white Body, and a clear Liquor without arty external heat : 
The deftrudh'on ©f this Colour, by adding only feme fair 
water ; The change of an Odorous Body, as Campbire 5 into 
an Inodorous , by mixing it with a Body , that has Icarce 
any fenfxble odour of its own: The Hidden reftauration of 
the Campbire to its native {cent and other qualities, by com* 
■ mon water, &c, 
2. Sublimate , di fill'd from Copper and Silver, which both 
did wholly loofe their Metalline forms, and were melted 
into brittle lumps, with colours quite differing from their 
own ; both apt to imbibe the moifture of the Air, f$e. 
• 3 d A (blutim of iilver mis Luna Cornea: Whereby the opa- 
cous, malleable and hardly fufible Body of Silver, was, by 
the addition of a little fpirit of fait, reduced into Chryftals, 
differing from thole of other Mettals ; diaphanous alfo, and 
brittle, and far more eafiiy fufible 3 than Silver 5 wholly un- 
like either a Salt or a Mettafbut very like to a piece of Horn , 
and withall inlipid,though the Solution of Silver, be very bic- 
ter 5 and the fpirit of fait, highly fowre,^. 
4. An Anomalous Salt i (which the Author had not 3 it feems 
the liberty to teach the Preparation off) whofe Ingredients 
were purely Saline, and yet the Compound, made up only 
of fait, fowre, and ftrongly tailed Bodies, was rather really 
fweet, than of any other tafte , and when a little urged 
with heat, its odour became ftronger, and more infuppor- 
tablethan that of Aquafortis , df tiled ZJrine, and even (pirit 
tfjAt Armmiacks but yet when thefe Fumes fettled again 
into faltj their odour would again prove inoffenfive, if not 
pleafant, ®e, 
5. A $ea*faltyvh erne Aqua forth had been dijiilled: Where 
the Liquor, that came over, proved an Aqua Regis : the 
fubffance jn the bottom, had not onely a mild tafte, and 
D d affedted 
