v^Ae natural spin He adds the eK^mple of 
Men, capable ^0 caiife a grangr&pe-^n^ biting in 
choler ; wheteas nofuchaccideht comes to pais, when they chance 
to bi te one without choler. He concludeth this difcourfe with 
K the {king oi^ f^ra/^tula, which he conceiveth to be accompanied 
' with an imagination , fo ft rongly impreflTcd in perfons that arc 
ilung by it, as that their Spirits are perTerted, and made conform 
to the agitajing mtiire of the fame , and conftrained at certain 
times by certain tunes to dance, and to return to fuch motions 
every year. To confirm which/he relateth an example of a Mea^ 
, pi?//WSouIdier, ^ho, he faith, bath been thefe four years tlie 
Fre?^ch Infantry! and is ftill in the Royal Regiment of Reuflfllon. 
I his perfon never failed to feel every year at a determinate time 
i X^k -^c^ the effeds of that fting, which he 
had received before he came into Frmce. And when the Idea's 
' of the fting were found exalted to a degree capable to produce 
- theireffeSs, he began to dance, and would hear without interrup- 
' tion the Violins, which the Officers of that Regiment caufed to be j 
play'd for himout of charity ; to which heanfwer d contimiallj, 
Keeping his time very well, without being tired, during three 
dales, eatirig and drinking without interrupting his dances , and 
being very impatient at any difcontinuance of the play of the 
Violins. But on the fourth day his eagernefs to dance abated, 
when he remembredallhe had done, and knew all that were about 
Kim ; after which time, he paffed the reft of the year without any 
incrmation to dance. This Souldier, he faith, to have been feen 
thus to dance every year by thoufands of people, and particularly 
in the Camp Royal A 1 6 7 0^ where the King himfelf, and the 
Court faw him. 
Laftly, M. Charas efteems, that Signor Redi would do well , if, 
for; the fatisfadion of the Publick, without ftanding upany lon- 
ger for the venomoufnefs of the jellow juice, which he thinks hatb 
been fo rationally contefted with him , he would take the pains to 
^ / look after fome other thing, that might M Common to the Vipers 
of Frame and Itdy^ and that might have the fame difpofitionof 
matter, the fame power of afting nimbly,and deferve to be equally 
declared to be the true feat of their Venom ; that fo Signor K^ii 
might as validly exclude from it the enraged Spirits , as he 
Ch^m^ now does the Jellow liquor : But if he can find none fucb^ 
our 
