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fure not to hurt the worm within. They count that a pound of cocons will yield an ounce of eggs. The cocons, thus threaded, they hang up or lay in a convenient room, that fo the papilions may come out, and make love to one another, and then lay their eggs on white paper laid there on purpose.

FROM the remaining cocons they prefently either wind off the filk, or if they cannot do that (for it is not every body can do it) they either with the heat of the fun, or oven, or hot water, kill the worms in the cocons, fo that they may keep them without having them fpoiled by the worm, till they can get their filk wound.

EIGHT pounds of cocons ufually yield one pound of filk.

THE way of winding filk off from the cocons is a thing that cannot ot be taught without feeing; and there are but few amongst them that can do it well, it lying in a dexterity not eafy to be learnt, as they fay: they put the cocons in hot water, and fo ftirring them about with a kind of rod, the ends of the filk twires of the cocons ftick to it, which they laying on upon a turning reel draw off from the cocons, which lie all the while in the hot water; but the great skill is to have such a number of these fingle twires of the cocons running at a time, as may make the thread of filk which they compofe of a due bignefs; for in turning (which they do apace) many of the twires of the cocons break, and fo by degrees the filk thread, made of fundry of thefe drawn together, grows too little, and then the woman that is winding ftirs her rod or little beefom again with her left hand amongst the cocons, to get new ends of twires to add to the thread, which all this while keeps running. To know when to make this addition of new twires and in what quantity, fo as to keep an even thread all along, is the great skill of thefe winders; for they do it by guess, and keep the reel turning and the thread running all the while; for fhould they, as oft as is occafion, ftand ftill to count the twires or confider the thread, and how many new twires were fit to be added, it would be an endless labour, and they could never make wages.

THE engines alfo that they ufe for twifting this filk afterwards, are too curious to be defcribed, but by a model. I have feen one, where one woman has turned a hundred and thirty-four fpindles, and twifted as many threads at a time; and I have feen another, wherein two women going in a wheel, like that of a crane, turned three hundred and fixty.

THEIR mulberry-trees, where they ftand near towns, yield them good profit; I have known the leaves of four white mulberry-trees (fome whereof were not very large) fold for a piftole, i, e.. between fixteen and Leventeen fhillings fterling.

THE END.

TO THE

FOURTH

A.

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Have the advantage of a quick dispersing of their orders,

546

Bishops, offended at King Charles II's declaration of indulgence, 544, 545.-Their zeal against popery, ibid. Some of them think it neceffaty to unite with the diffenting proteftants, 547.-Look on the diffenting proteftants as the only dangerous enemy, ibid.Join with the court-party, ibid.-Lay afide their zeal against popery, ibid.-Reject a bill, enacting that princes of the blood royal fhould marry none but proteftants, ibid. - How near they came to an infallibility in the house of lords, ibid.-Called the dead weight of the house, Blackmore. (Sir Richard) Vid. Locke, Molyneux. Blood, the circulation of it, 593 Bodies; luminous, pellucid, and opake, 587 Boileau, his tranflation of Longinus, commended, 601

ibid.

Bold, (Samuel) writes in defence of Mr. Locke's effay concerning human understanding, and reafonableness of Chriftianity, 609.-His difcourfe on the refurrection of the fame body,

Mr. Locke's concern for him, Bolingbroke, (Earl of) his character,

6:8

ibid.

563

Books, feem to infect all who trade in them, 628 Bookbinders, a great fault in our English binders,

604

ibid.

639

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605

ibid.

Bottom of a queftion, fhould be fought for, 190 Bratton, that author commended,

602

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Burlington, (Richard Boyle, Earl of) his character,

Children, great care to be taken of their company,

567

32, &c.

Burnet, bishop of Sarum, his history of the refor mation commended,, 604 Burridge undertakes to tranflate Mr. Locke's ef Say into Latin, 320, 321

fhould be treated as rational creatures, 31 Chronology, how to be learnt,

114, 115

C..

562

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ter,

Cange, (Charles du): his gloffarium media & infima Latinitatis commended, 605 Canons (of the church of England). Vid. Laud. Cannon-bullet; how long it would be in coming from the fun to the earth, 584 Capell, (Lord) his high efteem of Mr. Locke, and his works, 322 Carlile, (Charles Howard, Earl of) his charac567 Carnarvon, (Charles Dormer, Earl of) his character, 567 Carolina, laws and conftitutions for it, drawn up by Mr. Lecke, 519: Catechifm. (of the church of England), 559 Gaufes; the fyftem of occafional caufes confuted, 576, 577 it brings us to the religion of Hobbes and Spinofa, 577 Ceremony, an excefs of it contrary to good breeding, 89,90 Gertainty, an Irish bishop's letter against Mr. Locke's notion of it,

Cervantes, his Don Quixote, Chamberlayne, his fate of England,.

books that treat of it, 604 Civil law, how young men fhould be taught it, IIS Clarendon, (Earl of) commended, Clerc, (John le) his New Teftament commended,, 610. His harmony of the Evangelifts, 642 Clergymen, taught rather to obey than underftand,,

540 the principles of fome, dangerous to government, 570 Commendation, children chiefly to be allured by it, 25 Common-place-book; Mr. Locke's new method of making, one, 247, &c. Company of their parents, neceffary to children, 32, 33. Complaints of children against one another, not to be encouraged, 67 Compulsion, in teaching, to be avoided, 39, 40, 78, &c. Comines, (Philip de) his memoirs recommended, Coke, (Sir Edward) his inftitutes commended, 602 Cooper, his dictionary commended, 605 Corporations, the defign of the act for regulating corporations in 1661, 540 Cooper, (Sir Anthony Afbley) was the firft Earl of Shaftsbury, 233

604

his advice to King Charles I. for putting

369

an end to the war,

604

how his project was fruftrated.

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Charles II. defigned to reign by a standing ar

my,

568

Chefterfield, (Philip Stanhope, Earl of) his character,

ibid.

ibid.

235

237

237, &c.

his great candor to his enemies, feveral inftances of his extraordinary faga

city,

how he difcovered General Monk's defign of fetting up himself,

567

ΚΟΙ

Children, how a heathful conftitution fhould be

Chillingworth, his elegium,

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243

was the cause of the return of King Charles II. 242 his letters to King Charles, &c. ibid. &c. Coftiveness; its ill effects on the body, 12 how to be avoided, ibid. &c. Courage, to be early wrought in children, 69. to be promoted, by keeping children from frights, ibid. Craving of children not to be complied with,

18, 19,

60, &c.

290

how to reftrain it, how this reftraining is to be understood,

Grew, (John, Lord) his character, 567
Cromwell, (Oliver) his escape from the prefby-
terian party in parliament,
Cruelty, to be early rooted out of children, 72, 73

242.

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563

546
Fish, an account of a poisonous one, 608
Fallacies, how the understanding is misguided by
them,

187

562

Fencing, has both its ufe and danger,
Fitzwalter, (Benjamin Mildmay, Lord)
Five-mile-act,

126

567

541

567

Fleta,

602

Denbigh, (Bafil Fielding, Earl of) his character,
Devonshire, (William Cavendish, Earl of) his
character,
Dictionaries, how neceffary, 604. The beft of
them mentioned,
Defultorinefs, often misleads the understanding,

605
162
Diet,-what, beft for children,
7,8
Difpofition of children fhould be observed in their
learning,
38, 39
Difpute, over-great earnestness in it fhould be
avoided,
91, 92
Diffenters, cenfured for their inconfiftency, 362
Diftinction, how it differs from divifion, 176
how the understanding is improved by a
right use of it,
177
Dominion, wherein children's aiming at it first
appears,
60
how children's inclinations to it should
be reftrained,
ibid. &c.
Der fet, (Richard Sackville, Earl of) his character,
567
Drawing, fome fkill in it neceffary for a gentle-
98
Drink, taking of it cold, when the body is hot,
very dangerous,

man,

5,9

of children, fhould be only fmall beer, 9
much drinking, especially of ftrong li-
quors, caufes thirst.

E.

ibid.

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Grapes, the method of treading and preffing, Juvenal commended, for the making wine, Greek Tongue, may be attained without much

Grotius, (Hugo) cited,

653

difficulty by a grown man,

122, 123

553

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K.

604

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ibid.

Languages, better learned by ufe, than by a multitude of rules, 99, &c. Latin Tongue, much time ill spent in learning it, how it may be eafily attained, 108, &c. Laud, archbishop of Canterbury, his canons, 569 Lauderdale, (Duke of) his character, 545 houfe of commons addrefs the king against him,

564, n.. Law, (of one's country) how young men fhould learn it, 116 Lee, (Henry) his anti-fcepticism mentioned, 624 Learning, more ado than fhould be is made about it, in educating children, 92, &c. fhould be made a fport to children, from the firft, 93 how it may be made a play to children, 94, 95 by rote, children fhould not be too much put to it,

110, &c.. Le Clerc, vid. Locke, Molyneux. Letters, (or epiftles) what care fhould be taken to inftruct youth how to write them, 118, &c., Liberality, how children fhould be enured to it,

64, 65 Lightfoot, his works commended, 642 Limborch, (Mr.) his letters to Mr. Locke, 392 advifed by Mr. Locke to dedicate his hiftory of the inquifition to archbishop Tillotson, 410 his history well accepted by the archbishop, feveral bishops, and peers of England,.

411

his great care about the undoubted truth of his teftimonies,

418.

laments the fudden death of archbishop Tillotfon, to whom he intended to dedicate his theologia chriftiana, 419

declares the attempts of the Romanifts to fupprefs the authors cited in his history, 421 complaints of popish proceedings among profeffed proteftants,

ibid.

informs Mr. Locke about his publishing the

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