t >4n 
thofe Confonants, Syllables, and Words, that Teemed 
neceflary to require the Help of the Tongue, 
as * d, lit , n, r, at , al, ath , afh, cha , la, ta , /* . 'The 
little ‘Dog did not eat Bread . Touch the Tooth . 
• Try /<? //^/T the Candle. — * — Thrice Thirty - 
: three . — Let the large Cat fcratch the little 
Dog . The Church . doth. Lilly. All 
thele fhe pronounced perfectly. She read to us in a 
Book very didinftly and plain ; only we obferved, 
that fometimes fhe pronounced words ending in ath 
as et~- end as emb — ad as eib— 5 but it required a 
nice and drift Attention to obferve even this Differ- 
ence of Sound. She lings very prettily, and pro- 
nounced her Words in Singing as is common. What 
is dill very wonderful, notwithdanding the Lofs of 
this ufeful Organ the Tongue, which is generally 
allowed byAnatomids, and Natural Philofophers, to 
be the chief, if not the foie Organ of Tade, fhe didin- 
guifhes all Tades very nicely, and can tell the lead 
perceivable Difference in either Smell or Tade. 
We the Underwritten do atted the above to be a 
true Account. 
Benjamin Boddington . 
William Notcutt, Minider. 
William Hammond , Apothecary. 
Mr. Baker received along with the foregoing Cer- 
tificate, by Letter from Mr. Boddington , dome farther 
Particulars, which he fuppoled lels material. He 
fays, in her Perfon fhe is a little thin Body, genteel 
* Thefe were the Letters, Sounds and Sentences mentioned by 
Mr. Baker. 
enough. 
