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A letter to George Cheyne
M.D. F.R.S. shewing, the danger of laying down general rules to those who are not acquainted with animal oeconomy, &c. For preserving and restoring health, occasion'd by his essay on health and long life. With Animadversions upon that Performance -
The cry of Nature
or, an appeal to mercy and to justice, on behalf of the persecuted animals. By John Oswald, Member of the Club Des Jacobines -
A letter to George Cheyne
M.D. F.R.S. shewing, the danger of laying down general rules to those who are not acquainted with the animal oeconomy, &c. for preserving and restoring health. Occasion'd by his Essay on health and long life. With Animadversions upon that Performance. The Circumstances of Diseases are infinitely various, and no general Rules whatsoever, can be applied to particular Cases, without the Knowledge of the Reason of the Rule, that is, without understanding the Animal Oeconomy, upon which all the Rules of Physick are built. Preface to Keill's Essay's -
An epystell of ye famous doctor Erasm[us] of Roterdam
vnto the reuerende father & excellent prince, Christofer bysshop of Basyle, co[n]cernyng the forbedynge of eatynge of flesshe, and lyke constitutyons of men. &c -
The English hermite, or, Wonder of this age
being a relation of the life of Roger Crab, living near Uxbridg, taken from his own mouth, shewing his strange, reserved, and unparallel'd kind of life, who counteth it a sin against his body and soule to eate any sort of flesh...or to drink any wine...he left the army and kept a shop at Chesham, and hath now left off that, and sold a considerable estate to give to the poore, shewing his reasons from the Scripture -
The English hermite, or, Wonder of this age
Being a relation of the life of Roger Crab, living neer Uxbridg, taken from his own mouth, shewing his strange reserved and unparallel'd kind of life, who counteth it a sin against his body and soule to eate any sort of flesh, fish, or living creature, or to drinke any wine, ale, or beere. He can live with three farthings a week. His constant food is roots and hearbs, as cabbage, turneps, carrets, dock-leaves, and grasse; also bread and bran, without butter or cheese: his cloathing is sack-cloath. He left the Army, and kept a shop at Chesham, and hath now left off that, and sold a considerable estate to give to the poore, shewing his reasons from the Scripture, Mark. 10. 21. Jer. 35 -
A reasonable plea for the animal creation
being a reply to a late pamphlet, intituled, A dissertaion on the voluntary eating of blood, &c. In which is shewed, I. From the Nature and Reason of Things, that we have no right to destroy, much less to eat of any thing which has life. II. That if the human food at first was only the produce of the earth, and by positive command made immutable, then that law or command must be immutably eternal. By Robert Morris -
On the conduct of man to inferior animals
&c