PRINTED FOR 8. C. AND J. RIVINGTON; J. CUTHELL ; T. EGERTON, J, NUNN, CLARKE AND SONS : J. AND A. ARCH; LONGMAN, HURST, REES, ORME, AND BROWN; CADELL AND DAVIES; 265.7. 576. OF THE OF perception in bodies insensible, tending to natural Page 1 Of the nature of appetite in the stomach, 9 Of sweetness of odour from the rainbow, ibid. Of the corporeal substance of smells, Of the causes of putrefaction, Of alterations, which may be called majors, 15 Of bodies liquefiable, and not liquefiable, 16 Of the two kinds of pneumaticals in bodies, 17 Of concretion and dissolution of bodies, ibid. Of several passions of matter, and characters of Of the finer sort of base metals, Of certain cements and quarries, Of the altering of colours in hairs and feathers, 22 Of the difference of living creatures, male and ibid. Of the comparative magnitude of living creatures, 23 Of producing fruit without core or stone, 24 Of the melioration of tobacco, Of several heats working the same effects, 25 Of swelling and dilatation in boiling, Of the contrary operations of time on fruits and liquors, 28 Of blows and bruises, ibid. Of the orrice root, 29 Of the compression of liquors, ibid. Of the working of water upon air contiguous, ibid. Of the nature of air, 30 Of the eyes and sight, ibid. Of the colour of the sea, or other water, 32 Of shell-fish, 33 Of the right side, and the left, ibid. Of frictions, ibid. Of globes appearing flat at distance, 34 Of shadows, ibid. Of the rolling and breaking of the seas, ibid. Of the dulcoration of salt water, 35 Of the return of saltness in pits upon the sea-shore, ibid. Of attraction by similitude of substance, ibid. Of attraction, 36 Of heat under earth, ibid. Of flying in the air, ibid. Of the scarlet dye, 37 Of maleficiating, ibid. of the rise of water by means of flame, ibid. Of the influences of the moon, 38 Of vinegar, 40 Of creatures that sleep all winter, 41 Of the generating of creatures by copulation, and by putrefaction, ibid. 1 CENTURY X. Of the transmission and influx of immateriate virtues, and the force of imagination, 43 Of the emission of spirits in vapour, or exhalation, odour-like, 49 Of emission of spiritual species which affect the senses, 55 Of emissions of immateriate virtues, from the minds and spirits of men, by affections, imagination, or other impressions, 56 Mr. Bacon in praise of knowledge, Valerius Terminus of the interpretation of nature: a few fragments of the first book, Filum Labyrinthi, sive Formula inquisitionis, 167 Sequela chartarum, sive inquisitio legitima de Calore Inquisitions touching the compounding of metals, 187 Questions touching minerals, with Dr. Meverel's Of the compounding, incorporating, or union of ibid. Of the separation of metals and minerals, 199 Of the variation of metals into several shapes, bodies, Of the restitution of metals and minerals, 206 Inquisition concerning the versions, transmutations, multiplications, and affections of bodies, 207 A speech concerning the recovering of drowned Experiments about weight in air and water, 210 Certain sudden thoughts of the lord Bacon, set down by him under the title of Experiments for Profit, Experiments about the commixture of liquors only, not solids, without heat or agitation, but only by simple composition and settling, A catalogue of bodies, attractive and not attractive, ibid. |