920 CfieWo2?or:6jutesi5 or; 
on the Affirinative:thefe^»f/p«</w are theGIuttmis i 
and Drunkards above-mentioned, who have their i 
day when we have our night ; and when we have i, 
our day, and are about our bufinefe, they are ta- : 
king their reft. 
. CHAP. XXVI. 
Of the Hedg-hog. 
I Need not go about to make a large defcription ; 
of thisi creature, becaufe it is fo very well 
known; it is all over full of prickles, fo that no: 
one can touch him without pricking himfelf ; it re- ;i 
prefents unto us the untradable Rttfilck,)Or wrang- 
ling Difpmatits, with whom there is no talking 
without a qaa -rel : her neaft is by Hedges and 
Vineyards in Amtimny but in the winter in hollow- 
trees ; in the Summer-time fhe layedi up her food 
againft Winter; Ihe will climb fruit-trees, andj 
fhake down apples, and then Ihe taketh one in her] i 
mouth ; and fo rouls her felf up, and fticks the reft j i 
upon her prickles, and fo carryeth them to the hoi- i 
low-tree where her neaft is, and that is her food all p 
the Winter ; fhe doth the fame in Vineyard^, l| 
feaking the Vine as long as any grapes will fall off: ; 
his hole hath two holes, one towards the Nonhy3.nA ji 
another towards the South y which he fhutteth ; 
North and according as the wind is in either i; 
of thofe two corners : fometimes they have two I 
vents, through which nature eafeth her felf; when 
