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accuse me of having borrow'd any thing from these Writers. This small Treatise is nothing but the Substance and Result of the Observations that I made in the _American Islands_, during the fifteen Years which I was obliged to stay there, upon the account of his Majesty's Service. The great Trade they drive there in _Chocolate_, excited my Curiosity to examine more strictly than ordinary into its Origin, Culture, Properties, and Uses. I was not a little surprized when I every day discover'd, as to the Nature of the Plant, and the Customs of the Country, a great Number of Facts contrary to the Ideas, and Prejudices, for which the Writers on this Subject have given room. For this reason, I resolved to examine every thing myself, and to represent nothing but as it really was in Nature, to advance nothing but what I had experienced, and even to doubt of the Experiments themselves, till I had repeated them with the utmost Exactness. Without these Precautions, there can be no great Dependance on the greatest Part of the Facts, which are produced by those who write upon any Historical Matter from Memorandums; which, from the Nature of the Subject, they cannot fully comprehend. As for my Reasonings upon the Nature, Vertues, and Uses of Chocolate, perhaps they may be suspected by some People, because they relate to an Art which I do not profess; but let that be as it will, the Facts upon which they are founded are certain, and every one is at liberty to make what other Inferences they like best. As there are several Names of Plants, and Terms of Art used in those Countries, which I have been obliged to make use of, and which it was necessary to explain somewhat at large, that they might be rightly understood; rather than make frequent Digressions, and interrupt the Discourse, I have thought fit to number these Terms, and to explain them at the End of this Treatise: the Reader must therefore look forward for those Remarks under their particular Numbers. FOOTNOTES: [1] De Chocolata Inda. [2] Du The, du Caffe, & du Chocolat. THE TABLE. The First PART. Chap. I. The Description of the _Cocao-Tree_. Pag. 2 Chap. II. Of the Choice and Disposition of the Place to plant a Nursery. 10 Chap. III. Of the Method of Planting a Nursery, and of its Cultivation, till the Fruit comes to Maturity. 16 Chap. IV. Of the gath
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