







 
   
     
       
         The late censors deservedly censured; and their spurious litter of libels against Dr. Greenfield, and others, justly expos'd to contempt by the following answer to all, but especially the last, intituled, A reply to the reasons against the censors of the College of Physicians, &c. Humbly offer'd to the perusal of Dr. Thomas Burwell, Richard Torles, William Daws, Thomas Gill, the late censors. By Lysiponius Celer M.D.L.
         Groeneveldt, Jan, 1647?-1710?.
      
       
         
           1698
        
      
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         99827601
         32023
         
           
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             The late censors deservedly censured; and their spurious litter of libels against Dr. Greenfield, and others, justly expos'd to contempt by the following answer to all, but especially the last, intituled, A reply to the reasons against the censors of the College of Physicians, &c. Humbly offer'd to the perusal of Dr. Thomas Burwell, Richard Torles, William Daws, Thomas Gill, the late censors. By Lysiponius Celer M.D.L.
             Groeneveldt, Jan, 1647?-1710?.
          
           [4], 28 p.
           
             printed for the author, and are to be sold by B. Billingsley at the Printing-Press under the Royal Exchange in Cornhill,
             London :
             1698.
          
           
             "Dr. Greenfield" and Lysiponius Celer M.D.L. = Jan Groeneveldt.
             The words "Thomas .. Gill" are bracketed together on title page.
             His defense against members of the College of Physicians, many of whose members regarded him as a quack. Cf. DNB.
             Reproduction of the original in the British Library.
          
        
      
    
     
       
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           Groeneveldt, Jan, 1647?-1710? -- Early works to 1800.
           Quacks and quackery -- Early works to 1800.
           Medicine -- Early works to 1800.
        
      
    
     
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           THE
           Late
           CENSORS
           Deservedly
           Censured
           ;
           And
           their
           
             Spurious
             Litter
          
           of
           Libels
           AGAINST
           Dr.
           GREENFIELD
           ,
           and
           Others
           ,
           justly
           expos'd
           to
           Contempt
           :
           By
           the
           following
           Answer
           to
           all
           ,
           but
           especially
           the
           Last
           ,
           Intituled
           ,
           
             A
             Reply
             to
             the
             Reasons
             against
             the
             Censors
             of
             the
             College
             of
             Physicians
             ,
          
           &c.
           
        
         
           Humbly
           offer'd
           to
           the
           Perusal
           Of
           Dr.
           THOMAS
           BURWELL
           ,
           Dr.
           RICHARD
           TORLES
           ,
           Dr.
           WILLIAM
           DAWS
           ,
           Dr.
           THOMAS
           GILL
           ,
           The
           late
           Censors
           .
        
         
           And
           to
           the
           expiring
           Censure
           of
           D
           r
           CHARLES
           GOODAL
           .
        
         
           By
           
             Lysiponius
             Celer
          
           M.
           D.
           L.
           
        
         
           Si
           mihi
           pergit
           ,
           quae
           volt
           ,
           dicere
           ;
           ea
           ,
           quae
           non
           volt
           ,
           audiet
           .
           
             Ter.
             Andr.
             
          
        
         
           LONDON
           :
           Printed
           for
           the
           Author
           ,
           and
           are
           to
           be
           Sold
           by
           
             B.
             Billingsley
          
           at
           the
           
             Printing
             Press
          
           under
           the
           
             Royal
             Exchange
          
           in
           Cornhill
           ,
           1698.
           
        
         
         
         
      
       
         
         
         
           THE
           PREFACE
           TO
           THE
           READER
           ,
           To
           whom
           it
           may
           Concern
           .
        
         
           MY
           Intention
           ,
           is
           not
           to
           expose
           Physick
           ,
           but
           those
           who
           have
           done
           it
           :
           They
           are
           indeed
           of
           the
           Faculty
           ,
           and
           I
           am
           sorry
           for
           it
           .
           The
           Twelve
           tho
           Select
           ,
           yet
           had
           One
           Traitor
           among
           them
           ;
           and
           is
           it
           strange
           that
           a
           greater
           Number
           should
           contain
           a
           less
           Proportion
           of
           Vnworthy
           ?
           Whoever
           reproacheth
           an
           Art
           for
           the
           Crime
           of
           an
           Artist
           ,
           condemns
           his
           own
           ;
           for
           none
           is
           Exempt
           :
           He
           that
           chargeth
           me
           with
           anothers
           Fault
           ,
           is
           as
           guilty
           as
           my self
           of
           the
           Fact
           ,
           and
           justly
           of
           the
           Slander
           .
           But
           if
           I
           must
           suffer
           in
           my
           Art
           ,
           whilst
           publickly
           opposing
           the
           Censors
           Violence
           ;
           't
           is
           by
           Ends
           ,
           not
           true
           Judgment
           must
           be
           the
           Occasion
           .
           They
           have
           acted
           ill
           ;
           what
           is
           that
           to
           the
           Faculty
           or
           College
           ?
           Suppose
           Four
           of
           it
           had
           jointly
           been
           Felons
           ,
           must
           all
           the
           rest
           be
           Thieves
           ?
           They
           have
           indeed
           exposed
           the
           College
           ,
           but
           originally
           by
           Passion
           ;
           they
           persist
           in
           their
           Injustice
           ,
           supported
           by
           Pride
           :
           But
           some
           do
           the
           same
           with
           an
           Intent
           to
           destroy
           it
           .
           
           They
           have
           evidenced
           their
           Spight
           against
           one
           ,
           shew
           their
           Teeth
           at
           some
           few
           :
           But
           others
           strike
           at
           All
           ,
           whether
           in
           or
           against
           their
           Interest
           .
           What
           mean
           else
           those
           Libels
           publickly
           dispersed
           to
           the
           disgrace
           of
           the
           Faculty
           ?
           The
           Authors
           ridicule
           Physicians
           ;
           a
           pretty
           Way
           to
           secure
           themselves
           from
           Contempt
           :
           They
           are
           extreamly
           just
           to
           themselves
           ,
           whilest
           injust
           to
           the
           Art
           they
           pretend
           to
           ,
           and
           as
           qualified
           for
           Wit
           and
           Railery
           ,
           as
           the
           late
           Censors
           were
           for
           their
           Office.
           'T
           is
           meer
           Baregarding
           Stuff
           ,
           like
           that
           of
           the
           pretended
           great
           defender
           of
           an
           Art
           he
           neer
           learned
           ,
           tho
           ever
           teaching
           it
           .
           I
           am
           sorry
           to
           see
           so
           great
           a
           Body
           buckle
           to
           one
           whose
           only
           indeavour
           is
           ,
           by
           indirect
           means
           to
           make
           himself
           Great
           ,
           when
           justly
           he
           cannot
           .
           This
           knight
           Errant
           in
           Physick
           ,
           defends
           he
           knows
           not
           what
           ;
           attacks
           he
           can't
           tell
           whom
           ;
           and
           hates
           all
           but
           his
           Dulcigna
           ,
           his
           sweet
           imaginary
           Greatness
           ;
           hath
           nothing
           of
           his
           own
           ,
           but
           what
           no
           One
           would
           claim
           :
           But
           this
           Plagiary
           Jackdaw
           may
           e're
           long
           be
           Plum'd
           by
           a
           Leaden
           Dr.
           it's
           wings
           clipt
           ,
           and
           it's
           self
           exposed
           to
           the
           Contempt
           of
           Boys
           ;
           because
           it
           pretends
           to
           soar
           with
           the
           Eagles
           :
           There
           are
           notwithstanding
           ,
           and
           will
           be
           still
           honest
           Physicians
           of
           the
           College
           ,
           in
           spight
           of
           all
           forreign
           Oppositions
           ,
           or
           intestine
           Broils
           .
           All
           Bodies
           ,
           by
           the
           Instigation
           of
           some
           few
           Boutefeus
           ,
           may
           be
           guilty
           of
           Mismanagement
           ;
           none
           are
           exempt
           from
           Fault
           :
           Pray
           allow
           us
           but
           to
           be
           equally
           Obnoxious
           with
           the
           rest
           of
           Mankind
           .
           All
           then
           I
           desire
           is
           ,
           That
           there
           may
           be
           a
           difference
           put
           between
           the
           Innocent
           and
           Guilty
           ,
           as
           I
           have
           endeavour'd
           it
           in
           my
           Tract
           ;
           which
           whether
           it
           will
           please
           you
           with
           the
           Preface
           I
           know
           not
           :
           All
           will
           neither
           be
           pleasing
           to
           ,
           nor
           understood
           by
           All
           :
           But
           take
           it
           as
           you
           please
           to
           understand
           it
           :
           I
           shall
           soon
           be
           out
           of
           Pain
           ;
           either
           by
           slighting
           both
           Criticisms
           and
           Resentment
           ,
           or
           by
           a
           speedy
           Answer
           .
        
         
           
             
               September
               26
               ,
               1698.
               
            
          
           
             Lysiponius
             Celer
             .
          
        
      
    
     
       
         
         
           THE
           Late
           CENSORS
           Deservedly
           Censured
           ,
           &c.
           
        
         
           THE
           worthy
           Late
           Censors
           ,
           after
           so
           many
           fruitless
           Attempts
           ,
           to
           Exempt
           themselves
           from
           the
           Justice
           of
           the
           Law
           ;
           being
           baffl'd
           in
           all
           their
           Applications
           ,
           either
           to
           His
           Majesty
           ,
           the
           Right
           Honourable
           the
           Lords
           ,
           or
           other
           inferiour
           Courts
           and
           Persons
           ;
           and
           finding
           that
           the
           more
           they
           stir
           ,
           the
           more
           they
           are
           bemir'd
           and
           stink
           :
           Have
           now
           at
           last
           ,
           as
           their
           utmost
           Effort
           ,
           bethought
           themselves
           of
           the
           late
           Expedient
           of
           Popularity
           .
        
         
           In
           Order
           hereunto
           ,
           to
           support
           their
           tottering
           Credit
           and
           Cause
           ,
           they
           oblige
           the
           World
           with
           a
           single
           Sheet
           for
           three
           Pence
           ;
           Intituled
           it
           as
           if
           addressed
           to
           the
           highest
           Court
           of
           Justice
           :
           And
           being
           frustrated
           in
           all
           their
           Appeals
           ,
           make
           it
           now
           to
           the
           Mob
           ,
           make
           them
           their
           Judges
           and
           Peers
           .
        
         
           They
           take
           no
           Notice
           of
           their
           own
           Remarks
           upon
           the
           Prosecutors
           Reasons
           ,
           nor
           of
           his
           Reply
           ;
           being
           asham'd
           of
           the
           One
           ,
           and
           justly
           afraid
           of
           the
           other
           .
        
         
           For
           that
           Reply
           ,
           as
           it
           fully
           answers
           all
           their
           idle
           Pretences
           ,
           hath
           been
           satisfactory
           to
           the
           Lords
           and
           Commons
           ;
           so
           cannot
           be
           answer'd
           ,
           containing
           only
           Matters
           of
           Fact
           ,
           backt
           with
           irrefragable
           Reasons
           ,
           and
           shrew'd
           Circumstances
           ;
           confirm'd
           by
           Oaths
           of
           Credible
           Persons
           :
           Which
           last
           ,
           is
           the
           highest
           Argument
           of
           Truth
           in
           any
           ,
           but
           such
           ,
           who
           to
           palliate
           their
           evident
           Injustice
           ,
           have
           still
           ,
           this
           their
           only
           Recourse
           ,
           to
           that
           
             Crambe
             biscocta
          
           ,
           their
           Oaths
           and
           Consciences
           ,
           in
           Opposition
           to
           the
           Laws
           and
           Justice
           of
           the
           Nation
           .
        
         
         
           Furthermore
           ,
           being
           fully
           convinc'd
           ,
           that
           no
           One
           of
           the
           Late
           Censors
           could
           endite
           even
           so
           silly
           a
           Paper
           as
           I
           am
           about
           to
           Answer
           ,
           for
           reasons
           best
           known
           to
           them
           that
           know
           them
           ;
           I
           was
           at
           last
           forc'd
           to
           conclude
           ,
           that
           it
           must
           be
           the
           Product
           of
           a
           Noddle
           ever
           tipsy
           with
           Good-Ale
           ,
           and
           Brains
           still
           crowing
           by
           the
           seminal
           Influence
           of
           some
           hundreds
           of
           Eggs
           devour'd
           
             Anno
             Vertente
          
           ,
           which
           unless
           check'd
           by
           Cortex
           and
           Opium
           ,
           had
           e're
           now
           grown
           fledg'd
           :
           Especially
           if
           you
           consider
           the
           Stile
           ,
           so
           like
           that
           of
           the
           publick
           betrayer
           of
           the
           
             State
             ,
             Maxims
          
           and
           Secrets
           of
           the
           College
           ,
           and
           to
           use
           his
           own
           Words
           so
           inimical
           to
           Truth
           and
           Sincerity
           ,
           more
           then
           (
           in
           his
           own
           great
           Sence
           )
           unprepared
           Cantharides
           can
           be
           to
           the
           Body
           .
        
         
           Yet
           retaining
           some
           Respect
           to
           their
           seeming
           Gravity
           and
           qualifying
           Sadness
           ,
           though
           now
           out
           of
           the
           
             Santo
             Officio
          
           ,
           not
           coopt
           up
           in
           the
           
             Inquisition
             Chamber
          
           ,
           but
           breathing
           the
           free
           Air
           as
           yet
           ;
           I
           waited
           and
           sought
           in
           the
           publick
           Papers
           a
           required
           Recantation
           :
           This
           three
           Penny
           Sheet
           ,
           as
           well
           as
           the
           two
           Penny
           State
           of
           Physick
           ,
           Meriting
           at
           least
           an
           equivocating
           Denyal
           .
           But
           seeing
           now
           they
           own
           it
           ,
           and
           their
           sour
           Temper
           cannot
           be
           alter'd
           ,
           and
           continues
           nettled
           at
           good
           usage
           ;
           they
           must
           be
           crush'd
           to
           make
           them
           inoffensive
           ,
           seeing
           they
           Sting
           when
           tenderly
           handled
           .
        
         
           And
           tho'
           that
           Paper
           deleterious
           to
           it self
           doth
           ,
           like
           other
           Poisons
           ,
           carry
           it
           's
           own
           Antidote
           with
           it
           ,
           answering
           it self
           by
           it's
           own
           Nonsence
           ,
           Contradictions
           and
           Falshood
           ,
           to
           any
           unbiassed
           Reader
           that
           hath
           been
           inform'd
           of
           this
           Affair
           ;
           yet
           for
           the
           sake
           of
           those
           that
           are
           distant
           from
           Town
           ,
           and
           out
           of
           the
           reach
           of
           their
           
             Heptamiliary
             Quondam
          
           Power
           ,
           I
           thought
           to
           foul
           my
           Fingers
           ,
           anatomize
           it
           exactly
           ,
           and
           expose
           it
           (
           as
           it
           justly
           deserves
           )
           in
           the
           Publick
           Theatre
           of
           England
           ,
           to
           the
           View
           and
           Scorn
           of
           all
           .
        
         
           But
           finding
           ,
           tho'
           without
           any
           accurate
           Search
           ,
           That
           the
           principal
           consistent
           Parts
           are
           ,
           1.
           
           Contradiction
           .
           2.
           
           Falshood
           .
           3.
           
           Ignorance
           .
           4.
           
           
             Ill
             Manners
          
           .
           5.
           
           
             Like
             Conduct
          
           .
           Yet
           all
           so
           complicated
           ,
           as
           to
           make
           but
           One
           intire
           Gordian
           Knot
           of
           Nonsence
           ;
           it
           needs
           not
           be
           dissected
           now
           I
           think
           on
           't
           ,
           it
           merits
           not
           so
           great
           a
           Hand
           :
           But
           seeing
           it
           is
           roundly
           cover'd
           with
           a
           limber
           Conscience
           ,
           blown
           up
           with
           Bombast
           ,
           and
           got
           amongst
           the
           Mob
           ,
           let
           it
           e'ne
           be
           kick'd
           about
           ,
           till
           it
           be
           deservedly
           lost
           .
        
         
           The
           1st
           .
           of
           the
           Reasons
           they
           pretend
           to
           Answer
           is
           the
           following
           Reason
           ;
        
         
           First
           ,
           
             Because
             the
             said
             Censors
             did
             not
             only
             take
             upon
             them
             an
             Office
             of
             Trust
             and
             Judicial
             Authority
             ,
             wherein
             the
             Liberty
             and
             Property
             
             of
             the
             Subject
             is
             highly
             concerned
             without
             qualifying
             themselves
             ,
             but
             also
             executed
             the
             same
             with
             utmost
             Violence
             against
             an
             innocent
             Person
             ,
             as
             may
             more
             plainly
             appear
             in
             their
             Proceedings
             against
             Dr.
             
               John
               Greenfield
            
             ,
             a
             Member
             of
             the
             said
             College
             ,
             who
             having
             been
             accused
             by
             a
             vexatious
             Woman
             of
             ill
             Practice
             several
             Years
             before
             was
             twice
             acquitted
             by
             preceding
             Censors
             :
             But
             these
             Gentlemen
             proud
             of
             their
             Authority
             ,
             and
             having
             no
             regard
             to
             the
             Justice
             and
             Judgment
             of
             their
             Predecessors
             ,
             and
             in
             Contempt
             of
             two
             consecutive
             Acts
             of
             Grace
             from
             the
             King
             and
             Parliament
             ,
             did
             ,
             notwithstanding
             ,
             fine
             the
             abovesaid
             Dr.
             Greenfield
             for
             that
             imaginary
             Crime
             ,
             without
             suffering
             the
             said
             Doctor
             to
             clear
             himself
             by
             Witnesses
             ;
             and
             having
             signed
             a
             Warrant
             and
             appointed
             an
             Officer
             of
             their
             own
             Creation
             ,
             did
             commit
             him
             to
             Newgate
             without
             Bail
             or
             Main-prize
             ,
             and
             there
             detained
             him
             till
             the
             first
             Day
             of
             the
             ensuing
             Term
             ,
             when
             and
             where
             the
             Honourable
             the
             Judges
             of
             the
             King's-Bench
             convinced
             them
             of
             their
             illegal
             Proceedings
             and
             discharged
             the
             said
             Dr.
             Greenfield
             in
             open
             Court.
             
          
        
         
           To
           this
           they
           reply
           ,
           that
           it
           is
           
             a
             Malicious
             Charge
             ,
             drawn
             up
             and
             publish'd
             against
             the
             Censors
             of
             the
             College
             of
             Physicians
          
           [
           who
           ]
           
             took
             no
             Authority
             upon
             themselves
             ,
             but
             what
             is
             vested
             in
             them
             by
             two
             Acts
             of
             Parliament
             ,
          
           &c.
           
           The
           present
           Censors
           having
           qualifyed
           themselves
           ,
           and
           the
           rest
           ,
           since
           the
           including
           Act
           of
           Grace
           acting
           inoffensively
           ;
           the
           present
           cannot
           ,
           the
           former
           need
           not
           fear
           a
           Prosecution
           .
           The
           Prosecutors
           Charge
           is
           solely
           against
           the
           late
           ,
           nam'd
           in
           the
           Reasons
           and
           Title
           of
           this
           Tract
           ;
           which
           Charge
           as
           it
           is
           true
           ,
           cannot
           be
           Malicious
           ,
           and
           not
           against
           any
           Censors
           ,
           but
           those
           that
           were
           so
           ,
           now
           only
           Censorious
           ,
           with
           that
           indeleble
           Character
           I
           hope
           :
           But
           if
           their
           biennial
           Power
           ,
           be
           perpetuated
           in
           their
           Conceipt
           ,
           and
           once
           a
           Censor
           must
           e're
           be
           so
           ;
           let
           them
           e'ne
           be
           still
           the
           Kings
           of
           Branford
           ,
           let
           them
           imagine
           the
           Power
           of
           the
           two
           Acts
           to
           be
           
             vested
             in
             them
          
           ,
           appropriated
           to
           their
           Persons
           ,
           and
           inseparable
           from
           their
           Quality
           ;
           whilst
           they
           are
           deservedly
           out
           of
           that
           Place
           ,
           Power
           and
           Trust
           they
           have
           so
           notoriously
           abus'd
           :
           But
           
             Morta
             la
             Bestia
             ,
             morto
             lo
             Veleno
          
           ;
           let
           them
           rattle
           with
           their
           Tails
           ,
           their
           Fang-teeth
           are
           out
           .
           Yet
           though
           their
           Anthority
           be
           gone
           ,
           their
           Sence
           continues
           the
           same
           .
           They
           boast
           of
           a
           great
           
             Power
             vested
             by
             Law
          
           ;
           but
           no
           Trust
           at
           all
           ;
           deny
           the
           taking
           of
           an
           Office
           upon
           them
           ,
           but
           own
           they
           are
           chosen
           into
           ,
           and
           accept
           of
           the
           Place
           ;
           think
           themselves
           warranted
           by
           two
           Acts
           of
           Parliament
           in
           the
           executing
           of
           a
           Power
           ,
           in
           Contempt
           of
           Four
           others
           :
           I
           mean
           the
           Two
           of
           Grace
           ,
           and
           
           both
           the
           qualifying
           Acts.
           But
           they
           must
           be
           taught
           ,
           that
           the
           Law
           requires
           a
           Series
           of
           uninterrupted
           Justice
           .
           
             You
             err
             not
             knowing
             the
             Law
             ,
             for
             whosoever
             shall
             keep
             the
             whole
             Law
             ,
             and
             yet
             offend
             in
             one
             Point
             ,
             he
             is
             guilty
             of
             all
             ,
          
           &c.
           
           Is
           it
           Law
           that
           gives
           you
           leave
           to
           Imprison
           ?
           The
           same
           commands
           you
           to
           qualify
           .
           The
           same
           Justice
           that
           relieves
           the
           Oppressed
           ,
           ought
           to
           punish
           the
           Guilty
           ;
           and
           though
           you
           boast
           the
           Law
           cannot
           reach
           you
           ,
           the
           Legislators
           may
           .
           
             Ponite
             inflatos
             tumidosque
             vultus
             ;
             quicquid
             à
             vob
             is
             Minor
             extimescit
             ,
             Major
             hoc
             idem
             Dominus
             minatur
             .
          
        
         
           Next
           they
           alledge
           ,
           that
           the
           
             Censors
             are
             solemnly
             Sworn
             ,
             not
             to
             consent
             to
             admit
             any
             Person
             into
             the
             College
             ,
             but
             such
             ,
             whom
             without
             favour
             ,
             or
             affection
             ,
             they
             shall
             judge
             to
             be
             duly
             qualified
             ,
             both
             for
             Learning
             and
             Morals
             ,
             That
             they
             will
             approve
             no
             Person
             nor
             Medicine
             for
             Reward
             ,
             Favour
             or
             Entreaty
             ,
             but
             will
             in
             all
             things
             discharge
             the
             Duty
             faithfully
             ,
             as
             God
             shall
             help
             them
             .
          
        
         
           A
           solemn
           Oath
           is
           a
           sacred
           Tye
           and
           Motive
           to
           Justice
           ;
           but
           where
           this
           is
           wanting
           ,
           that
           always
           aggravates
           the
           Crime
           ,
           can
           never
           justifie
           the
           Action
           .
           Finding
           then
           ,
           that
           a
           gentle
           Rebuke
           in
           general
           Terms
           will
           not
           avail
           ,
           viz.
           that
           of
           the
           former
           Reply
           ,
           That
           
             their
             Oath
             was
             not
             binding
             to
             act
             illegally
             ,
          
           and
           
             where
             it
             doth
             so
             ,
             the
             Constitution
             is
             faulty
          
           ;
           a
           severer
           Lash
           must
           stop
           this
           full
           mouth'd
           Cry
           upon
           a
           wrong
           Scent
           .
           Dr.
           Greenfields
           Learning
           and
           Morals
           were
           approv'd
           when
           he
           entred
           the
           College
           ,
           he
           was
           balletted
           for
           as
           well
           as
           any
           of
           you
           ,
           admitted
           upon
           as
           good
           Terms
           as
           any
           ,
           hath
           the
           same
           Diploma
           ,
           Priviledges
           ,
           and
           Authority
           to
           Practice
           :
           This
           was
           done
           to
           your
           Hands
           by
           more
           impartial
           Judges
           ;
           and
           so
           far
           the
           recital
           of
           your
           Oath
           is
           insignificant
           .
           But
           seeing
           't
           is
           not
           this
           ,
           pray
           tell
           us
           what
           Oath
           it
           was
           that
           bound
           you
           ,
           to
           reassume
           the
           Cognizance
           of
           an
           Affair
           twice
           determin'd
           before
           ,
           by
           the
           same
           Authority
           ;
           to
           commit
           the
           Innocent
           ,
           when
           you
           were
           disabled
           by
           two
           Acts
           of
           Parliament
           to
           act
           so
           by
           a
           Criminal
           ;
           to
           declare
           that
           a
           Poison
           when
           given
           by
           Dr.
           Greenfield
           with
           its
           due
           Corrector
           ,
           which
           must
           be
           a
           harmless
           Medicine
           ,
           because
           given
           by
           two
           of
           you
           Censors
           without
           an
           Antidote
           ;
           to
           refuse
           the
           admitting
           of
           Witnesses
           ,
           which
           were
           afterwards
           satisfactory
           to
           a
           superiour
           Court
           ;
           to
           deny
           the
           Tryal
           of
           his
           Corrector
           upon
           other
           Animals
           ;
           to
           exact
           the
           utmost
           Farthing
           the
           Law
           allow'd
           you
           ;
           to
           fine
           and
           imprison
           too
           ,
           a
           Collegiate
           ,
           in
           an
           unpresidented
           Manner
           ;
           to
           send
           him
           to
           Newgate
           for
           the
           first
           Offence
           (
           as
           in
           your
           great
           Wisdoms
           you
           thought
           )
           when
           choice
           of
           Prisons
           of
           less
           Scandal
           might
           serve
           ,
           to
           be
           deaf
           when
           intreated
           not
           
           to
           do
           it
           .
           'T
           was
           of
           you
           Dr.
           Burwel
           he
           begg'd
           it
           ,
           upon
           your
           immediate
           return
           from
           the
           
             House
             of
             God
             ,
             the
             House
             of
             Prayer
             .
             Wo
             be
             to
             you
             Scribes
             and
             Pharisees
             ,
             Hypocrites
             ,
          
           &c.
           
           This
           last
           it
           was
           ,
           first
           caus'd
           my
           Blood
           to
           boile
           ,
           now
           sowers
           my
           Temper
           ,
           
             Irarumque
             omnes
             effundit
             Habenas
          
           ;
           and
           made
           me
           almost
           forget
           to
           ask
           you
           ,
           whether
           you
           did
           Swear
           too
           not
           to
           qualifie
           your selves
           ?
           I
           believe
           if
           you
           can
           give
           your selves
           leave
           to
           re-examine
           this
           Affair
           sedately
           ,
           you
           will
           find
           it
           the
           Result
           of
           Passion
           ,
           Envy
           ,
           Ambition
           and
           By-ends
           .
           Passion
           in
           Dr.
           
             T
             —
             e
          
           upon
           a
           former
           Peak
           :
           Ambition
           in
           the
           Bencher-fellows
           to
           curb
           and
           oppress
           the
           more
           Serviceable
           and
           Active
           by
           Arbitrary
           Laws
           ;
           Envy
           for
           want
           of
           Practice
           and
           Success
           :
           By-ends
           shall
           be
           Secret
           as
           yet
           .
           'T
           is
           so
           Dr.
           
             G
             —
             ll
          
           ,
           though
           you
           should
           exert
           to
           the
           utmost
           your
           now
           single
           Capacity
           ,
           register
           the
           Contrary
           ,
           and
           silence
           me
           with
           your
           
             Ratio
             prima
             &
             ultima
          
           :
           I
           do
           not
           mean
           the
           thundering
           Mawl
           against
           a
           Protest
           at
           the
           College
           Board
           ;
           but
           your
           customary
           Nonononono
           ,
           with
           a
           Jove-like
           disgust
           ,
           and
           a
           Conclusive-shake
           of
           the
           Nodle
           in
           a
           Demiquaver
           .
           Expect
           then
           the
           just
           Reward
           of
           your
           Pains
           ,
           but
           no
           Favour
           at
           all
           ;
           unless
           your
           Adversaries
           be
           prevail'd
           upon
           by
           Intreaty
           ;
           for
           they
           must
           discharge
           
             their
             Duty
             faithfully
          
           ,
           and
           help
           your selves
           as
           you
           can
           .
        
         
           Next
           you
           multiply
           your
           Power
           by
           a
           Piece-meal
           Recital
           .
           I
           'll
           please
           you
           for
           once
           ,
           and
           allow
           it
           as
           great
           in
           it self
           ,
           as
           it
           hath
           been
           enormous
           in
           the
           Execution
           ,
           
             Cuidam
             illic
             seritun
             &
             metitur
          
           ,
           't
           is
           a
           
             noli
             me
             tangere
          
           at
           present
           :
           But
           be
           pleas'd
           to
           remind
           ,
           that
           almost
           the
           whole
           of
           it
           is
           in
           the
           quoted
           Charter
           ,
           't
           is
           only
           confirm'd
           by
           the
           annex'd
           and
           subsequent
           Acts
           ;
           and
           why
           are
           the
           due
           Qualifications
           omitted
           ,
           to
           which
           that
           Power
           is
           annex'd
           .
           Let
           us
           examine
           you
           a
           little
           ,
           tho'
           not
           now
           at
           the
           Censors
           board
           .
           Were
           you
           
             Profound
             ,
             Sad
             ,
             Discreet
             ,
             well
             vers'd
             in
             Learning
             and
             deeply
             skill'd
             in
             Physick
             :
          
           You
           'l
           say
           perhaps
           ,
           these
           Epithets
           ,
           are
           requisite
           in
           Persons
           to
           be
           admitted
           into
           that
           Society
           ,
           not
           in
           the
           Censors
           that
           govern
           the
           same
           ,
           according
           to
           the
           express
           Words
           of
           the
           Law.
           The
           Fact
           I
           shall
           not
           dispute
           ;
           but
           certainly
           they
           are
           to
           be
           chosen
           out
           of
           such
           ,
           and
           continue
           the
           same
           .
           The
           1
           st
           .
           indeed
           may
           be
           allow'd
           ;
           for
           your
           Sense
           is
           out
           of
           the
           reach
           of
           ,
           disproportionate
           to
           ,
           and
           incommensurate
           with
           that
           of
           the
           rest
           of
           Mankind
           .
           Sad
           you
           are
           in
           the
           present
           acceptation
           of
           the
           Word
           ,
           your
           Actions
           shew
           you
           such
           ,
           and
           the
           present
           fear
           of
           a
           due
           Reward
           ,
           doth
           and
           will
           make
           you
           no
           other
           .
           But
           now
           in
           
             sober
             Sadness
          
           ,
           what
           is
           become
           of
           the
           Third
           ?
           Were
           you
           Discreet
           in
           not
           qualifying
           your selves
           ,
           if
           it
           were
           but
           only
           to
           prevent
           the
           Charges
           of
           an
           assuredly
           wrong
           Prosecution
           ,
           since
           
           your
           piece
           meal
           Loyalty
           was
           such
           ,
           that
           the
           Omission
           of
           it
           you
           count
           but
           a
           Peccadillo
           .
           The
           present
           Censors
           got
           here
           the
           Start
           of
           you
           ,
           and
           triumph
           over
           your
           Ignorance
           .
           It
           was
           no
           doubt
           the
           greatest
           Discretion
           imaginable
           ,
           to
           Commit
           a
           Brother
           for
           
             Mala
             Praxis
          
           ,
           yea
           very
           great
           
             Mala
             Praxis
          
           as
           the
           Judicious
           
             Go
             —
             le
          
           expressed
           it
           at
           the
           Board
           ,
           the
           giving
           of
           Poison
           I
           mean
           ,
           when
           some
           of
           your selves
           were
           guilty
           of
           the
           same
           ;
           Guilty
           I
           say
           ,
           in
           your
           own
           Consciences
           ,
           because
           you
           condemn'd
           it
           in
           another
           ;
           though
           he
           be
           Innocent
           ,
           having
           prov'd
           himself
           so
           in
           the
           Superiour
           Court
           :
           But
           this
           is
           not
           all
           ,
           had
           this
           Affair
           remain'd
           within
           the
           College
           and
           Newgate
           Walls
           ,
           and
           not
           been
           expos'd
           by
           you
           so
           often
           in
           the
           Publick
           Courts
           ,
           inforc'd
           by
           repeated
           Libels
           ,
           spread
           amongst
           the
           Mob
           ,
           persisted
           in
           to
           the
           utmost
           in
           Opposition
           to
           the
           Sense
           of
           Mankind
           ,
           and
           Contempt
           of
           definitive
           Justice
           ;
           it
           might
           have
           been
           pardon'd
           .
           
             Humanum
             est
             errare
             ,
             in
             Errore
             persistere
             Diabolicum
             .
          
           But
           again
           to
           push
           it
           more
           home
           ,
           tho'
           in
           milder
           Terms
           ,
           you
           will
           say
           he
           was
           Fined
           and
           Imprisoned
           ,
           for
           not
           duly
           executing
           the
           Practice
           of
           Physick
           ;
           but
           who
           was
           it
           Gentlemen
           ?
           A
           Graduate
           Doctor
           ,
           your
           fellow
           Collegiate
           ,
           unquestionable
           when
           admitted
           ,
           and
           continued
           so
           for
           many
           Years
           ,
           till
           it
           pleas'd
           you
           to
           have
           it
           otherwise
           .
           Reflect
           upon
           it
           ,
           I
           pray
           ,
           as
           the
           rest
           of
           Mankind
           to
           my
           knowledge
           doth
           now
           :
           What
           Physician
           shall
           we
           trust
           ,
           when
           neither
           his
           being
           of
           the
           College
           doth
           warrant
           his
           Skill
           ,
           nor
           his
           continued
           Practice
           approve
           his
           Judgment
           in
           Administring
           ?
           Whom
           shall
           we
           except
           ,
           when
           all
           are
           liable
           to
           the
           same
           Mistakes
           ?
           This
           doth
           not
           only
           affect
           you
           ,
           but
           the
           whole
           Faculty
           of
           Physick
           ,
           however
           diffused
           ,
           divided
           or
           distinguish'd
           in
           this
           Famous
           City
           ,
           and
           through
           the
           Universe
           .
           Would
           the
           least
           Mechanick
           Society
           have
           acted
           so
           publickly
           against
           a
           single
           Member
           ,
           if
           his
           exposing
           tended
           to
           the
           Disrepute
           of
           all
           the
           Rest
           :
           For
           tho
           the
           Character
           of
           an
           honest
           Physician
           be
           in
           it self
           real
           ,
           where
           is
           there
           a
           Fence
           against
           Suspicion
           ;
           tho'
           groundless
           when
           started
           ,
           it
           's
           Flight
           and
           Pitch
           is
           incertain
           ;
           and
           you
           only
           can
           be
           Exempt
           when
           at
           the
           Board
           ,
           and
           that
           only
           in
           your
           own
           Conceipt
           ,
           not
           decisive
           Judgment
           .
           
             Dat
             Veniam
             Corvis
             ,
             vexat
             Censura
             Columbas
             .
          
        
         
           Your
           great
           Discretion
           hath
           ruin'd
           one
           Part
           of
           your
           
             Imaginary
             Power
          
           ,
           by
           your
           Parties
           countenancing
           ,
           and
           you
           mainly
           promoting
           that
           turbulent
           Woman's
           Suit
           against
           the
           Doctor
           .
           Pray
           startle
           not
           at
           what
           you
           know
           as
           well
           as
           my self
           ,
           I
           shall
           prove
           it
           to
           others
           anon
           .
           You
           have
           open'd
           the
           Eyes
           of
           the
           Mob
           ,
           and
           the
           Flood-gates
           of
           the
           Law
           against
           you
           .
           Can
           the
           President
           be
           secure
           in
           his
           Place
           ,
           or
           the
           Censors
           by
           their
           boasted
           Power
           ,
           from
           being
           either
           arraign'd
           at
           the
           Bar
           as
           Malefactors
           ,
           
           or
           Sued
           at
           the
           Kings-Bench
           as
           Unskilfull
           ;
           and
           that
           at
           the
           Choice
           of
           the
           Multitude
           ?
           A
           pretended
           Mistake
           ,
           or
           an
           unforeseen
           Accident
           upon
           a
           single
           Dose
           of
           Physick
           ,
           exposeth
           a
           Physicians
           
             Person
             ,
             Reputation
          
           and
           Estate
           ,
           to
           the
           Discretion
           of
           others
           avowedly
           Ignorant
           ,
           of
           what
           you
           have
           made
           them
           Judges
           .
           We
           know
           what
           you
           told
           your
           Councel
           ,
           when
           dissuaded
           from
           this
           
             Pernicious
             Course
          
           by
           the
           Example
           of
           all
           other
           
             Societies
             .
             It
             must
             be
             done
             ,
             else
             the
             College
             would
             be
             undone
             .
             Peribo
             si
             non
             faxo
             ,
             si
             faxo
             vapulavero
             .
          
        
         
           Your
           Power
           is
           too
           Great
           ,
           not
           to
           be
           manag'd
           but
           by
           Persons
           throughly
           versed
           in
           the
           Law
           :
           Yet
           you
           will
           stretch
           it
           beyond
           it's
           due
           Bounds
           ,
           and
           expose
           it
           by
           your
           Actions
           to
           be
           canvassed
           by
           those
           ,
           who
           are
           justly
           Jealous
           of
           it
           .
           You
           will
           not
           submit
           to
           the
           Decision
           of
           the
           Four
           Chiefs
           ;
           but
           what
           think
           you
           of
           
             Royal
             Visitation
          
           ?
           Are
           you
           Exempt
           from
           that
           too
           ?
           May
           not
           a
           
             Quo
             Warranto
          
           be
           just
           and
           necessary
           in
           this
           Reign
           ,
           whatever
           it
           hath
           been
           in
           the
           Former
           ?
           Your
           Party
           promoted
           it
           under
           the
           Late
           ,
           and
           will
           you
           not
           submit
           to
           it
           under
           the
           
             Present
             .
             Tute
             hoc
             tibi
             intrivisti
             ,
             tibimet
             hoc
             exedendum
             est
             .
          
        
         
           But
           lastly
           ,
           seeing
           this
           Enormous
           Power
           ,
           doth
           so
           widely
           incompass
           all
           the
           Jurisdictions
           of
           the
           greatest
           City
           in
           Europe
           ;
           it
           was
           hoped
           your
           Ambition
           would
           have
           soar'd
           no
           higher
           .
           No
           ,
           your
           Discretion
           drives
           some
           of
           you
           to
           Hartford
           ,
           to
           worry
           the
           Ingenious
           Coatsworth
           ;
           your
           Designs
           round
           the
           Circuits
           (
           as
           you
           were
           told
           )
           to
           hang
           Physick
           out
           of
           the
           Way
           :
           Had
           not
           the
           clacking
           
             Capit-alian
             Goo
             —
          
           ,
           that
           
             Crepitante
             Ciconia
             Rostro
          
           ,
           prevented
           by
           its
           Noise
           the
           intended
           Mischief
           ,
           discover'd
           the
           Towering
           
             G
             —
             ls
          
           ;
           and
           the
           Jury
           disbeliev'd
           the
           Depositions
           ,
           that
           Gentlemen
           might
           have
           rotted
           in
           Prison
           ,
           without
           Bail
           or
           Main-prize
           till
           the
           next
           Assizes
           ,
           to
           serve
           your
           Turn
           ;
           that
           you
           might
           Alleviate
           one
           Crime
           ,
           by
           committing
           another
           .
        
         
           I
           have
           done
           as
           well
           as
           your selves
           with
           your
           Discretion
           ,
           your
           Learning
           and
           deep
           Skill
           in
           Physick
           ,
           will
           not
           seem
           much
           greater
           when
           throughly
           canvassed
           ,
           as
           it
           shall
           be
           in
           some
           Measure
           in
           its
           proper
           Place
           .
        
         
           You
           excuse
           your
           omitting
           of
           being
           Qualified
           ,
           because
           
             this
             Neglect
             did
             not
             proceed
             from
             any
             Error
             of
          
           [
           your
           ]
           
             Will.
             This
             being
             occasion'd
             partly
             by
             the
             Practice
             of
             the
             former
             Censors
             ,
             who
             never
             qualified
             themselves
             for
             that
             Employment
             ;
             and
             partly
             by
             Advice
             of
             your
             Council
             (
             three
             of
             the
             Great
             Practicers
             of
             this
             Age
             )
             who
             were
             of
             Opinion
             that
             the
             Censors
             were
             not
             comprehended
             in
             the
             said
             Act
             ,
             it
             being
             no
             Place
             of
             Profit
             ,
             or
             Crust
             ,
             nor
             by
             Commission
             immediately
             from
             the
             King
             ,
             nor
             such
             as
             concerned
             the
             Publick
             Government
             ,
             but
             did
             only
             relate
             to
             a
             due
             Regulation
             of
             the
             Practice
             of
             Physick
             in
          
           London
           
             and
             seven
             Miles
             ,
             which
             by
             the
             Laws
             of
             the
             Kingdom
             is
          
           
           
             Entrusted
             in
          
           [
           your
           ]
           Hands
           ,
           [
           you
           ]
           
             being
             the
             most
             proper
             Judges
             of
             the
             same
             .
          
        
         
           If
           it
           was
           not
           an
           
             Error
             of
             the
             Will
          
           ,
           it
           was
           a
           filthy
           one
           of
           the
           Judgment
           ;
           But
           why
           not
           of
           the
           Will
           ,
           when
           you
           would
           not
           hearken
           to
           the
           grave
           Advice
           of
           the
           Learned
           Bernard
           :
           Who
           told
           you
           the
           danger
           of
           the
           contrary
           ,
           and
           spurr'd
           you
           on
           to
           your
           Duty
           ,
           by
           his
           own
           Example
           .
           No
           ,
           you
           thought
           to
           shelter
           your selves
           amidst
           the
           Multitude
           ,
           by
           a
           Power
           paramount
           ,
           as
           you
           deem'd
           to
           the
           rest
           of
           the
           Law.
           There
           is
           but
           two
           Setts
           of
           you
           that
           are
           Obnoxious
           ,
           the
           rest
           safe
           by
           the
           including
           
             Act
             of
             Grace
          
           ;
           but
           doth
           a
           multitude
           of
           Offenders
           lessen
           the
           Crime
           ,
           it
           may
           prompt
           Mercy
           to
           spare
           the
           less
           Guilty
           .
           The
           most
           Turbulent
           in
           a
           Sedition
           ,
           the
           Ringleaders
           of
           a
           Faction
           ,
           are
           always
           justly
           punish'd
           ;
           tho'
           the
           seduced
           Mob
           may
           be
           spar'd
           ,
           because
           they
           were
           so
           ;
           and
           in
           a
           
             Rebellious
             Regiment
          
           ,
           where
           
             One
             and
             All
          
           seem
           equally
           Guilty
           ,
           Decimation
           is
           not
           only
           Just
           ,
           but
           Merciful
           .
           Will
           you
           make
           the
           World
           believe
           ,
           that
           either
           that
           True
           Oracle
           of
           the
           Law
           Sr.
           
             Cr.
             Levinz
          
           ,
           or
           the
           Judicious
           and
           Popular
           Sr.
           Barth
           ,
           or
           the
           Equitable
           Sr.
           Thomas
           ,
           would
           ever
           induce
           you
           to
           run
           the
           hazard
           of
           so
           severe
           a
           Lash
           of
           the
           Law
           ,
           when
           as
           you
           say
           ,
           you
           were
           already
           qualified
           by
           piece-meal
           ;
           so
           not
           Conscience
           ,
           but
           an
           unaccountable
           Capriccio
           could
           hinder
           the
           Total
           .
           Why
           was
           not
           their
           Advice
           produc'd
           when
           demanded
           before
           the
           Attorney
           General
           ?
           No
           ,
           you
           did
           here
           ,
           as
           in
           
             Gr
             —
             ds
          
           Commitment
           ,
           and
           would
           fain
           mend
           your selves
           ,
           as
           you
           endeavour'd
           to
           do
           the
           Warrant
           
             ex
             post
             Facto
             .
             Post
             est
             occasio
             Calva
             .
          
        
         
           Your
           Profit
           indeed
           as
           worthily
           manag'd
           ,
           together
           with
           the
           College
           Stock
           ,
           but
           small
           ;
           but
           upon
           Examination
           of
           Persons
           to
           be
           admitted
           Certain
           .
           The
           Perquisits
           sometimes
           very
           great
           .
           Surely
           your
           boastingly
           Great
           Power
           requires
           the
           like
           Trust
           in
           the
           Persons
           Entrusted
           therewith
           .
           Your
           Great
           Sence
           owns
           the
           Verb
           ,
           not
           the
           Noun
           ,
           the
           full
           meaning
           of
           the
           Word
           ,
           but
           not
           the
           Word
           it self
           .
           Should
           a
           Common-council-man
           argue
           ,
           that
           he
           was
           chosen
           for
           ,
           and
           represents
           only
           a
           private
           Precinct
           ;
           would
           that
           Exempt
           him
           from
           a
           due
           Qualification
           ?
           But
           your
           Power
           is
           more
           extensive
           then
           Health
           and
           Sickness
           .
           The
           
             Collegiate
             Physicians
          
           ,
           and
           all
           other
           
             Practitioners
             ,
             Apothecaries
             ,
             Naval
          
           and
           
             Resident
             Surgeons
          
           ,
           and
           Druggists
           are
           under
           your
           immediate
           Inspection
           ,
           pray
           cast
           them
           up
           and
           tell
           us
           how
           many
           Thousand
           they
           are
           .
        
         
           This
           Law
           would
           be
           a
           very
           pretty
           Barrier
           here
           ,
           against
           the
           universally
           incroaching
           Popery
           ;
           when
           Persons
           so
           vastly
           Entrusted
           ,
           if
           they
           will
           not
           ,
           need
           not
           qualifie
           themselves
           ;
           or
           pick
           and
           chose
           when
           ,
           how
           farr
           ,
           and
           what
           Part
           of
           that
           Law
           they
           are
           pleased
           to
           satisfie
           .
           Pray
           read
           but
           
           the
           Preamble
           to
           your
           Original
           Charter
           ,
           and
           you
           will
           find
           ,
           that
           your
           Power
           being
           so
           extensive
           ,
           your
           
             Capacity
             ,
             Care
          
           and
           Skill
           ought
           to
           have
           been
           proportionate
           .
           His
           Majesty
           indeed
           hath
           not
           been
           pleas'd
           to
           take
           any
           Notice
           of
           you
           as
           to
           Favour
           ,
           but
           hath
           already
           in
           Displeasure
           ,
           and
           't
           is
           hop'd
           he
           will
           curtail
           your
           Ambition
           ,
           and
           clipp
           the
           Wings
           of
           your
           towering
           Pride
           :
           but
           how
           much
           and
           whatever
           you
           have
           ,
           is
           originally
           deriv'd
           from
           ,
           and
           confirm'd
           by
           his
           Royal
           Predecessors
           .
           Judges
           you
           were
           ,
           but
           how
           Proper
           ,
           your
           Actions
           have
           already
           ,
           the
           Law
           hath
           and
           will
           determine
           it
           .
        
         
           Next
           you
           deny
           ,
           that
           you
           executed
           your
           Office
           with
           the
           utmost
           Violence
           ,
           against
           an
           Innocent
           Person
           ,
           and
           Member
           of
           the
           College
           ;
           call
           
             this
             and
             the
             former
             Charges
             against
          
           [
           you
           ]
           
             notorious
             Untruths
             ;
             are
             surprized
             how
             the
             Author
             durst
             Print
             and
             Publish
             them
             ,
             and
             impudently
             deliver
             them
             to
             the
             most
             high
             and
             celebrated
             Court
             of
             Judicature
             in
             this
             Kingdom
             ;
             the
             Doctor
             having
             been
             prov'd
             Guilty
             of
             Ill
             Practice
             in
             a
             very
             high
             Degree
             ,
             before
             the
             President
             and
             Censors
             .
          
        
         
           I
           answer
           that
           you
           are
           doubly
           Guilty
           of
           what
           you
           deny
           here
           ;
           because
           the
           Doctor
           was
           doubly
           Innocent
           1st
           ,
           in
           the
           Eye
           of
           the
           Law
           ,
           Rectus
           in
           any
           Curia
           by
           the
           Act
           of
           Grace
           ,
           tho
           he
           had
           been
           never
           so
           Guilty
           before
           :
           2ly
           ,
           as
           to
           
             Matter
             of
             Fact
          
           ,
           having
           prov'd
           himself
           so
           in
           the
           open
           Court.
           Therefore
           
             the
             Author
             durst
             Print
             and
             Publish
             this
             and
             the
             former
             Charges
             against
             you
             ,
             durst
             deliver
             it
             to
             the
             Right
             Honourable
             the
             Lords
             and
             Commons
             ,
             dares
             Publish
             it
             again
             and
             prove
             it
             at
             any
             time
          
           ;
           as
           he
           would
           have
           then
           ,
           if
           you
           durst
           have
           Challeng'd
           him
           ,
           or
           dare
           to
           do
           it
           still
           .
           As
           for
           Impudence
           e'ne
           let
           that
           be
           shar'd
           amongst
           those
           ,
           who
           openly
           dare
           in
           the
           Face
           of
           the
           World
           to
           Challenge
           the
           Judgment
           of
           my
           Lord
           
             Chief
             Justice
          
           ,
           and
           the
           Honestly
           of
           the
           Jury
           ,
           who
           sound
           upon
           Oath
           the
           Doctor
           not
           to
           be
           Guilty
           of
           
             Ill
             Practice
          
           to
           any
           Degree
           .
           They
           acquitted
           him
           of
           what
           you
           condemn'd
           him
           ,
           yet
           both
           were
           equally
           Sworn
           to
           do
           Right
           ;
           't
           is
           not
           now
           a
           meer
           Error
           in
           you
           ,
           you
           persist
           in
           your
           Judgment
           and
           condemn
           him
           still
           .
           Who
           ,
           I
           pray
           ,
           is
           now
           Guilty
           of
           what
           I
           dare
           not
           name
           .
           You
           may
           go
           on
           in
           your
           Defiance
           ,
           but
           never
           prosper
           long
           in
           Opposition
           to
           Justice
           :
           She
           hath
           indeed
           
             Leaden
             Heels
          
           ,
           especially
           when
           clogg'd
           by
           you
           ,
           and
           hindred
           in
           her
           Course
           ,
           but
           you
           may
           at
           last
           (
           as
           you
           deserve
           )
           feel
           her
           
             Iron
             Hands
          
           .
        
         
           Next
           you
           own
           
             the
             Doctor
             a
             Member
             of
             the
             College
             of
             Physicians
             (
             having
             a
             Licence
             granted
             him
             to
             Practice
             Physick
             )
             but
             then
             his
             admission
             was
             granted
             on
             these
             Conditions
             ,
             Quam
             diu
             se
             bene
             gesserit
             ,
             &
             statuta
             Collegii
             observaverit
             ;
             &
             Solutiones
             debitas
             praestiterit
             .
             All
             which
             Conditions
             he
             hath
             notoriously
             Violated
             ,
             having
             prov'd
             a
             very
             factious
             ,
             turbulent
             and
             disobedient
             Member
             to
             that
             Honourable
             Society
             ,
          
           &c.
           
        
         
         
           The
           Doctor
           is
           indeed
           a
           
             Member
             of
             the
             College
          
           ;
           his
           Diploma
           is
           his
           Licence
           ,
           and
           yours
           is
           no
           more
           ,
           because
           all
           one
           with
           his
           :
           His
           Admission
           the
           same
           as
           ,
           his
           Behaviour
           better
           then
           yours
           in
           the
           Eye
           of
           the
           World
           ,
           because
           adjudg'd
           so
           by
           Law.
           But
           seeing
           you
           persist
           in
           abusing
           both
           Words
           and
           Persons
           ,
           I
           must
           inform
           you
           ,
           That
           a
           Licenciat
           in
           any
           Faculty
           ,
           is
           as
           great
           in
           other
           Countries
           ,
           as
           a
           simple
           Fellow
           looks
           little
           in
           this
           .
           If
           he
           hath
           violated
           any
           Conditions
           ,
           you
           were
           notoriously
           Imprudent
           ,
           in
           not
           charging
           him
           with
           the
           True
           ,
           but
           condemn
           him
           for
           an
           
             Imaginary
             Crime
          
           .
           Out
           with
           it
           Gentlemen
           ,
           General
           Words
           will
           not
           do
           in
           Law
           ,
           Deceipt
           is
           generally
           couch'd
           under
           them
           .
           Well
           then
           ,
           is
           't
           
             Ill
             Practice
          
           ?
           He
           is
           clear'd
           of
           that
           ;
           't
           is
           not
           in
           him
           ,
           but
           in
           you
           towards
           him
           .
           Is
           't
           want
           of
           Respect
           ,
           in
           not
           submitting
           to
           you
           at
           the
           
             Censors
             board
          
           ,
           and
           acknowledging
           his
           Crime
           ?
           He
           beggs
           your
           Pardon
           for
           that
           ,
           and
           thinks
           your
           Demand
           insolent
           ,
           especially
           in
           the
           present
           Conjuncture
           .
           Is
           't
           because
           he
           will
           not
           furnish
           you
           with
           Money
           ,
           to
           defend
           your
           Injustice
           towards
           him
           ?
           He
           thinks
           he
           is
           not
           bound
           in
           Justice
           to
           do
           it
           ;
           especially
           you
           having
           been
           so
           remiss
           of
           Late
           ,
           in
           levying
           that
           Imposition
           upon
           him
           and
           his
           
             Fellow
             Licenciates
          
           .
           Pray
           take
           Example
           by
           the
           Prosecutor
           ,
           and
           be
           as
           Industrious
           in
           settling
           the
           
             speciall
             Verdict
          
           in
           Dr.
           Peaches
           Case
           ,
           as
           the
           Prosecutor
           hath
           been
           in
           that
           against
           one
           of
           you
           .
           You
           are
           at
           a
           Stand
           ;
           and
           so
           is
           Dr.
           Greenfield
           with
           the
           rest
           ,
           not
           knowing
           whether
           they
           have
           not
           paid
           too
           much
           in
           their
           Wrong
           already
           ;
           and
           whether
           a
           Repetundarum
           doth
           not
           lye
           against
           you
           ?
           I
           mean
           a
           small
           Bill
           in
           Equity
           ,
           for
           illegal
           Exactions
           and
           undue
           Expences
           .
           
             Recrimination
             is
             no
             Purgation
          
           in
           you
           .
           Have
           you
           your selves
           perform'd
           the
           Conditions
           requisite
           in
           Just
           Censors
           ?
           The
           Doctor
           and
           Prosecutor
           believes
           not
           ,
           and
           make
           bold
           to
           tell
           you
           still
           ,
           notwithstanding
           your
           late
           Rhodomontados
           ,
           and
           that
           almost
           in
           your
           own
           Latin
           ,
           
             Quod
             vos
             non
             bene
             gesseritis
             ,
             nec
             statuta
             Regni
             observaveritis
             ,
             solutiones
             utrique
             debit
             as
             praestabitis
             .
          
           I
           hope
           you
           may
           understand
           this
           Latin
           in
           time
           ,
           tho
           the
           Licenciats
           cannot
           yours
           .
        
         
           A
           Ternary
           of
           Epithets
           brings
           up
           the
           Rear
           of
           this
           Clause
           .
           Dr.
           Greenfield
           is
           
             Turbulent
             ,
             Factious
          
           and
           Disobedient
           .
           Not
           the
           first
           ,
           even
           when
           repeatedly
           troubled
           to
           no
           Purpose
           :
           Factious
           he
           can't
           be
           ,
           because
           he
           joins
           with
           the
           greater
           and
           better
           Part
           of
           the
           College
           ,
           against
           the
           Ambition
           and
           Impositions
           of
           the
           Contrary
           .
           Nor
           Disobedient
           ,
           because
           submissive
           even
           to
           an
           unjust
           Sentence
           .
           You
           on
           the
           contrary
           ,
           are
           
             Honest
             ,
             Just
          
           and
           
             Impartial
             .
             Honest
          
           ,
           for
           committing
           him
           in
           Opposition
           to
           Law.
           Just
           ,
           but
           not
           to
           him
           certainly
           ,
           nor
           your selves
           neither
           .
           Impartial
           ,
           in
           exposing
           your selves
           ,
           the
           College
           and
           the
           
           whole
           Faculty
           ,
           to
           Derision
           ,
           needless
           Suits
           and
           Contempt
           :
           this
           I
           suppose
           ,
           is
           not
           your
           Judgment
           at
           present
           ,
           but
           will
           be
           so
           ,
           and
           is
           to
           those
           of
           a
           better
           .
        
         
           You
           say
           farther
           ,
           that
           the
           Doctor
           
             unjustly
             complains
             of
             his
             Treatment
             ,
             the
             same
             being
             (
             as
             he
             saith
             )
             executed
             with
             the
             utmost
             Violence
             ;
             that
             it
             is
             so
             far
             from
             Truth
             ,
             that
             on
             the
             contrary
             he
             was
             treated
             with
             all
             the
             Fairness
             and
             Kindness
             which
             any
             Member
             of
             that
             ,
             or
             any
             other
             Corporation
             ,
             could
             expect
             or
             reasonably
             desire
             ,
             as
             will
             appear
             by
             the
             following
             Account
             of
             true
             Matter
             of
             Fact.
             
          
        
         
           Dr.
           Greenfield
           doth
           and
           may
           justly
           Complain
           of
           your
           Violence
           ;
           but
           here
           you
           mistake
           the
           Person
           ,
           't
           is
           the
           Prosecutors
           Charge
           against
           you
           ,
           and
           if
           you
           come
           off
           o'
           nt
           no
           better
           else
           where
           ,
           then
           by
           your
           Excuses
           here
           ,
           you
           may
           be
           as
           
             kindly
             treated
          
           as
           the
           Doctor
           ,
           and
           kinder
           too
           ,
           because
           a
           
             Prison
             of
             less
             Scandal
             may
             serve
             .
          
           You
           were
           not
           used
           in
           the
           Publick
           Court
           ,
           as
           the
           Doctor
           in
           yours
           ;
           you
           were
           
             fairly
             heard
          
           ,
           and
           the
           Prosecutor
           chose
           your
           own
           Friends
           to
           be
           Evidence
           against
           you
           .
           There
           remains
           now
           but
           a
           fair
           Retaliation
           of
           Kindness
           ,
           and
           that
           with
           an
           advantagious
           Compliment
           if
           you
           please
           to
           accept
           it
           ,
           in
           Token
           of
           Gratitude
           .
           May
           you
           be
           doubly
           repaid
           .
           But
           if
           your
           great
           Kindness
           cannot
           be
           refus'd
           ,
           and
           those
           lately
           incorporated
           amongst
           your
           
             kind
             selves
          
           ,
           are
           doubly
           bound
           to
           accept
           it
           ,
           whenever
           you
           please
           to
           offer
           it
           ;
           I
           'd
           e'ne
           advise
           them
           rather
           to
           give
           you
           a
           good
           piece
           of
           Plate
           for
           a
           Conge
           ,
           then
           be
           over
           loaded
           by
           your
           Graces
           .
        
         
           If
           the
           Matter
           of
           Fact
           be
           drawn
           out
           of
           the
           lasting
           Records
           of
           Dr.
           
             G
             —
             ll
          
           ;
           I
           must
           crave
           leave
           to
           tell
           him
           ,
           that
           he
           is
           out
           in
           both
           his
           Capacities
           :
           viz.
           In
           relating
           the
           Matter
           as
           Register
           ;
           and
           condemning
           the
           Doctor
           for
           the
           Fact
           as
           Censor
           ;
           his
           naturally
           precipitate
           Haste
           hurried
           him
           on
           to
           
             Puni●nd
             '
          
           ,
           without
           
             Examinand
             '
          
           ;
           and
           now
           to
           relate
           the
           Affair
           without
           
             Recognoscend
             '
          
           .
        
         
           You
           say
           ,
           
             the
             first
             Year
             upon
             Accusation
             of
             the
             Husband
             ,
          
           &c.
           
             the
             Doctor
             was
             out
             of
             Town
             ,
             and
             so
             not
             heard
             in
             his
             own
             Defence
             .
             The
             second
             Year
             the
             Complaint
             being
             renew'd
             ,
             was
             condemned
             unanimously
             by
             the
             Four
             Censors
             ,
             but
             not
             Fin'd
             or
             Committed
             ,
             because
             one
             of
             the
             Censors
             ,
             contrary
             to
             his
             Duty
             ,
             refus'd
             to
             sign
             the
             Warrant
             .
             The
             third
             Year
             ,
             he
             was
             unanimously
             found
             Guily
             again
             ,
             but
             was
             not
             committed
             ,
             because
             one
             of
             the
             Censors
             was
             called
             out
             of
             Town
             ,
             and
             another
             oblig'd
             to
             keep
             his
             Chamber
             with
             a
             tedious
             Fitt
             of
             the
             Gout
             .
             The
             fourth
             Year
             ,
             upon
             a
             fresh
             Complaint
             ,
             he
             was
             found
             Guilty
             of
             Ill
             Practice
             ,
             and
             Fin'd
             and
             Committed
             without
             Bail
             ,
             or
             Main-prize
             to
             Newgate
             ,
             &c.
             
          
        
         
         
           The
           Account
           as
           here
           stated
           ,
           is
           both
           Improbable
           and
           highly
           
             Mysterious
             .
             1st
          
           ,
           That
           the
           Fact
           being
           Committed
           in
           1692
           ,
           the
           Affair
           should
           not
           be
           determin'd
           till
           the
           6th
           Year
           after
           in
           1697.
           2ly
           ,
           That
           the
           Woman
           notwithstanding
           her
           continual
           Torments
           should
           not
           seek
           for
           a
           Re
           dress
           in
           almost
           two
           Years
           .
           3ly
           ,
           That
           her
           Friends
           should
           complain
           but
           once
           a
           Year
           .
           4ly
           ,
           That
           this
           weighty
           Affair
           ,
           should
           have
           but
           one
           Day
           in
           a
           Year
           allow'd
           towards
           it
           Decision
           .
           5ly
           ,
           That
           when
           the
           Doctor
           was
           dismissed
           (
           as
           was
           Sworn
           in
           Court
           by
           Doctor
           Collins
           )
           the
           Reason
           should
           be
           ,
           because
           one
           of
           the
           Censors
           ,
           tho
           he
           Condemn'd
           him
           
             according
             to
             his
             Oath
          
           ,
           yet
           refus'd
           to
           Punish
           him
           
             contrary
             to
             his
             Duty
             .
             6ly
             ,
          
           That
           upon
           another
           Arraignment
           and
           Condemnation
           ,
           the
           Doctor
           should
           scape
           unpunishd
           ,
           because
           
             One
             of
             the
             Censors
             was
             called
             out
             of
             Town
          
           (
           that
           very
           Minute
           ●
           suppose
           ,
           and
           must
           be
           Absent
           the
           whole
           remainder
           of
           the
           Year
           )
           so
           hastily
           ,
           that
           he
           could
           not
           set
           his
           Hand
           to
           the
           Warrant
           ;
           and
           another
           at
           the
           same
           time
           luckily
           
             taken
             with
             the
             Gout
          
           in
           his
           Toe
           ,
           so
           that
           he
           was
           not
           able
           to
           stirr
           his
           Fingers
           ,
           so
           much
           as
           to
           set
           his
           Mark.
           The
           Doctor
           was
           indeed
           ,
           after
           so
           many
           Jeopardies
           ,
           condemn'd
           to
           purpose
           at
           last
           ,
           by
           Men
           regardless
           of
           
             Magna
             Charta
          
           ,
           and
           outstripping
           the
           Inquisition
           it self
           ;
           but
           I
           hope
           they
           will
           be
           convinc'd
           ,
           that
           either
           a
           Gout
           ,
           or
           an
           Absence
           for
           a
           whole
           Year
           ,
           had
           been
           less
           prejudicial
           to
           the
           Affairs
           and
           Persons
           then
           ,
           &c.
           
           I
           shall
           forbear
           to
           unriddle
           these
           Mysteries
           ,
           till
           Mr.
           
           Bolton's
           Book
           against
           Dr.
           Greenfield
           comes
           out
           ,
           under
           the
           auspicious
           Conduct
           and
           Influence
           of
           Dr.
           Goodale
           ;
           and
           at
           present
           give
           you
           only
           some
           Hints
           .
           It
           was
           about
           this
           time
           Mr.
           Clunn
           was
           a
           trotting
           about
           with
           his
           pretended
           Patients
           ,
           in
           order
           to
           turn
           the
           Tedious
           and
           Expensive
           Illicita
           ,
           into
           a
           speedily
           Gainful
           
             Mala
             Praxis
          
           ;
           the
           Committy
           was
           then
           settling
           ;
           the
           Censors
           modelling
           ;
           new
           Laws
           forging
           ,
           Oaths
           and
           Bonds
           imposing
           :
           In
           short
           ,
           
             Parturiebant
             Montes
          
           ;
           and
           Dr.
           Greenfield
           was
           thought
           as
           yet
           not
           so
           Great
           an
           Offender
           ,
           till
           he
           refus'd
           to
           be
           shopt
           in
           the
           Repository
           ,
           and
           protested
           against
           the
           Laws
           impos'd
           :
           Then
           ,
           
             a'd
             Terrorem
          
           ,
           he
           was
           made
           an
           Example
           ,
           others
           very
           Eminent
           were
           to
           follow
           his
           Fate
           .
        
         
           But
           suppose
           the
           six
           Sets
           of
           Censors
           had
           
             unanimously
             Condemn'd
          
           him
           for
           that
           Fact
           ,
           he
           was
           afterwards
           honourably
           Acquitted
           of
           ,
           upon
           a
           full
           Hearing
           by
           a
           superiour
           Court
           :
           let
           the
           World
           Judge
           ;
           whether
           the
           Dishonour
           of
           so
           Foul
           an
           Act
           ,
           should
           not
           solely
           and
           wholly
           have
           belong'd
           to
           those
           his
           
             Partial
             ,
             Ignorant
          
           and
           Prejudic'd
           Judges
           ,
           who
           ,
           by
           that
           Means
           and
           in
           such
           Numbers
           ,
           had
           expos'd
           themselves
           ,
           and
           the
           whole
           Faculty
           ,
           to
           the
           Contempt
           of
           the
           Universe
           .
        
         
         
           You
           own
           further
           your
           Ignorance
           
             of
             the
             Doctors
             being
             comprehended
             in
             the
             Kings
             General
             Pardon
             ,
          
           [
           your
           ]
           
             Lawyers
             having
             never
             hinted
             any
             such
             thing
             to
          
           [
           you
           ]
           ,
           
             neither
             did
             the
             Doctor
             plead
             any
             Acts
             of
             Grace
             when
             summon'd
             before
          
           [
           you
           ]
           ,
           &c.
           
        
         
           Bless
           me
           what
           kind
           of
           Judges
           are
           these
           ,
           that
           plead
           their
           Ignorance
           of
           the
           Law
           ,
           as
           an
           Excuse
           of
           their
           acting
           against
           it
           !
           This
           was
           not
           a
           
             single
             ,
             private
             ,
             absolete
          
           Act
           ,
           but
           an
           Universal
           one
           repeatedly
           pass'd
           in
           Parliament
           ,
           since
           the
           pretended
           Fact
           was
           committed
           .
           'T
           is
           very
           strange
           you
           should
           be
           Ignorant
           of
           obvious
           Laws
           ,
           when
           so
           curiously
           Nice
           in
           the
           Terms
           ,
           as
           to
           be
           able
           to
           distinguish
           ,
           between
           four
           Men
           who
           are
           the
           Censors
           ,
           and
           four
           Censors
           who
           are
           the
           Men
           ,
           in
           the
           Specicial
           Verdict
           .
           But
           if
           all
           of
           the
           four
           Censors
           ,
           and
           those
           of
           the
           more
           numerous
           Committee
           ,
           continued
           invincibly
           Ignorant
           of
           what
           was
           known
           to
           the
           very
           Mob
           :
           I
           wonder
           it
           should
           scape
           the
           Studious
           Observations
           of
           the
           Industrious
           
             Go
             —
             le
          
           ,
           who
           ,
           
             Propria
             Voluntate
             &
             mero
             Motu
             suis
             ,
          
           without
           any
           Pension
           from
           the
           State
           ,
           hath
           been
           Epitomizing
           all
           the
           News
           Papers
           .
           You
           do
           both
           injustly
           ,
           and
           in
           vain
           Charge
           the
           Learned
           in
           the
           Law
           ,
           with
           such
           a
           gross
           Ignorance
           .
           Advice
           not
           ask'd
           cannot
           be
           given
           ,
           and
           if
           given
           ,
           is
           to
           no
           purpose
           when
           never
           taken
           :
           Had
           you
           not
           so
           much
           as
           a
           Hint
           of
           this
           ,
           when
           you
           oppos'd
           violently
           the
           Doctors
           Discharge
           .
           Pray
           ask
           Pardon
           of
           your
           Councel
           for
           so
           signal
           an
           Affront
           ;
           and
           be
           pleas'd
           to
           remember
           that
           you
           are
           a
           Court
           ,
           before
           which
           Pardons
           are
           requir'd
           to
           be
           pleaded
           .
        
         
           Reason
           Second
           ,
           
             These
             Censors
             not
             being
             satisfied
             with
             the
             designed
             Ruin
             of
             this
             Doctor
             and
             Family
             ,
             proceeded
             to
             effect
             it
             (
             according
             to
             the
             opinion
             of
             most
             People
             )
             by
             stirring
             up
             and
             assisting
             the
             aforesaid
             turbulent
             Woman
             to
             bring
             an
             Action
             of
             2000
             Pounds
             against
             the
             said
             Doctor
             ,
             which
             was
             carried
             on
             to
             an
             Expence
             far
             above
             the
             Ability
             of
             the
             Woman
             ,
             and
             back'd
             it
             by
             Libels
             published
             in
             their
             Name
             .
             But
             upon
             Tryal
             before
             the
             Right
             Honourable
             the
             Lord
             Chief
             Justice
             Holt
             ,
             the
             said
             Doctor
             was
             honourably
             acquitted
             ,
             and
             his
             Practice
             vindicated
             ,
             allowed
             of
             an
             commended
             by
             a
             great
             Number
             of
             the
             most
             eminent
             Physicians
             of
             the
             said
             College
             ,
             it
             plainly
             appearing
             that
             Ignorance
             ,
             not
             Judgment
             ,
             was
             the
             cause
             of
             that
             Censure
             ,
             and
             Envy
             for
             want
             of
             Success
             by
             the
             same
             Medicine
             they
             condemned
             the
             said
             Doctor
             for
             ,
             it
             being
             proved
             in
             Court
             that
             some
             of
             them
             had
             made
             use
             of
             it
             before
             .
          
        
         
           
             This
             Second
             Charge
          
           (
           you
           say
           )
           
             is
             highly
             unjust
          
           [
           you
           ]
           
             having
             been
             no
             further
             concern'd
             ,
             then
             as
             Witnesses
             Subpaena'd
             .
             And
             as
             to
             the
             publishing
             Libels
             in
          
           [
           your
           ]
           
             Names
             ,
             it
             is
             so
             notoriously
             false
             ,
             that
             you
             only
             vindicated
             your
             Honour
             and
             Justice
             against
             an
             Impudent
             and
             Scandalous
             Advertisement
             ,
             publish'd
             to
             defame
          
           [
           you
           ]
           .
        
         
         
           I
           must
           now
           rake
           up
           this
           shameful
           Affair
           ,
           being
           forc'd
           to
           it
           by
           your
           no
           better
           Denial
           .
           This
           Woman
           (
           one
           of
           the
           looser
           Gang
           of
           Pedlars
           ,
           that
           offer
           good
           Pennyworths
           of
           Muslin
           ,
           under
           pretence
           of
           a
           Seamans
           
             Covert
             Baron
          
           and
           
             Long
             Reach
          
           )
           lay
           Perdu
           for
           about
           six
           Years
           ,
           to
           regain
           her
           forty
           Shillings
           ;
           and
           seeing
           her
           yearly
           Applications
           to
           consecutive
           Censors
           ,
           were
           not
           prevalent
           to
           cause
           the
           Doctor
           to
           refund
           ,
           what
           he
           but
           too
           dearly
           earn'd
           ;
           tho'
           she
           found
           her
           Partizans
           baffl'd
           ,
           and
           the
           Doctor
           discharg'd
           by
           the
           Judges
           ;
           yet
           thought
           (
           forsooth
           )
           to
           jump
           into
           an
           Estate
           ,
           by
           such
           a
           favourable
           Opportunity
           ,
           and
           commenc'd
           a
           Suit
           of
           2000
           l.
           against
           the
           Doctor
           ,
           but
           unluckily
           it
           was
           some
           time
           after
           he
           had
           brought
           his
           ,
           in
           the
           like
           Summ
           against
           the
           Censors
           ,
           for
           false
           Imprisonment
           .
           This
           was
           a
           plain
           design
           to
           quash
           both
           the
           Actions
           ,
           there
           being
           no
           Overplus
           to
           be
           contended
           about
           in
           either
           :
           But
           the
           Doctor
           thought
           it
           Unreasonable
           ;
           she
           goes
           on
           and
           puts
           him
           to
           the
           Expence
           of
           50
           l.
           by
           dilatory
           Courses
           ;
           Summons
           the
           Censors
           to
           give
           Evidence
           in
           what
           they
           had
           Condemn'd
           before
           on
           her
           behalf
           ,
           influenceth
           their
           numerous
           Party
           ,
           (
           more
           then
           ever
           were
           seen
           in
           any
           Court
           )
           to
           defend
           her
           Cause
           tooth
           and
           nail
           ,
           and
           at
           last
           upon
           the
           Verdict
           against
           her
           ,
           pays
           the
           Costs
           as
           soon
           as
           demanded
           .
           Do
           you
           think
           all
           the
           World
           is
           at
           Blindmansbuff
           ;
           and
           every
           one
           you
           see
           at
           
             Ecco
             lo
             Cieco
          
           ,
           and
           your selves
           under
           Covert
           cause
           winking
           ?
           No
           ,
           Dr.
           Burwells
           menial
           Servant
           ,
           that
           poor
           addicated
           Officer
           of
           yours
           
             John
             Cole
          
           ,
           hath
           related
           the
           Fact
           to
           an
           Eminent
           Physician
           ,
           a
           little
           before
           his
           own
           Death
           :
           That
           by
           an
           express
           Command
           of
           your
           Attorney
           ,
           he
           waited
           on
           Mr.
           Ambrose
           ,
           and
           conducted
           him
           to
           that
           Womans
           House
           ,
           in
           order
           to
           commence
           that
           Suit.
           All
           the
           World
           hath
           reason
           to
           believe
           you
           were
           the
           Principals
           ,
           she
           only
           Accessary
           .
           The
           Doctor
           still
           reserves
           a
           Cardinal
           Evidence
           
             in
             Petto
          
           ,
           till
           his
           numerous
           Scruples
           ,
           about
           a
           
             Maintenance
             of
             a
             Suit
             ,
             Champeatie
             ,
             and
             Common
             Barretrie
             ,
          
           are
           fully
           satisfy'd
           .
           Now
           I
           shall
           readily
           grant
           you
           ,
           that
           the
           Advertisement
           you
           speak
           of
           ,
           was
           Impudent
           and
           Scandalous
           ,
           and
           lying
           as
           to
           Matter
           of
           Fact
           ;
           but
           I
           must
           acquaint
           the
           World
           ,
           that
           neither
           the
           Doctor
           ,
           nor
           any
           of
           his
           Friends
           I
           am
           sure
           ,
           had
           any
           Hand
           in
           it
           .
           The
           Author
           was
           a
           Professor
           but
           no
           Doctor
           ;
           a
           noisy
           Pamphletier
           ;
           that
           spark
           of
           flashy
           Nonsense
           ;
           your
           worthy
           Antagonist
           ,
           and
           fit
           Match
           for
           Controversy
           :
           You
           may
           easily
           know
           him
           ,
           whether
           he
           Speaks
           or
           Writes
           ,
           Prays
           or
           Rail's
           't
           is
           all
           one
           .
           
             Piscis
             à
             Capite
             foetet
          
           .
        
         
           But
           you
           were
           in
           Torment
           ,
           
             pray
             any
             Tooth
             good
             Barber
          
           ;
           drowning
           in
           Spight
           ,
           caught
           at
           Grass
           ,
           any
           Ansa
           ,
           any
           thing
           to
           pull
           in
           poor
           Greenfield
           .
           You
           published
           a
           Scandalous
           Answer
           ,
           to
           a
           
             Scandalous
             Advertisment
          
           ;
           whereby
           you
           doubly
           abuse
           the
           Innocent
           :
           For
           you
           might
           as
           easily
           have
           trac'd
           the
           Author
           of
           this
           ,
           as
           he
           the
           Messenger
           to
           the
           Press
           of
           yours
           .
           I
           
           must
           tell
           you
           for
           once
           ;
           the
           Doctor
           is
           so
           confident
           of
           the
           Justice
           of
           his
           Cause
           ,
           that
           notwithstanding
           your
           numerous
           Libels
           ,
           he
           hath
           writ
           nothing
           as
           yet
           but
           his
           Book
           in
           Latin.
           The
           Reasons
           and
           Remarks
           ,
           you
           dare
           not
           attack
           ,
           are
           the
           Prosecutors
           ;
           who
           hath
           hitherto
           expos'd
           you
           but
           moderately
           ,
           notwithstanding
           your
           Injustice
           be
           the
           very
           Basis
           of
           his
           Informations
           ;
           he
           could
           do
           it
           no
           otherwise
           ,
           then
           by
           vindicating
           the
           Doctor
           :
           As
           by
           Justice
           he
           was
           ,
           and
           in
           Justice
           he
           ought
           to
           be
           .
           
             Rumpantur
             ut
             Ilia
             Codris
          
           .
        
         
           You
           had
           indeed
           some
           shew
           of
           a
           Pretence
           to
           answer
           ,
           but
           no
           Cause
           to
           revile
           a
           declared
           Innocent
           .
           But
           pray
           did
           you
           not
           Libel
           him
           previously
           to
           all
           this
           ,
           while
           he
           lay
           at
           your
           Mercy
           ,
           your
           Prisoner
           in
           Newgate
           ,
           both
           for
           the
           pretended
           Crime
           and
           the
           impos'd
           Fine
           .
           Was
           not
           that
           enough
           ?
           But
           you
           must
           immediately
           give
           the
           World
           an
           Account
           ,
           that
           he
           was
           committed
           to
           Newgate
           for
           
             Ill
             Practices
          
           ,
           in
           the
           Plural
           ,
           without
           specifying
           for
           What.
           None
           but
           those
           that
           were
           acquainted
           with
           your
           Constitution
           and
           Injustice
           ,
           could
           imagine
           it
           less
           then
           Felony
           :
           Debt
           it
           could
           not
           be
           because
           of
           that
           Expression
           :
           Nor
           for
           the
           Fine
           ;
           that
           was
           never
           demanded
           .
           You
           remember
           no
           doubt
           Dr.
           Burwell
           ,
           when
           you
           were
           not
           named
           ,
           and
           scarcely
           affronted
           by
           the
           Learned
           Loss
           ;
           what
           horrid
           Labour
           you
           were
           in
           
             for
             a
             Year
          
           ,
           before
           you
           could
           be
           deliver'd
           of
           a
           
             Female
             Child
             at
             one
             Throw
             ,
             by
             the
             Midwifery
             of
             a
             Letter
          
           ;
           your
           Voluminous
           Book
           you
           mean
           ,
           in
           Answer
           to
           six
           Lines
           that
           touch'd
           you
           :
           Be
           pleas'd
           to
           look
           in
           your
           Epistle
           Dedicatory
           ,
           and
           amidst
           the
           
             broody
             Metaphors
             and
             teeming
             Allegories
          
           ,
           you
           'll
           find
           these
           Words
           .
           
             Yea
             and
             although
             in
             the
             Case
             of
             a
             particular
             Person
             ,
             Physicians
             may
             differ
             in
             their
             Opinion
             ,
             and
             perhaps
             each
             think
             he
             hath
             all
             the
             Reason
             on
             his
             side
             ,
             yet
             it
             is
             very
             Base
             for
             either
             of
             these
             to
             begin
             to
             print
             the
             Case
             ,
             and
             Condemn
             the
             other
             ,
             were
             he
             never
             so
             Guilty
             .
          
           And
           why
           so
           ?
           Certainly
           because
           it
           exposeth
           the
           Faculty
           ,
           as
           well
           as
           the
           Person
           .
           But
           tho'
           you
           were
           in
           the
           wrong
           ,
           you
           both
           
             condemn'd
             and
             printed
             first
          
           with
           a
           Witness
           :
           Every
           time
           you
           have
           publish'd
           ,
           may
           be
           deem'd
           the
           First
           ;
           because
           the
           Doctor
           hath
           not
           answer'd
           you
           as
           yet
           .
           Your
           being
           a
           Judge
           or
           Censor
           won't
           do
           :
           Neither
           Oath
           ,
           nor
           Discretion
           ,
           bound
           you
           to
           Print
           any
           thing
           .
           I
           hope
           you
           were
           a
           Physician
           then
           ;
           and
           if
           so
           ,
           I
           leave
           you
           to
           think
           of
           the
           Adjective
           you
           use
           .
           
             〈◊〉
             〈◊〉
             〈◊〉
             〈◊〉
             〈◊〉
          
           you
           are
           .
        
         
           Now
           we
           will
           go
           on
           to
           the
           Matter
           of
           Fact
           ,
           as
           by
           you
           related
           .
           
             The
             Doctor
             brought
             the
             said
             Woman
             thirty
             six
             Grains
             of
             Cantharides
             ,
             to
             be
             taken
             to
             Cure
             an
             Ulcer
             of
             the
             Bladder
             ,
             whereof
             she
             took
             thirty
             Grains
             in
          
           12
           
             Hours
             ,
             upon
             which
             ensued
          
           ,
           First
           ,
           
             great
             Pains
             and
             Torments
             with
             bloody
             Urine
             ;
             and
             then
             voyding
             of
             several
             Quarts
             of
             perfect
             Blood
             ,
             with
             
               Skins
               and
               Flesh
            
             That
             shecontinued
             twenty
             two
             Weeks
             in
             great
             Torment
             ,
          
           &c.
           
        
         
         
           The
           Truth
           of
           this
           ,
           as
           it
           was
           declar'd
           and
           prov'd
           in
           Court
           ,
           when
           the
           Doctor
           cast
           this
           Woman
           ,
           or
           the
           Censors
           rather
           ;
           is
           the
           following
           ,
           viz.
           Upon
           the
           Doctors
           extraordinary
           Success
           in
           curing
           Ulcers
           in
           the
           Bladder
           ,
           by
           the
           Cantharides
           (
           which
           is
           a
           Distemper
           hitherto
           accounted
           incurable
           )
           ,
           he
           was
           recommended
           by
           some
           of
           his
           former
           Patients
           to
           this
           Person
           ,
           and
           found
           her
           troubled
           with
           it
           ,
           and
           a
           Scyrrhus
           in
           the
           
             Vagina
             Uteri
          
           and
           
             Cancerous
             Piles
          
           withal
           ;
           he
           sends
           her
           eighteen
           of
           the
           Pills
           ,
           with
           their
           Corrector
           Camphire
           separately
           ;
           but
           with
           positive
           Orders
           not
           to
           take
           them
           but
           in
           his
           Presence
           ,
           in
           order
           to
           give
           more
           or
           less
           ,
           as
           the
           Case
           upon
           particular
           Signs
           should
           require
           :
           She
           impatient
           of
           Delays
           ,
           takes
           some
           of
           them
           in
           his
           Absence
           ,
           and
           without
           the
           Corrector
           ,
           upon
           which
           some
           Pains
           and
           bloody
           Water
           ensued
           ;
           but
           no
           more
           then
           what
           is
           but
           too
           usual
           ,
           upon
           the
           bare
           applying
           of
           a
           Blister
           .
           The
           Doctor
           being
           sent
           for
           in
           haste
           ,
           chides
           her
           ,
           but
           takes
           off
           the
           Pains
           and
           bloody
           Water
           immediately
           ;
           sends
           her
           into
           the
           Country
           ,
           and
           attends
           almost
           daily
           upon
           her
           ,
           for
           his
           forty
           Shillings
           .
           Not
           one
           ill
           Word
           against
           the
           Doctor
           all
           this
           while
           ,
           all
           the
           Clamour
           was
           against
           Mrs.
           Salloway
           the
           Midwife
           ;
           who
           clear'd
           her self
           from
           injuring
           the
           Person
           ,
           by
           Doctors
           Coatsworth
           and
           Gibson
           call'd
           in
           ,
           they
           finding
           then
           
             Cancerous
             Piles
          
           were
           the
           Cause
           of
           her
           Pains
           ,
           for
           the
           Ulcer
           was
           gone
           .
           This
           Clamour
           being
           obviated
           ,
           the
           Doctor
           was
           thought
           on
           about
           two
           Years
           after
           ,
           at
           the
           Instigation
           of
           one
           of
           the
           Censors
           ,
           whom
           the
           Doctor
           had
           exasperated
           ,
           as
           he
           easily
           will
           be
           .
           The
           Doctor
           being
           clear'd
           ;
           the
           Woman
           musters
           up
           her
           tatter'd
           Crew
           to
           Swear
           that
           horrid
           Nonsense
           ,
           produceth
           the
           Affidavits
           ;
           the
           Censors
           Condemn
           him
           upon
           them
           ;
           the
           Court
           of
           
             Kings
             Bench
          
           upon
           impartial
           hearing
           Acquits
           him
           of
           the
           Fact.
           
        
         
           This
           being
           so
           ,
           you
           are
           egregiously
           out
           both
           as
           to
           Fact
           ,
           and
           the
           Nature
           of
           the
           
             Thing
             ,
             1st
          
           ,
           That
           above
           thirty
           Grains
           of
           corrected
           Cantharides
           ,
           have
           been
           given
           by
           the
           Doctor
           with
           Success
           ,
           both
           before
           and
           since
           his
           Commitment
           ,
           was
           fully
           prov'd
           in
           Court.
           2ly
           ,
           Notwithstanding
           what
           the
           Womans
           Evidence
           Swore
           ,
           it
           appear'd
           as
           plain
           ,
           by
           their
           contradiction
           ,
           and
           the
           time
           of
           taking
           ,
           that
           she
           took
           less
           then
           fifteen
           Pills
           .
           3ly
           ,
           It
           was
           evident
           by
           the
           Doctors
           constant
           Practice
           in
           attending
           ,
           that
           it
           was
           against
           his
           Order
           she
           took
           any
           ,
           it
           was
           at
           her
           Peril
           she
           did
           it
           ,
           and
           ought
           to
           have
           far'd
           worse
           .
           4ly
           ,
           Those
           that
           know
           the
           Symptoms
           upon
           the
           giving
           of
           Cantharides
           ,
           will
           tell
           you
           ,
           that
           1st
           .
           there
           ensues
           a
           plentiful
           discharge
           of
           Urine
           ,
           then
           a
           desire
           to
           make
           Water
           with
           a
           less
           quantity
           of
           it
           ;
           next
           ,
           Strangury
           ;
           lastly
           ,
           bloody
           Water
           with
           Pains
           ;
           but
           
             Perfect
             Blood
          
           never
           :
           Experience
           and
           Famous
           Authors
           declare
           this
           expresly
           :
           I
           will
           not
           now
           Name
           them
           ,
           but
           may
           e're
           long
           .
           By
           the
           Flesh
           they
           mean
           (
           I
           suppose
           )
           the
           
             Sphincter
             Vesicae
             ,
             Nymphae
             ,
             Clitoris
             ,
          
           
           and
           the
           
             Labia
             Pudendi
          
           perhaps
           :
           by
           the
           Skins
           the
           bits
           either
           of
           the
           Vagina
           or
           the
           Bladder
           it self
           ,
           torn
           off
           in
           pieces
           by
           these
           
             Venomous
             Animals
             ,
             destructive
             to
             Life
             ,
             inimical
             to
             Nature
             ,
             Muliebris
          
           they
           must
           mean.
           Egregious
           Anatomists
           ,
           worthy
           ever
           to
           remain
           in
           the
           Theatre
           ,
           for
           the
           perpetual
           improvement
           of
           that
           Art
           :
           Especially
           if
           you
           consider
           their
           Nice
           Observations
           ,
           as
           to
           the
           Number
           of
           the
           Quarts
           of
           Blood
           :
           Several
           they
           say
           .
           An
           indefinite
           Quantity
           will
           bleed
           an
           Elephant
           to
           Death
           ;
           and
           tho
           this
           Woman
           had
           nine
           Lives
           like
           a
           Catt
           ,
           and
           each
           of
           them
           sustain'd
           by
           a
           proportionate
           and
           distinct
           Quantity
           of
           Blood
           ,
           that
           Number
           must
           have
           destroy'd
           her
           at
           last
           :
           But
           she
           is
           still
           alive
           ,
           and
           the
           better
           for
           the
           Doctor
           ,
           as
           was
           prov'd
           in
           Court.
           'T
           is
           a
           Cancerous
           Humor
           that
           attends
           her
           ,
           and
           the
           Doctor
           beggs
           you
           his
           Seniors
           ,
           to
           take
           some
           pitty
           upon
           her
           ,
           and
           Cure
           her
           of
           this
           ,
           as
           he
           did
           of
           the
           Ulcer
           ,
           and
           he
           'll
           refund
           the
           forty
           Shillings
           :
           'T
           is
           worth
           your
           Pains
           Gentlemen
           ,
           half
           an
           Examination
           Fee
           ,
           a
           whole
           Angel
           a
           piece
           .
           But
           this
           Several
           is
           set
           down
           to
           impose
           upon
           All
           ,
           being
           as
           wide
           as
           ones
           Fancy
           ,
           and
           as
           incertain
           ,
           as
           your
           Judgment
           of
           Things
           :
           It
           must
           then
           be
           restrain'd
           ,
           and
           it
           moderately
           reaching
           from
           Four
           to
           the
           Teens
           ,
           we
           'll
           take
           the
           middle
           Number
           ,
           and
           reduce
           it
           to
           Eight
           :
           Nay
           I
           'll
           bate
           you
           two
           ,
           and
           conclude
           it
           six
           by
           the
           Affidavit
           ,
           as
           reported
           from
           you
           ;
           which
           is
           about
           fifteen
           Pounds
           of
           Blood
           ,
           if
           you
           consider
           the
           difference
           of
           Troy
           and
           Avoirdupoize
           ,
           with
           that
           of
           the
           specific
           Gravity
           of
           the
           Blood
           ,
           as
           distinct
           from
           Water
           ;
           the
           first
           being
           bulk
           for
           bulk
           heavier
           then
           the
           last
           .
           
             Perfect
             Blood
          
           you
           say
           ,
           that
           is
           the
           
             Red
             Mass
          
           ,
           without
           the
           Mixture
           of
           the
           Serum
           ,
           which
           is
           the
           transparent
           and
           fluid
           Substance
           ,
           wherein
           the
           other
           ,
           or
           wherewith
           if
           you
           please
           ,
           is
           naturally
           carried
           ,
           and
           diluted
           in
           the
           Vessels
           :
           This
           distinct
           from
           the
           bloody
           Water
           ,
           and
           the
           preceding
           plentiful
           Urine
           ,
           was
           measured
           like
           Size
           ,
           I
           suppose
           ,
           to
           find
           the
           Accompt
           .
           Now
           it
           having
           been
           agreed
           amongst
           the
           Anatomists
           ,
           that
           the
           Quantity
           of
           Blood
           in
           Men
           ,
           is
           from
           sixteen
           to
           twenty
           four
           Pounds
           Troy
           ,
           by
           which
           Blood
           they
           mean
           ,
           the
           red
           Substance
           and
           the
           Serum
           together
           ,
           as
           they
           both
           circulate
           in
           the
           Vessels
           ;
           and
           the
           Proportion
           of
           the
           One
           to
           the
           other
           being
           almost
           Equal
           ;
           this
           Woman
           must
           have
           lost
           ,
           and
           that
           in
           twelve
           Hours
           time
           ,
           at
           least
           thirty
           Pounds
           of
           Blood
           ;
           if
           you
           consider
           the
           bloody
           Water
           too
           :
           Which
           must
           be
           six
           Pounds
           more
           then
           any
           one
           could
           have
           ;
           and
           yet
           she
           was
           better
           the
           next
           day
           then
           before
           ,
           and
           alive
           to
           this
           .
        
         
           That
           
             Perfect
             Blood
          
           ,
           as
           they
           call
           it
           ,
           must
           be
           here
           distinct
           from
           the
           Serum
           ,
           I
           will
           prove
           by
           the
           following
           Arguments
           .
        
         
           First
           ,
           This
           
             Perfect
             Blood
          
           ,
           came
           after
           the
           bloody
           Urine
           ,
           consequently
           distinct
           ;
           it
           must
           be
           taken
           from
           the
           bottom
           of
           the
           former
           ,
           and
           is
           the
           coagulated
           
             Red
             Mass
          
           :
           For
           the
           rest
           was
           Urine
           ,
           tho
           bloody
           besure
           .
        
         
         
           Secondly
           ,
           This
           monstrous
           Excretion
           of
           Blood
           ,
           being
           originally
           caus'd
           by
           a
           Diuretic
           ,
           must
           first
           cause
           a
           plentifull
           evacuation
           of
           Urine
           ;
           which
           is
           nothing
           but
           the
           Serum
           having
           past
           the
           Kidneys
           ;
           next
           bloody
           Urine
           ,
           that
           is
           the
           
             Red
             Mass
          
           broke
           by
           ,
           and
           diluted
           in
           the
           Serum
           :
           Now
           if
           you
           mind
           the
           Gradation
           ,
           the
           Third
           ,
           that
           is
           the
           
             Perfect
             Blood
          
           ,
           must
           be
           the
           
             Red
             Mass
          
           subsiding
           ,
           fluid
           when
           excreted
           ,
           but
           coagulating
           after
           and
           settling
           to
           the
           bottom
           ,
           and
           so
           measured
           ;
           or
           else
           where
           is
           there
           a
           distinction
           between
           the
           Second
           and
           Third
           .
        
         
           Thirdly
           ,
           If
           it
           were
           not
           so
           ,
           the
           just
           Proportion
           between
           the
           
             Red
             Mass
          
           and
           the
           Serum
           ,
           could
           not
           be
           known
           ;
           and
           so
           not
           Sworn
           to
           :
           Especially
           if
           you
           consider
           the
           Tagg-ragg
           and
           Bobtail
           ,
           that
           made
           the
           Observation
           for
           you
           ,
           and
           the
           Deposition
           too
           .
        
         
           Fourthly
           ,
           This
           Poison
           ,
           as
           you
           call
           it
           ,
           working
           by
           separating
           the
           Parts
           of
           the
           Blood
           ,
           and
           not
           by
           coagulating
           the
           whole
           Fluid
           ;
           the
           Serum
           separated
           ,
           upon
           Erosion
           of
           the
           Blood
           Vessels
           ,
           imbib'd
           as
           much
           Blood
           as
           it
           could
           retain
           ;
           which
           is
           the
           
             bloody
             Urine
          
           ;
           the
           Residue
           that
           subsided
           ,
           must
           be
           wholly
           devoy'd
           of
           it
           ,
           which
           is
           the
           
             Perfect
             Blood
          
           ;
           fifteen
           Pounds
           in
           all
           of
           the
           
             Red
             Mass
          
           ;
           which
           ,
           with
           thirteen
           Pounds
           of
           Serum
           ,
           requisite
           to
           dilute
           it
           in
           the
           Vessels
           ,
           makes
           twenty
           eight
           :
           And
           ten
           to
           one
           ,
           four
           more
           of
           both
           ,
           our
           of
           the
           bloody
           Urine
           ;
           makes
           thirty
           two
           ,
           
             Quod
             probandum
             erat
          
           .
           Yet
           this
           Heroic
           Virago
           fainted
           not
           at
           all
           ,
           after
           so
           enormous
           a
           loss
           of
           Blood.
           
        
         
           Lastly
           ,
           The
           same
           Witness
           that
           Swore
           to
           the
           Affidavit
           ,
           deposed
           likewise
           in
           Court
           ,
           that
           that
           Blood
           was
           as
           sweet
           as
           a
           Rose
           ;
           now
           if
           it
           had
           been
           mixt
           with
           the
           Serum
           ,
           after
           this
           had
           once
           pass'd
           the
           Kidneys
           ,
           or
           the
           Bladder
           ,
           it
           would
           certainly
           have
           got
           a
           farr
           different
           Scent
           ,
           of
           kin
           to
           the
           
             Boutan
             Royal
             Snush
          
           ,
           and
           overflowing
           with
           the
           neighbouring
           Perfumes
           .
        
         
           But
           whatsoever
           Anatomists
           have
           said
           on
           this
           Subject
           ,
           was
           meerly
           conjectural
           :
           comparative
           Anatomy
           ,
           first
           (
           that
           I
           know
           of
           as
           to
           this
           Affair
           )
           instituted
           by
           Mr.
           Boile
           ,
           detects
           a
           great
           deal
           less
           Quantity
           of
           Blood
           in
           Men.
           He
           tried
           the
           Experiment
           upon
           Sheep
           and
           other
           Animals
           ,
           took
           the
           exact
           weight
           of
           the
           Blood
           issuing
           ,
           and
           of
           the
           Animal
           ,
           which
           compar'd
           with
           that
           of
           Man
           ,
           by
           a
           Synonymous
           Rule
           ,
           he
           found
           the
           Proportion
           to
           be
           but
           sixteen
           Pounds
           at
           most
           in
           any
           .
           You
           may
           try
           it
           upon
           Goats
           ,
           as
           my
           Friend
           hath
           done
           ,
           for
           the
           sake
           of
           the
           Experiment
           and
           the
           Blood
           it self
           ;
           and
           upon
           all
           imaginable
           Allowances
           ,
           you
           will
           find
           this
           Assertion
           true
           .
           Consequently
           then
           ,
           this
           Woman
           by
           your
           
             veracious
             Accompt
          
           ,
           voided
           as
           much
           more
           of
           Blood
           ,
           as
           she
           could
           have
           in
           her
           ,
           besides
           what
           must
           of
           necessity
           have
           circulated
           in
           the
           Vessels
           ,
           and
           the
           habit
           of
           her
           Body
           ,
           to
           sustain
           her
           Life
           .
        
         
         
           Had
           you
           but
           consider'd
           the
           Menstrua
           ;
           how
           careful
           Nature
           is
           in
           the
           Evacuation
           of
           that
           ,
           tho'
           superfluous
           Blood
           ;
           how
           gradually
           she
           doth
           it
           ,
           in
           small
           quantities
           and
           several
           days
           ;
           tho
           then
           of
           no
           use
           to
           the
           Body
           ,
           because
           it
           was
           intended
           for
           another
           :
           What
           a
           small
           Excess
           is
           called
           Flooding
           ,
           and
           accompanied
           with
           Fainting
           ;
           and
           a
           little
           greater
           endangers
           Life
           :
           Or
           but
           minded
           ,
           what
           loss
           of
           Blood
           is
           Fatal
           in
           Haemorrhagies
           ,
           even
           discontinued
           for
           some
           Days
           :
           Or
           seen
           Executions
           by
           Beheading
           :
           You
           would
           never
           have
           impos'd
           upon
           the
           World
           such
           Nonsence
           .
           You
           consider'd
           as
           much
           ,
           the
           horrid
           Torments
           you
           talk
           of
           :
           Nature
           was
           then
           upon
           the
           Rack
           ,
           as
           you
           make
           us
           believe
           ;
           which
           of
           it self
           ,
           when
           her
           Flesh
           and
           Skins
           came
           away
           by
           Bits
           ,
           was
           more
           then
           enough
           to
           have
           destroy'd
           this
           miserable
           Creature
           .
           What
           will
           not
           an
           Exorbitant
           Spight
           do
           ?
           When
           fired
           by
           Passion
           ,
           in
           an
           inconsiderate
           Subject
           .
           Any
           Body
           ,
           any
           Thing
           ,
           must
           be
           believ'd
           against
           Greenfield
           ;
           any
           Reproach
           true
           ,
           if
           cast
           upon
           him
           .
           
             Quicquid
             in
             eum
             jecer
             is
             ,
             Pomum
             erit
             .
          
        
         
           Be
           pleas'd
           to
           accept
           of
           these
           few
           Hints
           ,
           for
           I
           design
           not
           to
           inlarge
           further
           as
           yet
           .
           The
           Author
           I
           dare
           not
           Name
           ,
           least
           he
           should
           prove
           to
           be
           one
           
             only
             Licens'd
          
           :
           An
           insignificant
           Wretch
           ,
           proper
           
             quo
             ad
             hoc
          
           (
           what
           he
           is
           now
           about
           )
           fit
           only
           to
           be
           despis'd
           ,
           his
           offers
           disdain'd
           ,
           and
           himself
           (
           poor
           Soul
           )
           expell'd
           .
           As
           to
           the
           Flesh
           and
           Skins
           ,
           pretended
           to
           be
           voided
           withal
           ;
           I
           cannot
           persuade
           my self
           to
           expose
           you
           for
           it
           ,
           as
           you
           justly
           deserve
           :
           I
           ll
           let
           it
           alone
           ,
           till
           further
           provok'd
           by
           the
           
             Master-piece
             of
             Dr.
          
           Goodal
           
             's
             Creation
          
           .
        
         
           To
           prove
           your
           Assertions
           ,
           you
           boast
           of
           five
           Affidavits
           :
           You
           may
           have
           as
           many
           Scores
           ,
           if
           you
           please
           ,
           and
           keep
           them
           for
           your
           private
           Use
           .
           The
           same
           Witnesses
           that
           attested
           these
           ,
           were
           examin'd
           upon
           Oath
           in
           Court
           ;
           and
           either
           retracted
           what
           they
           had
           Sworn
           before
           ,
           by
           not
           alledging
           what
           you
           here
           assert
           ;
           or
           were
           not
           believ'd
           in
           what
           they
           there
           depos'd
           :
           They
           were
           not
           then
           before
           you
           ,
           but
           before
           a
           just
           Judge
           and
           an
           honest
           Jury
           ;
           who
           minded
           as
           well
           the
           Credibility
           of
           the
           Witness
           ,
           as
           the
           Possibility
           of
           the
           Thing
           it self
           :
           Or
           else
           ,
           how
           could
           there
           have
           been
           a
           point
           blank
           contrary
           Determination
           of
           this
           Affair
           ?
           They
           clear'd
           the
           Doctor
           of
           the
           self
           same
           Fact
           you
           condemn'd
           him
           for
           ,
           yet
           heard
           the
           same
           Witnesses
           against
           him
           :
           But
           they
           had
           no
           Party
           to
           quell
           ;
           no
           wild
           Designs
           to
           carry
           on
           ;
           no
           Person
           to
           hate
           ;
           no
           Passion
           to
           satisfie
           ,
           but
           that
           for
           Truth
           and
           Justice
           :
           And
           they
           were
           upon
           their
           Oaths
           too
           ,
           as
           well
           as
           your
           Worships
           ;
           they
           talk'd
           not
           indeed
           so
           much
           of
           ,
           but
           acted
           according
           to
           them
           :
           But
           why
           was
           there
           so
           great
           a
           Difference
           in
           the
           Sentence
           pronounc'd
           ?
           I
           'll
           tell
           you
           .
           An
           Oath
           may
           be
           ,
           and
           is
           too
           often
           ,
           only
           a
           loose
           Covert
           for
           By-ends
           ,
           as
           the
           Party
           
           is
           biass'd
           by
           Interest
           or
           Passion
           ;
           as
           well
           as
           a
           fixed
           Tye
           to
           Truth
           ,
           in
           Persons
           immoveably
           Just
           .
        
         
           Next
           you
           seem
           to
           deny
           ,
           that
           the
           Doctor
           was
           honourably
           acquitted
           ,
           &c.
           by
           replying
           .
           
             That
             it
             is
             true
             ,
             that
             four
             Junior
             Physicians
             of
             the
             College
             ,
             who
             never
             arriv'd
             to
             the
             Honour
             or
             Dignity
             of
             Presidents
             ,
             Elects
             or
             Censors
             ,
             and
             profess'd
             Malecontents
             to
             the
             said
             College
             ,
             did
             endeavour
             to
             justifie
             the
             Ill
             Practice
             ,
             by
             extenuating
             and
             excusing
             it
             ;
             though
             none
             of
             them
             durst
             own
             ,
             that
             they
             had
             ever
             prescrib'd
             the
             Dose
             given
             by
             Dr.
          
           Groenvelt
           ;
           
             neither
             could
             they
             deny
             the
             Fatal
             Effects
             ,
             which
             had
             frequently
             attended
             the
             Use
             of
             that
             bold
             and
             unhappy
             Remedy
             ,
             which
             by
             the
             most
             Eminent
             Authors
             hath
             been
             rank'd
             amongst
             Poisons
             .
          
        
         
           These
           
             four
             Junior
             Physicians
          
           ,
           whom
           you
           worthy
           Seniors
           despise
           ,
           need
           no
           other
           Praise
           ,
           but
           only
           to
           be
           nam'd
           ,
           viz.
           Sr.
           
             R.
             Blackmore
          
           .
           The
           Learned
           Dr.
           Bernard
           ,
           
             〈◊〉
             〈◊〉
             〈◊〉
             〈◊〉
             〈◊〉
          
           (
           deceas'd
           when
           70
           )
           ,
           Dr.
           Gibbons
           ,
           and
           Dr.
           Coatsworth
           .
           The
           first
           solemnly
           knighted
           for
           his
           Merit
           ,
           and
           made
           Physician
           in
           ordinary
           to
           His
           Majesty
           ;
           two
           to
           Publick
           Hospitals
           ;
           the
           other
           universally
           known
           and
           applauded
           for
           his
           Learning
           and
           Practice
           ,
           together
           with
           the
           Rest
           .
           They
           indeed
           want
           Leisure
           and
           Ill
           Nature
           ,
           to
           execute
           the
           Office
           of
           such
           Censors
           ;
           have
           not
           Ambition
           enough
           to
           become
           the
           Heads
           of
           a
           Party
           ,
           of
           the
           College
           they
           deserve
           ;
           and
           their
           daily
           Practice
           requires
           not
           a
           second
           Examination
           ,
           to
           make
           them
           Elects
           .
           
             Profess'd
             Malecontents
          
           they
           are
           ,
           yet
           not
           to
           the
           College
           ,
           but
           at
           your
           Parties
           Proceedings
           ;
           and
           for
           that
           Reason
           still
           continue
           honest
           .
           Pray
           ,
           which
           of
           you
           would
           not
           quit
           all
           his
           Pretences
           ,
           to
           those
           vast
           
             Honours
             and
             Dignities
          
           ,
           to
           become
           but
           as
           one
           of
           them
           .
           All
           the
           good
           I
           can
           wish
           you
           ,
           is
           but
           to
           arrive
           to
           seemingly
           the
           same
           Repute
           ,
           to
           support
           your
           daily
           declining
           State
           :
           But
           to
           them
           (
           the
           three
           surviving
           Juniors
           )
           a
           gradual
           progress
           in
           their
           real
           Worth
           ,
           that
           the
           College
           may
           boast
           of
           more
           then
           a
           single
           Hippocrates
           .
        
         
           They
           were
           really
           smart
           Youths
           in
           quoting
           of
           Authors
           ;
           their
           Depositions
           tight
           as
           to
           Matter
           of
           Fact
           ;
           their
           Instances
           pithy
           ;
           their
           Observations
           becoming
           grey
           Hairs
           :
           The
           Court
           was
           astonish'd
           at
           their
           Learning
           and
           Experience
           ,
           and
           became
           regardless
           ,
           of
           the
           meerly
           Negative
           and
           Opinionative
           Depositions
           ,
           of
           their
           Seniors
           and
           Superiors
           ,
           either
           as
           to
           present
           Imaginary
           ,
           or
           Antiquated
           Honours
           .
           There
           was
           a
           sly
           Youth
           besides
           that
           prompted
           the
           Councel
           ,
           and
           laught
           at
           your
           Management
           ;
           and
           many
           Juniors
           that
           did
           ,
           and
           were
           ready
           ,
           to
           attest
           the
           Truth
           ,
           in
           Vindicating
           the
           Doctor
           ;
           each
           of
           them
           as
           Eminent
           really
           ,
           as
           you
           in
           Opinion
           .
           But
           you
           forgot
           the
           Eminent
           Apothecaries
           ,
           Able
           Surgeons
           ,
           Skillfull
           Midwives
           ,
           and
           a
           Cloud
           of
           Credible
           Witnesses
           ,
           attesting
           the
           extraordinary
           Success
           of
           the
           Doctor
           in
           
             Ulcers
             of
             the
             Bladder
          
           ,
           
           by
           that
           decried
           Medicine
           and
           Dose
           ;
           which
           the
           Doctor
           more
           conversant
           ,
           and
           generally
           apply'd
           to
           ,
           in
           Cases
           of
           that
           Nature
           ,
           kept
           as
           a
           beneficial
           Secret
           ,
           till
           ravish'd
           by
           you
           ,
           in
           order
           to
           abuse
           him
           and
           it
           ;
           yet
           he
           expects
           still
           a
           Reward
           for
           the
           Discovery
           ,
           even
           from
           your selves
           .
           The
           fatal
           Effects
           ,
           were
           no
           other
           then
           those
           but
           too
           usual
           upon
           Perl
           Cordials
           .
           A
           
             bold
             Remedy
          
           may
           be
           good
           and
           requisite
           in
           desperate
           Cases
           ;
           and
           this
           was
           not
           Unhappy
           to
           any
           but
           you
           ,
           for
           condemning
           ,
           what
           you
           knew
           not
           the
           Nature
           and
           Use
           of
           .
        
         
           Some
           remedies
           indeed
           have
           been
           rank'd
           amongst
           Poisons
           ;
           but
           it
           is
           either
           the
           Excess
           of
           Quantity
           ,
           or
           some
           incorrected
           Quality
           ,
           makes
           them
           reputed
           so
           :
           Mind
           the
           one
           ,
           and
           mend
           the
           other
           ,
           and
           what
           was
           Noxious
           before
           ,
           becomes
           benificial
           .
           Thus
           Sublimate
           is
           One
           ;
           but
           being
           corrected
           by
           One
           of
           the
           Ingredients
           ,
           that
           made
           it
           first
           a
           Poison
           ,
           becomes
           Innoxious
           ;
           and
           is
           safely
           and
           daily
           administred
           even
           to
           
             Infants
             .
             Ratsbane
          
           corrected
           ,
           hath
           been
           used
           internally
           with
           Success
           ,
           in
           desperate
           Cases
           ,
           by
           
             Muller
             ,
             Bonetus
          
           and
           
             Willis
             .
             Cortex
          
           was
           formerly
           thought
           such
           ,
           and
           given
           at
           first
           but
           to
           Grains
           ,
           with
           great
           Caution
           ,
           and
           only
           by
           some
           :
           Till
           the
           Nature
           and
           Benefit
           of
           it
           ,
           being
           duly
           observ'd
           by
           All
           ,
           increas'd
           the
           Dose
           of
           it
           almost
           to
           Ounces
           .
           Who
           doubts
           but
           Opium
           is
           a
           Poison
           ?
           Yet
           daily
           us'd
           ,
           in
           vast
           Doses
           for
           pleasure
           ,
           in
           the
           East
           ;
           and
           here
           in
           most
           Cases
           ,
           even
           to
           
             Excess
             .
             Hellebore
             ,
             Elaterium
             ,
             Coloquintida
             ,
             Lapis
             Lazuli
          
           and
           other
           violent
           Purgatives
           ,
           are
           no
           better
           without
           the
           former
           Precaution
           ;
           yet
           safely
           given
           by
           a
           skillful
           Hand
           .
           An
           expert
           Physician
           ,
           that
           really
           knows
           the
           Medicine
           and
           Distemper
           ,
           is
           the
           sole
           Judge
           of
           the
           Dose
           ;
           not
           to
           be
           abridg'd
           by
           meer
           Strangers
           to
           the
           Remedy
           and
           Intention
           .
           My
           Instances
           ,
           moftly
           either
           of
           natural
           Products
           ,
           or
           slightly
           Artificial
           ,
           have
           been
           adapted
           to
           your
           Capacities
           ;
           not
           daring
           to
           have
           a
           recourse
           to
           Chymistry
           ,
           and
           tell
           you
           ,
           how
           various
           and
           instantaneous
           Alterations
           and
           Corrections
           of
           Things
           ,
           are
           thereby
           produc'd
           ;
           least
           I
           should
           be
           revil'd
           ,
           for
           knowing
           something
           of
           so
           Benificial
           an
           Art
           ;
           though
           only
           with
           intent
           to
           prevent
           its
           being
           hurtful
           .
           
             〈◊〉
             〈◊〉
             〈◊〉
             〈◊〉
             〈◊〉
          
           .
        
         
           Besides
           ,
           we
           must
           not
           immediately
           Pronounce
           that
           a
           Poison
           ,
           what
           either
           some
           single
           ,
           or
           a
           consecutive
           Series
           of
           Authors
           ,
           declar'd
           to
           be
           so
           :
           We
           shall
           find
           both
           Ancients
           and
           Moderns
           much
           mistaken
           herein
           .
           To
           the
           former
           Quicksilver
           is
           such
           :
           Yet
           found
           now
           otherwise
           in
           it self
           ;
           and
           its
           preparations
           ,
           useful
           in
           Common
           ,
           and
           a
           Refuge
           in
           desperate
           Cases
           .
           Within
           this
           Century
           ,
           and
           our
           Memory
           almost
           ,
           the
           Famous
           Doctors
           of
           that
           Faculty
           in
           Paris
           ,
           banish'd
           Antimony
           as
           Venom
           from
           Physick
           ,
           and
           those
           that
           us'd
           it
           ,
           from
           the
           City
           Practice
           ;
           threatned
           to
           Prosecute
           Dr.
           Monginot
           (
           though
           chief
           Physician
           to
           the
           King
           )
           the
           
           Learned
           Quercetan
           and
           Mayerne
           :
           But
           had
           the
           Honesty
           ,
           when
           better
           inform'd
           ,
           to
           retract
           that
           Judgment
           by
           a
           solemn
           Decree
           ,
           and
           reinthrone
           that
           
             Triumphant
             Mineral
          
           .
        
         
           You
           say
           further
           ,
           
             Cantharides
             have
             been
             declar'd
             to
             be
             Venomous
             Animals
             ,
             destructive
             to
             Life
             ,
             inimical
             to
             Nature
             ,
             for
             the
             most
             part
             deadly
             ,
          
           &c.
           
             most
             l●thiferous
             Poisons
             and
             acute
             Venoms
             .
          
           Pray
           what
           is
           become
           of
           your
           
             Mother
             Tongue
          
           and
           Wit
           ?
           What
           do
           you
           mean
           by
           
             Venomous
             Animals
          
           ?
           Is
           there
           any
           other
           ,
           but
           what
           shew
           themselves
           to
           be
           such
           whil'st
           alive
           ?
           Deleterious
           either
           by
           
             Tooth
             ,
             Sting
          
           ,
           or
           Touch
           :
           By
           the
           first
           ,
           as
           the
           Vipers
           ,
           &c.
           
           Sting
           as
           the
           
             Scorpion
             ,
             Centopies
          
           ,
           the
           poisonous
           Raja
           and
           
             Cat-Fish
             :
             Tooth
          
           and
           mediate
           Touch
           ,
           as
           a
           Mad
           Dog
           :
           Mediate
           and
           immediate
           as
           the
           Torpedo
           :
           But
           a
           Spanish-Fly
           is
           as
           Venomous
           as
           its
           kind
           ,
           or
           a
           Flea
           ;
           scarce
           so
           much
           as
           a
           Gnat
           ;
           far
           short
           of
           a
           Breeze
           :
           It
           s
           
             acute
             Venom
          
           lies
           not
           in
           a
           sharp
           Tooth
           or
           Sting
           ;
           but
           in
           a
           slight
           Touch
           ,
           with
           a
           blunt
           Probascis
           .
           I
           have
           heard
           of
           
             Poisonous
             Plants
          
           ,
           and
           
             Virulent
             Simples
          
           I
           am
           acquainted
           with
           :
           But
           can
           you
           not
           distinguish
           between
           
             Animalia
             Venenata
          
           and
           
             Talia
             Venena
          
           ;
           though
           Use
           hath
           allow'd
           a
           greater
           Latitude
           to
           the
           Latin
           expression
           ,
           then
           to
           the
           
             Venemous
             English
          
           .
           I
           appeal
           to
           all
           Mankind
           ,
           what
           is
           meant
           by
           a
           
             Venemous
             Creature
          
           ;
           that
           Expression
           denoting
           such
           a
           Quality
           ,
           in
           a
           living
           Agent
           :
           When
           the
           Life
           is
           gone
           ,
           they
           cease
           to
           be
           Venemous
           ,
           and
           often
           to
           be
           Poisons
           ;
           being
           us'd
           either
           for
           Physic
           or
           Food
           ;
           as
           the
           
             Vipers
             ,
             Raja
          
           and
           Catfish
           :
           If
           you
           henceforward
           pretend
           to
           so
           much
           as
           an
           English
           Summons
           ;
           pray
           next
           Time
           ,
           you
           make
           Use
           of
           this
           Word
           Venomous
           ,
           learn
           to
           understand
           it
           and
           to
           spell
           it
           better
           :
           Else
           you
           will
           but
           expose
           your selves
           whil'st
           indeavouring
           to
           impose
           upon
           the
           Vulgar
           ;
           and
           in
           describing
           of
           a
           Fly
           ,
           use
           the
           
             Bombast
             ,
             Rattleheaded
          
           Epithets
           of
           a
           Snake
           .
        
         
           These
           Flies
           ,
           whatever
           you
           say
           ,
           have
           neither
           a
           burning
           ,
           nor
           a
           corroding
           Quality
           ,
           when
           in
           a
           skillful
           Hand
           ,
           with
           a
           due
           
             Corrector
             :
             Deadly
          
           no
           more
           then
           they
           were
           to
           this
           Person
           .
           However
           you
           being
           touch'd
           a
           little
           by
           the
           Authority
           of
           Hippocrates
           ,
           who
           recommends
           them
           twice
           ,
           are
           pleas'd
           to
           allow
           ,
           these
           
             Lethiferous
             Poisons
          
           and
           
             Acute
             Venoms
          
           ,
           &c.
           to
           be
           us'd
           in
           very
           Desperate
           and
           Chronic
           Cases
           :
           But
           to
           what
           Purpose
           I
           cannot
           Imagine
           ;
           u●less
           it
           be
           to
           ease
           the
           Patient
           of
           his
           Pains
           ,
           by
           sending
           him
           packing
           ;
           as
           you
           insinuate
           
           Hippocrates's
           Potions
           serv'd
           both
           the
           
             Patients
             ,
             to-whom
             they
             were
             most
             unhappily
             prescrib'd
             ,
             not
             exceeding
             five
             or
             six
             Grains
             at
             most
             .
          
           I
           do
           not
           now
           wonder
           that
           Greenfield
           was
           ,
           when
           Hippocrates
           must
           be
           lash'd
           by
           such
           like
           Animals
           ,
           for
           favouring
           this
           Remedy
           .
           You
           talk
           indeed
           of
           
             powerful
             Antidotes
          
           ,
           but
           mention
           not
           any
           :
           There
           are
           none
           in
           the
           Author
           ,
           unless
           it
           be
           Wine
           to
           allay
           the
           Burning
           ;
           but
           that
           of
           Pliny-lest
           out
           ,
           viz.
           the
           Heads
           and
           Tails
           to
           correct
           
           the
           Acrimony
           of
           the
           rest
           of
           the
           Body
           of
           these
           Flies
           :
           I
           will
           however
           unriddle
           this
           Affair
           ,
           for
           the
           sake
           of
           others
           .
           The
           Ancients
           us'd
           them
           in
           smaller
           Doses
           ,
           for
           want
           of
           a
           due
           Corrector
           ;
           but
           now
           one
           is
           found
           ,
           they
           are
           given
           in
           a
           Greater
           ,
           with
           greater
           Success
           ;
           and
           us'd
           at
           present
           but
           in
           Chronic
           and
           desperate
           Cases
           :
           Pray
           is
           not
           an
           
             Ulcer
             in
             the
             Bladder
          
           such
           ?
           How
           often
           hath
           it's
           Cure
           been
           attempted
           in
           vain
           ,
           for
           several
           Years
           ,
           by
           all
           imaginable
           Ways
           ?
           but
           now
           ,
           by
           this
           Method
           to
           be
           cur'd
           ,
           in
           less
           then
           a
           Week
           :
           Either
           you
           must
           allow
           this
           Distemper
           to
           be
           such
           ,
           and
           so
           talk
           to
           no
           purpose
           :
           Or
           if
           you
           deny
           it
           to
           be
           Chronic
           ,
           &c.
           you
           know
           not
           the
           Case
           ,
           and
           think
           it
           Acute
           ,
           because
           causing
           sharp
           Pains
           .
        
         
           You
           need
           not
           fright
           the
           Doctor
           ,
           with
           
             Tragical
             Stories
             ,
             of
             their
             mortiferous
             and
             deadly
             Effects
          
           ;
           they
           shall
           be
           examin'd
           ,
           whenever
           produced
           :
           only
           be
           pleas'd
           to
           take
           Notice
           ,
           That
           if
           all
           those
           Remedies
           ,
           that
           have
           been
           Mortiferous
           ,
           either
           by
           Accident
           ,
           design'd
           Malice
           ,
           or
           unskillful
           Advice
           and
           Mistakes
           ,
           must
           be
           set
           aside
           ,
           because
           then
           Noxious
           ;
           you
           must
           never
           prescribe
           either
           
             Opium
             ,
             Mercury
          
           ,
           the
           Cortex
           or
           Steel
           ;
           nay
           clear
           the
           Shop
           of
           most
           of
           the
           Rest
           ;
           and
           whoop
           for
           your
           Tools
           and
           Practice
           withal
           :
           Unless
           Hevelius
           hath
           discover'd
           some
           
             Medicinal
             Simples
          
           in
           the
           Moon
           ;
           which
           when
           fetch'd
           for
           you
           by
           
             Go
             —
             les
          
           Ganza's
           ,
           will
           serve
           but
           sometime
           ;
           being
           as
           liable
           to
           be
           misus'd
           ,
           as
           any
           we
           have
           .
           I
           believe
           these
           few
           Notes
           ,
           on
           your
           longest
           and
           most
           virulent
           Paragraph
           ,
           will
           prove
           a
           Preliminary
           ,
           
             short
             but
             full
             Answer
          
           to
           Mr.
           
             B
             —
             on
          
           ;
           let
           his
           intended
           Book
           be
           never
           so
           Voluminous
           ,
           and
           his
           Quotations
           Numerous
           :
           The
           young
           Gentleman
           knowing
           not
           as
           yet
           ,
           that
           Authority
           in
           Physick
           ,
           is
           always
           subject
           to
           Reason
           and
           Experience
           ;
           I
           am
           afraid
           his
           Tract
           will
           come
           out
           in
           Un●time
           .
        
         
           As
           to
           your
           boasted
           of
           Partisan
           Cyprianus
           ,
           we
           know
           the
           Man
           ,
           his
           Trade
           and
           Education
           ;
           can
           produce
           authentic
           Letters
           ,
           as
           to
           his
           Behaviour
           :
           Lithotomist
           he
           is
           ,
           and
           a
           Competitor
           to
           his
           much
           Senior
           ,
           the
           Expert
           and
           
             Successful
             ,
             Greenfield
          
           (
           who
           since
           his
           barbarous
           Treatment
           ,
           hath
           cut
           of
           and
           extracted
           the
           Stone
           ,
           from
           seventeen
           Persons
           of
           both
           Sexes
           ,
           from
           five
           to
           fifty
           six
           Years
           of
           Age
           ,
           and
           but
           one
           of
           them
           did
           miscarry
           ;
           who
           by
           the
           Opinion
           of
           the
           Physicians
           present
           at
           his
           Dissection
           ,
           could
           not
           have
           lived
           though
           he
           had
           not
           been
           cut
           )
           .
           Cyprianus
           indeed
           was
           the
           most
           violent
           ,
           in
           his
           Depositions
           against
           him
           ;
           tho
           both
           were
           of
           the
           same
           Country
           ,
           and
           Strangers
           in
           this
           :
           The
           reason
           you
           may
           judge
           of
           .
           How
           Eminent
           an
           Anat●mist
           he
           is
           ,
           will
           appear
           in
           the
           Sequel
           :
           But
           his
           Professorship
           ,
           you
           speak
           of
           ,
           like
           Meleagers
           Life
           ,
           not
           being
           inherent
           ,
           dwindled
           away
           with
           the
           Life
           of
           a
           kind
           co-habiting
           Refugie
           :
           His
           Lectures
           expir'd
           as
           soon
           as
           the
           Man
           ;
           and
           his
           Honour
           
           laid
           in
           the
           Dust
           ,
           before
           the
           Corps
           of
           his
           Friend
           .
           However
           by
           his
           last
           Lecture
           in
           the
           open
           Court
           ,
           I
           have
           learn'd
           ,
           that
           
             Spanish
             Flises
          
           work
           contrary
           Effects
           in
           different
           Countries
           :
           Here
           ,
           as
           appears
           by
           the
           five
           Affidavits
           ,
           they
           render
           the
           Blood
           (
           like
           the
           bite
           of
           a
           Haemorrhous
           )
           flowing
           out
           by
           Gallons
           :
           In
           Holland
           (
           upon
           his
           Credit
           )
           like
           that
           of
           an
           Asp
           ,
           they
           coagulate
           it
           by
           Pailfulls
           :
           Here
           ,
           internally
           given
           ,
           affect
           no
           inward
           Parts
           ,
           but
           only
           the
           Urinary-Ducts
           and
           Receptacles
           ;
           though
           convey'd
           into
           the
           Blood
           ,
           and
           carried
           by
           it
           to
           all
           others
           :
           There
           ,
           they
           
             miserably
             excoriate
             and
             ulcerate
             the
             Throat
             ,
             Stomach
             and
             Guts
             .
          
           Had
           these
           
             venomous
             Creatures
          
           ,
           been
           the
           Censors
           Flies
           ,
           and
           not
           stifled
           luckily
           in
           a
           
             Pailful
             of
             Blood
          
           (
           which
           he
           Swore
           he
           took
           out
           of
           the
           Bladder
           )
           ,
           They
           had
           doubtless
           torn
           '
           in
           Pieces
           ,
           and
           perhaps
           devour'd
           her
           Skins
           and
           Flesh
           ;
           as
           the
           Cacciatori
           are
           serv'd
           by
           the
           Vipers
           in
           
             Campagna
             di
             Roma
          
           .
           But
           now
           we
           talk
           of
           such
           Animals
           ,
           I
           must
           tell
           Mr.
           Professor
           ,
           by
           way
           of
           return
           ,
           one
           of
           my
           Observations
           ,
           viz.
           That
           the
           Venom
           of
           an
           
             Asp
             ,
             lying
             close
             by
             the
             Tongue
          
           ;
           is
           naturally
           ,
           as
           to
           the
           Creatures
           Jaunt
           ,
           bounded
           by
           a
           River
           :
           
             Lucan
             ,
             id
             Nili
             metitur
             Arenis
             :
          
           But
           we
           have
           made
           it
           boundless
           ,
           by
           wafting
           it
           over
           the
           Ocean
           .
           
             Aspida
             fecimus
             Merces
             ,
             Pelagoque
             petimus
             .
          
        
         
           
             Wherefore
             it
             most
             plainly
             appears
             ,
             that
             it
             was
             not
             a
             wise
             and
             considerate
             Judgment
             ,
          
           but
           Envy
           and
           
             Malicious
             Suggestions
          
           ,
           which
           occasion'd
           that
           unjust
           and
           illegal
           
             Censure
             against
          
           Dr.
           Groenvelt
           ;
           nor
           will
           
             Learned
             Censors
          
           ,
           either
           Censure
           ,
           what
           they
           do
           not
           know
           ;
           or
           Condemn
           ,
           what
           they
           themselves
           make
           use
           of
           ;
           nor
           are
           they
           
             solemnly
             Sworn
          
           ,
           to
           decry
           that
           as
           Poisonous
           ,
           which
           hath
           been
           evidently
           prov'd
           before
           the
           World
           ,
           to
           be
           highly
           Beneficial
           
             to
             the
             Kings
             Subjects
          
           .
           It
           had
           look'd
           far
           better
           in
           my
           poor
           Opinion
           ,
           for
           you
           to
           have
           done
           ,
           what
           you
           Charge
           the
           Doctors
           Evidence
           untruly
           withal
           ;
           viz.
           to
           have
           
             extenuated
             your
             Crime
             ,
             and
             not
             vindicated
             your
             Practice
             ,
          
           in
           opposition
           to
           the
           Law
           ,
           and
           the
           determination
           of
           the
           Court
           of
           Kings-Bench
           .
        
         
           As
           to
           your
           old
           Womens
           Stories
           you
           talk
           of
           ,
           the
           most
           Fabulous
           we
           have
           heard
           and
           laught
           at
           in
           Court
           ,
           for
           no
           other
           Fatality
           attending
           ;
           then
           the
           usual
           One
           ,
           upon
           the
           best
           of
           Remedies
           ,
           in
           a
           dying
           Person
           :
           But
           if
           you
           please
           to
           trump
           them
           up
           again
           ,
           the
           Doctor
           will
           either
           
             F
             —
             t
          
           at
           your
           Thunder
           ,
           by
           despising
           your
           Tales
           :
           Or
           if
           you
           expose
           the
           Faculty
           too
           much
           by
           the
           Rehearsal
           ;
           you
           must
           expect
           the
           same
           as
           to
           your
           Persons
           and
           Skill
           :
           
             Lex
             Talionis
          
           will
           bear
           him
           out
           if
           attack'd
           ;
           though
           not
           you
           the
           Aggressors
           .
           Instances
           he
           may
           have
           without
           any
           Trouble
           ;
           for
           you
           know
           how
           great
           a
           Body
           you
           have
           disoblig'd
           .
           You
           may
           then
           spare
           your
           Brains
           and
           Shoe-leather
           ,
           skipp
           no
           more
           over
           the
           Ditches
           in
           Southwark
           ;
           least
           you
           fall
           into
           what
           you
           design'd
           for
           
           another
           .
           Be
           therefore
           advis'd
           ,
           either
           to
           submit
           patiently
           to
           the
           Doctor
           and
           Prosecutor
           ;
           or
           fairly
           to
           the
           Law.
           
        
         
           The
           Charge
           against
           Dr.
           Burwell
           and
           Torlesse
           ,
           for
           administring
           unprepar'd
           Cantharides
           ,
           though
           you
           deny
           it
           ,
           is
           notoriously
           True
           ;
           being
           fully
           Sworn
           to
           ,
           by
           Mr.
           
             Daire
             ,
             Speers
          
           and
           Boucher
           ,
           known
           honest
           Apothecaries
           :
           The
           Bills
           were
           then
           ,
           and
           are
           ready
           still
           to
           
             be
             ,
             produced
          
           in
           any
           Court.
           You
           were
           absent
           ,
           you
           say
           ,
           when
           this
           was
           alledged
           ;
           yet
           
             Subpaena'd
             as
             Witnesses
          
           ,
           by
           the
           Plaintiff
           ,
           and
           concerned
           as
           such
           ;
           yea
           ,
           and
           otherwise
           too
           ,
           as
           hath
           been
           fully
           prov'd
           .
           You
           were
           really
           unkind
           to
           the
           Woman
           ,
           in
           not
           appearing
           ;
           to
           your selves
           ,
           in
           not
           
             vindicating
             your
             Honour
          
           .
           Doubtless
           your
           Presence
           would
           have
           over-aw'd
           the
           Court
           ;
           undone
           the
           Fact
           and
           asserted
           the
           Common
           Cause
           .
           You
           may
           still
           be
           present
           ,
           and
           Swear
           in
           your
           own
           Cause
           ,
           as
           Evidence
           for
           the
           King
           :
           Do
           but
           indict
           Mr.
           Speers
           of
           Perjury
           (
           with
           the
           rest
           to
           make
           the
           shorter
           Work
           )
           as
           you
           have
           threatned
           ;
           and
           the
           Matter
           of
           Fact
           will
           appear
           in
           its
           proper
           Colours
           :
           The
           Number
           of
           the
           Bills
           is
           increas'd
           ,
           and
           there
           is
           but
           such
           an
           Opportunity
           wanting
           to
           produce
           them
           ,
           and
           shew
           the
           World
           ,
           how
           just
           you
           were
           in
           condemning
           the
           Doctor
           for
           the
           same
           Fact
           ,
           you
           your selves
           were
           so
           notoriously
           Guilty
           of
           ;
           but
           with
           this
           remarkable
           Difference
           ,
           that
           tho
           the
           Doctor
           knew
           the
           Cantharides
           not
           to
           be
           a
           Poison
           ,
           yet
           was
           careful
           to
           correct
           their
           Acrimony
           :
           You
           have
           declared
           them
           an
           
             Acute
             Venom
          
           ;
           but
           administred
           them
           without
           any
           Caution
           (
           so
           much
           as
           to
           your selves
           )
           ,
           
             particular
             Diet
          
           ,
           or
           Antidote
           ;
           unless
           it
           be
           that
           of
           Plinie
           ,
           and
           Diuretics
           ,
           as
           in
           one
           of
           the
           Bills
           ,
           to
           increase
           their
           Force
           ,
           Malignity
           and
           Venom
           ,
           as
           you
           call
           it
           ;
           which
           appearing
           fully
           ,
           by
           the
           Bills
           themselves
           and
           the
           
             Latin
             directions
          
           ,
           and
           solemnly
           attested
           ,
           in
           a
           Publick
           Court
           :
           Pray
           be
           not
           so
           lavish
           of
           your
           
             Tenders
             of
             Oaths
          
           ,
           for
           fear
           of
           the
           worst
           :
           At
           least
           give
           us
           some
           satisfaction
           first
           ,
           how
           far
           your
           
             Negative
             Depositions
          
           ,
           as
           to
           Fact
           ,
           and
           that
           in
           your
           own
           Cause
           ,
           can
           be
           valid
           ,
           against
           a
           Positive
           Oath
           of
           sober
           and
           credible
           Witnesses
           ,
           who
           have
           and
           will
           assert
           directly
           the
           Contrary
           of
           what
           you
           pretend
           to
           .
        
         
           Reason
           Third
           ,
           
             The
             said
             Censors
             having
             thus
             notoriously
             acted
             like
             Ill
             Men
             ,
             Informations
             ,
             by
             order
             of
             the
             Kings-Bench
             ,
             were
             brought
             severally
             against
             them
             (
             in
             Obedience
             to
             and
             Incouragement
             by
             the
             Law
             )
             for
             not
             having
             qualified
             themselves
             ,
             for
             a
             Place
             of
             such
             high
             Trust
             and
             judicial
             Authority
             ;
             but
             by
             the
             great
             Endeavours
             of
             the
             said
             Censors
             to
             evade
             them
             ,
             the
             Suit
             hath
             prov'd
             very
             Expensive
             ,
             the
             said
             Censors
             applying
             themselves
             to
             His
             Majesty
             ,
             by
             way
             of
             Petition
             ,
             for
             a
             
               Noli
               Prosequi
            
             ;
             but
             His
             Majesty
             being
             informed
             
             of
             the
             Case
             ,
             out
             of
             a
             tender
             Regard
             to
             Justice
             and
             the
             Laws
             ,
             was
             pleas'd
             to
             deny
             them
             .
          
        
         
           Reason
           Fourth
           ,
           
             Dr.
             Burwell
             ,
             one
             of
             the
             said
             Censors
             ,
             being
             Try'd
             the
             si●ting
             after
             the
             last
             Term
             ,
             upon
             the
             Information
             aforesaid
             ,
             a
             special
             Verdict
             was
             obtain'd
             against
             him
             ;
             and
             the
             rest
             of
             the
             said
             Censors
             having
             joined
             Issue
             ,
             are
             to
             be
             Try'd
             the
             next
             Term.
             
          
        
         
           Here
           you
           are
           displeas'd
           with
           the
           Prosecutors
           asserting
           ,
           That
           you
           have
           acted
           notoriously
           like
           Ill
           Men.
           But
           if
           a
           notorious
           Injustice
           ,
           back'd
           by
           a
           Barbarous
           Treatment
           of
           a
           Brother
           ;
           persisted
           in
           to
           the
           last
           ,
           with
           the
           utmost
           Aggravations
           ,
           of
           privately
           Aspersing
           ,
           and
           publickly
           Calumniating
           ,
           of
           an
           innocent
           Person
           ,
           highly
           injur'd
           by
           your selves
           before
           ;
           and
           that
           in
           Contempt
           ,
           of
           the
           Law
           ,
           the
           Decision
           of
           the
           Jury
           ,
           the
           Advice
           of
           Friends
           ,
           and
           the
           Sense
           of
           Mankind
           ,
           merits
           such
           a
           Denomination
           ;
           be
           pleas'd
           now
           to
           accept
           ,
           not
           the
           Similitude
           only
           ,
           but
           the
           Thing
           it self
           .
           It
           was
           then
           your
           Injustice
           ,
           not
           the
           Prosecutors
           Malice
           ,
           that
           occasion'd
           the
           Informations
           .
           You
           have
           indeed
           indeavour'd
           to
           evade
           them
           ,
           upon
           as
           vain
           Pretences
           ,
           as
           you
           make
           Use
           of
           here
           ,
           and
           Sued
           ,
           You
           say
           ,
           for
           a
           
             Noli
             Prosequi
             ,
             being
             inform'd
             by
             your
             Councel
             ;
             that
             you
             were
             not
             within
             the
             Act
             :
          
           But
           you
           know
           ,
           That
           His
           Majesty
           ,
           upon
           true
           Information
           of
           the
           Matter
           of
           Fact
           ,
           was
           pleased
           to
           deny
           it
           :
           From
           which
           it
           doth
           plainly
           appear
           ,
           that
           the
           Prosecution
           was
           neither
           Malicious
           ,
           nor
           Unreasonable
           :
           For
           you
           were
           left
           to
           the
           Law
           ,
           by
           his
           Majesties
           Consent
           to
           ,
           and
           express
           Approbation
           of
           ,
           so
           just
           a
           Prosecution
           :
           And
           you
           have
           experienc'd
           ,
           by
           your
           repeated
           fruitless
           Attempts
           ,
           that
           the
           Right
           Honourable
           the
           Lords
           are
           of
           the
           same
           Mind
           .
        
         
           The
           Verdict
           against
           Dr.
           Burwell
           ,
           was
           brought
           in
           Special
           :
           But
           it
           was
           the
           Prosecutors
           design'd
           Favour
           ,
           to
           you
           not
           deferving
           any
           ,
           that
           the
           least
           Obnoxious
           Person
           was
           pitch'd
           upon
           amongst
           you
           ,
           to
           give
           you
           all
           time
           and
           scope
           of
           Repentance
           :
           To
           that
           End
           ,
           he
           order'd
           his
           Councel
           ,
           not
           to
           oppose
           the
           
             Special
             Verdict
          
           ,
           when
           desir'd
           :
           Furthermore
           ,
           I
           am
           fully
           satisfied
           ,
           if
           it
           had
           been
           any
           of
           the
           other
           Three
           ,
           the
           Jury
           would
           have
           brought
           him
           in
           Guilty
           ,
           for
           Reasons
           you
           may
           learn
           in
           time
           .
           Notwithstanding
           all
           this
           ,
           you
           have
           revil'd
           the
           Prosecutor
           for
           being
           so
           tender
           ,
           slighted
           his
           Favours
           ,
           and
           continue
           to
           do
           so
           .
        
         
           You
           express
           your selves
           wisely
           ,
           
             That
             the
             Matter
             is
             to
             be
             argued
             by
          
           (
           not
           before
           )
           
             the
             Judges
          
           ;
           but
           in
           your
           Wisdom
           ,
           
             know
             not
             how
             this
             Case
             will
             be
             then
             determined
             :
          
           Yet
           ,
           by
           an
           unaccountable
           Stubbornness
           ,
           hazzard
           your
           Ruin
           ,
           in
           a
           Case
           suppos'd
           by
           your selves
           to
           be
           doubtful
           :
           You
           stop
           your
           Ears
           to
           the
           Advice
           of
           Friends
           ,
           and
           the
           Counsel
           of
           those
           ,
           who
           not
           only
           guess
           at
           ,
           but
           know
           your
           Danger
           ;
           slight
           all
           Proposals
           ;
           
           laugh
           at
           those
           ,
           who
           in
           Pitty
           would
           gladly
           have
           been
           your
           Mediators
           .
           Three
           of
           you
           indeed
           may
           think
           your selves
           Secure
           ,
           and
           hope
           for
           an
           Accommodation
           timely
           enough
           ,
           tho'
           Burwell
           be
           ruin'd
           ;
           but
           you
           are
           not
           safe
           ,
           tho'
           he
           should
           escape
           ;
           your
           Pleadings
           must
           be
           different
           ,
           your
           Case
           worse
           ,
           your
           Defence
           as
           to
           any
           Point
           Insignificant
           :
           But
           if
           the
           Old
           Gentleman
           should
           persist
           in
           ,
           and
           fall
           a
           Martyr
           to
           his
           Obstinacy
           ,
           you
           must
           not
           ,
           you
           cannot
           ,
           in
           Reason
           and
           Justice
           expect
           any
           other
           Fate
           ;
           as
           you
           were
           his
           Accomplices
           ,
           more
           
             Active
             ,
             Designing
          
           and
           Spightful
           ;
           you
           must
           expect
           at
           least
           the
           same
           ,
           deserve
           a
           worse
           Usage
           .
           Go
           on
           in
           your
           Defiance
           ;
           the
           Prosecutor
           hath
           hitherto
           ,
           and
           I
           believe
           ,
           will
           not
           Fail
           to
           meet
           you
           One
           by
           One
           ,
           wherever
           you
           are
           pleas'd
           to
           carry
           the
           Suit
           :
           But
           my
           Advice
           to
           the
           Former
           (
           if
           he
           thinks
           fit
           to
           take
           it
           )
           is
           to
           desert
           you
           ,
           that
           would
           expose
           him
           singly
           ,
           to
           the
           lash
           of
           the
           Law
           ,
           and
           
             agree
             with
          
           his
           kinder
           
             Adversary
             ,
             whil'st
             in
             the
             Way
             with
             him
             ,
             least
             ,
          
           &c.
           
           Mat.
           5.
           25.
           
        
         
           I
           shall
           now
           take
           another
           Book
           in
           Hand
           ,
           to
           prove
           that
           Dr.
           Greenfield
           also
           ought
           to
           be
           consider'd
           :
           I
           mean
           that
           of
           
             Alius
             Medicus
          
           ,
           alias
           Dr.
           Bu●well
           ,
           against
           Mr.
           Less
           .
           I
           should
           not
           have
           advis'd
           Dr.
           Burwell
           at
           all
           ,
           but
           that
           I
           really
           pitty
           him
           ,
           being
           made
           by
           Nature
           more
           Innocent
           then
           the
           Rest
           ,
           as
           his
           Book
           doth
           fully
           declare
           it
           .
           He
           saith
           ,
           in
           the
           93
           Page
           ,
           
             That
             Good
             Name
             is
             better
             then
             Life
             ,
             especially
             if
             Lively-hood
             goes
             away
             with
             it
             .
          
           But
           what
           Regard
           had
           he
           to
           that
           of
           Dr.
           Greenfield
           ,
           or
           what
           Compassion
           for
           his
           Family
           ?
           The
           Doctor
           was
           trapann'd
           by
           a
           feigned
           Message
           and
           Name
           ,
           into
           a
           Coffee-house
           he
           constantly
           us'd
           ,
           to
           be
           hurried
           to
           NEWGATE
           ,
           from
           amidst
           his
           Friends
           ,
           Patients
           and
           numerous
           Acquaintance
           ;
           was
           follow'd
           from
           thence
           to
           his
           House
           ,
           there
           taken
           from
           the
           Imbraces
           of
           his
           Wife
           and
           Children
           ,
           from
           under
           the
           Nose
           of
           his
           Father
           in
           Law
           ,
           the
           Reverend
           Dr.
           Meriton
           :
           He
           was
           committed
           the
           same
           Day
           he
           had
           cut
           a
           Child
           of
           the
           Stone
           ,
           by
           Persons
           regardless
           ,
           of
           the
           Life
           of
           One
           Innocent
           ,
           as
           well
           as
           the
           Prayers
           of
           another
           ,
           Dr.
           Greenfield
           I
           mean
           ;
           that
           a
           Prison
           of
           less
           Scandal
           ,
           or
           the
           Lodge
           of
           the
           College
           ,
           might
           serve
           ,
           till
           he
           could
           make
           his
           Application
           to
           the
           other
           Censors
           ;
           that
           to
           Dr.
           Burwell
           proving
           in
           vain
           .
           His
           Commitment
           was
           instantly
           publish'd
           in
           the
           
             Post-Boy
             ,
             NEWGATE
          
           nam'd
           ,
           his
           Crime
           not
           specified
           ,
           but
           declar'd
           in
           General
           ▪
           for
           
             Ill
             Practises
          
           ,
           with
           a
           Notorious
           Falshood
           ,
           
             for
             refusing
             to
             pay
             his
             Fine
             ,
          
           which
           was
           never
           demanded
           ,
           nor
           intended
           to
           be
           the
           only
           Satisfaction
           ,
           for
           that
           Imaginary
           Crime
           ;
           as
           appears
           by
           the
           Censors
           Warrant
           and
           Defence
           .
           The
           Authors
           adds
           in
           the
           same
           Page
           ,
           Good
           Name
           
             is
             like
             a
             Venice
             Glass
          
           ,
           &c.
           
             if
             once
             crack'd
             though
             soadred
             or
             plaistred
             ,
             yet
             is
             despis'd
             ,
             undervalued
             ,
             and
             in
             a
             Manner
             good
             for
             Nothing
             .
          
           Yet
           he
           will
           not
           suffer
           the
           Doctor
           so
           much
           as
           to
           indeavour
           it
           ;
           but
           ,
           by
           repeated
           publick
           Aspersions
           .
           Essays
           (
           though
           I
           hope
           in
           Vain
           )
           to
           shiver
           it
           in
           Pieces
           .
           He
           adds
           further
           ,
           
             It
             is
             like
             Virginity
             in
             Women
             ,
             it
             enhanceth
             their
             Price
             ,
          
           &c.
           
           In
           Days
           of
           yore
           ,
           Women
           were
           bought
           for
           Wives
           ,
           now
           only
           for
           Whores
           :
           But
           seeing
           he
           hath
           ravish'd
           this
           Metaphoric
           Girl
           ,
           and
           indeavours
           to
           violate
           her
           still
           ;
           he
           will
           be
           kindly
           us'd
           ,
           if
           he
           only
           pays
           really
           ,
           and
           suffers
           not
           otherwise
           for
           the
           Fact
           :
           And
           if
           the
           first
           Assault
           merits
           a
           round
           Summ
           ;
           the
           repeated
           Violations
           ,
           as
           they
           enhance
           the
           Crime
           ,
           must
           likewise
           the
           Price
           .
           He
           goes
           on
           and
           tells
           us
           ,
           That
           
             private
             Slander
             is
             a
             Sort
             of
             Civil
             Gunpowder
             ,
             that
             blows
             up
             whole
             Families
             at
             once
             .
          
           Surely
           Publick
           is
           uncivil
           ,
           it
           doth
           it
           much
           more
           :
           
             And
             seeing
             it
             might
             have
             famish'd
             the
             Doctor
             ,
             his
             Wife
             and
             Children
             ,
             deserves
             their
             Curses
             against
             him
          
           (
           the
           Cause
           of
           it
           )
           
             as
             well
             as
             their
             Cries
          
           ,
           These
           are
           that
           Authors
           Words
           ,
           not
           mine
           ,
           and
           I
           firmly
           believe
           ,
           a●
           not
           the
           Doctors
           ,
           nor
           his
           Families
           wishes
           ;
           whatever
           the
           Author
           deserves
           .
        
         
         
           I
           shall
           now
           conclude
           with
           some
           few
           Questions
           to
           ,
           and
           Remarks
           upon
           ,
           about
           half
           a
           Score
           of
           that
           Restless
           Party
           ,
           Active
           to
           no
           Purpose
           .
           You
           pretend
           to
           advance
           the
           Grandeur
           of
           Physick
           ,
           by
           exposing
           that
           Faculty
           ;
           shew
           your selves
           Impartial
           ,
           by
           
             punishing
             your
             own
             Members
          
           ;
           without
           any
           Regard
           to
           your
           own
           ,
           or
           the
           Colleges
           Honour
           :
           For
           who
           can
           rely
           upon
           a
           Physician
           ,
           if
           his
           Admission
           amongst
           you
           ,
           doth
           not
           warrant
           his
           Skill
           and
           Honesty
           to
           boot
           .
           You
           pretend
           to
           attack
           your
           Enemies
           abroad
           ,
           by
           creating
           more
           within
           your
           own
           Bowells
           ,
           out
           of
           those
           who
           are
           best
           able
           to
           preserve
           and
           defend
           you
           .
           You
           are
           over
           
             Head
             and
             Ears
          
           in
           Debt
           ,
           yet
           lavishly
           waste
           the
           small
           Residue
           of
           your
           Stock
           in
           fruitless
           Attempts
           ,
           and
           as
           needful
           Suits
           .
           In
           order
           to
           retrieve
           this
           ,
           you
           talk
           of
           uniting
           your
           Body
           ;
           yet
           perfist
           in
           affronting
           the
           most
           Eminent
           of
           the
           FELLOWS
           ,
           and
           the
           whole
           BODY
           of
           those
           you
           call
           LICENTIATS
           .
           Pray
           where
           is
           your
           Conduct
           in
           all
           these
           Particulars
           ?
           You
           asperse
           the
           Latter
           publickly
           and
           privately
           ,
           as
           insufficient
           for
           Practice
           ;
           yet
           they
           really
           are
           ,
           and
           esteem'd
           by
           all
           ,
           equal
           to
           the
           best
           of
           you
           .
           Pray
           who
           will
           ensure
           your
           Skill
           ,
           when
           you
           your selves
           decry
           that
           of
           your
           Equals
           ?
           You
           defame
           them
           ,
           as
           fit
           only
           ,
           
             quoad
             hoc
          
           ,
           to
           practice
           only
           in
           some
           
             particular
             Cases
          
           :
           Yet
           the
           College
           hath
           given
           them
           as
           Ample
           à
           Diploma
           ,
           as
           any
           you
           have
           ,
           to
           practice
           in
           All.
           Pray
           what
           means
           this
           Abuse
           ?
           I
           had
           almost
           challeng'd
           your
           Honesty
           .
           You
           will
           scarcely
           alallow
           them
           any
           Priviledges
           ;
           yet
           the
           College
           hath
           granted
           them
           the
           Use
           and
           Benefit
           
             (
             Vsum
             Fructum
          
           )
           of
           all
           ,
           either
           granted
           ,
           or
           to
           be
           granted
           hereafter
           to
           it self
           .
           Pray
           where
           is
           your
           Justice
           ?
           You
           suffer
           them
           not
           to
           have
           the
           Priviledge
           even
           of
           transgressing
           Slaves
           ,
           to
           speak
           for
           themselves
           (
           I
           mean
           )
           though
           standing
           before
           your
           Worships
           ,
           and
           in
           all
           humility
           ,
           desiring
           to
           be
           heard
           .
           Pray
           what
           do
           you
           make
           of
           them
           ?
           You
           Affront
           your
           own
           Vniversities
           by
           re-examining
           ,
           and
           sometimes
           rejecting
           those
           ,
           whom
           they
           have
           approv'd
           of
           ,
           and
           honoured
           with
           the
           Decree
           of
           a
           Doctor
           :
           Besides
           ,
           you
           Vilify
           the
           forreign
           Academiae
           .
           Pray
           where
           is
           and
           was
           your
           Breeding
           ?
           You
           fly
           from
           
             Post
             to
             Pillar
          
           ,
           from
           Charter
           to
           the
           Act
           ;
           now
           fix
           here
           ,
           now
           there
           ;
           as
           you
           think
           ,
           this
           or
           that
           will
           best
           bear
           you
           out
           ,
           in
           your
           jarring
           Intentions
           .
           Pray
           where
           is
           your
           Foundation
           ?
           You
           reject
           the
           four
           Chiefs
           from
           being
           so
           much
           as
           Arbiters
           of
           your
           Differences
           ,
           or
           Judges
           of
           the
           By-laws
           you
           make
           .
           Pray
           where
           is
           your
           Discretion
           ?
           You
           challenge
           the
           Justice
           of
           the
           Jury
           ,
           slight
           the
           Advice
           of
           my
           Lord
           
             Chief
             Justice
          
           .
           Pray
           where
           is
           your
           Manners
           and
           Wisdom
           ?
           You
           impose
           Laws
           ,
           Oaths
           ,
           Bonds
           ,
           Fines
           ,
           Obligations
           ,
           upon
           freeborn
           (
           not
           your
           )
           Subjects
           ,
           without
           being
           their
           Representatives
           ,
           their
           Consent
           ,
           or
           Authority
           .
           Pray
           keep
           ,
           leavy
           and
           pay
           them
           your selves
           ;
           if
           you
           please
           ,
           and
           what
           you
           will
           or
           can
           .
           It
           is
           your
           boundless
           Ambition
           ,
           and
           conceited
           Greatness
           ,
           that
           is
           the
           Cause
           of
           all
           the
           Mischiefs
           that
           attend
           the
           College
           and
           Faculty
           .
           It
           was
           indeed
           otherwise
           ,
           when
           such
           low
           ,
           wandring
           and
           retrograde
           Orbs
           ,
           were
           chek'd
           and
           kept
           under
           ,
           by
           the
           Presence
           of
           those
           Immortal
           Lights
           ,
           whose
           Glory
           is
           eternally
           fix'd
           .
           I
           mean
           ,
           
             Wharton
             ,
             Glisson
             ,
             Willis
             ,
             Ent
             Scarburgh
             ,
             Lower
             ,
          
           &c.
           
           
             Fuistis
             Troes
             ,
             fuit
             Ilium
             &
             ingens
             Gloria
             Dardan●ae
             .
          
           I
           had
           almost
           forgot
           the
           
             ONLY
             LICENSED
             Sydenham
             .
             Audisne
             haec
             Amphiarae
             sub
             Terris
             abdite
             ?
          
           Nay
           ,
           Dr.
           
             Go
             ----
             le
          
           ,
           can
           you
           bear
           to
           hear
           your self
           talk
           ,
           and
           your
           great
           Patron
           and
           Benefactor
           revil'd
           with
           the
           same
           Breath
           ?
           But
           now
           what
           calls
           it self
           a
           College
           ,
           must
           seek
           for
           its
           Renown
           amidst
           the
           adverse
           Party
           ,
           and
           shelter
           it self
           amongst
           the
           Malcontents
           :
           It
           had
           only
           
             Goddards
             dropps
          
           for
           the
           Influence
           ,
           the
           Spirit
           of
           Elliots
           Bones
           for
           the
           Support
           of
           that
           Government
           ;
           till
           of
           late
           it
           got
           a
           YOUNG
           Man
           for
           its
           Defence
           .
           Yet
           when
           at
           the
           Board
           ,
           every
           one
           of
           you
           is
           a
           Menecrates
           ,
           each
           of
           you
           thinks
           himself
           a
           Jove
           ;
           to
           be
           adored
           ,
           by
           those
           call'd
           Licenciates
           ,
           with
           
             Capp
             and
             Knee
          
           ,
           in
           a
           
             Profound
             Silence
          
           .
           But
           you
           found
           of
           late
           ,
           that
           those
           your
           Equals
           ,
           will
           no
           longer
           bear
           such
           like
           Indignities
           .
           You
           must
           shew
           your selves
           first
           to
           be
           Men
           ,
           by
           reflex
           Thoughts
           on
           your
           past
           Actions
           :
           Till
           then
           ,
           I
           shall
           take
           Leave
           of
           your
           Excellencies
           (
           as
           Philip
           accosted
           your
           haughty
           Predecessor
           aforesaid
           )
           and
           that
           you
           may
           hence
           〈…〉
           d
           
             〈◊〉
             〈◊〉
             〈◊〉
             〈◊〉
             〈◊〉
          
           ,
           I
           wish
           you
           sincerely
           ,
           Mente
           
             〈◊〉
             〈◊〉
             〈◊〉
             〈◊〉
             〈◊〉
          
           .
           
             Ingenuas
             didicisse
             fideliter
             Ar
             〈…〉
             ollit
             Mores
             ,
             rec
             sinit
             esse
          
           Feros
           .
        
         
           FINIS
           .
        
      
    
     
       
         
           ERRATA
           .
        
         
           PReface
           ,
           P.
           2.
           
           L.
           8.
           
           R.
           Beargarden
           ,
           l.
           9.
           r.
           never
           ,
           p.
           2.
           l.
           2.
           dele
           even
           ,
           ●
           30.
           〈◊〉
           constit●●nt
           ,
           ●
           .
           2.
           l.
           28.
           r.
           ever
           ,
           p.
           4.
           l.
           14.
           r.
           their
           ,
           p.
           5.
           l.
           4.
           r.
           sours
           ,
           p.
           7.
           l.
           13.
           r.
           
           of
           ●
           ,
           p.
           12.
           l.
           2●
           .
           r
           ,
           ●heir
           ,
           p.
           13.
           l.
           7.
           r.
           obsol●te
           .
        
         
      
    
  

