) I fernatories of* Rme-waterffivich as they -ftaue iff Veme,&c.) they are found j 
| not fo Choicc Waters 5 Theworlc, (perhaps,; becailfe they are Couered | 
; aloft, and kept from the Sunne. Snow water is held vnw'no! dome, Info 1 
S much as the People, that dwell at the Foot ofthe S now ^ Mountaines, or 
! otherwife vpon.the Afcent (efpecially the Women) by drinking of Snow- : 
water, haue greatBags hanging vnder their Throats, tvell-water, except it I 
be vpon chalke, or a very plentifull Spring, maketh Meat Red 5 which is i 
an ill Signe. Springs on the Topso( High-Hills are the belt 5 For both they ' 
feemetohaueaLightnelTe, and Appetite of Mounting 5 And befides 
they are molt pure and Vnmingled 5 And againe are mote Percolated 
thorowagreat Space of Earth. For Waters in Talleys, ioyneinetfedl vn¬ 
der ground with alltvaters of the fame Leuell • Whereas Springs, on the 
Tops of Hills, paflfe thorow a great deale of Pure Earth, with lefle Mixture 
ofother waters. 
■> Seucnthly, Iudgement may bee made oh Waters, by the Style where¬ 
upon thewater runneth ; As Pebble is the Gleanelt, and bell tailed » And 
next to that Clay tvater ; And Thirdly , Water x pon Chalke ; Fourthly, 
that vpon sand • And Wbrftof all vpon CMnd. Neither may vou trull 
tvaters that Tajle Sweet 5 For they are commonly found* in Riling 
' Grounds of great Cities 5 which mu ft needs take in a great -deale of 
Filth. 
\ tii 1 ,sV;;,., -V*V * jO> 
I N Peru, and diners Parts of the mfi-indtis y though vnder the tin^ Experiment 
the Heats are not fo Intolerable, as they bee in Barbary , and the Skirts s S itar ^“ H ” 
of the Torrid Zone. The CAnfesaxc ', Firft the Great Brizes, which the pewfLafra! 
Motion ofthe Aire in great Circles, (fuchasare vnder the Girdle of the derthe JEqni- 
World,) produced] j Which doe refrigerate ; And therefore in thole j ” e£i ^ 
Parts Noone is nothing-fo hot, when the Brizes are great, as about | 39 ® 
Nineor Ten of the Clocke inthe Fore-Noone, Another Ca&fe is, for | 
that the Length of the Night, and the Dewes thereof, doe cornpenle i 
the Heat of theDav. AthhdCaofe is the Stay of the Sunne ■ Not in I 
Refped of Day and Night j (for that wee fpake of before,) but in Re- I 
fpefl ofthe Sea/bn - 3 For vrider the'Li»G ^he Snnnecroffeth tht Lih^ and 
maketh two Summers, arid two Winters • But in the Skirts of the Torrid 
Zone, it doubleth and goeth backe aga'ine, and fo maketh one Long 
Slimmer. 
T H E Hedf ofthe Sunne maketh Men Blade in Tome Countries, as in sUSvwh 
^EthiopiT, andGinnji'ScC. F/re doth it nop, asweefee in Ghjjemen, ching theco/o. 
’thatare continually about the Fire. The Reafon may bee, becaufo Fire r«yof 
doth licke vp the Spirits, and Blond of tfoeBody, fo as they Exhale 5 So j Mom ™' 7 
that it euer maketh Men looke Pale, and Sallow 5 But the Sunne, which 3 
is a Gentler Hear, doth but draw the Bloud to the Outward Parts : And ! 
1 ratHer Concbcleth it, than Soakethit : And therefore wee fee that all I 
j ^Ethiopes axc¥k(hy, andPlnmpe, and haue great Lips • All which be- j 
token Moi/lurc retained, and not drawne out. Wee fee aRo^tharthc j 
l • ■ . - ~ , ... K_ . . Negroes ■ \ 
3 97 
