A LETTER TO T [...] P [...], Eſq FROM The AUTHOR of SIRIS.
A LETTER TO T [...] P [...], Eſq FROM THE AUTHOR of SIRIS.
CONTAINING SOME FARTHER REMARKS on the VIRTUES of TAR-WATER, AND The METHODS for Preparing and Uſing of it.
To which is added, An ANSWER To a ſuppoſed Phyſician's LETTER to the Right Reverend the Biſhop of CLOYNE, occaſioned by his Lordſhip's Treatiſe on the VIRTUES of TAR-WATER.
DUBLIN Printed, LONDON Re-printed, For M. COOPER, at the Globe in Pater-noſter-row. MDCCXLIV. [Price Six-pence.]
A LETTER TO T [...] P [...], Eſq FROM The AUTHOR of SIRIS.
[1]I.
AMONG the great Numbers, who drink Tar Water in Dublin, your Letter informs me, there are ſeveral, that make or uſe it in an undue Manner. To ob⯑viate thoſe Inconveniences, and render this Water as generally uſeful as poſſible, you deſire I would draw up ſome Rules and Re⯑marks in a ſmall Compaſs, which according⯑ly I here ſend you.
II.
[2]Put a Gallon of cold Water to a Quart of Tar, ſtir and work them ſtrongly toge⯑ther for about four Minutes; let the Veſſel ſtand cloſe covered for eight and forty Hours, that the Tar may ſubſide; then pour off the clear Water, and keep it in Bottles, well corked, for Uſe: This is a good general Rule, but as Stomachs and Conſtitutions are ſo va⯑rious, it may admit of ſome Latitude, the leſs Water or more ſtirring makes it ſtronger, as more Water or leſs ſtirring makes it weaker.
III.
The ſame Tar will not do ſo well a ſecond Time, but may ſerve for common Uſes: The putting off Tar that hath been uſed, for freſh Tar, would be a bad Fraud. To prevent which it is to be noted, that Tar already uſed is of a lighter brown than other Tar. The only Tar that I have uſed is that from our Northern Colonies in America, and that from Norway, the latter being thinner, mixeth eaſier with Water, and ſeems to have more Spirit. If the former be made uſe of (as I have ſometimes known it with good Succeſs) the Tar Water will require longer ſtirring to make it.
IV.
[3]Tar Water, when right, is, not paler than French nor deeper coloured than Spaniſh White Wine, and full as clear; if there be not a Spi⯑rit very ſenſibly perceived in drinking, you may conclude the Tar Water is not good; if you would have it good, you muſt ſee it made yourſelf. Thoſe who begin with it, little and weak, may by Habit come to drink more and ſtronger, according to the Seaſon, or the Hu⯑mour of the Patient. It may be drank either cold or warm; it lays under no Reſtraint as to Air, Exerciſe, Cloaths, or Diet, and may be taken at all times in the Year.
V.
As to the Quantity in common chronical Indiſpoſitions, one Pint of Tar Water a Day may ſuffice, taken on an empty Stomach, at two or four Times, to wit, Night and Morn⯑ing, and about two Hours after Dinner and Breakfaſt; more may be taken by ſtrong Sto⯑machs. Alteratives in general, taken in ſmall Doſes, and often, mix beſt with the Blood; how oft or how ſtrong each ſtomach can bear, Experience will ſhew. But thoſe who labour under great and inveterate Maladies, muſt drink a greater Quantity, at leaſt one Quart per [4] Diem, taken at four, ſix, or eight Glaſſes, as beſt ſuits the Circumſtances and Caſe of the Drinker. All of this Claſs muſt have much Patience and Perſeverance in the Uſe of this, as well as of all other Medicines, which, if ſure and ſafe, muſt yet, from the Nature of Things, be ſlow in the Cute of inveterate Chronical Diſorders. In acute Caſes, Fevers of all Kinds, it muſt be drank in Bed warm, and in great Quantity, the Fever ſtill enabling the Patient to drink, perhaps a Pint every Hour, which I have known to work ſurpriſing Cures.
VI.
As the Morning's Draught is moſt difficult to nice Stomachs, ſuch may leſſen, or even omit it, at the Beginning, or rather poſtpone it till after Breakfaſt, and take a larger Doſe at Night; the Diſtance from Meal-time need not be more than one Hour, when the Stomach is ſtrong, or the Glaſſes ſmall: the Oil that ſwims on the Top, may either be drank with the reſt of the Liquor, or ſkimmed off and kept for outward Sores. Whether there be any Difference between old Tar or new Tar, or which of all the various Tars, produced from different Trees, or in different Parts of the World, is moſt medicinal, future Trials muſt determine—I have made a ſecond Sort of Tar Water, to be uſed externally, as a Waſh for the Itch, Scabs, Ulcers, Leproſy, and all [5] ſuch foul Caſes, which I have tried with Suc⯑cess, and recommend it to the Trial of others. For inveterate Caſes of that Kind, Tar Water ſhould be drank, a Quart every Day, at fix or eight Glaſſes; and at the ſame time the Waſh applied Outwardly, and warm, by bathing, fomenting, and ſteeping, to heal and dry up the Sores, and this ſeveral Times in the twen⯑ty-four Hours. This Water, for external Uſe, muſt be made in the following manner: Pour two Quarts of hot boiling Water on a Quart of Tar, ſtir and work it ſtrongly with a flat Stick or Ladle, for a full quarter of an Hour; let it ſtand eight Hours, then pour it off, and keep it cloſe covered for Uſe. It may be made weaker or ſtronger as there is Occaſion.
VII.
My Experiments have been made in va⯑rious Caſes, and on many Perſons; and I make no doubt its Virtues will ſoon be more fully diſcovered, as Tar-water is now growing into general Uſe, tho' not without that Oppoſition which uſually attends upon Novelty. The great Objection I find made to this Medicine is, that it promiſes too much. What, ſay the Objectors, do you pretend to a Panacea, a thing ſtrange, chimerical, and contrary to the Opi⯑nion and Experience of all Mankind. Now to ſpeak out, and, give this Objection or Queſtion a direct Anſwer, I freely own that I ſuſpect [6] Tar-water is a Panacea. I may be miſtaken, but it is worth trial; for the Chance of ſo great and general a Benefit, I am willing to ſtand the Ridicule of propoſing it. And as the old Philoſopher cried aloud, from the Houſe-top, to his Fellow Citizens, educate your Children; ſo, I confeſs, if I had a Situation high enough, and a Voice loud enough, I would cry out, to all the Valetudinarians upon Earth, drink Tar Water.
VIII.
Having thus frankly owned the Charge, I muſt explain to you, that by a Panacea is not meant a Medicine which cures all In⯑dividuals, (this conſiſts not with Mortality) but a Medicine that cures or relieves all the different Species of Diſtempers. And if God hath given us ſo great a Bleſſing, and made a Medicine ſo cheap and plentiful as Tar, to be withal ſo univerſal in its Effects, to eaſe the Miſeries of human Life, ſhall Men be ridiculed or bantered out of its Uſe, eſpe⯑cially when they run no Riſque in the Trial?
IX.
It muſt be owned I have not had Op⯑portunities of trying it myſelf in all Caſes, neither will I undertake to demonſtrate a [7] priori, that Tar Water is a Panacea. But yet, methinks, I am not quitedeſtitute of pro⯑bable Reaſons, which, joined to what Facts I have obſerved, induced me to entertain ſuch a Suſpicion.
X.
I know Tar was uſed to preſerve Cattle from Contagion; and this may be ſuppoſed to have given Riſe to that Practice of drin⯑king Tar Water for a Preſervative againſt the Small-Pox. But as the Tar Water uſed for that Purpoſe was made by mixing equal Quantities of Tar and Water, it proved a moſt offenſive Portion; beſides, as a freſh Glaſs of Water was put in for each Glaſs that; was taken our, and this for many Days on the ſame Tar, it followed that the Wa⯑ter was not equally impregnated with the fine volatile Spirit, though all alike ſtrongly ſaturated with groſs Particles.
XI.
Having found this nauſeous Draught very uſeful againſt the Small Pox, to as many as could be prevailed on to take it; I be⯑gan to conſider the Nature of Tar. I re⯑flected that Tar is a Balſam flowing from the Trunks of aged Ever-geens; that it re⯑ſiſts [8] Putrefaction; that it hath the Virtues of Turpentine, which in Medicine are known to be very great and manifold; but I ob⯑ſerved withal, that Turpentines or Balſams are very offenſive in the taking: I therefore conſidered diſtinctly the ſeveral conſtituent Parts of Balſams; which were thoſe, where⯑in the medicinal Virtues reſided and which were to be regarded, rather as a Viſcous Matrix to receive, arreſt, and retain the more volatile and active Particles. And if theſe laſt could be ſo ſeparated and diſengaged from the groſſer Parts, as to impreg⯑nate a clear and potable Liquor, I concluded that ſuch Liquor muſt prove a Medicine of great Force, and general Uſe. I conſidered, that Nature was the beſt Chemiſt and Pre⯑parer of Medicines, and that the Fragrance and Flavour of Tar argued very active Qua⯑lities and Virtues.
XII.
I had, of a long Time, entertained an Opinion agreeable to the Sentiments of many antient Philoſophers, That Fire may be re⯑garded as the Animal Spirit of this viſible World. And it ſeemed to me that the at⯑tracting and ſecreting of this Fire in the va⯑rious Pores, Tubes, and Ducts of Vetegables, did impart their ſpecifick Virtues to each Kind; that this ſame Light, or Fire, was the [9] immediate inſtrumental or phyſical Cauſe of Senſe and Motion, and conſequently of Life and Health to Animals; that on Account of this Solar Light or Fire, Phoebus was in the ancient Mythology reputed the God of Medi⯑cine Which Light as it is leiſurely intro⯑duced, and fixed in the viſeid Juice of old Firs and Pines, ſo the ſetting it free in Part, that is, the changing its viſcid for a volatile Vehicle, which may mix with Water, and convey it throughout the Habit copiouſly and inoffenſively, would be of infinite Uſe in Phyſic, extending to all Caſes whatſoever, inaſmuch as all Diſtempers are in Effect a Struggle, between the Vis Vitae and the peculiar Miaſma or Fomes Morbi; and nothing ſtrengthens Nature, or lends ſuch Aid and Vigour to Life, as a Cordial which doth not heat.
XIII.
The Solar Light in great Quantity during the Space of many ſuoceſſive Years, being at⯑tracted and detained in the Juice of ancient. Ever-greens, doth form and lodge itſelf in an, Oil ſo fine and volatile, as ſhall mix well with Water, and lightly paſs the Primae Viae. and penetrate every Part and Capillary of the original Syſtem, when once exempt and freed from the groſſer nauſeous Refin. It will not, therefore, ſeem unreaſonable to whoever is [10] acquainted with the medicinal Virtues of Turpentine in ſo many different Diſtempers, for which it hath been celebrated both by ancient and modern Phyſicians, and withal reflects on the Nauſea or Clog that prevents their full Operation and Effect on the human Body, it will not, I ſay, ſeem unreaſonable to ſuch a one to ſuppoſe, that if this ſame Clog were removed, numberleſs Cures might be wrought in great Variety of Caſes.
XIV.
The Deſideratum was, how to ſeparate the active Particles from the heavy viſcid Subſtance wich ſerved to attract and retain them, and ſo to order Matters, that the Vehicle of the Spirit ſhould not on the one hand be volatile enough to eſcape, nor on the other, groſs enough to offend. For the performing of this, I have found a moſt eaſy, ſimple, and effectual Method, which furniſheth a potable inoffenſive Liquor, clear and fine as the beſt White Wine, Cordial and Stomachic, to be kept bottled, as being endued with a very ſenſible Spirit, though, not fermented.
XV.
I tried many Experiements as to the Quan⯑tity of Water, and the Time of ſtirring and [11] ſtanding, in order to impregnate and clarify it, and, after all, fixed on the forementioned Receipt, as the moſt generally uſeful for making this ſalutiferous Liquor well impreg⯑nated, and not offenſive to common Stomachs, and even drank with Pleaſure by many: In which the moſt medicinal and active Particles, that is to ſay, the native Salts, Spirit, and volatile Oil, being diſentangled from the groſs Oil and viſcous Reſin, can freely paſs the Primae Viae, inſinuate themſelves into the ſmalleſt Ducts, and pervade the whole animal Machine, and that, in ſuch full Proportion and Meaſure, as ſuiteth every Caſe and Con⯑ſtitution.
XVI.
The foregoing general Conſiderations put me upon making Experiments in many va⯑rious and unlike Caſes, which otherwiſe I ſhould never have thought of doing, and the Succeſs anſwered my Hopes. Philoſophical Principles led me to make ſafe. Trials, and on thoſe Trials is founded my Opinion of the ſalutary Virtues of Tar Water; which Virtues are recommended from, and depend on, Experiments and Matters of Fact, and neither ſtand nor fall with any Theories or ſpeculative Principles whatever. Howbeit, thoſe Theories, as I ſaid, enlarged my Views of this Medicine, led me to a greater Variety [12] of Trials, and thereby engendered and nou⯑riſhed my Suſpicion, that it is a Panacea. I have been the more prolix in theſe Parti⯑culars, hoping that, to as many as ſhall can⯑didly weigh and conſider them, the high Opinion I conceive of this Medicine will not ſeem altogether an Effect of vain Prepoſſeſ⯑ſion or blind empiric Raſhneſs, but rather the Reſult of free Thought and Inquiry, and grounded on my beſt Reaſon, Judgment, and Experience.
XVII.
Thoſe who have only the Good of Man⯑kind at Heart, will give this Medicine fair play; if there be any who act from other Motives, the Public will look ſharp and be⯑ware. To do Juſtice to Tar Water, as well as to thoſe who drink it, Regard muſt be had to the particular Strength and Caſe of the Patients. Grievous or inveterate Maladies muſt not be treated as common Caſes. I cured a horrible Caſe, a Gangrene in the Blood, which had broke out in ſeveral Sores, and threatened ſpeedy Death, by obliging the Perſon to drink nothing but this Liquor for ſeveral Weeks, as much and as often as his Stomach would bear. Common Senſe will direct a proportionable Conduct in other Caſes. But this muſt be left to the Con⯑ſcience [13] and Diſceretion of the Givers and Takers.
XVIII.
After all that can be ſaid, it is moſt certain, that a Panacea ſounds odd, and conveys ſome⯑what ſhocking to the Ear and Senſe of moſt Men, who are wont to rank the univerſal Me⯑dicine with the Philoſophers Stone, and the Squaring of the Circle; whereof this chief, if not ſole Reaſon, I take to be, that it is thought incredible, the ſame Thing ſhould produce contrary Effects, as it muſt do, if it cures op⯑poſite Diſtempers. And yet this is no more than every Day's Experience verifies. Milk, for inſtance, makes ſome coſtive, and others laxative: This regards the Poſſibility of a Pa⯑nacea in general; as for Tar Water in parti⯑cular, I do not ſay it is a Panacea, I only ſuſ⯑pect it to be ſo.—Time and Trial will ſhew.
XIX.
But I am moſt ſincerely perſuaded from what I have already ſeen and tryed, that Tar Water may be drank with great Safety and Succeſs, for the Cure or Relief of moſt, if not all Diſeaſes, of Ulcers, Itch, Scald-heads, Le⯑proſy, the foul Diſeaſe, and all foul Caſes, Scurvies of all Kinds, Diſorders of the Lungs, [14] Stomach, and Bowels, gouty and nephritic Ailments, Pleurifies, Peripneumonies, Eryſi⯑pelas, and all Kinds of Fevers, Hyſteric and all nervous Caſes, Dropſies, Decays, and other Maladies; nor is it of Uſe only in the Cure of Sickneſs, it is alſo uſeful to preſerve Health, and guard againſt Infection, and, in ſome mea⯑ſure, even againſt old Age, as it gives laſting Spirits, and invigorates the Blood. I am even induced by the Nature and Analogy of Things, and its wonderful Succeſs in Fevers of all Kinds, to think that Tar Water may be uſeful againſt the Plague, both as a Preſervative and a Cure.
XX.
But I doubt no Medicine can withſtand that execrable Plague of diſtilled Spirits, which all without Exception, (the Fire of the hot Still imparting a cauſtic and coagulating Qua⯑lity to all diſtilled Spirits, whatever the Subject or Ingredients may be) operate as a ſlow Poiſon, preying on the Vitals, and waſting the Health and Strength of Body and Soul; which Peſt of human Kind is, I am told, gaining Ground in this Country, already too thin of Inhabi⯑tants.
REMARKS ON A LETTER To the Right Reverend The BISHOP of CLOYNE.
Occaſioned by His Treatiſe of TAR-WATER.
AN ANSWER TO A LETTER To the Right Reverend The BISHOP of CLOYNE. Occaſioned by His Treatiſe of TAR-WATER.
[17]WHEN a Gentleman had propoſed a Medicine to the World, which from repeated Experience he had found to be of ſingular Efficacy, one would think he had a Right to be heard with Candour, if not with Applauſe. But the Author of a Letter to the Biſhop of Cloyne, has attack'd him in a Man⯑ner as much below the Character of a Gen⯑tleman to offer, as a Biſhop to receive. It is, to ſay the leaſt of it, what the Author profeſſes it to be, with the UTMOST FREEDOM. He compares him to a Quack, a boaſting Mounte⯑bank [18] Dr. Salmon, Dr. Rock, the Devil a. Himſelf the World will probably gueſs to be a Phyſician. A thorough bread Man, no doubt; and, I ſuppoſe, the great Point be has in view is to lie half diſcovered, half concealed, ready to be called forth from his preſent Obſcurity into Practice, when he has raiſed a Character by demoliſhing a Writer of Eminence.
But Phyſician as he ſuppoſes the World will take him to be, I much doubt whether it may mot give to the Biſhop, even in that Reſpect, the Preference. To make a Science a Noſtrum, is as quackiſh as to make a Medicine one. Knowledge is open to every Man of Senſe and Application; and has the Biſhop ſhewn his Want of either in his Study of Phyſic, tho' it is not more immediately his Profeſſion? How frequently have Phyſicians turn'd Divines? where is the Abſurdity for a Divine to become a Phyſician? Is the Pale of Phyſic only ſo nar⯑row that it admits of no Interlopers? What then does this Gentleman mean, when he tells usb, the principal Points of Knowledge neceſ⯑ſary to a Phyſician, are NATURALLY wanting [19] in a Divine? Alas! it is not the Degree, or the Robe, the tye Wig, or the Gold-headed Cane, that makes the Phyſician, anymore than. Prunella the Parſon. But the Knowledge of either may be concealed under every Habit, and the ſeven Sciences contained without a College Title.
Need I produce Authority or Example for this? the two great Names of Bacon and Boyle will be laſting Monuments, that the Know⯑ledge of Phyſic is not confined to thoſe of the Profeſſion only.
But the Letter-Writer ſaysc, He cannot gueſs, from any Part of the Biſhop's Treatiſe, that he ever made Phyſic his Study. Many others ſay, he talks as rationally of it as thoſe that have. This Author himſelf obſe [...]vesd, That he has ſearched the Books of Phyſicians for Hiſtories of Diſeaſes, and to find out the peculiar Properties of Medicines; no ſmall Part of a Phyſician's Learning, as much, I believe, as many an one ſets up on. But becauſe the Biſhop has applied it to the magnifying his fa⯑vourite Medicine, this Author will not allow him to have made any Improvement from his Reſearches.
Will it be ſaid, that Phyſic has eluded his Labours, becauſe the Theory of it is more [20] extenſive than any other? The World has ge⯑nerally judged very differently. And, if we conſider how ſacredly the Avenues to this Sci⯑ence are guarded, by myſteriouſly preſcribbing Things unknown in an unknown Tongue, how it is converſant with Mankind in its weakeſt State, when the Mind is drooping, and catches at any Thing that promiſes Relief, the whole Faculty ought with Humility and Thankful⯑neſs to acknowledge the Reputation the World has given them. Nay, I would appeal to this very Writer, whether he is not perſuaded, that e⯑ven a regular Phyſician's Practice does not depend more on his Addreſs to the Whims and Foi⯑bles of his Patients, than his real Skill in his profeſſion. I ask this, when he has compar'd his own Merit with his Practice. I know his natural Pride will extort from him what his artificial Pride would tempt him to conceal.
To Senſe and Study has not the Biſhop join'd Experience? Experience founded on his own unbounded Generoſity to the Poor, itself an Hoſpital without adventitious Sub⯑ſcriptions. And is he not to be believ'd, when he tells us, without Fee or Reward, he has known, frequently known, after repeated Tri⯑als, upon various Conſtitutions, his Medicine prove ſucceſsful? The Letter-Writer ſays the Facts were alld miſunderſtood, and endea⯑vours to prove from Theory, thate Tar [21] Water is no Medicine, ſomething HARDLY worth the Name of one, and that it can care no one Diſeaſe. Nay, to make ſure Work, and to be as far in one Extreme as the Biſhop in the, other, That it can do no Goodf, but may do Harm. He aſſures us Cold Water oured on Tar can take none, not the leaſt of its Medicinal Virtues: That, if we ask the Chemiſt, he will tell us, "Oil cannot be mix'd with, or drawn forth by Cold Water." Now in Obedience to this Gentleman I have ask'd the Chemiſt, and he tells me, that ſome of the Virtues of the Oil of Tar may be drawn forth by Cold Water. And I have actually taſted Water, wherein the Oil of Tar was waſhed (two Ounces to a Pint) ſtrongly im⯑bued with its Virtues, and which had much the ſame Taſte with Water wherein the Oil of Benzoin was waſhed. In Analyzing Tar there are found to come over ſome fine Flow⯑ers, ſo quick with the Oil that they cannot be ſeparated, which may be communicated to Water. And it is well known, all Acids will imbibe ſome Part of the Flowers, or fineſt Part of the Oil of all Reſinous Subſtances. As it may afford ſome Satisfaction to the Let⯑ter-Writer, and enable others to determine more particularly the Virtues of Tar, I ſhall ſet down the Product of 22 Pound of the beſt Norway Tar by two Retorts; viz.
[22]
lib. | ℥ | |
Acid Spirit | 1 | 2½ |
Oil | 7 | 13 |
Pitch | 12 | 14 |
21 | 13½ | |
Loſt | 2½ | |
22 |
After Theory the Letter-Writer proceeds to prove that Tar Water can do no good, from Experience. Here then, let Iſſue be joined, and from one Aſſertion, which all the World may judge of, let this Writer's Credit ſtand or fall:—Crimine ab uno—Diſce omnes.
He ſaies, Of this Medicine's Power of doing Harm, we have too many Proofs, if we could overlook the Fatigues of the Phy⯑ſicians and Apothecaries unable to go through the Load of Buſineſs and the viſible Increaſe in the Bills of Mortality! The Fatigues of Phyſicians! His own, I ſuppoſe, included in that Number, in the midſt of which it was Exceſs of Good Nature to find Time to write ſo long a Pamphlet. The Increaſe in the Bills of Mortality! To them then let us go: The Biſhop's Book was publiſhed in England I think, about the Middle of April: The Medicine recommended in it came into greateſt Vogue about the beginning of June, and the Bills of Mortality ſtand thus:
1744, | June | 5 | Chriſtened | 237 | buried | 357 |
Decreaſed | 78 | |||||
12 | Chriſtened | 316 | 390 | |||
Increaſed | 33 | 390 | ||||
19 | Chriſtened | 231 | 367 | |||
Decreaſed | 23 |
So that, we ſee, after all this mighty Parade about the Bills of Mortality, they were low⯑eſt, when Tar Water was in its higheſt Repute; or, take which Period you pleaſe, afterwards for its Seaſon, before this Au⯑thor's Book appeared, the Alteration was in⯑conſiderable; increaſed the next Week 33, and decreaſed again 23. Such abundant Rea⯑ſon had he to ſet out with a Maxim which he learnt from his own Experience more than univerſal Conſent, That Truth and Partiality are inconſiſtent.
After theſe Specimens of his Skill in the Nature of Medicines and of his Faithfulneſs in the Hiſtory of Caſes, he may charge the Biſhop with Deficiency in both Particulars, and pleaſe himſelf with the Thoughts, that the World will probably gueſs' himſelf to be a Phyſician. I leave him and it in the quiet Poſ⯑ſion of that Satisfaction.
[24] The reſt of his Letter is chiefly taken up in Mirth and Paſtime; he plays the Doctor, as he calls it, and throws out plenty of Jokes to gather the Crowd together, and help off a Six-penny Packet.—He deſcribes the Witty Reflections of the Company he kept,—or ſuch as he has made for them.
Take a Specimen of the Weak Defender of the Biſhop, and of the acute Opponent; Come ſays another with a World of important Nothing in his Look, the Biſhop is a Man of ſound Learning, I avouch it, and I have read—And what then, ſays another [the Letter-Writer,] his Knowledge is borrowed from the Writings of other Men g. I wonder how this Author got his: I fancy, as Serjeant Kite, ſaies, he came into the World of his own Head.
Another witty Obſerver ſaies, the Biſhop has ſerv'd his Medicine juſt as Pope ſerv'd him, by giving it ev'ry Virtue under Heaven upon which the Author notes:—unleſs it be true, what ſome People ſay, That he never praiſed any Body, but with an INTENT that the World ſhould conſtrue it into ſomething more bitter then his ſevereſt Raillery n.
[25] Great and Generous, thus with a ſingle [...]roke to deſtroy the general Character of an [...]ſent Biſhop, and a Poet juſt cold in his Grave! But as the Diſcovery it wonderful, it [...]ght not to be concealed; and there is leſs Reaſon to expect it ſhould, bccauſe it carries [...] own Reward with it. For this Author and [...] Friends will go on to conſtrue the reſt of [...] Works of that great Genius backwards, [...] for the Comfort of their Party invert the Dunciad into a ſerious Panegyric. Thus for [...]ding out the Intention of the Poet, they [...]all be bleſſed with their own Deluſion, and [...] their's, the World's Conſtruction. I have [...]ard a Story of a Hero in Bedlam, who told a [...] ſecret to his Friend that it was the World [...]road which was really mad, they within [...]ere only reputed to be ſo; it was ſo they [...]nſtrued among one another, however others [...]ight miſconſtrue them?
That he may ſtill keep his Hand in at play⯑ [...] the Doctor, he examines carefully the very [...]xcrements of the Biſhop's Book, the Index. [...] wonder; it was in Search of a Medicine for [...] Cough, and why ſhould not Tar and Honey [...] found where Album Graecum is, a Medicine [...] no very different Purpoſe? But the Difficul⯑ [...] is, How Tar and Honey came there, ſince [...] is not in the Body of the Book. I will not [...]etend to account for the Phaenomenon, but [26] ſhall only obſerve almoſt as odd an one in this Writer's Letter. As an Inſtance how the Senſe of Words may be perverted, he tells us a Story of great Effectsa produced by a trifling Altera⯑tion in the Pointing. "Inſtead of Cain's ſaying, I have killed a Man with a Colon at the End, which makes it a Confeſſion of Guilt, only write it thus, I have killed a Man." Where is the Difference? This Story, it ſeems made him wonder, when he heard it, and it makes the Reader ſtare, when he reads it. It ſhould be, I ſuppoſe, Have I killed a Man. But when he tells us how the fame Blun⯑der came to ſtand in his ſecond Edition, as well as in his firſt, we may find out perhaps how Tar and Honey came to be in the Index only.
The Biſhop having illuſtrated how Acid are ſheathed by Alkalies from a Simile of Spi⯑gots and Faucets, this Author's Modeſty I much offended at it. Hail! Woodward lives I cannot but admire, ſaies he, the perfect Decency of your Lordſhip's Manner, your ex⯑cellent Cleaneſs as well as Delicacy in Sm⯑lles. Which reminds me of the Lady that could not bear a Chapter of hard Names for Fear there ſhould be ſome what immodeſ in them.
But it is not enough that he cut down the Biſhop in Phyſic, unleſs he makes Repriſals [27] upon him in Divinity. He charges him with making the Scriptures ſerve the Turn of his Philoſophy by new Tranſlaitions, and even where there was no need of it. This, I ſuppoſe, alludes to §. 179. where the Biſhop obſerves that the Paſſage in the Pſalms, who maketh his Miniſters a flaming Fire, might as well be rendered, and more agreeably to the Context, who maketh flaming Fire his Mini⯑ſters. If it is more agreeable to the Context, why will this Author ſay, There was no need of the Alteration? And, as to the Charge of Novelty, there is ſcarce a Commentator but gives the Paſſage the ſame Conſtruction, tho' they have nothing to do with the Biſhiop's Hypotheſis. Without a Pomp of Quotations, I recommend only to this Author's Polite Taſte, Buchanan's Verſion; or, if that is more ſuitable to it, Sternhold and Hopkins.
In the ſame Place he ſaies, I ſhall only commemorate to your Lordſhip's Honour as a Biſhop, that you can ſoften Atheiſm into Miſ⯑conſtruction. Ay, and this very Lordſhip he honours and reſpects, As A Bishop, whom as a Physician he deſpiſes. It is plain, his perſonal Charity is as great as his publick Zeal, which could prompt him to conſute an Author, half dead as he was with the Fatigues of Practice which that very Author had helped him to.
[28] But how has his Lordſhip been guilty of leſſening Atheiſm? Why he has vindicated, it ſeems, Ariſtotle and ſome other Philoſophers from that Imputation, by ſhewing how their Principles have been miſtaken. Atheiſm the Biſhop leaves juſt what it was; but ſhews thoſe Venerable Sages did not come within the Verge of it. Where is the Harm? If we will not take them as Partners of our Natural Creed, another Sett of Men will be proud of them. Here our Author's Zeal gets the better of his Charity, and he betrays a little of that un⯑ſociable Temper by which he excluded the Clergy from the College of Phyſicians, ſome of whom, I am perſuaded, cure more than many a Licentiate. From the ſame Turn of Mind he ſeems proud to characteriſe himſelf at parting, when he lets the Biſhop know what he ſhould have done to have prevented the Attacks of ſo formidable an Adverſary: Then, ſaies he,b No carping Wit or ſour Pbiloſopher would have dared to have blamed you.
- Citation Suggestion for this Object
- TextGrid Repository (2020). TEI. 4767 A letter to T P Esq from the author of Siris Containing some farther remarks on the virtues of tar water and the methods for preparing and using of it To which is added an answer to a s. University of Oxford Text Archive. . https://hdl.handle.net/21.T11991/0000-001A-5EFE-E