are the bejl of Drink*. 
Worthily efteemed to be very grateful to 
the Stomach, and of eafie digeftion } be¬ 
ing, by reafon of their concoftion and ma¬ 
turation in the Fruits, become before-hand 
a fem Sanguis, or half Blood, and are not 
fo fubjett to putrefaction as other Extracti¬ 
ons of a meaner Claffis j which is alfo the 
reafon, that with a due ordering of them, 
by a meer natural Maturation, the moft 
of them will keep in their full purity fe- 
Veral months and years; and fome of them 
for many years increafing ftill in ftrength, 
purity, and plealantnels, which no other 
Extracts are capable of. 
CHAP. IIL 
That Cider, and other Juices of our 
Englifb Fruits , are the beji Drinljjt 
for this Country . 
SECT. I. 
Its Antiquity and Nature. 
H Aving tafted a little of thole feverai 
Dainties that are in moft Countries 
ftquidly prepared to pleale the Palate, I 
D hope 
