( 194 } 
from her Head, andftream*d out tofomediftance fromit ; Nor did 
fhe bleed only there,but upon her Shpuldcrs,and at the Waft^in fuch 
quantities, that the lionen next herpight be wrung, it was fo wet 5 
and every day required clean linnen^She for three days bledalfo at 
the Toes, at the bend of her Anns^ c^t tbe.Joynts of her fingers of 
each hand, and at the fingers ends^and in fuch meaftjre,that in a quar- 
ter of an hour the Mother blth^ catchV from the droppings 0^ the 
fingers, almofl fo much as the'hollow of her hand would hold. All 
the time of this bleeding the Child never crycd vehemently, but on- 
ly groan'd ; though about three weel^s before,it had fuch a violent 
fit of cryingas the Mother faid (he never heard.After theChild was 
dead, there appear'd, in thofe places where the blood came , litle 
holes like the prickings of a Needle» 
This Accompc I had from the Mother of the Child, who is a very 
fober Woman;and fhe toldit me with tears. Every circumftance is 
fo far from fidlion/hat the Women,who were man7,that were with 
the Child in itsillnefsandat itsdearh,do atteftitjfaw theChild's 
Coat ftained, at the waft of it, with the blood that came from that 
partjand alfo another thing blocdy from the head of it.The Mother 
told me, the blood was not thin like water, but of that thicknefs as 
blood ufually is ; and that fhe and others believed, there was little 
or no bloud left in the body of the Chi Id. If the time of the Child's 
death will add any thing to this Relation, it was about laft Candie- 
4Tiafs. 
Some Queries mcL J^fmrs/elatwg to an Account given in Nnmb. 54. 
by Dr. Edw. Brown, of a ftrange Lake in Carniola, c^iTd the 
Zirchnitz-Sea : "the ^eries were made hy a, Curious ferfon in 
France; the An^xversgivenhy the Author of the [aid Accmp. 
J 4 Q^T TT J Bether the Mountains thatcompafs this Lake, except 
W on the South-fide^ be very high, and whether the Snow 
keep long upon them? A. This Lake is encompafTed with high 
hills at fome little diflance, but when I was upon the Lake, I favv 
no Snow upon them ; but upon Mountains in the Country, as I tra- 
vel I'd to and from this Lake, I obferv'd Snow in Upon Hills 
on the fide of great Lakes theSnow lyes not fo long as upoa hills 
more diftanr. 
2. Q* Whether the Boles and Openings^ by which thcfe Wdters 
run out, are in ftoneSy or in the loofe Earth ? A. Genera 11 y t h ey are 
fiony, not in foft or loofe Earth; yet in oneor two places the Earth 
hath been known to fink and fall in, particularly near a Village 
CdilVd Sea-dorf 
