oni of the Colledge , aad oi Sr,Theod.Mdjerft,Thb ip^n he concludeth 
with his method as to the regimenc of Life,and his way of treating all 
forts of peftiiential Taraors. - 
In the£/ffo&a£idlafl:hedifcourfeth of the means pfeventingthe 
Plague?)Qf vvhich he confiders/o^j^^ to Ge^eral.md thot^hth of iV^- 
mre, asftrong Northerly winds-^WofArt,as great Guns difcharged 
morning and evening, as alfo appropriat perfunaes, by burning re- 
iinous,but not fweet-^fc€nted,wood. Other means arc, famcHiar Amn^ 
lets • concerning which the Reader may confult the Author himfelf. 
To the whole is annexed an Account of the regiment of life, which 
the Author himfelf ufed as alfo a Lifi of thofe that dyed of the 
Plague this year, which amounted to 6859<5. befides 29000. that died 
of other difeafes during that time. 
m.A PhlUf^fhical E\[ayJecUrm^ frobable CAVSES $f STONES 
m the Greater World, in order to find out the Caufes and Cure of thd Stone 
in the flinty % and Bladder o/yl/(f;j : D. Thomas Sherley,Pi?//?M« 
in Ordinary to his Afajefiy jLondini in 8o» 
^r" He Ingenious Author of this Efl'ay having propofed to himfelf 
1 to publifli a Medicinal Traft concerning the raoft probableCaufe 
of the Stone in the Bodies of Animals, found it neceflary to premife 
th^s Inquiry into theCaufes and Nature of PetrefaAion in the greater 
World in gcneral jto fee, whether the Caufes be not the fame in both, 
or at lead bear not fomc analogy or refemblance to one another. 
In the doing of which, he thought good to relate a number of fcleft 
Hiftories of Petrifications, and then to examine the caufes by which 
they were performed, In which latter partahaving waved the AriflotS' 
iian dodrine of thispoint,nor found a full fatisfadion in that of the 
vulgar Chfmifisyhc clofeth with that ancient Hypothecs, which imports, 
that Stones and all other Sublunary Bodies arc made oiPVater conden* 
fed by the power of Seeds^which by the vertue of their fermcntive^O^ 
dours perform thefetranfmutations upon Matter. For the better un- 
derftanding of which, he prcmifes fomeGeneralsjand then defcends to 
particular proofs of what he aflcrts : concerning which we can do no 
better than to remit the Reader to the Author himfelf. 
lY.CaroliClaromontii M.D. &cJe AEKE,SOLO,& A^IS AngU, 
deque MO KB IS Anglorum vernacnlis Dijfertatioi Nec '^on Obfery Mioses 
MedicaC AMBRO«BRlTANNICty£. Londini Joh.Mar- 
lyn^fub fgno Campa^a in Coemeterio D,Fat4U^l6jZ, in 120. 
^~^He Author of thefe two Trafts, endeavours in the^;^^, to give afl 
1. account of the Scituation,Air,Soyl,andWaters of ^;7^/W^as al- 
fo of the Temper,Dyet, Exercifes, and chief Sickneffes of the Inhabi- 
tants thereof % In the othsr^ht maketh it his bufinefs to deliver fevcral 
Hiftories of Difeafes, to the number of 26, managed by himfelf in 
Wales^ which he doth, by defcribing the nature of each of thofe MaU* 
dies^by adding his ratiocinations thereon, by giving thelrlndications, 
and fliewinghis Method of Cure s, together with the Events of them. 
£T(^^T^ in this Nnmb.^.i^OQS.l.z.zhe^ taefe vvords,i /oo? langAMi^^h did re^r^ht tbe faid Crsvnif 
no greater hignefi than yo'AfeeFtg,i . m Tab.i f^^onJ.^.r.pxUs.pAozodhr.p 'erecption.p.^oizJ. ip,r.m 
' X'JNDON, Printed for Joh^ Martyn Printer to the Royal- SQcictp 1672. 
