54. 

Gunning,  note  to,  from  a  Greek  priest,  i, 
171. 


GtNEllAL    INDEX. 


oOu 


Gunpowder,  its  ingredients  anil  mode  ol' 
nianufactiirc,  ii,  SJ.'i.  Further  parti- 
culars concerning,  ;{-13,  n.  Mode  of 
its  discharge,  'Mi.  Cause  of  the  re- 
port, the  same  as  that  of  tliunder,  3  I.). 
Dr.  Wallis's  and  Professor  I5rande"s 
opinions  hereon,  ib.  n.  The  subterra- 
neous noise  of  earthquakes  also  similar, 
34fi.  Lemery's  experiment  hereon, 
ib.  n.  That  opium  will  deaden  its 
force,  doubted,  348.  That  is  strength- 
ened by  addition  of  quicklime,  ib.  n. 
Various  uoslniiiis  discussed,  ib. 

Gurney,  J.  J.  extract  from  his  Feculiari- 
iics  of  the  Friends,  ii,  78,  n. 

Guy  of  Warwick,  liis  cave  and  statue, 
T.  B.  saw,  i,  39.  His  pot  and  tower 
at  W.  castle,  40. 

Guyland,  commander  of  Arzyla,  i,  127. 
Driven  into  Argier,  166. 

C  Wynne,  Mary,  2nd  wife  of  Owen  Brig- 
stocke,  Esq.  i,  cvii. 

Gyges,  his  ring,  iii,  3C7. 

Gypsies,  concerning  their  original,  /'.  E. 
vi,  ch.  13,  iii,  287-200.  Commonly 
supposed  to  be  Egyptians,  288.  Im- 
probable, and  why,  289.  Their  Sda- 
vonian  dialect  would  intimate  that 
they  came  more  probably  from  the 
north  of  Europe,  ib.  This  assertion 
questioned,  and  a  number  of  modern 
opinions  collected  ;  one  of  which  sup- 
poses them  to  have  been  Pariars  driven 
out  of  India  by  the  conquests  of  Timur 
Beg — another  considers  them  Arabs, 
driven  out  by  the  contests  between 
Bajazct  and  Tamerlane,  288,  n. 


H. 


Hxmus,  mount,  Euxine  and  Adriatic 
seas  seen  from,  i,  220. 

Hackius,  a  Dutch  printer,  agreed  to  print 
R.  M.  i,  XXV. 

Hague,  E.  IJ.  at,  i,  Ixxviii,  155. 

Hair,  why  grey  only  in  man?  ii,  216. 
Note  of  explanation,  ib.  Custom  of 
nourishing  it  on  moles,  iii,  167. 
Wren's  nostrum  for,  ib.  n.  Polling 
elve-locks,  ib.    Hungarian  knot,  ib.  n. 

Halcyon,  what,  iv,  1^4. 

Hale,  .Sir  .Matthew,  trial  of  witches  be- 
fore, i,  Ixxxii. 

Halec,  a  little  fish  used  for  pickle,  iv, 
182. 

Halifax,  Co  York,  History  of  the  Parish 
of,  by  Watson,  ii,  iii.  Antiquities  of 
the  Town  of,  by  Wright,  ib.  n.  B. 
first  practised  at,  iii. 

Halifax-  and  its  Gibbet-law,  &c.  i,  Iviii. 

Hall,  Joseph,  D.  D.  Bp.  of  Norwich,  B. 


attended  him,  i,  c.  Hard  nwasurc, 
ib.  n.  Shaking  of  the  olive-tree,  ib. 
B's.  account  and  character  of,  iv,  IS, 
Extract  from  his  Hard  Measure,  26,  n. 

Halley,  his  voyage  to  the  S.  Pole,  i,  224. 

Ilaman,  picture  of,  hanged,  confronted 
with  the  ancient  modes  of  execution, 
/'.  F^.  V,  ch.  21,  iii,  153-155.  Gibeon- 
ites,  how  they  hanged  the  bodies  of 
Saul's  family,  154,  n.  Critical  ex- 
amination of  terms,  155. 

Hamburg,  E.  B.  at,  i,  Ixxxi.  Writes 
from,  198. 

Hamet,  Dr.  gave  books  to  Phys.  Coll. 
i,  295. 

Hand,  right  and  left,  P.  E.  iv,  ch.  5,  iii, 
13-23.  (See  Right,  &c.)  Gout  in  the,  12. 

Hanging,  various  ancient  modes  of,  iii, 
153-155. 

Hannibal,  that  he  brake  through  the  .\lps 
with  vinegar,  iii,  363.  Modern  opi- 
nions thereon,  ib.  n.    See  also  Annibal. 

Happiness,  none  in  this  world,  ii,  116. 

Hare,  that  it  hath  double  sex,  /•■.  E.  iii, 
ch.  17,  ii,  466-173.  By  whom  main- 
tained, 466.  Various  meaning  of  the 
phrase,  467-471.  Probable  grounds 
of  the  story,  471-473.  And  cabbage, 
Cato's  diet,  510.  Black  broth  made 
of,  ib.  Vulgar  dread  of  one  crossing 
the  highway,  iii,  162.  W'ren  explains 
it,  ib.  n.     Indian,  273. 

Hares  and  rabbits,nonein  Iceland,  iv,  254. 

Ilarengus,  a  herring,  iv,  182. 

Harmony,  of  the  works  of  God,  ii,  107. 

Harpies,  whence  fabled,  ii,  145. 

Harrington,  Sir  John,  his  mention  of  the 
four  bishops  of  Norwich  in  Queen 
Elizabeth's  reign,  iv,  16. 

Harris,  Walter,  M.  D.  translated  De 
Blegny,  on  Fr.  disease,  i,  211. 

Ilarsnet,  Sam.  Bp.  iv,  IS. 

Hart,  Walter  le,  Bp.  account  of,  iv,  8. 

Hartmaii,  to  be  read,  i,  357. 

Harvey,  .Sir  Dan.  embassador  at  Constan- 
tinople, i,  163. 

Harvey,  William,  M.D.  gave  books  to 
Phys.  Coll.  i,  295.  (iuoted,  363.  His 
d(s  Circul.  Sang,  better  than  Colum- 
bus's discovery  of  America,  356.  Read, 
360,  362.  His  maxim,  ii,  363,  n. 
Hase,  John,  Esq.  Richmond  Herald,  the 

editor  of  Repertorinm,  iv,  3. 
Hatton,  Sir  Chr.  Ld.  governor  of  Guern- 
sey, i,  318. 
Haward,  William,  of  Norwich,  heir  to 

Seldcn's  executor,  i,  386. 
Hawkins,   Mr.  of  the  British  Museum, 
suggested   the    solution   of   a    knotty 
question,  see  u  finita. 
Hawks  and  Falconry,  Tr.  5,  iv,  186-190- 


VOL.  IV. 


2  \ 


506 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


Little  known  of  it  by  the  ancients;  of 
the  diet  of  hawks,  1 SG.  Medical  treat- 
ment of  them,  i,  187-188.  Technical 
terms,  of  French  origin  ;  management 
of  them  ;  their  swiftness  ;  cry  ;  who 
most  have  practised  this  amusement, 
189.  Authors  to  be  consulted  respect- 
ing it,  190. 

Hay,  how  mown  in  Judea,  iv,  155. 

Hay,  Wm.  Esq.  author  of  Rel.  Philo- 
soplii,  ii,  XX. 

Hazel  tree,  iv,  132.     See  also  nut-tree. 

Heath,  what  plant,  iv,  126.  Various 
reading,  ib.  n. 

Heathens,  examination  of  the  lives  of; 
whether  consistent  with  their  own  doc- 
trines; Aristotle,  Seneca,  &c.  ii,  79, 
80,  n. 

Heart,  whether  on  the  left  side  ?  P.  E. 
iv,  ch.  2,  iii,  5-7. 

Heaven  and  hell,  their  place  and  nature, 
ii,  71-75.  Flames  of  hell,  how  can 
they  prey  upon  spirit,  72,  n.  Saurin's 
opinions  on  this,  74,  n.  The  heart  of 
man  too  often  a  hell,  75.  As  Milton 
says,  ib.  n: 

Hebrew,  whether  the  original  language, 
iii,  175,  n.  Whether  of  Shemitish,  or 
Mitzritish  origin,  iii,  175-177,  n. 

llecia,  Mount,  two  eruptions  near  it,  in 
1662,  iv,  254. 

Hector,  why  drawn  on  a  horse,  instead 
of  in  a  chariot,  iii,  128.  Picture  of, 
dragged  by  Achilles  round  Troy,  not 
consistent  with  Homer's  account, 
158.  Ridiculous  picture  of  his  burial, 
158,  n. 

Heidelberg,  E.  B.  at,  i,  Ixxix. 

Heineken,  Dr.  on  the  reproduction  of 
the  claws  of  spiders  and  Crustacea,  ii, 
409,  n. 

Heisier,  Frederick,  son  of  Lorenz,  i, 
Ixvii.  His  Apologia  pro  Medicis,  de- 
fends B.  ii,  XV. 

Heliogabalus,  his  supper  of  ostrich  brains, 
iv,  338,  n. 

Helleboraster  in  flower  in  Feb.  i,  49. 

Hellebore,  black,  in  flower  in  March,  i, 
54. 

Helmont,  Van,  inquiry  respecting  him, 
i,  158.      Quoted,  Sb'S. 

Helvetius,  (J,  F.)  M.U.  author  of  Vitii- 
lus  Aareits,  i,  157.  B.  wished  E.  B. 
to  see  him  at  Amsterdam,  157.  E.  B. 
met  at  Coin,  206. 

Hemlock,  iv,  125. 

Henri  IV,  demolished  Taillebourg  Cas- 
tle, i,  19. 

Henrietta,  Q.  of  Charles  I,  her  offering 
at  Loreto,  i,  89,  95.  Chapel  at  Somer- 
set house,  51. 


Henry  I,  HI,  IV,  V,  VII,  all  visited  Nor- 
wich, iv,  29.  n. 
Henry  VIII,  not  the  founder  of  our  re- 
ligion, ii,  6.     Refused  not  the  faith  of 
Rome,  ib.      Buchanan's  remarks   on 
him,  ib.  n.     Struggles  of  his  prede- 
cessors with  the  papal  power,  ii,  6,  n. 
Henry,  Prince,  life  of,  i,  Ivii,  n. 
Henry's   Hist,  of  England,   quoted,   ii, 

C,  n. 
Hensha w,  envoy  in  Denmark,  1,410,411. 
Heraclitus,  held  that  the  sun  is  no  big- 
ger than  it  appeareth,  ii,  263. 
Herbalists,  English,  to  be  read,  i,  357. 
Herbert,  Edw.  L.  Herbert  of  Cherbury, 
de  Religinne  Genfdium,  4to.  1663,  ii, 
xvii.     Laid,    1645,  ib.     Our   author 
classed    by    Buddeus    with   him,  and 
Toland  and  Hobbes,  i,  Ixvi. 
Herbert,  Wm.  Bp.  of  Norwich,  founded 
the  cathedral  church,  and  many  others, 
i,  469.     Also  the  bishop's  palace,  iv, 
12.     Some  account  of,  ii. 
Heresy  distinguished  from  error,  ii,  12. 
Not  to  be  extirpated;  although  for  a 
time  it  may  be  cancelled,  by  the  acts 
of    a   council,    it   will   revive    again, 
10.     B.  fell  into  that  of  the  Arabians, 
that   of    Origen,    and    that   of  using 
prayers   for    the    dead,    12.       Notice 
of  these,    ib.    n.     Of  the  Avthropo- 
morpbites,  195.     Various,  concerning 
Jesus  Christ,  257. 
Hermaphrodites,  ii,  467. 
Hermes,  allegorical  definition  of,  ii,   14. 
Deems  the  visible  a  picture  of  the  invi- 
sible world,  17. 
Herod  was  supposed  by  some  to  be  the 

Messias,  ii,  199,  n. 
Herodotos,  i,  386.     Styled  mendaciorum 
pater,  ii,  233.      Defence  of  him,  ib.  n. 
Herring  not  known  to  the  ancients,  iv, 

182. 
Heurn,  John,  M.  D.  prof,  of  anatomy  at 

Leyden,  commended,  i,  362. 
Hevel,  John,  astronomer  of  Danzig,  let- 
ters to  R.  Soc.  from,  i,  220,  n.     Has 
given  several  points  on  the  moon  the 
same  names  as   are   attached    to  the 
seas  and  mountains  on  the  earth,  iii, 
291. 
Ileydon,  Henry,  account  of,  iv,  24. 
Ilcylin,  his  Cosmography,  B.  commends, 

i,  161.     Quotes,  168. 

Ilierocles  on  our  relative  duties,  ii,  97,  n. 

Hieroglyphics   have  been,   through   the 

assistance  of  painters  and  poets,   the 

means  of  indirectly  promoting  popular 

error,  ii,  246,   247.      Picture-writing, 

P.  E.  v,  ch.  20,  iii,   148-152.      The 

absurdity  of  many  of  the  hieroglyphi- 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


50: 


cal  pictures  poiiitinl  out,  1.')0-1.j2.  But 
many  of  those  attributed  to  the  Egyp- 
tians iliJ  nut  originate  with  tliem, 
iJO,  n.  B's.  authorities  not  to  be  re- 
lied on,  ib.  n.  Wren's  story  of  a  colt 
and  mastitf,  151,  n.  Ross's  siiiiimary 
disposal  of  the  subject,  152,  n.  Mo- 
dern investigation  of  it,  1-19,  ii.  150,n. 
Hieroglyphic  of  the  beaver,  ii,  107. 
Basilisk,  415.  Salamander,  45*2. 
Swan,  518.  Viper,  458,  4(55.  Of 
Anubis,  or  the  dog-star,  ill,  71.  The 
Pelican,  87,  SS.  The  Dolphin,  91. 
A  horn,  116.  Sundry  enumerated, 
14S-152.  .\n  apple,  29S.  Venus 
with  a  head  of  poppy,  .317.  The 
handled  cross,  3Sy,  n.  Of  Orus,  418. 
The  Hoopoe,  iv,  183. 

Hieronymus,  ii,  11,  n.   199,  n.      Error 
concerning    crystal,    267.      On    John  ] 
Baptist's  food,  iii,   320.     Relates  the  I 
death  and  burial  of  John,  322.     See 
St.  Jerome. 

Hilarius,  on  John  Baptist's  food,  iii,  320. 

Ilildesley,  Mark,  said  to  be  the  author  of 
Hellgio  Jurispnidends,  per  Pliilanthro- 
pum,  Lond.  16S5,  ii,  xviii. 

Hills,  artificial,  see  'fumnli. 

Hints  and  extracts  to  Dr.  E.  B.  iv,  381- 
425. 

Hippocampus  erroneously  said  to  be  an 
insect,  ii,  505.      What  it  is,  ib.  n. 

Hippocrates,  practised  in  Thessaly,  i,  249. 
Quoted,  232,  266.  And  Galen,  fathers 
of  medicine,  356.  His  Aphorisms  to 
be  conned,  356.  An  odd  saying  of, 
iv,  38.  His  treatment  of  the  plague, 
277-279.  Why  did  he  leave  no  his- 
tory of  the  .\thenian  plague  ?  279. 
Remarks  and  queries  respecting,  404. 

Hippolytus  avMTts  St.  John  to  be  still 
living,  iii,  ,'522. 

Histoire  G^neraU  de  la  Compagnte  dc 
Jesus  quoted,  ii,  xxi. 

Hobart,  Sir  James,  iv,  7,  and  n. 

Hobart,  James,  of  Holt,  ib. 

Hobart,  Sir  John,  stunned  ivith  lightning 
in  his  gallery  at  Blickling,  iv,  354. 

Hobart,  John,  Esq.  of  Norwich,  letters 
from  B.  to,  i,  371,  372.  His  daughter 
Barbara,  iv,  7. 

Hobbes,  Mr.  a  surgeon  in  London,  only 
could  dissect  the  brain,  i,  217. 

Hobbes,  Thos.  of  Malmcsbury.  ii,  23,  n. 
35,  n.      B.  classed  with,  i,  Ixvi. 

Hogs  of  Illvria,  iii,  273. 

Holland,  Grand  Seignior's  threat  against, 
ii,  24. 

Holland,  Philemon,  M.D.  his  Translation 
oj  Camden's  liritannia,  i,  381. 

Hollerius  to  be  read,  i,  357.     Found  a 


scorpion  in  the  brain  of  a  man,  ii,  380. 
Holsiein,  drainage  in,  i,  3S9. 

rilombre,  (i.  e.  the  man,)  a  Spanish 
game  at  cards,  i,  46. 

Homer,  his  chain,  ii,  26.  His  pining 
away  upon  the  riddle  of  the  fishermen 
not  likely,  104  ;  iii,  337. 

Home,  Sir  Everard,  account  of  the  lam- 
prey, ii,  442,  n.  On  the  apparent  eyes 
of  snails,  48Q,  n. 

Honeycomb,  quincuncial,  iii,  416. 

Hooke,  Robert,  M.  D.  his  P/iilosophical 
Collections,  i,  270,  n.  Experiments 
on  the  collision  of  flint  and  steel,  ii, 
273. 

Hoopoe,  iv,  183,  IS4. 

Hopkins,  Rd.  friend  of  T.  B.  at  Coven- 
try, i,  40. 

Hopton,  John,  Bp.  iv,  16. 

Horace,  T.  B.  learned  at  sea,  i,  301. 

Ilorapollo,  Dr.  Young's  account  of  him, 
ii,  416,  n. 

Horden,  Sir,  a  friend  of  E.  B.  i,  45. 

Horizon,  rational  and  sensible,  iii,  215. 

Horse,  that  he  hath  no  gall,  P.  E.  iii, 
ch.  2,  ii,  396-398.  Ascribed  to  Aris- 
totle and  Pliny,  396.  How  correctly, 
ib.  n.  Experimentally  and  accurately 
disproved,  387,  388.  Remarks  on  the 
chapter,  ib.  n. 

Horse-radish  a  cure  for  sore  throat,  ii, 
379,  n.  The  prefix  Itorse  explained, 
ib.  n. 

Ilortus  Sanitatia,  among  works  of  little 
authority,  ii,  242. 

Hospital,  St.  Bartholomew's,  E.  B.  phy- 
sician to,  i,  cii.     Salary  of,  348. 

Hospital,  St.  Thomas's,  larger  than  St. 
Bartholomew's,  i,  350. 

Hot-bath  by  Buda,  i,  176.  At  Belgrad, 
175. 

How,  William,  M.  D.  a  correspondent  of 
B's.  wrote  Phylologia  Brilannica ;  some 
account  of  him,  i,  Ixx,  417,  n,  394. 
Letter  to  B.  417. 

Howard.  Henry,  br.  and  sue.  of  Thos.  D. 
of  Norfolk,  how  he  kept  Xmas,  166 J, 
at  Norwich,  i,  Ixxvi,  44.  Bought 
ground  for  public  gardens,  &c.  ib. 
Paid  off  X"  100,000  of  his  ancestors' 
debts,  45.  Brought  Evelyn  with  him 
from  Euston  to  Norwich,  and  intro- 
duced him  10  B.  i,  xciii. 

Howard,  Philip,  br.  of  D.  of  Norfolk,  a 
Dominican,  the  Q's.  confessor,  visits 
Norwich,  i,  47. 

Hume,  D.  History  of  England,  quoted, 
ii,  6,  7,  n. 

Humming-birds,  iii,  251. 

Humourists,  The,  a  paper  in  the  ./Ihc- 
neeum,  quoted,  i,  Iv,  n. 


508 


GENEliAL    INDEX. 


Hungary,  minerals  of,   wanted  for    the 
11.    Soc.    i,   171-17.'5.       And   mineral 
waters,  written  of,  by  Wernher,  170. 
E.  B.  travels  there,  179. 
Hunting  buffaloes  at  Fondi,  i,  80.    Bulls 
at  Venice,  90.      Good  ; — and  English 
dogs  kept  at  Vernueil,  112. 
Hurst,   seat  of  Mr.    Barker,  and  subse- 
quently Mr.  Fairfax,  i,  Ixxxi,  n.   Mon- 
umental   inscriptions    to   the    Fairfax 
family,   from  the  church  of,  cv.   cvi. 
Husks,  of  the  prodigal,  what,  iv,  128. 
Huss,  John,  whether  a  martyr  ?  ii,  38,  n. 
Hutchinson's  Biographia  Medica,  quoted 

ii.  XX. 
Hydriotapiua,  iii,  449-496.     Dedica- 
tion to  Thomas  Le  Gros,  iii,  451-453. 
Account  of  his  family,  451,  n.     Two 
modes  of  disposing  of  the  dead,  45G. 
Burial    the   older :  burning    very   an- 
cient, 450.    And  extensively  practised  ; 
■  Roman  examples  ;   motives  for  it,  457. 
Declined  by  the  Chaldeans,  and  Per- 
sians, Egyptians,  Pythagoras,  the  Scy- 
thians, 458.   The  Ichthyophagi,  Chris- 
tians,  and    Musselmaiis.     Practice   of 
the  Balearians,  Chinese,  and  Jews,  459, 
4()0.     Sepulture  of  animals,  4fil. 
Chap.    II.  Account  of  the  discovery  of 
urns    at    Old    Walsingham,   iii,   401. 
Probably  Roman,  and  why,  462.  Con- 
jectural etymology  of  Icvni,  403.    Dis- 
puted, lb.  n.     Urns,  coins,  &c.  found 
elsewhere,  403, 404.  Antiquity  of  them 
uncertain,  405.     Time  when  the  prac- 
tice of  burning  ceased,  465.     Various 
things  found  in  the  urns,  466.    Sepul- 
ture   of  the  ancient   Britons,  Druids, 
467.     Danes,    and   northern  nations, 
408.       Rollrich     stones,    and    similar 
stones  in  Norway  and  Denmark,  409. 
Chap.  III.  Description  of  the   urns  and 
their  covering,  470.     And   what  was 
found  with  them,  471-473.      Ancient 
customs,  as  to  mementos  and  inscrip- 
tions,   as   to   the  keeping   ashes    dis- 
tinct, 474-476.     Effect  of  fire  on  va- 
rious bodies,  476,  477.  Places  of  burial, 
477.    Postures  observed,  478,     Incor- 
ruptibility   of  human    hair,    479,    n. 
Substance  like  Castile  soap  found  in  an 
hydropical  subject,  ib.     Durability  of 
the  body   when  buried,  479.     Phre- 
nological conjecture,  480. 
Chap.  IV.  Variety  of  funeral  rites,  481- 
484.      Enumeration  and  discussion  of 
many  superstitions    and    poetical   fic- 
tions respecting  the  departed,  485-480. 
Reflections  on  death  and  immortality, 
487,  488. 
Chap.  V.  Reflections    on    the   universal 


desire  felt  to  be  remembered  after  our 
death,  488-492.  Oblivion  shares  with 
memory  a  great  part  even  of  our  living 
being,  493.  Nothing  immortal — but 
immortality,  494.  Vanity  of  Epitaphs, 
495,  490. 

Ilydrolith,  water  turned  to  stone,  i,  35. 

Hydrophobia,  cures  for,  iii,  84,  n. 

Hynm,  a  Turkish,  iv,  192. 

Hypericon,  or  Fuga  Dcemonis,  a  magical 
plant,  ii,  254,  n. 

Hyssop,  what,  iv,  125,  and  n. 


Ibis,  Egyptian  tradition  of,  ii,  421.  Wren's 
note  on  this,  ib.  n. 

Ice,  not  crystal,  P.  E.  ii,  ch.  1,267-284. 
Will  swim  in  water,  ii,  282,  n. 

Iceland,  account  of,  in  1062,  iv,  254-256. 
Whence  obtained,  i,  352,  iv,  254,  n. 

Ichneumoiiidm  deposit  their  eggs  in  some 
caterpillars,  iii,  411,  n. 

Idolatrous  worship  of  cats,  lizards,  and 
beetles,  ii,  198,  n. 

Idria,  quicksilver  mines  of,  E.  B.  visits, 
i,  Ixxx. 

Lnmortality  of  the  soul  doubted  by  an 
Italian  doctor  because  Galen  seemed  to 
doubt  it,  ii,  29.  Reflections  on,  iii, 
488-490. 

Impossibilities,  not  enough  in  religion  for 
an  active  faith,  ii,  13. 

Impostors  the  three,  ii,  29. 

Imposture  of  popish  relicks,  detected  by 
the  editor,  ii,  198,  n. 

India,  account  of  a  voyage  to,  i,  424-440. 
Rivers,  &c.  and  weather  in,  441.  Gar- 
lands used  there,  iv,  174. 

Indians,  burning  themselves  alive,  iii,  458. 

Indus,  river,  swelling  of,  i,  441. 

Infallibility  in  God  alone,  ii,  188. 

Infirmity  of  human  nature,  the  first  cause 
of  error,  P.  E.  i,  ch.  1,  and  2,  ii, 
183-192. 

Ingigner,  his  Physiognomia  Naturalis,  i, 
360. 

Ink,  how  made,  iii,  283. 

Inquiry,  neglect  of,  a  great  cause  of  error, 
ii,  211-214. 

Insects,  to  be  kept,  i,  9.  Received,  15. 
Motionless  in  winter,  363.  Various, 
which  are  hurtful,  or  sup])osed  so  to  be, 
ii,  527,  528.  Their  eyes,  eggs  and 
cells  often  quincuncial,  iii,  417.  And 
reptiles  found  in  Norfolk,  iv,  335,  336. 

Ipswich,  E.  B's.  account  of,  i,  53, 

Ireland,  author  travels  in,  ii,  iii.  He  ad- 
verts to  this,  iii,  344.  Exempt  from  ve- 
nomous creatures,  spiders,  toads,  and 
snakes,  240.     Which  will  die  in  earth 


GENEUAl,    JMj1:X. 


509 


broiigh  thence,  2 10,  n.  No  spiders 
in  the  roof  of  King's  Coll.  Chap.  Cam- 
bridge, because  it  is  built  of  Irish  tim- 
ber, il).  \i.  had  seen  spiders  in  Ire- 
land, und  in  Irish  timber,  344. 

Iron  and  steel  have  polarity  though  not 
excited  by  the  loadstone,  ii,  2S7.  How 
far  this  assertion  is  true,  ib.  n.  Heated 
in  the  fire  contractsa  verticit y  in  cooling, 
ii,  2SS-291.  Prof.  Barlow's  remarks 
on  this  point,  ib.  ii.  Contracts  polar- 
ity from  position,  291.  Its  alleged 
conversion  into  copper,  .■i02.  Expla- 
natory remarks,  ib.  n. 

Isaacs,  I'etrus,  an  engraver,  i,  47. 

Isidore,  Bp.  of  Seville,  De  origiiiibiis, 
a  compilation  relying  too  much  on 
former  writers,  ii,  241. 

Isiodorus  Pelusiota,  error  concerning 
crystal,  ii,  267.  Fable  concerning  a 
diamond,  334.  Fable  concerning  coral, 
350.  Supposes  the  pigeon  to  have 
no  gall,  399.  Countenances  the  fables 
told  of  the  viper,  458.  Opinion  re- 
specting the  food  of  John  Baptist,  iii, 
320. 

Israel,  escutcheons  of  the  tiibes  of,  P.  E. 
V,  ch.  10,  iii,  117-122.  Whether 
rightly  derived  from  Jacob's  blessing, 
117.  Rabbinical  authorities,  1 18.  Eze- 
kiel's  cherubim,  119.  Emblems  of 
the  four  evangelists  ;  reasons  tor  them, 
by  dean  Wren  and  Victorinus,  1 19,  n. 
Uncertainty  as  well  as  antiquity  of 
heraldry,  120.  Its  origin  traced  to 
the  bible,  by  Bp.  Hall,  and  by  Mor- 
gan and  Favine,  120,  121,  n.  Caba- 
listical  fancies,  121.  Various  opinions 
on  this,  ib.  n.  Protest  against  Sir  Wm. 
Drummond's  remarks  on  Gen.  xlix, 
122,  n. 

Israelites,  not  guilty  of  dishonesty  against 
the  Egyptians,  ii,  197,  n. 

D' Israeli's  Curiositiis  of  Literature,  ii, 
39,  n.  \Vhitefooi's  term  stochastic 
quoted  in  it,  i,  xlvii,  n. 

Istria,  remarkable  for  cripples,  iv,  4  1. 

Italy,  E.  B.  travels  there,  i,  Ixxvii.  Why 
compared  to  an  oak,  or  to  ivy.  iv, 
409. 

Italian,  who  poniarded  his  enemy  on  his 
renouncing  Christianity  to  secure  liis 
life,  iii,  371. 

Ivy,  that  a  cup  made  of  it  will  separate 
wine  from  water  found  incorrect,  ii, 
381.  Farraday's  experiment,  381. 
Will  only  grow  where  it  has  support, 
433.  Incorrect,  ib,  n.  Where  it  will 
grow,  iii,  431.  DiB'crent  kinds  of,  ib. 
Remarks  on,  448,  449. 


Jael  and  Sisera,  picture  of,  questionable, 
iii,  159. 

Jamaica,  Chas.  II,  talked  of  giving  up 
to  Spain,  upon  his  marriage,  i,  10. 

James  I,  iv,  30. 

James  II,  when  D.  of  York,  accompanies 
Charles  II  into  Norfolk,  i,  xci.  Afier- 
terwards  at  Norwich  on  his  return  from 
Scotland,  ib.  n. 

James,  Capt.  his  travels  mentioned,  i, 
132. 

Jann  Thomas,  Bp.  iv,  17. 

Jansenius,  supposes  the  pigeon  to  have 
no  gall,  ii,  399. 

Janus  and  Noah  the  same  person,  iii,  231. 

Jaundise,  a  magical  cure  for,  i,  48.  A 
country  remedy  for,  53. 

Jay  John,  member  for  Norwich,  i,  8. 
'High  Sheriff,  240. 

Jeffcry,  Archd.  editor  oi  Christian  Morals, 
in  1710,  i,  xvii,  n. 

Jegon,  Jno.  Bp.  iv,  IS. 

Jenkins,  Sir  Leolyn,  E.  B.  accompanies 
him  to  Cologne,  i,  xcvii.  Eng.  minis- 
ter at  Nimeguen,  i,  213.  Returned, 
25?.,  n. 

Jephthah,  the  picture  of,  sacrificing  his 
daughter,  P.  JE.  v,  ch.  14,  iii,  131, 
134.  Questioned,  as  to  the  accurate 
interpretation  of  the  scriptural  account, 
on  various  grounds,  131-134.  Dr. 
Adam  Clarke's  proposed  interpretation 
of  the  passage,  131,  n.  Fable  of  Iplii- 
genia  arose  from  this  incident,  133. 
Doubtful  meaning  of  the  text,  134. 

Jeremiah,  of  Constantinople,  a  Greek 
priest,  well  treated  at  Cambrid.'^e,  itc. 
i,  170,  Writes  bv  E.  B.  from  \'ienna, 
i,  171. 

Jericho,  see  Rose. 

Jersey,  passage  to  England  from,  most 
usual  by  Guernsey,  i,  322. 

Jesse,  Mr.  remarks  on  miseltoc,  ii,  3G8,  n. 

Jesuits,  round  church  at  Roclicllc,  given 
to,  i,  19.  Town  of  la  Fli-che  given 
to,  21.  Expelled  from  Venice,  ii,  7. 
Readmitted  in  1C57,  and  why,  xxi. 
Their  asserted  miracles,  40.  Various 
writers  thereon,  ib.  n. 

Jesus  Christ,  no  salvation  but  to  those 
who  believe  in,  ii,  77.  Hence  the 
author's  queries  as  to  those  who  lived 
before  or  never  heard  of  him,  77. 
Extract  from  J.  J.  Gurney,  hereon, 
7S,  n.  List  of  heresies  respecting, 
257.  Picture  of,  with  long  hair,  P.  ]£. 
V,  ch.  7,  iii,  111-112.  According  to 
Lcntulus's  description  in  a  letter  lo  the 
Senate,  111.     This  letter  a  forgery; 


ilO 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


account  of  it;  a  facsimile  thereof  in 
British  Mus.  ib.  n.  Long  account  of 
the  celebrated  portrait,  said  to  have 
been  sent  by  our  Saviour  himself,  on 
a  handkerchief,  to  the  King  Abgarus, 
111,  n.  Beautiful  head  of  him  from 
a  gem,  ib.  n.  Supposed  error  as  the 
crown  of  thorns,  ib.  n.  The  error 
of  supposing  that  he  had  long  hair 
because  a  Nazarite,  112.  Picture  of, 
asleep  in  the  ship,  incorrect,  160. 
Picture  of,  on  a  pinnacle  of  the  tem- 
ple, ib.  Meaning  of  the  term,  ib.  n. 
Date  of  his  nativity  and  passion,  199. 
Astronomical  attempts  to  decide  this, 
199,  Concluding  reflections  on  his 
first  and  second  advent,  200.  That 
he  never  laughed,  347. 

Jet,  and  Amber,  the  electricks  of  the 
ancients,  ii,  326.  B's.  opinion  re- 
specting them,  330.  That  they  attract 
not  straws,  &c.  if  oiled,  330. 

Jew,  the  wandering,  his  story  detailed, 
iii,  359.  Don  Espriella's  account  of, 
ib.  n. 

Jewish  and  oriental  feasts,  pictures  of, 
P.  E.  V,  ch.  6.  iii,  102-110. 

Jews,  that  they  stink,  P.  E.  iv,  ch.  10,  iii, 
36-43.  Wren's  testimony,  and  How- 
ell's to  this  fact,  36.  No  good  reason  for 
believing,  37.  The  ten  tribes  no  longer 
distinct,  37-39.  Opinions  of  modern 
travellers  hereon,  ib.  n.  Other  nations 
more  likely,  39.  On  account  of  the 
strictness  of  Jewish  laws,  40.  Chris- 
tian aversion,  one  cause  of  the  opi- 
nion, 41.  Unsatisfactory  solutions  of 
sundry  authors,  42,  43.  Their  rab- 
binical writings,  ii,  36.  Reference  to 
•writers  thereon,  ib.  n.  Their  diet, 
85.  Their  mode  of  feasting,  iii,  lOG- 
110,  see  Fvasls.  Their  practice  of 
sepulture,  459. 

Jew's  ear,  ii,  379. 

Joan,  Pope,  L'Estrange's  opinion  of,  ii, 
175. 

Job,  thought  by  some  an  Idumean,  iii, 
303. 

Jbcher,  JU^rmeincs  Gclehrten  Lexicon, 
ascribes  a  German  trynslaiion  of,  R.  M. 
to  G.  Veutzky,  ii,  xiii,  n. 

John,  the  Baptist,  his  food,  ii,  85,  n. 
Picture  of,  P.  E.  v,  ch.  15,  iii,  134- 
136.  His  head  in  a  charger,  impro- 
perly introduced,  by  some  painters, 
into  the  feast  of  Herod;  but  omitted 
by  Rubens,  159.  Concerning  his  food, 
P.  E.  vii,  ch.  9,  319-321.  Whether 
a  sort  of  bean,  called  panis  S.  Johan- 
iiis,  319.  Or  the  tender  tops  of  trees, 
3\'J.    Or  locusts,  320.    Various  autho- 


rities for  these  various  opinions,  321, 
it  is  clear  from  our  Lord's  remark 
respecting  John,  that  his  food,  as  well 
as  his  raiment,  was  coarse,  ib.  His 
garment  of  camel's  hair,  not  a  skin, 
135.  Ross's  lively  support  of  the  lat- 
ter opinion,  ib.  n. 

John,  King,  at  Norvpich,  iv,  29,  n. 

John,  of  Oxford,  Bp.  iv,  12. 

John  22nd,  Pope,  his  heresy,  ii,  11,  n. 

Johnson,  Mr.  preached  at  Christchurch, 
Norwich,  i,  45. 

Johnson,  Sam.  L.L.D.  supposes  R.  M. 
to  be  written  in  London,  i,  xx,  ii,  iii. 
suspects  B.  of  contriving  its  anony- 
mous publication,  i,  xx,  xxi,  ii,  iv. 
Vindicates  completely  his  religion,  ii, 
xvi.  His  Journey,  ^c.  xxii.  His 
life  of  B.  i,  xvii-Iiv,  written  in 
1756,  for  2nd  edition  of  Christian 
Morals,  xvii,  n.  Reprinted,  when,  iv, 
xi.  Criticisms  on  B's,  works,  i,  xxix- 
xxxviii.  Reflections  on  his  mental, 
literary,  and  religious  character,  i, 
xlvii-liv.  Said  to  have  attributed  to 
him  a  very  remarkable  expression, 
liv.  His  remarks  on  the  Quincunx, 
iii,  380. 

Johnson's  Life  of  Sir  T.  B.,  i,  xvii-liv. 
Sir  T.  B.  born  in  St.  Michael's  Cheap, 
London,  Oct.  19,  1605,  xvii.  His  fa- 
ther called  a  merchant,  xviii,  wrongly, 
ib.  n.  Mother's  name  not  known. 
Ann  d.  of  Paul  Garraway,  n.  at  Win- 
chester school.  Father  died  young. 
Mother  rem.  Sir  Thos.  Dutton,  at  Ox- 
ford in  1623.  B.  of  Broadgate  Hall, 
afterwards  Pembroke  Coll.  B.  A. 
Jan.  31,  1627,  xviii.  M.A,  June  11, 
1629,  xix,  n.  Practises  physick  in 
Oxfordshire  ;  goes  to  Ireland  with  his 
father-in-law;  to  France  and  Italy; 
Montpellier  and  Padua;  Holland;  Dr. 
of  Phys.  at  Ley  den,  about  1633,  n. 
Supposed  to  have  returned  about  1(334, 
to  London;  and  in  1635  to  have  written 
Re.l.  Med.  xx.  Kippis's  opinion  as  to 
this  date,  discussed,  ib.  n.  Suspected 
to  have  contrived  its  anonymous  pub- 
lication, XX,  xxi.  Earl  of  Dorset  re- 
commends R.  M.  to  Sir  K,  Digby, 
xxi,  who  writes  his  Observ.  on  it  in 
24  hours,  xxii.  Dr,  J's.  opinion  on 
B's.  correspondence  with  Digby,  and 
on  R.  M.  xxiii,  xxiv.  Translations 
of  R.  M.  xxiv,  XXV.  Notes  of  the 
Strasburged.  of  Merry  weather's  Latin 
translation,  wrongly  ascribed  by  Dr. 
J.  to  Lenuus  Nicolaus  Moltfaiius, 
True  name  given, /Ti,  n.  The  Italian 
tr.  never  seen  by  the  editor,  n. ;  but 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


Al 


mentioned  by  the  author  in  a  letter 
which   had   not,   when   that   note  was 
written,   reached  the  editor's  hand,  i, 
•IGS.     Author  of  Annotations  accom- 
panying all  the  English  editions  since 
164  1,  not  known.     Since  ascertained 
to    have  been    Mr.    T.    Keck,  16.  n. 
Ross's   Mcdints  Medicatits,  xxv.      B.  1 
settled  at  Norwich,  1G3C,  by  persua-  , 
sion  of  his  tutor  Ur.  Lushingion,  ib.  ' 
Incorporated    Dr.    of   Ph.  at   Oxford,  [ 
1(537,   xxvi.       Married     1(541.       His  1 
family,  ib.  n.     Printed   Pseud.    Epid.  ' 
1646,     xxvii,     sixth    edition,     1672.  I 
Answered  by  Ross,  and  translated,  16. 
Diligence  in  detecting  and  disproving 
errors,  even  the  most  absurd,  xxviii,n. 
Nature's  Cabinet   Unlocked,  attributed 
to  him  and  disclaimed,  x\ix.     Jlydrio- 
taphia,  in    1658.     Critique  on  it,  and 
on   the  Gardtn  of  Cyrus,  xxix-xxxiii. 
Presumed  ground  of  his  opposition  to 
the  Copernican  system,  xxxi,  n.     Re- 
viewal  of  two  posthumous  collections 
of  tracts,    one   by   Dr.    Tenison,  the 
other  by  a    nameless  editor,  xxxiiii- 
xxxviii.  Since  ascertained  to  have  been 
John  Hasc,   Esq.  in   1722;   this  date 
corrected     in   note  at     page    xxxvii. 
B's.    opinion    on    Satanic    influence, 
xxxvii,   n.       His  letter  on   the  study 
of    physick    in    Biog.    Brit,    xxxviii. 
Honorary  Fellow  of  Phys.  Coll.  16G.i, 
1664,  n.      Knighted,  1671  ;  died  Oct. 
19,  1(>S2;   where  buried,   ib.  n.       His 
monumental  inscription,  xxxix.     Ac- 
count  of  his   family ;    death    of    his 
widow,  in   1685:  sketch  of  his  son's 
life,   xl,  .\li.      fHiit' foot's  Minutes   of 
B's.    life;   large    extracts    from    it    in 
text ;  completed    in   notes,    xlii-xlvii. 
Concluding  reflections  on  the  intellect- 
ual, literary,  moral,  and  religious  cha- 
racter of  B.  xlvii-liv. 

Johnson,  Thos.  M.  D.  Herbal,  i,  Ixx, 
246.   An  enlargement  of  Gerard's,  360. 

Johnston,  John,  M.  D.  quoted,  i,  326, 
a.'Jl,  396,  3'J'J,  400,  403,  443. 

Joints,  of  elephants,  ii,  385-396. 

Jonah,  whose  son?  iv,  410.  Other  re- 
marks on,  ib.     His  gourd,  124,  and  n. 

Jonas  Theodore,  minister  of  Mitterdale, 
in  Iceland,  i,  l.\ix,  46.  His  letters  to 
B.  351;  iv,  256-269.  Why  not 
printed  in  the  Correspondence,  254,  n. 

Jones,  Inigo,  his  Description  of  Stone- 
henge,  i,  3S7. 

Jorden,  Edw.  M.  D.  on  Bath  waters,  B. 
wrote  a  note  out  of,  i,  184,  187. 

Jortin,  Dr.  quotation  from  It,  M.  and 
remarks,  i,  Ixiii. 


Joscphus,  ii,  33,  n.  35,  n. 

Jcubcrt,  Lauretit,'  Erreurs  Poptilaires 
toiichnnt  la  Mederine,i\,  180,  n.  No- 
tice thereof,  ib.  n. 

Journal,  E.  B's.  at  Norwich,  i,  44-50, 
53-56.  Paris,  65-67.  London,  50- 
52,  56.  To  France,  56-60.  T.  B's. 
from  Bourdeaux  to  Paris,  17-22.  At 
sea,  120-128,  134-140.  Of  E.  and 
T.  B's.  Tour  in  Derbyshire,  S(C.  22-i2. 

Journalistes  de  Leipsic,  their  opinion  of 
B.  in  the  ^4cta  Eruditorum,  cited  by 
Niceron,  i,  Ixv. 

Jovius,  Paulus,  his  Elogia  Doct.  I'irorum, 
B.  and  De  Thou  think  partial,  317. 
Other  works,  notice  of,  ib. 

Judas  Iscariot,  how  perished?  ii,  33,  n. 
Various  accounts  of  his  death,  iii, 
328.  Crimes  imputed  to  hini,  354. 
Doubted  by  Wren,  ib.  n. 

Judgement,  day  of,  ii,  67.  Its  influence 
on  our  actions,  ih. 

Julian  calendar,  iii,  212. 

Juliers,  siege  of,  i,  Ivii,  n. 

Julus,  of  the  /tcorus  f'erus,  B's.  notes  of, 
i,  394. 

Juniper  tree,  iv,  155,  156. 

Junius,  Francis,  i,  385. 

Junius,  Hadrianus,  quoted,  i,  395. 

Juments,  (horses,  oxen,  and  asses,)  why 
they  have  no  eructation  ?  ii,  21C. 

Justinus,  ii,  35,  n.  The  reason  assigned 
by  him  for  the  departure  of  Israel  out 
of  Egypt,  ii,  43.  Borrowed  from 
Trogus  Pompeius,  217.  More  pro- 
perly epitomized,  ib.  n. 

Juvenal,  with  Lubin's  notes,  T.  B.  read 
at  sea,  i,  151,301.  Translators  of,  302. 


Kalm,  P.  on  the  fascination  of  serpents, 
ii,  417,  n. 

Keck,  Mr.  Thomas,  calls  himself  couta- 
rum  aclor  mcdiocris,  ii,  1,  n.  Not 
known  by  Johnson  as  author  of  /tnno- 
tationson  II.  M.  i,  xxv,  ixiii.  Proved 
to  have  written  them,  ii,  ix.  A  selec- 
tion only  given  in  this  edition,  xxii,  n. 
In  his  discourse  "to  the  Reader"  of 
It.  M.  notices  the  singularity  of  its 
title,  xxiii.  The  replies,  notes,  and 
translations  which  had  appeared,  xxiv. 
When  his  own  notes  were  written,  and 
why  printed,  xxv,  xxvi.  Ilis  opinion 
of  Moltke,  tlie  German  editor,  xxv. 
Corrects  a  mistake  of  Merrvweather, 
3.  n. 

•  In    '  I    llii«   work, 

under  t  I'i'pulairet 

tovchant  ii    ■/•  <'■.  •  i  ,t  •  t  /.tyi^/iz  m   .'yantt,  par  A/- 
GojparJ  Bachot,  a  I.yon.M.  DC,  XXVI. 


112 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


Kelly,  Edvv.  his  account  of  Dr.  Dee's 
converse  with  spirits,  i,  175.  Banish- 
ed with  him,  177,  n.  Imprisoned, 
466. 

Kcmpthorne,  John,  Adni.  of  the  Channel- 
fleet,  T.  B.  under,  i,  1 15.  Expected  at 
Plymouth,  132,  142.  Arrives,  13i). 
Joined  at  the  Nore,  135,  see  n.  His 
general  orders,  141.  Sailed,  when, 
145. 

Kennet,  White,  D.  D.  Bishop  of  Peter- 
borough, his  Register,  i,  c,  n.  Memo- 
randum in  a  copy  of  B's.  works  be- 
longing to  hirn,  ex. 

Kent,  coast  of,  T.  B's.  account  of,  i,  135- 
137.     Long-tails  of,  iii,  43,  n. 

Kepler,  his  opinion  of  comets,  iii,  292,  n. 

King,  Daniel,  author  of  the  Vale  Royal 
of  Chester,  letter  to  in  praise  of,  i,  419. 

King's  evil,  touching  for,  i,  247,  259, 
288,  313.  Efficacy  of  the  royal  touch 
to  heal  it,  xcix.  Carte  suffered  for 
his  supposed  belief  in  that  efficacy, 
ib.  n.  John  Browne's  work  on,  ib. 
B's.  belief  in,  asserted  in  said  work, 
ib.  n.     On  slender  grounds,  ib. 

Kingfisher,  conceit  that  if  hanged  by  the 
bill  it  points  to  the  wind,  P.  E.  iii, 
ch.  10,  ii,  431-434.  Arose  perhaps 
from  the  instinct  of  those  birds  respect- 
ing the  seasons  and  the  winds,  433. 

Kings  of  Cologne,  P.  E.  vii,  ch.  8,  iii, 
317-319. 

Kippis,  Dr.  A.  his  edition  of  Biogruphia 
Brilannica  cited,  i,  Ixv,  n.  Ixvi,  Er- 
rors in  it,  Ixvi,  n.  Ixxv,  n,  ixxvii,  n. 
Ixxxix,  cvii.  His  account  of  B.  in  liiu- 
graphia  Brilannica,*  i,  Prff.  11,  n. 
(Opinions  as  to  the  year  in  which  Ril. 
Med.  was  written,  xx,  n.  Mentions 
a  letter  of  from  Whitefoot  to  Lady 
Browne,  Pref.  II,  n. 

Kiranidcs,  liis  works  collected  from  Ilar- 
pocration  and  others;  and  full  of  va- 
nity, ii,  242. 

Kirby,  Rev.  Wm.  his  opinion  on  qui- 
nary arrangement,  iii,  439-4  10,  n. 

Kircher,  Athanas,  Jesuit,  his  rarities  at 
Rome,  i,  86,  94.  His  relation  about 
ductus oi midtah,  whether  right  or  not? 
173.  His  Munilus  Subterran.  182, 
446.  China  Illustrata,  236.  His  as- 
sertion that  the  magnet  will  attract 
red-hot  iron,  ii,  289,  n.  His  reason 
for  the  variation  of  the  compass,  299. 
His  opinion  as  to  Archimedes's  burning 
glasses,  iii,  364. 

Kirkpatrick,  Mr.  John,  some  account  of 
his   MS.   collections,  coins,    &;c.     His 

•  By  mistake  called  Biographical  Dictionary , 
instead  of  Biogrnphia  Brilannica. 


illustrated  copy  of  Reperiorium,  iv, 
3,  n. 

Kitson,  John,  Esq.  of  Norwich,  supplies 
B's.  will,  i,  ciii. 

Knight,  Mr.  Payne,  supposes  Adam  a 
black,  iii,  272,  n. 

Knolles,  Hist,  of  Turkey,  Ricaut  con- 
tinued, i,  272. 

Knorr,  (or  Peganius,)  Christian,  B.  von 
Rosenroth,  translated  and  edited  works 
in  German,  ii,  xiii,  168. 

Knot,  true  lover's,  iii,  165. 

Knowledge,  love  of,  B's.  i,  256.  Sir  H. 
L'Estrange's,  370  Apparent  vanity  of 
labouring  to  gain  that  imperfectly  in 
this  life,  which  hereafter  we  shall  en- 
joy in  perfection  without  labour,  ii, 
105.  Dr.  Jortin  uttered  a  similar  sen- 
timent, ib.  n.  Not  by  remembrance 
only,  but  by  oblivion,  177. 

Knyvet,  Sir  John,  versed  in  the  Latin 
poets,  i,  301.  Translated  some  of  Ju- 
venal, 302. 

Komorn,  E.  B.  visits,  i,  Ixxx. 

Koran,  various  absurdities  of  it,  ii,  209. 
Denied  by  Sale,  ib.  n. 


L. 


Lacepede,  Count,  opinion  on  the  fascina- 
tion of  serpents,  ii,  417,  n. 

Lachrymatories,  worth  seeing,  i,  8. 
Draught  of  three,  455. 

Lactantius,  his  opinion  on  the  figure  of 
the  earth,  ii,  227. 

Lacuna,  Andv.  Epitome  of  Galen's  works, 
i,  212.     T.  Smith's  opinion  of,  360. 

Lambecius,  Peter,  Imp.  Librarian,  kind  to 
E.  B.  out  of  respect  for  B.  i,  Ixxix,  193. 
Presented  him  a  work  by  the  Emperor 
Ferdinand,  iii,  i,  Ixxx.  Also  a  cata- 
logue of  MSS.  ib. 

Lambert,  his  Perambulation  of  Kent,  i, 
388. 

Lamb's  Conduit,  i,  226. 

Lambs-wool,  what,  i,  272,  n. 

Lamech,  his  speech,  ii,  192. 

Lamps,  sepulchral,  often  obscene  in  their 
ornaments,  iii,  474. 

Lampreys,  that  they  have  nine  eyes, 
P.  E.m, ch.  19,  ii,  477,  478,  E.\pla- 
nation  of  the  error,  ib. 

Land  animals,  supposed  to  exist  also  in 
their  kind,  in  the  sea,  P.  E.  3  chap. 
24,  ii,  504-506. 

Langius,  says  that  garlick  hinders  the 
attraction  of  the  loadstone,  ii,  306. 

Language,  whether  children  would  natu- 
rally, and  if  untaught,  speak  the  pri- 
niitive  language  of  the  world,  Iii,  175. 
Whether  Hebrew  was  the  unconfound- 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


513 


ed  language  of  Raliel,   175-177.      Of 
Sheiiiiti&li  ur  Mizritisli  origiti?  ib.  n. 

Languages  of,  and  particularhj  of  the 
Saxon  tongue,  Tr.  S,  iv,  i9j"-212. 
AVas  the  antediluvian  language  one  ? 
Great  variety  ol'Ami-rican  dialect,  19j. 
How  the  primitive  language  was  pre- 
served after  the  deluge,  lUG.  Of  various 
ancient  languages,  I'J".  Of  the  Sax- 
on language;  its  commixture  with 
others,  198-201.  Various  examples 
comparing  Saxon  and  English,  to  shew 
how  large  a  proporiion  of  Saxon 
words  we  yet  retain,  201-201.  Dr. 
Johnson's  remark  on  this,  ib.  n.  Of 
the  Danish  language,  20-1.  List  of 
Norfolk  provincialisms,  203.  Explain- 
ed and  enlarged,  203-209,  n.  Of  the 
dialect  of  Britany  and  Languedoc,  209, 
2 1 0.     Of  the  term  Dreati,  211,212. 

Languedoc,  a  distemper  common  in,  iv, 
42.     Dialect  of,  210. 

Larache,  town  and  castle,  i,  12G. 

Larin,  an  Arabian  coin,  i,  2SG. 

Larissa.  in  Thessaly,  E.  B's.  journey  to, 
i,  Ixxxi,  205.  The  Grand  Signor  at, 
194,  268.     Read  Cigali's  life  at,  200. 

Laurenberg,  his  map  of  Greece-,  i,  220. 

Lawrence  Thos.  A.M.  Mercurius  Cen- 
tralis, &c.  a  letter  addressed  to  B.  re- 
specting fossil  shells  found  on  Sir  VV. 
D'Oyley's  estate  at  Shottisham,  i, 
Ixxxvi.  Reprinttitle,  IOCS,  i,  Ixxxvii,  n. 

Lead,  not  changed  by  aquafortis,  ii,  495. 

Learning,  promotes  humility,  ii,  104. 
That  of  to  day  unlearned  to-morrow,  i6. 

Le  Blanc,  Vincent,  at  Fez,  long  after 
Leo,  i,  148. 

Leech,  its  supposed  nutriment,  ii,  492. 

Leeks,  iv,  129. 

Lefebvre,  Nicholas,  said  to  be  the  trans- 
lator oi  R.  M.  out  of  Dutch  into  French, 
ii,  xii. 

Leghorn,  E.  B.  at,  i,  76. 

Leibnitz,  his  account  of  a  dog  which 
could  speak,  ii,  ,391,  n. 

Leicester,  T.  B.  at,  i,  40. 

Leiand,  or  Leylande,  John,  the  anti- 
quary, his  MSS.  in  the  Bodleian,  i, 
386.  Works  very  rare,  387.  Asser- 
tio  Arturi,  388,  and  n.  Ilinerarium 
Cantii,  ib. 

Leiand,  John,  his  View  of  Deistical  Writ- 
ers, ii,  xviii. 

Lemery,  his  experiment  on  the  nature  of 
earthquakes,  ii,  316,  n. 

Lemnius,  Levinus,  on  hyssop,  iii,  314. 
Mandrakes,  316. 

Le  Neve,  P.  Esq.  Norroy,  his  pedigree 
of  B.  mentioned,  i,  Pref.  13,  at  p.  xvii. 
Errors  in  it,  i,  Ivii,  civ. 


Lent  observed  in  1661,  i,  S. 

Lenlulus,  his  letter  describing  our  Sa- 
viour a  forgery,  iii.  111,  n. 

Leopold  I,  Emp.  an  admirer  of  /?.  M. 
i,  Ixxi.x.  His  library,  «i.  Books  from 
it  lent  to  E.  B.  ib.  n. 

Leo,  John,  called  the  African,  ii,  2,  n. 
Described  Fez,  i,  148. 

Leo,  X.  I'ope,  his  profusion  led  to  the 
Ileformation,  ii,  2,  n. 

Leopoldstadt,  fortress  of,  E.  B.  at,  i,  Ixxx. 
Count  Souehes,  governor  of,  i,  6. 

Lepanto,  the  battle  of,  ii,  101,  n. 

Lcrici,  E.  B.  lands  at,  from  Genoa,  i,  75. 

L'Escaillot,  M.  minister  in  Norwich. 
Letter  from,  at  Surat,  i,  425-442. 

Lesly  Count,  E.  B.  acquainted  witli,  i, 
Ixxx. 

L' Estrange,  Sir  Hamon,  of  Hunstanton, 
i,  Ixx.  Letter  to  B.  from,  i,  369,  370. 
Account  of,  and  family,  ib.  n.  Men- 
tions P.  E.  370.  His  observations  on 
it,  ii,  173-175.  Relates  a  marvellous 
story  of  Lord  Dacre,  ii,  173.  His  opi- 
nions on  five  kinds  of  horned  animals, 
174.  A  lively  incident, /7(.  His  pro- 
bable error  therein,  175. 

L'Estrange,  Sir  Roger,  son  of  Sir  Hamon, 
notice  of,  and  works,  i,  370,  n. 

Letter  to  a  Friend,  iv,  33-51. 

Lewenhoeck,  his  remark  on  codfish,  i, 
270. 

Lewes,  B's.  grandfather  Garraway  lived 
at,  i,  323. 

Lewis,  King  of  Hungary,  born  without 
a  skin,  &c.  iv,  42. 

Lewin,  Sir  Justinian,  solicits  B.  to  settle 
in  Norwich,  i,  Ix.  and  n. 

Leyden,  author  received  his  degree  of 
^L  D.  at,  ii,  iii,  E.  B.  at,  i,  Ixxviii. 
Account  of,  155.  Ii.  M,  in  Latin, 
printed   at,    367.     By  whom,  368. 

Liancourt  house,  description  of,  i,  112. 

Libraries,  public,  how  ancient,  iv,  240,  n. 
Adam's,  ib. 

Libussa,  I'rincess  of  Bohemia,  a  great 
sorceress,  i,  1 96. 

Lichen,  eaten  in  Iceland,  iv,  255, 

Lichfield,  B.  visits,  i,  39. 

Life,  instances  of  long,  i,  271,  290,  291, 
298.  Long,  not  to  be  desired,  ii,  60.  Of 
several  creatures  discussed,  ib.  n. 
The  efTect  to  be  apprehended  from 
it  morally,  61.  The  causes  of  it, 
62. 

Light-house,  at  Rochelle,  i,  20. 

Lightning,  extraordinary  instance  of  its 
effects,  ii,  372,  n. 

Lilienthal,  inuendo  against  B.  i,  Ixviii. 

Lilies,  iv,  132,  133.  Some  described  in 
Salt's  .ibyssinia,  132,  n. 


VOL  IV. 


2  O 


;i4 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


Lilly,  William,  B's.  letter  to,  i,  462.  His 
Christian  Astrology.,  463,  n. 

Lime,  quick,  increases  the  force  of  gun- 
powder, ii,  348,  n, 

Lincoln,  city  and  cathedral,  T.  B.  visits, 
i,  24. 

Lindley,  Professor,  on  the  forbidden  fruit, 
iii,  296,  n.  On  quinary  arrangement 
in  plants,  441,  n.  On  the  growth  of 
miseltoe,  ii,  3C7,  n. 

Lingard,  Dr.  Hist,  of  England,  quoted,  ii, 
6,  n. 

Linnaeus,  his  sexual  system,  ii,  361,  n. 

Linschotten,  his  account  of  porcelain,  ii, 
353, 

Lion  afraid  of  a  cock  ?  ii,  523.  Prince 
of  Bavaria's  experiment,  ib.  Ross's 
solution,  ib.  n.  Bp.  Andrews  tried 
the  experiment,  iff.  n. 

Lion's  heads,  why  the  common  orna- 
ment of  aqueducts,  &c.  iii,  168. 

Lisbon,  T.  B.  at,  i,  121.  His  account  of, 
146. 

Lister,  Martin,  M.  D.  of  York,  his  table 
of  spiders,  i,  284.  Account  of  a  mon- 
ster, 344.  ■ 

Liturgy,  see  Prayer  Common. 

Lithotomy,  case  of,  under  E.  B.  i,  278. 
To  his  credit,  279. 

Livius,  his  Hist.  Rom.  quoted,  i,  383,415. 

Loadstone,  rock  on  the  coast  of  Finland, 
i,  130.  Many  opinions  concerning  it 
which  are  true,  P.  E.  ii,  ch.  2,  ii, 
284-303.  Sagacity  displayed  in  this 
chap.  284,  n.  Will  not  attract  crocus 
martis,  301.  This  assertion  explained, 
ib.  n.  Takes  up  the  most  of  that  steel 
which  is  the  poorest,  302.  How  far 
true,  ib.  n.  Rejection  of  sundry  false 
opinions  concerning  it,  P.  E.  ii,  ch.  3, 
303-325.  Its  alleged  attraction  and 
repulsion  of  iron  is  in  fact  mutual,  303- 
305.  A  species  of,  said  to  attract 
flesh,  305.  Whether  hindered  by 
garlick,  as  delivered  by  many  grave 
writers,  306.  And  believed  by  Ross, 
ib.  n.  Its  attraction  said  to  be  pre- 
vented by  the  diamond,  306.  Falsely, 
ib,  n.  Falsely  said  by  Paracelsus  to 
lose  its  attraction  for  ever  if  put  into 
quicksilver,  307.  Impaired  by  age, 
&c.  ib.  Said  by  Pliny  to  attract  glass, 
308.  Attracts  emery  and  other  bo- 
dies, 309.  Why,  ib.  n.  Increases  not 
its  weight  by  the  addition  of  iron, 
311.  Various  other  absurdities  con- 
cerning, ib.  Mines  and  rocks  spoken 
of  by  Pliny,  313.  Medical  efficacy 
falsely  ascribed  to  it,  317-320.  Ma- 
gical tales  relating  to  its  efficacy,  320. 
To  detect  incontinency  and  thievery. 


ib.  To  divine  thereby,  321.  Sprinkled 
with  water  emits  a  voice  like  an  infant, 
ib.  By  means  of  two  needles  touched 
with  it  communication  is  said  to  be 
held  with  absent  friends,  ib.  Confuted 
by  B's.  own  experiment,  ib. 

Lobster,  has  one  claw  sometimes  longer 
than  the  other,  ii,  409,  Cause  of  this 
and  its  cure,  ib.  n. 

Locust,  an  unusual  kind  of,  i,  339.  Dis- 
tinct (roni'  cicada,  iii,  93;  iv,  185. 

Locust-trees,  many  at  Paris,  i,  61. 

Locke,  John,  Dunton's  enlargement  of 
Rel.  Bibliopohe  dedicated  to,  ii,  xix. 

London,  R.  M.  supposed  by  Dr.  Johnson 
to  have  been  written  in,  i,  iii,  B.  born 
iii,i,  xvii.  Bp.  of,(H.  Compton,)  E.  B. 
too  slow  to  gain  friendship  of,  i,  237. 

Longevity  of  the  deer,  P.  E.  iii,  ch.  8, 
ii,  424-437.  That  of  various  other 
creatures,  424.  A  very  ancient  opi- 
nion, ib. 

Longitude  and  latitude,  differences  be- 
tween ancient  and  modem  compute, 
iii,  291. 

Longomontanus  on  the  seventy  weeks  of 
Daniel,  iii,  199. 

Lorenzini,  a  Florentine,  on  the  torpedo, 
i,  270. 

Loretto,  M.  le  Gros's  pilgrimage  to,  i, 
49.     E.  B.  at,  89. 

Losel,  de  Podagra,  i,  253. 

Lot's  daughters,  question  respecting,  iii, 
346.      Similar  matters,  348. 

Lot's  wife,  was  her  transformation  real 
or  metaphorical,  iii,  327.  Dr.  Clarke's 
commentary  on,  ib.  n. 

Louis  XIII,  rased  Rothelle  walls,  i,  19. 
Xainctes  castle,  18. 

Louvre,  not  likely  to  be  finished  soon, 
i,  107.  Fault  found  with,  by  Ber- 
nini, ib.      By  Wren,  112. 

Love,  Dr.  of  Cambridge,  i,  280.  War- 
den of  Winchester  College,  281. 

Love,  Morley,  Charles,  M.  D.  on  the 
epidemic,  i,  280,  n.  B.  read,  281. 

Lover's  knot,  iii,  165. 

Lower,  Rd.  M.  D.  his  treatise  de  Corde, 
dedicated  to  Dr.   Millington,   i,    243. 
With  E.  B.  attends  Dean  Astley,  316. 
Lozenge,  see  Garden  of  C'i'RUS. 
Lucan,  T.  B.  read  at  sea,  i,  142,     His 
opinion    of,     143.      B.    approves    the 
verses,  but  not  the  example,  144. 
Lucca,  E.  B's.  account  of,  i,  75. 
Lucian,  ii,  31,  n.     Plagiarist  from  Lu- 
cius Prakensis,  217. 
Lucretius,  ii,  30,  n.     De  Rerum  Nalurce, 

B's.  opinion  of,  i,  209. 
Ludolf,  Job,  Hist.  Eihiop.  Englished,  i, 
340. 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


515 


Lushington,  Rev.  Thos.  D.  D.  prevailed 
on  B.  to  settle  at  Norwich,  i,  X\v. 
Rector  of  15urnh:im  Wcstgate,  xxvi, 
B.  sends  particulars  to  Ant.  Wood 
respecting  him,  xcv.  In  letters  to 
Aubrey,  407. 

LutluT,  .Nlurtin,  an  Eremite  friar,  ii,  3,  n. 
Writes  against  indulgencies,  ih.  Pub- 
lishes xcv  Theses,  and  defends  them 
against  Tekel ;  denies  the  Pope's  in- 
fallibility, ib.  Rejects  the  whole  body 
of  popish  doctrine,  ib.  His  Reforma- 
tion, not  the  setting  up  of  a  new  reli- 
gion, but  the  restoration  of  the  Chris- 
tian religion  to  its  primitive  integ- 
rity, 2. 

Lynn,  right  of  the  dean  of  Norwich  in 
ijt.  Mary's  church  at,  i,  9.  T.  B. 
starts  from,  22.  Returns  to,  41.  Cup 
and  sword  given  by  King  John  to,  2.3. 
Members  for,  304.      Recorder  of,  386. 

Lyttleton,  Capt.  George,  married  Eliza- 
beth Browne,  i,  ci.  Account  of,  ib. 
His  sister  Catharine,  346. 

Lyttleton,  .Mrs.  her  marriage,  i,  ci.  Her 
visit  at  Lord  Noel's  on  the  way  to 
Guernsey,  314,  317-320.  Her  voyage 
from  Guernsey  to  Yarmouth,  341. 
Resides  at  Windsor,  ex.  Her  account 
of  her  father  to  Bp.  Kennet,  ib.  Her 
character  of  Sir  Thomas  Dutton,lvii, 


M. 


Macartney,  Professor,  supposed  author  of 
the  article  on  birds  in  liecs's  Ci/c.  ii, 
31*5,  n. 

Mac  Culloch,  Dr.  on  the  process  by 
which  some  insects,  &c.  reproduce 
their  claws,  ii,  400,  n. 

Mace,  what,  ii,  366,  n. 

Macedonian  phalanx  quincuncially  ar- 
ranged, iii,  399. 

Mackenzie,  Sir  George,  author  of  Religio 
Stoici ;  reprinted  with  this  title,  Tlie 
Religious  Stoic,  ii,  xvii. 

Macleay,  W.  S.  on  quinary  arrange- 
ments, iii,  439-440,  n.  How  far  an- 
ticipated by  B.  3 SO. 

Macrorcphali,  iii,  270. 

Maestricht,  E.  B.  at,  i,  Ixxix.  Guns  at 
siege  of,  heard  at  Cologne,  20C.  Osna- 
burg  forces  besiege,  214. 

Magdeburg,  burnt  by  Tilly,  but  rebuilt, 
i,  KjS.  E.  B.  at,  Ixxxi.  Wrote  from, 
199. 

Magicians  of  Egypt,  ii,  2.)1. 

Magick,  how  distinguished  from  philoso- 
phy, ii,  45.  Of  Satan  origin,  254. 
Various  absurdities  of,  255. 

Magirus,  see  Nature's  Cabinet, 


Magnet,  see  also  Loadstone. 

Magnetic  needle,  its  dip,  ii,  292,  n. 
Poles,  294,  n.  Variation  of  the  nee- 
dle, 296.  Rocks  and  mountains,  312. 
These  not  occasioned  by  the  presence 
of  the  loadstone,  ib.  Copious  illustra- 
tion of  B's.  positions,  ib.  n. 

Magnetism,  L'Estrange's  remarks  on, 
ii,  173.  Of  the  earth.  284.  Of  the 
human  body,  310. 

Mahomet.  Ben  Ibrahim,  Grand  Signor, 
his  brother  a  Dominican  at  Turin, 
i,  72. 

Mahomet,  his  delusions,  ii,  199.  Law, 
207,  209.  His  camel,  iii,  367.  His 
tomb  ;  absurdity  of  the  stories  respect- 
ing it,  ii,  315. 

^L1honletans,  iii,  243. 

Malaga,  the  British  not  well  received, 
and  why,  i,  123. 

Man,  his  nature,  ii,  49.  Called  a  micro- 
cosm, ib.  His  soul  immaterial,  53. 
Dr.  Drake's  remarks  on  B's.  opinion 
hereon,  54,  n.  Devoureth  himself, 
54,  55.  Moltke's  notes  on  this  singu- 
lar passage,  ib.  n.  The  12th  part  of 
made  for  woman,  105.  The  whole 
world  and  breath  of  God  ;  woman,  the 
rib  and  crooked  jiart  of  man,  ib.  His 
deceptible  condition,  183.  His  fall, 
184-187.  Originally  deceived  by  Sa- 
tan, ib.  Angels  deceivable  as  well  as 
he,  187.  That  he  only  hath  an  erect 
figure,  P.  E.  iv,  ch.  1,  iii,  1-4.  Ovid 
quoted  in  support,  1.  Galen's  defini- 
tion of  erectness,  ib.  Wren  says  ba- 
boons and  apes  also  walk  erect,  ib. 
Incorrectly,  and  why,  ib.  n.  Another 
correction  proposed  by  Wren,  3,  n. 
Examination  of  the  question,  3.  4. 

Mandeville,  Sir  John,  adopts  some  of  the 
assertions  of  Ctesias,  ii,  236.  Dr. 
Murray's  account  of  his  travels,  ib.  n. 

Maiidolino,  an  Italian  musical  instru- 
ment, i,  170,  n. 

Mat>drakes,  many  fables  concerning  them, 
ii,  359-365.  Figures  of  in  Thiers  et 
Le  limn  Truiti  dcs  Superstitions,  fol. 
1733,  173,  Many  carried  about  for 
sale,  361.  Grow  under  gallowses, 
362.  Shriek  when  pulled  up,  363. 
Fatality  of  pulling  them  up,  ib.  Sup- 
posed to  have  been  the  plant  used  by 
Circe,  364.  Called  Circcra;  also  Moly. 
ib.  Generally  supposed  motive  for 
Rachel's  requesting  them  of  Leah  dis- 
cussed, /'.  E.  vii,  ch.  7,  iii,  312-317. 
Various  opinions  as  to  what  they  were, 
313-315.  The  alleged  object  not  pro- 
bable ;  nor  was  it  attained,  315.  Dio- 
scorides,  his  account  of  the  tendency 


516 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


of  the  plant  so   called  by  him,  3IG. 
Other  opinions  thereon,  317. 
Mankind,  on  the  origination  of,  iii,  186. 
Manna,  in  Calabria,  ii,  28. 
Mansfield,    Duke    John    Ernestus,     his 
heart  very  small,  iv,  41,  423. 

Mantis,  the  praying  locust,  iii,  3. 
Mantua,  E.  B.  at,  i,  99. 

Manuscripts  left  by  B.  notice  of  them  by 
the  editor;  where  now  preserved, 
i,  Pre/.  13.  Notice  of  some  of  those 
now  first  printed,  iv,  xii.  yfn  Account 
of  those  of  Sir  Thomas  and  Dr.  E, 
Browne,  iv,  463-476,  viz.  brief  his- 
tory of  them ;  part  were  placed  in 
the  Bodleian  Library,  463.  But 
greater  part  in  British  Museum  ;  the 
numbers  which  they  now  occupy  there, 
464.  Mr.  D'Israeli  misled  by  Ays- 
cough's  catalogue,  ib.  n.  Reasons  for 
printing  the  Ravvlinson  catalogue  of 
the  collection ;  conclusion  that  the 
present  edition  is  complete  ;  then  fol- 
lows the  catalogue  printed  from  a  MS. 
in  the  Bodleian  Library  ;  with  note 
following  each  article  in  the  collection, 
stating  where  it  is  now  to  be  found,  or 
where  printed  in  the  present  volumes, 
460-476. 

Maran,  a  great  port  for  corn,  i,  20. 

Marcellus,  Empericus,  his  De  Medica- 
mentis  transcribed  from  ScriboniusLar- 
gus,  ii,  218. 

Margate,  &c.  T,  B's  account  of,  i,  136. 

Marseilles,  E.  B.  at,  i,  102. 

Marshall,  Will,  engraved  the  frontispiece 
to/e.  M.  in  1612,  ii,  vii. 

Marsigli,  Count,  oh  coral,  ii,  352,  n. 

Martial  quoted,  i,  232.  Worth  reading, 
301.  Quotation  from,  De  Astrasrelo, 
iv,  290. 

Martini,  Martin,  his  Tartar  war  quoted, 
i,  46. 

Massa,  E.  B's.  account  of,  i,  75. 

Materia  Medica,  whence  and  how  to 
get  knowledge  of,  i,  Z:^Q, 

Matthiolus  says  that  garlick  hinders  the 
attraction  of  the  loadstone,  ii,  306. 
Ross  believes  it,  ib.  n. 

Mauritius,  his  dream,  iv,  357. 

Mayo,  of  All  Souls,  De  Respiratione,  S(C. 
just  out,  i,  160,  169. 

Meat  and  drink,  whether  they  go  through 
different  passages  into  the  stomach, 
iii,  31.  Danger  of  substances  getting 
into  the  windpipe,  32,  n. 

Meazles  and  pox,  possible  cause  of,  ii, 
40. 

Medals  of  Cosmo,  Duke  of  Florence,  i, 
312.  Account  of  some  gold,  iv,  284, 
285. 


Medea,  fable  of  her  sorceries  arose  out 
of  her  knowledge  of  simples,  ii,  220. 

Medici  Catholicon,  ii,  xvii. 

Medici,  see  Religio,  Evangelium. 

Medictis  Medicatus,  see  Ross. 

Medicine,  students  in,  books  useful  to,  i, 
356. 

Melo,  D.  Francisco  de,  visits  Norwich, 
i,  47. 

Memorial,  weekly,  i,  330. 

Mendoza,  Gonzales  de,  enquiries  con- 
cerning porcelain,  ii,  353. 

Mercati,  Michael,  M.  D.  of  Pisa,  on  dis- 
eases, to  be  read,  i,  357. 

Mercurii,  Girolamo,  DegU  Errori  Popo- 
lari  d'ltalia,  ii,  180.  Notice  of  him, 
ib.  n. 

Merlin  begotten  by  the  Devil,  iii,  346. 

Mermaids,  picture  of,  &c.  P.  E.  v,  ch.  19, 
iii,  143-148.  Described,  and  contrast- 
ed with  harpies,  143-145.  Like  Da- 
gon  and  the  Phenician  Derceto,  145. 
Collection  of  modern  opinions  about 
mermaids,  143-145,  n.  What  they 
may  be  supposed  to  be,  143. 

Merrett,  Chr.  M.  D.  his  Comments  on 
Neri  out,  i,  168.  Pinax  Rcr.  Nat. 
Brit,  sent  to  B.  168,  401.  Two  edi- 
tions of  it,  xc,  n.  Presents  a  paper  of 
E.  B's.  to  R.  Soc.  184,  Letters  to, 
393-408.  From,  442.  Sought  B's, 
assistance  in  his  Pinax,  xc.  Never 
produced  the  intended  new  edition  of 
it,  ib. 

Merryweather,  John,  B.  D.  translated 
R.  M.  into  Latin,  ii,  xi,  in  1644, 
xxiv.  Notice  of,  and  his  works,  i,  Ixii, 
n.;  ii,  xi.  Mistakes  the  meaning  of  a 
phrase,  3,  n.  Writes  to  B.  from 
Magd.  Coll.  Carab.  i,  366.  His  trans- 
lation reprinted  at  Paris,  Ixii.  His 
preface  to  his  translation,  ii,  153.  The 
preface  to  the  Parisian  reprint  of  the 
same,  153,  154. 

Metals,  ductus  of,  what?  i,  173.  How 
to  extract  from  the  mineral  without 
lead,  ib. 

Meteorites,  account  of,  ii,  211,  n. 

Metemptychosis,  B's.  remarks  on,  ii,  55. 
Those  of  others,  ib,  n. 

Methusalem  the  longest  liver  ?  ii,  33, 
P.  E.  vii.ch.  3.  iii,  301-304.  Though 
generally  believed,  yet  not  so  asserted 
in  Scripture,  302.  Wren  contends  it 
must  be  so,  ib.  n.  Cain's  posterity 
might  include  older,  303.  Adam  him- 
self older,  if  created  at  perfect  age,  ib. 
Argument  by  some  drawn  from  2  Pet. 
iii,  8,  301. 
Mice,  whether  bred  of  putrefaction  ?  ii, 
538.     Ross's  note,  shewing  him  to  be 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


.17 


a  stout  believer  of  equivocal  genera- 
tion, ib. 
Michael,   SuniKvopis,   vegetable  vcrtici- 

ties  asserted  by  him,  ii,  311. 
Micklcthwaytc,   Sir  John,   Phys.    to  St. 

Bartholomew's,    succeeded   by   E.   B. 

i,  cii. 
Micrxlius,  J.  attacks  B.  i,  Ixvii. 
Miiliiieburg.  E.   B.  at,  i,   l.'j(i.     Worth 

seeing,  1.">S. 
Middleton,  \Vm.   Bp,  account  of,  iv,  15. 
Milan,  rumors  of  plague  at,  i,  97,  91). 
Mileham,  Chas.  of  Yarmouth,  B's.  bro- 
ther-in-law, i,  2. 
Mileham,    Edw.   Esq.   Burliiigham,  Co. 

Norf.  father  of  Lady  Dorothy  Browne, 

i,  x.\vi. 
Miliiia,  well  settled,  i,  8. 
Millington,  >LD.,  E.  B.  well  acquainted 

with,  i,  243. 
Milo,  fable  of  his  carrying  a  bull,  iii, 

3C5. 
Milton,  quotation  from,  applied  to  B.  i, 

Ivi,  n. 
Minerals,  in  Germany,  what,  i,  1G6.     In 

.Austria,   Hungary,  &c.  for  Soc.  Reg. 

172.  Wernher,  wrote  of,  17G.  E.  B's. 
collection  of,  447-449. 

Mines,  queries  from  R.  S.  concerning ; 
salt,  how  deep, asked,  i,  172, answered, 

173.  Copper,  at  Herrn-grund,  no 
quicksilver,  173.  All  other  in  lluti- 
gary,  quicksilver  and  sulphur,  ih.  Sil- 
ver, in  Bohemia,  195.  Tin,  at  Slack- 
en wald,  196.  Gold,  silver  and  copper, 
Ixxx.     Quicksilver,  Ixxxi. 

Mingay,  of  Norwich,  sold  some  ground 
to  H.  Howard,  Esq.  i,  44. 

Minotaur,  whence  the  fable  of,  ii,  221. 

Miracles,  B.  thankful  that  he  lived  not 
in  the  days  of,  ii,  14.  Of  brazen  ser- 
pent, 27.  Their  cessation,  39.  Of 
the  Jesuits,  40.  Of  popish  relics,  41. 
B's.  life  a  miracle  of  30  years,  110. 
Johnson's  remarks  on  this  passage. 
L'Estrangc  ascribes  popish  miracles  to 
the  devil,  174. 

Misapprehension  and  fallacy,  causes  of 
error.  (P.  E.  i,  ch.  4,)  ii,' 202-208. 

Miscellanies,  &c.  iv,  251-270.  Con- 
taining speculations  on  the  difference 
which  a  slight  alteration  in  a  given 
train  of  causes  might  have  produced, 
251,  252.  Upon  reading  Iludibraa, 
253.  Arcotint  of  Iceland,  in  the  year, 
1()(;2,  254-25fi.  Letters  from  Theo- 
dore Jonas,  250-270. 

Miscellany  Tracts,  iv,  115  to  250. 
Evelyn's  copy  of,  xii.  True  date  of, 
ib.  Additional  collations  to  the  9th 
and  10th  Tracts,  (mislaid  during  the 


printing  of  them)  xv,  xvi.  Editor's 
Preface  to,  117,  118.  Abp.  Tenison's 
Trefacc,  119-120.  (For  the  subjects 
of  the  Tracts,  see  contents  to  vol.  If.) 
Several  of  these  tracts  addressed  to 
Sir  Nicholas  Bacon,  121,  n. 

Miselthrush,  turJus  viscivorus ;  why  so 
called,  ii,  369. 

Miseltoe  of  the  oak,  where  found,  and 
where  not,  i,  279.  Supposed  by  the  an- 
cients to  be  produced  fnim  seeds  dropt 
on  trees  by  birds,  especially  thrushes, 
ii,  367.  Opposed  by  15.  for  a  reason 
which  Wren  deems  triumphant,  ib.  n. 
Professor  Lindley's  and  Mr.  Jesse's 
remarks  on  it,  367,  n.  Deemed  an 
excrescence,  358.  Wren's  curious 
mistake  on  this  point,  ib.  n.  Various 
species  of,  369,  n.  Magical  virtues 
ascribed  to  it ;  the  relick  of  Druidism, 
ib.  On  what  trees  and  in  what  coun- 
tries to  be  found,  iii,  432. 

Mist,  account  of  the  dark  thick  mist 
which  happened  Nov,  27,  1674,  iv, 
341. 

Mitford,  Rev.  J.  of  Benhall,  Suffolk,  ii, 
xviii,  n. 

Modestus,  an  Irishman,  planted  the 
gospel  near  Vienna,  i,  175. 

Mola,  i,  47. 

Moldavia,  account  of,  i,  170. 

Mole,  at  Tangier,  a  great  work,  i,  148. 

Moles,  that  they  are  blind,  P.  E.  iii,  ch. 
18,  ii,  473-476.  Various  acceptations 
of  the  phrase,  473.  Ross's  absurd 
theory  hereon,  ih.  Aristotle  spoke  of 
a  different  animal,  which  is  blind,  ib, 
n.  Some  have  said  the  water  rat  and 
shrew  are  blind,  475.  Whether  cor- 
rectly, ib.  n. 

Moltfarius,  see  Moltke, 

Moltke,  Levin  Nicol  Von,  or  L.  N.  M. 
E.  N.  wrongly  named  in  Johnson's 
Life,  i,  xxv.  Some  account  of  him  in 
Niceron,  who  ascribes  to  him  Conclave 
Alcrandri  VII,  &c.  ib.  ii.  Edited  the 
Latin  Version  of  R.  M.  with  notes,  at 
Strasbiirg,  1652,  reprinted  1665  and 
1(177,  xxv,  Ixiii;  ii,  xii.  His  opinion 
of  R,  M.  ii,  xxiv.  Keek's  opinion  of 
him,  xxv.  Extract  tVom  his  Preface 
and  remarks  on  his  edition  of  R,  M. 
by  Keck,  xxiv,  xxv.  Extract  from 
his  Preface  to  his  edition  of  R.  M. 
155,  156. 

MoUkenius,  see  Moltke. 

Moly,  mentioned  by  Homer,  ii,  364. 

Monasteries,  and  religious  houses  of 
Norwich;  Austin  Friars,  Black  Friars, 
White  Friars.  Many  persons  of  fa- 
mily buried  in  them,  iv,  19. 


518 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


Monk,  who  poisoned  the  Emperor  Henry, 
in  the  Eucharist,  iii,  o72.  Similar 
examples,  ib.  n. 

Monkey,  E.  B.  dissected  one,  i,  46,  47, 
48. 

Monstrosity,  of  some  vitiosities,  ii,  102. 

Monstrous  productions,  ii,  SS.  Blu- 
menbach  reprobates  the  notion,  ib.  n. 

Montagu,  Basil,  Esq.  extract  from  his 
lectures  on  Bacon,  ii,  101. 

Montagu,  Rich.  Bp.  account  of,  iv,  13. 

Montaigne,  M.  Essais,  ii,  10,  n.  B. 
supposed  to  have  borrowed  from  him, 
but  denies  it,  9,  n.  10,  n. 

Montecuculi,  Gen.  lean  and  tall,  i,  159. 
Governor  of  Rab,  187. 

Months,  how  best  computed,  iii,  291,  292. 

Montpellier,  E.  B.  at,  i,  Ixxvii.  And 
account  of,  70.  Ld.  Aylesbury  at, 
214. 

Monuments  of  B.  i,  xxxix.  Lady  B.  civ. 
Dr.  E.  B.  and  his  family  in  North- 
fleet  chr.  cviii.  Of  the  Barker  and 
Fairfax  families  in  Hurst  chr.  cv,  cvi. 
In  Norwich  cathedral,  of  Dean  Astley, 
children  of.  7.  Bigots  family  of,  12. 
Boleyn,  Sir  William,  14.  Bosvil, 
Prior,  11.  Brome,  Richard,  11. 
Calthorpe,  Dame,  8.  Corbet,  Rich. 
Bp.  14.  Crofts,  John,  Dean,  8.  Denny, 
Sir  William,  10.  Erpingham,  Sir 
Thomas,  9,  10.  Gardiner,  George, 
Dean,  7.  Goldwell,  James,  Bp.  9. 
Hart,  Walter,  or  Lyghard,  Bp.  8. 
Herbert,  Wm,  Bp.  12.  Hobart,  Sir 
James,  7.  Hobart,  Mr.  James,  7. 
Montagu,  Richard,  Bp.  13.  Nicks, 
or  Nix,  Rich.  Bp.  6.  Overall,  Bp.  12. 
Parkhurst,  John,  Bp.  6.  Porter, 
Edm.  D.  D.  7.  Pulvertoft,  Randulfus, 
11,  (his  inscription,  ib.  n.)  Seamier, 
Edmund,  Bp.  C.  Southwell,  Sir 
Francis,  8.  Spencer,  Henry,  Bp.  12. 
Spencer,  Miles,  L.L.  D.  iv,  5.  Wa- 
kering,  John,  B.  iv,  9.  Windham, 
Sir  Thomas,  10,  and  n. 

Moore,  Arthur,  Esq.  M.  P.  marr.  E.  B's- 
daughter  Susatmah,  i,  cvi. 

Moore,  Jonas,  chicfsurveyor  of  fen  drain- 
age, 1,381. 
Morel,  his    Formula  Med.  to    be    read, 

i,  357. 
Moreland,  i,  215. 

Morgan,  supposed  author  of  Beligio  Mi- 

litis,  ii,  xviii. 

MorgelluTis,  a  distemper  so  called,  iv,  18. 

Morliof,  Dan.  George,  translated  Digby's 

Obss.  into  Lat.  never  published,  ii,  xv. 

Remarks  on  B,  in  Polijlii.'ilor,  i,  Ixvii. 

Morillon  with  Sir  S.  Tuke  at  Paris,  i,  70. 

Language  master  at  Rome  and  Padua, 


188.     Writes  to   E.   B,  and  B.  191, 
192.     E.  B.  expects,  64. 

Morinus,  Exercitationes  Biblicee  referred 
to,  iii,  194. 

Morocco,  (Emp.  of)  and  K.  of  Fez,  Mu- 
ley  Ismael.  His  embassador,  i,  323. 
E.  B's.  visit  to,  account  of,  324. 

Moren,  his  Directorium  Medico  Practi- 
cum,  i,  357. 

Morrison,  (Robert  of  Aberdeen),  M.  D. 
(of  Angers,  K.  Phys.  and  Prof.  13otany, 
at  Oxford)  his  Herbal,  too  dear,  i,  314. 

Mortality,  bills  of,  decreased,  i,  270, 
High,  282.     Increased,  338. 

Moses,  earlier  writers  than?  ii,  35.  Pic- 
ture of,  with  horns,  P.  E.  v.  ch.  9,  iii, 
1 14-116.  In  Michael  Angelo's  statue 
of  him,  114,  n.  Occasioned  by  an 
ambiguity  in  a  Hebrew  word,  114.  A 
similar  error  in  the  term  applied  to 
Rahab,  115.  Critical  opinions  as  to 
this,  ib.  n.  The  same  person  as  Bac- 
chus, lie.  The  horn  an  hieroglyphic 
of  authority,  ib.  Pictures  of,  praying 
between  Hur  'and  Aaron  ;  several  in- 
consistent with  the  scriptural  account, 
159,  n. 

Moshelm's  Ecclesiastical  History,  ii,  1 1,  n. 
Motion  of  gravitation  on  the  laws  of, 
iv,  425,  427.  Motion  of  the  heavens  ; 
whether  on  its  cessation  all  things 
would  perish  ?  iii,  292.  Of  animals — 
quincuncial,  420.  Proportion  in  the 
parts  of  motion,  423,  n. 

Moufet,  or  Muffet,  Thomas.  M.  D.  on 
insects,  i,  284,  394-399,  402. 

Mountains,  comparative  height  of,  iii,  251 

Mozer,  Mr.  his  character  of  the  European 
nations,  ii,  93,  94. 

Mugtl,  not  the  mullet,  iv,  183. 

Mules,  long-lived,  iii,  224. 

Muller,  Exameii  Atheisvn,  calls  the  au- 
tlior  atheist,  i,  Ixvi  ;  n,  ii,  xv.  n. 

Multitude,  the,  "  one  great  beast,  more 
prodigious  than  hydra,"  ii,  86.  Erro- 
neous disposition  of,  the  great  cause  of 
popular  errors,  /•*.  E.  ii,  ch.  3,  ii,  193- 
201.  Led  rather  by  sense  than  reason, 
rather  by  example  than  precept,  194. 
Lively  description  of,  190.  A  prey  to 
delusion,  197.  Led  into  idolatry,  198,  n. 
Examples  of  their  delusion,    199-201. 

Miimmia,  its  alleged  medical  qualities,  iv, 
274.  Jews  traded  in  it,  275.  Hob- 
goblin story  of  Radzivil,  275.  So- 
lemn reflexion,  in  conclusion,  276. 

Mummies,  Vansleb's  account  of,  i,  222. 

The  quincuncial  arrangement  of  their 

folds,   iii,    418.      The  Slatua  Isiaca 

found    about    them,    ib.      Fragment 

on,  iv,  273-270.     Whence  the  Egyp- 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


19 


tians  derived  tlie  practice  of  embalm- 
ing, 273.  Joseph  embalmed;  Rab- 
binical stories  about  this,  274. 

iliisfeum  Clausiini,  ^\-r.  Tr.  13,  iv,  239- 
2J0.  In  reiurn  lor  a  catalogue  iciit 
for  inspection.  Mr.  Crosslcy's  remarks 
on  Warbiirton's  suggestion,  as  to  the 
motive  which  led  to  the  composition  of 
the  present  Tract,  ib.  n.  Various 
printed  accounts  of  museums,  239. 
Rare  and  unknown  books,  210-243. 
Rarities  in  pictures,  243-247.  Anti- 
quities and  rarities  of  several  sorts, 
247-250. 

Muscles,  Aristotle  did  not  understand,  i, 
322. 

Music,  Grecian  instrument  of,  called 
Tzibori,  like  the  Italian  n.andolino,  i, 
170.  Of  love,  ii,  10(j.  The  spheres, 
ib.  Philosophical  theory  of  musical 
effect,  ib.  Remarks  on  the  passage, 
ib.  n.     Tavern  musick,  ib. 

Musicians  at  Cologne,  i,  206. 

Mussulmans  forbid  burning  the  dead,  iii, 
459.  I 

Mustard  seed,  its  size,  iv,  137-139. 

Mutiny  at  the  Nore,  i,  131.  T.  B's. 
opinion  ot",  132,  133,  In  the  wilder- 
ness, ii,  197. 

Myrtle,  iv,  126.     Crowns,  175. 

Myrrh,  fossil,  B.  asks  for,  i,  177,  183. 
E.  B.  cannot  get,  185.  What,  iv, 
128,  and  n. 


N. 


Nails,  ungues,  B's.  hints  for  E.  B's.  lec- 
ture on,  i,  231,  232.  Superstitions 
about  paring,  iii,  167.  Spots  in,  popu- 
lar presages  from,  174.  Cardan  applied 
them  to  himself,  i7».   How  died  red,  369. 

Nantes,  city,  described  bv  T.  B.  i,  20. 
E.  B.  at,  106. 

Napkins  of  Asbestos,  iii,  476. 

Naples,  E.  B.  at,  i,  Ixxvii.  .Xccount  of, 
and  neighbourhood,  77.  Cardinal 
d'.\ragon,  viceroy  of,  81. 

Naphtha,  ii,  28,  n.  Creusa  and  Alex- 
ander's boy  set  on  fire  by,  489.  Lamps, 
488,  and  li. 

Narbonne,  E.  B.  at,  i,  103. 

Narborough,  Capt.  his  voyage  to  the  S. 
Sea,  i,  450. 

Nard,  the  ointment  of  the  evangelisbt,  iii, 
314. 

Natural  arrangement,  see  Quinary. 

Natural  history,  B's.  collections  in,  i, 
393-408. 

Nature's  Cabinet  Unlocked,  professing  to 
be  by  B. ;  disclaimed,  iii,  448. 

Naumachia,  Latin  description  of  a  sea- 


fight,  iv,  294-297.  Probably  written 
as  an  exercise  in  Latin  naval  terms, 
294,  n.  Several  authors  referred  to, 
ib.  n. 

Naval  fights,  remarks  and  queries  con- 
cerning, P.  K.  V,  ch.  5,  iii,  99-102. 
Several,  iv,  287-2S9. 

Navel,  see  Adam  and  Eve. 

Navigation  of  the  ancients,  how  perform- 
ed, ii,  300. 

Naz.irite,  iii,  1 12. 

Nearchus,  incident  respecting,  iv,  418. 

Necks  of  birds  and  animals,  iii,  339. 

Necromancy,  belief  in,  a  delusion  of  Sa- 
tan, ii,  252. 

Needham,  Jasper,  M.  D.  his  death,  B. 
regrets,  i,  264,  268,  273. 

Needle,  (see  Magnetic),  touched  with  a 
diamond  said  to  be  magnetized,  ii, 
311. 

Negro  Slavery,  its  termination  prophe- 
cied,  iv,  235. 

Negroes,  skin  of,  noticeable,  i,  213.  Of 
the  blackness  of,  P.  E.  vi.  ch.  10  and 
1 1 ,  iii,  263-275.  Causes  of  colour  the 
chemists  reduce  to  three,  263.  The 
heat  of  the  sun,  or  the  curse  of  God 
assigned  as  the  causes  of  blackness, 
264.  The  first  generally  asserted  by 
the  ancients  but  admitting  many  ob- 
jections, 264.  1.  A  river  sufficient  to 
separate  black  from  tawny  races,  265. 

2.  If  in  man  why  not  in  animals?  ib. 

3.  If  sun  alone  were  the  cause  why 
are  transplanted  negroes   still  black  ? 

266.  4.  Why  not  all,  equally  ex- 
posed to  the  sun,  equally  black  ?  266, 

267.  5,  fi.  Why  are  not  all,  even  in 
Africa,  negroes  ?  267,268.  Nor  can 
the  aridity  of  Africa  be  urged  in  aid 
as  a  cause,  for  they  are  negroes,  where 
the  rivers  are  mighty  ;  and  not  so  in 
the  drier  parts,  268.  Seeing  the  sun 
cannot  be  proved  the  cause,  what  might 
be  so  in  the  first  instance  ?  Whether 
some  peculiarity  of  water,  2G9.  Or 
the  power  of  imagination  as  with  Ja- 
cob's cattle?  269,  270.  Or  disease, 
ib.  Or  art?  271.  After  all,  we  can- 
not assign  cause  for  many  similar  va- 
rieties in  animals,  271,  and  n.  Many 
curious  and  equally  insoluble  queries 
follow,  272-274.  Physical  cause  of 
complexion ;  various  opinions  as  to 
that  of  Adam,  272,  n.  Variety  the 
striking  feature  throughout  the  works 
of  God,  iii,  273,  n.  The  effects  of 
colour  on  heat,  ib.  Dr.  Stark's  paper 
on  odours,  273,  n.  Edible  dogs  and 
whitefooted  hogs,  how  first  obtained, 
their  colour  is  clearly  transmitted  hy 


520 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


generation,  274.  The  curse  of  God 
on  Cham  considered  as  the  cause  of 
blackness,  275.  By  whom  first  pro- 
posed, «i.  n.  Cham's  posterity  not  all 
negroes,  275.  The  said  curse  was  not 
on  Cain  but  on  Canaan,  whose  de- 
scendants are  not  negroes,  276.  Nor 
is  it  very  easy  to  trace  with  certainty 
from  which  of  Noah's  sons  the  Ethio- 
pians are  descended,  276.  But  the 
cuise  was  defined,  277.  Nor  can  it 
be  shewed  why  blackness  is  considered 
a  curse,  278.  Beauty  depending  upon 
opinion,  279.  Lastly  it  is  not  safe 
to  ascribe  points  of  obscurity  to  mira- 
culous causes,  280. 

Neri,  Antonio,  de  Arte  Vilraria,  Dr.  Mer- 
retl's  comment  on,  out,  i,  168. 

Nerves,  iii,  12. 

Newcastle,  M.  of,  his  house  and  stud  at 
Welbeck,  i,  55. 

News-letters,  supplied  the  place  of  print- 
ed journals,  i,  277,  n. 

Newsol,  E.  B.  visits  the  copper  mines  of, 
i,  Ixxx. 

Newspaper,  substitutes  for,  i,  277,  n. 
First,  what,  and  by  whom,  ;i70,  n. 

Newton,  went  with  E.  B.  to  Cologne,  i, 
213.  His  lady,  d.  of  Lady  Mary  lle- 
veringham,  226. 

Newton,  Sir  Isaac,  at  one  period  dispo- 
sed to  alchymy  and  astrology,  i,  xcvi. 

Nicander,  the  poet,  his  works,  ii,  239. 

Nicephorus,  ii,  11,  n. 

Niceron,  father  Jean  Pierre,  in  his  Me- 
moires  pour  servir  d  I'H/stoire  des  hom- 
ines celehres  ascribes  Conclave  Alexan- 
dri  Vn.  to  Moltke,  i,  xxv.  In  his 
Nouvelles  de  la  Repuhlique  de  Lettres, 
condemns  Patin's  remarks  on  the  au- 
thor, Ivi.  His  opinion  of/?.  M.  and 
of  the  author,  ih.,  ii,  xv.  n. 

Nicholas,  Sir  N.  Harris,  his.  assistance  in 
compiling  the  pedigree  of  B.  i,  Pref. 
13. 

Nichols,  Wm.  D.  D.  author  of  the  Religion 
of  a  Prince,  ii,  xix. 

Nidor  and  fuligo,  distinguished,  iii,  281, 
282. 

Nieremberg,  of  ostriches,  i,  328. 

Niger,  its  overflow,  iii,  252. 

Night-mare,  charm  against,  iii,  182. 

Nightingale,  sitting  against  a  thorn,  ii, 
537.     Its  tongue,  iii,  341. 

Nile,  number  of  its  mouths,  generally 
said  to  be  seven,  iii,  50,  P.  E.  vi, 
ch.  8,  246-259.  Not  so  said  by  many 
ancient  authors,  246.  Herodotus 
names  but  two,  247.  Strabo  and 
Ptolemy  more  than  seven,  ib.  Modern 
travellers  fewer,  248.     Consideration 


of  Isa.  ii,  15,  16,  248.  Bp.  Lowth's 
remarks  on  it,  249,  n.  Variety  in 
the  maps  of,  249.  It  has  been  ac- 
counted the  greatest  river  of  the  earth, 
250.  How  incorrectly,  shown  by  a 
comparison  with  others,  250.  So  all 
are  apt  to  magnify  their  own,  251. 
Wren's  example  of  this,  ib.  n.  Con- 
cerning its  inundation,  supposed  to  be 
peculiar  to  it,  252.  But  shown  from 
several  examples  not  to  be  so,  ib. 
Extraordinary  phenomenon  in  the 
Rio  de  la  Plata,  ib.  n.  Supposed 
cause  of  the  overflow  of  Nile,  253. 
Assigned  period  of  it,  254.  Too  ex- 
actly to  be  invariably  coi'rect,  255. 
So  in  other  cases  it  were  safer  to  be 
less  precise  in  terms,  256.  Said 
never  to  rain  in  Egypt,  incorrectly,  ib. 
257.  Various  attempts  to  cut  a  canal 
from  the  Red  Sea  to  it,  258.  Spe- 
culations on  similar  attempts,  258, 
259,  n. 

Nimrod,  the  same  as  Belus,  iii,  230. 

Nimeguen,  congress  at,  tedious,  i,  213. 

Ninus,  his  immense  army,  i,  234.  The 
same  person  as  Assur,  iii,  230. 

Niobe,  fable  of  explained,  ii,  221. 

Nix,  Bp.  account  of,  iv,  5,  6,  22,  31. 

Noah,  the  same  person  as  Janus,  iii,  231. 
Or  the  same  as  Saturn,  310.  Whe- 
ther he  was  the  first  that  tasted  wine, 
349.     The  first  plank,  392. 

Noel,  Ed.  Ld.  Capt.  Lyttleton,  and  his 
wife,  visit,  i,  314.  Knew  E.  B.  in  his 
travels,  325. 

Nogent,  castle,  burnt  in  civil  wars,  i,  21. 

Nonulla  a  Lectionc  Atlienai,  ^-c.  de  Re 
CuUnaria,  iv,  305-308. 

Norfolk  Birds,  account  of,  iv,  314-324. 
Coimty  election,  i,  8,  236.  Complained 
oi,ib.  New,  240.  Poll  at,  241.  Can- 
didates, 238,  257,  304.  Members,  8, 
236,  241,  304.  One  a  Londoner,  161. 
New  rather  than  old,  325.  Duke 
of,  189.  His  house  at  Padua,  93. 
Son,Ld.  Arundel,  visits  B. at  Norwich, 
261.  Ld.  Lieut,  of  to  Ld.  Yarmouth, 
236.  Feast,  242,  243.  Fishes,  c^c. 
Account  of,  iv,  325-336.  Fossils  found 
in,  454. 

North,  Sir  Thos.  did  Plutarch  into  Eng- 
lish, i,  332. 

North-east  passage,  its  discovery  prophe- 
cied,  iv,  237.  Mr.  Barrow's  remarks 
on,  ib.  n. 

Northwich,  T.  B.  saw  the  salt  mines  at, 

.    i,  37. 

Norwich,  see  Reperlorium.  Bishop  of, 
sec  Reynolds,  Corbet.  Who  had  epi- 
taphs, 469.     Castle,  how  old,  iii,  464. 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


521 


Rose  from  the  ruins  of  i'cnta,  ib.  Ca- 
tlicdral,  i,  S.  Dtan  preached  at,  311. 
Who  founded,  4(J9.  Its  cliapels,  see 
Cliapels.  Its  organs,  sec  Organs. 
Spire,  iv,  2S,  29,  n.  Chapter,  first 
iiienibers  of,  ■471.  Coaches,  robbed  by 
higliwayinen,  i,  290.  Some  go  in  two 
days,  335.  Convent  of  Dlack  friars 
at,  387,  see  Monasteries.  Corpora- 
tion made  a  law  to  be  at  prayers  as 
well  as  sermon  every  Sunday  in  Ca- 
thedral, 10.  Dean  of,  see  Crofts, 
Aitiey,  Sharpe.  His  rights  at  Lynn 
and  Yarmouth,  S.  Wiiy,  -169.  Elec- 
tion, poll  at,  30G.  Members  for,  8, 
30(j.  Freeschool,  iv,  25.  E.  B.  edu- 
cated there,  Ixxv.  King,  queen, 
and  court  at,  4GS.  How  many  kings 
have  visited  it,  iv,  290,  n.  Mayor  of, 
accused  to  the  king,  but  came  oti'  witli 
honour,  i,  323.  I'rebends  in  ItiSl, 
iv,  30.  To  London,  three  days' jour- 
ney, i,  266,  2S9,  335. 

Noses,  inarching  of,  ii,  430,  n.  See 
Taliacotius.     Moorish,  iii,  271. 

Nostradamus,  Michael,  M.  D.  his  tomb 
at  Sailon,  i,  102. 

NolfF  in  Aristutt'lem,  iv,  360-366. 

Numa,  not  burnt,  ii,  43. 

Nut  trees  dug  up  in  Marshland,  i,  3S9. 

Nutmeg,  what,  ii,  366,  n. 

Isycticorax,  the  night  raven?  iv,  185,  n. 

Nysus,  a  kind  of  hawk,  iv,  1S4. 


O. 


Oak,  Wren  calls  the  gall  its  proper  fruit, 
and  acorn  an  excrescence,  ii,  308,  n. 
Curious  account  of  one  growing  in  the 
New  Forest,  371,  n.  Insects  found 
in  oak  apples  deemed  a  presage  of 
war,  famine,  or  pestilence,  376.  Of 
Scripture,  what  species,  iv,  157,  158. 
Curious  example  of  one  naturally  graft- 
ed on  a  willow  pollard,  371. 

Oats,  not  mentioned  in  Scripture,  iv,  135. 

Oblivion,  reflexions  on,  iii,  492. 

Obsequies,  see  Funeral  Kites. 

Ochin,  Bernardin,  not  supposed  by  B.  to 
have  written  De  Tribus  Jmpostoribus, 
ii,  xxii.  As  Digby  implies  he  did, 
128.     And  others  thought,  i,  359. 

O^cumenius,  ii,  33,  n. 

Oil  tree,  iv,  126. 

Ointment,  what,  iv,  127,  12S.  Whether 
tVankincense,  127,  n. 

Olaus,  Magnus,  his  account  of  magnetic 
rocks,  ii,  312. 

Oldenbcrg,  Henry,  Sec.  R.  Soc.  sends  a 
list  of  enquiries  to  E.  B.  i,  Ixxx. 

Olearius,  passage  in  his  history,   iv,  424. 


Olcron,  isle  of,  visited  by  T.  B.  i,  20. 

Olive,  how  the  dove  could  find  a  green 
leaf  of,  after  the  deluge,  iv,  136,  137. 
Wild  grafted  into  a  good ;  remarks 
and  reflexions  thereon,  148,  150.  Se- 
veral remarks  on,  395. 

Olympiad,  when  the  first,  iii,  221. 

Ombre,  see  I'Hombrc. 

Omens  and  presages,  of  Satanic  origin,  ii, 
259.  Several  absurd  ones  noticed,  iii, 
162. 

Omnibus,  (a  coach  for  fourteen,  but  not 
then  so  called,)  Duke  of  Norfolk's  bro- 
ther, in  1664,  had  one,  i,  44. 

Onions,  iv,  129.  St.  Omer  famous  for, 
i,  216. 

Ophir,  question  respecting  its  true  situ- 
ation, ii,  300,  n. 

Opium,  said  to  deaden  the  force  of  gun- 
powder, ii,  348. 

Oppianus,  a  Cilician  poet,  some  errors  in 
his  works  noticed,  ii,  240.  His  denial 
of  sight  to  moles,  473. 

Oracles,  B's.  opinions  respecting,  i,xxxvii; 
ii,  42,  43,  253  ;  iii,  329-332  ;  iv,  223- 
230.  A  form  of  Satanic  agency,  ii, 
253.  Cessation  of,  considered  by  B. 
to  be  a  miracle,  42.  Various  opinions 
on,  ib.  n.  Cessation  of  at  the  birth 
of  Christ,  P.  E.  vii,  ch.  12,  iii,  329- 
332.  Classical  testimonies,  330.  Other 
opinions,  ib.  Satan  still  vigilant  in  his 
malice,  ib.  Concluding  particulars  re- 
specting, 331.  Tract  on,  iv,  223-230. 
See  also  Delphos. 

Oratio  Anniversariu  Ilarvciana,  iv,  343, 
352. 

Oregliana,  a  river  in  America,  iii,  250. 

Ores,  of  gold  and  silver,  at  Cranach,  i, 
172.  Copper,  iron,  and  lead,  if  ever 
mixt,  and  how,  173. 

Organs,  account  of  those  in  Norwich  ca- 
thedral, iv,  26,  and  n. 

Oribasius,  a  plagiarist  of  Galen,  ii,  2 IS. 
Physician  to  Julian,  380. 

Origen,  successfully  opposed  the  Arabian 
heresy,  ii,  11,  n.  Accused,  by  Augus- 
tin,  Epiphanius,  and  Jerome,  of  the 
heretical  opinion,  that  not  only  men, 
but  devils  would  ultimately  be  dis- 
charged from  torment;  defended  from 
the  charge  by  Genebrard,  ib.  On  John 
Baptist's  food,  iii,  .'i20. 

Orpheus,  fable  of  his  harp,  ii,  220.  Sup- 
posed to  be  David,  ib.  n. 

Ortelius,  his  Geography,  i,  177,  183, 
187,  220.     Metamorphosis  of,  iii,  479. 

Orus  covered  with  net-work,  iii,  418. 

Osorius  on  the  elephant,  il,  390. 

Ostrich,  or  Oestridge,  two  brought  from 
Tangier,  i,  281.     Many  from  Morocco, 


VOL.  IV. 


2  P 


522 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


324.  B's.  advice  about  one  E,  B.  had, 
326-331.  Dissection  of  it,  456-460. 
Opinion  that  it  digests  iron,  P.  E,  iii, 
ch.  22,  ii,  494-497.  Conflicting  testi- 
monies of  the  ancients,  494.  Aldro- 
vandus,  on  experiment,  denies  it,  495. 
Ross  believes  it  nevertheless,  ib.  n. 
Probable  grounds  of  it,  496-497.  Pa- 
pers on  the,  iv,  337-339.  A  small- 
headed  bird,  337.  Reference  to  seve- 
ral figures  of  it;  eaten  in  Africa; 
Ileliogabalus's  supper  of  Ostrichs' 
brains ;  no  eagles  will  attack  ;  their 
eggs  used  for  cups,  338.  Their  food, 
and  note  ;  alleged  antipathy  between 
it  and  a  horse ;  trade  in  their  feathers, 
339. 

Osyris,  supposed  the  same  as  Mizraim, 
iii,  231. 

Otters,  common  in  Norfolk,  iv,  326. 

Otiley,  Mr.  of  the  Brit.  Mus.  ii,  167. 

Overall,  John,  Bp.  iv,  13. 

Ovidius,  Naso,  his  Metamorphoses  bor- 
rowed from  Parthenius  Chius,  ii,  218. 
On  the  chamelion,  482.  His  poem  in 
Gethic,  Mr.  Taylor's  note  respecting, 
iv,  240,  n. 

Owls  and  ravens  deemed  ominous,  iii, 
163.     Why,  ib.  n. 

Oxenden,  Sir  George,  President  of  India, 
i,  440.     Character  uf,  430. 

Oxford  theatre  finished,  when,  i,  184. 
New  villas  printed  at,  by  Moses  Pit, 
293.  Parliament  called  at,  303.  Bis- 
hop of,  307.  Merton  College,  E.  B. 
incorporated  of,  Ixxvii. 

Oxfordshire,  B.  resided  in  for  some  time, 
i,  iii. 


P. 


Padua,  E.  B.  at,  i,  Ixxvii,  Ixxxi.  Studies 
anatomy  at,  91.  Account  of,  93,  189. 
Writes  from,  91,  94.  Leaves,  98. 
Card.  Barberigo,  Bp.  of,  107. 

Pain,  Sir  Joseph,  of  Norwich,  i,  4.  Col. 
of  the  militia,  8,  14. 

Pala;phatus,  his  book  of  fabulous  narra- 
tions, ii,  220. 

Palingenesis,  ii,  69,  70,  n. 

Palladio,  his  rotunda,  &c.  at  Vicenza, 
i,  98. 

Palm  tree,  iv,  141,  167. 

PanciroUi,  Guido,  opinion  concerning 
porcelain,  ii,  353. 

Pantagruel's  library,  ii,  31. 

Pantry,  Dr.  G.  White's  described,  ii, 
520,  n. 

Papin,  Nicholas,  De Pulvere  Sympathetica, 
i,  252. 

Papin,  Denys,  son  of  Nicholas,  his  bone 


digester,  i,  252.     Useful  in  cookery, 
308. 
Parable  of  the  sower  explained,  iv,  144, 

145. 
Paracelsus,  i,  422;  ii,  27,   n.     His  re- 
ceipt to  make   a    man,    52.     Similar 
speculations    of  others,   ib.    n.       His 
abuse  of  all  other  writers  in  his  own 
profession,   229.     Dr.    Thomson's  ac- 
count of  him,  ib,  n.      Falsely  affirms 
that  a  loadstone  put  into  quicksilver 
loseth  its  attraction  for  ever,  307.    His 
pigmies,  iii,  46. 
Paradise  planted  on  the  3rd  day,  iii,  386. 
Its   probable    situation,   ib-     Tree   of 
knowledge  afforded  to  it  a  centre  of 
decussation,  ii,  393. 
Parallaxis  of  a  comet,   i,    300.     What, 

301. 
Pare,  Ambrose,  surgeon  to  King  Henri  II, 

of  France,  to  be  read,  i,  357. 
Parhelion,  or  mock  sun,   E.  B's.  account 
of  two,  i,  179.   Presented  toR.  Soc.  and 
printed  in  I'hil.  Trans.  184,  and  n. 
Paris,  E.  B.  at,  i,  Ixxvii,  59.     His  jour- 
nal at,  65-67.     His  letters  from,  60- 
65,  67,  68.     Procession  at  the  legate's 
entry  into,  67.      Returns  to,  106. 
Park,  St.  James's,  state  of  then,  i,  50, 
Parkhurst,  John,  Bp.  account  of,  iv,  6, 

and  n. 
Parkinson,  John,  botanist  to  K.  Charles, 
his     Theatrum     Botanicum,     i,    Ixx, 
361. 
Parliament   in   1661,    elections  for,  i,  8. 
Sitting  in  June,  and  convocation,  10. 
Money  called  in,  Dec.  1,  to  be  received, 
15.     In  1678,  still  sitting,  225.     Dis- 
solved, 229.     New  elections  for,  231, 
233.     Of  Bordeaux,  first  set   up   by 
Charles  VII,    17.     Character  of,  242. 
Dissolution  of,  unexpected,  256.  Again, 
303.     New  elections  for,  257.    Again, 
304-307.     To  sit,  when,  275,  n.  281. 
Called  at  Oxford,  303.     News  of  the, 
235,  236,  237,  238,  289. 
Parma,  E.  B.  at,  i,  99. 
Parrots,  their  screaming,  how  made,  ii, 

522,  n. 
Parsons,  Rev.  published  a  sermon,  i,282. 
Parthians,  their  diet,  ii,  85,  n. 
Parysatis,  see  Poison. 
Passages,    that    there  are  separate   pas- 
sages for  meat  and  drink,  P.  E.  iv, 
ch.  8.  iii,  31,32. 
Passing-bell,  to  invite  prayer  for  the  dy- 
ing, ii,  100,  n. 
Paston,  Sir  Robert,  Earl  of  Yarmouth, 
letters  to  B.  from,  i,  409-413.     Intro- 
duced Evelyn  to  B.  Ixxi.     Entertains 
King   Charles  II,    at   Oxnead,    xcvi. 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


523 


Blomcfield's  character  of,  ib.  A  coin 
and  some  fragments  of  urns  found  by 
him,  iii,  504-503. 

Paiin,  Guy,  M.  D.  i,  Ixv.  Remarks  on 
R.  M.  in  his  Letlres  Choisies,  ii,  xv. 
Condemned  by  Niceron  and  Bayle, 
Ixv,  n.  Read  in  chemistry,  when  K. 
15.  was  at  Paris,  i,  (51,  63.  Asl^ed  E.  B. 
about  his  father,  lx.\Aii,  (57.  B's. 
thanks  to.  110. 

Pau,  Peter,  professor  at  Leyden,  dissect- 
ed a  giilo,  i,  218. 

Paul  V,  Pope,  contest  with  the  Venetian 
republic,  ii,  7,  n. 

Paujo,  Francesco  di,  founder  of  the  Min- 
ims, ii,  XV. 

Paulo  Padre,  the  Venetian,  B.  compared 
by  Whitefoot  to  him,  i,  xlvii. 

Pausanias  does  not  mention  Euripus,  iii, 
334. 

Payne,  Alderman,  of  Norwich,  stood  for 
the  city,  i,  306.  Goes  to  London  to 
consult  E.  B.  313.  His  daughter  and 
her  hu>band,  ib. 

Peacock's  flesh  said  to  keep  very  long,  ii, 
520.      Wren's  note  hereon,  ib.  n. 

Peak,  Derbyshire,  T.  B.  visits,  i,  32. 

Pearson,  Dr.  note  to,  from  a  Greek 
priest,  i,  171. 

Pedigrees  of  B.  account  of,  i,  Pref.  13. 
Three,  facing  p.  xvii,  vol.  i. 

Peel,  Rev.  Mr.,  Sir  John  Barkers  chap- 
lain, i,  50. 

Peganius,  the  Latinized  surname,  of 
Knorr,  ii,  xiii. 

Pegge,  Dr.  opinion  on  St.  George,  ii, 
139,  n.  His  opinion  on  Tumuli,  iv, 
214,  n. 

Pelican,  B.  had  one,  i,  397.  On  the 
picture  of  it,  P.  E.  v,  ch.  1,  iii,  87-90. 
A  hieroglyphick  of  piety  ;  and  drawn 
opening  her  breast,  to  feed  her  young, 
87.  Different  account  of  the  hiero- 
glyphical  import ;  with  conjectures  as 
to  the  occasion  of  the  pictorial  absur- 
dity, ib.  n.  Absurdity  of  the  fiction; 
and  some  account  of  the  bird,  88, 
89,  n.  90. 

Pentangle  of  Solomon,  ii,  255,  n. 

People,  see  Multitude. 

Pepys's  .Mt-muirs,  i,  Ixxxi,  n. 

Percy,  Thomas,  Bp.  iv,  15. 

Perefixe,  Hardouin  de,  Abp.  of  Paris, 
i,  67. 

Tli^iafifLa  Eridr,fj.io\i ;  or,  I'ulgar  Er- 
ron    in    Practice    Censured,    ii,    171. 

Persecution  reprobated,  ii,  37. 

Persian  magi  declined  the  practice  of 
cremation,  iii,  458. 

Persicaria  of  use  to  cure  a  galled  horse, 
ii,  237,  n. 


Pesaro,  E.  B.  at,  i,  89,  96. 

Peste  de,  see  Plague. 

Peter,  see  St.  Peter. 

Peterboro',  city,  T.  B.  slept  at,  i,  41. 

Peterboro'  Earl  of,  sent  to  take  posses- 
sion of  Tangier,  i,  15. 

Petit,  Pierre,  matliematician,  his  respect 
for  B's.  Ps.  Ep.  i,  113.  Said  to  have 
translated  some  part  of  Ps.  Ep.  into 
Latin,  ii,  IGS. 

Petit  Thouars,  M.  du,  attributes  the 
French  version  of  It.  M.  to  N.  !-«- 
febvre,  ii,  xii.  And  that  of  Ps.  Ep. 
to  the  .\bbe  Souchay,  168. 

Petroleum,  iv,  419. 

Pettingal,  Dr.  Dissertation  on  St.  George, 
iii,  138,  n. 

Pettus,  Sir  John,  Bart,  i,  387. 

Peyssonnel  discovered  the  apparent  flow- 
ers of  coral  to  be  the  polypi  which 
produce  it,  ii,  352,  n. 

/'Aa/uWjir/tt'n,  supposed  erroneously  to  have 
ten  legs,  iii,  443,  n. 

Pharmacopaia  Augustana,  \,  357.  See 
Bauderoni. 

Philes,  a  writer  on  animals,  follows  the 
ancient  stories,  ii,  240. 

Philip,  Rev.  Dr.  account  of  a  mermaid, 
iii,  145,  n. 

Philips,  Mr.  Wm.  on  the  divining  rod, 
iii,  178,  n. 

Fhilipsburg,  by  Spire,  French  besiege,  i, 
214. 

Philo,  JudsEus,  ii,  34.  Says  the  forbid- 
den fruit  has  never  been  produced  since 
the  fall,  iii,  296. 

Philoxenus,  his  wish  for  the  neck  of  a 
crane,  P.  £.  vii,  ch.  14.  iii,  338.  Its 
absurdity  variously  argued,  338-341. 
Ross's  defence  of  it,  338,  n.  Droll 
stories  in  illustration,  310,  n. 

Phoenicians,  their  colonies,  in  Africa,  iii, 
232.     Near  the  Red  Sea,  260. 

Phoenix,  fable  respecting  it,  P.  E.  iii, 
ch.  12,  ii,  437-445.  Ross  thinks  it 
very  probable,  437,  n.  Examination 
of  the  various  absurdities  involved  in  it, 
441-445.  By  whom  it  has  been  re- 
ceived and  promoted,  438-441.  Cri- 
ticism on  the  name,  445,  n. 

Phosphorescence  of  gems,  ii,  334,  n. 

Phrenology  anticipated  in  a  remark  at 
p.  480,  vol.  iii. 

Physicians,  none  made  by  books  only,  i, 
356. 

Physicians  and  philosophers  accounted 
atheists  and  magicians,  ii,  1,  n.  26. 
A  number  of  in  the  Romish  calendar 
of  saints,  iv,  416.  College  of;  their 
hall,  or  anatomy  theatre,  i,  291.  Who 
gave  books  to,  295. 


524 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


Physiognomy,  ii,  8S,  89,  n.  Almost 
endless  variety  in,  ib. 

Pice  Fraudes,  ii,  41. 

Pictures,  E.  B.  saw  at  Cologne,  i,  207. 
Various  errors  in,  iii,  87-lCl.  ( For 
list,  see  Table  of  Contents  of  vol.  III.) 
Reference  to  several  collections  of, 
some  very  absurd,  iii,  161,  n.  List  of 
varieties,  in,  iv,  213-247. 

Pierius,  his  absurd  antidote  against  the 
sting  of  a  scorpion,  ii,  231.  Says  that 
pigeons  have  no  gall,  399.  His  hiero- 
glyphic of  the  beaver,  407,  n.  Of 
the  basilisk,  415,  n.  Character  of 
his  work,  ib.  n.  Hieroglyphic  of  the 
salamander,  452. 

Pigeon,  said  to  have  no  gall,  P.  E.  iii,  ch. 
3,  ii,  399-403.  Probable  ground  of 
tliis  ancient  opinion,  399.  Supported 
by  Wren,  ib.  n.  Denied  by  Aristotle, 
Pliny,  and  Galen,  400.  Further 
grounds  of  the  conceit  respecting,  401- 
403.  Said  to  be  contrary  to  experi- 
ence, 401.  Correct  statement  of  the 
fact,  ib.  n. 

Pigmies,  their- existence  discussed,  P.  E. 
iv.  cb.  11,  iii,  43-47.  Ross  contends 
for,  43,  n.  Conflicting  testimonies  on, 
44 -4C.    Absurd  fables  respecting,  47. 

Pigs,  wholefootcd,  iii,  273,  n. 

Pill,  Matthew's,  or  Mathias's,  receipt  for, 
i,  248.     Black,  for  cough,  349. 

Pineda,  quotes  1040  authors  in  his  Mo- 
narchia  Ecclcsiastica,  ii,  35. 

Pisa,  E.  B's.  account  of,  i,  75. 

Pismire,  said  to  bite  off  the  ends  of  corn 
to  prevent  its  growth,  ii,  531.  Cor- 
rection of  the  error,  ib.  n.  Horse  pis- 
mire of  Ctesias,  337,  n. 

Pitch,  why  black,  iii,  2S2. 

Plaetorius  Marcus  Ceslianus,  account  of 
a  coin  of,  i,  415. 

Plague,  in  Milan,  i,  97.  France,  101. 
England,  110.  Norwich,  130.  Brus- 
sels, 156.  Antwerp,  157,  Flanders, 
158.  De  Peste,  a  paper  on  the  plague, 
iv,  277-281.  Kircher's  account  of  the 
medicines  used  by  Hippocrates  in  the 
plague.  Averrhoes  said  to  have  pe- 
rished by  the  wheel.  The  authority 
untraceable,  277.  Hippocrates's recyjr, 
several  queries  respecting,  279.  Se- 
veral medical  queries  thereon,  280. 

Plagues  of  Egypt,  in  what  season  hap- 
pened, iv,  153,  154. 

Plagiarists,  examples  of  many  writers  who 
have  borrowed  largely  from  former 
writers,  ii,  217,  218.  Without  even 
acknowledging  the  obligation,  218. 

Planets,  their  number,  iii,  50. 

Plants,  revived  from  their  ashes,  ii,  69, 


70,  n.  Various  authors  respecting, 
ib.  n.     Author's  experiment  thereon, 

71,  n.  Whether  all  have  seed,  377. 
The  question  answered,  ib.  n.  Many 
absurd  modes  of  naming  them,  379. 
Erroneous  impressions  have  arisen 
from  some  of  these  appellations  re- 
specting the  nature  of  the  plants,  ib. 
Many  and  strange  faculties  and  pro- 
perties falsely  ascribed  to  them,  380- 
384.  Whether  impaired  by  the  flood, 
507. 

Planting,  various  conveniences  of  the 
quincuncial  arrangement  in,  iii,  426- 
429. 

Plates,  account  of  those  which  accompa- 
ny this  edition,  i,  Pre/.  15. 

Platina,  NomuiUa  de  lie  Culinariaf  iv, 
305-308. 

Plato,  ii,  20,  n,  21,  n.  26,  n,  47.  His 
year,  11.  Remarks  on  a  passage  in, 
iv,  413. 

Plautus,  the  meaning  of  a  passage  in, 
ii,  299. 

Pleiades,  iii,  51. 

Pleurisies,  only  on  the  left  side  ?  P.  E. 
iv,  ch.  3,  ii,  7,  8.  Ignorance  of  ana- 
tomy led  to  the  notion,  ib. 

Plinius  Secundus,  IFtst.  Nat.  Jeers  at 
books  with  odd  titles,  ii,  xxiii.  The 
greatest  collector  of  all  the  Latins : 
his  Nat.  Hist,  collected  out  of  2000 
authors,  238.  Dr.  Thomson's  opinion 
of  him,  ib.  n.  Error,  respecting  crys- 
tal, 267.  And  garUck,  306.  His 
story  of  loadstone  mines  and  rocks, 
3 1 3.  Of  the  temple  of  Arsinoe  arched 
with  loadstone,  313.  Says  that  the 
diamond  is  broke  by  the  blood  of  a 
goat,  334.  Of  coral,  350.  Says  that 
a  horse  has  no  gall,  396.  In  what 
sense,  ib.  n.  Mentions  the  basilisk, 
414.  On  the  fascination  of  serpents, 
417,  n.  Error  respecting  the  wolf, 
422.  His  fable  of  the  plicenix,  438. 
Of  the  salamander,  452.  Of  the  am- 
phisb.x'na,  455.  His  fabulous  asser- 
tion of  the  viper,  458.  Denial  of  sight 
to  the  mole,  473.  Fable  of  the  cha- 
melion,  482.  His  absurd  notion  about 
cock-broth,  425.  Asserts  the  exist- 
ence of  pigmies,    iii,  44. 

Plot,  Dr.  Rob.  his  Description  of  Middle- 
sex, i,  454.  Natural  Histories  of  O.v- 
fordsliire  and  Staffordshire,  i,  xc.  His 
Journetj  with  Dr.  Thomas  Browne,  iv, 
457-462. 

Plot,  new  set  up,  i,  265. 

Plovers,  green,  in  Iceland,  iv,  255. 

Plutarchus,  his  Lives,  quoted  i,  149. 
New   translation   of,    designed,    329. 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


525 


B's.  account  of  foi-mcr  ones,  332. 
E.  B.  undertakes  a  life,  cii.  Finishes 
it,  315.  Subsequently  another,  cii. 
His  tract  against  Herodotus,  ii,  233. 
Says  that  jjarlick  hindirs  the  attraction 
of  the  loadstone,  30C.  .Asserts  bitter 
almonds  to  be  an  antidote  again  drunk - 
cness,  374.  I'arious  Extracts  from 
his  Writim^s  and  Remnrks  thereon,  iv, 
nO-412,  413,  416-411),  422-424. 

Plymouth,  sound,  1$.  writes  from,  i,  142. 
And  harbours,  138.  Fort  and  town, 
B's.  account  of,  139. 

Poetry,  Latin,  ii,  2.  English,  19,  47, 
C2i  6b,  113,  iv,  37(5.  Incidentally  oc- 
curring in  prose  authors;  Tacitus,  Ci- 
cero, &c.  107.  Critical  remarks  on  the 
preceding  passage,  ib.  n. 

Poison,  carries  its  own  antidote,  ii,  109. 
The  PiijUi,  ib.  n.  Of  Parysatis,  iii, 
357.  Fabulous,  ib.  n.  Will  break 
a  Venice  glass,  357.  Ross's  evi- 
dence, ib.  n.  Attempt  to  poison  Alex- 
ander, 358.  Ireland  free  from  ve- 
nomous creatures,  359.  Wren's  bitter 
remark,  ib.  n.  Administered  in  the 
Eucharist,  372,  and  n. 

Poisoning,  case,  and  terror  of,  in  France, 
i,247,  n. 

Politian,  ii,  xxx. 

Polybius,  Casaubon's  Translation  of,  i, 
383. 

Polycrates,  Bp.  of  Ephesus,  relates  the 
death  of  tlie  Evangelist  John,  iii,  323. 

Polypus,  extracted  from  the  nose,  de- 
scribed, i,  49. 

Pomegranate  tree,  iv,  142. 

Pompeius,  his  pillar  at  the  Euxine,  stand- 
ing, i,  175. 

Pons,  town  and  castle,  T.  B.  described,  i, 
18.     E.  B.  at,  105. 

Ponies,  of  Iceland,  iv,  255. 

Pope  Joan,  story  of,  to  be  doubted, 
iii,  300.      Fabulous,  ib.  n. 

Popery,  bill  against,  i,  239. 

Popes,  their  custom  of  changing  their 
name,  iii,  349. 

Poplar,  iv,  132. 

Popular  Errors,  see  Errors. 

Popular  phrase,  used  in  .Scripture,  not 
always  intended  to  be  taken  literally, 
ii,  245.  Application  of  this  remark  to 
astronomy  and  geology,  ib.  n. 

Porcelain,  common  error  respecting,  ii, 
352.  Various  accounts  of,  353-355. 
Its  true  ingredients,  353,  n. 

Porpoise,  and  dolphin,  differ,  how,  i,  254, 
iii,  90. 

Porwigle,  what,  ii,  451. 

Porta  Baptista,  account  of  his  works, 
many  things  in  them  not  true,  ii,  242. 


Taylor's  recommendation  of  his  Phy- 
siugnotnij,  ib.  n.  Conybeare's  opinion 
of  his  Sattiral  Magick,  243,  n. 

Portland,  road,  &c.  i,  138.  B.  writes 
from,  145. 

Porto,  St.  -Maria,  B.  at,  i,  Mfi. 

Purtrails  of  Ii.  List  of,  ii,  1G7.  That 
prefixed  to  this  edition,  engraved  by 
Edwards,  from  what  original,  i,  Prcf. 
14. 

Portsmoutij,  T.  B.  sails  from,  in  the  Mon- 
tague, i,  120.  His  account  of,  137. 
Sir  Christopher  Minns,  port  admiral, 
120.     Governor  of,  Col.  Legge,  325. 

Posthumous  Works,  some  account  of 
its  first  [publication,  iv,  ix,  x.  Copies 
with  reprint  titles,  ix,  x.  Ives's  copy 
ix,  n.  Reviewed  in  the  Memoirs  of 
Literature,  iv,  55. 

Posture,  superstitions  respecting,  iii, 
1G6. 

Power,  Henry,  Dr.  of  Christ  College, 
Cambridge.  At  Halifax,  i,  lix,  363. 
B.  known  and  honored  by  his  father, 
366.  Mentioned,  421.  A  correspond- 
ent of  the  .Author's,  IxLx.  His  works 
and  MSS.  ib.  and  356,  n.  His  letters 
from  and  to  B.  358-366.  Letter  to  B. 
on  a  passage  of  the  Garden  of  Cyrus, 
with  B's.  answer,  iii,  405,  408,  n. 
Why  not  placed  in  the  Correspondence, 
379. 

Powder,  white  and  noiseless,  ii,  341. 
Fulminating,  ib.  Invented  by  Al- 
phonsus,  duke  of  Ferrara,  347. 

Powder,  of  sympathy,  Papin's  work  on, 
i,  252.  Digby's,  ii,  27,  n.  quoted, 
322,  n.  iii,  182,  n. 

Powder-plot,  ii,  26. 

Prag,  thought  the  largest  city  in  Ger- 
many, i,  168.  E.  B.at,  Ixxvi.  Writes 
from,  195. 

Prateolus,  Gabriel,  {Ov.  Preau)  account 
of  him,  ii,  205,  n. 

Prayer,  Common,  read  Apr.  21,  1661, 
at  Yarmouth,  i,  8.  At  Westminster 
before  the  House  of  Commons,  10. 
Daily,  morning  and  evening,  in  B's. 
parish  church,  313.  For  the  dead,  B. 
inclined  to,  as  was  Dr.  Johnson,  ii,  12, 
n.  100. 

Predictions,  augurial,  whence  origina- 
ting, ii,  259. 

PnEFACES.  liy  the  Editor.  General,  vol. 
i,  9-16.  Works  published  by  B.  and 
those  published  posthumously  ;  ar- 
rangement of  the  present  edition.  Pre- 
faces to  each  portion  of  the  works,  9, 
10.  The  life  ;  existing  materials  for 
it,  II.  Some  account  of  Whitefoot; 
nf  Aikin's  Life,  ih.  n.    Johnson's  Life, 


52G 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


Whitefoot's  Minutes,  and  Mrs.  Lyttle- 
ton's  Notice,  reprinted.  Supplement- 
ary Memoir,  12.  Notice  of  works 
falsely  ascribed  to  B.  ib.  n.  B's.  MS. 
Collections;  Pedigrees,  13.  Arrange- 
ment of  the  Correspondence;  Index, 
14.  Plates,  15.  Acknowledgement 
of  assistance  from  many  friends,  espe- 
cially  Thomas    Amyot,  Esq.  16. 

to  Religio  Medici,  vol.    ii,  iii-xxii, 

with  a  Postscript,  153-158. 

to  Pseudo(Ioxia,n,  161-175. 

to  Garde7i  of  Cyrus,  Hydriotaphia, 


and  Bravipton  Urns,  iii,  377-380, 
to  Vol.  iv,  ix-xvi.     Some  copies  of 


Posthumous  Works  and  Christian  Mo- 
rals, with  reprint  titles,  ix.  Mr.  Ives's 
copy  of  the  former,  ib.  n.  Some  ac- 
count of  its  first  publication,  x.  Chris- 
tian  Morals,  a  copy  dated,  17C1  ; 
Johnson's  Life  written  for  second 
edition,  by  Payne  ;  when  reprinted, 
xi.  Evelyn's  copy  of  the  Miscellany 
Tracts.  Notice  of  the  Unpublished 
I'apers,  xii,  xiii. 

•  to  liepertorium,  iv,  3,  4. 

to  Letter  to  a  Friend,  35. 

-^  to  Christiaji  Morals,  55. 

'  to  Miscellany  Tracts  and  Miscella- 


nies, 117-188. 

Prega  Dio,  iii,  3. 

Presages  of  death,  various,  iv,  40-42. 
From  dreams,  46. 

Presbyterian  Parsons,  no  great  clerks, 
B's  account  of  some  who  kept  their 
livings  by  subscription,  i,  30. 

Prester,  John,  still  a  Mulatto,  iii,  274. 

Price,  Thomas,  D.  D.  Abp.  of  Cashel,  i, 
347. 

Pride,  disclaimed  by  the  Author,  ii,  102- 
105.  Dr.  Watts's  censure  on  this  pas- 
sage, i,  xlviii.     Discussed,  ii,  102,  n. 

Prierius,  a  Dominican,  writes  against  Lu- 
ther, ii,  3,  n. 

Primrose,  James,  Popular  Errors,  ii,  171. 
Editions  and  translations  of  the  work, 
ib.  n,  and  179,  n.  Noticed  by  B.  ii, 
379. 

Proclus,  Dr.  Lushington  wrote  Comments 
on,  i,  467. 

Procopius,  his  Arcana  Ilistoria,  iii,  35  1. 

Procreation,  B's.  extraordinary  wish  re- 
specting, ii,  105.  Quotation  from  Mon- 
taigne thereon,  ih.  n. 

Professions  of  Divinity,  Physic  and  Law, 
raised  upon  the  fall  of  Adam,  ii,  108. 

Prognostics,  of  birds,  ii,  433. 

Prophecy,  proposed  in  reply  to  an  old  one 
sent  for  solution,  Tr.  12,  iv,  231-238. 
The  prophecy,  232,  233.  Paralleled, 
ib.  n.     Expounded,  233-238. 


Proportions  existing  in  animal  conforma- 
tions, iii,  423,  424.  Dr.  Adam's  re- 
marks on,  ib.  n. 

Prosperity,  not  desired,  at  the  expense 
of  others,  ii,  108. 

Protestant  religion,  i,  3.  Tolerated  in 
France,  11.  Preachers,  6.  Church 
in  France,  7. 

Providence  not  to  be  called  chance,  ii,  21. 

PsEUDODOXiA  Epidemica,  vols.  ii,  iii. 
Editor's  Preface,  ii,  161-175.  Possi- 
bly suggested  by  Lord  Bacon  on  the 
Use  of  Doubts,  101.  Various  editions 
of,  165-170.  Translations  of,  168. 
Replies,  169.  Imitations  of,  and 
works  with  similar  titles,  171-173. 
Present  edition,  170.  Notes  to  it,  by 
Wren,  Brayley,  and  others,  170,  171. 
Length  of  time  since  it  was  under- 
taken, 173,  n.  Opinions  on  the  work 
by  Bates,  i,  354.  Sir  Haraon  L'Es- 
trange's  observations  on,  sent  to  B.  and 
preserved  in  Br.  Mus.  ii,  173.  To  the 
reader,  177-182.  In  which  the  Au- 
thor states  his  object,  to  clear  away 
errors  in  our  knowledge,  177.  His 
discouragements  and  encouragements 
therein,  178.  Reason  for  writing  in 
English,  179.  Notices  previous  writ- 
ers, ih.  And  bespeaks  the  candour  of 
his  readers,  180-182.  Postscript  to 
the  sixth  edition,  182.  (For  subjects 
treated  in  this  work,  see  Table  of 
ConteMs  to  vols.  I,  ill. J 

Psylli,  ii,  109,  n. 

Ptolemy,  ii,  34.  Where  born,  iii,  247. 
Says  that  garlick  hinders  the  attraction 
of  the  loadstone,  ii,  306. 

Public  Libraries,  before  the  flood,  iv, 
240,  n. 

Pulse,  Daniel's  food,  what,  iv,  130,  131, 
and  130,  n. 

Pulteney,  Rich.  M.D.  Sketches  of  Bo- 
tany, i,  Ixx,  n. 

Pulvertoft,  Randulfus,  iv,  11. 

Puppies,  born  blind,  iii,  523. 

Pygmalion,  fable  of,  iii,  371. 

Pyramids,  Vansleb's  account  of,  i,  222. 

Pyrrhus,  his  toe,  increniablc,  iii,  476. 

Pythagoras,  ii,  17,  n.  47.  His  notions 
respecting  numbers,  iii,  48.  Bp. 
Hall's  reflections  on,  ib.  n. 


Q. 


Quails,  feed  on  hellebore,  iii,  538. 
Queen,  mother,  see  Henrietta  of  France, 

i,  108.     Of  Charles  II,  see  Catharina. 
Quecnborough,    T.    B's.    account   of,  i, 

130,  136. 
Queries,  a  brief  reply  to  several,  iv,281- 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


527 


2S6,  (see  Answers.)  Of  the  cry  of  a 
soldier,  2S1.  On  an  odd  picture,  sup- 
posed to  be  of  St.  Corbinian,  2S1 ,  2S2. 
Of  "  telling  noses,"  2S;J.  Several 
queries  proposed  in  return.  Descrip- 
tion of  several  medals,  2S4,  285. 

Quicksilver,  veins  of,  at  Cremnitz,  i, 
172.  Found  ill  all  mines,  in  Hun- 
pary,  but  one,  173.  .Mines  of,  205. 
S(il"lens  pold,  255.  Said  by  Diosco- 
rides  to  be  best  preserved  in  vessels 
of  tin  and  lead,  ii,  2IC.  Said  by  Para- 
celsus to  destroy  the  power  of  the 
loadstone,  307.  Said  to  be  more  de- 
structive than  shut,  318. 

Quellinus,  an  engraver,  i,  -17. 

Quinary,  arrangement  of  nature,  iii, 
413-415,  n.  43'J-440,  n. 

Quince,  one  of  the  meanings  of  the 
Greek  word  for  apple,  iii,  297. 

Quincuiu,  see  Garden  of  Cyrus. 


R. 


Raab,  E.  B.  visits,  i,  Ixxx. 

Habelais,  ii,  29,  n.  31,  n. 

Kabbi,  Joseph,  Bar  Abraara,  ii,  17,  n. 

Rabble,  to  be  found  among  gentry,  ii, 
87. 

Rachel,  her  alleged  motive  for  asking 
for  the  mandrakes,  iii,  315. 

Racine,  ^-Ibrt-gi  de  I' Hist.  Ecclesiastique, 
quoted,  ii,  xx'i. 

Radzivil,  Nicol.  Christ,  his  Peregrinatio 
Hurosoli/m.  quoted,  i,  46,  130. 

Rahab,  whether  correctly  termed  a  har- 
lot, iii,  115. 

Rain,  apparently  pure,  ii,  491. 

Rainbow,  that  there  was  none  l)efore  the 
flood,  P.  E.  vii,  ch.  4,  iii,  304-308. 
An  absurd  fancy — and  why,  306.  It 
was  chosen,  not  created,  for  a  token 
of  mercy,  ib.  Cabalistical,  and  other 
considerations,  307,  30S. 

Rajapore,  taken  and  plundered,  i,  429. 

Raleigh,  Sir  Walter,  query  on  a  passage 
of  his,  iv,  920. 

Ralegh,  Wm.  Bp.  iv,  17. 

Ramuzius,  account  of  porcelain,  ii,  353. 

Ramsey,  Abbey  of,  remarkable  tenure, 
iv,  286. 

Ratisbon,  E.  B.  at,  i,  Ixxix. 

Rattlesnake,  its  supposed  power  of  fas- 
cinating, ii,  417.  Cuvier's  account 
of,  460,  n. 

Ratj*,  brought  to  England  in  the  Embas- 
sador's suite.  .Muscovy,  smell  like 
musk,  i,  47. 

Ravens,  why  ominous,  iii.  163,  n. 

Rawlcy,  Dr.  Isaac  Gruter's  letters  to,  i, 
XV,  n. 


Rawlinson,  Thos.  Esq.  iv,  3,  n. 

Rawlinson,  Rich.  D.D.  iv,  3,  n. 

Ray,  Rev.  John,  (spelt  also  Wray)  his 
translation  of  Willougliby's  Urnitliolo- 
giii,  i,  xc.  328.  B.  lent  descriptions 
and  drawings  of  birds,  d'c.  for,  xc, 
337.  Travels  with  E.  B.  Ixxvii, 
mentioned  by  E.  B.  86,  94,  96. 
His  edition  of  Willoughbtj' s  Ichthy- 
olugy,  xc,  xci,  n.  De  lie  Culiiiaria, 
noniiulla  a  lecliunc  yJl/iencei,  I'lattnte, 
■i-lpicii,  conscripta,  iv,  305-308. 

Read,  M.D.  reported  author  of  R.  M. 
dated  1641,  ii,  iii,  n. 

Reason,  to  be  submitted  to  faith,  ii,  15. 
A  rebel  to  faith,  ii,  27-29. 

Receipts,  iv,  453. 

Reculvers,  church,  a  landmark,   i,  136. 

Redman,  William,  Bp.  iv,  16. 

Red  Sea,  P.  E.  vi,  ch.  9,  iii,  259-262, 
Whence  its  title  ;  whether  from  weeds, 
259.  Or  from  King  Erythrus;  or 
from  the  Edomites ;  or  from  its  water 
being  red,  2C0.  Bruce  ascribes  the 
name  to  weeds,  259,  n.  Blumfield 
( lleccnsio  Synoptica)  to  King  Eryth- 
rus, or  Edom,  and  doubts  the  weeds 
being  the  cause,  260,  n.  Sir  Walter 
Raleigh  ascribes  the  redness  to  coral, 
and  others  to  the  redness  of  the  earth, 
261.  Other  seas  of  the  same  name, 
261,262.      Mentioned,  ii,  14. 

Redi,  Francisco,  de  f'ipera,  and  on  salts, 
i,  108,  ii,  465.  ilis  remarks  on  vipers, 
confirmed  by  later  observation,  ib.  n. 

Regio  Montanus,  his  fly,  and  eagle,  ii, 
21. 

Reiclicnberg,  Adam,  attack  on  Br,  in 
Eurema  Ilobbesian.  i,  l.xvii.  Wrote 
also  De  Gemmis  Errores  f'ulgares, 
ib.  n. 

Reimmann,  John  Fr.  in  his  Hist.  Univ. 
Alheismi,  defends  the  author  from  the 
charge  of  atheism,  i,  Ixvi,  ii,  xv,  n. 
and  in  his  Bibliothecee  Theologica 
Calalogus,  against  the  att-icks  of  J. 
Micrailius,  and  Ad.  Reichenberg,  i, 
Ixvii.     Remarks  on  Ps.  Ep.  i,  Ixviii. 

Reiser,  de  Atheismo,  calls  the  author, 
atheist,  i,  Ixvi,  ii,  xv,  n.  Vindicia 
yhili-Tlioviistircr,  i,  Ixvi,  n. 

Relations,  enumeration  of  some,  the 
truth  of  which  we  fear,  P.  E.  vii,  ch. 
19,  iii,  370-374. 

Religin  HihUopolfr,  by  Henj.  Bridgwater, 
enlarged  by  John  Dunion,  an  entire 
piece  of  patchwork,  ii,  xix.  Chris- 
tiani,  a  churchman's  answer  to  Ucl. 
Clerici,  xxi.  Cleriri,  I,  in  1681, 
design  of,  xviii.  II,  .•/  churchman's 
epistle,    1818.      Account   of,  xx.     A 


523 


GENEUAL    INDEX. 


churcliman's  second  Epistle,  xxi.  Ju- 
risconsulli,  12mo.  published,  London, 
1649,  xvi.  Supposed  to  be,  by  J. 
Botrie,  xvii.  JurisprudcMiis,  or  the 
Lawyer's  Advice  to  liis  son.  Mark 
llikiesiey  supposed  author  of,  xviii. 
Laici,  or  a  Layman's  faith.  I,  by 
John  Dryden,  notice  of,  xviii.  II, 
by  Chas.  Hlount,  notice  and  design  of, 
ib.  Inscribed  to  Dryden,  ib.  Mostly 
a  translation  of  Lord  Herbert's  de  Ret. 
Laid,  ib.  Ill,  touching  the  supreme 
guide  of  the  church,  by  J.  II.  charac- 
ter of,  ib.  IV.  by  St.  Tempest,  Esq. 
character  of,  xx.  Liberlini,  by  Ber- 
ridge,  ib. 
Religio  Medici,  ii,  1-158.  Written 
between  1033,  and  1635,  iii.  On 
the  date,  see  also,  i,  xx,  n.  At  Ship- 
den  Hall,  near  Halifax,  Iviii,  ii.  iv. 
Lent  privately  for  some  years  in  MS. 
ib.  MS.  copies  now  existing,  ib. 
Account  of,  V,  n.  Not  transcripts, 
but  distinct  originals,  iv.  First  printed 
surreptitiously,  in  1642,  ib.  Dr. 
Johnson's  inuendo  on  this,  ii,  xxi. 
Considered  and  rebutted,  i,  iv.  Let- 
ters of  ijir  Kenelm  Digby,  and  B.  con- 
cerning, xxvii,  xxix.  Johnson's  notice 
of  this  correspondence,  i,  xxu.  Ob- 
servations on,  by  Digby,  ii,  viii,  119- 
151.  Made  on  the  surreptitious  cd. 
viii.  R.  M.  revised  and  published  by 
the  author,  1643,  vi.  Ascribed  to  Dr. 
Read,  v,  n.  Attacked  by  Ross,  i, 
XXV,  Ixii.  Opinions  of,  by  Digby,  ii, 
xxiv.  MoUke,  ib.  Patin,  xv.  Con- 
ring,  ib.  Duncou,  a  quaker,  352. 
Bates,  353.  Fuller  account  of  the 
various  opinions  for  and  against  the 
work,  Ixiii-lxviii.  Placed  in  the 
Index  Eutpurgatorius,  Lxiii,  li,  xvi. 
Annotations  on,  by  Keck,  ii,  ix. 
Marshall's  frontispiece  to,  vii.  Vari- 
ous editions  of,  v-xiii.  Plan  of  the 
present  edition,  (xvth,)  xiii.  Correc- 
tions of,  XX,  xxii.  Translations  of,  i, 
xxiv,  XXV;  ii,  xi-xiii.  Latin,  xi,  xii. 
By  Merryweather,  i,  Ixii;  ii,  xi,  xii. 
with  notes,  supposed  to  be  by  Moltke, 
xii.  Dutch,  by  Griitidahl,  xii.  French 
attributed  to  N.  Lefebvre,  ib.  Ger- 
man,  with  a  life,  ascribed  to  G .  Veuztky , 
xiii.  In  the  works,  by  Knorr,  ib. 
Italian  said,  but  not  known  to  be,  ib. 
(See  the  author's  own  authority  for 
this,  i,  468.)  Preface  to  Merrywea- 
ther's  translation,  and  to  the  Parisian 
reprint  of  it;  first  part  of  Moltke's 
preface,  and  extract  from  that  of  the 
French  translation,  ii,  153-157.     Imi- 


tations of,  &c.  xvi-xxi;  157,  158. 
Fragmentian,  I.  H.  Broxvne,  trans- 
lated for  a  second  R.  M.  xx.  Epi- 
tome of  the  contents  of  R.  M. ; — The 
author  writes  to  dissuade  Digby  from 
printing  his  annotations,  xxvii,  xxviii. 
In  his  discourse  "  to  the  reader"  com- 
plains of  the  surreptitious  edition, 
and  announces  the  corrected  edition, 
xxxi.  When,  why,  and  under  what 
circumstances  written,  xxxii.  De- 
clares himself  a  Christian,  1.  Of  the 
reformed  faith,  2.  But  without  hos- 
tility to  catholics ;  avows  his  lean- 
ing to  that  which  is  termed  supersti- 
tion, 3-5.  Among  various  reformed 
churches,  he  prefers  that  of  England, 
but  reserving  his  liberty  of  judgment 
on  points  left  doubtful  by  scripture 
and  church,  6.  Denies  the  novelty 
of  the  reformed  faith,  but  condemns 
all  scurrility  or  opprobrious  epithets 
against  that  of  Rome,  S.  Disinclined 
to  controversy  in  religion ;  in  philoso- 
phy paradoxical,  but  not  in  divinity,  9. 
Heresies  of  his  youth,  10.  That  of 
the  Arabians,  that  the  soul  should 
sleep  till  the  resurrection,  11.  That 
of  Origen,  that  all  should  finally  be 
restored; — tliatof  prayer  for  the  dead, 
12.  Distinguished  between  error  and 
heresy,  12,  13.  The  mysteries  and 
miracles  of  the  Christian  religion  de- 
mand the  exercise  of  faith,  to  which 
reason  must  bow,  13-15.  His  reflec- 
tions on  the  eternity  of  God,  16.  On 
the  trinity,  17.  On  the  wisdom  of 
God,  IS.  In  his  works,  19.  Their 
causes,  arrangement,  and  uses,  20,  21. 
His  definition  of  nature,  from  whence, 
as  well  as  from  Scripture,  he  derives 
his  divinity,  21-23.  Refers  the  events 
of  his  life  to  providence,  reprobating 
the  name  of  chance  or  fortune,  23-26. 
Endeavours  to  set  just  limits  to  the 
respective  jurisdictions  of  affection, 
reason  and  faith,  27.  Reason  too 
often  a  rebel  unto  faith.  Knowledge 
tempting  to  unbelief.  Gives  several 
curious  examples  of  this,  27-29.  All 
unbelief  not  atheism,  ib.  Some  have 
referred  the  testimony  of  heathens  to 
that  of  Scripture,  ib.  The  miracles  of 
which  are  of  easy  possibility,  "  if  we 
conceive  but  the  little  finger  of  the 
Almighty,"  30.  Many  absurd  ques- 
tions have  been  proposed  in  divinity  as 
well  as  philosophy:  not  worthy  dis- 
cussion, 31.  Proceeds  to  mention 
some  more  reasonable  yet  easily  sol- 
viblc   doubts,  31-34.     Compares  the 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


oi>y 


bible  with  the  Koran,  33.     Speaks  of  [ 
works  supposed  to  liavc  perished  ; — of 
ihe  Alexandrian  library  ; — of  the  vast 
number  of  useless  works  with  which 
the  art  of  printing    has   deluged   the 
world,  35,  3(i.    Speaks  of  the  Jewish 
traditions,  36.      Of  tlie   four  religions 
into  which  the  world  is  divided,  37. 
The  evil  of  persecution,   3!).     Ques- 
rions  whether  miracles   have  ceased, 
and  wlien  ?  ib.     False  miracles  ;  tran- 
substantiation ;     relicks,     &c.    40-12. 
Discusses  the  cessation  of  oracles,   -12. 
Spirits  and  witches,  43.     Satanic  pos- 
session, 44.    Sorcery  and  incantations; 
calls  that  knowledge  which  is  derived 
from  the  study  of  nature,  philosophy — 
and  that  magick,  which  is  learned  from 
the  devil,  45.      Helieves  in   the  exist- 
ence of  good  angels,  from  whom   we 
derive  many  charitable  premonitions, 
46.      Disposed  to  admit  the  possibility 
of   a  universal    spirit    to    the    whole 
world,  according  to  Plato  and  the  her- 
metic philosophers  ;  acknowledges  the 
operation  of  the  Spirit  of  dod  within 
us,  ib.      His  poetic  prayer  for  the  in-  j 
fluence  of  that  Spirit,  47.      Asserts  his  ■ 
belief  in  tutelary  and  guardian  angels,  I 
47-49.      Considers  the  nature  of  man  j 
as  made   in  the  image  of  God,   49.  ' 
The  nature  of  angels ;    why  created,  ! 
50-51.      The  meaning  of  the  term  ere-  ' 
ation,  51.     The  process  thereof;  espe-  ' 
cially  in  that  of  the  soul  of  man,  52, 
53.     How  the  soul  is  transmitted,  53. 
Its  inorganity,   54.      The  change  in- 
duced by  death  in  our  corporeal  frame 
only,  55.     Supposes  the  ghosts  of  the 
departed   to  be  the  unquiet  walks  of 
devils,  56.      Expresses  his  feelings  re- 
specting  death,    57-64.      That    death 
unto  sin,  in  respect  of  which,  the  way 
to   be   immortal    is   to   die    daily,   64. 
The  death  of  the  world  ;  and  day  of 
judgment,   65.     The  impiety  of  pre- 
suming to  fix  the  time  of  it,  66.     Con- 
templates the  last  day,  and  the  manner 
of  the  resurrection,   67-70.      The  na- 
ture and  locality  of  heaven  and  hell, 
71-75.      Never  feared  hell,  75.      The 
numberless  mercies  of   God   are    our 
true  incitement  to  fear,  love,  and  obey 
him,  75-77.     Enquires  at  large — who 
shall  be  saved?   77-S3.      Declares  his 
confidence  of  salvation,   yet  not  with- 
out fear  and  trembling:  and  denounces 
those  who  decry  good  works,  and  rely 
only  upon  faith,  83-S5. 
Part  1 1,  85-1 17.      .\sscris  himself  to  have 
inherited  a  disposition  to  charity  ;  and 

VOL  IV. 


to  be  free  from  antipathies  and  preju- 
dices, 85.      To  be  averse  from  nothing, 
not  hating  any  essence  but  the  devil; 
but  most  contemning  the  multitude,  86. 
In    which    he   includes    not    only   the 
poorer   classes,    but    a    rabble    among 
gentry,   87.      Suggests   what  are   the 
true  motives  and  ends  of  charity,  88. 
Digresses  to  speak  of  physiognomy  and 
chiromancy,  89.     Of  the  endless  va- 
riety existing  among  faces,  ib.  90.    En- 
joins  a    liberal  and   diffusive   charity, 
not  only  towards  the  bodily,  but  also 
the  mental  wants  of  our  fellow-crea- 
tures,  ib.     But   denounces    all    bitter 
controversy , especially  on  trifling  points, 
91-93.      Notices  the  uncharitable  prac- 
tice of  condemning  whole  professions, 
and  even  whole  nations,  93-95.      Pro- 
fesses his  own  feelings  of  charity  and 
benevolence  to  be  strong,  96-98.    And 
especially     those    of    friendship,     99. 
Never  hears  a  passing  bell  without  a 
prayer  for    the  departing  spirit,    100. 
Disallows  all  resentments  against  ene- 
mies, ib.     Gives  his  opinion  as  to  sin, 
and  its  forgiveness ;  its  various  kinds  and 
degrees,  101.      And  the  mixed  feelings 
of  indignation,  anger,  and  sorrow,  with 
which  he  regards  his  own  sin.s,  102. 
Is    thankful  for    having   escaped    the 
master-sin   of  piidc,    finding  himself, 
notwithstanding  his  various  k  now  ledge, 
less  conceited  of  his  acquirements  than 
conscious  of  his  ignorance,    102-105. 
His  aversion   to  the  act  of  marriage, 
105.     Though  not  averse  from    that 
sweet  se.x,  but  amorous  of  all   that  is 
beautiful  and    harmonious    106-107. 
Disclaims  professional  cupidity,    108. 
Expresses    his   readiness    to   converse 
with  all  men,  holding  none  to  be  alto- 
gether bad,  and   fearing  no    external 
contagion,  compared  with  the  corrup- 
tion within,  109,  110.     Calls  his  life  a 
miracle  of  thirty  years,   which  would 
sound,  to  common  ears,   like  a  fable, 
110.   Fond  of  self-contemplation.  111. 
His    thoughts   on   dreams    and   sleep, 
112.      His  evening  hymn,  113.      Dis- 
claims against  avarice,  114.     Conclud- 
ing reflections  on  the  love  of  God,  115- 
117. 

Religio  Militis,  or  the  Moral  Duty  of  a 
Soldier,  ii,  xviii.  Morgan  supposed 
author  of,  ib.  Jteli/sio  Militis,  or  Chris- 
tianity/or the  Camp,  xxi. 

Religio  Philasophi,  by  Win.  Hay,  Esq. 
design  of,  ii,  xx. 

lieligio  f'hilosophi  Peripateliri,  by  Chr. 
Davenport,    written    1640,    published 

2  Q 


530 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


at  Douay,  8vo.  1662,  ii,  xvii. 
Religio  Stoic'i,  with  an  address  to  phana- 
ticks  of  all  sects  and  sorts,  small  8vo. 
Edinburgh,  1665,  written  by  Sir  Geo. 
Mackenzie,  and  reprinted  with  his 
Essays:  also  in  London,  1685,  with 
this  title,  Tlie  Religious  Stoic,  ii,  xvii. 

Religion,  Protestant,  B.  bids  his  son  be 
firm  to,  i,  3,  12,14.   At  Montpellier,  70. 

Religion  of  a  Church  of  England  Man, 
ii,  xxi.  A  Gentleman's,  by  Abp.  Synge, 
account  of,  xx.  Of  a  Lady,  xx,  157, 
158.  Of  a  Lawyer,  a  crazy  tale,  xx. 
The  Layman's,  and  the  second  part  of, 
xviii.  Of  a  Physician,  Meditations 
on  the  Festivals,  Edm.  Gayton,  author 
of,  xvii.  Of  a  Prince,  by  Wm.  Ni- 
chols, D.  D.  design  of,  xix.  Of  a  Sol- 
dier, 158.  Of  the  Wits  at  Button's 
refuted,  account  of,  xx. 

de  Religione  Gentilium,  ii,  xvii. 

de  Religione  Laid,  ii,  xvii. 

Religions,  computation  of  the  relative 
numbers  professing  various,  ii,  37,  n. 

Reliques,  at  Chartres,  i,  '22.  St.  Denis, 
62.  Bologna,  97.  St.  Zacharias,  102. 
Thoulouse,  104.  St.  Stephen's,  Vi- 
enna, 185.      Cologne,  206. 

Remains,  Roman,  at  Bordeaux,  i,  17. 
Near  Xainctes,  18.  At  Saal  Sala,  186. 
In  the  fens,  382.  Near  Ratcliff,  454. 
In  Norfolk,  470. 

Remora,  absurd  account  of  it,  ii,  537,  n. 

Renodffius,  useful  for  compounding  medi- 
cines, i,  357. 

Repentance,  B's.   description  of,  ii,  102. 

Rkpertokium,  iv,  i,  to  3?.  Preface, 
the  Author's  motives  for  completing  it. 
Who  was  the  editor.  Illustrated  co- 
pies; that  of  Kirkpatrick,  3.  Some 
account  of  him,  fi.  n.  Present  edition 
edited  by  \V.  Woodward,  iv.  Motives 
for  the  work,  5.  Eimmcration  of  the 
monuments,  5-14.  Bishops  suppo- 
sed to  have  been  buried  here,  and  in 
our  Lady's  Chapel,  14-16.  Account 
hereof,  16.  Some  bishops  of  Norwich 
buried  elsewhere,  17,  18.  Some  sup- 
posed to  have  been  buried  in  the  Old 
Bishop's  Chapel,  19.  Why,  since 
many  noble  and  distinguished  families 
have  belonged  to  the  county,  so  few 
are  buried  in  the  cathedral,  19-24. 
Escutcheons  of  patrons  and  benefactors 
thereof,  (willi  a  plate),  20.  Account 
of  various  escutcheons,  statues,  figures, 
and  carvings  in  the  cathedral,  20-23. 
Beauchamp's,  Heydon's,  and  other 
chapels,  23-25.  That  of  St.  John, 
now  the  free  school ;  charnel-house 
under  it,  25.      Organs,   26.      Account 


of  the  green  yard,  and  combination 
sermons  preached  there,  (scs  plan), 
27,  28.  The  spire,  and  prospect  from 
it,  28,  29.  No  kings  buried  here, 
and  few  have  visited  either  it  or  Nor- 
wich, only  four,  29.  Correction  of 
this,  enumerating  sixteen,  ih.  n.  Death 
of  Dean  Astley,  30.  Addenda,  31. 
MS.  completed  in  1680,  i,  c. 
Reply,  a  brief  to  several  queries,  iv,  281- 

286. 
Resolutions,  B's.  pious,  iv,  420. 
Resurrection,  mode  of  discussed,  ii,  68. 
Reynolds,   Dr.    Edw.    Bp.    of  Norwich, 
dear  friend  of  B.  i,  14.    Sends  respects 
to  E.  B.    161-178.     His  death,  199. 
His  chapel,  ih. 
Rhe,  isle  of,  visited  by  T.  B.  jun.  i,  20. 
Ribs,   how  many  a  monkey  has,   i,  46. 
Whether  a  man  has  fewer  than  a  wo- 
man, a  common  conceit;  but  neither 
true  nor  reasonable,  and  why,  P.  E. 
vii,  ch.  2,  iii,  299-301.    Mutilations  not 
transmitted,    300.     Bp.  Hall's  reflec- 
tions on  the  point,  301,  n. 
Ricaut,  Sir  Paul,  his  Lives  of  the  Sultans, 
i,   268.     B's.   remarks  on,    272-275. 
Stale   of    the    Greek    and    Armertian 
Churches,  275.     Written  by  the  K's. 
command,  277. 
Richard  I,  II,  III,  all  visited  Norwich, 

iv,  29,  n. 
Richardson,  Dr.  notice  of  B's.  account  of 

the  bear,ii,  413,  n. 
Richborowe,  iv,  461. 
Richmond,  duke  of,  a  patient  of  E.  B's. 

i,  cii. 
Right  and  left  hand,  P.  E.  iv,  ch.  5,  iii, 
13-23.  The  right  preeminently  used  ; 
whether  naturally?  13.  Scriptural 
testimony,  ib.  Grecian  and  Roman, 
14.  Wren  and  Ross  both  of  right- 
handed  opinion,  ib.  n.  If  man,  why 
not  other  creatures  naturally  prepotent 
on  the  rightside  ?  ib.  Some  children 
left-handed,  ib.  Wren  accounts  for 
this,  ib.  n.  Aristotle  ascribes  the  pre- 
ference to  custom,  15.  Anatomical 
grounds  for  the  contrary  opinion  not 
valid,  15-18.  Discussion  as  to  which 
is  the  right  and  which  the  left  side, 
18.  Ambidextrous  and  ambilevous 
persons,  20.  As  to  east  and  west,  21. 
Northern  called  the  right  side  of  the 
world,  21.  Conclusion  against  the 
natural  prepotency  of  the  right  side, 
22,  23.  Yet  does  this  seem  to  be  the 
fact,  from  modern  investigation,  ib.  n. 
Rimini,  E.  B.  at,  i,  89,  96. 
Ring-finger,  of  the,  P.  E.  iv,  ch.  4,  iii, 
8-13.   Why  both  by  christians  and  hea- 


GENblKAL    INDl.X. 


531 


thens  the  foiirih  has  been  preferred,  S. 
What  the  practice  of  imtiquity,  8,  D, 
n.  What  implied  by  wearing  rings, 
9,  10,  and  n.  Discussion  of  the  opi- 
nion, 10-13. 

Rin^s,  various  particulars  respecting 
their  use,  iii,  9,  n. 

Rio  de  la  Plata,  iii,  250. 

Riolan,  John,  M.  D.  his  Enchiridion,  i, 
232,  23.'>,  quoted,  255,  259. 

Rivers,  tropical,  swell  like  the  Nile,  i, 
440.  \  classed  catalogue  of,  iv,  414, 
415. 

Riviere,  Lazare,  M.  D.  at  Montpellier, 
to  be  read,  on  diseases,  i,  357. 

Rivington,  and  other  merchants,  seized 
at  Rajapore,  i,  129. 

Robinson,  John,  F.ndoxa,  &c.  in  reply  to 
Ps.  Ep.  with  Whitlock's  remark  on  it, 
i,  Ixiv.  Further  account  of  him  and 
his  works,  ii,  169,  n.  Supports  the 
fables  of  the  ancients  respecting  the 
elephant,  387,  n. 

Robinson,  Reuben,  M.  D.  of  Maldon,  letter 
from,  i,  121. 

Rochelle,  worth  seeing,  ships  pass  to, 
from  Yarmouth,  for  salt,  i,  8.  T.  B, 
describes,  19.  E.  B.  visits,  Ixxvii. 
Writes  from,  106. 

Rochester,  E,  B.  through,  i,  56. 

Rochester,  E.  of,  E.  B.  attended  his  last 
illness,  i,  cii,  202,  278,  n. 

Rocks  of  Iceland,  described,  iv,  255. 

Rod,  divining,  its  origin,  and  use  in 
mining,  iii,  178.  Moses's,  ib.  Mo- 
dern accounts  of,  ib.  n. 

Rodd,  Thomas,  bookseller,  ii,  xviii,  n. 

Rodolf  II.  Emperor,  gold  and  silver  ore 
first  found  and  worked  at  Cranach 
by,  i,  172.  His  magical  glass,  &c. 
175-177. 

Rogers,  Dr.  his  two  orations,  i,  347. 

Rohr.  Phil.  Piclor  Erraus,  iii,  161,  n. 

Rolfinck,  quoted,  i,  234. 

Rollo,  D.  of  Normandy,  converted  by  the 
V.  .Mary's  shift,  i,  22. 

Rollrich  stones,  iii,  469.  Some  like 
them,  i,  470. 

Roman  battalia  qiiincuncially  arranged, 
iii,  398. 

Roman  stations  in  Britain,  iii,  462.  At 
Brancaster,  ih.  Coins  found  in  Bri- 
tain, 463.      Emperors  in  Britain,  405. 

Roman  highways,  Watling-street,  iv, 
457-162. 

Roman  theatres  in  Gallia  enumerated, 
iv,  405. 

Romans  used  garlands,  iv,  174. 

Rome,  not  built  in  a  day ;  contrasted 
with  the  assertion  of  Strabo,  that  An- 
chiali  and  Tarsus  were  built  by  Sarda- 


napalus  in  a  day,  iii,  365,  and  n. 
E.  B.  at,  i,  Ixxvii,  76.  Again,  82. 
His  account  of,  77,  83,  85,  86,  93. 
The  bisliop  of,  entitled,  as  a  temporal 
prince,  to  tiie  duty  of  good  language, 
ii,  7. 

Rondelet,  i,  399. 

Ropalir,  or  Gradual  ferses,  Tr.  7,  iv, 
193,  194. 

Ros  Solis  said  to  give  the  rot  to  sheep,  ii, 
381.      Remarks  thereon,  ib.  n. 

Rose,  "under  the,"  import  and  origin 
of  the  phrase,  iii,  165.  Modern  ac- 
counts of,  ib.  n.  Five  brethren  of  the, 
413,  n.  Of  Jericho  flourishing  at 
Christmas-eve,  ii,  370.  Its  dry  flow- 
ers, if  moistened,  will  expand,  ib. 
Very  curious  fact  related  by  Dean 
Wren,  ib.  n.  Whit  it  is,  ib.  and  iv, 
141.  Sir  R.  K.  Porter's  description 
of,  ib.  n. 

Roses  brought  broni  Egypt  to  Rome,  till 
cultivated  there,  iv,  176. 

Rosenberg,  Count,  patron  of  Dee,  tlie 
alchemist,  i,  460. 

Rosenm'dlleri  Scholia,  ii,  33,  n. 

Ross,  Alexander,  attacked  R.  M.  and 
Digby's  Obss.  in  Mcdicus  Medical  us, 
or  the  Physician's  Religion  Cured,  Sf-c. 
8vo.  1645,  i,  XXV,  Ixii ;  ii,  viii.  The 
only  one  who  did,  xxiv.  H.  Bates's 
wit  upon,  i,  354.  /Ircanu  Microcosmi, 
in  answer  to  Ps.  Ep.  i,  xxvii,  Ixiv;  ii, 
1 69.  Johnson's  remarks  on  him,  con- 
trasted with  that  of  Sir  Thomas  Ur- 
quhart,  i,  Ixii,  n.  Keck  mentions,  ii, 
xxiv.  His  speculations  on  apparitions 
and  bleeding  dead  bodies,  132,  n. 
Some  account  of,  and  Kippis's  opinion 
of  his  /Ircaua,  169,  n.  Supports  the 
ancient  fable  that  an  elephant  has  no 
joints,  387,  n. 

Rotterdam,  E.  B.  at,  i,  Ixxxiii,  151.  His 
account  of,  155. 

Roy  du,  or  Regius,  commended,  i,  362. 
His  Fundament.  Phys.  quoted,  363. 

Royal  Society,  i,  162,  166.  Its  transac- 
tions came  out  monthly,  169.  Que- 
ries, 13,  from  the  Sec.  of,  sent  to  E.  15. 
at  Wien,  172.     B's.  advice  about,  176. 

Rubicon,  E.  B.  passes,  i,  96. 

Rueus  says  that  garlick  hinders  the  at- 
traction of  the  loadstone,  ii,  306.  Con- 
cerning coral,  350. 

Ruffinus,  story  of  an  iron  chariot  sus- 
pended by  loadstones,  ii,  310. 

Rugge,  W.  Bp.  iv,  15,  and  n. 

Rump  of  sheep  very  large  in  Judea,  iv, 
168. 

Running  much  exercised  about  Stafford, 
i,  38.     At  the  ring,  at  Bologna,  97. 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


Rupert,  Prince,  notices  T.  B.  i,  133. 
Rupertus  supposes  a  pigeon  to  have  no 

gall,  ii,  39!». 
Rye,  fatal  effects  of  an  ear  of,  ii,  330,  n. 

Later  tlian  barley,  iv,  152. 


Saal  Sala,  E.  B.  at,  i,  180,  187. 

Saddles,  wlien  invented  ?  ii,  237,  n. 

Safety  lamp,  history  of  its  invention,  ii, 
489,  n. 

Sainctes,  see  Xainctes. 

St.  Christopher,  picture  of  this  gigantic 
saint  carrying  our  Saviour  through  the 
water,  P.  E.  v,  ch.  10,  iii,  130-138. 
More  common  in  B's  time,  both  in 
churches  and  on  signs,  than  it  is  now, 
130,  n.  Who  he  was,  and  what  he 
did,  137.  Rather  a  symbolical  repre- 
sentation than  a  real  history,  ib. 

St.  Faith,  her  day  and  fair  at  Norwich, 
&c.  i,  201. 

St.  George,  picture  of,  P.  E,  v,  ch.  17, 
iii,  138-140,  Who  was  he?  139. 
The  picture,  rather  a  symbolical  re- 
presentation of  the  soldier  of  Christ, 

140.  Notice  of  Pettingal's  disserta- 
tion, and  Dr.  Pegge's  opinion  hereon, 
138,  n. 

St.  James,  Clerkenwell,  Lieut.  B.  said 
to  have  been  buried  at,  i,  Ixxv,  n. 

St.  Jerome,  of  his  picture,  P.  E.  v,  ch. 
18,  iii,  141-143.  With  his  clock, 
which   is  a  thing  of  later  invention, 

141.  The  dean's  account  of  the  more 
ancient  pictures,  and  the  probable  rea- 
son of  their  being  modernized,  ib.  n. 
Of  the  more  ancient  measures  of  time, 
clepsydrcc  and  sundials;  and  their  im- 
perfectness,  141,  142.  Ahaz's  sun- 
dial, 142.  Perpetual  motions,  ib.  One 
described  by  Dr.  John  Dee,  143. 

St.  John,  that  he  should  not  die,  P.  E. 
vii,  ch.  10,  iii,  321-320.  Origin  of  the 
conceit,  322.  His  death  and  burial 
attested  by  some  ancient  authors,  322- 
323.  Why  he  escaped  martyrdom, 
323.  His  long  life,  324.  Various 
grounds  to  favour  the  opinion,  324, 
325. 

St.  John,  chief  justice,  i,  392. 

St.  Omer,  siege  of,  i,  217. 

St.  Peter  in  the  prison,  Reubens's  pic- 
ture of,  iii,  100. 

St.  Veit,  in  Carinthia,  E.  B.  rested  at,  i, 
ISO.  Wrote  from,  187.  May  mean 
St.  Faith,  201. 

St,  Vincent,  some  account   of,   iv,  413. 

Sala,  Angelus,  on  the  resurrection,  i, 
358. 


Salamander,  fable  of,  P.  E.  iii,  ch.  14, 
ii.  452-455.  In  the  Egyptian  hiero- 
glyphics, 452.  This  questioned,  ib.  n. 
Those  who  have  believed  the  story, 
and  those  who  have  denied  it,  452. 
Supposed  grounds  for  it,  453. 

Salamander's  wool,  ii,  453.  Being  the 
asbestos,  454,  n.  Sir  Henry  Wotton's 
napkin  of  asbestos,  ib.  n.  Modern 
application  of  the  term  in  natural  his- 
tory, 454,  n.  Lamps  of  alumen  plu- 
mosim,  455. 

Sallee  revolted,  English  helped  the 
Moors  to  take,  i,  323, 

Sallon,  E.  B.  at,  i,  102. 

Salmasius,  a  Dutch  publisher,  discou- 
raged the  publication  of  R.  M.  i,  xxv. 

Salmon,  John,  Bp.  iv,  15,  19. 

Salt  made  at  the  isle  of  Rhe.i,  20.  North- 
vvich,  and  how,  37.  Exhaled  by  art, 
from  a  spring  near  Northwich,  49.  Pits 
in  Transylvania,  account  of,  wanted  for 
Soc.  Reg.  172.  Rock  in  Hungary, 
E,  B's.  account  of,  174.  A  lake  or 
field  of,  in  South  America,  452.  Dis- 
solvable most  easily  in  cold  water?  ii, 
210.  Explained,  ib.  n.  Its  fall  omi- 
nous, iii,  104,  Taxed  in  France, 
ib.  n.  A  symbol  of  friendship,  ib. 
Interesting  account  of,  ib.  n. 

Saltpetre,  what  and  whence,  ii,  344, 
Native,  ib.  n. 

Saltzberg,  a  noble  fountain  at,  i,  177. 
plentiful  in  minerals,  178. 

Salvation,  confidence  respecting  our,  how 
far  justified,  ii,  84,  85, 

Samaritans,  their  chronology,  iii,  189. 
Their  care  to  preserve  the  pentateuch, 
190. 

Sanctius,  Fr.  says  a  nightingale  hath  no 
tongue,  ii,  231. 

Sandarach,  what,  ii,  349,  n. 

Sandlin,  John,  a  chorister  of  Norwich 
cathedral,  iv,  5, 

Sandwich,  see  Swanwich. 

Sandwich,  E.  of,  admiral,  his  praise  of 
T.  B.  i,  151. 

Sandys,  his  travels,  i,  331. 

Sap,  theory  of  its  circulation,  ii,  378. 
Opinions  of  several  eminent  vegetable 
physiologists,  ib.  n. 

Sardinia,  K,  of,  order  of  garter  sent  to, 
i,  108, 

Satan,  his  equivocations  in  the  replies  of 
oracles,  ii,  204.  His  endeavours  the 
great  promoter  of  popular  error,  {P.  E. 
i,  ch.  10,  11,)  ii,  247-205.  Endea- 
vours to  inculcate  atheism,  248.  Poly- 
theism, 249.  To  represent  himself  as 
God,  250.  Pretending  to  work  mira- 
cles,  251.      H.    K.    White's  remarks 


GENERAL    INDliX. 


533 


on   the    magicians   of  Pliaraoli,  i7».  n.  I 
His  variuus   iiietbods  to  induce  a  be-  1 
lief  of  his   deity,    250-252.       Especi-  ' 
ally   by    the   practice  of  oracles,   25;i.  I 
By  inculcating  magic,  25  I.     Some  he 
persuades  to  disbelieve  in  his  own  ex- 
istence, 255.   To  eftect  his  deceptions, 
he  labours  in  various  ways  to  destroy 
the  credit  of  the   bible,  256.     By  de- 
nying,   corrupting,   or    mutilating    it,  ' 
or  by  the   production    of  apocryphal  ; 
scriptures,    256,  257.       The    various 
errors  respecting  the   Redeemer,  pro- 
moted   by    Satan,  257.      Induces   the 
ascription  of  various  efl'ects  to  absurd 
or  false  causes,  258.     Astrology,  258. 
Presages  and  omens,  259.     Charms, 
potions,     &c.     260-2G2.        Originates 
various  speculative  errors,  on  many  of 
which  sects  have  arisen,  262.      While 
others  are  single  errors,  262-5. 

Satanic  agency,  oracles  the  result  of,  ii, 
253.  And  witchcraft — note  upon  B's. 
opinions  on  these  points,  256,  n. 

Saturn,  the  same  as  Noah,  iii,  230.* 

Saturn  Egyptius,  the  same  as  Cham,  231. 

Savile,  Sir  Henrv,  his  translation  of  Livy, 
i,  384. 

Scaliger,  Jul.  Caesar,  his  house  at  Agen, 
i,  105.  His  comment,  on  Hist.  Ani- 
mal, quoted,  254,  255,  273.  Motto  to 
Psendodoria,  ii,  160.  Enumerates  in- 
cidental resemblances  among  authors, 
10,  n.      His  epitaph,  iv,  48. 

Scaliger,  Joseph,  son  of  Julius,  learned 
and  famous,  i,  257. 

Seamier,  Edin.  Bp.  iv,  6, 

Scarborough,  or  Scarburg,  Dr.  i,  394,  400. 

Scarlet,  Berry,  whether  known  in  Judea, 
iv,  156. 

Schemnitz,  silver  mines  of,  i,  Isxx. 
Veins  of  silver  at,  172.  Is  yellow 
stone  deposited  by  hot  waters  at  ?  173. 
E.  B.  at,  181.     Wrote  from,  182. 

Schevelin,  Charles  II.  took  ship  for 
England  at,  i,  155. 

Schlegel  Professor,  his  history  of  the 
elephant  and  sphinx  in  the  classical 
Journal,  ii,  385. 

Schonevelde,  de  Ophidic,  i,  398,  400. 

Sciences,  authority  of  no  validity  in 
several ; — especially  mathematics,  ii, 
22G.  Most  of  them  illustrated  by 
scripture,  iv,  122,  123. 

Scolopendra,  said  to  be  double  headed, 
ii,  458. 

Scorpion,  cure  of  its  sting,  iv,  424. 

Scotland,  rebellion  in,  i,  250.  New  in- 
stitutions in,  334. 

Schottus,  Caspar,  dedicates   Thaumatur- 
•  Mispriotcd  "ialtm. 


aus    Maihematicus    to    his    guardian 
ungel,  iv,  385. 

Scripture,  most  sciences  have  something 
to  illustrate  therein,  iv,  122,  123.  Oh. 
serrations  on  plants  mentioned  therein, 
Tr.  1,  iv,  121-173.  Remarks  on 
passages  of,  iv,  380,  381  ; — 150,  451. 

Scripture.  List  of  texts  quoted  or  illus- 
trated .— 

Gen.  ch.   1    ii,  50,  51 

1,24-29   442 

1,  28  441 

1,  29 507 

2,  5,  6  iv,341 

2.  13 iii, 247 

2,  16,  17  ii,  185 

2,  18 443 

3,  4,  5  204 

3,  6 185 

3,  10 183 

3,  12 189 

3,  13 190 

3,  14 16 

3,  14-16 459 

3,  15 iv,  221 

4,  9 ii,  190 

4,  13 191 

4,  23 192 

6,  1 iii,  235 

6,  20 ii,  441 

8,  5 iii,  223 

8,  II iv,  451 

8,  17 ii,  441 

9,  13 iii,  305 

9,  20 235 

9,  25 277 

10,  10 312 

11,  4 235 

11,  4 312 

11.  26 309 

13,  10 iv,  221 

23,  4 ili,466 

26,  12 iv,  146 

28,  5 iii,  309 

30,  14 312 

30,  26 iv,  274 

41,  48 148 

41,  56 146 

43,  11 iii,  318 

43,  11  iv,  150 

45,  9,  11 146 

48,  13,  14, iii,  13 

49,  5,  22  117 

49,  9 lis 

49,  10 200 

49,  11 iv,  140 

50,  3 274 

Exodus,  ch.  5,  12 136 

7,  20,  24  154 

9,  13 iii, 257 

9,  31 209 


534 


GENERAL  INDEX. 


Ruth,  ch. 
2  Sam.  ch. 


Exodus,  ch.  9 

12 

12 

29 

30 

30 

30 

32 

Lev.  ch.  3 

6 

11 

23 

Numb.  ch.  2 

2 

7 
10 
13 
17 
Deut.  ch.  G 
11 
27 
33 
33 
Josh.  ch.  3 

3 

5 
16 

2 

18 
18 

1  Kings,  ch.  4 

4 

7 

8 

10 

2  Kings,  ch.  9 

13 
18 
27 
.  4 
1 
26 
28 
29 
31 
37 
38 
38 
1 
2 

29 

30 

37 

78 

91 

93 

104 

120 

129 

139 

144 


1  Chron.ch. 

2  Chron.  ch 
Job,   ch 


Ps.   ch. 


31 iv,  152 

11 iii,  110 

40 197 

20 13 

12 327 

13 327 

31,  35  iv,  127 

8 ii,  197 

9 iv,  168 

5 iii,  444 

19 iv,  183 

40 168 

2 iii,  118 

3 244 

8 iv,  450 

35 iii,  119 

23 iv,  127 

8 139 

4 iii,  119 

14 208 

26 190 

17 117 

29 lis 

15 207 

15 iv,  170 

10 iii,  208 

17 iv,  169 

23 iii,  209 

9-14 iv,  158 

33 iii,  461 

33 314 

32,33 ii,«o/e,  35 

26 iv,  133 

38 iii,  242 

27 iv,  143 

36 iv,  123 

15 iii,  180 

4 iv,  158 

28 143 

2 ii,  245 

7 190 

7 285 

1,2 iv,  122 

18 ii,  441 

40 iv,  173 

39 iii,  243 

6 ii,  285 

7 iv,  1 1 1 

14,12 137 

4 iii,  348 

3,5,  6,9,  ..  u,mte,   52 

3,  4 iv,  156 

35  161 

47  ..  144 

11  ii,  206 

1  285 

17 iv,  150 

4 155 

7 155 

15 iii,  419 

13 iv,  168 


Prov.  ch.  3,  16 iii,  -12 

19,  17 ii,  115 

25,  15 iv,  101 

30,  27 iii,  93 

Eccles.  ch.  1,  4  ii,  116 

2,  5 iii,  392 

2,  14 ii,  478 

11,  2 iv,  62 

12,  5 139 

12,  5 450 

24,26 170 

Cant.  ch.  1,  14  126 

2,  1 133 

2,  9 iii,  396 

2,  13 iv,  136 

2,16 133 

4,  1 167 

4,  2 168 

4,  16 iii,  429 

5,  13  ,.., iv,  133 

7,  8 167 

Isa.  ch.   9,10 143 

11,  5 iii,  168 

11,  15,  16  248 

14,  16 496 

14,  29 ii,  416 

28,  25 iv,  133 

34,  11,  13  iii,  163 

36,  6 ii,  54 

40,  12 note,     52 

41,19 iv,  126 

60,  3 iii,  317 

66,  1  ii,  note,    52 

Jer.  ch.  1,  11  iv,  139 

4,  30 123 

8,  17 ii,  414 

10,  5 iv,  161 

22,  24 iii,   8 

24,  2 iv,  164 

25,  11 iii,  197 

Ezek.  ch.  1,  10 iii,  119 

21,  21 180 

23,41 106 

23,  40 iv,  123 

27,  12 iii,  45 

40,  5 iv,  169 

Dan.  ch.  4,  9 iv,  137 

6,  10 iii,  242 

7,  9 156 

9,  24 199 

Ilosea,  ch.  4,  12  ,. 180 

4,  13 iv,  140 

10,  4 125 

Joel,  ch.  2,  23 iii,  208 

Amos,  ch.  2,  1 477 

6,  2 iv,  125 

6,  10 iii,  460 

7,  14 iv,  144 

Jonah,  ch.  3,  4 iii,  195 

4,  6 iv,  124 

Micah,  ch.  7,  1 165 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


535 


2rt;ch.    ch.    1,  12 iii,  19S 

Matt.    ch.    2,23 112 

•S,     7 ii,  46-1 

4,     6 206 

8,  40 iii,  note  196 

10,  6 ii,  399 

11,  18 iii,  320 

12,  40 195 

13,  25 iv,  170 

13,26 172 

13,  31 137 

17,     5 ii,  note,  33 

21,  12 iii,  235 

21,  19 iv,  1G2 

23,23 134 

23,  29 iii,  469 

24,  6 ii,  C6 

24,  36 ii,  note,  ib. 

27,  30,  48    iv,  169 

Mark,   ch.   7,  32 380 

11,  13 162 

14.67 165 

Luke,  ch.    6,  30 62 

7,  38 iii,  109 

12,54 243 

13,  19 iv,  137 

15,     7 ii,     48 

17,  G iv,  144 

21,25 ii,     66 

22,  55,  56    iv,  165 

24,  27 122 

John,    ch.    3,  17 ii,  note  78 

6,53 i,  54 

7,  46 iii,  106 

8,  58 ii,     84 

13,     8 iii,  169 

13,23 108 

18,  18 iv,  165 

21,9,10.11,13..  179 

21,  21,  22    iii,  321 

22,  21 ii,  202 

Acts.    ch.    2,  13 iv,  136 

10,  34,  35  ...  .  ii,  note,  78 

17,  24,  28   ib. 

19,28 197 

20,    6 iv,  218 

28,  4 ii,  459 

Rom.    ch.    2,13,11 ii,  wore,  78 

5,18,21     ib. 

9,  20 77 

2,  24 iv.  149 

13,  10 66 

1  Cor.  ch.  10,    2 iii,  261 

1  Cor.  ch.  13.     1 iv,  191 

13,  4,  7    66 

2  Cor.  ch.    3,  7     iii,  1 15 

4,  17     ii,  note,  74 

8,  12     note,  79 

Gal.    ch.      3,  10 iii,  190 

3,  17 197 

Phil.    ch.    2,  12 ii,    84 


2  Thcss.ch.2,  2     iii,  324 

1  Tim.  ch.  2,  5,  6    ii,  note  78 

Heb.     ch.    2,  2,  9   ii. 

James,  ch.    1,17 iv,  122 

1,  26 66 

1  Pet.   ch.    1,  13 ill,  163 

2  Pet.   ch.    3,     8 .{04 

3,     9 ii,  note,  78 

3,     8 16 

1  John,  ch.  2,  1.  2 ii,  note,  78 

2,16 185 

Rev.     ch.      2,10 ii,  wo/r,  39 

II,   3 iii, 321 

Scythians,  subject  to  .Sciatica,  iii,  130. 
Their  languages  supposed  tlie  fountain 
of  the  languages  of  Europe,  iv,  196. 

Sea,  course  of,  how  altered,  i,  390-392. 
Its  ebb  and  flow,  iii,  334. 

Seasons,  theirdivision,  P.  E.  vi.  ch.  3,  iii, 
204-209.  Various  rules  for  determin- 
ing by  sun  and  stars,  204-206.  Di- 
versity of  climes  to  be  regarded,  206- 
209.  As  marked  by  the  ditferent 
length  of  the  days,  P.  E.  vi,  ch.  4, 
210-213.  Compared  to  the  progress 
of  man's  life,  210.  Prognostics  as  to 
temperature,  211. 

Sebets,  or  Zebets,  little  known  of,  i,  244. 
Probable  account  of,  246,  n. 

Sebund,  Raymund,  a  physician,  wrote  on 
Natural  Theology,  ii,  228. 

Seed,  consideration  of  its  increase,  iv, 
145-148.  The  seven  years  of  plenty 
in  Egypt,  146. 

Sedgwick,  Professor,  supplied  copy  of 
E.  B's.  admission  at  Trin.  Coll.  Camb. 
i,  1.XXV,  n.  And  account  of  a  crayon 
drawing  formerly  belonging  to  B.  pre- 
served in  the  College  lodge,  i,  hxv,  n. 

Selden,  John,  his  comment  on  Drayton's 
Polyolbion,\,  315.  Executors  and  li- 
brary, 386. 

Semiramis,  her  immense  army,  iii,  234. 

Seneca,  ii,  xxiii,  10,  n.  Of  books  with 
odd  titles,  xxiii.  Character,  and  trans- 
lations of,  i,  302.  His  Morals,  L'Es- 
trange  translated,  370,  n.  Three 
lines  of,  ii,  29,  n.  Error  concerning 
crystal,  267. 

Senij?aglia,  E.  B.  at,  i,  89.  Its  carnival,  96. 

Sennert,  Daniel,  M.  D.  of  Wittemberg, 
his  Institutions,  i,  357-360.  On  dis- 
eases, ib.  de  Febribus,  360.  I'raxis, 
ib.      New  edition  of,  expected,  362. 

Sens,  E.   B.   at,  i,  69. 

Septuagint,  its  antiquity,  credit,  and  his- 
tory, iii,  193. 

Sepulture,  observed  by  some  animals,  iii, 
461.     With  what  variety  of  rites,  483. 

Seraglio,  daily  provision  for  the  use  of, 
iii,  352. 


536 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


Serapis,  why  figured  with  a  bushel  on  his 

head,  iii,  118. 
Serini,  Niciiolas,  his  acts  in  Ricaut,  i,  2G8. 
Sermon,   daily,   Montpellier,  i,  70.       At 

Hamburg,  199. 
Serpent,  vomited  by  a  woman,  i,  49. 
Brazen,  ii,  27.  What  was  it,  by  whom 
Eve  was  tempted  and  how?  15,  n. 
184.  Basil's  opinion  of,  230.  Pic- 
ture of,  P.  E.  V.  ch.  4,  iii,  95-99. 
Bede's  account  of,  in  which  he  gives  a 
virgin's  face  to  the  tempter,  95.  Argu- 
ments against  this,  and  in  favor  of  a 
literal  understanding  of  scripture,  95- 
99.  Collection  of  speculations  on  the 
point,  97,  n.  98,  n. 
Seva-Gee  Rajah,  rebel  to  the  K.  of  Visi- 
apore,  i,  428.  Defies  the  great  Mo- 
gol,  429.  Assaults  and  pillages  Surat, 
420,  430,  407. 
Sexes,  in  plants,  ii,3G0,  n. 

Sfcrra  Cflvallo,  or  Ferrum  equinum,  its 

fabled  power,  ii,  372. 
Shaftesbury,  Ant.  Ashley,  1st  E.  of,  had 
his  side    opened,    i,  274.     A  speech, 
said  to  be  his,  printed,  292. 

Sharp,  John,  D.  D.  Dean  of  Norwich,  i, 
345.     Succeeded  Dean  Astley,  iv,  30. 

Sheep,  in  Lincolnshire  without  horns, 
i,  26.  Why  they  get  the  rot?  ii,  381. 
Immense  flock  of,  iii,  352,  n.  Very 
fertile  in  the  east,  iv,  ir)8.  Of  Ice- 
land, 255.  That  they  always  produce 
twins  on  the  scitc  of  an  abbey,  ii,  173. 

Slieerness  dockyard  newly  built,  1,  13G. 
How  fortified,  147.     E.  B.  saw,  207, 

Shekel  of  the  sanctuary,  iii,  327. 

Shells,  said  to  be  of  all  colour.s  but  blue, 
iii,  264,  n.     Found  in  Iceland,  iv,  255. 

Shem,  Hani,  and  Japhet,  their  relative 
ages,  P.  E.  vii,  ch.  5,  iii,  308-309. 
Not  according  to  the  order  in  which 
they  stand  ;  as  Ham  was  the  youngest, 
and  probably  Japhet  the  eldest,  ib. 
Mr.  Beke's  opinion,  308,  n. 

Shining  flesh,  various  accounts  of,  i,  211 . 

Ship,   one    to   sail   in    the    air,    i,    270. 

Shipden  hall,  near  Ilalifa.x,  R.  M.  written 
at,  i,  iii  ;   iv,  li.x. 

Shiplake,  Mrs.  Fairfax's  residence,  i, 
Ixxxi. 

Shittah  tree,  iv,  126,  and  n. 

Shoes  worn  on  Sundays,  i,  34.  Not 
else,  36. 

Short,  I'errgrine,  M.  D.  an  old  friend, 
B.  met,  i,  217.  B.  sends  respects  to, 
245. 

Short,  Thomas,  M.  D.  son  of  Dr.  Pere- 
grine, i,  217. 

Shovel-board,  a  game  played  by  gentry, 
j,  27. 


Showers  of  wheat ;  the  seeds  of  ivy  ber- 
ries, ii,  378. 

Sibyls,  the  pictures  of,  P.  E.  v,  ch.  2,  iii, 
122,  123. 

Sickness,  the,  see  Plague.  In  England, 
i,  110.  '  Norwich,  111.  London,  ob- 
servations on,  373. 

Side,  see  Right  and  Left. 

Sierra  Leone,  in  Guinea,  a  ship  bound 
for,  i,  437. 

Sight,  recovery  of,  iv,  424. 

Signposts,  curious,  i,  53. 

Silkworms,  their  metamorphoses  com- 
pared to  the  resurrectiou,  ii  58. 

Siily-how,  what,  and  why  prized,  iii, 
170.     Advertisements  Tor,  ib.  n. 

Silver,  true  ore  found  at  Cranach,  i,  172. 
Veins  of  at  Scliemnilz,  ib.  Mines  at 
Gottenberg,  in  Bohemia,  195. 

Silvester  II,  Pope,  passed  for  a  magician, 
ii,  1,  n. 

Simocrates,  his  tract  De  Nilo  stolen  from 
Diodorus  Siculus,  ii,  217. 

Sitting  cross-legged  unlucky,  iii,  166. 

Skalhalt,  in  Iceland,  Bp.  of,  his  son  visits 
Norwich,  i,  49. 

Skerewyng,  Roger  de,  Bp.  iv,  15. 

Skin,  mankind  distinguished  by  colour  of, 
i,  213.  Of  palm  of  hand  and  sole  of 
foot,  cast  oft'  after  fever,  244.  And 
membranes  of  man  and  animals  often 
exhibit  the  quincunx,  iii,  419-420. 

Skippon,  Sir  Philip,  a  lover  of  natural 
history,  and  friend  of  B.  and  Ray,  i, 
xci. 

Skull,  a  badger's  and  a  polecat's,  i,  310. 

Slates,  plenty  in  Derbyshire  hills,  i,  131. 

Sleep,  thoughts  upon  it  and  dreams,  ii, 
111.  The  world  a  sleep,  and  the  con- 
ceits of  life  but  dreams,  ib.  Neither 
Aristotle  nor  Galen  have  rightly  de- 
fined it,  ib.  So  like  to  death,  that  B. 
dares  not  trust  it  without  his  prayers, 
113. 
Small  coal,  the  old  term  for  charcoal,  ii, 

344. 
Small-pox  at  Norwich,  i,  320,  322,  338, 

346. 
Smalt,  a  stone,  blue  for  starch  made  of, 

i,  183. 
Smedley,    Rev.   E.    supposed    author   of 
Itel.  Clerici,  a  Churchman's  Epistle,  ii, 
xxi. 
Smith,  Anthony,  servant  of  E.  I.  Com- 
pany at  Surat,  i,  431. 
Smitli,   Thos.  of  Chr.  Coll.  Cambridge, 

letter  to  B.  from,  i,  359. 

"Smoke   follows   the   fairest,"   iii,    166. 

Still  a  common  saying  in  Norfolk,  ib.  ti. 

Snails,  that  they  have  no  eyes,  P.  E.  iii, 

ch.    20,    479-481.       Aristotle    denies 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


537 


eyes  fo  nil  testaceous  animals,  179. 
Probable  that  tliey  have  four  eyes, 
479,  -ISO.  B*s.  earlier  opinions  from 
former  editions  more  in  agreement  with 
Aristotle,  ib.  n.  Whose  opinion  is 
shown  to  be  correct,  ib.  n.  Wren  of 
the  same  opinion,  179,  n.  Digression 
on  double  and  single  vision,  ISl.  Dr. 
Woll;L-;ton  hereon,  ib.  n. 

Snakes,  falsely  said  not  to  endure  the 
shade  of  an  ash,  ii,  .3S2.  Said  to  breed 
out  of  the  spinal  marrow,  537.  Nor 
adders  ever  found  alive,  in  Blcchinton, 
CO.  Oxon.  nor  ran  be  kept  alive  if 
brought  there,  iii,  210,  n.  Spiders, 
nor  toads  f'lnd  in  Ireland,  210-359. 
Contradicted  by  B.  311.  Wren's  sar- 
casm hereon,  359,  n.  Their  skins 
quincuncially  marked,  417.  And  vi- 
pers, that  they  sting  by  the  tail,  denied, 
ii,  535.  Some  not  poisonous,  and 
therefore  eaten,  530.  Poisonous  ser- 
pents also  edible,  i^.  n. 

.Snast,  a  Norfolk  vulgarism,  iii,  178,  n. 

•Sneezing,  concerning  the  custom  of  sa- 
luting thereupon,  P.  E.  iv,  ch.  9,  iii, 33- 
36.  Said  to  have  arisen  from  a  dis- 
ease in  which  sneezing  proved  mortal, 
33.  Shewn  to  have  been  much  more 
ancient  and  very  general,  34,  3G. 

Snow,  its  exquisite  configuration,  ii,  27G. 

Society,  see  Koyal  Society. 

Sodom  and  Gomorrha.ii,  2S,iv,  220,  222. 

Solenander  Reiner,  rfe  Foiilibus  Medicatis, 
E.  B.  read,  i,  41G. 

Solinus  Juliu5,  ii,  28,  n.  His  Pohjhistor,  a 
plagiarism  from  Pliny,  217-239.  Says 
that  garlick  hinders  the  attraction  of 
the  loadstone,  30G.  That  the  elephant 
lias  no  joints,  3S7.  That  the  diamond 
is  broken  by  the  blood  of  a  goat,  334. 

Solitude,  no  such  thing  ;  none  truly  alone 
but  God,  ii,  110. 

Solomon,  lost  works  of,  ii,  35.  His  gar- 
dens, iii,  392. 

Sorites  a,  ii,  20,  n. 

Sortes  Ilomcrictc,  or  J'iigiliante  defined 
and  denounced,  iii,  170.  King  Charles 
1st.  tried  them,  ib.  ii.  Casual  opening 
of  a  Bible  noticed  by  Cardan,  ib   n. 

Souches,  Count,  governor  of  Leopold- 
stadt,  kind  to  E.  B.  i,  Ixxx. 

Soul-sleeping,  B's  opinions  respecting, 
ii,  11. 

Southey,  Robert,  LL.D.  an  uncorrected 
passage  of  R.  M.  quoted  in  his  Collo- 
quies, ii,  xxii. 

Southwell,  Sir  Francis,  iv,  S. 

Spain,  its  origin,  iii,  233. 

Spanish  language,  iv,  197. 

Sparrow,  Anthony,  Bp.  iv,  IS. 


Spectacles,  without  glasses,  i,  220. 

i/ifcu/MW  of  Archimedes,  iii,  304. 

Speed,  Dr.  of  Southampton,  letters  for 
Guernsey  sent  to,  i,  319. 

Speech,  whether  animals  arc  capable  of 
attaining,  ii,  394,  n.  Wren's  stories 
about  apes  speaking,  ib.  n.  Organs  of 
in  birds,  395,  n. 

Spelman  Sir  Henry,  his  Jl'orks,  Diigdale 
editing,  i,  392. 

Spencer,  Henrv,  Bp.  account  of,  iv,  12, 
13,  n,  31, 

Spencer,  Miles,  LL.  D.  chancellor,  ac- 
count of,  iv,  5.     His  picture,  iv,  31. 

Spendlove,  Mr.  Prebendary,  iv,  10. 

Spider,  red,  see  Tainct. 

Spider  and  toad,  see  Toad. 

Spiders,  not  to  be  found  in  Ireland,  nor 
Irish  timber,  e.  g.  in  King's  College 
roof,  Cambridge,  iii,  240,  n.  Contra- 
dicted by  B.  344. 

Spieghel,  Adrian  van  der,  a  Dutch  anat- 
omist, commended,  i,  35C-3G0,  302. 
His  I.iagoge  in  Rem  Herb,  useful,  357. 

Spirits,  manner  of  conversing  with,  i, 
175.  Two,  in  mines  at  Brunswic,  and 
Sl.ickenwald,  19G.  Good,  ii,  45.  Wri- 
ters on  referred  to,  ib.  n.  A  passage 
on  the  subject  from  Collfl's  Relics  of 
Literature,  ih.  n. 

Sponge  and  other  tests  of  the  moisture 
of  the  atmosphere,  iv,  396,  397. 

Springs,  hot- baths  from,  at  Belgrade,  i, 
175.     Hot  mineral,  in  Ireland,  iv,  254. 

Spurge  leaves  said  to  be  purgative  or 
emetic  according  to  the  direction  in 
which  they  are  plucked  off  the  plant, 
ii,  3S0. 

Squalders,  what,  i,  423. 

Stacy,  Mr.  John,  Norwich,  his  Norfolk 
Tour,  quoted,  i,  370,  n. 

Stade,  in  danger,  i,  214. 

Stafford,  town-hall,  worth  seeing,  i,  38. 

Stag,  particulars  of  the,  i,  278. 

Stamford,  T.  B.  at,  i,  41. 

Stamp,  Dr.  chaplain  to  Q.  of  Bohemia, 
i,  468. 

Standing,  one  kind  of  exercise,  ii,  389. 
To  what  animals  a  position  of  rest,  388, 
n.  Wren  thinks  it  tends  to  produce 
swelled  legs  and  gout,  3S9,  u.  What 
would  probably  have  been  Darwin's 
opinion  on  the  point,  ib. 

Stapleton,  Sir  Philip,  his  translation  of 
Juvenal,  i,  302. 

Starfish,  or  sea  stars,  how  many  points 
have  they?  iii,  4  15,  n. 

Stark,  Dr.  on  the  effect  of  colour,  on  heat 
and  odour,  iii,  273,  n. 

Stars,  their  ascension,  &c.  especially  the 
dog  star,  iii,  C9,  Src. 


VOL.  IV. 


R 


538 


GENEUAL    INDEX. 


Stati'r  the  coin  found  in  the  fisli's  mouth, 
iii,  327. 

Steel,  experiments  on  its  collision  with 
flint,  ii,  273. 

Stirrups,  how  ancient,  iii,  128-130. 

Stoic,  the  Ueliginiis,  by  Sir  G.  M.[acken- 
zie,]  ii,  xvii. 

Stoics,  deny  a  soul  to  plants,  ii,  21,  n. 

Stomacli,  some  animals  have  four,  ii,  455. 

Stones,  sundry  fabulous  opinions  con- 
cerning divers  kinds  of,  ii,  357.  Pre- 
cious stones  of  Aaron's  breastplate; 
whether  the  diamond  was  among  them, 
ib.  n.  Brief  account  of  the  principal 
kinds  of,  358,  n.  Which  exhibit  the 
quincuncial  arrangement,  iii,  401,402. 

Storks,  that  they  will  only  live  in  free 
states,  ii,  521.  Obviously  false,  ih. 
An  hospital  at  Fez  for  sick  storks,  ib.  n. 
Resting  on  trees  in  Galilee,  iv,  150,  n. 

Strabo,  ii,  10,  n.  His  Geography,  ({xxoicdi, 
i.  386.  His  cloak,  ii,  81,  n.  Says 
that  an  elephant  has  no  joints,  387. 
Remarks  and  queries  respecting,  iv, 
404,  405, 407, 408,  409,  413,  4l5. 

Strada,  Famianus,  ii,  324, 

Straw,  very  short  in  Egypt,  iv,  1 35. 
Stubble,  why  substituted,  loG. 

Style  of  B.  Latinized,  in  Pseud.  Ep.  ii, 
179.     Remarks  thereon,  ib.  n. 

Styria,  E.  B.  travels  in,  i,  Ixxx. 

Suarez,  De  Causa  Formali,  ii,  17,  n. 
His  Metaphysicks,  ii,  20. 

Suetonius,  description  of  the  Emperor 
Augustus's  dress,  contrasted  by  White- 
foot  with  that  of  B.  i,  xliii. 

Suicide,  glorified  by  Lucan,  i,  143. 
Condemned  by  B.  144. 

Sulphur,  its  probable  effect  in  gunpowder, 
ii,  349. 

Sun,  observed  to  rise  oval,  by  T.  B.  i, 
45.  Picture  of  the  sun  and  moon,  iii, 
157.      Dancing  on  Easter-day,  lf)9. 

Sundials,  iii,  141.     That  of  Ahaz,  142. 

Superstitious  man,  character  of,  by  Bp. 
Hall,  iii,  183,  184,  n. 

Supplementary  Memoir  of  Sir  T.  B. 
by  the  Editor,  i.  Pre/.  11;  Iv-cix 
Scantiness  of  biographical  materials, 
Iv-lvii.  B.  practised  physick||  about 
two  years  from  1G29-1630,  Ivii.  In 
Ireland  with  Sir  Thomas  Dutton,  called 
Sir  Ihilph  in  Le  Neve's  pedigree,  and 
mentioned  by  Birch,  in  his  lAfe  of  Pr. 
Henry  as  having  killed  Sir  Hatton 
Cheke,  Ivii,  n.  Lines  by  B.  supposed 
to  have  been  written  on  this  occasion, 
Iviii.  Death  of  Sir  T.  Dutton,  ib. 
B.  after  travelling  settles  at  Shipden 
Hall,  near  Halifax,  1C33.  Authori- 
ties for  this   fact,   ib.     Writes  R.  M. 


there  ;  remarks  on  that  work,  lix.  In- 
duced to  remove  to  Norwich,  and 
why,  Ix.  When  incorporated  Dr.  Ph. 
at  Oxford,  Ixi.  Married,  1641,  ib. 
Account  of  his  wife's  family  and  con- 
nexions, Ixi,  Ixii.  Publication  ofii.il/. 
in  1642,  Ixii.  OfPsend.Epid.  1646,ixiv. 
Account  of  the  translations  of,  criticisms 
on  and  replies  to,  these  works ;  and  their 
effect  on  the  literary  character  and  ge- 
neral reputation  of  the  author,  Ixii-lxix. 
His  correspondents,  Ixix-lxxiii.  Pow- 
er, Theod.  Jonas,  Ixix.  Sir  H.  L'Es- 
trange,  How,  Ixx.  Evelyn,  Ixxi.  Pub- 
lishes Ilydriotaphia  and  Garden  of  Cy- 
rus, Ixxii.  His  discovery  of  the  Adipo- 
cire,  ib.  Dugdale  applies  to  him  for 
assistance  in  his  vv'ork  on  embanking 
and  draining,  Ixxii,  Ixxiii.  B's.  ma- 
nagement of  his  children,  Ixxiii-lxxv. 
Some  of  his  daughters  visited  France, 
Ixxiv.  Sends  his  son  Thomas  to 
France  at  14  years  of  age,  Ixxiv. 
Why  so  young,  ib.  His  advice  to  him, 
ib.  The  eldest  son,  Edward,  at  Nor- 
wich Freeschool ;  Trinity  Coll.  Cam. 
M.  B.  1663,  Ixxv.  Passes  the  winter 
of  1664  in  Norwich,  Ixxvi.  Descrip- 
tion of  Mr.  H.  Howard's  parties;  his 
munificence ;  '  he  opens  My  Lord's  Gar- 
dens' in  King  St.  ib.  E.  B.  in  Lon- 
don, 1664  ;  first  acquaintance  with 
Dr.  Terne;  speaks  of  his  sister  Cot- 
trell ;  who  was  she  ?  Ixxvi,  n.  Of 
Madam  Fairfax,  Ixxvi.  Travels  in 
France  and  Italv,  1664-1665,  Ixxvii. 
M.D.  and  F.R.S.  in  1667,  ib.  Cha- 
racter as  a  traveller,  Ixxviii.  Hij 
travels  in  Germany,  Hungary,  &c. 
1668-1669,  Ixxviii-lxxxi.  Return  to 
Norwich,  Ixxxi.  Sister  Ann's  mar- 
riage, and  subsequent  residence,  ib. 
His  own  marriage,  1672,27).  Removal 
to  and  residence  in  Salisbury  Court  dur- 
ing his  father's  life,  Ixxxii.  B's.  evi- 
dence on  a  trial  of  witches,  Ixxxii.  Re- 
flections on  that  remarkable  incident, 
Ixxxii-lxxxv.  Dr.  Lawrence's  Mer- 
curius  Centralis  addressed  to  him, 
Ixxxvi.  Soc.  Honorar.  Col].  Phys. 
1664-1665,  Ixxxvii.  The  diploma, 
Ixxxviii,  n.  Presents  fossils  to  R.  S. 
Ixxxviii.  Hon.  R.  Boyle's  high  cha- 
racter of  him  as  an  experimenter, 
Ixxxviii.  B.  corresponds  with  Dr. 
Merrett ;  lends  his  papers  on  Norfolk 
Birds,  Fishes,  S^-c.  first  to  him,  then  to 
Ray,  xc.  Knighted  by  Charles  II,  on 
his  visit  to  Norwich,  xci.  Some  par- 
ticulars of  the  visit,  xcii.  Supposed 
memorial  thereof,  by   B.  ib.  n.     Ste- 


ncNEiJ  VI.  ra)i:\. 


339 


venson's  poem  ihcrcoii,  xciii.  Eve- 
lyn's visit  to  him,  xciii-xcv.  B.  cer- 
tifies to  the  i)rt.cocity  of  W.  Wottou, 
XfV.  Supplies  Aiilhuiiy  Wood  with 
biogrnpliical  memoranda  respecting 
himself  and  Dr.  Lushinglon,  and  Dr. 
A.  Dee,  his  intimate  friend,  xcv. 
Applied  to  Ity  Sir  Robert  Paston  for 
assistance  in  the  study  of  alchymy, 
xcvi.  His  son  K.  B's.  last  visit  to  the 
Continent,  xcvii.  From  the  date  of 
his  son's  return  from  thence  H.  renders 
him  constant  assistance  in  his  profes- 
sional and  literary  pursuits,  xcviii. 
Loses  his  daughier  Mary,  1()7(3,  writes 
commendatory  letters  for  Kind's  J' ale 
Royal  of  Chester,  and  Browne  on  Tu- 
mours, xci.x.  Curious  sTory  related  by 
(he  latter  respecting  him,  ib.  n.  His 
subscriptions  to  several  public  works, 
c.  He  completes  MS.o{  Ilcpertoriitm, 
ib.  Attends  Bp.  Hall  in  his  dying  ill- 
ness, ib.  Certilicate  of  Bp.  Sparrow's 
health,  ci,  n.  His  daughter  Llizabeth 
marries  Cap.  Geo.  Lyttleton  Dec.  ICSO, 
ci.  And  goes  to  reside  in  Guernsey, 
cii.  Progress  of  his  son  E.  B.; — chosen 
Censor  of  the  Coll.  Phys.  attended 
Lord  Rochester  in  his  dying  illness ; 
prevailed  on  the  Marquis  of  Dorchester 
to  bequeath  his  library  to  the  Coll. 
Phys. ;  translated  the  lives  of  Themis- 
tocles  and  Sertorius  ;  appointed  Phy- 
sician to  St.  Bartholomew's  hospital, 
cii.  Applied  for  advice  respecting  the 
hospital  practice,  to  his  father,  cii. 
Whose  death  occurs  a  few  days  after 
the  application,  Oct.  19th,  1682,  ciii. 
His  will,  iTi.  Death  of  his  widow;  her 
monument,  civ.  Sketch  of  the  history 
of  his  descendants,  civ-cviii.  His  Li- 
brary and  MSS.  cix. 

Some  particulars  communicated  by  Mrs. 
Lyttleton,  his  daughter,  to  ll'hite  Ken- 
net,  Up,  of  Peter borouffh,  ex. 

Surat,  its  condition,  i,  42(5-428.  .Attack- 
ed and  pillaged,  429-437. 

Surgery,  low  state  of,  at  Xorwich,  Src. 
i,  245. 

Sulhfielfl  Walter  de  Bp.  iv,  IG. 

Sutton,  Rev.  Charles,  D.  D.  of  Norwich, 
remembers  '  My  Lord's  Gardens,'  i, 
Ixxvi.  His  copy  of  the  Uepertorium, 
iv,  3. 

Swallows,  unlucky  to  kill  them,  iii,  177. 
Similar  superstition  attaches  to  the 
robin,  ib.  n. 

Swammerdam,  John,  his  Miraculum  Ka- 
turie,  i,  2.S7. 

Swan,  its  fabled  musical  powers,  ii,  517. 
Discussed  and  disallowed,    518,  519. 


It  was  the  hicroglyphick  of  musick 
among  the  Egyptians,  518.  Not  so 
enumerated  by  Dr.  Young  or  Cham- 
pollion,  thougli  mentioned  by  Hora- 
pollo,  ib.  n.  Anatomy  of  thn  organs 
of  voice  in,  518,  n.  Black,  no  longer 
a  ilction,  iii,  148,  n. 

Swanwich,  bay  and  castle,  i,  137. 

Swimming  and  Floating,  whether  men 
swim  naturally,  when  and  why  drown- 
ed bodies  float,  and  why  men  supine 
and  women  prone,  /•".  E.  iv,  ch.  (J, 
24-27. 

Sivinbome's  Two  Sicilies,  ii,  10,  n. 

Sybils,  errors  in  the  pictures  of,  as  to 
their  nimiber  and  age,  P.  E.  v.  ch.  2, 
iii,  122,  123.  Reference  hereon  to 
the  Abbe  Pluche,  123,  n. 

Sycamore-tree,  iv,  143,  144. 

Sydenham,  Thomas,  M.  D.  his  work  on 
small  pox,&:c.  i,  340. 

Sylla  Corn,  the  first  of  the  Cornelian  fa- 
mily burnt  in  Rome,  iii,  457. 

Sylvester  II,  Pope,  for  his  science, counted 
a  magician,  ii,  1.  n. 

Synge,TheM.  Rev.  Edw.  Abp.  of  Tuam, 
author  of  A  Gentleman's  Rel.  ii,  XX. 

Syria,  famous  for  gardens,  iv,  108. 


Tacitus,  ii,  23,  n.  His  Life  of  /Igricola 
quoted,  i,  3S1.  Query  on  a  phrase 
in,  Ixxiii,  381.  B.  examines,  83. 
First  line  of  his  .innalsa  verse,  ii,  107. 

Tadpoles,  ii,  451.  Wren's  observation 
of  them,  ib.  n. 

TafTelsur  crowned  king  of  Morocco,  i, 
166. 

Tainct  supposed  to  be  very  poisonous  to 
cattle,  ii,  527. 

Taillebourg,  its  castle  demolished  by 
Henri  IV,  i,  19. 

Talbot,  Mr.  B's.  letter  to,  i,  415. 

Talbot,  Lord,  the  famous,  slain  nt  Bour- 
deaux,  lies  at  Whilechurch,  i,  38. 

Taliacotius,  in  his  De  Curlorum  Chirur- 
gia,  sets  forth  his  art  of  communicating 
with  absent  friend?-,  ii,  323.  His  new 
art  of  the  inarching  of  noses,  430,  n. 
Similar  operation  related  in  Chirur- 
gorum  Covies,  ib.  Sir  K.  Digby's  re- 
marks hereon,  ib. 

Tamerlane,  his  extraction  diicusscd;  said 
tu  be  the  son  of  a  shepherd,  iii,  351. 
Modern  opinion,  ib.  n.  Shepherds 
were  great  men  ;  number  of  their  pos- 
sessions in  cattle,  3  32.  Immense  flock 
of  Sir  Wm.  Joidcn,  ib.  n. 

Tangier,  T.  B's.  account  of,  i,  122,  127, 
147,   148.      .\ncicnt,  but  not  Tingis, 


540 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


149.     State  of,  169.     Ostriches  from, 
281.     Success  at,  293. 

Tarantula,  wondrous  stories  about  it,  ii, 
556.  Set  right  by  modern  experi- 
ment, ib.  n. 

Tares,  what,  iv,  170-173. 

Tartaret,  ii,  31. 

Tartary,  Cliam  of,  embassador  from,  at 
Vienna,  i,  159.  Vegetable  lamb  of, 
ii,  536. 

Tasman,  Capt.  A.  J.  his  voyage  to  the 
south  terra  incognita,  i,  314. 

Tavernier,  J.  B.  his  figures  of  Asiatic 
coins,  i,  286. 

Teeth,  monkeys  have  thirty-six,  i,  46. 
Those  of  vipers,  whether  hollow,  365. 
Their  durability,  iv,  43. 

Tempest,  Stephen,  Esq.  author  of  liel. 
Laid,  ii,  xx. 

Temptation,  original  of  Satan,  how  was  it 
conducted,  ii,  184-187.  Various  que- 
ries respecting,  1S6-187.  Hadrian 
Beverland's  theory  respecting,  ib.  n. 

Ternc,  Chris.  M.  D.  Anatomy  Reader  at 
Surgeon's  Hall,  i,  50.  E.  B's.  first 
acquaintance  with  him,  Ixxvi.  His 
daughter  Henrietta  Susan  marries  E.B. 
Ixxxi.  His  widow  married  Mr.  Whit- 
ing, a  surgeon,  219. 

Tenison,  Abp.  B's.  works,  f^-c.  fol.  1686, 
first  edited  collectively  by,  ii,  x.  His 
edition  chiefly  followed  in  correcting 
standard  text,  xiii.  Preached  at  St. 
Luke's,  Norwich,  i,  45.  Minister  of  St. 
Peter's ;  wrote  a  Latin  poem,  still  in 
MS.  on  modern  Epicureans,  209.  Mar- 
ried, whom,  280.  His  Baconiana, 
Ixv,  n.   Remark  on  Repertorinm,  iv,  3. 

TcrtuUian,  Tillotson's  and  Jortin's  re- 
marks on  a  quotation  from,  in  It.  M. 
i,  Ixiii,  Ixiv.  Passage  from,  quoted  by 
B.  ii,  14.  Relates  the  death  and  bu- 
rial of  John,  iii,  322. 

Testa  Pietro,  an  Italian  painter,  iii, 
157,  n. 

Testimony,  absence  of,  no  proof  of  nega- 
tive, ii,  230. 

Tetzel,  John,  a  Dominican,  attacks  Lu- 
ther's 95  Theses,  ii,  3,  n. 

Thales  held  that  the  earth  swims  in 
water,  ii,  285.  Deemed  water  the 
original  of  all  things,  iii,  457. 

Theatre  at  Oxford  finished,  when,  i,  184. 
Of  anatomy,  in  London,  compared 
with  others  E.  B.  saw,  291. 

Theodoretus,  on  the  cessation  of  oracles, 
iii,  330. 

Theodorick,  King,  manner  of  his  death, 
iv,  180,  181. 

Theophrastus  to  be  read  by  medical  stu- 
dents, i,  357.     On  the  plantations  of 


India,  iii,  391.     Where  he  made  his 
observations,  38 1. 

Theseus,  his  bones,  iii,  451. 

Thessaly,  hath  produced  many  famous 
men,  iv,  402. 

Thei'.das,  his  history,  ii,  198,  199,  n. 

Thirlby,  Thomas,  Bp.  iv,  17. 

Thistles,  what,  iv,  173. 

Thomson,  Dr.  notice  of  Paracelsus  in  his 
History  of  Chemistry,  ii,  229,  n. 

Thorn  of  Glastonbury,  ii,  371.  Some 
particulars  respecting,  ib.  n.  Wren's 
certificate  respecting  a  similar  plant ; 
an  oak  in  the  Nev\'  Forest,  ib.  n. 

Thorns  of  the  cross,  what,  iv,  125,  and  n. 

de  Thou,  his  opinion  of  P.  Jovio's  Elo- 
gia,  i,  317. 

Thoulouse,  E.  B.  at,  i,  Ixxvii.  Writes 
from,  104.      Account  of,  ib. 

Throat,  several  passages  in  P.  E.  iv, 
ch.  8,  iii,  31,  32. 

Thruston,  Malachi,  M.  D.  On  Respira~ 
iion,  answer  to,  i,  277,  n, 

Thuanus,  see  de  Thou. 

Thunder  compared  with  the  report  of 
gunpowder,  ii,  345.  In  a  clear  sky, 
346.  Attributed  to  the  fall  of  me- 
teoric stones,  of  old  called  thunder- 
bolts, ib.  n. 

Thunderbolts,  what,  ii,  346,  n. 

Tlnmder storm,  account  of,  at  Ntirwich^ 
1665,  June  28,  iv,  353,  354.  A 
former  storm  mentioned,  in  which 
jCi3000  worth  of  glass  was  broken  in 
Norwich  in  a  few  minutes,  354. 

Tierra  del  Fuego,  account  of,  i,  453. 

Tillotson,  John,  D.  D.  B.  read  his  ser- 
mon at  the  Yorkshire  feast,  i,  237. 
Alludes,  in  his  140th  sermon,  to  a 
passage  in  R.  M.  Ixiii. 

Time,  what  it  is,  iii,  57.  Ancient  mea- 
sures of  it,  141.  Divisions  of  the  year, 
P.  E.  vi,  ch.  3  and  4,  iii,  204-213. 
Three  great  periods  of,  220,  221. 

Tincal,  E.  B's.  account  of,  i,  244.  A 
drug  from  India,  246. 

Tirocinium  Chymicum  to  be  read,  i,  357. 

Toad  and  spider,  antipathy  between,  i, 
524.  Erasmus's  ridiculous  story  of 
this,  ib.  n. 

Toads,  Ireland  exempt  from,  as  well  as 
from  spiders  and  all  venomous  things, 
iii,  240,  359,  and  n.  (See  Ireland, 
Snakes,  Spiders.) 

Tobacco,  remarks  on,  iv,  447,  448. 

Tobias  cured  by  the  gall  of  the  fish,  re- 
marks on  this,  ii,  402. 

Toland,  J.  B.  classed  with,  i,  Ixvi. 

Tomb  at  Tingis  opened  by  Sertorius,  i, 
149.  Of  Modestus,  near  Vienna,  175. 
At  Larissa,  green  jasper  coloured,  205. 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


511 


Of  Duns,  at  Cologne,  200.  Often  dis- 
tant from  the  place  of  actual  burial, 
iii,  -175. 

Tonomliaus,  i,  17. 

Tooihanagc,  or  Tutcnague,  i,  21 1,  21C,  n. 
See  Zinc. 

Torpedo,  Lorcnzini  on  the,  i,  270,  Its 
shock,  ii,  417,  n. 

Torrid  Zone  supposed  uninhabitable,  iii, 

an. 

Tostatiis,  ii,  32,  n.     Says  that  Xilus  in- 

crca»eth  every  new  moon,  2;iO. 
Touneboutonnc  and  castle,  i,  19. 
Tours,  E.  IVs.  account  of,  i,  107. 
Townsend,  Sir  Horace,  made  a  lord,  i,  8. 

Lord  Lieut,  of  Norfolk  14. 
Tracts,  see  Miscellany  Tracts. 
Trajeciion,  instances  of  the   use   of  the 

term,  ii,  95,  n. 
Transactions,  Philcsopliical,  E.  U's  papers 
in,  i,  202,  n.      B.    quotes,   211,  220, 
2;J0. 
Transparency  of  crystal,  ii,  279.     Cause 

of,  ib.  n.      llow  destroyed,  280. 
Trees  and  shrubs,  vegetables  thus  divided 

in  Scripture,  iv,  1(30. 
Trent,  the  Council  of,  ii,  2,  n.   Not  in  all 

points  wrong,  ti,     llistonj  of,  2,  n. 
Trevor,  Sir  John,  one  of  Selden's  execu- 
tors, i,  3SG.     Uugdale  introduced  by  a 
letter  to,  387. 
Triclinium,  iii,  108. 

Trigaut,  Dc  Exp.  Xlian.  ap.  Chin,  ii,  2,  n. 
Trinity,  reflexions  on  the  doctrine  of  the, 

ii,  13,  14.     Of  souls,  17,  n. 
Trotis,  of  the  place  so  calhd,  and  of  the 
siluution    of  Sodom,    \c.    Tr.    10,    iv, 
217-222.     Whether    Troas    a  region, 
217.       Or   a   city,    218-220.       Doth, 
217,  n.     Various  accounts  of  the  city 
of  Troas,  21}-',  219.     Its  precise  situa- 
tion, 219,  220.     Of  the  Dead  Sea,  and 
tiie  four  cities  swallowed  up  therein, 
220,  221 .      Its  catastrophe  miraculous, 
222.     Dr.  Wells's  opinion,  ib.  n. 
Trumbull,  travelling  with  E.  B.  i,  Ixxvii, 
99.      Ill   three   days   at   Tours,    107. 
And  at  Paris,  ib.     His  praise  of  papists, 
ib.     Used  the  waters  at  Vic,  110. 
Truro,  T.  B's  account  of,  i,  140. 
Tubal  Cain,  why  associated  «ith  Jubal, 

iv,  383. 
Tuberville,    M.   D.    a    noted    oculist,   i, 

294. 
Tuckcsford,  T.  D's  visit  to,  before  the  fair, 

i,  26. 
Tuke,  Sir  Samuel,  at  Paris,  i,  <0.      Used 
the  Bourbon  waters,   110.     Travelled 
with  E.  B.  Ixxvii. 
Tulips  never  blue,  iii,  2C4. 
Tumuli,    or    .trlificial   Hills,    Tr.  9,  iv, 


213-21(i.  In  reply  to  Sir  Wm.  Dug- 
vl;ile's  ini|uiry,  213,  n.  What  they 
are,  213.  Of  what  nationality  ;  Ro- 
man, Saxon,  Danish,  211.  Mr.  Pegge's 
opinion  hereon,  ib.  n.  Criterions  by 
which  to  judge  of  their  origin,  215, 
21(j.  One  opened  in  Kent,  215. 
Another  in  Essex,  21'). 

Tunbridge  waters,  E.  B.  imitated,  i,  22f). 

Turbus,  \\'iUiam,  Up.  iv,  12. 

Tnrenne,  Marshal,  with  his  army,  i,  200*. 

Turin,  E.  B's.  account  of,  i,  72. 

Turkey,  travelling  in,  privileges  of  the 
English,  i,  170. 

Turkish  hymn,  iv,  192. 

Turks  use  vinegar,  i,  244. 

Turnebus,  or  Tourneboeuf,  or  Turnbull, 
Adrian,  his  Adversaria,  i,  3S4.  Opi- 
nion as  to  the  meaning  of  a  passage  in 
Plautus,  ii,  299. 

Turnips,  by  some  said  to  change  into 
radishes,  ii,  4G7. 

Turpentine  tree,  E.  B.  saw  one  in  Pro- 
vence, i,  103.     What,  iv,  141,  and  n. 

Tuscany,  Prince  of,  with  the  king  at 
Newmarket,  i,  1S4. 

Twinus,  Thomas,  De  liebns  yJlbionicis  ; 
Account  of  tumulus  opened  in  Kent,  iv, 
215. 

Tzetzes,  Johannes,  a  transcriptive  writer, 
not  to  be  trusted,  ii,  240.  Declares 
that  Hclcnus  foretold  the  destruction 
of  Troy  by  the  loadstone,  321. 

Tzibori,  a  (ireck  instrument  of  music, 
like  the  mandoline,  i,  171. 


U. 


U  Finilas,  iii,  382.  Note  explaining  the 
term,  ib.*  n. 

Ubi  trcs  nicdici,  duo  Athei,  ii,    1,  n. 

Umbrcr,  at  feasts,  iii,  104. 

"  Ungirt,  unblest,"  its  imjjurt  supposed, 
iii,  108,  1C9.  Wren's  note  thereon, 
168,  n. 

Unicorn,  (sec  also  Unicorn's  Horn, )  what 
is  it  ?  ii,  498,  499.  Modern  accounts 
of  it,  ih.  n.  Picture  of  in  the  arms  of 
Great  Britain,  iii,   145. 

Unicorn's  horn,  /'.  E.  iii,  ch.  23,  ii,  498- 
503.  What  is  the  Unicorn  .'  4'JS,  499. 
Modern  accounts  thereof,  ih.  ti.  What 
animal  produces  that  which  we  call 
unicorn's  horn,  499-502.  Chemical 
analysis  of  true  horn — as  distinguished 
from  hartshorn  and  bone,  501,  n. 
.Mlcged  virtues  of  unicorn's  iiorn  ex- 
amined, 502,  503. 

•  Thin  solution  wiui  uniffrfwtocl  to  the  editor 
li>-  Mr.  Iliiwkino,  of  tliv  coiiidt'l>artiaeDl,  io  the 
Dritisb  .^lus«um. 


542 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


Universal  redemption,  B's.  opinions  re- 
specting, ii,  12. 

University  of  la  Fleclie,  mo^t  famous  one, 
of  Jesuits,  in  France,  i,  21.  Vienna, 
chiefly  for  theology ;  Ileylin  counts 
twenty-one  in  Germany,  1G8. 

Unpublished  Paplrs,  iv,  271-456. 

Upas  tree,  particulars  respecting  it,  ii, 
417. 

Upcot.Wm.,  Evelyn's  Miscellaneous  Writ- 
ings, iv,  174,  n. 

Uppingham,  T.  B.  dines  at,  i,  41. 

Upton,  Co.  Chester,  residence  of  B's  an- 
cestors, i,  xviii. 

Vpupa  epops,  iv,  183. 

Urns,  figures  of,  iii,  450.  Ilipprodrome, 
ii,  452.  Found  at  Old  Walsingham, 
of  various  sizes  and  forms  ;  their  con- 
tents, iii,  4G1,  466.  Their  supposed 
origin,  462.  Found  at  Castor,  South 
Creak,  and  Buxton,  463.  Their  un- 
certain antiquity,  464.  Found  at  Ash- 
bury,  Little  Massingham,  469.  Their 
size  and  material,  diftering  according 
to  the  rank  of  the  deceased,  461),  470. 
Their  coverings  and  accompaniments 
various,  471.  Of  Philopoemen  cover- 
ed with  flowers,  &c.  472.  Brass  not 
rusted  in  the  Walsingham  urns,  ib. 
Family  urns,  473.  Never  deposited 
in  temples  in  ancient  times,  497.  Cu- 
thred  the  first  thus  buried  in  England, 
478.  Found  at  Brampton,  499-506. 
(See  Brampton  Urns.) 

Urn-burial,  (see  Ilydriutaphia,)  very  an- 
cient examples  of  it,  iii,  456,  457. 
Used  in  Gallia,  467.  Among  the 
northern  nations,  468.  Is  free  from 
worms,  478.  But  destroys  all  possi- 
bility of  tracing  proportions,  480.  Va- 
rious observances  in,  482. 

Urquhart,  Sir  Thomas,  of  Cromarty,  pas- 
sage in  praise  of  A.  Ross,  from  his 
Jewell,  i,  Ixii,  n. 


V. 


Valenciennes,  siege  of,  i,  217. 

Valerius,  Maximus,  i,  415. 

Van  Slcb,  his  Dcscriplion,  8(C.  of  Egypt, 

i,  221. 
Varenius,  Bernhard,  De  Diversilat.  Gent. 

Religion,  ii,  2,  n.  Descriptio  Regni  Ja- 

ponicE,  ib. 
Variation  of  the  compass,  ii,  296. 
Varro,  De  Ling.   Lai.  i,  415.      Advises 

to  place  a  farm  towards  the  cast,  242. 
Vcau,  U.  de,  E.  B.  shewed  him  Norwich, 

i,  47. 
Vegetables,   whether    impaired   by    the 

flood,  ii,  507. 


Vegetation,  remarlcs  on,  iV,  443-447. 

Venice,  E.  B.  at,  i,lxxvii,  90.  Again  on 
Good  Friday,  &c.  94.  Writes  from, 
186, 188.  Contest  ofthe  republic  with 
the  see  of  Rome  ;  expels  the  Jesuits  ; 
adheres  nevertheless  to  the  faith  of 
Rome,  ii,  7,  n.  Duke  of,  the  annual 
ceremony  of  his  casting  a  ring  into 
the  Adriatic,  80,  n. 

Venice  glass,  what,  ii,  275,  n. 

Venomous  creatures,  Ireland  said  to  be 
exempt  from,  iii,  240,  n.  Also  the 
island  of  Crete,  359.  Wren's  bitter 
sarcasm  on  this,  359,  n.  The  story 
not  true,  344. 

Verdigris,  iii,  285. 

Verjuice,  made  from  unripe  grapes,  i, 
244. 

Vermin,  distinct  species  peculiar  to  vari- 
ous animals,  &c.  ii,  363.  Correctness 
of  the  assertion,  362,  n, 

Vermuden,  i,  390. 

Vernon,  Geo.  ob.  1534,  rector  of  Whit- 
church, i,  38. 

Vernueil,  D.  de,  embassador  in  England, 
i,  112.  Keeps  English  hounds,  ib. 
His  house,  ib. 

Verona,  E.  B.  at,  i,  99. 

Verrin,  E.  B.  at  his  father's,  at  Amster- 
dam, i,  182.     Visits  England,  184. 

Versoriam,  meaning  of  the  word  in  Plau- 
tus,  ii,  299. 

Verses,  ropalick  or  gradual,  Tr.  7,  iv, 
193,  194,  Described,  193.  Other 
similar  affected  modes  of,  194.  Made 
on  several  occasions,  iv,  376,  377. 

Vesalius,  Andr.  a  Dutch  anatomist,  com- 
mended, i,  356. 

Vesling,  John,  Prof,  of  anatomy  at 
Padua,  commended,  i,  362. 

Vespasianus,  his  dream,  iv,  357. 

Vice,  extravagance  in,  ii,  102. 

Veuztky,  George,  probably  the  author 
of  a  German  translation  of  R,  M.  and 
life  of  B.  ii,  xiii. 

Vicenza,  E.  B.  at,  i,  98. 

Vienna,  [or  Wien,]  E.  B.  at,  i,  Ixxx, 
Ixxxi.  Writes  from,  158.  A  uni- 
versity, &c.  163.  Siege  of,  by  Soly- 
man,  166.  Long  bridge  at,  broken 
down  by  ice,  175,  177.  Great  stone 
quarry  near,  179. 

Vigo,  to  be  read,  i,  357. 

Vigors,  N.  Esq.  on  quinary  arrange- 
ments in  birds,  iii,  441,  n. 

Vincentius,  see  St.  Vincent. 

Vincentius  Belluacensis,  his  Speculum 
Nalurale,  ii,  241.  Derived  from  Gu- 
liclmus  de  Conchis.  Account  of  him 
by  Conybeare,  ib.  n. 

Vinegar,   scarce  in  war,  i,   243.      Vcr- 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


513 


juice  und  other  substitutes  for,  211. 

\'incr,  Sir  George,  M.  lor  Norfolk,  i,  ICl. 

Vines,  why  suid  to  give  a  good  smell,  iv, 
13(5.     Their  great  size,  1  10,  and  n. 

Viol,  or  lute,  that  the  string  of  one  will 
answer,  on  the  touch  of  another,  in 
unison  with  it,  iii,  369. 

Vipers,  lledi  on,  mentioned,  i,  lOS. 
And  Finch's  intended  works  on,  ib. 
Fables  respecting,  P.  K.  iii,  ch.  IG,  ii, 
45S-4(i5.  That  the  young  force  their 
way  through  the  bowels  of  their  dam, 
458.  In  revenge  for  her  having  bit- 
ten off  the  head  of  the  male,  ib.  Very 
anciently  and  generally  received,  ib. 
Though  repugnant  to  reason  and  ex- 
perience, 43'J-4(il.  That  the  old  viper 
receives  her  young  into  her  mouth  on 
any  fright,  4G0.  This  is  true  of  the 
rattlesnake,  but  not  the  viper,  ib.  n. 
Various  supposed  grounds  of  the  fable 
denied  in  this  chapter,  4G 1-465.  Ro- 
man punishment  of  parricides,  by 
means  of,  459.  On  Paul's  hand,  ib. 
Quasi  vi  pariat,  ib.  Ross  supports 
the  fable,  ib.  n. 

Virgilius,  who  planted  the  gospel  near 
^'ienna,  i,   175. 

Virgilius,  Bp.  of  Saltzburg^  said  to  have 
suffered  martyrdom  in  the  cause  of  the 
antipodes,  ii,  39,  n.  Disproved,  40, 
n. 

Virgilius  Pub.  Maro,  i,  340,  ii,  3,  n.  His 
Eclogues  borrowed  from  Theocritus, 
his  Ceorgicks  from  Ilesiod  and  Aratus, 
Ills  JEneid  from  Homer  and  Pisander, 
ii,  218. 

Virtue,  "  its  own  reward"  but  a  cold 
principle  of  action,  ii,  G7.  That  of 
the  Stoics,  ih.  n.  The  artifice  of 
Seneca,  ib.  Practised  by  the  author, 
68. 

Vision,  with  one  eye  perpendicular  to  the 
other,  better,  i,  55.  Single,  with  two 
eyes,  ii,  481,  n. 

Vitrification,  definition  of,  ii,  274. 

Vitriol,  best  Hungarian,  wanted  for  R. 
Soc.  i,  172.  Some  in  Hungary  found 
crystallized?  ib.  yes,  173.  E.  B.  got 
some,  174.  B's.  opinion  of,  176.  A 
human  body  dissolved  by,  185.  Green 
vitriol — its  operation  on  iron,  ii,  302, 
303,  and  n.  Roman,  used  in  the 
cure  of  wounds,  322,  n. 

Vlussing  [or  Flushing,]  E.  B.  at,  i,  156. 
Worth  seeing,  158. 

Voet,  J.  ii,  35,  n. 

Vorburg,  B.  met  the  Dutch  translator  at, 
ii,  xiii. 

Vossius,  de  MoluMar.  and  f'cnl.  i,  130. 
Isaac,  in   England,    220.     A  letter  to 


him  ascribed  to  B.  falsely,  Pnf.  12, 
n.    In  Pomponium  Mclam,  Ixxiii,  n. 

Vulcan,  giving  arrows  to  Apollo  and 
Diana,  on  their  4th  day,  may  have 
arisen  from  the  creation  of  the  sun 
and  moon  on  the  4th  day,  iii,  385. 

Vulgar  errors,  ii,  172.  On  points  of 
law,  173.  B's  enquiries  into,  sec 
Pseudodoria.     See  also  Errors. 

Vultures,  absurd  story  of,  iii,  150. 


W. 


Wagner,  Tobias,  Exam.  Elenchlic.  /Ithe- 
ismi,  Spec,  pronounced  the  author, 
atheist,  i,  Ixv,  n  ;  ii,  xv,  n.  His  un- 
candid  criticism,  i,  Ixvi. 

Wakenian,  master  of  Whitchurch  school, 
T.  B's.  friend,  i,  -iS. 

Wakering,  John,  Bp.  iv,  9. 

Waldegrave,  Sir  Henry's  daughter  a  nun 
at  Brussels,  i,  156. 

Wales,  boats  used  in,  ii,  310,  n. 

Wallis,  Dr.  on  the  cause  of  thunder,  ii, 
345,  n. 

Walpole,  Hor.  error  respecting  a  picture, 
i,  Pre/.  13,  15,  ex. 

Walpole,  Ralph  de,  iv,  17. 

Walsh,  Peter,  D.D.  his  History  of  Ire- 
land since  the  flood,  i,  348. 

Walsingham  old,  in  Norfolk,  urns  found 
there,  iii,  461. 

Wanton,  or  'Walton  Simeon  de,  Bp.  iv, 
16. 

Warburton,  Bp.  Divine  Legation  of 
Moses,  ref.  ii,  xxii. 

Warts,  charms  against,  iii,  182.  Used 
by  Lord  Bacon,  ib.  n.  Digby's  expe- 
riment hereon,  ib.  n. 

Warwick,  T.  B.  visits  town,  i,  39.  And 
castle,  40. 

Water,  why  hot  will  not  melt  metals,  ii, 
282,  n.  Distilled  makes  beer  without 
boiling,  iii,  435.  In  the  chest,  fatal 
case  of,  i,  273.      Another,  274. 

Waters,  mineral,  about  London,  useful 
there,  i,  218.  List  of,  227.  Imita- 
ted, 227.  In  Hungary,  &c.  Wernher 
wrote  of,  176.  At  Tangier,  144. 
And  springs,  some  will  not  freeze,  ii, 
281.      Why,  i6.  n. 

Watson,  Rev.  John,  i,  lix.  History  of 
Ilalifaj-,  ii,  iii. 

Watt,  in  his  liiUiulhcca  Brit,  mentions 
an  edition  of  11  M.  in  1GI8,  not  met 
with  by  the  editor,  ii,  viii.  And  an 
edition  in  Latin  of  the  works  of  B.  in 
1GS2,  not  met  with  by  editor,  168. 

Watts,  Dr.  Isaac,  his  charge  of  arrogant 
temerity  upon  B.  quoted,  i,  xlviii. 
Strictures  thereon,  ii,  102,  n.      Dia- 


544 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


logue  with  an  African  as  to  Adam's 
complexion,  iii,  272,  n. 
Wave,  the  tenth,  conceit  respecting,  iii, 
355.     Curious  particulars  in  illustra- 
tion  of,    ib.  n.     Similar  conceits   re- 
specting the  number  ten,  356. 
Weather,  very  severe  in  winter,  1(5(51-5, 
i,  89.    In  16G6-7,  132,  131.    In  June, 
1G7(),  very  hot,  212.    Boisterous,  217. 
Wecker,    his    Antidotarium   Speciule,   i, 

357. 
Weight,  of  the   human    body,   P.  E.  iv, 
ch.  7,  iii,  28-31.    That  men  are  heavier 
dead  than    alive.     Not  probable,  28. 
Ross's  absurd  argument,  //;.  n.      Dal- 
ton's  theory,  ih.  n.       Whether  before 
meat  than  after,  29.     Several  parallel 
notions,  30,  31. 
Welsh,  language,  iv,  197. 
Werner,  (Geo.)  de  Aqiiis  Hung,  i,  182. 
Wernher,   de   Rebus   Pannonice,   i,    17(5. 
Wetherley,  M.D.  observations  of,  on  the 

sickness,  i,  373. 
Westminster,  abbey    church,    House    of 

Commons  had  communion  at,  i,  10. 
Whale,  B's.  queries  about  one,  i,  3(58. 
Answered^  3(59,  70.  L'Estrange's  ac- 
count of  one,  ii,  173.  On  the  sper- 
maceti, P.  Ti;.  iii,  ch.  2(5,  ii,515-5]7. 
Modern  name  of  this  whale,  515,  n. 
Account  of  one  on  shore  at  Overstrand 
1 822,  iv,  326,  n.  Another  at  Runton, 
ib.  A  steak  of  it  cooked  at  North- 
repps  Hall,  ib.  B.  objects  to  the  pic- 
ture of,  with  two  spouts,  instead  of 
one,  iii,  146.  The  picture  correct, 
ib.  n. 
Wharton,  Rev.  preached  at  Norwich,  i, 

48. 
Wheat,  dear  at  45  shillings  the  coomb, 

i,  14.     Later  than  barley,  152. 
Whelps,  whether  blind  for  nine  days,  ii, 
523,  524,     They  are  so   for  a  longer 
time,  ib.       Aristotle's  opinion  on,  ib. 
Whitaker,  Rev.  J.  I).  Loldis  and  Elmete, 
i,  lix.    II/stori/ofC}rnvn,  quoted  ii,  xx. 
Whitchurcl),  T.  B.  visits  a  friend  at,  i,  38. 
White,  Francis,  Bp.  iv,  18. 
White,  H.  K.  remarks  on  the  magicians 

of  Pharaoh,  ii,  251,  n. 
White,  Thomas,  ii,  125.     Some  account 

of  him  and  his  works,  ib.  n. 
White  Powder,  and  noiseless,  inquiry  re- 
specting, ii,  343.  Notice  respecting 
the  fulminating  powder,  ib,  n. 
AVhitcfoot,  Rev.  J.  M.  A.  some  account 
of  him,  i.  Preface,  11,  n.  Letter  to 
Lady  Browne,  ib.  His  Minutes  for 
the  Life  of  Ii.  Lent  by  Mrs.  Lyttle- 
ton  to  Bp.  Kennet,  ex.  Quoted,  ex, 
306.      Printed    at   length,    xlii-xlvii. 


His  description  of  B's.  person,  dress, 
acquirements,    memory,  feelings   and 
deportment,  his  activity,  his  extensive 
acquaintance  with  languages,  his  reli- 
gious feelings,  his  calmness  in  the  hour 
of  death,     his     liberality    and    kind- 
ness, his  great  sagacity;   he   excelled 
in  the  stochastick  faculty.      This  term 
quoted   by   D'Israeli,    xlvii,    n.      His 
sermon   for  B.   never  printed,  ex,  n. 
A  MS.  discourse  of  his  in  Brit.  Mus. 
ib.      He  is  supposed   to  have  superin- 
tended the  second  edition  of  Ps.  Ep. 
ii,  166,  n. 
Whitefriars,  see  Monasteries. 
Whiter,  Rev.   Waller,  his  work  on  the 
Disorder  of  Death,  extract  from,  ii,  252. 
Whiting,  Mr.  a  surgeon,  i,  219. 
Whitlock,  Richard,  remark  in  his  Zooto- 

mia,  on  Robinson's  Endoxa,  i,  I.nIv. 
Wicn,  see  Vienna. 

Wight,  Isle  of,  T.  B's.  account  of,  i.  137. 
Wilkins,  Bp.  Mechanical  Powers,  i,  87. 
William  the  Conqueror,  iv,  30. 
Williamson,  Sir  Joseph,  E.  B.  accompa- 
nies him  to   Cologne,  i,  xcvii.       Ac- 
count of,  262,  n.     A  benefactor  of  Qu. 
Coll.  Oxon.  264.      Member  for  Thet- 
ford,  305.     A  patient  of  E.  B's.  i,  cii. 
Willis,  Thomas,  M.  D.  his  way  of  dissect- 
ing the  brain,  i,  217.     Imitating  cha- 
lybeate waters,  227.      In  his  Pharmu- 
ceul.  Rationalis,  speaks  of  Matthew's 
pill,  248. 
Wiiloughbv,   Francis,    his    Ornitholcgia, 

Eng.  by  Ray,  i,  327. 
Windet,  a  medical  pedant  at  Yarmouth, 

his  letters  to  B.  omitted,  i,  351. 
Windham,  Sir  Thomas,  account  of,  iv,  10. 
Windows,  glass,  not  then  usual,  i,  101. 
Wine,  of  Cogpic,  drunk  in  I'.ngland,  in 
sunmicr,  i,  19.      Of  Orleans,  &e.  ex- 
ported at  Nantes,  21.     French,  not  to 
be  had  in  war,  243.     Spirit  of,  cheap 
sort  of,  413. 
Winter,  in   1664-5,   very   severe,  i,  89. 

In  1668-9,  open,  161,  16S. 
Wisbich,  T.  B.  saw,  i,  41. 
Witchcraft  and    Satanic  influence,     B's. 
opinions  respecting,  i,    Ixxxii-lxxxvi ; 
ii,   43-45,  56,  256,  n;  iv,  389.     Ac- 
cordant with  those  of  Bacon,  Bp.  Hall, 
Baxter,  Hale,  Lavater,  &c.  i,  Ixxxv,  n. 
ii,  43.     Illustrated    by  extracts  from 
Ellis's  Polynesian  Researches,   ib.    n. 
List  of  writers  on,  43,  n. 
Witches,  trial  of,  in   1664,  at  Bury  St. 
Edmund's,  iv,  389.   Author's  evidence 
on,i,  Ixxxii.      Omitted  by  Whitefoot, 
Johnson,  and  Kippis,  ib.      Related  by 
Dr.  Hutchinson  in  his  Essay  on  Witch- 


GENERAL    INDIi^. 


51. 


craft,  ill.  Another  account  of  it  in 
Hale's  Treatise  tuiiching  Sheriff's  ylc- 
coiinfs,  Sfc.  ib.  n.  The  Judge's  charge 
to  the  jury,  Ixxxv,  n.  Dr.  Aikin's  ac- 
count of  it,  Ix.xxiii.  Reflections  on  it, 
Ixxxiii-lxxxv.  B.avowsliis  belief  in, 43. 

Wolf,  fable  of  his  striking  a  man  dumb, 
P.  E.  iii,  cli.  7,  ii,  422-121.  Wren's 
opinion  of  this,  122,  n.  Probable  ori- 
gin of  the  fable,  J 23.  Said  lliat  it 
will  not  live  in  England,  iii,  314. 

Wollaston  Dr.  on  single  vision  with  two 
eyes,  ii,  4S1,  n. 

Woman,  conceiving  in  a  bath,  iii,  345. 

Wood,  of  which  violins  are  made,  what, 
i,  177.  Called  ayre  a  kind  of  maple, 
1S3.  Grows  by  Saltzberg,  185.  Pe- 
trified, ii,  2G0. 

Wood,  Anthony,  B.  gives  hints  for  his 
Atheiue  Oxouienses,  i,  xcv.  In  letters 
to  John  Aubrey,  467-471.  His  life  of 
B.  in  /Ithentr  Oxonienses ;  calls  B.  the 
first  man  of  eminence  in  Pemb.  Coll. 
Ox.  i,  xix. 

Wood,  Thomas,  his  Maps  of  S.  ytmerica, 
i,  450.  Ofters  the  E.  I.  C.  to  go  for 
Japan,  451. 

Woodliouse,  Sir  Thomas  at  H's.  i,  178. 

Woods,  Capt.  Jn.  his  voyage  of  discovery, 
1,212. 

Woodward,  Mr.  .S.  Editor  of  Repertorium. 
iv,  4.  His  plan  of  the  green  yard,  ib. 
His  Synoptical  Table  of  Britinh  Or- 
ganic Remains,  ib.  n. 

World,  in  what  season  created,  ii,  30,  n. 
P.  E.  vi,  ch.  2,  iii,  201-203.  Actu- 
ally in  all  four,  if  referred  to  the  differ- 
ent parts  of  it,  201,  202.  If  in  Meso- 
potamia, still  there  is  difficulty  in 
deciding,  and  different  opinions,  203, 
and  n.  How  repeopled  with  crea- 
tures? 32,  n.  A  universal  Spirit  to 
the  whole,  ii,  46.  The  opinion  of 
Plato  and  others,  ib.  n.  Mode  and 
time  of  its  destruction  discussed,  65- 
67.  Opinions  of  Stoicks  thereon,  ib.  n. 
Concerning  the  period  of  its  commence- 
ment, P.  E.  vi,  ch.  1,  iii,  185-200. 
Epicurus  denied  that  it  had  any,  1 85. 
Mosaic  definition,  186.  Egyptian  and 
Scythian  ideas  of  its  antiquity,  187. 
Experiment  of  Psanimilichus,  ib,  Chal- 
dean and  Babylonian  records,  their 
antiquity,  188.  Scripture  the  rule 
of  Jews,  Samaritans,  and  Christians, 
herein,  189.  Jewish  difference  of  ac- 
count, ib.  Samaritan  Pentateuch,  190. 
Christian  records  ;  and  first  the  Latin, 
their  discordance,  ib.  Then  the  Greek, 
still  more  anomalous,  190-192.  The 
differences    existing    in    various    edi- 


tions and  versions  of  Scripture,  a 
reason  of  this  difference,  192-195. 
Some  difficulty  also  in  understanding 
precisely  the  terms  of  Scripture  ;  their 
day  and  night,  what  it  meant,  195, 
196.  Wren  controverts  the  proposed 
explanation  of  Matt,  xii,  40;  196,  n. 
Strictures  on  Wren's  note,  197,  n. 
Daniel's  seventy  weeks,  198,  99. 
Rev.  T.  H.  Home's  theory  on  this, 
198,  n.  Astronomical  rules  to  ascer- 
tain when  our  Lord  suffered,  199,200. 
Whether  slenderly  peopled,  before  the 
flood,  P.  E.  vi,  ch.  6,  iii,  219-235. 
Three  periods  of  time,  220-221.  Of 
the  first,  viz.  before  the  flood,  we  have 
but  slender  records  besides  Scripture, 
if  any,  222.  The  populousness  of  the 
world  before  the  flood — argued  from 
the  longevity  of  man,  223-228.  A 
computation  hereof,  227.  Also  from 
the  extent  of  time  from  the  creation 
to  the  deluge,  229.  And  from  the 
immense  population  of  the  world  in 
1300  years  after  the  flood,  229-234. 
The  antediluvian  unity  of  language  no 
bar  to  populosity,  234.  Conclusion  in 
uncertainty,  235. 

Wormius,  i,  Ixxiii. 

Worms  supposed  by  most  to  be  exsan- 
guinous,  ii,  526.  Are  not  so,  ib.  n. 
Their  mode  of  propagation,  ib. 

Worthies,  picture  of  the  nine,  P.  E.  v, 
ch.  13,  iii,  127-131.  Whothcywere, 
127,  n.  Why  Alexander  on  an  ele- 
phant instead  of  Bucephalus,  127. 
Ross's  answer,  ib.  n.  Why  Hector  on 
a  horse  and  not  in  a  chariot,  12S. 
Why  stirrups  on  the  hordes,  ij.  Re- 
marks on  the  antiquity  of  stirrups, 
130,  n. 

Wotton,  Rev.  H.  ./In  Essay  on  the  Edu- 
cation of  Children,  Sfc.  i,  xcv,  n. 

Wotton,  Wni.  B's.  testimony  to  his  ac- 
quirements, i,  xcv. 

Wounds  cured  by  the  powder  of  sympa- 
thy, ii,  322,  n. 

Wray,  sec  Ray. 

Wren,  Christopher,  D.  D.  Dean  of  Wind- 
sor, notes  to  /'.«.  Ep.  ii,  170.  His 
character,  ib.  n.  His  defence  of  the 
Ptolemaic  system  of  astronomy,  210,  n. 

Wren,  Sir  Christopher,  D.  C.  L.  travels 
with  E.  B.  i,  Ixxvii.  At  Paris,  110. 
Ills  discourse.  111.  Succeeded  I)cn- 
liam,  184.  As  surveyor  of  royal  build- 
ings, and  Prcs.  Roy.  Soc.  ib.  n.  His 
dreams,  it,  170. 

Wren,  Matthew,  Bp.  iv,  18. 

Wright,  John,  a  clerk  of  Norwich  cathe- 
dral, iv,  5, 


2  S 


54G 


GENERAL    INDEX. 


Wright,  Rev.  Thomas,  ylntiquilies  of  the 
Town  of  Halifax,  i,  lix  ;  ii,  iii. 


Xaincles,  city  of,  T.  B.  at,  i,  6.     E.  B. 

at,  105.     Described,  7,  18. 
Xenophanes  held  that  the  eartli  lias  no 

bottom,  ii,  285.     That  there  is  another 

world  in  the  moon,  263, 
Xenophon,  his  description  of  the  Sardian 

plantations  of  Cyrus,  iii,  ;58S. 
Xeres,  [dela  Frontera,]  commonly  called 

Sherrez,  i,  146. 
Xerxes,  that  his  army  drank  whole  rivers 

dry,  P.  E.  vii,  ch.  18,  iii,  362. 


Yarmouth,  Lady  B's.  brother  lived  at,  i, 
5.  Ships  pass  from  to  Rochelle  for 
salt,  8.  To  Bourdeaux  for  wine,  12. 
Fishermen  profit  by  keeping  Lent,  ib, 
E.  B.  sails  from,  Ixxviii,  154.  Mem- 
bers for,  306.  Quick  passage  from  to 
Isle  of  Wight,  320. 

Yarmouth,  Ear!  of,  his  eldest  son.  Lord 
Paston,  member  for  Norwich,  i,  306. 

Yarrell,  Mr,  his  Memoirs  on  the  Organs 


of  Speech  in  Birds,  ii,  394,  n.  518,  n. 

Year,  civil  and  natural,  iii,  65,  Divi- 
sion of  the,  P.  E.  vi,  ch.  3,  iii,  204- 
209. 

Yew  said  to  be  poisonous,  but  contra- 
dicted by  B.  ii,  382.  Some  animals 
asserted  to  have  died  from  eating  it, 
ih.  n. 

Yorkshire  feast,  Tillotson  preached  at,  i, 
237. 

Young,  Dr.  On  Hieroglyphics,  ii,  415,  n. 
On  the  crux  ansata,  iii,  389,  n. 

Young,  Charles  George,  Esq.  communi- 
cation of  two  pedigrees,  i,  Pref.  13. 


Z. 


Zecchinelli,  Signer,  on  the  natural  pre- 
potency of  the  right  side,  iii,  23,  n. 

Zeno,  denies  motion  in  nature,  ii,  211. 

Zinc,  called  by  B.  toothanage,  i,  244. 
Or  tunenague,  246,  n. 

Zircknitz,  lake  of,  E.  B.  at,  i,  Ixxx.  Ac- 
count of,  191,  446. 

Zodiack,or  line  of  life,  iii,  210. 

Zone,  the  torrid,  supposed  to  be  unin- 
habitable, iii,  344. 

Zootomia,  <^-c.  by  Whitlock,  i,  Ixiv,  n. 

Zoroaster,  ii,  3.5. 


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