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.
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.