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Titles
- A compleat treatise of the muscles, as they appear in humane body, and arise in dissection: with diverse anatomical observations not yet discover'd : illustrated by near fourty copper-plates, accurately delineated and engraven1
- Aurifontina chymica, or, A collection of fourteen small treatises concerning the first matter of philosophers: for the discovery of their (hitherto so much concealed) mercury : which many have studiously endeavoured to hide, but these to make manifest, for the benefit of mankind in general1
- La guerison assurée des fievres tierces, doubles tierces, en deux jours, quartes & doubles quartes, en quatre: par le remede provençal en tablettes, que le sieur B. Alary, maître apoticaire de la ville de Grasse en Provence, fait & distribue par privilege du Roy : Le regime de vivre qu'il faut observer, la manier de se servir de ce remede avec heureux succez, les effets differens qu'il produit, & les raisons justificatives1
- Relation, in welcher beygebracht wird, was gestalten die Wiennerische Neustatt mit der Pest angesteckt worden: wie man sich in geistlicher un weltlicher Ordnung verhalten, was für Praeservativ-Mittel gebraucht, und auff was Weiss die Krancken versehen und curirt worden, wie man die inficirte Häuser gereiniget, und wann sich die Pest geendet1
- Saducismus triumphatus, or, Full and plain evidence concerning witches and apparitions: in two parts : the first treating of their possibility, the second of their real existence1
- The anatomy of an horse: containing an exact and full description of the frame, situation and connexion of all his parts, (with their actions and uses) exprest in forty nine copper-plates : to which is added an appendix, containing two discourses, the one, of the generation of animals : and the other, of the motion of the chyle, and the circulation of the bloud1
- The conclave of physicians. The second part. Further detecting their intrigues, frauds and plots against their patients1
- The remaining medical works of that famous and renowned physician Dr Thomas Willis of Christ-Church in Oxford, and Sidley Professor of Natural Philosophy in the famous University: viz. I. Of fermentation. II. Of feavours. III. Of urines. IV. Of the accension of the bloud. V. Of musculary motion. VI. Of the anatomy of the brain. VII. Of the description and use of the nerves. VIII. Of convulsive diseases ; with large alphabetical tables for the whole, and an index for the explaining all the hard and unusual words and terms of art, derived from the Latine, Greek, or other languages, for the benefit of the meer English reader, and meanest capacity ; with eighteen copper plates1