JJC 
69 5 
| fiN^aturall History: j 
I Organ, is of the greateft P leaf are • Which is but in two things :/ Sweet j 
Smells- Arid Wine, and the like Sweet Fapours. Tor Smells, wee lee their/ 
great and liiddenEffed in fetchingM^ againe,when they fw ounc: For 
Drinke ,it is certain,that the Pleafure of Drunktnnejfej s next theP leaf are 
ot Fenm ; And Great Joyes (like wife ) make the Spirits moue,and touch 
themlelues .* And the Pleafure ofFenus is fomewhat of the fame Kind. 
It hathbeene alwaies obferued, that Men art more inclined to Ferm 
in the winter , and women in the Summer. The Caufe is, for that the Spi¬ 
rits in aBody more Hot and dry,(as the Spirits of Men are,)by thesum- 
mer are more exhaled, and diffipatcd-And in th e winter more conden- 
fed,and kept entire: But in Bodies that are Cold and Moift,( as womens 
are^che Summer doth Cherifh the Spirits , and calleth them forth j the 
Winter doth dull them.Furthermore, the stbjlinence, or Intermijsion of 
the Ffe of Fenus, in Moijl and well Habituate Bodies , breedeth a Number 
of pifeafe j-• And efpeciall dangerous / mpejlumations. The Reafon is 
euident 5 For that it is a Principal! £#rfc/wr/V«,efpccially of the Spirits : 
For of the Spirits, there is fcarcc any Euacuation, but in Fenus,and Exer- 
cife. And therefore the Omijfton of either of them, breedeth all Difeafes 
of Repletion, 
Experiment* 
in Confort 
touching the 
Inftlle. 
Th e Nature of Vinification is very worthy the Enquiry: 
And as the Nature of Things, is commonly better percciued, 
m Small,than in Great ; and in vnperfeft, than in perfect; and 
in Parts, than in whole: So the Nature of Vinification is beft 
enquired in Creatures bred of Putrefattion. The Contemplation 
whereof hath many Excellent Fruits. Fir ft, in Difclofing the 0- 
riginall of Vinification . Secondly, in Difclofing the Originall of 
Figuration, Thirdly,in Difclofing many Things in the Nature 
o\P erfeB Creatures, which in them lye more hidden. And 
Fourthly, in Traducing, by way of Operation, feme Obferuati- 
ons in the Infe El a, to worke EffeEls vpon Perfctt Creatures . 
Note that the word JnfeEla , agrecthnoc with the Marter, but 
weeuervfeiiforBreuiticsfakc, intending by it Creatures bred 
ofPutrefaBion. 
Th elnfefta are found to breed out of fcuerall Matters: Some breed 
of Mud or Dung • As the Earth-wormes, Eeles, Snakes,dec. For they are 
both PutrefaStions : For Water in Muddoth Putrifie, as not able to Pre- 
ferue it felfe: And for Dung , all Excrements are the Ref afe and Putrefacti¬ 
ons oCNourijhment.Some breed in wood, both Growing,and Cut down. 
Jguyre in what ^Wrmoft,and at whatSeafbns?We lee that th eworms 
with manyFeet,which round themfeluesintoBaIls,arc bred chiefly vn- 
der L ogs of Timber ,but not in th eTimber, And they are faid to be found 
alfo,(many times,) in Gardens , where no Logs are.But it feemeth their 
Generation 
