' I ,NEW EXPERIMENTS UPON VIPERS. WITH EXQUISITE REMEDIE Si That may be drawn from them, as well for the I Cun of their JS ititgs, as for that of other Maladies. Alfo a LETTER of FRANCISCO REDI , Concerning fome Objections mad? upon \ his Obfervations about VI P E RS ; j Written to Monfieur BOZJRDELOT AND M.ALEX. MO R VS. Together with the Sequel of New Experiments Upon Vipers,in a Reply to a Letter written by Sign. F. REDI By M. C HARAS. I2oSb tenOjta (EmjUfij. -s LONDON ’rinted for 'f.Martyn, Printer to the R.Sucletv , at Y the Bell in Ss. P.wls Ghurch-yard, 1673. I V >. - CKar.ai r . /.loo . Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2015 n r- ' X. https://archive.org/details/newexperimentsup01char THE Preface. Iny will perhaps wonder , that af- ter Jo many famous Authoursy Ant tent and Modern , who have wrttten of V I P E R S, I fhould •jet undertake to labour in an Argument , which in all likelihood they fhould have exhaufled. But if reflexion be made on the many wonders , that are found in the Body of this Animaf it will be eafily granted^ that it cannot be inquir’d into with too much exattncfs, and that it is tot a work } that can be finifh't at one or two fittings. What Obfervations have been left us by knowing men although the j be not carried to their perfection, may be very ufeful to thofe , that are come after them y to make them dif co- ver what hid Reaped their diligence. And without this aid , I fhould net have had the A 3 con- The PREFACE; confidence of undertaking this Work-in which I have propos'd to my felf three main things , that may much contribute to the illufiration of the Hi (lory concerning Vipers. The firft is, to examine f undry obfervatious of the Antients , which have hitherto pafi’d for true, though mo [l of them are not fo. The fecond , to give an accompt of other Ob- fer vat ions, which have been unknown to our Predeceffcrs. The third, to find in the Vi- per, which canfeth fo man y mi [chief Spe- Cifick Remedies again fi its Biting , which had not been difcover’d before , and may ferve to overcome many troublefom Difiem- pers, which the ordinary Remedies were not able to conquer. The Enterpnf l certainly, is bold 5 andy J confcfs, I fhould never have comp of’ d it, what hope foever I might have conceived of it) had I not been affified by fome know- ing Phyfitians , whofe light hath been very helpful tome . Their Mode fly permits not, I fhould hen name them 5 it fuf fleet h the Publick ti know , that a good part of the rare things in this Treatife is due to thorn. They hat the kindnefs to meet often at my Houfe fo, the fpace of three months, and there to fe mat 1 •I‘ Tfie PREFACE. made exatt Diffc&io s of V iper% wh h b m> care were brought to me font a of this Kmgdome • and to fee afo tx merits tryed of their biting , upon in nitnals. and to examine their Boa es . ■ diately open d after their death , to d(t the true caufe of it ; and 10 prefcnbe me dies # anfwerable to their Conje'Jure and to take notice of the fuccefs of t ■$ ' fame . In differing all thefe V pers, we w re willing to fee the parts, which Authu s h*vc taken notice of and which have alfo been rc frefented in the Books of Jome of them e And comparing them with the Natura one that were before our Byes . we found gr-‘a ; emifsions of very confderable parts an troduttion of jome imaginary ones , am *g- frefentations and [equations of ft eralthm were ill dejigned, and ill enough placed , Sc WM thought ft, I fhould en eavaur toper j form fomething mere accompli Ibt : a yd Monftur Boffe, who fe skill and dexter ui in the Art of Defining and Graving h known j tod ejleem d of all the World, in things of | a fan fublimer nature than the Anatomy of ■ Vipers , being happily prefent at one of our 1 Wrings > and taking great pleafure to oblige 4 his The PREFACE.1 ^ his Friends, expreff’d from that faery lime y that be was very wdling to j econd my in- tent tons : And having received from me a fuffeient number of Subjells, hath taken the pains to deftgn them after the life , and thereupon to grave all the confiderable parts of this Animal . In a word, I have omitted nothing of what might render my Defign an - freer able to the wifhes of all Learned and Curious men . New as thofe, who, f peaking of a matter that hath been often handled by others, cannot but mufl often repeat again} what hath been already fat d of it 5 I thought, 1 was not to fcruple to enlarge my felf a littie , that / might not give an imp erf ell Anatomy of the Viper, of which it was ft enough to de- scribe as well the great number of the true parts, that have been known to our Ancefors, as the new ones, by me found after themp 1 fay nothing of my way of Writing. From a perfon of my profeffton, you arp not to ex pell the Elegancy ond Purity of our T ongue. I thought it enough for me , to deliver my felf clear fa and intelligibly , which is , in my opinion , all that could be expelled from me. 5 The PREFACE; For the refi T think 5 1 am the fir fl, that ha'h given to France a Treacife of the Vi- |M in its Native Language. Thofe who under fiand no other Languages 7 may think t hem ( elves obliged by it , in regard they would elfe have been ignorant of abun- dance of things y that deferve to be known. Farewell. o J ••. I ' A I t\ ' v 4 f A tl.\V c''V \ y ^(\ i VL* T i \ , -iY -Ti::./; i." : • V \ wy'A vVl A’ ;.A '■■■ ■, ixx . v . w. : *v -.y ■ ■ A ■ ) r- • U'l ; \ ■ < ) . . Vw ’ ' 'v ■ ;■• - v., \ : tvmr\ .4 t\ v:- \ \ THE TABLE Of the Tides of all the Con- tents in this Book. Anatomy of the Viper. Chap. I. Eneral ohfervatms upon VJ the ripen Defcription of the Viper. Ch. II. Of the Parts which prefent them « j elves fir (l: of all. of the ext er tour Jhape of the riper. Secc.i. of the skin of the riper. See. 2. Of the parts of a Vipers Head. Ch.IIL o]the riper s Nofe, Sec. 1. Of The CONTENTS. Of the Skull. Sect. 2. Of the Brain. Sec. 3. of the Eyes and their principal Parts , and of thofe that fen ve for Hearing. Sect. 4. of the Bones of the Head that are arti- culated to the Skull. Sec. 5 . Of the 7eeth . Sec. 6. Of the Nerves , Veins , Art cries , and Mujcles of the Head in general. Sec.7. of the Saltval Glands of the Viper , Sec. 8. Ch. IV. Of the other Bones of the Viper , and of the principal parts that depend therefrom. Ch. V* of the other internal parts of the Vi- per. of the Tongue. Sec. 1. of the Wind-pipe , and the Lungs. Sec. 2. of the Heart and Liver , Sec.3. of the Call and Pancreas. Sec. 4. Of 1 he Weafandand Stomach. Sec. 5. of the Guts } kidneys , Eat, and a Coat wrapping them up under-neath. Sec.6 . Ch.VI.o/ thcQrgans of Generationina Vi- per. Self, 3. of the parti of a Male. Sec. 1 . of the parts of Generation in a Female. Sec. 2. Of V3 The CONTENTS. of the Generation and Birth of ri- sers. Sec. 3. The Explication of what is reprefented inthe frjl Cut. The Explication of what is exhibited in the fecond Cue. The Explication of what appears in the third Cut. Experiments upon Vipers. Ch. I. A Biting of a Viper happnd to 4 Man . Ch. II. Experiments of Vipers upon divers Animals . Experiments on Bogs. The Biting of a Bog in his Tan Another Biting upon a Bog , The Biting of a little Bog. Another Bog hit in the T ongue. Ch. III. Experiments of the Biting, of a Vi* per made upon Pigeons and Bullets. Cn. IV, of the Poyfon of a Vipers biting , and of its operation. Ch. V, Experiments of the yellow liquor contained in the little Baggs of the greater Teeth , made on fever al Animals. Cb.Vf, Experiments of the Gall \ Eggs> Guts , The CONTENTS. > Gttts,fJedds,andthe Blood of a Piper mads w divers Animals . Ch.VH. Sundry ether Experiments made upon Vipers. Ch. VIII. General Reflexions on all thofe Experiments. Remedies drawn from Vi- pers, Ch. I. of the different choice that may he made of the parts of Vipers. Ch. II. of the Ufe of the parts of [a Viper , m to its Nourifhing vertue. Ch. Ill, of the Vertues of fever Alp arts of a Viper in Phyftck. Ch. IV. of the Porvder and Tmhifques of Vipers . Ch. V. Of the Viper- Salt of the Antients. Ch.* VI. Of the Volatil Salt of Vipers of their Fixt Salt , and of the other parts that are feparated hj Biff illation . Ch. VII. Of the Fixation of the Volatil Salt of Viper Si Ch. VIII. of the vertues of the Volatil Salt of Vipers 9and3of what other parts are able t§ The CONTENTS; id dce y that are feparated h) DiftWai tio». Ch.IX. of the my ofufwg the Volatll Salt of Vipers . Ch.X. Divers Remedies or Compositions* of which this Volatil Salt psjhe Safe 0% ground. ET&Riji PAgeig. line 6. read feenon. p. 29. f. 8. t. and that. p. 95. 1. 27. r. and the want of goodneft. p, 12©. I. 5- 1- *ke bitten animal would be. p. 1 26. 1. 1 2. r. twice thoughfiot^wice in the day-light, p.i 63. |. 12. r. adapt, p. 165. 1. * with Salt and Dill. p. a 72. 1. 1. r. Simples be in. \ T - ■ ' '■% d:i; 1 •; - h. "•tv >' i 5 ‘ '■'v' d • ■ ; i.. ■ - ' •. * -v • . - ■ -'SIY • . ' ' - ^ • -;v V. V. " - - . ' - i r ... • - (O ANATOMY O F A VIP (jeneral Obfervations upon this aAnimah CHAPTER l Know not, what ground the Antient Writers up- on this Animal had » to fay , that in the Copu- lation, the Male did in- fert his Head into the throat offthe Female, and there emitted his feed , thence falling into her Matrix , where fhefirft did form Eggs and then Young Vipers • That the Female, finding a titillation from the emifiion of the feed , fnapp’d off with her teeth the B head f head of the Male, and fo kill’d him 5 and that thdYoung Vipers, being ready to be brought forth , did pierce the Womb and the fides of their Damm , tomakeapaf- fage for themfelves *, fo that by killing her, they revenged in fome manner the death of their Sire. I confefs,that this Story, or T ale rather, having neither reafon nor experience on its flde,I cannot take the part of thofe Authors. I efteem , that a Viper, which is a kind of creeping Serpent , is indeed procreated by the conjunttion of Male and Female^but this is done by means of the Organs defigned for Generation* of which we fhall make adef» cription in their proper place, and which this Animal hath common with all others , and that more in number , than moft Ani- \ mals. The Viper differs from other Serpents , not only in this , that it creeps more flow- ly, and jumps not-, but chiefly herein,tha£ its little ones receive their perfection in the womb,and come forth alive after theufual manner * whereas the Femals of other Ser- pents lay Eggs , which they incubate 5 and hatch 3 either in the Sua,or in their re- cedes* The (s) The Viper is by many taken for aii T- mage of malice and cruelty •, but in reality fhe is guilty of no fuch thing , if (he be not hurtorvex’d*, for, if (he be, (he becoms fu- rious , aud bites very piercingly.- butfhe never aflfaults Man or beaft , except (be be angred. And if attimesjit happen, that fhe bites fome perfon or other fleepingin the field, certainly that Body muff have thruft or otherwife hit her 5 for elfe (he would never have bit him. It may very well be faid , that by that means the Stratagem of Anntbal fucceeded, when he caufed a quantity of earthen Pitch- ers fill’d with Vipers to be thrown into the Shipps of the King of Pergamus^ his Ene- my 5 in regard that on the one hand the Pots being broken , did hurt and anger the Vipers, rnd ftirr’d them up tobite whatso- ever was within the reach of their teeth $ and on the other, the llghc cf thefe creeping Creatures, fcattered about here and there in the Ships, frighted the Souldiers anddif order’d them,fo that they could not fight. Meantime a Viper2nacksand kills thofe Animrls , which fhe means to devour tor her nourifhment, asSpanifhFiyes, hcorpi- ons3Froggs,Mice, Moles, Lizmds 2nd the B % Ike U) like ‘vyhich ftiefwallows whole, after (he hath kill’d them with her bigger Teeth. T he fmaller prey Hie fends down whole in- to her ftomach 5 the bigger fhe partly lodg- eth in her ftomach , partly in her wea- fand. There can hardly be made any perfedfc digeftion in the Stomach of Vipers, both becaufe the heat is there not well united, by reafonof the great aperture , there is at the mouth, where the Oefophagus or Wea- fand ends 5 and becaufe they have not moi- fture enough to help the fermentation and the Concodtion of food. But yet this hin- ders not * the conveyance of the Juyce and of the fineft part of the fwallow’d animals into all the parts of their body for nourish- ment .• Which is not performed but in the fpace of many days , during which, the ex- crements and fupei fluities of the nutriment are carried into the Gutts, whence the grof- fer parts of them are caft out again by the 1100th. T his we have lately obferv'dina great part of the body of a Lizzard , which a Viper vomited up twelve days after fhe was taken ■ where we favv,that,of the head and of the fore-leggs , and of that part of the body contiguous to them, and which could could conveniently be placed in the fto- mach of the Viper, there refted li^lle more than the Bones ^ but that a great part the trunk, together with the hind-leggs, and the whole Caile, were in a manner in a condition, as if the Viper had iwallow'd them that day, as appears in the zd Figure. But we were furpiifed, among other things, to fee, that the parts , which could not en- ter into theftomach,and had remained in the Oefophagus, had kept To long well, I mean, without fuffring any alteration in the skin $ although thofe underneath had contra&ed home lividnefs , which perhaps was an effeft of the venemoufnefs of the biting. . Vipers can live for many monrhs without any food, and after they are once taken, they eat no more, living then only upon the Air, they take in. And although they be greedy enough of Lizzards , when at liberty , yet I have found , that having thrown Lizzards alive into a barrel, where- in I kept a good number of living Vipers, and leaving them there whole da.s and n ghts , the Vipers did no hurt at all to the Lizzards. The Subftance of Vipers is vifcous and compaft j and perifheth not but very flow- B 3 ly ly and difficultly. Their Skin is fcaly, which defends them from the injuries of the Air , and maketh that the Spirits unite them- felves fo firmly to the body, that ’tis hard for them to quit it-, andwefee, thatthey remain yet many hours in the Head and in all the parts of the trunk , after tis flead , emptied of all the gutts, and cut in ma- ny pieces.” And this is thecaufe , that the motions and windings fo long continue in them-, that the Head is able to bite, and its biting as dangerous, as when the Vi- per was entire 5 and that the Heart , even after it is pull’d out of the body, and fe- ver’d from the otherinward parts, keeps its beating for many hours. Whence it may be concluded , that the Viper , which is compofed of parts fo clofely united toge- ther , and in which are found fuch perfect Spirits, can impart to Man what it hath moft accomplifhtandinfo^reat abundance: So that we need not wonder, if we find the remedies , we draw from its body, are of a not-ordinary vertue. A Viper voids not much excrement , and what (he voyds is not offenfive, where- as that of Snakes Rinks much, and hath the fmell of Hale and corrupt Urine. Nei- ther r , thcr have we ever found any ill fmelliri <> pening the veffels, wherein we m fed to keep Vipers alive , unlefs fome vfper or o- ther had been dead and putrifyed. For my part , I have never received any inconvem- encefrom any ill air, which fome pretend to ifliie forth at the opening of thofe Veffels. Vipers make no holes in the Earth to hide themfelvesin , as other Serpents do 5 but ordinarily they hide themfelves under ftones or old ruines , where they may be often found heaped up and wound toge- ther in clufters. When ’tis fair weather, they love to lurk under bullies and tufted plants. They commonly couple twice a year, the time in the month of March 5 and they goewith their young ones 4. or 5.months$ which being perfect, come forth one after another by the common opening of the Ma- trix in great number3tven to twenty and twenty five. They draw out with them, in coming forth, a fmall tegument faftned to their navil, like an after- birth, which the damm by little and little £eparateth with her tongue , as they are bom one af- ter another. Vipers calf a skin every Spring , and fomenmes even in Autumne .* which hath B 4 ecca- < (8) occafioneda belief, that they have a ver- cue, able&D make young again, and to pre- ferve the llrength of thofe , who ufe them either for a prefervative or a remedy. THE DESCRIPTION -s Q F A VIPER CHAP. II. Of the 1? artsjtobich prefent t hemf elves firft. SECT. I. Of its external Figure. T He Vipers, Males and Females, that we have in France , being of their full growth , are in the middle of their bo- dy (9) ciy a good inch thick 5 but that of Females is bigger , when they are with y^ung , e- fpecially when the young ones are ready to tome forth. They are commonly two good foot long 5 and there arefome, that are fome what longer. Their head, which is flat, hath a kind of border roundabout the edges of its upper p2rt , and io that they differ from Snakes , which have all that round bared and taken down, and the Head fharper and narrower, in propor- tion to their Body. The Head of a Viper is in all an inch long, and towards the top thereof it is 7 or 8 lines broad > and thenleffening by lit- tle and little, it is not above 4 or 5 lines broad about the Eyes , and 2 lines onely about the end of the Nofe. It is about % lines thick. The Neck, taken where it begins , is a- bout the bignefs of a mans little finger. That of Males is ordinarily a little thicker than that of Females : Yet there are fome of the Females , which , when full , ap- pear to have a Neck even thicker than that of Males. The Tail of Males is always longer and thicker than that of Females, becaufe it con- tains r "v ; x ( SO ) tains the parts of generation double; and in their Interfaces there arc alfo two (mail bladders fomewhat long,ferving for a refer- vatory of their feed, which make their Tail bigger. This of the Males is about four fingers fquare long^but that of Females not much longer than three. The upper part of the Taile of Males is, at its beginning, about the bignefsof their Neck , and ends iharp, as doth aifo the Tail of Females. Neither of them (lings , nor have they any venom in them. SECT. I I. Of the Skin of Vipers . NO Vipers are feen, but they have their skin fpotted: but the ground of the colour is different enough ; for fome- times 5tis whitifh , fome times reddilh , in fome ’tis gray , in others yellow, in oth ers tawny. This ground is always fpeckled with black fpoas , or atleaftmuch darker ones than the reft ; they appear like diffe- ' rent cyphers or characters , ranged in fpa- ces, even enough, and anfwenng onea- nother, efpecially on the top and the fides of the Body. Some of them are alfo up- on the Head , and among the reft , two in the form of Horns, which take their rife between both Eyes , and open themfelves and reach towards the two fides of the top of the Head, and are fometimes 4. or 5. lines long, each of them, and halfe aline broad. Oppofice to the mid- dle of thefe two horns , there appears a fpeck of the bignefs of a fmall Lentile , being fhaped like the Iron of a Pike: And this is that, which is, as ’twere, the firft and principal of all thefe fpecks , Teeming to guide them all along the Back-bone, T he Skin is all cover’d with Scales , the greateft, ftrongeft and moft confiderable of which , are thofe under the whole Bo- dy , and fome under part of the Head„ Their bignefs and force is neceffary for them , to fortify the Viper in the place that is feebleft and leaft capable of defence^ befides that they fupport the Animal , and ferve it , inftead of feet , for creeping, and for carrying its Body to and fro. Thefe great Scales are alwayes of the colour of Steel, from one end to the other , and dif- ferent from thofe of Snakes, which are commonly mark’d with 3 yellow colour. Theyopei, and ftick, according as the Vi” ' J" • (iO Viper will recoyle, or ftop. Theextre: mity of tbefe great Scales is 3 as ’cwere, fow’d beneath the other litle Scales, which cover the whole Body. Thofe under the Head , reach in their breadth towards the twojawes; they are letter, (freighter and fofter than thofe under the Belly , and ter- minate at other fmaller Scales , which go on to cover the whole undermoft part of the Head, and , beginning their ranks to- wards the ends before , continue them at the fides of thofe ranks as far as towards the bottom of the Jaws. From thebegining of the Neck unto the beginning of the Tayl , there are as many great Scales, as there are vertebraes or Joynts of the Back- bone; and as each Vertebra hath on each fide a Ribb, each Scale meets by its t wo ends the points of both , and ferves them for a defence and Ihy : the fame abuts alfo on each fide at the end of one rank of litle fcales , where- with the reft of the Body is covered , and it feems,that his placed there to receive them. Thefe fmall fcales are admirably well ranged , they lying upon one another, and reprefenting'each as ’twere halfe a round towards their extremity. Their ranks ap- pear ( 13) pear always floping , whether you look on them from the right fide to the left 3 or from the left to the right ^ fome what ah ter the manner of the ranks of fmall Slate 3 that are cut in a halfe round , in fome pla- ces feen in the tops of houfes. Thefe Scales are more or lefs great , according as the part of the Body, they cover , is great- er or lefie^ The Symmetry of them is always very exquifite and even ^ and is fu- table to the great Scales, united to their ranks beneath. T here are alfo obferv d on the top of thefe Scales , and all along the Back, many -fine and diftindt Lines , paf- fing (freight along from the hind-part of the Head unto the end of the T ay). The Scales, that are under the Tayl from the beginning of it to the end, are divided, and yet they appear united and ranged in the middle by a very orderly and pieafing compartment ; and their bignefs goes di- miniihing in proportion with the Tayl. The Skin of the Head is alfo covered with fmall fcales, and at the end of the Nofe turned up , and fo on , even round about , as far as towards the Eyes, in the manner of a fwines-fnout. There are obferved onlyfix openings in the V the Skinrof a V iper : the biggeft is that of its Throaty the other four are thofe of the twoNoftrils, and of the two Eyes; the laft is that , which is at the lower-moft end of the Belly, where is the beginning of the Tayl , which inclofeth not only the hole of the Gut for voiding the excrements, but al- fo thofe of the organs of Generation, as well of Males as Females. This laft ope- ning is fhut by the laft of the great fcales , which is advanc’d in the form of a half round , and opens in falling lower at the time of copulation, asitalfo doth at the time of the young Vipers being caft, and of the excretion of their dung. The Throat opens and (huts at the will of the Animal ; the Noftrils remain alwayes open , and the Eyes have Eye-lids to cover them up- on occafion. There is no aperture in the skin to give any paffage for Hearing $ Na- ture, it feems, ferving herfelf of the aper- tures of the Noftrils for that purpofe. Vipers ordinarily caft their fcaly Skins twice a year, under which they are furnifht with another, quite formed, which at firft appears much fairer , and of a more vivid colour, than that which is caft off. And there is alfo infenfibly forming an o- ( 15 ) s/ ■ . ■ ' ther new one, againft the time it is to ferve , when that which now*, covers ic fhallbe fevered from it: So that a Viper hath at all times a double skin 5 and all thefe skins, though furniflit with fcales3 are notwithftanding tranfparent, being held and look’t on againft the day-lighr. This External defcription might be fufficient for thofe , who (hall defire no . more but to know how to difcern Vipers from other Serpents , but the Anatomical Defcription of all the parts under the Skin will be much more fatisfa&ory and more neceflary for thofe, who Ihall defire to know exa&ly all the good and all the ill in a Viper, CHAP. Ill / W (1 6) \ CHAP. III. OF the Farts of the Head o F A VIPER SECT. I. Of the Nofe and Nojirtls. BEginning at the extremity of the Head there are the Nofe and the Noftrils . The former is made up of a Bone Tome what Griftly, furnifht with fome ends of Mufdes , that come farther off, and are accompanied with fomefmall veins and ar- teries. T his Bone is alfo cover’d with th® fcaly Skin, turn’d up, aswasfaid above , at its extremities. There are two pipes, ip the two fides, that form the noftrils, which have each a fmall and round ope- ning on the right and the left fide , before, and the proper nej;ve, which corns down from ■ i 07) from the fore-part of the Brain unto their Orifice, and communicates to them*the ob- , je&s of fmelling. The fame Pipes ferve alfo to receive two fmall Nerves, which if- fue each from the lateral part of the Brain, and ferve for Hearing. This griftly Bone hath feveral Angles round about, and is ar- ticulated by two ftrong Ligaments within and about the hollow and anteriour part of the Skull - which hinders not, but that it is a little flexible in this Articulation. Se-CT. 2. • ft Of the Shrill. it. le of re i* ic 3 ') h 5) it- •e, FD IB THe Skull is found hollow in the fore- part of it, and reprefents the lhape pf an Heart in this Cavity, when the Bone pf theNofe is feparated from it. There are itwo points advancing, which in part embrace that Bone 5 it is in the fuperior part fur- rounded with a fmall border, advancing in thefafliionof a Cornifhe*, it is notch’d on both fides, where the Eyes are fcituate,and there forms their round holes, of which the hind-part reaches out to a point , to which anfwers that before. The whole Skull in C all r 08) all its 'parts is of a very comparand hard fubftance, There are three principal Su- tures in the part above s the one5which maj be call’d the Sagittal, which divides long- wayes the part above the two Eyes ; th< fecond, which may be term’d Coronal , di- vides the Skull a-crofs behind the two Eye- holes 5 the third3feparates it alfo crofs-way; near the beginning of the Back* bone. Ii the Surface of the upper part of the Skull may be obferv’d the figure of an Heart wel reprefented, feated in the middle thereof which hath its hafts near the Suture Coro nal,and carries its fharp end towards tbi hind-part of the Skull, which is fever’d b] the third Suture. There is alfo another great Suture, rouni; about the nethermoft lateral parts of th( Skull, by which it may be divided into twj bodies, an upper and lower. This Utter j made in the form of a turn’d back , goin j long wayes, hollow in the middle, and rci prefenting the fhape of a Culter , vvhici hath a kind of little wing on its fides, an; whofe point advances beneath the middlj of the Eyes. Its latter part defcenq as far as the bottoms of the Palate; where is hath in its lower part a poirl defcendin ( *9) i descending in the form of an ovtarifd t hillock. ij All the Sutures of the Skull are fo well ij united in their conjunction, and fo ftrongly connected, that ’tis very hard to diftinguiih ci- them, and yet more to feparate the parts of )'c them without breaking them , unlefs the attSkull be boyled in fome liquor. Sect. g. Of the Brain . 'T'He fubftance of a Vipers Brain is di- vided into five main Bodies, of which :he two firfi: are oblong , each of the fize ud md lhape of a grain of Succory-feed.T hey 4 re feated long* way es between the two twfeyes 5 and ’tis from thefe Bodies, that the er bIfaCtory Nerves do proceed. The three oin ither are in the middle part of the Skull, i it nd under that figure of the Heart , of hidvhich we have been fpeaking. Each of an hefe Bodies is near as big as a grain of the icilieed of Milium Sells , and reprefents almofi: i^hefliapeof a Pear, the point of which is late urned towards the fore-part of the Head, pic Two of thefe Bodies are feated in the up- nfr C s per r (20) per part long-wayes, and one on the fide o£ theothei 5 the third, which is a little lefs, is placed under the middle of the two , and may be call'd the Cerebellum, or little Brain, The Spinal Marrow feems to be the fame body with this laft, although it have a fe- pirate place m the hind-part of the Shull, 3c is of a fubftance fomewhat whiter and fofter than the Bodies, we have been juft now fpeaking of, and of the fize of a fmall grain of Wheat. It produces a Body of the fame fubftance, which extends it felf long-wayes, and paffing in a ftrait line! thorough all the Vertebra sor Joints of the Back- bone, terminates at the end of the Tayle. The Bodies of a Vipers Brain are cover’d with a coat, thick enough, and flicking fafi: enough to them, which may be called the Dura Mater : It is black, whence it hath hapned, that fome Authors, not taking the pains to look under this Tunicle, have af- firm'd , that Vipers Brains were black. Linder this Dura Mater, each Body of the Brain, feparately, hath alfo a little mem- brane involving it, which may be termed the Via Mater. There are obferved fome fmall interdices betwixt thefe Bodies, and; even (21) . (even in the Body of the Spinal Marrow, ‘ which might pafs for Ventricles : 'And I j doubt not, but that, if theSubjed were a little bigger, we might obferve in it mod ' of the confiderable parts, that are to be ' found in bigger Animals. Sect. a. i Of the Eyes , and their principal parts ’■) 05 alfo of thofe^that jcrve for Hearing . THe Eyes of Vipers are very quick, and their afped is exceedingly fixe and bold. They have their Nerves, Mufcles, Veins, Arteries, Apple, Chryftal- lin, Uvea, Cornea, Eye-lids, and the other parts, like enough to thofe of the Eyes of other Animals. The moft confiderable Nerves are the Qptick, which parting from behind both the Eyes, do meet together and conjoin, lateral- ly at the beginning of the Little Brain, and there make as it were the figure of an X, and opening themfelves after this conjum dion, they encompafs that little Body by the fides thereof, and render themfelves at, C 2 the (22 ) the beginning of the Spinal Marrow, which received them. T he (mallnefs of all the other parts be- ing fuch, as that it maketh their examinati- on difficult, and we having not been able to find any thing particular in them, I efteem, that as it would be very troublefome to make Refearches thereof, fo it would be to no purpofe, to make a defcription of them. The two upper Bodies of the Brain fend each from their lateral fore- part a fmali Nerve,which piercing the Skull,runs along the Temples, where it joins it felf to the Salival Glands (whereof we fliall fpeak hereafter ) and following them, it pafleth under theEye,whereitdividethitfelf into two branches, of which the chief inferts it felf into the Bone and the Conduit of the NoftrilSjto ferve for the Senfe of Hear- ing, and thelefTer defending towards the T eeth, called the Dog- teeth, it ends there, after it hath divided it felf into feveral branches. j E C ♦ «2 Of the Bones of the Head , that are u jointed to the Shrill, i, o N each upper fide of the middle of t that Heart, which is feen above in if the Skull, there is a little flat Bone, a mat- ter of a line and an half long , that is a firmly articulated to it, which following j and adhering to the fame fide of the Skull 5 as far as to its hind- part, becomes to be ar- 5 ticulated anew to another flat Bone,lon- j ger and ftronger , and forming there as Twere an Elbow. This latter Bone goeth 3 downwards, and is ftrongly jointed to the 5 inward end of the lower Jaw? in themid- f die of which articulation, the upper Jaw . terminates, and is there jointed, but not fo a firmly, becaufe it hath other articulations, which the lower hath not, Thefe Bones, j which are like Clavicles , ferve both for a fupport to the Jaws, and to open and flint them - and for this purpofe they are alfift- ed by the Nerves and Mufcles, which Na= ture hath provided them with. C 4 There (h) There is alfo at each advancing end of the Eyfc-hole a little flat Bone, being about a line and an half long, which is ftrongly articulated with the root of the Dog- tooth, and by its other end is al/o firmly jointed to the middle of the upper Jaw, as well to fupportir, as to make it advance together with the great Tooth, when it is railed to bite. The upper Jaw is divided in two, be- fore, and is feparated, by the griftly Bone, from the Nofe, where its two ends are arti- culated on each fide, Thefe two Jaws are much more inward than thofe below , and the great Teeth are feated without their rank and at their fide, tending outward, and do Serve them for a defence. They are made up, each of one only Bone, that is about fix lines long. The lower Jaw is alfo divided in two. Thefe Jaws are annexed, before , one to the other, by a Mufcle, which opens or fliuts them at the plealure of the Animal 5 and they have no other articulation but that, we have fpoken of about their in- ward end, viz . with the Clavicle coming down from the Skull, and with the inward end cf the upper Jaws, Each of thefe Jaws V C*5) Jaws is compofed of two Bones, articu- lated together towards the middle’of the Jaw 5 that which is before , 'embraces above and below that which is behind, and can bend it felf outward in this phce5when the Viper will bite,and is a little curved in- wards toward its extremity* and 5cis upon this Bone alone, that the lower Teeth are faftned. Sect. 6 . Of the Teeth. i. j; i oj )i . it i- r o , d i'e ; THe Opinions of the Antients have been very differing about the num- ber of the great Teeth of Vipers, and mo ft have held, that in this the Female exceed- ed the Male, and that the plurality of the great Teeth was the chief mark, whereby to diftinguifh her from him. I have been careful to inform my felf about it, and have taken pains to grovel with a great deal a pa- tience in the gums of innumerable Vipers 5 but all being well examined, I have not found, as to this point, any true difference of oneSexfrom the other, but fometimes more, fometimes lefs Teeth in one and fht other. ( (26) other. I have cafually met on each fide with tw'o great Teeth fixed , placed very near together, and on the fide of one an- other, *s well in Males, as Females *? but in moft of both Sexes I have found only one, fixed on each fide, cover’d, to two thirds of their height, with a Tunicle or Bag fuf- ficiently thick, fill’d with a yellowifh juyce, which is tranfparent and pretty fluid 5 and in this Veficle,in the midfl: of this juyce, and under the great and main Teeth, a dif- fering number of Teeth ill fet, fome longer than others, and all hooked, of which I have counted, in feveral Vipers, from two to five, fix and feven, on one and the fame fide, under the felf- fame Tooth, and in the fame Bag. Thefe great Teeth areon'y in the up- per part, ftanding on the fide, and without the Jaws of the Animal, where they are like Bulwarks. They are about two lines long, hooked, white, hollow, and diapha- nous throughout , as far as to their fliarp point, which is very fubtle and exceedingly piercing. T hey have many little Cavities towards their Root , in which the other Teeth are planted. Thefe Teeth com- monly remain lying along the Jaw , and O 7 ) their point appears not but at the mpment the Viper will bite 5 for then in raifeth them, and advanceth them jointly with the ; upper Ja^v, drawn by the Bone, which at f one end is articulated in the middle of it, and at the other, to the root of the great Tooth, The yellow liquor,contained in the Ve- iicle, ferveth not only to moiften the liga- ments, and to make them fit for the bend- ing of the T eeth, but alfo to nourifh them, and to make thofe grow, that are there as I ’twere in a Nurfery, and are, if we may fay fo, in expectation to ferve inftead of the many Teeth, whether thefe come to fail in | their force, or fall out of themfelves. All the Jaws, both upper and lower, are fortify’d with bent Teeth, that are hollow, pellucid and fharp, as the bigger Teeth, but that they are much fmaller. Their num- ber is uncertain enough, whether it be,thac Nature produces fometimes more, fome- times lefs of them , or that that finenefs | maketh them apt to break. There is little i difference, as to the number, in thofe above | from thofe below. Ordinarily there are eight Teeth in each Jaw, but at times I I helve found nine, ten, eleven in each. T hoft (28) that advance moft, are a little bigger thao Hhedeepeft 5 and juft as thofe below anfwer in formation to the Dog-teeth , that are above them, they have at the end of each fide one Tooth, that is a little bigger than all thofe of the other Jaws, and another, lefler, at the fide, at the end of the part bent inwards. There is a great difference in the Teeth and Jaws of Vipers, from thofe of Snakes : for /hefe have no Dog-teeth ; and although their Jaws are all divided in their foremoft part like as in Vipers, yet they exceed them in the number of Jaws, and in the number of T eeth 5 for, they have four Jaws above, and two below 5 two of thofe above are fituated 11 along and clofeto the rim of the Lip, and ferve for a defence to the two other Jaws, that are feated in the fame place w'here thofe in Vipers are. Befides, I have counted 13 Teeth in each exterior Jaw above, and as many in each of the Jaws below, and 20 in each fuperior inward Jaw 5 fo that I have counted of them to 92 Teeth in one Snake, and all thefe Teeth are bent, fine, hollow, white and tranfpa- rent, like thofe in Vipers, Sect. OS>) S E C T. 7* » i) Of the , Neryes , Veins, Arteries and Mufcles of the Head in general . ! THe chief Nerves in the Head of a Viper are, fiift, thofe of which we have fpoken, namely thofe of the Smell, the Sight and the Hearing. Befides, there are thofe of theTafte, that which may be call’d the fixth far vagumj which is after-” wards diftributed into all the vital and na- tural parts *, and thofe, which ifluing from the Spinal Marrow are carried though the whole habit of the Body. There are al- fo many Nerves, that go from the inferiour part of the Brain, and pafs through the Skull, but by reafon of their fubtility and finenefs, *tis hard to follow them to their infertion. There is yet another Nerve that is confi- derable, which proceeds from the Skull, behind that of Hearing, which leaves, in the fpace between, a fmall Apophyfis, or Pro- cefs,or Knot, in the Skull, ana which, de- fending along the Clavicle, runs upon the fuperiour Jaw, and is inferred in its middle* then Cs© ) then it goes on in the middle to its extre* mity, and diftributeth it felf into all che Teeth, fix’d there. The Head hath alfo its Veins and Arte- ries, which coming from the Liver and the Hearty diftribute themfelves there into an infinity of branches, by which all thofe parts are bedew’d. It is alfo provided of many Mufcks,at thefides and below the Skull3and about the Clavicles, and fupe- riour and inferiour Jaws,that ferve not only to fill up the Cavities of the Skull, and to cover the Bones that are articulated there, but to give motion to all the parts that need it: to which alfo the Nerves con- tribute their fhare. Sect. 8<» Of the Saliva! Glands of a Viper . THe Opinion of theAntients, That the feat of the Vipers poyfon was the Gallj and that from thence it afcended into the Gums , by vefTels odly enough fancied, hath feem’d to me too far from all probability to follow it. I therefore thought, that that particular did very well defer ve (30 deferve a ftridf enquiry, and that it. was of moment to difcover the Truth thereof. On the other fide, the curious Observations, made oti this Subjedl by Signor Rediy a Flo* 5 rentine Philofopher, whofe merit is known and efteem’d by all the Learn’d, Teemed to me, as to all tnofe that have Teen and ex- amin’d them, not onlyreaTonable and pof- lible, but I was altogether perTwaded of the candor and ability of that illuftrious perTon. Upon his Accompt and Relation, I never Tcrupled to tafte often of the gall of Vipers, as well as of the yellowilh li- quor, contained in the bags of the Gums ; and 1 have found in bo:h the Truth of whatlhe hath obferved thereof, namely a great bitternefs, and a great fharpnefs in the Gall; and the tafte of a or Spittle Tufficiently flat, and approaching enough to the tafte of the Oyle of Tweet Al- monds, in the yellow Liquor of the Gums. TheTe great differences of the qualities in the one from the other, made me believe that there was a great diverfity in the mat- ter of them, as well as in their Tour ce; and I believed at firft, following Signor Redl} that there might be Salival Vdfds in VV pers. (32) pers , a? there have been lately found in Man, and .divers other Animals? fo chat after many refearches, made with attention and patience enough , in many « Vipers Heads, I difcover’d at length fuch Glands , proper to form this juyce, and to convey it to the Gums > and after I was well perfwa- ded of it my felf, I fliew’d them to divers of thofe knowing Phyfitians , that had met at myHoufe the laft Year. Thefe perfons had a mind to fee with their own Eyes, and after they had well examin’d the parts which I fhew’d them, they not only found them true, but they there alfo faw a greater number of fmaller veftels, than had appear'd to me, of which fome , that are Arteries and Veins, pafs above the Glands , and others, that are Lymphedutls , run be- low : fo that they judged, that I could con- fidently affert and defcribe thefe Glands , which! call Salival, and which they had acknowledged together with me ? though Signor Red i durft not fpeak fofttwely of them, becaufe he had not difcover’d them, neither had they been defcribed by any Author of their knowledge , nor by any one of mine. Thefe (33) Thefe Glands are found in all the Heads of Vipers, both Males and Females $ they are feated on both fides, and joining to the Skull, in .the hind-part of each round of the Eyes, and at the fame height with them. T here are many fmall ones join’d . together, which may be call’d Conglomerate which areeafily diftinguifliable by their form and colour, which is different from the Mufcles, neighbouring to them, and of which there is one , that may be call’d Temporal^ which in part covers them by its extremity. This heap of Glands appears there of the bignefs of the neigh- bouring Eye,and extending it felf in length, continues its progrefs in the Orbire of the Eye, below, and in part behind the Eye. Each Gland hath its little Lymphatique Veffel, which parts from it as from a little Teat, and goes difgorging it felf into a greater Veffel, that runs all along and un- der thefeG/Wj, and paffeth into the Ve- fide of the Gum, and terminates in the midftof the Articulation, which the root of thegreat Teeth maketh with the advan- ]V cing corner of the faid Orbite, and with the little Bone, whi£h by its other end is articu- lated in the middle of the upper Jaw. This D principal i (34) principarvdTel, which, being confidered alone, is very little in appearance, but is not fo in effed:, feing it receives the dif- charge of all the fmall veflfels, t'hat come from each Gland, empties it felf into the Bag of the Gums, and carries thither that Salival Juyce , which may have qualities approaching to thofeof the Saliva or Spi* tie of man, or of the foam or drivel of di< vers other Animals. The Nerve, which ferves in the No- Brils for the faculty of Hearing , runs fo; fome fpace along thefe Glands , which ar< alfo,as I have already faid,lmal Veins am Arteries. But having well pconfidered the fub j ftance, quality, and fituation of thefi Glands , we judged their formation not t(| be in vain 5 but that their Ufe, in all like lyhood , was to receive the humiditie j both of the Brain , the Eyes , and th< neighbouring parts ; and that their dif charge was very convenient and even ver| neceffary to the parts, which receive tha liquor, as well for moiftening the ligament of the great Teeth, and to keep them iij a condition of bending, atfuch timewhei the Viper will bite, and to increafe th| Teeth (35) Teeth, which Nature hath made and fe£ In the midft of this Juyce. * For the reft, examining and rafting the ^ Glands as well as the Juyce, we found a h Tafte altogether like that of the Gums, 5 vhich Signor Redi hath defcribed, namely 'tyery near the tafteof the Oyle of Al- Pjnonds, without any bitternefs, though it ^ eave, a while after, a little acrimony in the nouth3fuch as may be difcerned in all kind ,Jl)f Spitle. & As to the fmall Glands , which Signor ledi hath obferved at the bottom of the lC!/efides that contain this Juyce, I can ay, that I have with great care and dili- “ ;ence fearched them, and that, ’tis true, = have there found the appearances of t Hands, but having opened them, I faw no- thing in them but fmall teeth which were ti< iftned there, and are of the number of i hofe, which I have called Expeffavts , di 'ithout finding any thing of a Glandular M ature there, nor that did, intheleaft.ap h roach to the fhape, fubftance or qualities ■“If the Glands , which I have been defer i- “! ing. h The Viper is not the onely among Ser- .. t ents,that hath Salival Glands 5 for I have D 2 alfo ( 3&) alfo found of them in the Head of Snakes, which Glands were heaped together long« wayesj and fcituated near each outwarc upper Jaw, ferving them for a defence, ii a manner, as the Dog-teeth do to Vipers. T efe confiderations, fupported by ma ny Experiments, made by u ,and to be re- lated hereafter have induced me to cal thefe Glands Salival , and to aferibe t< them the very fource of that yellow Li quor, which hath been fo much decryed and with-all fo little known , and is no thing elfe, but a pure and very innocen Spittle. I hope, that thofe, who fhali tak the pains of carefully examining, after me thefe Glands ^ and this juyc of the Gum; will not flick to give me their fuffrages, CHAF 0?) CHAP. IV. Of the other Hones of a VIPER, and the prin~ cipalcPartsi thence depend - ing. THe great number of Bones, which reft in the Body of a Viper after thofeof the Head, confifts only in the Vertebras or Joints of the Back-bone, and the Ribs, Thefe joints begin at the hind-part of the Skull , to which the firft is articulated 5 the other are ranged confecutively , ftrongly joined to one another, and they continue to the end of the Tayle. Every Viper, both Male and Female, hath an hundred and forty five Vertebras from the end of the Head to the beginning of the Tayl -,and T o hundred . and fourfcore and ten Ribs, which is the 1 double number of the Vertebras ; to each of which there are articulated two Ribs, one to each fide, which are bent, and do D 3 embrace (33) embrace the vital and natural parts of a Vi- per, and each point whereof Vendevoufes at one of the ends of the great Scale under the belly, which is fit for both; fo that' there are as many great Scales under the belly, from the end of the Head unto the begin- ning of the Tayle, as there are Vertebra' s, contorted by their two Ribs: Befides that, there are twenty five Vertebras from the beginning of the Tayle to the end there- of; and thofe Vertebra’s have not any Ribs, but, inffead thereof,litt!e JpopbyfeSj or Pre- cedes, which leffen in their magnitude , as the Vertebra's do, tending towards the ex- tremity of the Tayle. There are four great Mufdes, very firm and very long , which take their origine from the hind-partof the Head, and de- fcend,two of them on each fide of the Sp nal Proceffes, one joining to the Spine, and the other to the fide and a little below the firff, which it accompanies all along un- *o the end of the Tayle. There are alfo two great Mufdes of the like length,which are fa fin’d to the inferiour part of the Ver - tebrd s,and accompany them from one end to the other, as well as the fuperiour ones. We alfo obfeive, on each fide., as many in- tercofial (.&) tereoftal Mufcles, as there any Vertebras , ferving for the fame ufe,thit rhofe of other Animals do, which fever theRibbs from the place of their root unto (heir point . All thefe Mdfcles are alfo accompanied with n- veins and arteries, as well as thegreateft. CHAPT. C4o) i CHAP. V. Of the other Internal parts of a Viper. Of the Tongue, THe Tongue, which the Viper darts out and draws in often and very quick, prefents her felf firft of all. She is placed between the two Jaws below) and compofed of two Bodies, flefhy, long and roundilh, and terminating in very (harp and flexible points. Thefe two Bodies are contiguous, and adhere to one another all along, from the place of their root as far as to the two third parts of their length. The inward half of thefe Bodies is of the colour of flefh, but theo- ther half, I mean that which is often thruft out, is of colour blackifh. The Tongue may be, in all, an inch and an half long8 Its root begins half an inch lowe] (40 lower than the bottom of the TJiroatf and ’tis firmly annex’d , below the Neck, to two tendinous bodies, which are two or three lines long. There are feme Vipers, whofe Tongues have three points,^nd fotne alfo, that have four. Thefe points, though often darted out, prick not, nor hurt any body 5 though perhaps they may frighten the ignorant. They chiefly ferve Vipers to catch thefe fmall creatures, which they have a mind to devour. The Tongue is envelop'd by a kind of (heath from one end to the other* Sect. 2. Of the Wind-pipe and the Lungs. *T*He Wind-pipe hath its beginning at the A entrance of the Throat, where it pre- fents a hole in an Oval, raifed on high, and having as ’twere a little beak in its lower parr. It is compofed, at its entrance, of many griftly rings, joyned to one another - which continue about the length of a good inch, and fall into the right fide of ••the Vi- per, where they meet with the Lungs 5 and from that place you fee no more but the half (■(4*5 half rings turn’d upfide down, which be* ing joyned on both fides to the membrans, that depend from the Lungs, and which are annexed to it below from one end to the other, being aflifted by the faid" Lungs, ferve for Refpiration , and continue their rank and their connexion, as far as to the fourth part of the Liver, which lies under it 5 as well as the Heart. The Winde- pipe is in all eight or nine inches long; and at the place, where its half rings end, it is united with a membrane, which attradls and receives the Air, as far as to the begin- ning of the inteftins, where it forms, as it were, a roundifh bottom of a fack. The Lungs , being joyn’d to the Wind- pipe, and making with it one Body, are confequently fituate, as it, on the right fide. T hey begin, where the whole rings of the Winde-pipe do end. They are made in the form of a Net ; they have no Lobes at all 5 they are red, very clear and very vivid, of a fubflance fine enough, fuf- ficiently tranfparent and alitlerough.They are faftned by Membrans to the upper part of the%nperfe<5t rings*, being feven or eight inches Tong, and about one inch broad; and all over embroidered with veins and arte- ries. SECT* (43) Sect. 3. ^ * ' Of the Heart , and the Liver . THe Heart and the Liver are alfo fea- red on the right fide of the Viper- and before the Heart there is, about the third part of an inch, a little flelhy and flat- i tifh body, of the bignefs of a little pea, which is filled with water} this little body is placed under the Lungs as well as the Heart and the Liver, and is fufpended by the fame membrans , which fupport it : it may be taken for a kind of Thymus or ker- nel, and may ferve for the fame ufes. The Heart is feated about four or five inches below the beginning of the Lungs 5 of the bignefs of a fmall beane : it is fome- whatlong, flelhy, and encompafted with its pericardium^ which confifts of a fufficient- ly thick tunicle. It hath two Ventricles, one on the right, the other on the left fide r it alfo hath two apertures. The Blood, which comes from the vena cava , enters into the right ventricle, and being pafied into xbe left, ifiiies thence by the Aorta , y?hich prefently is divided into two great branches, (w) branches, one of which afcends into the upperparts, and the ocher, parting below the Oefofbagus or Wefand, and taking irs way Hoping, Tubdivideth it felf aft.erwards into many other branches, which fpread themfelves and are carried to all the parts, to the very end of the Tayle. The Liver is a flelhy part, of colour red- brown, feated half an inch beneath the Heart, and fupported by the fame mem- brans: its length and breadth are unequal enough, but the greateft Livers, I have feen, are five or fix inches long, and half an inch large. It confifts of two great lobes of ^which the right defcends a good inch lower then the left. T hefe two lobes are bedew’d by the vena cavay which feems to feparate them all along into two bodies, and which makes even a reparation in their lower half, running in their interftice- and ferving to joyn them together in one body: The upper half of the Liver is continued, and cannot be divided but by cutting it afunder. The Trunk of the venacav* is divided into two branches in its upper part , of which the main and biggeft endeth in the Heart, and the other pafleth under the Lungs, (45) Langs, and from thence into the fuperiour parts. This Vein in its inferiour.part is di- ^rided into many branches, which defeend into allxhe parts below. A Viper is deftitute of a Z)UphrAgmey there being no folid traverfing tunicle at all, that fevers the vital parts from the natural : yet it may be faid that that fine tunicle, which depends from the Wind- pipe and theLungs,and goestdown towards the Inteftins, and there forms, as ’twere, the fhape of afack-bottom, may infome manner peform the fundion thereof. sect; (40 I « •c Sect. ^ Of the Gall^and the P ancreasy which the Antients called the Spleen. THe Bladder of Gall is fituate an inch below the Liver, and on the fide of the bottom of the Stomack, and it leans to the left fide. It is almoft of the ihape and bignefs of a fmall Bean lying fter. The Gall is very green} its tafte very bit-> ter and lharp 5 its confidence approaching to that of a Syrup not much boyled. I have found in the Bladder of Gall but one out-let by a fmall veflel, which ifiuing from the inward fide of its upper part, is bent from its origine, and defending, and adhering, even in its beginning, to the in- ternal part of this Bladder, is afterwards di- vided into two branches, of which the principal and dire&eft, palling through that Body ( which the Antients have taken for the Spleen) runs into the Inteftin, which receives it 5 and the other lelfer branch, turning about, feems to remount to the Liver, but dividing itfelf into many fmall branches, becomes fo indifcernablej than it cannot be iollowed any longer. It (47) It is not here, that I will refute the opi- nion of the Antients concerning the Veno- mous quality they have afcribed to the 1 GalU Heave that for another place, where I fhall endeavour to maintain the Balfa- i mique quality of this Joyce, and fhew, that i ’tis free from all kind of poyfon. The Pancreas or Sweet-bread, which all ; Authors have called the Spleen, is placed : near and a very little below the Gall, and on the right fide of the V iper. It is of the . bignefs of a good Pea, of a feemingly flefhy fubftance, but indeed Glandular. Confi- dering its fituation (which is dofe to the bottom of the Stomach and towards the entry of the Guts) together with its ker- nelly fubftance, it maketh me believe, that 'tis rather a Pancreas than a Spleen i but yet I leave the decifion of it to thofe, who fhall take the pains to examine it. I SECT, ' (48) Sect. Of the Oefophagns or Weafand ' and the Stomach . THe otfofhagtis takes its beginning at the bottom of the Throat ; its fituation is on the left fide, and its paflage direftly on the fide of the Lungs and the Liver, as far as to its union with the orifice of the Stomach. It is made up of one onely membrane, very foft,and eafy to be exten- ded, and which may be fwell’d even to the bignefs of two inches. It is this part, which firft receives the animals, the Viper hath killed with its great teeth, and fwallowed whole, it being proper for that purpofe,both by its large capacity, and by its length3| which is of a good foot. The Stomack, which is next, is as 'twerei fowed at its bottom, and feems to make but one Body with the Oefophagut 5 but| yet is much thicker, and compofed of two ftrong coats, one within the other, and flicking to one another. The thicknefs of its coats makes, that it cannot be fwell’d £© the fame bignefs .with the oefophagut ?j 1 4S0 or it cannot much exceed the bignefso£* n inch. It is between three anti, tour in- ih$S long 5 its orifice is fufficiently large., s well as> its middle, but the bottom of £ grows freighter, and is commonly very lofe and firm, not opening it felf, but to je&its excrements into the Gutts. Its. nternal tunicle is full of rugofities when ids empty, and in it there are very often 5 aund little worms of the length and thick- i efs of (mall pins. The Stomach is feated !n the left fide, as the Oe fop hag us *, but, he bottom of it is turned towards the iiddle of the Body, to empty itfelf into :fijhe firftGut. T he length and capacicyof the Oefophi - and the largenefs of the entry of the tl tomach, are very well accommodated to :h he*.flature of the Viper, which fends no-* ding chew’d to the Stomach, but (wallows ;n Lnlmals whole for its food^and when home rk( f them happen to be longer than the )il epth of the Stomach, part ot them ftayes wo It the Oefopbagus, untill the Stomach have imxtra&ed and fent away the juyce of the icfiarts devoured, which it coal • hold-, after ’I'hich it receives thofe that flay’d in the tfopbagus. But this requires agoodfpaee' tot E of (50) of time', in regard that the Stomach is not clofed, and cannot gather any con- fiderable heat to make a fpeedy dige«| flion. Sect. 6. below . THE inteftins of Vipers are fituate ir the midft of the Body , under th< Back-bone, and immediately after th< bottom of the Stomach. I have onelj obferved three of them, of which the firli and narroweft may be called the Duode- num ; the fecond, which is larger^and ful of many windings, may be called the Co lon'-y and the third and laft, the Return which alfo is very large and very {freight and hath its aperture below and near thi beginning of the tayle, at which the Ex crements pafs away. Thefe Inteftins have, at their fides, Te\ I Idles , together with their veftelsj botho, th< (Si) the Males and Females, and the tv^o bo- dies of the Matrix of the latter, which we iifall fpeak of hereafter. They contain alfo xhzktinpmth. their vefiels-Avhich part from thence, and are ar companied of their veins and arteries, as alfo all vtflels ferving for ge= aeration ^ and the Inttftins themfelves arf not deftitute of them. The kidneys are placed below the Teflh :les 5 they are made up of many glandti- ous bodies, contiguous,and ranged long- vayes, one after another. They are com- aonly two inches and an half long, and wo 1 nes snd an half large upon the round, /hich is a little flat. They are of a pale-red olour. T he right kidney is alwayes feated igher than the lower in both fexes. T hey ave alfo their Ureters , at which they dif- ;harge theferofities near the extremity of 1 lelnteftin. 1 Allthe Inteftins, theTeflicIes, and the f dneys are covered with a very white and ury ioft Fat , which being melted hath ie form of Oyle. At times alfo there is 1 en in fome Vipers a little Fat about the eart, the Lungs, the Liver, but efpecial- clofe to the Gall, and near that parr5 ;trhieh fome take for the Spleen^ and others E % for rf _ » ( 5* ) for the Venerea. All thefe parts are wrap- ped about with a ftrong Coat, that is firm- ly faftned to the extremities of the Ribbs,5 which might pafs for ihtEpiploon^i theFat wertjoynedtoit: butastne V’per, which is a kind of Serpent, pafieth not but among the imperfed animals, I (hall not determine the name of this Tunique, to which the more Intelligent may give what name they (hall think moft proper. CHAP CHAPT. VI. Of the parts of Vipers , that: ferve for generation , ; r Sect. x. Of the Parts of the Male , r 8 aHE Male hath two Tefticles, which J. are fomewhat long and ioundilh,and ' (liai pen a little toward both ends. Their :olour is white, and their fubftance glandu- ar .Their length is unequal, the right being ongerby an inch, than the left, and this , lfo fomewhat lefs in thicknefs, They are lot thicker than the quill of the wing >f a great Capon. Their fituationisdiffe- ent-,for>the right begins near and beneath he Gall, whereas the left begins about ight lines lower than the right. They are oth fufpended in their upper part by two :rong membrans, coming from below the E 3 Gall, Gall, apd are ordinarily covered with fat, which maketh them hardly difcernable,by reafon of the likenefs of colour they haveJ with this fat. From themidft of each of thefeTefti- des, from the inward part, one may fee if- fue forth a little Body, long and flender.fo- lid enough, and even fomewhat whiter than the fubftance of the Tefticles, which de- fcends, and is fafined to them all along as far as to their lower end. It may be called the Epididymis . There appears at the end of each, the beginning of a fmall ftrad- lingvtfTel, that may be called fpe rmatique becaufeof its office 5 which is a little flat, very white, and fhining enough, and corm monly filled with feed, having the form of a milky juyce. ThisvefTel is Efficiently delicate, and winds in its paffage, after the lhape'ofm3ny Ss joyned together, very pleafant to behold. From thence it de- fends between the Inteftin and the kid- ney, whoteUreter it follows unto the hole of t e laft Gut, at which the Excrements pafs away. It is aifo accompanied of veins and arteries from one end to the other, a; well as theTefhcIes, anditceafeth to b< wind j jg a little before it coines to the aper- (S5 J ture of the Gut. Each ofthefe twc? fper- matique veftels comes to rendevoufe at its [proper receptacle of feed} of which there Jare two,* that may be called Par abates , which are like white kernels, each of the i length, bignefs and fhape of a grain of Car - 1 daus bencdittut feed. Thefe kernels are I feated longways below and between the two natural parts: they are always full of I I milky juyce, and altogether like that of I :he fpermatique veftels, juft now defcribed: ' ind tofurnifh for ejaculation at the time of ‘ :he Coitus , they tranfmit the feed, which ! :hey contain, into the ejaculatory pipes of ■ :he two natural parts, neighboring to them . I I may fay on this occasion, that thofe vho have taken thefe two Confervatories )f feed for other Tefticles, have much de- ' :eived themfelves in the opinion, they lave entertained, that, there being two na- ; :ural parts, there muft alfo be for each of ; hem two tefticles : But their fubftance be- ng quite different from the true tefticles, ! >y us defcribed, and their office beiog to eceive, and not to form, we do not ac- knowledge them but for Parajlates ? L vhich by little and little receive the ! >eed,fent thither by the Tefticles, and re- fer ve (50 ferve.it, and keep it ready for the time of copulation-, and to perform that in a mo- ment, and feafonably, what the fperma- tiqne Veflels would not be able to execute jib foon,nor fo well,becaufe of their length and windings. The Male hath two Penes's altogether alike, which being pulled out are each as long as the Taylcfthe animal. Their ori- gine cometh from the extremity of the Tayle, under which they are feated all along, the one by the other. They go in-' creafing in bignels, as the Tayle does$ ai the beginning of which they end, and they have their iffue near and at the fide of one another, and clofe to the opening of the |nteftin, which maketh it] a manner theii fepnration, Each of thefe is compofed of two long and firtulous bodies, feated together one by the other, and which joyn towards the:] top inone body, which is environ- d witl: its prepuce, and hath its Mufcles Eretfors. as many other Animals have, thefe part: are within full of many rtings or pricks, ve- ry white and hard, and very fha.rp, fofer as that they have their (harp end variouflj turned 3 of which the bipnefs and thick C 27 > nets anfwers to the place of the qaturat part, where they are fet, fo that as the top is bigger and thicker, the faid flings are fo too i and they advance and appear noc but when the prepuce, which covers them, : fhrinks down at the time of thetanimals dif- pofition tothecoir. Thefe natural parts are ordinarily hid- den, and they fwell not, nor come forth, but for the coit 5 unlefs it be, that , the animal being taken, they be forced out by prefixing them •, for in that cafe one may fee them both come forth equally, each about the thicknefs of a date , and of the length: of two thirds thereof, and their top is alto- gether covered and quite befet with thefe pricks, like the skin of a Porcupin 5 and thefe flings retire and hide themfelves un- der the prepuce, when one ceafethto prefs them. The iffue of thefe two parts is environ’d with a very ftrong and thick Mufcle, to which the skin is firmly faftned, and infuch a manner that it is very difficult tofeparate it therefrom : which fame Mufcle ferwth alfo to open and fliuc the Intefrin, j/ S ECT, (S3) Sect. 2. (c Of the parts of the Female Viper th at fervefor Generation . Femal Viper hath two Tefticles, J§_ as the Male; but they are longer and bigger. They are featea onthefides and near the bottom of the two Bodies of the Matrix, and the right is higher than | the left, as'tisinMales. Their Subftance and colour alfo are very like them. The right is about one inch and an half long, and two lines and an half large t the left is fomething lefs. They ha^e their Efidi- tlywis, and their SpermatiquV vefTels, that convey the feed into the two Bodies of the Matrix, and which are much fhorter than thofe of the Males. Yet I obferve, that thefeTefticles appear not always fuch in all Females, efpecialiy in thofe that are emaci- ated, either by ficknefs, or by long keep- ing ; for, their Tefticles fhorten, {heighten, and^iy, like as in thofe, whofe Eggs are al- ready great? having obferv’d, that inthefe the Tefticles are much fhortned anddryed up, as alfo that they are defcended lower, al- (59) although the right be alwayes founjl high, er than the left. The Matrix begins in a body pretty thick,w,hich is compos’d of two ftrong tu- nicies, and which being feated above the inteftin, hath in the fame place its o ifice, which is large, and doth eafily dilate, to receive at one and the fame time, by the fame aperture, the two Penis's of the Male, in the Copulation. This Body is about the bignefs of a nail of a middle- fized finger, and is divided very near its ’ beginning into two fmall baggs open at 3 the bottom, and fram’d by Nature to re- ceive and embrace the two members of the Male in the coit. Their interiour coae is full of rugofities, and very hard, as is that of the whole body, which we have fpokenof; fo that fhe fuffers, and alfo feels pleafure from, the pricking of the little Bings of the Male’s members, without be- ing hurt thereby, although their points be veryfharp. The Matrix begins by thefe two little facks or baggs to be divided into two bo- ; dies, which afcend each on its fide along the kidneys, and betwixt them and the inteflins, as fair as to the bottom of the Sto- (6o) Stomach , where they are fufpended by ligaments, which come from about the Li- ver, being alfo fuftained , from fpace to fpace, by divers fmall ligaments, that come from the Back-bone. Thefe two bodies are compofed of two tunicles, that arefoft, thin, and tranfparent, being one within th’ other, T heir beginning is at the bot- tom of thofe two fmall bags, which em- brace the two members of the male, from whence they receive the feed each from its fide, to breed Eggs of it, and fo young Vipers, by the conjunction of their own feed, which the tefticles fend thither. T hefe two Bodies of the Matrix do ve- ry eafily dilate themfelves, that they may contain many young Vipers, unto the time of their perfection : notwithftanding the opinion of fome, who have affirm’d, that the Matrix of a Viper had but one onely body 5 that it was feated in the m idle, and #11 along the Back-bone, and that there were in it dilfinCt Bodies to hold the Eggs, #nd the young Vipers, which bodies were dependants of this Matrix. But, I believe, that the ground of their miftske hath been, in that thofe true bodies of the matrix, be- ing very delicat. and very tranfparent, efpe- cially (6i) dally when they are fwell’d and diftended j by (he Eggs, or the Vipers, by them con- > tained, have not pafled in their opinion for | true bodies of the Matrix , and that they i have taken for it the inteftins, which are . featfed in the middle, and appear pretty i bigg and thick, and feern to make but ■ one and the fame body with the firft thick body of the matrix , under which the be- i ginning erf the foil intelf in is fated and i rested. The Viper ’ is not the onely animal, thal i hath her matrix divided into two like Bo- dies, equally placed each on its fide , and along the Guts, which feparate them; for 1 have obferv’d the fame thing in many Snakes, which I have open’d purpofely to know the truth hereof. c*o c. * Sect. 3. Of the Generation and Production of young Vipers . BY the particular defcription, we have made of the parts ierving the Viper for generation, is is eafy to renounce all the Fables we finde in Books, concerning the copulation of Vipers, and theprodu- dion of the young Vipers: fo that l fhall not trouble the Reader any further with them, but onely intimate, That by the means of rhe insertion of both members of the Male into the two baggs of the Ma- trix 5 by the ejaculation of the Seed,made of them both together, into the two bo- dies of the faid Matrix , which are united at the bottom of the baggs 5 and by the concurrence of the Femals own feed which her tefticles emit at the time of the coit; the Eggs are firft formed in both the bo- dies of the Matrix : that each is covered by its little tunide 5 that the Eggs of each body of the Matrix are altogether wrap- ped up in one common membrane, com- monly C«3) i monly called the Ovarium 5 that all, is in* dofed in its proper body, the Matrix ; thae the Eggs there take their increaffcjthatthe ' young V.ipers are there formed and perfe&~ ed? that* thence they come forth one after [another by the fame paflage, where the feed of the Male went in5 and that they ar« produc’d alive, as many other animals, with* out any need of the intervention of the dam’s death. We can allure the truth of all thefe par- ticulars, having verified them by an accu® rate examination of all the parts, at feve® ! sl times, and upon a great number of fub® | je&s 5 and having feen the extenfion and | fwelling of thofe two bodies of the Matrix, sven at the time when the young Vipers ivere perfected and ready to come forth » indlaftly having feen the paflage free, by vhich they were to come abroad, and the , poung ones a&ually produced without any | danger to the Dam. We have noted, that the right body of :he Matrix of the Viper is ordinarily fuller j )f Eggs and young brood, than the left 5 that the number ofEggs is pretty unequal? :hat at times there are twenty or twenty 5ve,fometimes but half fo many j that the young (64) young Vipers take' their form and perfe * &icn in the Egg 5 that there they are fea- ted and entangled divers wayes, and after a very plealant manner 5 that tjiey have each within their Egg a kind of after-birth depending from their Navil,by which they draw their foou 5 that in coming abroad they train it alter them, and in part are en- compafted with it$ and that their Dam frees them thereof, and cleanfeth them by lick- ingfthem when they are born. But although we have, as exa&Iy as we could, defcribed all the inward and'outwarc parts of a Viper, both of a Male and Fe- male ? yet to the end that all may be the better underftood,we fliall addrefs the Rea- der to' the following Schemes, wherinhe may fee the fame parts, we have juft now defcribed represented and drawn to the life, together with their explication in the 7*4- blts accompanying them > hoping, that be will there find fijtisfa&ion. 7k C«S) . be Reader is de fired to take not lie , tbaf having on the Frontifpice of this Book reprefeMed two Vipers, ^ Male and a Fe- male 0 conjoined tempore coitus , and j there being in the exteriour part of their Body no ccnfiderable difference in the one from the other, but in their T style, of which the reprefentation may be feen feparately in the fecond Figure • I thought it nee die fs , to exhibit the whole Figure of a Male by it (elf ; and have contented my felf to have engraven the Female ' in the (late fie is at the time when (he produceth her young ones , which is that, which feemd to me the mo(i con ftder able for her txte>iour Figure. He will alfo fad no fault with the Si- tuation,which the \ iper isreprefent- ed in the Cutt, at the time when her young ' ones come forth, fince that befides the Sym- metry, which hath been there induflnoufj obferv d, it was alfo intended to (hew there- , in the parts , that feem'd very neceffa'j't# me, and that could not be reprefented e'fc - i! where * the EXPLICATION of what , repefented in the fir fi Scheme,- AAA, The Female Viper , bringin forth her young Vipers, exhibiting ti lowermod part of her Body *, where yc may fee the great Scales, on which creepeth. BB B B. Four young Vipers, each in or of rhecorneisofthe Cut, appearing wre, thed,and in the fame pofture and fituatio wherein we have feen them alive and reac to come forthj two of which appear wit! out cover, one cover’d with its Coat, ai the other having a piece of its After-bid depending from its Navel. C C CC. Four other young Vipers, wit in the round, which the Viper formetj one of which appears creeping, and eld of its Secundinei the other having it y depending from its Navel * - the thif coming forth, and training along with the Secundine- and the lad: wrap’d abq by it, and in the date, wherein ic was,wh ready to be born, Z> (67) X) D, A part of a Female Viper, ?epre~ imted open onder the belly iogg-wayes, nd turned upfide down, from the place of be Gall*, unto the Orifice of thz-Ma- rix* E. The Gall. F, The Pancreas or Sweet- bread, which >any have taken for the Spleen, 1 G. The bottom of the Stomach, j H. The beginning of thelnteftins. 1,1,1, The Eggs contain’d in the two Ddies of the Matrix, but being found in far greater plenty in the right, than the ft body. K. A part of thelaft Gut. L. The Orifice of the Matrix, and of le Gut, M M. The two little Baggs, which join i the beginning of the two bodies of the 'atrix, NN, A part of each of the Kid- :-ys. ' 1 ; 1 A> i r 'i V 3 fit (<58) ( The EXPLICATION of what is n- frefentcd in the fecond Scheme , A A. The firft half of the body of a Male Viper, flead, turn’d upfide down, and open under the belly from one end to the other, containing BB. The Wind-pipe. CC. The Lungs. D. The Thymus or Kernel, E. The Heart. F. The Liver. G. The great Vein, call’d Vena cava HH. The oefophagus or Weafand. /. The afcenaing branch of the Aorta Li The descending branch of the (am Artery. M. The Stomach. NN Theotherhalf of the Body, i ehe fame condition with the firft,' contain ing O. The bottom of the Stomach, P. The bladder of Gall. ^ The Pancreas^or, according to fomi ghe Spleen. ' &RA, The Inteftfas, Os>) S S. The Teftides, together witji their Epididjmis. TT. The Spermatick VefTels. rr, J he Kidneys. a a. The Tayle of a Male, to which are iinnext the parts that follow. bb. The two members of Generation, :s they come forth at the time of the Coit. c c, T he two FarajtateS) or Confervato- ies of the Seed. dd. The two Spermatique VefTels. | e e, ThetwoTefticles. //. The two Epididymes, m- The Guts- b h. T he two Kidneys. ii, The Tayle of a Female, to which re join’d the parts following. //. The Orifice of the Matrix, mm. The two fmall Baggs. nnnvt. The two bodies of the Ma~ i*. 5 eo. The two T eftides with their Epidi° ymeSj and Spermatique VefTels. pp. The Inteftins. qq. The two Kidneys. rr. A great part of the body of a j.izard, of the fame length and bignefs, it F 3 was (7°) wis vomited up by a Viper, many dayes af- ter this had been taken. s s. The reft of the Head, and the reft o: the Fore-legs of the Came Lizard, paft up a the fame time. 1 1. The Oefopbagw, that had contains the faid great part of the Lizard. tin. The Stomach, that had contain’c and by little and little extracted the juyci fubftance of the left of this Animal' body. The EXPLICATION ef what is o hibited in the third Scheme, A. A whole Sceleton of a Viper. B. T he Head having its Throat clofe reprefented with a part of its Neck. C. The Head having its > hroatin pa open,flead on its fide, and there prefer j ing the Salival Glands , together wi; their LymPh.4ick veilels , above the gre Teeth. D. The Head without Neck,reprefer: cd with the Throat open. E. Another Head withour Neck, m< open, and diftinftly (hewing all its inter parts that can be there reprefented , a whi (71) /hich may be eafily underflood in reading he places, where I (peak of them. ii| F. The whole Skull of a Viper. : G. The inferiour part of this feparatfid ikull, * H. The conglomerate S alival GlanA\ Jeprefented with their Ljmjthatick veflels,® ittle bigger than the natural, to make hem the better to be underfiood , and as ivell as their fmallnefs permits. I. T he fame Salival Glmds $ the two Eyes with their Optick Nerves 5 the five todies of the Brain, and that of the Spinal Marrow, adhering together, fever’d from he Crane, and reprefented by the face above. i X. The fame bodies joined together, re-’ )refented by the face below. M. Divers great Teeth,fome by them- ! elves, fome in their bag, others accompa- lied by the Teeth Exfyeffants, which are et beneath them in the fame bag. i\T. The upper Jaw articulated to a ‘mall bone, which by its other end is articu- lated to the root of the great Tooth, uj 0. The lower Jaw,, confiding of two bones, and articulated to the lower bone of ; the Clavicle bent like an Elbow, which de~ F 4 pends (?2 ) pends from the pofteriour lateral part of th Skull. P. The Lungs with the Wind-pipi without the body. <• JL The Heart in its Pericardium or in doling Membrane. R. The Liver feparated in two Lobe: by the Vena Cava . S. T he bladder of Gall, with the veffe that carrieth its juyce into the Inteftins. T. The Pancreas or Sweet* bread5 whicf fome take for the Spleen. F. The Inteftins, EXPERIMENTS (73) EX PERI M E.NTS * ABOUT VIPERS. CHAPT. I. The Biting of a Viper , bapned to a Alan , N the Month of June of the year 1668, I procured a great number of live Vipers, Males and Females, to put the de- fign in execution, I had pur- Ipofed to my felf 5 Which was, to know in truth all the good and all the evil, a Viper ivas capable of. I was nappy though in Jxciting the Curiofity of many intelligent ^erfons, and amongft others, of fome Phy- (74) Phyfitjans of my acquaintance J very knowing and fagacious, who were pleafed to take the pains of coming to my houfe every day, to affift in ^thefe experiments , and to impart to me t heir diredi ions. The firft Meeting of all proved a fad one by a furprifing mis-fortune. A certain Forrainer, drawn to fee our Experiments by his own curiofity, felt in his own per- fon, contrary to his expectation, a great pare of the grievous accidents, which may be caufed by Vipers, and furn fht us, fore againft our wills, with an Experiment, which was followed with circumftances too confiderable to be fuppreftedi and I thought my felf obliged to recite them firft of all, becaufe it was not onely the firft, but the onely, that hath furnifht us with more remarkable things, than all the reft. This Gentleman, of 25 years of age, had been by chance the day before at my houfe, when five or fix douzen of Vipers were brought thither. He would needs fee them immediately, and I, being defi- rous to fasrisfie his Curiofity, drew out ol the Veftel one of the Vipers. He was not contented to fee her, but took her in his hand. C 7? ) hand, and kept her there for about a great quarter of an hour,fufferng her to turn and Iwinde herfelf about his hand and arm, the Viper not fo much as offering to bite him.' Then he tyed her about her neck , and fo having hanged her, pulled off her skin,and emptied her of her Guts to examine them. I am allured, that he would have been foundly bitten at that time, if the Viper [ had been vexed 5 but not having been fo, ij and being pleafed to breath another air than that of the VefTel,where fhe had been long fhut in, fhe let herfelf be tyed, after which (lie could not do[that mifchief, which certainly fire would have done,if fhe had not Ibeen tyed. But this proved quite otherwife the next day-, for this ftranger being come again to ■ my houfe at the hour of the Affembly, he faw one of the Vipers upon the Table, which had been held a long while between Pincers, and was much angred. He would take her with his naked hand, though he J was earneffly warn’d to forbear, it being reprefented to him. that he had been too bold already the day before. He had no fooner taken her in his hand, but fhe turn’d f her head to bite him, and with one of her great (7<0 great bent teeth, fhelaid hold on the late- ral inward part of his right thumbe, a little above the'fituation of the nail. The prick- ing appear’d no more than that of a pin ; and it feem’d to us not deep, and on the furface we only faw a very (mail hole with a very little rednefs > fo that it was not dif- cernable but by its colour. There was not ufow^mx about this litle hole, any fign of that yellow liquor contain’d in the baggs about the great teeth, and which is wont to be fhed upon the wound, when a Viper biteth | deep* yet the pricking caufed fome pain to him at the very Hr ft, but the finger fwell’d not of it, no intumefcence appearing but fome hours after, as we (hall relate more amply In the fequel. It was found proper to fcarify the part wounded, and to make ftrong ligatures above the place bitten., both to ftop the effe&s of the Venom, and to difcharge the wounded part of the fame^ but the Patient oppofed thefe means, not believ- ing them neceftary 5 and he could very hardly be perfwaded to endure any fcarifi- cation; after which, he endured alfo an iron fpatule very hot and heated over and j over again, held very near to the prick 'e ( 77 ) place 5 which was done, to keep the pores open, and to fetch back and draw out Tome part of the poyfon: Mean while, we made :he Patient take two drachms of Theriaque in half a glafsof Wine. In lefs then half a quarter of an hour after the pricking, the patient felt fome debility, and call'd for a chair; he wax’d at the fame time very pale, and his pulfe was found very low, very quick, and even interrupted. Thefe accidents were fol- lowed by convulfive motions, and by a ftif- nefs of his whole body, and chiefly of his neck, and the mufcles of his head : he then alfo complain’d of a very great pain to- wards his Navil; and there appear’d a coldnefs in his extreme parts, and in the whole face, which was covered with little drops of cold fweat : his lips alfo were fwell’d, efpecially the lower. And find- ing himfelf urged by the pains about his Navil, andadifpofitiontogotoftool, he |rofe, and having voided fome excrements, fie vaniflf t away , and at the fame time vomited not only all the T heriaque he had taken, but all he had eaten at dinner, which was yet un-digefted* We made iiafte to fuccour him.and found him fo fee- C78) ble, that he was not able to goe up again to the chamber , whence he was come down. And in regard his pulfe continu- ed weak, low, quick, and unequal^ and his fwoundings frequent , as well as his cold fweats, it was thought feafonable to give him a drachm of Viper-powder mThcri - deal and Carduu x Beneditfus water, and to apply to him a great Plaifter of Theriaque upon the Heart and Stomach, but he Toon reje&ed what he had taken. One alfo came to give him home of the Orvietan , mixt with new powder of Vipers , but he vomited up that alfo, and defiled to be put upon a bed, and to have other help ad*- miniftred to him. During all which time, he neither wanted his fenfes, nor the ufe of reafon, notwithftanding all the feeble- nefs of his Body • and he had had great averfion to the Orvietan , having no faith at all in it, and not confenting to take it, but out ofrefped: to fome of thofe that were prefent, who had prefled it upon him. This vomiting not giving time to the remedies to convey and communicate their vertue to the noble parts, it was judged very proper to have recourfe to the Vola- tile- (79) tile Salt of Vipers , becaufe that being very volatile and exceeding fit to be quick- ly conveyed to all the parts, even the moil remote., the Patient might thence feel the cffeds with more fpeed and efficacy, than i from all the other groffer remedies, which having been re jeded as foon as they were taken, had not had time to be made *ffe~ dual by the flomach, nor to impart their vertue where need required.- We therefore caufed to be diflolv’d a drachm of this volatile Salt of Vipers in Theriacal and Cardnu* water , and gave him about a quart of this mixture-, he kept it a little while, and then call up a part of it, mingled with ftore of phlegme very vif- cous. We made him take another like quantity of the fame mixture, which he alfo kept for fome time, and then vomi- ted up, what might have remain’d of it in : his Stomach, and amongft it much phlegm. We continued to give him ftill more of the fame compoficion as faftas he vomi- ted it up 5 and there were alfo given him j feveral Clyfters,toappeafe the violent and 1 ftubborn pains, which he felt about his h Nayil. lips remained ftill fwolne, his pulfe s ’ ’ naught, 1 c_ I (8o) naught; and his fweat cold, as well as his faintings continued very long 5 but having perfifted in the ufe of the Volatil Salt of Vipers, his vomiting ceafed, and he kept the eighth do[e in his belly, which was gi- ven him about four hours after he received the mif chief: the fymptoms leffen’d from that time, the cold began little by little to retire, and gave place to the natural heat, which appeared fufficiently about five hours after the pricking • his pulfe retur* j ned, and was even and ftrong, but fome- what high. It was about ten of the clock at night, that the mod troublefome accidents dis- appear'd, the Patient was happy in his unhappfnefsjin being fpeedily and rational- ly fuccour’d. I left him not , before his mortal accidents had ceafed; and then he was carried to his lodgings, whether I ao* I companied him, and he was put to bed 5 and by the advice of thofe pe fons, that frequently vifited him curing his diftem* per , I made a mixture of one drachm of I Confection of Hyacinthe , and of as much , of the Confection of Alkermes , and of one ounce of Syrup of Limons, and of four 1 ounces of Cerditm-'mxsX) which was giv’n ) :m at three times, from three hours to iree hours. There were given him Ci- ons to fmell to, and from time' to time me {lice's of them fugred. He took good oths, and drank ptifan made with Scor- ,] wera,- roots, and the fhavings of Harts- Mn, mingled with Syrup of Limons, he fo drank fometimes a little wine, and lere was diffolved of the Confection of Ikermes , fometimes in his broth, fome- ,unes in his ptifane. This is a thing remarkable enough, that uring all the great accidents, his finger as not changed, and there appeared not iy fwelling upon it, but that began, hen thofe accidents ceafed. In the mean me, the pains about the navil continued, .liough they were infome little degree a- llited; which obliged the Phyfitians often D prefcribe him Clyfters, His belly was j little ftiff, but not fwclled *? his tongue jas whicifh,but not dry *, his eyes faint and ;an5 his countenance pale, and his lips pllfwelled. ij The fwelling of the finger extended it j , if that night over the whole hand* which pas often anointed with the Oyl of Scor- pions, compofedby MattbioluSy and mist G with (so wit'h the Queen of Uungaries witter, bi notwithftanding this anointing, the tuir part'd onto the arm the next day, with p; and rednefs, and advanced to the Eye. was thought fit to apply fomentatic made with the roots of Angelica , Im\ ratoria, Car Una, and Jriflolochia , and wi the tops of Scordhtm, Centaur turn y Won wood, St. Johns wort yCalamint, boyled White wine, and withal to continue t anointing with the faid Oyle of Scorpio among thefe fomentations. Although ti was done with great care, yet there appe; ed no great efted upon it ^ the Patient w fqueamiih, and once vomited up even I bioth; but this vomiting continued n< He alvvayes ufed the fame internal ande ternal remedies, and the fame food 5 tj although he found his other limbs ini good condition, and his pulfe very eqi and moderate, nor had any drought, he: or pain in the reft of his body, yet was ti of the Navil obftinates and the fwelli and the rednefs of the hand and arm fi increafed; and from the beginning of tj third day, it had feifed on the fhoulder the fame ftde, and defended to the an pir3upon the whole breaft,and all theneig bouri (83) outing parts, and even the whole region if the Liver, notwithftanding the continual ife of the fomentations, and the' Oyle of ::corpions4 o ii All thefe confiderations, joyned to the ot feafon, wherein we weie, made usap- irehendjleft the gangrene (hould ftrike to lofe parts, it was believed, that, fince le outward remedies which had been jud- ,ed moil expedient, had proved fuccefs- fs, recourfe muff be had to internal ones* A hich induced the Phyiitians to give him, ~" the evening of the third day, a drachm • the root of Contrary erva in powder, dif- lv’d in cordial waters, with as much con- dlion of Alkcrmcs: but wefavv no abate- entofthe rednefs, fwelling, or pain 5 on ie contrary, we obferv’d,that the fwelling em’d to feize on the left fide. After we had well examin’d all things, we und it very neceffary to return to the ufe ’ our firft inward remedy, which had uck the great ftroke,and had had a ma- jfeft good operation ; I mean, th zVoU~ ii Salt of Vipers. T his was in the morning \ the fourth day after the bitin?. So we live him half a drachm of that Salt,difToI* id in four ounces of Car dims water , and G 3- we (84) we order’d that he fliould be well coverec to make him fweat. This medicine di work according to our expectation and d< fire*, for the Patient not onely d/d fweat ; bundantly, but found a very confiderab! amendment in all the ill Symptoms th; had remain’d. His pain about the na^ was almoft not fenfibie *, the tumor of h Lips, and that, which was in the regie of the Liver, Breaft, and under the Am ('s pits, vanifht, and that of the fhou!der,Ar and Hand was much abated, as well as tl rednefs and pain. We thence judg’d,thatwe Ihould certai ly cure the reft $ and to compafs it,we ga< the next morning to our Patient a like dc of that Volatil Salt of Vipers, which ma him fweat again very largely 5 the pain j the Navil ceafed altogether 5 the fwi ling of thelboulder was wholly gone; a] that of the whole arm and hand was y much more abated, as well as the redwi and pain. And not to leave the cure ii perfect, though the patient found himf exceedingly amended, we gave him t next day another fuch dofe again, and t day following one more, whereby ti whole fwelling, all the rednefs, and all t P 't*s> tin of the arm, hand, and the finger it- If, were dlflipated 5 Meanwhile there las applyed to the finger a little plaifter |) cicatrize the incifions , that had been ,aae there, and which were healed three r four day es after. Which did not hin- erthe Patient to goe abroad, and to doe is bufinefs, as well as if he had never been tten by the Viper. Thofe that (hall read this Hiflory, and iamineall the circumftences of it, the fe= eral and furprifing accidents of the bi- - v ng of the Viper, which we faw, and the fedual operation of the remedies, em- toyed to remove them, will therein find nple matter to exercife their reafoning pon, and will foon judge, that we had rufe , accurately to inquire, as we have one, into all the parts of a Viper, to fcnow them well, and what they can doe 5 j> make a great number of Experiments !pon all its parts, and to apply ourfelves )the preparation of the excellent reme- ies, that may be drawn from the body of his Animal. The Extraordinary effedl of its Volatil lalt, in flopping and in overcoming, fir ft if all the Yenome, which fo violently ex- G 3 ercifed r (8S) 6rcifed its tyranny over the natural heat and all the noble parts, and which doubt lefs would have altogether triumphed ove them : the ndivity, penetration, ^and fore of the fame alt, going to find out th poyfon, and expelling it from the remo te(t parts of the body, where it hat fortified itfelf, and whence it endeavou red to regain the place it had loft, an where, in the mean time, it feem’d to de , (pifethe ordinary moft powerful remedies' All this, 1 fay, is fufficient to make it t be wondred at 5 and men will, doubtlef averr, that the ill, which Vipers are abl to caufe, and which every one may eafil avoide, is nothing in comparifon of fuc a remedy, as the fame Vipers can furnifl and which may ferve, not onely to he their bitings , but alfo to overcome man1 other obftinate difeafes, againft which th ordinary remedies perform nothing * nc to fpeak of many other good preparation made of' Vipers, which we intend to deferit hereafter, ; EXPii sk X h ) SXPE RIME NTS ! * Of she Biting of Vipers, upon other Animals. CHAPT. II. Experiments upon Dogs. rHE effedfs, that are furprifing, are wontfenfibly to touch the Minds of Men 5 and they are they , /hich excite the Curious to inquire uo the Caufe of them 5 and although bis do alwayes precede tbefe , yet it would ‘ot be known, and we fhould not fo much js be aware that it was, if the efifedts there- f did not firft appear. Being therefore 0 treat of the Biting of Vipers, we hope, : will not be thought amifs, if we begin vith the recitation of the Experiments, y the Examples of its efFedte. And not G 4 to (82) to be tedious to the Reader • having r< viewed all that hath been experimented ; my houfe, both the laft: and this year, fhall confine my felf to what I think d< fervcs moft: to be communicated,what fei veth moft to our purpofe, and what maj give moft fatisfadlion to the Curious. One of the moft confiderable Exper ments was madeon a Dog , which wasbii; ten by an angred Viper at the upper lipj T he dog was not much moved at it at firf Rut little by little grew fad , and his ja began to (well : a little while after he vc mited up the laft food he had taken, art dunged. Then fome bread, flefh, an water being offred him, he would touc none of it, he remain’d in a proftrate pc fture without complaining, the place <: the pricking waxed livid, and this livic nefs extended it fell to the neck, and s far as the bread, as did alfo the (welling At length he dyed, but not till fourt hours were p ft after the biting. His be’ ly appear’d not fwoln , and without W obferv’d nothing extraordinary but th tumour and lividnefs in the part prickh and thereabout. The Dog being opene after his death, we found in the troncc th tm the vena cava a little blond curdled, and we noted, that the reft of the bloud,in this liplace, in the heart, and every ivhere elfe, was of a dark colour, and of a very ill con- fluence, as if it were blood in part diflolv’d and corrupted. The Stomach appear’d of a darkifh colour, but the Mefentery and the Gutts were darker. We found no al- teration in the Heart, Liver, Lungs, nor the Spleen ; all thefe parts being of a very fine ’colour, and in their natural corj^ dition. , • ' The Biting of a Dog at the Ear. THis Dog howled from the time he felt the biting, and continued his howling for half an hour 5 then he ceafed to howl and to complain. The place prick’t wax’d livid, and fwell’d, as alfo did the Neighbouring parts. This dog vomited not, but voided fome excre- ments, which Teemed natural. He would neither eat nor drink, no more then the firft, and he foon dyed , having liv’d no longer then twenty four hours after he had had been bitten. We faw outwardly na2 thing un-common, but the lividnefs and fvvelling at the neigbpming part, and thereabout. But having opened him, we found all the inward parts in-thefame con- dition with thofe of the former dog. ’Tis true, we did not finde in this dog any £'o- nguhted bloody neither in the heartj not the vena, c avd, nor el fe where, but it Was of an obfcure colour, and of an odd confi- dence, and in a vifibledifpofition tocoa* 4r^te. + — "* 1 Another biting of a Dog, WE had a Dog bitten by an irritated Viper at the tip of his Nofe, the dog howled , when he felt himfelf bitten, but was foon appeafed , falling to lick the place prick’t, and to feratch it with his paws. He lay not down, but continu- ed for fome time in that exerdfe,and went up and downin the chamber. The place bitten became fomewhat black and blew, but fwell’d not 5 and a little while after the dog drank and eat , as if he had never beeri c 9*y (been bitten: The lividnefs difappeared little by little, and the Dog was as well as ever. 5, The Biting of a little dog . f| AYong Puppy, but 7. or8.dayes old, was bitten in the leg by an enraged Viper*, the dog began to howl asfoonashf: was bitten, and fo continued till he dyeai: which he did one hour after. The part pricked was fwelled and livid,as in the for- mer, and the animal being open’d, we l found nothing extraordinary in his body, 1 fave onely fome lividnefs in the Stomach and Gutts, and fome blackiflinefs and ill confidence in the bloud, as in the others; for all the other inward parts appear'd to us \ very found. Another biting of a Dog . E caufed alfo another Dog to be bitten under the Belly by another an° (S>0 angred Viper. He howled prefen tly, but that lafted not long. The place bitten fwelled much, and was very livid, and the tumor and lividnefs reached over all the natural parts; This Dog drank often, but would eat nothing, and was alwayes in this condition without growing woife. Two dayes after, to be more certain of the thing, wecaufed him to be bitten again, and that twice, near the (lime place, where fje had been bitten at fir ft. He again how- j Ted"much,and the fvvelling increas'd, and ex- tended it felf over the whole belly, as well as the black and blew colour* but it went no further > for the dog often licked his wounds-, and drank (tore of water, and at laftfell to eat, fo that without any other- remedy, but his tongue, all the fvvelling and blew colour vanifli’t in five or fix daies. And the dog was in the fame condition, he had been in before he was wounded. Another Dog bitten in the Tongue* rip His Dog gave us feme trouble? for X he defended himfelf a great while * be- (93) i before he would let out his Tongue • hut yet at laft he received therein a deep bite by an enraged Viper. At fitft'he howled extremely, fo as to be heard afar off, and To continued, tolling and tormenting him- fejf for half an hour together, and then dy- ed. We opened him alfo, and although the Heart, Liver, Lungs, and Spleen were in a very good condition, his tongue was exceedingly livid 5 his mefentery cover’d all over with black fpots, fome of which were blacker then lentils , under which i there was coagulated blood 5 the Sto- ! mach and Guts were alfo blacker than I thofe of all the others. The bloud very t: black, and beginning to coagulate in the r heart, and in the vena cava, being alro of [ the confidence of bloud curdled and cor- , rupted. This laft Experiment gave us great fa- tisfadion, informing us fully of the efifeds of the venomous biting of a Viper, and : (hewing us, that the poyfon goes not di- redlyto the noble parts, feeing we never obferv’d any alteration therein, but that ’tis chiefly the bloud it works upon, fince 1 it corrupts the fubftance thereof, coagu- > lateth it, or feparateth its parts, difturbs its . (P4 J its circulation 5 and at the fame time hin ders the communication of the Spirits through the whole b\)dy, depriving the noble parts of them, as well as ofr the pure bloud, which vas *orit to bedew therm and deftroying them indire&ly, by caufing this privation of Spirits and of the good liquor, whence depends their fubfi- ftence. We alfo found thereby that the pro- _^gr.efs of the venom of a Vipers biting prin- cipallydepends bom the place bitten, and from the bignefs of the veins or arteries, which the teeth hath lighted on. For, the tongue of the Dog being full of veins and arteries, ’tis no wonder , if the Venom, meeting with them, and finding in them a large way, very (horn and very free to tri- umph over the bitten animal, did foon produce its eflfedls, and caufed death much more fpeedily, than that, which met on- ly with fmall, {lender and winding branch- es, by which its way was ftraighter, more about, and longer ; though it failed not to do execution at laft 5 which it would have done fooner, if the paiTage had been freer. We may judge by the effedls of the ve- - (£$5 nom of the Vipers biting in thofe dogsi and efpecially in the laft, that the vo- miting, and the extreme pains about the Navil, which befell the Gentleman, above difcouried of, proceeded partly from the bloud which was coagulated or difpo- fed to coagulation in its courfe, and which could not freely circulate) and partly from this, that the fpirits, which accom- pany the bloud in the circulation, finding obftades in their paffage, endeavoured to make way for themfelves , and to that end, doing violence to the lateral parts in their way, caufed in thofe places the extreme pains, which the Patient felt there ; which might alfo be augmented by the bloud, that probably was coagu- lated out of the great vefTels, and might be difperfed in the form of fpots in the Mefentery , or elfewhere, juft as in the body of the Dog. We may conclude alfo, that the cold fweats, the convulfions and the faintings, wherewith the Patient was molefted, came from nothing elfe, but the defedt of the or- dinary commerce of the fpirits with the no- ble parts, and from the goodnefs and puri- ty of the bloud dedinated to bedew them. Con- C 96) Concerning the fuccefs of the remedies employed to cure the faid Gentleman, we ihall declare our thoughts thereof in the fe- quele of our Experiments, after , we fhall have given proofs fufficient to fupport them. As to the Dogs, that were cured by lick- ing the wound, I think that that was a good means to recall and draw back the venom > and I am much of their opinion, who believe, that if the perfon bitten, 01 fome friend for him, fliould for a good while and ftrongly fuck the wound, it would be cur’d, provided that the teeth of the Viper have not lighted upon fome great veffel, whereby the progrefsof the venom may prevail over the force of fuck- ing. I am alfo perfuaded,that thefe fuckedl and recall’d Spirits are incapable to an-i noy him who fucks them, partly becaufej they have been weakn’d by the a&ion they) have been upon, partly becaufe they are then deftitute of the inftruments propel to convey and fecond their aSion , to wit, the teeth of the Viper, CHAP,; (97) CH APT. II L, [XPE RIME NTS )f the Biting of Vipers , mach upon Pigeons and Pullets . rHE Experiments made upon thefe Animals have likewife been very ufeful to us, to know the effedh the Biting of Vipers, which have been iry like in both. We caufed a Pigeon and a Pullet to be ten by a vexed V iper, almoft at the fame lie, in the mod flelhy part, namely in at under the breaft. We fcon after ob“ ved in both a very thick and extraordi- ry beating of the heart, which went on 11 increafing, and in fuch a manner, that ith Pigeon and Pullet were dead in lefs en half an hour. We foon opened them, d found in both of them a little bloud lagulated in the heart and the vena ca- !,and all the reft of the bloud blackifh, fpofed to cMrdle, and as ’twere turn’d and H cor (98) corrupt 5 but the Heart, and Liver, and a the inward and outward parts of a ver good colour, and in a very good condit on, Cave that a little lividnefs appear’d upo the place bitten. We have frequently obferv’d the fare thing in many Pullets and Pigeons : But will not be amifs, here to relate the difft rent fuccefs in two Pigeons, we caufed t be bitten equally and in the fame place b - an angred Viper. One of them we mac to fwallow the weight of about half } crown of T heriack, a moment before it w; bitten, giving nothing to the other. Tf former being bitten, went to and fro in tf room, fo as not to fhew any fign of illnef but the latter was dead in lefs than a quai ter of an hour We afterwards caufed tf former to be bitten again in the leg ; ar; then it grew fick by little and little, ar dyed half an hour after. We found t! place of the fii ft pricking much more 1 vicl, then that of the Pigeon, which dye in a quarter of an hour ; and even moi then the place of the leg, which wasbii ten afterward. We judged, that the v< xed fpirits unable to penetrate into the be, dy, defended by the Theriaque, ha„ wrong! (99) vrought upon the outward part, and ound about the place bitten, where they tad coagulated the bloud, and caufed the tvidnefs^ whereas the like fpirits, having net with no refinance in the other Pigeon, lad gained and wrought upon the inner 'arts, having left and as ’twere defpifed le place, at which they wereenned. We fo wondred not, that the Theriaque, /hich had vigoroufly repulfed the Spirits ltioduc’d by the firft bite, could not re lift he latter but for half an hour, and that at iftit was forced to yield,in regard that the iumberofthe enemies was great, and be- fig weakn’d by the conflict had but now lidured, had not force enough to bear up gainft the new aflault of the latter. We did alfo prick feveral times, and jretty deep , dogs , pigeons and pullets, : ith the long teeth ot Vipers, fome pull’d ; at of the throat of dead ones, others out it : fuch as were alive. There was alfo one The company, who handling a dead vi- [trshead, had a mind to prick his Huger, id actually did fo, wiih one of the great c Meth,fo that the bloud iflfued. I alfo my ■ If thruft into my hand one of them, id fodeep,that apiece of it remain'd more H 2 than ( 100 ) than halfanhourinmyflefl]} but in all thi we found- not the lead appearance of ve noun, nor any ill, but fucfoas might be cau fed by the pricking of a Pin, or fome fuc thing. Wealfo deplum’d a Pigeon at the moi flefby place, and holding with both oi hands the jawes of a Viper open, and ms king her raife her great teeth, weprefle both the jawes at once againft that fled part, and caufed the teeth deeply toenti into it, and order’d the matter fo5that tl: yellow liquor of theGums had time enoug to pafs into the wounds, which the teei had made. We at the fame time faw3th; the bloud ifliied*out of the wounds, at mingled it felf with the yellow juyc< which remained there. We had then rej dy a little done, come from Portugal , whi> thofe of that Country call the Sval Stone^ being pretty black, fhining,roundiit and flat,about the bignefs'of a French piej of five Sols , but three times thicke which we prefently applyed to the pk bitten, which was cover’d with bloud, a with the yellow liquor! mingled the with. The done immediately was faftr to the wound, and we perceived nothir (IOI) ttraordinary in the Pigeon. We might ive believed, that this fafety of the Pige- 1 was due to the vertue of this Stone, hich they would allure us was infallible gainft the bitings or Vipe s and all kinds : Serpents, if we had not fome dayes be- >re tryed the like Stone upon a Pigeon, .tten in the fame place by an angry Viper, id if that wound had not been follow’d f the death of that Pigeon, a quarter of 1 hour after. We thought, this very ell deferved another experiment 5 and aving ftill the fame Stone by us, W’hich uiem’d to have faved the former pigeon, 1 id fuch another, which the Lord Ambaf- 'V idour of Spain had trufted his Phylitian ith, we by one and the fame enraged Vi- ercaufed to be bitten two Pigeons of e- :ual bignefs and flefhinefs, each in the ame place, well freed from its feathers, 'he bloud was feen upon both wounds $ ut there appear’d bur little of the yellow quor. We foon applyed both the Stones, :ne to each Pigeon 5 they prefently ftuck aft to the places pricked 5 but we law im- nediately in both a very high and thick Seating of the heart, which was follow’d >y the death of both Pigeons, which hap- H 3 ned ( 10 2 ) ned at one and the fame time, in lefs than a quarter of an hour. We had alfo a mind to know, whether I the Venom, that had fo much force upon the bloud, were alfo able to mak£ Tome ill' impreflion upon the noble or folid parts of ' the bitten animals, which parts appear’d to us very fair and very well conditioned. We gave alfo a Pigeon, dead of a Vipers' biting , to be eaten by a Cat that was very1 lean, which fed very greedily upon it * and1 the fame did afterwards eat many more,and Pullets alfo 5 upon which fhe grew very1 far, fo far was fhe from finding any incon- venience thereby. Moreover we had a defire to learn, whe- therone and the fame Viper was able tc kill by its hiring divers animals wounded, one prefentiy after another^ and whethei the Venom was exhauftible, fo that the animals, bitten laft, might be free from it! mifehievoufnefs. To know the trutf hereof, weeaufed to be bitten five Pige- ons one after another, by the fame Viper which we angred every time fhe was tc bite : All thefe Pigeons foon dyed ; and w< particularly obferved, that the laft bittei dyed fiift of all. And as to the Bloud anc C I03 ) id all the inward and outward parts, they rere in a manner alike with thofe of the igeon, that was bitten firft. The various Experiments, we have been [dating, do infeniibly oblige us to deliver , jur thoughts concealing the Venom of Vi- ers, and its operation. We think this to UK e a proper place to declareourfelves here, .id afterwards to employ the reft of our tiain experiments for the defence of what J’e fliall have advanced upon this Sub- it j 0; CHAP. IV. f the Venom of a Vipers Biting^ and its Operation. HE Antiens, prevented by the opinion , that there were very few parts in a Viper, that were ex- npt of poyfon, have but very {lightly ex- nin’d them. And as they efteemed that le Choller of the Viper did much con- H 4 tribute fi°4) tribute to the Venom, believing, that th< feat thereof was in the Gall, they then, alfo fetled that of the poyfon, and imagi ned,that the tafte of the Gall, very {harp and very bitter, was an argurrfent of it1 malignity, and that the veins and arte ries, which pafs near the Gall, and mas be followed as far as into the jawes, am appear the fame through the whole body above and below the Gall, were the pipes, which Nature had purpofeiy form’d t< carry the juyceof the Gall into the Gums and that it was that liquor, which caufe all the mortal Symptoms , and death ii felf. But they have not confidered, that th Choler of the Viper refideth not in th Gall 5 that the Galls of innumerable oth<| Animals have a tafte very approaching t that of a Viper , and yet are not vent mous; thtf the veins and arteries , whic pafs near the Gall , and feem to pai thence and extend unto the Gumms,an all the parts of the Body, are veftels def gned, onely to convey the blood, whic have not their origin in the Gall, an which cannot carry a juyce, which the could not receive : that there is not an tall (i°5) afte of Gail in all thofe imagined Veffels, 10 more than there is in the liquor of the }ums,nor in all the reft of the Body above he Gall: and that in the twhole Bladder if Gall there is but one veftel, that is any hing confiderable, though it be very {len- der, which iftuing, as we havefaid, from he internal fide of the upper part of the Sail, defcends ( fo far is it from afcend- ag) and difcharges it felf into the firft nteftine, according to the defcription we rave made of it, and conformably to the Figure, that may be feen in the Cut. But not to ftay upon principles fo lightly eftabliftft, and ill maintain’d, for- rfmuch as we have on our fide a great num- ber of Experiments, upon which we are grounded; We fay, That the Gall of a [Viper is not at all Venomous, but that on the contrary it contains a Vertue, that is Balfamick and cleanfing, and very proper for many good ufes ; that there is no Vef- ifel, which carries its juyce to the Vefides, that are about the great teeth-, that the ! yellow liquor, therein contain’d, is in all , i things very different from that of the Gall, excepting that they are both equally free from V enom j that that yellow liquor is ga- ther’d. f 10 6) cher’d, and form’d by the Salival Glands , above defcribed? that it is carried into thofe Veficles or Baggs by the Ljmphatick vefTels which part from thofe Glands 5 that this juyce is nothing but a pure &nd plain Saliva , of which we havejalready obfervd the ufe$ and that this juyce contributes nothing to the venomoufnefs of the Bi- ting 5 fince,being tailed and fwallowed (as we have often experimented ) it does no hurt neither to man nor beaftj andfince alfo, being put upon open wounds,and up- i on incifions made in the flefh, the fame be- j ing rubb’d therewith ,and mingled with the blond, it annoyes nothing at all : not- withftanding the judgment of a per- fon very intelligent, and particularly in this fubjedl of Vipers, wo affures to have j made a great number of Experiments ; which being contrary to ours, the great opi- nion we have of the abilities and the fince- ricy of that famous man, hath obliged us to employ the more care and exadtnefs,and to confirm ourfelves, by a very great num- ber of Experiments, which have alwayes betn found alike, in the truth, we here af- ferc ,and of which we fhall make evident and irrefragable proof. We (107.) We fay further, that there is no other nom in all the other parts of the Body 5 d more, that there is none evdn in the eat teeth, if the Viper be not alive, and e biting riot accompanied with vexed and raged Sprits. The hurt, which the sth doth, when the Viper biteth, con- Is chiefly in that it opens a door to the gred Spirits , without which irritation e Biting of the teeth is not mortal, and ightto be no further confider’d then for e deep and diredt wound, which a tooth, fliarp, fo long, and fo {lender, of any O'- er an mal whatfoever, might make. In hich circumftances, the great number of xperiments, by us made, hath ren- 1 ed us knowing; in regard that we ive obferved a quite manifeft diffe- nee in the Biting of a Viper angred , am that of a Viper, which was made bite by holding its jaws, and by pref- ag its great teeth into the body of me animal : becaufe this forc’d adtion rves rather to mike the Viper retain its ►hits, then to let them out> for which le freedom of the animal is neceflary, ie fpirits not being able to part, but the pagination and the Choler of the Viper mufl mi C 108 ; muft immediately precede and thruft them out. For this way of biting, by holding the jaws, and thrulting the teeth into Tome animal, although it emit more of the yel- low liquor upon the part bitten, ‘than the biting made by an angred Viper, left to it felf, is not followed by any finifter acci- dent, and is healed like a fimple wound: whereas the other is attended with death in cafe we want means of preventing it. The eflfeft therefore of the venom be ing altogether of a fpirituous nature, an( not working but according as the fpirit: are more or lefs iritated and pufh’t on and according as they finde more or lef free paflfage, we havereafon to impute i to the exafperated Spirits , having fount no footftep of it , neither real , nor appa| rent in all the vifible parts. But the bet; ter to maintain this ©ur affertion, we fhalj here give you our thoughts concerning th a&ion of the enraged Spirits. Thefe Spirits then, pufh’t on by th< choler, which the Viper had conceived finding the apertures, made by the Teeth follow their inclination, and as it is thei property, to advance and penetrate, the]! at the firft feek out all wayes for it, an ( IOp) hey advance more or lefs, according to the icility or difficulty , they meet with- thence it is, that the Biting is much more angerous , when the teeth light upon he greater vefiels, than when they only ight upon Fleflij or the little branches of he veins and Arteries. So chat the vex- d Spirits of a Viper, meeting with the >loud and Spirits contain’d in the vef- els of the bitten animal, puffi and prefs hem to make way for themfelves, and em- ^araffing the particles that compofe the ttoud, caufe there a coagulation or confu- ion, which difturbs the ordinary Circula- :ion, and by this means hinders the com- nunication of the Spirits, to the principal aarcs,from which depends their fub/ittence md life. And by reafon of this privation muft fuccumbe , either for having been attack’t in their fort by thefe vexed iSpirits and infe&ed by them, or rather be- caufe thefe fpirits of the Viper have made themfelves matters of the avenues, and ob- ftru&ed the paflages, by which the blood and the fpirits were communicated to them. We conclude therefore, that the ima- gination of the Viper being irritated by the 1; (Iio) the idea of revenge which Ihe had fram toherfelf, gives a certain motion to d Spirits which cannot be exprefted , an pufhes them violently, throughftbe nerv and theirfibres, towards the cavity of d teeth, as into a funnel; and that frot htence they are convey’d into the blood ( the animal, byt-he opening, which the , have made , there to produce all thoi effedls, of which we end eavour to give reafon. Others, more able than we,may pei haps carry their reafoning farther. For the reft, fome have thought, thj thofe enraged Spirits have in them a fecr< acidity, capable to coagulate the blou( and to hinder the Circulation, whence th mortall accidents proceed. But fince the this acidity may have been produced in thl| mafs of the Blood by its own parts, whic come to be diftolved and fevered, whe they are tainted by the venom, and fine corruption Aides into it , as into milk which fowreth and corrupteth of it felt without mixing any acid thing therewith it is not neceftary to fearch ior a coagu lating Acid in the Spirits of the Viper which cannot be perceived by thetaftett know the truth of its exiftence therein ant (in ) nd that the lefs,becaufe that Add may be laterally formed in the Bloud of the ani- nal bitten, without looking for it in the V'iper, as if it had come from thence. How-ever this be, we muft agree here- fn, that this irritation in the phanfy or in :he fpirits of the Viper is the main caufe ^f the activity and piercingnefs of its ve- nom, and that without it the biting would not produce fuch furprifing effe&s, as :hofe are, of which we have related fo ma- ay Examples. Nor is a viper the onely animal, whofe biting is mortal: Dogs, Wolves, and Men themfdves prove that 5 md not to go from our Subject, the biting >f Serpents, of which the Viper is a fpeci- fj, is more or lefs malign, according to :he nature of their fpirits, and especially iccording as they are angred and exafpe- rated. It feems, that Cleopatra was well intru- ded in this matter, when ihe, intending to till herfelf, commanded to be brought her two Afpes in a fruit-basket, and pricked them with a golden needle, which ihe pul- led out of her hair-drefs, and made her Ifelf be bitten immediately by one of thofe Afpes in the right arm, and by the other, in (H2) in her left breaft*, knowing (as a famous Author faith) that their natural fiq-cenefs and cruelty was not fufficient to execute well what fhe defired,and that it was need- ful, this pricking fhouldferve to "provoke thefpirits to bite to purpofe, and to ren- der the wound mortal i if at leaft it be with Orbiting, as it is with that of our Vipers, who alfo have this particular qua- lity , that not onely they are foonangred. but that in the very moment of the irrita- tion they bite with a ftrange fwiftnefs: which fpeaketh much the fubtlery andi impetuoufnefsof their fpirits, whence de- pends their ftrength and adivity. ,We ob- ferve alfo, that in diftilling Vipers bodies, we thence draw very fubtile and very pene- trating parts, and in much greater quanti- ty , in proportion , than from any other animal. In the mean time, the obfhcle, which thefe irritated fpirits of the Viper givetc the communication of the fpirits of the a-j nimal bitten, nor the coagulation, or con- fufion , which they caufe to the bloudy are not of that force, that fpecifique remedies fhould not matter them, and re-! ftoie the animal unto that Condition j where- (H3) /herein it was before it was wounded. Vhich is that, we fliall prove in the (e- uele by divers Experiments ; ‘where we iope to Ihew in what manner the remedies o overccTme the powerful a&ion of thofe inraged Spirits. If the yellovo j uyce, contain'd in the Veficles of the great teeth * made upon divers e, Animals . IN the defign, we had, well to try all things, wepurfuedour Experiments, and to be well allured of the quality of that yellow fliquor, which hath ieen believed fo dangerous , we caufed o be bitten, by fix angred Vipers , fe- CHAP. V. IXPE R.I MENTS 1 f 114) parately and feveral times by each oi them, a dice of bread, and fo much, thai it had well exhaufted and retain’d all th< yellow liquor, contained in the Gums 0: thefe lix Vipers : At the fame time w< gave this (lice of bread to a fading Dog to eat, who was no more inconveniencec thereby, than if he had eaten a piece o dry bread, that had imbibed nothing 0 this juyce. We have alfo often made divers Pullet: and Pigeons to fwallow pieces of bread dip ped in the fame liquor*, and we can allure1 that none of thefe animals had any mifchie thereupon. I my felf had thecuriofity to tafteo this juyce, which I have divers time done in the prefence of many perfons' without wafting my mouth before or af ter. And feveral Phyfitians alfo have ta fted of it themfelves,both to know the taft and to be aflfur’d of the harmlefsnefs there of 5 and ’tis certain, that they were n< more incommoded thereby than my felf. And becaufe it hath been believed, tha this juyce, being thus tailed and fwallow S>d by Men or other Animals, that had ni woum; C>'S) round nor Ulcer in their mouths, nor in heir ftomachs, was indeed harmlefs •, but ihat it was quite another thing, when it id accompany a Biting, and entred into he openings made by the teeth and that le fame being put upon anUIcer,a wound, r a limple excoriation made on the skin, as mortal, and failed not to produce its fe<5f , three or four hours after it had been at upon the wound; and that as well upon len, as all other forts of Animals, without Kception; we refolved alfo to make ma- / Experiments upon this account, lean therefore fay, in the firlt place , lat I have tailed of it my felf , at fuch tnes, when my mouth was excoria- d, upon which I obferved , that even y fpittle was a little ting’d with bloud , ithout having perceived any acrimony, extraordinary heat. We alfo made a ryal upon a Pigeon, which we wounded ider the wing, and in the leg in the fame oment of time; and we let into each ound fome of this yellow liquor, which e juft afore had drawn from the gums of vo enraged Vipers > then we re-joyned tie skin, well to inclofe the faid liquor, lid we bound both wounds over with a I % band, » (tiS) band, that nothing might run out. We can affine, that the Pigeon felt not any inconveniency from it, and that we even found upon the wound, made on the leg, a coagulated drop of the juyee, round, and of the fame colour, as we had put it therej and the bloud of the place dry ed, and that, foon after, both wounds were dryed up, anc heal’d of themfelves. We alfo made the like Experiment upor a Cat, wh ch we purpofely wounded it the leg, but he received no harm at all bj it. We have alfo often experimented i upon Pullets, and other Pigeons, but al wayes with the like fuccefs, andwithouj any offence to the Animals. The fame tryal hath been thrice madi at three feveral times, and even twice i: one day, upon a dog, whom we had woun ded on purpofe towards the bottom of th Ear, where he could not lick his wound and no mifchief at all followed upon it. We cannot but adde here an Experi ment of the mortal effedi of the enrage Spirits, without any intervention of th yellow liquor. We made a Viper fever; times to bite upon a flice of bread, by p; el fing every time its jaws againft the breac an (H7) ind we did this fo often; that not only that uyce was altogether exhaufted, but that :hebloud began to come out ofathe gums. . iut then we found alfo, that the teeth of :heViper were in a manner cover’d with the :rums of the bread, from the force of its having bitten at it, and that that had hin- ired them from making a deep entrance , md that; having half dop’d up the pores of :he tooth3a good part of theangred Spirits :ouId not come forth 5 fo that the death af the Pigeon could not follow fo faft, chough yet it hapned without any mixture Df the juyce which had been altogether emptied, I* CHAP. ( n8 } CHAPT. VI. ( EXPERIMENTS Of l the Gall y Eggs , Intejlins Head , and ! Blond of Vi - persuade upon divers Ariu mats. WE have made feveral Dogs anc Cats to fivallow the Galls of Vi pers, fometimes whole, fometimes burftj and diffolv’d in fome liquor, and fometime fix, fometimes ten, fometimes a dozer at a time s but they never found them feves ill after it, no more than the Pige ons and Puliets that had fwaliowed fomi of it, and which we had alfo wounded and afterwards rubbed with the Gall of Viper : for this Gall fetved them for a Bal fom, the wounds being the fooner cure< thereby; fo that we can juftly declare thi (n we made ; Pigeon to be bitten in the moil fleflv; part of its body, well freed of its feathers, and we cut, bruifed , and applyed to thi place bitten, the head of the fame Viper i that had wounded the Pigeon, and tool care to have it held upon it with a hand We alfo cut the head of a living Viper ,an< had it {lightly broyl’d , then bruis’d ant laid hot to the wound of another Pigeon which had been newly bitten in the farm place, to find, whether by the heat of tht en’d, and the fpirits more fee at liberty, ey would work better 5 but the fuccefs as not more beneficial for one Pigeon , an the other 5 for they both dyed half a liarter of an hour after they had beenbit- n > and their bodies being open’d, we und in them, what wedid in others, kill'd 1 Vipers, namely a blackilhblood,in pare , )agulated,and half corrupted, in the heart id the great veflels ; but we took notice, tat there was lefs black & blew about the ace bitten 5 which was perhaps all the fed, that thefe bruifed heads had pro- Heed, which had not been able to carry leir virtue any farther. ! It is not fo, ( to fay that on the by ) ith the pricking of a Scorpion^ which being uifed on the part flung , ferves for an .ntidote, andcureth: for which this rea- >n may be alledged, that the venom of iScorpion, not working fo briskly, and ot piercing with fo much quicknefs unto ie inward parts • the Spirits, that iflue om the bruifed Scorpion, have leifure to lake way for themfelves, and to go and nd out the venom, to joyn with it, and b make it come forth ; whereas the ve- nom (i*4) nom of the Viper goes immediately taint the mafs of the blood , and t parts which it bedewethi as was app rent in our Gentleman, who had no pai nor fwelling in his arm, but after all ti other accidents 5 contrary to theoperai on of the Scorpions Venom, which, b fore it paffeth further, að upon t) part prick’d by benumming, cold, and te fion, or by inflammation, and very gre pains ; as thofe Authors, that have wr ten thereof, and the perfons, that ha been prick’d by them, doe aflure. We have found very true, what Sign Redi hath faid of the efle&s of the Eflen of Tobacco upon Vipers; That,runnii their skin through with a thred dipp’d that eflfence, and leaving the thred int skin, the Viper dies in lefs than a qui ter of an hour , and becomes as hard brafs, but foon after fupple and plyar We have alfo try ed, that a little piece i Tobacco in the roll,held in the throat o; Viper, and the fraoak of Tobacco blov into its throat produce the like effeC but a little more flosvly ; and that bo do caufe convulfions , and extraordina contractions in a viper, which are atten < C U5) with death 5 and that, when all the her parts of the body are deprived of otion, the heart yet beats about half an >ur after; and that Tobacco, or its ef- ace, kills Snakes as well as Vipers.I know it, whether this will do with other ani- ials, fince,'having run a thred dipt in the [fence of Tobacco, into the skin of the ider-belly of a Dog, he immediately how- d very much, and continued fo to do for ilf a quarter; of an hour, running round, ien lying down, and then rifing again, and the mean time purging above and be- w, and voy ding excrements more liquid ien ordinarily. He would eat nothing, iid onely drunk now and then a little,after 'hich he vomited 5 but this was all the ouble he had, which infenfibly went a- ay, and foon after, without any other bcident. We have vexed a viper, and made it to ite another viper, which on purpofe we ield within the reach of its teeth. But al- houghihe open’d her throat, and put her blf into a pofture of biting, yet (he refrai- ed, and funk not her teeth deep into the •ody of the other 5 which .moved us to hruft them our felves by prefling her jaws; but {n6) but the bitten viper received no inconv nience from it. Yet we have obferve< that a viper which was made to fwallo fome of the efTence of T obacco, and whi< we yet held by the neck with pincers, d bite herfelf 5 but as the efTence alone fai ed not to kill her, fo there was no reafc to impute her death to this kind of bitin which was probably an effedi: of the coi vulfive motions caufed by the efTence Tobacco. We alfo pierced twice, in the day-ligf with the point of a pen-knife, the he^ of a live viper in the midftof the Brai from the top to the botom ; one thrt long-wayes, the other crofs-wayes, ai in fuch a manner, that the blood run c both above and below 5 but notwithftan ing , the viper, being let loofe , ere -j| about as before , and as if fhe had n< been wounded ; but fhe ftill loft bloud tj the wounds, and atlaft dyed at the end 1 an hour, but her heart did ftill beat ar continue to do fo two hours after. Whid Experiment fufficienly argues the er traordinary vivacity of the Spirits of tl viper. We have alfo put into aglafs-veflel, Irvin (i*7) ring viper,together with three live Scsr - ms , and there left them together four iyes ; but found them in the fame con- tion, in which they were, when we put lem in, though there be Authors that fare, that thefe Animals kill one ano- ler, being faut up together in one and le fame veffel. Mean time a viper will ill Scorpions, as well as Lizzards, and o- ler animals to devour them and feed upon (iem, but that Hie doth only, when fhe i$ j: liberty, and not when imprifon’d 5 for len faeceafeth to take food. \ We have likewife found the contrary > what Authors have affirm’d of the 7dffe’s attaching a Viper, and that the i>rmer would fix its fling into the head of le latter,and quitted her not, till fhe were CHAPT. VIII. ■g «P ^ V GENERAL REFLEXIONS ‘Upon all we have experimented . rH E great care and attention ufed by us in the Experiments, we have hitherto defcribed, and in thofe, b have thought fit to fupprefs, hath ade us to profit of all the occafions, that efented tnemfelves * and we have taken ?afure to obferve all the effe&s, that ve appeared to us , and carefully exa- ned them, and inquired into their cau- ; afterwards. that we might make our-re- xions thereon. The Biting of the Viper- which hapned the Gentleman Stranger, began to fur- h us with much matter s and at that tie we knew the Venom by its efFe&s, nich feem’d to proceed from a very flight -life, it being nothing but a little prick- k, and onely the cut of a tooth, which Is not any thing deep , and the ill of K 2 which C 13O which did notfeem to us increased by an] of the yellow liquor of the Gums, the in nocence of which was not yet fully knowi to us. In the mean time the mortal Ac cidents came on in great number, whili continued vomitings hinder’d the effe and thofe, that were err; pic M afterward? an^ in the intervals < its exhibition, were nothing, if we ma [ ITT- V 7 035) ' o fpeak,but Souldiers alfifting their Cap- ain ; fuch as the Conledtion of Alkermes ind of Hyacintbe, which were vgry proper o fortify the noble parts $ as alfo were the Jyrup of »Limons, and the Decodiion of Icorzonera, and the (havings of Ivory. The Slices of Citron, which might eem to fome by their acidity capable to Ugment the coagulation of the blood , vere not given till after the Volatile Salt lad ufed its force to diffipate it 5 and they erved to recover the Stomach, debilita- ed by continual vomiting, and by their cidnefs to reftore the loll appetite, and 0 help the concodlion of the aliments, and heir diflribution into the parts, that had eed of them. Befides that Citrons have fpecifique vertue againft the poyfon .of /ipers, if we will believe thofe Authors, hat have written of it 5 and is a great iend to the Heart and the other noble arts. The Anointing with the Oyle of Scor- ions of Matthiolus^ and with the water of he Queen of Hungary., made upon the well’d parts, and the application of Aiexi- erial fomentations, (hould in all appear- nce have ferv’d much5 but the fequele K 4 fbew’d ’• fij'O ' ' fhew’d, that there was nothing but th Volatile Salt, which could make thofe ai gry Spirits furrender, and fo \Vas to tali the honour of all. The Experiments, which we afterwar made upon a great number of differing / nimals, have given us a much great knowledg of the effedls of Vipers- poyfo: of the parts on which it works , and i thofe that feem to be exempt from i though at laft they do fuccumbe: 'VS1 have fet down the rnofl confiderable them, making fome reflexions on the t ting of fever'd Doggs,done by Viper but there remain’d ftill for us to difcourl Why and How the parts of Vipers, beir eaten, can flop and overcome the Veno of their biting. We fay therefore, that all the parts a Viper abound chiefly in Volatile Sal which in diftillation is found partly alone! partly in the form of a Spirit, which prope lyis nothing but a Salt diflblved in fon portion of Phlegme •, and partly in tl form of an Oyle, which alfo is but a $a mix’t among the undfuous part of a Vipt We fay alfo, that in the digeftioo, ma< in the Stomachy of the parts of a Vipe boc s ^ / (137) \ tody, that have been fwallowed dawn , his fame Volatile Salt , which they con- ain, is feparated, and afterwards diftribu- ed to all the parts that need them 5 efpe- :ially if .of thefe parts there have been wallow’d enow, to furnifhthat quantity, vhich is neceflary, of this Salt } and fo we leed not doubt , but that this Salt will Produce an effedt like that of the Volatile Salt, which was given to our Gentleman bitten 5 Unlefsit fhould be faid, that this Came Volatile Salt of thofe parts of a Vi- pers body, which, have been fwallowed , aeing of the fame nature with the irritated Spirits, attra&s them to it felf, and by this union changes their maligne quality, land fo tames them , that they have no power over the bitten Animal 5 which, in my opinion, is hard enough to conceive, and perhaps eftablifhed upon unfolid foun- dations. We hope, that among the many Expe- riments, thofe of the Five Pigeons, bit- ! ten one after another, by one and the fame Viper exafperated, and of which the laft bitten dyed firft of all, when the V iper was i moft vexed, and moft exhaufted of its yel- low liquorjand that of thePigeon bitten by '■a Vi- < (ttf) \ J Viper, which we had eaufed to bite feve- ral times into bread before, and that ever' fill bloudcame forth, to the end that the Juyee might be well emptied of it, and which notvvithftanding was followed by the death of the Pigeon j Thefe Experi-j roents, I fay , will prove on one hand ,J that the yellow liquor contributes no- thing to thepoyfon; and on the other, that thefe incenfed Spirits, affifted by the openings which the great Teeth had pre-j pared for them , are the foie and true! caufe thereof. The wound, made by a Viper not ve- xed, whofe jaws were held in, and whofe teeth were at the fame time thruft into the body of a Pigeon, which alfo was accom- panied with (tore of the yellow juyee, and | yet not attended with any ill accident • as alfo the pricking, made by the great teeth, pulled out of a live Viper, or by fuch , as ftuck yet in the head of a dead Viper, and did no hurt at all,do fufficient- Sy confirm this truth, viz. that the caufe of the Venom is to be imputed to the Spi- rits enraged, and not to any other thing or parts in the Vipers body. I have not undertaken to reafon upon all J (!39> ; I the Experiments, we have made, as I ive done upon the Bitings, both be- iufe that is beyond the Sphere ’of a man l my profeflion, and becaufe I defigned nely to eonfine my felf particularly to le wounds and to the Remedies able to eal them. For the reft, if in the Treaty concern- ig Theriaque, which I have lately pub- lic , I have advanced any thing not con- onant to what I h ve declared here, ouching the adtien of the Venom, I m to be excufed therein , forafmuch as had not then had the occafton, well to I mow the nature and the effedfs of the Sitings of Vipers, and referred my felf to he moft approved Authors about it. hit yet all we hive there fa id , \ dero- ;ates in nothing from the preparation of /ipers for Theriaque, which we have here laid down , and which was in that Sookour main defign, as well as to re- orm feveral other preparations , that eemednoc reafonable to us: That which now remains to be done by us, is, to fpeak of the Remedies to be drawn from Vipers, which may ferve to heal their bitings, md to cure many other evils. THE c (140) \ s THE remedie: EXTRACTED FROM VIPERS C H A P T. L Of the different choyce tha may be made of the parts 0 a Viper . THere is nothing in Nature, t which can be given more juftl the title both of Aliment an Medicine ^ than to a Viper, fince it afforc equally very good Nourilhment and ver good Remedies. It alfo hath in its Bod not one part, which is not very ufeful and of which Artifts may not draw fom< thin ning tHat is go©d ; their chief difference unfitting in this, that the fubftance of the •ne is more or lefs clofe, then that of o- uers. Yet, as in all Bodies of Animals, nere are*parts preferable toothers, fo re may make a diftin&ion of thofe ina iper, efpecially if we mean to eat them, : to reduce them to powder, to take it :the mouth, alone, or mingled with other .ledicaments. In this cafe, it will be well, to ufeon- t the Heart, the Liver, and the Trunk, mean, the jBody emptied of its guts, 'ithout head and tayle. Not that, if you I 'Quid make ufe of the head and taile, ay ill would attend it, or that you need 3 fear any ill quality in them, no more han in all the other parts of the body 5 ut the Heart, Liver and Trunk are cho- |:n, as thofe that are moft efteem’d, and /hich are taken before the reft, out of he body of fuch Animals, which men ife to feed upon. Thofe alfo, that vould nourifh themfelves with Viper- flefti >oyled and feafoned , may do well, in mating of it, to feparate the bones there- )f, and to leave them uneaten : but if :hey bruife them between their teeth, ( (142) \ ^ and (wallow them down together with til! fleii, they would afford them a like, ar even a ftronger nourifliment than til flefh : for, we have found by Diftillatio > that the Bones yield the fame parts, th 1 the Flefh does and even in greater quai tity. For the fame reafon, the Bones < the trunk are not to be caft away, whd you will prepare the powder of Vipers, an that the rather, becaufe they are in th: way very eafy to fwallow. One may all very ufefully drefs the flefh of Vipers wit their own fat, as one would do with bui ter, or with the fat of other animals. Th Skin it felf, if men would, might be boy led and eaten with benefit 5 but thatf would not be fo favory, as the princip; parts we have been fpeaking of. As for the Cbyntical preparations, a! the parts of Vipers may be therein em ployed, and I would not except from then the Stomach it felf, nor the Inteftins,if the; were well clear’d of Worms, and all Ex crements. Ialfo know no difference, as to good nefs,of one Sex from the other, althougl moft Authors have prefcribed the ufe 0 Females .• Oa the contrary , if there b< an] ly fue^ difference, I wlmld preferre the laics to the Females, when thefe are full if Eggs, and big, forafmuch as then they e too much walled for the feeding and !iCrealing»of their Eggs. As to the Seatons, in which they are to e taken and ufed, Ialmoft equally conf- er the Sping and Autumne 5 for the times herein men need them , ought to carry in the behalf of thofe who have a mind ) feed on them. But care muft be had ) chufe fuch Vipers, as are bigg, fat, vi- orous, and a&ive 5 and not to keep them ery long after they have been taken, be- lufe they grow leaner and leffer every ly , both out of Melancholy, and want 'food, which after that time they ufe at to take. 1 alfo make no difference etween thofe Vipers of France , that are red in one Province, and thofe of ano- ler > for thofe of Poitou and the neighb- ouring parts are as good as thofe of Dan- lwcandabouc£jmr,and in other places. :‘he place therefore is not to be confide- :d but for the quantity, and for the con- eniency of getting them, in regard that bey are not wont to be found in mari- ne places , which are the onely 3 that Authors (1144) \ V Authors have difapproved for Wiper* upon the belief, that the flefh of Vipet taken in them, did caufe thirft, by re fon of the faltifh food , they met wii there. CHAR II. Of the Vfe of the parts of V \ persy in refpeB of their nou rifbing Vertue . THere is fcarce an Author, that hat written of Vipers, but affirms, th;i in feveral parts of the World, mar perfons,and even who’s Nations, have fe< and ftill feed upon the flefli of Vipers in fomuch that in great and coftly Ente: tainments, they made exquifiteand vet confiderable difhes of it. T here are alfi that have alledged for an example foul Nations, which by the ufe of Viper- flefli v C»4J) . ave extraordinarily letigtlm’d their li:V /en to 140. years. It is needlefs, to in- here the teftimonies of' Antiqui- on this fubjedt5 the Curious may ide them in Books. We content our- Ives to affirm, that many perfons c’o ft ill feitat this time in divers Countries, whe* e lerit be from Cuftom, ortofatisfie their (petite, or by the Advice of knowing hyli.ians, and that upon occafions they ide wonderful effedis thereof. I alfo >ubt nor, but that the ufe of it v ould ■: more frequent among us, if the- ver- es of Vipers were well known, and ii one iuld diflodge out of the minde of people e honour and natural antipathy, they ve againfl this animal. For the raffe of iper-fleffi is very like that of Eeles •, bence it is, that in fome Countries Vipers 2 called Eeles of the Mountain *, and one ads fomet hing in them even more fa- >ury than in Eeles. 1 know perfons* ao well knowing the moft inward parrs Vipers, have out of merriment, and in mpany, made good meals of rhem, and und it very favory meat. But thole at have too much aveifion from this nd of food, may find veiy convenL-nc L wave s . ! >4<0 wayes tobenefu'themfelvesby tft'evertu of them ,(o as not to be diverted from it b any abhorrency of the animal: for the may feed Capons and Pullets with tf flefliof Vipers cut in fmall pieces, whic thofe Creatures eat very greedily 5 . an continuing for forne time to feed thei therewith, it will certainly communicai the vertue of the Vipers to the body < thofe Animals-, which may be eaten, i we eate other Capons or Pullets, the tafl of which will be very favoUry, becaul that of Viper flefli :s fo. Neither ought we to doubt, thattf] qualities of Vipers pafs into the bodies k thofe animals, fince there are innumerab others, the flefh of which hath not onel the vertue , but even the tafte of tl things, they are fed with. The flefh the Birds , that live on Juniper-berrie; and of thofe, that live onely upon Olive hath not onely their qualities , but all their tafte and bitternefs,and that fo hig ly, that one can fcare eat them. In til Countries, where Silk-worms are brec it is obferved, that in their feafon, whic is chiefly in the months of May an d^un the Eggs of Hens/thac eat thofe Worm, hai | CI4?) ;ive a tafte and fmell of friem, as well as eir fkfh$ infomuch that nice perfons ed their Poultry a part, and hinder then* am eating any Silk- worms. It may be ken notice of, to this purpofe, that his iuftome to give to Nurfes the medicines, aich young Children cannot be made take, to the end that their vertue may fs from the body of theNurfe to that of e Child-, and it hath been often obferv’d, at the Urine of the Babe hath had the it of the Diuggs the Nurfe had ken. ; But yet home might phanfy, that Ani- als cannot take the good from the good rts of the things eaten by them , buc ey muft at the fame time receive the im- leflions of the ill ones , that are there 5 d it might even be objected, thatLiz- irds, Scorpions, Cantharides, and the ui iher Creatures, on which Vipers do feed, ouldimprefs in their bodies the illquali- k; :s, they have, as, among the reft, the ;Di antharid, its Cauftique qualiry. Put k btwithftanding all this, the Experience behave of the harmlefsnefs of Vipers- J i)dies, and alfo of their good qualities , Iruifhes us with a contrary argument, fuf- L 2 ficienc ■H • ^ C T4^) ficient to deftroy that phanfy* and teaches us, that the ftomach of Anima converteth into good all the ill qualitie! to be met with in the bodies, it recei eth todigeft-, and that itunitethand a propriateth the good ones to the very fu ftance of- the Animal that hath eat them: Whence ic comes to pafs, that is as ’twere transformed, or at leaft ve much changed by thole good qualitie and is upon that account capable to cor municate them to other animals, in whole ftomach it enters to be there dige ed. We fay befides* that there a divers Examples of Bodies, that would altogether poyfonous in the ftomach men, wh en yet ferve for food to, and f< ten, other animals, which afterwards yi< good nourifliment to men. Such are H< lebore and Hemlock , which nourilh and 6 ten Quailes and Goates, which afterwar areufeiully employed for the nourifhme of men 5 and this is it, what Lucrece ha very wellobferved in thefeVerfes ; Trxterea nehis Veratrum eft acre 1 nerium-y At Caprti adipes & Ccturnicibus attge ( *4 9 ) Quipp'e vidcre licet pirfettefcere fitpc Ci- cuta Barbigerdi pecudcs j homini qud eft acre Ventnum. » j But thofe, that have no averfion from c ipeis-flefh, may take of them the Heart, fi< e Liver, and the Trunck,and having wa- ' ;d them well, they may then accommo- ite them to their own tafteinthe dref- ig. Where they are to ’take care, not make the fleih too hot by too much ice, efpecially pepper*, but yet they are lowed to put to it fome aromatique libs, as Garden- and Wild- Thyme, and ;e like 5 or a little Nutmeg, Cinamon, loves, to raife the tafte. They muft alfo roid the fault, committed by the Anti- its, whipping and vexing the Vipers, be- re they killed them* leaft this irritati- fliould caufe fome ill impreflion in their )dy, which by it felf hath no venom ac Unit. Let them alfo not caft away the oth, wherein the Vipers have been boy- d, becaufe it retaines the greateft vertue them. Neither do I fee, why one ftiould intthe quantity, or limit the time of the e of it 5 that depending from the degree L s of (15°) of die illnefs, arkj from the conft'tcution c the perfons, that will make u'e thereo1 And although we know Vipers tobe a ve ry Alterative Medicine, and that the c iefufeis onely for their Medicinal qu; lities s yet if taken as an Aliment, thei11 is no danger at all to eat of their flcfb, ( to drink of their broth, fomewhat moil or fomewhat refs. It is alfo to be mode lately faked 5 and thofe that have any< the Fixed Salt of Vipers, final! do well t employ it. You may alfo add'e to it fore! of its Volatile Salt, if you will have tl1 Flefh of V ipers work more powerfully. I As to the Verities of Viper- flefh, acco ding to the confent of innumerable At thors, whefe opinion is fupported by re;l fonand truth, confirmed by many Exp» riments 5 we can fay, that they are veil great, and that there is no Animal in N:| ture, that affords fuch and fo many: An we wonder net at all, that the A mien have fo frequently employ’d Vipers in the Hierogljpbicks , anda orned their Mtda with them; thereby to dtfign veiy at vantagious things for the publick, an for. private men j forasmuch as this An mal is very capable to furnifh them. F< ie ufeof it preferves th^natural heat in a i:ry good temper, it repaireth the fame , lid reftoreth it when ’tis altered > it yields very good food 5 helps digeflion by its 'at, which is not exceflive^ it retards d age and prolongeth life, by a proper- , which Vipers have , to maintain in )od plight the whole habit of the Body, whence it is, that many have believed, at both Staggs and Eagles, induced to by a natural intlindl, eat all the Vipers, ey can meet with, and that 5tis upon at fcore , that their life is extraordina- long. There is alfo adfcribed to Vipers, and >t without reafon, a Renewing veitue, p-ible to make young again 5 which they :itly fhew, by calling their skin twice 'ear, and renewing themfelves by the co- rof a new skin. This, joyned to the btile parts, of which the Viper is corn- fed, and to its lively and daring afpedf, illifies it to be pertinent enough that Au- ors have attributed to it the vertue of taring and ftrengthning the E: es. Vipers have alfo a very particular ver- |e of Cleanfing the whole Body, and par- :ularly the Blond, and of expelling L 4 through fi50 through tile (io^rcs of its skin all rite fup Fill ties : Whence it may be inferred, t! they are very proper to cure the Itch , Tj tar^ Eryfipelas or Saint Anthonies ft :e,Afi fe/s , Small Pox , and the Leprofy it felf, t ufe of them being long enough continue though I cannot well believe what Ga faith, That the Wine, wherein one ont Viper is choakea, is able to curefo gr< an Evil, and which doth not fo eafily yij to remedies. Vipers alfo may, by removing all t impurities and obftru&ions of theBody a, skin, caufe beau y therein j and upon t account it is, that many Ladies in Italy \ them for their ordinary food. By the good nourifhmenr, they yii by the purity they give ro the blood a] to all the parts, and by the liberty thj give to the Spirits to do their fundticj therein , they are a great relief to perfci in a Confumption, and to thofe that : emaciated by long difeafes, and wafted I tedious Leavers, There are even Autho who cfture that the ufe of them is capat to cure the Venereal difeafe* for which 1 doubt not but they may fe> ve much, if th dp not altogether cure it. .(IS3) T heir mundifying veptue, joyned to the Alexiterial, makes them alfo very proper to ;xpell all iorts of poyfons, and even the ^lague it felf and all contagious difeafes. ' They are alfo very contrary to all putrefa- ction, which commonly is the matter and : 'ource of mod maladies 5 whence it comes, [ :hat thofe who ufe them,are not fubjedt to » iifeafes, unlefs they live irregularly, which $ able to deftroy all the good, which the ufe of Vipers might afford. W e might here fpecify many other fick- ' defies, that might be cured by the ufe of Viper-fleflr, but we think not fit todofo, fince the general vertues, which we have noted, may fuffice to make men apply the ufe to many particular Evils, that may need it. Yet we fhall defcribe, in the Chapter enfuing^the ufes andj Vertues of the parts of Vipers, taken as a Medicine, without any great preparation. , !. I CHAP. ( *54) CHAP. Ill, Of the Vertues of feveral parts of the Viper 3 and of their Vfe in Thy fief THE Vertues, which th t Fie ft of Vipers is able to communicate to thofe, who eat them for nourifl> ment, are doubtlefs very conside- rable 5 but they are not the onely ones 3 that Vipers are endow’d with; and not to alledge Superfluous things , we Shall con- fine our Selves to the principal Vertues, of which we have experimented the great- dSpart.* It is very certain, that the Head of a Viper, broyledand Swallowed, healeth the biting of chat animal. T he Heart and the Liver may do th<£ fame. Reafon and Ex- perience have confirm'd it 5 and therefore in . (155.) an urgent occafion tbofe parts may be *;ry ufefully employed. The applicati- liof the Blood of a Viper to the Biting, ;alfo that of its Head bruifed,are neither i) be rejected, nor is that of the Entrails: at thefe applications alone are not capa- Ie to cure it 5 for, thefubtlety and quic- Ts of the Spirits carrying them with reat fpeed into the body, there muft be fed internal fpecifick remedies to repulfe hem 5 and you may alfo very pertinent- r repeat (at the mouth ) the ufe of the ead, heart, liver, and the other parts of Viper, without fearing to take too much f them , becaufe thofe parts can never o hurt, and they alwayes produce fome ;ood eflfed:. They may alfo ferve for all Drts of venoms and poyfons, and againft 11 forts of contagious and epidemical dif- afes. Divers Authors allure, that the Head >f a Viper, hung about the neck, hath a -ery particular quality to cure the Squi- laucy and all the diftempers of the Throat; ind that the Brain of a Viper, wrapt up n a little skin, and likewife hung about :he neck, is very good to make the Teeth af children come forth; which efFedl others f the biting, onely as it is for all other :i rounds, and (or ulcers themfelves, having ,i great abfterfive, mundifying andcicatri- ; ing vertue. It is alfo vety good for the a reaknefles of Eyes, above all, for fuffufi- ms and films, being taken inwardly, or ap- is died outwardly •, fo far it is from doing hem hurt. The Fat of Vipers hath very great ver- i ues * for, befides that it is very good in the Irefling of the Viper-flefli (as hath been aid) it is able alfo, taking a drachm of it, is ;:o give great relief in Epidemical difeafes , ;! and to expel 1 the venom thereof. It is alfo : very ufeful to facilitate the travel of wo- men 5 and to diflipate the fwellings of (158; the throat, anointing it outwardly ther with. It alfo much relieves Gouty pe Tons, and ferves to refolve nodofides. ! unfwels all hard and inveterate tumors, at even thofe that proceed fromVenereal di eafes 5 and for this reafon ’ds, that tfean < Vigo hath ufed it in the Plaifter which bea his name.lt is likewife very good for Bun ings,puftuls,7and all diftempers of the skii and laftly, it is very powerful againft all tl illnefles of the Sinews, and of great vernj for the parts attackt by the Palfy. W might alfo adde many other vertues,adfcr bed by Authors to other parts of[the Vipe but we forbear, becaufe we have not expt rimented them. CHAP (t5?) CHAPT. IV. » u i . . 0/ ^ Towder and Tro* chifquesof Vipers . J' fi Ince we do not alwayes meet with perfons, who, having need to make kJ ufe of Viper-flefh, are difpofed to at thereof 5 it is very neceflary to have eady fuch remedies, that be as well ac- lommodated to the inclination of the Pa- ient, as fitted to remove the malady. The knowledge , which Phyfi nans have ad of the great Vertues of the Viper, joy- ed to the difficulty, met with in the point f pleafing Patients , hath obliged them 0 fearch for divers Preparations, in which he Antients did not well fucceed 5 and if ?e would bind ourfelves to their way of >rep3ring the Powder and the T rocbi[quesy ve fhould Ioofe the principal vertue of the /iper, and retain onely the moft ufelefs, For, in the opinion, which they entertai- / ( i<5© ) ned, that there remain’d alwayes fome v pom in the flefti'of the Viper, if it we not freed therefrom by fome preparath or other $ their pra&ice was, to p the fleth of Vipers in fome earthen poi and having luted it, to fet it in a Bak oven, after the Bread was drawn out, ai to leave it there, till this flefh was reduc< to powder. In which preparation the be of this flefli, which is the Volatile Salt, w,1 certainly ditfipated. They alfo made fi veral medicines with this powder, mi: among other medicaments divers wayes of which we need not to enlarge. We fha content ourfelves , here to fet down preparation of the Powder of Vipers, whic Ihall be grounded on Reafon, and fhall r< tain all the vertuesof the Viper5eafy all toprepare,and very convenient for the Pal tient to ufe. Take then towards the end of Jprt33t in the beginning of May, fuch a quantity c Vipers as youpleafe, Maks and Females chufing big ones, and fuch as are fat an vigorous, and ufing none of thofe Females which are already big with eggs ; and the prepare thofe, you lhall have thus chofer as follows : Without whipping and vex in, (i6i) n them, cut off , with a pair of fizers3 lit heads and tailes , flda them9and emp* [them of all their entrals, of which you to feparate the heart and the Liver 5 1 lay afide their fat for its peculiar ufes> lafh he trunks of the bodies, the hearts 1 livers in clear water, and after that in ite wine* then dry them with a very an linnen cloth , and having put the irts and livers again into their trunks , 1 all the trunks withfmall pack-thred, h at one end, and hang them up in the in the fhade , and leave them there, till :y be well dryed 5 which will be in three (four dayes. After that, cut thefe inks into fmall pieces, and ffamp them : great Brafs-mortar with an iron-peftle, l fearce all through a very fine hair* e, and fo keep it for ufe„ This is the ht Powder of Vipers, which contains the vertues $ to which maybe added jrop of Cinamon-oyle, to give it a good nt. There are fome, who, to make this uvder would have the trunks of Vipers :t in pieces, and put together with their >arts and livers in a Glafs-cucurbt , and I'S covered with its head and luted, and M fo ( i6z ) fo placed with a recipient, in a very ge tie Balneum ; thereby , continuing tl warmth for three dayes together, to dr the phlegm of Vipers, accompanied w: a fmall portion of the Volatile Salt, and keep this liquor apart ; and then to ta out of the Cucu. bite what ftiall rem; there , and of it to make the powder Vipers. But, befiaes that this method is troub fome enough •, that the fire of a Balneum not fufficiendy flrong to fend forth enou of the Volatile Salt, at a time when ’ not yet looien’d from its fubjedt 5 that ’ notwithftanding too much fo, not to en infenfibly fome final portion, which wot afterwards be wanting in the Powder, a which alfo may exhale out of the watt befides alfo that the Vipers are in dang to be too much dry’d >in the Cucurbi and even to be there rofted in part : V efteem, there is caufe to prefer our Prep ration to this, in regard it is much eafii and, without any deftrudlion oralteratf of the good parts of Vipers, carries aw all their fuperfiuous and ufelefs hun dity. Y ou ’might notwithftanding fellow tl w.1 (1^) y in part, if you fliou^d defire to have od Viper- water ; but then you muft in- :afe the fire of the Balneum, and finifh rdiftillation inmuchlefs time, and yec :e l eed flot to haften the fire too mtich the latter end, leaft the water fmell of ; Empyreuma or burning. You muft ), after you have taken out the parts the Viper, that reft in the Cucurbite, : them into a glafs-retorc well luted,, 1 fet this into a reverberating furnace, >c and exadtly lute to it a great Recipient, give it a fire increafed by degrees, and ter about the end, to obtain the Vo- le Spirit, Salt, and Oyle, that could not by the fire of the Balneum-, which are be feparated and redrifyed, as we fhall hereafter. Then take a portion ofithis latile Sale well redlified , and diftolve ;i diftilled water, and keep it carefully well flopp’d bottle, as -an excellent liedy • of which you may ihcreafe or di- lifh the dofe, according to perfohs and afions 5 and according as you fhall have olved more or Ids of the Volatile Sale □poh this occafion, I thought fit to ertife thofe, who diftill Capons , Par- M 2 nidges, H ■ ( i<54) tridges, flices of Veal, or other parts Animals, in a Glifs-limbec (as the cufto is,') and who employ for that purpofe tl fire of a Balneum , or that of Sand or 1 fhes ; that by a moderate fire they cann make rife almoft any thing but ufek fie . m •, and that, not being able to i creafe the fire without making the diftill water fmell of the Empyreuma} they wou fucceed better, if in this they did, wh I was juft now faying of the water and v latile Salt of Vipers 5 and if they joyr their water with the volatile Salt of the < ftilled Animals, in which refides the ch vertue, Thofe, that have no mind to ta fo much pains, (hall do better not to gi diftilled waters to their Patients, as t cuftom is, fince they have no vertue at c if none be communicated to them by tj volatil Salt of the Animal, As to the Trochifques , the Antiei have as ill invented, and as ill order them , as the Powder. For, not to ftay blame here ( as I have done^ elfewhei| the whipping, which they ufed, and whi w. s not onely ufelefs, but alfo very no: ous *, I fhall fay in a few words, that tj decodtion, they made of the body of tj Vij! (l6j) jiper in Water, with Salt and Anife, till e flefli would fever'jfrom the bones, : ihich they afterwards cad away as well as ie broth, was not a Preparation of the flefli the Viper, but rather a deftruffionjince Iwas made to leave its principal vertue in e broth ; and that they weaken’d it yet sore, by incorporating it with very dry ead, of which the proportion of a fifth i four times as much weight of flefli , ough but little in appearance, came yet , a moiety, fince that four ounces of is flefli, and one ounce of bread (which as fo dry that it could not beleflened) lake onely two ounces of Trocbifqjtes 7 len they are well dry’d. This we have ore at large examined in our Treatife of e Theriaque 5 and becaufe their fault is :ry eafily underdood , I fliall infill on no farther •, nor on their reafons for aking ufe of Boyling to corredt a ma- gnity in the flefli, (of which there is none. ) d to be able to fever it from the bones, lich they believe naught, or at lead un- efull, which yet are very good 5 foraf- uchas all their reafons are diffidently re- Jted in the fame Book, and becaufe they e yet more fojby what we have edablifli’d f this. And (i 66) And although it be not alwayes nece:| fary to mak eTro^ifqucs of Vipers, fine we might be w ithouc them yet there b jng fome ufe of them , and to prefer’ their name, you may take a little Gum; Arabique, very white and pure, and r duce it to powder, and infufe it in got Malvafy , till it be well diffolv’d, and tl( wine fomewhat tinged thereof: then tak of the powder of Vi per, prepar’d as we har lately directed, and incorporate it with fufficient quantity of this gumm’d Malv fy, braying them together in a MarbL mortar with a woodden- peftle, and fo n duce the whole into a fomewhat folid part whereof make Ttochifques , of the fir and drape you pleafe, and dry them in ti fnade upon a hair-five. Ifaid, that we might be without Trc phifques, becaufe that having the Pov’j der, which they are made of, that may fu fice for our ufes-, but there is one incoi veniency in the Powder, in that it wi Tcarce keep any confiderable time, efpt - ally if it be not well fiopt up, and if, be lides, fome art be not ufed to hinder ti breeding of worms in it : Whereas Trc phifques, being made compleatby the ad dido, C l6i) ion of Malvafy, andjw the clofe com- flTion of the parts of the’ Powder, they not fo eafily penetrated by the Air, nor ubjedt to corruption. The T rochifques ng dry/ they may be {lightly rubbed kr with a little Balfom of pertly which 1 give them a good fcent, and help to ferve them. The Ufe both of the Powder and Tro- fques is excellent and alike ? but the xhifques are to be reduced jintopow- , when they are to be ufed. Neither them have an ill tafte, and they contain the vertues , we have afcribed to the (h of Vipers, as having loft nothing in ing, made without the heat of the Sun- ms, butafupeifluous moifture, which ild ferve for noth ng but corrupt t' em, : had remained. They may be given ordial waters, broths, wine, or fome fie o&ion , or you may make Bolus' s of m withSyrrups, Conferves, or Cor- l Confe&ions, or turn them into tablets h fugar. rheir main effetft is, to purify, open, pe- rate, and to drive to the extremities of lies all venom, corruptions, impurities, erfluities, and they may be very bene- M 4 ficially (i62) ficially ufed in many occafions for div< maladies; withouMfte fear of any ill fucce For both have this quality, that they do ; wayes Tome good , but never any hari T heir dofe is from a Scruple tp a dracli or two •, and they may be given to all ag» arjd fexesj and at all times. CHAP T. V. Of the Salt of Vipers made I j the Ancients . AMong many different Preparatic of the Salt of Vipers, made by t — -&• Ancients, of which we finde t defcriptions in their Books, there is no more famous, nor that hath been lon£ in life, than one that is very ample a much enriched by many Alexiterial rem dies •, whence tis alfo, that they gave this Salt the name of Therucal. But h ving considered this pompous Prepara (,169) . m, we do not wonder, that a much efteem- ! :d Author hath not g)ven it his approbati- ng fince we cannot finde any thing in it, hat is according to rule or reafon, no more han there is in the reft. We finde, that :he fentiments of that Author proceed romanunderftanding fo judicious, andfo mowing, that we cannot but fubfcribe to :hem, almoft in all *• For, in the Calcina- tion, theynfed, there remain’d nothing out the fixt Salt, which contains but ve- ry little vertue 5 Vipers, as all forts of A- nimals , having but little of Fixt Salt, whereas they have much of the Volatile , which foon rifeth in the Calcination, and carries away with it the principal and the moft eftential vertue of the Animal. They were alfo much miftaken, when they thought , that four Vipers , which they burn’d with fourty pounds of Sea-falt, or SalGemm& , or Sal Ammoniac, (as fame would have it) and with a great quantity of Simples , ftiould communicate great vertues to thefe Salts and thefe Coales, For in the Calcination, which they ufed j to make in an earthen pot luted , with 1 its cover on , and yet in one place pierced , the Volatil Salt of the four f 270) four Vipers would <:ertainly fly quickly away ; and if it hacpUyM (which yet we do not grant) and there had been half an ounce of it (which is a quantity beyond what the four greateft Vipers could yield,) what, I pray, would t hat be to 40. pounds of Sea~falt,ana to many pounds of Coales, 1 more than a fmall rivolet mingled with the Ocean i But as to the fixt Salt, four Vi- i pers are not able to afford half a Scruple of it. ’Tis alfo certain ,that both theSea-falc and Sal gemme, do not perifli in the Calci- nation, but Bill remain there. But if or- dinary Salt Ammoniac be employed, the Urinous and Volatile part, which is in that Salt, will not fail to make its efcape, as well as the Volatile Salt of Vipers, and there will onely remain the fixt Saline part of the Salt Ammoniac, mix’t with fome terreftrial parts > which is that, we finde in the Diftiliation, after we have driven out all the Volatile Salt, of which afterwards, changing the veffel and the fire, we draw an acid fpirit, very much approaching to that, we draw out of Sea-Salt, by wayes al- moft like thefe. Aitifls know alfo, that Herbs, Wood, Horns, 070 Horns, B6nes, and other fuch like mat- :es6? if they Ihould be Reined in an earth- en pot, luted and covered, though a hole ,vere left in the cover, would alwayes be tfterwardj found in the form of very black :oales, although they had endured a great ire5 and that the Salt cannot be feparated :rom them, unlefs they be calcin’d again n an open vefTel 5 or they being reduced :o allies, the Salt be then fever’d from them ay a Lixivium, and by Filtration. On which occafion we relate an Exam- pie of an imperfedt Calcination , which is naturally made in the Earth about the Summer- SolfHce ,of the end of the root^of nany Plants,and among others,of Mugwort ind Plantain > on which end,the fubterrane- dus Fire^or, if you will, the Fire of the Sun, working , and yet being furrounded by the Earth, (which is to the root what the ear- then pot, luted, is to the Vipers, and to the Mixts, that were Ihut up with them ) burns it and reduces it to coales, but can- not turn it to allies. I have often found this to be true, and lighted upon a little coal at the end of the root of thofe Plants, at the time above-mentioned. So that, although the Fixe Salt of the ad- ded (170 tied be Simples in the Coales, yet it wouh have been more p^per, and more metho dical, to have quite calcined thofe coale to reduce them toafhes, and fo to drav from them and to purify the., Salt fo ufe , than to make people fwallovv th grofs, earthy, and ufelefs part of thefe coales Thofe Antients added to this pretend ed Salt calcin’d, the powder of many Ai lexiterial Druggs, which not being devef ted of their vertue by any calcination may communicate, and even alone furniflj the greateft part of the good qualities, b] them afcribed to this Salt. And ’tis upoi the account of thefe principally, that th< name of Thcriacal may belong to it, whicf impertinently would be attributed to the Vipers, fince they have loft their prime ver- tue in the Calcination. This Preparation of TheriacalS alt doth fofficientiy ihew us, that the Antients did not take pains to know the inward parts, of which mix’t bodies are compounded, and that they did not well know the na- ture of the poyfon of Vipers , of which they imagin’d they ftiould be infefted by the fumes proceeding from their Calcina- tion j although none could come from C 173 ) hem, when there was none, as we have nade appear. And though the fmell, s well of the Vipers, as of the Simples, vere 'troublefome , whilft they burned, ret they were not therefore at all veno- nous. The little knowledge, which the An- ients had , and many Moderns kill have, >f the nature of the two Saks in Vipers, lath led them into a great fault , viz, to :alcine the bones of Vipers, to draw from .hence, as they thought, the true Salt of pipers, which they w’ere not at all like to iinde, after they had diffipated it by Cal- cination. T he firft fault hath drawn after t a fecond *, for the fmall quantity of fixt ■ Salt, they found in them, not much fa- ■ tisfying them, carried thofe, that had no great fenfe of honour or confcience, to a my great abufe, which was, to mis among thofe calcin’d bones a great quan- tity of Sea-fait , to diffolve this Salt, and and to boyle all together in water, to fil- ter and coagulate it , and to fell at a great rate this Counterfeit falc for true Sale of Vipers. But, to accommodate ourfelves to thofe, who, intending better, will make no Mm- • (174) no ill ufe of it > and to furnilh them with pleafing Salt'for tj/ofe, that may defire i for ordinary ufe; we fhall here deliver th way of preparing a Salt of Viper, that fha! have much vertue ; the method of whicl fhall be very eafy,and the ufe very conve nient. Take three dozen of great Vipers, wel chofen; cut off their heads and tails, fie; them, and empty the bodies of all thei entrals, and wafh them well, [together witl» the Heart and Liver : Boylall together ii ten pints of common water, fo long till al be perfectly boyled. Then ftrain it1, anc1 fqueefe well all the parts ; and in this de- codtion diffolve four pounds of Sea-fak: and carefully filter it > afterwards, coagu- late, or, if you will,chryftallize this Salt which will be found white and abounding with the vertue of the Vipers, and of no il take at all 5 which you may ufe in all things as common Salt. And to fiiew, that thefe boyled and! fqueefed parts have left much of their ver- tue in the Decodfion, and yet that they have not left all, and that fiill there re- mains fome of it, principally in the Bones; lay them abroad, and dry them, and then C 175 ) diftill them, and you will draw from them, efpecially from the B^pes, a Volatile Salt and oyl, but in much lefs quantity, then if they had not been boyld. If you would have a Viper-Salt of more yertue, arid that might even be call’d The- nacal , you muft proceed after the fame manner , as hath been lately fet down ; but in Head of Seal-Salt, take a like quan- tity of Salt, drawn from Alexiterial and Theriacal Plants, as the roots of Valeri - *ny ImperatorUy Angelica, Leaves qS. Scot- diumy the little Cent annum, Cardnm Bene- iiBitSy andthelike. ’Tis true, that this Salt is a little more difplealing to the caffe than the former, but it may produce more tonfiderable effects ,and be ufed in extraor- dinary occafions. Thefe forts of Salt have indeed good pertue, and are convenient for laftingsefpe- :ially the two firlf : But the Volatile Salt lath fomething more particular, and con- siderably better: the properties of it are nnumerable, and it is an Epitome of the excellent qualities , contained in Vipers. We fliall nowfpeak of its Preparation, as ilfo of the Phlegm, of what is called vo- latile Spirit and Oyle, which accompany C 17 O it 5 and of the Fixt Salt, which remains after diftillation, m*xed among the terre* ftrial parts 5 and that done, weflialltrea of their vertues and ufefulnefs. WE make here publick oui Preparation of the Volatile, Sdt of Vipers, with the fulnefs, becaufe we efteem it one of the beft Medicines in Phyfick. ’Tis true in- deed , that fome Authors have already! fpoken of it > but there is none, thai hath defcribed it with more exa&nefs -fh*r CHAP. VI. Of the Volatile Salt of Vipers : and the Fixt Salt , ana other parts , which are fe parated hyfDijlillation . more franknefs and chear- \ (177) ?, nor that hath more defired, that eve- one might, accorclingto this Method, |>tainfor himfelf and his occafions a re- jedy, which goes beyond many others , 1 fay no -more. We hope, that our ly of proceeding will be weil received by i, and that , it there be any that fhail ide fault with it, they will be fiich only, ;io are unwilling to communicate what ey have, and often wrap it up under the me of Secrets . T ake onely the Bodies, Hearts and Li- fts of Vipers, or, ( to have the more be* ifit of all) add to them the Heads, Tails, d skins, and generally all the parts of a iper 5 of which you will have a care to ke away ail the Excrements and Worms, alfothe Eggs, that may be in the Ma- lx of the Females. Small and great, [ales and Females are of the fame good- :fs, as alfo the Salt is, that fhail have :en drawn from all the parts of the Body, ry in the /bade all theft parts feparate- , then cur them into bits, and fill with iiem your Glafs-limbec up to the neck, ihich is to be well luted. Put it in the lidftof a Reverberating furnace, prepor- Jon'd to its bigoefs , cover it with its < N head / ( «78) head, and (hut the Regifter of it; Fit t< the Limbec a Glafs-recipient, which muf be very large* and lute well all the joynts Then begin to give a fmall fire, which con tinue for abouc two hours , fo that th Limbec be heated gradually , and th Phlegme begin to diftil into the Recipiem Afterwards increafe the fire gently unto fecond degree; and give a little openin at the Regifter, and continue the fame fir likewife two hours ; then increafe it, open ing the Regifter yet more, and fo continv two other horns > at the end of which yo are to give it the fire of thelaft degree quite opening the Regifter, and you mu continue to drive the fire , till no mof come out of the Limbec, and the Recip' ent be all obfcured by the Volatile Sal which will flick to its fides, towards tf bottom, and to the upper part. Then h theveftells cool, and the Furnace alfo; a ter which you are to un-lute the Recipient wherein you will finde the Phlegme, th; part which is called Spirit, , the Volati) Salt, and the Oyle mingled together ; ti cept a part of the Volatile Salt , that ma yet adhere to the upper part, and to tf fides of the Recipient, which you may de?| ( 1 19 > ?roufly take away, and, if you will, keep >rufe, as ’tis. This Volatile Salt, Spirit, ■id Oyle, are fo penetrating, that you ar§ at able to hold your nofe over ita Powre out, what you find in the Red- ent, into a Glofs-Body, which muft be rge, tall, broad below, and whofe figure )es up ftraightn'ing towards the orifice » • which you muft adapt a Glafs-head, thafi to have fomewhat a high body , and rge, and a very ftraight mouth, and pro^ irtioned to that of the Glafs-body. Lute e joynts exadly with paper and ftarch^ c the Body in a Sand-bath, and fink is wn as low as the matter reacheth • fit a i all Recipient to the beak of the Head* id lute that alfo: kindle under it a very, ntlefire, and order it fo, that the Sand d the Glafs-body may be heated gent- ; after which you may increafe it a little, t onely fo as to make it ftrong enough drive up the Volatile Salt 5 which, be- l dif-engag’d from the parts of the Vi - i s bodies, rifeth eafily* It v ill be fub- led, and flick every whereto theinfide the Head, like a Chryftallized Snow, lere will arife at the fame time a little the Spirit, which is properly nothing ( i8o ) but a portion of ihe Volatile Salt, havir carried up with it a little of the Phlegm that will run into the little Recipient,andi which even a part will congeal into Chr fhls. You muft alwayes be careful in m naging the Fire 5 for how little foev you increafe it, the Phiegmowill rife wii fome of the Oyle, and they will difibh and hide the Salt > and then you muft r commence the Rectification 3 butgover ing the fiie well, when you fliall fee tl Head well lined with Salt, which will 1 very white and very Chryftalline,you mu then un-lute it, and take it off, and 111 on an other head, inftead of the formd You are to take out the Salt, as foon ail as well as you can; and to endofe it ini ftrong bottle , with fuch a mouth, til the Salt may pafs through it, and whil may be exa&ly clofed, without which tj Salt will eafily flyaway. Mean time,yi are to continue a like fire under the Gla body, and when no more of that Volat rifeth, you are to defift, and to take c of the head the Salt there gathered, a keep it as the former. Your Sand bei cold, take off the Glafs-body, and deer from it the remainder through a gr< c 181) Slafs-funnel , covered with paper for fil- ration, held over Tome vefiell. All the ^hlegm will pafs thorough the Paper; >uc you’l finde Tome Oy le there, that can- • tot pafs, which you may make run through he Funnel into a bottle, having pierced he paper with Tome convenient inflru- jnent. ;.l Thofe that fhall defire a high and much i more perfed R edification of this Volatile ?a ialt, may make it in manner following. ! Take two pounds of Ivory calcin'd to yhitenefs, and reduced to a fine powder 5 it i/hich is to be mixt with four ounces of his Salt. Then put all into a new Glafs- 1 tody, of the fame fliape with the former, no this let there be adapted and luted a iilindHead, orfuchanone, the extreme y of whofe beak is well flopp’d (for thAt ; ufelefs for this purpofe, there being no 'hlegme; and if there were, the calcin’d vory being a dry Body, and in part fpun- y, would lick and retain it, as it would Mb the Oily part, that might happen to ■e among the Volatile Salt: ) let there he ;iven to thisGlafs-body a moderate Fire, vith the fame cautions as before $ the Salt /ill quickly rife, and flick to the Head; N 3 where, (1 Si) where, the Sublimation being ended, yc will finde it in the form of Chryftals, whi like fnow $ which you are to put up at keep in a bottle exactly clofed, to ufe upon occafion. This Salt thus re&ifh (mells not of File, and hath nothing bi its own natural ttrong- and penetratir (cent. There may perhaps be found Artift who will take it ill, that we have been ; large and fo particular in exadfly fettir do wn all the things-, that are to be obfe ved in preparing and rectifying this Sal But it is not for them, that we have doi it, but for thofe, who not knowing it w be glad to learn it, W e have given the Sincerely the true means ufed by ourfelver which they may alfo praCtife in preparir and rectifying the Salts of the parts of t Animals. Thofe that have any tinCtu of Chymiftry , will here find enough i teach themfelves *, as we have done, at] do daily. Mean time they mud not t offended , that there remain with us uj pn thisfubjed fuch things , which cou' pop be faid, nor well comprehendedbi by' thofe that have labour’d a great whil • ip rhk Art. Intelligent perfons > thi (*»}) all examine our proceeding, or have a ind to experience the fame , will find tir ingenuoufnefsjby finding thefhccefs of 1 we have made them exped , together ith the facility, we give, of the Operation. ! hey will alfo find, that our wayoffil- bg the Retort as far as the neck , is more oper than that of leaving a third part npty,as fome would have it, in the Diftil- tion of the Bones , Horns, ?and other dry irtsof Animals*, although thofe, that iderftand it, pradice it not but in matters tat will melt, and may break the Re- irt , or let fomething run out by the ;ak , when his fill’d too high. But in y fubftances, asareour Vipers, and the orns, and Bones of Animals, Crabs- res. Stones, and the like, it is enough to ave this neck empty, to give vent to le parts raifed from the matter , and that etogo into the Recipient. They will fo acknowledge , that our way to leave le Oyl among the other fubftances,when e will fever them by fubliming and redd- ing them, is not without reafon,in regard latthe Oyl hath commonly with it much 1 olatile Salt , which leaves it, and after- fard rifethin the Redification, We ( 184) We efteem alfo , that this Preparatio; will be preferr’d before many others , tha are operofe and have little method i them*, and, among others, before the Re6t j fkation, which home pretend to make t the addition of Spirit of Salt to tf Phlegme, and to that which is call’d Sp rit, and to the Volatil Salt: which inftes of rectifying this Salt , and of making purer and better , changes its nature ^ ai inftead of fubliming it to the Head andtl top of the Body (as they have pretendi k did, after the Phlegm was rifen,)tl Spirit of Salt rifeth it felr in itsfirft forn initsfmell, colour and tafte, leaving the bottom the Salt, which is there four like fixed, having the taft and the oth qualities of the Spirit of Salt, but beir leflen’d'of two thirds of its weight. Th kind of men have hli\i Eooks with mai Preparations they underhand not, nor ha experimented : For , forgetting, amor other things , in the procefs l:hey labouring to difguife the Prccefs , have retrenched the main and moft ne- cefiary part of it , and employed at the Very firft that method, vyhich they fliould have' obferv d to fix it , believing that that would fublime it; not confidering ? that having by that means inverted na- ture, the fuccefs would prove anfwerable to it. I fet a fide their unwarrantable pra- ctice of adding a pound of luke-warm wa- ter among the fubftances found in the Recipient , after the firft diftillation,fince kis an Augmentation, not onelyufelefs , but troublefome, of that Phlegme, which muft needs be feparated. Now, although one partof this Salt, : remaining in the Body of the Limbec, may i yet afterwards becom Volatil , by mixing : it with feme Lixiviat Salt , and making it ! to fublime; yen that is not done but with | a new and very great lofs of its weight 5 0*0 Bor Is the tafte of it better than of that which fhall have been well re&ified accor- ding to the method , we have before deft cribed ; fince the Lixiviat Salts, by revi ving it in part , give it as difpleafing a fme as the former. We may further add here that the ufe of tall and ftrait-neck’tBo dies is much more proper for this Re&ifr- cation, than the ufe of Matrafles wicf longnecks , myfelf having experimented that the Phlegme fals back again more ea* lily, and that the Vplatil Salt rifeth pu- rer in the Bodies of our fafhion; of whicf th t Figure maybe feen on the 1 Title page * where alfo is that of the Retort and the Re- cipient, for the firft Diftillation. Now although the fame men, that have given us caufe to reprehend them , have affirmed contrary to truth , that there is no fixt Salt in the parts of Ani- mals: To prove that there is , and to be- nefit by that of the Viper; Take what fhall remain in the Retort, commonly called the Caput Mortuum , which you will find of the form and colour ofCoales; calcine it in a Furnace, or, to fave expences, in a Potters Oven , till all become white and of the form of Chalk , pulverize it C 187) Well , and make it boyl in a competent quantity of water, that may receive and diffolvethe Salt 5 filter it 3 and make it euaporate and confume. You'l find at thebotcqma coagulated Salt; though in a fmall quantity , and fuch an one, as that of five pounds of Viper- bones well cal- cin'd , we have obtain’d no more than three ounces of fix’t Salt, This Salt hath a very ffiarp and poynant tafte ; it is Lixiviat, and approaching enough in di- vers regards to the fixt Salt of Tartar. You’l find on the Filter the Terreftriai part , dripp'd of all its vertue; which then may juftly be call d Caput Uertuum. And thus you’l have the Phlegme, than which is call'd Spirit, the VolatilSalt, the Oyl, the Fixt Salt, and the Earth; into which all the parts of the Viper have been reduced in their reparation. CHAP. VII, (188; CHAP. VII. Of the Fixation i of the Volatil Salt of Vipers. ALthough the Volatile Salt of Vii pers have in ic , to fpeak 'truth nothing offensive , but its ftron^i and piercing Smell, and that thofe, who fhall take into their mouth the weigh of a good number of grains , cannot re< ceive from it any other trouble but thai of this Sent , which yet boon pafleth a- way, this Salt leaving afterwards afaline and very agreeable tafte 5 yet notwith-j fhnding many perfons^ offended with the! piercing odour , which is firft perceived in this Salt , and befides diffatisfied with its eafy Avolation, unlefs it be extreamely well clofed 3 have endeavoured to fix ic , and fo to free it from thisfmel , not con- fidering that this fmel cannot be altoge- ther feparated from this Salt 5 buc its ver- tue muff be fo too , and that the fixation changes its nature : And inftead of conten- ting C IS 9 ) ing themfelves to re&ify ic well , there- iy to carry away , as much as may be, the dventitious fmel , which ic may have ac- [uired by the violence of the fire by the irftdiftillation, they have fometimes al~ ogether deftroyed it, and have dealt vith it , as if one would deprive Mu[c and 4mber-gris of their good fent , and Colo * mntida of its bitternefs5 and many com* )oundsof their operations , which would \i lot be what they are , if you ihould robb igl :hemof theleaft ofthofe parts that com- :i x)fe them. tf We fay therefore, that after the Redli- i flcation of this Volatil Salt, ( fuch an one c is we fhall fet down beneath, )the beft and iureft preparation would be, to do no- thing elfe to it, but to make it to be ufed in chat condition, only mixing with it things accomodated to the Patients tafte, or with fuch other remedies , as do not change its nature , nor make it loofe any thing of its force or vertue. If the Fixed Salt of Vipers were capa- Ible to arreft and retain the Volatil , there were then nothing to be faid againft this fixation, becaufe having been both for- med jointly and in the fame body, they have (l?°) have no averfion to, but rather are able p help one another > But this common ori gin, and this friendfhip which theyhav contra&ed , whilft they lived together ii; one and the fame fubje£i,hinders them fron deftroying one another, and maketh,tha : what is Fixe can nor will change th^naturi1 of the Volatil. And indeed, although! you mixe them together , and that th< quantity of the Fixe be five or fix time:* greater than that of the Volatil, and that they may alfo lodg with one another 5 yet1 they both equally keep their nature and vertue, and they may be feparated by fire, and manifeft at all times their feveral and diftindf vertues. But this hinders not the taking one Salt among the other, nor that the Fixe fliould not then borrow fome- what of the fubtilty of the Volatil, the! better to penetrate the Entrals and Vefiels; to o pen the more vigoroufly the obftru&i- ons , and to expel the impurities, it meets j with, by fiege or urine; and that, on the ! contrary , the Volatil Salt, helped by the I Fix’t Salt, ihould not carry away and drive out through the pores of the skinor other ways , the more grofs and more vifcous ? parts of the humors , that perhaps might-1 iiiwis 0*0 ive efcaped its quick and fubtileoperati- ii: For which ufes , both Salts maybe ix’d together upon occafion^ without un- making an impofiible fixation. But efpecially , the fixing of this Vola- li Salt by guick-lim cannot pafs with all .rtifts but for an operation altogether def- iu&ive to it 5 and ’tis that, which is moft : all to be avoided , becaufe not only carries away the fmel, ttfte, and vertues : this Salt, but quite changeth its na- ire, and converts it into its own, by pe- lifying the fame. The Fixation of this VolatilSalr, by re Spirit of Salt, although it feem tode- roy it and change its nature, in that it irries away the fmel and tafte of the Vo- til Salt, may notwitftanding be admit- ;d rather than the other , in regard that re Spirit of Salt , by preserving the ver- le it hath to open all the obftrudf ions of re inward parts , working upon the Vo- itil Salt, may appropriate to it felf fome- hing of its vertue, efpecially that which i able to fecond itsa&ion, and to expel ogether with it , by urine or other ways , he moft tenacious and moft ftubbornhu- rors. Thofe that would expel the hu- mors (102) mors by thefe ways, may ufefally prepar it after this manner. Mix four ounces of the Volatil Salt < Vipers , well redfifyed, with four ounci of Water i put them into aGlafs-Cucu bite Somewhat high, ofanarrowmoutl broad and flat towards the bottom , ho ding about two pints. Fit to its mout a Glafs-funnel, the end of whofe pipe very narrow : Lute the funnel quite rour about the orifice of the Cucurbite , I that there may be no other aperture br that of the end of the funnel. Thf powre , little by little , and drop- wifi fome Spirit of Salt well redfified upci the Volatil Salt. At firft there will be conflidt betwixt them , which will cau an ebullition , but that of a fhort duratioi Continue to powre upon it of the fan Spirit of Salt , gently and leifurely,acco ding as you find the ebullition ceafe , an by intervals ftir alfo the Cucurbite 5 an repeat this fo often, that at laft there aj pear no motion any more , and tf Spirit oi Salt have as ’twere mortified an fixed the Volatil Salt. Then place tf Cucurbite in fome receptacle furnifh’t witt Saudi fit to it a head , lute it (though i (193) he beginning that be not neceffary ) and ya flow fire draw away all themoifture if the Spirit of Salt, and of the Volatil alt , which will rife almoft infipid. Cor.*’ nue the fire ftill, and when you fhall pe - five a tafte of the Spirit of Salt in what iall be diftill’d , change the Recipient , icreafe a little the fire , and drive it ( yet 'ithout too much violence,) until there iftil no more, and that the Salt remain : the bottom of the Cucurbite altogether ry and of a gray colour. You’lfind in le Recipient a Spirit of Salt of the fame tfte, of the fame colour, and of the :me force it had when it was powr’d up- n the Volatil Salt*, hut you fhall not nd any part of the Volatil Salt rifen to le head , nor to the top of the Cucurbit, ; fome have given out it doth, without aving experimented it , as we have done, ‘he gray Salt, found at thebortom, is ut in a fmal quantity , being leflen’d ai- iioft of two t hirds : It’s tafte is very fbarp, king, and much differing from what it had lefore it was fix’d , and as ’twere mortifi- d by the Spirit of Salt. After this you bay diffolve this Salt in vvater;filterit,and lake it evaporate , and letting it cool , O you! ( i?4 ) you’l find at the bottom a final quantity of Salt coagulated in the form ofChry ftals. Powr out by inclination the wate fwimming on the top, to have the Salt bj itfelf, which you may dry in the Air , o the Sun , or over a little fire. You ma alfo make good ufe of the Salt that Ilia have remained in the water thatfwam top, by making it evaporate in part Chryftallizing and drying it, as the for mer. You might, if you pleafed,very we| omit luting the Funnel upon the Cucurbit when you will powre the Spirit of Salt ur on the Volatil *S"alt 5 forafmuch as we hay found by experiment , that in the open tion of the Spirit of Salt upon the Volat Salt, there rifech nothing but phlegme that hath neither vertuenor fmel5 althoug the farneperfons , that have err’d in man things in the rectification cf the Volat Salt , have fear’d they fliouid loofe then1 Ina Volatil Spirit, which was only i their imagination: And the luting, whic we have advifed , was only to prevei peoples belief, that apart ofthe Volat Salt might haveefcaped tha.t way. But although this Volatil Salt appe: fix’t , and remain as fuch at the bottom t ti! C 195) he Cucurbit , after diftillation , ye£ here is a part, which retakes its former rature , and becoms Volatil again , if it e mix’d with Salt of T artar , or with Dme other Lixiviate Salt , putting them Dgether in a fubliming veflel. For thefe jxiviate Salts , being of a nature con- rary to acid Salts and Spirits , do morti- y them and retain them to themfelves 3 nd let go the Volatil Salts > which the a- id fpirits had , as ’twere, mortified and ;x’d , and all that was Volatil in this fee- ringlyfix’t Salt, rifeth in a white form, nd hath almoft the fame tafle and the ime other qualities of the Volatil Salts /ell rectified. Yet you will alfo find there great diminution of its weight, fo that : will be more advantagious to keep it in he condition, it was in before this lafl iblimation-, the greateft advantage of hich is, to come to know, that the fix- tion, that hath been made by the Spirit f Salt, although it have as ’twere chang- ed the nature of the Volatil Salt, and iid its diaphoretique quality under that of hediuretique, yet hath not quite deftroy* d it, fince there is fome part, that can Jtake its priftine form and venue, O a This ( Ip6) This Salt thus fix’d poffeffeth the vei tues of a Spirit. of Salt concentred, bi they are found augmented^ by thofe it hath borrowed from the Volatil sal Thofe, who wou’d only carry avvay, byi rine or fiege, the fuperfluous humours ( the body, may ufefully prepare and en ploy it 5 but thofe, that (hall ufe the V< iatile Salt well rectified, without chan; ing its nature, nor diverting its adlion l any fixation, will finde therein fuch effedl as will be incomparably more apparent ai more fenfible, and will not wafte of it I much. CHAI C-JP7) CHAPT. VIII. 9 Of the Vertues of the V ilatile Salt of Vipers, and of what the other parts feparated by TOifida on, may perform. THE Volatile Salt of Vipers is to be confider d , as a Sun, as well among the parts, that rife by di- lillation, as among thofe that reft in the Letort$ there being none among thofe hat are come over, but have borrowed :om ft almoft all the vertueit can have ; or any of thofe that have ftay’d, but have eed ofit,?or are ufelefs without it. The •legm that rireth ftrft, carries alwayes fome art with it, without which it would pro- ace no effedt. That which is called pirit, is nothing elfe, to fpeak aright, but Volatile Salt, which in the distillation O 3 hath hath been followed by a little Flegtne diffolving it, and giving it the form of a Spirit: which may be (hewed by the Re-, dbfication, wherein that faline volatil pari, is feparated, raifed, and coagulated into 2 white and chryftalline forme, aiidleaveth at the botom of the cucurbite the moi- fture that had changed its nature, and i; nothing elfe but flegm. We fay, on thi:, occafion, the fame thing of what man) Authors improperly call the Volatil Spi- rit of an humane skull, of Harts»horn, anc of other parts of Animals, they being no- thing elfe but Volatil Salts mixe witl flegme, which they afterwards quit, whei they are re&ified. The Oyle alfo woul<' have but very little vertue, if it borrowei no Volatil fair, and if it retained not ini a good part thereof, as may be obfervei in the R edification : for, if theOylewer meafur’d , or weighed, before ’tis put ai mong the reft into the cucurbite for re&i fication, and if it were weighed again afte that all the Volatil Salt isrifen, it wouli be found much diminiihed in quantity and in ftrength alfo, becaufe moft of th Volatil Salt, which had joyned it felf t< it, hath been carried away by the rediiica 099 ) an. So thofe, that feparate the Oyle om the other parts to reftify them, and !’ho ufe it not but for wounds or ulcers, jid to take away fuperfluities, dodoubt- ifs not know it aright 5 for it is alfo en- dow’d with other vertues more confident lej of which we fhall fpeake in this Chap- 7. The Fixt Salt, which refts in the Re- )rt, mix’t among the terrefirial part, al- aough it is to be put in the rank of Lixi- iat Salts, and poftefifeth few other qua- ties , but thofe of Salt of Tartar , yet .’tains fomething of the nature of the Vo- idle fait. And thofe, that have confide- ?d this Salt as a Caufliek , have had good lccefs with it, without knowing its na- ire, feing they imputed it to the maligne arts, which they believed to be in Vipers, /hereas they ftioald have afcribed it to he nature of Lixiviate falts. But this bit being taken at the mouth , will be auch more effeftual, if you mingle forne !/olatil Salt with it*, this Cauftique fa- culty not hindring but that it may be taken afely and beneficially in appropriated li- quors, as many other lixiviate Salts are. The Terreftrial part hath nothing in it3 :hac deferves to be confidered, and it may o 4 juftiy (200 ) daftly be called Terra mortua^ Dead earth.! after it is freed from its fixed Salt. So thai all the parts, that rife by d filiation, a: well as thofe that cannot rife, are of fmal| force, or altogether ufelefs, vvichout th ’tis not at all tobe oubted, but that this Salt, which is the 10ft fubtile and the moft potent of them 11, is fomething more fublime and more fficacious. And we are afTur’d, that if it .■ere well known to us, it would pafs for an Imoft Univerfal medicine; men would be areful of preparing it, and we Ihouldfee t often prefcribed by Phyfitians, and find t fucceed in innumerable obftinate difea- es> that are but feldom and difficultly :ured. To Judge well of the Effedls, which his Volatile Salt can produce in our Bo- lies, we mull know its manner of operati- )n, which is, to open, to comminute, to ittenuate, to pierce, and to drive to the ex- :reme parts of the Body, and through the pores of the skin, all the impurities, and ill the ftrange bodies, that can get out by ithofe wayes. Further, it is an enemy to all corruption, very friendly and very agre- ( 202 ) able to our nature, which it affifts and for tifies, enabling it to expell, not onely b] the pores of the skin, but alfo by fiege an* urine, and by all the Emuruflories of th Body, the fuperfluous humors, which mo left it: Whence it comes to pafs, that i produces admirable effe&s upon a thoui fand occafions, curing a great number o ficknefies, or at leatt giving great relie therein, even in thofe, that ars moft refra &ory,and moft difficult to cure, fuch asar Apoplexies, Lethargies, Convulfions, Pal fies, and many other maladies, believed t< Jhave their fource in the Brain. It is alfo great relief to the Diftempers of the Breaft asSwoundings, Palpitations of the Heart Difficulties of Breathing, and Pleurifies Befides it particularly unftops the Obftru dlions of the Liver,Spleen, Mefentery, an* other parts of the lower Belly. It diflipate all inward impoftumes, in their rife, anr all forts of Fevers, caufed thereby* 5 for mod intermittent Feavers, and par- icularly Quartans, It alfo worketh pOw* rfully in the diftempersof the Matrix % nd is a remedy to all the vices of the skim, nd to the Leprofy it felf: but above ail, :is fpecifique againft all Bitings and fting- ngs of venomous creatures, againft all ve- 10ms and poyfons,if they be not corrofive* or in that cafe, recourfe mud prefently be rad to Vomitives and to Unduous things, ifter which it produceth good effeds. It lath a particular vertue againft the Plague, jgainft all Contagious difeafes,and Epide- mical ones, fuch as are the Meafels,Smali Pox, and the like.Irj a word^thelndudions, we can draw from the great number of Ex- periments, we have feen of it , at diffe- rent times, oblige us to affirm, that its ver- tues goes beyond what can be expreffed. And thofe, that fhall make reflexion on what we have faid of it, will be able toap- | ply and ufe it beneficially to many other fickneffes, which to enumerate would be too prolix and to® tedious. In the mean time, we cannot forbear to s relate here a very remarkable Experiment, made upon a Gentleman, who fuffgred aboHt r 2o4; about a month fince, a violent and corn nual paine, doubled and redoubled, attl right part of his front pretty near the Terr pie : the end of a finger might cover th place of the pain-, there appeared no rednei nor fwelling, and there was perceived n hardnefs. Yet the pain, though it was, a 't were, fixed in a point, was communica ted to the other neighboring parts, fo tha theGentleman could not chew, nor fo muc! as open his mouth to take down a littL broth, but with extreme pain, thougl hunger urged him. ThePhyfitians, tha faw him,had ufed feveral means to relievf him, and, among the reft, Vena- fedtionj in the arm and foot; they had purged hire often > they had employed frictions of his neck andfhoulders ; they had applyed tc him Veficatories, and Snailes, behind his eares: they had caufed his temporal arte- ry to be open’d, and drawn from him ten or. twelve ounces of arterial blood , and then cauterifed the Aperture ; they had alfo preferibed him powerful Sudorifiques, which were continued many dayes morn- ing and evening, and had made him fweat very copioufiy *, and the Patient himfeif, of hfs own accord, being extremely pref- 0°5 ) ;d by 'the violence of the pains, caufed 'ne of his upper teeth* which was very )und, to be pulled out, hoping thereby d give fome vent to them : But after he ad ufed allthefe means in vain, onedofe ,f the Volatil Salt of Vipers* given in vine, remov’d prefendy all the pain, yhich caufed as great a wonder in the Af- iftants, as fatisfaCtion in the Patient. This o furprifing effect, which demonftrateth ijetter, than all reafons, the force and effi- cacy of this Volatil Salt, may alfo conclude :he difcourfe of its Vertues. There remains now, that we fay fome- :hing of the vertues of the Ojle , which ri- 'eth by Diftillation with the Volatil Salt, Df which it alfo retains a part. Its ftrong fent is the caufe, that it is not often em» ployed; whence it comes, that fometimes it is more advantageous to the Preparer, to profit by the rectification of the Vola- til Salt , which it hath* than to keep it in its condition for Patients that fhallufe it notwithftanding its ftrong fmel and ill tafte. This - fmel is fo intimately ftick» ing to it, that there is no rectification , able to remove it. But we make herewith known to all thofe, that fhall be able to com- (20 6 ) comply with the ufe of it , that it is one ( the beft and moft efficscious outward r< medies in all Phyfick, provided it t made ufe of, when Stis yet indued wit its Volatil .Salt: For it opens , atteni ates , refolves , is abfterfive , and adm rably cleanfing 5 and we know , wh have experimented it , that the continue anointing with it , accompanied with thJ internal ufe of the Volatil Salt , producer' admirable eflfe&s in the parts labouring un derthe Palfy, and deprived of motion1 and even in thofe , that are dryed for wan of the communication of Spirits and nou rifliment. A little Spunge imbibed wit. this Oyl , carried in a little box pierced and often fmelled to , is very good in th time of the Plague , to keep off the il Air , and to fortify the Brain , and th< noble parts. It is alfo good to make it tc be fmelled , to put of it in the noftrilsjant to annoint the Temples with it, in Hpi' leptical Symptoms , and for thofe , thai are troubled with giddinefs, and hav< their Brain charged with vapors or flegme for it gives them vent , and difpels their powerfully. It hath alfo aconfiderabh effeft again!! the fuffocations of the Ma • ( J07 ) \jc\ and againft all forts of worms 5 in iiich cafe , fome drops of it may even be venat the mouth, in wine, or broth; id the hollow of the ftomach anointed erewith. > It vifibly diflipltateth all out- 3rd contufions , and ferveth much for ward ones , and Specially for thofeof j.e Head. It refolves tumours and hard- :ffes , giving iffue by the pores to fuch atter, as can tranfpire, dige fling the offer , and bringing them to a laudable ppuration. It is alfo abflerfive and clean-* th all forts of Ulcers, and healeth all le diftempers of the skin , even the moft ubborn , provided the internal caufe lereof be removed. In all which evils its Fetls are yet more quick and powerful , it be enforced by the internal ufeof the 'olatil Salt, which, in a word , is that , hich gives it its main vertue. We (hall add ,on this occafion, that the indents valued very much their Oyl of ripers, which they prepared feveralways, )tne by infufion , fome by the deco&ion f Vipers in Oyl of Oliues. If they had ghtly proportioned the quantity of Vipers >ith that of the Oyl 5 if they had added hereto what moifhire was neceffary ; and if (208) if in this they had employed fome go, method , this Oyl might produce go effeds , and we fhculd approve of i and refer our Readers to it. But find! nothing regular in all the Preparations, them defcribed , we thought good h< to fet down one, according to all t rules of Art. T ake about the end of May , or t beginning of $une , a dozen great \ pers newly taken, cut each of them in leven or eight pieces, and put them intc well glazed and ftrong earthen pot: po’ upon them three pounds of Oyl ofOliv< and one pint cf white wine 5 cover t pot well, and make it boyl over a gem nre'to the confumption of the moiftui Then ftrain all, fqueeze out the Vip< well, and keep the Oyle for ufe. Int mean time, fear not (as the Antients di the Vapors, that may ifliie out of the p during the decodion ; for the Vipers, we have faid, have no poyfon in all th< body. This Oyle, thus prepared, ha not, ’tis true,'all the ftrength and vertu of the diftilled Oyle, of which we we fpeaking a little before •, but it may ve well ferve for an oyncment in all the c ifempe (20£) empers of the skin, in contractions of i;rves, in rheumatifmes, & in many other jhls. a — — - — — — — CHAP. IX. f the Manner of ufing the Volatil Salt . Lthough it be impoflible to fpecify in particular all the wayes of Ufing . ^ the Volatil Salt of Vipers, no )re than one can well enumerate the knefles, that may have need of it 5 Yet, fome degree to fatisfy thofe that may fire it we fhall make here an Abridg- ?nt of a good part of what we have feen uftifd by Pyhfitians,that perfectly know z qualities and proprieties of this Salt, i ufe it daily to the great benefit of their 0 tients. You muft fir (l know, that its piercing ifte hinders it from being given alone5 & that it muft be mix’t. with fome Ali- Aliment, as in broth, the yolk of an eg a rolled apple, a little jelley, &c. fom times with Medicines, and that innumer blewayes, which partly depend from t humour and difpofition of the, Patient, b chiefly from the wit, knowledge, and d cretion of the Phyfitian. For this S;, calls for a Phyfitian, that hathfufficiej ability to know and meafure its force a a&iv.ty; that is intelligent and verfed all Maladies, to be able beneficially to ei ploy it in thofe that require it, thatkno' to chufe a favorable time and occafio and to mix it pertinently and to good pi! pofe with fuch things, as may not chan' its nature nor divert its operations nor fu vert the indication, he fhalJ have tak< So that ’tis neceffary,to be equally aflfu; of the genuine and methodical preparati of the Salt 5 of the knowledge of its qt Ikies and vertues 5 of the nature of the* ftemper , of the condition, temper , ai flrengthof the Patient 5 of thefitnefs its exhibition among aliments or appr piiated medicaments, and of the occafic and the time, in which it may be iufeful employed. And when a due regard ha been had to all thefe circumftances, 4 C 211) ’ill not fail to finde very';good effe&s of it4 ut that thofe, who are nor accuftom’d i ) make ufe of it, may not unawares finde !i it eflfe&s contrary to the nature of this ;alt, we have thought ourfelves obliged > advertife them, that they muft above 1 things avoid mixing them among Acids ^ idefpecially among Spirit of Salt, Vitri- ,, Brimftone, and the like, which would x it and deftroy its operation. To find aerefore facility in its exhibition, it may : taken indiftilled waters, orptifane, or :ch deceptions as are appropriated to the feafe5 as alTo in Juleps, Emulfions, or otions diverfly compofed. Itmayalfo : mix’t in Conferves, Extracts, ConhPti- ' is, and the like 5 as alfo in Lozenges and pints, diverfly made according to the iture of the diftemper, and the intenth lof the Phyfitian 5 It is alfo mingled ith Purgatives, Sudorifiques , Aperi- yes and Diuretiques 5 and no lefs, with s own fix’t Salt, and fuch other Salts, as e not contrary to it. It is alfo given in 7ine, and among certain Mineral waters. . may be adminiftred to both fexes, and > all ages , at all times and hours , be- veen meals according to the nature of P % the ( 212 ) the difeafe, and the intention of the D dor. It may be taken, if one w ill, fe\ ral times in a day, and even at night $ a theufe of it may be continued for a go while. As to its dofe, that is different, aca ding to the occalion, age, temper and 1 mour of the Patient , and the nature the diftemper, and the reiteration made it: For , the dofe is to be much lefs j tiiofe, who take it often in one day, a continue the ufeofit, than forthofe, tl take it but once in a cafe of need. Son times cis efteemed fufficient to give 6. 10. or 12. grains of its but on cert; occafions we may give 20. or 2 5. graii and fome-times, halfadrachme, andev a whole drachme. But difcretion and si is to be ufed 5 without which, this Salt' excellent as ’tis, may produce effeds qu contrary to what the Phyfitian and the I dent might exped from it. CHAP. CHAPT. X, Divers Remedies or Comf ofi - tions, of which the Vola - til Salt of Vipers is the Rafe or Ground, WE had not undertaken to defcribe the vertues, nor the Ufes of the rolatil Salt of Vipers, no more than of ae Fix’t Salt, andoftheOyle thatnfeth y Diftillation, if this our Book were only Titten for the skiltul Phyfidan, who per- tly knows all, and efpecially the parts lat may be drawn from the Viper. But icing defirous to do a good office to fuch erfons, as have no knowledg thereof, or iat knowing it in part, have need to be ireded , efpecially in the exhibition of his Volatil Salt*, we thought* good to include this Book with the Receipts of P 3 the (*i4) the chief Compofitions of which this Vo- latil Salt may be the Ground, which art. not found in Books, and may produce Ef-j feds worthy of this Salt. And knowing, that there are many cu-j rious perfons, who having a grfcat efteerr; for the Viper and its ufes, make prepara-! tions thereof in private, following the Re- (apts they find in Books, which fome- times are well, fome-times ill prefcribed or ill executed • We (1 all impart to then an Elixir of Vipers , that (hall be of greai vertue, pleafant to the tafte, ofeafy prc paration, and of long duration. Take four douzen of Hearts and a:’, many Livers of Vipers, dry’d in the fhade and reduced to powder*, twodrachmeso good Cinnamon, half a drachme of Cloves grofly beaten: put them into a ft ron < glafs-bottle , holding about two pintSj Povvr on it a pound of the Queen of Uun\ gary's Water, a pound of Melifle- water half a pound of Orange* flower- water, am half a pound of Rofe-water. Clofe thr bottle exactly , and expofe it to the Sui for fourty dayes $ after which diflolvt in the liquor a pound of fine Sugar, anc1 pafs all through a dean bagg, Put up (215) $ Elixir in a Bottle, and add to it half ounce of the Volatil Salt of Vipers, dl re&ified, twelve grains of Levant- nsk, and as much of Amber-gris. Clofe e bottle exactly, and you may keep this ■ixir, to ute it in time of need, from half fpoonfull to a whole. You may take it in the morning upon an empty Sto- ack, and at all hours, according as ne- flity fhall require. T his medicin is very jod and very convenient : It is not onely oper againft all Poyfons, againft the ague, and all Contagious and Epidemi- ildifeafes, but it alfo fortifieth all the )ble parts , preferves the Natural heat good condixion, and by this means the e of it conduces much to preferve ealth, and to prolong Life. The Elixir following deferveth alfo to communicated to the Public, as ante- icine that is not common, and is very a- ailable, not onely for the Sickneffes of ien, as well in the Brain, as the ftoraack, id all the noble parts 5 but alfo very par- icularly, formoft of the difeafesot Wo- Men. I fhall give you here the Defcripti- n of it. Take an ounce of good Saffr on, s much of fair Myrrhe , as much of A- P 4 lots (216) logs Smtrin* , and the fame quantity i White Amber $ a drachm of the Extras of opium, and as much of the Extrad c| Ca(tor. Mingle your Extra&s in a litt Spirit of Wine-, pulverize all the_ refl and put altogether in aGlafs-Body : pov; upon it three pounds ol Spirit of wine ta tarized > place the Body in a Bath of P\ flies > fit an Head to it, with its Recipieni well lured together : Give it a moderait fire, and draw from it about the moiety c the Spirit of Wine-, then unlute your ve fels, decant the tin&ute, that will fwii above your powdeis, which will be fonr| very much imbued with all their qualitie and keep it by itfelf in a bottle well-clofe Powre the spirit of Wine, which yc have drawn off, upon the remainder in th Body 5 Fit again to it the Head and tf Recipient , and draw again from it t! half of the Spirit of Wine. Decant ; gain the tindure fwimmingatop, ming it with the fir ft, and keep it likewife. Cc hobate for the third time the Spirit ( wine, drawn off, upon the remainder i the Body 5 proceed as before, and powi off the tindure fwimming a ton, and mir gle it with the former : then filter all thre (217; agether, and powre all into a (tong Viall, dding to the whole an ounce of theVolatil ‘alt of Vipers, which will eafily diflblve in 1 $ keep the whole thus mix’t and well lofed. The do[e may be from ten to fix- een drops. We fliall yet adde to this an ofhte of *reat efficacy for moft diftempers of the 3rain5 and tis this. Take half an ounce )f the Extra# of the root and feed of the inale-Preony ; and of the true Mifleltoe of the Oakland of that of Betony- flowers, and of that of Clove- gilly-flowers , the fame quantity of each of them ; three drachms of the Confeftion of Alkermes of Mefae , three drachms of the Volatil Sale of Vipers , one drachme of the Volatil Salt of Succinum, two drachms and an half of prepared Pearl, and as much of Crabs-eyes prepar’d 5 three drops of Cina- mon-oyle, and as much of the oyle of Mace: Mingle all according to Art, and make an Opiate of it, and keep it in a pot of Fayence ( a fort of fine white Earthen : pots) well dofed. The dofeof it may be fromafcrupleto a drachme. Youmay alfo make, in the following ' manner, an opening and laxative Opiate, h / • that (218) that (hall conduce^© the cure of fundryi long and Rubborn difeafes, efpecially of thofe that are caofed by feveral obftru#i- onsof th® parts Take of the Confervej of Tamarisk- flowers, of the Cqnferve of the Flowers of Genifta or Spanifh-Broom, of that of Mary-gold, and of that of the Male-peach flowers, of each fix drachms 5 half an ounce of the Volatil Salt of Vipers, as much of the Extract of the ordinary lrU\ root, and as much of the Extra# ofRu- barb ; two drachms of the fix’t Salt of Vi- pers, as much of the Mineral Bezoar, and as much of the Salt of Worm-wood; a drachma and an half ofRofin ofScammo- ny, and as much of the Extra# of Colo- quintida ; and a drachme of the powder of j Cinnamon. Mix all thefe things toge-! ther, and adding to it, as much as needs, of the Syrup of Succory, compounded with Rubarb, you (hall make an Opiate of it, the Dofe of which may be from one drachme to Two, and even to three fori flronger Bodies. There may alfo be made Pills, that fhall have a vertuenear the former in efficacy, to be taken in a lefs quantity. Take of the Extra# of Aloes, made with the juyce of ! ; (219) if the cleanfedfflowers of Violets, of the ixtra&of Rubarb, and of that of the Le- ant-Sena, of each two drachms 5 as much >f the Volatil Salt of Vipers, as much of he Rofinof Scammony, and as much of he Gum’m Ammoniac in drops 5 one irachme of Mineral Bezoar, and the like quantity of the Fixt Salt ofVipers. Re- iuce all into a mafs of Pills, of w hich the iofe (hall be from half a fcruple to two fcruples. Thofe, whofe ftomach lhallbe troubled with tenacious humo s, fuch as could not be carryed away by Purges, or other re- medies 5 thofe, that have a naufeoufnefs, 1 and are fubject to troublefome refentments from the Stomach , may to good put- pofe ufe the following powder. Take of Coriander- feed (that is not prepared with Vinegar, according to the ill way of the Antients, but fuch as is fold in good (hops,) of Anis-feed , of fweet Fennel-feed, of the root of Lickorilh well fcraped and dryed, of each half an ounce 5 three drachms of the Volatil Salt of Vipers, and as much of Crabs-eyes prepared ; two drachms of the Fixt Salt of Vipers, and as , muchofwell-chofenCinarnon. Bring all to fe f 220 ) co a fine powder, and aide to it its weight or if you will, double its weight of finetj powder’d fugar. Clofe this mixture ic a Glafs-veflel, or in one of the fine white Earthenpots, and clofe it carefully You may take of it, at a time, from half a fyoon- full to a whole, according as you have put more or lefs Sugar to it. YOu may alfo adde to the powder fome drops of the Qyl of Anis, and of the Oyl of Cinnamon, and even of Musk and Ambre-gris. This Volatil Sale is to very good pur- pofe mix’c among the Sneezing powders > forbefides that ic penetrates exceedingly by its activenef* , it alfo difeharges the Brain powerfully, and withall fortifieth it. It may be mixed with the powders of Be- tony, Marjoram, Rofemary, Arabic, Sta?-i chas,Sage, and the like, not putting but a fixth part of our Volatil Salt among thefe powders. Thofe that would have an Opiate, pro- per not onely to fortify the Heart, the Sto- mach, and allthe noble parts, but alfo to expel! all kind of Venom, and all the im- purities of the mafs of Bloud, and of the (olid parts, and to make them ifltie out at the pores of the skin, or at the other emun- ctories, (221') Tories, may prepare very beneficially the following Opiate, Take two ounces of the Conferve of Gilly- flowers, one ounce of the Confecti- on of Alkermes, ambred andmusked, fix drachms of the Volatile Salt of Vipers well rectified, half an ounce of the Con- fection of Hyacinth, as much of the Ele- ctuary of Diafeordinm, three drachmes of the Mineral Bezoar$ and of Pearl prepar’d, of Crabs-eyes prepared, of the Extract of Angelica, ana of that of Carlina, of each of thefe the fame quantity 5 two drachms of the Salt of Carduus Benedictus. Mix all together, and reduce it to an Opiate, by adding to it fome Syrup of kermes, or the Clove-G illy- flowers, as much as needs to give a good confifteuce to the Compo- fition: Which you are to keep clofe for your occafions. You may take of it, for a preservative, half a drachm', at a time, in Wine, or broth * but in urging ficknefles, 1 you may take of it a whole drachme, and 15 even two drachms. n” Thofe that will ufe the Oyl which hath ; been drawn by Diftillation,may either em- ploy it all alone, or mingle it with an equal quantity of Ungutntum Marti At am ^ and even ; . 1 . ■ (222) even adde to it Oyles diftilled of Rofe mary, Sage, Lavender and the like. Thofe,that (hall wellconfiderthefe Re ceipts, will finde therein not onely a fi proportion in the dofe of a‘l the particu lars, butalfo great cautioufnefs in mixin< nothing with them, that maydeftroyo change the natnre of our Volatil Salt which is the thing, moft to be avoided ii i the exhibition. We might here adde many other Com' pofitions, of which the Volatil Salt of Vi- pers may be the Ground ; but we have contented ourfelves to deliver thefe for ex- amples, knowing, that there may be founc divers others, good enough , in Books j and efteeming, that ’tis better to prepare them upon occafion according to exigen- cy, and following the Receipts, which able Phyfitians may preferibe thereof. We have alfo explain’d ourfelves fuffici- endy in all particulars. We would have been more large, if we had not apprehend- ed we might exceed our bounds, and under- j take things, which might be thought to be beyond our reach, and to belong onely to knowing Phyfttians. Thofe that know well to prepare this Vo- (“3 ) /olatil Salt of Vipers, and to unite it well vith the Volatil parts of Plants, and with he Sulphureous parts of certain Minerals, hat are friendly to our nature, may fay,thac hey have made fome progrefs in their Pro- )eflion. We labour daily, and wifii our elves able in time to impart fomething to he publick5thac may be more accomplice? FINIS. E T*T E R RANCESCO REDI Concerning Obje&ions made upon his OBSERVATIONS About fIPE Written to ifieur BCTURDELOr Abbot > and Lord of Cottde and St- Lever. And ifieur ALEXANDER A/OR VS. Primed in Italian Florence, 1670. Bom mane Cngiift. Together with SEQUEL of NEW EXPED- IENTS upon VIPERS, and a Dif- rtation upon their Poyfon : Serving for Reply to a Letter written by Signor rancefco Redi to M. Bourdelot,it\& M. Morns „ Written in French by Moyfe Charas. jjSatolt&ettufc CngUthc®. LONDON, ted by 7. R, for John Martyn Printer to the Royal Witty , at the Bell in S. Fanis Churchyard, 167 i- 1 w A LETTER OF IRANCESCO REDE frncerning fbme Objections made upon his Obfervat ions about Vipers. I Written to Monfieur BOllRDELOT \ AND vlonfieur ALEXANDER MORUS. SIRS, ROM your liberality I have received the Book entituled NE W EXPER l ME NTS upon VIPERS , learnedly lpofed by thofe noble Virtucji , who du- yfome months had met in the Hotife of Chciros for that purpofe. I have read ver more then once with great com- ment, plainly -finding that thofe Wor- perfons have not fcrup'edby their e- ent labours to confirm the Truth of fe Obfervations, which I alfo had made thing VIPER S’, until the year 1664. A 2 And ( 4 ) And indeed I think my felf much oblij to their ingenuity, and do frankly acknc ledge, that whatever worth that rude ; plain piece of mine may have , it hath ceived it from the honourable teftimon given to it in France , where all theex< lent Sciences and Arts do highly florifh the admiration of thofethat profefs tl in the other parts of Furcpe. I intreat you, Sirs, that you would me the favour to reprefent upon occai thefe my candid and cordial fentimei and withall to declare the high efleei have for that Book ; the authority ofwhj is fo venerable with me, that, having foi therein feme few things dire&ly contr| to my own Experiments , I have oi doubted of my felf, and been almoft ret to believe, that I dream’d when I mtj and when I wrote them. But fome of Learned Friends , that were frequei prefent at thofe my Operations, have lai ed at me for that pronenefs of my be! and between jeft and earnefl: allur’d that thofe Experiments had by no me fo fucceeded with me in a dream. F withftanding which, without any regarc their alTeverations, I refolved to ite [ reiterate them, and that with To great careful diligence, that I fhould greatly are my felf and Truth, if I fhould not dy and candidly tell you, that all thofe r or five ’Experiments, which to thofe ltlemen in France have not fucceeded, Tucceed with me in Italy without fail, hey were formerly recorded by me ; on contrary, thofe will not fucceed with that have been made in France and are scitrary to mine. And fince you may perhaps have the cu- ifityas to defire to know of what kind y are, I fhall here give you a brief ac- int of them ; affuring my felf, that it .1 be acceptable to all the Lovers of ath, but efpeciallyto the Authors of Book of the New Experiments, who re been induced to write by no other tive then the foie defire either to con- n or to find the Truth of a matter fo cu- us, of which fo many underloading men be written. In my Letter then of. the Obfervations. \ut Vipers, addreffed to the Illuffcrious \renz& EMagalotti, fpeakingof the Poi- |i of thofe creatures, both what it is, and I what part of the Body it refiderh, I af- A 3 firm’d C 6 ) firm’d (as I affirm ftill ) that the Poil of a V iper is nothing elfe then a certain y lowilh liquor, which lodgeth in the vefic that cover the greateft teeth oftheVipe and that that Juice is not only poifonoi when it is eje&edby the live Viper wl fhe biteth, but alfo when ’tis colled! from a dead Viper, and even fuch and that hath been dead many days, provicj it be made to pafs into a wound , and 1 main there. Moreover, I added, that til fame liquor, when taken down into tl ftomach, is not deadly, no not fo much I noxious. And this was my opinion,whi ! hath been confirm’d to me by innumerall Experiments, made with the greateft exa nefs I couldemploy. But the Authors of the Book of the N "Experiments do refolutely write , Tl! that above mention’d Liquor is not poifcl ous, but a meer and a moft innocent Sahl or Spitle. Thence they go on to affirm I an undoubted and experimented Trutil, that the Viper hath no part of her boc neither limb nor humor, able to poifo and that all herpoifon confifts in theft imagination of the Viper, irritated ai made angrr by the idea of vengeance, whi 1C 7 i hath conceived in her head ; by the ms whereof the fpirits being put into a lent motion,- are darted through the 'ves, and at times through the Fibres of cavities Of the Teeth, by which cavities fe fpirits are carried to infeft the blood he animal, by the opening made with $ biting teeth. Infhort, they conclude, ft if a Viper be not angry, and have not ;r.:iit vindicative imagination , her bitings at*, never poifon , but are very innocent, to ;.ifmg nomifehief at all to him, in whom ucirsy are made. For thefe are their words ; Pag- 36. in the Englifh Veriion , "Thefe a ijiderations , fupported by many Experi- >nts made by Us , and to be related hereaf- >■ , have induced me to call thefe Glands liva \,and to aferibe to them the very fource that yellow liquor, which hath been fo much \ cried , and withal fo little known ; and is thing elfe, but a pure and a very innocent title. 1 hope that thofe who /lull take the '■ins of examining after me , thefe Glands, id this Juyce of the Gums, will not flick to ve me their fuff ages. ! Item p. 105. 106. But not to flay upon 'inciples fo fightly eflablijhed , and ill main- tin d , forafmuch as we have on our fide a A 4 great ( 8 ) great number of Experiments, upon wh we are grounded : We fay, that this Juki nothing hut a pure and plain Saliva, of wh we have already obferved the ufe ; and t, this Juice contributes nothing to the venom nefs of the Biting, fince being tafled and fa lowed ( as we have often experimented ) doth no hurt to man or beafi ; and jince a being put upon open wounds , and upon inciji made in the flefh , the fame being rub' d the with , and mingled with the blood , it ann nothing at all ; notwith (landing thejudgnu of a Berfon very intelligent, and particula in this fubject of Vipers , who abjures to ha made a great number of Experiments, wh being contrary to curs, the great opinion have of the abilities and the jincenty of ti famous man, hath obliged us to employ the mi care and exaclnefs, and to confirm our feh bg a very great number of Experiments, whi have alwayes been found alike in the truth here ajfert, and of which we fhallmake ei dent and irrefragable proof. Item p.cog.Ue conclude therefore, that 1 1 imagination of the Viper , irritated by the id of revenge , which jhe had framed to her fet gives a certain motion to the fpivits, whi cannot be expreffed,and pufhes them violent i throng ( 9 ) k ugh the Nerves and their Fibres, to the \ty of the teeth as into a funnel, And that vt thence they are conveyed into the blood lie animal by the opening , vohich they have 'e , there 'to produce all thofe effects, of itch we endeavour to give a reafen. item pag. in. However this be, we mufl ’in agree , that this irritation in the fanjie 1 1 the fpirits of the Viper , is the main caufe be activity and pier cingnef of its venom , that without it the biting would not pro- ' fuch [urprifing effects, as thofe are , of ch we have related fo many examples. tern pag. 138. Ehefe Experiments wit ye on the one hand, that the yellow liquor ributes nothing to the poyfon ; and on the ; r, that theje incenfed fpirits , a ffified by : openings , which the great teeth had ' le for them, are the foie and true caufe k reef it Thefe fentiments they confirm by fome c periments, all which confifi: in this, that y haddrop’t a quantity of that yellow 1 Jor into the wounds of a Pigeon, a Dog, cl fome Pullets, which yet dyed not of ft and that having caufed a Pigeon to be k ten by a Viper not enraged, the animal ceived thence no hurt at all. For they | . fay. ( 10 ) fay pag. 1 1 5. We alfo made a trial up i Pigeon, which we wounded under the w and in the Leg in the fame moment of th And we let into each wound fame of this yeti liquor , which juft afore we had drawn f the gums of two enraged Vipers ; then we joyned the skin well , to enclofe the faid liq and we bound both wounds over with a ba that nothing might run out. We can afj: that the Pigeon felt not any inconvenu from it , and that we even found upon wound , made in the Leg , a coagulated droj the juice , round , and of the fame colour as had put it there, and the blood of the wo. dryed , and that , foon after , both wounds » dried up, and healed of themfelves. Pag. ii 6. We alfo made the like Exp . ment upon a Cat , which we purpofely woun in the Leg , but he received no harm at ah it: We have alfo often experimented it on ii lets , and other Pigeons , but alwayes with like fuccefs , and without any offence to Animals. Ibid. The fame Trial hath been th made at three fever al times, and even tn in one day upon a Dog , whom we had woun. on purpofe towards the bottom of the JBj where he could not lick his wound and mifchief at PI followed upon it. Ifct C II ) > [bid. We cannot but add here an Experi- 4tt of the mortal ejfeff of the Enraged Spi - ( jr without any intervention of the yellow t!or. We made a Viper Jeveral times to bite n a fice of bread , by preffmg every time ■jaws againjl the bread ; and rve did this fo ,7 i, that not only that juice was altogether kiaufed, but the blood began to come out of VeJJtcles. Jt the fame time we vexed Viper, and made her bite a Pigeon in the ■Ji flejhy part and we obfervd that indeed effects of the venom of the biting were fo quick , the Pigeon not dying but an hour l an half after it had been bitten ; but then found alfo, that the teeth of the Viper were a manner covered with the crums of the ’ad, from the force of her having bitten at and that that had hindred them fro?n ma - ig a deep entrance ; and that having half ft up the pores of the teeth , a good part of ? angred Spirits could not come forth ; fo it the death of the Pigeon could not follow faf, though yet it hapned without any mix- re of the juice, which had been altogether tptied. Pag. 138. T he wound made by a Viper t vexed , whofe Jaws were held in, and bofe teeth were at the fame time thrufk into the C 12 ) the body of tPigeonyvhich alfo w/ts accompan 4 with fore of the yellow juice, and yet not tended with any ill accident. To thefe Experiments I have noth! elfetooppofe, but t ho fe very many oi ; that were made by me in the year 1 664. : recited in the above-mentioned Obfervd ons of mine about Vipers , and thofe alfot I fhall recite hereafter , made likewife my felf,not with a defire to confirm the fi but indeed to difcover the Truth. A that I may not be put often to repeat fc things, I fhall premife fame General Obf vations,made by me at the time when I de in Vipers. 1. A viper more eafily kills a Pigeon1 Pullet, aTurky-cock, a Squirrel, a D I moufe, and generally all fmall Birds a Animals, than agre^it Animal, asaShei a Deer, aHorfe, a Bull ; yea thefe great ones and thofe that are ofan hard skin,v( often a Viper kills not at all. 2. According to the bignefs of the A malbitten,and according to the place wb< the Viper biteth, death follows fooner later; efpecially according as the pla| wounded is a clear texture , or thick 1 with veins and arteries ; or thofe veins a:l arteries are very fmall or big. 3. V C 13 ) ). If from the wound of a Viper much odiffueth, it fometimes happens, that : Animal not only dyeth not, but does : fo much as feel any great inconveni- re. 4. Itdothalfonot feldom fall out, that Animal bitten by a Viper buffers grie- jis Symptoms from the poyfon , which ing it near death, but yet kill it not; : the creature without any helpofPhy- k and by the foie work of nature reco~ T. 5. Thofe Animals that are bitten of a per dye a little fooner, than thofe, into ? wounds of which hath been on purpofe nveyed that yellow liquor, which by : hath been fetch’t out of the baggs of the tth of that Viper. 6 . ’Tis neceffary, that great dexterity ; tiled in making the faid liquor to metrate into the wound ; becaufe, if the oundbe narrow, it pierces difficultly; large, it cannot be otherwifebut it will deed, and with that blood the faid liquor ill turn back, and fo the poifon come out *ain. I had then provided a good number of ipers which I caufed to be brought me cut C H ) of the Kingdome of Naples ; and having thisraoneth of oJlTay, 1670 wounded Pigeons of the bigger fort in the thighs put into them foiue of the yellow liqi frefhly taken out of the mouth of the 1 Vipers ; and all thefe PigeonS, fome wit! the fpace of one hour, fome in half an ho and fome in two hours, died. This Ex riment I repeated upon ten Chickens, lij wife wounded in their thighs, with the fa event that had befallen the Pigeons. Then I cut off the heads of twelf Vipe and all the heads being cut ofF, and the > pers quite dead, I thence extracted the pc fon , and caufed them to be put into wounds of eight Turtle-doves, all which ed in the fpace of half an hour. In the month of June , having killedm ny otherV i pers, and gather’d out of the ba of their teeth and their gums all the yello and vifeous Juice that was there, I anoint< therewith fome beefom-rods* fharpn’d li arrowes , and immediately I pricked wiij them ten young Pigeons in the more fleft part of their cheft, leaving them fixed in tl wound ;and the Pigeons furvived not abo^ two or three hours. But left itfhouldt doubted ; whether thefe Pigeons died nc ( *5 ) le wound it felf, enraged by the pun- es of thofe rods, I made a trial upon -other Pigeons with rods not infected h that poyfonous liquor ; but none of n dyed, though the wounds became pu- i ;nt. alfo took eight heads of Vipers, cut off hours before, and, the Vipers being quite d, I caufed eight Turtlg-doves to be :en by them in the thigh, and not one of n efcaped. vforeover I made the heads of fifteen )ers to be cut off: and put them into a ik-veffel well cover’d, having laid them >n ©ne another, that fo they might remain ;l ift.Four dayes after, I ftruck with thofe ds five young Cocks , and five great Pi- rns in the thigh, and they all after a little ; ile died* The like fell out with other )er-heads, which having been killed fix fes before, had in all likely hood loft all 1 >ller and thoughts of revenge. And to • :vent all Objeffions that might be railed thisoccafion, Ilhall not omit to relate you, that about the beginning of jiuguft entwo of my Vipers, that alone were t me in a box, died of thetnfel ves of fick- s,I caufed two Turtle-doves to be ftruck by ( *6 ) by them, which alfo, like the former, d1 in lefs than an hours time. But I may go further. I had collet inaglafs all the poifonous liquor of I headsoftwo hundred and fifty Vipers, make various Experiments therewith it| occafion. But being by much bufmefs 1 dred, I delayed to accomplifh my deE Whence that Jiquor turn’t firft into a gl< colour’d like amber; then in 30 daye became altogether dry and friable , fo r it could eafiiy be reduced to powder ing pulveri fed, I had a mind to try, w therthat powder, let into a wound, < keep the force of poyfoning ; and I foi that really it did fo, all thofe Pullets, Pi ons, and Turtle-doves, into the wound: which I had put Tome thereof, dying of i a little while. Having made this Experiment, I be, to doubt, whether that poyfon of the1 rowes of the King of (zlMacafiar in the Ifl< of Celebes , which commonly are called arrowes of Bantam in Java Major, were i the poyfon excra&ed out of the moutl fome Viper, or of fome other Viper-1 ferpent, and perhaps ofa more maligne ture becauie of the diverfity of theCIimt I C 17) not much averfe from believing this to b ; and it may be confirmed by what I read in Fliny, viz,. That the Scythians infed their Arrows with a Vipenn poi- [ His words are. Scythe Jagittas tmgunt 'ini Janie & humano Jangnine : ir remedy ! id Jcehu mortem illico levi tactic ajjert. | this was perhaps extraded by Pliny of Arifictler who in h s Book , inti turd v; v/uaQiay ctMvQfiaiwv, loon after defcri- 1 the procefs of preparing it,whichl dare iffirm to be the true one, or to requi e ? iany circumftances and cautions* Ar.d knows, whether the Arrows of Hercules , • /hich the Fables alledge that they were pi ued with the blood of an Hydra , were infeded with this poifon of Vipers ? So , believed by Diodorus Siculus , when he ], Thj dxjS'3- mvlttrUi ixHvnc l°v { . Ovid gives the name of Viper to the ■t ra , when in his ninth Book of oJMsta- 'rh. he faith ; irs quota Derma Jerpens er-it UntisJLchidna, l afterwards ; — Cap it injeius keros , duiturqtie burner is Lernece virus Tchidna. which may be added, that Philo Ft etes , Heir of the Bow and Arro ws of Hercules , ng yon ia the Grecian Navy to- the Trojan B War, (i3) War, and having unawares wounded hii (as Servius Grammaticus relates,/. 3. 1FE1 with one of his Arrows in the foot \ was among the Grecians in the Kb of Stalin by reafon of the violence of the pain, the intolerable ftench of the wound. Wh Sophocles , alluding, it feems, to the kin poifon, in a Poetical way and phrafe 1 teth, that FhiloBetes was left in that Ifle caufe he had been bitten by a Viper, words are ; Si tikvov, % i(/la,repared for two young Dogs a difh of Vi- r-heads parboiled, but they would not eat hd, and we were forced .to cramm them iwn : Soon after, the lefier of the two Dogs s bitten in the thigh near the groin, and the ;ger in the tongue;and they both dyed. And the like manner dyed eight Chickens, two lings, two young Hares, and fix Turtle- ves, likewife bitten by Vipers, and Phyfi- ;dnot only by their heads, both raw and i.led, but alfo having their wounds walked :h the Viper-blood. And I remember, that I Ifed thofe 6 Turtle-Doves to be bitten nor theheadsof live Vipers, but by thofe of d ones, and fiuch as had dyed two days be- *. Moreover,! continued for three days cefiively to cram two fuch other Doves h Viper-flelh, and gave them no other nk then the broth of that flefh ; and yet y could not efcape death, being bit ten by iper. Whence I am inclined to believe, that in 'cany the fiefh ofVipers is no help or reme- , at leaft no confiderable one, to Animals ten by Vipers. Meanwhile Irefermyfelf :he Learning, Experience, and Authority C 2 of ( 36 ) of thofe noble perfons, to whom I do m< willingly fubmit this or any other opinion mine, and with whom I would never entert; a controveriie. For 1 fhould apprehend 1 it might befall me, what Marcus Tullius v wont to fay of Cato, viz. That it was not 1 troublefome to him to anfwer to the authc ty of Cato, then to his ftrongeft arguments,! For the reft, I earneftly intreat you, &| that you would pardon the rudenefs of t my Letter, fufficiently appearing to h; been written by aperfonfull of bufinefs, ther then enjoying leifure;and that you wo pleafe only to regard the naked truth, wh without any paftion I did undertake to late+ * A CONTINUATION Of the iJEW, EXPERIMENTS CONCERNING IPERS: TOGETHER ith a Difcourfe touching their Poyfon ; By way of Reply, to a Letter written by I Signor FRJNCESCO RED I, to Meffieurs BOURDELO? and O R U S ; Printed at Flo- rence, 1670. BysJKOTSE CHJRJS. Englifii’d out of French* LONDON , Printed by 7. K.for John Marty n Printer to the Loyal Society , at the Beilin S. Paul) Churchyard, 1675. HEW EXPERIMENTS CONCERNING PIPERS. nifbt in the Fi efs At Paris, jiuguft 4. 1671. Eelieved, I had fufficiently efta- bliOi’d my opinion touching the Foifon of Vipers by abun- dance of Experiments, fuppor- ted by Reafons , heretofore iade publick : But there hath fince appear’d t Paris a Letter of Signor Re di , in which ic oppofes my Lent intents : And he being a >erfon,whofe merit hath acquir’d him a great eputation among the Learned, that Letter >f his hath not been without making fome im- 1 predion in the minds of many, and in fome c yen of thofe,that had relifh’d my opinion, C 4 favor: C 40 ) favour of which they feem’d to have alrea< declared themfelvcs. I might indeed have defended my felf as that which is againft me in that Letter, fo after it appear’d; having reafousftrongai numerous enough to maintain and juftifief I had advanced in my writing : But I thoug icbetter to deferr it till Spring, to the ei that after I fhould have made New Expei) ments, and the more a {lur’d my felf of all, 1 might, by a renew’d knowledge of the trut afterwards the better perfwade the public thereof. It will therefore appear by this Si quel of Experiments, here fet down, that 1 21 fo far from changing my Opinion, that I ha1 reafon to be more ftrongly than everconfi med in what I embraced at firfh I do herewith fincerely declare, that wTh< I publifhed my book, my chief aim wra| faithfully to relate all the truths I had difc< ver’d, and not to offend Signor Red?, whom] exceedingly efteem and honour for his rat Talents, and whofefriendthip I hope to ha\: a fbare in ; fofar was I from pretending ti do any thing that might make him write ai gain ft: my Book, or from fore-feeing that c ver I fhould have occafion to labour to de fend my felf again ft him : Which yet I fine fciud otl.erwife, by the Letter he hath writ1 ( 41 ) againftme, and even without honoring with a Copy of it, wherewith he hath gra- ?d many perfons at Paris and elfe where, e- j after 1 had had the advantage offome Let- .ry Commerce with him, as I might eafily ifie. . canbeiides proteff, that when I refolved ontradift certain points of his firft Let- s it -was in a manner again!! my will, and aufe I could not at alidifpenfe with it,ex- 1 1 would have baffled my fenfes, and that it I faw my felf,together with a great num- of witneiffes. I can alfo allure, that I uld now be very ready to un-fay what I e affirm’d upon this fubjeft, and to agree b him, if I were not altogether pe fwaded the contrary in the main things he hath tten again!! my Sentiments. Vfterthefe Protections, being well afflu- as well by Reafon, as by many new Expe- lents newly made, that I have affirrted no- ig but what is true I found my felf in- penfably obliged to maintain it, and to der a good office to the publick,by endea- iring to lliew that ’tis very difficult reafo- >ly to oppofe any thing to the contrary. The difference between Signor Kedi and confifts chiefly in this, That he Pretends, Jellow Liquor contain’d in the Vehicles / of ( 42 ) of the Gums of Vipers, to be the only a true feat of their Poifon ; That thisjuyct riot venomous when taken at the mouth, t that it is fo when let into the wounds ma by a Viper whillt fhe is alive,'and even thole, which fire may be forced to make fe' ral days after fhe is dead, provided thaty low liquor do intervene; That the fame quor drawn from a live.Viper,as well as t of a dead one, is always venomous if let ii wounds, and mingled with the blood of i Animal wounded,whether it be ufed when quid, or after it is dryed and reduced to pct der ; and that it generally kills all kind Animals into the wounds of which it ft have been intromitted. But I, who of all thele points can admil none but that of the innocence of the yell liquor when taken at the mouth, and op] ftngmyfelfto all the reft; do fay, That Poifon of a Viper is no where but in her en ged Spirits ; that the yellow juyce as wel a live Viper, and even a vexed one, as of < that is either newly dead, or hath been fo feveral days, contains in it no poifon at neither in the biting, nor taken inwarc nor put into wounds, nor mingled with blood, nor any other way wherein it may ufed ; that it kills nor infefts any kind oft m — ( 43 ) i; ; and that it is nothing but a meerand bcent Saliva. 'he queftion muft principally be decided matter of Faaid as to the formalities of the biting, and ufingof the yellow liquor : His reputati- s too well grounded to be blamed; and ! is the confederation which troubles me b Mean time I fee the contrary to what lath advanced againft my Book; and the :hs which X there oppo'fe are fo clearly 1 in my Experiments Brft and laft, as well hofe I have made only in the prefence of ie curious perfons, as in thofe I have late- nade inpublick, andbeforea great num- ofPhyfkians and other perfons very ind- igent in thefe matters. So that I can nor ;ht any longer to hide thofe truths, which the chief inducement of writing this dif- ; rfe. We need not wonder that Signor Redi, ha- g made all his Experiments by order and the expence of fo great a Prince, who is as “ious as he is Munificent, had Vipers and forts of Animals in far greater number than C 44 ) I had ; I, who did all from my felf, at my o charges, and with a meer defire to difc truth from falfhood. Nor do I think, I ' obliged to multiply expences when the tr was found fufficiently clear’d up, and all by-ftanders acknowledged, that I had m fufficient tryals for every Experiment, fince he hath contented himfelf with hav made fome of the yellow liquor to be fv lowed by one only Man, one only Duck, < only Kid, thence to know and to allure h felf of its innocence when lwallow?d,with! making a greater number of Experimeni1 He mult not blame me for having candi bounded my curiofity, after I had in div things made many more Experiments, t he mentions he hath made upon this fubj( as appears by what he writeth p. 1 7,8c r S1 his firft Letter. I find therefore, that he h no great caufe to complain of me (as hedc under the name of thofe Illustrious Authors , whom he afcribes my Book in his Letter)' not having vouchfafed to makeExperime enow to confirm the truth of the Obferv ons about Vipers, contain’d in his firft I1 ter of 1 66 4. He had not, I fay, great ca to fpeak ofit after fuch a manner, fince I < do fo but in imitation of him, and becaufi had in the fame Letter advanced and affu: f > ( 45 ) ticulars, which required not I fhould ke more tryals then thofe 1 have defer ibed ny Book : Although I can aflure to have de more then I have recited. He knows y well, that about the end of pag. 23. of firft Letter he ufed thefe words. , E quelveleno fljizza tutto fuora, fe non al • i»», almeno al fecondo ntorfo ; Ji cbe ilterzo ( e ■ volte l ho ejperimentato) non e ve/e no fo : tat is, yfnd that poifon iffues all out, if not at f jirjl , at leaf at the fecond biting ; fo that ’ third (which I have often experimented) not venomous. And if,becaufeoftherefpe&I bear to the , filings of a perfon of fo high a reputation, I ■ otght among divers other Experiments, a having made one and the fame Viper, e- ry time vexed, to bite five feveral Pige- ts, which all died, and even the laft of them oner then the reft, I might ftop there ; I ink Signor Rcdi hath nothing to reproach swith. He had affured in his firft Letter, d affures the fame in his latter. That all the )ifon did lodge in the yellow liquor, and tat this poifon was all exhaufted if not at te firft, yet at leaf! at the fecond biting, and iat he had often experimented that the third as no. more venomous : So that, if I was per- vaded, that all the yellow Liquor muft be come C 40 came out by the fecond bit ing made upon |i fecond Pigeon, and if, after that, I have i dye three other Pigeons by the frefh biti|< of the fameViperthat had bitten the twofi| I do not think that Sign. Redi ‘hath righti accnfe me for not having done enough : might rather have done me that jufticeas | acknowledge, that I had done more then) nough to maintain my Reflexions, and tha i was obliged from that tune »o feek the p i fonelfe\vhere then in the yellow liquor, regard it did no longer intervene, accordu to him, in the three laft bitings, and that ( three laffc Pigeons were as foon, yea foom dead then the two firft, of the death of whi he could charge the yellow liquor. If I con not find, no more then Sign. Rediy inallVl body of the Viper, any other vifible or pi pable part that was venomous, and tj might jbftly be declared to be the feat of | poifoipand the true caufe of the death whi| enfued upon the three laft bitings ; he nr not wonder, if I have fought and found it the vexed Spirits , and if I have grounded J felf upon the beft evidence, I could get fnt Experiments and Reafon. But fince the chief motive of my tryals ha been the defire of exadly knowing theTrii concerning thofe matters ; having feen tl > ( 47 ) t ;n. Redi, pag. 31. of his Iaft Letter hath fired. I would make new experiments after t; Objections againft me : To be the more af- •edofall, I have been willing to give him it fatisfaCtlon, in giving it to my felf. For, ithe moneth of Map lafl,in the Chymical La* ratory of the Royal Garden, in the pre- ice of two or three hundred by-ftanders, th Fhyfitians and others, capable to judge it, and worthy to be credited ; from a- mgft many live Vipers, fen t me out of Dau~ \ne, and divers parts of Roittu, I chofe a ;at Feinal-Viper , that was lufty enough twithftanding the great way ihe came, and ving open’d her jawes, I very carefully ?aredand fqueezed out of them at feveral petitions, all the yellow liquor contained the bags of her gums, and that alfo which ght be diffufed about the neighbouring rts, with a fine piece of linnen cloth wound out the handle of a penknife: Which done, 00k the fame Viper with Pincers about her ck, and angred her in making her to fallen r teeth into the end of her tail, and in pref- gfrom time to time her neck with thofe ncers ; and immediately after I prefented her five Pigeons and two Pullets one after other, to bite them in the moft flefhy part their Cheft, having irritated her every time ©f / 4* ) , 1 of her biting* I purpofely wounded, a | fix Pigeons audPullets in divers places, inti! prefence of all the company, and let into ti: wounds feme drops of the yellow liqw drawn from the Vehicles of newly enraged 1 pers. I laid both forts a part; and the col pany parted about an hour after, beft; which time, five of the Pigeons and Pullei that had been bitten, were dead, and the t\ remaining died about an hour after ; but t, Pigeons and Pullets, which I had woundt and in whofe wounds 1 had put in fome ofij faidjuyee, ailed nothing, but that there a peared fome lividnef, at the place woundt and filch an one as might have been the from the fo'e wounding them, and witht any concurrence of that liquor. Two da after, I fhew’d the company the fame wot ded Pullets and the fame Pigeons , whit were very well, and had their wounds alm< perfectly healed up, only there remain’di little blewnefs about the wounded parts, would then have wounded the fame animals, gain in other paces, and intromitted frei yellow liquor : fome alfo of the by-ftandt propofed to let into one of thefe creatur fome of this yellow liquor by that way Transfufion, that hath lately been made in c vers parts of Europe^ of fome ft ranger blot j, in > ( 49 ) nhe veins 6f men, that fo this jiiyce be- mingled with the blood by the ordinary :u!ation,it might be able to aifcover what r it could do. I readily complied with ir motion" whereupon the intromiHion of ] liquor was attempted upon one of the e Pigeons that had been wounded tw® s before. One Phyfitian andtwQ Chirur- lns did the work one after onother, in ma- g both the incifion and the ligature of the It difcernable velTels of the right wing : : they let the Pigeon loofe fo much blood, t it dyed fcoii after. Seeing this, I faid, t the Pigeon dyed only from the lofsofits od, and not from the letting in of the vel- ■ liquor ; and that it would be neceffary, only Chirurgion ofthe Company fiou'd tea new operation upon another of the e Animals, that had been wounded 2 days bre,and upon whom that yellow Juyce had ibeentryed. The Operation was made ordinglyat the fame time upon a Pullet, ich did not only efcape again, but was feen t next day and the following days by the ole company to be very well ; as wereal- he other animals that had been wounded in at the fame time, and received of the low liquor, though without the wav of nsfufion. Yet true it is, that one of the D Pigeon! (50) Pigeon?, that had been the fecond time woij ded, was found dead feme time after its b ing wounded, in a clofe earthen Furnace, ^ r y hot, and Panding clofe by luchanotb where I then diftil ed feme fpirit and oyl | Tobacco, and the death of which ought t be imputed to the piercing vapors of this ft favourable to Signor Red/, to make him- ftheincifion, and intromit the yellow li- or as he fhould think beft. He made fuch )unds as hepleafed, and he did even fever ■e skin of the flefli round about the wounds had made, and fo far, that I could not hold tell him fin i ling, he did more than Signor himfelf faid in his Letters he had done; d added, Eon/ ejfe aft dr is fonder e, non de t here , A good Shepherd did Sheer, not Flea s Sheep. One of the Catlings was bitten in the Car- lagineouspart of theEar, without anyap- D 2 gearance (50 , pearance cf b’oocl at the place of the bitin, and it efcapecl. The other, which was mu lefs, and a very noted one by the b’ackn of its colour and by having her ears cut . ive ; feeling alfo he pain in two other places, where die had b wounded and Head. Some of the by-ftand began already to mutter, and laid, 1 sfliould cart, and the Cat would certainly dye ; notwithstanding the Cat did not dye, thoi fhe was very little and taken out from urn her dam ; and Hie was Ihew’d to the com n y 24 hours after, found and fafe, althoi fhe had nei ther fuck’d nor eaten any thing that time- And ’tis remarkable enough, t this very Car, having been returned to a F at to whom Hie belonged, and being gre big, ha' h ret to this day the hind- part of skull unclofed at the place of her wou# C 53 ) ^ id notwithstanding all that, & the falling off fome flefh and skin, that were fever’d from e places where flie was flead, fhe is very ]t jtiy and full of play, and very diverting r! mickgeftures. d fhe fix latter Pigeons, that had been woun- lo' d at the fame time, and received of theyel- > v liquor, were like wife producedjand they ?reyet kept five or fix days with the other i geo ns and Pullets that had been twice i minded before ; among which was that alfo which the transfufion had been imitated, eai : lad they were killed, rolled, and eaten, iv good company, of which were fome of f( ofe that faw them woundedjand that found 1 em very good and favoury meat. i( Amidft all thofe Experiments 5 omitted not d try, whether the heads of Vipers newly ;ad, having yet their necks on, with all their J Slow liquor, would be able to kill Animals, : / making them to be bitten by them. I tryed upon Pigeons and Pullets, by thrufting the eth into them as deep as I could. I emp'oy- 1 alfo to the fame purpofe fome whole Vi- ers, which I had found dead among the live aes in the barrils, and which abounded in le yellow liquor. But this was always wit li- nt any inconvenience to the Animals bitten, 3 far was it from killing them. d3 I here ( 54 ) ^ I here pafs by many other Experimer : made at my houfe, in the prefence of fevctl Phy(itians,that did all agree in making out t? innocence of the yellow liquor, and in afc: bing the poifonoufnefs to the enraged fpiri Yet I muff not leave here un-mentionej what was done by three youngPhyfitians,wli being perfwaded of the truth of my Expe:i ments,as well concerning the innocence of tl yellow liquor, as that of bitings made wit out the angred fpirits, caufed their fingers be bitten, to ftrifes, by a dead Viper havi yet all her yellow liquor, and that fodee that the blood of it appeared to all: But th:| found no other inconvenience by it, but wh they might have felt from prickings made 1 a needle. I had certainly made a far greater numl: ©f Experiments if I had not obferved, thl Sign. Rcdi himfelf had already made ma for me, and for the maintaining of my Sen ments ; and among others that of fag. 2 G. his firft Letter of Obfer vat ions, where faith, Si mori unpollajlro morficato , &c. That j 7 here dyed a Pullet hit ten by a Viper , the peh pf rvhofc teeth l hud cut off ; and cut of wh vehicles 1 had fquee^d out all that ill juyee tl is there. x ( 55 ; ‘or, fince by his ownconfeffion,there dy* Pullet by having been bitten by a Viper, points of w hofe teeth he had defignedly off, and all whole yellow liquor (which rails the ill juyce, and will have to be the y feat of the poifon) he had careful’y tfs’d out of the vehicles of her Gums ; Re h no more ground then I, to charge the .th of the Pullet upon a liquor, which w as re no more, nor upon the points of the th, which he had cut off. And he cannot )id toaccufewithmethe vexed fpirits of ? Viper, and to fall into my opinion, viz,, at the venom of the Viper is not a grofs t ter, .but fomething invisible and fpiritual. And to fliew again, that Signor Redi hath xnired, without being aware of it, to jufti- my Sentiment, and that at the fame time he inifeftly contradi&s himfelf, by deftroying his laft Letter his fir ft Propositions, which Ti hat all the venom of the Viper ijfues at the jl , or at leaf at the fecond biting, and that the nrd ti venomom no more, as he affureth to ive often experimented;to Shew that, I fay, I lall alledge the words of pag. 33, 34, and 5. of his laft Letter, viz. Sul frincipio di maggio fcelji una viper a ,&c. fhat is. About the beginning e/May I chafe a Fewal-Viper, one of the biggejl and lujliejl,and D 4 vexed C $6 } Vexedher to bite ten Chickens , one after a ' ther , in the right thigh ) of which the JirJi , . Cond and third died, almofi in an infant) i foil: th jet rn d only to be jick) but the fifth am the refl did not only not dye , but were not at \ Jick) and yet every time the Viper did bite angred and madded her exceedingly. In j moneth of June 1 repeated the Experiment fve tame Ducks , bitten by one and the fame per , which alfo immediately after bit th young Turtle-Doves. The firfi wounded dj three hours after ; the fecondfivc hours aftt the refi efcaped. ’ Tis ur dyed ; that another time of twelve there taped but the moiety; and that office Rab- :ts, likevrife bitten, there were but two that haded dying. I cannot but be amazed, that all thefe Ex- eriments have not been able to change his pinion, or at lead to fufpend it. Nor do I •oubt but that the number of Anima’s that r/ed would have been much greater, if the itings had been made in other places but the fgs. For, befides that they have their bones, ervec, and tendons, that are able to blunt he point of the teeth at the firft biting; they avealfo their Mufcles, which are very vif- ous, and therefore fail not to imbue the teeth f the biting Viper, thereby flopping in part reir Pores, and even hindring them by that i Xcofity from entring far in the enfuing bites, nd I likewife doubt not, but that will come opafs more and more in the reiteration of heir bitings. Nor do I wonder, that the Ducks did not dye fo foon as the Pullets or dgeons, nor that there dyed lefsofthem; for, xfides the reafons juft now alledged, they lave their skin, bones, and all parts much larder, and far more difficult to be pierced oy the Vipers tee, h, than th ofe of Pigeons or Pullets. c 58 j Pullets. Now I do not find any part mor^ proper to try divers bitings, then the flelh part of the cheft, which hath neither Nerve: nor Tendons, nor bones near, nor that Vifcc fity found in the Mufcles of the legs. Mean time thefe Experiments made b Sign. Redi himfelf, muff oblige him, as far a I can judge, to relinquifh his firft Afiertion And if he will perfift to maintain, that tl yellow liquor is the true feat ofthepoifoi he muft needs believe that liquor to be ir exhauftibie, and that always there fucceec fome frefh, in all the bitings of a Viper ; o ifhe will abandon his opinion, and afcrifc thepoifonno more to the yellow liquor, 1 muft find out fome other fubjeft to afiign to, except he pleafe to take mine, and t lodge it in the irritated fpirits;in regard th: he cannot find it in the yellow liquor, whir is no more there, after the fecond biting ( himfelf aftureth ;) and which muft yet mo evidently be wanting there, when defigned hehadwith care taken it out of the bags i the gums of the Viper that bit the Pullet, an the bite of which was followed by the dea of the Animal bitten. But if Sign.-R^’ fhould. now be in an hum* f to alter Ms opinion, and to judge the yello 1 liquor to be neceffaryin all the bitings ofi Vipi * f 59 ) 'iper (though that be an impoftible thing ; ) Is opinion would never be received by dif- itereffed perfons, that have feen my fir ft and ft Experiments;among which perfons there 'e fome, eVfen of the nioft able, who, having ; re to fore examin’d the Salival Glanduls up- In the defcription I gave them of it after I id difcover’d them, did there obferve alfo i)m'e fmall Lymphatic Veffels, more numerous ten thofe that had firft appeared to me; and /ho, having feen the laft Letter of Sign. Rediy ere willing to fufpend their Judgment until le making of my new Tryals, which have al- ogether confirm’d them in my firft opinion. For, no^ to fpeak of this, that in the pre- face of divers perfons, even ofthebeft qua- ity, at feveral times and places, in divers af- “mblies,& even in theConferencesof theAb- >ot Bourdelot ; I have fwallow’d fome of the mellow liquor taken out of the bags of the rums of many live and enraged Vipers, with* )Ut finding the lead inconvenience from it, 10 more then the Viper-catcher of Sign.Ee^f: .’can boldly affure all the world, that at no :ime, in no place, there ever dyed any animal of all thofe I have wounded,or feen wounded on purpofe, and into the wounds of which that liquor hath been intromitted, although it had been drawn hot out of the Veficles of the C 60 ) * the gums of Vipers exceedingly vexed; fof is it, that the Joyce of dead Vipers was ah to annoy any animal. I can alfo affiire, th never any head of a dead Viper, whether t Animal were who e, or that head only wi its neck, and though it abounded with th yellow liquor, hath done any harm to man i any other Animal, bitten by it. The yellow liquor, which I fwal low’d oneof the conferences of the Abbot Bottrdel puts me in mind of a Letter, which M. L Tapieres, a very curious, fincere and able pothecary of Bourbon V Arckamband, hi written to him, which was there read, and mong other things did relate, That in the ye 1630. he had taken a Viper, whole crook teeth he had cut, and that he carried her in \ bofjm ; and that after two or three days,a fa cy taking him to approach her to his fac pr effing her a little, ffie bit him in his lip,ai‘ thereby caufed great pain to him; whereupc he flung her to the ground and in his ang' cruffit her in pieces ; that his lip and fa fwelled ; that a Ligature was made upon hit that Treacle was given him, and fome of applied to the bite ; that at the place of tl wound there appear’d a little bladde whence iffiied two or three drops of 1 quor of a dark yellow colour, and th;! h v , C £r ) > face remain’d very pale for a inoneth. If my opinion be asked about this Expe-. . inent, 1 declare that there is nothing in it, hch I ought not to believe ; and I acid alfc, at there hapm’d nothing in it, which agrees It with the principles by me eftabliflfd and , lintain’d. For, although the great teeth 'that Viper had been cut, which might have >ne further, and mingled the enraged fpirits : the Viper with the blood of M. Tapieres ; ?t they had not cut the point of the fmali eth, which I fihew’d in the fame conference , ngether with the other neighbouring parts j 1 the teath of a live Viper, fent to Monfieur , our de let by the fame Apothecary that had een bitten :of which fmali teeth I have here- i afore given the defcription and figure, as ■ rell as that of the upper and lower Jawes, in ; /hich they are faftn’d, as may be feen in my inatomy of Vipers, in the Sc If ion of the teeth, nd the third Cut of that book. For, a1- houghthofe little teeth have not the length lor thicknefs of the great ones ; j et they have he fame fhape and the fame matter ; for they ire bony, crooked, tranfparent, and very "harp ; fo that the vexed fpirits may pafs in- to them as into fmali Funnels, and through heir Pore?, as they do tl orough thofeof the bigger ones : Put they cannot go very deep, became ( 62 ) becaufe their finalnefs permits them not t<| carry their openings as far as into theflefl and all they can doe, is, to open theskii j Now to reafon upon the accidents that be fellM .Des Trafieres by this bite, as the; are fee down in his Letter; I fee nothing i them that isnot very natural, and very credit ble. For, although the angred Spirits hat entred by the openings made by the fma. teeth ; yet they could not penetrate the fid! , nor mingle with the blood, becaufe thofe a, pertures were not deep enough , and the could do no more but to make their efFoi( ’twixt the flefli and skin ; whence follow’ the fwelling of the Up and face, and the in preflion of the pale colour, which appear’, there during a moneth ; which accident might at firft have been eafily prevented b one only dofe of the volatil Salt of Viper: which would have made the enraged Spirit, to tranfpire, that lodged between the flef and the skin, and could find no entry to pa. further. As to the little bladder, which wasfoi med at the place of the bite, and the two c three drops of dark liquor that iffued aftei wards, that was nothing but a little feroi moifture that had been gather’d there froi the neighbouring parts, and that had bee called by the comprefliou of the Ligaturi „ (63) jd by the bruiting made by the teeth and Jwesatthe time of the biting, and without Iy intervention of the yellow liqUor, which tides its innocence, could not haveentred rough fuch fmall apertures. After fo many Experiments, and upon fo my Reflexions which I have made, as well 1 the yellow liquor, as on the irritated fpi- ts of Vipers, I cannot comprehend, how le Animals of Sign. Redi could dye all and ithout any exception by the intromifiion f the yellow liquor into the wounds, h£ had ade in them, and by the biting of heads fle- er’d, or by that of entire Vipers that had een dead feveral days. I have too many ex- eriments to the contrary, and too many wit- efles, to put it out of doubt, and to fix me in iy firft opinion. But, to the end that among the Truths by le advanced, and confifting in matter of faft, he publick may find wherewith to be flatis- ied ; I thought my flelf obliged to explain my enfle upon thefle matters, and to form to my elf the Obje&ions, that may be made againft ne. I flay therefore concerning the Tellorv Li - (Hor , That nothing can a 6. from it flelf, but ac- cording to its nature, thediflpofition of the natter of which it is compofled, and the force of 1 V ( <4 ) , of itsadivity. For example, you will no ; find in River Water, the tafte, ftrength, no ; particles that are found in Wine, nor will that inebriate like this ; it hath not the acri| monynor penetrancy of Urine, neither thi colour not bitternefs of Gall : The Spirit c Wine, that is freed from the aqueous parts which hindred the Wine from producing th ' effeds it was capable of, is much more fub tile and ftrong, then the fame wine whence i | hath been drawn : The Volatil Salt of Win hath quite another penetrating force than th Urine which contained it before its fublima tion: And not to go from my fubjed ; th volatil Salt of Vipers is very different fron theflefhand bones of them, whence it hat! been extraded ; and, though in fmall quanti ty, it will work more in a moment as well b its odour as its piercing venue, than ten time as much of that matter, whence it hath beei drawn, could effed in many hours : The bi leous, fharp, fait and fpirituous ferofity,tha| is often form’d in our bodies, will fuddenb produce inflammations in the eyes, tumors ii the cheeks, gums, throat, and. many othei parts, as alfo Pufiuls, St. Anthony fire, anc the Gangrene it felf; andallthatit does b} thecompofition ofits parts, and the force o itsadivity; whereas the thick and vifcou: Phlegtm (6$) egme will do no fuch thing, but chargeth ure only by its weight, cold, and tenacity: is Phlegme, I fay, will ever be incapable working with quicknefs , and it cannot )duce any’ efied but veryfiowly, and in portion to its power, which is extreamly iifined. 5o then, it is not the nature of the yellow nor, to pafs fwifdy to remote parts, and ire to ad with vigor and violence ; ich is obferved in the poifon of a Vi- •. I fay, that a tough, vifcous, and 1 manner mfipid Saliva, cannot make any rat progrefs in a moment. I affirm befides, t’tis impoffible, itfhould corporally en- i into the holes made by the teeth, which : very final 1 and almoft invifible, and that it juldalfopafs through the cavities of the th, and much lefs through their Pores, if y would have them pafs that way I I fay rther, that although the teeth of a Viper Diild be all over imbued with that Juyce at e time of her biting*, the skin of the Animal tten, and the flefh it felf, if need were, ouldkeepit out of the bitten place, and nder it from entring there ; That though it lould be able to enter , it mufc have a fit lace to receive it, a great pafiage to go irougb,and a long time to arrive to the parts E remote * r (66) remote ; I fay alfo, that though it were ar:i ved there, (if that were poflible,) it could i| ver ad: beyond the forces, which nature hsi redrained it to. Befides,ifthis yellow liquor .were capal, of any confiderable operation, it would n fail to di (cover it either in whole or in pa: i when ’tis fwallow’d and got into the ftomac where the place, the heat, and all thirt would feern to concur either to make it ft ment, if its matter were difpofed for it, or reduce its power into adion : For, by p: ling out of the domach into the intedins would infed the Chyle, and make of it a pc Ton, which would be car tied jointly with i through the milky veflels, and through t Thoracique DudusV, fo happily difeover by the illudrious M. Fecquet, to defeend i to the Heart with the blood, the which is t matter, on which the poifon of Vipers dc fo particularly exert its dominion. And tl| way is much more eafie and large, than that ■ the Opening, made by the teeth, by whii this juyee cannot fo much as enter. I fay th further, that, if it were fuch as Sign. Re makes it to be, it would, being taken at t] mouth and let down into the domadympre upon the places of its padage, and thofe of i day, fome mark or other ofits power, efpec all \ (67) !y if it did contain any jh Rented Salts? lich would not fail, foon to manifeft them- ves either by their tafte or by foir.e other eds: And yet all thofe that fhall tafte or allow this9 yellow liquor, fhallnever per- iveany malignity whether great or fmall, ither in the mouth, nor in the ftomach, nor ewhere. I conclude therefore from all :fe confiderations, that this juyee contaias it no part at all, that is able to difTolve, or igulate, or difeompofe any part of our bo- ;&that it hath not any quality, manifeft or :ulr,to fhew that ’tis capable of doing fo. T add moreover, that this juyee, as flat and vous as it is, is always found fo yellow in parts of France^ that it can hardly be lefs our’d than ’tis in Italy j and that they both It have altogether alike qualities, or, at t, very near fuch. And it would be to purpofe, to alledge in favour of Sign Redl, t the div'erfity of places and climats, or t Of aliments might be able to change the ure of Vipers, and caufe that manifeft dif- ?nce, there is between his Experiments 1 mine. For, although fome diverfity may obferved in other things, there can be id none in this; and if there could befome erence, it cannot be that the nature of the ow juyee, and that of the Spirits fhould £2 be ( 68 ) , be quite changed ; fince we find in France i fame marks in that liquor, which Sign. Rt hath found and defcribed in that of Italy, a fince our Vipers, without any intervbnti of that juyce, do kill as nimbly afs his can d "But I think it would be much, if in the y low liquor, or in the enraged fpirits, th< could be obfervd any Jhtall degree of qua' ty, ftronger or weaker in Italy than in Fran For,! have by a great number of experime: made it out, that all the Vipers of Fran though taken in very different places, and ten fechasarefixfcore Leagues diftant fr one another, have their poifon altogether like, and do kill equally. Whence I infe that the difference of the Vipers of Italy a France , cannot be confiderable ; fince D phine, which is a Province in France that f nifiheth us with many of them, and is v< mountainous as well as Italy , borders up Fiemont , which is the beginning of Ital and that the fame Vauphme abounds in 1 pers in its utuioft extremity ; and fince a all Vipers, we get from thence, have their} low liquor always very innocent,though h colour’d. And I can truly fay, that th* Vipers, that have ferv’d me mofi; both in firft and laft experiments, were ikoff of th lent me out of Dauphine , and that I was w % / ( 69 ) jg to make ufe of fuch, as being commonly hger than moft of thofe that were fent me [to fPoictou ; that, at lea ft, which ferv’d to bite the live firftPigeons, which I fpake in my firft, Experiments ; and that w^ich j: the feaven Iaft Pullets and Pigeons, were [I thofe of Dauphimy and even of the bigger |:t that could be procured'. And it would have been to no purpofe to [ve ufed any tooth of a V iper fever’d from head, and much lefs to wipe it dry with {lie bread crums, in hopes it fhould kill any limal by pricking it therewith ■ feeing the pthj that had of the yellow liquor upon ■m, without being feparated from the dead •ads, were not able to do any harm, no not [ofe of live ones,without the concurrence of je enraged fpirits. And if fometimes I have fade ufe Qfbread-crums, fometimes of a fine nnen ragg, to wipe away all the yellow li- Uorof the veficles, that was never but in ve Vipers j to fhew, that it wras not that li- luor which did kill, but the vexed .Spirits [nly, entring by means of the biting. We are not to imagine neither, that a Vi- er teareth by biting, unlcfs having made her b thruft her teeth into the fiefh of fome ani- oal , you do immediately after draw her a- ay by the reft of her body ; /We are not, I E 3 fay, r S (70 ) fay, to pretend, that a Viper doth, by Bitir ofher own accord, make any. great openin at which the yellow liquor is able to ente For, fhe doth no more but thruft in her teet far enough, and prefently draw them out ; gainjwith as much eafe as a Cat dt’aws out h claws when he will. Befides, you cannot pe: ceive but two very little holes, which do a fo feem as ’twere clofed again by the fiefl arid which would hardly be difcern’d, if tl pain of the bite, or the accidents enfuing,di not oblige us to loik very narrowly to it. We alfo never fee, that the poifon fatter it felf to the part bitten, nor that the evil b< gins by a mortification, or by a gangren there. For, if that were fo, and if the vcnoi did lodge at the entry, it would be muc more eafie to matter it. I know alfo by m; ny Experiments, that thy poifon never flay at the place where it enters, blit infinuates i felf very nimbly into the Veines, to mingl with theblood; efpecially if the bitebat open’d for it a paflage free enoifgh to arriv there. I know, that there it produces after wards thofe troublefome accidents, whicl enfue upon the biting ; and that laftly it can fetbdeatb,ific be not prevented by a quick re lief. Which clearly fhews, that a poifjn c this nature mull: needs have difpofitions t •.'/ . - ; * pew C 11 ) aetrate, very differing from thofe that ap- ir in a yellow liquor, that is incapable of fudden motion afid operation. [t would alfo prove an ufelefs labour, to k at the place of the biting, in hopes of ting out from thence a Juyce, which could t enter there. And though I do not dip- :ii; )ve this way of fuccours 01T fuch occafion ; if; 1 1 know, that all what the fucking can do, tyd to fetch out agaan part of the enraged fpi- s, that had enter’d by the openings of the :e. I know alfo, that a fpecifique reme- ili) ’, taken at the mouth, is far better, y I would be in vain, to objed unto me the fr ample of the feed of Animals, which, not- « lithftanding its vifcofity, ferves daily to opagate that Species which produces i t ; d that it could in like manner come to pafs the yellow liquor to convey the ' venom in e biting. For befides that the feed is the ureft and moft elaborat part which an ani- al can produce ; it is alfo accompanied ithftore of Spirits ; and there needs, be- des, the concurrence of many other means s well to introduce and to receive it, as to orm and perfed the Foetus : There is more-* •ver necefTary an afii fiance of abundance of pirits from the mothers fide ; a juyce pro- xmtbnateand proper for itsnourifhment and E 4 increafe C 72 ) v increafe, and a ftifficiefit time for the fair! Whereas the yellow liquor, that can pafs f nothing but a juyce excre-'pd out of the Sa j val G'anduls, after it had been fent thithl! from the brain and the neighbouring pari and that is deftitute of fpirits and of all d ! pofition to aft ; wants alfo a paffage fuffieie to intromit it, and a place proper to lod in. And jf you fliould grant it an entry, ail a place to fojourn in , it mu ft have a nun longer time than the feed, ofwhich I was fpei king. But with all this time and all the thercircumftances, it would fill be incap! ble of working any thing at all perfeft, ari perifh of it fejf; without any remarkab produftion. If any fiiould fay, That this yellow liquj may have fpirits proper and proportional to its nature, and that they are not wanting * make thepoifon work at the moment of tl biting ; but that, being drawn out of the v< ficles,and expofed to the Air,thofe fpirits ai! diffipated, and thereby render it incapab) ©fall aftion : I anfwer. That, without ftayirj upon what I have amply made out of its innc cenceinall kind of ufes. Signor Redi himfe: contradifts it, as I have mentioned above firce he pretends, that the Juyce even of fuci Vipers as have been dead for feyeral days, 6 V c 73 ) at is dryed to bcgk, ceafeth not to infinuate 5 venom without any intervention offpirits, hen it is put intcpwounds. But, befides all lat, many Experiments have evinced to me* ■at death follows the biting without any in- dention of the yellow liquor, and then hen it hath been perfectly wiped away, [oreover, it is well known, that ’tis the na- me of fpirits, to he in motion, to fallen them- ■Ives to, and to follow the parts that have oft of them, as for example, the blood. It alfotobe noted, that the fpirits, that do ifinuatethe poifon, are not of the nature of aofe that follow' the ordinary motion of the : Ipod of the animal ; that they do not joyn lemfelves to it, as thofe ; and that neither of hem have any union with the* yellow liquor* >?hich is but a meer excrement : But that the \pirits, I fpeak of, do form themfelves in the ipmcnt that the Viper conceives the Idea of evenging her felf ; and they need not the em- larafmentof filch a dull and vifeous juyee, vhich is not qualified to follow them, nor to aafs through the imperceptible pores of the eeth, which the fpirits only can penetrate, no more then they can any ways enter through |:he holes, which the teeth have made. In a ■ word ; the nature of a gro Is, tough and vif- 1 epus juyee is not, to act, penetrate, and be fwift* e 74 ) 1 , vv ifcly carried to the moft remote parts of th body; but that belongs to fpirituous fub ftances, to go and come whfcre grofs corpe rail ones cannpt. ' Thefeare the only fpiritSj that can fubvert the whole Oecon6my of th body ; they are they, that difturb the circu i lation of the blood, and that corrupt it ; the} are they, that flop the natural and animal fpii rits, and hinder them from palling to th< parts of the body as they were wont to do and lafbly, ’tisby the let of them, that th< death of theAnimal ufually enfueth the biting! As to what may be obje&ed, that ’tis verj: difficult, fo exa&ly to evacuate the yellow li- quor, that there remain none at all ; and thai it may very well come to pafs, that a 1 it tie o: it intervenes in all bitings: I anfwer, that be- tides that this is alfo againft the opinion ol Sign. Redi, and which he hath renounced in his firft AlTertion ; the Salival Glandnls.| though many in number, yet are too fmall and have too little capacity to contain ;uyce e- nough to furnifli for that purpofe ; and thatj that cannot be expe&ed but from great ani-j mals, that have thofe Salival glanduls and the other parts far bigger : And though it were poffible, they fliould fufficiently furnifli, I do maintain, that the impoffibility of intro- mitting that juyee, and its evinced innocence, ought V C,75 > light to fuffice fopconfuting this ObjedUpm. ' Yet this I fball here fay in favour of Sign. lediy That I doubj: not but that this yellow 0 quor, as Salivotfs and Excrementitious as it ts>, contains its VpJatil Salt, as well as all the Mther parts of a Viper, and all the parts of Animals, and even all their excrements, and e)jhat confequently it is to be reputed fpiritu- %is. But then, befides that thefe fpirituous libftances are never hurtful, they are yet too Ultimately mixed and locked in with their Matter, and they cannot produce their effects igirithout being feparated from it; which can- not be but by a violent heat, and in veflels fit '■or it. I fay therefore, that by art there may W>e extracted a true Volatil Salt out of this °fellowTiquor,& even without any addition ‘or mixture of other matter ;which may bepror- j^ed to be of the fame nature with that of the wither parts of a Viperjand that Vis fo far from w, :>eingable to work like poifon,that t’is very Proper and effectual to matter all the ill acci- dents, which the bite of a Viper may caufe ; ^bf which I doaccufe the enraged fpirits alone. Wpince therefore Sign. Redi hath dried and ‘iKaidafide the yellow liquor of two hundred erc, md fifty Vipers, and may eatt! y obtain much 1 more of it • ’tis in his power, to extradh fuch > | fa.lt out of it, when he pleafeth, to verifie -jJ • what ( 70 Vs what I was juft now faying..; And if, to fav himfelf that labour, by reafon of his other ini portant occupations, he fhrjl pleafe to l'enci me a competent quantity thereof, Ido wit! all my heart offer my felf to prepare it fo him, thereby to let him fee not only the in nocence of this juyce, but alfo the great bene fit, that is hid in it. Concerning the Billow Breath of a Viper that may be charged to intervene with thi yellow liquor, and to envenom it ; I am c opinion, that that is nothing but a difguife c the enraged fpirits. I aftert, That the tru Breath of a Viper is ever innocent, howbili ous fbever it be reprefented ; that there if fues not any ill feentout of her throat, no out of her guts, nor from the parts made t< void the excrements ; that Vipers among c ther marks are in this different from Snakes that thefe have their excrements and the part containing them very fetide and ofa fmell o flunking Urine; whereas you cannot perceivl any ill fmell in any part of a Viper ; that tb Spirits which carry the venom are quite ano| ther thing than the breath coming from tb! Lungs; that thofe fpirits have no union noi correfpondence with the Bilious humour ' that they are not formed but at the inftant o the irritation; and laftly, that they need nq fuel' ^ C/77 ) ich thingas an excrement itious and ufelcfs quor, pretended to intervene, fit for no- ting but to gargb the paffage of the place, trough which the vexed fpirits have en- red. But the better to fhew the impoffibility of he intervention of this breath, and to make t appear,that it never contributes any thing othe poifon; you may take notice, that a Pipers head cut off, feparate from the Lungs .nd all communication with the Gall, and in- apable to yield any breath, and deprived rvenof all that yellow liquor ; yet failes not to kill by its biting as long as ’tis alive, f the animal have been provoked ; juft as :!j mould come to pafs, if a bite were made by the head of a Viper that is whole and alive, if no remedy were applied. Touching the Communication, that may : alfo be pretended to be between the bladder ofGalland the yellow liquor, by r^afon of 1 fome refemblance of colour ; I fay, that, be- fides that my Sentiments in thefe matters are very conform to thofe of Sign. Redi ; that we have both of us juft ifted the innocence of the juyce contained in the Bladder of Gall ; that we have denied, there is any veffel carrying this better juyce into the vehicles of the gums, to make that yellow liquor which is found there C 78 J there: andlaftly, wL.have unanimoufh sontradi&ed the errors of the Antients abou this pretended channel ; besides this, I fay the truth of what yve have affirmed i$ ver; eafie to prove,by tailing the yellow liquor o the"Gall, which is very bitter and very fharp though very innocent, and by comparing with that of the veficlesof the. Gums,, which is very flat, though equally innocent.- The fame may be yet better made out by diffe- ring one or more Vipers ; where, no more than in Serpents and all other animals, you will never find any veffel, that carries this bile of the Bladder of Gall to the. Gums ; and you wiU'there fee nothing, but veins and ar- teries filled With true blood. Of this there will benodoubt,.ifyoupleafe only to tafte it ; for you will find nothing but the ordina ry tafte of blood. To be yet moreaffur’d of it,you may tafte all that runs out of the body of a Viper when the head is fever’d frqm her; for you fliall find no bitternefs.at all, nor o- thertaft but that of blood. And befifles, ha- ting amply verified, that the yellow liquor comes from the Salival glanduls albne, and having given a very exaft defeription of them; I think itneedlefsto fay any more of it, what ever the Antients may have written, or the Moderns may fay of that fubjeft. To J ^ ( 79 ) ] To come now te -the enraged Spirits of a 1 iper, which I do allure to be the true and nly feat of the poifon ; methinks Sign. Redd quantity of Vipers, making of them daily a ve- I ry great fl aught er ; and , to extract the fubtile from the fubtil (if I may fo jpeak') I always laid ' afide and kept all their flejh and bones , which being dryed in a Furnace , and afterwards by a quick fire with long and great labour burnt and ; reduced to ajhes , I thence drew the Salt with Fountain-water , and purified it, and reduced it into a kind of Chryfial, See. Thofe chat know all the parts of which the body of a Viper iscompofed, will cer- tainly wonder, that a perfon fo judicious and knowing hath not found, that the chief ► and beft part of a Viper confifts in its vola- I til Salt, and that that Salt would not fail to , avolate and to be wafted by that preparation 1 or rather deftru&ion, which Sign. Kedi hath ufed to extra# the Salt of Vipers. They will quickly fee, that when he would draw the fubtil from the fubtil ( as he fpea'ks ) he did quite C 90 ) quite the contrary, and excelled and diffi- pated the volatil and better parts, re- turning only the grofs,the fixed and the leaft, They will foon judg, that he inoui4^nqthave given hitnfelf all that labour and pain, whicn he faith he hath taken, to fucceed fo ill in his work ; and that he had done much better, withfilencetopafsoverhisprocefs, then to publifh it. The way , by him taken, will be found, I think, received from the An- tients, who knew not , that all Animals a- bound in Volatil , and have little of Fixed Salt : And his preparation, which is very eafie , would have pleafed better in thofe times, efpecially in Italy', then that great and laborious Preparation of the Salt of Vipers, which was made with fo great an apparatus, and of which I have already given my thoughts, when I difcourfed of the Remedies drawn from Vipers. I al fo forefee, that Sign. Redi will not re- ceive any greater advantage by ftriving to at- tribute to himfelf the firfb difcoveryqf the Salival glanduls , which I found on both the Temples of both Male and Female Vipers, and which I have defer i bed and delineated in my Anatomy of Vipers; For, he will not be able to perfwade it to thofe, who (hall C 9* ) ee pag. 44. of his firft Letter of Observations he difcourfe following ; Se non JlmaJfi '^vergogm fcriver Jenzx al- • jrjpxn That is. If l did not think t a fhame, to write, without other proof what I tine into my phancy , i might fay perhaps, that that yellow liquor is by no other way intromit - ■ed into the above faid gums of the teeth but by thofe Salival Conduits, found out by the fa- mous Thomas Wharton, and fhewn in this Court by Lorenzo Billini, a learned young man '■ and of great expectation, in other „ Animals be - :i] j ides Man , and particularly in Staggs , and Mood-peckers : Moreover that under thofe D( Gums there are two J, mall Glandnls , found by ’>i me in all Vipers. Tet I would not have you rely upon this thought of mine , becaufe it may prove a Chimera , as I believe it to be one , &c. I cannot comprehend, how Sign- Redi, after he hath fppken of the Salival Conduits as of a thing that came into his phancy, and by a perhaps , that is to fay, not knowing it ; and who aeclareth, that lie was afham’d to write of a thing without verifying it ; who exhorts his friend to whom he writes, not to ' relye on his thoughts, and who adds, that it may prove a Chimera; I know not, ] fay, C 92 )/ how, after he -kath written all this, he car pretend to be the inventor of the Salivm \ Glanduls and their Pipes : Tor pag. 5 5 and1 56.ofhisfirft Letter fpea king o ftf^yd lqrtl liquor, he adds, E queflo veleno altro non e, &c. That is, "Thu •venom is nothing elfe but that liquor, which burned s the Palat, and Jl agnates inthofe gums that invefl the teeth , not transmitted thither from the Bladder of Gall , but bred in the whole head , and conveyed perhaps to thi gums by fome Salival conduits, which perhaps are there infer ted. Where the word perhaps, yet twice again repeated, doth fufficiently fliew, that Sign. Redi did fpeak of the Salival conduits no o- therwife than as ofa thing he was not at all allured of. And though he may fay, that he hath had thoughts of it fooner than I, (who have not medled with Vipers but fome years I after his firft Letter,) that what he had' written of it gave me from that timeoccafi- on and a defire to feek for thofe Pipes and the Glanduls that might convey thither the yellow liquor *, that the belief, he had of the Generation of this juyceinthe w'hole head, induced me to fearch for theSalival Glanduls higher and farther off than the place under the bottom ( 93 ) xjttom of the vV>ficles ; and that I doubt lot, that himfelfWht have found thefe li:rue Glanduls, if vi'ould have taken pains ^ - W^frfthaL fince he hath not done [t. he ought not to be offended at my having labour’d for him, andfueceeded in fo doing : Neither hath he any right to deny, that I have ftrft found, defcribed, and to the life reprefented the two heaps of Salival Glan- dulsofa Viper with all their Veflels, as well for forming, as conveying the yellow li- quor into the Veficles that cover the great teeth. As to what Sign. Redi faith of me, fpeak- lingofthe Authors of my Book, that I have changed the words, under the bottom, into : thofc, at the bottom of the veficles of the gums, and there fought in vain for the two fmall Glanduls, which he allures to have found there in all Vipers .* I anfwer, that whilft he is critical as to the letter of the words, 1 keep to the truth of the matter of fad: .* And I can allure, to have fearched with much care? , not only in the wrhole bottom of the veficles, but every where under the bottom of them, but have not found any, whether great or fmall G landuls, nor any thing of the colour ofa Glandul, nor that came any way near to their form- ( 94 ) I put it then for a truth, /that there is hot to be found any Glandul neither in nor under the bottom of the veficles,* apd that under the bottom there is nothing but/, that gives the fhape to the nofeofa Viper ; the two fharp ends of the two advanced bones of the skull, to which the two great teeth are firmly annexed ; the conduit of the fin ell, that of the hearing ; fome final 1 vein, fome little Artery, fome little Nerve, the extremity of a Mufcle, and the two ends of the Salival Channels that difcharge into the veficles ; as you may fee it in a manner de- fcribed in the Anatomy made of it by me. After this, Signor Redi himfelf fhews; that it was impoffible, there lhould be Gian* duls under the bottom of the veficles, fincehe faith, pag. 3S. of his laft Letter. Ne io pot ev a mai fcrivere , &c. that is, Nor j could 1 at all write, that thofe Glandul slay in the bottom of the 'veficles , if I was of opinion , that the yellow liquor did run into them after it had paffed through the Salival conduits , which yet 1 imagined might have their Origin from or connexion with thofe two GUndnls feen by me, and therefore muf needs be in a feituation a \ little diftant from the veficles, and not in the ! bottom of them. For ellow jnyce toolcw its courfe thorough the ialiva! conduits before its coining into the « • ^fft^nnor find a way long enough, or a di fiance great enough, for the need of ong conduits, from the place under t\\ebot- om unto that which is in the bottom of the [f: veficles : For, there would have needed no- hing but a little opening in the fame bottom, o receive the juyce ilfuing out of the two i ittle Glanduls he hath fpoken of. And he : fihews fufficiently, that he cannot maintain thofe two fmall Glanduls under the bottom, where he would have them to be,fince now he will needs have them a little diftant from the veficles, that he may find, in the interval!, a fpace fufficient for the veffels that are necef- fary to the courfe of this yellow liquor* Be- fides, that it is altogether impoffible for two fmall Glanduls to furnifh all that yellow li- quor, which prefents it felf in the veficles ; fince the two great heaps by me found in the two Temples and behind the Orbits of the eyes of a Viper, can hardly furnifh each a- boutadrop in the fpace of 24 hours, after the veficles have been well voided. More- over, it. is very eafie to judge by what Sign. J&cdi faith in'hisTnrft Letter, that he under- ftood not, the falival Glands were feared, as they ( 96 ) they are, on the two Temple nor To near the skull ;fince he faith, that/what came into his phancy, was, that the heaflof a Viper did hot convey that yellow ) uy ce b&v ^ ^tjftain fali- val conduits. For ifhe had been oFanotBer'l mind, he would not have fpoken but of glands; or, at leaft, he would have begun with them before he had fpoken of the conduits, which fhews alfo fufficiently, that by this means he hath as ’twere inverted the order of nature : For, inftead of placing the Glands clofe to the skul, and afterwards the falival conduits; ! he hath begun with thefe, and would have them immediately to receive the juyce of the Brain, and to carry them to the veficles of the gums ; and that his two pretended glanduls are feated between the extremity of thefe conduits, and the bottom of the veficles ; though none be there, and it would be altoge- ther ufelefs, they fhould be there, becaufe there are none but they that can at the begin- ning fuck&digeft the humidities of the brain and the neighbouring parts, and fend them into the veficles of the gums by the conduits appointed for this office. But when Sign. Redi accufes meof having taken the bottom of the veficles for that which is under the bottom of them, and e.t. not having rightly underflood, as he fpeaks, hath (.97) the Tofian tongtV ; I may fay, that himfelf hath not very w eKj apprehended, nor duly [explained the French terms, ufed by me ; firir'v u~&fcfefTtlietrnd of pag. 35. and at the beginning ofp. 3 6. of the fame laft letter, Sovra de chi gli , Autori delle novelle expert encc ajfermano, Sec. That is. Whereupon the Authors of the New Experiments do affirm, that they could never fee fuch Glanduls as I ihad named ; but that inllead of them they had found two others, which they call Salival, thus by them defcribed, p . 3 7 . For neither in all that he hath afterwards taken the pains to tranfcribe out of my book On that fub jeft, nor in al 1 the reft of my Secti- on upon the Salival Glanduls, he can have read, that I fay to have found two GUnduls , but, GUnduls ; there being a great difference in good French, between Deux Glxndes , and ■ Ves GUndes , two Glands, and, Glands. And when, defcribing the Glanduls, I fay, that they are featedon the two ftdes of the Cra - nium , I fay afterwards, that there are many (mall ones joyned together, which may be call’d Conglomerate Glanduls • And yet more [ fpeak of an Heap of Glanduls ; fo far am I from fpeaking only of one or two Gjanduls,as Redi hath reprefented me to have done. And fince, in hopes of better maintaining G his ( 9§ ) bis caufe, he hath given bi^felf the trouble of copying word for worcfcpn his laft Letter^ ! only the moft general placetofppy Book, and that which was the leaft contraf^d^c^siaije-, Section of the Sali val Glands. To ffiew there- fore on my part, that the Glands, found by me, are very different, and that even they are quite another thing, than the two fmall ones fpoken of by him ; I thought my felf obli- ged to tranfcribe hither out of my book what he thought not neceffary for him. For in the fame Section,?. 30. (in the Englifh ver« fion,y. 33) Ifpeakthus ofthe falival Glands. thefe Glands are found in all the heads of Vi- pers, both Males and Females ; they are feated on both Jides , and joining to the skull , in the hind-part of each round of the eyes , and at the\ fame height with them, "there are many fmall ones joined together, which may be call'd Con- glomerate Glands, that are eafily diflinguifha- ble by their form and colour, which is different from the Mufcles, neighbouring to them , and oj which there is one ,t hat may be calldT emporal. which in part covers them by its extremity this heap of Glands appears there of the bignef ofthe neighbouring eye, and extending it felj in length, continues its progrefs in the Orbit of the eye, below and in part behind the fye Each Gland hath its little Lymphatiyue vejfel I- . v ' C 99 ) hich parts from it /hyfrom a little Teat, am i'i dijgorging it felfj into a greater veffel, that '■nsall alon^^c&nder thefe Glands, and pa f thTmrTide Veficle of the Gum, and le> minates the midfl of the Articulation, which the root the great teeth makes with the advancing cor- r of the [aid Or kite, and with the little Bone, ' b ich by its other end is articulated in the mid - ? of the upper jaw. This principal veffel, which ing conjider d alone, is very little in appear - ce, but is not fo in effcl, feeing if receives the ft charge of all the frnall veffels that come from :h Gland , empties it felf into the bag of the ins, and carries thither that Salival jtiyce , rich may have qualities approaching to thofe the Saliva or Spitle of man , or of the foam or ivel of divers other Animals. The Nerve, which ferves in the Noflrils the faculty of Hearing, runs for fome '■ce along thefe Glands , which are alfo , as have already faid , fmall Veins and Arte - L f S. lut having well confide Vd the fubfiance , qua- 7 & frit nation of thefe G 1 andsyve judged their 'mat ion not to be in vain \ but that their ^ , in all likelyhood , was , to receive the aridities both of the Brain, the Byes , and e neighbouring parts ; and that their dif- Arge was very convenient , and even very C 2 necejfary C 10 0 ) neceffary to the parts, \rhi4i receive that li- quor ; as vo ell for moiffning the ligamcm of the great teeth , anoft^keep them in a condition of bending at fucf^f^‘^sd!A-:.yht. 1 iper will bite , as for bedewing^ and increi- fing the teeth , which feature hath formed am fet in the midjl of this Juice. For the ref , examining and tofling tkt Glands as wed as the Juice , we found < tafte altogether like that of the Gamsyvhici Sign. Redi hath defcribed ; namely , ver near the tafle of the Oyle of Almonds , with out ad bitterncfs , though it leave , a whil after , a little acrimony in the mouth , fuci as may be difcernd in ad kind of Spi tie. I could add here > what I faid of th Salival Glands of Snakes , their difFerenc from thofe of Vipers ; and I could a: ledge, that I believe my lelf to be like wife the tirft Difcoverer of them. Bt becaufe fo prolix a Citation might prov tedious, and that thofe that defire to hav more light therein, may eafily find the rei in the above-cited Section of my Eook, fhall not tranferibe it hither. Mean time tis very eafie to judge fro.i my whole Difcourfe, and from the -.rvcdi refeription , made by me, of thefe Gland. ncl their neighboring parts, that they ere net known tujmc by Pbancy. Their donation very d^anc from that place from the fides of, the ottom of the vehicles of the gums , fiievvs ifficienrly, that they are neither in nor nder the bottom of thofe vehicles, asSign, [edi hath pretended ; and their great lumber makes it appear , that ’tis quite a- other thing, than the two litle Glanduls e hpeaks of, and which are not to be found either. I intreat the Reader, well to confider tohe I have difeover’d , as they are re- >rehented in my third Cutty as well in that art where the Temples are of a Head cut, lark’d C, (where their fhape and heitua- ion is reprehented to the life, as they lew themfelves before they are fever’d • ) s in the inclohure of a Vipers fee'eton, ;hich is there alfo exhibited ; where he lay fee them in their upper and lower ppearance, drawn out of the Head , and y their ligaments fa fined to the hind-part 'f the Eyes, and to the body of the Brain, came not to the full knowledge of them M after much pains, and a very long and ?arfieular hearch. I did not content my If to feek a great while in the bottom, G 3 and ( IO20 snd under the bottom. of the vehicles e| the gums ; but, to Enfc- thefe Glands,! haw dead and differed a g-eat number of/Vii pers heads, as dextrou'iiy^p^nipel v as l could ; and I have ufed all means welf t<| examine them; among others, I caufed mat ny heads to be gently boyled in a littlf water , as well to confider the divers ful tures of the skull , and to feparate all thf parts from it; as to remark well the fonf and the connexion of thefe Glands, to dravl them out whole, and joined, as they are! to the Eyes, and to divers bodies of th Brain, to which the marrow of the Spin! is annex'd; and to have all thefe parts en tire, and. fuch as I have caufed them to b engraven. Me thinks, that all thefe cares, follow’*1 by fo good fnccefs , may well deferve, try Difcovery of this great number of Saliva Glands with all their veffels , diould no! be envied me by Sign. Reds ; confident I dofufficicntly appear to him incapable o envving him any of thofe fine things, he hath already found, or may find hereafter ir his curious re-fearches. There remains no more for me to do, me thinks , than to fatisfie Sign. Reds as concerning the Uncertainty, wherein he h touching ouching the Vo^er the Volatil Salt of Pipers for the cumlg of their bitings ; as .bout the ObjeftioiJ, by him made again ft ny Experjjj?|mtg-^f the Head and Neck of f i Vfp^for curing Doggs bitten by it, and vhich I havealfo thought fhould be effica- m :ious to cure men in the like cafe. ! He oppofes nothing to the Vertue of this /olatil Salt , but that he remits the Reader o the time he will take , Chymically to orepare this Salt, and to make the Expe- 'iment therewith. But he faith, that he lath made many tryals with the Heads and Sleeks of Vipers, and found firft ; That, laving made two great Doggs aforehanc to wallow, each the head and neck of a Vi- aer, and, afterwards caufed both of them , o be bitten by other Vipers, thofe Doggs dyed not: And that, having caufed to be bitten two other Doggs of the fame big- lefs, that had eaten neither head nor neck )f a Viper, they dyed neither. He faith anther, that having made a Pullet to f wal- low one head of a Viper, and a Capon two, and caufed them to be bitten, they both dy- ;d foon after. He adds , that having the next day made ready fome heads of Vipers, tk caufed them to be forc’d down the throat of two little Doggs , of which he caufed G 4 the e i <4 ) the leafl to be bittenpn /he legg near th6 |[ anus, and the other , pt the tongue , an°$ ) ivy yrortal fyritotoyhs ; and that this may come to pafs by qj(J foie afliftance of Nature. As to the two cjther Generals , which he alledgeth^gx^fer^hce to the letting in of the * yeTfqw dkjuor ; I did not think fit to alledge them here, both be.caufe I agree not as to the pofiibility of the fatt, and that I have elfe- i where declared my felf fufficiently about it; as alfo that they make not to this purpofe. But I think it more material , to add here I two other Generals to thofe of Sign. Red?, and to fay: That the biting is more or lefs noxious , not only according to the place bitten, but according to the degree of the Vipers being vexed when fhe is to bite, and according as her teeth have more or lefs pe- netrated. And reafoning particularly upon thefe experiments, I fay, that the dogs which I had caufed to be bitten every one thrice, & were cured by making each of them fwallow the head and neck of a Viper, were of a very midling fize, that it is very difficult to found a certainjudgtnent upon the great ones,which Sign. Red? hath ufed, as ’t is alfo, to pafs it upon them that had fwal low’d the head and neck of a Viper, and thofe, that had not done fo, that all the other little animals, which he employed, as well the Pullet and the Capon, as the Pigeons, Catlings, Puppies, and little Rabbet^ ( ifo 6 ) 1 Rabbets, had not of th.emfejves ftrengdh e^.j nough to refid for a timeTh.'j enraged fpirits,^ nor to find the effed of th& remedy ; efpeeial- ly that which was bitten hT^^OQg^ie. For, I ; firmly believe, that there is no animal', '’great or final, which being fiercely bit in the tongue by a Viper well vexed, can avoid death, what aid foever you minifter to it, becaufe of the j nerves, veins & arteries, diffeminated through the tongue;and becaufe that the angred fpirits finding a free entrance, produce there all the effed they are capable of, with fo much vio- lence and nimbi enefs, that nothing is able to j Hop them. But in all curable bites I fihall not eafily be induced to renounce the help, which may be given by the head, neck, heart, liver, and divers other parts of a Viper (efpecially of her that made the bite) for the cure of the animals that have fufficient ftrength to refill: a while, and to exped the benefit of this kind of remedy. I believe alfo to have great caufe not to exclude from it man himfelf; as alfo to prefer the parts of the fame Viper that hath bitten, to thofeofothers j becaufe they muff needs have greater cognation and more con- fent with the vexed fpirits, that iffued from her. Concerning which I think it not amifs,to impart to the publickan accident that hapn’d,. in the Royal Laboratory of this City, white my laft experiments were making, A ',1 ue it :e :Ji $ ) ( >07 ) A you ng man t l^at bid made a good progrefs in his ftudies, derrbus to perfect himfelf in both ways of Pharmacy, and chiefly addi&ed to my cc^^^chymifliry, was near me, in tBeqffiii.gf a great Aflembly,on the id day of my experiments. After I had made Pome, whilft I was entertaining the company, the fancy took him, in imitation of me, yet without my knowledge, to take a Viper with his hand, and to feize on her head : which he did not with that caution that is neceflary, as not holding her fo fall but that theViper took her oppor- tunity, and ftruck one of her great teeth very- deep into the middle of the upper part of his left fore-finger .Having been made acquainted therewith, I remov’d, as much as I could., all fear from hisfpirit,and aavifed him to betake himfelf to the neceflary remedies. The credit he gave to the truths contain’d in my book, of- ten read by him, induced him to fay, that if I thought well of it, he would eat the head and neck of the Viper that had bit him. Com- mending his courage, I feconded his good in- clinations ; for, I caufed (lightly to be broil- ed on coals the head and neck of the faid vi- per, and made him eat and fwallow it hot, in the midfl of the company, adding to it the heart and liver broiled likewife. After which I faid, I doubted not but what he had done would be fufneient to cure him ; yet to be the Purer C 108 ) fnrer,I would give him Itoe/rolatil fait of vi- pers, efpecially he being alberfon whom I did much efteem, and for whol^health I had and ever fhould haue a great corfeB^Tfe&r^KjQ^ k immediately gave him a dofe of fifqngrgkiS of • this volatil fait, dilfolved in four ounces of water, and allured him there was not any dan- ger after this.The young man remained in the midft of the company, & ftirr’d not from the place, till the meeting ended,and then he took a little frefh air. He was afterwards a couple j of hours in the Royal Garden and the Labora- * toryjduring which time he now & then found | fome little ficknefs about his heart; but being come to his own lodging, he was ready to fup as he was ufed to do, and. would have done it, if I had not thought it better for him to take another dofe of the fame volatil falt,which had fo good effect, that the next day, after he had dined well, became again to our meeting ; which did much furprifeall thofe that had been witnefTes of the bite. Since that time he hath ever been very well. Now though his wound appear’d much deeper then that of the German gentleman, that was bitten the i Ji day of my former experiments ; yet had he none of thofe grievous accidents, that befell him, & were by me defcribed in my book: for he bad* no other pain but that of the hole of the bite, nor had he fo much as a Fever. The wound only * , ( ro9 ) only rendred fom^ drops of blood, by mean? of the ligature, I caus’d to be made on the top of his wounded finger, which did never fwell, Plbgalld'-up aTif it had been 1n3.de by the okcif&pin, without any Cicatrice appear- ing ; fo far was it from a Gangrene, or Scar, a? fome fancied he would have. The thing hath been too pubiick,not to be credited every where; and I think not, that Sign.-Rrw himfeifwill doubt of it; but rather that all things have concurr’d together to ve- rifie all I had advanced in my book, of which he hath contefred fome particulars, and could not refolve himfelf about others. However, if he have by him any remedies, more quick and more fure for the cure of the bites of Vi- pers,the publick will be much oblig’d to him when he fhall pleafe to impart them, as I very willingly communicate thefe I have experi- mented. I iLall not fpeak here of divers Ex- periments lately made upon Vipers by very able perfons at Far is. which confirm not on- ly the perfed innocence of the jellow liquor that is in the veficles of the Gums, but which warrant at the fame time my adfcribing the venom to the enraged fpirits. Thefe truths will be better received from their hands, and they will be much more advantagious to me, than if I did attempt to publilh them row. For doubtlefs there will he found in them ve- C Iio ) o ry curious things, and thtpyire like to be oil more importance than wmt I might be ablel to fay of them. Beiides tha^Jam far from u» furping the honor due to others, and fps^ratH tributing to me the obligation, 'tfhidi the publick will owe them for it* I Fora conclusion of this difcourfe ; ftnce Sign* Redi hath not found in the whole body i ofa Viper any other part but the jel low juice I to which he can aflign its venom ; fence on my fm to the end that afterwards he might as ju« ly exckdeTrom it the enraged fprrits, as I now cclud^ fi'vJai it the jellow liquor. But if on the xitrary it comes to pafs* that he can find none :her, 1 believe not, that for the future he hath iy ground to maintain his opinion, no more ban to conteftmine. ! Concluding this differ ration I fhall fay, that he contrariety of opinions, which is between iign. Redi and me, in the moft effential -things )f the Vipers poifon, may alfo be obferved up- )n another account about the fame animal : For, :hemore^exprefTeth^.39. ofhis la# letter, the jiverfion and hatred he hathagainft it, the more I dfeem it, and the greater pleafure I take to han- die, to examine, and to prepare it. Nor can I fuf- ficiently praife the excellent qualities, which fo rare a fubjeft poflefleth,nor the admirable reme- dies which it fiirnifheth: Which are the confide- rations, that have heretofore induced me, and oblige me ftill to call the Viper one 01 the chief Pillars of Phyfick. It may be, that for this once Sign. Redz will not doubt but that a difcourfe as rude as this, i compos’d among coals and furnaces, which I ' have feldom quitted of late, is mine. He will doubtlefs judge, that, if more underftanding men |%ad put their hands to it, the reafonings thereof | r would ( m ^ would be more fubtile, the-ftyle morepolit and the exprefllons more elegant ; and the Gre \ and Latin quotations would not have been fp red therein, both to ftrengthen the argurnef thereof, and to adorn' & enlarge the-^olmare. Bl for ail the contrarieties, which thedifferentco: ceptions have bred between Sign. Redi and m< I fliali always have a very great and a very dilj interreff’d efteem for him;and fo much the more becaufe I have great realon to conceive fom( good opinion of my book,fmce it could defers that fo intelligent & famous a perfon hath vouch fafed to read it again and again with pleafure. ashefaithhirafelf, that he hath taken the pain« of tranfcribing many pages out of it word foi word, and hath made it famous by his anfwer,and by that alfo which a perfon of great parts, and a high reputation hath made to ir,addrefsd to him- felf on this fubjett. I cannot but much glory in it, and highly declare my felf his obliged. And if it fhoutd come to pafs, that the diverfityo his experiments, the force of his arguments, o the efteem he hath acquiredamong the Learned fhould carry thebell from me in the fpirits ofal the world ; the vidory, which he fhould thence obtain, would not be much lefs advantagious for me, then if the truth of my experiments, accom- panied by my reafonings, had been able to bal lance or even to prevail over his Sentiments anc the writings of fo Illuftrious a Perfon. , * FINIS. i