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Cote : RES 121093.
Exemplaire numérisé : BIU Santé (Paris)
Nombre de pages : 346
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 126  An oil or liquor, made of crabs-eyes / Water of spawn of frogs / A compound water of the sperm of frogs / Another compound water of the sperm of frogs
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 [sans numérotation]  The epistle dedicatory to Tobias Garbrand, doctor of physic and principal of Glocesterhall in Oxford
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 [sans numérotation]  To the reader
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 [sans numérotation]  Alphabetical table of the diseases and infirmities for which cures or remedies are prescribed in the foregoing books
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 1  Book I - What distillation is, and the kinds thereof
 2  Of the matter and form of furnaces
 3  Of vessels fit for distillation
 4  Of lutes, for coating of glasses, and for closures, as also several wayes of stopping glasses
 5  
Image : [A furnace made up of : a cover, a body or vessel, a little glass and a quick-silver]
 6  
Image : The stopple of glass and the glass-body
 7  The manner of nipping up a glass, or sealing it up hermitically
Image : [A furnace made up of : a crooked pipe, a glass-body, a glass-stopple, a mouth of the vessel
 8  An explanation of such hard words, and tearms of art, which are used in this ensuing treatise
Image : [A furnace used for nipping up a glass]
 9  
 10  
 11  
 12  Rules to be considered in distillation
 13  
 14  
 15  
 16  
Image : [Instruments used for the experiment : an iron rod with two iron rings, an iron book, a pair of tongs, a crooked iron, an iron rake
 17  Common distilled simple waters / To make waters in a cold still that shall have the full smell and vertue of the vegetables
Image : The form of a common cold still
 18  Another way to make water taste and smell strong of its vegetables / To make water, at any time of the year in a cold still, without green hearbs, so that the water shall smell strong of the hearb / Another way to make a water taste, and smell strong of its vegetables
 19  To make the water of roses, or other flowers, of a grateful and pleasant smell, and that shall burn like unto spirit of wine / To make the water of the flowers of jasmin, honey-suckles, or woodbind, violets, lillies, etc, retain the smell of their flowers
 20  
 21  
Image : A furnace with his vessels, to distill liquors with the steam of boiling water
 22  A water out of berries
Image : The delineation of a balneum Mariae which may also serve for to distil with ashes
 23  A sweating water made of elder-berries
Image : The furnace for a balneum Mariae, with the alembics and their receivers
 24  
Image : The effigies of another balneum Mariae, not so easie to be removed as the former
 25  Water out of rotten apples / The simple water of succory
Image : In defect of a furnace for a balneum, you may make use of a pot set upon a trefoot, after this manner
 26  The water of fennel / Cinnamon water
 27  The acid water, of oak, juniper, guajacum, box, etc / How to make aqua vitae, and spirit of wine out of wine
 28  How to make aqua vitae out of beer
Image : A hot still
 29  How to rectifie spirit of wine, or aqua vitae / To make the magistery of wine, which will be one of the greatest cordials, and most odoriferous liquor in the world
Image : The form of a pellican
 30  To make another magistery of wine, that a few drops thereof shall turn water into perfect wine / To make an oil of wine / To extract the spirit out of wine by the spirit of wine
 31  To make a very subtil spirit of wine at the first distilling
Image : These vessels may either stand in ashes or in balneo / The manner of distilling in wooden vessels
 32  To make the spirit of any vegetables
Image : A balneum and a boiling vessel made of wood
 33  
Image : The form of an alembick
 34  The manner of making the spirit of any vegetable may suddainly, at any time of the year / To make any vegetable yield its spirit quickly / To reduce the whole hearb into a liquor which may well be called the essence thereof / To make an essence of any hearb, which being put into a glass, and held over a gentle fire, the lively form and idea of the hearb will appear in the glass
 35  To make the true essence, or rather quintessence, of any hearb / To extract the quintessence of all vegetables
 36  An excellent essence of any vegetable / Water or spirit of Manna / The tincture of dryed roses / The tincture of violets
 37  The tincture of saffron / The tincture of rhubarb
 38  The tincture of sugar / The tincture of salt of tartar
 39  The chymical oil of the hearb or flower of any vegetables / The oil commonly called the spirit of roses
 40  Oils out of seeds / Oils out of berries / Oil out of any solid wood
 41  To make a most excellent oil out of any wood, or gums, in a short time, without much cost / To make vegetables yield their oil easily / To make the spirit of turpentine / Another more excellent way
 42  To make oil or spirit of turpentine / Another way to make the oil of turpentine
 43  To make oil of gums refines, fat and oily things / Oil of champhire / Another way to make oil of camphire, that it shall not be reduced again / Another way to make oil of camphire
 44  A true oil of sugar / Oil of sage / Oil of amber
 45  Oil of myrrhe
 46  Oil of myrrhe per deliquium or by dissolution / Oil of tartar per deliquium by dissolution / Oils by expression / A vomiting, and purging oil made by expression
 47  Oil of jasmine / To make any oil, or water, per descensum
 48  How to make an oil and water out of seat
Image : [A furnace to make oil or water per descensum]
 49  How to rectifie spirits
Image : A retort with its receiver standing upon crystal bowls, just opposite to the sun-beams ; another retort with its receiver standing in a marble or iron mortar, directly opposite to the sun
 50  How to rectifie all stinking, thick black oils that are made by retort, and to take away their stink
 51  Book II - Of compound waters, oils, and spirits. A dissolving menstruum
Image : A glass-gourd with its head
 52  Another dissolving menstruum, or acetum philosophicum / Another dissolving menstruum / Paracelsus, his elixir subtilitatis / Usque-bath, or irish aqua vitae
 53  Aqua coelestis
 54  Aqua imperialis
 55  Aqua mirabilis / Dr Stephen's water
 56  A famous surfet water / A pectoral water
 57  A very excellent water against the worms / A water against the convulsions / An hydropical water
 58  A water against the colic
 59  A water against the vertigo, and convulsions / A compound water of burre-root causing sweat / Another excellent sudorific and plague water
 60  Dr Burges his plague water / Crollius his treacle water camphorated
 61  A distilled treacle vinegar
 62  An excellent water against the stone in the kidneys / Another water for the same use / To make an excellent wound-water
 63  Dr Mathias his palsie water
 64  A scorbutical-water, or a compound-water of horse-radish
 65  Spirit of castor / Bezoar water
 66  A specifical sudorific
 67  Treacle-water / Aqua Mariae
 68  The mother water commonly called hysterical-water / A vomitting water / A vomitting water made by Platerus
 69  A distilled purging water that purges without any pain or griping / A specifical liquor against the toothach / A water of wonderful efficacy, not undoservedly called the mother of balsame
 70  An excellent sanative oil for wounds and bursten bellies
 71  A notable water against the falling-sickness
 72  A most excellent water, reviving the natural and lively colour and preserving the health of man / A very excellent anti-epileptic water
 73  A water effectual in any diseases in the joints, arising from cold rheumes, or any other causes / The oil of the philosophers, not common
 74  Oleum benedictum
 75  An artificial balsame
 76  A compounded oil against the megrim / A compound oil for the suffocation of the Matrix
 77  Book III - Of minerals. Spirit of salt
 78  Oil, or spirit of salt, may also be made after this manner
Image : A retort and it's receiver before they be set on work / A retort with its receiver set on work
 79  How to make a white, acid, and a red volatile spirit, out of salt-nitre
 80  The use of the white acid spirit of salt-nitre / To turn salt-peter into a water by a meer digestion / Spirit of salt-ammoniac
 81  Another way / Oil and spirit of vitriol / A red and heavy oil of vitriol
 82  To dulcifie the spirit of vitriol, and of salt / Gilla Theophrasti or a most delicate vomiting liquor made of vitriol / Oil of sulphur per Campanam
 83  Of the spirit or acid oil of sulphur according to Glauberus
Image : The bell
 84  
 85  The oil of sulphur is made after a more philosophical manner / The essence of sulphur
 86  The oil of arsenic / Of the nitrous spirit of arsenic
 87  To make a spirit of sulphur, crude tartar and salt-nitre / To make spirits and flowers of nitre and coals / Aqua-fortis or a strong spirit that will dissolve silver and baser metals / Aqua-regia or Stygia or a strong spirit that will dissolve gold
 88  Another aqua-regia / To make a most strong and vehement aqua-regia / Oil or butter of antimony
 89  How to make a water of antimony, whereof a few drops shall purge, or sweat, and which [bath] neither smell, or scarce any taste / Oil or quintessence of metals
Image : A furnace for a close reverberation furnished with its retort and receiver
 90  A sweet and red oil of metals and minerals / The true spirit of antimony / The true oil or essence of antimony
 91  A burning spirit made out of lead, most fragrant and balsamical
 92  How to turn quick-silver into a water without mixing any thing with it and to make thereof a good purgative and diaphoretic medicine / A fragrant oil of mercury
 93  To make the water of mercury / To turn mercury into a water by it self
Image : The vessel for this operation
 94  How to distil spirits, and oils out of minerals, vegetables, bones, horns, and faster, and in a greater quantity in one hour, than in the common way in 24
 95  
Image : [The furnace and the distiller]
 96  How to make the acid oil and volatile spirit of vitriol
 97  
 98  The use and dose of the narcotic sulphur of vitriol / To make an oil of lapis calaminaris
 99  To make oil of talk / Another way to make oil of talk / Oil of bole-armoniac, terra-figillata, and such clay-earths
 100  Oil out of these kinds of Earth / Spirits of unslaked lime
 101  Oil made out of tile-stones called the oil of philosophers / The liquor or water of coral / To make a water out of Lapis Armenus that shall have neither taste nor smell, a few drops whereof shall purge
 102  Another way / How to make a furnace that shall of it self without any vessels, which should contain the matter, being put into it, sublime minerals, and distil all manner of oils, and spirits out of minerals, vegetables, and animals, and that in a very great quantity, in a very short time, and with small cost
 103  
Image : [Furnaces used for distillation]
 104  
 105  
 106  The way to make spirit of salt by this furnace
 107  Of the use of the spirit of salt / To clear oil of mastic, and frankincense
 108  Ros vitriol / A sweet green oil of vitriol
 109  The sulphur of vitriol may with spirit of wine be extracted thus / A sudorific water to be used out wardly
 110  How an acid spirit, or vinegar, may be distilled out of all vegetables, as herbs, woods, roots, seeds, etc / To make the spirits, flowers and salts of minerals and stones
 111  How to rectifie oils and spirits of minerals
Image : Receivers
 112  Book IV - Of animals. Waters, spirits, and oils, simple and compound out of animals. Oil and water out of blood / The magistery of blood
 113  Elixir of mummie / The essence of mans brains
 114  A famous spirit made out of Cranium humanum / Another excellent spirit made out of Cranium, harts horn, or ivory
 115  A water and oil made out of hair / Water of milk / A compound water out of milk for any inflamations in the eyes / Spirit of urine
 116  A compound spirit of urine / Spirit of honey / The quintessence of honey
 117  Some make the quintessence of honey after this manner / An essence of honey / A most strong spirit of the vinegar of honey
 118  Oil or quintessence of wax / Water is made out of any of flesh
 119  Water or liquor is made out of flesh / A very excellent restorative liquor
 120  A balsame made of bears fat / Oil of snakes and adders / Quintessence of snakes, adders, or vipers
 121  Viper wine
 122  Kunraths famous water, called aqua-magnanimitatis / Another aqua-magnanimitatis
 123  Water of dung / A water of doves dung / A water made of horse-dung
 127  Book V - A miscellany of spagyrical experiments, and curiosities. The spagyrical anatomy of water
 128  
 129  
 130  
 131  
 132  The spagyrical anatomy of wine
 133  
Image : [Furnace used for distillation]
 134  
 135  The famous arcanum or restorative medicament of Paracelsus, called his homunculus
 136  
 137  
 138  
 139  An artificial way to make flesh / Paracelsus, his way for the raising of a dead bird to life, and for the generating many serpents out of one, both which are performed by putrefaction
 140  To make an artificial Mallago wine / To make an artificial Claret wine
 141  An artificial malmsey / To make an excellent aromatical hypocras
Image : A single hypocras-bag or manica hippocratis
 142  To make excellent hypocras wine in an instant
Image : A triple hypocras-bag is only one banging above another after this manner
 143  Another way to make hypocras, or to make any wine taste of any vegetable in an instant / To make good raspberry wine / Two other ways to make it all the year at an instant
 144  To make mead of metheglin that it shall be stale, and taste quick within a fortnight, and be fit to drink / To make a spirit of amber-greise, that a few drops thereof shall perfume a pint of wine most richly / An excellent sweet water
 145  To purifie and to give an excellent smell, and taste unto oil-olive, that they that loath it, may delight to eat it / Another way
 146  To purifie butter that it shall keep fresh and sweet a long time, and be most wonderful sweet in taste / To make butter taste of any vegetable without altering the colour thereof
 147  To make cheese taste strong of any vegetable without discolouring of it / To purifie and refine sugar / To make a vegetable grow and become more glorious then any of its species
 148  To make a plant grow in two or three hours / To make the idea of any plant appear in a glass, as if the very plant it self were there
 149  To make firre-trees appear in Turpentine / To make harts-horns seemingly to grow in a glass / To make golden mountains, as it were, to appear in a glass / To make the representation of the whole world in a glass
 150  To make the four elements appear in a glass / To make a perpetual motion in a glass
 151  To make a luminous water that shall give light by night / To make a vapour in a chamber, that he that enters into it with a candle shall think the room to be on fire / To make a powder that by spitting upon shall be inflamed / [Note manuscrite]
 152  To fortifie a load-stone, that it shall be able to draw a nail out of a piece of wood / To make quick-silver malleable in seven hours
 153  To reduce glass into its first principles, Viz. sand, and salt / To write or engrave upon an egg, or pebble with wax, or grease
 154  To make artificial pearl, as glorious as any oriental / To make a mineral perfume / The oil or liquor of sand, flints, pebbles or crystals, for the aforesaid, and divers other preparations
 155  
 156  To make steel grow in a glass like a tree / To melt a metal in ones hand without burning the hand / An observation upon the beams of the sun, and heat of the fire, how they add weight to minerals and metalline bodies
 157  
 158  To extract a white milkie substance from the rayes of the moon / To condense the air in the heat of summer, and in the heat of the day, into water
 159  How two sorts of volatile salts will be fixed by joining them together / To make an unguent that a few grains thereof being applyed out wardly, will cause vomiting, or looseness, as you pease
 160  To make a medicine that half a grain thereof being taken every morning will keep the body soluble / To make a cordial stomachical and purgative tincture
 161  
 162  To reduce distilled Turpentine into its body again / To make the distilled oil out of any hearb, feed or flower, in an instant, without any furnace
 163  To make the water, and the tincture of any vegetable at the same time, which is an excellent way to draw out the vertue thereof / A way to separate fresh water from salt, without a furnace or much trouble
Image : [Furnace used to make water and the tincture of any vegetable at the same time]
 164  A way to purge and purifie troubled and muddie waters
Image : [Caldron with cover used to separate fresh water from salt]
 165  Another way to purifie any thick, muddie, or feculent liquor
Image : [Great pot used to purge and purifie troubled and muddy water]
 166  To keep fire in a glass, that whilest the glass is shut, will not burn, but as soon as it is opened will be inflamed
Image : [Another system with three vessels to purifie any thick, muddie or feculent liquor]
 167  
 168  How to distil with a lamp, with divers other uses thereof
Image : A lamp furnace
 169  
 170  Another lamp-furnace / To make a candle that shall last long
Image : Another lamp furnace with trhree candles
 171  To make a lasting and durable oil
 172  Philosophical bellows
Image : [Three instruments for several uses]
 173  An excellent invention to make a fire
Image : [Invention to make a fire]
 174  A new invention for baths
 175  
Image : [Three sorts of baths by distillation]
 176  An artificial hot bath made from the same principles as the natural hot bath
 177  
 178  
 179  
 180  
 181  
 182  An artificial tunbridge and epsome water
 183  
 184  To make artificial precious stones of all sorts of colours
 185  
 186  To prove what kind of metal there is in any ore, although you have but a very few grains thereof so as that you cannot make proof thereof the ordinary way with lead / A pretty observation upon the melting of copper and tin together
 187  A remarkable observation upon the melting of salt-ammoniac, and calx-vive together / An easy and cheap powder like unto Aurum fulminans
 188  To make an antimonial cup, and to cast divers figures with antimony
 189  Book VI - The spagyrical anatomy of gold, and silver, together with the curiosities therein, and chiefest preparations thereof
 190  
 191  
 192  
 193  
 194  
 195  
 196  
 197  
 198  Dr Anthony's famous aurum potabile, and oil of gold
 199  The true oil of gold
 200  A tincture of gold / Another tincture of gold
 201  Another tincture of gold / Another tincture of gold
 202  Another tincture / Aurum fulminans
 203  To make gold grow in a glass like a tree, which is called the golden-tree of the Philosophers
 204  Another way / To make gold grow and be increased in the Earth / A remarkable observation upon a golden marcasite
 205  The vertues of the aforesaid preparations of gold
 206  The preparations of silver in general
 207  A green tincture of silver
 208  A green oil of silver / To make oil of silver per deliquium
 209  To make a liquor of silver, that shall make the glass wherein it is so exceeding cold, that no man is able for the coldness thereof, to hold it in his hand any long time / To make silver as white as snow / To make the silver tree of the Philosophers
 210  [Note manuscrite]
 211  The process of the elixir, according to Paracelsus
 212  The process of the elixir, according to Divi Leschi Genus Amo
 213  The process of the Philosophers stone according to Pontanus / The smaragdine table of Hermes from whence all alchymie did arise
 214  [Note manuscrite]
 215  Book VII - Of sublimation. What sublimation is / What furnaces are necessary in this work
 216  What vessels are to be used in sublimation
 217  How sublimation is performed
 218  How sulphur is sublimed / Another way thus / Another way to sublime sulphur
 219  Another way thus / To sublime the flowers of Benjamin
 220  To sublime sal ammoniac
 221  The sublimation of mercury / A more perfect way of subliming mercury
 222  To make mercurius dulcis
 223  The best way to prepare mercury from metals for the foresaid process / Another way / To prepare the manna of mercury or the white eagle
 224  Mercurius sublimatus [essentified] / The imperial eagle
 225  The diaphoretic ruby of auripigmentum / Another diaphoretic ruby of arsenic
 226  How minerals and metals may be reduced into flowers and of their vertues
 227  
Image : [The furnace used for sublimation]
 228  Flowers of iron and copper / Flowers of lead and tin
 229  Flowers of mercury / The flowers of zinc / The use
 230  To make metallical spirits and flores by the help of salt nitre and linnen cloth
 231  To make the flowers of antimony according to Glauber
 232  
 233  
 234  
 235  Book VIII - Of calcination. What calcination is, and the several ways thereof
 236  
 237  The calcination of common salt / The calcination of salt petre / The calcination of vitriol
 238  The calcination of pumex stone / The calcination of crystal / Another way to calcine crystal
 239  Another and better way to calcine crystal / The calcination of the silver marcasite or wismuth / To calcine [Allom]
 240  To calcine antimony with salt prepared / To calcine antimony per se
 241  Crocus metallorum or the liver of antimony / To calcine antimony, that it shall purge only per secessum
 242  The calcination of mettals. To calcine gold by amalgamation
 243  The calcination of gold by cementation / The common cementation / The royal cement
 244  The most perfect cementation of gold / The calcination of gold by aqua regis
 245  The calcination of silver by aqua fortis / To calcine silver by fumigation / The calcination of copper by aqua fortis / Another way to calcine copper
 246  Another way to make crocus veneris / The calcination of iron
 247  To make crocus martis by aqua fortis / To make crocus martis by cementation
 248  Another way / The calcination of saturn or lead / The calcination of tin
 249  The calcination of mercury / Red precipitate of mercury / The best way to precipitate mercury
 250  To precipitate mercury in a moment
 [sans numérotation]  The contents. Book I
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 [sans numérotation]  Book II - Of compound waters, oils, and spirits
 [sans numérotation]  Book III - Of minerals
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 [sans numérotation]  Book IV - Of animals
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 [sans numérotation]  Book V - A miscellany of spagyrical experiments and curiosities
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 [sans numérotation]  Book VI - The spagyrical anatomy of gold, and silver, together with the curiosities therein, and chiefest preparations thereof
 [sans numérotation]  Book VII - Of sublimation
 [sans numérotation]  Book VIII - Of calcination
 [sans numérotation]  An alphabetical table of all the oils, waters, experiments, and curiosities contained in the eight foregoing books
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 [sans numérotation]  The London-distiller, exactly and truly shewing. The way (inwords at length, and not in mysterious charcaters and figures) to draw all sorts of spirits and strong-waters : to which is added their vertues, with additions of many excellent waters
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 1  The London-distiller, or, Rules and directions for extracting and drawing of low-wines and spirits, to be re-distilled into richspirits, strong waters, or aqua-vitae
 2  
 3  Rules and directions for the company of distillers of London, in general : but more especially for such of them, as now do, or hereafter shall make vinegars, etc
 4  
 5  
 6  The London-distiller, or, Rules and directions for preparing, composing, distilling, extracting, and making of rich spirits, strong waters, or aqua-vitae, etc. CHAP I - Of aqua-vitae, the first sort / CHAP II - Aqua-vitae, the second sort
 7  CHAP III - Of aniseed water / CHAP IV - Of angelica water / CHAP V - Of wormwood water
 8  CHAP VI - Of balm water / CHAP VII - Of mint water
 9  CHAP VIII - Of rosemary water / CHAP IX - Of limon or orange water
 10  CHAP X - Of stomach water the left / CHAP XI - Stomach water the greater
 11  CHAP XII - Marjoram water / CHAP XIII - Usquebach
 12  CHAP XIV - Balsamint water / CHAP XV - Rosa solis
 13  CHAP XVI - Clove water / CHAP XVII - Cinamon water common
 14  CHAP XVIII - Cinamon water proper / CHAP XIX - Sweet fennel feed water
 15  CHAP XX - Marigold water / CHAP XXI - Caraway water / CHAP XXII - Nutmeg water
 16  CHAP XXIII - Precious water
 17  CHAP XXIV - Wind water
 18  CHAP XXV - Water to procure sweat / CHAP XXVI - Surfet water
 19  CHAP XXVII - Scorbutical water
 20  CHAP XXVIII - Plague water
 21  CHAP XXIX - Lavender water
 22  CHAP XXX - Sage water / CHAP XXXI - Ros folis proper
 23  CHAP XXXII - Water of flowers
 24  
 25  CHAP XXXIII - Water of fruits / CHAP XXXIV - Aven water
 26  
 27  Additions to inrich these precedent chapters, to which (by numbers) these are referred
 28  
 29  
 30  
 31  
 32  
Image : The furnace used in the drawing off the preceding spirits and waters
 33  Excellent waters for several uses. CHAP I - A water to cause hair faln to grow again / CHAP II - A water to cause hair taken off never to grow again / CHAP III - A water to take away spots in the face
 34  CHAP IV - A water against scabs / CHAP V - A water to preserve the sight / CHAP VI - A water to restore the fight decayed / CHAP VII - A water against the gout
 35  CHAP VIII - A water for the web and spots in the eyes / CHAP IX - A water for tetters, fistulaes, cankers, etc / CHAP X - A water against redness of the face, and to beautifie the skin
 36  CHAP XI - A water against the inordinate flux of tearr / CHAP XII - A water against the redness of the eyes / CHAP XIII - A water to cleanse and dry a sharp ulcer
 37  CHAP XIV - A water to make the teeth white / CHAP XV - A water to take away the marks of the small pox / CHAP XVI - A water to cicatrize ulcers
 38  CHAP XVII - A water for ulcers / CHAP XVIII - A water for hollow ulcers / CHAP XIX - A cicatrizing water
 39  CHAP XX - A water for hollow wounds / CHAP XXI - A water for wounds and ulcers
 40  CHAP XXII - A water to make the teeth white / CHAP XXIII - A water against the colick / CHAP XXIV - A water for a cold stomach / CHAP XXV - Water of sage compound / CHAP XXVI - Lavender water compound
 41  CHAP XXVII - A pectoral water / CHAP XXVIII - Aqua splenetica
 42  CHAP XXIX - Aqua febrifuga / CHAP XXX - Aqua damascena odorifera / CHAP XXXI - Aqua hysterica
 43  CHAP XXXII - Aqua nephretica / CHAP XXXIII - Aqua aperitiva
 44  A catalogue of the materials and ingredients used in the precedent rules
 45  
 46  
 [sans numérotation]  An alphabetical table of the waters and spirits treated of in the London Distiller
 [sans numérotation]  An alphabetical table of the diseases for which cures or remedies are prescribed in the foregoing treatise
 [sans numérotation]  
 [sans numérotation]  
 67  [Chap 10 - A threefold defense of the doctrine of original sinne]
 68  
 69  
 70  
 [sans numérotation]  [Contreplat]
 [sans numérotation]  [Plat]