204
It was farther supposd that the greate
st transpiration of the
body was made by the lungs. and that some creatures did hardly
sweat. Wherevpon D
r . . . Aglionby sugge
sted that the Driuell of a
Dog heated w
th. Running was not ordinary saliua but
seemed to be the sweat of the Dog mixed w
th it.
vpon the mention of the Relation Read the la
st day about
a pa
ssage to the top of the Pike of Tenariff seuerall de:
bates aro
se concerning the height of the cloudes and concer:
ning the nature of them.
S
r. Iohn Hoskins obserued that by this relation the cloudes
were as high as the top of the pike and that they some
times couerd it and made the earth very moyst & clammy
D
r. Wallis and some others affirmed that they had rode through
clouds at the tops of hills. which there appeard a
mi
st but both before they enterd it & after they had pa
ssed
it It lookd like a cloude and was really nothing els.
After this a Letter was Reard from Theodorus Kerckrin
=gius of Hamborough sent to the President Returning his
^ /great sensiblene
sse/ Gratefall acknowledgment
and of the Hon
e. & fauour done
him in chu
sing him a member of this Society & Declared
his Desire & redine
ss to serue
the De
signe of the society
to the vtmo
st of his power.
The Exp
t. for the next day was the tryall of
the
all.
Exp
t. at the Column at fi
sh street hill.
Ref: CELL/RS/HF_206 © Centre for Editing Lives and Letters