C ) 
chief City thereof is a Bell , which reqaires above 
Twenty four ftrong Men to ring it ; and here likewifi; 
he mentions feveral Idolatrous Cuftoms and Rites for- 
merly oWerved ; and fpeaking of the Woods and De- 
farts of Lithuania , he gives the Relation of feveral 
Children that have been bred up and fuckkd by the 
Bears, with their Cubs, with Obfervables of their eat- 
ting raw Flefh, wild Honey, and Crabs with the Dif- 
ficulty of making them go Upright, bringing chem 
to Speak, and the like, which ends this Volume. 
At the end of this Treatife the DoSor gives a Com- 
pendious Plan of the Body of Phyfick , or his Corpus 
rationale Medicum^ being his Chymical and Anatomical 
Method ; for underftanding the Oeconomia Animalu^ the 
Nature of Difeafts, and the Materia Medica^ as it was 
by him demonftrated at Oxm^ London and Cambridge ; 
firftof iht Elements, Fahrick, ^nd Syfiem o[thG World; 
then of the Elements o( Terreflial Bodies , next the vJ/r^- 
iiure and parts of the Human Body^ in all its particu- 
lars and laftly of the Union of the Soul and Body ; 
coming to fpeak of the Materia Medica^ he affirms, All 
inward Difeafes have their fir ft Seat in the Mafs of Blood; 
that there are no Specifick Medicines for any particular 
part of the Body, and that outward Applications can- 
not avail much for inward Diftempers. He divides all 
the Materia Medica into Two Clajfes^ evacuating and 
altering Medicines where he reduces the Chymijiry and 
Reafon, the Nature and Operations of Medicines this, 
he fays, he endeavoured to demonftrate at Oxford, &c. 
and here he gives liopes of his obliging the Publick in s 
few Years, with a Latin Treatift of the Principles of 
Phyfick^ and of the Oeconomia Animalis ; he fubjoins a 
farther Explication and Vindication of the Plan of the 
Q » Anmi'^l 
