347
Ian. the 2d. 1678/9.
S
r. Chistopher Wren
the vice Pre
t. tooke the chair -
D
r. Grew Read a Letter to him from Christianus Mentzelius
consil: & Archiat: Brandenb: Dated from Berlin the La
st of Iuly 1678-
Expre
ssing hs kind acceptance of the profer that had been made
him of holding correspondence w
th the secretary of this society
and his great De
sire of continuing it as he formerly begun it
w
th. m
r. Oldenburg and more e
specially concerning such inqui
sition,
as he had w
th. great Delight been much exerci
sed about,
theconcerning /to wit of/ the ^ /nature/ qualitys & species of vegetables. In the po
st -
script of w
ch. he makes mention of the 8
th. year of the German Ephe
medides of the ^ /German/ Curio
si. wherein
a D
r. Grews Anatomy of vegetables is
translated. As also that Iacobus Breynius Dantiscanus had this
year publi
shed Centuria Plantarum Rariorum praesertim ex pro
montorio capitis Bonae spei De
sumptorum cum effigijs aneis summa
arte ad viuum inci
sis in fol
o./
The same also read a 2
d. Letter to him from E Leichner. contein
ing, an inquiry after some things he had formerly sent & had Receiud
noe answer, and al
so a printed half sheet intituled D. E.Leiknerj
excerpta Diatypo
sis tractatus de Physico-medica Analysi, in duos
Di
stincti Libros. whereby he hopeth that /naturall/ Philosophy & physick
may obteine its vtmo
st felicity - Dated from Erfurt the
15 of nouember 1678. -
The minutes of the 19
th. of December were read, where vpon
the mention of the
wheat that mention of the Barly that
produced such great increa
se. m
r Henshaw obserued that
There was a Triticum multiplex first brought from Per
sia
which would yeald 2000 for 1. This was secunded by S
r.
Iohn Hoskins who obserued that it would doe the same in
any other place ^ /he hauing found it vpon tryall to succeed here he further noted/ that the stalk of it was not hollow -
like other wheat But solid. It was much preyd on by birds
vpon the mention of Pearles m
r. Henshaw obserued that
the same were often found in fre
sh water as well as in
salt, namely in a sort of Hors mu
scles found in Riuers.
vpon a Di
scour
se about sand Gold. S
r. Chr: wren obserued that the
figure thereof for the most part was
. . . /shaped/ like talk or
salts of Regular flat sides & angules, and that it was seldome
found like small particles of a melted mettall. that he had seen baggs
[of] these sands the mo
st part of w
ch. was thus shaped & yet very pure gold.
Ref: CELL/RS/HF_349 © Centre for Editing Lives and Letters