c n ) 
Which fliews thehight of Flattery of thofe times. So- 
that they paid their Vowes to the lately dead Father the 
Confervator of Britam > for the fafety of the Son > and the 
Storytells us how gladly he would have had him made a 
God long before, even with his own hand. 
1 think it not amifs, if i give you the reft ofmy O bfer- 
vationsxoncerning theft matters, which -I have met "wkhr 
in this City. 
I/ A large Pedefial oi t^t fame fort of Stone, found 
deepin the grounds on th€. Weft fide of the River^ which 
by the'Stone^ and itsmouldirigs^was undoubtedly JR^omaus 
and muft have been for a Pillar in fome large building. 
2. A Broken Infcription in the Churchnvall in jill- 
*S^/W^ North -ftreetj wuh the Figure of a Naked Woman 
in Eafs-relieve on the left fide of it. The Letters ( as many 
of them as remain^ are e?{ceeding fairly cut> beyond any 
thing I have yet feen of J{oman Antiquities in England, 
and the Stone of a finer grain than ordinary. It is a Mo-^ 
nnmtiit of ConjugaUffeBim^ 
^===== 
I'^^AE-" AN 
-^S" SE C r 
^^I^ A KTO 
> - conF vgi 
The firft ftroak is the out-fide of a greatM, and is part 
of the Vis Manibm. The three laft lines may be read thus, 
Bme merenti Antonio Conjugi : Yet it is ha):d to fay^ whe- 
