and ofthe vertues thereof. 
the bꝛeſt, and fo the inner members, and efpecially for the 
bꝛeathing : and there is none that doe bie to dꝛinke it but it 
wil do them hurte vnleſſe hee be of afanguine tomplexion, 
which if he doe not feele hurte pꝛeſently, he ſhall feele it af 
terwarde. WAhereby it appeareth howe euill the vie ol the 
ſayd ſnowe is, and the water which dooeth tome out of it, it 
it bee not by the way of medicine onely , ſo it may bee bied 
to coole there with, loꝛ in ſuche forte it doeth not oſfende, as 
is ſaide. Foz in this neither the auncient wꝛiters did put 
any doubt of hurt, noꝛ any ſcruple, and now wee fee that it 
—_ not, but bꝛingeth health, and benefite, as wee ba 
apde, | 
And as Plinie alſo faieth , of the delight and daintineſſe 
of the colde, without offence ofany malice of the Snawe. 
And Martial dobeth ſhewe the fame , in the 4.booke where 
he ſaith the ſnow mut not bee dꝛunke, but that licour which 
is made very told with it. And this was ſhe wed and taught 
bute vs by the moſt ingenious dꝛieth. 
And vnto fuch as are verie colde, it commeth not well to 
paſſe fo? them to dꝛinke that, which is made cold with now 
oꝛ that which is verie colde, i hee bee not attuſtomed there ⸗ 
too:fo2 by cuſtome, they may bfe and dꝛinke it withaut any 
offence ta them, but it is good that they moderate them⸗ 
ſelues in dꝛinkingthat which is verie colde, and that they 
content them ſelues that it bes made colde, after a meane 
forts although it be with {howe . Allo it is not tonuenient 
fo2 childꝛen noꝛ boyes, that their dꝛinke be made colde with 
fnow, fo; the weaknels ofthe ſtne wes, and intericur parts, 
and fo2 the tendernelſe oftheir age, and chiefly ther map 
Drinke no wine, but water, forthat their age dooeth mot ful 
fer, that they may dꝛinke it: and dꝛinking water verie colbe, 
it doeth them verie much hurte. The wine which is made 
colde with tnowe , doeth not offende fo much as the water 
iwbich is made colne: one of the thinges wbich takers nt 
n Sent at he Wins Us Se wee 
