A rich closet of physical secrets, collected by the elaborate paines of four severall students in physick, and digested together : viz. The child-bearers cabinet. A preservative against the plague and small pox. Physicall experiments presented to our late Queen Elizabeths own hands. With certain approved medicines, taken out of a manuscript, found at the dissolution of one of our English abbies, and supplied with some of his own experiments, by a late English doctor.

  • A. M
Date:
1652
  • Books
  • Online

Online resources

About this work

Publication/Creation

London : Printed by Gartrude Dawson, and are to be sold by William Nealand, at the Crown in Duck-Lane, 1652.

Physical description

8 unnumbered pages, 71 pages, 1 unnumbered page, 4 unnumbered pages, 65, 96-146 pages, 14 unnumbered pages

Notes

"To the reader." (p. 3) signed: A.M.
"A treatise concerning the plague and the pox", anonymous, by Edwards, has separate dated title page, pagination and register and is identified as Thomason E.670[2].
Text continuous despite pagination.
"A treatise concerning the plague and the pox" is identified as Wing E190 on UMI microfilm set "Early English books, 1641-1700", reel 1355.
Annotation on Thomason copy: "July 10".
Reproductions of the originals in the British Library (Thomason Tracts) and the Cambridge University Library (Early English books, "A treatise concerning the plague and the pox" only).

References note

Wing (2nd ed.) M7.
Thomason E.670[1].
Thomason E.670[2].

Reproduction note

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Mich. : UMI, 1999- (Early English books online) Digital version of: (Thomason Tracts ; 103:E670[1], 103:E670[2]) s1999 miun s

Type/Technique

Languages

Permanent link