Bacon, Francis, Sylva sylvarum : or, a natural history in ten centuries

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6228Natural Hiſtory; ſo a great ſecret of Preſervation of Bodies from change; for if you can
prohibit, that they neither turn into Air, becauſe no Air cometh to them,
nor go into the Bodies Adjacent, becauſe they are utterly Heterogeneal, nor
make a round and circulation within themſelves;
they will never change,
though they be in their Nature never ſo periſhable or mutable.
We ſee how
Flies and Spiders, and the like, get a Sepulchre in Amber, more durable than
the Monument and Embalming of the Body of any King.
And Iconceive the
like will be of Bodies put into Quick-ſilver.
But then they muſt be but thin, as
a leaf or a peece of Paper or Parchment;
for if they have a greater craſſi-
tude, they will alter in their own Body, though they ſpend not.
But of this,
we ſhall ſpeak more when we handle the Title of Conſervation of Bodies.
3[Figure 3]

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