( 44 ) 
and wet that you canlca^eitill them, and although they 
feem to be quite ftormed, yet they will revive, for tcaft 
fome of theft Catterpillart into cold water, and Kept 
them 12 Hours in it, then I took them forth ftiffe with 
colde and extended, futhatl cou’d not difterne the leaft 
fignes of Life or motion in them j but expofing them to 
the Sun, within halfe an houre they came to themftlves 
sod coa'd not be difcerned from their fellows that had 
notbeeu fteeped. . If you in like manner.Drown.Flyes, 
in Bear or Water, and let them lye in it all Night, and 
having taken themout,Iprinkle them, well over with the 
Powder of Chalke, they will by and by creep away, 
which feemed Dead, the heate of the Chalke which I 
look upon as a kind of unquenched Lime, put Life into 
the Flyes, as the heat of the Sun into the Catterpil/arsi 
the Sun caufing theVitall juice to returne into, and pafle 
thebenummed Members. 
F urther it is to be obftrved, that this fteeping in cold 
Water, gaine theft Cattevpillars a good ftomack, and 
made them eat more greedily theu their fellows 
whfth were not ferved (b, as men feem to have better 
ftomacks in Winter, then in the heat ofSummer. 
Theft Catterpillars , make themftlves commodious 
nefts to change in, of Worm-wood ftattered upon the 
ground,and (hutting up themftlves, they change therein. 
This Catterpillar changed the 4#^. of September, and 
Jay in that condition ( figured mtheTMe ) 10 Months, 
18 Days. 
And the t^th> ofjufy, came forth aBntterfy,of^ 
wonderfull (hape,and accouterment i it lived not above 
foure Dayesjfor I knew not what to feed it with, that it 
wou'd Eate. 
Number 
