Pseudodoxia Epidemica
Pseudodoxia Epidemica
Pseudodoxia Epidemica
THE
WILLIAM
R.
PERKINS
'
LIBRARY
OF
DUKE UNIVERSITY
y^toTl^v
_ r
Rare Books
^
WESLEYANA
AND
BRITISH
METHODISM
PieuHocloxia Epicicmica:
N (Tu"l R IN
"T
E
A
S
'
TEN EN T
And common'y Prefumcd
S>
^'^'^^.%
S.
ynC J^
T
i3
II LI
H
-
//JOT^
By 'Thomas Crowm
'
Dr. of Phyfick.
77j<?
Fo'ifth Edition.
Wit.h
Marmal
Obfcrvacions,
andaTable
Alpiiabetical.
w-^eye'inti a^e
now dd lei
tr^a.:VifcoH f/s
Uns,
or
lately
THe-oto.of 'tti^G
CYRUS
AncLms.
fime
Network
;PIant4tt6ias ot cfoBstJr
]Sf:'jitlj
ill
o/^
Kl
':?;/
ipf-innn cognitio^'^r
<
tpfis
L 0:aXD O
Printed for
ir_
.
iV,
Andrew
Crco^
\cen X>/\igm
m
^
Pails Ci.iirc..-y.ud.
*
I'd
8.
/
f ^<
-m
m\mmmmwmmmmm\m
TO THE READER.
^Ould Truth
vNith 'P/4fo
"^^WYs:
wc
membrance^
were but reminifcential evocation, and new Imprefsions but thecolourifhing of old ftamps which flood pale in the foul before. For what isworfe, knowledge is made by obhvion, and to purchafea clear and warrantable body of Truth, we muft forget and part with much we know. Our tender Enquiries taking up Learning at large, and together with true and aifured notions, receiving many, wherein our reviewing judgements do find no fatisfaftion. And therefore in this Encyclopedie and round of Knowledg, like the great and exemplary wheels of Heaven, we
muft obferve two Circles that while we are daily carried about, and whirled on by the fvvirig and rapt of the one, we may maintain a natural and proper courfe, in the (low and fober wheel of the other. And this we fj-iall more readily perform, if we timely furvey our knowledge impa- tially fingling out thofe encroachnts, which junior compliance and poplilar creduli:
ty hath admitted.
Whereof
at prefcnt vje
have en-
deavoured a long and ferious adVtfo prqpofing not only a large and copious Lift, buc from experience and reafon attempting theit deciiions. \ And jfii ft we crave exceedmg pardon in thi audacity
of
70
of the Attempt
TBE READER.
of
it
.
fuch concernment unto truth, and diffiailry in did well dci'crvr the con)unftion ot many head
furcly moicadvantigcou'^^ had
it
IcU,
And
been unto Truih, to have iallen into the endcavoars ot iome o-o^ c aring advancers, that might have peifo mcd it to the lite, and added authority thereto^ which the piva^icof. oar condition, and unequal abilities cannot ex eft.
i
j
Whereby
nor have
notv^ ithflanding
o:ir
d;
look of
Pen,
upon difcourageCiffioul-y of
slthough
we
are very
ienflble,
how
badeth
in
I
ur to errors, ard
how
iuch
as arc
i
bu: acorns
our younger brow s; grow Oaks in our Idcr heads, and become inflexible unto the powcrtulleft arm of reafon. Although we have alfo beheld, wh:Jtcoldrcquitals otlic.3 have found ia their feveral redanption? pt Truth ; and how their ingenuous Fnquirics have b en difmiiud with cenfure, avd obloquie oi fingularities.
Some
wehopc 'rom
our Pio'eision, which thouQ;h 't lead, th u.^ into n^any truths that pals undilcerned by otl er?^, yet doth 'r d'-fi: irb their CommunicarioMs and n-nch irrerrupt the ofKceolo'ir fens in their v el' ine; ecd Tia/iiini<sicn?.
11 Andt!e:.fjrefare!y aithisAciik Aitcmpr exceed
v-
TO THF READIER.
cx.^ceJ performances
^
it
ba'ing
compi>fcd by fnatchcs
ot tiuc, AS
'
me iical
r
r
c't
t JiMty
urojcopte
fo,
p(rha^)sic
riile,
U permit us. And All would there.ore a^hachnoc iound that regular ar>dcor^
1
r nriifpeaioii
,
of mni-.
ftanr
the iub)cl romttime rcbe cxpec cd from others, whofe qiiircib, arid mig')t quicr doors ar.d unmo]eiled hours affo.d nofuchJiftr^ctions. Although whoever ftidl indifferently pc pcndthe exceeding difficuky, which either theobleu ricy of the jubiect, or ui avoidable paradoxoloeie
fiircd dccern^in-ttiors, wbicli
work t)f this nature is or to be per!ormtd uppnonelegg; and (liould fmcl oi oyl, iiduly a:;d
d.'iervrdly handled,
j
...,,
.^.
Oar fi;ftintcntitnsc6rifidenn-:
efl:
the
common
>
it
tcr-
ofTiuth, refolvedto pr ^pofe ic unt (h? Latinc republiqneand eq-jal Judi^esof Europe^ but owing itUhe iii^ftplac^this fervire unto our Coantrevj and
unto
irs
iherc'in efpecially
we have
Allomr^
pro-
declared our
ielt in
though
conkfs the q
(
ot the lubjeci^i^ill
xpr( Gions
beyond
it
Ki^re Enuliih
ftiil
apprehenfions.
ceeJedi, and
baveo'i
l.'te
And
indeed,
ele^^ancie
w:
fh/ill
we
i um^e ftand s and oyeof En' I'fn, a work will p (qdull be liry in Nor cith-r. have 'AeadJ eiTeiour ptn or^ile unto
be hjn ro learn
arinc to
the pe.
t^lis -rv^y
I'l
(^\\ho:n
Books
cji
incj^able^j
jc^tjjcti.c?'?;)
70 THE READtK.
ing and leading part of Learning.
As weH UndcftanJ.
ing ( at
probably hoping ) except they be wate.edfrom higher regions, and fructifying meteors of Knowledge, thefe weeds mii ft lofe their ahmental
leaft
fap,
and wither of themfelves. Whofeconfervinginfljcnce, could our endeavours prevent; we fhould triift the reft unto the fythe oilime^ and hopefull dominion of Truth. We hope it will not be unconfidereJ, that we find no open traS:, orconftant manuduction in this Labyrinth but are oft-times tain to wander in ihe^wmc4 and untravclled parts of Frurh. For though not many years paft, Dr. Trimr ofe\\2ii\\ made a learned and full Difcourfe of vulgar Errors in Phyfick, yet
,
have
we
difcuffed buc
two or
three thereof.
Scipio
an excellent tract in Italian, coucernir.g popular Errors ; buc confining; himfclf only unto thole in Pbyfiekjie hath little conduced unto the
Mecurii hath alfo left
generality of our doctrii^.e,
Laurentm
Joubertus
by
the
fime Tide led our expectation into thoughts of great relief; whereby notwithftanding we reaped no ad-> vantage; itanfwering fcarfcatall thepromifeof the infcripcion. Nor perhaps (if it were yet extant ) {hould we find any farther Afsiftancefrom tnatanci-
pretending the fame Title. And ArhawT'' ent piece of y^wciV^^/, lib, 7. therefore we^are often canftrained to ftand alone againft the ftrcngth
^^andGahrof
bles,
Authority,
Nor hive we indeed fcarcc named any Author whofe name we do not honour
TV rmS READER,
nour;
and if detraction could invite us, difcrction furtly would contain us from any derogatory inrentior, where highcft Pens and fricndieft eJoqiencc niuft fail in commendarion. And thercftf)^ alio we cannt but hr^pethcequit .Me conild'/rarions and Ccindoiir of rcalbnabV mir.d?. Wc caror expect the frown of Theoh^ie here in j nor c^n they wh;cii b hold the prefcr.t ft^tc of thing?, and
cpntrov r(K*of po'nts fo long receive i
in
1
divinity,
cend^mn our
t nancies
do
ib:full
3ppcr-
of Aits,and Receprarics of Pliiloiophy. Surely Phi^ologers and Crit'cal DiiLOuricr.% who look bevond the fhtll and obvious exteiioursoi things, will not be an5tZ,ry with our larroAcr explorations. And we cannot doubt, our Brothers in Phvfick (^
whole knowkdg
nearer
a
in
pprehenfion of
many
n av
our endeavours.
Nor
can
we
conceive
it
who
progreGiop,
when
fo
minv
many
which pafsing
pUs with common bcli fs. d'ftarb the tra: qiiility of Ax!om< , which orherwrf;:^ mii>ht be Tailed. And' wife men c nnot but know, thac arts a d learning
VI
and
^hke
it
pern
ft
fclf
lihat
crcd compuraions,
d'i>ation ftill
e:
it
can? oc tfcape
many
errors,
which
Jar^eih.
Lal.ly,
\\ea.c not
in opinions,
nor
have
havewc Dictaror
obrrud.d our o-^nceptior.?, but in the humility of Enquiries or difquilirions have only propoicd them unto inore pcul<r diftcrl,ke
iier
.
And
open
it is
io
any ro chink or declae rhc coiitiary, Andv\e fliall I.) tar encouia^e contradiction, as to promife ro diflu bancc, or re-^pp(^fc any Fen, that (hall
FalljciouTv or captiouflv refute
lav h;>kl
U'^
^
ih^t
lliall
only-
ro'Uri
s,
his o';vn in as
nt truths.
And
flia'l
oulv t?ke
ronceofiiih,
kno*vleJglliall
owne
rot
x. lain
and diUKidaiC
la jda
according ro the
j
ble cft-
om
romotions ot
Learning.
Unto whmi
notwitl-ftmding,
we
fliall
not contcnt-O'iOy rejoin, or only tO')ufi",fij our own, but to applajd or cor.firm his matuier -alic'tions , and (li^ll conter wh.^t b in us unto his name a .d ho-
nour
cr
:
Ready
a^
allowed in any wot thy enlarghaving rcqtii'cd our end, it ar y way, or iirto
Tva
be
der any
red^
Thomas Bro
\y"N.
A
OF
of the
Of
common
infirmity of
nature.
humane Chapter i.
chap.
2.
fecond caufe of poplar Error s^ the erroueous difpofition of the chap. 3. p.'ople.
in the
Of mijiakf, mifapprehenfon^ fallacy or falfe Of credulity and Supinity. Of ohjlinate adherence unto antiquity,
chap. 4. chap. 5. chap. 6. * chap. 7. Vnto Authority. chap. 8. Of Authors who hav e moji promoted popular conceits. chap. 9. Of others indire&ly effecting the fame. great promoter opinions^ the endeavours the and falfe of lafi of SaOf chap. lOj II, tan,
K,
TH E
congealed.
Chapter
i.
Concerning the Loadjhne^ of things particularly fpokjn thereof evidently or probably true : of things generally believed or particularly delivered evidently or probably falfe. Of the magnetical vertue of the earth. Of the four motions oftheflone-, that if^ its verticity or direcrion, its coition or attraCfion^ its declination^ variation^,
and alfo
chap. 2. rejection of fundry opinions and relations thereof) Natural^ Medical^ chap. 3* Hifiorica'li Magical. Of bodies Ele^rical in general.
of
its
Antiquity.
'
[i]
Of
AtaH'eottheConttm^/
Oj J^t uni Jinher in partf.-uhr, cept Bafil and b-idiei eyled.
that they atrraH atllight
Udies ex*
chap.4,
CoyHpcndioufly of fever al ether T'enents* 'that a Diamond is wadefofty orhroi^^ by the hioodof a Goat^ 'That gtajiM poifoHy and of malleable glaji.
Of
7hat a pot
them.
the cordial quality of Gold infubjiance or deco&ion*. full ajhes Will contain as much water oi it would
iith9iii_
Of white powder
Ihat Coral if foft under water;, but hardneth in the ajr. %hat Porceliane or China difljes lit under the earth an hundred years
preparation.
lit
chap.
:
5.
light in the darhjj Of the JEgleJlone wi th fonie others. Of fimdj y Tenents cojicernini; Vegetables.
Oj
Fai'-
ibid.
That the root of Mandrakes refembleth the jh ape of a man. That thn naturally grow under gallows^ and places of execution.. That the root gives a (hreek^upon eradication.. That it is fatal or dangerous to dig them up.. 7 hit Cinamon^ Ginger;^ Cloves, Mace, are but the parti or fruits of thd" fame tree.
7 bat Miffeltse is bred upon trees^from feeds which birds let fall thereon. Of the Kofe of Jericho tly.it flowreth every year upon Chrijhmas Eve^
That Sferra Cavallo hath a power to breaks or loofen Iron. That Bajes preferve from the mifchief of Lightning and Thunder. chap. That bitter Almonds are prefervatives againji Ebriety. year the inoak^ prefage the the infers Apples. of from Of
6.
the root.
others, chap.7;.
That Camphire caufeth impotency unto venerjiWitb many Of Kos foli4 and others*
T H E H I R D B K. popular and received Tenents concernintj Anlnjals. Hat an Elephant hath no joints.. chapter.!, Jhat an horfe hath no Gail. chap.2i That afigeoH buthno Gall. chap.j. That a Bever to efcape the hunter bites of^his tedicles or (}ones. chap.4, Jhat a Badger bath the legs of on'' fide (horter tk^n of ihe other, chap. 5. Jhat a B.'ar brings forth her cubs injormous or u/tjhap.d chap.6.
Of
Bafilisk:
O O
Of the
That
a
chap.7.
a
man
begets
adumbnejs
it him.
chap.8.
Of the long
the billjheweth
if.
Of
i\
OfCryphiHs, OftheFhdenix.
awe 01 tnc
'
v^^ontcms*
chap. 1 1.. chap.12.
'
Of the Rifling
'
(tti^
Frogs'.
That
it
Salamander
Of theAmpkisbena^
orferpent with to heads moving cither B'<ry.chap.i5. *tbaty9iiKg Vipers force their way through the bowels of their dttn. c.i6. chap.17.' That Hares are both wale and female,
ejes*
Tha t Lampri ss ha ve many eyes. That Snayls have two eyes^ and at the ends of th&ir That the Chamelion lives onely by ayr. That the 0;iridge digfjieth Iron,
horns.
Of the Vnicorns
That
all
hrn?,
Animals in the Land are in their kjnd in the Sea. Concerning the common courfe of diet in makjng choycc of feme Anivtalsy
itnd abjiainingfrom eating others.
chap. 18. chap. if?. chap.20 chap.21. chap.22. chap.23. chap. 24.
chap.25.
chap. 26.
Of fpermaceti and
Ihat theflejh of Peacockj corrupteth not That Storkj will cnly live in Republickj and free (iates.
Bittern by putting the bill in a Reed. That Whelps are blind nine dayes, and then begin to fee. Of the Antipathy between a Toad and a Spider^ a Lion and a CocJ^. That an Earwig hath no wings.
Of the mife of a
Of Worms.
Ihat Flies mal{e that hummirig
noife by their mouths or wings*
Of
the
Taina
Oj^ the
Glow-worm.
chap.27.
chap.28.
the providence of Tifmires in biting off the ends of Corn. That the Chic\en 14 made out ofthsyol'i^ofthe egg.
others.
Of many
and
that to look^ up
to
heaven.
j.
Chapter
-
Ihat the heart of man is feated on the left fide. chap.2. That plurifies are only on the left fide. chap. 3. 'Of th'fo'rth finger of our left hand whereon we wear our Kings, chap.4. Of th' right and left hand. chap. 5. Of [wimmingj that fome men fwim naturally:, that men drowned do float
'
lb 2^
th.'
i
^
i 1i
A
>f
/;fti& ^^/t?
w'^'^
^^"^"^
That men weigh heavier dead then alive^and before meat then after, cj. chap.8. 'that there are fever al paffages for meat and drink^
Of
"that
Jews
fiinl{.
.
is
6^^
THE FIFTH BO
Of many, things
OK.
Chapter
chap.
OfOf
ch ap. 5,
chap.^j.
Eve.
at their feafis,
chap. 5.
and our
chap.5^
0/ the piSiure of our Saviour with Icng hair. Of thepiCmre of Abraham Sacrificing Jfaac, 0/ the picture ofMofes with horns, 0/ the Scutcheons of the twelve tribes oflfrael, 0/ pictures of the Sybils. 0/ the pi&ure defcrihing the death of Cleopatra. Of the pictures of the nine worthies. 0/ the pi&ure oflephtah fa crificing his daughter.
1^1?
chap.7. chap.g,
chap.^. chap. 10.
in a
Camels skjn*
chap. a. chap. 1 5,
Of the pi&ure of the Chriflopher. Of the pidure of S.George. Of the piTrure of ]eiom. Of the pidures of Mermaids^, Vnicorns
and many
others.
chap, i p.
Ofthe Hieroglyj>hical pictures of the JEgyptiam. chap.20. Compendioufly of many popular Cuftonis, Opinions, Piftures^ Praftifes and Obfervations. Hare an crofsingthe high way. Of Of the omineuf appearing of Owls and Ravens, Ofthe falling of Salt.
'
Ofthe true lovers kjtot. Ofthe cheek^burning or ear tingling. " Offpeakjng under the Rofe.
Of fmoak^following
the fair.
Of
Of Lions heads upon fpouts and cijierns. Of the faying^ Vngirt tmhleft. Of the picmre of God the Father,
Of the
Ofthti
picture of Sun,
Moon, and
or Eajier
the IVinds.
Sun daincing
da v.
Of the Sillj-How or covering about fome childrens heads. Of being drunh^ once a moneth. chap.2i}. Of the appearing of the devil with a ciovenhoof. Of the prediction of the year, enfuing from the infects in Oak^ applei^^
O/Mofcs hif Rod in the difcovery of Mines. Of difcovering of doutfuU matters by book, orjlaff.
chap. 22,
Hiftorical.
'A
'
,'
Concerning
Of mens
they
time'thereof ii not
precifely kjtown, as
commonly it if prefumed. Chapter.i what feafon or point of the Zodiack^it began, that as are generally made they are in vain, and its particularly incerenquiries in
tain.
chap.2.
Of
Alronomen and, and which is jiiH retained by fome, if very quejiionable. chap. 3. Offome computation of dayes, and didi&ions of one part of the year unto
unto
ents,
and four quarters of the year, according Fhyfttiam, that the common compute of the Anci-
another.
chap.:|.
of God
in the f.te
and motion
Concerning the vulgar opinion, that the earth was flenderly peopled before the flood. chap.6.
Of the feven heads of Nile. Of the greatnefs of Nile. Of its inundation, aud certain time Ihat it never raineth in JCgypt, &c. Of the Red Sea.
chap.8.
thereof, '>' \'
'
Of
Of the fame.
cbap.ii*
chap. 12.
digrefsionofBlacknefs.
Or
Ojfome
othtrs,
chap. 14,
THESE V E N TH BOOK,
Conccnjiigniai'j Hilloiial Tenents, generally received, and fome d.^diiced from the Hiftory of holy Scripture.
Chapter.i.
livi'V
lefs
then a JVontan.
chap.
before the flood.
3.
Rainhow
chap-.^.
OfSeWyHinnandJapber.
Tower ofBibelrvas erecred againj a fecond th<> M^ndral^es Of of Leah, Of the three Kings of Coil: in.
th.'
chap. 5.
Deluge^. riiap.6.
chap.7. chap.g.
chap.^i.
Of the fofid of John the T,api{t in the wilder nefs. Of the conceit that John the Evange!ijiJJ:ould mt Of fome others ynore hrieflj, Of the c flat ion ofOracl.'s.
die.
Of th'tdeatb
Of Of
of Arijistle. the wifh oj Philoxeniis to have the nech^ of a Crane. the lak^e Afphaltites, or the dead Sea:
ch-ap.ij.
cliap.14.
chap.15.
Of
That our Saviour never laughed. Of Sergius the fecand^ or Bacca de Porco. 7 hat Tamerlane w.is a Scjthianjhepherd.clrd-^. 16.
Decumanm-i
or the tenth
wave.
OfParifitif that pojfoned Statira by one fide of a kjtife. Of the yvontan fed with poyfon thatfjould have poyfoned Alexander.
Jew.
Of frier
Of
Thji
ef
I'picurm.
More
the
breifly.
thro'yrh the
Ar^ny of Xerxes drank^whole Kivers dry. That Hanihaltat Alps with Vinegur. Of Archimedes hpt burning the Ships Marcellm. Of the Fahii that were all flain. Of the death of ALf,
ehylm.
the
Of the
grea t Shijp
Tarfm^ ani, Anchiale imlt in one day. Of Syracufta or Alexandr ia. Of the Spartan boy'es. c. 18.
Cities of
s
Offomeijihers.
Oj fome
Mat^JinalllHuftrattons omitted, or to be added to the Difcourfcs of Uin'3uridj and of the Giirdenof CjmS^
O PV<c 5.Double P. 9.
cent.
Atfolom, Ahfolom^ Ahfolom.Szm. 2. 18. Sepulture of Abraham, Vet mihi f^eluftcam dupH-
Gen.
23.
which could nor be buinr. Lamp ok Gal* P. 16. Vyyrhus his Toe the note out o( Licetmin whom it is to be ' refers vaHus to which
feen aiid defcribcd.
the Skeleton of an Horfe, which is P. 18 .GaricJj : that part in skulls : for their extraordinary Negro's hanch-boucS. the mad'c^ by
thickneiie.
in Uomer^ -^^j^n ^^Ceu^ Tpi^ice Lucian. in Afphodells ^^^ ffAHT'Jpsi/ ix"^' ftiow in feveral Countries, P. 27. Of the Mummies which giving chcin what Names they pkafej and unto fome the Names of the old Egyptian Kings out of Herodotus. P. 27. Firft llorie before the flood Vagnns could doubt. Euripides, Light in Arties. According to the cuftome of the Jewes, who place a lighted wax-candle in a pot of aflx's by the Corps. Leo. according to tlie P! 29. Wood, Pitch, a Mourner, and an Urne Epitaph of KvJM and BeronicamGr titer m^ Nee ex.
: :
P. 21. Four or five dayes ; at living Eyes. P. 22. Of the Mafailine gender
Icali
by
fonie difference
from
mm
Eorum
Et Et
P. 29,
^od pifficeret
prfica
ad emendam pyram
c&nd^a
in Greek, Latlne, Hebrew, /gyptian, Arabick, defaced by Liciniits the Emperour. the largvf fort of Medals. Be armis fcaccaP. 41. Medallions tif^ t^As rcfersto ^dgc^i. ztUcrdilds.
:
upon a
^'//^
Magot
Maggot found
al-
moa
1/1
every h.^ad.
p. 4?. Upon Pollards : upoii pollard Oaks and Thorns. p. 51. VVhile the JnIus : Thefe and more to b.; found upon otut Oaks ; HOC well dcfcribed by any till, the. Edition Qi^heairum BatuH'Cui:-*,
P. 52.
Number
five.
P. 56. No lefs theit four : (nyihtu koi\U, KiK^vipAKof i;^/'Mf, 'Vvrpiy. AriH. nia^n!4f venter Keticulmn^ omirfus, abomafiis. Gaza.
^^
"^^
P. 57. thcftalk : below. to be obfervcd in white P. 58. The iiifTet Neck 'which afterward vanifheth.
.
young Lambs^
P. SS.Vecujfavit eunu iyjctftv ivroy \v 7$ to-vt}. P. 69. In many, asHerns, Bitterns^and long claw'dFowl?, P. 70. Neftar of the life Planet. O.fculaquaVenus
'
^inta
in the Enquirie?. read SaltLnibancos./?.57. 7.33. r. fluor. p. 5p. Z.^^. r. icecles. p. 60. I. 2. r. containing. /. 5. r. in the. p, 88. /. 39. '^.V^and. p. 102. /. S. r. Fioravanti. p. 113. ^f/d-inthat. />. 114. dele
ERTLATA
PAge
II. line'),
front the to fo. /'.115./.27. r, that Gamphyre eunuchate's.^.i3y. l.i$, fnarg, r. yhvu a yoyix angulus. p. 211. /. 2. r. Owl. p. 215. /. ^. r. fetid, p. 216. r, fuavis odor lucri. p. 224. /. 15. dele feeing, p. 293. /. Jilt, r. Right hand. ;. 397. 7.3 1. r. difcover that. /. penult, for fulphur
r.
r.
/.
colour, p. ^^^. /. 24^ r. cold. p. 400. /. 40. r. motion, p. 403. /. 2. inquinatioiis. p. 406'. 7.2. r. of them. J) . 413,7.37. r. falarie. 7>. 414. 15. r. humble us. p. 426. /. 36. r. altitude.;^. -453. /. 13, r. Ovation. In the Vifcourfes annexed,
ult.
/.
II. r. inflowen. in
onttf.
p. 1.
1.
4. r.
Kake.
burned, p. 6. 1. 6. r.ln. 1. penult, r. Trafutagus. p.7. 1. 15. wunkjiown. 1. 31. dele with. p. 8. 1. 22. r. havemade. p.ii.1.2. r. Anfgarim. \. 36. r. great perfons. p. 12. 1. ip. r. and. p. 13. 1. ult. r. Kufl,
40.
r.
p. 1.6.
r.
1.
gnawd,
24. r. Vlato. 1. 36. r. well. p. 23. 1. 42. dele and. p. 25. 1. 15. r. fironger. p. 27. 1. 29. after riwf, thefe words to come in, [without the flavour of th." everlajiingregijhr.'^^. 2S. r. j-o/^m. p. 29. I. 18; r.fiage.
p. 22,
I.
}.
14.
r.
doubled,
I.
v.
kvyurm.
p.'
1.
1.
19.
I.
r.
Recfangular.
"p- ^S-.
ig:i\ Tenupha.
13. for
p. 39.
ly.Y. Sons,
42.
5. r. Chapiters,
p. 43.
I.
and
r.
24. y.firjiranck^.
P45.
1.
33. 49. \.2i. roots, ad and fprouts. p. 50. 1. 15. r. powers. 1. 25. dele fecond and. p. 5 1. 1.4. after trf^j, addej^/?/ /j /^^^^ acccption it confprifeth all vegetables^ for the frutex and fufrutex are
r. pi/7^/7. p.
47.
r. T'eazel. p.
vnder
1.
16. r.
dofmg. p.53.
1.6.
Delphinium, p. 54. 1. 17. r. pliant'. \>. ')7.r. Aiain. p. 58. 1. 10. r. flars. p. 59. 1. penult, t. gentrality. p. 61.1. 13. Y.pot. p. 63. 1. 32 8c ^^.r.four. dele ineverj one. p.64. l.i. y.jiand vot.-^. 66. i.-2i. r. Pluto, p. 68. 1. I2. r. which was.
'
.1
GENERAL PART.
CHAP,
Of
fK.<9-i
I.
the Catifes
of Common Errori
J^Jn'f3
^"^""'
:
nion infirmity of humane Nature 5 of whofe deceptible condition, although perhaps there fliould not need amy other eviftion, then the frequent errors we (hall om fclves commit, even in the exprefs declarenient hereof: Yet (hall we ilhiftratc the fame from more infaUible conllitutions, and perfons prefumed as far from us in condition, as time, that is our (irft and ingenerated fore-fathers. From whom as we derive our being, and rhe feverall wounds of conftitution i fo may we in fome manner excufe our infirmities in the depravity of thofe parts, whofe traduftions were pure in them, and their originals but once removed from God. Who notwithftanding f if 3/atccr bf po(lerity may take leave to judge of the faft, as they are aflured to great difputc fufrerinthepuni(hmenc)were grofly deceived in their perfefbionj and fo weakly deluded in the clarity of their underf^anding, that it be fo deed, hath left no fmall obfcurity in ours, how error (hould gain upon ved, them.
t)le
firlt. They were decived by Sataiii and that not in an invifiinfinuation, but an open and difcoverable apparition, that is, in the forni of a Serpentj whereby although there were many occalions
^015^^
For
fpeftion, yet did the unwary appreheniion thereof. It hath therefore feesned flrange
offufpition, and fuch as could not ealily cfcape a weaker circupioiEve take no advantage
unto fome^
(he (hould
be
a Scrpenc, or fubjeft her reafon to abeail, which God I 1 r*^u-^^ had fubjefted imto hers. It hath empuz^eled the enquiries of others to apprehend, and enforced them unto ftrange conceptions, to make
ovvt
Enpirifi
into
mga/
fhe
BOOK: I*
could difcourfe with fuch a outj how without fear or doubt creature, or hear a Serpent fpeak, without fufpirion of impoilure. The wits of others have been To bold as to accufe her limplicity in receiving his temptation fo coldl/i and when fuch fpccious effefts of the fruit were promifedj as to make them like gods, not to defirc, at leaft not to wonder he purfued not that benefit himlelf And had it been their own cafe would perhaps have leplied. If the taftc of this fruit maketh the eaccrs like gods, why remainft thou a beaftMf it makethus but like gods, we are fo already. If thereby our eyes (hall be opened hereafter, they are at prefent quick enough to difcover thy deceit, andwedefire them no opener to behold our own ihame. If to know good and evil be our advantage, although we have free will unto both, we delire to perform but one^ we know 'tis good to obey the Commandment of God, but evil if we tranfgrefs it. They were deceived by one another, and in the greateil: difadvantage of deluijon, that is, thf ftroager by the weaker: For Eve prefented the fruit, and Adam received it from her. Thn^ the Serpent vfzs cunning enough to begin the deceit in the weaker and the weaker of ftrength fufficient to confummate rhe fraud in the ftronger. A.rt and fallacy was ufed unto her,a naked offer proved fufficient unto hira:So his fuperilruftion was his ruine,a!id thefertility of his fleep, an iifue of death unto him. And although the condition of fex and pofterioAdam Tuppo- rity of creation might fomewhat extenuate the error of the woman: ltd by (omc Yet was it very ftrange and inexcufable in the man i efpecially, if as affirni,he was the wife!} of all men fincejor if as others have con^^^^ the wlrcf"iin ccived, he was not ignorant of the fall of the Angels, and had theretlic ever was. by example andpuni/hmenttodecer him. They were deceived from themfelves , and their own appreheiifions ; for Eve either miftook or traduced the Commandment of God. Of every tree of the garden thou mayeft freely ear5but of the tree of knowledge of good and evil thou (halt not eat, for in the day thou eatert thereof, thou (hall furely die. Now Eve upon the q^ie(Hon of the Serpei^t returned the precept in different terms: You (hall not eac of ir, neither (hall you touch it,left perhaps you die. In which delivery,there were no lefs then two miftakesjOr rather additional mendacities i for the Commandment forbad not the touch oF the fruit, and p'olitively faid ye (hall furely die \ but (he extenuaiing, replied, ne forte worawimj left perhaps ye die.For Co in the vulgar trantladon it runneth, and fo is it expre(J;^d in the T'bar^um or Paraphafe ot Jonathan. And therefore although it be faid, and that very trulj, that the Devil vva^ a liar from the beginning, yet was the womati herein the firft exprefs beginner and falliried twice before the reply of Satan.And therefore alfo to fpeak f^riftiy, thelin of the fruit was nod the firft offence :They Bri\ tranfgr-eTed the rule of their own reafoi^ and after, the Commandment of God. .,
:
'
They
BOOKL
iiitelleftuals
"
AdmindEvi
fell,
whereby although
,
infervient and brutal faculties controle the fuggeftion of rcafon : Pleafure and profit already overfwaying the iuHrruftions of ho-
tue
nefty and^ fenfuality perturbing the reafonable commands of ver For fo is it delivered in the text : That when the woman 5 faw that the tree was good for food, and that it was pleafant unto the
make one wife, ftie took of the fruit hereby it appearech, that Eve before the eat. Now did thereof and feUjWas by the fame and beaten way of allurements inveigled^whereby her pofterity hath been deluded ever lince^ that is, thofe three delivered by Saint JohHy the lull of the flefli, the luft of the eye, and the pride of life; Wherein indeed they feemed as weakly to fail, as their debilitated pofterity, ever after. Whereof notwithftanding fome in their imperfeftions, have reiifted more powerfull temptacionsj and Mam whence iu many moralities condemned the facility of their feduftions. Again, Th ey might for ought we know, be ftill deceived in the (probably) in* unbelief of their mortality, even after they had eat of the fruit,For <lu**tcat. Eve obferving no immediate execution of the ciufe,ftie delivered the fruit nmo Adam who after the tafte thereof, perceiving himfelf ftill to live,might yet remain in doubt, whether he. had incunei death 5 which perhaps he did not indubitably believe, uniill he was after corivifted in the vilible example of Jhe/. For he that would not believe the menace of God at firft,it may be doubted whether before an ocular example, he believed the curfe at laft. And therefore they Whether Cam are not without all reafon, who have difputed the faft of C<zi, that L^Sr^lw*^^ * is, although he purpofed to mifchief, whether he intended to murther his brotherjor deligned that, whereof he had not beheld an
ye, and a tree to be defired to
example in his own kind. There might be fomewhat in it that he w<mld not have done, or deiired undone, when he brake forth as defperately, as before he had done uncivillyj Mjiniquitj is greater then
can be forgit en me.
Some niceties I confefs there are which extenuate, but many mors that aggravate this delufionj which exceeding the bounds of this Difcourle, and perhaps our fatisfaftion, we fhall at prefent pafs
And therefore whether the fin of our firft parents were the great eft of any fince, whether the tranfgreflion oiEve feduci ng, did not exceed that of ^^^w feduceds or wliether the reliftibility of his reafon did not equivalence the facility of her feduftion. We ftiall refer it imto the Schoolman. Whether there was not in Eve as great
over.
injuftice in deceiving her
her
husband, as imprudence in being deceived the fruit, her eyes were opened before hisj and ftie knew the eifeft of it, before he tafted of it we leave it unto the Moralift. Whether the ^holc relation be not Allegorical
felf, cfpccially if foretafting
that
4
Ther/;a//. ii^i Allcgo-
BOOK
L,
wlictlicr the
temptation of the
of the rational, and fiigher parts, by the inferiour and or whether the tree in the midft of the garden^ H fto"r'''i!f ^rf7wandEvf'i w^re not that part in the center of the body, on which was afterward the appointment of circumcifioii in males, we leave it unto fall, the thaltnud'iii. whether there were any policy in the devil to tempt them before the conjunftion, or whether the ifllie before tentation might in juftice have fiifFered with thofe after, we leave it unto the Lawyer. Whether y^^^zw foreknew the advent of Chrift, ortherepa^ ration of his error by his Saviourj how the execution of the curfe ihould have been ordered, if after Eve had eaten, Adam had yet refufed. Whether if they Iiad tafted the tree of life before that of good and evil, they had yet fuffered the curfe of mortality^ or whether the efficacy of the one had not over-powered the penalty of the other, we leave it unto God. For he alone can truly determine thefe and all things elfe j Who as he hath propofed the world unto our difputation, fo hath he referved many things imto his own refolutiouj whofe determinations we cannot hope from flefh; but muft with reverence fufpend unto that great day, whofe jufticefhall either condcnm our ciirioiities, or refolve our difquiiitions. Laftly, Man was not only deceiveable in his integrity, but the Angels of light' in all their clarity. He that faid he would be like the higheft, did err, if in fome way he conceived not himfelf fo already; but in attempting fo high an effeft from himfelf, he mif-underftood the nature of God, and held a falfe apprehenfion of his own^ whereby vainly attempting not only infolencies,but impoffibilities, he deceived himfelf as low as hell. In brief, there is nothing infallible but Godj who cannot poHibly err. For things are really true as they cprrefpond unto his conception^ and have fomuch verity as they hold of conformity unto that intelleft, in whofe Idea they had their, firft determinations. And therefore being the rule, he cannot be irjegularj nor being thith it felf^conceav eably admit the impoflible focicty of error.
ti^e fediiftion
fen^inine faculties
CHAP.
lr4
IL
it is no wonder if their conceptions were deceitfull, and could fcarce fpeak without an error
For what is very remarkable (" and no man I know hath yet obferved ) in the relation of Scripture before the flood, there is but one fpeech delivered by nianp wherein there is not an erronions conception j
BOOK
t.
"d^jJ
Comnm ERR0R5.
ception; and ftrlAIy examined, moft hainouflj irtjiirious unto truth. The pen of Mofes is brief in the account before theflood, and the fpeeches recorded are lix. The firft is that of Adam, when upon diecxpoflulation of God^ he replied^ I heard thy voice in the garden, andbecaufe I was naked, Ihidniyfelf. In which reply, there was included a very grofs raiftake, and if with pertinacity maintained, a high and capital error. For thinking by this retirement to obfcure hinifelf from God , he infringed the omnifciency and eiTential ubiquity of his Maker.Whoas he createdcall things,fo is he beyond and iji them all,not only in power, as under his fubjei:ion,oj- in his prefence, as being in his cognition, but in his very Eflence , as being the foul of their caufalities, and the eflential caufe of their exiften.cies.CertainIy,his pofterity at this diftance and after fo perpetuated an impairment, cannot but condemn the poverty of his conception, that thought to obfcure hinifelf from his Creator in the (hade of the garden, who had beheld him before in the darknefs of his Chaos, and the great obfcurity of nochingj That thought to fiie from God, which could not flie hinifelf, or imagined that one tree fhoulc^ conceal hisnakednefsfiom Gods eye, as another had revealed it unto his own. Thofe tormented fpirits that wiOi the mountains to cover them, have fallen upon de/ires of minor abfurdity, and chofen waies
of lefs improbable concealment. Though thisbealfo as ridiculous unto reafon, as fruitlefs unto their delires; for he that laid the foundations of the earth, cannot be excluded the fecrecy of the mountains; nor can there anything efcape the perfpicacity of thofe eyes which were before light, and in whofe opticks there is no opacity. This is the confolation of all good men, unto whom his ubiquity afFordeth continual comfort and fecurity : And this is the aftliftion of hell, imto whom it affordeth defpair, remedilefs calamity. For thofe reftlefs fpirits that flie the face of the Almighty, being deprived the fruition of his eye, would alfo avoid the extent of his handj which being impoflible, their fufferings are defperate, and their affUftions without evaliouj untill they can get out of Tri/w^gi/fw his circle, that is, to extend their wings above the univerfe,. and pitch
beyond ubiquity.
The fecond is that fpeech ofAdam unto God ; The woman whom thou gaveft me to be with nie,{he gave me of the Tree, and I did eat. This indeed was an unfatisfaftory reply, and therein was involved a vccy impious error, as implying God the Author of fin, and acculing his Maker of his trantgreifion. As if he had faid,lf thou hadfl nor given me a woman I had not been deceived Thou promifedfl to make her a help,bur fhe hath proved deflruftion unto me Had 1 remained alone 1 had not finned, but thou gavefl me a confoit, and fo I became feduced. This was a bold and open acaifation of God, making the foiuitaihof good the contriver of eviljand the foi bidder
: :
:Enpmei
into
rulgAr
BOOK". I.
of the crime an abetter of the faft prohibited.Surely his mercy was great that did not revenge the impeachment of his jnllice; And his goodnefs to be admired, that it refuted not his argument in the punifbment of his excufation, or only puifuedthe firft traiifgrdlion without a penalty of this the fecond. The third was. that of y.'vv. The Serpent beguiled me, and I did eat. In which reply there was} not.only a very feeble excufe, but an erroneous trauflaiing her own oifence upon another. Extenuating her fin from that which was an aggravation, that is to excufe the fa't at all, much more upon the luggeftion of a beaft, which was before in the ftrifeeft terms prohibited by her God, For although we now do hope the mercies of God will confider our degenerated integrities unto Tome minoration of our oifences, yet had nor the lincerity of our firft parents, fo colourable expeftations, unto whom the commandment vvas but iingle, and their integrities beft able to reliftthe motions of its tranfgreilion. And therefore fo heinous con ceptions have rifen hereof,that fome have feemed more angry therewith, then God himfelf: Being fo exafperated with the offence, as to call in queftion their falvation,and lo difpute the eternal punifhmenc of their Maker. Airurediy with better reafon may porter ity accufe them then they the Serpent, or one anotherj and the difpleafure of the Pf/<rgi/?;fr muft needs be irreconcilable, who peremptorily maint-aining they can fulfill the wliole Law, will infatisfadorily condemn the non-obfervation of one. The fourth was that fpeech of Cain upon the demand of God, Vl'^here is thy brother .? and he faid, I know not. In which negation, belide the open impudence, there was implied a notable eiTor ? for returning a lie unto his Maker, and pre fuming in this manner to put off tiie fearcher of hearts, he denied the omniThe anfciency of God,whereunto there is nothing concealable. fwerof Satan in the cafe of Job^ had more of truth, wifdom and Whence comeft thou Satan ? and he faid, reverence, then this from compafling of the Earth. For though an enemy of God, and hater of all Truth, his wifdom will hardly permit him to falfiFor well underftanding the omnifciencc fie with the All-mighty. of his nature, he is not fo ready to deceive himfelf, as to falfiAnd therefic unto him whofe cognition is no way deludable. fore when in the tentation of Chrift he played upon the fallacy, and thought to decieve the Author of Truth , the nethod of this ThedevU proceeding arofe- from the uncertainty of his Divinity 3 whereof knc* not our 1^^^ |^e remained affured, he had continued lilent i nor would And fo ^^^ difcretion attempt fo unfucceedable a temptation. God"tvbe \c into acdrawn be I aft day, when our offences (hall the at again lemptcd hki.^ compt, the fubtilty of that Inquifitor fliall not prefent unto God . bundle of cahimnies or confutable acciUations 3 but will difcreeti .
BOOK. L
ly oifer w^ unto
tranfgrellions.
his
and
Commn bRRORS.
lift
7
of our
The fifth is
cuife.
My iniquity
another reply of Cam upon the denouncement of his is greater then can be forgiven : For fo is ic
expreired in fonie Tranflations. The affertion was not oncly df-fperate, Ltit the conceit erroneous , overthrowing that glorious Attribute of God, his Mercy, and conceiving the fin of muider unpardonable. VVhich h ow great foever, is not above the repentance of man, but far below the uKrcies of God, and was fas fome conceive) expiated inthat punifhmenthe fufFered temporally for it.
There are but two examples of this eiror in holy Sciipture, and they both for murder, and both as it were of the fame perfoui for Chrill: vv as myftically flain in Abel^ and therefore Cain had fome int^uenceon his death as well ik^ Judas but the fin had a different effect on Ctf/, from that it had on Judas; and nioft that fince
i
have fallen into it j for they like j^//c/^defi re death, and not unfrequently purfue it : Cain on the contrary grew afraid thereof, and obtained a fecurement from it. Afliiredly if his difpair continued, there was puni/hment enough in lift, and Juftice fufticient in the mercy of his proteftion. For the life of the defperare equals the anxieties of deaih J who in unce/Tanr inquietudes but aft the life of the damned , and anticipate the defolations of hell. 'Tis in. deed a fin in man, bur a punifhment only in Devils, who offend not Godbutaftiiftthemfelves, in the appointed dffpair of his mercie?. And as to be without all hope is the affdftion of the damned, fo is itthehappinefie of the blefled ; who haveing their expeftacions prtfent, are not dif^rafted with futurities. So is it aifo their felicity to have no Faith ; for enjoying the beatifical vifion, there is no>. tiiing unto them inevident;and in the fruition of die objeft of F-aith_, thev have received the full evacuation of it. The laft fpeech was that of L^wcc^, I have (lain a man to wound, and a young nia!i to my hurt : liCain be avenged feven fold, truly Lay>ifch ievenry and feven fold. Now herein there feems to be a very erroneous Illation > from the indulgence of God unto Crfi, concluding an immunity unio himfelf j that is, a regular proteftlon from a.ingleexamplej/Jnd an exemption from piminiment in a fiift that naturally delerved it. The Error of this ofFendor was contra17. to that of Ctf/>, whom the Rabkins conceive that Latnecb at this time killed. He defpaired of Gods mercy in the fame Fad, where
my
t^'Z'^.
^'^r
.
at
this
prefumtd of
ip
heby adecollacion
^^^^^'"s
operate to their con verfions ; So his juftice will not exaaa.cccunt tinue tneir rrafgreiiions.
is it
Mnj
Ill us
Enqumei into VulgAr BOOK.l. Thus 'may we perceive, how weakly our fathers did err before the Floudi how continually and upon common difcourfe they fell upon errors after^k is therefore no wonder we have been erroneous cverfince; And being now at greateft diftance from the beginning
of error, are almoft
lefs,
loft in its
and
confeflTe
no circumfcription.
CHAP.
of
Ill
;
the
erroneum
fallible nature of man even from hij produftion, we have beheld the general caufe of error. But as for popular errors, they are more neerly founded upon an erroneous inclination of the people j as being the moi\ deceptable part of mankind, and ready wich open arnis to receive the encroachments of error. Which condition of theirs akhough dediiceable from many grounds, yet fliall we evidence it but from a few, and fuch as moft neerly and undeniable declare their natures. How unequal difcerners of truth they are, and openly expofed unto error, will firft appear from their unqualified intelieftuals, unable to umpire the difficulty of its diflentions. For error, to fpeak largely, is afalfe judgement of things, or an a/Tent unto faliity. Now whether the objeft whereunto they deliver up their affent be true or falfe, they are incompetent judges. For the afTured truth of things is derived from the principles of
Hi
,firft
-.
..
knowledge, and caufes which detemiine their verities. Whereof their uncultivated underftandings , fcarce holding any theory, they are but bad difcerners of verity ; and in the numerous track of error, but cafual ly do hit the point and unity of truth. Their underftanding is fo feeble in the difcernment of falfities, and averting the errors of reafon, that it fubmitteth unto the fallacies of fenfe,and is unable to reftifie the error of its fenfations. Thus ^^^ greater part of mankind having but one eye of fenCe and
reafon, coiiceive the earth far bigger then the Sun, the fixed Stars lefler then the Moon, their figures plain, and their fpaces from
earth equidiftant. For thus their fenfe informeth them, andhereArguments of jn their reafon cannot reftifie them j and therefore hopelefly contifcnfitivc quali-
-,
palling their
vaUme
on vulgar
cflpac ticj.
dayes in perverted apprehenfions, and conceptions of the world, derogatory unto God and the wifdoni of the creation, Again being fo illiterate in the point of intel left, and their fenfe of
1Book''I.
iW Common
Errori,
jcnhcivc
$
Argumentt of
qa-
To incorrefted, they are fartlier indifpofed ever to artain anto truth, as commonly proceeding in thofewaycs, which have moil
j-cfercnceiintofenle,
and wherein there lycth moft notable and po- y],-'ii^ pular delillion. vulgar For being unable to weild the incelleftual arms of reafon, they lici. are fain to betake themfelves unto wallers and the blunter weapons of truth i atFefting tlie grofs and feiilible v/aies of doctrine, and fuch
us will
JI^^
ctfaci<
not
coiilift
with
is
Itritt
and
fubtile reafon.
a piece of Rhetorick
a fufticient
o^ JEfopi beyond a Syllogifm in Barbara-^ parables then propofitions, and proverbs more powerful tlven demonilrations. And therefoie are they led rather by example 3 then precept; receiving perfwalions from viiible inducements , before cleftual inftruftions. And therefore alfo they judge of humane aftions by tlie eventj of operable circumftances , or rightbeing uncapable ly to judge the prudentiality of affairs, they onely gaze upon the viiible fuccefs , and thereafter condemn or cry up the whole And fo from this groimd in the Lefture of holy progrellion. their apprehenfions are commonly Confined unco the Scripture, literal fenfe of the Text j from whence have enfued the grofs and For not attaining the deuterofcopy , and duller fort of Hereiies. feccnd intention of the words, they are fain to omit their Superconfequencies. Coherencies, Figures, or Tropologies ; and arc
for
fire
beyond
their literalities.
And
therefore alfo things inviiible , but unto intelleftual difcernments, ro humour the grofsnefs of their comprehenlions, have been degraded from their proper forms, and God himfelf diihonoured And fo likewife being unprovided , or into manual expreffions. unfufficient for higher fpeculations,they will aiwayes betake thenifelves unto fenfible reprefencations , and can hardly be reftranied the dulnefs of Idolatry. A lin or folly not only derogatory unto God, h\\t men overthrowing tiieir reafon , as well as his divinity. In brief, a reciprocation , or rather an Inveriion of the Creation; making God one way, as he made us another ; that is, after our Image, as he made us after his own.
;
Moreover, their underftanding thus weak in it felf, and perverted by feniible deluiions, is yet farther impaired by the dominion of their appetite; that is , the irrational and brutal part of the foul, which lording it over the foveraign faculty , interrupts the anions of tliac noblepart,and choaks thofe tender fparksjwiiich Adam hath lef-t them of reafon. And therefore they do not onely fwarm with errors , but vices depending thereon. Thus they commonly atfctft no man any further then he deferts his reafon, or complios ^vith their aberrancies. Hence they imbracenot vercuefor it felf, but its reward and the argimient from pleafurc or uti;
liry
-i
E^uiries
lity is far
into
Vu!g4r
^ook.
I.
morerpowerfullj then that from vertuous honefty : which Mahomet ^iid liis conrrivers well iiiiderftoodj when he fet out the feUciry of his heaven, by the contentments of flefh, and rhe delights of fenfe ^flic^htly paiiin^ over the accomplifhnient of the foul, and the btaritiideof that part which earth andviiibilities too weakly afftft. Bnt the wifdoni of our Saviour, and the limplicity of his truth proceeded another way^ defying the popular provifions of happinelTe from fenhble expectations , placing his felicity in things remov^^ from fenfe, and the intelleftual enjoyment of God. And thereJalirtn, fore the doftrine of the one was never afraid of llniveriitiesjor endeavoured the baniOiment of learning like the other. And though Galen doth fometime nibble at Mofes^ and beiide the Apoxlate Chrftian, fome Heathens have queftioned his Philofophical part or treaty of the Creation : Yet is there furely no reafonable Tagan^ that will not admire the rationall and well groun'ed precepts of Ch rift i whofe life^ as it was conformable unto his doftrine, fo was that unto the higheft rules of reafon 5 and muil therefore flourifh in the advancement of learning, and the perfeftion of parts beft able to compi'ehend it. Again, Their individual imperfeftions being great, they are moreover enlarged by their aggregation j and being enoneous in their (ingle numbers once hudled together, they will be error it felf. For being a confufion of knaves and fools, and a farraginous concurrence of all conditions, tempers, fex, an ages , it r'n but natural if their determinations be monftrous, and many vvaies inconliftent with truth. And therefore wife men have alwaies applauded their own judgement, in the contradiftion of that of the people ; and their fobereft adverfaries, have ever afforded them the liile of fools and mad men ; and to fpeak impartially, their aftions have often made good thefe Epithites. j(q fani ejle Had Orejies been Judge, he would not have acquitted that Lyjirian h^mi^ts, w#/i rabble of madnefle, who upon a vilible miracle, falling into fo fain^ \uratO' j^jgj^ ^ conceit of Vaid and Bumahasy that they termed the one ujtei. Jtipiter^ the other Mercuriiis j that they brought oxen and garlands, and were hardly retrained from facrihcing unto them did notwithftanding fuddenly after fall upon Fau! ^ and having ftoned 'Jiim drew him for dead out of the city. It ipiight have hazarded the fides of Vemocritus ^ had he been prefent at that tumUjlt of Demetrius j when the people flocking together in great numbers , fome cryed one thing , and fome another^ and the aflembly was confufed , and the moft part knew not wherefore they were come together } notwithftanding,, all with one voice for the fpace of two hours cried out, great is Diana of the Ephefians. It had overcome the patience of Jo^ as it did the meekneUe of Mofes^ and would furely have maftered any , but the
Book.
I.
and Common
Errors^
the longaiiiniity and lafting fufferance of God ; Had they beheld the mutinie in the wildeme/Te , when after ten great miracles in JEg^pt i and fonie in the fame place, they melted down their lloln ear-rings into a calf, and monftroufly cryed out : Thefe are Ifrael 3 that brought thee out of the land of JEgypt, thy gods It much accufeth the impatience of Peter ^ who could not endure the ftaves of the multitude, and is the grcateft example of lenity in our Saviour, when he deiired of God forgivenelfe unto thofe, who having one day brought him into the City in triun;ph, did prefently after, aft all di(honour upon him, and nothing coul3 be heardbutCn'C/;%^ in their courts. Certainly he that coniiderech
Gods peculiar people,will ealily difcern how little of truth there is in the wayes of the njiultitude ^ and though fometimes they are flattered with that ^^^or;y>?/, will hardly believe the \'oice of the people to be the voice of God. Laffly, Being thus divided from truth in themfelves, they are yet farther removed by advenient deception. For true it is (and I hope I /hall not offend their vulgarities, J if I fay they are daily mocked into error by fubtkr devifors , and have been exThus the Priefts of* prefly deluded by all profeflions and ages* Elder tinie, have put upon them many incredible conceits, not only deluding their apprehenfiohs with AriolatiOn, South-faying and ftich oblique Idolatries , but winning their credulities unto the literal and down-right adorement of Cats, Lizzards: and Beetles. And thus alfo in fonie Chriftian Churches, wherein is prefumed an irreprovable truth, if all be true that is fufpefted, or half what is related, there have not wanted many ftrange deceptions^ and fome thereof are ftill confeffed by the name of pious frauds. Thus Theudai an Impoftor was able to lead away four thoufand into the wildernefTc, and the deluiions of Mahomet almoft the fourth part of niankinde-. Thus all hercfies, howgrofs foever, have found a welcome with the people. For thus, many of the Jews were wrought into belief that Herod was the Mef'
thefe things in
fuK; and "David George
"
of Leyden and Arden ^ were not without a party amongft the peopl-e, who maintained the fame opinion of themfelves almoft in our dayes.
Phylitians (many at leaft that make profefHon thereof) bcfide divers lefs difcoverable waies of fraud, have made them believe, there is the book of fate, or the power of Aarom- brcfl^plate in
therefore hereunto they have recourfe, as unto the j^^ ,gjfj, Oracle of life, the gi^at determinator of virginity, conception, by Urinefertility, and the infcnitable infirmities of the whok body. For as though thftewere a feminality Urine, or that like the feed it carried with it the Idea of every part, they foolifhly conceive,
Urines*
And
Jg^jj;"^J*^
W Yiiibly behold
therein
trlie
Anatomy of every
thereby
12
Book.
I.
thertby iucrigitate their diftafes And running into any demands, cxpcft from\is a fudJcn refolution in things, wJicreon the Devil of Vc/phos would demurriand we know hath taken refpite of foms daycs
roanfwer ealicrqucftions.
Pbccs
in I'e-
Siiltimbalcoei^ ^tickjitilvers , and Charlatans:, deceive them in Were ^/o/> alive, the Piazza und Pont-Neuf coi]\(i lower degrees.
i'peak their fallacies^ mean while there are too many, For their impoftures ^vhofe cries caiuiot conceal their mifchief. are fuU of cruelty, and worfe then any other i deluding not only unto pecuniary defraudations, but the irreparable deceit of
*^"=*"'^^''"^'
not but
ubanlc"play'
ihtlr i^ranks.
death.
(fuch have not been wanting in who having won their belief unto principles their deceptions ; whereof they make great doubt themfelves, have made tliem believe that arbitrary events below, have neceflary caufes, above; whereupon their credulities afTent unto any prognolHcks 5 and daily fwallow the prediftions of men, which conlidering tlie independencie of their caiifes, and contingencie in their events , are only in the prefcience of Goti. Fortune-tellers, Juglers, Geomancers, and the like incantatory impoilors, though conmionly men of inferiour lank , and from whom without illumination they can expeft no more then from themfelves, do daily and profeiFedly delude them. Unto whom (what is deplorable in men and Chriftians) too many applying themfelves betwixt jeft and earneft, betray the caufe of truth, and infeniibly make up the legionary body of error. StatifU and Politicians ^ unto whom Kagione di Stato , is the as though it were their bulinefTe to deceive firft conliderable ,
I
mean
worthy Enquiry
>
do hold, that truth is to be concealed from tlum ui to whom although they reveal the viiible deligne, yet do they commonly conceal the capitalL intention. And theretore have they ever been the inftruments of great deijgnes, yec feldom undcdiood the true intention of any i accomplishing the
of wifej heads, as in animate and ignorant Agents, the general defigne of the world j who though in fome latitude of feiifc,, and in a natura^ cognition perform their proper aftions, yet do
drifts
they unknowingly concur unto higher ends, and^bfnidiy advance the great intention of nature. Now how far rhcy may be kept The people of jj^ ianorance a great example there is in the people of Koma wha XoiBc why nc \ /^r u tt knew the true and proper name of their own City, for Ycr fuffcicd to"^^^^'
1
1
common
appellation recived
name
CQiicealed
fecret is Ceremoni arum nefas habetur, faith.. P/7if ; left luito their enemies, their P^-
natts
Book.
I.
IP^^
ff
Mates and Patronal Gods, might be called fordi by charms and incantations. For according nnto tlie tradition of Mtgitians, the tutelary ft)irit.s will not remove at common appellations, but at the proper names oF things whereunto they art.- proreftors. Thus having been deceived by thcmfelvcs. and continually deluded by others, they mult needs be ftiifred with errors, and even over-run with thefe inferiour faUities j whereunto whofoever fhall refign their reafons, either from the root of deceit in themfelves, or inability to relirt fuch trivial ingamiations from others , although their condition and fortunes may place them many Spheres
above the nmltitude yet are they ftill within the line of vulgarity, and Democratical enemies of truth.
5
C HAP.
Of
the hearer
IV.
and more ftnmeci/ ate Ca.'ffes of popular errors^ loth the wifer and common fort^ Mifipprehe/ifion^ Fal/'acj^ or falp de-
and Authoritie.
THefirilis
firft
a miftake,ora mifconception of thnigs, either in their apprehenlions, or fecondary rclacions. So Eve miftook the, Conmiandment , either from the immediate injimftion of God, or from the fecondary narration of her husband. So might the Difciples miftake onr Saviour, in his aufwer unto Feter concerning thcjdeath of Jo^>/, as is delivesred, ^oibw ii.Teter {tc'm^ Johrt^
faith
)f
1
Lord , and what fhall this man do YJeJuf faith, he tarry till I come, whar is that unto thee j Theiv went this laying abroad among the brethren, that that Difciple' ftiould not die. Thus began the conceit and opinionof the Cf/i- rhc belief o? taures 'ths^t is, in the miftake of the firft behoiderS5as is declared {7Mra,(j. hyS^rvius when feme young The/laliati5 on horfeback were be^ whence occa"^'l* held afar off, while their horfes watered, that is,while their heads, were deprelTed, they were conceived by the firft Speftators, to be but oi^e animal 5 and aufwerable hereunto have rheir pictures been dr^vn ever lince. And as fimple miftakes commonly beget fallacies, fo men reft not in falfe apprelienlinouSi without abfurd and inconfequent deductions from fallacious foundations, and mifapprehended medi-' um:, erefting conclioions. no way inferrible from their premiUs^ Now the fallacies whereby men deceive others, and are deceive.! themfelves,rhe Antients have divided into Verball and ft call. Of the V'ibali,and.futh as conclude froni aiiftakes of the word^ akhongk theru
unto
Je[m:>
will, that
-,
Enquiries irAoVulur
.
Book,
I.~
itHi!\'occion'
and Ampiii.
^h'^^lrr^'""* c> ^^'
'
yet are tlieie but two thereof worthy our iiotatioiiiaiid unto wiwc:?. the itk may bti rererred ; tha: is the fallacy of Equivocation and Amphibologie 5 which 'conchide from the ambiguity of foqie. one word, or tihe ambiguous lytiTaxis of niauy. put' together. Fr<x>m tiiiv fallacy arofc chac calamitous error of the
tijerebeno
Itl.s
then
iix,
jews
po'iinding
Tyihagcras his
Ailegotical
rtiJiappreheuding the Prdplieiies of their MeHias, and exthem ahvaic; unto literal and temporal expeftations. By ti)isv/ay.iiiany errors crept iu and perveited the doftrine of Pythagi^i^/j:^;^whil!il:<meu!irecei-ved his.preceptS'
precepts *molaljzed.
'!*''
Z"'^''
^*y-'*"'^ *'^*
/:**i*5 i>^ff0
and receiving as" i converting Metaphors into piopriff ties, literal eiprduousy obfcui-e'andiiivolved tiiith?.- Thais when he eiijoyned his Difciples, an abiiinence from bean>3 many conceived they were with feverity debarred the ufe of that pulfe j which notwithllanding could not be his meaning ; for as Ariiloxenm who wrote his life, averreth, he deliqhpedj much in that kind of food himfelf. But herein as Plutarch obrerveth, he hadnoother intenti* on, then to difTwacie men from Magiftracy, or undertaking the publike oftices of ftate; for by bsans were the Magiftrates elected in fome parts' of Greece 5 and after his dales, we read in T^hucydidesy of tb <Z-ounfel of the bean in Athens, The fame word^lfo iu Greek doth lignitie aTefticle, and hath been thought by fome an injunftion only of continency , as Aid. GclUus hath expounded^ and as Empedocles may alfo be interpreted that is T'ejHcu/is mi" feri dextras fubducite ; and might be the original intention of Pjth'agar.tsy as having a notable hint hereof in Beans, from the natural iiguatLlre of the venereal organs of both Sexes. Agaiui his injun-. ftioii is, not to harbour Swallows in our houfes iWhoCe advice iiotwithftanding we, do, Uot contemn, who daily admit and cheri/h thenlrFOr herein a caution, isl only implied, not to entertain ungratefull and tlianklefs perfons, which like the Swallow are no way commodious unCQ us 5 but having made ufe of our habitations, and ferved their own turns, forfake us. So he commands to de-> fiice the print of a cauldron in the afhes , after it hath boiled. Which ftriitly to obferve were condemnable fuperftition -For hereby he covertly advifeth us nor to perrevde in auger 5 but after our choler hath boyled,to retain no impreHion thereof. In the like feiife are to be received^whenhe advifeth his Difciples togive the right hand but to few, to put no viands in a chamber-pot,, not to pafs over a balance, not to rake up fire with afword, Oivpifs againlt the Sun. .Which enigmatical deliveries comprehend ufe|riU verities, but being ihiila''^cn by literal Expoiitors at the firft,.they have been mifimderftood by moil: fince, and may be oecaiion of error to verbal
intention
:
:
This fidlacy in the firft delnfion Satan put upon Eve^ and. his whole tencation miEht be the fame continued fo when: he faid. Ye
i,
fhall
Book.
iliall
I.
md
Common
Errors,
xj
not die, that was in his equivocation, ye /hall not incur a prefent death, or a deftniftionimmediatly fenfiting your tranfgreflron. Your eyes fhali be opened j that is^ not to the enlargement of your knowledge, but difcoveryof your fhanie and proper" confiilion i You fliall know good and evih that is , you fhall have knowledge of good by it its privation, bat cognifance of evil And the fame fallacy or way by fenfe and viiible experience. of deceit fo well fucceeding i-n Paradife , he continued in his Which had not men more Oracles through all the world. warily underftood, they might have performed many acls inBrutits might have made haft with confilient with his intention. have ki.<Ted his own Mother. The Athenians migh'c to tarqvine have built them wooden walls , or doubled the AUar at Dcl-
The
circle
of this fallacy
is
may
be
comprifed
all Ironical
ing inverted fignincations j all deduftions from Metaphors, PaWhererables, Allegories, unto real and rigid interpretations^ in Philofophy, have lifen not erros but viilgar popular only by and fenflefs Herelies in Divinity ; as will be evideilt unto -any that
fhall
as
m:,A'4iiH:iOV Vrateohis.
^
;
Other
falfe
ap-
prehenfion of words, that is5 verbal exprellions or fentelitial iigniHcations g but fraudulent deduftions;, or iiiconfeqi{ent ilhtions from a falfe conception of things. Ofthefe ek'tradiftionary and Logicians make, in number fix, but we real fallacies, Arfjiotle obferve that men are moft commonly deceived by four thereof thofe are Petitio principii- A diirofecimdmt guid ad diif/mfimplici^ ter. K noncaufa fro caiifa: htidfhllacia con]eqTfefi.tis.' \
md
'
The firft
a queftion
is,
Petitio principi.
is
m^e
a medittiii,
whereof we remain as iinPatisfied of the queftioil.' B'nefly, wher^ that is aHiimedasa principle, to prove another thing, which is not conceded as true it felf. By this fallacie was Et/d* deceived^ when fhe took for granted, the falfe affertioii. of the Devil; ye fhall not furely die, for God dotlv kno*^ th^'i^ithe dity ye fhall eat thereof, your eyes lha)l be opened, and you fii*all be as God-'. Which was but a bare affirmation of S'at^n, vvit1iout'pri6t)f or probable indiicement, contrary' unto the' conimand of God and former belief of her felf. And this was the'Logitk of thejews when tlteyaccufed bur S-aviOiir unto Pilafe^ whbdenidndiirga reafonable impeachment. Or the allegation of Tome crime wortiiy t>f coiidem^ -hartion; they only replied, "if he had nor 'b&en worth )^6f death, wfc would not-liave brought him before thee. Wherein there was neither
j^
tiier acciifation
v,ell
BpoIcL
of the pcjTon, nor fatisfaf^ion of fife Judge; Who undsilTOod a bait: accufacion was no prefiiajption of guilty and the clamours of the people no acciifation at all. The fame fallacie is fomtrime iifed in the difpiite, between Job and his friends ; they cfreti taknig tliac for granted wliich afterward he difpioveth. The fecond is A diClo fecundum quid ad diUum fiynf letter^ wheli from that which is but true in a qualiHcd fenfcjan inconditional and abfolute verity is inferred ; transferring the fpecial confideration of things unco their general acceptions, or concluding from their fhiXt acception, unto that witiiout all limitation. This fallacie men commit when they argue froni a particular to a general ; as when we conclude the vices or qualities of a few upon a whole Nation Or from a part unto the whole Thus the Devil argued with our Saviour, and by this he ivould perfwade him he might be fecure, if he cafthimfelf from the Pinacle For faid he^, it is written, he (hall give his Angels charge concerning thee, and in their hands they Ihall beare thee up, leaft at any time thou dafh thy foot againft a ftone . But this illation was fallacious, leaving out part of the text rp/. 91. He (halj keep thee in all thy waies j that is, in the waici of righteoufnefs, and not of rafh attempts : fo he urged a part for che whole, iind inferred more in the conclufion, then was contained in the premifes . By the fame fallacie we proceed, when we conclude from the ligniinto the thing lignilied. By this incroachment Idolatry firft crept in> men converting the fymbolical ufe of Idols into their proper worlhip, and receiving the reprcfcnration of things as the iubltanceand thing it felf. So the flatue of ^^-Zw acfirft erefted in his memory, was in after times adored as a Divinity. Andfoalfo in the Sacrament of the Eucharift, the bread and wine which were rhc Original but the fignals or vifible iigns, were made the things llgnified, and ef Idolatry, worfhipped as the body of Ch rift. And hereby generally men are deceived that take things fpoken in fome latitude without any at all. Hereby the J.ews were deceived concerning the commandment of the Sabbath, accuiing our Saviour for healing the lick, and his Difciples for plucking the ears of corn upon that day. And by this deplorable miltake they were deceived unto dcftruftion, upon the affault ofPompey the great made upon that d3y,by whofe fujierftitious obfervation they could not defend themfelvcs, or perform any la^Thc M:6ran bour whatever. cndurci nciThe thirdis A /)>f capfa. pro cavfa^ when that4s pretended for a tlicr wine i^cr ^ji^ifg ^^jch is not, or not in that fenfe which is inferred. Upon ctliiivcrUuci. ^j^-j^. (-onfcquencc die law of Mahowet fobirds the ufe of wine, and
.
.
By
thisalfo
many Chriftians
have gondemned literature, mifiuideritanding the counfel of Saint Paule, who advifeth no furtiier then to beware of philofophy. On tius t^oundauo were built the coiicliilions of ^outhf^yers in their Augurial
J
Book
I.
17
Auguriall, and Trlpudiary divinations 5 collefting prefages fr^pi voice or food of birds, and conjoyning events unto caiifes of no connexion. Hereupon alfo are grounded the grofs miilakcsj in
difeafes ; not onclyfroni the laft medicine, and fympathetical Receipts, but amulets,' charms, and all incantatory applications j deriving effefts not only from inconcurring caufes, but things devoid of all efficiency whatever. The fourth is the fallaeie of the coiifequcnt j which if ftriftly taken, may be a fallacious illation in reference unto antecedencie, or confequencie as to conclude from the pofitionof the antecedent, unto the polition of the confequent, or frortl the remotioii of the confequent to the remotion of the antecedent. This is ufually committed, when in connexed propoiitions the terms adhere contingently. This is frequent in Oratorie illations ; and thus the Pharifeesj becaufe he converfed with Publicans and Sinners , accufcd the holinefsof Chrift. But if this fallacie be largely taken, it is committed in any vicious illation, offending the rules of good confequence ; and fo it may be very large, and comprehend all falfe illations againft the fetled laws of Logick. But the moft ufual inconfequencies are from particulars, from negatives, and from affirmative conclufions in the fecond figure, wherein indeed offences are mofl frequentp and their difcoveries not difficult.
->
rhecureof many
'
CH A
P.
V.
Suptnkj,
of CreduUtj and
Third caufe of common Errors is the Credulity ofmen, thiac is, anealie afTent, to what is obtruded, or a believing at firft ear what is delivered by others. Tliisisa weaknefs intheunderftanding, withoutexamination affenting untothnigs, which fr5m their natures and caufes do carry no perfwafion ; whereby men
often fwallow fallities for truths
libilities
,
fe-
and things impollible as pol?ibilities themfelves. Which, though a weaknefle of the Intellect, and moft difcoverable in vnlgar heads, yet hath it fometime falieii upon wifer brains, and gieat advancers of Truth. Thus many wife Athenians fo far forgot their Philofophy, and the natuiv of humane ppoduftion, that thy defcended unco beliefs, the origijiall of their Nation was from the Earth , and had no other beginning then the feminalitie and wombe of thtir great Mother. Thus- is it not without wonder, how thofe learned Arabicks fo tamely delivered up their belief unto the abfurdictes D of
for
polfibilicies
,
^g
tfiplrtes
im
VulgAf
Book,
1,
of (he Akorii/i. How the uoble Geber , Avicemta , and Alj^anz.or^ fhouMreft fatis.led in the nature and caifesoF earthquakes , delivered from the doftiinc of their Frophet s that is , from the motion of a ^reat Bull, upon whofe horns all the earth is poifed. How their faiths could decline fo low , as-to concede their generations in heaven^to be made by the fmell of a Citron,or that the felicity of their Paradile fhoiild conlirt in a Jubile of copulation , that is^ a coitioii) of one aft prolonged unto fifty years. Thus is it ahnoil beyond wonder^ how the belief of reafoiiable creatures, fhould ever fubmit luito Idolatry And the credulity of thofe men fcarce credible f witliout prefumption of a fecond fall) who could believe a Deity in the work of their own hands.For although in that ancient and diffiifed ado.ati on of Idols, unto the Priejis and fubtiler heads j the wor/hip perhaps might be fymbolical 5 and as thofe Images fome way related unto their Deities i y^t Was the Idolatry direct anddown-right in the people i whofe credulity is illimitable j who may be made believe that any thing is God i and may be made believe there is no God ac
:
ail.
thecaufe of Error, fo incredidity oftentimes of not enjoying truth ; and that not onely an obftinate incredulity, we will not acknowledge aflent unto what is reafonably inObftinate and whereby ferred, but any Academical refervation in matters of eaiie truth , or iriaiionsl Sccpricifm rather fceptical infidelity againft the evidence of reafon and fenfe. jiiflly ccnfuYoT thefe are conceptions befalling wife men , as abfurd as the apprehenlions of fools , and the credulity of the people which promifFor this is not onely derogatory unto cuoiiily fwallow any thing. the wifdomof God J who hath propofed the world unto our know ledge 5 and thereby the notion of himfelf j but alfo detraftoiy unro the i'ntel left , and fenfe of man exprefledly difpofed for that inquilition. And therefore, hoctantunifcioy quod nihil fcio ^ is not to be received in an abfolute fenfe, but is comparatively exprefTed untO the number of things wherectf our knowledge is ignorant. Nor will it aquit the infatisfaftion of thofe which quarrel with all things, or difpute of matters , concerning whofe verities we have conviftionfroia reafon, or decilion from the inerrable and requilite cohpi tit ions oF fenfe*- And therefore if any aftirm the earth dotli \novei and will not believe with us, it ftandeth ftillj becaufe he hath pr6bable reafons for it, and I no infallible fenfe, nor reafon againft it , I will not quarrel with his aflertion. But if like Zsno he ihall walk about, and yet deny there is 7A\y motion in nature; furely that
as credulity
is
'
And
thofe,
man was conilituted for Anticera. , and were who having a conceit they are dead ,
fit
companion for
camiot be convifted
into the fociery of the living. Tiie fourth is a fupinity or negleft of enquiry , even of matters wlaeieof we doubcj racher believing, then going to fee^ or doubting
with
Book.
I.
with eaCe
and gratis , then believing with ditficiilt/ or piirchafe. Wheibyjcither from a temperamental in afti vityaWe are iinready to put in execution the fuggeiHons or diftates of reafon or by a content and acquiefcenfe in every fpecics of truth , we embrace the Shadow thereof 5 or fo much as may palliate-its juft and fubftancial acquiremeius. Had our fore-Fathers fat down in thefe refolutions, or Ijiad their curiolities been fedentary, who purfued the knowledge of things through all the coiners of nature, rheface of truth had been obfcure unco us, whofe luftre in fome part their induftries have
;
revealed.
Certainly the fweat of their Labours was not fait unto t^iem^ and they took delight nuhe duft of their endeavours. Forqueftionlefs in knowledge there is nofleiider diiKculty, and truth whic^ v^ife men fay doth lye in a well , is not recoverable but by exantlaIt were fome extenuation of the curfe , xiinfudore viiltus tut tion. werecontinable unto corporal exercitations, and there ftill remained aParadife or luithorny place of knowledge. But now our imderftandings being eclipfed^ as well as our tempers infirmsd^ we nmft betake our felves to wayes of reparation, and depend upon the illumiFor thus we may in fome meafure renation of our endeavours. And pair our primary mines , and build our felves "men again. though the attenipts of fome have been precipitous , and their enquiries fo audacious as to come within command of the flaming fwordsj and lofl: themfelves in attempts above humanity i yet have the enquiries of moft dcfefted by the way , and tired within the fober circumference of knowledge. And this is the reafon why fome have tranfcrlbed any thing ami although they cannot but doitbt thereof, yet neitlicr make experiment by fenfe , or enquiry by reafon j but live in doubts of things whofe fatisfaftion is in their own powers whicli is indeed the inexcufable part of our ignorance , and may perhaps fill up the charge of For not obeying the diftates of reafon, and neglcftthe lall day. ingthe cries of truth , we fail notouely in the trull: of our luiderWhich alrhougli more -takings, but in the intention of man it felf. venial inordinary conftitutions, andfuch as are not framed beyond the capacity of beaten notions , yet will it inexciifably condemn fome men, who having received excellent endowments, have yet fat down by the way, and fruftrated the intention of their h;;bilities. For certainly as lome men have finned in the principles of huriiaiury,andmurt anfwer, for noc being men, fo others oifend if they be not more r Magis extra vitia , q::ani cum virtutibusy would conmiend Thefe are not excufable without an Excellency. For great thofe conftitutions, and fuch as are conilellated unto knowledge , do nothing till they out-do alU they come Ihort of themfelves if rliey go not beyond others3 and muft not frt down under the degree of wor, :
thie?.
ao
tlries.
Enpiries
into
VulgAr
Book.
f.
expefts no liiftre fiomtlieminorftarSa but if the Sun fhould not ilhiminare nil, it were a fin in Natiiie. Vlthtius honor unty will not cxciife every man , nor is it fiifficient for all to hoM the
God
Mens names fliould not onely diftingui/h them : A fomethiug, that men are not, and individual in fomewhat belide his proper nature. Thus while it exceed* not the bounds of reafon and modefty, we cannot condemn fingulatity. Nos numiYus finnusy is the motto of the multitude, and for that reafon are they fools. For things as they recede from unity, the more they approach to imperfeftion , and deformity i for they hold their perfection in their limplicities , and as they neareft approach unto
;
God.
Now as there are many great wits to be condemned , who have neglefted the increment of Arts, and the fedulous purfuit of knowledge ; fo are there not a few very much tobc pittied, whofeinduftry being not attended with natural parts , they have fweat to
little purpofe, and rolled the ftone in vain. Which chiefly proceedeth from natural incapacity, and genial indifpofition, at leaft fothofe particulars whereunto they apply their endeavours. And this is one reafon why, though Univerlities be full of men, they are oftentimes empty of learning. Why as there are fome which do much without learning, fo others but little with it, and few that Uaivcr/Jries, why many attain to any meafure of it. For many heads that undertake it, were U;llC-> full of never fquared nor timbred for it. There are not onely particular Sc!iolarf,an(l men, but whole nations indifpofed for learning j whereunto is reempty of qmred not onely education , but a pregnant Minerva^ and teeming Learning. conftitution. For the wifdomofGod hath divided the Genius of men according to the different affairs of the world : And varied their inclinations according to the variety of Aftions to be performed therein. Which they who confider not j rudely rufhing upon The natural profeiTions and waies of life unequal to their natures j dilhonour genius or in- nor only theriifelves and their funftions , but pervert the harmony clination) how of the whpie world. For if the world went on as God hath ordained reuch to be rcgirdcd in the itj and-'were every one implied in points concordant to their Nachoife of a
profilTion.
thenifclvcs
and Common-wealths would rife up of nor needed we a Lanthron to find a man in Athens.
CHAP,
5oo k L
'
^^'^
Common
f-.
Errors,
^ ^
TTtT
'
'\ :
'
~i:
CHAP,
of
VI.
the mortalleft enemy unto kuQwledge, and that which BUc hath do!ie the ereateft execution upon truth, harh been a per-
.mptory adhefion unto Authority, and more efjpecially the cfta- /^"^yy^^^'^r^ C For (as of. Error, blilhing of our belief upon the diftates of Antiquity. fo fuprefent, men obferve) of Ages moil may every capacity
do look on Ages paft, that the 'Authorities of the Whofe perfons indeed be^ one, exceed the reafons of the other in^^ far removed from our times, their works, which feldom with us pafs uncontrouled , either by contemporaries or immediate fiicceflbrs, are now become out of the diftance of envies : And tlie fiirther removed from prefent times, are conceived to ap-^ pro^ch the nearer unto truth ic felf. Now hereby x\\z thinks
perftitioully
we
manifeftly dehide our felves, and widely walk out of the track of Truth. For firft. Men hereby impofe a thraldom on their times, which the ingenuity of no age (hould endure , or indeed the prefumption of any did ever yet enjoin. Thus Hippocrates about 2000. year ago, conceived it no injuftice, either to examine or refute Galett* the like, and Ari(iotle the doftrines of his predeceflbrs moft of any. Yet did not any of thefe conceive themfelves infallible, or Cec down their diftates as verifies irrefragable j but when they either deliver their own inventions, or rejeft other mens Opinion?, they proceed with Judgement and Ingenuiry j eftabliffiing their aflertion, not only with great foUdity, but fubmitting them alfo unto the correction of future difcovery. Secondly, Men that adore rimes paft, confider not that thofe times were once prefent that is, as our own are at this inftant, and we our felves unto thofe to come, as they unco us at prefent as we relye on them, even fo will thofe on us, and magnifie us hereafter, who at prefent condemn our felves. Which very abfurdicy is daily committed amongft us even in the cileen^ and cenfure of our own times. Arid to fpeak impartially , old men from whoiiv we fhoiild expeft the greateiV example of wifdom, do moft exceed hi this point of folly 5 comnit^ndhig the daics of their youth, they fcarce remenber,at ieaft well underiloa;! jio.:j extolling thofe times their ymmger years have heard their Fachcr.^ condemn, and condemnino; thofe times the [^gray heads of their
:
:
,
^oilerity
humour of many heads to extoi ednefs, of times prefent. Which nocwichftanding they cannot handfomly do, without the ixjrrovred help and fa tyres of times paftj condemning the vices of their times^ by the expre/Hons of vices in times which they commend j which cannot but argue the comnuinicy of vice in both. Horace therefore, JuvenaU and Ferfeus were no Prophets, although their lines did feem to indigitate and point at our times. There is a certain lift of vices comitted ni all ages, and declaimed againft by all Authors, which will'laft as long as humane nature ; or digefted into common places may ferve for any theme, and never be out of date luitiil Dooms-day. Thirdly, The teftimonies of Antiquity and fuch as pafs oraculoufly amongft us, were not if we coniider them alwaics fo exa^t as to exan^ine the doftrine they delivered. For fome, and thofe the acuteft of them, have left unto us many things of f.iliity, controulable, not only by critical and collective reafon, but common and coimtrey obfervation. Hereof there want not many examples in y4rz/fof/f,th rough all his book of animalsj we fliall inftance only in three of his Problemes, and all contained under one SeThe firft enquirtth why a Man doth cough, but not aft ftion. Oxe or Cow j whereas notwithftanding the contrary is ofcen obferved by Husband-men, and Hands confirmed by thofe who have exprefly treated de re rujHca^ and have alfo delivered divers remedies for it. Why Juments, as Horfes, Oxen^ and AiTes j have no eruftation or belching, whereas indeed tiie contrary is ofcen obferved, and alfo delivered by Collumella, And thirdly j why man alone hath gray hairs ? whereas it cannot efcape the cyesj, and ordinary obfervation of all men, that Horfes, Dogs, and Fcxe-s, wax gray with age in our Countries j and in the colder ReAnd though favourable gions many other animals without ir. conftruftions may fomewhat extenuate the rigor of thefe concelTions , yet will fcarce any palliate that in the fourth of his Meteors, that fait is eafieft difolvible in cold water : Nor that o( Vinfcoridesy that Quickfilver is beft preferved in veflels of
pofterity
fliall
is it
th^
tiie
Tin and Lead. Other Authors write ofcen dubioufly, even in matters wherein is expefted a ftrift and definitive truth extenuating their affirmations, with aiunt, ferunty fortajje : xAs Viafcorides, Galefty J^ rilhtle, and many nioi'C. Others by h car-fay i taking upon truft
;
i"^
have delivered, whofe volumes are nicer colleftionsj oi leaves of other Authors 5 as may be obferved in ?///>, Mlian^ Atbenxuiy and many more. Not a few tranfcriptively, fubfcribing their Names unto other mens eiideavoursjand mcerly tranfcribing almoft all they have written.
nioft tliey
The
^ook.
I.
'
23
, the Creekj , and Latlnes ^ borrowed all from trogiti Tommaimer n-anfcribed PUnie. Thus veiiiS) md Julim Solinus i in a lerved Lvcim Vtatenfis men both living The Antiqiand Ap^uleim Lucian have both tranfcribing the fame Author, in^y* >"<* .^^oic \\\ the fame timCj and ^_o^='*^^<= '"thofe famous Books, Entituled Lr^c/w by the one, and Aureus fame meafure hath In the Simocrates in his pu^Jianifm finus by the Other. Traft dv Nile.} dealt with ViodoYM Sicfiluf^ as may be obferved, that U , of* in that work artnexed unto' Rerodotns^ and tranflated by yf/- tranfcribing ^'chlng germaHHUS. Thus EratoJlbeHe's wholly tranflated 'timdtheus dn In- o"" ^"'"^"' the very, Preface. The fame doth ^frrt/;o fulls i not referving report of Eudoras, and At^/Jion in a Treatife Entituled de Nilo.
The
each other.
Thus hath
Jujiine
many examples hereof among very fpeakech plainly in his Preface, th^c and 'l*/;^^ the Greeks and comparing their ivorks together Authors, ins conferring lie generally found thofe that v,-ent befoi-e vnbatim tranfcribcd, l^y thofe that followed after, and their originals. never fo much To omit how nuich the wittieil piece of Ovid as mentioned. ^vcn the magniiied Firgil is beholding unto Tanhenim Chins ; his works in Iiis Eclogues from Theall almoft borrowed in l.ath and Aratus Gecrgichj his Mneads from. his from Hefiod ^ ocritus Ho^ir flie fecond Book whereof containing the exploit of Siiien and the 'Trcjan horfe Cas M^rcroHas obfervethj he hath verlaOur own piofeilion is not excufable iitrt derived from Pifander. ^tius Thus Oribafius , , and ALgineta have in a manner herein.
Clevtens Alexandr.inui hath obferved
3
:
,
'^wt ,}/Urcellui EfUpericus^ who hath left a fatranfcribed Gule>u hath word for word, tranfcribed -all de Medicanientko work mous Scrtlonim Largiis, de compofnione medicnnieniorum y and not left our his very peroration. Thus may we perceive the Ancients were but men, even like our felvcs The praftice of tranfcripti-
Plaginrie had not our dales was no monfter in theirs times begiui in but when thefts 5 its were diliicult, and the paucity of books fcarce wanted that in-
on
in
veution.
Fourthly, While we fo eagerly adhere amto Antiquity, and the accoimtsof elder times, we are to conlider the fabulous condition thereof. And that we (hall not deny, if we call to mind the, liiendacity of Greece^ from whom we have received mpft relations, and that a conliderable part of Ancient times, was by the An nncijfnc Greeks themfelves termed (xvdiKer? that is, made up or ftutfed Otit ^^^^^"^^ who with fables. And furely the fabulous inclination of thofe dales, "'^'J''^*?' * was greater then any iince ; which fw armed fo with fables, and J'^'^^^' from fuch flender grounds, took hints for fiftions,,uoyfoning the .f., ^'^Zu e' world ever afteri wherem, how tar they exceeded, maybe ex- f,,,^^ p:,rc is amplified fioni Pale^hatus^ in his book of7 fabulous narrations, yet exunr.
That
^
T.,c fiblc of
Uffhiui his
Book.!.
Harp.
fioiicd.
d'-c.
'
''fable of Orpheus^ vfho by the melodic of his nmlick made woOyls and rjiees,tP foUoiw. l^pi , was rai fed upon a (lender fouiidatioivj for. thierp were a ^ci:ew of. mad women, retired into a moiincain, rrom whence beuig pacihea by ms MulKjiCi they defreiicit'd with boughs in their hands , which unto the fabuloficy of thofe times, proved a fufficient ground to celebrate unto all poilerity the Magick 0;f Orpheus Harp, and its pqyfer to accraft the fenflefle, trees aboiir ir. That iVW^<r the famous SorccrelTe ^puld renew youth, and make old men young again, was nothing elfe, but that from the -knowledge of fimjples flie had a Receit to make white hair black , and reduce old heads into the The fable of Gerion and Cerberus with tincture of youth again. Gerion was of the City 'Trkarinia , that three heads was thi^ is, pf three 'Jieads., and Cerberus of the fame place was one of his_ dogs , which nmning iiito a cave upon purfuit of his mafters
:,
Oxen,
f/frc///f.f
perforce .drew
,
whence the
him out of that places from no lefTe , then that and brought up Cerberus .into the
.Upon the like grounds was raifed the who dwelling in a Citie called Hecatonchi-
the fancies of thofe times a.Iigned him an lumdred hands. 'Twas ground enough to fancy wings unto Dxdalui , in that he ftole out of a window from Minos^ and failed away with his fon Icarus') who fleering his courfe wifely, efcapedj but his fon carrying to high a fail was, drowned. That Niobe weeping over her children was turned into a ftone, was nothing elfe, but that during her life fhe erefted over their fepultures, a Marble Tomb
of her own.
'
ff
of
how
^^'^'^
lie
Acieon had undone himfelf with dogs , and they made a folcnin florid , was devoured by his Hounds. And upon the like grounds
When
iWansflcfli.
'
raifed the Anthropophagie o^ Diomedes his Horfes. Upon a flender foundation was built" the fable of the Mi'notaure j ft>r one Taurus a fervant of Minos gat his Miftrefs Pafipbae with childei from whence the infant was namtd Minotaurus, Now this unto the fabulofi ty of thofe times was thought fufficlent to acrufe Pafiphae of Eeftiality or admitting conjunction with a Bull 5 and in fucceeding ages gave a hint of depravity imto Domitian to. aft the fable into reality. In like manner, as Viodorus plainly dellvereth, the famous fable of Charon had its nativity j who benig no oJier but the conunon Ferryman of JEgypt^ that wafted over die dead bodies from Mi? w^5''> was made by the Greeks to be tlie Ferryman of Hell , and folenin flories raifed iafcer of Inm. Laftly, we fliall not need to enlarge , if that be true which groimded the generation of Cajhr and Helena, cut of an Egg, becaufe they were born anci brought up in an upper room, ac-
cording
Book
I.
25
word
*Siav 3
applaud many things delivered by the Ancients, themfelves buc ordinary, and come fhort of piijr own conceptions. Thiis we ufually exioll, and our Orations canNofce teipfum liot efcape the fayings of the wife men of Greece. qf'thaies : Nofce tenipitf of Pittac/a : Nihil nimii oi Cleobulm ; which notwithflanding to fpeak indi,^erently, are but vulgar precepts in Moralityj carrying with them nothing above the line, or be-
We
which are
in
yond the extemporary fententiolity of common conceits with us. Thus we magniHe the Apothegms, or reputed replies of wifdom^ whereof n7any are to be feen in Lnertius , more in Lycojihenes^
not a few in the fecond book oi MacroHusy in the faks of Cicero, Aiigi/fi'iS:> and the comical wits of thofe times : in moit whereof there is not much to admire j and are me thinks exceeded not -only in the replies of wife men, bur the paflages of fociety and And thus we extoll their Adages or Prourbanities of our times. verbs, and Erafmushath taken great pains to make colleftions of them ; whereof notwithftanding the greater part will I believe, unto inditferent judges be elleemed no extraordinaries i and may be paralelled, if not exceeded, by thofe of more unlearned nations, and many of our own. Sixtly, We urge Authorities, in points that need not, and introduce the teftimony of ancient Writers, to confirm things evidently believed, and whereto no reafoiiable hearer but would affent without them i fuch as are, Nemo mortalium omnibus horis fa- p^ nthnuc^\ fit. Virtute nil frjlanttvsy nil fulchtim. 'Omnia, vincit amor. Tr- vanity, to All which, although things known and quote Authors clarum quiddam Veritas. vulgar, are frequently urged by many men, and though trivial '" "'^"^"^^-r ^ ?. common fen fc ^J c 1; T,/ r^ J verities in our mouths, yet no*:ea troni PlatO) Ovid, or Cicero, ^^ ^^ familjar they become reputed elegancies. For many hundred, to inftancc jc'^nowledgebur in one weiuect; with while we are wricing. Antonius Gifevara ment. that Elegant Spaniard, in his book entituled. The Vial' of Frin^ 'C,beginneth his Epiftle thus. Apolonii^s Thyan: m d\[^\itn\g ^ith the Scholars of Hiarchas, faid, that among all the aileftions of nature, -noching was more nacurall , then the deiire all have to preferve life. Which being "a confeifed Truth, and a verity acknowledged by all, it was afuperfluous arFeftacioii to derive ic^ Autho'ritie from Apolfinius , or feek a coniirmation thereof as far as India, and the learned Scholars of Hiarchas. Which, Avhether it be not all one to ftrengtlien common Dignities and principles known by themfelves, vvich the Authoritie of M;v thematicians 3 or think a man (hould believe the whole \% greater then its parts, rather upon the. Authoritie of 'vclide ,, then if it were propounded alone ; l-jave I un^j
.
the
2^'
ffce
Book.
I.
fecond imd wifer cogitatrons of all men. *Tis fur^ a pr;i-favouis much of Pedanterv , a refcrvc of I^iierility we have not (hakenoflP from School wnere being feafoiied wit'i Minor feiitences by aneglcft of higher enquiries, they prefcribe Upon our riper ears/and are never worn Our but with our memo rie?. Laftly, While we fo devoutly adhere unto Andquiry in fom; things, we do not conlider we have deferred them in feveral oFor they indeed have not only been imperfeftj in the conthei-s. things, biit either ignorant or erroneous in many fome ceit of more. They underftood not the motion of the eighth fpcar from Some remark- \^^^ ^^ g^^^ .^^j f^^ Conceived the longitude of the ftars invaconceived the torrid Zone unhabitable, and fo made They riable. amore'thc^ But we now know 'tis fruftrate the gooJlieft part of the Earth. Ancients. Very well enpeopled, and the habitation thereof efteemed fo happy, that fame have made it the proper feat of Paradife and been fb far from judging it unhabitable, that they have made it the Many of the Ancients denied the Aatifirft habitation of all. pdes^ and fome unto the penality of contrary affirmations; but the experience of our enlarged navigations, can now afl'ert them beyond all dubrtation.Having thus totally relinquifht them in fome things, it may not be prefumptuous, to examine them in orhersj but furely moil unreafonable to adhere to them in all, as though they were infallible, or could not err in any.
ftice rhat
,
-,
CHAP.
Of
enemy unto n; Authority,
full
VII.
Ai^thoritj,
only a refolved proftration unto Antiquity a powerknowledge, but any confident adhejence unor refignation of our judgements upon the telbmoto ny of Age or Author whatfocver. For firft. To fpeak generally an argument from Authority to wifer examinations, is but a weaker kind of proof 5 it being but a topical probation , and as we term it, an inartificial argunient, depending upon a naked alfeveration wherein neitlier declaring the caufes, afFeftion?. or adjunfts of what we believe, it not with it the reafonable inducements of knowledge. f-aj i^ieth And therefore Contra negantern principia^ Jpfe dixit or Oportet difcentem credere^ although Pofhiliates very accomodable unto Junior indoftrinations ; yet are their Authorities but temporary^ and ilot to be imbraced beyond the minority of our intellei;tials. for our advanced beliefs are not to be biUlt upon di6\iatfs ^ut having
is
:
'^ ,'
Or
Book.
I.
^^^ Common
Errors,
27
having received the probable inducements of truth, we become einancipated from teftinionial engagements, and are to ereit upon the furer bafc of reafon. Secondly, Unto reafonable perpenfions ic hath no place in f6me Sciences, fraall in others , and fuffereth many reltriftions, Inthc Mathceven where IS it moft admited. It is of no validity in the Ma"^*"'^ ' thematicks, efpecially the mother part thereof 3 Artithmetick and Geometry. For thefe Sciences concluding from dignities
*
receive not fatisfaftiou and prmciples known by thenifelves from probable reafons, mudi lefs from bare and peremptory af:
feverations.
And therefore if all Atbetts (hould decree, that in , two iides, which foever be taken, are greater Triangle every then the fide remaining , or that in retangle triangles the fquare which is made of the fide that fubtendeth tiie right an-t gle , is equal to the fquares which are made of the fides containAlthough there be a cettain truth thereing the right angle would nor receive fatisfaftinotwithihnding in, Geometricians thereof: 'Tis true, by the vulgaridemonftratioii without on ty of Philofophers , there are many points believed without probation nor if a man affirm from Vtolomy , that the Sun is bigger then the Earth , fhall he probably meet with any contradilici ? whereunto notwithftanding Aftronomers will not affent without fome convincing argument or demonftrative proof And therefore certainly of all men a Philofopher thereof. fliould be no fwearer : for an oath which is the end of con-* troveriies in Law, cannot determine any here j nor are the deepeft Sacraments or defperate imprecations of any force to perfwadf , where reafon only , and neceflary mediums muft in:
-y
duce. In natural Philofophy more generally purfued amongft us, it And carrieth but flender conlideration ; for that alfo proceeding from Ceded Principles , tberein is expefted a fatisfaftion from fcientibcall pi ogrefljons , and fuch as beget a fure rational belief. For if Authority might have made out the affertions of Philofophy, we might have held, that fnow was black, that the Sea wai but the fweat of the Earth, and many of the like abfurditie-. Then was Arijiot/e injurious to fall upon Melifjh , to re)et the afierttons of Anaxagoras , Anaxiwander , and Empedocles-j then were we a!fo ungratefull unto himfetf 5 from whont
Fbyfick,
cur Jknior endeavours embracing many things on his authority, our mature and fecondary enquiries , arc forced to quit thofe leccptions, and to adhere imto the nearer account of
Reafon.
And although it be not imufual, even in Philofophical' Traftates to make enumeration of Authors, yet are there reafonsufually introduced,and to ingenuous Readers do carry the ftroak in
E
2
chq
2?
the pcrfwalfCM;
nir felves. aitd
"
Enpirics
into Vulgdr
Book.
I.
A ticl
not injurious iiiitoi-atibnal 'Authors, no farther' to abec their opinions then as they are fuppo"rteJ by (bliti Pveafons certainly with more excufable refervatidn may we ftirink at their bare tcliimonies 5 whofe argument is but precarious^ and fubfifts upon the charity of our aTencmenrs. -^ In Morality, Rherorick, Law and Hiftory, there is I confefe a frequent and allowable \\{t of teftimony j aitd yet herein I p^rccive^ it not unlimitable, but admitteth-many reftriftioir. Thus jn Law both Civill and Divine that is only efteemcd a le;aJ rc/Jimony, which receives comprobation from the mouths of at Jtad two witneffes 5 and that not only for prevention of caJumny, but afliirance againft millake'i whereas notwithftariding the folid reafon of one man^ is as fufficient as the clamor of a ivhole Nation j and with imprejudi<:ate apprehenfions begets as firm' ii belief as the authority or aggregated teftimony of many hundreds. For reafon being the very root of our natures, and the principles thereof common unto all, what is againft the Laws of true reafon 5 or the unerring underftanding of any one, if ri'ghtly apprehended 5 muft be difclaimed by all Nations, aild rejefted even by mankind. Again, A teftimony is of fmall validity if deduced from mert out of their own profejiion 5 fo if La^antius affirm the figure of the earth is plain, or Aufiin himfelf deny there are Anufodes though venerable Fathers of the Church, and ever to be-'hoiioured, yet will not their Authorities prove fufficient to ground a belief theron. Whereas notwithftanding folid reafon oi- confirmed experience of any man, is very approvable in what profodien foever. So Kajmund Sehimd, a Phylitian of T'holouzf ^ belides his learned Diologues de natura humana^ hath written a natural Theologie J demonftrating therein the Attributes of God, and attemSo Hugo Grotim a pting the like in moft points of Religion. Civilian, did write an excellent Traft of the verity of Chirftian Wherein moft rationally dc;livering themfelves, their Religion. works will be embraced by moft that underftand them, and their Neither icafons enforce belief even from prejudicate Readers. indeed have the Authorities of men been ever fo awfull j but that by fome they have been rejefted, even in their own profeftlons,Thus Arijhtle affirming the birth of the Infant ortime of its g^^ iiarion, extendeth fometimes unto the eleventh Monerh, butHifpcratesj averring that it exceeiled not the tenth Adrian the Emperour in a folemn procefs, determined for Arijhtle ; hwt J a ft in} an TOany years after,, took in with Hippocrates and reverfed the Dedec of the other. Thus have Coimcils , not only 'condemned private men, but the: Decrees and A^s'o^ione anorhei*i So 0alen
: i.s:
'
-t
after
Book.
1.
^^
Common
Errort,
^9
aifteiall
^fom^rinu
H^'\i\i{in(m'Mi}^fp(>ci^tesj in fonie things hath fallen Avtceiv iiiMaiany 'from Gahn ; *nd others fiicceeding .fromhint.- Ami although the [mg\\\^niy oi Parac.elfu.s be incolIcrabkj.'whQ Sparing oiiiy:Hip/'ocr>7r<'.^ hath reviled not only the Authors, but al^noft jill -the learning that went before him ^ yet is irnot much leffe injurious unco knowledge obliinately and inconi!ftcedly!to IjdH.with ajly^onfii: cVVhidi humor unhappily poflefiing'inany 5 they ^ave:!byj fifejii^iir;vvithdrav?n themfclves into paccies, aiad conteuinuig the foverargnty otTruth, ;(editioufly abet>
'
"
Hiftoricill,
iinayoidabk'-ufoj is of iuo iilacion confeqAience that Heradottfs wr\tijig tlierclbre no uch._City 'in his\ime-5 ov\kc2i\.^Q Vicf^or ides hath mad^tio.inention of Unicorns hojii, there is-therefbren6fuch thing
V
Indeed j intending iiii accurate enumeratioii of Mediin Nature. cal! materials, the omilfion hereof affords foiue probability, it was. not tiifed by the Ancients j but will not conclude the nonFor fo may we annihilate many iimples exiitence thereof. as Setmay'Rabarbe'^ B^^oar ^ A^nbregris khoVviL toi his, enquiiies and diVera odiers. Whereas indeed the reafon oif' man hath
,
*
mw
not
lafl:
fuGJi
;
reftraint:5
affirniitively
but nega-
tively
notoucly affirming there is no magnitude beyond the heavens , but aifo denying there is any vacuity vvithin them.
;
Aithugh>dr.iie confelfed,; the a!Srhiative hath the prerogative iUntiwi^ and B^ritif^ 'ciigi^offetliiiTrfie-powsr^ulI dem^nftration.
...
.'.x
'.
.
'.:'.:
.-^h
:'
isb
r-;
."A...:
i>
ir^^'
vLartlyy the ftrahge relations nradei by Authors n'lajf fiifflcieutdifcourage our adlicrelice unto Authoritie, and which if we bt^lieve we mull: be apt to^ fwallow any thing. Thus Bufil will^ fecU us the ferpent went er eft like man, and that 'that Beaft could fpeake. before the ;fall. -"^ojiatm would make lis believe thae Niliis encreafeth every New moon. Leonardo Fioravanti an Italy.
.
many dttier fecrets', afliimeth unto Lim-' of one conceruing Pellitpry of the wall, that is, that it never growedi the {in^CL^ oP'the North ftar. T>oue ft poJJ'a. vedere la. jiella T'ramontana , wherejn how wide he is from truth, is ealily 'dj^fcpverabh unto; every one, who ha:h but Aftronomie enough to know that ftar. Francifcus SanClius
lian Phylitianybeirde
fclf the difcovery
Emblemes
affirmeth,
and
'^
from, experience, g- Nightingale hath no tongue. Avc>>: V-bilomelam liupa curare 'fro ccrto wfirmare pijfum ^ nifi nte ocul: f^luitt^^ while /hall believe up.^^l^cjl ifii, an^f:. nian for a
.
'
^*:L!'^'':^?i?i"'ei>ci
k&
ijiiay
at.;his
leafiure
refmt
leaft,
it
by
his
<^SH''jxWJ?ft?;o^?U;;.iljnpflj.AVQul4
<
i
.kkeye,,
at
what-vfife mail
^<?
Efiquhies
itito
P'ulgoir
Book,
man would relle upon tfcat Antidote delivered by Tierius in bis Hi^^rogiyphicksagaii^ tlie,fving of a Scorpion? that is^to (it upon aft ATs with ones face toward bis tail ; for fo.the Pain ieavech.the mail, and paflith into the Beart. It were me thinks but an luicoiifoitabic for an Quartane Ague (and yet as good perhaps as many rfc:c;;ic others ufed) to have recourfe unto the Rfc;p oi Sammonicusi that is 5 to lay th<j fourtk book of Homers. W'lSLd under. ones head J according to the precept qf, rliat Phyiitian and Poet, Mxonie I/iados quarlurn fuppone trementi. There are furely fcvT An cycmcdc' ^^^^^ ^^^^^ belief to fvva How, or hope enough to experiment the Gollyriuni of Albertm , which promileth a ftrange effeft , and fiich as cine. Thieves would count ineftimabie , that is, to make one fee iii yet thus much ^ according unto his receit. Will the dark the right eye of an Hedge-hog boyled in oyt,. and preferred in a brazen veffel effed. As (Irange it is, and unto vicious in-* clinations were worth a nights lodging with L***- , what is deTen thoufand Uvered in Kiranides ; that the left llcMie of a Weefel , wrapt up drachracj. jj^ j.|^g ^\^^^ ^f ^ ^g Mule , is able to fecurc incontinency from con^
ception*
..
i:
Thefe with fwarms. of others have mem delivered in their writings, whofe verities are onety fupported by thei^ Authori-<
But being neither coufbnant imto reafon, nor correfpondenc unto experiment, their affirmations are unto us no Axiomesr We cfteem thereof as things unfaid, and account them bat in the lift of nothing. I wifti liercin the Cbjmijb had been more fparing who over-magnifying: .'tiieir. prep-aiations y inveigle the curioiity of many, and delude the fecurity of moft. For if experiments would anfwer: theiir encomiums , the ftone andquartane Agues, were not opprobrious unto Phylitians ; we might contenmthat firft, and moft uncomfortable A phorifm of Hippocrates^ for furely that Art werefooaattabied, that hath fo general rem&dies 5 Mid life could not beftirt j were there fuch co prolong it.
ties
: :
;
><ri/o/;g<:w tnvit,
'.'
'
k.
I
, . !
<
-!:fl
^i;^'.i:
Ul
'
'
J
!
'
'
'
..
^r-:
'
,
IM' F ^ '''*^-
'i
.
'' M
'
'
'
CHAP.
VHI.
NOw
IS
for as much as we have difcourfed of Authority , and there fcarce any tradition or popular error but ftands alfo deli-
vered by fome good Authors we Diallendeavouralhortdifcovery of fuch, as for the major part have given authority hereto : who though excellent and ufeful Authors , yet bei*>g either tranfcriptivcj or following common relations ^ their aCGoiirits are not to
]^Qok.
I.
*^^^
Common
Errort.
fpeftion.
entertained without a prudent clrCunit3 be fwallowed at largc^ or In whom the 77/> dixit ^ although it be no powerful ar^un^ent in any, is yet lefs authentick then in rtianj other, benot their own experiences \ but others caiife they deliver from others , r^ later pens from write and affirmations ,
1/ Thefirftinorder, asalfointime
carftajjtif.
An excellent and very eleeant Hiftorianj whofe books i"^|^'=^J'^^^J^^' ofHirtory were fo well received in his own dayes, that at their ^j^^^^^P "^^^c rehearfal in the Olympick games ^ they obtained the names of the eminent Auand continued in fuch efteem unto defcending ihors. MvXes iiine
,
termed him 5 Hijloriarum parens. And Dion ifrni Epiftle to Pompey^ after an exprefs conpariCountrcy-man;,inan his fon, affords him the better o( Thucydcii all which notwith-ilanding , he hath received from fome , the ftile of Mendnciorum pa.His authority was much nifringed by P/wf<?rt;[> i who being ofter. fended with him 3 as folyhim had been with P/ji/tfjv/yr , for fpeaking too coldly ofhisCountrey-nien, hath left a particular Traft,
A^'es, that O'cfro
X><r
But in this latter Century , Cameand Stejphmus hnye ftcpped in , and by their witty Apologies, effeauaM)^ endea^mU'^d to frufli-ate the Arguments of Now in this Author , as may be obferved Tint arch , or any other. in our enfuing difcoiirfe , and is better difcernable in the permaligytitate Uerodoti.
rarius
lifai
there arc many things fabuloufly deliaccepted as truth? : .whereby neverthelefs if any man b^ deceived 3 the'Anthof, is 'not fo culpable as he mdeed' inutan'i>g Ihe father Poet, Foi' the Believer. ^nd' its ^yi/cjdides ofeferveth, \vbofe life he hath alfo written as well intending the delight* as benefit of his Reader, hath
bie
,,
befprinkled his
work
any man be
the
led into
',
with error,
many
he
,
fabillofities
niillaketh
Author
who
,
plainly
confefifeth
the he Writeth
whereby if mtention of
many
by
ruea.
hear-fay
deleo
and
Egff
:
forgettttii
v*'ery
coiiiiderable
.
things caution
'
'
"
' "
In the fecond place hCteftas die Gnidian, Phyfitian unto 2. Artaxerxes K\r\g of ferfia : His books are often, cited by ancient Writers : and by the induftry of Steph'anm and Kodomanm , there are extant fome fragments thereof In our dayes j he wrote the B'ldovy o^Perfi a y and many niirr^tions of India. In thefirft, as having a fair opportunity to know the -truth, and as Diodorus affirmeth thepenifal of Pfr/:<f'RecOrds, his teftitripny is acceptable.
liyh\^ Indi'in Rektiotis , wherein are contained Rrange and incredible actOiuitS 3 -"-he i^' fiirdy fo' Be' read with fufpen^on.
'
Thefe
22
Enpmes^tntp Vulgar
Book.!;
Thefe were they which weakned his authority with former ages; for ai wq may oKerve , li,c is feldom meiuloned, without a dei'ogatory Pareutheils^iji any Afi^i^r. Arifioih belides the frequent unJtrvahiing of his auchpiity > in hi^ books of Animals gives hinj the lie no lefi then twice, concerning the feed of Elephants. .Strabo in his Equidem facilms eievendi book hath lefc a harder cenfure of him. Homero j aliquis fidem adhibuerit^ item^ue "tragicis Toetisy Hep.odo corum fimilibhs. But Lucian hath quavt Cteft, HerodotOy HdUnicO) fppken more plainly than any. Scripfit Ctefi^ de Indorum regione, deque lis quapud ilos funt. ea qn nee ipfe viditjueque ex ullius fermone audivit. Yet were his relations taken up by fome fuccceding Wriiers, and many thereof revived ty our Coiuitrey-man , Sir John Mandevil'y Knight and Doftor in Phyfick , who after thirty years peregriHe lefc a nation died at Lf/gf, and was there honourably interred. book of his Travelsj, which hath been honoured with thetranflation of many languages;, and now continued above three hundred ycarsi
&
&
herein he often atteiieth the fabulous relations -oCtejias^ and fcems, to confirm the refuted accounts of Antiquity. All which may ftill be received in fome acceptions of morality , and to a pregnant invention, inay afford commendable my thologie j but in a natural and .proper expoiition , it coij^tainetf^ i^ipc^^iU^ides'^ things incpfir iiilent with truth. .;>:'':"':: ^'\ y^.r-/ ;.; > / There is a Book t)e mirandis Auiitionibm^ alcribed unto Arifiotle-y another De mirahilihus narratiouihits ^ written long after by Antis^O' mHy anoth eralfo of the fame title by P/f^<? Trallianusy tranllated by Xilander^^mvi with th^ AnnoiatioiK of Mi?/^r//;-jall wherof make good the promife of their tjtjes, and r^iay be read with caution. Which if iauy man fhiall iikewife obfeu^ve in theJLeftureof FJifilojiratus concerning the life ofApolIoniui, and even in fome palTages of the fober and learned P/t/?rc/(?f j ornot onely in ancient Writers , but (hall carry a wary eye,, on Paj^lus Vey^etus^ Joviuf, Olaus Magnus, Nierembergiufi and.many other I think his circumfpetion is laudable, and he may thereby decline occalion of Error. lie wrote many books in Phyfick, 4. "Diofcorides Anazarheifs but fix thereof ^d- Materia Medic a y have found the greateft efteem j lie is an Author of good Antiquity and ufe^ preferred by Galetty before Cratevas ,. P aniphi Iiif ^.^nd all that attempted the iike defcription before him; yet all he delivereth therein is not to be concaved Oraculou:^. For befide , that following the vs'ars under Antbonj, the courfe of ixis life would not- permit a punctual Exakcn \n all^ T/iere are uiany things concerning the nature of fimples , traditionally delivered,, and to. which I believe he gave no'aflent himfetf. Ithad been an excellent deceit? and in his time when Sadies were fcarce in fafhio qf very great ufe, if that were true 3 which ^ic. .^liyers, ti^tj^i^^x ^ 61' Jgnt^
'
-^
:,
'
"
'
'
"
'
X'^P^
Book
I.
Z 3
Alikeopinioti Cafim held onely in the hand, preferveth the rider from gal"'* "' liiig. It were a ftrange effeft, and whores would forfakethe ex'^j'J^^" periment of Savine^ if tlaac were a truth which he deliverech of Brake or female Fearn 5 that ouely treading over it, itcaufeth It were to be wilhedtrue , and women would a fudden abortion. Idolize him 3 could that be made out which he recorded of Phyllort:, Mercury , and other vegetables , that the juice of the Made plane drunkj oi the leaves but applied unto the genitals , determines their In thtfe relations although he be more conceptions unto males. fparing , his predeceflbrs were very nimierous i and Ga/e^t hereof moft fharply accufeth Fantphilns. Many of the like naJiLtius ^ ture We meet fometimes ii\ Or ibafms Tralliamtf y Se~ ration , Evax and Marcellm j wiiereof fonie containing no colour of verity, we may at iirft light re)ed them j others which feen\ to we may reduce unto experiment. carry fome face of truth , And herein we ftiall rather perform good oflices unto truth then any fervice unto their relators, who have well deferved of fuccecding Ages-, from whom having received the conceptions of former times, we have the readier hint of their conformity with ours , and may accordingly explore and lift their verities. a man of great Eloquence^ andin5. Vliniw fecimdmoi Verona diiihy indefatigable, as may appear by his writings, efpecially thofe now extant , and which are never like to perifh , but even with learning it felf^ that is, his natural Hiftory. He v^ras the greateft Colleftor or Rhapfodiftof the Latines , and 2iS Suetonius obferveth , he coUeded this piece out of two thoufand Latine and Greek Authors. Now, what is very ftrange, there is p/rj natura* fcarce a popular error paflant in our dayesj which is not ei- Hiftory colther direftly exprefled, or MiduCtively contained in this work ; l^aied out of which being in the' hands of moft men , hath proved a powerful V^^P^^^^"occafion of their propogation. Wherein notwithftanding the credulity of the Reader , is more condenmable then the curioiiFor commonly ive nameth the Authors ty the Author. frO0i whom he received thofe accounts ; and writes but as he rei|ds , as in his Preface to Vefj>dfian he acknowledgeth. Claudius JElianui h who fioiirifhed not long after in the reign ^. of Xr<rj<?}Unto whom he dedicated his Tafticks, an elegant and mifiCqUjiyieous Author v be .hath.kfc two.books which are in the hands of every one, his Hiftory of Anin}?ils,and his Var 14 hifhria. Wherein are Contained many things fufpicious> not. a few falfe, fonre impo.liblej he is much beholden nnw Cteftas , and in many uncertainties writes more confidently then P/i>'.
'
:,
-,
--y
7. j^M/iw5o/iM53 who lived alfo about his time : He left: a work entituled Po/j:^/jbr , containing great variety of niatter , and is with moft in good requeft at this day. Buttofpeaklreely what cannot
.
be
'
.^
be concealed,
it is
Enfnries
into t^ulgar
Book.
but Pliny varied^ or a tfaiifcriptionoFhis natural Hiftory-, nor is it without all wonder it hath continued fo long, buc not oneis now likely, and deferves indeed to live for ever 5 !y for the elegancy of the Text, but the excellency of the Comnienr, lately performed by Salmafms , under the name of PUnian Exercitations.
Atheni'A ^ a delegable, Author, very various, and jufi^Iy There is extant of his, a hyCafaiihone ^ Grxcoriim Plinm. famous piece under the name of Velpmfophilia , Or cccna fapi^ntutB) containing the difcourfe of many learned m-u , at a feaft provided by Laureyitius. It is a laborious colleftion out of many Authors, atid fome whereof are mentioned no where elfe. If containeth ftrange and lingular relations, not without fome fpice or fprinkling
8.
failed
of
all
learning.
a better
Gramma-
rian then Philofopher, dealing but hardly with An'iotle znd Plato and betrayeth himfelf much in his Chapter de curiofitate Arijhtelt', h\ brief, he is an Author of excellent ufe, and may with difcretion be read unto great advantage : and hath therefore well deferved But being mifcellathe Comments of Cafaubon and Dalcampim. neous in many things, he is to be received with fufpition , for fuch as amafs all relations, niuft err in fome, and may witliout offence be
That
write
Hcxonictcrs,
or long Ycrfcs.
unbelieved in many. We will not omit the works of N:c under , a Poet of good 9. Antiquity : that is, his T'heriacay^nd Alexipharmaca, tranflated and commented by Gorraus^ for therein are contained feveral traditions, and popular conceits , of venemous beafts j which onely dedufted, the work is to be embraced, as containing the iirlt defcription of poyfons and their Antidotes, vfhereofI>iofcorides,PlinjandGaleni have made efpecial uCe in elder times j and Ardojnus ^ Grevinm-t and others, in times more neer our own. We might perhaps let pafs There are extant of his Oppianua^ that famous Cilician Poet. in Greek , four books of Cynegeticks or Venation, five of Halieuticks or Pifcation , conmiented and publifhed by Kitterhuftim wherein defcribing beafts of vcnery and fiAes , he hath indeed but fparingly inferted the vulgar conceptions thereof. So that abaing the annual mutation of Sexes in the Hyena , the iingle Sex of the Hhinoceros ^ the Antipathy between two Drums, of a Lamb and a Wolfs skin 5 the inforraicyof Cubs, the venation of Ceatai^res , the copulation of the M'tnna and the Viper, with fome few others , he may be read with great delight and proiome wonder liis Elegant lines are It is not without fit. Surely hereby we rejeft one of the beft Epick fo neglefted. Poets,and much condemn the j udgement of Antoninus^ whofe appreheniioiis fo honoured his Poem, that as fome report, for every verfc, he aJfigned him a Stater of Gold.
10.
More
Book.
10.
I.
More warily are we to receive the relations o( Philes ^ vrho in Greek Jambick^s delivered the proprieties of Animals , for herein he had aniafled the vulgar accounts recorded by the Ancients, and hath therein efpecially followed ^lian. And likewife Johannes a Grammarianj whobciidesa Comment upon HeCmdind 1zetz.es
:t
Homer, hath left us Chiliads de Van a Hilhria ; wherein delivering theaccountsof Cr^yi^f 5 Herodotnf ^ and moft of the Ancients, he embraced with caution , and as a tranfciiptive reis to be
lator.
We cannot without partiality omit all caution even of ho11. and fuch whofe names are venerable unto all pofterity : Writers, ly not to meddle atall with miraculous Authors, or any Legendary relators, we are not without circumfpetion to receive fome books even of Authentick and renowned Fathers. So are we to read the leaves of B^^/ and ^w^ro/> , in their books , entituled Uexameron , or 'the defcription of the Creation; Wherein delivering particular accounts of all the Creatures , they have left us relations futable to thofe of ^/i/7>x, P/inie and other natural Writersi whofe authorities herein they followed , and from whom moft probably they defumed their Narrations. And the like hath been that is, a book he committed by Epiphanius , in his Phyiiologie the With nature of no lefs caution concerning Animals. left hath muft we look on Ifidor , Bifhop of Sevil; who having left in twentybooks, an acurate work de Originibus ^ hath to the Etymologic of words, fuperadded their recived natures, wherein moft generally he confents with common opinions and Authors which have delivered
:
them.
for his great learning and lati12. Albcrt'us Bi(hop oi Katisbone tude of knowledge lirnamed Magnus, Befides Divinity,he hath written many Trafts in Philofophyi what we are chiefly to receive with caution, are his natural traftates, more efpecially thofe of Minerals; Vegetables and animals, which are indeed chiefly Colle6:ions out of Ari\htle.iJiLlian^2ind P/ij,anJ refpe^tively contain many of our popular Errors. A man who hath much advanced thefe opinions by the authority of his Nanie,and delivered moft conceits,with ftrift enquiry into few.In the fame Clajfis^ may well be placed Vincentiuf^ Belluacenfis-, or rather he from whom he collefted his Speculum naturakythait zwdzKo Hort in Sanitatis-, -.ind BartholotneU'S \Sy Gull elm as de Conchif Glanv ill ^di'mm&d Anglicuf:,who wiice de proprietatibus renmi. Hither alfo may be referred Kiranides j which is a colledtion out of Harpocration the Greekjand fundry Arabick Writers^ delivering not onely the Natural but Magical propriety of thingsj a work asfull of vanity as variety^ containing many relations, whofe invention is as difficult as their beliefs , and their experiments fometime as haraas ei,
'-,
ther.
ly
Why
3^
^npiries
into
Vulgdr
Book.
I.
had almoft iov got J eronimm Cardan;^ that faraous Phy13. iicivm oF hlilan^ a great enquirer of truth, but roo greedy a receiver of it. He hath left many excellent difcourfes. Medical, Natural, and Aftrological the mo^ fupicious are thofe two he wrote by admonition in a dream, that is, Ve fubtilitate varietate re,
We
&
hath taken many thnigs upon tniil-j and although examined Tome,, hath let (lip many others. He is of lingular ufe unto a prudent Pleader 5 but unto him that onely deiireth Hocies , or to repleniih his head with va-; rities ; like many others before related , either in the Original or coufirmacion , he may become no fmall occa;ion of Error. 14. Laftly, Authors are alfo fufpicious, not greedily to be fwalloweilj wiio pretend to write of fccrets , to deliver AntipachicSj !Synipathies , and the occult obftruiities of things i in the lift whereof may be accounted. Alexia Fedmontaniis , Antonirts Miz,jtldi{S:> 'trinum Magicunii and many other. Not omitting that famous Philofopher of Naples, Baptifia V^orta i in whofe works, although there be contained many excellene things, and verified upon his own experience 5 yet are there many alfo receptary, and fuch as will not endure the teft. Who although he hath delivered maray flrangc relations in his Phytognoraia, and his Villa j yec hath he more remarkably exprefTed himfelf in his Natutal Magick, and the miraculous efFefts of Nature. Which containing various and dt lettable fubjefts,wi)hall promiling wondrous and eajie eifeft-, they are entertained by Readers at all hands, whereof the major part lit down in his authority, and thereby omit not only the Cfrtainty of truth, but the pleafure of its experimenr. Thus have vfc made a brief enumeration of thefe learned men^ not willing any to decline their Works f without which it is not eafie to attain any racafure of general knowledge,) but to-apply themftlves with caution thereunto. And feeing the lapfes of thcfc worthy pens, to caft a wary eye on thofe diminutive, and pamphlet Treaties daily publifhed amongft us. Pieces maintaining rather Typography then verity Authors prefiimably vvricing by common places, wherein for many years promifciioufly amalHng all that makes for fubjeft, they breal( froth at laft in trite and fri^iiUefs Khapfodies j doing thereby not. only open injury unto ieariling, but committing a fecret treachery upon truth. Fortiicir relations falling upon credulous Readers, they msec with prepared beliefs 5 whofe fupinities had rather aflent unto allj then^adevnture the triall of any. Thus, I fay,muft thefe Authors be read, and thus muft we be read curfclves; for difcourling of matters dubious, and many contro-
rum.
man
vertible truths
.,
;
',
we cannot
or
Book.
I.
37
or implore any farther aflent^ then the probability of our Reafonsa and verity of experiments induce.
CHAP.
of the
IX.
fame.
THere
are bciide thefe Autiiors and fuch as have pofitively promoted errors, divers other which are in fome way acceifory 5 whofe verities although they do not direftly afTert, yet do they obliquely conciu' unto their beliefs In which account are many holy Writers, PreacherSjMoralifts, Rhetoricians, Orators and Poets; for they depending upon invention, deduce their mediums from and playing much upon the limile, or illuall things wliacfosver
j
ftrative
argumentation to induce their Enthymemes unto the people, they take up popular conceits, and from traditions unjuftifiable or really falfe, illuftrate matters of undeniable truth. VVherein al'tliougli their intention be lincere, and that courfe not much condemnable yet doth it notorioufly ftrengthen common errors, and authorife opinions injurious unto truth. Thus have fome Divines drawn into argument die Fable of the Thxni:<3 made ufe of the Salamander^, Pelican 3 Bafilis^p and divers relations of P/i;y ; deducing from thence moil worthy morals,and even upon our Saviour. Now although this be no: prejudicial unto wifer judgements, who are but v^eakly moved with fuch argument?, yet it is ofc times occaiion of Error unto vulgar heads, the Moralj and conwho expeft in the Fable as equal a truth as ceive that infallible Philofophy, which is in any fenf.' delivered by Divinity. But wifer difcerners do well underiiand, char every Art hath its own circle j that the effects of things are beil examined, by fcienccs wherein are delivered their caufej j thac ilrift Evprcfllons'of and definitive expreHions, are alway required in Philofophy, but a holy Scripture loofe and popular delivery will ferve ofcennmes in Divinity. As fitted rcany may be obferved even in holy Scripture which often omittcth t''"^^ rather ^o PoP" ="" the exaft account of things i defcribing them rather to our apcommon 3"a -1 r J prehenhons , then leaving doubts in vulgar minds, upon their apprtiicnfion. ' unknown and Philofophical dcfcriptions. Thus it, termeth the tlicn to the Sun and the Moon, the t\vo great lights of Heaven. Now if exnct ratuie any fhall froni hence conchide, the Moon is fecond inmagni- *^^ things. tude unto the Sun, he muft excufe my belief j atid i think it cannot be taken for hereiic, if herein 1 rather adhere unto the demonftration of Etoio'ji than the popular dcfcription of Thus is it i^id ^ CbronkUs 2. 4.. Tiiat Solonijn made Mofes.
:
-,
'
_,g
-K
Enqulrki
nK>lceii
five
into
VulgAr
Book.
and
Sea of ten Cubits, from brim to brim round in compafs, Cubits the height thereof, and a line of thirty Cubits did
ro.ind about. made juft treble
it
compafs
Now
^^'''
I"-!l tucrna.
i,^, as lo. to rence is 30. or 7. to 21. But Archinsi^s demonftrates, thac the proportion of the Diameter, unco the circumference, is as 7. unto alaio.1: 22. which will occaliou a fenlible difference, that is almoft a Cubit. Now if herem I adhere unto Archimedes who fpeaketh exaftly, rather then the facred Texc which fpeakech largely 5 I hope I ihall not offend Divinity I am fare I ffiall have reafon and experience of every circle to fupport me. Thus Moral Writers, Rhetoricians and Orators make ufe offeverall relations which will not confift with verity. Arijiotle in his Ethicks takes up the conceit of the Bever, and the divulhon of his Tefticles. The tradition of the Bear, the Viper, and divers others are frequent amongft Orators. All which although unto the illiterate and undifcerning hearers may feem a confirmation of their realities; yet is this no reafonable eftablifhmentmito others, who will not depend hereon otherwife then common Apologues which being of impojTible falfities, do notwithftanding include wholfome moralities, and fuch as expiate the trcfpafs of their abfurdities. The Hieroglyphical do^iine of the y^gyptians f which in their four hundred years cohabitation fome conjecture they learned from the Hebrews) hath much advanced many popular conceits. For ufing an Alpbabet of things, and not of words, though the Image and piftures thereof, they endeavoured to fpeak their hidden conceit, in the letters and language of nature. In purfuit whereof, although in many things, they exceeded not their true and real appreheniions j yet in fome other they either framing the ftory, or
: :
taking up the tradition, conduceable unto their attentions, obliquely, confirmed nwny faliities which as authentick and conceded truths did after pafs unto the Greeks 5 from them unto other Nations, are ftill retained by fymbolical Writers, Emblematifts, He--,
and others. Whereof fome are ftriftly mantained for truths, good their artificial reprefentarions ; others fymbollically intended, are literally received, and fwallowed in
raldes,
as naturally making'
the firlt fenie, without all guft of the fecond. Whereby we pervert the profound and myiterious knowledge of ^gypt ; containing the Arcana's of Greek Antiquities ; the Key of many obfcurities, and ancient learning extant. Famous herein in former age^ were HeraifcHS:, Cherenton^ Efiust efpecially Orits Apollo Niliacm : who lived in the reign of 7beodofins) and in ^Egyptian language hft two books of Hieroglyphicks ; tranflated into Greek by Phi/i^pus, and a large colleftion ot all made after hyPieriuf, But no man is likely to profomdthe ocean of thatDoftrinejbeyond thac eminent exaniple of ^nduftrioiis LearningjKirc^ir^. ! nters
Book.
^/^
CommnErrors.
,9
painters who are die vifible reprefenters of things, and fuch as by the learned fenfe of the eye endeavour to inform the underftandmg, are not inculpable herein^who either defcribing naturals
as they have been, have oftentimes erred in as they are, or anions their delineations. Which being the books that all can read, are fiiiicfull advancers of thefe conceptions, efpecially in common and
popular apprchenlions
niuft left
being unable for farther enquiry, . who in the text, and letter of their defcriptions. LaiHyj Poets and Poetical Writers have in this point exceeded
others, trimly advancing the Egyptian notions of Harfies^^ fbxnixjGrjphins^ and many more. Now however to make life of fifticns. Apologues, and fables be not unwarrantable, and the intent
cf thele invnitions might point at laudable ends: Yet do they afford our junior capacities a frequent occalion of error, fetling imjrcflions in our tender memories, which our advanced judgements gencfially ncgleft to expunge. This way the vain and idle fiftions rf the Gentiles didfirft infinuate into the heads of Chriftans ; and thus are they continued even unto our dales. Our firil: and literary apprchenlions being commonly inftnifted in Authors which wherewith our memories being fluffed, oiir i andle nothing elfe i inventions become pcdantick, and cannot avoid their allufions ; driving at thefe as at the higheft elegancies, which are but the fri^^idities of wit, and become not the genius of manly ingenuities. It were therefore no lofs like that o^ Galens ftudy, if thefe had found the fame fate and would in fome way requite the neglet of folid Aithors, if they were lefs purfued. For were a pregnant wit edwatel in ignorance hereof, receiving only impreillons from realiiies; upon fuch folid foundations, it muft fiirely raife more fiibftantial fuperftruftions , and fall upon very many excellent Itrains, which have been jufled off by their intrulions.
,
CHA
Oj
the lafi
P.
X.
falfe Opinions^ the
endcA-
fours of Satan*
befide the BVt within our
of humane natitre, the feed of error and the feveral waics of delulion from each other, there is an invi; ble Agent, and fecret pronjoter without ifs, whofe aftiviry is undifcerned, and plaies in the dark upon us j and that is the ifirft contriver of Error, and profeffed oppofer of Truth,- the devil. For though permitted unto his proper principles^^ Adam perhaps would have iinned without the fuggeftion of Saran: aud
infmiities
felves,
Enptriei
into
Vulgdr
Book.L
:
tranfgrciTive infirmities of hitiuVlt might have erred alone, as well as the Angels before him And although alfo there were no devil at all, yet is there now in our natures a confeHcd futficiency unto corruption , and the frailty of our own Oecoiioniif, were able to betray us out of truth, yet wants there not another Agent, who taking advantage heieof proceederh to obfcure the diviner part, and efface all traft of its craduftion. The 'devils Jo attempt a particular of all his wiles, is too bold an Arithme"^^^^^ "*^^ coniiderably concerneth his popular and *^*^^^ ^^^*' "'^" T'^'ttfne of deluiion, he firft deceiveth mankind in live main waies piaftifed cror'fn The points concerning God and himfelf. world. And liril: his endeavoius have ever been, and they ceafe not yet to inftill a belief in the mind of man,- There is no God at all. And this he principally endeavours to eflabli(h in a direft and literal apprehenlion i that is, that there is no fuch reality exillenr, that the neceillty of his entity dependeth upon ours, and is but a Political Chymera j That the natural truth of God is an artificial ereftion of man, and the Creator himfelf but a fubtile invention of the Creature. Where he fucceeds not thus high, he labours to introduce a fecondary and deduftive Atheifm ; that although, men concede there is a God, ytt^ /hould they deny his providence. And therefore alTertions have flown about, that he inteuieth only the care of fpecies or common natures, but letteth loofe the guard of individuals,' and fingle exiitencies rherein That he looks nor below the Moon;)but hath deligned the regiment of fublunary affairs imro inferiour deputations. To promote which v-appreheniions , or empuzzel their due conceptions, he caileth iii notions of fate, deltiny, fortune, chance, and necelTity terms commonly niifconceived by vulgar heads,and their propriety fometime Whereby extinguilhing in minds the perverted by the wifeil. compenfation of vertue and vice, the hope and fear of heaven or hell they comply in their aftions unto the drift of his delulions, and live like creatures without the capacity of cither. No\v hereby he not [only imdermineth the Bafe of religion, and deffroyeth the principle preambulous unto all belief j but puts upon us the remoteft error from truth. For Atheifm is the
greatefl fallity,
and to aftirm there is no God, the higheft lie in therefore ihiftly taken, fonie men will fay his labotir is in vain i For many there are, who cannot conceive there was ever any abfolute Atheiji > or fuch as could determine there
Natiu'c.
And
xvas
from
check from himfelf, or contradiction And therefore rhofe few fo called by elder times, might be the bell of Pagans fuffering that name rather, in relation to the gods of the Gentiles, then the true Creator of all. A conceit thac cannot befall Jiis greate/l enemy, or
aJl
no God, without
him
Book
I.
7nd]Common Errors,
41
him that would Induce the fame in us ; who hath a fenfible appreTo fpfeakyet henfion hereof 3 for he believeth with trembling. fome unto opinions conformably no and , creamre can more ftriftly which the will hath can a power much; nor to run into thus wifh For velleities, and wifhes of impolTibilities^ have any utinam of this. ^ to defire there were no God, were plainly to unwi/h their own being j which muft needs be annihilated in thefubftraftionof that eflfence, which fubftantially fupported them, and reftrains them from And if as fome contend , no creature can regreflion into nothing. deiire his own annihilation, that Nothing is not appetible, and not to be at all, is worfe then to be in the miferableft condition of fomething the devil himfelf could not embrace that motion, nor would the enemy of God be freed by fuch a Redemption. But coldly thriving in this dciign,as being repulfed by the principles of humanity, and the Diftates of that produftion, which cannot deny its original , he fetcheth a wider circle; and when he cannot make men conceive there is no God at all, he endeavours to make thcmbelieve, there is not one, but many : wherein he hath been fo fuccesful with common heads , that he had led their belief thorow all the works of Nature. Now in this latter attempt , the fubtilty of his circumvention, hath indirectly obtained the former. For although to opinion there be many gods, may feem an accefs in Religion , and fuch as cannot at all confift with Atheifm 3 yet doth it diduftively and upon inference include the fame, for unity is the infeparable and effential And if there be more then one God , it is no Areopsguj the attribute of Deity ; Atheifm to fay there is no God at all. And herein though So- fevcie Court crates onely fuffered , yec were Tlato and ArOiotle guilty of the ^_^**^"'{, '^*' fame truth-, who demonftratively underflanding the fimplicity of .^^'"" perfeftion , and the indivifible condition of the firft caufator, it was not in the power of earth, or Areopagy of hell to work them from it. For holding an * Apodiftical knowled'g, and affured fcience of its verity , to perfwade their appreheniions unto a plurality of gods in the world, were to make Euclide believe there. Were more then one Center in a Circle , or one right Angle in a Trianglej which were indeed a fruitlefs attempt, and inferreth abfurdities beyond the evaiionof hell. For though Mechanick and vulgar heads afcend not imto fuch comprehenfions, who live not Commonly unto half the advantage of their principles ; yet did they not efcape the eye of wifer Minervas, and fuch as made good the genealogies of Jupiters brains; who although they had divers ftyles for God, yet under many appellations acknowledged one divinity : rather conceiving thereby the evidence or afts of his power in feverall wayes and places, then a multiplication of Eflence, or real diftraftion of unity in any one.
,
A gain.
.z
Book
Again, To render our errors more monftrou? ("and what unto miracle fets forth the patience of God, ) he hath endeavoured to maketlie world believe, that he was Godiiimfelf; and failing of his hi ft attempt to hz but like the higheft iu heaven, he hath obtained with men to be the fame on eaith. And hath accordingly alTunted the aimexes of Divinity, and the prerogatives of the Creator , drawing into praftice the operation of miracles , and the prefcience of things to come. Thus hath he in a fpecious way wrouglit cures upon the fick played over the wondrous afts of Prophets, and counterfeited many miracles of Chrift and his Apoftle?. Thus hath he openly condended with God j and to this ciiefthis infolency was not aftiamed to play a folenin prize with. Mofcs', wherein although his performance were very fpecious and beyond the conmion apprehenlion of any power below a Deity, yet was it not fuch as could make good his Omnipotency. For he was wholly confounded in the converiion of duft into lice. An aft Phylofophy can fcarce deny to be above the power
:
of Nature , nor upon a requilite predifpo!ition beyond the efficacy of the Sun. Wherein notwithftanding the head of the old Serpent was confe/Tedly too weak for Mo/f^ hand , and the arm of his Magicians too fhort for the finger of God. Thus hath he alfo made men believe that he can raife the dead; that he hath the key of life and death , and a prerogative above that principle which makes no regrelliOJi from privations. The Stoicks that opinioned the fouls of wife men dwelt about the Moon, and thofe of fools wandred about the earth, advantaged the conceit o^this. effeft wherein the Epicureans, who hit^Id tliac death was nothing, nor nothiirg after death , muft contradift their principles to be deceived. Nor could the Pythagorian or fuch as maintained the tranfniigratioii of fouls give eaiie admittance herefor holding that feparated. fouls, fucceiiively fupplied other to bodies i they could, hardly allow the raifing of fouls from other worlds, vyhich at the fame time p they conceived conjoyned.unto bodies in 4)is. More incon(iftent with thefe opinions, is the erThe Authors ror of Ghriftians , who holding the dead do reft in the Lord, do ye: opinion, believe they are at the lure of the Devil j that he who is in bonds loiichlngNc himfelf commandeth the fetters of the dead, and dwelling in the croniancy a"'j.|,^of(-Qnilefs lake , the efled from ^Abrahams bofonie , that canbereal refurrection the oi Samuel: or tipt there is any thing but Heve thc fpiritrof men drpartcd. delufionj ill the praftife of -^ Necromancy and popular conception of
j
,
Divination
GhoftF.
pjg j^^th
by the dead.
dclufion ofdreams
moreover endeavoured the opinion of Deity, by the difcovery of things to come in lleep, J and the
above t|ie pref''- '^nce of our waked fenfes. In this expeftatlon he perfwaded the credulity of elder times to take up their lodging before
his
Book.
his
I.
'
Common
ErrOrf,
4?
temple , In skinS of their own facrifices : till his refervedncfs had contrived anfwers, vvhofe accomplirtiments were in his power, or not beyond his prefagement. Which way, although it hath pleafed Aliiu"hty God, fometimestoreveal himfelf, yet was the proceeding *^^*'^ very different. For the revelations of heaven are conveied by new ^*T ^*?'. inipreliions, and the immediate illumination of the foul, whereas the J^ j^jj rgj'/i^" deceiving fpirit,by concitation of humours, produceth his conceited pons or prc^ phantafms , or by compounding the fpecies already reiiding, doth diftiom. make up words which mentally fpeak his intentions. But above all hemoft advanced his Deity in the folenmpraftife of Oracles, wherein in feveral parts of the world, he publikely profefTed his divhiityi but how ftiort they flew of that ft^irit, whofe om- 7)emo/ihcnct. nifcience they would refemble, their weaknefs fumciently declared. What jugling there was therein, the Orator plainly confefTed, who being good at the fame game hintfelf j could fay that Pjthia PhilipWho can but laugh at the carriage o( Jmmon luito Alexanpifed. der, who addrefling unto him as God, was made to believe, he was a
god himfelf ? How openly did he betray his Indivinity unto Cr^fut^ whobeing ruined by his Amphibology , and expoftulating with him for fo migrateful a deceits received no higher anfwer,then the excufe of his impotency upon the contradiftion of fate , and the fetled law What more then fubluof powers beyond his power to controle nary direftions, or fuch as might proceed from the oracle of humane reafon , was in his advice unto the Spartans in the time of a great plague:when for the ceflation thereof,he wiftit them to have recourfe unto a Fawn,th'at is in open terms, unto one Nebnts^z good Phyfitian ofthofe dayes? From no diviner a fpirit came his reply wntoCaritcal/a^vflio requiring a remedy for his gout, received 110 other coimfel then to refrain cold drink ; which was but a dietetical caution, and
!
'"
'^f''
'
p^^^^
fuch as without a journey unto JEfculapius , culinary prefcription and kitchin Aphorifms might have afforded at home. Nor furely if any tnith there were therein, of more then natural aftiviry was hiscounfel unto Deniocratufi when for the falling ficknefs he commended the Maggot in a Goats head. For many things fecretare true; fympathies and antipathies arefafely auchentick unto us, who ignorant of their canfes may yet acknowledge their efFefts. Belide being a natural Magician he may perform many ats in wayes above our knowledge, though not tranfcending our natuial power , when our knowledge (hall direft it. Part hereof hath been difcovered by liimfelf,and fome by humane indagation: which though magnified as frefli inventions unco us,are ftale unto his cognition.l hardly believe he hath from elder times imknown the verticity of the load-floue , furely his perfpicacity difcerned it to refpeft the North , wheft ours beheld it indeterminately^. Many fecrets there are in Na~' ture of difticult difcov^ry itnto-man, of eaiie knowledi^e untoSa-^
tani
^/j,
taiii
Enplrlei
into
Vulgdr
Book,
I.
wherein fome his vain glory cannot concealjOthers his envy will not difcover. Again , fuch is the myfterie of his delfion , that although he labour to make us believe that he is God , and fupremeft nature whatfoever, yet would he alfoperfwade our beliefs 3 thatheislefs then Angels or Men and his condition not onely fubjeft^d unto rational powers, but t^ie aftions of things which have no. efficacy on our felves. Thus hath he inveigled no fmall pare of the world into a credulity of artificial Magick That there is an Art J which without conipaft commandeth the powers of Hell whence fome have delivered the polity of fpirit*, and left an acthat they ftand in count even to their Provincial Dominions aweofcharmSj fpels, and conjurations j that he is affraid of letters and charafters , of notes and dafties , which fet together do fignifie nothing 5 and not onely in the diftionary of Man, butchefubtiler vocabulary of Satan. That there is any power in Bitumeny pitch or brimftone , to purifie the air from his uncieaunefsi that
,
ni Hipericon to
make good
Magick
as is afcribed
or Cjno^ajiiis by jEUaHia , naturally made out what is tcSeaedand That midc of five 1^7 the fume of a fi/hes liver, he put to flight Jfmodeus. lines. they are afraid of the pentangle of Solomon , though fo itt forth Implying le- with the body of man, as to touch and point out the five places ** ^^^^hereinour Saviour was wounded, I know not how to afTent. If H b perhaps he hath fled from holy Water , if he car^s not to hear the confiftethof found of ^ tetragammaton, if his eye delight nor in the fign four letters, of the Crofs, and that fometiraes he will feem to be charmed with words of holy Scripture , and to fly from the letter and dead verbalicy, who miiil onely flart at the life and animated interiors thereof; Jl maybefearM they are but P<zrr^i<7 flights , ^w/'.'^yi'/z^:/^ retreats,
3
Magicians
JofepJm ^
^^^^ ^^
^^
the mmzoi fuga unto the Root Baaras by it is not ea.le to believe; delivered of Tohhs y^ that
and
cl.ufojy
,
tergiverfations
Whereby
to
confirm, our
cre-
comply with the opinion of fuch powers,, which in themfelves have no aftlvities. Whereof having once begot in our minds an afliued dependence , he makes us and to rely on powers which he but precarioufly obeyes j defert thole true and onely charms which Hell cannot withdulties
he will
ftand.
into darknefs , and quite to lofe us in he would make men believe there is no fuch and that he is not onely fubjeft unto inftricreature as himfelf our creatJu'e.s , but in the rank of nothing. Infinuating into mens minds there is no Devil at all , and contriveth accoidingly, many wayes to conceal or indubitate his exiftency. Wherein beiide that he annihilates theblefled Angels and fpirits in the ranks ofhis. creaLaftly,
this
To lead us farther
,
:
maze of Error
tionj
Book.
tioiij
lall
I.
'45
hebegetsa fecurity of hinifelf, and a carelefs eye unto the remuneration?. And therefore hereto he inveigleth^ not onely but is alfo Sadduces and fuch as retain unto the Church of God content that Eptcurits , Deniocritus , or any Heathen fhoii Id hold the fame. And to this effeft he maketh men believe that apparitions, and fuch as confirm his exiftence are either deceptions of light, depravements of phancy. Thus when he Iiadnot or melancholly onely appeared but fpake imw Brutus; Cajjiu^ the Epicurian was ready at hand to perfwade him , it was but a niiftake in his weary imaf^inatioUj and that indeed there were no fuch realities in naThus he endeavours to propagate the unbelief of witches, ture? infers his co-exiftency 5 by this means alfo he adconcelTion whofe vaneeth the opinion of toial death, and ftaggereth the inimortalicy of rlie foul for, fuch as deny there are fpirits fublifteiK: without bodies will^ with more difficulty affirm the feparated exillence of their
: :
own.
to induce and bring about thefe fain ties 5 he hath laboured to deilroy the evidence of Truth , that is the reavealed vci icy and written Word of God. To which intent he hath obtained widi fome to repudiate the Books o^Mofes , others thofe of the Prophets , and fome both to deny tiic Gofpel and aurhentick Hi/lories of Chriil; to rejeft that of Jo.^>i,and receive that o?Jud.ts;to difallow ail^and erct another. of 't^ow^. And when neither tlieir corruption by Valentinm
Now
by MarcionyManeSyUnd Ebion could fatifhe attempted the ruin and total deftrufti on thereof? as he feduloufly endeavoured , by the power and fubtilty of Julian^ Maxiwinm^ndVioclefiaM. But the longevity of that piece , which hath fo long efcaped the common fate , and the providence of that Spirit which ever waketh over it, may at laft difcourage fuch attempcsi and if not make doubtful its -Mortality , at leaft indubitably declare j this is aftoue too bi< for Saturns mouth , and a bit indeed Oblivion cannot fwaland
Arr'iUSylh^^y mutilation
,
iie
his deiign
low.
Andthushowftrangely he poffefTech us with Errors may clearly be obferved; deluding us into contradiftory and inconiiftent faliicies; whileft he would make us believe, Thac there is no God. That there That he himfelf is God. That he ia lefs then Angels or are many. Men, That he is nothing at all. Nor hath he only by thefe wiles depraved the conception of the Creator, but with fuch Riddles hath alfo entangled ihe Nature of
our Redeemer. Some denying his Humanity , and that he was otie of the Angels , as Ebion i that the Father and Son were but one perfon, as SatelHus. That his body was phantaftical, as MaowAy palfei ihi^t ha nes, Bafilides y frifciHian^ Jovhuanm ; through Marj as Vtjchei and VaUntinui. Some denying his Divinicy
j,^
.Book.L
that he was begotten of humane principles, and the feminalSon oi Jo^efb as Cnr^ocr.^i^ Symwachns, ?kotini. That he was Seih the (on of Adaw^ as the Sethiam. That be was lefs then Angels as Chermihm. That he was inferiour unto Melchifedecby as That he was not God, but God dwelt in him, as NiTheodoUif. And fome embroiling them both. So did they which colaw. converted the Trinity nitpa quaternity, and affirmed two perfons inChriftj as Taidm Samofatenm that held he was man without a foul, and that the word performed that office in him, as Apdl/inarif. That he was both Son and Father, as Montanm. That Jefm fuffcred, but Chrift remained impatible, as Cherinthus. Thus he endeaj
vours to entangle Truths : And when he cannot polTibly deftroy its fubftance, he cunningly confounds its apprehenfions j that from the inconfiftent and contrary determinations thcreof,confetary inipieties,and hopeful concluiions may arife,there's no fuch thing at all.
CHAP.
A further
XL
lUn^ration,
NOw
efcaped, yet are there many other whereimto we are daily betrayed, and thefe we meet with in obvious occur rents of the world, wherein he induceth us, to afcribe effefts unto caufes of no
cognario!!
and diftorting the order and theory of caufes perpenhe draws them alide unco things whereto they run parallel, and in their proper motions would neves^ meet
j
together.
Thus doth he fonietime delude us in the conceits of Stars and Meteors, beiide their allowable aftions afcribing effefts thereunto of independent caufations. Thus hath he alfo made the ignorant fort believe that natural efFe\is immediately and commonly proceed from fupematural powers and thefe he ufually drives from Heaven, his own principality the air, and meteors therein; which being of themfelves, the effefts of natural and ci-eated caufes, and fuch as upon a due conjunftion of aftives and pallives, without a miracle nmfl: arife unto what they appear ; are alwaies looked on by ignorant fpeftators as fiipernaturalifpeftacles, and made the caufes or iigns of moft fuceeding contingencies. To behold a Rain-bow in the night, is no prodigy imto a Philofopher. Then n, nochin.^ is more natiual. Yet with what Eclipfesof Sun or fuperflirion they have been hcheld iince the Tragedy of Nicm
:
Mc
and
his
Book.
"
I. it iSj
^j
and vve wilJ not den75that although thefe being natural produftions from fecond and Tetledcaufes 3 we need notalway look upon them as the immediate hand of God , or of his miniftring Spirits; yet do they fometimes admit a refpeft therein; and even in their naturals , the imliiferency of their exilkncies coiiadmits a fart'ier conlideraunto our actions , tetnporifed
True
tion.
,
in any mans life or But that the fame (hould fall not worth the wonder. out a remarkable time , or point of fome decilive aftion ; that the contingency of the appearance fhould be confined unco that time; that tbofe whofhouldbut make one line in the Book of Fate, and Ibnd together in the great Ephemsrides of God; beiide the Philofop.lucal allignmenc of the caule, it may admit a Chriftian apprehenii-
reign
it
is
onintheiignality. But above all he deceiveth us when we afcribe the effeft of things unto evident and feeming caufalities , which arife from the fecrec and undifcerned aftion of himfelf. Thus hath he deluded mwwf Nations in his Augurial and Extifpicious inventions ; from cafaal and imcontrived contingencies divining events lucceeding.Which T^'-.fcan fiiperiVitiou fealing upon Row^jharh fuice pofTefTed all Europe. VV hen his facrificejthe credulity of the City conAfg^'fiifs found two gals VI ith Anthony, and the conjunftion of per^tacc of hope a cluded Becaufe JBrf/^ and Cajjiufmcfd fons in choler with each other. Blackmore, znd Fompey had on a dark or fad coloured garment at Tharfalia'i thefe wereprefages of their overthrow. Which not withftandingai'efcarce Rhetorical fequels; concluding Metaphors from realitieSjahd from conceptions metaphorical inferrnig'realities agair. Now th^fe divinations concerning events ^ being in his power to force 3 contrive, prevent or further, they muft generally fall out conformably unto his prediftion?. When Graceus was flain, the fame and Claudius day the Chickens rcfufe to come out of the coop like fucceffefs when he contemthe underwent , fulcher becaufe the died not : Augurations They Tripudiary the ned but becaufe the devil forefavv their death, Pullets would not feed he contrived that abftinence in them. So was there no natural dependence of the event upon the lign, but an artificial contrivance of the lign unto the event. An unexpected way of delufioii 5 and whereby he more eaiily led away the incircumWhich fallacy he might excellently fpeftion of their belief have ated before the deatb of Saul ; for that being within his and power to foretell, was not beyond his ability to forelTiew which the creatures have all through , contrived figns thereof might \iljbly confirmed by the event, had proved authencick unto thofe times 5 and advanced the Art ever after.
He
g
The danger
Enpirles
into
Vulgd/
Book.I.
Philters, Ligatures, Cliarms, ungrouiicP andd-luion ed Amulets, Characters, and many fuperltitious waies in the cure that is in cures ^^ common difeafes fecoudlng herein the expectation of men by charms, ^.^j^ evnits of his own contriving. VVliich while fome unwilling to
Ke deludeth
US alfo
:
by
^^ayiucs'c'iu- fall
uct'ciiVc
derectly upon Magick, impute unto the power of imagination, or the efficacy of hidden cauics, he obtains a bloody advantage : for thereby de begets not otily a falfe opinion, but fuch as leadech the open wy of deihuftion. In maladies admitting natural reliefs, making men rely on remedies, neither of real operati-
on
in themfelves,
nor
currence.
Which whenfoever he
naked unto the mifchief of their difeafes j and revenge the contempt of the medicines of the Earth which God hath created for them. And therefore when neither miracle is expefted, nor connexion of caufe unto effeft from natural grounds concluded; however it be fometime fuccefsfull, it cannot be fafe to rely on fuch pradifes, and defert the known and authentick provilions of God. In which ink of remedies, if nothing in our knowledge or their proper power be able to relieve us, we nuift with patience fiibmitunto that rtftraint, and expeft the will of the Reftrainer-* Npwinthefe effects although he feem oft times to imitate, ytt doth he concur unto ;:heir produftions in a different way from that fpirit which fomt rime in natural means produceth eifefts above Nature. For whether he worketh by caufes which have relation or none unto the effeft, he maketh it out by fecret and undifcerned waies of Nature. So when Cuius the blind, in the reign of Antomnuh was commanded to pafs from the right fide of the Alt^r unto the left, to lay dve fingers of one hand thereon, and five of the other upon his eyes j although the cure fucceeded and all the people wondered, there was not any thing in the aftion which did produce it, nor any thing in his power that could enable it thereunto. So for tht fame infirmity, when Aper was counfelled by him to make a colly riiim or ocular medecine with the blood of a white Cock, and honey, andapp^lyit to his eyes for When Julian for his fpicting of blood, was cured by three dayes honey, and pine Nuts taken from his Altars When Luciuf for the pain in his fide, applied thereto the Affies from his Altar with wine : although the remedies were fomewhat rational, andnot without a naturaly vertue imto fucii intentions, yet need we not believt' that by their proper faculties they produced thefe effefts. But the effects of powers divine flow from ano-ther operation who either proceeding by vifible means or not, unto vilible eiFeftSj And therefore thofe is able to conjoin them by his co-operation. fenfible wayes wl icU feem of indiiferenc natures, are not idle ceremonies, but miy be caufes by his commaadj and arife unto pro:
*
ductions
Book,
Common ttnn,
'4^
^iftions beyond their regular aftivities. If Rahaman the Syrian had wafhcd in Jordan without the command of the Prophet, I bebelieve he had been cleanfed by them no more then by the waters of 1 doubt if any belide E'lifha had caft in fait , the waters' T)amii[cui' of Jericho had not been n\ade wholefoni. I know that a decoftion of 'wild gourd or Colocynthis (though fomewhat qualified ) will not from every hand be dulcified unto aliment by an addition of flower or meal. There was fome natural vertue in the Plaifter of figs applied wwto Ezechioi we find that gall is very nnmdificative , and was a proper medicine to clear the eyes of 'Tobit which carrying in themfelves fome aftion of their own , they were additionally promoted by that powers which can extend their natures unto the production of effefts beyond thejr created eftiAnd thus may he operate alfo from caufes of no power unciences. to their vifible effefts; for he that hath determined their aftions unto certain effefts, hatli not fo emptied his own , but that he can make them efteftual unto any otlier. Again, Although his dehifions run higheft in points of praftice, whofe errors draw on offenfive or penal enormities, yet doth he alfo deal in points of fpeculation , and things whofe knowledge terminates in themfelves. Whofe cognition although it feems indifferent, and therefore its aberration direftly to condemn no man ; yet doth he hereby preparatively difpofe us unto errors, and deduftively
'>
That the Sun, Moon and Stars are living creatures, endued with foul and life , feems an innocent Error , and an harmlefs digreflion from truth j yet hereby he confirmed their Idolatry , and made it more plaufibly embraced. For wifely niiftrufting that rcafonable
fpirits
would never firmly be loft in the adorement of things inaniand in the loweft form of Nature j he begat an opinion that they were living creatures , and could not decay for
mate,
ever.
That fpirits are corporeal, feems at firft view a conceit derogative unto himfelf, and fiich as he Oiould rather labour to overthrow ; yet hereby he eftablifheth the Doftrine of Luftrations, Amulets and Charms, as we have declareii before. That there arc two principles of all thing?, one good, and anotherevili from the one proceeding vertue , love, light and unity, from the other divifion, difcord, darknefs and deformity, was the fpeculation of P)/t^<r^or<7^ , Evfpedcc/es ^ and many ancient Philofo phers, and was no more then Oromafdes , and Arhnanm o^Zorajier, Yet liereby he obtained the advantage ofAdoiarion, and as the terrible principle became more dreadful then his Maker and there^ fore not willing ro let it fall , he furthered the conceit in fiiccf eding Ages, and i^'iCedthc&idiionoi' Manes to maincainir.
5
'
That
^o
Enptries
Into
Vulgar
Book.L
That the feminine fex have no generative emlffion, affording^ no feminal Principles of conception, was ^W/fot/w opinion of old, maintained ftillbyfome, and will be countenanced by him for ever.
For hereby he difparageth the fruit of the Virgin^ fruftratech the fundamental Prophelie, nor can the feed of the woman then break the head of the Serpent. Nor doth he only fport in fpeculative Errors, which are of confequent impieties j but the unquietnefs of his malice hunts after iimple lapfes, and fuch whofe falfities do only condemn oirr underfianding?. Thus if Xenophanes will fay there is another world in the Moon ; If Heraclitus with his adherents will hold the Sun
is is
no bigger then it appeareth i \i Anaxagor as z.^vn\t\\?it Snow black ; If any other opinion there are no Antipodes^ or that Stars do fall, he fhall not want herein the applaufe oi advocacy of Satan. For maUgning the tranquility of truth, he delighteth to trouble its ftreams; and being a profelTed enemy unto God ( who is truth it felf ) he promoteth any Error as derogatory to his nature j and revengeth himfelf in every diiTormity from truth. If therefore at any time he fpeak or praftife truth, it is upon dcCigw^ and a fubtile inverfion of the precept of God, to do good that evil may come of it. And therefore fometimes we meet with wholfome doftrines from Hell ; Nofce teipfum, the Motto
of Ve/phoSi was a good precept in morality That a juft man is beloved of the gods, an uncontroulable verity. 'Twas a good deed, though not well done, which he wrought by Vefpafian, when by the touch of his foot he reftored a lame man, and by the ftroak of his hand another that was blind, but the intention hereof drived at his own advantage ; for hereby he not only confirmed the opinion of his power with the people, but his integrity with Princes; in whofe power he knew it lay to overthrow his Oracles, and filence the practice of his dehiiions. But of fuch a ilifrufed nature, and fo large is the Empire of Truth, that it hath Place within the walls of Hell, and the devils themfelvcs are daily forced to pradife it 5* not only as being true themfelves in a Metaphyseal verity, that is, a?s having their effence conformable unto the Intellect of their Maker, but making ^f^ ofMoral and Logical verities ; that is, whither ni the con-fornijty of word; unto things, or things unto their own concepti:
How
fp'rlcs
ons, tliey praftife truth in common among themfelves. For although without fpeech they intuitively conceive each other, yet do their appreheulions proceed through realities; and they conceive each other by fpecies, which carry the true and proper notions of things conceived. And fo alfo in Moral verities, although they deceive us, they lie unto each other ; as well underllanding that all conimunity is continued by Truth, and that
of Hell canno:
conlili wiciiouc
it.
To
Book L
yet rearer the point, and draw into a ftiarper angle ; They do not only fpeak and praftife triithj but may be faid wellvviftiers hereunto, and in fome feiifedo really deiire its enlargement. For many things which in themfelves are falfe, they do defire were truej He cannot but wifli he were as he profefleth j that he had the knowledge of future events ; were it in his power , the Jews and the Meffias yet to come. Could ftiould be in the right, his del'ires efFeft it, the opinion of Arijiotle ftiould be true, the world ftiould have no end, but be as immortal as himfelf. For thereby he might evade the accomplifhment of thofe affliftions he now but gradually endureth ; for comparatively unto thofe flames, he is but yet in Balneo, then begins his Ignis Rot3 and terrible fire, which will determine his difputed fubtilty , and hazard his immortality. But to fpeak ftriftly, he is in thefe wiflies no promoter of verity, but if conlidercd fome waies injurious unto Truth, for ( belides that if things were true which now are falfe , it were but an exchange of their natures, and things muft then be falfe, which now are true ) the fetled and determined order of the world would be perverted, and that courfe of things difturbed, which feemed beft unto the immutible contriver. For whileft they murmur againft the prefent difpofure of things, regulating determinated realities unto thir private optations , they reft not in their eftabliflied natures j but unwifliing their unalterable verities, do tacitly deiire in them a difformity from the primitive rule, and the Idea of that minde that formed all things beft. And thus he offended truth even *^^ in his firft attempt For not content with his created nature, and ^'J'" * thinking it too low, to be the higheft Creature of God he offended ^' ^ ^ the Ordainer, not only in the attempt, but in the wifti and fimple
,
To come
^^-
volition thereof.
THE
53
which
or
dubious.
CHAP.
Of Chrypl
4i4->
I.
^"^'^^^ i^ rr 4<$ Ereof the common opinion hath been, and ftill that Chiyftal is noriiing elfe IJ. ^^ cth amongft
iis ,
^i^<^^<(bti>4 or
Snow
beyond liquation.
Of which
affertion, if prefcnptioii
of time, and niimeroiity of x^flertorsjwere afufficient demonftration, we might fit down herein 3 as an unqueftionable Truth j nor fhould For few opinions there are, whicli there nccd.j4lterior difquifition. have fonnd fo many friends, or been fo popularly received, through all profellions and ages. Pliny is politive in tliis opinion CrjjiaUusfit gelu vebeyytentm concreto : the fanve is followed by Seneca. Elegantly defcribed by Claudiayty not denied hy Scaliger^ fome way affirmed by The venerable Alhertuf^ JBrtfpt;o/(f, and direftly by many others. Fathers of the Church have alfo aflented hereto As Bafil in his liexameron^ Ifidore in his Etymologies, and not onely ^.v/h' a Latin Father, but Gregory the great, and Jerom upon occalion of th-ac term cxprefled in the iirft of Ezekjel. All which notwithftandin,upon a ftrift enquiry, we find the mat- That Chry. 's'^^' ^ '^^ ter contix>vertible, and with much more reafon denied then is as yet "*' though For many have paffed it over with ealie affirma- g^jigj^ *^" affirmed. tivesj yet are there alfo many Authors that deny it, and the exatteft Mineralogifts have rejefted it. Diodorm in his eleventh Book denieth itj (if Chryftal be there taken in its proper acception, as Kho' diginm hath ufed it , and not for a Diamond , as Salmarm hach expounded It) foi' in that place he affirmeth j Chrjftallum (j[e lapidem ex aquapwr-aconcretimi^nontamen frigore fed divini calorkvi. Solium wiiotranfcribedp/iwj, and therefore in almoftall fubfciibed unto him, hath in this point diflented from him. Putant quidam glacitni
:
,
coire^& in Chrjiialumcorporarijfedfrulira. Maihiolus in his Commune ttpon Viofcorides , hath with confidence rejt fted ir. The fame hach been performed by AgricoU de natwa fojjili'm; by Cardan^ Bxtm ds Boct^fm Bernarditf^Sennertusydwdsix^ny moi.
'
Now
^4
Book.
I.
Now tciides Authority againft it , there may be many reafons deduced from their feveialditfereiices ^ which feem ro overthrow jr. And lirft 5 a difference is probable in their concretion. For if Chryftal be a ilone (as in the number thereof it is confefledjy received ) it is not immediatly concreted by the efficacy of cold , but rather by a Mineral fpirit, and lapidifical principles of its own, and therefore while it lay in folutis prtnipiis , and i-ttiiained in a fluid body, it was a fubjeft very unapt for proper canglaciation j for Mineral fpirits do generally refift and fcaix:e So we obferve that many waters and fprings fubmit thereta will never freez 5 and many parts in Rivers and Lakes, where are Mineral eruptions , will ftill perfift without congelations, as we alfo obferve in Aqj^a. fortisyCr any Mineral foluti on, either of Vitriol, Alum, Salt-peter, Ammoniac or Tartar i which although to fome dcnree exhalcd,and placed in cold confervatories, wil Chryftallize and yet is not this a congelation Ihoot into white and glacious bodies j prinrarily effected by coid, but an intrinfecal induration from themfelves and a retreat into their proper folidities , which were abfoibed by die liquor, and loft in a full imbibition thereof before. And fo alfo when wood and many other bodies do petrifie , either by the fea, other waters, or earths aboiuiding in fuch fpirits; we do not ufually afcribe their induration to cold, but rather imto falinous fpirits , concretive juices, and caufes circumjacent, which
-,
do
on?.
aiiimilate
all
bodies
not
indifpofed
for
their
impreiTi-
is water congealed by the frigidity of the air j whereno new form, but rather a confiltence or determinaacquireth by tion of Its diftiuency , and amitteth not its effence, but condition of Neither doth there any thing properly conglaciace but fluidity. water, or watery humidity j for the determination of quick-filver is properly fixation, that of milk coagulation, and that of oyl and luidious bodies,onely incraflation j Ai^d therefore Ariiiotle makes a trial of the fertility of humane feed, from the experiment of congelation j for That , faith he , which is not watery and improlifical will not conglaciatej which perhaps muft not be taken ftriftly, but in the germ and fpirited particles : for Eggs I obferve will freez, in the albuginous part thereof. And upon this groimd Taracelfm in his Archidoxis, extrafteth the magiftery of wine; after four moneths digeftion in horfe-dung, expofing it unto the extremity of cold j whereby the aqueous parts will freez , but the Spirit retire and be found imcongealed in the Center. But whether this congelation be fimply made by cold , or alfo by co-operation of any nitrous coagulura , or fpirit of fait the principle of concretion ; whereby we obferve that Ice may be made with Salt and Snow by the iire-iidej as is alfo obfervable from
But Ice
it
Ice
Book.
Ice
I.
15
made by Salt-peter and water duly mixed and ftrongly agiHow to make tated at any tim<: of the year ; were a very confiderable enofl""'"^ we might cleer the generation quiry. For thereby
Snow 5
winds
,
hail
and hoary
frofts
the piercing
qualities
might the coldnefs of Caverns and fome Cells. the conceive how Salt-peter fixeth flying and how by fpirits of Minerals in Chymical preparations j this congealing quality it becomes an ufeful medicine in Fe-
We
of fome ^j,
more
fenfibly
vers.
diflblution
difference of their concretion is collectible from their which being many wayes performable in Ice , is few Now the caufes of liquation are conwayeseffefted in Chryftal. trary to thofe of concretion; and as the Atoms and indiviiible parcels are united , fo are they in an oppoiite way disjoyned. That which is concreted by exliccation or expreffion of humidity, will be refolved by humeftation , as earth, dirt and clay; that which is coagulated by a iicry iiccity , will fufFer colliquacion from an aqueous hiunidity, as fait and fugar, which are ealily difToluble in water, but not without difficulty in oyl ; and well reftified fpirits of wine. That which is concreted by cold, will di/Tolve by a moift heat, 'if it coniift of watery parts, as Gums, Arabick, Tragacanth, Ammoniack andochers;in an airieheat or oyl ,35 all reiinous bodies. Turpentine, Pitch and Frankincenfe; in both, as gummy reiinous bodies, MalHck,Camphire and Storax ; in neither, as neutrals and bodies anamalous hereto , as Bdellium , Myrrhe and others. Some by a violent dry heat, as Mettals; which although corrodible by waters, yet will they not fuffer a liquation from the powerfulleft Some will diflblve by this heat, communicable unto that element. heat although their ingredients be earthy, asGlafs, whofe materials are fine S and, and the afties of Chali or fearn ; and fo will Salt run
Again,
The
-,
'
with
culty
fubtle
fire
although
is ,
may be
;
that
be concreted by heat. And this way , but not without fome difficalcination or reducing it by Art into a
it
i
*^^
conmiixmre , ^j^J^^"^ GlaiTes are fometime made hereof , and it becomes the Gi^f;, chiefeft ground for artificial and faftitious gemms. But the lame way of folution is conmion alfo unto many Stones and not onely Berylls and Cornelians, but Flints and Pebbles , are fubjeft unto fufion , and will run like Glafs in
a
powder; by which
way and
vitreous
^f
iire.
But Ice
doth
the
will dilTolve
it
will
onely fubmit
caVidity
iil
any way of heat; for it will difcoUiquate in water, or warm oyi; nor \\\V[^ an aftual heat , but not endure
in
potential
diiTolve
pf. many
Aq'fia
watei^s)^'
:,
For
it
will
prc-
fcnrLy
colli
fort^
f}).
Enpiriei
ncfr will
it
into
VulgAr
its
Book.II,
long continue
Wine,
Again, the concretion of Ice will not endure a dq^ attrition without liquaiion; for it it be rubbed long with a cloch, it melteth. But C^yftal will calelie unto cleftricity ; that is 5 a power to attraft iiraws or light bodies, and convert the needle freely placed. Which wherein we fhall not inis a declartment of very ditfercnt parts large5as having difcourfed concerning fuch bodies in the Chap, of
:
Eleftricks.
They are differenced by fupematation or floating upon watery for Chryftal will link in water 3 as carrying in its own bulk a greater ponderolity, then the fpacein any water it doth occupy j and will therefore onely fwim in molten niettal and quickiilver. But Ice vfillfwim in water of what thinnefs fover j and though it fink in oyl, will float in fpirits of wine or Aquavits, And therefore it may fwini in water , not onely as being water it fcif, and in its proper place, but perhaps as weighing foniewhat lefsthen the water it poflefTeth. And therefore as it will not fink unto the bottom , fo will it neither float above like lighter bodies, but being near in weight, lie fuperficially or almoft horrizontally unto it. And therefore alfo an Ice or congelation of Salt or Sugar, although it defcend not unto the bottom, yet will it abate, and decline below the furface in thin water, but very fenlible in fpirits of wine. For Ice although it feemeth as tranfparent and compaft as Chryftal, .yet is it fiiort in either^for its attonaes are not concreted into continuity, which doth diniinifh it tranflucency 3 it is alfo full of fpuniesaiid bubbles, which may abate its gravity. And therefore watersfrozen in pans , and open glafies , after their diflblution do comleave a froth and fpume upon them; which arecaufedby rhe airy parts diffused in the congeleable mixture which uniting then\feives and finding no paflage at the furface , do elevate the mafs , and make the liquor take up a greater place then before : as may be obferved in glalfes filled with water, which being frozen, will feem to fwell above the brim. So that if in this condenfatioii any one affirmeth there is alfo fome rarefaction, experience may afl^ert it. They are difiinguifiied in fubfiance of parts and the accidents thereof, that is, in colour and figure ; for Ice is a fimilary body, and homogeneous concretion, whofe material is properly water, and but accidentally exceeding the finiplicity of that element. But the body of Chryfial is mixed ; its ingredients many, and feniibly containeth thofe principles into which mixt bodies are reduced. For befide the fpivit and mercurial principk' it containeth a fulpher or infiamable part, and that in no fmall quantity,-, for befides i:s E-
monly
kjftrick artradion,
whici)
is
made, by a
fiiii'bureoiLs
eftiuviiimj.
ic
Book II.
ic
5
ftoiies
;
upon
perciLHion like
many
other
and upon
coUiiioii
its fparksjiiot much inferiourbodies as iirike tire have fulphureoiis or ignitible parts within them, and thofe ftrike beft, which abound For thefe fcintillations are not the accenfion of the nioft in them. ayr, upon the collihon of two hard bodies, but rather the inflanwble efflucncies difcharged from the bodres collided. For Diamonds, Marbles, Heliotropes and Agaths, though hard bodies, will
with
fteel
ly unto a
flint.
Now
not readily llrike fire with a fteel, much lefTe with one another Nor a flint fo readily with a fteel, if they both be very wet, for then the fparks are fometimes quenched in their eniption. It contained! alfo a fait, and that in fome plenty, which may ocThis by the art cafion its fragility, as is alfo obfervabie in Corall. ofChymiftry is feparable, unto the operations whereof it is liable, with other concretions, as calcination, reverberation, fublimation, dliTillation And in the preparation of Chryftal, Faracelfus hath Paracdfus dc made a rule for that of Genmis. Briefly, it confifteth of parts fo far P^^^^P^ratiom. from an Icie diflblution, that powerfid menftruums are made for its ^moUition ; wereby it may receive the tinfture of minerals, and fo refemble Gemms,as Bottius hath declared in the diftillation of Urine, fpirits of wine and turpentine; and is not only tritiuablcjand reduceable into powder, by contrition, but will fubiift in a violent fire, and endure a vitiiMcation. Whereby are teftified its earthy and fixed parts. For vitrificacion is the laft work of fire, andafuhonof the fait and earth ; which are the fixed elements cf the compofition; wherein the fufible fait draws the earth and infufible part into one continiuim 5 and therefore afhes will not riui from whence the fait is drawn, as ^'^*v^"yj^^5*^ bone allies prepared for the Tert of Metals. Common fufion i" quac^^^or''
:
:
JVletals is alio
made by a violent heat, afting upon the volatile and dry and humid parts of thofe bodies ; which notwithilanding are fo imited, that upon attenuation from heat, the humid parts will not flie away, but draw the fixed one into flour with them. Ordinary li^|iiation in wax and oily bodies is imade by a gentler hear, where the oyl and fait, the fixed and fluid principles will not eafily feparate. All which , whe^lixed, the
melting of McttalsjCH.
ther
fluent
by
vitrifications
,
fufion or liquation,
being
forced
into
do naturally regreiTe into their former folidities. Whereas the melting of Ice is a frmple refolution, or return from folid to fluid parts, wherein it natuGonliikncies
refteth.
rally
As
body
feetns
to have none at all, yet its reduftion into powdery ax. hath a vail and fiiadow of blew 5 and in its courfer peeces, is of a fadder hue then the powder of Venice glafle ^ and tliis complexion it will
maintain although
it
fire.
Which
I
notwithdandijig needs
-3
dies, are
Book.
11.
needs not move us unto wonder ; for vitrified and pellucid boof a clearer complexion in their continuities, then in powders and Atomical divifions. So Stibium or glafs of their Antimony^ appears fomewhat red in glafs, but in its powder yeliow_ ; fo painted glafs of a fanguine red will not afcend in powder above a nuirrej. As for the figure of Chryftal fwhich is very flange, iand forced T/inie to defpair of refolucion ) it is for the molt part hexagonal or fix cornered ; behig built upon a confufed matter, from whence as it were from a root angular Hgures arife, even as in the Amethyft and Bafaltes. Which regular liguration hath made fomc opinion, it hath not its determination from circumfcription , or as conforming unto contiguities, but rather from a feniiiial root, and formative principle of its own, even as we obferve in feveral other concretions. So the ftones which are fomecinie found in the gall of a man are moll: triangular, and pyramidal, although the figure of thacpart feems-not to cooperate thereto. So the Aierin or lapis fiellaris hath on it the figure of a Star, fo Lapis J'/daicus hath circular lines in length all down itrs bodie, and equidiilant, as though they had been turned by Art. So that we call a t'ajrie ftone, and is often found in gravel pits amongft us, being of ^n p*ifj, In ftonc and chalk liemifpherical figure, hath five double lines ariinig from the center mines. of its balis, which if no accretion dilrraft them, do commonly concur and meet in the pole thereof. The figures arc jegular in many other flones, as inthe Belemnites, Lapis anguinus^ Cormi Ammonisy and many more, as by thofe which have not experience hereof -may \Vhich fc^m- beobferved in their figures expreffed by Mineralogifts. BijrTce re'' ^eiveth its figure according unto the furface wherein it concreteth, njtes*decima or the circumanibiency which conformeth it. So it is plain upon the Aldrovandi. Mti('ei Metal' lurface of water, but round in Hayl (which is alfo a glaciation, ) licl. lib. 4. auci fiaured in its ijuttulous defcent from the ayr, and fo sjrovving ttatner tcnigreater orleffer according unto the accretion or pluvious aggela*^^" about the TOodier and fundamental Atomeo thereof 5 which bcT^refemb. ling the Ech"- feems to be fome feathery particle of Snow j although Snow it notnetra found felf be fexaugular , or at leall of a Itarry and many-pointed ficoiiimonly on
gure,
our
lea
more.
Xhey
though Chryftal be found in cold countries, and where Ice remaineth long, and the ayr exceed^th in cold, yet is it alfo fovmd as Vlinie in regions, where Ice is feldoin feen or foon diflblved and Agricola relate oi Ciprus Caramania ^ and an Ifland in the Red fea , It hath been alfo found in the veins of Minerals, fomeWhcrein the times agglutinated unto lead, fonietimes in Pvocks, opacous ftone^, '"^'*^^^ ^^^^ ^^ Oaavius Duke of Parma, It hath alfo a'^ic?^ u"f ^""^ ^^^ about others that of Salvino veins befide j. coiuftaiit mount as j Chryttali.^"'^^
;
:,
the
Book. H.
',
59
from whence the Tertory of Bergamo long traft of time out of the fame place, trix, others areobfervcd to aiifc. Which tus to conclude, Vide ant hi an fitglacies^ isalfo found in the veins of Minerals, in
be taken, ui no its mineral mamade the learned Cer /z- Mu Olcco; an vero corpus fojjtle. It lar. rocks, and fomerime in conmion earth. But as for Ice, it will not readily concrete but in the approachment of the ayr, as we have made trial in glafTes of water, covered an inch with oyl, which will not eafily frepz in hard frofts of our climate. For water commonly concrcteth
as
from
firft
in
its
furface,
it
and fo
will
3?.
be expofedin thecoldeft mettal of lead j which well accordeth with that expreflion of Job-y The waters are hid Chap. as with a ftone, and the face of the deep is frozen. But whether water which hath been boiled or heated doth fooner receive this congelation, as commonly is delivered, we reft in experiment of Cabevs 5 who hath rejcfted the fame in his excellent difcourfe of Meteors. They have contrary qualities elemental, and ufes medicinal; for Ice is cold and moift of the quality of water: but Chryftal is cold and dry, according to the condition of earth. The ufeoflce is condemned by moft Phyiicians; that of Chryftal commended by many. For although Viofcorides and G a len^ have left no mention thereof; yethzthMathiolus, Agricola. and many commended it in dyfenteries and fluxes ; all for the increafe of milk i moft Chymifts for the ftone, and fome, as Brajfavolus and Bxtiusy as an antidote againft poifon. Which occult and fpecilical operations are not expeftible from Ice \ for being but water congealed, it can never make good fuch qualities; nor willit reafonably admit of fecret proprieties, which are the afFed:ions of forms, and
it
do although
compofitions at diftance from their elements. Having thus declared what Chryftal is not, it may afford fome WhatChnfttl *^* fatiifaftion to manifeft what it is. To deliver therefore what with the judgement of approved Authors, and beft reafon conlifteth. It is a mineral body in the difference of ftones, and reduced by fome unto that fubdiviiion, which coniprehendeth gemms, tranfparent and refembling glafs or Ice, made of a lentous percolation of earth, drawn from moft pure and limpid juics thereof, owing unto thecoldnefs of the earth fome concurrence or c oadjuvancy, but not immediate determination and efficiency, which are wrought by the hand of its concretive fpirit , the feeds of peti iijcatiou and Gorgon of it felf. As fenfible Phylofophers conceive of the generation of Diamonds, Iris, Berih. Not making them of frozen icecle , or fiom meer aqueous and glaciable fubllances, ^ondeniing them by frofts into folidities , vainly to be expefted even from Pokiry congelations from thin and Hrieft earths, fo I 2 well
:
6Q
well
Book. II.
contenipered and refolved, that traiifparencj is not hindred j and continuing lapidifical fpiiitSj able to make good their folidities, againft the oppolition and aftivity of outward contraries j and fo leave a fenlible difference between the bonds ofglaciation, which if the mountains of Ice, about the Northern Seas, are ealily dilTolved by an ordinary heat of the Sun; and the finer legaturesof petrification, whereby not only the harder concretions of Diamonds and Saphirs j but the fofter veins of Chryilal rcmainj indifToivable in fcorchingterritories^ and the Nes;ro land of Congo!', And therefore I fear we commonly confider fubterranitiesj no: in contemplations futiiciently refpeftive vmto the creation. For though Mojes have left no mention of minerals, nor made any other difcripdon then futes unto the apparent and vilible creation^ yet is there unqueflionably, a very large Clafis of creatures in the earth, far abovethe condition of elementarity. And although^ not in adiilinft and indifputable way of vivcncy, or anfwering in all points the properties or ariPeftions of plants, yet in inferiour and defcending conflituons, they do like thefe contain fpccilical diflinft.ons, ajid are determined by feminalities, that is, created anddefjued feeds committed unto the earth fiom the beginning. VVheveln although they attain not the indubitable requiiites of Animation, yet have they a neer affinity thereto. And though we want a proper name and exprellive appellation, yet are they not to be clofed up in the general name of concretions ; or lightly paiTed over as only Elementary and Subterraneous mixtions. The principle an J moik gcmmary afFeftionis its Tralucency : as for irradiancy or fparkling which is found in many gems, Jtis not difcoverable in this j for it cometh fhort of their compaftnefTe and durity, and therefore requireth not the Emery, as the Saphir, Granate and TopaZj but will receive imprefhonfrom fteel, in a manner like the Turchois As for its diaphanity or perfpicuity, it en-
joyeth that moft emuiently j and the reafon thereof is its continuity; as having its earthy and falinous parts fo exaftiy re^"V^"^'' foJved, that its body is left imporous and not difcreted by i^tomical terminations. For that continuity of parts is the caufe a caufc or" perfpicujty, it is made perfpicuous by two wales of experitransparency in things; and mcnt. That is, either in efFefting tranfparency in thofe bodies ^^1' which were not fo before, or at leafl far fhort of the additional degree : So Snow becomes tranfparent upon liquation ; fo horns and bodies rcfolvable into continued parts or gelly. "'The like oyled paper , wherein the interflltlall divilions is obfervable in being continuated by the accelllon of oyl, it becometh more traniparent , and admits the vilible rayes with lefs umbrolity. Or clfe the fame is efFcfted by rendring thofe bodies opacoiiSa
which
Book. U,
-tf^
Common
Errors,
^^
So glaflTe which wa^ ^vhich were before pellucid and perfpiciious. before diaphanous, being by powder reduced into nuilriplicicy of fuperficiesj becomes an o^acous body;, and will not tranfmic the ligl-HT. So it is in the Chryftal powdered, and fo it is alfo before; for if it be made hot in a crulible, and prefently projefted upon water, it will grow dim, and abate its diaphanity j for the water, entring the body, begets a diviilon of parts, and a termination oF Atonies liiHted before unco continuity. The ground of this opinion might be, firft the concluUons of fome men from experience*, for as much as Chryli^al is found fometitnes in rocks, and in fome places not much imlike the ftirrious or liillicidious dependencies of Ice. Which norwithllanding may happen either in places which have been forfaken or left bare by the
earth; or may be petriticacions , or Mineral indurations, like other gcmms proc^etling from percolations of the earth difpoud
iinro fuch concretions.
iial'uiy
fecond and mod: common ground is from the name Chr\~ whereby in Greek, both Ice and Chryfral are exprelled which many not duly conildeiing, have from their community of name, conceived a conununity of nature ; and what was afcribed
The
But
this
is
from
By
this fallacy
:
Aorfo.
they deluded, who conceive jperma. Cceti which is found about the head, to be the fpawn of the Whale ; Or take fanguis draconis (which is the gumme of a tree,) to be the blood of a Dragon. By the fame Logick we may infer,the Chryftalline humour of the eye, or rather the Chryftalline heaven above,tobeof the fubftance of Chryftal here below; Oi- that God fcndeth downChryftal, becaufe it is delivered in the vulgar tranfor ftrong water
By
this are
llation,
Pfal. 47. Mittit Chryi}aUv.ni fiium ficat B"ccellm. Which tranflation although it literally exprelTe the Sepniaginc; yet is there no more meant thereby, then what our tranflation in plain
is,
Ql?
TrenieUhii ^.nd Junius as clearly deliver, Pejicit ge/'4 pyw.u Oct fr^lh) cerant jrigore ij:u quls conftkt ? winch proper and latiiie ex-
what
had they b^en obferved in anciL'nc tranllations, elder Agrpcmpne been mifguided by the Synononiy, nor had in name, they afforded occafion unto .^ /L>/, the Glofs, L>n/w and mrn/ others, to have taken np the common conceit^ and fpoke of this texc conformajbly uiKo the opinion rejeftcd*
prtdions,
CHAP.
6^
Enjuines
into
Vul^^r
Book.
I^^
CHAP.
IL
Of
Of
or particularly delivered
tnanifeftlyor
prolablyfalfe.
of the Magnecical vertue of the earthy of the four motions of the fl one , that i^j its Verticity or DireBionj its AttraBton or Coition its Declination ^ its Variation^ andalfoofits
In the
firfl
.,
Antiquity.
tions
In the fecond a rejeBion of fandry opinions and relathereof^ Natural^ Medical^ Hifloricaly Magical,
is
Hovftbeearih a Magaccical bo y
a N D firft we conceive the earth to be a Magnetical body. A jT^ Magiietical bodj we perm not onely that which hath a power
,
but that which feated in a convenient medium , naturally difpofeth it felf to one invariable and fixed fituation. And fuch a Magnetical vertue we conceive to be in the Globe of the earth whereby as unto its natural points and proper terms , it difpofeth being fo framed^ conftituted and ordered unic felFuntothe poles to thefe points, that thofe parts which are now at the poles , would not naturally abide imder the j^quator j nor Green-land remain in And if the whole earth were violentthe place of Magellanica. ly removed, yet would it not forgo its pirmitive points, nor pitch in theEaftor VV^eft, but return imto its polary polition again. For though by compaftnefs or gravity it may acquire the lowed place, and become the center of the univerfe , yet that it makes good that poiiitj not varying at all by the acce'Iion of bodies upon ^ or fece.Iion thereof, from its furface , perturbing the equilibration of either Hemifphere ( whereby the altitude of the ftars might varyj or that ic ftriftly maintains the North and Southern pointsi that neither upon the motions of the heavens, air and winds without, large eruptions divilions of parts within , its polary parts ihould never incline or veer unto the Equator (whereby the latitude of places fhouldalfo v^ry J it cannot fo well be falved from gravity as a Magnctical vtr"*" This is probably that foundation the wifdome of the Creaticity. on ofth" laid unto the earth j in this fenfe we may more nearly aphath tor earcUs ftabii:prehe.nd, and fenfibly make out the expreilions of holy Scripture, as ly. t'irniavit orhemtcrrx qui noncotirriovehiiiiry lie hath iiiade tlie round pral. 93. world fb fure that it cannot be moved as when it is faidby jFo^, He ilretchech forth the lixtendit Jqinlonsm fipsr vacuo , &s:. Northattraftive
i
j
...
And Common Errors, Book. n. North upon the empty place , and haii^ech the earth upon no- Job
thing.
^3
5
g.
the moil: probable anfwer unto that great quelTithe foundations of the earth faftened, or who are on. thereof ftone Had they been acquainted with this corner the laid principle. Anaxagorof, Socrates, and Democritus had better made out the groimd of this {lability : Xenophanes had not been fain to fay the eaith had no bottoms and thales Milefius to make it fwim in wathis
is
And
Whereupon
.*
ter.
>
Kor is the vigour of this great body included onely in its felf, j^g M^gntu. or ciircumferenced by its furface , but diffufed at indeterminate cal vcrt-e of diflances through the air, water and all bodies circi'.mjaccnt. the earth difExciting and impregnating Magnetical bodies within its furface or ^"^'^'^ ^^''''^ ^ wiihout it 1 and performing in a ferret and iuviiible way what we^'. *^j'""'boevidtntly behold effefted by the Load-ftone. For thefe eflludions ^jjg, ajjaccnt. penetrate all bodies, and lilce the fpecies of vilibleobjefts are ever ready in the medium, and lay hold on al] bodies proportionate or capable of their action thofe bodies likewife being of a congenerous nature^ do readily receive the iniprelfions of their mocori and if not fettered by their gravity, conform thenifelves to lituations, whereAnd this will futiiciently th they btil miite unto their Animator. appear from the obfervations that are to follow, which cannobct(t-er way be made out then by tliis we fpeak of, the Magnetical vigour of the earth. Now whether thefe eftluviums doflye by ftriated Atomes and winding ^?i\-i\c\es ^.s Kenatus des Cartes conceivethj or glide by ftreams attracted from either Pole and Hemifphereofthe earth unto the Equator, as Sir Kenelm Vighy excellently declareth, it takes not away this vertue of the earth j but more diftinftly fets down the gefts and progrefs thereof and are conceits of eminent ufe to falve Magnetical phenoniena''s. And as in Aftronomy thofe hypothefes though never fo ftrange are beft efteemed which beft do ^ ^ falve apparencies; fo furely in Phylofophy thofe principles ("though obicrvauonj. feeming monftrous ) may with advantage be embraced , which beft confirm experiment , and afford the readieft reafon of obfervation. And truly the doftrine of effluxions, their penetrating natures, their invilible paths , and infufpefted effefts , are very confidera- f},^ jj^^j^l^g ble; for befides this Magnetical one of the earth 5 feveral effulions of effluxions there may be iom divers others bodies , which inviiibly aft their acknowledge! paits at any time, and perhaps through any medium ^ a part ''yl*^ Auihor. difcovery , and will I fear of Phylofophy but yet in prove the laft leaf to be turned over in the book of Nai,
ture.
Firft, Therefore true it is , and confirmable by every experiment, that Steel and good Iron never excited by the Load-itone, dilcover inthemfelves a vcrticity^that iSja direftiveor polary facultiewherc-
at
^A
,
Book. II.
NonV
I'cinttothc
Souch.
This is maiiifeftl^ole in long and thin places of Sceel peiforaced in the middle and equilibeiated or by an eaiier ^^'^y i'l long wires equiponderate with mitwifted iilk and fofc wax; for ill this maimer pendulous, they will conform themfelves Meridional lyjdirefting one exrcani unto the Norch^another to theSouth. The fame is alfo manifell in fteel wires thruft through lictle fphears or globes of cork & floated on the water j or in naked Needles gently let fall thereon i for fo difpofed they will not reft, until they have found out the Meridian; and as neer as they can ly paSometimes the eye, fometimes rallel unto the Axis of the Earth the point Northward in divers Needles , but the fame point alwayes in moil Conforming themfelves unto the whole earth, in the fame manner as they do unto every Load-ftone. For if a Needle untoucht be hanged above aLoad-ilone , it will convert into a parallel pofition thereto for in this (ituation it can beft receive its verticity and be excited proportionably atboth extreams. Now this direftion proceeds not primitively from themfelves , but is derivative and contrafted from the Magneticaleffluftion^ of the Earchj which they have vviiided in their hammering and forma ioni or elfe by long continuance in one poiition, as we fliali declare herc^
,
after. It is likewife true what is delivered of Irons heated iii the fire, that they contract a verticicy in their refrigeration ; for heated re<l hot and cooled in the Meridian from North to South, they prefently contraft a polary power , and being poyfed in air or water convert that part unto the North wliicn rei'pefted that point in its refrigeration, fo that if they had no fenlible verticicy before , icipaybe
acquired by this way or if they had any, it might be exchanged by contrary poiition in the cooling. For by the fire they omit not onely many droHie and fcorious parts, but whatfoever
j
they had received from the Earth or Loadftone j and io being naked and defpoiled of all verticity , the Magnetical Atonies invade their bodies with more effeft and agility.
refrigerated
onely true what Gtlhertm firft obferved , that Irons North and South acquire a Direftive faculty; but if they be cooled upright and perpendicularly , they will alfo obtain the fame. That part which io cooled toward the North on this lide the Equator , converting it felf unto the North, and attracting the South point of the Needle the other and higheit extreani refpefting the South, and attrafting the Northern , according unto laws Magnetical For (^ what muft be obferved J contrary Poles or faces attiaft each other, as the North the South and the like decline each other, as the North the North. Now on this iideof the Equator j that extieam which is next to the Earth .is
is it
: :
Neither
animated
Book II.
alii
And Common
J^rrors,
6y
mated unto the North , and the contrary unto the South ; fn that in Coition it applies it felf quite oppofitely, the Coition or Attraftion being contrary to the Verticity or DireContrary , if we fpeak according unto common ufe , yet ftion. alike 5 if we conceive the vertue of the North Pole to diffufc
it
felf
at the
North
again.
This polarity from refrigeration upon extremity and in defeat of a Load-ftone might ferve to invigorate and touch a gome conceive Needle any where; and this , allowing variation, is alfo the that the figure readied way at any feafon to difcover the North or South j of rhe tree oc "g^^ and furelyfar more certain then what is affirmed of the grains and fr"^"<i -1 in the root ol r rrr^ -r n. cuclesni trees , or the hgure ni the root ot t crii. t or it we erect a q^^^^c or fern red hot wire until it cool , then hang it up with wax and untwifted ftjnds North lilk 5 where the lower end , and that which cooled next the and Southjbuc earth doth reft, that is the Northern point ; and this we affirm will no^ "'^^yftill be tnie, whether it be cooled in the air or extinguished in water,
,
.
''
oyl ofVirriol,
^(///rf
/orf^^jor Qiiick-filver.
And
,
this
is
alfo evi-
denced in culinary
and Irons tliat often feel the force of prongs fire-fhovels, and andirons all which acquire a fire, as tongs, Magnetical and polary condition , and being fufpended , convci t their lower extrcam unto the North ; with the fame attracting the Southern point of the Needle. For eafier experiment, if we place a Needle touched at the foot of tongs or andirons , it will obvert or turn aiide its lillie or North point, and conform its cufpis or South extream unto the andiron. The like verticity though more obfcurely is alfo contracted by bricks and tiles , as we have made Now to contriall in fome taken out of the backs of chimneys.
utenfils
traft thisDireftion, there needs not a total ignition , nor isitneceflTary the Irons fliould be red hot all over. I' or if a wire be heated
bnely at one end, according as that end is cooled upward or downward, it refpeftively acquires a verticity j as we hawdeclared in Nor is it abfohicely requilite they wires totally candent. fhoiild be cooled perpendicularly , or flriCtly lye in the Meridian y for whether they be refrigerated ijiciinatorily or fomew hat Equinox ially, that is toward the Ealkrn or VVeiUrii points though in a leller degree , they difcover fonvj verti
',
city.
onely true in Irons, but in the Load-ftone it felf. For made red hot , it lofeth the magnetical vigour ic had before in ic felf, and acquires another from the Earth in its refrigeration for that part which cooleth toward die Earth will acquire the refpeft of the North , and attraCt the Southern point or cufpis of the Needle. The experiment iiereof we made iij a Load-ltone of a parallelogram or long fquare hgurci wherein ondy
is
Nor
this
if a Load-ftone be
',
iijvertin:^
6^
Fnplrlei
into
Vulgar
BdoIc.-H.
Dctrincr../;.!.
jiiwrtingtlicextreamsj as it cams one of the fire, we altered the poles or faces thereof at pleafure. It is alfo true what is delivered of the direftloii and coition of Irons that they contraft a verticity by long and conrinued position : that is , not onely being placed from North to South , and lying in the Meridian, but refpefting the Zenith and perpendicular unto the Center of the Earth j as 'm nioft manifeft in bars of windows , ciiic' nients , hinges and the like. For if we prefent the Needle unto their lower excreams J it wheels about and turns its Southern point unro them. The fame condition in long time do. bricks contract which are placed in walls, and it may be a fallible way to finde out the Meridian by placing the Needle on a wall; for fome bricks therein by a long and continued polition, are ofcen magnetically enabled to diilraft the polarity of the Needle. And therefore thofe have been converted into Loadirons , which are faid to ftones, whether they were real converiions, or onely actraftive augmentations, might be much promoted by this polition a5th: Iron crofs of an himdred weight upon the Church ot Sc. John in Anviinuni^ or that Load-fton'dlroii oi C[ar hUderatm^ fetdownby AUrovandi:^. _r uvo' Laftly , Irons do manifeil a verticity -not o:iely upon rebut- (^ what is wonderful frigeration ajid conrtant ficua:ion , and advanceth the magnctical hypothecs ^ they evidence the fame by meet poiicion according as they arc inverted , and their extreams difpofed refpeftively unto the Earth. For if an Iron be held perpendicularly or inor '^tt^i not /irmly excired , clinatoriiy un:o the Needle; the lower end thereof will aitraft t^ie cvjpis'or Southern point; but if the fame extream be in:
.":
verted and held under the Needle , it will then attraft the Lilly or Northern point ; for by inverlion it changeth its direction acquir^ before, and receiveth a new and Southern polarity from^we Earth, as being the upper eJ^Cream. Now if an Iron l*.e touched before, it varieth not in thjti manner; fbi- then ic ;idmits not this n,ragnetical imprelTion , as being already informed by the Load-ltone , and polarily deteiniiiied by its preafticn.
And from thefe grounds may we bell determine why the Northern Pole of the Load-ftone attraft::th a greater weight then the Sourhcru on this lide the /Eqmtovj why the iione is beft preferved in a natural and polary (it lation ; ani whyasG/7/'.''rtj^obfervedi , it refpefterh that pole out of the Earth, which it regarded in its mineral bed and fubrerraneous polition. Ic is likewife tiue and wonderful what is delivered of rheljiclinarion or Declination of the Load-ftonCjthat is5the defcent of the Needle below the plain of the Hprizoii, For long Needles which flood
-
-'
befo.e
'
Book.
II.
li^d
Gomnon
Errdis.
before upon their axisyparallel unto the Horizrti, being vigorloiifly excited, incline and bend downward ; depreiling the North extieani below the Horizon. That is the North cfv\ this, the South on the orher lide of the Equator and at the very Line or middle circle
,
And this is evidenced not onely from obfland without defleftion. fervations of the Needle in feveiall parts of the earth, but fundry experiments in any part thereof i as in a long Steel wire, equilibrated or evenly ballanced in the ayr i for excited by a vigorous Loadilone it will fomewhat deprefTe its animated extreara, andinIt is alfo manifeft in a terfeft the horizontal! circumference. Needle pierced through a Globe of Cork fo cut away and pared by degrees, that ic will fwim under water, yet fink no: unto the bottom, which may be well effected j for if the Cotkbe a thought too light to link under the furface, the body of the water may be a tenuated with fpirlts of wine ; if too heavy, it may be incraiTated with faltj and if by chance too much be added, it may again be thinned by a proportionable addition of freih water. If then the Needle be taken out, actively touched and put in again, it will deprefie and bow down its Northern head toward the bottom, -And advance its Southern extremity toward the brim. This way invent'ed by Gilbertm may feem of difficulty 3 the fame with leife labour may be obferved in a needled fphere of Cork equally contiguous imto the {wv^niiCG^ of the water-for if the Needle be not exactly equiponderant, that end which is a thought too light, if touched becometh even 5 that Needle alfo which will bat juft fwim under water, if forcibly touched will fink deeper, and fometime unto tlve bottom. I likewife that inclinatory vercue be deftroyed by a touch fiom the contrary Pole-, that end which before was elevated will then decline, knd this perhaps might be obferved in fome fcales exaftly ballanced, ;andinruch Needles which for their bulk can hardly be fnpported For if they be powerfdlly excited and equally lee by- the water. fall, they commonly fink down and bi^ak the water at that extream whereat they were feptentnonally excited : and by this way it is conceived there rtay be fone fraud in the weighing of pretious commodities, and fuch as carry a value in quarter-grains by placing a powerfull Loadftone above or below, kccording as we iiicenJ to der {wefle or elevate one extream.
=
.
Now
f^ravicy
if
thefe
Magnetkal
emillions
be ot^tf
qtialitie^i)
and'
tlire
of bodies anclint; them oiifly unto' the earth i furely that which aloRC movetlt other bodies to defcent, carrieth rioc the ftroke in this, but rather the Magr.etical-alliciency of the Earth h unto which with alacrity it applyech it felf, and in the Very fame way unto the 'whole Earth, as it doth imto a lingle* V6v if th\- imtbucfeed' ;N eedle be at^ a 'diiHtnce fufpend* Loadftone. ded ovier a Eoac^oiie,* It'^sir-tiec'Jiang paralkl, but dec'iiiie -at chs K 2
^8
the North
reftor.
Enpirles
into
Vulgar
Book.
II.
extreAm, and at that part will firll falute its DiAgain, what is alfo wonderfiiU, this inciinacioii is not invariable ^ for juft under the line the NeeJle lyeth parallel wich the Horizon, but failing North or South it beginneth to incline, and cncreafeth according as it approacherh unco either Pole i and would at lafl: endeavour to ereft it felf. And this no more then what it doth upon the Loadllone, and that more plainly upon the Terrella or fpherical magnet Cofmographically fet out wich circles of the Globe. For at the Equacor ciiereof, the Needle will (land rectangularly j but approaching Norchvvard coward the tropick it will regard the ftone obliquely j and when it aciainech the Pole, direftly ; and if its bulk be no impediment)
And therefore it felf and ftand perpendicularly thereon. upon ftrift obfeivation of this inclination in feveiall latitudes and due records prefervetl, inftruments are made whereby wichout tlie help of Sun or Star, the latitude of the place may be difcovered, and yet it. appears the obfervations of men have not as yet been fo juft and equall as is deiirable ; for of thofc Tables of declination which 1 liave perufed, there are not any two that pun(dually agree though fome have been exactly calculated, efpecially rlut which Ridley received from Mr. Br/gs^ in our time Geomeuy
erel:
}
ProfefTor in Oxford, It is alfo probable what is delivered concerning the variation of the compafre that is the caufe and ground thereof, for the man.
what
'
the va-
riation
coinpaife
is.
ner as being condrmed by obfervacion we fliall not at all difpute. yj^g variation of the compafTe is an Arch of the Horizon incer^epted between the true and Magneticall Meridian j or more plainly, a deflexion and fiding Eaft and Weft from the true Meridian. The true Meridian is a major Circle palling through the Poles of the world, and the Zenith or Vertex of any place, exaftly dividini; Now on this Line the Needle exaftly lythe Eaft from thii Weft,
eth not, but diverts and varietli its points, that is, the Notch point v)n this fide of the Equator, the South on the ocher \ foiuetimes unto the Eaft, fometime toward the Weft, and iii fome few places Firft, therefore it is obferved that betwixt the yarieth not at all. fijore of JrelttndiFranceiSyai/t^Ouinyyind the Jzores, the North point varieth toward the Eaft, and that in fome variec/ at London ic variech eleven degrees, at Antwerp nine, at Rome but five at fome parts of the Azores it defleftech not, but lyeth in the true Meridian, on the other fide of the Azores, and this fide of the Equators the North point of the Needle wheeleth to the Weft To that in the latitude of 36. near the
-,
iJjore
is about eleven degrees i but pn the for about Capo Equator, it is quite otherwife in BrafiUa) tlK South pome varieth twelve degrees unto
the
variation
the
Book.
11.
and Common
Errors,
^)
the Weftj^: about the mouth of the Straits of Afrgf///?>/ five or fixjbut elongating from the coaft of Br/r/?//<z toward the /hore of ^i^ric/r it varieth Eaftward , and arriving at Cap de las Jgulias , it refteth in the Meridian5looketh neither way. Now the caufeof this variation may be the inequality of the Earth, varioufly difpofed, and differently intermixed wicli the withal the different difpofure of its Magnetical vigor in Sea For the Needle nathe eminencies and ftronger parts thereof. turally 'endeavours to conform unto the Meridian, but being dilhafted, driveth that way where the greater and powcrfu-ller
:
Which may be illuftrated from and may be conceived by any, For wherethat iniderffands t!is, generalities of Geography. as on this fide the Meridian 3 or the lllesof ^2;'/rf.f , where the hrft Meridian is placed , the Needle varieth Eaflward it may beoccaIjoned by that vaft Tract of Earth , that is, of E'^rope^ Afui ^nd Africa, feared toward the Eaft, and difpo-ing the Needle that way. For arriving ac foine part of the Azores , or Illands of Sainc Michael-, which have a middle lituacion between thefe contin;:nts, and that vaft and almoft anfweiable TmCt of America y ic feemeth equally diftrafted by bo: h and diverting unto neither, doth parallel and place it felf upon the true Meridian. But fayU ing farther it veers its Lilly to the Wert, and regardeth that quarter wherein the Land is nearer or greater^ and in the fame latitude And as it approacheth the fhore Augmenteth its variation. therefore as fome obferve , if Coluntbm or whofoever firit difcovered America, had apprehended the caufe of this variation having pafled more then half the way , he might have been confirmed in the difcovery and afTuredly fore-told there lay a vail and mighty The reafon I confefs and inference is continent toward the Weft. good, but the inftance perhaps not fo. For Columbus knew not the variation of the compafs, whereof Seba.\ii an Cabot firft took notice, who after made difcovery in the Northern parts of that continent. And it happened indeed that part of America was lirft difcovered:)Which was on this lide fartheft diftant,chat is, J<zw<7ic</j Cuba^ and the Ifles in the Bay of Mexico, And from this variation do fome new difcoverers deduce a probability, in the attempts of the Northern paflage toward the Indies, Now becaufe where the greater continents ^^^ )<>>;" ^d, the ^1^^^^^^^^^^ aftion and etfluence is alfo greater therefore thofe Needles the varisiier* do fiiffer the greacell variation which are in countries which of the corn^ nioft do feel that ation. And therefore hacb Rome far lefs varia- pafj. tion then London for on the Weft lide of Rome, are feated the great continents of France , Spain, Germany, which take off the cxuperanccj and in fome way ballance the vigor of the Eaftein parti'-. But
part of the Earth
is
placed..
what
hath
been
delivered
E/2pklei
Into
Vulgar
Book.
II.
Euc unto England there is almoft noearch Weft, put the whole extent of Europe and 'Xfia, lieth Eaftvvard; and therefore at London it varieth eleven degrees, that is almoft one Khomh, Thusalfo by reufon of thegreat continent of Braiiliaj Peru and Chili, the needle defleftcih toward the land twelve degrees but at the ftraits of Magellan whet e tlie land is nai row ed^ and thefea on the ocher
i
fide, it varieth but five orlix. And folikwife, becaufe the Cape de las Agulhis hath fea on boch fides near it, and other land remote, and as it were sfquidiftant from it, therefore at that poinc the needle conforms unco the true Meridian, and is not diftra^ted by the vicinity of Adjacencies, This is the general and great cauCe of variation. But if in certain creeks and valleys the needle prove it may be imputed unto irregular, and vary beyond expcftation fome vigorous part of the earth, or Magnetical eminence not far difl-ant. And this was the invention of D. Gilbert^ not many years paft, a phyiiiiau4n London. And therefore although fonis alfunie the invention of its direftion, and ochers have had the glory of the Card J yet in the experiments, grounds, and caufes thereof, England produced the Fadier phylofoplier> and difcovered more in it, then Columhm or Amcrkus did ever by it. Unto this hi great part true the reafon of Kircherus may be added: That this variation proceedech not only from jter reft riQus eminences, and magnetical veins of earth, laterally refpefting the needle, but the diiferent coagmencation of the earth difpofed luito the poles, lying under the Sea and waters j which ag^eft the needle with great or lefler variation, according to the vigour or imbecility of thefe fubterraneous lines : or the entire or broken compagination of the magneticall fabiick unler it. .As is obfervable from feveral Loadftones placed ac the bottom of any water for a Loadftone or needle upon the furface will varioufly conform it felf, according to the vigour or faintneife of the Loadftones under it. Thus alfoa reafon may be alledged for tlie variation of the variation, andv^hy, according to obfervation, tlie variation of the needle hatli after fome years been found to vary in fome placer. For this may proceed from mutations of the earth by, fubterraneous fires, fumes, mineral fpirits, or orherwife , which altering the coaftitution of the magnetical parts, i;i procefs of time doth vary the variation over the place. It is aifo probable what is conceived of its antiquity, that the kjiowlcdgc of its polary power and direftion unto the North was unknown unto the Ancients j and though Levvv.s Lemnm^ and Cxliiis Ca/cagimtfy are of another belief, is juftly pl3ed with new inventions by Tancirollm. Tor theii- Achill s ^luiikowgc^ argument is an, expteHion in flautus:, a veiy ..ancient Au-?
.
.,
thor.
Book. IL
til or 5
7^
jam Cc-n^
a'l'^
Emiius.
Hie
vcnti.:s
dus
ejty
be
thfe
Now this vcrforiam they conftnie to cape ntodo verforianr. which notwithila'idiiig according iniico Pineda, compafs
who
hath dilciifled the point, Tumebm^ Caheiis and divers others, is better interpreted the rope that helps to tnrn the flMp; or as we fay doth make it tack about ; tlie Compafs declaring rather As for the Ihip is tiuned, then conferring unto its converllon. tlie long expeditions anil fundry voyages of. eider times, which mighc connim the Antiquity of this invention, it is not improbable they were performed by the he)p of ftars ; and fo mighc tiie Ph^niciaii navigators, and alfo Vlijjes fail about the Medi-. By the ilight of bird-;, or keeping neer the ftiore i t<'rrar(eaii. and fo U)ighc Ha-dm coaft about Africa ; or by the help of oars, And whereas it is cona is expreiled in the voyage of Jonah. tended that this verticiry was nor unknown unto Salomon^xn whom an luiiveri'aiicy of knowledge s it will as forcibly is piefumed follow he knew the Arc of Typography, powder and gun>, or had the Philofophers flone, yet fent imco O'phir for gold. It is not to be denied, that belide his Poliricall wifdom j his knowX-cX^fi in Philofophy was very large ; and perhaps from liis work*? thcreijij the ancient Philofophers, efpecially Ariirot/e, who had the ajiilance of Jlrxanders acquirements, collefted great obfeiYet if he knew the ufe of the Compafs, his (hips vvere vablts. furely very fiwv, that made a three years voyage fiom Eziongeber in the red Sea imto Ophir j which is fuppofed to be TfaproLana ovMalaca 'n\t\\t Indies, not many Moneths fail; and fince in the fameorlefler iimt^Drakf and Candijh performed their voyage about the earth. And as ^the knowledge of its verticity is not fo old as^ fome conceive, fo is it more ancient then moft believe ; nor. had its difcovery with guns, printing, or as many think, fome years beFor it was not unknown unto ?efore the difcovery of America. trus Veregrinus a Frenchman, who two hiuidred years laice left a Traft of the Magnet , and a perpetuall motion to be made thereby, preferved by Co^'trm. Fau.lm Venetm, and about live hundred years paft Albertus Magma make mention hereof, anid quote for it a book of Ariliotle de lapide ; which book although we finde in the Catalogue of Laertius , yet with Cabefu do rather judge it to be the work of foni;^ Arabick^ Writer, not many years before the daies of Albertus. Lailly , It is likewife true what fonij have dc^livered of Crocts Marti s i that is, fteel corrodi^i with vineger, fulphur or ctheiwife, and after reverberated by fire. For the Loadito le will not
-at all attraft it, noi- will it adhere, but lie therein like (-and. -This to be underftood of Crocm M.irtis well rcverberaicd,; aiul
iato
corroded
smd powdered Heel, the Loadftone atrrafts like ordinary filings of iroH i and many timesmoft of that which pafTeth for Croifs Murtis. So th'Jt this way may fcrve as a tefl: of ics preparation ; after which it becomtth a veiy good medicine in fluxes. The like may be aftiimed of Flakes of iron that are rufty and begin to tend Mnto earth for their cognation then expireth^ and the Loadltonc
;
will
And therefore
may
fcrve as a tryal of
good
fteel.
The Load-
ftone taking up a greater mafs of that which is moft pure , it may alfo decide the converiion of wood into iron, as is pretended from Ibnie waters: and the common con verfion of iron into Cop-
per by the mediation of blew Coperofe j for the Loadftone will not atti^t it. Although it may be queftioned, whether in this operadon, the Iron or Coperofe be tranfnuited-, as may be doubted from the cognation of Coperofe with Copper; and the quantity of lion, remaining after the converiion. And the fam:: may be ufeful to fome difcovery concerning Vitriol or Coperofe of Mars, by fome called Sale of Steel, made by the fpirits of Vitriol or Sulphur. For the corroded powder of Steel, will after ablution be aftively attracted by the Loadftone ; and alfo remaineth in little diminiflied quantity* And therefore whether thofe (hooting Salts partake but little of fteel, and be not rather the vitriolous fpirits fixed into Salt by the eftiiivium or odor of Steely is not without good queftion.
CHAP.
ceived relations
:
III.
not onclyafimple Heterodox, but a very hard Parawill feem, and of great abfurdity unto obftinate ears, if we fay attraftion is unjuftly appropriated unto the Loadftone, and that perhaps we fpeak not properly, when we fay vulgarly and appropriatiy the Loadftone draweth Iron; and yet herein we ftiould not want experiment and great Authority. The words of Renatus des Cartes in his Principles of Pliilofophy are very plain* yrterea magnes trahit ferrum, five potius magnes ferrum ad invicem accedunt) ncque enim vlUx ihi tradio eji. The fanie is fokmnly determined by Cabem. Nee wagnes trahit proprie ferrum , nee ferrum ad fe magnetem provocate fed awbo pari conatu ad invicem confluunt , Concordant hereto is the aftercion of Doctor Ridiej , Phyfirft
ANd dox,
it
&
frtiaii
"
Book II.
iitian
7;
of Magtietlcalljododies, defining Magnetical attraction to be a natural incitatiort and difpolitioix conforming, unto contiguity an union of one" Magnetical body with another, and no violent haling of the weak unto the ftronger. And this isaU'othe Doctrine of Gilher" Lertus; by whom this motion is termed Coition, and that not made by any faculty attractive of one, but a Cyndrome and concourfe of each ; a Coition alvvify of their vigours, and alfo of their bodies, if bulk or impediment prevent not. And therefore chofe centra! y actions which fiow from oppoiite Poles or Faces, are not fa properly expulfion and attractioe, as Sequela and F/zg;*?, a muConfonant whereto are alfo the detertrtial flight and followinsj. minations of Heln:ontim-i Kircherus^ and Licet ms. The fame is alfo confirmed by experiment j for if a piece of Attraction reIron be faftened in the fide of a bowl orbafon of water, a Load- ciprocal beftone fwimming freely in a boat of Cork, will prefently make unto '^"'""^ ^^^ Loadnone it. So if a Steel or knife untouched be offered toward the Nee* die that is touched, the Needle nimbly moveth toward it ; and confoimeth unto union with the Steel that moveth not. Again, If a Loadftone be finely filed, the Atomes or duft thereof will adhere unto Iron that was never touched, even as the powder of And laftly, if in two gkitFs Iron doth alfo unto the Loadftone. of Cork, a Loadftone and Steel be placed within the Orb of their aftivities, the one doth not move the other landing ftill, but both hoife fayl and fteer wnto each other. So that if the Loadftoneattraft, the Steel hath alfo its attraftion j for in this jiftion the Alliciency is reciprocal which jointly felt, they mutually approach and run into each others arm;^. And therefore furely more moderate expreiuons become this ationj then what the Antients have ufed , which fome have delivered iu the moft violent terms of their language-, fo A-'iiin cals it, Mirahilem ferri rapton,n : Hippocrates., k'i^Q- tri -f ^{/jifsr G/den difputing againft Epicurus t{<T*'^ Lapk qui ferri/m rapit. lifeth the term, t\%nv , but this is alfo too violent among the Antients Arihtle fpake mod warily, m'^Q' o^n r c'lH^tv Kivi^:, Lapis qui ferrum wovet : and in fome toUerable acception do run the exprciT?ons of Aqj'inoij Sc.iliger nndCj:fan'!s.
;
,
relations are made, aiid great expeftacions are raifed the MagMfs Camens, or a LoadRone, that hath a faculty to attract fiot only iron but fielh ; but this upon enquiry and; s Cahem hath alfo obferved, is nothing elfe but a weak, an inanimate kind of Loadi]-one, veined here and there with a few, Magnetical andferre-^is lines jbut chiefly conliiHng of a bolary and clammy fubflance 5 whereby it adheres WkeLl teniatites, or Terra, Lf^winra^
fx-oni
Many
is
to be underf!:Qo45>yhe.a
Phvliciaas
74
Book* II.
Phyficians joyn it with Mtites or the Eagle {[ont^ and promife there<in a vermc againft abortion, ,,.,,,. There is fometinis a niiftake concerning ithc variation of the corii*For beyond the pafs 5 aiidtherein one point is taken for another. Eqnacor fcnie men account i/LS variation by the diverfion of the Northern point, whereas beyond that Circle the Southern
point is foveraign , and the North fubmits his preheminency. For in the Southern coall either of ^werictf or Africa./^ the Southern point dcflefts and varieth toward the Land > as being difpofed and
spirited that way by the meridional and proper Hemifphere. Antt therefore on that lide of the Earth the varying point is bed aocounted by the South. And therefore alfo the writings of fome, and Maps of ocherSjare to be enquired, that make the Needle decline unto the Eaft twelve ilegrees at Cap Frio j and fix at the ftraits o^ Magellan 5 accounting hereby cMie point for another ^ and preferring the North in the Liberties and Province of tlie
South.
ThatGatl ck
hinders not
But certainly falfe it is what is commonly affirmed and believed, Garlick doth hinder the attraftion of the Load-ftone i which is notwithlbnding delivered by grave and worthy Writers , by Tliof thcTo3d" ^yy ^oUnuf:, Ttolomy^ P/utarch, Alhertus, Mathioluf, Rueitf, Langim^ flonc. and niany more. An effeft as ftrange as that of Homers MgIj^ ^ and But that it is evithe Garlick chat M^rcwr/V bellowed upon Vljjfts. dently falfe 3 many experiments declare. For an Iron wire heated red hot and quenched in the juyce of Garlick, doth notwithftanding contraft a verticicity from the Earth , and attrafteth the Southern If alfo the tooth of a Load-ftone be point of the Needle. covered or ftuck in Garlick, it will notwithftanding attraftj and Needles excited and fixed in Garlick until they begin to riift 3 do yet retain their attraftive and polary re^\^^^
fpeft?.
Of the fame ftanip is that which is obtruded upon us by Authors ancient and modern , that an Adamant or Dianiond prevents or fufpends the attraftion of the Load-ftone.: j^g jg j,j opgj^ terms delivered by Pliny. Jdam,is dijfidn cum Magnate lapide^ ut juxta pofitm ferrum non patiatur ahjirahii
aut
fi
admotus
ntagnes
apprehenierit
rapiat atque
auferat.
a Diamond be placed between a Needle and a Load*will neverrhelefs enfue a Coition even^over the bothere ftone, Diamond. And an eafie matter it is to touch or the dy of excite a Needle through a Diamond, by placing it at the tooth of a Load-ftone ; and therefore the relation is falfe, or our eftimation of thefe gems untrue ; nor arc they Diamonds which carry that
For
if
^okll.
It is 110!:
75
affirmetlij
what Taracdfiu
01*
if a
onely put
Qiiick-lilver,
For we have
found that Loadftones and touched Needles which have laid long time in Quick-filver have not amitted their attraftion. And we alfo finde that red hot Needles or wires extinguiftied in Quickaccording to the Laws of silver, doe yet acquire a verticity pofitior. in excinftion. \ Of greater repugnancy unto reafon is that which he delivers concerning its graduation, that heated in fii-e, and often extinguiflied in oyl of Mars or Iron, it acquires an
ability to
as
forth a nail faftencd in a wall j for, before^ the vigor of the Loadftone is dewill it be re-inipregnated by any other then the Earth.
extraft or
draw
Nor is it to be made out what feenieth very plaufible, and formerly hath deceived us, that a Loadftone will not attraft an Iron or
-Steel
red hot.
The
by
faliity
haeof
difcovered
i
firft
by
Kircberusy
iterated experiment
Loadftones, and obfcurely in any other. ^True it is, that belides fire fome other waies there are of its deftruftion, as iVge, Ruft 5 and what is leaft dreamt on, an unnaturall or contrary fituatioii. For being impolarily adjoyned unto a more vigorous Loadftone, it will in a fhort time exchange its Poles; or l)eing kept in undue poiition> that is, not lying on the Meridian, or elfe with its poles inverted, it receives in longer time impair in aftiviry, exchange of Faces j and is more powerfiilly preferved by polition then by the daft of Steel. But the fud<len and fmeft way is iire that is, fire not onely aftuall but potential! 5 the onefurely andfuddenly, the other ilowly and iniperfeftly i the one changing, the other deftroying the figure. For if diftilled Vinegar or Agua fortU be poured upon the powder of Loafdftorte, the fubfiding powder dryed, retains fome Magnetical vertue, -and will be attracted by the Loadftone but if the menlhuum or diftblvent be evaporated to a connftence, and afterward doth flioot into Icycles or Chryftals, tiie Loadftojie hath no power upon them and if in a full diflblution of Steel a reparation of
-,
-J
precipitarion or exhalation, the exficcated wings, and afcends not unto the Loadftone. And though a Loadftone fired doth prefently omit its proper vertue, arid accoidiug to -the poiition in cooling contracts a iiew verti^ c ty from the Earth yet if the fame be laid a while in Jcjua. forth- or other con Oil ve water, and taken out before a con'iderable corroiion ; it ftill referves its attraftion, and will convert the Needle according to foi mer polarity. And tliat duly preferved from violent cono.ion, or the nacurai difeafe of rui>, it may long confervc
piircji
be made by
powder hath
loft its
Ats
j
its
Enpirles
lafted fiuce
into VulgAir
Book. II,
vertue, befide the Magnetical vertiie of the Earth, which liach the Creatvon, a great example we have from the obIn his learned favation of our learned friend Mr. Graves^ in an Egyptian Idol Ty amido^ra- cut out of Loadfo ic, and found among the Mummies i which ftill f^''^ret. ins its attradion, though probably taken out of the Mine about
thousand years ago. It is improbable what Tliny aiTBrmeth concerning the objeft of Its attraftion, that it atcrafts not onely ferreous bodies, but alfo /iqi'.orem vitri , for in the body of Glafs there is no ferreous or MaFof of the Glafs gnetical narure which might occafion attraftion. we ufc;, thepureft is made of the tineft fand' and the afhes of Chaor green fort of the aihes of li or Clai't:vvort , and the courfer Brake or o::her planrs. True it is that in the making of Glaf^, it hath been an ancient practice to caft in pieces of Loadilone ;
.
conceiviiig
it carried away all ferreous and earthy parts, from the portion of Glafs , which the Loadlfone would and running pure and therefore if that attraftion were not rather i|OC re())et Eleftrlcal' tlien Magnetical , it was a wondrous eifeft wliat Helviont deliverech cojicerning a Glafs wherein the Magilkry of .Loadiione was prepared 3 which after retained an attractive quality. But whether the Magnete actrafteth more then common Ircyi> may be tried in other bodies. It fcems to attract the Smyris or Emery in powder j It drav\reth the fhinlng or glalje powder brought from the Indies^ and ufually implied in vfricing df^l. Th^re is alio.inSniiths cinder? by fome adheiion of iioij, whereby, ,^|^ey appear asit were glazed, fometime to be foimd a Magnetical pperation for fome thereof applied liave power to move the'Ntedje. But whether the aflies of vegetables which grow over Iron-Mines contraft a Magnetical quality, as containing fome mineral particles,,, w.hich by fublimacion afcend unto their Roorsj> iaiul are attracted together with their nourifhment j according as fom;; ^thvm from die like obfervations upon the Mines of Silver , Q^ick-iilver and Gold we nnift refer unto further experiment. It is alfo improbable and fomething lingular what fome conceive, and Ei-.fehih'Sj Niercmherghn^ a learned Jefuit of Syain delivers, that the body of man is Magnetical, and being placed in 4 boat 3 the veiTel will never reft until the head refpeSteth the North. If this be true, the bodies of Chriftians do lye uimaturalKing Cheop in his Tomb, and the J'tws in ly in their graves.
; i
'
-,
upon the natural poiition v;ho reverentially declining the lituation of their Temple, nor willing to lye do place their beds from North to South, and dellgiit as that ftood
their beds have fallen
:
,
This opinion confirmed would miich advance the Microcofmical conceit, and commend the Geography of Paracelfm ; who according to"'the Cardinal poiiits' df'the world
toOcep Meridionaily.
divide th
Book. n.
ami
Common
Errors,
77
and therefore working upon humanr divideth the ; long preparation hy and rendring it odiferous, he termsordure , it Ziheta Occidentalism Weftern Civet j making the face the Eafl, but the pofteriors the America or Weftern pare of his Microcofni. The verity hereof, might eafily be tryed in JVales^ wliere thci-e are portable boats, and made of Leather , which would convert upo;i the inipuliion of any verticityi and Teem to btf the fame whereof in his defcription of Brittain-Cjefar hach left fomt:, mention.
body of man
Another kind of
getable?,
verticity,
is
s^
Amgramnia-
S/'e- tically.
from iHcks lee fall or depreffed under warer , which e(]ua_llyfpnied and; p:;rmitted unto fhemfelves, will afcend ac the uppet end, or that which was vertical ni its vetigation ; wherein notwithftanding, as yet, we have' not found fatisfaftion. Although' p^i^
haps poo^grecdy of Magiialicies, \ye are apt to make bui: favourable experiments concerning welcome truths, and fuch de/ifed veHIt
i^
'
what''i!;jef//7/i
^ifcida'ft^^\-^ih\ that
'
unto ten ounces of Loadftone one of Ironbb ifdyfedjit elicreafbth HOtuntoeieven, but weighs ten ounCes ftill. A relation iiiexdufabl.e hi a work of Itafurable hours the txaniinacion being as rdady a the relaion, and' the faliity tryed as eafily as delivered. Nor is.it to be omitted what is taken up by Cdi^ws Bernard'/s a late Mii)eralogift, andpriginally confirnvea by jPor'f^ , that Needles touched with a Viamond contract a veiticity, eVai^^s they do' with a Lo^ftone vwhich will not confift wii:h expei inienr. Aitd th^refdrfej as Cilhertvs obferveth, he might be deceived, in touching' fiidi Needles with Pi<rwow(^5, which had a verticity before, as we have declared moft Needles to have j and fo had he touched them with Gold or lilycrs. hp P^isht have cofidiided a' iMa^netical verttie :' th^ein, .; ^;/ !:v^l^^::^:;: : .:"';:''' V'l :;:u
if
:
'
Hotte
x,^.
fubfM'
pface fracaftdfitls hk ht^iB^iOri of l{\In tlie faL-jefori^i ver, Philoirat;:shisVanrartes\'JpoLo'loiriiS-di\d'Beda his 'rdatiOii of
mayVe
the
that actrafted onely in tiie liight. But moll in exwho in a man ot our own profeifion his.difcoiirre of Gems menCi^ned in the' Apoc-^lfpSi, undertakes a
cuiable
is ^^ancifcr.s Kf^ei^s,
,
LoadiWe
Chfapter of the irqadftdne. '\Vherdn fubitairially iihd upon dxteriment heXcarQe.delive'reth any thhig ; makn'i^ Ipiig'eiuimeracron of its traditional qualities, wcreof he fdeiftebh'fo Believe miiny, and feme ^bpve conviftiid by experience, he is fc'in to falve as impoflures of the devil. Eui Bjet7i{6 de B^or Phylitian untoil(^r^//' p^w the fecond, hath recompenced this defeft i and in his Tr;^ft, de Lafidjbui Gemmii y fpcaks very macerially hereof j and his " D ifcoiirfe is cohforiahc unto experience and Reafon.
&
'
'
As
Enpmei
tnto
Vulgar
i5ook.il,
l^s for relati.Qns Hiftprical, though many there be of Icfs acvcpimc, yec two alone iddferve coniiaerationj Thdfirft concerileth
M^gnetjcal Roc|cs , and attractive mountains iiifeveral parts of thfe Earth. The other the Tomb of M^ibowet and bodies fufpendded Of^Rocks Magnctical there are likewife two reiatioh^i inthea\r. for fome are delivered to be in the Ii/r/zw, and feme in the extremity of the North , and about the very Pole. The Northern ac.coil^t^is co.mqionly afcribed unco Olaui Magnus Arch-Billiop of Vpfale, who out of his Predeceffbr Jo/zwwfj, jS'^;c(3 and others, compiled a Hiftory of fome Northern Nations ; but this aflercion we have not difcovered in that work of his wTiich commonly pafTech .^mongusj and Hiould believe his Geography herein no more then that inthe firft line of his book; when he aftirmeth that Biarmia. jfw.hich is not fevency degrees in latitude J hath the Pole for its icnith, and Equinoftial for the Horizon. Now upon this foundation, how uncertain foever men have refted mighty illations , afcribing thereto the caufe of the Needles direftion, and conceiving the etfluft ions from thefe mountains arid rocks invite the Lilly toward the North. Which conceit though .countenanced by learned men, is not made out either by experience .or reafon ; for no man hath ytt attained or given a fenlible account of the Pole by fome degrees. It is alfo obferved the Needle doth, very much vary as it approacheth the Pole 3 whereas were there fuch dirie&ion froni the rocks, upon a nearer approachmenc it would more direftly refpeft them. Belide , Were j,ther^ CticIxM/agnetical Rocks under the Pole, yet being fofaffeFor they that f^yl 4i(?ved they would produce no fuch eifeft. X>y die, Ifle of Una now called Elha iti the Tufcah Sea ^hicli abounds in veins pfLoad-ftone, obferve no variation or incliriatibii of tlie Needle J .much lefs may they expeft a direftion from Rocks at the end of the l^arth, A^d laftlyj men that afcribe thus much unto Rocks of the North , muft prefume or difcover'^^he _; like Magnetic^ls at the South : For in the Southern Seas and far ibxjyond theEquacor, variations are large^ and declinations as conllant as in the Northern Ocean, The orher relation of Load-ftone Mines and Rocks in the fhoi e of I;;^i^ is delivered of old by P/iny y wherein faith he , tKcy are fo placed both in abundaiice and vigor , that it proves an adventure of hazard to pals chpfe coafts in a Ship with Iron naile?. Serapicn the Moor, an Antho]ofgoodefteem and reafonable Antiquiiy conhrmtth the fame wnofe expreflion in the word magnes is this. The Mine of thi.s f^>me is in the fea-coaft oi' India; whereto when j^hips approach, there \y no Iron in tii-.m which tlies not like a bird imto the mountains and therfo' e tht?r Ships aije fjaftened not wittilron but wood , for odiciwifc ihty would be torn ko pieces.
.
i
^^ Common Errors, Eook. U. But this aflertion, howpofitive foevei-j is contradifted by ^11 N^'vi" gators that pafs that way, which are now many, and of our own Nation; and might furely have been controuled by Nearchus tJ'^ Admirall o( Alexander j who not knowing the conipafs, was faiil
79
(^rohxhly) lcrbcno
^^^JJ'"*"
to coaft that fliore. For the relation concerning Mahomety it is generally believed his Tomb ^t Medina TaUabiy in Arabia^ withoUt any vifible flip- j^ahmtts porters hangeth in the ayr Between two Loadftories artificially con* tomb of ftonc, trived borh above arid below ^ which conceit is fabulous and evi- and built updently falfe from the teftiriiony of Ocular Teftarors , who affirm " f he ground his Tomb is made of ftone, and lyeth upon the ground h as befides Others the learned VoJJim oBferveth from Gabriel SiDnitay and Joannes Hefronita f two Maronite's in their relations hereof. Of fuch intentions and attempt by Mahometans '^o. r'ead in ferns Relators i aiid that might be the occafion of the fable ; which by tradition of time arid diftance of place enlarged into the ftorit of being accomplifhed. And this hath been promoted by attempts of the like nature j For we read in Vlinj that one Vinocrates began to Arch the Temple of Arfuioe in Alexandria with Loaditone, that fo her ftatue might be fufpended in the ayr t6 die amazement of the beholders. And to lead on our ci'ediility hereiii, conhrmation may be drawn from Hiftory and Writers of gootl authority. So is it jeported by Kuffinus , that in the Temple of Serapis tliere was an iron chariot fufpended by Loadftones in the ^yr i which ftones removed the Chariot fell and daflied into pieces. The like dorh Beda report of Bellerdphons horfe, Which frzimed of L on, was placed between two Loadftories, With 'Wings expanfed, pendulous the ayr.
'
The
fibility
verity of thefeftories
man
fion
it
5
if we icOriceiVej what no will deny, that bodies fufpended in the ayr have this fufpen-,
from one or many Loadftones placed both above and below elfe by one or mariy placed pnely above ir. Likewife the body to be fuipended in refpeft of the Loadftone above , is either placed firft at a pendulous diflance in th^ medium, or elfe attracted Hntothat lite by the vigor of the Loadrtone. Andfowe firft affirm that polTible it is a body may'be fufpended between two Loadftbnes j
or
is, it being fo equally attrafted unto both , that it dttermineth it felf unto neither. But furely tiiis pofition will be of no duration: for if die ayr bs agicaced or the bodic waved cither way ; ic omits the equilibration, and difpofeth it felf unco the neareit attraStor. Again, it is not im^ofible (though hardly feilible^ by a lingle Loadftone to fufpend an iron in the ayr, the Iron being artificially placed and at a diftance guided toward the Hone, until it findthe neutral pouit wherein its gravity jiilt
that
e pials
go
Book. II.
'
ec^uals:then)agni.'ticai quality,; the one exaftly .extolling as much a> fr:eo^hcv:d.i^eirpLh. And laftly^ imponrbje icistbatif anjroii ieftupA)n chtgiound, and aLoatWbne be placed overita it /hoiikl vei- ib arife ab to hang in the way or medium ^ for that vigor whicli at a diflance is able to overcome the reiiftanceof its gravity and to lift up it from the earth, will asit approacheth nearer'be
"
mqri^ able, to. artra*^ it h never remaining in the middle that Now the way of Baptjilci porta. ex ^ JnTjl*/' <^'id' not -abide iu the to a table, and then fo guides Needle a that by,a iJ^A:f,t\j.ffift?iieth. -^u ifi-.cf bt.i and orders tlVefame, that by the attraftion of the Loadftoneira,
ilill,
'
bjdeth in the ayr, infringed! not this reafpui for this is a violent retention jaiia,if the thrcd be' loofened,' the Needle afcends and
^^^heres ijinto^th^ Aptrjaccpr.
., ,,T;he
',,.,,'
third confi4pi;a,t^I6n ,^6iicerncth Medical relations 5 wl^e;;e^nw'hat^v'er rftectsjare delivei^ed, they are either derived from I'cs mineral and^ferreous condition, or elfe magnitical operation. Unto t|ie ferreous and miiieral quality pertaineth what Diofcorides an ancient Writer and Souldier under Anthonj and Cleopatra, afHrm-
Powdcr cf
iialf
adramof
jj^g^^^^^
w^acopcrati-
^P^^j.g.jj-'j^y^
Loadflone given with honey and water, ^^^d evacuatcth grofs humors. But
quality of great incertaintyj for omitciiig the vehicle of water and hony, which is of a laxative power it felf, the powder of fome Loadfrones in this' dofe doth rather conftipate and bind, then purge -and lofen the belly. And if fometimes itcaufeany laxity, it is probably inthefame wa^vvith Iron and Steel unprepaji'ed; whichwiU difturb fome bodies, andvvorke by purge and (V.onjit. And therefore, whereas it is delivered in a booic afcribed ^{uiioGaleHi that it is a good medicihe in dropfies, and evacuates It maylconfefs by ficcity and the waters of pei'^ons fo aifected ailriction afford a conlirmation unto parts relaxed, and fuch as be Jjiydropically difpofedj and by thefe qualities it maybe ufefuU
^^:^^^^
:
^J
.1
or Ruptures, and for thefe it is comm nded by^fiw, /jfEgiffetamid^OriSatiusyvthoonfy affirm that it contains thevertiic, o^' H^niatite;, iand being burnt was fometimes vended for it. Wherein notwithllanding there is an higher vertue and in the fa*ne prepared, or in rich veins thereof, though crude, we hav obferved the effects of Chalybeat medicines i and tlie benefits of Iron and Steel in ftrong obiti-uccions. And therefore that was probably a diffei-eiit vein of Loa'dtlone i orinfefted with other mineral mixture, which the ancients commended for a purgative medicine, and ranked the fame with the violent eft kines thereof: vvith Hippophae, Cneoron, and "thynieUa, as we Hnde \tn\ hippo7>c maihis Initrnis, crates y and might be fomewhat doubtful, whether bythemagnefian flone, heunderftood the Loadftone; did not AcbHles Stativi j 4efine the fam^, the ftone tiiat loveth Iron.
'
-jiilierrtias
To
Book-il.
Si
mineral condition belongeth what is delivered by ComCy wounds which are made with weapons excited by the Loadftone, contraft a malignity, and become of more diiiicult cm-e ; which neverthelefs is not to be found in the inciifon ofChyrurgions with knives and lancets touched which leave no fuch effeft behind them. Hither we alfo refer that aBirmacive, which faies
To this
that
poifon \ and therefore in the lifts of poifons we Authors. But this our experience cannot contirm, and the practice of the King of Zeiitin cjearly contradifteth j who as Carcias ab /E^orrojPhyiitian unto the Spanijh Vicejoy delivereth, hath all his meatferved up in diflies of Loadftone^ and conceives thereby he preferveth the vigour of youth. But furely from a magnetical aftivity muft be made out what is let fall by JEtiusj that a Loadftone held in the hand of one that is podagrical, doth either cure or give great eafe intheGour. Or whatM^r6f//w Ewpencus aftirmeth, that as an amulet, icalfocureththehead-ach; which are but additions unto its proper nature, and hopefuU enlargements of its allowed attraftion. For perceiving its fecret power to draw magnetical bodies, men have invented anew attrai:ion, to draw out the dolour and pain of any part. And from fuch grounds it furely became a philter, and was conceived a medicine of fome venereal attraftion ; and therefore upon this ftone they graved the Image of Venusy according unto that of Claudian^ Venereyn magnete gemma, figurar. Hither muitwe alfo refer wliat is delivered concerning its power to draw out of the body bullets and heads of arrows, and for the like intention is mixed up in plaifttrs. Which courfe, although as vain and ineffeftual it be rejedicd by many good Authors, yet is it not me thinkes fo readily to be denied, nor the^raftice of many Phyiitians which have thus compounded plaifters, thus fiiddenly to be condemned, as may be obferved in the Entplalinwt divinutn Nicolae^ the Empliijinmi nigrum of Augfpurg, the Opodeldoch and Attraclium of Paracelfus, with feveral more in the Difpenfatory of JVeckeri and praftice of Sennertin, The cure alfo of Herneas-, or Ruptures in Parens : and ^'^ ^^"'^ '^"^'^ the method alfo of curation lately delivered by Daniel Beckjyerusy "^^Ig"' and approved by the profefTors of Lejden^ that is, of a young man oi Spruce land that cafually fwallowed a knife about ten inciies long, The cure of which was cutout of his ftoniach, and the wound healed up. In the Pruuian which cure to attraft the knife to a convenient lituation, there ''"i'^* was applied a plaifter made up with the powder of Loadftone. Now this kind of praftice Ubavius:, Gilhertus:, and lately Swick- In h\s Ars ardus condemn^ as vain, and altogether unufefull-, becaufe a Load- Aia^?;ef/tf. ftone in powder hath no attractive power j for in that form it omits his pokry refpects, and lofeth thofe parts which are the rule of attraction.
the LoadiVone
find
it is
in
many
Wherein
8^
Enpirles
into
Vulgar
Book. H.
Whereiiv to fpeak compendioufly, if experiment hath not deceived us, we lirft aftirni, that aLoadftone in powder omits not allartraftion. For if the powder of a rich vein be in a reafonable quantity preftnted toward the. Needle freely placed, it will not appear to be void of all activity, but will be able to ftir it. Nor hath it only a power to move the Needle in powder and by it fclf, but this will it alfo do, if incorporated and mixed with plailters ; a> we have made trial in the Eniplalirum de Minioh with half an ounce of the mafs, mixing a dram of Loadftone. For applying magdaleon or. roal unco the Needle it would both ilirand accraft itj not equally in all parts, but more vigoroufly in fome, according unto the mine of the ftone more plentifully difperfed in theniafi'. And laftly, in the Loadftone powdered, the polary lefpecti are not wholly deftroyed. For thofe diminutive particles are not atomical or mserly indivifible, but conlift of aimenfions fuliicient for their operations, though in obfcure efThus if unto the powder of Loadftone or Iron we adfects. move the North Pole of the Loadllone, the powders orfmall diviUons wil ereft and conform themfelves thereto but if the South pole approach, they will fublide, and inverting then- bodies, refpect the Lcadftcne with the other extrcam. And this will happen noiT only in a body of powder together, but in any particle or duft divided from it. Now though we difavow not thefe plail-iers, yet fhall we not omit cwo cautions in their uCc 5 that therein the ftone be not too fubcilly powdered ; for it will better manifeft its atThat where is de/ired traftion in a more feniible dimeniion. a fpeedy eifedC;, it miy be conlidered whether ic were nor better to relinqifiili the powdered plaifters, and to apply an entire Loadftone unco the part; And though the other be not wholly inejfehiall,whecherthis way benot more powerful 1, and To might have been in tie cure of the young man delivered by Beck^eru^. The lafl confideration, concerning Magical relations i in which account we comprehend ciFefts derived and fathered r.pon hidden qualicies, fpecifical forms. Antipathies and Sympadiies, whereof from received groi.nds of Art, no reafons are derived. Herein relations arc ftiaiige and numerous 5 men being apt in all ages to multiply wonders , and Philosophers dealing with admirable bodies, as Hiilorians have done with excellent n^.j upon the ftrength of their great .atchievements, afcribing unto them not only falfe, but impoJible ; and exceeding truth as much in their relations, as they have others in their aftions. Hereof we fhall biieliy mendoa fome delivered by Authors of good whereby we may difcovev the tabujous invcniions efteem of fom-* , the credulous fupinity of others, and the great
: :
^s
differ vice
Book. n.
And
:
Cmkon
Errorf.
^3
:
rijultlplyiiig obfcui ities xw nature, diflervice unto truth By both whereas wife and authori7,ing hidden qualities that are falfe men are afhamed there are fo many true. And firft V/ofcorides puts a fhrewd quality upon it, and fuch as m.n are apt enough to experiment, who therewith difcovers the incontinency of a wife, by placing the Loadftone under her pillow whereupon (he will not be able to remain in bed with her husband. The fariie he alfo makes a help unto theevery. For theeves faith he, having a defigne upon a houfe, do make a fire ac the four corners thereof, and caft therein the fragments of Loadftone whence ai ifeth a fume that fo diilui'beth the inhabitants , that they forfake the houfe and leave it to the fpoil of the robbers. This relation how ridiculous fosver, hath Albertus taken up above a thoufand years after, zwdi Murkodeas the Frenchman hadi continued it the fame in Latine verfe which wichthe notes of Vicioriui is currant unto our daies. As ftrange rauft be the Lithomancy or divination from this ftone, whereby as Izet2i delivers Hdenm the Prophet foretold thedeftru(Stiou of Troy' and the Magick thereof not fafely to be believed, which was delivered by Orpheus that fprinkled with water it will upon a queftion emit a voice not nuich unlike an Infant. But furely the Loadftone of Laiirentius Guafcm the Phylitian is never to be matched j wherewith as Cardan delivereth , whatfoever needles or bodies were touched, the wounds and punftures made thereby, were never felt at all. And yet. as ftrange is that delivered by fome , that a Loadftone ^^prefcrved in the fait of a, Remora^ acquires a power to attraft gold out of the dtepeft vicWs. Certainly a ftudied abfurditie', not cafually call: out, but plotted for perpetuity for the ftrangeneffe of thie elfeft ever to be admireil, and the difticulty of the tryal never to be convifted. Thefe conceits are of that monfcrohry that they refute themfelves in their recitement?. There is another of better notice, and whifpered thprow the world with fome attention; credu-^ lous and vulgar auditors readily believing^ it, and more jvidiciousr
: : :
:,
and
difiinftive head?,
ir.
The
conceit
is
and if the effeft 'wcxuld follow fome what divine r whereby we might communicate like fpirits, and confer on eardi with Meriippm in the Moon. Aud this, ;isi pretended from the fymprfthy of two n'eedlei; touched with ;:he ("auie Ijoadilonc, and placed in' the center oP'two Abecedary circles, or,,: rings with lecters defcHbed round 'about them, one fjiend keeping cue, and another the other , and agreeing, upon hour wherein they will communicate. For then, faith tradition, at what dillance ot place foever, when one needle ft] all b^ removed unto any Letter, tsiie other by a wondcrfull fympathy will move imco the Hmic; But
e-xcellciit ,
herein
>?^
Book.IL
for having exaccording to the number
herein
confefs
truth
prefly fi-amcd
two
of wood, and
divided each into twenty three parts j placing therein two iHlesor needles compofed of the fame fteel, touched with the fame Loadftone, and at the fame point of thefetwo, whcnfoever I removed the one , although but at the diftance of half a fpan, the other would ftand like Hercules pillars, and if the earth Hand ftill, have furely no motion at all. Now as it is not pofllble that any body fhould have no boundaries , or Spliear of its aftivity, (b it is improbable it fhould effect that at diftiuice , which nearer hand it cannot at all perform. Again, The conceit is ill contrived, and one effe& inferred, whereas the contrary will enfue. For if the removing of one to B, Hiould' have any aftion or influof the needles from ence on the other J it would intice it from ^ to B3 but repell it to Z : for needles excited by the fame point of thellione, from do not attrad, but avoid each other, even as thefe ahb do, when their invigorated extreams approach unto one other. Laftly, Were this conceit aifuredly true, yet were it not a conclu(:on at every diftance to be tried by every head it being no ordinary or Almanack buiinefs, but prbbleme Matiiematical, to finde out the difference of hours in different places i nor do thewifeft exaftly fatisfie themfeWes in all. For the hours of feveral places anticipate each other, according unto their Longitudes y which are not exat^Iy difcovered of every place ; and therefore the tryal hereof at a conJiderable interval, is bell performed at the diftance of the Ant-oi that i^^, fuch habitations as have the fame Meridian and equal parallel, on different, lides of the i^quatorj or more plainly the fame Longitude and the fame Latitude unto the South, which we have in the North. For tmro fuch Situations it is noon and midnight at the very fame
letters
;
of the Latine
time.
And
therefore the
Sympathy of
thefe Needles
is
much of
the
fame mould with that intelligence which is pretended from the flefh of one body tranfmuted by inlition into another. For if
Pecu'-toYum
Lh)rurgia.
by the Art of Taliacotiofy a permutation of flelh, or tranfmutation be made from one mans body into another , as if a piece of flefti be exchanged from tlie bicipital mufcle of either parties arm, and about them both, an Alphabet circumfcribed 3 upon a time apointed as fome conceptions affirm, they may communiFor if one fhall prick iiimfelf in cate at what dilknce foever. y^, the other at the fame time, will have a fenfe thereof in the fiJnie part : and upon infpeftion of his ar'm perceive what letters the ochers poiiits out in his. Which is a way of intelligence very ftrtnge : and would requite the lolt Aft of Tjtbagoras.'; who
could read a revcrfe in the Moon.
^'
'''^
'
Now
Book.
II.
S5
Now
this
fonie original in
Reafonj for
how ftrange foever, might have men obferving no folid bod/, what-
foever did interrupt its aftion , might be induced to believe no ' diftance would terminate the fame j and nioft conceiving it pointed unto the Pole of Heaven , might alfo opinion that nothing between could retrain it. VVhofoever was the Author, the lE')hus that blew it about, Vi2i% famiamis 5'rr/r^/z, that Elegant Jefuit in his Rhetorical prohifions, who chofe out this fubjefttoexBut neither BipHlhi Porta , dc furt'iprefs the ftile of Lucretius. vls liter arimi mtis; Trithemius in his Steganography , Selenuf his Cryptography, or Nuyici^s inaniniatus nnkt any conlid-ration ^_ although they dehver many waies to conuiiunicate hereof ^^^^^ ^ ^_ And this we will not deny may in fome g,j],(jpof thoughts at diihnce. that i>j from one room K-cicfotd. mdnner be effefted by the Loadftone into another j by placing a table in the wall common unto both, for and writing thereon the fame letters one.againtt another upon the approach of a vigorous Lcaditone unto a letter on this But thi^ ir.ie, the Ntedle will move unto the fame on the other. is a very ditFerent way from ours at prefenti and hereof there are many waies delivered , and more may be difcovered which contradict not the rule of its operations. As for Vnguenti.m Armarium ^ called alfo Ma^nettcunt^ it belongs not to this difcourfe, it neither having the Loadftone for
its ingredient, nor any one of its aftions : but fuppofech other principles, as common and univerfal fpirits, which convey the
aftion of the remedy unto the part , and conjoin*; the yertue of But perhaps the cures it doth, are not worth bodies far disjoined. fo mighty principles j it commonly healing but Umple wounds, and fuch as mundified and kept clean , do need no other hand then that of Nature, and the Balfamof the proper parr. Unto which effeft there being fields of Medicmes, it may be a hazardous curiofity to rely on this i and becaufe men fay the effeft doth generally follow , it might be worth the experiment to try, whether the fame will not enfue, upon the fame. Method of cure, by ordinary Balfams, or common vulnerary plaifters. Many other Magnetifms may be pretended, and the like atWhether the fame tradions through all the creatures of Naciu'e. be verified in the aftion of the Sun upon iiiferiour bodies, whether there be jEolian Magnets, whether the flux and reflux of the Sea be caufed by any Magnetifm from the Moon , whether the like be really made out, or rather Metaphorically verified in the fympathies of Plants and Animals, n^ht aflord a large difpute ; and Kircherm in his Catena Magnetica hath, excellently difcufTed the famei which work cams late unto our haiid,. but might have much advantaged this Difcourfe.
Other
S^
Other
Enphiei
Difcoiirfc^ there
tiie Loadilone a> Moral, Myfticalj Theological ; and fome have handfomly done thenii ^sAtfftrofey Auitine^ GuHehms Parifimfisf and many more-, but thefe fall under no Rule, and are as boundlefs as mens invenrion?. And though honeft minds doglorifie God hereby^ yet do they nioft powerfully niagnifie him, and are to be looked on with another eye, who denionlhatively fet forth its Magnalitics ; who not from poftulated or precarious inferences, entreat a courteous a/Tent ; but from experiments and undenible effects, enforce the wonder of its Maker.
:
Book.
It.
CHAP.
0[
IV.
Bodies EleBricd,
'Aving thus fpoken of the Loadftone and Bodies Magnetical, .1 (hall in the next place deliver fomewhac of Eleftrical, and Hereof we Bodies Elect i-^"*^'^ ^^ "^^^ feem to have attraftion like the other. ^'^^^ ^^^^ deliver what particularly fpoken or nfot generally known cal. What ? is manifeftly or probably true, what generally believed is alfo falfe or dubious. Now by Eleftrical bodies , I underftand not fucli as are Metallical , mentioned by Tliny^ and theAntients; for their Ektrum was a mixture made of Gold, wich the addition of a fifth part of iilver i a fubftance now as unknown , as true Anrkhalcwn or Corinthian Br^k) and fee down among things loft by Tancirohus. Nor by Eleftrick Boiliss do T conceive fuch onely as take up (havings, ftraws, and light Lolies, in which number the Ancients onely placed Jn and Amt?r-^ but fuch as conveniently placed unto their objects attraft all bodies palpable whatfoever. I fay conveniently placed, that is, in regard of the object, that it be nor two ponderous, or any way afixed ^ in regard of the Agent, that it be not foul or fullied, but wiped, rubbed and excitatedj in regard of both, that they be conveniently diftant, and no impediment interpofed. I fay, all bodies palpable, thereby excluding fire, which indeed it will not attraft, nor jct draw thiough it j for fire confumes its etHtixions by Virhich it
Hi
ifhould attract.
Now although
by the Ancients,
Jiof-jtones)
in this
GilbertuS} difcovereth
,
Saphjrsy Carbuncles
Irii ,
Opals
Sulphur:, Mafiick^-,
BeriL', Chtj^itly
Kojin^,
Bri-
Arfemc^, Salrty
or Glafs of Antimo-
Book. IL
Kj.
ciy
87
Unto
Fix Hifpanica, and Gipftim. fiime^ BenjamiH} T'a/cum^ Chyna-dilheSy Snndaraca^ Turpentine^ Sty^ rax Liquida, and Caranna dried into a hard conliftence. And the fame ac.raftion we finde, not onely in fimple bodies, but fuch as are ni.ich compounded i as the Oxjcroceum Plailkr, and obfcurely that ad Herdtam, and Gratia Dei ; all which fniooth and rightly prepared, willdifcover afufficiem: power to ftir the Needle, fetled freely upon a well-pointed pin ; and Co as the Elecaick may be applyed unro ic, without all difadvantage. But tht; aciraction of thefe Elcccriks we obfcrve to be very different. RCiinous or unctuous bodies, and fuch as will ilame, attract nioft vigoroufly, and moft thereof wichout fricacion; as ^/Wf, Beiijtnfin^ and mofl powerfully "good hard Wax , which will convert the Needle almoft as aftively as the Loadllone. And we believe that all or nioft of this fubftance if reduced to hardnefs, tralucency or clcarnefs, would have fome attractive quality. But juicei concrete, or Gums ealily difiblvuig in water, draw not at ail as. Aloe, Opium, Sanguis Draconic, Lacca^ Callamr-nj Sagapc~ n".m. Many ftones alfo both precious and vulgar, although ter fe ar.d fmooth, liave not this power attractive : as Emeralds;^ Pearly Jafp-^Sr, Corneleans:) Jgath, Heliotropes, Mirlle, Al.dlalhr, Tom:Glafs attracts but weakly, though clear ^ jtQHeo Flint, and Bezoar. fome llicklloncs and thick GlaiTes indifferently : Arfenic but weakly, folikewife Glafs of Antimony ^ hi\t Crocus M^taHorum not at all. Salts generally but weakly : as Sal gemma, AUum and alfo Talkj, but if gently warmed nor very difcoverably by any frication at the fire, and wiped with a dry cloth, they will better difcover
.
their Electrities.
Mettal attracts, nor Animal concretion we know, although and fniooth as we have made trial in Elkj-Uooh, H^wkjTalons, the fword of 2iSword-fi(h, Tortoyf-Jhels, Sea-horfe ^nd Elephants Teeth, in bones, in Harts-horn, and what is ufually conceived 1/'iif(jri-6.r. No wood though never fo hard and poliflied, although out of fome thereof Elecrrick bodies proceed as Eionjj Box, Lignum vit. Cedar, &l\ And although Jet and Amher be reckoned among Bitumens, yet neither do we rinde Afphaltus, that is. Bitumen of Judea, nor Sea-cole, nor Camphire , nor Mtmmia to attract j although we have tryed large and polifhed pieces. Now this attraction have we tryed in ftraws and pakoas bodies, in Needles of Iron equilibrated Powders of Wood and Iron, in Cold and lilver foliate. And not onelyuifolid but fluent and liquid bodies, as oyls made both by exprelfion and dilhllation ; in wa;:er, in fpirits f Wine, Vitriol and Aquafort is. But how this attradion is made, is not fo eaiily decerniined j
polite
-,
No
-,
til at
g3
tlwit 'tis
Book,
II.
performed by eftiiiviums is plain, and granted hy moIl will noc commonly auiraft, except they grow hot For if they become foul or obnubilated, perfpirable. or become it hinders their efftuxion^ nor if they be covered, though but with Linen or Sarfenet, or if a body be incerpofed j for that inIf alfo a powerfuU and broad Eleftiick tercepts the efpAivium. of Wax or Anime be held over fine powder ; the Atonies or fniall particks will afcend moft numeroulJy unto it j and if the Eleftrick be held unto the light , it may be obferved that many thereof will liy, and be as it were difcharged from the Eieftrick to the diflance fometime of two or three inches. Which motion is performed by the breath of the effluvium ifliiing with agility i for as the Eleftrick cooleth^ the projeftion of the Atomes ceafeth.
hereof Cabeus wittily attempteth, affirming that tftiuvium attenuateth and impellech the neighbour ayr, whicii returning home in a gyration, carrieth widi it the obvious boAnd this he labours to conHrni by exdies imto the Eledrick. periments ; for if the ftraws be raifed by a vigorous EJedtrick,
^\^\^
c.lcus
his
The manner
way
tor at-
y^?'^\l"'
cinck.
they do appear to wave and turn in their afcents. If likewife the Eleftiick be broad, and the ftraws light and chaffy, and held at a reafonable diftance, they will not arife unto the middle, but rather adhere toward die verge or borders thereof. And daftly if many ftraws be laid together , aiid a nimble Electrick approaLu, they will not allarifeunto it, but fome will commonly ftart aiide, and be whirled a reafonable diftance from Now that the air impelled returns unto it:^ place in a gyit. ration or whirling, is evident from the Atonij or motes in the
Sun. For when the Sun fo enters a hole or window, that by its illumination the Atomes or Moats become perceptible, if then by our breath the ayr be gently impelled, it may be perceived, that they will circularly return and in a gyration unto their
places again.
The way
'^ ^'
of
Sit i^evelm
Another way of their attraction is alfo delivered ; that is, by ^ tenuous emanation or continued effluvium, which after fomc diftance retracteth into it felf j as is obfervable in drops of Syrups, oyl and feminal vifcofities, which fpun at 4ength retire inNow thefe eflluviums advancing from to their former dimenlions. the bodie of the Electrick, and in their return do carry back
the bodies whereon they have laid hold within the fphear or Circle of their continuities 5 and thefe they do not only attract, but with their vifcous arms hold faft a good while af-
And if any {hall wonder why thefe effluviums iflTuing forth impell and protrude not the ftraw before they can bring it back ; it IS beiaule the eftiuviiini palfing out in a ftualler thred and
ter.
more
'
Bbokll.
iW Common Brrorf,
8.
more enlengthcned
but
filament, it ftirreth not the bodies iiiteipofedj returning unco its originall , falls into a clofer fubftanee,
and carrieth them back unto it felf. And this way of at'aaftion is beft received, embraced by Sir Kenclm Digby \i\ his exct*!lent Treaty of bodies, allowed by Des Cartes in his principles of Philofopliy 5 as far as concerneth fat and refinous bxjdies , and with exception of Glafs, whofe attraftion he alfo derive:h from And this in fonie manner the words the recefs of its eftluftion. amof Gilbert :4S will bear. Effluvia, ilia tenuiora conci^iunt
ple^untNY corpora^
chiii-,
quibtts iiniuntnr^
&
extenfis bra-
invalefcentibus effluviisy dedvcuntur. the ground were true, that the earth were an Eleftrick body, and the ayr but the effluvium thereof j we might perhaps believe that from this attraction, and by this effluxion bodies tended to the Earth, and could not remain above it. Our other difcourfe of Electricks concerneth a general opinion 'touching Jet and Amber, that they actraft all light bodies, except Ocjmum or Bafil, and fuch as be dipped in oyl or oyled j and but Scaliger acquitceth him; this is urged as high as T'heophrailui
And
if
would probably have taken it up, who herein ftands out, and delivereth no more but what is vulgarly known. But Plutarch fpeaks pofitively in his Sjmpofiackji that Amber attrafteth all bodies, excepting Balll and oyled fubftances. With Plutarch confent many Authors both Ancient and Modern, but the moft in inexcufable are Lemmus and Rueusy whereof the one delivering the nature of Minerals mentioned in Scripture, the infallible fountain of Truth, confirmthis
And had
been his
aflertion, Flinj
ech their vertues with erroneous traditions ; the other undertaking the occult and hidden miracles of Nature, acceptech this for i and endeavoureth to alleadge a reafon of that which is more then occult, fhat is, not exiftent. Now herein , omitting the authority of others , as the Dodii'me of experiment hath enformed us, we firft affirm. That ^/-
^e
is
For
if
the leaves thereof or dryed (talks be ftripped into fmall ftraws, they arife unto Amber, IJ^ax, and other Eleftries, no otherwife then thofe of Wheat and Rye : nor is there any peculiar fatnefs or fingular vifcofity in that plant that might caufe adheiion, and fo prevent its afceniion. But that Jet and Anther attraft not ftraws oyled, is in part true and falfe. For if the ftraws be much wet or drenched in oyl , true it is that Amber draweth them not ; for then the oyl makes the ftraw to adhere unco the part whereon they are placed, fo that they cannot rife unto the Atcraftor j and this is true , not only if they be foaked in oyl, but fpirits of wine or water. But if we fpeak of ftraws or
feftucous
Lnpiriet
Into
VulgAr
oyl,
Book.
and fo that
II.
it
Mucous
caufeth
diviiloiis
lightly
-,
no adhefion
or
For Amber will atAnther^ the Doftrine is not true. convert the will oylcd-, Needles of Dials it tract ftraws thus they although be Iron, much oyled^ for or Brafs either of made in thefe Needles confifting free upon their Center, there can be
Oyl and
no adhelion. It will likewife attraft oyl it felf and if it approacherh unto a drop thereof, it becometh conical , and arifeth up unto it 5 for oyl taketh not away his attraftiori, although it be nibbed over it. For if you touch a piece of Wax already excitated, with common oyl, it will notwithftanding attraft, though not fo vigoroufly as before. But if you moiften the fame with any chyniical oyl, water or fpirits of wine, or onely breach upon it, it quite omits its attraction j for either ics effiuencies cannot get through, or will not mingle with thofe fubftances. It is likewife probable the Ancients were nitftaken concerning its fubftance and generation j they conceiving it a vegetable concretion made of the gums of trees , efpecially Tine and TofUr falling into the water, and after indurated or hardened j wherebut furely the conunto accordeth the fable of Thaetons fifters cretion is Mineral^ according as is dilivered by Bxtim. For either it is found in Mountains and niediterraneous parts i and fo ic is a fat and unftuous fublimation in the Earth, concreted and fixed by Or elfe , which fait and nitrous fpirits wherewith it meeteth. is moft ufual, it is collected upon the Sea-ftiorci and fo it is a fat and bituminous juice coagulated by the faltnefs of the Sea. Now that fait fpirits have a power to congele and coagulate un:
ctuous bodies, is evident in Chymical operations; in "the diftillations o^ Arfenick^^ fublimate and Antinoviy j in the mixture of oyl of Juniper^ with the fait and acide fpirit oi Sulphury fo# theieupon enfueth a concretion unto the confiftence of Birdlime j as alfo in fpirits of fait, or A<]ua. fortify poured upon oyl of Olive, or more plainly in the manufacture of Sope. And many bodies will coagulate upon commixture, whofe feperated naThus upon a folution of Ttn by tures 'J)rcHiufe no concretion. Aqua fortify there will enfue a coagulation, like that of whites of Eggs. Thus the volatile fak of Urine will coagulate Agi^a vit^ or fpirits of Wine j and thus perhaps Cas Helmont excelleiuly declareth^ the ftones or calculous concretions in Kidney Haw the the fpirits or volatile fait of ^ ^^. gj^t^cJej. ^n^y l^e produced with the conjoyning Aqua viU potentially lying therein; Urine in the kidney as he illuftrateth from the diftillation of fermented Krine. From or bladder., whence arifeth -dn Aqua vit or fpirit, which the volatile fak of tlu: fame Urine v^ill congele ; and finding an earthy concurrence, Ih ike into lapideous fubftance.
.
Laftly,
Book. n.
And
Commm
Errors,
<^
Laftly, We will not omit what Bellabonm upon his o^vn experiment writ from Dantzich unto MeUichim ^ as he hath left re- Of a Bee and corded in bis Chapter, J)e fuccino y that the bodies of Flies^ Pif- a Viper involved in Amber. triires and the like, which are faid oftimes to be included in ^^'''^*' ^* Jniber^ are not real but reprefentative, as he difcovcred in fethat purpofe. Jf fo, the two famous Epiveral pieces broke for grams hereof in Martial are but Poetical, the Pifmire of Brajfavolm Imaginary, ^nd- Cardans Moufo/eim for a flye, a raeer phanBut hereunto we know not how to aflent, as having met with cy. fome whofe reals made good their reprefentments.
CHAP.
dubious,
\.
Compendm/ly of fundrj other common Tenents^ concerning Mine^ ral and Terreom bodies^ which examined^ prove either falfe or
A Nd firft we hear it in every mouth, and in many good jr\, Authors read it, That a Diamond ^ which is the hardeft of ftones, not yielding unto Steely Emery^ or any thing, but its own powder, is yet made foft, or broke by the blood of a Goat. Thus much is athtmed by Plinj , Solinus , A/bertus, Cyprian^ Auftin, Ifidore , and many Chriftian Writers i alluding herein unto the heart of man and the precious bloud of our Saviour who was typified by the Goat that was flain, and the fcape Goat in the Wildernefsj and at the effuiion of whofe blood, not onely the hard hearts of his enemies relented, but the ftony rocks and But this I perceive is eafier vail of the Tenlple were fhattered. For Lapidaries ^ and fuch as profefs the affirmed then proved. art of cutting this ftone, do generally deny it 5 and they that feem to countenance it , have in their deliveries fo qualixled it, that little from thence of moment can be inferred for it. For firft, the holy Fathers, without a fiirther enquiry did take it for granted, and refted upon the authority of the firft deliverers. As for Alhertusy he promifeth this effeft, but conditionally, not except the Goat drink wine, and be fed with^Siler niontanumypetrofelinunii and fuch herbs as are conceived of power to break the ftone in the bladder. But the words of P/inj^ fron whom nioft likely the reft at firft derived it, if ftriftly conlidered, do rather overthrow, then any way advantage this effeft. His woids are
1.
;
thefe
vnacerata^
& fic
quam
is,
recentiy calideque
frangem.
That
2
it
is
broken with
Goats.
Book.lI.
Goats bloodj but not except it be fredi and warm, and that not without many blows j and then alfo it will break the beft Anvils and hammers of Iron. And anfwerable heretOj, is the aflertion By which account, a Diamond fteeped in of l(iJore and Solinm. Goacs blood, rather increafeth in hardnefs, then acquireth any
fofcncfs
it;
by
and are
the infuljon-, for the beft we have are cominuible without fo far from breaking hammers, that they fubmi tunreiift
to piftillation, and
7fl/x'
iJ&o
tiif^icus.
perhaps the difcovery of anorhers'that was fovereign for the Stone, as it ftands commended by many good Writers , and brings up the commpoKtion in the powder of NichoJa^'s^ and the Eleftuary of theQije-n of Col'^in. Or rather beeaufe it was found an excellent medicine for the Stone, and ics ability commended by fome todifTolve the hardeft thereof i it might be conceived by amplifying appreh-nnon^ , to be able to break a Viamond j and fo it came to be ordered that the Goat fbould be fed with faxifragous heibs , and fuch as are conceived of power to break the ftone. However it were as the eifeft is falfe in the one, fo is it fur ly very doubtful in the other. For although inwardly received ic may be very diuretick, and expalfe the ftone in the kidneys yet how it ftiould difiblve or break that in the bladder, will require a further difpute; and perhaps would be more reaIbnably tryed by a waim in eftion thereof, then as it is commonly ufed. Wherein notwithftanding,. we ftiould rather rely upon the urine in a Caftiings bladder a refolution of Crabs eyes ; or the fecond diftillation of mine, as Hdmont hath commended, or rather f if any fuch might be found) a Chilifaftory menftruum or digeftive preparation drawn fronj fpecies or individuals 3 whofe ftomacks peculiarly diffolve lapideous bothis conceit arofe
Upon
of a
'Oat,
dies.
2.
"that Glafs
is
poyforty according
imtoconmion
conceit;, Jkicnow
not
CO gi ant. Not onely from the innocency of its ingredients, that is, fine fand, and the a/hes of glafs-wort of fearn, which in themfelves are harmlefs and ufeful : or beeaufe 1 find
it
how
by many commend d for the Stone i but alfo from experience, as having given mito dogs above a dram thereof, fubtiily powdered in burter or pafte, without any vi;ible difturbance. The conceit is furely grounded upon the viable mifchief of
VVhvGlafsis Glafs groily or courfly powdered-, for that indeed is mortally cimmofily noxiiis, and etteftually \\(td by fome lo deftroy Mice and Rats; held to be for by reafon of its acutentfs and angularity, it commonly expoyfonous.
coriaces the parts through which it pafleth , and folliclts them unto a continual expul ion. Whereup'Mi t'lere er.fties fearful fymptomes, not much unlike thofe whicu attend the aftion of poilon.
From
Book.
II.
^W
Common
JErrorf,
^3
notwithflandiiig, we cannot with propriety inipofe upon it that name, either by occult or elementary quality; which he that concedeth will much enlarge the catalogue or lilts of poifons. For many things, neither deleterious by fubftance or quality, are yet deftruftive by figure, or fonie occaiional aftivicy.
From whence
are Leeches deftruftive, and by fome accounted poifon 5 not properly, that is by temperamental contrariety, occr.lt foini, or fo much a> elemental repugnancy; but becaufe b:'ing invvaidiy taken*"they faften upon the veins, andoccalionancxiuiion of blov^d, So a fponge is mifchievous j wliich cannot be ealily ilanched. bur bica.ife benot in it felf, for in its powder it is harnilefs ing received into the ftomack it fwellerh, and occaaoning a coutiiuial difteuiion, induceth a f^rangulation. So pins, needle^-, ears oF Rye or Barley, maybe poilon. So Daniel deftroyed the Dragon by a compoiition of three things, whereof nei;h?r was polibn alone, nor properly all together, that is, pitch, fat, and hair i
So
accordijig as
and
expreiled inthe hiftory. Then Daniel took pi:cli, and did feethc them together, and made lumps thereof, thefe he put in the Dragons mouth , and fo he burft That is, the far and piich being cleaving bodies, and afunder. extimulating the parts : by the aftion of the contiually hair the one,, nature was provoked to expejl, but by the tenacity of the fo that there being left no pafTage in ocher forced to retain or out, the Dragon brake in peeces. It muft therefore be taken of gi ofly-powdered Glafs, what is delivered by Grevinus : and from the fame muft that Mortal dyfentery proceed which is And in the fSime fenfe (hall we only alrelated by SanUorim. low a Diamond to be poifon ; and whereby as fome relate Yara-is
fat,
and
hair,
celfus
So even the precious fragments and himfelf was .poifoned. gems which are of frequent ufe in Phyiick, and in themfelves confe^ed of ufeful faculties j received in grofs and angular powders, may fo offend the bowels, as to procure defperate languors, or caufe moft dangerous fluxes. That Glafs may be rendered malleable and pliable unto the when hammer, many conceive, and fome make little doubt they read inD/o, Tliny ^nd Petronius 3 that one unhappily efFefted Which notwithftanding muft needs, feem ftrange> it for Tiheriuf. unto fuch as conjder, that bodies are duftile from a tenacious humidity, which fo holdeth the parts together that though they dilace or extend, they parr not from each others. That bodies run in:o glafs, when the volatile parts are exhaled, and the continua.inghnmourfeparaced: the fait and earth, that is, the fixed parts remaining. And therefore vitrificadon maketh bodies brittle : as deftroying the vHcous humours which hinder the difruption of parts. Which may be verified even in the bodies of
cordial
;
-,
'
Jlfy;::'yki into
Vulgar
Book.
II.
of Mettals. For glafs of Lead or Tin isfra^^ilcy when that ghicindus fulphiir harh been hred one, which made their bodies duftile. He that would moft probably attempt it, mull experiment upon gold. Whofe iixed and flying parts are fo co-joyned , whole fulpluir and concinuating principle is fo united unto the fait, that fome may be hoped to remain to hinder fragility after vitrification. But how to proceed > though after frequent corrolion, as that upon the agency of tire , it lliould not revive into its proper body, before ic comes to v'ltrihe, will prove noeafiedifcovery. 3. That Gold inwardly taken, either in fubftance, infuiion, decoftion or extinftion , is a cordial of great efficacy , in fundry Medical ufes, although a praftife much uftd, is alfo much queliioned, and by no man detcrnnned bfyond difpute. There are hereof I perceive two extream opinions ; fome exceilively magnifying it, and probably beyond its defertsj others extreamly vilifying it , and perhaps below its demerits. Some affirming it a powerful Medecine in many difeafe^, others averring that fo ufed, it is eiTeftual in: none , and in this number are very eminent Phylicians j Eraiiusy Vureim licndeletmi Brajjavolm and many other j who befide the ilrigments and fudorous adhelions from mens bands, acknowledge that nothing proceeded! from gold in the ufual decoftion thereof. Now the capital reafonthat led men unto this opinion, was their obfervation of the infeparable nature of gold ; it being excluded in the fame quantity as it was received, without alteration of parts, or diminution of its gravity. Now herein to deliver fomewhat which in a middle way maybe
entertained j we firft affirm, that the Uibftance of Gold is invii> by the powerfulleft aftion of natural heat i and that notonly alimentally in a fubiUntial nmtation, but alfo medicamentally in any corporeal converjion. As is very evident , not only in the fwallowing of golden bullets , but in the lefTer and focible
liate
'
diviiions thereof
,
palling the
as
it
that is, without abatement of weight or confiftence. So that it entreth not the veins with thofe eleftualies wherein it is mixed but taketh leave of the permeant parts,
mouthes of the Meferakkj , and accompanieth t he inconvertible portion unto the liege. Nor is its fubilantial converiioii cxpeftible in any compolition or aliment wherein it is taken. And therefore that was truly a ftarving abfurdity , which befell the
at the
wiflies
of Midas.
And
little
credit there
is
So
we
muft not conceive it parteth with any of its fait or diflbluble principle thereby, as we may affirm of Iron ; for the parts thereof are hxcd beyond diviiion nor vyill they feparate upon the ftrongeft teft of /ire. This we affirm of pure gold for that which is currant and
:
pafTeth
Book. IL
pafTeth
ml
Common
lError^.
p^
by reafoii of its allay, which is a proportion of filver or copper mixed therewith is aftually dtquantitated by fij-e, and poUibly by frequent extinftion. Secondly, Although the fubftance of gold be not inimuted or its gravity fenfibly decreafed, yet that from thence fonie vertue
in flamp atiiongft Ui^
:
may proceed either in fubftantial reception or infufion wc cannot fafely deny. For poflible it is that bodies may emit vertue and operation without abatement o^weight 5 as is mof]: evident in the Loadftone, whofe eflluencies are continual, and communicable without a minoration of gravity. And the like is obfervable in bodies eleftrical, whofe eniilllons are lefs fubtile. So wiJl a Diamond or Saphire emit an effluvium fufficient to move the needle or a ftraw , without diminution of weight. Nor will polifhed i\mber although it fend forth a grofs and corporal exhalement, be found along time defective upon the exafteft fcales. Which ismoreealily conceivable in a contmued and tenacious effluvium, whereof a great part retreats into its body. Thirdly, If amulets do work by emanations from their bodies 5 upon thofe parts whereunto they are appended, and are not yet obferved to abate their weighty if they produce viiible
and real
effefts
by imponderous and
invilible
emiffions
it
be uniuft to deny the polTible efficacy of gold, in the non-omlfiion of weight j or deperdition of any ponderous particles. Laftly, Since Stibium or glafs of Antinionji iince alfo its P^egulus will manifeftly communicate unto water or wine, a purging and vomitory operation 5 and yet the body it felf, though after iterated infufions, cannot be found to abate either vertue or weight j we fhall not deny but gold may do the like i that is, impart fome effluences unto the infufion, which carry with them the
may
feparable fubtilties thereof. That therefore this mettal thus received, hath any undeniable effeft, we /hall not imperioiifly determine j although beiide the former experiments, many more may induce us to believe it. But fince the point is dubious and not yet authentically decided,
it will
rather
be no difcretion to depend on difputable remedies but in cafes of known danger, to have recourfe unto medicines of known and aproved aftivity. For, beiide the benefit accruing unto tire fick, hereby may be avoided a grofs and frequent error j commonly commited in the ufe of doubtfull remedies, conjointly with thofe which are of approved vertues that is, to impute the cure luito the conceited remedy, or place it on thar. v/ hereon they place their opinion. Whofe operation although it be nothing, or its concurrence not conllderable yet doth it obtain the name of the whole cure: and carrieth often the honour of the capital energie, which had no finger in it. Herein
;
,
p5
:
Enpiries
Heiein exaft and
:
tnto Vulgiir
'Book.Il.
critical
trial Ihoulti
might be ierled beyond dejoinnient for fince thereby, not only the bodies of men, but great bare Treafiires might be prefeiVed, it is not only an error of Phyfick, but folly of State, to doubt thereof any longer. 4. That a pot full of afhes, will ftill contain as much water as it would without them, although by Arijiotle in his problcmcs taken for granted, and fo received by moft, is not effeftible upon the ftriftell experiment I could ever make. For when the aiery interfticies are filled, and as nnich of the fait of the afhes as the water will imbibe is diiffblved ; there remains a grofsand terreous portion at the bottom ; which will pofTefs a fpace by it felf; according whereto there will remain a quantity of water not receivable ; fo will it come to pafs in a pot of fait, although decrepitated 5 and fo alfo in a pot of fnow. For fo much it will want in reception, as its folution taketh up ; according unto the bulk whereof, there will remain a portion of water not to be So a glafs fluffed with pieces of fpunge will want aadmited. fixt part of what it would receive without it. So Sugar a bout will not diflblve beyond the capacity of the watery nor a metAnd fo a tal in aqua, fortis be corroded beyond its reception. pint of fait of tartar expofed unto a moift ayr luitill it diflblve, will make far more liquor, or as fome term it oy 1, then the former raea-
whereby
deterniiiiation
oply the exclufion of ayr by water, or repletion which caufeth a pot of afhes to admit fo great a quantity of water, but alfo the folution of the So a pot of fait of the afhes into the body of the difTolvent. afhes will receive fomewhat more of hot water then of cold; for the warm water imbibeth more of the fait and a glafs veflell of afhes more then of pin-dufl or fillings of Iron 5 and a glas fult of water, will yet drink in a proportion of fait orfugar without
Nor
is
it
of
over-flowing. Neverthelefs to make the experiment with moft advantage and in which fence it approacheth neareft the truth, it miift be made in afhes throughly burnt, and well reverberated by fire, after the fait thereof hath been drawn out by iterated decoftions. For then the body being reduced nearer unto earth, ai^ emptied of all other principles, which had former ingreffion lui-
becometh more porous, and greedily drinketh in water.^ that hath beheld what quantity of lead the teft of faltlefs afhes Will imbibe, upon the refining of Silver, hath encouragement to think it will do very much more in water.
to
it,
He
5.
is
Of white powder and fuch as is difcharged without report, there no fmal noile in the world but how far agreeable unto truth, few
.
Book.
I
II.
>7
^^*
Herein perceive are able to determine. We doubcs of fome, and anmfe the credulity of declare i that Gunpowder confifteth of three ingredients, Salt-^*** peter, Smal-coal, and Brimftone. Salt-peter, although it be alfo natural and found in feveral places j yet is that of common ufe an artificial Salt, drawn from the infiifion of Salt earth, as that of Stales, Stables, Dove-houfes, Cellers, and other covered places; where the rain can neither difTolye, nor the Sun approach to refolveit^ Brimftone is a Mineral body of fat and inflamable parts, and this IS either ufed crude, and called fulphurvive, and is of a fadder or after depuration, fuch as we have in magdeleons or rols, colour of a lighter yellow. Smal-coal is known unto all, and for this iifeismade of5ii//oKPj Willow^ Alder, Hafelly and the like; which three proportionably mixed, tempered, and formed into granulary
-J
is in uff for Guns. they bear a (hare in the difcharge, yet have they diftinft intentions, and different offices in the compofition. From Brimftone proceedeth the piercing and powerful firing: For Smal-coal and Peter together will onely fpit, nor vigorouf-
bodies,
ly continue the ignition.^ From Smal-coal enfueth the blak colour for neither Brimftone nor Peter, although i
in powder, will take fire like Smal-coal 5 nor will they eaiily kindle upon thefparksof aflint i as neither vi'iW Camphire^ a body very inflamable : but Smal-coal is equivolent to tinder, and ferveth to light the Sulphur. It may alfo ferve to diffufe the ignition through every part of the mixture j and being of more grofs
and fixed parts, may feem to moderate the aftivity of Salt-peter, and prevent too hally rarefa^ion. From Salt-peter proceedeth the force and the report ; for fulphiire and Smal-coal mixed will not take fire with noife, or cxilition; and powder which is made of impure and greafie Peter, hath but a weak emiiHon, andgiveth a famt report. And therefore in the thiceeferts.of powder , the
flrongeft containeth moft Salt-peter, ,^n,d the -proportioii thereof
^
is
about ten parts of Peter, unto one of Goal and Sulphur.;; But the immediate caufe of the Report, is the vehement commotion of the ayr upon the fudden and violent eruption of the Powder i for that being fuddenly fired, and almoft altogether 5 upon this high rarefaftion, requireth by mauy degreesa greater fpace then before its body occupied but ifinding'reliftance, it actively forceth h|s way, and by cpncuftion of .the ayr, occaiioneth the Report, Npw with what violence it forceth; upon the ayr, may ealily Ipe conceived, if we admit what Cardan aftirmeth, that the powder fired doth occupy an hundred times a greater fpace then its own bulk ; or rather what ^f//i/^i more exactly <accouiitjech 5 th.sit it e?;ce.edeth its former fp<ic no left then izooov '"'"
;.
'
O'
and
5$
TKe
caufe of
Etipmes
this
into
is
Vulgar
Book.
II.
Thtto4fr.
the reafoii not onely of this fliland $oo tinics. And may refolve the caufe of thofe terribut Guns , of report minaring ble cracks, and affrighting noyfes of Heaven; that is, the nitrous and fulphurous exhalations, fee on fire in the clouds j whereupon requiring a larger place, they force out their way, not onely with the breaking of the cloud , but the laceration of the air about ir. When if the matter be fpirituous , and the cloud compaft, the noyfe is great and terrible ; If the cloud be thin, and the Materials weak , the eruption is languid , ending in coritfcations and flafhes without noife , although but at the diftance of two Miles ; which
is
Thcgrcatcft
diftance of
And therefore fuch efteenied the renioteft diftance of clouds. And theiefbi^e alfoit isproiigilightnings do feldom any harm. die oils to have thunder in a clear sky, as is obfervably recorded in fome
Hiftories.
f
*
Clouds.
^
h-"u k
From the like caufe may alfo proceed fnbteraneous Thunders and Earthquakes i when fulphureous and nitrous veins being fired upon rarefaftion, do force their way through bodies that reiift chem. VVhere if the kindled matter be plentiful , and the Mine clofe and firm about it, fubvenion of Hils and Towns do fonietimes follow : If fcanty , weak , and the Earth hollow or porous there onely enfueth fome fault concuflion or tremulous and quaking MotiSurely , a main Reafon wliy the Ancients were fo iniperon. feft in the Doitrine of Meteors , was their ignorance of Gunpowder and Fire-works, which beft difcover the caufes of many
,
thereof.
In thli Pvrotcchnia.
Now therefore he that would dcftroy the report of Powder, nmft work upcMi the Peter; he that would exchange the colour, muft think how to alter the Smal-cioal. For the one, that i<s^ to "^^^^ white powder 5 it is furely many wayes feafible The beft I know is by the Powder of rotten Willows; Spimk, or Touch-wood prepared, might perhaps make ir Ruifet : and fome, as Beringuccio aftirmeth : have promifedto make it Red. All'Cfhfch norwithftanding doth little concern the Report ; for that, as we have ftiewed, depends on anodier Ingredient. And therefore alfo under the co^ lour of black, this principle is very variable ; for it is made not oneBut fome above all comly hy. Wiliow^ AUer^ Hazel ^ &c. mend the coals of Flax and Kujhes ; and fome alfo contend, the fame may be effe<Jted with Tinder. As for the other , that is, todefti'oy the Report, it is reafonably attempted but two wayes ; either by quite leaving out, or elfeby fikncing the Salt-peter. How to abate the vigor thereof , or fifilcnce its bombulation , a way is promifed by Pornz, not onely in general tcrnjs by fome fat bodies , but in particular by Borax and butter mixed in a due propoi-tioh ; which faith he, will fO go off as fcarce to be heard by the difch^rger ; and indeed
:
plentifully
Book.
II.
"ind
Common Emril
and
alfo
it
99
made without
plentifully
mixed
I
it
That
may be
thus
have met with but one example , that is , of Alin the relation of Brajfavolus and D< ear^wae phonfus Cardan y invented fuch a Powder, as would difcharge a bullet ^^W*"*without Report. That therefore white powder there may be, there is no abthat alfo fuch a one as may give no Report, wc will furdity not deny a poffibilityi But this however, contrived either with or without Salt-peter, will furely be of little force, and the efFor as it omits of Report, fects thereof no way to be feared and fo the charge be of little fo will it of etfeftual exclufion For thus much is reported of that force which is excluded. which was not of force enough Alphonfus^ powder of famous to kill a Ckicken, according to the delivery of Brajfavoluf* Jamque pdvU inventus eji qui glandem. fine bombo projicit , nee tamcn
',
-,
vehenienter ut vel
Ig is
puUum
interficere pojjit.
not to be denyed, there'are waies to difcharge a bullet, not onely with powder that makes no noife , but without any powder at all ; as is done by water and Wind-guns j but thefe afford no fulminating Report, and depend on fingle principles. And even in ordinary powder there are pretended other waies, to alter the noife and ftrength of the difcharge j and the beft, for as for if not onely way, coniifts in the quality of the Nitre make either additions alterations which or in the Powwaies other der, or charge, 1 find therein noeffeft. That unto every pound of Sulphur, an adjeftion of one ounce of Qajck-iilver , or unto every pound of Peter, one ounce of Sal Armoniac will much intend the force and confequently the Report, as Beringuccio hath That a piece of Opi/^wz will delivered, I find no fuccefs therein. dead the force, and blow^ as fome have promifed. I find herein no fuch peculiarity, no more then in any Gum or vifcofe body and as much effeft there is to be found from Scammonj. That a Bullet dipped in ojl by preventing the tranfpiration of ayr, vvill carry farther, and pierce deeper, a? Porta affirmeth, my experience cannot difcern. That Qliick-iiJver is more deftruftive then fhot, is fureiy not to be made outi, for it will fcarce make any penetraticn, and difcharged frora a Piftol, will hardly pierce through a parchment. That Vinegar, fpiiics of Wine, or the diftilled water of Oran<je-pils, -wherewich the now- ^ Cat. avmi' ^ J u der is tempered, are more ettectual unto the Report then com- ^j,^^- j^j^.,^ mon water, as fome do proniife, I (hall not affirm 5 but may af- ^ ya v,o}>.bxf furedly more conduce unto the prefervation and durance of the dicTQ\ powder, as C/zttfMftf hath well obferved. That the heads of arrows and bullets have been difcharged with
; :
,
jtcvi^Id
that
jioo
Enpiries
into Vulvar
Book.lL
that force, as to nick or grow red hot in their flight, though received, and taken up hy /irijiotle in his Meteors, is not foeaiily allowa'ble by any, who fhall confider, that a Bullet of Wax will mifchief withour melting-, that an Arrow or Bullet
commonly
difcharged againft linnen or paper do nor fet them onfire^ and hardhow an Iron fhould grow red hot, fincc the fwiftefl motion at hand will nor keep one red that hath been made red by fire; as may be obferved in fwinging a red hot Iron about, or fafteningic into a wheel; which under that motion will fooner gi ow cold then without it. That a bullet alfo mounts upward upon the horizontal or point blank difcharge, many Artifts do not allow: who contend that it defcribeth a parabolical and bowing line, by reafon of its natural gravity inclining it alwaies downward. But, Beiide the prevalence from Salt-peter, as Mafter-ingredientinthe mixture; Sulphur may hold a greater ufe in the conipofition and further aftivity in the exclulion , then is by moll conceived. For Sulphur vive makes better powder then common Sulphur, which neverthelefs is of a quick accenlion. For fmalcoal. Salt-peter and Caniphire made into powder will be of little force, wherein notwithftanding there wants not the accending ingredient. And Caniphire though it flame well, yet will not fluQi fo lively, or defecate Salt-peter, if you injeft it thereAnd on, like Sulphur, as in the preparation of Sal p-mtelU. laftly, though many waies may be found to light this powder, yet is there none I know to make a ftrong and vigorous powder of Salt-perer ; without the admixtion Sulphur. Arfenk red and yallow, that is Orpement and Sandarach may perhaps do fomething, as being inflamable and containing Sulphiu' in them ; but containing alfo a fait , and Mercurial mixtion, they will be of little eifeft; and white or Chrillaline Arfenk of lefs; for that being artificial , and fublimed with fait, will not indure fialy apprehend
niation.
This Antipathy or contention between Salt-peter and Sulphur aftual tire in their compleat a!id diltinft bodies, is alfo manifefted in their preparations, and bodies which invi;ibly 'J'hus is the preparation of Crocm Metallorurn } contain them. the matter kindleth and flufheth like Gun-powder ; wherein notwithllanding, there is nothing but y^/^rzwo;/) i'^d Salt-peter. But this pioceedeth from the Sulphur of Antimony^ not enduring the focietyof Salt-peter; for after three or four acceniions, through a frefli addidon of peter, the powder will fluOi no more ; for the Sulphur of the Antimony is quite exhaled. Thus Iron in Aqua for [if will fall into ebullition, with noife and emicacion, as alfo a crafs and fumid exhalation; which are caufed from this combat of the Sulphiu: of Iron,with theacideandnicrous fi^ints o^ Aqua fort is. So
upon an
Book.
II;
Common Errorf
lo^
'
Aurnm fulntiHans y or powder of Gold dliTolvediii with oyl of T'^rrrtfr, which will kindle andprecipitaced AquaKegi^i Without an aftiial fire, and afford a report like Gun-povvder3 that is, not as Croi'iwf affirmech from any Antipathy between Sal Armoniac Vtconft/ifu and tartar , but rather between the nitrous fpirits of Aqua Reglfy Chymiionm, coniniixed^fr /iiw/r with the Sulphur of Gold, as Sennertm hatlv^^* well obferved. ThatCo?<r/(which is aLit^o/'^j'f(?; orftone-plant, andgrowN 6. cth at thebocroni of the Sea) is foft under water, but waxeth hard in the air , although the airertioii of Diofcorides , Pliny , and confequently Solinm-, Iftdore^Kuemi and many others, and ftands believed by molt , we have fome reafon to doubt j efpeclally if we conceive with common believers , a total foftnefs at the bottom j and this induration ro be.llngly made by the air , not onely from fofuddjn a petrifaftlon and ilrange induration , not eafily made out from the qualities of airi but becaufe we find it rejected by experimeutal enqi'.iries. Johannes Beguinm in his Chapter of the Tint.ire of Coraly. undertakes to clear the world of this error , from the exprefs experiment of John Baptijia 4e Nrco/e who was Overfe^r of the in the Frcpch gathering of Coral upon the Kingdom of Thu.nis. This Gentlemen, Copy. laithhe, defirous to find the nature of Ci^r^/, and to be refolved how it groweth at the bottom of the Sea j caufed a man to go down no Icfs then a hundred fathom, with exprefs to take notice, whether it were hard or foft in the place where it growech. Who returning j brought in each hand a branch of Coral , affirming delivered it was as hard at the bottom , as in the air where he The fame was alfo confirmed by atrial of his own, handling it. Boetm in his How Coral of it a fathom under water before it felt the air. actuate Traft De GemmU ^ is of the fame opinion; not afcribing a plant beconies a ftonc. its concretion unto the air , but the coagulating fpirits of fait, and ladipifical juyce of the Sea, which entring the parts of that plant, overcomes its vegetabilityjand converts it into a lapideous fubllancc. And this, faith he, doth happen when the plant is ready to decayj for all Cor/r/ is not hard, and in many concreted parts fome parts remain unpetrified , that is, the quick and livelier parts remain Now that plants and as wood, and were never yet converted. ligneous bodies may endurace underwater without approachmcnt of air, we have eKPeriment in Coralline^ with many Coralloidal coiicretionsjand that little ftony plant which Mr. Johnfon nameth, Hi^ furii Caroloides i 2i\\<iGefner fol lis manfu Arenafts ^ v^Q. have found in which is the lefs concretive portion of that Elefrefti water i have alfo with us the vilible petrification of wood in ment. manyvvaters j whereof fo much as is covered with water converteth into ftonci as much as is above ic and in the air^retaineth the form of wood, and continueth as before.]
So
is it
alfo in
:,
We
Now
j2
Expiries
into Vulgar
Book. H.
Gaw Hiuor.
tliough in a middle way we might concede , that fomc are foft and others hard; yec whether all Coral were firft of a woody fubllanct and afterward converted or rather fome thereof- were never fuch , but from the fprouting fpirit of fait, were ^i^j^ ^.^^^^ jj^ ^j^^-^ ilony natures to raniifie and fend forth branches ; as is obfervable in fome ftones, in filver and Metall jcall bodies, is
,
Now
And fuch at leaft might fome of thofe not without fome queftion. be, which Fiarouniti obferved to grow upon bricks at the bottom of the Sea, upon the coaft of Barbaric. 7. We are not throughly refolved concerning Porcf//<r;f^ or China difhes, that according to common belief they are made of Earth, which lyeth in preparation about an hundred years under ground 4 for the relations thereof are not only divers, but contrary and Authors agree not herein. Guido TanciroUus will have them made of Egg- (hells, Lobftcr-Zhells, and Gjpfum laid up in the Earth the fpace of eighty years of the fame aftirmation is Scaliger ^ and the common opinion of moft. Ramuzius in his Navigations is of that they are made out of Earth, not laid a conti ary aflertion under ground, but hardened in the Sun and winde, the fpace But Conzales de Mendoza, a man imployed inof fourty years. Of what mat- to China from PhiL'ip the fecond King of Spai>i3 upon enquiry and rer the China ocular experience delivered a way different from all thefe. For ^" ^ ^ enquiring into the ArtiHce thereof, he found they were made of a Chalky Earth ; which beaten and fteeped in water, affordeth a cream or fatneffe on the top, and a grofs fubfidence at the bottom i out of the cream or fuperfluitance, the finell difhes, faith he, are made, out of the refidence thereof the courfer; which being formed, they gild or paint, and not after an hundred years, but This, faith he, is known by prefentJy commit unto the furnace. experience, and more probable then what Odoardus Barbofa hath delivered ; that they are made of flieJs, and buried under earth an hundred years. And anfwerable in all points hereto, is the relation of LinfchottCHi a diligent enquirer, in his Oriental Navigatiows. Later confirmation may be had from Alvarez the Jefuit, who That Porcellived long in thofe parts, in his relations oi China. lane Ve/Tels were made but in one Town of the Province of Ckiamfi : That the Earth was brought out of other Provinces, but for the advantage of water which makes them -more polite and perfpicuThat they were wrought and ou, they were only made in this. fafhioned like thofe of other Countries, whereof fonii were tinfted blew, fome red, others yellpw, of which colour only they prefented unto the King. Now if any enquire, why being fo conmionly made, and in fo fhort a time, they are become fo fcarce, or not at all to be had? Theanfvvcrisgivenby rhcfe iaft Pvelators, that under great penal,
^'
ties
Book. IL
'ics it
is
And Common
'Errors,
'j
105
And of
forbidden to carry the firft fort out of the CoiintrCf. thofe finely the properties hiuft be verefied ^ which by Scaliger and others are afcribed to China-difhes ; That they admit no poyfon. That they ftrike firCjThatf they will grow hot no higher then the liqueur in them arifeth. For fuch as paife anlongft us, and
fineft,
j
8.
Whether
Carbuncle ( which
is
and biggeft
of Rubies J doth flame in the dark, or fhiiie like a coal 'in the nightj though generally agreed on by common believers, is very much queftioned by many. By MtUim j who accmmts it a vulgar By the leavned Bxtim who could not finde it verefied ui Error that famous one of Koduiphrtf 3 which was as big as an Egg, and efteemed the beft in Europe'. Wherefore although we difpute no: the poilibility, whether Irerein there be not too high an appreheniion, and above its natural radiancy, is not without juft doubt however it be granted a very fplendid Gem, and whofefparks may fomewhat refemble the glaiices of fire , and Metaphorically defervc And therefore when it is conceived by fome, that this that name. ftone in the Breftplate of Aaron rcfpeiS^ed the Tribe of Pan, who and Sampfon of the fame tribe, who fired bunit the City of Laifh the Corn of the Pkilijihims ; in fonie fenfe it may be admitted, and
:
no intolerable conception. As for that Indiin Stone, that fhlned fo brightly iti the Night, iicude quaand pretended to have been fhewn to many in the Cmu't of France^fit. pLt Epi^O' ^s Andrew Chioccus h^th declared out of Thaamts ; it proved but an ^a^'
is
inipofture, as that
and therefore
found. And ttiito the Sun, and then clofely fhiit up, will afteiward afrord a Bonomnp. Kght in the dark ; it is of imlike eonii deration, for that requlreth calcination, or rcdu&iwi into a dry powder by fire ; whereby it imbibeth the light in the vaporous humidity of the ayr about it 5 and therefore maintaineth its light not long, but goes out when the vaporous vehicle is confimied. " 9. Whether the Mtites or iEg/f-ftone hath that eminent propery to promote delivery or reftrain abovtioii, refpeftively apply ed to lower or upward parts of the body, we /hall not difcourage common praftice by otu' queftion ; but whether they anfv/er the account thereof, as to be taken out of jEgles-n^^s, co-operaciiig hi- women imto luch effeftsj as they are conceived toward the young Mgifi : oi' whether the lingle fignature of one i}one included in the Matrix and belly of another, werenocfufticient at firft to derive this vertue of the pregnane Stone, upon others in impregnacion, may
y^ec
eminent Philofopher Licetus hath difcorered ; in the revifed Editions of thuanufy it is not to be for the Fhofphoruf or Bononian Stone, which cyi]^o{cAVeet.dtlapU
104
'Book.IL
yet be forth er coniidered. Many forts there arc of this ratling Stone, befide theG^o^fij containing a fofterfubliajice in it. Divert sw-e, found in x^//7/fi;^3 and one we met with on the Sea-ihore, l>uC. becaufe many of eminent life are pretended to be brought from rkecdoius ^9" Ifiand wherein are divers ayries o^ JEgles^ we cannot omit to deliVdi^'ntiYtUltt ver what we received from a iCHrned perfon in that Country, JfL-^ titas an in nidis Aquilarnm aliquando fuerit repertusyMefcio, Nojtra certe fneriwriay etiam iriquirentihus mn contigit invenijp , quare in fahu-^ lis habendum. 10. Terrible apprehenfions and anfwerable mito their names, are raifed of Fayrie itones, and Elves fpurs found commonly with us, in Stone,Chalk,and Marl-pits,which notvTithftanding are no more then Echinometrites and Belemnites^ theSea-Hedg-hogjand the D/jrr-ftone, arifing from fome IiiiceousR.oots, and fofter then that of Flint, the Mafter-ftone, lying more regularly in courfes, and ariling from the primary andftrongeft fpirit of the Mine. Of the Echinitesituch as arc found in Chalk-pits are white, glaiTy, andbuilt upon a Chalky inlide i fome of an hard and flinty fubftance, are found in Stone-pits and elf- where. Common opinion commendeth them for theftoncj but are moft practically ufed againft Films in Horfes eyes. 11. Laftly, He mull have more heads then Kowe had Hills, that makes out half of thofe vertues afcribed unto ftones, and their not only Medical, but Magical proprieties, which are to be found in Authors of great Name. In I'ftlluSy Serapian^ Evax^ Albertws^ Also,zar^ Marbodeus ; in Maiol't^^ Kueusy Mjliusy and many more. That Lapis Lafull hath in it a purgative faculty we know 5 that Agalnft poi; Bfzo^r is Antidotal, Lapis J udaicus diuretical. Coral Antepileptical,
fon.
Provoking
Urine.
Againd the
Calling tickncfs.
wewillnotdeny^ Th^t Come liansy Jafpisy Heliotropesy and Blood-, ftones, may be of vertue to thofe intentions they are implyed, experience and vilible effects will make us grant. But that an Amethjjl prevents inebriation j that anwfr^/<a^ will break if worn in copu-, lation. That a Diamond laid under the pillow, will betray the meon-; tinency of a wife. That ^ Saphire is pi;efervative againft inchantnients j that the fume of an Agath will avert a tempeli, or the wearihg of a Cryfoprafe make one out of love with Gold i as fome have delivered, we are yet, I confefs, to believe, and in tliat iniideUty. are likely to end our dayes. And therefore they, which in the. explication of the two Beryls upon the Ephod, or the twelve ftones ip,
the Rational or Breaftplate o( Aarony or thofq twelve vvhich garnifhed the wall of the holy City in the Apocalyps, have drawn t.heir, fignifications fromfuch asthefe; or declared their fymbolical verities from fuch traditional faliities j have furely corrupted the finceritie of their Analogies, or mifunderftood the myfterie of their
CHAP.
Book. II.
i^nd
Common Enirs.
P.
VI.
lo^
C
Of fundrj
tt
^^
fiich as
regarding the Clouds, behold them inftiapes conformable to pre-apprehenfions. Now what ever encouraged the firft invention , there have not been wanting many waies of its promotion. The firft aCatachrefticall and far derived fimilitude, it holds with Man 5 that is, in a bifurcation or divifion of the Root into two pares, which fome are content to call Thighs whereas norwithftanding they arc oft-times three, and when but two, commonly fo complicated and crofled, that men for this deceit, arc fain to effeft tlieir de ign in other plants J And as fair a relemblance is often found in Carror.f, ParfnipSy Brhnyy afid many others. There are, I confefs, divers plants which carry about them, rot onely the ftiape of partSj but aifo of whole Animals, but furcly not all thereof, unto whom this conformity is imputed. Whoever fhall perufe the fisjnatures of CnUiusy or rather the Phytognomy of Porta, and ftriftly obferve how vegetable Realities are commonly forced into Animil Rcpreftnuaions, may eafily perceive in very many, the femblance is but poftulatory j and muft have a more alTmiiUting phancy then mine to uiake good many thereof. Illiterate heades have been lead on by the name 5 which in the f rft fylliblc expreffeth its Reprefentation ^ but others have better obferved the Laws of Etiynologj, and deduced it from a ^'*'''^?*> * vvo:d of the fame language, becaufe it delighteth to grow in ^^^ oblcure and fliady places j which derivation, although we /ball not ftand to mainrain,'yet the orher feemeth anfwerablc unto the Etimolog'-es of matiy Author?, who often confoimd fuch nominal Notaciom. Not to -:nquire beyond our own profe. Hon, the Latine In the old Phylitians which moft adhered unto the Arabii\ way, have Edicioa. often failed herein ; particularly Vale feus de Tarrant a, a received Phyiitian, in whofe p^/7';iw>/ or Medical praftice thefemay be obferved i Viarbea, fairh he, ^ia pfuries venit in die. HewQrrhoi<: rifepela^ quaf. kxrenspilif. 'Eworrbois , ah emachfangvis quod eji cadere.Litbargja a Lt^os quod eji ohiivio Targus worluSySco' niias mufca. Opthalmia ah opus Grdcce tontia a ScoXusq'^od e^ videre, Salmon quod eft occvlm, Paralifts^ quafi Ufio ptrtis* quod eft fuccus,
',
&
&
&
&
tuiuU
jo^
cis-.
Enquiries
into,
Vulgar
Book.IL,
2>
tl
tis
-
liolon qvod eji emiffid, quaft emijjio font vel voFibula a foi fonvs^ Which are derivations as ftrange indeed as the other, and hardly to be paralleld elfcwhere ; confirming not only the words of one language with another , but creating fuch as were never yet in any. The received diftinftion and common notation by Sexes, hath alfo promoted the conceit-, for true it is, that H^rbalijh from ancicnt times have thus diftinguiflied them ; naming thar the Male, whofe leaves are lighter, and fruit and Apples rounder j but this *^ properly no generative divifion, but rather fonie note of ftiftintion in colour, figure or operation. For though Empedocles affirm, there is a mixt and undevided Sex in Vegetables , and Sc'aUger upon Arifiotle^ doth favourably explain that opinion j yet will it not conlift with the common and ordinary accepdon, nor yet with Arijhotles definition. For if that be Male which generates in anorher, that Femak which procreates in it feif j if it be underftood of Sexes conjoyned, all plafits are Feuiale j auid if of difjoyned and congreilive generation, there is no Male or Female in
&
them
The impo-
at all.
this opinion,
fenfe.
was For many flurcs touchthere are in feveral parts of E'lrop^^ who carry about Roots and fell them unto ignorant people , which handfomly make out the "J^^^^^^^ o Mandraifc ^^^^ ^^ ^^^^ or Woman. But thefe are not proJuftions of Nature, but contrivances of Art, as divers have noted, and Miihio" Im plainly detefted, who learned this way of Trumpejy from a vagabond cheater lying under his cure for the French difcafe. His words are thefe, and may determine the point, Sed prof^^o vanunt fahulofum-i^cQ.* But this is vain and fabulous , which ignorant people, and iimple women believe for the roots which are carried about by impoftors to deceive imfruitfuU women, are nade of the roots of Canes, Bryony and other plants: for in thefe yet frefh and virent, they carve out the figiues of men and women, firft flicking- therein the grains of barley or millet , where they intend the hair fhould growj then bury them in fand, until the grains flioot forth their roots, wjilch at the longeft will happen in twenty daiesi afterward clip and trim thofe tender ihings in the falhion of beards and other hairy teguments. AH which like other impoftures once difcovered is eafily eifeftedj an J in the rooc
But the Atlas or main Axis which fupported daily experience, and the viiible teftimony of
&
may be praftifed every fpring. therefore delivered in favour thereof, by Authors ancient or mo lern, uuift have its root in tradition , impoihire , far derived limilitude, or cafuall and rare con:ingency. So may we
of white Briony
What
is
admit of the Epithet of Pythagorji^ who calls it Anth^opomo<p'yM', an.i that oi ColumeUa^ who terms \tSemihont3 3 more app liable unro
the
Book. II.
'and
Common trroW,
^'ld7
O'this Antlro^'' f"'^?'"^'^*'
Thus is Alkrlm the ^2.\\-0rchis^ whofe flower reprefents a mati. to be received when he affirnieth that Mandrak^i rc^i-z^tnt manUnder thefe reftriftions \]fcri'' Maoii kindc with the diftinftion of either fex. may thofe Authors be admitted, which for this opinion are iiitro- par.ifiatica. diiced by Vrufius ; nor Hiall we need to queftion the nionftrous root D> mavdriP^'^of Briony defcribed in Aldrovnndu^. '^''"'"'"* Thefecond aflertion concerneth its produftlon, That it natu- ^* rally grov^eth under gallowfes and places of execution, arifing from fat or mine that drops from the body of the dead , a ftory fomewhac agrcable unto the fable of the Serpents teeth fowed or rather the birth of Orion from the in the earth by Cadmus Now this opinion feems lirine of Jupiter^ Mercury^ and Neptune, grounded on the former, that is, a conceived fimilitude it hath
.
with man 5 and therefore from him in fome way they would make out its produftion Which conceit is not only erroneous in the foundation, but injurious vmto Philofophy in the fupcrftruftiMaking putrifaftive generations , correfpondent unto femion. nal productions , and conceiving in equivocal efFefts an vmivocal conformity unto the efficient. Which is fo far from being vereiied of animals in their corruptive mutations into plants, that they niaintain not this fimilitude in their nearer tranflation into animals. So when the Oxe corrupteth into Bees, or the Horfe into Hornets, they come not forth in the image of their original?. So the corrupt and excrementous humours in man are animated Generations into Lice ; and we may obferve, that Hogs,Sheep5Goats,Hawks,Hens equivocal, arC J IJ J r Ti-i others, have one peculiar and proper kinde of vernunci uot ygj coaimcnly refembling themfelves according to feminal conditions, yet carry- regularjand of ing a fetled and confined habitude unto their corruptive originals, n determinacc And therefore come not forth in generations erratical,'or diiferent ^^^ ^ rpcqei from each others but feem fpecitically and in regular fhapes to attend the corruption of their bodies, as do more perfect conceptions, the rule of feminal production?. The third affirmeth the roots of Mandrakes do make a noife, or give a (hreek upon eradication which is indeed ridiculous, and fdlCc below confute-, ariling perliaps from a fmall and ftridulous noife^ which beeing firmly rooted^ it maketh upon divullion of parts, A fl.nder foundation for fiich a vaft conception for fuch a noife we fometime obferve in other planes, inParfenip:-, Li<]uoriih, Eringiiim. Flags ai^i others. The lafi: concerneth the danger enfuing,^ That tliere follows an hazard of life to them that pull it up, that fome evil fate purfiies them, and they live not very long after. Therefore the artempt hereot aiiiong the Ancients was not in ordinary way, but as Pitny informeth, when they intended to take up the root of this plant, they took the winde thereof, and with a Avoid dcfciibing
:
I
three
;;
loS
Book.
II,
three dries abovit it, they digged it up, looking toward the IFeff, A conctic not only injiuious unto truth, and confutable by daily cx^ eri jnce, but fomewhat dero:;arory unto the Providence of God that is not only to impofe fo dellruftive a quality on any plant, but conceive a vegitable, whofe parts are ufefuU unto many, fhould To think he fufin the only taking up prove niortall unto any. fi^rcth the poifon oi Nubia, to be gathered, Na^eUui^ Aconi'e and ThoThat he perra to be eradicated , yet this not to be moved. mitteth Afenick and mineral poifons to be forced from the bowThis els of the earth , yet not this from the furface thereof. were to introduce a fecond foi bidden fruit, and inhance the firt malediftion ; making it not only mortal for Adam to tafte the one, but capitall unco his pofterity to eradicate or dig up the
other.
Now what begot, ac leaft promoted fo ftrange conceptions, might be the magical opinion hereof this being conceived the plant fo much in life with Circe^ and therefore named Circeay as which being the emiDi'^fcorides and T^f<//?W/f75 have delivered nent Sorcerefs of elder llory , and by the Magick of fimples befome men were apt to inlieved to have wrought many wonders vent, others to believe any tradition or magical promife thereof. Analogous relations concerning other plants, and fuch as aj-e of near aftiniry unco this have made its currant fm)oth , and pafs more caiily among xv?. For the fame effet is alfo delivered by Jofephufj concerning the root Btnras , by JElian of Cymfpba^us', and we read in Homer the very fame opinion concerning Moly.
>
'iTie
Is
Gods
it
Moiy
call,
;
dangerous unto
Man
but
or like relations alternately relieve each other j they piaulible together ; their mutual concurrences fupporting their folicary inftabilities. Signaturirfs have fomewhat advanced if, who feldom omitting what Ancients delivered drawing into iufcrerences received diftinftions of fex, not willing ro examine its humane refemblance; and placing it in the form of ftrange and magical limples, have made men (ufpeft ihere was more thereui then ordinary praftife allowed and fo became apt to embrace whatever they heard or read conformable imco fuch conceptions. for concerning an efLafdy, The conceit promoceth it felf feft whofe tryal muft coll fodear, it fortifies it felf in that invention j and few there are whofe expei iment it need to fear. For ( what is moft contemptible} akhough not only the reafon of
Now paralels
when neither
any
BooJc.
II.
mi
Common Error t,
^^9
any heaH, but experitnce of eveiy haiidilMay well conviA itj yet will it not by clivers be rejefted-, for prepofTdfed heads will ever doubt it, and timorous beliefs will never dare to rry ir. So thcfs traditions how low and ridiculous foevet, will finde fufpition in fome, doubt in others, and fcrve as refts or tryals of Melancholly, and fiipeiftirious tempers for ever. 2. ThatCniamon, Ginger, Clove, Mace and Nutmeg , are but That Cliuthe feverai parts, and fniits of the fame tree, is the common b::lief "^'S Gir>fer, of thofe which daily ufej^hem. Wheieof to Qieak diftinftly Gin- Cl'^ve, ef^-c ger is the Roo: of neither tree nor fhrub, but of an h^rbafeous ^^^^ ^^^^
i
bed
or ruicher ths common Pvecd, a; Loheli.u lince afhrmed. Vsvy common in many pares o^ Indian growing either from Root or 'tQ^d-y
i
whidi in I>ecmb.'r and Jan^'ary they take up, and gtnt\y dryed^ role ir up in earth whertby occluding the poies, they confervetlie natural humidify, and fo prevent corruption* Cinamonis the inward baikof a Cinamontree, whereof the beft is bro: g t from ZeiLm\ this freed from the outward bark, and expofed unto die SuUj contrafti into thofe folds wherein we commonly receive it. If it have not a fufticienc infolation it looketh pale, and attains not its laudable colour 5 if it be funned too long, it fuifereth a torrefaftion, and defcendeth fomewhat below ir. Clove fcems to be either the rudiment of a fruit, or the fruit fclf growing upon the Clove-tree j to be found but in few countiies. The moft commendable is that of the Ifles of Molvcca-^ it is firft white, afterward green, which beaten down and dried in the Sun, becometK black, and in the complexion we receive it. Nutmeg is the fruit of a tree differing from all thefe, and as Grfrcijj' defer ibeth it, fomewhat like a Peach j growing in divers places, but fruftifying in the \i[& oi Banda The fruit hereof conlifteth of four parts ; the firft or outward part is a thick and carnous covering like that of a Walnut. The fecond a dry and flofculous coat, commonly called Mace. The third a harder tegument or fhelU which lyeth under the Mace. The fourth a kernel included in the /hell, which is the fame we call Nutmeg. All which both in their parts and order of difpofuie are ealily difcerned in thofe fruits, which are brought in preferves unto us. Now if becaufe Mace and Nutmegs proceed from one tree, the
,
muft bear them company ; or becaufe they are all from the EaftIndiesy they are all from one plant : the Inference is precipirous j nor will there fuch a plant be found in the Herbal of Natiue. 3. That Vifcoiis Ai boreus or Mifleitoc is bred upon trees,from feeds
reft
which birds- efpecially Thrufhcs and Ring-doves let fall thereon, was the Creed of the Ancients, and is ftill believed among us is the account of its produftion,fet dowaby P/ij,delivered by rirg/7,and fubr fcribed
;
'
II
fcnbed by m^ny
>
tnptrtet
tnto
Vulgar
Book. II.
grovveth orici iipoii certain tiees^and not upon many whereon thefe birds do light. Fox as Exotick obfervcrs deliver, itgroweth upon Alniond-trees, Chefniit, 'Apples, Oaks, and Pine-trees, Asweobfei\c ill Englirnd) very commonly upon Apple, Crabs, and Whitethorn i fometimes upon Sallow, Hazel and Oak: rarely upon Afh and Maple ; never, that I could obferve, upon Holly, Elm, and ma-
all
Countries and
places
it
Braffavolus affirmeth,
is
not to be found in the Territory of Ferrara ; and was fain to fupply hinifclf from other parts of Zt/z/y Why if itarifeth from a feed, if fown it will not grow again, as Tlhiy affirmeth, and as by fetting the Berries thereof, we have in vain attempted its production j why if it cometh from feed that faileth upon the tree, it groweth often down-wards, and puts forth under the bough, where feed can neither fall nor yet remain. Hereofbe(ide fome others, the Lord Verulam hath taken notice. And ^^^^y furely fpeak probably who make it an arboreous excrefV'har the Mtffuper-plant, bred of a vifcoiis and fuperfluous felcoc in feme cenfe, or rather And therefore fap which the tree it felf cannot alVmiilate. ticcsis. fprouteth not forth in boughs and furcles of the fame fhape, and fimilary unto the tree that beareth it but in a different form, and fecondary unto its fpeciricall intention j wherein once and in the hrft place that of MiiJelfailing, another form fuccedeth Aud theretoe, in plaints and trees difpofed to its produftion. fore alfo where ever it groweth, it is of conftantfhape, and main,
tains a regular
living
as
figure 5 like other fupercrefcenfcs, and fuch as upon the ftock of others , are termed parafirical plants^ Polypody , Mofs , the fnialler Capillaries , and many more
So that feveral regions produce fcveral Mifleltoes > India, one, America, another, according to the law and rule of their degenerations.
]^aCofQ-.
Now what begot this conceit, might be the enlargnient of fome part of truth contained in its ftory. For certain it is, that fome birds do feed upon the berries' of this vegetable, and we meet in 'Ariihtle with one kind of Trufh called the Miffel Trulh or feeder upon MilTekoe. But that which hath moftpromoutd it, is a received proverb, Ti/rdus fihi n^lum cacat j Appliable luito fuch men as are Authors of their own misfortune. For according unto Ancient tradition and Tlinies relation, the bird not able to digeii the fruit whereon flie fecdeth from her inconverted Muring, arifeth this plant of the berries whereof But although birdlime is made wherewith fhe is after entangled.
i
bial
proverbs be popular principles, ySt is not: all true that is proverand in many thereof, there being one thing delivered, and 3 another
Book.
II.
Hi
another intended ; tlioiigli the verbal expreilion be falfe, the proverb is true enough in the verity of its intention. As for the Magicall vertues in this plant, and conceived efficacy unto veneficial intentions, it feemeth a pagan relique derived Paganirtjfufrom the 'ancient Druides^ the great admirers of the Oak, eipe- perftuiona^^'*'j|' cially theMifleltoe that grew thereon; which according unto the ^^"^ ' garheied with they great folemnity. of THny:> For particular ^^^ after (acrifice the prieft in a white garment afcended the tree, cut down the MiiTeltoe with a golden iiook, and received it in a white coaci the vertue whereof was to rdift all poyfonSj and make friiicfull any that ufed if. Vertues noc expefted fromCiafAnd did they anfwer their promife which are Co fical praftice Epileptical intentions; we would abate thefc quain commended, praftice hath added another; to provoke the afCountre^ lities. terbirth, and in that cafe thedecoftion is given unto Cows. That
,
the berries arc poy Ton- as Tome conceive, wearefo far from averring, that we have fafely given :hem inwardly ; and can conSrm the cxpeiiment of Bn;jff<i:'j/w, that they have foms purgative quality. The Fvofe of Jericho^ that flourifhes cwQvy year juil about ^. Chriftmas Eve, is famous in Chriftian reports, which notvyithflatidiug we have fome reafon to doubt; and are plainly informed by BlIonh:Sy it is but a Monaftical impo:hue ; as he hath deThat livered in his obfervations, concerning the plants in Jericho. which promoted the conceit , or perhaps begot its continui- or though it be dx^^ ance , was a propriety ia this plant, yet will it upon imbibition of moifture dilate its leaves, and explicate its flowers contrafted, and feemingly dried up. ^nd this is to be effeftcd not OJily in the plant yet growing , but in fome manner alfo in that which is brought exuccous and dry unto Which quality being obferved, thefubtiky of contrivers did u*. commonly play this (hew upon the Eve of our Saviours Nativity ; when by frying the plant again, it clofed the next day, and fo pretended a double myiterie referring unto the opening and doling of the womb of M^O* There wanted not a fpecious confirmation from a text in Eclefiajiicusy ^j^afi palma exaltata [urn in Cades^ quafi plantatio Kofe in Jericho: 1 was exalted like a Palm tree in Engaddiy and as a Rofe in Jericho. The found whereof in common ears, begat an extraordinary opinion of the Rofe of that denomination. But herein there feemeth a miftake ; for by the Rofe in the text, is implied .the true and proper Rofe.: as firft the Greek, and ours accordingly rendereth it. But that which pafTeth under this name , and by u*. is commonly called the Koicof Jericho , is properly no Role, but a fmall thorny (hrub or kind of hearh, bearing little wliice
:
&
^P**''*
ftir*
n p*/*
flowers,
fai'
differing
from the
K.ofe
whereof
Belloni'^s.
very
inquilicive
jjj
inquifitWe
Bdox.
any
in his travels
11*
thoiovv
A Jericho. ibnie good Simplijl for Amoynum ; unlike a Rofe, tha: as D/ofcorides delivers, the flowers thereof are like the white violet , and its leaves refemble Brjo^
ic
nie.
Siitable unto this relation almoft in all points is that of the thorn at GUff'enbury^ and peihaps the daughter thereof j herein our endeavours as yet have not attained fatisfaftion, and cannot therefore enlarge. Thus much in general we may obfeive that ftrange effefts, are naturally taken for Miracles by weaker heads i and artihcially improved to that appreheniion by \Yifer. Such t 'horn Qgj-fjj^^jy many precocious trees, and fuch as fpring in the win*^^'"' "^*y ^" foiHid in mod parts of Europe:, and divers alfo iu ^Ytrhm Patk trees do begin For moft to fproiit in the fall of the England. in slf/Wife, and leaf or Autumn , and if not kept back by cold and outward ctic where. caufes, would leaf about the Solftice. Now if it happen, that any be fo ftrongly couftituted , as to make this good againft the power of winter , thsy may produce their leaves or blofToms And perform that in fome lingles, which is in that feafon. obfervable in whole kinr's as in Jt/j, which blofjbras and bears at the winter j as aifo in Furze leaft twice a year, and once in which flowereth in that feafon. 5. That ferrum EijfJinum, or Sferra Cavello hath a vertue attractive of iron, a power to break locks, and draw o-f tlie (hooes of a horfe that paffeth over iti whether you taiie it for one kind ofSecuridaca, or will alfo take in Lunaria^ we know ic be falfe And cannot but w6nder at Mnhiolui:, who upon a parallel in No:wi:hftaiiding in the imTliny was daggered into fufpeniion. puted vertue to open things, clofe and ihut up, could laugh himfeif at that promife from the herb JEthiopis or JLtbiopia-t mullenv and condemn the judgement o^Scipio^ who having fuch a picklock, would fpend fo many years in battering the Gates oFC^>Which ftrange and Magical conceir, feems to have no thage. deeper root in reafon, then the figure of its feed; for therein indcei it fomewhat refemble's a horfeHioo winch notwithrtanding Butiita porta. Iiath thought too low a fignation, and raifed the fameunto
'
thunder,
tree,
ta/j.
a quallitj
pi
.^i^gle,
niifchief of lightning and afcribed thereto, common with the figand skin of a Seal. ' Agaiiiil fo famous a quality,
l'icom:rcatt4S
And
therefore although
yet did Aug't'ivs take a more probable aud holbw vaults for proceftion.
And
Book. II.
Mil
Comm
Krrorf,
\ 1
And though forta conceive, becaufe in a ftreperous eniptio!!, it rifeth againft'firCj it doth therefore refift lightning, yet is that no emboldning Illation. And if we confider the threefold efFeft t)f Jupten Trifulk, to burn, diflcufs and terebrate ; and if that be true which is commonly delivered, that it will melt the blade, yet pafs the fcabbard, kill the childe, yet fpare the mother, dry Hp the wine, yet leave the hogfhead intire j though it favour jthe amulet, it may not fpare us; it will be unfure to relye on any prefervative ; 'tis no lecurity to be dipped in StyiL^ or clad Now that beer , wine and other li- ^i^^ ^^^ j,nd ii\ the armour of Cenevs. with lightning and thunder, we conceive it pro- wine come la fpoiled are quors, ceedsnot only from noife and concuffionofthe ayr, but alfo noxi- be fpoiled by ous fpirits, which mingle therewith, and draw them to corruption ; I'ghming, whereby they become not only dead themfelves, but fometime deadly unto others, as that which Seneca mentioneth; whereof whofocver drank, either loft his life, or elf<e his wits upon it. 7, It hath much deceived the hopes of good fellows, what is commonly expefted of bitter Almonds^ and though in Tlutarch confirmed from the practice oi Claudius his Phyacian, that Antidote againft ebriety hath
verft in the practice
Surely men much theory of inebriation ; conceiving in difturbance the brain doth only luffer from exhafrom the ftomake, which fat lations and vaporous afcentions and oylie fubftances may fupprefs. "Whereas the prevalent intoxi*^'^'"'^' cation is from the fpirits drink of difperfed ijito the veins and arte- !^^. *** ries j whence by common conveyace they creep into the brain, inliJj"^^er*cmc nUate into its ventricles, and beget thofc vertigoes, accompany- ^^^^ ing that perverfion. And therefore the fame effeft may be produced by a Glifter jthe head may be intoxicated by a medecine at the heel. So the poyfonous bites of Serpents, although on parts at diIlance from the head, yet having entered the veins, difturb the animal faculties, and produce the effefts of drink, ov poyfon fwallowed. And fo as the head may be difturbed by rhe skni, it may the fame way be relieved^ as is obfervable in balneations, wafhings , and fomentations; either of the whole body, ov ofthat part alone-.
commonly failed.
do
err in the
<X
C H A
P^.
j^
Book. H.
CHAP.
Of fome
InfeBt^
V//.
and
Plants,
i.^TpHe prefage of the year fucceeding which is commonly made in Oak-apples, according to J. fiom Infefts or little Animals the kinds thereof, either Maggot, Fly or Spider ; that is3 of Famine, War or Peftilence whether we mean that woody excrefceiice, which fhooteth from the branch about May^ or that round and Apple-like accretion, which groweth under the leaf, about the latter end of Summer^ is 1 doubt too diftinft, nor verifiable from event. For F lyes and Maggots are found every year j very feldom Spiders And Helmont afiirmeth he could never find the Spider and the Fly upon the fame trees, that is, the dgwts of War and PefJiBefide, That the Flies found were lence, which often go together
i
Maggots, experience hath informed us; for keeping .thefe excrefcencies, we have obferved their converfions j beholding in Magnifying Glafles the daily progreHion thereof. As may be alfo obferved \n other Vegetable excretions 5 whofe Maggots do terminate in Flies of conftant fhapes j as in the Nurgals of the Outlandilli Oak, and the Molie tuft of the wild Briar j which having gathered in November, we have found the little Maggots which lodged in wooden Gels all Winter, to turn into Flies in June. We confefs the opinion may hold fome verity in the Analogy, or Emblematical phancy. For Peftilence is properly lignified by the Spider, whereof fome kinds are of a very venemous Nature. Fa* inine by Maggots , which deftroy the fruits of the Earth. And War not improperly by the Fly ; if we reft in the phancy of Homer who compares the valiant Grecian nnto a Fly. Some verity it may alfo have in it felf, as truly declaring the corrupti\e conftitution in the prefent fap and nutrimental juyce of the tree; and may confequently difcover the difpoiicion of that year, according to the plenty or kinds of thefe prcduftions. For if tlie putrifyingjuycCi of bodies, bring forth plenty of Flies and Maggots, they give teftimony of common corruption, and declare that the Elements are full of the feeds of putrifaftion; as the great numAbundance cf ber of Caterpillars, Gnats and ordinary Infefts do alfo declare. If Flic, Maggori, ^y^^^ j,^,jj -^^^^^ Spiders they give figns of higher pucrefaftion, as plt:nty of Vipers and Scorpions are confeffed todoi theputrtfaftiihynatutaUy
atfirft
fignific,
^"5 ^^ plenty Vipers and Scorpions are confcfled to do ; the putrefying Materials producing Animals of higher Mifchiefs, according to the advance and higher ftrain of corruption. 2. Whether all planes have feed, were more eafily determinable, if we could conclude conceining Harts-tongue, Fern , the Ca-^
piliaries
^
Book.
II.
^/^^
Common
Errors]
i j 5
But whether tliofe little diifly paitlclesj pillariesand fome others. upon the lower fide of the leaves, be feeds and femiual parts j or rather, as it is commonly conceived, excremsntal fepararions ; we
have not been able to determine by any germinaaon or univocal produftion from them.* Thus much we obferve, that they feem to renew yearly, and come not fully out till the plant be iiriis vigour : and by the help of Magnifying GlafTes we find thefe dufly Atonies to be round at firft, and fully reprefenting feeds j out of which proceed little Mites almoft invifible-, fo that fuch as are old ftand open, as being emptied of fome bodies formerly inckuled which though dlfcernable in Harts-tongue, is more notorioufly difcoverablc in fome differencies of Brake or Fern. trees runs down to the Roots in ^i^t^r, 3. Whether the fap of naked and grow not i or whether they do become they whereby and refervc fo much as fufficeth for conmore, draw any ceale to not For we obferve, that moil fervation, is not a point indubitable. trees, as though they would be perpetually green, do bud at the fall of the leaf 5 although they fprout not much forward untill the Springt and warmer weather approacheth, and many trees maintain their leaves all Winter^, although they feem to receive very fmal advantage in their growth. But that the fap doth powerfully rife in the Springs to repair that moillure whereby they barely fiibliftedin the fainter, and alfo to put the plane in capacity of fruftification-, he that hath beheld how many gallons of water may in afmall time be drawn from a birch-tree in the Sj^ringy hath flender
^
reafon to doubt.
4. That Camphtre or Eunuchates, begets in Men an impotency unto venery, observation will hardly conijrm 5 and we have found it to fail in Cocks and Hens, though given for many daies ; which was a more favourable triall then that of Scaligery when he gave it unto a Bitch that was proud. For the inftant turgefcence is not to be taken off, but by Medicines of higher Natures, and with any certainty but one way that wc know > whicli notwithftanding, by fuppreffingthat natural evacuation, may incline untoMadnefs, if taken
in the
5.
Summer.
In the Hiftory of Prodigies we meet with many Hiowers of Wheat; how true oi- probable, we have not room to debate. Only thus much we fhall not omit to inform j That what was this year
in many places, and almoft preached for Wheat rained from the clouds j was but the feed of Ivy-berries, which foiiiewhat reprefentit j and though it were found in Steeples and high places, might be conveighed thither , or Muted out by birds for many feed thereon, and in the crops of fome we have found no lefs then three ounces. 6. That every plant might receive a Name according unto the
found
'
Q^ 2
difeafs
jj5
difeafe
it
Book. II,
Paracelfuf,
A way
is
more
likely to
praftifedby many is advantagioiis unto neither ; that is , relinquifhing their proper appellations, to re-baptize them by the name of Saints, Apoftles, Patriarchs and Martyrs i to call this the herb of j^ofe , that of P^ter, this of James or Jofeph^ that of Mary or Barbara. For hereby apprehenfions are made additional unto their proper Natures j whereon fuperrtitious pradifes.enfuei andftories are framed accordingly to make good their foundations. cannot omit to declare the grofs mlftake of nwny in the 7. of plants ; to inftance but in few. An herb apprehenfion Nominal there is commonly called BetonicaPauly , or Pauls Betony j hereof the people, have fome conceit in reference to St. ?/?///, whereas indeed that name is derived from Paulus JEgineta , an ancient Phyfitian of JEgina^ and is no more then Speed-well, or Fluellen. The like expeftations are raifed from H^ri<t 7r/irtft^-i which notwithftanding obtaineth that name from the figure of its leaves, and is one kind of Liverwort or Hepatic.a. h\ Milium Soils ^ the Epithete of the Sun hath enlarged its opinion j which hach indeed no reference tiiereunto , it being no more then Litkofpermon 3 or Gruw>Mf/,or rather Milium Solen which, as Serapion from Aben Juliet hath taught us , becaufe it grew plentifully in the Mountains of Soler:, In Jews-ears fomething is conceived received that appellation. extraordinary from the Name, which is in propriety but Fumgm fambucinus:, or an excrefcence about the Roots of Elder, and concernWhy the Jcwj eth not the Nation of the Jews^, but JudM Ifcariot^u^on a conceit,lie car 1$ ufcd for and is become a famous Medicine in Qninfies, f, ^^geJ on this tree ; ore i roiti. And fo are they de^^^^ Throats, and ftrangulations ever fince. ceived in the name of Horfe-Raddifh, Horfe-Mint , BuU-riifh , and niany more : conceiving therein fome prenominal confideration whereas indeed that exprelfion is but a Grecifm ; by the prefix of Hippos a^d Bous^tlvdt is,Horfe and Bull,intending no more then great. According whereto the great dock is called Hippoilapathum ; a-.id he that calls the Horfe of Alexander^ Great-head^ exprelTeth the fame which the Greekj do in Bucephalus, Laftly , Many things are delivered and believed of other 8. plants, wherein at leaft we cannot but fufpend. That there is property mBajil to propogate Scorpions, and that by the fmell thereof they are bred in the brains of men, is much advanced by Hoi/^ri, who fomid this infeft in the brains of a man that delighted much ill this fmell. Wherein bclide that we find no way to conjoin the effeft unto the caufe afljgned ; herein the Moderns fpi^ak but tinicroufly , and fome of the Ancients quite conirarily. For, according unto Qribafim y Phylitian unco Julian ; The Africans , Men beft experienced in poifons , aihrm,
We
whofoever
Book.
JJif
^
no pain thereby
;
Common nors,
n?
he be ftung with a ScorpiojT, whc'i is a very different effeft, and rather antidotal ly deftroying, then feniinally promoting itsproJuBafify aithoiigti
ftion.
That the leaves of Cataputia or fpurge being plucked upward or downward refpeftively perform their operations by Purge or Vomit, as fome have written, and old wives ftill do preach, is a ftrange conceit, afcribing
ner of the Loadftone j upon the Pole whereof if a knife be drawn from the handle unto the point, it will take up a Needle i butif drawn again from the point to the handle, it will attract it no more. That Cucumbers are no commendable fruits, that being very waterilh, they fill tht: veins with crude and windy feroiities ; that containing little fait or fpirit, they may alfo debiliate the vital acidity, and fer mental faculty of the ftomack, we readily concede. But that they ihould be fo cold, as to be almoft poifon by that quality, it will ^ '"his >*<*.. be hard to allow,withOut the contradiftion o( GaleH'.vtho accounteth ^ ** * them cold but in the fecond degree, and in that Ckilis have moil phylitians placed them. That Elder-berries are poifon, as we are taught by tradition, experience will unteach us. And befide the promifes of Blochw'itiiK^thc healthful erf^edts thereof daily obfa-ved will convitus. That an Ivy Cup will feperate wine from water,if rilled with bo:h, the wine foaking through, but the water ftill remaining, as after Fliny many have averred, we know not how to aftirm j who making trial thereof,found both the liquors to foak indiftinftly through the bowl. That ftieep do often get the Rot, by feeding in boggy grounds where Ros-folis groweth, feems beyond difpute. That this herb is the caufe thereo^Shepherds affirm and denyj whether it hath a cordial vertue by fudden refeftion, feniible experinjent doth hardly confirm, but that it may have a Balfamical and refumptive Vertue, whereby it becomes a good Medicine in C^rt^rrk-i and Confumptive difpolitions, praftife and Rcafon conclude. That the lentous drops upon it are not extraneous,and rather an exudation from it felf, then a rorid concretion from without : befide other grounds, we have reafon to conceive ; for having kept the Roots moift and earthed in clofe chambers, they have, though in lefler plenty, fent out thefe drops as before. That Ylos Affrkanm is poifon> and deftroieth dogs, in two experiments we have not found. That Yew and the berries thereof are harmleifs, we know. That a Snake will not endure the (hade of an Aih, we can deny. tib. r. obfer-
Nor is it inconfiderable what is aftiimed by Bel'onJM h for if his afTertion be true, our apprehenfion is ofcentimes wide in ordinary fimples, and in common ufe we raiftake one for another. know
vat.
We
not
1%
Enpmei into Vulgar not the true Thyme the Savx>ry in our
\
JfookTir. Gardens, Is uoflRac comand that kind of Hyfop the Ancients iifed^ is unwho make great ufe of another.
fci
-'.
'
omit to recite the many Vertuesj and endlcfs faculties aibed unto Plants, which fometime occur in grave and ferious Authors j and we ftiall make a bad tranfaftion for truth to concede a To reckon up all, it were iniployment for Archimeverity in half. des^ who imdertook to write the number of the Sands. Swarms of others there are, fome whereof our future endeavours may difcover^ common reafon I hope will fave us a labour in many Whofe abfurdites ftand naked unto every eyci Errors not able to deceive the Embleme of Juftice, and need no Argus to defcry them. Herein there furely wants expurgatory animadvertions, whereby we might Itrike out great numbers of hidden qualities j and having once a ferious and conceded lift, we might with niore encoii:
We
..
xagement and
fafety,
TH^E
m
THE THIRD BOOK:
Of divers
popular and received Tenets concerning Animals
,
which
examined
CHAP.
Of
I.
the Elephant.
^^^^^ HE
'^
firfl
fhall
iierally
palTeth
this abfurdity is feconded with another , that being unable to lie down d it fleepeth againft a Tree j which t he "Hunters obfervingj do faw alnioft afunder 5 wherefalls alfo on the beaft relying^, by the fall of the Tree and able conceit is is 110 Which not the felf to rife more. down it 3 daughter of lacer times, but an old and gray-headed error, even in the dayes of ArifiotleyZ^ he deliverech in his book, de incejfu animaHum, and ftands fucceiTively related by feveral ocher Authors by PiodorusSiculi'!Sy Strabo, Anthrofe) CaJfiodoreySo/inin, and many more. Now herein me thinks men much forget themfelves , not well coniidering the abfitrdity of fuch aiTertions. For firft, they affirrh it hath no joynt, and yet concede it walks and moves about 5 whereby they conceive there may be a pi ogrelllon or advancement made in Motion without inflexion of parts. ""!!'. P*^?' Now all progrellion or Animal locomotion being (as Arijhtle teach- ^aje^ e in am* eth)performed traSu pidCu 5 that is, by drawing on, or impelling mals. forward fome part which was before in ftacion, or at quiet where there are no joynts or flexures, neither can there be chefe aftions. And this is true, not onely in Quadrupedes , Volatils and Fifhefj which havediftinft and prominent Organs of Mo ion, Legs, Wings? and Fins; but in fuch alfo a,, perform their progreiiion by the Trunk,
: :
&
as Serpents,
and
all
ig(^
logiesi
Joynt-likc
parts.
EnpirteS
mo
Vulgar
Book. If.
to niakeprogreilton. and without all protrufion of parts , were to expeft a Race from Hercules his pillars j or hope to behold the effefts of Orfheus his Harpj when trees found joynts 3 and danced after his
Miilick.,
abK
Afifain, While men conceive cfiey never lie down , and enjoy not the pofition of reft , ordained unto all pedeftrious Animals, hereby they imagine, (what reafon cannot conceive , that an animal of the vafteft dimenfion and long eft duration, fhould live in a continual motion, without that alternity and viciffkude of reft whereby all others continue; andyetmuft thus much come to pafs, if we opiniEvtenfivc or on they lie not down and enjoy no decumbence at all. For fta^'on is properly no reft, but one kind of motion, relating unto '^"""wlT**'? * that wDfich Phylitians ( from Galen ) do name extenfive or tonical j that is, an extenfion of the mufcles or organs of motion maintaining the body at length or in its proper figure. Wherein although it feem to be immoved , it is not without aU motion 5 for in this pofition tlie mufcles are fenfibly extended , and labour to fupport the body which permitted unto its proper gravity, would fuddenly fiiblideand fall unto tlie earth , as it happeneth in deep,
'
,
difeafes
and death.
From which
mo-
tion of the mufcles in ftation ( as Galen declareth ) proceed more And therefore the tyofFenfive lalTitudes then from ambulation. ranny of fome have tormented men , with long and enforced ftaand though Ixion and Sifiphmvfhich alwayes moved, do feem tion tohavethehardeft meafure 5 yet was not TVri/tf favoured , that lay extended upon Caucafus i and Tantalus fuffered fome what more then thirft, that ftood perpetually in hell. Thus Mercurials in his Gymnafticks juftly makes ftanding one kind of exercife j and Galen when we lie down, commends unto us middle figuresj that is, not to lie direftly , or at length, but fomewliat inflefted, that the muf^ cles may be at reft; forfuch as he termeth Hjpololemaioi or figures of excefs , either fhrinking up or ftretching out , are weariibme pofitions, and fuch as perturb the quiet of thofe parts. Now various parts do varioufly difcover thefe indolent and quiet pofifome at right angles^ tions, fome in right lines , as the wriftsj as the cubit : others at oblique angles^ as the fingers and the fatisfied in refting poftures of moderation, knees all and none enduring the extremity of flexure or extcnfi-,
on.
Moreover men herein do ftrangely forget the obvious relations of hiftcry, affirming they have no j oynts , whereas they daily read of feveral aftions v.'iich are not ptrformable without them.
is
delivered
by X/^hili.iH^j and
alfo
by Suetonm^
in
Book. III.
^f>^
Common
Errors',
137
Galba^ that Elephants have been inftrufted to walk on ropes, in Which is not eafily performed byman i and requireth not only a broad foot, but a pliable flexure of joints, and commandible difpofure of all parts of progreflion. They pafs by that memorable place in Crr/>^, concerning the Elephant of King ToruSi Indus qui Eltfphantem regebat^, defcendere eum ratifSy more foiita procumbere jujfit in genua, Cditeri quoqiie ( ita epiiblike (hews before the people.
nim
They remember erant ) demifere corpora, in terram. when he fpeaks of the Elephant of OfgriuSi not the exprelTion demiy-'^ rbut prefented to Leo the tenth, Pontificem ter genibusflexis,
hijlituti
.
&
., ge[lii
fo corporis habitu
call
venerahundus falutavit. But above all , they not to mind that memorable Ihew of Germanicus, wherein twelve Elephants danced unto the found of mulick ; and after laid them down in the Tricliniums , or places of feftival Reaim-
bency.
They forget the Etimologie of the knee, approved by fome Grammarian?. They difturb the polition of the yoimg ones in the Womb :
which upon exteniion of legs is not eaiily conceivable ; and contrary unto the general contrivance of nature. J>Jor do they coniider the impoHible exclufion thereof, upon extenfion and rigour of
the leg?.
Laftly,
.
confult not experience ; whereof not many years pail, we havp had the advantage in England, by an Elephant fbevvn in many parts thereof j not only in the poRure
They
forget or
A^
of {landing, but kneeling and lying down. Whereby although the opinion at prefent be well fuppred'ed, yet from fome ftiings of tradition, and fruitfull recurrence of error, it is not. improThis being bable, it may revive in the next generation again. not the firft that hath been feen in England;, i'or f bolides fome other llnce ) as Volidore Virgil relateth, Lewis the French King fent one to Henry the third j and Eman-ic'l of Pjrt'/gal another toL^'othe tench ii tolftf/j'i where nonvithllanding the error is ftill alive and epidemical, as wirhu?. ^ The hint and giound of this opinion might be the grofsaixl fomewhat Cylindricall compofure of the. leg^^ the equality and Ufs percepf'Wle difpofure of the joints^ efpecially in the former legs of this Animal they apearing when he /-andeth, like pillars of fxefh, without any evidence of articulacior. The d'tTerenc flexure and Older of the joints might alfo countenaice the fume ; being not difpofcd in the Elephant, as they aie in other quadrupedes, but carry a nearer conformity inro thofeof man*, that: is, the bought of the fore-legs, not directly backward, but laterally and fomtwhac inward > but the hough orfuffraginousti:.xure bchinde rather outward. Somewliat difftrenc unto many other qi':.adiuptdes3 asKorfcs, Camels, Dter, Sheep and Dogs i foi?
their
13$
Bm^uirles
im
VulgAt
Book. IIL
til eir fore-legs bend like our legs, and then' hinder legs lifceoiir arms, when we niovc them to our hoiikiers. But quadrupedes oviparous, as Frogs^ Lizards, Crocadilcs, have their joynts and motive fiexures more analogoufly framed unto ours: and fome among viviparous, that is, fuch thereof as can bring their forpfect aiKl meat therein unto their mouths, as moft can do that whereby their breafts are have the clavicles or coller-bones broader., and their flioulders more afunder , as the Ape, the Monkey, the Squirrel aikl fome others. If therefore jany fhall affirm the joynts of Elephants arc differently framed from moil: of' ctlur quadrupedes, and more obfeurcly and grofly alnioll then any, he doth herein no injury unto truth. But rfrf dicio Secundum quid ad di&um Jini^liciter, he affirmeth alfo they have no articulations at all, he iwCurs the controidment of reafon, and can? not avoid tlie contadi6tion alfp of fenfe. As for the manner of their venation, if we confnlt hiftorical experience, we fliall find" rt be otherwife then as is commonly preThe accoimts whereof are to 1 unied, by fawing away of trees. be feen at large, in JohanH^^ Hugo, Edwardns Lopez, Garci.a ah hor^ to, Cadamujtui^ and many more. Other concernments there are*''of the Elephant, whidi might admit of difcotnfe and if we fhould queftion the teeth of Elephants, that is, whether they be properly fo termed, or might rather be called horns : it were no new enquiry of mine, but Qgtmt. hh. 2. ^ paradox as old as Opjiams. Whether as Phny and divers fince affirm, that Elephants are terrified, and make away upon the grunting of fwine, Gareioi ab Horto may decide, who affirmeth upon experience, they enter their ftalls, and live promifcuoufly in the woods of Muhivar, That the fituation of the genitals is averfe, and their copulation like that of Camels, as Tliny hath alfo delivered, IS nor to be received j for we have beheld that part in a different poikion j and their coicion is made by fuperfalie ncy, like that of horfes ; as we are informed by fome who have beheld them That fome Elephants have not only written whole in that aft. fentences, as JElian ocularly teftifieth , but have alfo fpoken, as OppianHf delivereth, and Chrijhpherus a Cofla particularly relateth 5 although it found like that of /4c^i/.' Horfe in Homer, we do not Nor befide the affinity of reafon in this Aniconceive impoHible. ^cmc Brutes tollcrably well mal any fuch intollerable incapacity in the organs of divers quaorganiz'j for ^Impedes, whereby they might not be taught to fpeak , or be^^' Strange it is how the cuco^^*^ imitators of fpeech like birds. proach-* e riofity of men that have been aftive in the iriftruftion of beaiis, Kafou. have never fallen upon this artifice i and among thofe^ many paradoxical and unheard of .^ifetibns, (hould not attempt to make one f[)eak. The Serpent that fpake ti^.to Eve, the Dogs
: :
and
Book.IlL
ani'Oammm
Eyrsrsl
139
and Cats that II fiially fpeak unto Wirclies might- afford fcmie euconrageuient. And liiice a broad and thick chops are required in biids tliat fpeak, iince lips and teeth are alfo organs oF fpeech j fromthefe there is alfo an advantage in quadrupedes^ and a proximity of reafon in Elephants and Apes above them all. Since alfo an Echo will fpeak without any mouth at all articulately returning the voice of man, by only ordering the vocal fpirit in concave and hollow places ; whether the mufculous and motive parts about the hollow mouthes of beads, may not difpofe the palfing fpirit into fonie articulate notes , feems a queiie of no great doubt.
chAp;'
of
tL
the Horfe.
TH E
is
very
general, nor only fwallowed by the people and common Farriers , bwt alfo rjeceived by gooft Veterrinarians, and fome who have laudably difcourfed upon Horfes. It feemeth alfo very an- j/(teffintriani ' cient; for it is plainly fee down by Arijhtle ^ an horfe and all or Farriew, folidimgulous or whole hoofed animals have no gall 5 and the fame is alfo delivered by Pliny i which notwithftanding we iindc
repugnant unto experience and reafoii. For firft, it calls in quewho not abounfiion the providence or wife proviiion of nature iifither deficient fuperfluities is in Wherein , necertities. in ding neverthelefs there would be amain defeft, and her improviiloft juftly accufable i if fuch a feeding Animal, and fo fubjeft unto difeafes from bilious caufes, (hould want a proper conveyance for choler > or have no other receptacle for that 4iHmour, then the i: v-veins, and general mafs of blood. It is again controulable by experience ; for'W^ hafeiha^yifbirie encoin'aged by AbCyrtuf a Greek Aufearch aud enquiry herein thor, in t\\tt\mtoiConjlantme\ who in his Hi^piatrics, obfcurely;dfligneth the gall a place in the liver ; but more efpecially by '^^'^*''''*'' Carlo. Rwiwithe -BonmmH, whoiin hi^^AHatomia tlel Cdvah^ hath' mor plainly defcribd it, and in a mawner as I found it. Fof^'^'""* * the concave or fiin the parti cicular enquiry intb tfeat p*rt, nious part of the livei*, whereabout the gall is ufually feated in quadrupedes , I difcover an hollow , long and membranous fubftance, of a pale coulour without, and lined with chol^i- and gall within:; vi>iiich part is by branches diffufed into the lobes and feveral parcels of the liver j from whence receiving the ikry fun
,
..
'
-,
fluity
14*^
Book.
III.
perfluity, or cholerick remainder, upon the fccond concoftion and the general mafs of blood j by a manifeft and open pafTagcit conveyech it into the duodenum or itpper gut, thence into the lower bowels i which is the manner of its derivation in man and o:her animals. And therefore although there be no eminent and circular follicle, no round bag or veficle which long containctli this humour yet is thferc a manifeft receptacle and paffage of choler from, the liver into the guts which being not fo fiiut up, qr at leaf^ not fo long detained, as it! is in ozher animals procures tliat frequent excretion, and occaflons the Horfe to dung more often then many other, which cotifidcriug the plentifuU feeding the largenefs of the guts, and their various circumTolution, was prudently contrived by providence in this animal. For choler is tiie natiuall glifter^ or one excretion whereby nature excludeth another J Which dt^cending daily into the bowels, cxtinnilates thofe parts, and excites them unto expuliion. Choler the And ratjralglifter. therefore when this humalir aboundeth or corrupteth, there fucceeds oft-times a cholerka paffio j that is, a fudden and vehement Purgation upward and downward and when the padage of gall becomes obftruftcd, tlie body grows coftive, and the excrements of the belly white i as it happeneth oft-times in the jaundice.^ if any therefore affirm an Horfe hath 'no gall, that-is, no" receptacle, or part ordained for the feparation of cholery or not that humour at all j he harh both fenfe ind reafoii tooppofe him. But if he faith it hath no bladder of Gall, and fuch^ i^ obferyed in many other Animals, we fhall oppofc our fenfe if we gaiiifay him. Thus nuift Arijiot/e be made out when he denicth this part ; by this diftinftion we may relieve PliJtj. of a contradiftionj who in one place affirming an Horfe hath no gall, deiiverech yet in another, that the gall of an Horfe was accounted poifon i and therefore at the facrifices of Horfes Rome, it was Pfi*ft. imUwfull for the Flamen to touch it. Euit with more difficulty, or hardly ac all is that reconcileable which is delivered by our Country-man, and received Veterinarian i whofe. words in his Mafter-piecc, and Cliapter of difeafes from the Gall, are fomevvhat too ftrift, and fcarce admit a Reconciliation. The fallacy therefore of this conceit is not unlike the former ; j4 di&o /<?ctrnduni quid ad dictum fimfliciter^. Betaufe tk^y have not a bladder of gall, like thofe wej^fuaily obierVe in others, they have
: : : :
no
giill
at all.
VViiich jv.a
Paraiogifm not adnnttib.le, , a fallacy and needs not the Sun to fcatter it.
HA
P.
Book. in.
md
Common ^rroru
14
CHAP.
Of
third THe or
,
III.
the
Dove,
is fomcvvhat like the fecondj, that a Dove hath no gall i which is aihrnied from \ery great for as Pierm obfervedi from this confideration the Antiquity did make it the Hieroglyphick of Meeknefs. It hath been Egypua-rts commonly delivered by PcliiUers averred by many holy Writers and Comnientflton i who from the frequent mention of the Dove in the Cantklesj the precept of our Saviour, to be wife as Se\-and efpecially the appearance of penfSj and infiocent as Doves fimiiicude of this Animal; have taken ocin the Gholt the Holy calion to fee down many affections of the Dove, and what dorh moft commend it, is, that ic hath no gall. And hereof have made life not Oiiely Minor Divines , but Cyprian, Aujlin, Ifidore, Beda, Kupertusj Janfeni^y and many more. Whereto nocwichftanding we know not how to afTentjit being repugnant unto the Authority and poiitive determinacion of anThe affirmative of Ariilotle in his hiflory of cient Philofophy. Animals is very plain, Fel aliis ventriy alils jntejiin) y.ngitnr : Some have the gall adjoyned to the guts, as the Crow the Swallow, the Sparrow and the Dove ^ the fame is alfo attefted by Tlmj
affertion
Pige(7ti
and not without fome pallion by Galen, who bile accoimts him ridiculous that denies it.
It is
in his
book de Atra
not agreeable to the conftitution of this Animal, nor can that is the hoc which Flegm or and Now of what complexion it is, Melancholly could not effeft. fultus Alexandrinus dechrech, when he affirmeth that fome upon The temthe ufe thereof, have fallen into Feavers and Quinfies. per of their Dung and inteftinal Excretions do alfo confirm the lame ; which Topically applyed become a Th^nigmus or Rubifying Medecine j and are of fuch fiery parts, that as we read in Galen, they have of themfelves conceived fire, aud burnt a houfe about them. And therefore when in the famine of Samaria (wherein the fourth part of a Cab of Pigeons Dung was fold for five pieces offilver,^ it is delivered by Jofefhus-, that men made ufe hereof inftead of conmion fait i although the expoiirion fecm flrange, it is more probable then many other. For that it containeth very much falti as beiide the eiTefts before cxprefTed, is defcernabie by tafte, and the earth of Columbaries or Dovehoufes, fo mucti deiir.ed in the artilice of falc-peter. And to
we
fo reafonably conceive there wants a Gall fiery humour in a body fo hot of temper i
s.Mrimp:
14-
tnpinei
i/fto
Fulgar
;Book.
IH',
Whence
irafcible,
the
whence ihe
concupifcible
pifstons
do
cnoft aiifc.
to fpeak generaliyj the excrement oF birds which wane both bladder and kidiiiesj hath more of fak and acrimony , then that of other animalsj who belide the giits have alfo thofe conveyances j for whereas in thefc, the fait and iixivated ferocity with fori;^ portion of choler, is divided between tiie guts and bladder^ it remains iindevided in birds j and hath but a lingle deCceiity by the Now if bccaufe the Dove guts, with the exclulions of the belly. is of a miide and gentle nature, we cannot conceive it fhould be of an hot temper j our appreheniions are not diiHnft in the meafure of conftitutions, and the feveral parts which evidence fuch condition?. For the Irafcible pallions do follow the temper of the heart, but the concupifcible dilhaftions the crafis of the liver. Now many have hot livers, which have but cool and temperate hearts ; and this was probably the temper of Park j a contrary conftitution to that of Jjax ; and both but fhort of Medea, who
ftemed to exceed in either. for Anatomical enquiLaftly, it is repugnant to experience and that according to thedeter- ry difcovereth in them a gall mination of Ariftotle , not annexed unto the liver, but adhering nor is the humour contained in fmaller veins, unto the guts orobfcurer capillations, bnt in a vefciclc or little bladder, though And therefore the Hiefome affirm it hath no bag at all. roglyphick of the j^^gyptians, though allowable in the fenfe, who expreiling meeknefs and lenity is weak in the foundation by the portraft of a Dove with a tail erefted, affirmed it had no gall in the inward parts , but only in the mmp, and as it wei'C And therefore if they conceived their gods out of the body. were pleafed with the facrifice of this animal, as being without gall , the ancient heathens were furely niiRaken in the reafon, Whereas in the holocauft or burnt and in the very oblation. for as Ben Mainion inoffering of Mojes, the gall was caft away ftrufteth, the inwards whereto the gall adhereth were taken out Which the Prieft did with the crop, according unto the Law the is, behind his back, and burn, but caft unto E^/r, that not And if they alfo readieft place to be carried out of the Sanftuary. conceived that for this reafon, they were the birds of Ff^, and wanting the fui'ious and difcording part, were more acceptable they furely added unto the conceit r unto the Deity of Love and in this animal may be fufticientwhich was at firft venereal ly made out fiom that conception. The ground of this conceit is partly like the fomier ; the obfcure fituationof the gall, and out of the liver, werein it is commonly enquired. But this is a very injuft illation, not wellconr In iidering with what variety this part is feated in birds. fome bo:h at the ftomack and liver , aa in the Capriceps ; in
:
fome
Book. lU.
liver
a/?d
Common
Errori,
I43
onely 5 as in Cocks, Tiirke/s and Phcfiants; in fomeatthe others :it the guts and' Liver , as in Haiwks and Kites, in feme at tiie And thefe perhaps guts alone, as Crows, Doves , and many more. may take up all the wayes of fittiation, not onely in birds, butalfo other animalsj for what is faid of the Anchovy, that anfwerable un- hniti^i^hQ' to its name,it carricth the gall in the head, is further to be enquired. And though the difcoloured particles in the skin of an Heron , be con\monVy termed Galls , yet is not this animal deficient in that part, but Gontaineth it in the Liver. And thus when it is conceived that the eyes of "Toti.K were cured by the gall of the fifh Callyoni-r mus , or Scorpiiif wtiriH/ff) commended tothaceff"e(^by D/oyi'^r/^/fj; although that part were not in the Liver-, yet there were no reafoii to doubt that probability. And whatfoever animal it was, it may he received wichonc exception, when its delivered, the married couple as a reftimony of future concord, did cafl the gall of the facrihce behind the Altar. A ftrift and iiceral acccption of a loofe and tropical expreJlion was a fecond groimd hereof. For while fome aftirmed it had no gall , iiuending onely thereby no evidence of anger or fury j others have couitrued it aiiatomically,and denied that part at all. By which illation we may infer, and that from facred Text, a Pigeon hath no heart ; according to that expreffion, Facins ef} Ephraini jjcui Colnmba Hofea 7. And fo from the letter of Scripture we may fedu&ii nonhnhensCor. conclude it is no mild i but a fiery and fiirious animal, according to Facia eff terra in defolationeni a facie irx Columhji : Cap.i^. that of Jeremy , Kevertamur ad terram nativitatis noffr a facie gladii Cc~ ^"^f- ^^' and again , Where notwithftanding the Dove is not literally intended-, limthr. but thereby are implyed the B^r^y^o^/i^^^ , whofe Qaeen Semlranti'S Was called by that name j and whofe fuccefTors did bear the Dove
in their ftandard.
hahet
So
is it
;
proverbially faid
Formic<e fua
bills ineji^
whereas we know Philophy denieth thefe parts, noi' hath Anatomy difcovered them in infeft?. If therefore afiy affirm a Pigeon hath no gall , implying no more thereby then the lenity of this animal, we fhall not controvert his Thus may we make out the affercions of ancient Wriaffirmation. ters 3 and fafely receive the exprelfions of Divines and worthy Fathers. But if by a tranfition fromPthetorick toLogick , he (hall contend, it hath no fuch part or humovu' j he comniitteth an open fallacy, and fuch as was probably firft committed concerning
.
& mufcafplenent
Spanifh Miire^-y whofe fwifcnefs tropically expreffed from their generation by the windi might after be grofly taken, and a real truth conceived in that conception.
CHAP.
1^^
Book, lH.
CHAP.
Of the
IV.
Bever,
Bever to efcape the Hunter, bites of his tefticles or is a Tenent very ancient i and hath had thereby adFor the fame vv^e find in the Hiero-^ '^^'^^2ge of propagation. 'C^T oi^^' in the Apologue oi JEfop^ an Author^ of the jUgjptians ^vhaTanciqai- S^ypfiicks the beginning of the Perfian Monarwho lived in Antiquity, of great tj. chy, andinthe timeof C>*w i the fame is touched by Arifhtleiw his Ethicks, but ferioufly delivered by ^//>, Pliny^ ^nd So Hhks ; with the fame we meet with in Juvena/l^ who by an handfome and Metricall expreiiloii more welcomly engrafts it in our juni-
THat
fiones,
or Memories
imitatus Caftoray qui fe 'EuHuchiim ipfe facit^ cupiens evadere damm 'Tejlkulorum^ adeo medicatunt intclligit inguen^
it
bad
propagated by Emblems; andfome have been io the Name, deriving as to be deceived by Ca\hr a Cafirando j whereas, the proper Latine word is Fiber and Ca(ior but borrowed from the Greek, fo called quafi ya.Titfy that is. Animal ventricoprniy from his fwaggy and prominent belly. Herein therefore to fpeake compcndioufly, we firtl prefume to affiim, that from a ftrift enquiry, we cannot maintam the cand this is declarable from the vulfion or biting otf any parts for though fome have made teft aixl moft profefled VVriters life hereof in a Moral or Tropical way, yet have the profelfed Difcourfers by iilence dcferted, or by experience rejedtd this afTertion. Thus was it in ancient times difcovered, and experimentally refuted by one Sijii'-s^ Pbyiltranj as it flands related by?/:hath been
Grammarians,
ny
hy Viofcoridesj who plainly affirms that this rraiition isfalfe; the difcoveries of Modern Authors, who liave exprefly difcourfed hereon, as A'drovandi.'Sy Mathiohs^ Gcften:'!:, Bellonius ; by Ola's Magnrs^ Peter Martyr and others 5 who have dcfcribed America; they generally omitthe manner of their Venations ting this way of their efcape, and have delivered feverall other, by which they are daily taken.. The originall of the conceit was probably Hieroglyphical ;
h
by
which
?.fcer
\
by
Aifop
\
wasbjjc
became yydiological unto the Greek?, and fofet down and by proccfs of tradition, ftole into a total verity, which ariially true, tha-c is in its covert fenfe and Morality. Now
why
Book. HI.
14
upon the Bever f befide the Mcdithey call and Merchantable commodity of Cajioreum^ or parts conceived to be bitten awayj might be the fagacity and wifdom of that Animal j which from the works it performSj and efpecially its Artifice in building is very ftrange j and furely not to be matched by any other. Omitted by Plutarch de folertin animalium^ but might have much advantaged the drift of that Difcourfe.
If therefore any affirm a wife man ftiould demean himfelf like the Bever, who to efcape with his life, contenmeth the lofs of his genitals J that is, in cafe of extremity, not ftriftly to endeavour the prefervationof all, but to fit down in the enjoyment of the greater good, though with the detriment and hazard of the tefier ^ we may hereby apprehend a real and ufeful Triitli. In this latitude of belief, we are -content to receive the Fable o^ Hif^omanes^ who redeemed his life with the lofle of a Golden ball j and whether true or falfe, we rejeft not the Tragedy of Abfyrtui:, and the difperiioii of his members by Medea^ to perplex the purfuit of her Father. But if he (hall pofitively affirm this aft, and cannot believe the Mor^l, unlefs he alfo credit the fable ; he is furely greedy of deUilion, and will hardly avoid deception in theories of this Nature. The error therefore and Alogy in this opinion , is worfe then 4a the laft j that is not to receive figures for realities, but expeft a verity in Apologues; and believe, as ferious affirmationSj
why
confefTed and Ihidied Fable?. Again, if this were true, and that the Bever in chafe makes fome yet are not divuliion of parts, as that which we call Caftoreum the fame to be termed Tefticles or ftones j for thefe Cods or Follicles are found in both Sexes, though fomewhat more pro,
There is hereto no derivation of the fcminal parts, nor any pafTage from hence , luito the VefTels of fome perforations only in the part it felf, through Ejaculation which the humour included doth exudate as may bevobferved And lailly. in fuch as are frefh, and not much dried with age. The Tefticles properly fo called, are of a lefler Magnitude, and feated imvardly upon the loins ; and therefore it were not only a fruirlefs attempt, but impollible aft, to Eunuchare or caftrate and might be an hazardous praftife of Art , if ac themfelves all attempted by others. Now all this is confirmed from the experimental Teftimony of 'five very memorable Authors BeHonim-i G^fnerus^ Amatiis^ Rondewho receiving the hint hereof from Kon^ letiWy and Matkiolus deletim in the Anatomy of two Bevers , did finde all true that had been delivered by him, whofe words are thefe in his learned Book de pifci-hus Fibri in ingninibus gemiMos tumores habent^ ulrinque unicum^ ovi Adferini wagnitudine ^ inter, bos eji mentida
tuberant in the Male.
:
in
^6
iti
Enpiries
marihus
,
tnto VulgAr
,
Book.
,
III.
in fxminis
pudendum
y
fed
joUicidi tnemhramt
to ore
contedi
in
quorum medio
cerofus^ quern
y
lamkit
&
&
exugit
corporis
Jios
efi
tumores tejies uon effe bine maxime colligitur, quod ab iJlU nulla ad mentulam via neque ducfm quo hutnor in ntenii^U megtum de~
for.ts emittatur j praterea quod tejhs intus reperiuntur^ eofdem tumores Mofcho o-nimali ineffe putOy e quibiis odoratum illud pm ewanat. Then which words there can be none plainer, nor more evidently difcover the impropriety of this appellation. Thac which is included in the cod or vilible bag about the groin, bebut rather a coling not the Tefticle, or any fperniatical part ledion of fome fuperfluous nwtter deflowing from the body, efpecially the parts of nutrition as imto their proper emunftories 5 and as it doth in n.iisk and Civet cats , though in a different and ofFenlivc odoiu' ; proceeding partly from its food, that being efpecially fifti ; whereof this humour nny b? a garous excietion and olidous feparation. Moft therefore of the Moderns before Kondeletius, and all the -Ancients' excepting Sejiins , have mifunderftood this part , conceiving Cajtoreunt the Tefticles of the Beverj as DiofcoridesyGaleuy Ai^ginetUy JEtius y and others have pleafed to name. .it. The Egyptians alfo failed in the ground of their Hieroglyphick, when they exprelTed the puniflimenr of adultery by the Bever depriving himfelf of his TelHcles, which was amongft them the penalty of fuch incontinency. Nor is jEtius perhaps, too ftriftly to be obferved, when he prefcribeth the rtones of the Otter, or Pviyer-dog as fuccedaiieous unto Cajhreum. But moft inexcufable of all is Flinj ; who having before him in one place the experiment of Seliim againft it , fees down in another , that the Bevers of Pontus bite off their tefticles , and in the fame place affirmeth the like of the Hyena. Which was indeed wdl joined ^^^''^ ^^^^ Bever, as having alfo a bag in thofe parts j if thereCi''ttUus de~ H,Ma odji- ^y ^^^ underrtand the Hyeua odorata, or Civet cat, as is delivered and graphically defcribed by Canellm. Jaa. Now the ground of this millake might be the refemblance and lituation of thefe tumors about thofe parts, wherein we obferve the tedicles in other animals. Which notwithftanding is no well founded illation j for the tefticles are defined by their ofhce, sind not determined by place or ficuation i they having one office in all, but dilferent fears in many. For beiide that no fcrpent or iilhes oviparous have any ftones at all i that neither biped nor cjuadruped oviparous have any exteriorly, or prominent in the groin s fome alfo that are viviparous contain thefe part within, its be/ide this animal, the Elephanr, and the Hedge-Iiog.
rivetuYy
&
',
'
If
Book.
If
111.
md Common
Errovi.
^47
any thfrefore (hall term thefe tefticles, intending Metapliolically and in no ftrift acception ; his langnage is tolerable, and offends our ears no more then the Tropical names of plants when we read in Hcrbals^ of Dogs, Fox, and Goat-ftones. But if he infifteth thereon, and maintaineth a propriety in this lanour difcourfe hath overthrown his afTertion, nor will guage Logick permit his illation 5 That is, from things alike, to conclude a thing the fames and from an accidental convenience, that
:
:
CH A
Of
the
P.
V.
Badger,
a Brock or Badger hath the legs of one fide fhorter then of the other, though an opinion perhaps not very ancient, is yet very generall ; received not only by Theorifts and imcxpcrienced believers, but affented unto by moft who have the opportunity to behold and hunt them daily. Which notwithftanding upon enquiry I findc repugnant unto the three Determinators of truth. Authority, Senfe and Reafon. For firft, Albertm Magnus fpeaks dubioufly confefling he could not confirm the verity hereof j but Aldrovandm plainly affirmeth , there can be no fuch inequality cbferved. And for my own part , upon indifferent enquirie, I cannot difcover this difference, although the rcgardible lide be defined, and the brevity by moft imputed unto the left. Again, It feems no eafie affront unto Reafon, and generally repugnant unto the courfe of Nature i for if we furvey the totall fet of Animals, we may in their legs, or Organs of progreifion^ obferve an equality of length, and parity of Numeration j that is, not any to have an odd leg, or the fupporters and Movers of one fide not exactly anfwered by the other. Although the hinder may be unequal unto the fore and middle legs, as in Frogs, Locults and Graflioppersj or both unto the middle, as in fome Beetles and Spiders, as is determined by Arijiotle de incejfu animalium. ^t ineeffu Anv Perfeft and viviparous quadrupeds, fo fianding in their pofition fnJium. of pronenefs , that the oppofite joynts of neighbour-legs cowiiilinthe fame plane; and a line defcending from their Navel interfeftsat right angles the axis of the Earth. It happcneth ofcen I confefs that a Lobfter hath the Chely or great claw of one fide longer then the othej- ; but this is not propei-ly their leg, but a pav<: S 2
THat
i48
Book. IIL
part of apprehenfion, and whereby they hpld or feii upon their prey ^ for the legs and proper parts of progreflion are inverted back-; ward, and ftand in a polition oppolite unto thefe. Laftlyj The Monftrofity is ill contrived, and with fome difadvan*DinimAn, a tage ^ the Ihortnefs being affixed unto the legs of one fide, which might have been more tolerably placed upon the thwart or Dialine drawn from the crofs gonial Movers. F'or the progreffion of quadrupeds being performed >n|lci. ^Y Diamctrunip that is the crofs legs moving or refting together, fo that two are alwayes in Motion, and two in ftationat thefams time i the brevity had been more tolerable in the crofs legs. For then the motion and ftation had been performed by equal legs ; whereas herein they are both performed by uncquall Organs, and the imperfeft'ion becomes difcoverablc at every hand.
C H.A
Of the
P.
VI.
Bear,
THat
a Bear brings forth her young informous and unfhapen, which (he fartiioneth after by licking them over, is ati opinion not only vulgar, and common with us at prefent but hath been of old delivered by Ancient Writers. Upon this foundation it was an Hieroglyphick with the JLgyJ^tians ; Arijhtle feems to coimtenance it Solinus, Flinji and Milan direftly affirm it, and Ovid fmoodi ly delivereth it
: :
Nee catulu^ partu quern reddidit urfa. recenti Sed male viva caro f/?, lamhendo mater in
Ducit^
artus
&
in
formam qualem
is not only repugnant unto the enquire into it, but the exat and d<;liberate experiment of three Authentick Philofophers. The firft of Mathiolus in his comment on Viofcorides , whofe words are to this etfeft. Inthe valley of ^i<z about Trent^ in a Bear which the Hunters eventerated or opened, I beheld the yoiuig ones with all their parts diftinft : and not without fhape, as many conceive: giving more credit unto Ariftotle and P/zV/j, then experience and Of the fame affluance was Julius Scaliger their proper fenfes.
in his exercitations,
Vrfam
^id'
j
hahndum
Beok. HI.
inventus
efi
:
1^9
, diJpCra ea fdtw plane formatiii. intm Aldrovandiis who from the teftimony of his own eyes aftirniech , that in the Cabinet of the Senate of ooi<i, there was preferved in a Glafs aCubdifTeftcdoutot aBearperfeftly formed, and conipleat in every part. Ic is moreover iniurious unto reafon, and much impugn eth the courfe and providence of Nature, to conceive a birth (hou id be ordained before there is a formation. For the conformation of parts is necefTarily rei]uired, not onely unto the pre-requitices and previous but alfounto the conditions of birth, as Motion and Animation Wherein not onely the Dam, but parturition or very birth itfelf the younglings play their parts ; and the caufeandaftof exciuiion proceedeth from them both, f'orthe excluiion of Animals is not meerly palllve like that of Eggs , nor the total aftion of delivery to
: :
the Infant
rates
fore.
but the firft attempt beginneth from be imputed unto the Mother which at the accompliflied period attempteth to and ftrugling to come forth , dilacechange his Manlion
: ; ,
:
and
breaks
thofe
parts
which
reftrained
him
be-
Men hereby do in an high meaimputing that unto the tongue of a '? Beaft, which is theftrangeft Artifice in all the afts of Nature; that is ^{J"^'^^^"^" the formation of the Infant in the Womb: not onely in Mankind, jj^j^^'ij^jjI^'^* but all viviparous Animals. Wherein the plaftick or forma- work of Native faculty , from matter appearing Homogeneous, and of a iimila- turc. and ry fubftance, erefteth Bones, Membranes, Veins and Arteries out of thefc contrived! every part in number , place and figure, according to the law of its fpecies. Which is fo far from being fafhioned by any outward agent , that once omitted or perverted by a flip of the inward Phidias ^ it is not reducible by any other whatfoever. And therefore Mire me pUfmaveruntmaniu tuje^ though it originally refpefted the generation of man , yet is it appliable unto that of other Animals; who entring the Womb in diftinft and limple materials, return with diftinftion of parts, and the pcrfcft breath of life. He that ftiall confidcr thefe alterations without, mull needs conceive there have beenftrange operations within; which to behold it, were a fpeftacle alnjoft worth ones being ; a fight beyond all ; except that man had been created firft, and might have feen the fhevv of five dayes
Bellde (what few take notice of}
furevilitie the
works of
God ,
"
after.
Now as the
hath
ther.
it
opinion is repugnant both unto fenfe and Reafon , fo probably ijeen occalioned from fome flight ground in ei* Thus inkgard the Cub conies forth involved in the C hori-
on, a thick and:|ough Membrane obfcuring the formation, and which the Dam" doth after bite and tear afundef ; the beholder
ac-
at
firft fight conceives it a rude and informoiis lump of flefli^ and imputes the enluing ihape unco the Mouthing of the Damj which addeth nothing tliereunto 3 but onely draws the curtain, and. takes away that Vail which concealed the piece before. And thus have fome endeavoured to enforce the fAme from reafon j that is , the I'mali and flender time of the Bears geftation , or going with her
on becomes
*iiiivffii'
youngj which laftingbucfew dayes(a Month fome fay) the exclufiprecipitous , and the young ones confequently informousj according to that of SoHhm^ T'rigefiwtis dies uterum liber at itrfdt^ vnde evenit utprjecipitata fecund iUk informes creet partus. But this will overthrow the general Method of Nature,!!! the works of generation. For therein the conformation is not onely antecedent, but proportional unto the exclufion i and if the period of the birth befhort, the term of confirmation will be as fudden alfo. There may I confefs from this narrow time of geftation enfue a Minority or fmalnefs in the exclufion ; but this however inferrech no iuformity, anditftill receiveth the Name of a natural and legitimate birth 5 whereas if we affirm a total informity , it cannot admit fo forward a term as an Abortmeut ; for that fuppofeth confirmation. So we muft call this conftanc and intended aft of Nature, a flip or before the birth effluxion, that is an exclufion before conformation can bear the name of the Parent, or be fo much as properly called
: :
'^iiEmbryon.
CHAP.
VIL
Of the BafiUsL
"Any opinions are paffant concerning the
of Serpents,
Bafilisk or little
King
the Cockatrice : fome afiirming, What -others denying , moftdoubcing the relations made hereof. therefore inthefe incertainties we may more furcly determine : that -fuch an Animal there is, if we evade not the tefhmony of Scripture^
commonly called
and humane Writers, we cannot fafely deny. So is it faid, Pfalm 9u. Super a^idem Bafi/ifcum arnbnlalis^'Viu^vtin the vulgar Tranflation retajneth the Word of the Septuagint , ufing in other places the Latine expreiHon Jlfgw/f, as Proverbs 23. M^rdebit ut coluberj&ficut ^egulus venena diffundet , and Jersmy 8. Ecce ego ntittam vobk ferfentes Kegulos^&c That isjas ours tranflate it,Behold I will fend Serpents, Cockatrices among you which will not be charmed, and they ihall bite you. And as for humane Authors , or fuch as
&
have
Book. HI.
^^^^
Common
Errors,
"151
have difcoiu'fed of Animalsj orPoifons, icis tobe found almoll in Diofcorides , Gal^n^ ^li^J^ Solinus^ Mllan^ ALtius^ Avicen^ all Ardoynuh Grevinus^ and many more. In Arijiotle I confefs we find no mention thereofj but Scaliger in his Comment and enumeration of Serpents, hath made fupply ; and in his Exercitationsdelivereththat a Baliliskvvas found in il^wf, inthedaies of Leo the fourth. The like is reported by Sigonius; and fome are fo far from denying one, that they have made feveral kind>; thereof 5 for fuch is the Catoblepas oiFliny^ conceived byfome j and the Dryinus of JEriw by others. But alchough we deny not the exiftenceof theBafiliskj yet whether we do not commonly niiftake in tlie conception hereof, and call that a Baiiiisk which is none at all, is fiirely to be queftioned. For certainly that which from the conceit of its generation we vulgarly call \ Cockatrice; and wherein ( but under a different name ) vv c intend a formal identity and adequate conception with the Bafilisk whereof fuch wonders are deliis not the Bail lisk of the i^ncients, vei'ed. For this of ours is generally defcribed witli legs, wings, a ferpent'uie and winding tail, and a crift or comb fome what like a Cock. But the Baiiliks of elder times was a proper kind of Serpent, not above tliree palms long, as fome account ; and differenced from other Serpents by advancing his head,atid fome white marks or coronary fpots upon the Crown^as all authentickWriters have delivered. Nor is this Cockatrice only unlike the Bafilisk, but of no real (hape in nature ^ and rather an Hieroglyphical phancy , to ex:
Some-
'
times with the head of a man, fometimcs with the head of an Hawk, as Vierius hath delivered 3 and as with addition of legs Nor was it only the Heralds and Painters ftill defcribe it. of old a Cymbollical and allowable invention, but is now become a manual contrivance of Art, and artihcial impofture ; 'whereof beiides others , Scaliger hath taken notice BafiUfci pcdihm binis j formam mentiti funt vulgo Gallinaceo fimilem , neque enim abfintiles funt Cteris ferpentihus, nifi macula quafiin vertice Candida^ unde illi mmeyi Regium ; that is, men conmionly counterfeit the form of a Bafilisk, with another like a Cock, and with two feet i whereas they differ not from other Serpents, but in a white fpeck upon their crown. Now although in fome mamier it might be counterfeited in Indian Cocks, and flying Serpents j yet is it commonly contrived out of the skins of Thornbacks, Scaitsor Maids, as Aldrovandhath obferved 5 and alfo graphically defcribed By way of gu^c. in his excellent book of fifhes. Nor is only the exiftency of this animal confidei able, but many things delivered thereof, particularly its poyfon and its generation. Concerning! the tirft, according to the doftrine of the Ancients, men
:
&
fi-
'
mil
Book. HI.
ftill affirm, that ic killeth at a diftance, that it polfonethby the eye, and by priority of viiion. Now that deliterioiis it may be at forne diftaiice and diftruftivc without corporal contraftion^ what uncer-
tainty foever there be in the etfeft^ there is no high improbability in the relation. For if plagues or peftilential Atomes have been conveyed in the air from different Regionsjif men at a diftaiice have infefted each otherjif the (hadows of feme trees be noxious^if 'torpedoes deliver their opium at a diftance, and ftupitie beyond themfelves ; we cannot rcafonably deny, that ( beiide our grofs and reftrained poifons requiring contiguity luito their aftions ) there may proceed from fubti Her feeds, more agile emanations; which contemn thofe
at diftance unexpected. venenation ftiooteth from the eye, and that this way a Bafilisk may empoifon, although thus much be not agreed upon by Authors, fome imputing it unto the breath, 'others of unto the bite, it is not a thing impollible. Effluxion For eyes receive ofcarporeal 'pe- fcnlive imprelHons, from their objects, and may have influences cics. dcftruftive to each other. For the viiible fpecies of things ftrick not our fenfes immaterially ; but ftreaming in corporal raies, do carry with them the qualities of the object from whence they flow, and the medium through which they pafs. Thus through a green or red glafs all things we behold appear of the fame c^'^'^^^'^^ J ^hus fore eyes affeft thofe which are found j and themfelves e R f ^' ^^^ ^y ^"^^'^'^io'M as will happen to an -inflamed eye that beholds Ibk^kil^s ac it fe If long in a glafs j thus is fafcination made out; and thus diftance. alfo it is not impoliible, what is affirms J of this animal; the viiible raies of their eies carrying forth tne fubtileft portion of their poifon ; which received by the eye of man, or beaft, infefteth firft the brain, and is from thencr coiimunicatcdunto the heart. But laftly. That this deftruftiou lliO'iidbe theeffeft of the firft beholder, or depend upon priority of afpeftioii, is a point not ealily to be granted j and very hardly to be made out upon the principles of Arifiotle^ Alhazen^ Vitello^ and others ; who hold that light is made by reception, and not by extramiifion j by receiving the raics of thecbjeft into the eye, and not by fending any out For hereby although he behold a man firft, the Balilisk fliould rather. be delhoyed, in regard he firft receivech the raies of his An-
That
this
tipathy, and
venemous
emiilions
which
objectively
move
his
fenfe; but how powerfuU foever his own poifon be, it invadeth not the fenfe of man, in regard he beholJet^i him not. And therefore this conceit was probably begot by fuch as held the opinion of light by extramiflion ; as did Pithagoras, Flato^ Empedoclesy
HipptirchuS} Galerty
Mncrohim^
Procluf, Siwp/iciiifi
with moftofthe
Ancients, and is the poftulateof .vc/i</f in his Opticksj but fufficienrly convifted Irom obfcrvations of the dark chamber.
now
As
'
Balv.lU
xj^
the Ealilisk, that ic pioceedetli from As for the generation of a Toad or Serpent, it is a tonceit^^^ J*^?^^*^'* under paCT hatched L^OCftS rf\cV^ cgj, "-"^ a ,_ on of the A r \c TT -r /I II ic felh brood For if we should grant that ^^^.j^^.^gg^ the as as monftrous for emiffionjamafs within themfelves Gocks throwing oldjand unable fomefeminal matter, which may after conglobate into the form of fubftance be unfruitftill. As wanting one prinan e*T<^5 yet will this andfl comixture of the feed of both fexes, ciple '^of veneration, produftion, as may be obfcrved in the unto is^'required
which
e"!S
and
as
we have made
tVial
in Tome
which are termed Cocks eggs* Ic is not indeed- inipo.TibL" that Oyum Ccnufrom the fperm of a Cock, Hen, or other animal being once in pu*'^''^' or incubation, otherwife. Tome generation trefcence, either from ^^w^t may enfue ; not univocal and of the fame fpecies, butfome imper- j^^^ ytfyVt'le produftion j even s in the body of man from pu- one. fcft or monrtrous peculiar waiesof coruption-, there havefUcceedand ; trid humours fliapes of wormsj whereof we have beheld unfeconded and ftianne ed in medical obfervations. And fohie our felves, and read of others be feveral waies engendered > Serpents venemous fomay ftrange and that this generation (hould be regular,aiid alway produce a Ba-
beyond our aftirmation, and we have good rea(on to doubt. A^ain It is umcalonable to afcribe the equivocacy of this fornrunto the hatching of a Toad, t>r imagine that diverHScsthe produftion. For Incubation alters not the fpecies nor if wc obferve it, fo much as concurs eitber to the Tex or colour or Partridges hardied under a Hen as appears in the eggs of Ducks exclufion, onlyngeiitle ai^d contheir unto required being there tinued heat: and that not particular or confijied unto the fpeSo have,! knowii the feed of Silk- worms tiatclicies, or parent. and TUny reports that Livi'i the ed' oil the bodies of vromen in her bofome. egg an hatched Nor is only an wife of /^I/g^;(t/w but an elemental hereto, and warmth required artificial heat animal for as Vjodoriif delivereth, the i^igyptians Were wont to willfuffice l.atdi their eggs inovens, and many eye-witneifes' confirm thac
filisk, is
j
: :
: : -
but
'
unto this day. And therefore this generation oT'the he that can like that of Cajhr and Helena J^afilisk, feems believe the thefe two other that eafily is, that one may credit the were hatched out of the egg,which Ji^pter.'m the form of a fwa!i,bepraftice
:
gat on his Miftres heda. The occalion of r])is conceit might be an ^gyprifln tradition concerning rhe bnrd His whicli after became transferred unta Cocks. For an opinion it wa^ of that Nation, that Ibis feeding upon Serpents, that venemous food fo inquinated their ovall conceptions, or eggs within their bodies, that they fometimes came forth in Serpeiitine fhapes ; and therefore they alwaies
:
brske their
^^^'^^ I'Or
toL't
J 54
^rqmnet
into
VulgAr
Book.
III.
Bat how caufclefs their fear was herein, the daily incubation of Ducks, Peahens, and many other teftifie ; and the ftork might have informed them j which bird they honoured and cherifljedj
to deftroy their Serpent?. Tliat which much promoted if, was a mifapprehenfion in holy Scripture upon the Latine tranflation in Efa^ <,i. Ova. ajpidumrujperunt 3 tehis Aranearum texuerunt, <p(i comedent de ovis eorum worietur^ quod confotum ejl crumpet in Kegulum. From whence notwithftanding , befide the generation of Serpents from eggs there can be nothing conckided-, and what kinde of Serpents are
& &
meant, not ealie to be determined j for tranflations are very different: Tremellius rendring the Afp Htmorrhous, and the Regulus or Bafilisk a Viper, and our tranflation for the Afp fets down a Cockatrice in the text, and an Adder in the margin.
alfo feem to countenance it, Chap. quoniam Uteris FbiiijUa diminuta eji virga pcrci/Jforis tui, 14. de radice entnt coluhri egredietur Regulm ^ few en ejus abforbnts
Ne
&
volucrem , which ours fomewhat favourably rendereth y Out of the Serpents Root fliall come forth a Cockatrice, and his fruit But Tremellius e radice Serpentis Ihall be a fiery flying Serpent. prodit H^ynorrhoWi jruclus iUiusprjijier volans-, wherein the words are diiferent, but the fenfc is ftiU the fame ; for therein are figuratively intended Vzziah and Ezechias j for though the Philiftines had efcaped the minor Serpent Vzziahj yet from his ftock, a fiercer Snake ftiould arife, that would more terribly fting them,
&
it hath received from a mifunderftanding of the Hieroglyphical intention. For being conceived, to be the Lord and King of Serpents to awe all others, nor to be deftroyed by any j the i^gyptians hereby implyed Eternity, and the awfuU power of the fupreme Di?itie : and therefore defcribed a crowned Afp or Bafilisk upon the heads of their God?, the Bembiue tsble^ and oth^r EgyptiAs may be obferved
an Monuments.
CHAP.
Book, in,
x 5
!>
CHAP.
of
VIII.
the Wolfe,
SUch a ftory as
the Bafilisk is that of the Wolfe concerning priority of viiion, that a man becomes hoarfe or dumb, if a Wolfe have the advantage firft to eye him. And this is in plain language affirmed by Pliny In Italia nt cteditur^Litprum vifus efi noxiufy vocemque homini , quern frius contemplatur adimere ; fo is it made out what is delivered by Theocrituf 3 and after him by Virgil
:
Vex
qiioque
Moerim
Jam
Thus
is
fugit.ipfay Luft
Mxrim
videre ^riores.
courfe
the Proverb to be underftood , when during the difthe party or fubjeft interveneth , and there enfueth a ludden filence, it is ufually faid, Lufus eji in Fabula. Which conceit being already convifted, not only by Scali^er^ Kiolanitfy and others 5 but daily confutable almoft everywhere outo^ England i we iliali not further refute. The ground or occafional original hereof, was probably the amazement and fudden iilence the luiexpefted appearance of Wolves do often put upon Travellers*: not by a fuppofed vapour, or venemous emanation, but a vehement fear which naturally produceth obmutefcence 3 and fometimes irrecoverable lilcnce. Thus birds are filent inprefence of an Hawk, and Flinj faith that dogs are mute in the fhadow of an Hiaena. But thus could not die mouths of worthy Martyrs be filenced ; who being expofed not only unto the eyes, but the mercilefs teeth of Wolves, gave loud
if
expreifions of their faith ; and their holy clamours were heard ^s high as Heaven. That which much promoted it befide the common Proverb, was an expreflion in Iheocrym:, a very ancient Poet, i ^9i>|ij KvKat iiitUiEdere non poteris vocemy Lycus ejl tibi vifm--, vfhichLycm was Rival unto another; and fuddenly appearing flopped the mouth
of his Corrival ; now Lyciti lignifying alfo a Wolfe, occalioned this apprehcniion men taking that appellacivcly, which was to be underftood properly, and tranflating the genuine acception. Which is a fallacy of Equivocation, and in fome opinions begac the like conceit concerning Romulus and Remm^y that they were fofteredby a Wolf; the name of the Nurfe being L//^^ ; and founded the fable of -Europa, and her carriage over fea by a Bull, be- caufe the Ship or pilats name was Tauritf:, and thus have fome been ftartled at the Proverb, B9S in Lingua; confufedly apprebefti*
-,
^^^^
^5^
Book. IH. ding how a mail fhould be faid to have an Oxc in his tongue, which was no more then tliat that woiUd not fpeak his minde for by the Oxe was only a piece of money had filenced h\m implied a piece of coin ftamped with that figure , firil curranc with the Athenians^ and after amoMg the Romans.
;
:
CHAP.
Of
Deer.
IX.
comnR)n opinion coiKerning the long of Animalls, THe very ancientj efpeclally of Crows, Choughs and Deer^
life
i?
in
moderate accounts exceeding the Age of Man ; fome the daies of Nejior^ and in others furmountihg the years of Anephlufy or Methi^alah. From whence Antiquity hath raifed proverbiali expreifions, and the real conception of their duration, hath been
the Hyperbolical exprelTlon of many others. From all the reft we fl^all iingle. out the Deer j upon concejlion a bng-Uv'd A.nimal, and in longcBvity by many conceived to attain unto hundreds i wherein permitting every man his own belief^ vve fi.all our fclves crave liberty to doubt 5 and our reafons are thefe en
fui ng.
Tiic firft is that of Arijhtk , drawn from the^ increment and geiUtion of this Animal, that is, its fudden arrivance unto growth and Maturity^ and the fmall time of its remainder in the Womb. His words in the tranflation of Scaliger are thefe ; T>e ejus vit
neque enlrn aut gefiatio aut incrementum j hinnulorum ejufmodi fimt^^ ut pr'ient argumentmn longvi animalis ; that is, Fables are raifed concerning the vivacity of Deer; for neither are their geftation or increment, fuch as may afford an argument of long life. And thefe faith Scaliger^ are good Mediums conjunftively taken, that is, not one without the orher. For of Animals viviparous fuch as live long, go long with young, and attain but flowly to their Maturity and Mature. So the Horfe that liveth about thirty, arriveth unto his Mature about hx years, and remaineth above ten Moneths in the Womb-, fo the Camell that liveth unto fifty, goeth with young no lefle then ten moneths, and ceafeth not to grow before and ; fo the Elephant that liveth an hundred, bearetli its young above a year, and arriveth unto perfection at twenty. On the contrary, the Sheep and Goat, which live but eight or ten years, go but five nr> !ieths,and attain to their perfeftion at two years:and the Hkeproportjon is.obfervable in Cats, Hares and Conies. And fo the Deer that cnc|i,ir.^h the womb but eight moneths, and is compleat at iix years,
longitudine jahv.lantur
Mtn
'
'"
from
Book. Ul.
1 5
from the conrfc of nacnre, we cannot expert to live an hiin Jredj nor As havin" ia any proportional allowance nmch more then thirty. already palfcd two general mocfons obfervable in all animation^*, atid having but two more to run that is, its beginning and encreafe thoroWjthat isjits^ftate and declination^ which are proportionally fee out by nature in every kind and naturally proceeding admit of inference from each other. The other ground that brings its long lifelntoqucftion , is tiie immoderate fallacity/and almoft unparalleld excefs of veneryjwhlcU f very September may be obferved in this Animal and is fuppofed to
j
: :
of Cocks^Patridges and Sparrow<r. Certainly a cout and that not only a< a fefied and undeniable enemy unro long.^vicy but alfo as a caufe iign in the complexionaldeiire and impetuolity For though in the frequent aft, or iterated performance thereof. we confenc not with that Philofopherjwho thinks a fpermatical emifllon unto the weight of one drachm, is equivalent unto the elfuiion of lixty ounces of blood , yet conlidering the exolution and languor nifuing that aft in fomc , the exteniiarion and marcour in other?, we cannot but and the viiible acceleration it makes ofageinmoft think it much abridgeth oiu'dayes. Although we alfo concede that this exclulion is natural , that nature it felf will find a way hereto without either aft or objeft And although it be placed among the lix non-naturals, that is, fuch as neitherTiaturally conlHtutive, nor ineerly deftruftive , do prefervc or deftroy according unto circumyet do we feniibly obferve an impotency or total priftance , and they live longeft in every kind vation thereof, prolong<;th life And this is true not onely in Eunuchcs that exercife it not at all. for caftrated animals in every fpeby namre, but Spadoes by Art cies are longer lived then they which retained their virilities. For the generation of bodies is not effeftedas forae conceive, of fouls, that is, by irradiation, or anfwerable unto the propagation of light, Eunuches and but therein a tranfmilfion is made %^^'^'^ cx^^- * without its proper diminution materially from forae parts , and Ideally from every one and the Jy^iongcT*^^^ propagation of one , is in a ftrift acception, fome minoration of liycd. another. And therefore alfo that axiome in Philofophy , that the -generation of one thing , is the corruption of another al^^^* though it be fubftantially true concerning the form and ^f " ^ matter , is alfo difpofitively verified in the efficient or pro-*
iliorten the lives
:
ducer.
Asfbr more fenfible arguments , and fuch as relate iinto experiment from thefe we have alfo reafon to doubt its age , and prefumed vivacity for where long life is i^atural , the marks of age .are late and when they appear, the journey unto death cannot be long. Now the age of Deer ( as Arijhtle long ago obft rved ) is beft conjeftured, by view of the horns and teeth. Frcm
: :
:
the
ijS
Enquiries tntoFulgAr
Book.Uf,
the horns there is a paiticular and annual account unto fix years they ariling firil plain^and fo fucceillvely branching: after which the judgement of their yedrs by particular marks becomes uncertain. But when they grow old, they grow lefs branclied, and firft do lofc their itui/vljifif , or propi^gnacuia : that is, their brow Antlers, or which Arijlotle faith the young loweft furcations next the head ones ufe in fight and the old as needlefsjhave them not at all. The fame may be alfo collefted from the lofs of their Teeth , whereof Now thefe in old age they have few or none before in either jaw. are infallible marks of age^ and when they appear, we mult confefs a which notwithftandnig (as men inform us in England^ declination where obfervations may well be made,J will happen between twenty and thirty. As for the bone or rather induration of the Roots of the arterial vein, and great artery, which is thought to be found onely hi the heart of an old Deer, and therefore becomes more precious in its Rarity; it is often found in Deer, much under thirty; & we have known fome affirm they havefoiuid it in one of half that age. And therefore in that account of P/ij, of a Deer with achoUar about his neck , put on by Alexander the Great, and taken alive an himdred years after, with other relations of this nature, we much fufpeftimpoftureor mirtake. And if we grant their verity , they are but lingle relations, and very rare contingencies in individuals, not affording a regular diquftion upon the fpecies. For though V^ lijfes his Dog lived unto twenty , and the Athenian Mule imto fourfcore J yet do we not meafure their dayes by thofe years orufuNor can the three hundred years of ally fay , they live thus long. John of times, or Nefi&r, overthrow the aiTertion o(Mofes:y or afford a reafonable encouragement beyond his feptuagenary determinati:
:
Tfalinpol
on.
this conceit was firft Hieroglyphithe JLgyptians exprelling longevity by this Animal ; but upon what uncertainties , and alfo convinciblefallities they often erefted And if that were {iich Emblemes , we have elfewhcre delivered. true which Arijiotle delivers of his time, and F/iny was not affraid to take up long after, t\\^ Egyptians could make but weak obfervations herein; for though it be faid that ^fw feafted his followers with Venilbn, yet Anjiotle affirms that neither Deer nor Boar wer6 tobeiound in Africa. And how far they mifcounted the lives and duration of Animals, is evident from their conceit of the Crow> wliich they prefume to live five hundred years; and from th lives c^ Hawks, which (as Julian delivereth)che Egyptians do reckonno lefs then at feven hundred. The fecond which Jed the concat unto the Grecians^ ^nd probably defcended front the jEgyptians^vias Poetical ; and that was a paffa^e of Hefiodythixi rendred by Aufonim^
cal
ui^er'.animMl.
iib.J.
ter
Book. III.
'Xer
am Comnm
Errort]
15^
Jtfta fenefcentum quos intp/et vita virormn. Hos novies fuperat vivendo garrula cormx^ Et quater egreditur cornicts fecitla cervus^
Alipedem cervum ter vincit cervus. To ninryfix the life of man afceiidethj Nine times as long that of the Chough extendeth. Four times beyond the life of Deer doth go;,
And thrice
is
that furpaiTed
by the Crow.
So that according to this account, allowing ninty fixfor the age of the life of a Deer amounts unto three thoufand , four hunhundred fifry fix. A conceit fo hard to be made outjthat many have So Jheon in Aratm deferred the common and literal conllruftion. would have the number of nine not taken ftriftly, but for many years. In other opinions the compute fo far cxceedech truth, that they have thought it more probable to take the word Genea:, that is,
Man,
a generation confifting of many years, but for one year, or a fingle revolution of the Sun^ which is the reniarkable meafureof tim2,and within the compafs whereof we receive our perfeftion in the Womb. So that by thisconftruftion,the years of a Deer fhouldbebut thirty fix,as is difcourfed at large in that Traft of P//<^t;rr.lijConcerning the ceffation of Oracle*; ; and \vhereto in his difcourfe of the Crow, AlOthers not able to make it out , have redrovandus alfo incUneth. jefted the whole account,as may be obferved from the words oF?//yj
Hefiodus qui -primus aiiquid de hng<tvitate vitxprodidit^fabulofe (reor)
fnulta de
hominum vo
ejui cervii
refer ens
^
quadruplum
Thoenice
flender fo-ver, was p robably the ftrongeft ground Antiquity had for this longoevity of Animals j thac
this
& njmphis.
And
how
made Thcophra(iuf expoftulate with Nature concerning the long life ofCrows:that begat thac Epithete of Deer in Oppianw^^i\<X that cxpreffion oi Juvenal a7f*itBl^mga &' cervina fene&uf. The third ground was Philofophical, aijd foimded upon a proba- pfly^* ble Reafon in Nature,that isjthe defcft of a Gall, which part (in the opinioii of ^ri/?c;t/e and P//ji^this Animal warited,and was conceived a caufe and reafon of their long life according Cfay they) as it baj;>peneth unto fome few men, who have not thii pare at all. But tliis affertion is firft defeftive in the verity concerning the Animal alleadged for though it be true, a Deer hath no Gall in the Liver like many other Animals, yet hath it thac pare in the guts, as is difcoverable by tafte and colour and therefore pUnj doth well correft himfelf 5 when having affirmed before it had no Gall , he afcer
:
faicb.
i/D
fa'ichj
Book.
m.
fome hold it to be in the gutsi and chat for their bitternefs, dogs will vefiife to cat them. It is alfo deficient in tiie verity of the Induftionor conniinierationof other Animals conjojned herewith, as having alfo no Gall-,that is,as Tliny accoimteth5Ejf'//3Mv//3t>*c-.Horfes, Mules. Afl^es, DeerjGoacSj Boars, Caniels, Dolphins, havenoGaH. Concerning Horfes what truth there is herein we have declared be fore as for Goats we find- not them without itj what Gall the Camel hach, Ariilotle declaretli that Hogs alfo have it, we can affirm j and that not in any obfcure placejbut in the Liver, even as it is feated in man. That therefore the Deer is no fhort-liv'd Animal, we will acknowledge: that comparatively, and in fome fenfe long-liv'dwe will concede ; and thus nuich we fhall grant if we comnionly account
',
for tiiereby it w ill exceed all other dayes by thirty fix or forty cornigerous Anioiah. But that itattaineth under hundreds, or the ye?u"S delivered by Antliorsi fince we have no authcntick experience for it, fince we havereafon and common experience againft it, fince the grounds are falfe and fabulous which do eftabliiTi it we know no ground to aflent. Concerniiig Deer there alfo pafleth another opinion, that the Males thereof do yearly lofe their pizzel. For men obfervijig the decidence of their horns , do fall upon the like conceit of this part, that it annually rotteth away,and fucceilively reneweth again. Now the groimd hereof, vvas furely the obfervation of this part in Deer after immoderate vcnery, and about the end of theu'Fvutt, which fometimes becomes fo relaxed and pendulous, it cannot be quite retra&ed,and being often befet with fliesjit is conceived to roc, and. at laft to fall from the body. But herein experience will contradict us: for Deer which either die or are killed' at that time, or any ther,are alwayes found to have that part entire. And reafonalfo will correft us: for f^iermatical parts,or fuch as are framed from the feniinal principles of parents, although homogeneous or finulary , will not admit a Puegenerationjmuch lefs will they^ receive an integral reltaui-ation , which being organical and inftrumental Members , confift of manyofthofe. Now this part, or Animal oi Plato y contifteth not onely of fanguincous and reparable particles : but is made, up of veins, nerves, arteries, and in fome Animals, of bones whofe reparation is beyond itsown fertilityjand a fruit not to be ejcpcfted fiom
Its
: : :
Which faculty were it communicated it felf. Animals, whofc originals are double, as well as vmto plants, vvhofe feed is within themfelves we might abate the aixoiTaliacoAnd therefore the fancies of tiuip^nd the new in^arching of Nofes. Poets have been fo niodeft , as not to fet down fuch renovations, even from the powers of tiieir deities for the mutilated JlliouKfcrcfi'f'/6'/>*was pieced out with Ivory : and that the limbs of
th.e
fruftifying part
inito
Wppolititi
Book.IIL
Hippo/ituf
were
l6i
is
the
CHAP.
Of
^T^Hat
X.
the King-fifher,
by the bill , flieweth in what quarter by an occult andfecret propriety , converting the breart to that point of the Horizon from whence the wind doth blow, is a received opinion, and very ftrange ; introducing natural Weather-cocks, and extending Magnetical pofitions as far as Animal Natures. A conceit fupported cheifly by prefent praftice, yet not made out by reafon or experience. Unto Reafon it feemeth very repugnant, that a carcafsor boa King^flier hanged
is,
the
wind
dy difani mated, fhould be fo affeftf d with every wind, as to carry a conformable refpeft andconft^it habitude thereto. For although in fundry Animals, we deny not a kind of natural Meteorology or innate prefention both of wind and weather, yet that proceeding from fenfe receiving impreflions from the firjft mutation of the ayr, they cannot in reafon retain that apprehenfion after death 5 twhence It it" as being affeftions which depend on lifejand depart upon difanimati- that fomc And therefore with more favourable Keafon may we draw crcaturc$ preon. *'^*' the Amie effet or fympathy upon the Hedgliog; whofe prefen- *^* *"* "' ftoppechthe winds thatic North or isfoexaft, Southern-* tionof hole of its Neft, according to prenorion ofthefe winds enfuing 5 which fomeiiien obfervingjhave been able to make prediftions which way the wind would turn, and been efteemed hereby wife men Now this proceeding from fenfe in the in point of weather. creature alive, it were not reafotiable to hang up an Hedg-hog dead, and to expeft a conformable Motion unto its living co!iveriioii. And though in fundry plants their vermes do live after death and we know that Scammony,Rhubard and Senna will purge without any vital afliftance yet in Animals and fenfible creatures, many actions are mixt, and' depend upon their living form, as well as that of miiiion i and though they wholly feem to retain unto the body? depart upon difunion. Thus Glow-woinis alive, project aluilure inihedark which viiigo'.ii- notwithf^anding ceafech after death and thus the Tropedo which being alive ftiipihes at a diwhich had ftance, applied after deatli, produccth no fuch effeft they retaned, in places where they abound, they might have fup* plied Opium, and fei-ved as fi onta! in Phreij^ies.
j
;
As
^2
Book. lU.
cxpenment 5 we cannot make.it out by any we have atif a lingle King-ft(hei- be hanged up withuncwifted lilk in an open room, and where the air is free, it obferves not a conftant refpeft unco the month of the wind, but varioufly convertIf two be fufpended ni the fame \\\<y 3 doth feldom brcaft it right.
As
for
temptcdi for
room, they
will noc regukirly conform their bieafts, but oft-times And if we conceive that for refpeft the oppoiite points of heaven. exaft exploration , they fliould be fufpended where tlie air is quiet and immoved, tliat clear of impediments , they may more freely convert upon their natural verticityi we have alfo made this way
of inquiiltion, fufpending thim in large and capacious glalTes clofely flopped-, wherein neverchelefs we obferve a cafual Ifacion , and Wherefoever they that they refted irregidarly upon convc^iion. and poSTeiTing one point of the reftedj remaining inconverted Compafs 3 whilft the wind perhaps had palTed the two and thir,
^y-
might be the common opinion birds; the natural regard vertueprognoliickofthcfe concerning the they have unto the winds, and they unto them again j more efpscially remarkable in tlie time of their nidulation, and bringing foith For at that time, which happeneth about the brumal their young. SolRice, it hath been obferved even unco a pioverb , that the fea is calm, and the winds do ceafe, till the young ones are excluded, and forfake their ncft, which tioaterh upon the fea, and by the roughnefs of winds might otherwife be overwhelmed. But how far hereby to magnifie their prediftion we have no certain rule j for whether out of any particular prenorion they chufe to fit at this time, or whether it be thus contrived by concurrence of caufes, and providence of Nature, fecuring every fpecies in their produbion , is not Surely many things fall out by the deilgn of the yet determined. general mo'or , and undreamt of contrivance of Nature, which are not imputable unco the intention or knowledge of the particular So though the feminality of Ivybe almoft in every earth, Aftor. yet that it arifeth and groweth not, but where it may be fupportedj we camiot afcribe the fame unto the dilHnftion or the feed or conceive any fcience therein which fufpends and condiiionates its So if , as ?//; and PA^t^rrc/^ Report, the Crocodiles of eruption. JE^jpty fo aptly lay their Eggs, that the Natives thereby are able to know how high the flood will attain-, it will be hard to make out, how they fhould divine the extent of the in-undacion, depending on caufes fo many miles remote; that is,thc mea(ure of fhowers in JEthi' opia, and whereof, ^^ Ath an. ifius in the Wfc of A nibjnj! dtilvers, the devil himfelf upon d:^mand could make no clear prediftion. So arc there likewife many things in Nature, which are the fore-runners oliigus of future cffefts , whereto they neither concur in caufality or
praftice
...
-,
Book. in.
ti?3
or prenorioii ; but are fecretly ordered by tlje 'providence of cauCes, and concurrence of aftions collateral to their liguadons.
It was alfo a cuftome of old ro keep thefe birds in cheftsj upon opinion that they prevented Moths ; whether ic were not firft hatig'd up HI Rooms to fuch efFefts , is not beyond all doubt. Or whether wemiftake notthepoflure or fufpeniion, hanging it by the bill, whereas we fliould do it by the back \ that by the bill it might poinc out the quarters of the wind i for fo hati Kirch^rm defcribed the Orbis and tne 5'ea Swallow. But the eldeft ciiftome of hanging up thefe birds was founded upon a tradition that they would renew dVeir feathers every year as though they were alive : In expeftatioH whereof four hundred years ago Alhertm Magnm was de-
ceiVcd.
CHAP. XL
of
Grijfins,
THat
there are Griffins in Nature, that is a mixt and dubious Animal , in the fore-part refembiing an Eagle , and behind, the Ihape of a Lioiijwith directed ears, four feet, and a long tail, many affiim andmort,! perceive,deny not. The fame is averred hy Mining Solm.tfy Mela and Herodotus^ countenanced by the Nanic fomctimcs found in Scripture, and was an Hieroglyphick of the JEgy^^i"
ans,
Notwithftanding we find mofl: diligent enquirers to be.of a contrary ailcrtion. For beiide thac Albertus and Pliny have difailowed irjthe learned Aidrovandus hath in a large difcourfe rejected if, Ma" tbui Michovius who writ of thofe Northern parts wherein men pbce thefe Griffinsjhath politively concluded againft it i and if examined
is MonilrousjUor much inChinivra and Harpies, for though there be fome flying Animals of mixed and participating Natures, thac is, between bii-d and quadruped ^ yec.a e their wings and legs fo fet together , that they -feem to make each other 5 there being a commixticai of both j sather tiien adaptation or cement of prominent parts unto each other s as is obfervable in the Bat, whofe wings and fore- legs are contrived in each, other. For though fome fpecies there be of middle and participariiig Natures, that isjof bii^d and beaft J as Bats. and fome few others *-. y^t are their parts fo coiir fpi'med and fet together, that we cannot define the beginning
umo
the figment of
Sphynx
ov
1^4
Book.
III.
or cud of either; there behig a comraixtion of both In the whole, rather then an adaptation or cement of the one unto the other. Now for the word^fj-^or Grypi fometimeg mentioned in Scripture, and frequently in humane Authors, properly Ufiderftood> it lignifies fonic kinde of Eagle or Vulture i from whence the Epirhcte Grjjw for an hooked or Aquiline Nofe. Thus when the
T^remel'ius and our Tranflawhich is one kindc of Eagle. And although the Vulgar Tranflation, and that annexed unto the Septuagint retain the word Grji/j;, which in ordinary and fchoolconftruftion is commonly rendred a Griffin j yet cannot the Latine aflimie any ocher fenfe then the Greek, from whence it is borrowed. And though, the Lacine Gryphes be altered fomewhat by the addition of an h, or afpiration of the letter , yet is not this unufuall j fo what the Greeks call TfSirct/oj'jthe Latines will call Trc J>hum, and that pcrfon which in the Gofpel is named KKiora, the Latines will render Cleophjs. \iid therefore the quarrel ofOrigen was injuft 3 and his concepcion erroneous, when he conceived rhe food of Griffins forbidden Ijy the Law of Mofes that is. Poetical AniAnd therefore when in the Henials, and things of no exiftence. catoms and mighty oblations of the Gentiles^ it is delivered they facriiiced Gryphes or Griffins j hereby we may imderftand fome
,
i-^utii^eJ
j{-
f[^e
Ollifrage
And
therefore alfo
when
it is
Match , or Mopftts marrying 'Nyfa , Jungentur jam grjfhes equii, we need not hunt after other fenfe, then that itrange unions fhall be made, and diiferent natures be conjoined
together.
As
tive,
and ternunate
for the teflimonies of ancient Writers, they are but derivaall in one Arijleuf a Poer of Troconefm ; who
affirmed that ncer the Ariniujfi:, or one-eyed Nation, Griffins defended the Mines of Gold. But this as Herodotus dcliveieth, he wrote by hearfay ; and Michovius who hath exprefly written of
thofe parts, plainly affirmeth, there is neither Gold nor Griffins in that councrcy, nor any fuch animal extant i for fo doth he conclude, Ego vero contra leteres autkores^ Grjphei nee in ilia. Septen, although it approacheth the truth, it it doch not infer its exiftency. The conceit of the Griffin properly taken being but fymbolical phancy ^ in fo intollerable a ihape including allowable morality. So doth it well make out the properties of a Guardian, or any perfon entrufted j the ears implying attention, the wings celerity of execution, the Lion-like (hape, courage and audacity, the hooked bill refervance and tenacity. It is alfo an Embleme of valour, and magnanimity, as being compoimded of the Eagle and Lion, the
trionk^ nee in a/iis Brkis partibm inveniri affirmarim. LalHy , Concerning the Hieroglyphical Authority
jieereft
nobleft
Book. in.
Prefidents, Generals,
1^5
and fo is it applyablc unto Princes, and all heroiek Conimauders and fo it is alfo born in the Coat-arms of many noble Families of Europe. But the original invention (eenis to be Hieroglyphieal , derive^I from the JEgjptians^ and of an higher iignihcation. By the mylKical conjmidipn of Hawk and Lyon, implying either the Genial or the fyderous fun, the great celerity thereof, and the ftrength and vigour in its operations. And tlierefore under fuch Hieroglyphicks , 0[yris wa* defcribcd i and in ancient Coins, we meet with Gryphiiis conjointly with ApoUo^S:, "Tripodes and Charioc wheels, and the marble Gryphins at St. Peters in Rome^ as learned men conjecture, were iiril tranllated from the Temple of Apollo. Whether hereby were not alfo myftically implyed the aftivity of the Sun in Leo, the power of God in the Sun, or the influence of the Cal.elHal OjQt^j by Moptha the Genius of A^/7w might a'fo be coniidejed. And then the learned Kircherui no man were likely
to be a better Oedipiif.
CHAP.
of the
THat'thert
XII.
Phosmx,
is but one Phoenix in the world, which after many hundred years burneth it felf , and from the afiies thereof arifcth up another , is a conceit not new or altogether popular, but of great Antiquity ; not only delivered by humane Authors, but frequently exprelTed by holy Writers j by Cjril^ Epiphanius and others, by Ambrofe in his Hexameron, and Tertullian in his Poem de Judicio Vomini^ but more agreeably unto the prefent Cent fenfe, in his excellent Traft, de KefurreHione carnU. lUimt
de pojie-
qui fentetipfum libenter funerans renovaty natali Vbi jam nemo^ itefine decedensy atque fuccedens iterum Thjenix.
rum ipfe ; qvia Hon jam^ alius idem. The Scripture alfo feems to favour it , particularly that of Job 21. In the interpretation of Beda^ Dicebam in nidulo nteo moriar^ ficut Vhxnix multipiicabo did : and Pp/. 3 1. J'UeuQ- H^Tif (poiv4 tV9>)o-, vir jujiui ut Vhxnix flar rebity as Terti'i/r renders it, and fo alfo expounds it in his Book before alleadged. All Avhich notwithftanding, we cannot prefume the exiftenceof y^^^- T:his Animal ; nor dare we affirm there is any Phoenix in Nature. For, ftory"o{ firft there wants herein thedeKnitive confirmator and teft of things Phanix-
&
the
iincer-
j^.
Enpirhs intoVutgdr
Book. Ill,
tiitCemui, that W, the fenfe of man. For though many Writers have nuicfe enlarged hereon, yec is there noc any ocular deicriber ^ or fucli as prcfumeth ro confirm it upon afpbftion. And rfvcre&)re Herodov-i that led the ftory unto the Grff^y, plainly faith he never attain"d the fight of any bur only in the pifture.
Again, Primitive Authors, and from whom the ftr earn of relations is derivative, deli\^cr themfelves very dubioufly 5 and cithei by a doubtful parentheiis, or a timcrous concluiion overthrow the whole relation. Thus Herodoms \\\ his Euterpe, delivering the ftory hereof,
p efently interpofeth
count (eems to
**
(^oi ijXv tis- hiyovjn > trhat is, which ac, improuaDle. 2acitus in his annals affordeth a larger ftory, how the Phoenix was (irft feen at Heliopolis in the reign of Sefofirif, then in the reign of Amaf-s^ after in the dayes of Ptolewj, the third of the Macedonian race, but at the laft thus deterraineth, nonnuUl falfum ejfe hmic fhccnicem^ neque ASed antiquitas obfeura rahim e terris credidcre. Vlinj makes yet a fairer ftorie- that the phoenix flew into Mgypt in the Coufulfhip ot ^intus Planciuf, that it was brought to Rome inche Cenforfliip of C/audim, in the eight hundred year of the City,and teftified alfo in their records j buc after all conckideth,^^;?/^^^ falfa nemo dubitabityzs we read it in the fair Sc ancient imprellion of Brefciai as Aldrovandits hach quoted it, and as it is found in the manufcript Copy,as Dalechampim hath alfo noted. Moreover, Such as have naturally difcourfed hereon , have fodiverfly, contrarily, or contradiftorily delivered themfelve.^, that no aftirmative from thence can reafonably be deduced. F^r moft have pOlitivdy denied it, and they which afiirni and believe \y a^Iign cliis name unto many^ and miftake two or three in one. So hath chac bird been taken for the Phoenix which liveth '\r\ Arabia^ and buildeth its nelf with Cinnamon ; by Herodotus^ called Cinnamulgm, and by A^'iftotky Cinnamomuii and as a fabulous conceit is cenfured by Scaliger. Some have conceived that' bird to be the Phoenix, which by a Verf^n nUme With the Greekj is called Khiniacr-,h\{: how they made this good the life of AnaxerxeSy ivel^nde occaiion of doubt', wliirit wc read that^thls is a little bird brought often to their tables, and where-o \vit:HT</r<7j[i'r)y^ cunningly poifoned the Qjjeen. The Mmucodiata or biVd oif Paradife, hath had the honour of this name, and their feathers brought fi 6m the Molucca''s do pafs for thofe of the Phanix. WiUch though promoted by rarity with us, the Eaitern travellers \\;]11 haMly admit 3 who kaov^.'Hiey are coiumon in- thofe pa^ts, and 'the Ordinary plume ofJanissaries among tticjTvrJ^j. And laftly, the \)\vd Senjenda hath fouiid the fanie a'ppellatVoii, for fo hath Scaliger obferved and refuted i nor will the folitude of, the Phoenix allow this
mc
'-,
&
denOminacion i for many there are of that fp.ecies, and whofe trifilluUry bill and cranv'we have' beheld ou|>felye.-:. f)Jpx arf men only
tt
vai-i;!iic'e ill
it feff/
Book.llX.
<<^
Common
Errort,
l66
tht acaeidents afcribtd thereto : for fonie affirm it Ilvetli three Tiuiidredjtbme five,ochers fix/onie a thoufandjochers no lefs then fifteen hiindft-d years i fome fay it livcch \n Mthiopia ^ others iwArabiay fome mJEgJpt-.) others in JW/<?3 and fome in 'Z^fo/'i/r, for fuch mult that be which is defcribedby Laaantim ; that is, which neither was iinqed in the combuiVion of Ph.tetoniOr overvvlielmed by the inun-
dation of Deucalion.
Lailly,
we cannot from thence For fome have written Poscicallyjas Ovid-, Some have written Miiiituaytf LacfantiiMi Clnffdian.^ and others Myfticiiliyj asP<ir/?cY//7-in his book de Azoth, or de /igno & linea vi"
vered themfelves, and with
fitch intentions,
de.!u:e a confirmation.
t; and as feveral Hermctical PhilGro^)hers , involving therein the fccret of thtfir Elixir, and enigmacicaHy eiq")re;rmg th:: nature of Some have written Rhetorically , and conceiTitheir i^reat work. vely 5 not controverting but alTuming the queflion , which taken as granted5advantaged the illation. So have holy men made life hereof as far as thereby to confirm theFvefiirreftion i for difcourlnig with Heathens who granted the i\ovy of the Phoznix , they induced the Refurreftion from prniciples of rhcir own,and poikioiiS received among themfelves. Others have fpoken Emblemacically and Hieroglyphically , and fo did the Mgjftians , tinto whom the Phccnix was the Hieroglyphick of the Sun. And tliis was probably the ground of the whole Relation fucceedini^ ag^s adding fabulous accounts, which laid together built up thislingularity , which every - > pen proclaimeth. Scripture, whith bf (htti\ t cq/ifirm the conceit, As for the T^xts duly perpended , they add not diei'cunto:-' For wherea^ in that of Job , acording to the Septuagint or Gre'ek Tranllation we find the word phoenix, yet can it have no Animal fanftihcation j for therein it i^ not exprefled <poivi^ but rusx" P^*"''^ , ^^^^, trunk of the Palmtree, which is alfo caj led Phoenix i and therefore the coriftruftipii tvill be very hard , if not applied imtb fom^' vegetable nature. Nor can vve fafely infift upon the Greekexpre^libti at all ; for though the Vulgar tranflates it Talma ^ and fome retain the word Phoenix, others do render it by a word of a different fenfe v for fo hath Tr?wellius delivered it : T>tcebam qmd apud nidunt meum expirabo , fia/t arena, muhiflkaho dirs fo hath the Geneva and oui'S rranflated it , I faid I (hall die in my Neft , arid (hall multiply my dayes, as the (and. As for that in the book of Pfalm^ , Vir j-i^iuf ut Th'tnix fiorebit ^ as Epipbaniuf and T'ertv.Uian render it, it was onely a miilake upon the Homonymy of the Greek word Phaiiix , which fignifies aifo a Palm-tree. Which is a fallacy of equivocation, from a community in name i'^fei"- Confent o ring a common natures and whereby we may as firmly conclude,that nmcs
-,
>
&
Dia-
i^g
B^uirlei
tnto
Vulgdr
Book. IE.
Qem.
Gen.
I.
Diaphoemcon a purging Eleftaary hacli fonie part of the Phoewhich receivech that name from Dates, or nix for it^ ingredient ot Palm-tree, fruit from whence, as P//y delivers, the Phoethe the nix had its name. Nor do we onely arraign the exiftence of this Animal, but many things are qiieftionable which are afcribed thereto, efpecially its unity, long life, and generation. As for its unity or conzJ\t their fhould be but one in nature it feenicth not onely repugnant unto Philofophy, but alfo holy Scripture i which plainly a'iirms, there went of every fort two at leaft into the Arke of iVo^^> according to the text. Every fowl after his kind, every bird of every fort, they went into the Ark, two and two of all flefh, wherein there is the breath of life, and they that went in, went in both Male and female of all flefti.Tt infringeth the Benediftion of God concerning Multiplication. God bleffed them, faying be fruitful and multiply, and till the waters in the feas, and let fowl multiply in the
,
earth i And again. Bring forth with thee, every living-thing, that they may breed abundantly in the earth, and be fruitful and multiply upon the earth i which terms are nor appliable unco the Cjap. 8. Phoenix wheireof there is but one in the world, and no more For the produt^ion of one, ]:o v living then at the iirft benediction. being the deftruftion of another , although they produce and generate, they increafe not ; and nuift not be faid to multiply, who do not tranfcend an unity. As for longevity, that it liveth a thoufands years or more; tefides that from imperfeft obfervations and rarity of appearance, no Gouiirmation can be made j, there may be probably a niiftake in the compute.' For the tradition being very ancient and probably i?]gyptian, the Greeks who difperfed the fable, might fum up the account by their ov/n numeration of years; whereas the conceit might have its original in times of Ihorter compute. For if we fuppofe oiir prefenc calculation, the Phoenix now in nature will be,thf %tijrom the Creationjbut in the middle of its years ; and if the Kahbines prophecy fucceed, (hall conclude not in its own, butthelaft and general flames, without ''''^V. ^^n M itsdaies, world fliould ,, cr> clallhopeof Revividtion. lift but fix Concerning its generation, that without all conjunftion ii; thoufand ycrs. b5;cti and refeminates it felf, hereby we introduce a vegitable prp-i duftion in Animals, and unto feulible, natures, transfer the propriety of plants i that is to multiply, within themfelves,; according to the Law of the Creation, Let the earth bring forth grafs> the heib yielding feed, and the tree yielding fruit, whole feed is in it G<H. I fcIf. Which is indeed the natural way of plants , who havingno difrindion of fex,and the power of the fpeties, contained in every 'mdividkUKi beget and propagate themfelve^vyithout cojiimi.xtk>'ii,i /and
,
,
.;
therefore
Book.
III.
ttnd
Common
Errors]
169
therefore their fruits proceeding from fimpler roots, are not fo unlike, or diftinguifhablc from each other^as are the ofF-fprings of fenlible creatures and prolifications defcending from double original'. But Animal generation is accompli/hed by more; and the concurrence of two fexes is required to the conftitution of one. Aud therefore fuch as have no diftinftion of fexjengender not at all,as Arilhtle conceives of Eels, and teftaceous Animals. And though plant-animals do multiply, they doit not by copulation, but in a way aualogous unto plants. So Hermaphrodites although they include the parts of both fexes, and may be fufficiently potent in either ; yet unto a conception requu-e a feperated fex, and cannot impregnate rhemfelves. And fo alfo though Adam included all humane natiue, or was ( as fome opinion ) an Hermaphrodite, yet had he no power to propagate himfelf ; and therefore God faid. It is not good that man fiiould be alone, let us make him an help meet for him: that is, an help unto generation i for as for any other help, it had been fitter to have made another man. Now whereas fome atiirm that from onePhanix there doth not immediady proceed another, but thefirft corrupteth intoa worm, which after becometh a Phoenix, it will not make probable this produ-ftioii. For hereby they confound the generation of pcrfeft animals with imperfeft, fanguineous with exanguious, vermiparous with oviparous, and ereft Anomalies, diflurbing the laws of Nature. Irregularities; Nor will this corruptive produftionbe ealily made out inmoftimperfeft generations j for althongh we deny not that many Animals are vermiparous, begetting thentfelves at a diftance, and as it were at the fecond hand ( as generally fnfefts, and more remarkably Butterflies and Silk-worms ) yet proceeds not this generation from a corruption of themfelves, but rather a fpccifical and feminal diffalion, retaining ftill the Idea of theifelves, though it aft that And this will alfo hold in genepart a while in other (hapes. rations equivocal, and fuch as are not begotten from parents like themfelves ; fo from Frogs corrupting, proceed not Frogs again 5 fo if there be anatiferous trees, whofe corruption breaks forth into Bernacles, yet if they corrupt, they degenerate into Maggots, which produce not them again. For this were a confufion of corruptive and feminal produftion, and a fruftration of that feminal power committed to animals at the creation. The probleme might have been fpared. Why we love not our Lice as well as our hildii^n Noahs Ark had been needlefs the graves of animals would be the fruitfulleft wombs i for death would not deftroy, but empeople the world again. Since therefore we have fo (lender grounds to confirm the exiftcnce of he Phcenixifince there is no ocular witneflTe of ic h imce a:> we have deciaicd, by Authoi s from whom the ftory is d-i ivtd, it rather
.
.''
Itauds
70
tnpmft
into
Vulgar
Book. TIL
{lands rejcftcd^ fi nee they who have ferloufly difcoiirfed hereof, have delivered themfelves negatively, diverOya or contarily j (jnce mauy others cannot be di-awn into ari,'unientj as writing Poetically, Rhetorically, Enigmatically, Hieroglyphically lince holy Scripture alleadged for it duly perpended, doth not advantage it j and laftly, lince fo ftrange a generation, unity and long life, hath neither experience nor reafon to contirni itj how far to rely on this tradition, vve refer unto confideration. But iurely they were not well-wirtiers unto parable Phyiick, or remedies eanly acquired, who derived medecines from the Phocit/ypp/rrt. YixY. i as fome have done, and are juftly condennied by fliny , Irridere eji , vitji rerncdia , poji millefimum annum redd itur a monllrare-'y It i> a foliy to finde out remedies that are not recoverable under a thoufand years v or propofe the prolonging of life by that which the twentieth generation may never behold. More veniiable is a dependance upon the Philofophers ftone, potable Gold, or any of thofe Arcana's, whereby Paracelfus that died himfelf at forty feven, gldried that he could make other men immortal. Which, although extreamly difficult, and tantiwi non infgible, yec are they not impOilible ; nor do they f rightly imderftood ) impofe any violence on Nature. And therefore if ftriicly taken for the Phoenix, very ftrange is that which is delivered by flutarch^ That the brain thereof is a pleafant bit, but that it caufeth the Which notwithftanding the luxurious Emperour could ib'^fdniaae tu-^^^^^-^^^^' never talk j though he had at his Table many a Phanicopter.is, yec enda. Hdkfgabalus. |iad he not one Phoenixifor though he expefted and attempted it,we read not in Lampridiuf that he performed it j and con(idering the unity thereof, it was a vaindefigne, that is, to deftroy anyfpccies, or Mutilate the great accomplilhnient of lix day es. And although fome conceive, and it may feem true, that there is in man a natural poffjbility to deftroy the world in one generation, that is, by a general confpire to know no woman themfelves, and dlfable all others alfo yet will this never be effected. And therefore Cain after he had killed Ahe/;, were there no other woman living, could not have alfo deftroyed Eve which although he had a natural power to effeft, yet the execution thereof the Providence of God would have relifted for that would have impofed another creation upon him^ and to have animated a fecoud Rib of Adam*
,
CHAP.
Book.lir.
7nd[Common Efrdrt,
CHAP.
of
XIII.
COncenilng
piffeth,
the venemous urine of Toads, of the ftonc in the Toads head, and of the generation of Frogs, conceptions arc
firft that a Toad generally received, not only with irs, but alfo in other parts j for fo hath Scaliger oL*ferved in hisCon"nient5 Averfum urinam reddere ob oculos perfecut-rif fcrnicio^am rurkolii perfuafum ejij and Mdthiolm hath alfo a paffagc, that a Toad communic^ttes it venom, not only by urine, but by the humidity and flaver of its mouth : which notwithftanding ftriftly underftood, will not confiil witli truth. For to fpeak properly a Toad piiTeth noc nor do they contain thofe urinary parts which are found in other Animals, to avoid that ferous exaetion : for though not only birds, but oviparous quadrupeds and Serpents have kidneys and Ureters, and fome fiflies a.fo bladders yet for the moift and dry excretion they have one vent and common place of exclulion and with die fame propriety of language, we may afcribe that aftion unto Crows and Kite?. And this is not only verefied in Frogs and Toads, but may be whether that be ftriftly true , or to be enquired in Tortoyfes taken for a diftinft and feparace miftion, when Arilhtle affirmeth, that no oviparous Animal, that is, which either fpawneth or layeth Eggs, doch Urine, except the Tortoyfe. The ground or occafion of this expreffion might from hence arife, that Toads are fometimes obferved to exclude or fpirt out a dark and liquid matter behinde which we have obferved to be true, and a venemous condition there may be perhaps therein, but it cannot be called their Urine: not becaufe it is emitted aveifly or backward, by both Sexes, but becaufe it is confounded with the inteltinal excretions, and Egeilicis of the belly. As for the ftone commonly called a Toad-ilone, which is pre* fumed to be found in the head of that Animal, ivt: hrll: conceive ic not a thing impolTible nor is there any Cifbftantial reafon, vvh) in a Toad there may not be found firdi hard and lapideous concretions. For the like we daily obferve in the heads of FiJhe'^, as Cods, Carps, and Pcarches the like alfo in Snails, a fofc and ex-
And
is
and
this
way
difFufeth its
venome,
oflcous Animal, whereof in the naked and greater fort, as though flie would requite t;he defe^ of a (hell on tlieirback, Nature, neer the head hath placed a Hat viU'ite ftone, or rather teftaceous coiiCi'ttion. Which though Aldrovandm aftirms that after diifeftion
of
i72
Enquiries tdo
Vulg^
:
Book.
Ill;
of matiy, he found but in feme few: yet of the great gray Snails , I have not met with any that wanted it and the fame indeed fo palpable, that without difleftion it is difcoverable by the hand. Again , though it be not impolTible , yet it is furely very rare: as we are induced to believe from feme enquiry of our own from the trial of many who have been deceived^ and the fruftrated fearch of Porta 5 who upon the explorement of many , could fcarce finde one. Nor is it onely of rarity , but may be doubted whether it be of exigency, or really any fuch fione inthehead ofaToad atall. For although L^r/'/V^znc^ and queftuary enquirers a^rm it , yet the Writers of minerals and natural fpeciilators , are of another belief conceiving the fiones which bear this name, to be a Mineral concretion not to be found in animals, but in fields. And therefore Brtius refers it to Aleria or fome kind of Laps (iellarlf. and plainly concludech, reperiu)ttur in agrU i quo s t amen alii in annofuj ac qui diuin Arundinet>sy irtttr ruhos f'/ttefque delituerunt, bpfonis capitihus gemrari
: : :
pertinaciter affirmant. Laftly, If any fuch thing there be,yet muft it no! for
be taken as we receive
ought I fee, and moveable ftone, but rather a concretion or induration of the crany it felfj for b-iiig of an earthy temper , living in tlie earth , and as fome fay feeding thereon^
it,
for a loofe
fuch indurations may fometimes happen. Thus when Brajfavoliis after a long fearch had difcovered one , he afttims it was rather the forehead bone petrified , then a Hone within the crany \ and of
was Gejncr. Which is alfo much confirmed fiom what is delivered in Aldrovandm , upon experiment of very many Toads i whofe cranies or skuls in time grew hard, and almoft of af^ony fubftance. All which conl^dered, we nuift with circumfpeftion receive thofe ftones , which commonly bear this name, much lefs believe the traditions , that in envy to mankind they are caft out, or fwallowed down by the Toad which canno: coniift with Anatomj, and with the reft, enforced this cenfurefroni Bctiusj Ah eo
this belief
-,
'
lb A
Muf'xi Calcee-
and to be found in the earth; fome animal, to be met with in Toads, by the induration of their cranies. The firft are many and manifold, to be found in Germanj and other parts; the laft are fewer in number, and in fiibftance not unlike tl^.e ftones in Carps heads. This is agreeable unto the determinarion of Aldrovandus ^ and is alfo tlie judgemement of kanicd Spigeliuf in his Epiftle unto Pignoat leaft
.fliall
l^riiini.Secl.i.riuf.
Concerning the generation of Frogs, we accoiuit which obfervation hath taught us.
JBy Frogs
unde;ftand not
Book.
not
III.
Ad Commofi Errors
from putrefaftion
,
173
are bred without copulation, and becaufe they fublift not long , are called TemforarU, nor do I mean the little Frog of an excellent Parrat-green , that ufually lits on Trees and Bufliesj and is therefore called Ranunculm viridis , or arborim but hereby I iinderftand the aquatile or Water-Frog, wherefiich as aiifing
of in ditches and landing pla/hes we may behold many millions every S^i'nigm England. Now thefe do not as Pliny ccnceivech, exclude black pieces of flefh , vvhich after become Frogs ; but they let fall their fpawn in the water , of excellent ufe in Phyiick^ and and fcarce unknown unto any. In this fpawn of a lencoui and tranfparcnt body, are to be difcerned many fpecks, or littk conglobations, which in a fmall time become of deep black j a (ubliancc more compared and terreftrious then the other ; for it rifcth no: in dilUllation, and affords a powder, when the white and aqueous pare Now of this black or duskie fubftance is the Frog at laft is exhaled. formed j as we have beheld , including the fpawn with water in a For that black and round glafs 3 and expoling it unco the Sun. fubftancc, in a few dayes began to dilate and grow longer , after a while the head, the eyeSjthe tail to be difcernable, and at laft to become that which the Ancients called Gyrinm^ we a Porwigle or TadThis in fonie weeks after 3 becomes aperfeftFrog, the legs pole. growing out before, and the tail wearing away, to fupply the other behind^ as may be obferved in fome, which have iKwly forfaken the waterj for in fuch,fome part of the tail will be feen, bur curtailed and A part provided theoi a vvhile liiort, not long andfinny as before. to.fwim and move in the water, that is, until fuch time as natiu'e excluded legs , whereby they might be piovided not oncly to fwim in the water , but move upon the land j according to the amphibious and mixt iiKention ofnature, that is, to live in both. So cliat who-, ever obferveth the firft progrellion of the feed before morion, or fhall take notice of the ftrange indiftinftion of parts hi the Tadpole, even when it moveth about , and how fuccelfively the inward parts dofeem to difcover themfelves,until their laft perfeftiom may eafily difcern the high curiofity ofnature in thefc iiiferiour animals , and what a long line is run to make a Frog. And becaufe many affirm,and fome deliver, that in rfgar4 it hatli lungs and breatheth , a Frog may be eaiily drowned; though the reafonbe probable, I find not the experiment aufwcrable^ for faftning one about a fpan under water, it lived almoft ux dayes. Nor Amphibionj is it hard todeftroy one in water , but difficult alfo at land for it ^'^ly^ in both will live long after the lungs and heart be out-, how long it will live deracntiof in the feed, or whether the fpawn of this year being prefervcd, wii Imd tni wanoc arife into Frogs in the next^ might alfo be enquired : and we are tcr.
:
|>repared to trie.
C H A
p.
1 7^4
Book. IH
CHAP.
Of
the
VI
X.
Sdamnnder.
corruptive
and put out not onely of great iVntiquity, but confirmed by frequentjand not contemptible teftiniony. The ^Egyptians have drawn it into~ their Hieroglyphicks ; Ariftotle feemeth to embrace it; more plainly Nicander ^ Sarenw Sammonicnf , Milan and fhnyy who alligns the caufe of this effeft An Animal f faich iie J fo cold that it extinguiflieth the fire like ice. All which notwithftanding , there is on the negative , Authority and experience; Sextim aPhyfitian, as P/i;y deliverethj denied this effeftj Diofcorides affirmed it a point of folly to believe it Galen thzt it endureth the fiie a while, but in continuance is confumed therein. For experimental conviftion, Miithiolits affirmeth he faw a Salamander burnt in a very fliort time; and of the like afTertion is Amatits Lufitanm and moft plainly Pier/u^y vvhofe words in his Hieroglypliicks are thefc; Whereas it is commonly faidjthat a Salamander extinguifheth fire, we have found by experience, that its fo far from quenching hot coals , that it dieth immediately therein. As for the contrary affertion of y^ri/fot/(? , it is but byhearfay, as common opinion believeth , Hcenim (in aiunt) ignem ingrediens , emt exthiguit ; and therefore there was no abfitrdity in Galen , tvhen as a Septical me^iicine he commended the afhes of a Salamander ; and Magicians in ^.^-^^ ^^.^^^^ ^j^^ power of this tradition, at the burning of towns or
is
THat a Salmander
fire, is
an
affertion,
'
Ar-
^^^^^^"^^
^^P^^
fcnike.
The ground
iire
of
obferved in the Salamander: vVhich being, zsGiflcn determinfeth, cold in the fourth, and moiil in the thiixl degree, and having alfo a mucous humidity ab'ove and imdei* the skin , by vertue thereof it may a while endure the flame : which being confumed, it can
reiift
no
fUore.
Such an humidity
,
thtfr'e is
obfei'i'ed in
N^vtes,
efpecially ff their skins be pciforated or pricked. Thus will Frogs and Snails endure the llame: thus will whites of eggs, vitreous or glallie flegm extinguifh a coal : dnis ar^ unguents
or water-Lizards
J>ini
im'clthus belide the Hir^ proteft awhile from the fire there are later ftories of men that have pafs'd untouchc through fire. And thcrefoi-e feme t'ruth we allow in the tradi-
made which
tion : truth according unto G/?/f , that it may for a tinieiTiift a flame,or as Scaliger avers,extinguifli or put out a coalrfbr thus much will many humid bodies perform : but that it perfereres and live* in
Book. 111.
deftriiftive
^M
Cofmtofi Brrorf,
175
clement, is a fallacious enlargement. KTordo in that we reafonably conclude , bcafe for a time it indureth fire, ic fubducrh and extinguflierh the fame, becaiife by a cold and aImiiinoiis moifture, it isablea while to refift it: from a peculiaiitjr
of natme it fublifteth and liveth in it. It hath been much promoted by Stores of incumbiiftible napindure the fire, whofe materials are kin-> and textures which caird by the name of Salamander? wool. VVhicli many too literally apprehending, conceive fome invefting part, or tegument of the Salamander wherein beside that they miftake the condition of this Aninial f wiiich is a kind of Lizard, a quadruped corticated and depilous, that is, without wool, fur or hair ) they obferVe whereby all Quanot the method aud general rule of nature Frogs, Tortois, as Lizards, Chamellons, Crooviparous, drupeds codiles, are without hare, and have no covering part or hairy inAnd if they conceive that from the skin of veftuient ac all. the Salamander, thefe incremable pieces are compofedj beiidethe experiments made upon the living, xh^tofBraJfavolus will ftep in, who in the fearch of this truth, did burn the skin o( one dead. Nor is this Salamanders wool defumcd from any Animal, -but a minerall fubliance Metaphorically Co called from this received For befide Germanicus his heart, and Tjrrhus his great opinion. Toe, which would not burn with the reft of their bodies. There are in the number of Minerals, fome bodies incumbuftible j more remarkabfy that which the Ancients named Asbejion^^ and TanWhereof by p^^j^^fl^,. cirollus treats of in the chapter of Lmum vivum. Art were weaved napkins, fliirts and coats inconfumable by fiire j smtonhS' and wherein in Ancient times to preferve their allies pure, and without commixture, they burnt the bodies of Kings. A napkin hereof Tliny reports that Nero had, and the like faith ?auIm Venetusi the Emperour of Tartarie fcnt nnto Pope Alexander ; and alfo affirms that in fome part of Tjirtark, there were Mines of Iron whofe filaments were weaved into incumbuftible cloth. Which rare manufafture, although delivered for loft by Tanciroliuf) yet Salmuth his comnienratoi' affirmeth, that one Vodocaterus a Cyprian, had fliewed the fame at Venice > and his materials were from Cyprus^ where indeed Diofcorides placeth them j the fame is alfo ocularly confirmed by Fiz/ upon Aujii^} s^nd Ma to liis his colloquies. And thus in our daies do men praftife to make longlafting Snafts for lampcs, out of A lumen plimiofum 5 and by the fame we read in l?aufanias , that there alwaies burnt a Lamp befoie the Image of Minerva.
:
CHAP.
17^
Book. in.
CHAP. XV.
Of
the
Ambish<em
that is, a fmaller kind of Scrpeiit, which moveth forward and backward, hath two heads, or oiie at either extrcam, was affirmed firft by Nicander, and after by many others, by the Author of the book de Th^riaca ad Pifonew^ afcribed unto Galen, more plainly '?/ij/, Geminum habet caput taitquam parum ejfet uno ore effundi venenum: but ^///r moftconfidently,who referring the conceit oi Chimera and Hydra unco fables,
hath
fet
down this
as
an undeniable truth.
Whereunto while men afTcnt, and can belive a bicipitous Gonformacion in any continued fpecies, they admit a gemination of True principle parts, not naturally difcovercd in any Animal. it is that other parts in Animals arc not equal; for fome make their progreiHon with many legs, even to the number of an hundred, TL^Jvli^i Scolopendri orfuch as are termed Cfxti/Ji^^^^ fome fly with two wings, as birds and many infefts, fome wichfour, as all farinaceous or mealy-winged animals, as Butter-flies, and Moths all vaginipennous or ftieath winged infefts, as Beetles and
;
:
Some have three Tefticles, as Arifidtle fpeake<^ of the Buzzard; and fome have four ftomacks, as horned and ruminating animals: but for the principle parts, the Liver, heart, and efpecially the brain ; regularly they are but one in any kind or fpeDorrs.
whatfoever. there any fuch fpecies or naturall kind of animall, it would be hard to make good thofe fix portions of body, which according to the three dimenlions are afcribed unto every animall: that is, infra:, fi/pr ay ante^ retro, dextrofitnt) finijirofum : for iff as it is determined ) that be the anterior and upper part, wherein the fenfes are placed, and that the pofterior and lower part which is oppofite thereunto ; there is no inferiour or former part in this animall for the fenfes being placed at both cxtreams, do make both ends anterior, which is impoifible: the terms being Relative, which mutually fublili and are not withAnd therefore this duplicity was ill contrived out each other. to place one head at both cxtreames*, and had been more tolerable to have fctled three or four at one. And therefore alfo Poets have been more reafonable then PhilofopherSj and Geryou or Cerberous Icfs nionftrous then Amphisb.ina,
cies
And were
Again
Bouk.
'md
^iy^niphisbdna
,
Commm
were,
Srrours,
it
177
were not to be obtruded by the one denomination ; for properly the animal is not one, but multiplicious or many , which hath And this doth Ar'ijhtle a duplicity or gemination of principal parts. define , when he aftirmeth a Monfkr is to be efieemed one or many, according to its principle, which he conceived the heart , whence he derived the original of Nerves , and thereto afcribed many ads vvhidi Phyfitians alTivn unto the brain: and therefore if it cannot be caH,;d one , which hath a duplicity of hearts in- his fenfe , it cannot receive
Again, If any fuch thing
rherfe
name of
or as an animal of
And
have baptized rhefegetninous births, and double connafc^rxies with feveral jaam.es ; as conceiving in them a diftin6tion of fouls, upon the divided execution of their fundions ; that is, while one wept, the other laughing, while one was Hlent, the other {i:'eaking, while one awaked, the other fleeping; as h declared by three remarkable exam.ples in P^fr^rr/:',^'^/W.77/-/W and the Scottijh hiliory of bvchw. It is not denied there have been bicipitous Serpents with the head at each extream , for an example hereof we tinde in Arlfiotls , and of thelike form in Alirovandtts we meet with the Icon of a Lizza.d ; anci of this kind perhaps might that .'i? f',:i6h(tKa\it the pidure whereof r..j/J7tiMHs FHitus- ih^wcd unto the learned Fab.r, Which double for nations do often happen unto mvAii^^xoMS generations, ^ more'e{]-eciaHy that of Serpents, whofe produ6lions bein numerous , and their Egos in chains or links together ( which fometime conjoyn and inoculate into e^ch other) they may unite into various lliapes, and come out in mixed formations. But thefe are m.onrtrous produilions befide the intention of Nature, and the flatutes ^i generation ^ neither begotten of like parents, nor begetting the like agam, but irregularly pro. 'uced, do Which being fhifts. fland as Anomalies in the general book of Nature. and forced pieces, rather then renuine and proper efteds, they afford us no illation ; nor is it reafonable to conclude , from a m.onftr^lity unto a fpecies, o: from accidental efteds, unto the regular wo: ks of Nature. LafllY,the ground of the conceit was the figure of this animal,and motion oft tim.e, "both wayes ; for defcribedit is to be like a worm, ancl fo equally fram.ed at both extreams , that at an ordinary diOance it is no eafie matter to determine which is the head; and therefore fome obferving them to move both wayes , have given the appellation of heads imto both extreims , which is no proper and warrantable denomination ; for many Animals with one head:, do ordinarily perform borh ditferem and contrary m.oaons Crabs move hdelin^, Lobrters will fwim. fvviftly backward , NA'ormes an Leeches will ^move both \Vayes and fo will moR of thofe i^nimals, whofe bodies cojifiif of rounq and annulary fibers, and move by undulation, that is, Ukethej^vave^ xi|^
;
.
who
Aa
tne
^^8
lEn^uiriestntc Vulvar
Bock.j.
make
the iea, the one portruding the other, by inver/ion whereof they
'
a backward motion. Upon the fame ground hath arifen the fame miftake concerning the Scolopendra or hundred-footed Infet , as is delivered by Khodialnns from the Scholiaft of Nicdndtr DlcltHr a Nicandro , A\K<^i)ia. f, ^idefl
:
dlcefhalus aHtbicefsfiBumverOyi^uomdm rttrerfum ( Ht fcrlhlt zyirlHottles ) arreplty obfcrved by z/ildrovandus^ but moft plainly by Mnffetus-,
i^dtibltox that
the Text of Nlcander l amen face untcum illl dumaxat cMfut I'ldro alufc^ue imtofttunder favour of fo great an Author, the Scolopen*
:
dra hath but one head, although with equal facility it moveth forward and backward , which I fufpeil deceived Nicander and others.
CHAP,
Of
XVI.
the Vl-per,
TPHat the young Vipers force their way through' the bowels of thenDam, or tiiat the female Viper in the ail of generation bites off
'
the head of the male , in revenge whereof the young ones eat throui,h In the womb and belly of the female, is a very ancient tradition. this fenfe entertained in theHieroglyphicks of. the <yajtptiansy z^vmtdby HerodotfiSy N'icahdery Tilft^y^Platarchy (t^Iia-/i^ Jerome^ BafiUy JJidore ^ fee ms countenanced by Arijfotle^ and his Scholar T/'^o'/'Ar<from hence is commonly affif^ned the reafon. why the %omans pufiui nilhed T^?-r;V/Ww by drowning them in a fack with a Viper; and fo ;perhapsupon the fame opinion the men of CMelitu when they faw a Viper upon the hand of Paul^ faid prefently without conceit of any oiher fin , No cjoubt this man is a murtherer who though he have eThat is , he fcaped the Sea , yet vengeance fuffereth him not to live. is now paid in his own wiy, the parricidous Animal and punii"hment of 'murtherers is upon him. And though the tradition were currant among
:
-,
racfttafiv'ifarlaty
the Greeks, toconfirm the fame the Latins nime is introduced, DpfThit pafTa:;e alfoin the Gofpel ; ye generation
of Vipers, hath found expositions which countenmce this conceit. Notwirhftan ing which authorities , t.anfcribed relation? and conjectures, upon enquiry we find the fame repugnant unto experience and
te^fon.
"
'
coBtrivp'v
Book.
3.
a^d ConmpnErrours,
-fj^
contrive thexontinuatioii of the fpecies by the deftmiUon of the 'Continuator; but it overchrcvves and fruftrates the great. benedidion of.
God,
vyhich
is
exprefl'ed,
it
faying,
be fo ordained that fome mult regularly periiK by q^, tiply. multiplication , and thefe be the fruits of frui.ifying in the Viper; it cannot be faid that God did blefs, but curfe this animal ; upon thy belly (halt thou go , and duft llialt thou eat all thy life , was not fo great a puniiliment unto the Serpent after the fall , as encreafe, befruitful and This were to confound the maledi6Uons of, multiply , was before. .God, and tranflate the curfe of the Woman upon the Serpent that is, if} do/ore paries, in forrow fhalt thou bring forth; which being proper
:
Now if
untothe Woman, is verified beft in the Viper, whofe delivery is not only accompanied with pain, but alfo with death it feif. And laiUy, ic
overthrowes the careful cQiirfe,and parental provifion of nature,whereand prp^ by the young ones newly excluded are fuftained by the Dam teded until they grow up unto a fufficiency for themfelv^es. All which, for the Dam being deftroyed, is perverted in this eruptive generation the younglings are left to their own prote6lion : which is not conceive^ able they can at all perform , and whereof they afford us a remarkable confirmance many dayes after birth. For the young ones fuppofed to, break through the belly of the Dam , will upon any fright for prote6lion run into it; for th^n the old one receives them in at her mouth, which way the fri^hc being paft, they will return again, which is a peculiar way of refu ;e ; and although it feem ftrange, is avowed by frequent experience and undeniable telUmony. As for the experiment, although we have thrice attempted it , it hath not well fucceeded ; for though we fed them with milk, bran, cheefe, &c. the females alwayes died before the young ones were mature for this eruption ; but reft fufliciently confirmed in the experim.ents of wor\\ herein to omit the ancient convi6lion of Apollottim^ thy enquire rs. we llnal 1 fet down fom.e few of modern Writers. The firft , of Amatm j, ^. Lnjifmus in his Comment npon Diofcond-s, Vldmus kos viper 04 pr<^- exclude their ttaKles lyicl;ifiUptxid,ihHsparere, <jute inde ex portu nee mortud , uec vifce- young ones by The fecond is that of Scali^er , V-tpera^ ab, an ordinary r'lhti^ perforata rfjunfernm.
; :
ImpaHe-fitihHS moftsfict'ib
is
tM
vipri-clla4yparar.tejalva.
,
?i
st^ntnminHs
and molt plain of Frir^nctjcm B^^Spani\hV\\)^\lunoi ylicaladc Hen arcs whofe? words
Tiie
lalt
-,
arethefe Cufp vera per' we per alios hue ipfa. difcjHifijfenx fcrvata Viper tyjj^. prog nie^&c. that is, when by my felf and others I h.id enquired the truth hereof, iiicluding Vipers in a glafs , and feeding them with <lheefe and bran ; I undoubte"ly found th.u the. Viper was not delivered by the tearing of her bowels, but I beheld them excluded by the paflai-;e of Lenerarion , near the ^i'^c^ of there;i%5 ;\'yh?ii^o wcjinighc alfo -add t[-Kocu^ir.tpijfe^^aT
in his third ^f Amnia/.tibMs Scnptftra
,
:
&
Aa
tion
iSo
tion of Lactira
Book. 3.
,
upon Diofcorldes
FerdinattdHs Iwp;rattis
and
th.tt
learned Phyfitun oi Naples y tiAurel'ms Sever iKm. Now although the Tradition be untrue , there wanted not
many
grounds which made it plaufibly received. The firft was a favourable indulgence and fpecitil contrivance of nature ; vvhirh was the conceit of Hcrod'>tHs^ who thus dflivereth himfel f. Fearful Animals, an fuch as ferve for food , nature huh made more fruitful; but upon the offeniive and noxious kind, fhe hath not conferred fertility. So the Hare that bccou>eth a prey unto m.an , unto beafts, and fowls of the ayr , is fruitful even to fuperfcetation ; but the Lyon a fierce and ferocious Animal, hath young ones but feldome, and alfo but one at a tim.e ; Vipers indeed , althou^ h deftruilive , are fruitful ; but left th^iir rjirifber fhould encreafe , providence hath contrived another way to abate it: for in copulation the female bites off the head of the male, and the youn^ ones deftroy the m. other. But this will not confill with reafon , as we have declared before. And.if we m.ore nearly confider the condition of Vipers and noxious animals, we ilialldilcover an higher provifion of nature how although in their paucity Hie hath not abridged their malignity yet hath \\-\q. noto.ioully eft'edted it by their feceffion or lati< : :
tancy.
like
i
oftenfive infeils, as Koi mts , Waf*.^s , and the but fanzuineous corticated Anim.als , as Serpents , Toais and Lizzards , do lye hid and betake themfelves to cove.ts in the \\ inter.
the
Candicy there arifeth a tem.poral feciirity from their veno nes ; and an intermilfion of their mifchiefs , mercifully requiting the cime of their
activities.
A fecond ground of this effe6l, was conceived the JuQice of Nature, whereby llie compenCues the death of the-father by the m.atriti'de or murder of the mother and thir was the exprelTion of Nicandcr. ,But the caufe hereof is as improbable as the etfeil and were indeed an i nprc^i^Ient revenue in the yo- n;; ones, whereby in confequence , and
;
;
upon defeat of provii on they mJuft deftroy them.felves. And whereas he expreiVeth this decollation of the male oy fo full a term as </>;t-.aVc, for the fem.ale that i^ to cut or lop oflf , the acl is hardly conceiveable viper h.ith but four conf.derable teeth , and thofe fo c'ifpofed , fo flender and needle pointed, that they are apter for punlure then any ait of And if .my like adlion there be, it may be only fo ne fjft reinci'on. tention or furlden co npreifion in the O^^/ or fury of their luft? according as ihn exprelTion of Horace is conftrued concerning Z./^/^* g^nd le/ephw.
;
Sivepu^rffirs,
Jmfrejfit memorem dtnte labris notam,.
Others aA.ribc
and
Book. 3
l^i
though he denierh cfis and this was the opinion of Theoplrafias. evefion or forcing, throui^h the Belly , conceiveth neverthelefs that upon Ji full and plentiful impletion there may perh.ips fucceed a difruption
Who
of thi matrix, as it happeneth foinetiaies in the long and (lender fiHv Needle fi/hj ^c/u. Nowal.hou^hinhot Countryes, and very numerous concep- found fonielions, in the Viper or other Animals, there may fometimej enfue a "rarsupontbe dilaceration of the genital parts, yet is this a rare and contin^^ent etfe6l, V/""* ?J. and not a natural and conftantway of exclufion. For the wife Creator I'jneJ^ynto J^c hath-forined the organs of Animah unto their operations, and in whom yent, and fix he ordaineth a numerous conception in them he bath prepared conve- from thence ""^ 'fa* *'**^nient receptacles, and a futable way of exclufion.Others do ground this difruption upon their continued' or protra6lcd time of deli ety, prefumed to laft twenty dayes, whereat, excluding but one a day,the latter brood impatient, by a forcible proruption anticipate their period of exclufion and this was theafl'ertionof P///?7> Cateri tArd.itatisimp(itientes'frorummntlatera^opc'ifafarente\ which was occafioned upon a miftake of the Greek text in ylrlFtotle , t'ikth S'l iv fti* t/fcgst K9' w'lTucTw cTs 'TThH'a iiMoiv^ which ate Iitterally thus tranflatcd^ Parit apfttm uyia die fecunditm unum ^ faritaHt<ni plurcs cjuam vigwtiy and m.ay be thus EngliHied , She bringerh forth in one day, one by one, and fometimes more then twenty ; and fo hath Scaliaer rendred ic, Sr/^illatim f^^.rit ^ abfolvitPtfjadie^ inerdumplHres qt'.am vi^tnti'. But
^ .
Pliyry
{bits fugptlis
f.on
whom. Gaz,a followerh, huh differently tranflated it, Slngulos dL parity nHmcroferev'igiml', whereby he extends the excluunto twenty dayes, which in the textuary feme is fully accomplilhone.
ed-ini
fiatle^
But what hath m.oft advanced it, is a miftake in another text o Ari^^ which feemerh c ire6lly to c'etermine this difruption, tIktw (JMfd
:
Tcii^ifyjreti
men.hranis
Parit cuhhIos abvol'/t9s^ qm trmtero ad, Now herein-very probably P//htic ffr,it abrojh mcif/hraicispro H.n.fant^ ny , and m.any fn. e have been millaken; for the cifruption of the mem,
branes or skins, whi^h in lude the youn ones, conceivinga dilaceration of the matrix ana belly of the Viper: and concluding froaj a cafuaL
,
dilacer.uion, a re
lar
As for the Litm word r/'/p^r.? which m the Etym.ology oil(idore.^io^ moterh this conceit more properly it may imrly i/Zt/'p^-r^. For wherei
as
excludeth livin^^ anim.als,and though zYtCeraflt be Ifo \ iviperous, r-nd we have foknd formed.Snakes in the belly cf the ''ic 7V; or flow- worm yet may the Vif erem.phatically bear the name. For the Notntion of Erymoloc:y is not of nece(Tty adequate unto tht name ; and therefore fhou-,h animal be educed from a-
other Sepents
.
nlma^ yet are there mnny animations befidc a r i^bt th^xein as well a feniible creatures.
Aa3.
y^%
Text of Scripture, and compel (ation of the Thaby Generation of Vipers ; although conrtru6lions be made hereof conform^ible to this Tradition ; and it may be plaulibly expounded, that out of a viperous condition they confpired againft their Prophets,
\Aj5,t<>uchiag the
ri{ei-i
.
and deftroyed thiir fpiritual parents; yet (as J^nfenipu obferveth) Gregory and fsro^e-, do make another conftruition ; apprehending thereby what is ufually implyed by that Proverb, Mallcorvl mal<^m ovHm that is, of evil parents, an evil generation a pofteriry not unlike their majority ; of miTchievous progenitors, a venomous and de; ;
ftru6live progeny.
And lalHy, concerning the Hieroglyphical account according to the down by Orns Afolio , the Authority thereof is
,
for were the conception true or falfe, to their ap; Which ftrii\:Iy taken , and toprehenfions, it exprelfed filial impiety. tally received for truth, might perhaps begin, but furely promote this
only Emblematical
i-conception.
CHAP.
XVII.
Of Hard,
or -that every Hare is both male and female, befide the vulgar opinion , was the affirmative of Archelaus-, oi Plmarch-, P/?;7/r^r/, and many more. Of the fame belief
Kttvit. ir.
The fame islikewiie confirmed from have been the Jewilli '^(r^^'^^ the Hebrew word ; which, as though there were no fingle males of that kind , hath only obtained a name of the feminine gender. A^ alfo fromtbe fymbolical foundation of its prohibition in the Law, and what vices therein it figured , that is, not only pufillanimity and timidity from its temper, feneration or ufury from its fecundity and fuperfetation but from this mixture of fexes, unnatural venery and degenerous effeminvition. Nor are there hardly any who either treat of mutation or m.ixtionof fexe?, who have not left fome m.encion of this point; fome fpeaking pofirively, others dubiouOy, and moft refigning it imto the enquiry of the Reader. Now hereof to fpeak diitindly,they m.urt be male andfem^ale by mutation, and fucceffion of fexes ; or elfe by compofitiOn, mixture or union thereof. As for the mutation of fexes , or tran(ition into one .mother, we cannotdeny it inHares, it being obfervable in man. For hereof beand though fide Enipedoclcs or Tirefoi , xhztf ate not a few examples ~
;
'
"
'
ven'
Book. 3
iSz
very few , or rather 'none which have emafculatfed or rurned Women , Tranfmutatiyet very many who from in efteem or reality of being Women have in point of their menftruouserupSome'at the faliibly proved Men. J" ^ Womea marriage, others many years after; which tions, fome in the day of their huo into men, occafiOneddifputesatLaw, and conteftations concerning a reftore of gwmcd. And that not only mankind, but many other Animals^ may the dow.y. we Will not deny, or hold it at all impoflfible ; altranfexion, this fuffer
thou -h I ccnfv^ls by reafon of the poftick and backward pofitbn of the fexinine parts in quadrupedes, they can: hnrdly admit the fubftttution of a protru(ion,,effeiliial unto mafculine generation-; except it be in Rerromin^ents,awd fuch as couple backward. Nor lliall we only concede the fucceflfion of- fexeiin fome , but fliall not difpute the tranfition of reputed fpecies in others, that is, atranf.
mutation, or ( as Parac< Iftans term, it ) Tranfplanration of one into aHereof in perfedl Animah of a con^-'^enerous feed, or near afnother. finity of natures, examples are in im.perfeil kinds , and fuch where the difcrimination of lexes is obfcure, thefe transformations are m.ore com.mon and in fome within themfdves without commixtion, as particularly in Caterpillers or Silk-worm.s , wherein there is a vifible and But in plants, wherein there is no diftini^ion of triple transfiguration.
:
conceived more obvious then any : as of VJ heat into Darnel ; and thofe graines s y^\d\ generally arifeam.ong Corn, as Cockle, Aracus, iEgilops, and 0-ther degenerations; which com^e up in unexpedcd fhapes, when they want the fupport and maintenance of the primary and mafierrfoxmes. And the fame do fom.e affirm concemmg other, plants- in lefs Analogy of figures ; asthe mutation of Mint into Creffes, Bafil into Serpoil, and Turneps into Radifhes. In all which, as Sever imu conceiveth , there may be equivocal feeds and Hermaphroditical principles, which contain the racicality and power of different forms ; thus in the feed of Wheat there lieth obfcurely the feminality of Darnel , althoi^h in a fecondary * or inferiour way , and at fome diftanee of production ; which neverthelefs if it-meet with convenient promotion, or a conflux and eonfpiration ofcaufes more powerful then the other; it then beginneth to edifie in chief, and contemning the fuperintendent form, produceth the
fex, thefe tranfpjantations are
fignatures of
its felf.
and do
allow thc?t Kares may exchange their fex,yet this we conceive doth come to pafs but fometimes, and not in that viciiTituee or annual alternation That is, f om imperfe6tion to perfeilion , from perfeas is prefumed. 6lion to imperfedion from female unto male, from male to female again , and fo in a circle to both without a permanPon in either. For befide the inconceivable mutation of temper, which ihould yearly alternate the fex this is injurious unto the order of nuure , whofe operations do refl in the perfection of theii: intents ; which having once at
taiaed^
84
'
Enqttlries
wto
fuli^dir
Book. 3
tained, they maintain th^ir accompliilifed ends, and relapfe not again into th^ir pro^reflional imperfdilions. So if in tlie minority of Natural when upon the encrcafe or vigor, the parts of feminality take pJace growth thereof the mnfculine appear , riie firil dcfi^n of Nature isatIhicved , and thofe parts a-e after maintained. But furely it much impeachech this iterated tranfeilion of Hares , if thatbetruewhiciiCV^^^^andoiher Phyfuians affirm, Thit rnnfmutationoffexisonlyfoin opinion; and th.it thefe tranfeminated persons were really men at firft ; althou:,h fucceeding years produced the manifelio or evidence of their virilities. Which alrhoui^h intended and formed, was not atfiril excluded; and that the examples hereof have undergone no real or new tranf^xion, but we e Andro^^ynally born, and under fome kinde of Ilerm^^phrodltes. For though 6'*.A do favour the opinion , that the diftinclive parts of fexes are onejy dirfcrcnt in Pofition, that is, inversion or prorrufion ; yet will this hardly be
;
out from the Anatomy of thofe parts. The terticles bein^ fo feared in the female, that they adm.it not of protrufion ; and the neck of the matrix wanting thofe parts which are difcoverable in the organ of vi-
made
rility.
The fecond and moft received acception , is, that Hares are male and female by conjun6lion of both fexes and fuch as are found in mankind, fuppofed to be form.ed f om the ePoetically called Hermaphroaites feed non either carrying about them zht parts of vlEiorie of or quality, Man and Woman akhout^Ji with ^reat variety in perfection, fite and a!.bility ; nor only as ArijvotU conceived , with a conftant impotency in one; but as latter Obfecvers affirm, fometimes with ability of either And therefore the providence of fome Lavvshave thou ht venery. good, that at the years of maturity they ihouldeleilonefex, and the
; ; ; ;
hereby endeathey unawares en;oyned perpetual cha.ftity, for being, executive in both part.s, and confined unto one, they rePhito and ftrained a Natural power , and ordained-a partial virginity.
fome of the Rabbins proceedel higher who conceived the firft Man an Hermaphrodite and Marcus L(?i.the learned J^^^^ in fome fenfe hath -r.llowedit; nftirmiing that Adam in one fuppofitum vvithoutdiviiion, contained both m.ale and fem.ile. And therefore whereas it isfaid in in the Image of .thejexf, That Cod created m.an in his own Image Cod created he him. , male and female created he rhem applying the f.n :ular an \ plural unro Adam-, it ir:i_ht denote, that in one fubfbnce, and in himifclf be in.hideth both fe.xes , which was after divi*'ed ^ and The opinion of ArijhtU exten.kth furthefem.ale called Woman. ther , from whofe afiertion all men lliould be Hem.aphroJites ; for afhrm.ingthat wom.endonot foerm.atize, and confer a place or receptacle rather then efi'ential principles r^l g-'^mra^lon^ he deduf lively includes i)oth .'exes in mankmd ; for from the father proceed not only males and
; ; ,
:
fep.iales,
'
Book.
18^
, but from him alfo muft Hermaphrodital and mafculo-feminine generations be derived, and a commixtion of both ^txzs arife But the Schoolmen have dealt with that fex from, the feed of one. more hardly then any other , who though they have not muth difputed their generation, yet they have controverted their RefurroJIhn, and raifen a query, whether ^y at the laft day {liould arife in thWiSof women; as may oe obferved in the Supplement of AqmnM. Now as we muft acknowledge this Androgynal condition in Mim , fo Confiftingof can we not deny the like doth happen in betfts. Thus do we read in mmandvroPliny^ that Neroes Chariot was drawn by four Hermaph oditical mares, ""'"^ and Cardan affirms he alfo beheld one at Antwerp. And thus m.ay we alfo concede, that Hares have been of both fexes, and fome have ocularly confirmed it ; but that the whole fpecies or kind fliould be bifexous or double-fexed , we cannot affirm, who have found the parts of male and female rcfpe6\ively diftin6t and fingle in any wherein we have enquired And the like fuccefs had Bacchinw in fuch as he difl"e6ted. And whereas it is conceived, that being anharmlefs Animal and dele- BicchMHttn ^able food unto man, nature hath made them with double fexes , that f^fbrtiitit, a^lively and paffively performing they m.i^ht more numeroufly encreafe; vve forget an hij^her providence of nature whereby llie efpecially promotes the multiplication of Hares, which is by fuperfetation ; that is, a conception upon a conception, or an improvement of a fecond fruk before the firft be excluded; preventing hereby theufual rntermilTion and vacant time of generation ; which is very comm.on and frequently obfervable in Hares, mentioned long ago by Arifiotle^HerodotuiyZnd *?llny\ and we have often obferved, that after the firft caft, there remain fucceflive conceptions, and other younglings very immature, and far from their term of excUiiion. Nor need any man to queftion this in Hares, for the fame we obferve doth fometime happen in Women ; foralrhou:hit be true, that upon ^"E?i|'[*'?'^"\ conception the inward orifice of the matrix exadly ciofeth , fo that it men and"hat^ commonly admitteth nothing after ; yet falleth it out fomefime , that umoaperfcft in the aft of coition , the avidity of that part dilateth it felf, and re- birth, ceiveth a fecond burden ; which if it happen tobcnearintim.e unto the firft, they commonly do both proceed unto perfeftion , Snd have legitimate exclufions, periodically fucceeding each other. But if the fuperfetation be made with confiderable inteimJirion , the latter moft comm.only proves abortive; for the firft being confirmed, engrofleth the aliment from the other. However therefore thepro;e6tof J//^ feem very plaufible, and that way infallible, wiien {he received not her paffengcrsjbcfore (lie had taken iniier lading,yet was there afallibility therin, nor indeed any abfolute fecirrity irithc policy of adultery after con.ception.For the Matrix(which feme have called another Animal within us, and which is not fubjefted unto the law of our will)after reception of its proper Tenant,may yet receive a ftrange and fpurious inmate. A^iis conBb
fettiales
1^^
En^iries^i^tto Vulvar
Book.3,
:
confirmable by many examples in Plin)f ; by Larijfaain Hippocrates; and that merry one in PUmus ur^ed alfo by AnftotL- that is , of Iphicles and Hercules , the one begat by J tplter^ the other by Afnphltryon on Alemana ; as alfo in thofe fuper-conceptions , where one child was like th^iH||er, the other like the adultere-r , the one favoured the fervant^^^JjpPier refembled the mailer. Now the groLJids that begat, or much promoted the opinion of a doibU fcx in Hares, mii.ht be fome little bags or tumours, at firlt
glcincererrelcntingllonesofTefticles, robefoundin both fexes about the p.^ rr^ of generation ; which m.en obferving in either fex, were indu-
ced to \)c\'\c\ e a m.afculine fex in both. But to fpeak properly, rhefe are no Tei icks or parts ofticial unto generation , but glandulous fub/knces For herein may be perthat feem to held the nature of Emunilories. ceived flcnuer perforations, at which may be exprefled a black andfxculent matter. If therefore fom thefe wefhall conceive a mixtion of fexes in Hares, with fairer reafon we may conclude it in Bevers, whereof both iexes contain a double bag orTum.our in the groin, commonly called the Cod of O^fior^ as we have delivered before. Another t,round v/ere certain holes or cavities obfervable about the fiedge; which being perceived in m.ales, made fome conceive there mi^ht be alfo a fem.inine nature in them. And upon this very ground, the fame opinion hathpafled upon rheHyarna , and is declared by Arlamem alunt utrlufque ftotle , and thus tranflated by Scaliger ; qpiodvideinr gemtalla^ habere cJfcfcemtneHmfHb cattda falfnm efi^ f.xHS non p^rvm-i'i verttm and focmlnino^ thus it is ftgara ; ftmile ef; alfo in efi Hares, in whom thefe holes, although they feem to make a deep cavity, yet do they not perforate the skin; nor hold a community with any part of generation i but were (as T//7 delivereth ) efteemed-the marks of their age , the number of thofe deciding their number of years. In which opinion what truth there is wc fhall not contend ; for if in oiher Animals there be authentick notations, if the vhara6lers of years be found in the horns of Covves, or in the Antlers of Deer, if we conjecture the a^ e of Horfes from joynts in their docks, an \ undeniably pre-
Qmd
It from their teeth we cannot affirm, there u in ihis conceit, any ont unro nature ; although, who ever enquirech lliali lind no aflUrance therein. The hrt foundation was Retromin'^,ency or piilin?, backward ; for men obletvin^ both fexes to urine backward , or averfly between their i^^% they mi ht conceive there wh a feminine part in both ; whereinthey are dec^;ived by the iynorance of the uft and pro-'er iiteof the Pizel , or partdefi ,ned unto the Exc etion of urine ; whi-h in the Hare holds not the common pofition , but is averily feated, an.l in its diftentionencline? unto the CoccixOi.- Scut. Novv fron the njture of this polition ,. there enfueth * neccXity of Retrocopulation, which alfo pro.noudvchd conceic; focfonac obferving them to cou{)le without mine-
fume
afF
i,
Book.
$.
AtMCow^onErrours,
tg^
afcenfion ; have not been able to judge of male orfemale , or to determine the proper fcx in either. And to fpeak generally , this way of copulation is not appropriate unto Hares, nor is there one, but many
wayes of coition according to divers fhapes and different conformatiFor fome couple laterally or fide-wife, as Worms fome circuon-;. larly or by complication , as Serpents: fome pronely, that is by conta6lionof the ventral parts in both, as Apes, Porcupines, Hedgehogs, and fuch as are termed Mollia, *as the Duttle-fiHi and the Purple i fome mixtly, that is, the male afcending the female , or by application of the ventral parts of the one , unto the podick parts of the other , as mbfl Qiiadrupedsj Some averfly, as all Cruftaceous Animals, Lobfters, Shrimps, and Crevifes, and alfo Retromingents , as Panthers, Tygers>
:
This is the conftant Law of their Coition, this they ooferve andtranfgrefsnot: onely the vitiofity of man hath a6led the varieties hereof; no r content with a digrefTion from fex or fpecies, hath in his own kind thorow the Anom.alics of venery ; and been fo bold, not only to ail, but reprefent to view , the irregular waycs of luft.
and Hares.
CHAP.
Of
XVIII.
Moles,
are blind and have no eyes, THat Moles with much variety
is
thouph a
common
opinion>
received
fight, as Opplaf'Uj,
affirming only they have no the Proverb Ta/pa Cc^clor^ ana the word (ar^Ax}*y
;
:
fome
or Talplta^^ which in Hefychim is made the fame with Gttcltas fome that they have eyes, but no fight , as the text oiArifiotle feems to imply; fom.e neither eyes nor fight, as -^//'f>^fj,P//r, and the vulgar o-
pinion
others.
as Scalig r, AldrovandH^s^-indiomQ
with fome reflridlion, is moft confonant unto truth ; for that they have eyes in their head is manifeft unto any that wants them not in his own ; and are difcoverable, not only in old ones , but as we have obferved in young and naked conceptions', t.iken out of the belly of the Dam. And he thitexailly enquires, into the cavity of their cranies, may perhaps difcover fome propagation of nerves communicated unto thefe parts. But that the humours roizether with their coats are alfo diftinit ( though Galen feem xo affirm id) and intranfcendeth our difcovery ; for feparating thefe little Orbs cluding them in Magnifying Glafles , we difcerned no more thzr^Arilaft
-,
y?<j//(?
tii^it if ^they
mentions , h-^a^fi^ iAkaiva, thatis, a black humour, nor any be br<^n; 'That therefore they have eyesvve mtift 6f it'e-
Bb2
cclfity
i8S
ceflity affirm
;
Book. 3.
deny
in refpeil:
mals:.
jos
,
but that they be comparatively incompleat we need not to the parts of generation in women are imperfeft, of tfaofc of men, as the eyes of Moles in regard of other Ani^r//?or/d'term.srhem'^"pP'KS vvhich C(iz.a tranflates O^/c-
So
a word of imperfection inchoatos. have eyes is manifcft unto fenfe, fo that they have fight not incongruous unto reafon if we call not in queftion the provic'ence of this provihon, th.icis, to afifign the Organs , and yet deny the Office, to grant them eyes and withhold all manner of viiion. For as the inference is fair, affirmatively deduced from the adion to the organ, that they have eyes becaufe they I'ee ; fo is. it alfo fro'.v. the organ to the aAion , thatthey have eyes, therefore fome fight clefigned ; if we take the intention of Nature in every fpecies, and except the cafual impediments , or morbofities in inaividvals. But as their eyes are more Jmperfedl then others, fo do vve conceive of their fight or ad of vifion; for they vvill run againil things, and hudling forwards fall from high places. So that they are not blind, nor yet dillinilly fee i there is in them no Cecity , yet more then a Cecutiency ; they have fight enough to difcern the li^ht y though not perhaps to diiiinguilli of objects or colours fo are they not exaitly blind, for light is one objeft of vifion. And this ( as Scaligcr obferveth ) might be as fulla fight as Nature firfl intended; for living in darknefs under the earth , they had no further need of eyes then to avoid the light; and to be fenfible when ever they loft that darknefs of earth, vvhich was their natural confinenient. And therefore however Tranflators do render the word of Arlftotk or Galm , that is, imferfeHos^ obUfus or mchoatos , it is not much c<^n':c)erable ; for their eyes are Sufficiently begun to finifh this adlion, and competently pcrfeft
and Scil'geY\ys
as chat they
Now
although they had neither eyes nor fight , yet could they blind. For blindnefs being a privative term unto fight, this appellation is nor admittible in propriety of fpeech, and will overthrow the doftrine of privations ; which prefuppofe pofitive forms or habits, and are not indefinite negations, denying in all ubieils, but fiich alone wherein the pofitive habits are in their proper Nature , and placed without repu-,n-incy. So do we improperly fay a Mole is blind, if we deny it the Organs or a capacity of vifion from its created Nature
And laftly,
not be termed
fowhen the
vity,
perfon was blind from his Natiwas not warrantable in ATo^'/zw to fey he had no eyes at .'II, as in the judgement of Hcmfiw , he defcribeth inhisparaphrife ; and.as fome ancient Fathers affirm, that by this Miracle they wenp created in him. And fo though the.fenfe may be ^ccf^i'i.^y thac Proverb muil be candidly interpreted, which maketh Filhesmute ; aad.calkthcm filent which have no voice in Nature. Now this conceit is erected upon a mifapprehenfion or mifhke in the fymtoo^esof vifioav mencotDfouDdingaboJiifhmienc, diminution and
text
of 'John had
faid, that
deprave-
Book.3
depravement
1^9
, and namir^ tKat an abolition oi^jg , which indeed isbut an abatement. For if Vifion be abolilliedURs called cacit^y x>r, blindnefs ; if depraved and receive its objects erroneoufly, Hallucinati-' on ; if diminillied, hebtmdo vifasy ca/i^atio, or dimnefs. Now inftcad of a diminution or imperfeik vilion in th^ Mole, we affirm an abolition
or total privation , infteadof a caligation or dimnefs , we conclude a \Vhich hath been frequently inferred concerning cecity or blindnef^-. other Ani?nals ; fo fom.e affirm the. Water- Rat is blind, fo Sammomcm and Nlcafider do call the Muf-Arancus the fhrew or Ranny, blind And becaufe darknefs was before li^ht, the iygyftians worlliipped the fame. Soare Slow-worm.s accounted blind, and the like we affirm proverbially of the Beetle ; although their eyes be evident, and they will flye againll lights, like many other Infects ; and though alfo Arlftotle determines,, that the eyes are apparent in all flying Infects , though other fenfes be obfcure, and not preceptible at all. And if from a diminution we may infer a toral privation, or affirm that other anim.als are blind which do. not acutely fee , or comparatively unto others, wefliall condem.n unto, blindnefs many not fo elkemed j for fuch as have corneous or homey eyes, as Loblters and cruftaceous anim.als , are generally dim-iighted; all Infedls that have antennx^ or long horns tofeel out .their way, as Buttcx-fiyes and Locufts, or their fore-legs fo difpofed , that they much advance before their heads , as may be obferved in Spiders ; and if the Eagle were Judge, we might be blind our felves. 1 be expreflion therefore of Scripture in the^ftory of ^acob is furely with circumfpeilion ;, And it came to pafs when Jacob was old, and his eyes were dim, quando, caligarunt ocali^ (dSxh Jerome zXidTremell'iHS^ which.areexpreffions of. ciiiainution , and not of abfolute privation.
'
CHAP,
XIX.
Of, Lampries^
is
received,
we durflr refer it
unto Tolyphemw^ who had but one to judge it. An error con-r cerning eyes, occafioned by the error of eyes , deduced from the ap-
on
either fide
which fome
call
eyes that carelefly behoi<l them, and is not only refutable by experience, h\ix alfo repagnant unto reafon. For befide the monftrofiry they faftcn unto nature,in contrivii^ many eyes,who hath mr^de but two untoany ar
.
nimal, that
is,
Bh3
tip*
1^0
Snqulries intoVulgAr
Book. 3 /
XowhatuTe
V
ic \ferc a fuperfiuouMjkl imrtificial a^lto place and fettle fo mafiyin one plane ; for the^^ extreams would fufticientfy perform the office of fight without the help of the inter mediate eyes,and behold as much For the vifible bafe of the objeft would as all feven joyned together. be defined by tnefe two ; and the middle eyes, although they behold the fame thing, yet could they not behold fo much thereof as thefe ; [o were it no advantage unto m.an to hav\i a third eye between thofe two he hath already; ."^and thefi6^ion of aArgw feems morereafonab/e then this, for though he had many eyes, yet were they placed in circum.ference andpofitions of advantage. Again, thefe cavities which men call eyes are feated outofche head, and where the Gils of other fifh are placed ; containing no Organs of fight, nor haying any Communication wuh the brain. Now all fenfe proceedhi^ fr6m the brain, and that being placed (as Gakyj obfi;rveth)for and conseniency required unto fight ; the fi^er lituation of the eyes, it is not reafonable to imagine that they are any where z\^z^ br deler\^e that name which are feated in other parts. And therefore we relinquifli or men with eyes in as fabulous what is delivered of Starmpthalmi^ vcife mans eyes are in their breaft and when it is inhySohv^oji^ his /^f^^jitistobetcikenihafecondfenfe, and affordeth no objection. True it is that the eyes of Animal^ are feated with fom.e difference, but all whatfoever in the head, and that more torward then theeareor hole' of hearing. In quadrupedes, in regard of the figure of their head<T, they are placed at fomediftance; in latircdrous and fiat-bill'd birds they are more laterally feated ; and therefore when they look intently they turn one eye upon the obje6^, and cm convert their heads to fee before and behinde, and to behold two oppofite points at once. But at and inthe f^m.e cira more eafie diftance are they fituatedinman, for if one foot of the Compaffe be placed cum.ference with the ear ; upon the Crown, a Circle defcribed thereby will interfe6l, or pafle over both the eares. ^ The errour in this conceit confifts in the ignorance of thefe cavities, and their proper ufe in nature; for this is a particular difpofure of parts, and a peculiar confirmation whereby thefe holes and fluc<:!s fupply thedefe6l of Gils, and are alTilkd by the conduit in the head ; fo: like cetaceous Animals and Whales, the Lamprie hath a fiftula, fpouc or pipe at the back part of the head, whereat it fourts out watet. Nor is ir onlyfingular in this formatioh, bift alfo in many otiier ; as in defeat: ofbbne^s,' A\^e'-eof it h'Ath not one iihd fot the fpine or back bone, a c'artilkirious ftiMiincc wirhotit any 'fpondylcs, procefies or protuberance whatfoever. As alfo in rhe provifion vvhich Nature hath made fortheheirr,' which in this Aiiimal is very firan<;c!y fecured, and lies im.muredin.a (^arr^^t:e o- <rTifily.fub(^ance. And Inftly, in the colour of theliViir ^^^ich is jiiVhe riirrk of ah excellent graife-green; but of a
'
d^pet tiBloSi^'
Verdure.
ih-^'tl F6Wi^ie-,'a'riJiVili
CHAP.
Bpok.5.
AndComwonBrrours,
xpj
CHAP.
of
XX.
Snails,
Hat
Snails have
two
tha aflertion of the people, is the. opinion of fome learned men. Which notvvirhftanding Scaligir tenr.s bur imitation of eyes;
and Arlfiotle upon confequence denies,vvhen Animals have no eyes at all. And for my owngart after much enquiry, I am not fatished that th^fe are eyes, or that thofe black and atramentous fpots which feem to reprefent them are any ocular realities. For if any objecl be prefented unto them, they will fometime feem to clecline it, and fometime run aIf alfothefe. black extrem.ities, orprefumed eyes be clipped oainfUt. off, they mW notwirhftandin^ m.ake ufe of thefe protrufions or horns, and poke out their way as before. A^2ain, if they >vere eyes orinftrumenrs of yifion, they would- hive their originals in the head,and from thence dqi\% .tbeir, motive and optick organs ; but theit roots and firfi extremities are feared .low upon ihe fides of the back, as may be perceived in the whiter fo;t, of Snails when they retract them., Andlaltwe rnlitl alfo grant they have no. ly,. if we concede they have two eyes, for not only the two greater extenfispjus above, have lefie then foure ; thefe imitations of eyes, but alfo the two leiicr below ; antiiftbeybe dextroufly difle6led, there will be found on eiiher fide two black filaments or membranous ftrings, which extend into the Ipng and lliotter carni'.le upon ^ rotrufion.And therefore if they have two eyes, they have aliO foute^r which will be monilrous and beyond the aflij^mation of any.
\vhich^P//V)' contradidls,
....
why
yve
eyes,
is, beqatjlie
All fenic I*
fj^oai
to call them elfe, and unde ft^nd not the proper ufe of that part ; which indeed is very obfeure, and not delivered by anyj but may probably b- fud toaifift the protrufion and retraviiion (if
their
the
bmiu
'
homes which being a weak and hollow bo'dy , required fome inward eiiabliilim.ent, to conhrm the; length of their advancement; which we obierve they cannot extend without the concutrence hereof. For ifwiihyourhnji,eryouapprehend' the,to/of the home, and d^'aw out this black and m-emb aijous eaiidibn, the horn will be exeluded no more ; but if you clip off the extremity, or only findgc the tOj^ thereof with ^i<7< /or/^id-, or othercoToiive water, leaving a con.
they will neverthelefle exclude their horns,and ; therewith explo:ate rheir way as before. And indeed the exaet fenfe f thek extremities is very remarkable ; fo; if you dip a pen in e/^oyl of Vitriol or Turpentine,
^Ha fortify
andprefent
it
igi
points> they
retiring ordiitorting
Book. 3
acrimony thereof,
all ,
if
them
to avoid
it
and
this
or not at
approach-
'
never feen includes good fenfe or m.eaning. Andfo may who was an Hieroglyphick of hea, ven , in thofe centuries of c/es exprelfmg the ftars ; and their alternate wakings, the viciflitude of day and night. Which ftrid^y taken cannot be admitted , for the fubjefl of deep is not the eye, but the common fenfe, which once afleep, all eyes mull be at reft. And therefore^ vvhac is delivered as an Embleme of vi^ilancy, that the Hare and Lion do fleep with one eye open , doth not evince they areany mere awake then if they were both clofed. For the open eye beholds in fleep no more then that which is clofed ; and no more one eye in them then two in other .Animals that fleep with both open ; as fpmeby difeafe, and others naturally which have no eye-lids at all. As for 'Polyphemus i although the flory be fabulous, the monftrofity is
under
thini^s
impoflible. For theailofVifionmaybe performed with one eye, and in the deception and fallacy of fight , hath this advantage of two, that it beholds not objeflsdouole, or fees two things for one. For this iHowthings happen to be doth happen when the axis of the vilive cones , diflfufed from the obkin as double, j^o^ f^jj ^^^ ^p^j^ [|,e (j^n^e plane , but that which is conveyed into ^ one eye, is more dcprefled or elevated then that which enters the o-ther. SoifbeholcingaDandle, we protrude either upward or domiward the pupil of one eye, the object will appear double ; but if we lliut the other eye, and behold it with one, it will then appear but fingle ; .wd if we abduce the eye unto either corner, the objeil will not duplicate for in that pohtion the axis of the cone^ remain in the fame plane, as isdemonftrated in the opticks, and delivered by Galen , in his
;
not
-tenth
Dc ufu partmnj.
RdatioHsalfo there are of men that could make themfelves inviii"iJle, which belongs not to this difcourfe , but mayferve as notable expreflions of wife and p'rudent men , who fo contrive their affairs , that although their actions be manifeft, thv^ir defigns arc not difcoverable. In this acception there is nothing Mi of doubt, and ^jiges Ring remaineth fiill amongft us for vuhar eyes behold no more of wife rhen then doth the Sun they may dii'cover their exteriour and outward wayes, but theirinteriour and inward pieces he onely fees, that fees ito thek
:
:
beings.
CHAP.
Book. 3
dnd Common
Srroftrs,
f>|
CHAP.
Of
XXI.
JUi
the Cameleon.
upon
ayr,
and is fuitaincd
1:^
no other aliment
Thus
in plain terms affirmed by SoUnHs^ Vl'iny^ and others , and by this All ivhich notwithflandin^, periphrafis is the fame defcribed by OviA,
much
the aflertion mainly controvertible, and very mucii inducements of bdief. :. And flirt for its verity, although aflertedby fom.e , and traditionally For befide c///<r, delivered by others , yet is it very queflionable. who is fcldome defective in thefe accounts, nArifloth diftin6lly treatin^^ hereof, hath made no mention of this remarkable propriety which either fufpciiing its verity, or prefuming-its falfity, he furely omitted : for that he rem.ained ignorant of this account it is not eafily conceiveable: it being the com. m. on opinion, and generally received by all m.en. Some have pofitively denied it, as Atigufiinus Niphasj Stobdm^ 'Z).*/^chanifms^FortmiiiSy Lic::iUi^ ss\ih. m.any more: or hers have experimentally refuted it, as namely, 7i//?<2;7a Land'im-, who in the relation oiSccliil^er^ obferved a Cameleon to lick up a fly from his breaft : But Belloniu-s hath been more fatisfac-iorily experimental, not only affirming they feed on fiies, caterpillars, beetles and other Infci^s, but uponexen';- Commenr. in whereto we mi2,ht alfo 011. Lmmh, teration he found thefe animals in their bellies add theexperim^ental decihonsof the worthy Poire fc him and learned nianuel V"iz.z.e.n'w ^ in that Cam.eleon which had be^n obferved to d ink ware r, and deii;-hc to feed on Meal-worms. And although we have not had the advantage of our own obfervation, yet h^ive .\Yerecieive<3 the like ^^ confirmation from many ocular fpcftarors.
upon enquiry
to
fail
End
'
in the three
r:
As touching the verihmility or probable truth of this relation, feve^For firft, there ar.i r.ilre^fonsthereare which feem to overthrow it.
found in
this anim.al,
the guts, the flomack, and ether parts official unto its aliment the empty recepti6n of ayr, rlieir
Now
abH<ir-*
ring fupcffTuicies, and efteiling nothing in vain, unto the inrentioi? of thefe operations rcfpeJlively contriverh the organs^^nd therefore where
we f nd fuch inftrumcnts,we may with ftritlnefs expedl their afli6n<;,arKl; where we difcover them not, we may with fofety conclude the non-in-/ tention of their operations. So when we obferve that ov iperous animaH,^'
asLizards, Frogs,
ntys, \\
Bi'. (is,
nor'-iicP^
Cc
in
; ,
*I4
in the fame kind
Book. ^
difcover thefe parts in the Tortoife,we cannot deny he exercifeth that excretion ; nor was there any abfurdtty in T/;;,when
for medicin^il ufes
we
he coinnjendcd the Urine of a Tortoife, So when , ic is not unreafonable to infer they fuckle their younglings with milk bur whereas no other fiyinj Animal
we
hath thefe parts, we cannot, from them expect a viviparous excl ufion but either a generation of e^gs, or fome vermiparous feparation , whofe navel is within it felf at firft, and its nutrition after not connexedly de.priding of; iis ior^inal. ^ Again, Nature is fo far from caving any one part wirhout its proper a4^iQi|i, xhat Ihe oft times impofv^ch two or three labours upon one , fo the l?i^el'in Animals,i both ofHcial unco Urine and to generation, bur '^f iirft and primary life ip ^enei;a{:ion, fo: many creatures enjoy that part w"hich urine not, as fillie?, birds, and quadrupeds oviparou^J. But upc on the contrary, for the Secundary ailion fubiifteth not alone but hut in co^icomitancy with the other. So the nofirils are ufeful both for jefpiration and fmeiling , but the principal ufe is fmelling ; for many have no/trils which have no lungs, as fiilics , but none have lungs or reff irAtion, which have not fome fhew, or fome analogy of noftrils. Thus we perceive rhe pfpvidenceof Nature, that is, the wifdomeofGod, Nature provides no part whichidifpofethof nopartinvain, and fome parts unto two or three without ics ufes, will not provide any without the execution of its proper office, proper fundi nor where there is no digeliion to be made, make any parts infervient
;
oil
or office.
of. this
:
gument to overthrow
an.i that
proper nature; but alfo it peculiar figure. For of this part properly taken there are two ends ; that is, the formation of the voice, and the execution of tafle ; for the voice, it can have no office in Cameleons, for they are mute animals ; as befide fifhes, are mrrft other forts of Lilards. As for their tafte, if their nutriment be ayr, neirher can it be an ififljrument thereof j for the body of that element is inguftible, void of all fapiuity, :md without any adion of the tonpiie , i:; by the roujh arcej^ or weazon conducted into the lun^s. And therefore Pliny much forgets the ftri^inefs of his aflertion , when he allovvetb excrements unto that animal , that feederh only upon ayr , which norwithdanding with the urine of an Afs, he com.mends as a magical meuicine upon our ene.
mies.
the tongue feems alfo to overthrow the prefumption of which according to exail delineation, is in this Animal For. in fo little a creamte k peculiar, and feemeth contrived for prey. is;at thelcaft a palm lang, and being ic felf very flow in motion, hath inthis part a very great agility ; wirhiil ics food b.iing, ftyes and fuch as fuddenly efcape, k hath in the tongue a mucous and flimy extremity ,wherebj upon a fudden emilBon it iaviicates and taagkjh thofe Infedis. Andr
this aliment,
The figure of
. "
ook-
Mfifi^
n7im!i'n<X{xn()AtM^^a^^'i^ , not ft> much for ffe^ Peftm-' blance of fliape, as affinity of concUtion ; that is for vigilartcy ii^^ts prfty, and fudden rapacity thereof, which it performeth not like th^ Lyon with its teerh but a fudden and unexpe^ed ejaculation of the tongue. Thij expofition is favoured by fome, efpecially the old glofs upon Let/It tens ^. i A^rfrsl fe whereby in the tranflation of feronu and the Scptuagint) forbidden whatever it be, it feems a* rcafonable as thaeof //?<^>1'-wfi Leott^^ as prefuanin^ herein refemblanee derives this name OrCameh
thenomumipninCfeeltis
a litcle Lioit
W^
-^
&
,,.,-/,iv ::
vvirba
Camel.
'
-^
'
As
ahd wii'e
opinion, the bodies of Animals ca^nocFeceive'-apr^pe^: jt* liment from ayr ; for bcfidetbat tiii being (as t^AnfiitU cennsit ) a^ kindof toucb; ic is required the aliment ihould be tangible, and fall
men are of
aflre(3ions of touch ; befide alfo that there isfbme fa-. por in all aliments, as bcin^ to be diftinguiJlied and judged by the guft", which cartno't be admitted in ayr Betide thefe, I fay, if we conlider the nature of alim.ent, and the properufe of ayr in refpiration, invilfvcry hardly fall undetthe name hereof, -or- |)operty, attain the -a^oPJiUtri-
catioJi.;
'
''
;..oi
;'-X>7Ut;i.7.diY^::^jp:;ri/;'3o,:^ii:; !u yhaci'.-:
:i
conceihing its nature, to make a perfefV nutrition into the' R^q"'rit unJ And bodynourifhed', there is requiceda tranfmutation of the nuirimenc, toNii'"on. now wher^ this converfion bf aggen^rarion is made, the;re is alfo required in the" alimaira familiarity of miatrer, and fucha community orvi^' dnity unto a liuing nature , as by onea(^ ot the foulimay be conv^i'tdi''' into thebody of the living, and enjo)' one common f(ul; Wftiek^iijjtii*^ nacbeetfefledbyayr , it concurring only wkh Obrf'Se^in^f^^rft^oHprmcipJcs, vvbich are at the: Largeft diliatice from life, and^^cdrfirrr*^
firft
nnto inanim.ated conflicutions. Andthereforewben it'isfaidby.PV'/fW, and aflertcd by divers others, thacwe are only nourifhedWiivihg^ bodies, and fuch as ^p. fome wafproceeidirtg from thertt<=that^'W j.^hd' fruits, effeas, parts, or feeds thereof; tta?y4wv'fe> la^(^t ad^' ofi;^ Vefy^ agreeable umouttlrhulation j for thefe indeed^e fTt^io^Fefeeiv^'a -itek and immediate cohverfion, as holding fome coiTvm unity' wrth^du^felyis*,/' ''" -^ '" ^-;and 'conr^iniR.^ approximate difpofitions unto ankiiiftlttn:''/ -/J
Secondly, (as i$^ar^ued'by'>^i^/^ef/-'a^ainft the Pytha:g6riai)&-)''ivhadi Syrhe ai^^eH of li^^ rural heat it recei^'ett^a corpiiiency oc incriflation-pfogre^oiiai^ittoic^^ cmv^aiCioh ;r:wbi6b^not\^ith0andite('^nndblc<i6led^^
feeve't ppopeply nouri(1-ierhbefreitsa{miiilatiOff,
'
"
"'
^^^^ jdnrjiV;
-,
the aaion'of hekidoth Wot condbnie bat>lr.^g^ithic bod\s'9h4-''*^'^tt^^ .T.rV.u-^ v -jji nuation raiher thsn for nutrition, difpordth ipffeip t^^uliw>n. '-'^' ^ ^' \ h nid: r no ' Thirdly, (^ A/iihkh k tht itv^inricnt o fJif^^^l'}^^^ ceivpd inDoEh3feody,iimuft-'bethQr^i!n^a confiderable'fpace r*a^^^ i>ot imbiedititely esptitteijii Mo^yl^yp but momemally remaliiiWg:'' itibh.^ ^
'
>l
i -.
bodifi$ii^iliDifat:iid'iprop<mka*iblt ^ak:e'f^.'kfe^cioftvajfif)fl
f^i^^'^k^
length
Cc
10
,\.
./, -!
Enffumesinto Vtd^of
^
Bpok^j.
krigtb enough to refrigerate the heart j which having once perform" ed, left bc;ing it felf heated again, it ihould fuffocate tnat part, ic maketh no Qay, but hafteth back the fame way it pafled in. 'Fourtnly, the proper ufe : aire attrailed by the lungs, and without which there is no durable continuation in life, is not the nutrition of parts but the contemperation cf that fervour in [he heart, and the ventilation of thatiirealwaye? maintamed in the forge of life> whe%by ajthou^h in iou^e nlanner k ^-oncuireth unto nutrition, yet can it no:receive: the proper name of nutriment. And therefore by ///^/(trr^)
*wj<p.
^^^
-J.
-g
terjTiefj
Al'imcnwm
is,
r.on
no nou-
rishment.
That
guage, ^onferving the bpdy, not nourilHi^ the lame ;. not repairing i^by aflimulation, but preferving it by ventilation ; for thereby the nfiitqral-^ram.elis-preferved: fromextinition,and fo the indi: iduum fupported infomc way like nut.ition. So when it is faid by the fime Author, Th/ma cofitrarium corpori alimemtimtrahit^ relicjua-Qmnlo idem^
it;
tlje
not to be taken in a Ikidl: and proper fenfe ; but the qfuality in one, the fub;lance is meant in. the other.. For aire in regard of our natural heatis cold, and in that quality contrary unro ic; but what is properly aliment, of what quality foever, is potencially the fame,and in.
is
;
a/abltandial identity
unto
ic.
V-f
"-
Again, fomearefofar from affirming the. re to aft'bcd any nutriment, that they plainly deny it to be any Elem.enc, or that it entreth. intp mixt bodies, as any principle in their compohtion?, but performefh.qther ofScGsin the Univerfe ; as .to hll all vacuities about the to maintain fires earth or Ibeneathic, to convey the heat of the Sun, apd flakmesjfjto'f^rvefbr the flight of volmis, refpiration of bieathrn^ Animals, and refrigeration of otners. And although we receive itr ayarn Wherein vaElem.ent, yet fmce the tranfmut ation of Llem.ents and fimpk bodie.^ pour is commonly Bii^ not beyond great queRion, lince alfok is no eafie matter to demon-' iiakco for air. jj^^^^g ^^^^ ^^^^ j^ fp much as convertible into water; how cranfmucable i^is. into llerhy may be of deeper doubt. And although the aite attrati^ed may be conceived tt nouriili the invifible flame of life, in as much as common and culinary flames are nouriflied by the aire about them ; we make fome doubr whether air is tbepabulous fupply of fire, much leife that flame is properly aire kindAnd the fame before us, hath been denied by the liord of F<rrM^: led. lam , in his Tca^ of life and Death, and alfo by Dr. Jerden in his book.of ;Hineral{>vate's. For that which fubftonn;(llymaintaineth thefire^ is ^t^*^Pii^^t^^JbIe"^3^t.'C'" in the kindled body, and not the ambient aire, ttr^c*!!"*'" nffordeth exhaJajtion tto its fuliginou*; atom.es ; nor that which or Kucbin'fi:7 ^^^ich caufeththe flame prop^ij^^o be. termed aire, but rather as he exprefleth il^ it,the accenfloi^ offuliginous exhalations, which contain an un^tuofiry in ihem,and ajif? from the matter of fuel, which opinion-is very probable,
^
'
:
'
it^yvil falye
from
Book. 3.
ifj
Ms firft, how fire is ftricken out of flintspthat is, not by kindling the a;c
from the coUifion of twe hard bodies; for then Diamonds iliould do the like better then flincs,but rather from the fulphur and inflamable effluviums contained in them. The like, faith Jorden^ we obferve in canes and
.\Yoods,that are uni^uoi.s
or collihon, not by kindling the air about thein, bur the inflairiable oile Why the fire goes out without air? that is,bec.uife the fu v^iihin chem.
liginous exhaluions w.^nting evaporation,
recoil
ntc goes
cboak it, as is evident in cupping-;;Ufle<; and the artifice of charcoals, oaj commonly where if the aire be alto^etlKr excluded, the fire "oes out* Why fome " ^""^^7 lamps include(i in clofc bodies have burned many hundred years, as that t^^er condnudifcovered in the Sepulchre of Tk///'^ the fiftex oi Cicero^ and that of O//- ed many ages ia bins many years afrer, near Padna ? l^caufe whatever vva their matter, flame withooc either a preparation gold, odA^^/>/^/?, the duration proceeded from the fuel, purity of their oik, whicbyielded nofuliginous exhalations to fuffocate. the hre; for if air had no.uriilied. the flame, it had not continued many minutesjfo; it would have been fpenc and wafled by the fire.Why a piece, of flax will kindle, althouv,h it touch not the flame? becaufe the fire extenderh further, then indeed it is vilible, being at fome diflance from the week, a pellu^de and tranfparent body, and thinner then the air it felfe. hy mettals in their liquation, although they intenfly heat the air above their furface, acife not yet into a flame, nor kindle the air about them ; becaufe theirfulphur is more fixed, and they emit not irifla.mable exhaLations.And la(ily, why a lamp or candle burneth only in the aii about it,, aiid enflameth not the air at a diftance from it? becaufe the flame extendethinot beyond the inflamabk effluence,but clofely adheres unto the^ori[jaalofitsinflamation? and therefore it only warmeth, not kindletk hich notwithltanding it will do, if the ambient air bo, the air about it. impre;^nate with fubtile inflam.abilities, and fuch as are of quick accenfias ej^eriment is trade in a clofe room,upon an evaporation of fpiffii rits of wiiie and Cam.phire; as fubterraneous fires do fometimes happen;,, ajad as Cre'-ftt and Alexand' rs boy in the bath were fee on fireby Na^tha^ Laftly,he Element of air is foar from nouriiliing the body^hat fome kive queflioneu the power of wate^ many conceiving it cntei:^ not the body in the power of aliment, or that from thence there proceeds a fubflantial fupply. Fo: befides that (om.e creatu'-es drink notatall>unto others k performs the common office.of -air, and ferves for refrigeration of the heart, as unto-fiiliesjwho receive it, and expel it by the -Gils., even unto our felves, and more perfefl Animalsy though -many ways affluent thereto, it performs ho fubftant-ial nutrition-, ferving,for refrigeration, dilution of Colid alimenr,and its elix4tion in the ftomack;whichrrom thence as a vehicle it conveysthr ough lefle acceflibla cavities into the \yver,from thence into the veins,^nd fo in a rorid tibftanc^ through the ca"^^
whkh having performed, it is afterward^ excluded by urine, fweat and feroMsfeparations. And this opinion furel)^,
Ccj
peffeffed;.
j?8
pofleflfed
Bookj,
the Ancients , for when they fo highly commended that wafuddenly hot and cold, which is without all Civour. the li^hcthinneft, the and which vvill foonefl boil Beans or Peafe, they had no -eft, confide ration of mtritlon ; whereunto had they had refpeil, they would
ter Vehich
is
and turbid ftreams, in whofe confufion ac fome Nutriment, and not jejune or lim.Although Iconfefs, pid water, nearer the frnplicicy of its Elenent. 'ACec4of our cleareft waters, and fuch as feemfimple unto fenfe; are much complnisandm- pounded unto reafon , as may beobfervedin the evaporation of large a befide terreoas refidence wherein fome fait quantities water of is alj!.?!!*!!?" ; S rain which water, appenrmg alfoobrervablem pure IS fo found, as and ter. iZi'bavius torn, empty, is full of feminil principles, and carrieth vital atomesof plants ^,Ql^m. and Anim.als in it , which have not pcrillied in the great ci culation of Nature ; as may be difcovered f om feveral Infeils gene:ated in rain waand (befide the iter, from the prevalent fuilification of plants thereby real plant of C/?yc'r/f) from ve^^-sLable figurations, upon the fides of
have furely
grofs
leaft,
commended
-,
glafles, fo rarely
delineated in fro'b. AH which considered, feverer heads will be apt enough to conceive the opinion of this Animal, nor much unlike that of the Aftomi , or
-
men. vvirhout mouths in ?//7 ; futable unto the relationl^f the Mares and their fubventaiTeous conceptions , from the Weftern ^ wind, and in fome way mo"e unreafonable then the figment of "^,4^/<ir4 the fam.ous horfe in Arlofio^ which being conceived by flame and wind, never tatted grafs, or fed on any grofl'er provender then ayr ; for rhiis way of Nutrition was anfwerable unto the principles of his gene* Which being not airy, but grofs and feminal in the Chameleration. on , unto its confervation there is required a folid paliurc and a food congenerous unco the principles of its Nature. Thegrounds of this ofimon are many, the firtt obferved by Theo^hr^fiw was the inflation or fweliinr, of the body m.ade in this Animal upoti infpiration or drawing in its breath which people obferving, have But this effeil: is rather occafioned upoii 'thought it to feed upon ayr. tbe greatnefs of its lungs, which in this Animal are very large , and by their backward fituation, afford a more obfervable dilatation; and though their lungs be lefs, the like inflation is alfo obfervable in Toad>. Afeconi is the conrimied hiation or holding open its mouth, which, mefn obfirvinjy conceive the inref>ticn thereof to receive th alimenti of ayr ; but this is alfp occafioned by the greitnef^ of itslungs ; for rc-^: pletion whereof not having a fuflicientor ready fupply by iino(toilJi:^ic> fis enforced to dilate and ho Id open the jaws. The third-is the paucity of blood obferved in this Ammat , fcbrce at :aMto-1be foL'ndbut in tlie eye; and about the heart which -defet^ being obferved, inclinedfome into thoughts, that the ayr v\!%is a; fufBcient
in Stain
;
l
'
'
'
'
miintenanctffotthefeexeinguio'ifs
'cify ^of
'J^artss;
Book. 5
lid
j^
Nutriment we do not controvert ; as may be obferved in other forts of Lizards, in Frogs and divers tiHies ; and therefore an Horfe-Ieech will not readily faften upon every fifh ; and we do not read of much blood that was drawn from Frc^s by I^lice , in that famous battel of
Hom:r.
groiuid which begat or pro -noted this ohereof without any vihble food; which continuation long pinion , is the they eat not any at alJ. precipitoufly conclude obfervmg7 It canfome not be denied it is (if not .the moft of any) a very abliemious animal, and fuch as by r<;afon of its frigidity , paucity of blood, and iatitancy ia the winter (about which time the obfervations are often made ) will lonj fnbrill without a vifible fuftentation. But a like condition may be alfo^obferved in majiy other animals, for Lizards and Leeches , as we have made tryal, will live fome moneths without fuftenance ; and we have included Snails in glafles all winter, which have returned to feed
not conceived to , and is moreover fufficiently conviled by experience. And therefore proba bly other relations are of the fame verity , which are of the like affinity; as is the conceit of the Rhint^ce'm Pcrjia^ thtCanls Ltvis oi Arn r'lca^ and the M^.mcodiata or bird of Paradife in India. To aflfign a reafonof this abliinence in Animals', or declare hov^pafs all their lives without
for fo to argue
is
fallacious
without a fupply there enfueth no deftrudtive exhauftion , exceedeth the lortunms Licetus in his excellimits and intention of m.y dilcourfe. lent Trail, dc his qm diH v iv urn fme aliment o ^ hath very ingenioufly attempted it; deducing the caufe hereof from an equal conformity of natural heat and moiflure, at leaft no confide rableexuperancy in either; which concurring in an luiaftive proportion , the natural heat confumeth not the moifture ( whereby enfueth no exhauftion ) aixl the condition of natural moifture is able torefifttheflenderadlionof heat ( whereby it needeth no reparation ) and this is evident in Snakes , Lizards, Sniils, and divers othet Infei"ls latitantmanym.onethsinthe year ; which being cold creatures, containing a weak heat in a crafs or copious hum.idity , do long fubfift without nutrition.- For the adliviry of the agent, being not able to over-mafter the refifta nee of .the patiAnd upon the like grounds it is, ent, there will enfue no deperdition. that cold and phlegm.atickbodyes, and (as Hippocrates determineth) Now the fame bar m.ony and ttathat old men will beft endure fafting; tionaryconftitution) as it happeneth in many fpecies, fo doth it fall outfcmetime in, Individuals. Fo**we read of many who have lived lon^ time without aliment J and befide deceits and impoftures, there may be veritable relations of fome, whowithout a miracle , and by peculiarity of temper , have far out-fafted E/ias. VV hich nocwitbftanding doth not take off the miracle ; for that may be miraculoufly eflfedV edinojie, which is naturally caufable in another. Som.e naturally li
vi^U
xoo
Enqairteunto Vu\qfir
Book.
ving unto an hundred ; unto which age, others nocvvichftanjinj could not attain without a miracle.
CHAP.
Of
'TTHc common opinion of
XXII.
the Oflrc'Uae,
is confirriied by the affirmations of many, befide (warms of others, Rhodi^hiM in his preledlions taketh it for granted , Johames LaMgins in his Epiflles pleidech
experiment for
it
the comm.on pidture alfo confirmeth it , which ufuAnimal with an horfhoein its mouth. Notwithftand-
ing upon enqui.y we find it very queltionable, and the Negative feems mott reafonaoly entertained , whofe verity indeed we do the rather deJire, becaufe hereby we fhall relieve our ignorance of one occult quality for in the lift thereof it is accounted, and in that notion imperioufly obtruded upon us. For my own part, although I have had the fight of this animal, I have not had theoppo.timiry of its experiment, but have received great; occafion of doubt, from learned difcourfes there;
on.
For
Artftotle and
Oppi^ms
;
either omitting
as fabulous.
as dubious,
or as the
,
Comaffirm-
mcnt faith,
that
it
rejecting
if
ijig
this Animal ; cy /."/? delivereth, Leo Afric^nns^ mention of iron who livedin thofe Countryes wherein they moll abound, fpeakcth c-iSurdum ac fa-npLx .:niinutively , and but halfway into this afl'ertion mmale^^ cjuicciHid mvtriH^ abfcju-i dclttia-, ufqae nd fcrrum dcvor.ir FerMclitu in his fecond De ahd'tns rt'rum amjis^ extenuates it, and 'RJe-
is
wonderful in
lamif in his
Comm.cnt thereof
it,
poiltively denies
\
m.cntally refuted
xa
zAlbtrtKs M^xvrnm
;
Aldrovandm
Tridcnti ejf-.m^ohftrvdzii^
at
my being at
exclude
it
Trent,
undigeiled again.
it
bly)ihefto-
Odli ic!
aiier
mj
^
bein^ an ocx:ult quality , which contemns the Law of Reafon , anddefeni';>itfelf by admitting no reafon at Al. As for nor will we affirm tliar 1^^^ pofTibiUty we lliall not at prefenc difpute
phical argument J
;
lion
all
Book*
all
j
3
if any
zot
fuchthe;e be , we fufpeft this effe<a rather from fome way of cor. ofion , then any of digefUon ; not any liquid redu6lion or tendance to chilification by the power of natural heat , but rather fofne
but
i^omack, which So rufty Iron cramm.ed down the throat of a Cock, will become terfe and clear again in irs gizzard: So the Counter which according to the relation of v^w^/'?^ rem.ained a whole year in the body of a youth , and came out much confum.ed at lall mii ,ht fuffer this diminution, rather from fliarp and acide humours, then the ftrength of natural heat, as he fuppofeth. So filver Iwallowed and retained fome tim.e in the body, will turn black, a^ if it had been dipped in oAmafortu!^ or fome corrofive water, but lead will remain unaltered, fortnat m.ettal containerh in it afweetfaltoc fi!gar, whereby it re{ilieth ordinary corrofion , and will not eafily diffolve even in Aqnafortis. So when for m.edical ufes, we take down the filings of Iron or Steel, we mufl nor conceive it palferh unaltered from us ; for though the grofler parts be excluded again , yet are the ctiffoluble parts extra6led , whereby it becomes effe6tual in deopilations and therefore for fpeedier operation we make extinctions, infulions, and the like, whereby we extract the fair and active parts of the m.edicine ; which being in foiucion, more eafily enter the veins. And this is that ^,
attrition
in the
may
abfterfe
^^
^^'i* .7," the Chymills mainly drive at in the attempt of their fsAurHrn Potabile ; Jj^ thati^, to reduce that indigettible fubftance intofucha form, as may not have bv their be ejeftedby fiege, but enter the cavities, and lefs accelTible parts of the /turuni Fitdbile -I o'l*;. body, without corrofion.
{
fwallowing down fragments of iron," which men obfer\ ini;, by a froward illation, have therefore conceived it digefteththem ; which is an inference not t6 be admitted, as being a fallacy of the confequent, that is, concluding apofitionof the confequent , from, the poiition of the antecedent. For many things are Iwallowed by Animals, rather for condiment, guft or Medicament^rhfin any fubftantial nutriment. So Poultrey, and elpecially the Turkey, do of themfelves take down ftones ; and we have found at one time in the gizzard of a Turkey no lefs then feven hundred. Now thefe rather concur unto ci^eflion , then are themfelves digefted; for we have found them alfo in the ^uts and excrements; but their defcent is very flow, for we have given them ftones and fm.all pieces, of iron, which eighteen dayes after we have found remaining in the Gizzard. And therefore the experiment of Langim and others mitht be miflaken , whilft after the taking they cxpeil:ed it fhould comedown within a day or two after, Thus alfowefwallow Cher, y-ftones, but void them^ unconcofted,-cartd kowCfimywe ufually fay they preferve us from furfeit ; for being hard bodies they ftones may be
The ground of
this conceit
is its
conceive a ftrongand durable heat in the ftomack, and fo prevent the *ou|it precrudities of their fruit And upon the like reafondo culinary opera- yp"on"jt[ng tors obferve, that fleil^ boils belt , when the bones are boilvJd with icv x:berri<s. " Thu>
;
.
Dd
aoi
EnqmriesintoVulgAf
Book.j;
:
Thus dogs will eat graft, which they clkeft not; Thus Camels ro make the water fapid , do raife the mud with their feet Thus horfes will knable at walls, Pid^eons delight in fait (tones. Rats will gnaw iron , and And thus may alfo ^r'lfiotli faith tne Elephant fvvalloweth ftones. the Oeftridge fwallow iron ; not as his proper aliment, burfor the ends above exprdfed , and even as we obferve the like in other Animals. And whether thefe fragments of Iron and hard fubftancesfwal lowed
by the Oeftrid-c , have not alio that ufe in their fto^maks , which ihey ^ivz m other birds ; that is, in fome way to fupply the ufe of teeth , by commolition, grinding and comprelfion of their proper alixenr, upon the a6lion of the ftrongly conformed mufcles of the Itomack ; as the honor'd Dv.Harvej difcourfeth, may alfo be confidered. what eflfedl therefore may be expected from the (lomack of an Oeftridge by application alone to further digeftion in ours, befide the experime'ntal refute of G^/f/r, we refer it unto confiderations above alledged ; Or whether there be any more credit to be given unto the medicine of t///^, who affirms the ftones they fwallow have a peculiar vertue for the eyes, then that of Hi'r^olay.s and P/iji dvAwn from the urine of this animal ; let rhcm determine who can fwallow fo ftrange a traniiP-iffion of qualities, or believe that any Bird or flying Animal doth
feparately anddiftinclly
i
That therefore an Oeiiridge will fwallow and take down iron, iseafily to be granted that oftentimes they pafs entire avvny, if we admit of oAnd thou, h Com- experiment may cular teftimony not to be denied. alfo plead, that fometim.es they are fo altered , as not to be found or excluded in any difcernable parts yet whether ibis be not effeiled by fome way of corrDiion,from iliarp and diiiolving humilities, rather then any proper digeftion; chilifadivc mutation, or alimental converfion , is with goodreafon doubted.
: :
CHAP,
xxiir.
Of Vmcorns horn.
accaint and much GRe of which beireth the
that
profit
is
at leaft
thereof; wherein notwithftandin? mmylpercei/efufpeitanlmpofture , and fome conceive there isnofiichAnimleKtinc. Herein therefore to draw up our determination^ ; beijde the fe^^eral places of Scripture mentioning this Animal
name
t<>
we
Book. 3.
tt^j
that
we are fo
there, are
we
affirtne
many kinds thereof. In the number of Quadrupedes, we will Some doubt concede no iefs then five ; that is, the Indian Qx^y the IndUn Afs, Rhi- '" be made noceros, the Oryx, and that which is more eminently termed O^o^oce- ^^^.^^1 Some in the lift of fifhes, as that dcfcribed by OUm g^J ^^l^^. "* rosy or Vnicornps. J.lbertns and others and iome Unicorns we will allow even among Infects; as thofe four kinds of nafcornous Beetles defcribedby CMnfe^
,
:
many Unicorns
yet are
we
ftilltofeek; for whereunto to affix this horn in queftion, or to determine from which thereof we receive this magnified medicine, we have
noaflurance, or any fatisfailory decifion. For although wefingle out one, and eminently thereto aiiign the name of the Unicorn; yet can we can be fecure what creature is meant thereby ; what conftant iliapc For as far as our endeait holdeth, or in what number to be received. vours difcover, this Animal is not uniformly defcribed, but differently
fet forth
it.
Tllny affirmeth
it is
a fierce
and
Vartornanntu a tam.e and m^anfuete Animal: thofe which G"<2rc'^f^^^ Hor^odecribeth about the cape of good hope, w-re ThcU ilcofii ' beheld with heads like horfes; \\ioi^\y\i\.<:\\ l^^.nomannm behel:1,hede["^"^^Jb" fcribed with the head of a Deer ; Flmy^ '^EllanySoliumy and after thefe Authors, from ocular aflurance, Fmlas Fenetns aflfirmeth the feet of the Unicorn
terrible creature
are unaivided
tJHs
like the Elephants But thofe tvw which Vartoman-' cha^ were as he defcribeth , footed like a Goat. As c///^z?dercribeth, it is in the bi ^nefs of an horfe, as Vartomannns , of
beheld at
and
a Colt ; that which i hzwt ff eaketh of was not fo big as an Heifer ; buc PohIhs Venetm aftirmeth, they are but little Iefs then Elephants. Which are difcriminations very material , and plainly declare, that under the fame nam.e Authors defcribe not th^ fime Animal; fo that the Unicorns horn of one, is not that of another, although we proclaim an equal
vertueinall. Thirdly, Although not in its defcription
/;
<
:1
^
differed
would this alfo afford but little fatisfadlicn , for-the horn we commonly extol, is not the fame with that of the Anthis cients. For that in the defcription of c^//^/? and '^I'mj was black which is fhewed amongft us is commonly white , none black ; and of thofe five which ^c^Z/^^fr beheld, though one fpadiceou?, or of a light red, and two enclining to red, yet was there not any of this complexion
:
among them. Fourthly, What horns foever they be which pafs amongft us,
they are
not furely the horns of any one kind of Animal, but muft proceed from feveral forts of Unicorns. Foribnae are wreathed, ibme-fi6tt That fA-^ mous one which is pref^tved at Sc Dennii, near 7it>ts , hath wrejithy fpiresy and choclesiiry turnings about ic, which agreeth with the defcription of the Unicorns horii in c//iW ; Thofe two in thtJ Tr^aftff*
Dd 2
of
404
of
St.
Enqmrtes
into Vulgdr
Book.
J.
Mark.^x^ plain, and bed accord with thofc of the Indian Aire,or
:
the defcriptions of other Vnicorns; Albertus Magnw defcribeth one ten foot loa^, and at the bale about thirreen inches eompafs And that c,iAntwerf\\\\\c\iGorof!HiBi:canHs6.tUn\)tt\i^ is not much inferiour unto it ; which heft agree i nto thedefcriptions of the Sea-Vnicorns; for
ihefc, as OUns affirmeth, are of that ftren^th and bignefs, as able to peThe fame is more probable, in that it was netrate the ribs of diips. brought from Ifland, from, whence, as Becamts affirmeth, three other were broiicht in his dayes : And we have heard f fome which have
Sea-fide,
peculi.ir but
unto one Animal ; under apprehenfion of the fime verme, we ufe very many; and com.mendthat effedlfrom all, which every one conffnech unto fome one he hach either feen or defcribed. Fifthly, although there be m.any Vnicorns, and confequently many horns, yet many there are which bear that name, and currenrly palle among us, which are no homes at all. Such are thol*e fragm.encs and pieces of Laps ceratites^ common[y ttvmcdCornH foj/iiej\yht:e.o Ba:' tiHihxdnoiti^tihzn twenry feveral forts prefented him for Vnicoms horn.Hereof in fubterraneous cavities, an3 under the earth there are many to be found in feveral parts o^ Germany ;\\hich are but the Lapidefcencies and pecrifa6tive m.utations of hard bodies fometim.c of home, of ^eeth, of bones, and branches of trees, whereof there are fom.efoimperfeilly converted, as to retain the odor and qualities of their origiAgain, in riio7}, nals ; as he relateth of pieces of Afli and Walnut. if not all which pafle amongft us, andare extolled for precious homes, we difcover not an affection common unto other horns ; that is, they m.ollifie not wii^ fire, they foften not upon decoition or infufion, nor will they afford a gelly, or mucilaginous concretion in either; which notwithitending we may effeit in Goats horns, Sheeps, Cows and Fhrts-horn, in the hornofthe -^/3;W<fr<?/, the horn ofthePriftis or Nor do thev become friable or eafily powderable by PhiSwojd-fifh. lofophical calcinition, tnat is, from the vapour or {kam. of water, buc fplit and rift contrary to other horns. Briefly, that which is com.monly received, and whereof there be fo m.any fragments preferved in En?--, land is not only no horn, but a fubihnce harder then a bone,that is,the tooth of a-Morfe or Sea-horfe ? in the midft of the folider part containhorn Unicorns commonly ufed jng a curdled grain, which is not to be found in ivory. This in Northern In'Engknii Rei ion- is of frequent ufe for hafts of knives, or hilts of fvvords,and beiihat it IS. jj^^, burnrbecomes a good remedy for fluxes but Antidotally ufcd, and expofed for Vnicorns horn, it is an infufferable delufion and Wnh more v^eniable deceit, it might have been praf^ifed in Harts-horn. The like deceit may be pradifed in the teeth of other Sea-ariim^Is;in the teeth alfo of the Hippopotamtts, or great animal which frecjuenteth the River A^ilm For we reade that theVame was anciently ufed in ftead of
;
; :
Book. 3.
and Common
Errours',
i05
of Ivory or Elephants tooth. Nor is it to be omitted what hath been formerly fufpe^led, but now confirmed by O/ans }Vorm'ms^ and Thomas Banhol'ifiHs, that thofe long horns preferved as precious rarities in ma-^ ny places, are but the teeth ofNarh whales, to be found about //Z^^, 6V<r'-/W, and other Nortliern regions ; of many feet long, commonly wreathed, very deeply faflened in the upper jaw, and ftanding cireitaccording unto one j>gj^;,/^;,lyforwardy graphically defcribed in ^<rf /><?// Hereof jfencfromaBiiliop oflfland, not feparated from the crany. AlercMorhnh taken notice in his defcription of Ifland fome rehtions hereof th:re feemtobein 'Prc'/>^, who alfodeHvereth that thshoin^iPy-'ifidfo-r^ was in his feccnd voyage brought hither by Fr(?^//^<?r.
W,
Tbefe before the Northern difcoveries, as unknown rarities^ were carri-. ea by Merchants into all parts oi Europe, and thou-:,h found on the Seabut are now become more com.iliore, were fold at very high rates ; mon, and probably in tim.r will prove of little etleem ; and tha bargain of JW// the third, be accounted a very hard one,, whottucknot CO give many thouflind crowns for one. Nor is it threat wonder we may befo deceived in this, being daily galled in the brother Aiitidore Bezoar 'whereof though many be falfe,. f jme-yet one there paifeth amougrt us of more intolerable delufion VMhat paler then the tfiertone, and given by women in the extremity rrcat difeafesjwhich notwithfbnding is no ftone,but feems to be the (to ny feed of fomeLithofpermum or greaterGrumwel;or theLobus Echinatus of C//;,called alfo the Bezoar Nut ; for being broken, it difcovereth a kernel of a legum.inous fa-^ell and tafte,bittet like a Lupine,and will fwell and fprout if fet in the ground, and therefore more fejviceabk fon iilues, then dangerous and virulent difeafes. Sixthly, although we were fatisfed we had the Vnicorns home, ycD were it" no in ury unto reafon to queftion the efficacy thereof ,or whether thofe vertues.pretended do properly belong unto it^For what we obferve^ (and it efcapednot the obfervation of 7^^/w, J(?z/;w' many years paft) none of the Ancients afcribed any m.edicimi or antidotal vertue unto and that which (^lian extolleth whovvas tke firft the Vnicorns horn and only m.an of the Ancients who fpake.of the medical'vertue of any Vnicorn, wasthehornofthe /W/W Affe; whereof, faith he, the Priaces of thofe parts m.ake bowls and di ink therein, as prefervatives aNow the degainft poifon, Convulfions, and the falling (ickneffe. fcription of that horn is not agreeable unto that we comm.end; for that (faiih he)is red above, white below, and black in the m.iddlejwhich is very different from ours,or nny to be feen amon.,ft us. And thus,though the defcription of the Vnicorn be very nncient,yet was there of old no vertue afcribed unto it, and although this amon:,{l us receive the opinion of the f.>me vertue,yet is it noc the fame horn whereunto theAntiencs afcri:
bed
it.
Laftly,
although
we
allow,
it
an antidotal
efficacy,
and fuch as
the
i
Dd3
106
the Ancients
Book. 3.
afcribed thereto
feme vertues
Eitpulfirc of
Poiionj.
.J,
by Moderns not eafily to be received ; and it hath furely fain out in this, as other magnified medicines , whofe operations eftedual in fome difThat fome Antidotal quality it eal'es, are prefently extended unto ail. may have, we have no reafon to deny ; for fince Elks hoofs and horns are magnified for Epilepfies, fince not only the bone in the heart, but '^^ ^'^^^ ^^ ^ ^^^^ '^ Alexipharmacal, and ingredient into the confe<5liGil of Hyacinth, and the Eleduary of Maximilian ; we cannot without prejudice except againft the efficacy of this. But when we affirm it is not only Antidotal to proper venoms, and fubftances deftrudive by qualities we cannot exprefs ; but that it refifteth alio Sublimate, Arfenick, and poyfons which kill by fecond qualities , that is, by corrofion of parts ; I doubt we exceed the properties of iw nature , and the promifea of experiment will not fectire the adventure. And therefore in fuch extremities, whether there be not more probable relief from fat and oyly fubftances, which are the open tyrants over file and corrofive bodyes, then precious and cordial medicines which operate by fecret and difputable proprieties , or whether he that fwallovved Lime, and (Jrank down Mercury water , did not m.orc reafonably place his cure in milk, butter or oyl, then if he had recurred anto Pearl and Bezoar, com.mon reafon at all times, and necelTity in the like cafe would eafily determine. Since therefore there be many Unicorns ; fince that whereto we appropriate a horn is fo varioufly defcribed, that it feemeth either never to have been feen by two perfons, or not to have been one animal ; Since though they agreed mrhe defcription of the animal , yet is not the horn we extol the fame with that of the Ancients ; Since what horns foever they bethatpafsam.oni,us, they are not the horns of one, butfeveral animals Since many in common ufe andhi^^h efteem are no horns at all : Since if they were true horns, yet might their vettues be queftioned: Since though we allowed fome vertues , yetwcrenotothersto be received ; with what fecurity a man may rely on tliis rcm.edy, the mijftrefg of fools bath already inftru^ted fome, and to vvifdome (wnich is nc'ver too wife to learn ) it is not toolarc to confider.
:
CHAP.
Book.}.^
ao-
CHAP.
That aU^if^^^ of
the
XXIV.
,
Land
are In their
THac
all
th;;ir kin-i in
n/-
and
admic of rertrainc. For fome in the Sea arc not ro be matclit at Land, and hold thofe fhapes which terrefirious' forms as may be obferved in the Moon-fifli , or Orthragorifof Raia's, Torpedo's, Oyfters, and many more; ^^^"^^^ forts feveral the cus, * and fome there are in the Land which were never maintained to be in the S^a, asPaiithers, Hyana's, Camels-, Sheep, Moles, and others, which carry no nam.e in I6lhyology, nor are to be found in the exait dcfcriptiRoyidclet'msy
onsof
'^je[ner^oi
Aldrovandm.
Again, Though many there be which make out their nominations, as the Hedge-hog, Sea-ferpents and others ; yet are there alfo very m.any that bear the name of animals at Land , which hold no refemblance iri corporal configuration ; in which account we com.pure Vtilfecnla^ C^" Wiierein nisy Rana, Tajfer, Cu^^a/us, JifllpiSy Turdus^ Lcpns, &c. while fome are called the Fox, the Dog, the Sparrow or Frog-fifh, and are known by comm.on names with thole at Land; as their defcriberi
attert,
gure
they receive not thefe appellations from a total fimilitude in fibut any concurrence in commion accidents, in colour , condition or any (ingle conformation. As for Sea-horfes which much confirm, this aflertion ; in their common defcriptions , they are but Crotefco deliniations which fill up empty fpaces in Maps , and meer pidlorial in
,
futable unto thofe which ( as Pliny ; delivereth) Tmxiteies long ago fee out in the Temple of Domitliii. For that which is commonly called a Sca-horfe, is properly called a Morfe , and m.akes not out that fhape. That which the Ancients nar
about fix inches long, and not prebeyond the claffis of Inleds. That which they tef med Hlptofotamm an amphibious animal about the River Nile , lo little refemoleth an horfe> that as Mathlolns obferN'eth, in .W except the feet , it better makes out a fwine. That which rhey term.ed a Lion, was but a kind of Lobfler and that they called the Bear, wr, but one kind of Crab and that which they named Bos marlmts, was not as we conceive a fifh refembling an Oxe butaSkaireor Thornback , fo named from its bignefs, exprefled by the Greek word Boh^^ which is a prefix of augmeatat!n to many words in that h n ;uage. And therefore, although it b^ not denied that fome in the water do carry a juftifiable refemblance to fome at Land, yet are the major part which bear their names unlike; nor do they otherwifc refemblc the creatines on earth, then they on earth the conftellations which pafs un:
der
2.0%
Book^
Fab. Column
deflirjf. rario^
ribus, orchis,
der animal name sin heaven nor the Dog-tilli at Sea much more m.ake out the Dog of the Land , then that his cognominal or name-fake in the heavens. Now if from a fimilitude infome, it be reafonable to infer a correfpondency in all ; we may draw this analogy of animals upon plants; for vegetables there are whichcarry a near and allowable limilitude unto animals. might alfo conclude that animal iliapes ^^ere generally made out in minerals for feveral ftones there are thic bear their names in relation to animals or their parts , as Lapis a>:amriHs^ Conchites^ Echwites^ Enapha/itcsy <t/gopth^ln7Hs-y and many more;
We
cerceptthccotophvTi,
^^
^^jj j
Batlm and
AldrovandHS.
Moreover if we concede, that the animals of one Elem.ent, mi^ht bear the nam.es -of thofe in the other, yet in {tri6\ reafon the watery produilions fliould have the prenom.ination and they of the land rather derive their names , then nominate thofe of the Sea. For the watery plantations were firrt exiftent , and as they enjoyed a priority in form,
:
had alfo in nature precedent denom.inations but falling not under that Nomenclature of zAdam , which unto terreftrious animals affigned a uam.e appropriate unto their natures ; from fuceeeding fpedators they received arbitrary appellations, and were refpedively denominated unto creatures known at Land > who in themfelves had independent names, and not to be called after them, which were created before them. Lailly, By this aflertion we reftrain the hand of God , and abridge tlie variety of the Creation ; making the creatures of one Element,but an a6ling over thofe of another , andconjoyning as it were the fpccies of things which ikod at diftance in the intelledl of God ; and though united in the Chaos, had feveral feeds of their Creation. For alrhouih in that indiftinguillit Mafs, allthin^^s feemedone, yet feparated by the voice of God , according to their fpecies , they came out in incomm.unicated varieties, and irrelative feminaltie.', as well as divided places ; and fo although we fay the world was made in fix dayes, yet was there as it were a World in every one ; that is, a diftinil Creation of dia diftindiion in time of creatures divided in nature, ftinguiflit creatures and a feveral approbation and fun^ey in every one.
: ;
CHAI^
iai
fijil:
B<H>k. 5
20^
CHAP.
XXV.
,
in
makjng
choice
f fome
Animals
and. abfiaining
from
eati/tg others.
iiow thefe diftin^ions crept into feveral be built upon folid reafon, or chiefthis prailice ; whether Nations and ly fupporced by cuftome or opinion , may admit confideration. For firft there is no abfolute necelTity to feed on any ; and if we re(ift
je6t
V V
and
totally re-
'
not the ftream of Authority , and feveral didu6tions from holy Scripture : there was no Sarcophagie before the flood ; and without the eating of flcfh, ourfathersfrom vegitable aliments, preferved them- Rating of ficfli felves unto longer lives, then their pofterity by any other. For where- Gen. j. i^. as it is plainly faid , I have given you every nerb which u upon the face ^^^ M^ural
of all
tfte
you it
ihall
j^^^y^"*
mfi,
cd by ihc dc"^'
luge,
vegetable^;,
by an exprelTion of enlargem.ent,
all
it is
Eve-
ry
for
you, even
as the
green Gtn.^.s.
although ic be faid that Ahelw^s a Shepherd, and it be not readily conceived the firft men would keep fheep , except they made food thereof; "teat Expofitors will tell us, that it was partly for
their skins, wherewith they were cloathed, partly for their milk, wnereby they were fuftained ; and partly for Sacrifices, which they alfo offered. And though it may feem irtprobable, that they offered fleili , ytz eat not thereof; and^^^/canhirdlybe faid to offer the firftlings of his flock, and the fat or acceptable part, if menufednot totaftthe fame, whereby to raife fuch diftinilions fome will confine the eating of flefh unto the line of C^in , who extended their luxury , and confined not unto the rule of Gcd. That if at any time the line of Seth eat Belli, it was extraodinary, and only at their facrifices ; or elfe (as Grotins hinteth ) if any fuch pradice there were, it was not from the beginning, but from, that time when the wayes of men were corrupted, and whereof it Eating of fltfli is ud, that the wickednefs of man^; heart was great ; the more righte- Tprobably) not ous part of mankind probably conforming unto the diet prefcribed in b (o*i '"'h^'* Paradife,-and the ftate of innocency. And yet however the practice of, flood, men conformed, this was the injundtion of God, and mi^ht be therefore fufticient, without the food of fleili. That they fed not on fleHi, at leaft the faithful pa^ty before the flood, may become more probable, becaufe they refrained the fame for fome time after. For fo was it generally delivered of the golden age and; raign of Saturn ; which is conceived the time of Noah, before the And he that confidereth how agreeable building of BabeL this is unto '
:
And therefore
Ee
the
ttid
EnplrieSittioVul^t
the<raditionsr>f tht Gentiles
;
Book. 3 ^
:
flfsf <
amf^ti(
was of one tongue that Saturn devoured all his fonsbiit three ; that be was the fon of Oceaniu and Thctii ; that a Ship was his Symbole, that he caught the culture of vineyards, and the art o? husbandry, and was therefore defcribed with a fickle ; may well conceive, thefe traditions h.id their origin.il in Noah. Nor did this prailice terminate in him , but was continued at kaft in many after as ( befide the ^^yth^gorians of old, and B amy am now in India , who upon fingle opinions refrain the food of flclli ) ancient Records do hint or plainly deliver. Although we defcend not fo low, as that of ^yEfclcfiades delivered by TorphyriKs^ that men began to feed ^^^ g^^ j^ ^^^ ^^.^^ ^^ ^ygmaleoy/ brother o^Dldo^ who invented fevcthat that age
;
ral
but as
fome
beafts
And
if
we
grave conjeilures, carnivorous animals now, were not flelli de\^ourers then, accor.'ing to the exprelTion of the divine provifion io: them. To every beaft of the earth, and to every fowl of the ayr , I have given eg'.
1.
30.
As is alo colleiled from theherb for meat, and it was fo. up in the Ark ; wherein there feems , to. have been no flefhy For of every kind of unclean bealt provifion for carnivorous animals. and therefore no fiock of fiefli to-futhere wenr but two into the Ark
y^j.y gj-een
fiore laid
ftain
them many dayes, much lefs almoft a year. But when ever it be acknowledged that men began- to feed on
flefh,
yet
how they betook themfelves after to particular kinds thereof, with rejection of many others, is a point not clearly determined. As for
H
nyght
MP
diftTn-
''
the diftin6tion of clean and unclean hearts, the original is obfcure, and falveth not our practice. For no Animal is natu-ally unclean, or hath ^^^^ chara6ler in nature ; and therefore whether in thi^ diHinilion there were not fom.e myftical intention ; whether Mofss after the cirtin6lion made of unclean beafts, did not nam.e thefe fo before the flood by anticipation Whether this difiini^ion before the flood , were not only in regard of facrifices, as thcit delivered after was in regard of food ( for p* ';' were clean for food, which were unclean for facrificc)
:
or whether thC denomination were but com.parative, and of beafts commodious for food, although not fim.ply bad, is not yet refolved*
lefs
And as.for the fame dirtin&on in the time of Mops, long after the Flood) from, thence we hold no reftrt6tion, as being no rule unto Nations befides the Jnves in dietetical confideration , or natural choice of diet, they being enjoyned o r prohibited certain foods upon remote and fccret intentions. Efpecially thereby to avoid community with the Gentiks upon promifcuous commenfiliry or to divert them from the Idolatry of c^^gypt whence they came , they were enjoyned to eat the Gods of cyf^yp/^inthefoodof Sheep and Oxen. Withal in this diftinftion of Animals the confideration was hieroglyphical ; in the bofi^oie and inward fenfc implying an abftiaence from certain vices fymbo-*
:
Ikally
Book. 3.
lically intimated from the nature of thofe animals; as maybe^vell made out in the prohibited meat of Swine, Cony, Oyl, and many more.
At leaft the intention was not medical > or fuch as might oblige unto conformity or imitation ; For fome we refrain which that Law allow t^ eth, as Locufts and many others; and fome it prohibiterh, which are accounted good meat in ftri6t and medical cenfure : as belide m.any fiAies whicti have not fins and fcales, the Swine, Cony and Hare, a dainty diili with the Ancients ; as is delivered by GaUn^ certified by Marti- j^^^^ eutdm' aly as the popular opinion implyed> that men grew fair by the flefh pedctmsttja thereof: by the diet of C^ro , that is Hare and Cabbage; and the fi primLepHt. fiigrnm or Black broach of the Spartans y which was made with the blood and bowels of an Hare. And if we take a view of other Nations, we fhall difcover that they For in fome the abrefrained many m.eats upon like confide rations. itinence was fymbolical , fo Pythagoras enjoyned abftinence from filli; th at is, luxurious and dainty difries: So according to Herodotus ^ fome c/ff;j7r/W refrained fwines ftefh , as an im.pure and fordid animal: which whoever but touched, was fain to wafli himfelf. Some abrtained fuperftitioufly or upon religious confideration : SO' the Syrians: refrained Fiili and Pigeons ; the <jgyptlans of old, Dogs, Eels and Crocodiles ; though Leo Afrlcar.m delivers , that many of and HeroAotus alfo affirmeth , that late, do eat them with good guft the o^gyptians of Elephant ia ( unto whom they were not facred ) did eat thereof in elder times ; and Writers teftifie, that they are eaten at And lb, as C<efar reporxs, unto the anthis day in Iftdia and America. cient Brit aim it was piaculous to taft a Goofe, which difh at prefent no ^^^- ^' iO^^^
;
table
is
without.
^*^'
Unto fome Nation? the abfiinence was political and for fome civil advantage: So the T'/jf;//^/;^;^^ refrained Storks , becaufe theydertroyed their Serpents ; and the like in fundry animals is obfervable in other Nations. And under all the fe confide rations were fome animals refrained fo the Je-!ves abftained from fwine at firft fym.bolically, .1 Embleme of impurity ; and not for fear of the Leprofie, as Tacitus '\ijlould pur up:
.-,v-\
on them.
fuckled in that
The Cretians luperrtitioufly, upon tradition that Jnpiter was Countreyby a Sow. Some zAigyftiayis politically, becaufe they fupplyed the labour of plowing by rooting up the grounl And upon like confiderarions perhap.; the Phmlciam and Syrians fed not on this Animal and as So/ims reports, the Arabians alfo and /dia-ns. A great part of mankind refraining one of the bell foods, and fuch as Pythagoras him.felf would eat who, as Arijioxcnni records refufed not to feed on Pigs. Moreover while we finale out feveral dillies and rejeit others, the feleftion feems but arbitrary , or upon opinion; for m.any are commended and cryed. up in one j^e, which are decried -and naufeated in
;
;
a^I.G<M.\^x^\
Ee
another.
;2I2
Ceriaindiflics
vith"ihe *Anci ^
Book. 3.
another. Thus in the dales of Aiecenas-, no fleih was preferred before young AlVes ; which norwithftanding became abominable unto fucceedAt the Table of Heliogabalus^ the co nbs of Cocks were appetices.
^Z
ents.notfo
an eftcemed fervice
much
^^^^
cfleemcd
The Sumen or belly and dugs of fwine with Pi:, and fometimes beaten
and bruifed unto death the Womb of the fame'Animal, efpeaally that was barren, or elfe had calt her youn^ ones, though a tough awd meinwhereunto neverchebranouspart, was magnified by Roman Pallats How Uc^ Mnrla and Garum, iefs we cannot perfwade our ilom.ack^. would humour our guft I know not ; but furely few there are that could delight in their Cyceon ; that is, the comm.on draught of honey, cheefe, parcht barley-flower, oyl and wine which notwithrtanding was a comn^cnded mixture, and in high efteem among them. We m.orrifie our felves wiih the diet of fiili , and think we fare courfly if we refrain from the flefh of other animals. But antiquity held another opinion hereof: when Pythagoras in prevention of luxury advifed, not fo much as to taft onfilli. Since, the Khodlam were wont to call them, clowns that eat flelli: and fince P/^fo to evidence the temperance of the noble Greckj beforeTriyy, obferved, thatit wasnotfoimd they fed on fil"h , though they lay fo long near.the Jfc/lsfponty and was only obferved in the companions of Me-^slaus^ that bsing almoil ftarved, they betook rhem.felves
: ;
.
Od
/r.40.
to filliing about
P/?<roy.
Nor will
I fear )
ans, be a fufticient ground to confirm o: warrant com.m.on practice , as is.deducible from ancient Write s , r:oni Nippocrares ^ Galtn^ Simeon
;'i^."^
'
about
Nomas and CaJhllaKits. So Arifiotlc and commend the fle(h of young Hawk^ Gulo: the flclli of Foxes Autumn when they feed on Grapes but condem.neth Quails, and
:
"'
^rHum
J^^^keth
think they have fared hardly, if Gat.'tAlim.fac. t^ice and every table extolleth. in tinges of extrem.ity they have defcended fo lowasDo:;s: but Ga/in lib.^.
G'<j/.5';if'./<<f.
,.
Men
H-*^^
^^iuptrfit
and gelded, they were the food of many Whelps with that of Birds: who alfo com m.ends them againft the Spleen, and to promote conception. The opinion in (7^/<;j time , which Plinj alfofolloweth, deeply condemned Ho: fe-flelli, and conceived the very blood thereof deftru(5^ive; but no diet is m.ore comm.on among the Tanars^ who alfodrink their blood. And though this may only feem an adventure oiNorihr n ftomacks, yet as Herodotus tells us, in the hotter clime of Perfia^ the fame was a convival diljh, and folemnly eaten at the feafts of their whereat they dreffed whole Horfes, Camels and AfTes connativities temning the poverty of Grecian feafls, as unfurniflh 'd of diilies fufficienc
(ielivereth, that yoiuig, fat,
Nations; and
///f/^o^rr^rf j
to
fill
x\\t bellies
of their guefls.
Again^ While we confine our diet in feveral places, all things almoft are eaten, ii' wet^ksin, the whole e^rth for that which is.refufed in
;
one
'
Book. 3
one counrrsy u ^cczozzi
in
213
, coUedive judgement Thus were ic not or the world, particular diftin^5;Uons .ire overthrown. h.ird to lliew, thxU Tygers, Elephants, Camels, Mice, Bats and others, ^:iz the food of feveral countryes , and Lerim with others delivers, that fo.ne ^w^'/c^^z-^eatofall kinds, net refraining Toads and Serpents: and fome have run fo hi^h, as not tofpare th^ fleili of man a pradiceinexcufabl9> nor to be drawn into exampjgj^ a diet beyond the rule and IrgelHndulgenceofGod. As for the objeilion againft beafts and birds of prey, it acquitteth not ourprail:ice,who obfervenotthii difiinilion in fillies; nor regard the fam.e in our diet of Pikes, Perches and Eels nor are we excufed herein, Nor is^ if we examine the ftomacks of Mackerels, Cods and Whitmgs. the foulnefs of feed fufficient to juftifie our choice ; for (befide that their natural heat is able to convert: the fame into laudible aliment ) we re^* fufe not m.any whofe diet is more impure then fome which we rejevil as may be coniidercd in hogs, ducks, puets, and many more. Thus we perceive the practice of diet doth hold no certain courfe,, nor folid rule of feleilion or confinement fome-in an indilHnc;t vora-
and in the
-,
almoll any, others out of a timerous pre-opinion, refraining herein indeed necelfity, reafon and Phyfick, are the beltvery many. determinators. Surely m.any animals may be fed on, like many plants,thou^-hncr inalim.ental, yet medical confiderations Whereas having raifed Antipathies by prejudgement or education , w-e often naufeate proper m.eats, and aohor that diet which difeafe or temper requireth. Now whether it were not beft to conform unto the fim.ple diet of oun forefathers, whether pure and fimple waters were not m.ore healthful then fcrm.ented liquors whether there be not an ample futficiency^ without all flelh, in the food of honey, oyl, and the feveral parts ofcity eating
Problem,'
milk
and all
forts
of
fruits
fince ei-
have rightly food-of one countrey be not m.ore agreeable unto another? howindifunclly all tempers apply unto the fame, and how the diet of youth and
is confounded were confiderations much concerning healthy and mi^ht prolong our dayes, but muft not this difcourfe.
may be made almoftof ail? Whether Nations confined unto feveral m.eats ? Or whether the comm.on
^
,
old age
E e\3
CHAPi^
-2
f4
Book
CHAP. Of
XXVI.
fvjjale.
\7 \J Hat Sperma-Ceti
Ve miicmtri'
tiso^iin.
* ^^ Hofwamus
is, men mi. ht juftly doubt, fince the learnin hi*4vork of Thirty years, faith plainly, N^j-
" CIO
ons
quid fit. And therefore rtSed not wonder at the variety of opiniwhile fome conceived it to htflos marls, ond many, a bituminous ;
upon the fea. That it was not the fpawn of the Whale, according to vulgar conceit, or nominal appellation, Phylofophers have alwayes doubted noteafilyconceiTing the Seminal humour of Animals, fhould be inflamablc;
fubllance floating
;
or of a floating nature.
'
That it proceedeth from the Whale, befide the relation of CUJins and other learned obfervers , was indubitably determined , not m.any yeai-s f.nce by a Spenna-Ceii Whale, caft on our Coall: of No;fAk^. Which to lead on further enquiry, we cannot omit to inform. It con^. ^**^ ^^ ^ rained no lefs then fixty foot in length , the head fomewhat peculiar, with a large prominency over the mouth ; teeth only in the lower jaw, received into flel"hy fockets in the upper. The wei;:hc of the largest aNo griiUy fubHances in the m.outh, commonly called houx. two pound Whale-bones only two fhort fins feated forwardly on the back the NearH/fj- eyes but fm.all, the pizel large, and prom.inimt. AleflerWhale of this '" kind about twenty years ago, was call up on the fam.e fhorc. The defcription o! this Whale feems omitted by Gefm'r^ RondeUtlns, and the fird Editions cf ^'y/iro-t/^,W/f , but defcribed in the Latin imprelTionof P^.rem, in the Exoticks of C/afptiy and the natural hiilory of Nir:beriiHs j but m.ore am.ply in the Icons and figures of Johr.~
,
J-
(lonm.
Mariners (who are not the beft Nomenclators ) ^^ * or rather Glbhartdi. Of the fame appellation we
called
it
a fahartas,
m.eet with
one
in
"A^f'dcietifis, called by the Fr; r/?Gibbar< fom. its round and gibbous back. The name G!kl>i^:rtn we find alfb given unco one kind of GreenUnd \\ hales But this of ours Teemed not to anfwer th * V\ hale of that denomination; but more agreeable unto the 7 >7/;?;/.2 or Sperma-Ceti Wh.ile according unto the account of out Gremhwd defcribers in ?nrchai. And m.aketh the third among the ei.^ht remarkable Whales of that
:
'
Caift.
:.
having been dead divers daies, nnd unier putrifadion, flowed dreams of oyl nnd Sperma-Ceti ; which was carefully taken up end preferved by tlie Co.i{l:rs. But u';:on breaking up, the Magnzin of Sperma-Ceti, was found in the head lying in foulds nnd co'urfes, in the bignefs of goofe e 'gs , encompafl'ed with large flaky fubllanccs, as large as a iXi\\\i head, in form of hony-combs, very white and " ^ full ofovl. Some
this
,
Whale
Book. 5
1 <
refemblance or trace hereof there feetns to be in the Vhyfiter or Capidolioo^ %pndeletiHSy while he delivers, 'that afatnefsmore liwhich being our, the quid then oyl, runs from the brain of that animal Reliquesare like theskales of Sardines prefled into a mafs j which melting with heat, are ai;ain concreted by cold. And this many conceive to have been the fiili which rwallowed /<?/. Akhoiii.h for tb; lar'cnef? of the mouth, and frequency in rhofe feas, m.ay poifibly be the Lam'n'.. Som.e part of the Sperma-Ceti found on the lliore was pure, and needed little depuration ; a great part m.Lxed withfelid oyl, needing good preparation , and frequent exprelHon , *to bring it to a flaky coniiftency. And not only the head, but other parts contained it. For the car nous parts being roafted , the oyl dropped our, an axun^^ious and thicker parr fubfiding ; the ovl it felf contained alfo much in 'it, and flill after many years lome is obtained from ir. Grecnh-rd Enquirers feldome meet with a Whale of this kinde and therefore it is but a contingent com.modity, nor reparable from any o-' thtr. It flameth white and candent like Champ hire , but diflblveth not in^^'^^/orr/j, likeit. Som.e lumps containing about two ounces, kept ever f^nce in water, afford a frefh, and flofculous fmell. Well prepared and feparated from the oyl , it is of a-fubftancc unlikely to decay , and m.ay out-Iall the oyl required in the compofition oiMathiolm. Of the large quantity of oyl, what firft came fo th by exprelTion from thzSper??:a Ceti y grew very white and clear , like that of Almonds or Ben. what cam.c by deco6lion was red. It was found to fpend much in the vefl'els which contained it: It freezeth or coagulateth quickly with It fee ms different from the oyl of any cold, and the newer fooneft. other anim.al , and very miuch fruftratcd the expe6lation of our foapboilers, as not incorporating or mingling with their lyes. But it m.ixCombers of eth well with painting colours, though hardly drieth at all. wool I made ufe hereof, and Country people for cuts, aches and hard tuIt may prove of good m.edical ule , and fer\x for a ground in rn, ours. ^ com.pounded oyls and balfomes. Diftilled, it affords a Itrong oyl, with a quick and piercing water Upon Evaporation it gives a balfame, which is rctter performed with Turpentine diflilled with Sperma-Ceti. Hnd the abomJnable fcent permitted , enquiry had been made into Since that flrangc compofure of the head, and hillock of fledi about it. the workmen .iflfirm.ed, they m.et with Sperma-Ceti before they came tc the bone , and the head yet preferved, feems to confirm the fame. The fphinilers infer\'ing I'Jito the Fiftula or fpouc , mi^ht have been examined, fince they are fo notably contrived in other cetaceous Animals j as alfo the Larynx or Throtle , whether anfwerable unto th.it of Dolphins and Porpofes in the ftrange compofure and figure which it maketh. what figure the flomack mairitained in thl? animal of one jaw o^ teeth, fince in Porpofes which abound in both, the ventricle is trebly divided, and fince in that formerly tal^n nothing was found but vv^eds and a Lo-
Some
ligo.
,2j^
ligo.
Enquiries into
^d^ar
Book. 5
The heart, lungs, and kidneys, had not efcaped ; wherein are remarkable differences from animals of rhe land, likewife what humor the bladder contained, but efpecialiy thefeminal parts, which mii^ht have determined the difference of that humour , from this which beareth its
name.
In vain it was to rake for Ambergreece in the panch of this Levlathany zs Greenland di^cowt^tii y and attefte of experience dii^ate , that they fometimesfwallow great lumps thereof inthefea; infufferable fetour denying
Cui
dutcis odor
tu ri ex re
quiUbet.
th.it enquiry. And yet if, as Tar^celfUs encourageth, Or^^^^ n^akes the bell Musk , and from the moft felid fubftanccs may be drawn the moft odoriferous Eflences ; all that h;id not FcfpafMns Nofe, might boldly fwear, here was a fubjecl fit for fuch extradions.
CHAP. XXVII.
ConiJ^endloHjly of fttndry Tenents coKcern'wg other ey^nima/s,
which
examined
from great Antiquity , and before the Melody of 5)note or Swans hath been commended , and For thus we read in Plathat they fmg moft fweetly before their deith. or tranfmigrationof the to, that from the opinion of M:teniffnchofis fouls of men into the bodies of beafts moft futableunto their humane condition, after his death, Or/?/?: i the Mufician became a Swan. Thus \Yas-it the bird of ^fr-llo the god of Mufick by the greeks ; and an Hieroglyphickof mufick among the c/^^)'/?r/^^, from whom the Greeks derived the conception hath been the affirmation of many Latines,and hath not wanted aflertors alm.oft from every Nation.
firft
,
A Nd
-,
Of
S2nj,'ind
by cyEHan,
Hger-^
All whiirh notwithftanding, we find this relation doubtfulty received as an hear- fay account by Bellonim, as a falfe one by Plinyy
expreOy refuted hyA'fyndlus in Athen^^nsy and feverely rejefled by Scawhofe words unto C*:r^*T are thefe. 1)e Cygnl vrro ca-atH fnaauem cum '^ arent e mendac lorum Grecciaja^iare anfus cs, ad LuclV'jjitr ani tr'ihtsnal, afudqum jjovi clu^uid d'lcai , Jtatiio, Authors alTo that foimtenance it, fpeak not fuisl\i6"io.iIy of it. Some affirm.ing they fing not till ihey die, fome that they fing, yet die not. Som.e fpeak gene ral-ly, as though this note were in all ; Tome biit particularly , as though it were only.in fome fome in places remote, an.i where we can have no trial of it ;. others in place;? where eve-y experience can refute it; as Aldrovandm upon elation, delivered, concerning the Mufick of the Swans Tlie figuration on the river of Thames near Londov. to be found in jsJow that which countcn-mceth, and probably c onfirmerh this opiniEiks, ar.d nx ^,^^ j^ ^j^^ fttange and unufual conformation of the wind pipe , or vocal in corrraion obferved firft by Aldrovandm, an:! conceived by (,j.an iii this animal
beforc ceath.
-,
their fingin^i
fome
3ogk
3
this
^ty
it-farexcccdeth
isi
For in
itsleirgtb
when
it art-
therhrciat,but <kfcend-
ingfiriUnto a capfulary reception of the bteaft boncjbya Serpentine and Trumpet recurvation it afeendeth again into the neckj- and fo by length thereof a great quantity of ayr is received; and by the figure thereof But to fpeak indinerently, this formatia Mufical modulation effefle'd. on of the Weazon , isnot peculiar unto the Swan , but common alfo unto the Platca or Shovelard, a bird of no mufical throat ; And as Jlidrovandtis confefferh , may thus be contrived in- the Swaij to contain a larger Hock of ayr , whereby bein^ to feed on weeds at the bottom, they mi^lit the longer fpace detain theit heads under water. But were this formation peculiar, or had they unto this effe<Sl an advantage from this
a."known and open difadvantage from another ; that For no Latiroilrous animal (whereof neverthelefs thete are no {lender num.bers) were ever commended for their note, or accounted among thofe animals which havi been inftrufled to fpeak.
part
is,
a flat-bill.
'
"When therefore we confider the dilfention of Authors, the falfity of relatiom, the indifpofition of the Organs , and the imm.ufical note of all we ever beheld or heard of; if generally taken- and comprehending all Swans, or of all places, we cannot aflenc thereto. Surely he that is bit with a Tarantula, fl^all neve; be cured by this tnuficic 5 ahd witfeh$
nirn^ fime hopes we expe6l to hear theharm.ony of the Spheres. 2. That there is a fpecial propriety in the flelli of Peacocks , roaft ! Ofthc * boiled, to preferve a long time incorrupted, hath been the affertion of *^^ m.any; ftandsyet confirmed by v^;<y?/ , De Civhate Deii^^hy'.GfgAf AldrovaiidHs ; and the fame txperihient we can. obfififm Scmfronws-^ our felves, in the brawn or flefhy parts of Peacocks fo Ranged up with thred, that they touch no place whereby to contrail a moyfture and The reaibn , hereof we have made tryal both in fummer and winter. fome, I perceive, attempt to. make out from the ficcityanddrinefsof its fleili , and fome are content to reft in a.fecret propriety thereof. As for' the ficcity of the flelli, it is m.ore remarkable in other' animals,' asrBat> gles, Hawks, and birds 6f prey ; That it is apropfiety or agreeable unaiv none other, we cannot with reafon admit for the fame prefervatiofl,' or rather incorruption we have obferved in the flellt of Turkeys,Capons,' Hares, Partridge, Vcnifon, fufpended freely in the ayr, and afecpa year ^ and a half, dogs, have not refufed to ear them. As for the other conceit, that a PeacacWis alliamed when :he tofiite iofi^ his legs, as is commonly held , and aifo' delH^er^d by Cdrda/(V^^<^ what hath been faid againft it hy Scaligeri kt them believe thbt hofcf fpecial deformities ; or that any part can f^em uolMndrbme ro their eyes, which hath appeared go<?i and beautiful uflto their 'makers. Thfr
'
Pv'
'.
<
<
'^
Ff
occafion
ttiS
Book. 5,
bccifionof this conceit, might firft arifc from a common obfervarion, that when they are in their pride, ihat is, advance their train, it ;by decline their neck to the ground^ they prefently demit, and kt .which indeed they cannot othervvife do ; for con\fy\\ the (iime ftra<ftino their body, and being forced to draw in their forepart!^ to e(^abiitn the hinder in the elevation of thitriin.; if the foreparts depart and incline to. the ground, the hinder gcovv too weak, andfufl-er rthe fame to iaUij ^d, cheifame iiLfome deiiee is alfo obfervable in
:
-Turkeys.-.
' , :
.
,
>
.
'
01
<;
Ir
*
Jer.8,7,
r\c
.1.. tj-.
3.TharSforksaretobefound,and will only live in Republikeso: Free States, is a pretty conceit to advance the opinion of popular policie?, and from Antipathies in nature, to difparage Monarchical Government. But how far agreeable unto truth, let them confider who reade inTZ/yy, th.it among the Thejfallafis who were governed by Kings, and much abounded with Serpents, it was no Icfle then capital to kill a Stork. That the ancient Egyptians honoured them, whofe Government was from all times Monarchical. That Bellomm aflfirmerh men make them nefls vafrfiyice. That relations make them comm.on in *TtrJta^ and the dominions of the g^eat Turk^ And laftiy, how Jeremy the Prophet delivered hin:felf unto his country-men, whofe governm.ent walsatitbat time Monarchical, The Stork in heaven knoweth her appoiated times, the Turtle, Crane and Swallow obfer\^e the time of their coming, but my people know not the judgment of the Lord. V\ herein to exprobate their ftupidity, he tnduceth the providence of Storks. Now if the bird had been unknown, the illuftratian had been 0bfcu.re.4nd the .Kvdbn-.ii cxprobation not fop roper. 4. That a Bittor maketh that muti.enc noyre,or as we term it tumping-, by puttinp, its bill into a reed as moft believe, or as BelloKtm and AldrovnndHi conceive, by putting the fame in water or m.ud, and after a whi4c retaining the ayr by fuddedly excluding' it again , is not fo eafily made out. For my own part, though after diligent enquiry , I could never behold them in this motion ; Notwith(bnding by others whofe' obfervations we have exprcfly requefted, we are informed, that fome have boheld ihem making this noife on the (liore, their bills being far enough removed from reed or water ; that is, firft ftron^ly attrading tb^ ayr, and unto a manifert diftenrion of the neck, and prefently after with great conAs for what others aftention and violence excluding the fame again. firm of putting thei: bill in water or mud > it is alfo hird to make our. For what may be obfervedfrom any that walketh the Fens, thete is little intermiirion,nor any obfervable pawfe,between the drawing in and fending forth of their breath. And the expiration o breathing forth doth not only produce a noife, but the infpiration or hailing in of the ayr , afford<ib ^ found th^c may be \&n^ aigfioH a fU^bc-ihoc^
Now.
Book.
,5,
mdComiO'^ErrQurs,
3,
u.*J#
the reafon of this i|range*and peculiar nolTe, -iscfcdMjefi^'from the conformation of the wind-pipe , which in this bird is diftereniC from other volatiles. For at the upper, extream it harh no fit Larinx;,- or throttle to qualifiethe found, and at the other end, by two branches deriveth it felf into the lungs. Which divifion conlifteth only of Semicircular fibers, and fuch as attain but lialf way round the part by which formation; they are dilatable into larger capacities ^_zti<\ are able to contain a fuller proportion of ayr ; which being with violence fent up the weazon, and finding no refiftance by the Larinx , it iffucth forth in a found like that
;
Now
from caverns, and fuch as fometim.es fubterraneouseruptions,from hollow rocks afford. As -^/-/y?(?r//'obferveth in ,^.Problem, and is obfervable g^^ in pitchers, bottles, and that ipftrument which A^e^enfa upon that Problem defcribeth , vyherevvirf? in J^rifiotle^s,t\r(yQ,G^i^zs_ affrighted
'
j^^' *
^
birds.
'
,
;
'
.
'
large perfora^tioiis of the extren^ities of the weazon, in the abdomen^ adm.itting large quantify of ayr within the cavity of its
Whether the
memhrans,
boation,
tVis
their
may not much: affift this- magiency or as It doth in fro^s may alfobe con(idered,j|ior fuch as bwe behei4 them making
;
.
noyfe out of the v\ater,',obfery^;a largeidi^n^n,jU^tbei|:;i^ o Qinary note is but like that of a 'Ravea. ,,; .jfj or'v/ |'.i;-^fKN.) no' 5. That whelps are blind nine days, and then begin Do fee. Is' the common opinion of all, and fome will be apt enough to defcend unto oaths, ^^ Whelpii upon it. But this I find not aiifwerable unto experience; for upon a* ftiicl obfervation of many j 1 have fear ce found any that fee- -the niiieth; day , few before the twelfth , and the eyes of fome not open before the. ^^ fourteenth day. ^-0 And this is agreeable unto the determiiiation of AriitiC flotle who computeth th? time of their anopfie or noi)-vifion ^hy thac faith lie, do go with their ypui^g the fikc of their geCbtion. For fome, part of a year, twodayes over or under, that is, about fixty -daies or nint weeks ; mi the whelps of thefe fee not_tilVtwelv5:.dayes. !cime goithc' fift part of.a year^ that is, feventy onedaie?, andYtbefe, faith.bv, iee ti^cs before the fou teenty day. Others do go the fourth part of ayear , tbar. is, three whole^ m.o^eths, and thefe, faith he,, are without fight no >lefs\ thenfeventaei>^ayes.Wherein althoiigh the accoujits be differeiM:^ yd: doth the leaftcherepf exceed ^Ip.v term pf nine d^yes,\ which is fo genC)-*
1.
thro\\{ tlie comjQ^pi-^ caufe, allediged foir tpis eff^^l:, that ii,.a'!^e<;ipitattoni
or ovcr-hafty
untd thei whelps of^ lonsjeft geftafipniare ^alfoth^.latel^in v^ilioj?' Th^rmSiniiivr hereof is this. At,;^he firft-lijttering, their eyesore faftly clpf^d, ,Ehat U^ by co.iiition ot loy^airrgvtpgetll^r DCt:he^e,^lids and fo,'fi$^ptinue unpl about the wetftk
excljilloi) -before
.p;>?rfet> ,r aefetording
ft)r
the birthJ^e
herein;|:be
'
Ff2
.ffisduioj-jfia-Eted
tftio
Book,^.
parted ttAtftcict J they open at rhe inward canthis or greater angle of the eye , and fo by degrees dilate rhemfclves quire open. An effci^ very ftrange , and the caufe of much obfcuf ity , wherein as yet mens enqui-
and fatisfa(ftiou acquirable from no man. What ever it mijih w^ may'obi^rve,thofe animals are.only exclucled without, fight, Whicl!iai:'mukiparou^nndmukifidous> th.it is, vyhtch h.n'^ many4ta Irtter,* and hive alfo their feetoivided into many pbrtrcn?. For the Swine, althoujih multipa-ous, yet biting bifulcous , and only clovcu hoofvid, is not ej^tiiided in this manner, but farrowed wich open eyes , as other bifulcous animals. ; /"
ries are blind,
be,thuij
O: aToM ^i.
a S
i ia<r.
6.
^ider , and that they poiis very iam.oiis and folemn ftories have
To.id
i
,' '
^
.
"
P^"
'
combats ; wherein moft co.iimoiily the vitory is. given unto the Spider. Of what Toads and Spiders it is to be underftood would be confidered. For the Phalangium and deadly Spiders, are different from thofe we generally behold in England. However the verity hereof, as alfo of many others, we cannot but defire ; for hereby we mi^ht be flirely provided of pfoper Antidotes in cafes which ftf^uit^ rh^rti ; btrt' vv^st we have -obfervedhereii), we cannotin reafon conceal J who having in a glaite mcluded a Toad with feveral Spiders, we beheld the Spiders witFout refiftance to fit upon his head and paflc GN-er all his body, which at laft upon advantage he fwallowed down,; and that in few houres, unto the nmnber of feven. And in tiie like iJj^ianner will Tbads alto firye Bees, and ate accounted etie-r
their
,
been vVritren of
'
mios^mo
^''"?
.
their- Hives.-'
'-'
'
',
^''
''';''
-'i
'^
anaaC>c
Lion be alfo afraid' of a Cock, as is related by many, ed by m.ofi:, were very eafie in fome places to make trial. AlrhoiK-h how- far they ftand in fear of th-at Animal, we may fufficiemiiptundc'ftand, from.whAtis delivered by f-^^wr/^r/;*;, whofe words. in! hiM ymbol s are thefe ; Nojhls tem^orih-^s tn AHlaftr:mffiml Prin 7.A'3i)cfft^^ a
bei.jJe'i
an:;
'
cjfis
B ku^r'vJty H-mu
r^factificUi
trmiffa.
canhim aitt cU'^'ores nihil refcrtnvdam^ 'i^ftsui-'A.ttm^l'-r'mU galllnisdevor^vlt. That is, in our rime in the Court of the Prince of Bavarld] ohk of the Lions leaped down into a net hbours yard, where nothing regarding the crowing or naifc of the Cocks, he eat them up with many other Hens.An; therefore avei'y unfafe defeniati-.e it is ^:p.'mi\ the Itity di this Animal (and furely nobLtterthen Vi"v:inityo btood-royal) which T'/iA/y doth place in Cock-broth: Fo- herev\iih, fiith he, whoever is anointed (efpc^j^jly j iTj-grlick be boiled therein} no Lion or Panther will touch him. But of an higher nature it wefe, and more exalted Antipathy, if fb:c
ii>Hi:areapi,f:ftdimlJit^Hbl ^alfiacior*ew
wcDe certain \\\^chProfiits delivers, that I'ojary Diemattf^ and liich as appear in the iliape of Lion, willdifappear aod vaniih, if a Cock be pr^fcnced upon chcm.
8, It
"
Book. 3.
dndCommon Errom,
221
8. It is generally conceived, an earvvig hath no wings, and is reckoned amon^ft impennous infeds by many ; but he that fhall narrowly obferve them, orrtiallwith a needle put afide the fliort and ihearhie cafes on their back, may extend and draw forth two win^s 6f a proportion tble length for fii^hr, and larger then in many The experimeutof *P.W/ isyet moreperfej^, who with a fli^sT
or briftie fo pricked them a.^ to make them flie. That worms are exanguious Animals, and fuch as have no o/Wurmes blood at all, is the determination of Phylofophy, the general opinion of Scholars, and I know not well to diffenc from thence m.y
ruili
9.
we want a proper terme whereby to exprefle them, which fo flrilly refembleth blood: and we rd;er it unto the clifcernmenc of others what to determine of that red and fanguineous humour, found m.ore plentifully about the Torquis
h;lfe.
If fo,
furely
that
humour
in
or carneous circle cf great worms in theSprin3,aftording in linnen or paper an indifcernable tiniliire from bloo i. Or wherein that differeth
from'a vein,\Yhich in an apparent blew runneth along the body, and if dexterioufly pricked with a lancet, emitteth a red drop, which prick-
on either fide it will not readily afford. In the upper parts ol worms, there are likewife found wliite and oval olandulofities, which Authors terme egges,
ed
certain
>
m.agnifying piaffes they alfo reprefent them ; how alfo be enquired, fince if in them there be diftinitron of Sexes, thefe egge^ are to be found in both. For in that which is prefUmed to
b^ their coition,
ring parts of both.
their
th.t
is,
*
dixidin.-
&c.do make thit noife o" humming found by mouth, or,as m.any believe,wiih their v\ in .,s only, would be more warily afferted^ if we confulted the determination of Ariflotl:, who, as mlundry other pl.t ces, {rimorecxpreflyin his book of refpiration, affirmcth thi^ foi.nd :o be made b) the illi.on of an inward fpirit upon a pellicle or little membrane about the precinil: or perioral divifion of their body. Jf we alfo confi^'er that a Bee or Flie, fo it be able to move the boJy, will buz, though its head be off; that it will do the like if deprived of wings, refcning the head, whereby the body may An thar fome alfo which are big and livebe the better moved.
10. ThatFlies, Bees,
without either headorwing* Nor is it only the beating upon ;his little membrane, by the inward and connatural fplit, as Ariftotle detjermines, or the outward as Scaliger convciveth, which affordeth this humming noife, air, as will bttC mojft of the oth^r parts may alfo concurre hereto ;
ly will
hum
be
2 2:1
Book. 3.
be manifcft, if while chey hum we hy our finder on the back or other parts, for chereupon will be felc a ferrous or jarrinj motion, like that which happenech while we blow on che teeth of a conbe through paper ; andfo if the head or oiher parts of the trunk be touched with oyle, the found will be much empaired, if not deftroy-. ed ; for thofe being alfo dry and m.embranous parts, by attricion' And therefore alfo the of the fpirit do help to advance the noife ; found is ftron^eft in dry weather, and very weak in raiuy feafon, and toward Winter ; for then the air is moifl, and the inward fpirit growing weak , makes a languid and dumb allifion upon the
parts.
II.
. .
.:-
found in the Sum.mer a kinde of Spider", called >" Tain6l, of a red colour, and fo little of "body that ten of the largeft' Nvill hardly out wei^h a grain ; rhisby Countrey-people is accounted a deadly poifon unto Cows and Horfes ; who if they fuddenly die,
There
is
andfvvell thereon, afcribe their death hereto, and will commonly Now to fatisfi the doubts of men, fay, they have licked a Taindl;. this Tradition unto experiment; we have given herecalled have we
of unto Dogs, Chickens, Calves and Horfes, arid not in the lingular yet never could finde the leaft difturbance enfue. number "fliere muft be therefore other cauies enquired of the fudden death and fwellingof cattel and perhaps this infecl is miftaken, andunjuftly For fome there are which from elder times accufed for fome orher. have been obferved pernicious unto cartel, as the Bupreftis or Burftcow, the Pityocamp orEruca Pinuum, hy Dl ofcor ides ^ G^/t'^, antj c>fif, theStaphilinus defcribed by Arlfietle and others, or thcfc red Phalangious Spiders like Canthirides mentioned by OMtijfetfu-. Now although the Animal may be miftaken, and the opinion alfo falfe, yet in the ground or reafon which m.akes m.en moll: ro doubt the verity hereof, there may be truth enough, that is, the inFor that a poifon cannot conlideraole quantity of this infed. For if deftroy in fo Analla bulk, we have no reafon to affirm.. as Lto zAfncanui repotteth, the tenth pai-t of a grain of the poifon of Nhbia will difpatcha man in two houres; if the bite of a Viper and fting of a Scorpion, is not conceived to impart much; if the bice of lan Afp will kill wirhin an houre^ fo yet the imprelfion feared >inbie, .and the poifon conmumcannot as impolTible rejetl thi^ cated not ponderable 'we. way of dellruilion ; or deny the ^power of death in lb narrow a
; ;
,
'
;^
circumfcription.
12.
Wondrous
'things
are promifed
preteijded,
aTmned
Book. 3
diftilled
223
which afford a luftre in the night ; and this is aficrted by Cardan^ Alhrtus, (jdHdentinus^ Miz>a/dm, and many more. But hereto we cannot withreafon alient ; for the lii^ht made by tliis AnimAl- (depends upon a living i]-irir, and leems'by fome vital rrracistion to be ai'tuated into this lufire. For wh>:in they are dead they lluiienor, nor alwayes v^hile they live, but are obfcure,or
li^ht,
fpirir,
andtheprotrufion'cf
For
this
flam-
mcousii^hr
-fir'e
;
not over
all
on
the inward
is full
When
a
this
feemcrli protruded,
there
arifeth a
Fame of
citcular figure
and and
Emerald green colour; which is difcernable in any dark place then day .but when it falleth and feemeth contw^'ledy the lioht diiappeareth, and the colour of that part only remainech. Now this liiht, as it appearcth and difappeareth in their life, fodoth it go quite out at their death. As we have obfcrved in fome which preiervcd in frdK grafle have lived and fhined eighteen dayes ; bur as they declined, their light grew languid, and at laft went out with their lives. Thus alfo xhtToi'pjdo^ which alive hath a power to ftupifie at adittance, bath, none upon conca6lion beinc dead, as Galen and Rondeletlus jparticularly experiir.ented. And this hathaUb difappoimed the mifchief of thofe incendons, whichftudy the advancement of poifons ; and flmcie dcftruttive. com.poilrionsfrom Afps orVipe-s teeth, from Scorpions oi Horner ttin^s. For thefe omit their elEcacy inthe death of the individu.U, and a6l butdependantly on their formis. And thus far alio thofe Philofophersconcut with us, which held the Sun and Starres were livin^ creatures, fob they conceived their luftre depended oa their livesi; but if they ever died, their light muft alfo pcriili. And whether the light of Animah, which do not occafionally l>iine from contingent caufes, be not of itin unco the light of heaven; whether the invihble flame of life received in a convenient matter, may not become viiibie, and the diffiifed aetherial li^ht make little Hars by con^lobation in idoneous parts f the compofitum; whether alfo it may not have fome original irt the feed and fpirit analOpOusunto the Element of Starres, whereoffom.eglimpfeis oHfervable in the littk refulgent humour at the firft attempts of formation ; Philofophy may yet enquire. True it is, th t a Clow worm will aftbrd a feint light, almofta dayesfpacewhen many will conceive it dead; ^ but this isamiftake inthe com.pute of death, and term cf difanimation ; for indeed,it is i)t thea dead, bur if itbe diftcnded will flowiy contra^ it felf again, which
;
.
324
it
Enqdriei into
cannot do,
f^ulj^ar
Book.
flriine
any more. And to which when matter to determine the point of it is no eafie fpeak Ikidly, death in infe^ls and crearures who h.ive not their vitaJicies radifor they are not dead when they cally confined unto one part ceale to move or afford the viable evidences of life ; as may be obfer\'edin flies, who when they appear even ciefperite and quite forfaken of their formes; by vertue of the Sunne or war me and perform its functions aaihes will be revoked unto life, gam. Now whether this luftre, a while remaining .ifter death, dependeth not (Uil upon thefirftimpreffion, and light communicated or raifedfrom an inward ffirir, lubhliing a while in a moift and apt recipient, nor long con inuing in this, or the more remarkable /;?dian Glow-wo.m or whether it be of another nature, and proceederh from, different caufes of illumination yet feeing fince it confefledly fubnlkth fo little a while after their lives, how to make perpetual lights, and fublunary m.oons thereof as is pretended, we rationally doubt, though not fo fharply deny, with Scallger and MnffetHi. 1 1. The wifdom of the Pifmire is magnified by all, and in the Panegyricks of their Providence we alwayes meet with this, that to prevent the growth of corne which they (lore np, they bite NamiUircum off the end thereof: And fome have conceived that from hence eidit. From whence arifcrh a conthey have their name in Hebrew ceit that corn will not grow if the exrreams be cut or broken. But herein wefinde no fecurity to prevent its germination ; as having made trial in grains, whofe ends cut oft have notwithrtanding fuddenly fprouted, and according to the Law of their kinds; that is, the roots ofbarley and oats at contrary ends, of wheat and rye at the fame. And therefore fome have delivered that which if after rainy weather they dry rhefe grains in the Sun ; efteilml, we muft conceive to be m-idein a high de.;ree and above fo: that Male will grow, this year hath forthe progrefTion of Malt nine med us,and that unto a pe;feil: ear. And if that be true which is delivered by Inauy, and we fhall further A natural vi experiment, that a deco^liion of Toad-ffools if poured upon earth, will produce the fam.e again If Sow-thiftles will abound in places cifficude of gcnera'.ion in manured with dung of Hogs vyhich feed much upon that plant: Homogcnc- jf horfe-dung reproduceth oats if v>indes and raines will tranfpo t uus thing'' irvvillnot'beeafie to determine where the thefeminils of plants; power of generation ceafeth. The forms of things m.ay be deeper- then we conceive them ; feminal principles may not be dead in the diit cctifcth
to
;'
vided
Book
5.
andcommonErroru
255
vided atoms of plants; but wandering iiuhe ocean ofnature, when they ^ hit upon proportionable materials, may unite, and return to their vifible
felvcs again. But the prudence
of this animal
is
by Knawingjpeircinp, or otherwifc,
to deftroy the litlc nebbe or principal of germination. Which notwithftanding is not cafily difcoverable;it being no ready bufinefs to meet with fiich grains in Anthills; and he muft dig deep,that will Tcck them in the
Winter.
Chap.
XXVIII.
of Jome others,
formed out of the yelk of the egg, was the opinion THat a Chicken Whether be not the nutriment ancient Philofophers.
is
of the
ens.
Chick-
offome
it
of the Pullei, may alfo be confidered : Since umbilical veffels are caried unto it : Since much of the yelk rcmaineth after the Chicken is formcd:Since in a Chicken newly hatchcd,the ftomack is tinfted yellow, and the belly full of yelk, which is drawn in at the navel or umbilical veflels toward the vent,as may be difcerned in Chickens,within a day or two bc
fore exclufion. Whether the Chicken be made cut of the white, or that be not alfo its aliment,is likewife very queftionablcrSince an umbilical veffelis derived
unto
much of
Since after the formation and perf eft (hape of the Chicken, the white remaineth. Whether it be not made out of the grando, gallature, germ or tred of the egg, A?, Aqnapendente and ftrifter enquiery informeth us, doth fecm of lefTer doubt : for at theblunter end it is not difcovered after the Chicken is formed; by this alfo the yelk and white are con
it:
j^
tinued, whereby
it
may conveniently
receive
its
both.
nature (hould effeft this proand even in obferved in other animals grains and kernels, the greatefl partis but the nutriment of that generative particle, fo difproportionable unto k. A greater difficulty in the doftrine of eggs, is, how the fperm of the Cock prolificates and makes the oval conception fruitful, or how it attaineth unto every egg, fince the vitellary or place of the yelk is ver/ highrSince the ovary or part where the white involveth it , is in the fecond region of the matrix, which is fomewhat long and inverced ; Since alio a Cock will in one day fertilitate the whole recemation or ciuftcr of eggSjWhich are not excluded in many weeks after. Butthsfe at laft, and how in the Cicatricula or little pale circle formation firft beginncih, how the Grando or tre-dle , are but the poles
duftion,
it is
^^*
and
226
and
Book. 6.
eftabiiiliing particles of the tender mcmbrans, firmly confcrving the floating parts, in their proper places, with many other obfervabks, that occular Philofopher, and fingular difclofcr of truth, Dr.
Harvey hath difcoveredj in that excellent difcourfeof Generation ; So (Irongly erefted upon the two great pillars of truth,expcrience and lolid
rcafon.
That the fex it difcemable from the figure of eggs, or that Cocks or Hens proceed from long or round one?, as many contend, experiment
will eafily
fruftrate.
observed a better way to hatch their eggs in ovens, then the 'Babylonians to roaft them at the bottom of a fling, by Twinging tliem round abour,tiIl heat from motion had concofted ihcm j for that confufeth all parts without any fuch effeft. Though flight diftinftion be made between boiled and roafted eggs^yet is there no flender difference, for the one is much drier then the other the egg expiring lefs in the elixation or boiling 5 whereas in the aflfation or roafling, i: will fometimes abate a dragm , that is, threefcore grains io weight. So a new laid egg will not fo eafily be boiled hard, becaufe it contains a greater ftock of humid parts; which muft be evaporated, before the heat can bring the inexhalable parts into coniiftence.
The Egyptians
the Hen hatcheth not the egg in her belIy,or makcth not atleaft forac rudiment thereof within her felf, by the natural beat of inward parts, lince the fame is performed by incubation from an outward
Why
is thinner at one extream ? Why there is the blunter end 1 Why wc open them at the greater end is firft excluded t Why fomc eggs are all that part ^ red, as the Keftrils; feme only red atone end, as thofe of Kites and Buzzards / Why fome eggs are not ovall but round , as thofe of fifh-
Why
cs^ d^c.
this
Qec
^^
'
y^^
difcourfe".
''
or tranfmit
their
;
eafily to be jufiified
their venoms unto a partjwherein we could never find it;thepoy fon lying about the teeth, and communicated by bite, in fuch ar*
on of
therefore when biting Serpents arc mentioned in they are not differentially fet down from fuch as mifchief by flings ; nor can condufions be made conformable to this opinion, becaufe when the rod of Mofes was turned into a Serpenr, God determiaatcly commanded him to take up the fame by the uil.
deflruftive.
the Scripture,
prefuroeth
as common opinion confirmable from the ordinary green Snake with us, from (everalhiftories ot^ dom.eflick Snakes,from Ophiophagous nations, and fuch as feed upon Serpent?. Surely
-,
Bo6k*
6.
dnd Common
Errors *
2^7
Surely thd deftru^ive dcludon of Satan in this (hapr, hath much enWhich notwithftanding was not larged the opinion of their mifchief. fo high with the heathens,in whom the Devil had wrought a better opinion bf this animal, being facrcdunto the Mgyptians^ Greeks and ReIn the (hape whereof ihanSi and the common fymbole of fanlty. the Kotnans , acunto appeared of health God M]culafm the
companied
their
EmbafTadoiirs
to
Ifle
and that magical cure of the bite thereof by Mufick. But fince we obRrve that many atteft it irom experience Since it , averred and iet the learned Kircberius hath poflitively down the fongs and tunes folcmnly ufed for it ; Since fomc aUo affirm the Tarantula it felf will dance upon certain ftroaks,whereby they fet their inftruments againft its poifon j we ftiall not at all queft i:
onic.
Much wonder is made of the Boramez, that (Irange plant-animal or vegetable Lamb of Tartary^ which Wolves delight to feed on, which hath the ftiape of a Lamb, affordeth a bloody juyce upon breaking, and liveth while the plants be confumed abouLit. And yet if all this be no more, then the (hape of a Lamb in thrower or feed, upon the top of the ftalk,as we meet with the forms of Bees, Flics and Dogs in fome other? ; he hath feen nothing that (hall much wonder
at
it.
too hard to quellion the (wiftncfs of Tigers, which hath names unto horfes,Ships and Rivers, nor can we deny what all have thus affirmed yet cannot but obferve, that Jacobus Bmti" ilatePhy(itianat7<^z''2intheEaft Indies^ as an occular and frequent witnefs is not afraid to deney it ; to condemn Vliny who affirmcth lt,and that indeed it is but a (low and tardigradous animal, preying upon advantage, and otherwife maybe efcaped. Many more there are whofe ferious enquiries we muft requeft of others, and (hall onely awake confiderations, Whether that common opipinion that Snakes do breed out of the back or (pinal marrow of man, doth build upon any conftant root or feed in nature ; or did not ari(e from contingent generation, in fome (ingle bodies remembred by Fliny orothers,and might be paralleld (ince in living corruptions of the guts and others partsj which regularly proceed not to putrifadions of that naIt
may feem
therefore given
ture.
Whether the ftory of the Remora be not unreafonably amplifiedjwhe* ther that of Bernacles and Goof-trees be not too much enlarged j whether the common hiftory of Bees will hold, as large accounts have delilignities, as Biofcerides
vered ; whether the brains of Cats be attended with fuch dcftruftive ma and others put upon them. 2 Whc-
Gg
2 2 8^
Book a. be poyfon unto Snakes and Vipers, as experience hath made us doubt? Whether the Nightingals retting with her breaft againd a thorn, be any more then that file placeth fome prickels on the outfide of her neft, or rooftetb in thorny and prickly places, where Serpents may leaft approach her > Whether Mice may be bred by putrifaftion as well as univocal produftion, as may be eafily believed, if that receit to make Mice out of wheat will hold, which Helmont hath delivered. Whether Qyails from any idiofyncracy or peculiarity of conftitution, do innocuoLifly feed upon Hellebore, or rather ibmctime but medically ufe the fame; becaufc we perceive that Stares, which arc commonly faid harmlcfly to (ced on Hemlock, do not make good the tradition; and he that obferves what vertigoes, cramps and convulfions follow thereon in thefc animal Sj will be of our belief.
Whether the
fafting fpittle of
man
'-V
THE
22p
FOURTH BOOK:
Of
manj popular and recehed Temnts concerning
THE
Man ,
'which
examined ^ prove
either
falfe or dubious
C H A p.
Of
the
I.
ErtUmfs of Man.
Hatonely Man hathancreft figure, and for to behold and look up toward heaven, according to that of the
Poet,
fpeiiant anmalia utera terraWi Os homini fuhiime dedit, cslumque tueri ereGos adfydera uUere vultusy Juffit, is a double aflerdonj whofe firft part may be true; if we take ercftnefs ftriftly, and fo as Galen hath defined it 5 for they onely, faith he, have an crcft figure, whofe fpinc and thigh- wfiat figore ia bone are carried in right lines ; and fo indeed ot any we yet know antmals is proMan onely is trcft. For the thi^hcs of other animals do ftand at aneks P^"^ *^""' with their fpine, and have reftangular pofitions in birds, and pcrfeft Quadruped?. Nor doth the Frog, though ftretched out, or fwirpmin?, attain the rcftitudc of man, or carry its thigh without all angulai'ty;
Promque cum
&
Gg
And
33<5
Book
6.
What fcianc
or fitting.
is it alfo true, that man only fittcthj if \^c define fitting to be a firmationof the body upon the Ifchias : wherein if the pofition be juft and natural, the thigh-bone lyeth at right angles to the fpine, and the leg bone or tibia to the thigh. For others when ihcy feem to fit, as Dogs, Cats, or Lions, do make unto their fpine acute angles with their thigh, and acute to the thigh with their (hank. Thus is it likewife true,
And thus
Ifir^pAlw;*
what
ArijiotU alledgeth in that Problem ; why man alone fuffereth becaufe man only lyeth upon his back ; if we pollutions in the night define not the fome by every fupirte pofition, but when the fpine is in reftitude with the thigh,and both with the arms lie parallel to the Hori"i
2on:fo that aline through their nivell will pafs through the Zenith and centre of the earth. And fo cannot other animals lie upon their backs for though the fpine lie parallel with the Horizon, yet will their legs incline, and lie at angles Unto it. And upon theffi three divers pofitiohs in man, whet-cin the fpine can only be at right lines with the thigh, arife thofe remarkable poftures, prone, fupineand ereft ; which are but diffe* fenced in fituation, or in angular poftures upon the back, the belly and
the feet.
But
if ereftncfi^e
it is
proncnelTe, or the pofture of animals lookiAg downwards, carrying their venters or oppofite p^rt to the fpine, direftly tol^ards the earth, it may admit of quefliOn. ForthdUgh in Serpents and Lizards we may
truly allow a pronenefTe, yet Galen acknowledgeth that pcrfeft Quadrupeds, as Horfe?, Oxen and Camels, are but partly prone, and have
And birds or flying animals, are fo far from ereftnefTe. kind of pronenefle, that they are almoft ereft f advancing the head and breafl in their progreftion, and only prone in the Aft of volitation. And if that be true which is delivered of the Pengin or Aftfer Magellanic Obfcrvealfo the Vria* Bel- i{Si often defcribcd in Maps about thofe Straits, that they go ereft like lonii and Mer^ men, and with their brcaft and belly do make one line perpendicular gui major. unto the axis of the earth ; it will make up the exaft ereftnefTe of man. Nor will that infeft come very fliort which we have often beheld, that is, one kind of Locuft which flands nos prone, or a little inclining up' ward, but in a large ereftnefTe, elevating alwayes the two fore legs, and Defcribers of fijftaining it felfe in the middle of the other four $ by Zoographers cjllkd Animals. wantisy and by the common people of Province, frega^ T>io, the Prophet and praying Locufl ; as being generally found in the pofture of fupplication, or fuch as refembletb ours, when we lift up our hands to
fome part of
this
'
heaven.
As for the end of this creftion, to look up toward heaven ; though confirmed by feveral teftimonies, and the Grffi^Etymologieof man, it is not fo readily to be admitted ; and as a popular and vain eohceit was anciently rejefted by Galen 5 who in his third, I>e ufu partiuni, determines that man is ereft, becaufe he was made with hands, and was therewith to exercifs all Afts, which in any other figtire he could not
have
Book 6.
have performed
alfo proves that
5
231
man
as he excellently dfclarah in that place, where he could have been made neither Quadruped nor
Centaur.
And for the accoroplifhment of this intention, that i?, to look up and behold the heavensa man hath a notable difadvantangc in the eye- lid whereof the upper is far greater then the lower, which abridgeih the fight upwards j contrary to thofe of birds, who herein have the advan^^f'"/'- ^P^' tage of man : Infomucb that the learned Flentfm is bold to affirm, ^*'"V''/*^that it he had had the formation of the eye-lids, he would havecontrived them quite otherwise. The ground and occafion of this conceit was a literal apprehcnfion of a figurative cxprelTion in F/ato, as Galen thus delivers ; To opinion that man is ereft to look up and behold the heavens, is a conceit only fit for thofe that never faw the fiOi Uranofcopu?, that is, the Beholder of heaven; which hath its eyes fo placed, that it looks up dircftly to heaven ; which man doth not, except he recline, or bend his head backward and thus to look up to heaven, agreeth not only unto Men, buc Aflcs j to omit birds with long necks, which look not only upwards, but round about at pleafure. And therefore men of this opinion underftood not Tlato when he faid that man doth Surfum afpicere j for thereby was not meant to gape, or look upward with the eye, but to have his thoughts fublirac ; and not only to behold, but (peculate their nature, with the eye of the undcrftanding. Now although Galen in this place makes inflance but in one, yet are there other fifhcs, whofe eyes regard the heavens, as Plane, andcattila* gineous fifhcs j as peftinals, or fuch as have their bones made laterally like a comb; for when they apply thcmf elves to flecporrcft upon the white fide, their eyes on the other fide look upward toward heaven. For birds, they generally carry their heads ereftly like man, and have advantage in their upper eye-lid; and many that have long neckf,and bear their heads fomsvvhat backward, behold far more of the heavens, and fecm to look above the xquinoxial circle. And foalfo in many Quadruped?, although their progrcflion be partly prone, yet is the fight of their eye direft, not refpefting the earth but heaven ; and makes an higher arch ofaltiti'de then our own. The pifition of a Prog with his head above water jxceedeth thefc ; for therein he feems to behold a large part of the heavens, and the acies of his eye to afcend as high as the Tropick ; ^'"^ of hei.' ^^^ but he that hath beheld the pofture of a Bittor, will not deny that it be-
S^"
Chap.
II.
Of the Heart.
'HjttheHcartofManis feated in the left fide, is an affeveraiion, which ftriaiy taken, is refutable by iufpcftion; whereby it appears
How
mans
P'^"
^^">
body.'"
2^2
Book 3. pears the bafe and centre thereof is in the midft of the cheft 5 true it is, that the Macro or point thereof inclineth unto the left j for by this pofition it giveth way unto the afcen/ion of the midriff, and by reafon of the hollow vein could not commodioufly defleft unto the right. From which diver/ion,nevcrtheIefs we cannot fo properly fay tis placed in the leftjas that itconfifteth in the middlcjthat isjwherc its centre refleth ; for fo do we ufually fay a Gnomen or needle is in the middle of a dial, although the extrcams may rcfpeft the North or South^ and approach the circumference thereof. The ground of this miflake is a general obfervation from the pulfeor motion of the heart, which is more fenfiblc on this fide; but the r,cafon hereof is not to be drawn from the fitu^ition of the heart, but the flte of the left ventricle wherein the vital fpirits are laboured; and alPo the great Artery that convey eth them out; both which are iituated on the Upon this reafon Epithcms or cordial applications are jufily apleft. plied unto the left breaft; and the wounds under the fifth rib may be
more fuddenly deflruftiveif made on thefiniffer fide; and the fpear of the fouldier that pierced our Saviour, is not improperly defcribcd, when Painters direft it a little towards the left. The other ground is more particularly and upon infpeftion ; for in dead bodies efpecially lying upon the fpine, the heart doth feem to incline unto the left. Which happeneth not from its proper fite;but bcfidcs its finiflrous gravity,is drawn that way by the great artery, which then
and haleth the heart unto it. And therefore ff riftly taken, the heart is feated in the middle of the chefl ; but after a carelefs and incon* liderateafpeftation, or according to the readieflfenfe of pulfation, we (hall not quarrel, if any affirm it is feated toward the left. And in
iubfideth
when he affirmeth the heart placed in the left fide ; and thus in a popular acception may we receive theperiphrafis of Terfimh when hetakcth the part under the l^y^jn i^rte mamilU. lett pap for the heart ; and if rightly apprehended, it concerneth not this controvcrfie, when it is faid in Ecclejiajifs', The heart of a wife man is in the right fide, but that of a fool in the left, for thereby may be implied, that the heart c^a wife man delighteth in the right way, or in the path of vertue; thatof a foolin the left, or road of vice ; accor* dine to the miflery of the letter of Pythagoras, orthat expreflion in Jqftah concerning lixfcorethoufand, that could not difccrn between their right hand and their left, or knew not good from evil. That affertion alfo that man proportionally hath the largeft brain, I did I confefs fomewhat doubt ; and conceived it might have failed in birds, efpecially fuch as having little bodies, have yet large cr4nies,and feem to contain much brain,asSnipes,VVoodcocks,dfc.But upon trial I find it very true. The brains of a man, Archangetus and BauhiKusohCcrve^ to weigh four pound,and fometinK five and an hall. If
thefe confiderations muft Arjiotlehe falved,
is
of man
thcre<
Book
4.
235
therefore a man v/eigh one hundred and fourty pounds, and his brain but five, his weight is 27. times as much as his brain, de.
dufting the weight of that five pound which is allowed for it, four ounces two dragms, I finde half a dragm ; fo that the weight of the the brains to weigh but exceeded brain the weight of the brain, the for (allowing ) body
and an
half.
More controvertible it fcemeth in the brains of fparrows, whofe cranies are rounder, and Co of larger capacity and moft of all in the heads oi birds, upon the firft formation in the egge,
:
wherein the head feems larger then all the body, and the very A fparrow in the total we found to eyes almoft as big as either. weigh feven dragms and four and twenty grains; whereof the head a dragm, but the brain not fifteen grains ; which anfwereth not fully the proportion of the brain of man. And therefore it is to be taken of the whole head with the brains, when Scaliger ob- fjiflouAmml. ^^^'^* jefteth that theheadof a man is the fifteenth part of his body;that
a Sparrowjfcarce the
fift.
Chap.
of
THatPleurifies
III.
Vleurijiss,
are onely on the left fide, is a popular Tenent, not only abfurd but dangerous. From the mifapprehenfion hereof, men omitting the opportunity of remedies, which other- what aPIcip wife they would not negleft. ChicHy occafioned by the igno- ^'fi^ is, ranee of Anatomy and the extent of the part afTefted; which in an exquifite Pleurilie is determined to be the skin or membrane which invefteth the ribs, for fo it is defined, Inflammatio membro' n cojlas [uccingeHtis An Inflammation, either fimple, confifting
)
only of an hot Scfanguineous aftiuxionior elfedenominable from o ther humors according to the predominancy of raclancholyjflegm, or choler.The vcfTcls whereby the morbifieal matter is derived unto this membrane, are either the afcending branches of the hoN low vein, which difperfe themfelves into the four upper ribs ; or clfe the Azygos or vena fine -pari ^ whofe furcles are difpofed unto the other lower. The membrane thus inflamed, is properly called Fleura'j from whence the dileafe hath its name 5 and this invefteth not onely one fide, but over fpreadeth the cavity of the chefi-, and afTordeth a common coat unto the parts contained therein,
Hh
Now
>34
Eftquiries intoVnlgat
Now therefore the Vleura. beine^ common unto not reafonablc to confine the inflimmation unto one, nor ftriftly to determine it is alwayes in the fide ; but (ometimes before and behinde, that is, inclininej to the fpine or breaft-bone, for thither this coat extmdeth and therefore with equal propriety we may affirm, that ulcers of the lungs, or Apoff cmb of the br.in do happen oncly in the left fide; or that Ruptures arc confinable unto one fide, whereas the peritoneum or rim of the belly may be broke, or its perforations relaxed in either.
*,
j^.
__
Ghap. IV.
Of
the Ring-finger,
opinion there is, which magnifies the fourth finger of thclefthand; prcfuming therein a corc^ial relation, thai a particular vefTel, nerve, vein or artery is conferred thereto from the heart, and therefore that efpecially hath the honour to bear Whichwasnotonely theChritfianpraftice in Nupour rings. tial conrrafts, but obferved by heathens, as Alexander ab Alexan* droy Hellm^MacrohiM and Pierius have dclivercvl, as Levinus Lent' mus hath confirmed, who affirms this peculiar veflel to be an artery, and not a nerve, as antiquity hath conceived it; adding moreover that rings hereon peculiarly afFeft the heart; that in Lipothymies or f woundings he ufcd the fricatiun oi this finger with faffron and gold ; that the ancient Phyficians mixed up their Medicines herewith; that this is feldom or laff of all affefted with the Gout, and when ihat becometh nodou;, men continue not long after. Notwithltanding all which we remain unfatisfied, nor can we think the reiiforis alleadged fufficiently eftablifh the preheniintncy of this finger, Forfirf}, Concerning the prafticeof antiquity, the cuflom was not general to wear their rinfs either on th'S hand cr finger; ^or it is faid, and that emphatically in Jeremiah^ Si fuerit Jecomiss filiu! Joachim regit Judx annulus in manu dextra mea^ inde evellam eum : Though Comab the fun ct Joachim Ki g of Judah were the So is lignet on my rif'^t hcnJ, yet would I pluck thee thence. itobierved by f/iy,that in the ]:oi traits 01 their Gods, the rings were worn on the finger next the thumb; that the Ronjans wore
AN
them alio upon their litcL finger,asNfro fome wore them on the middle finger,
is
dcfcribed in i^etroniusi
(j/w//<'i
as the ancient
and
Bntans'^
Book.
Britans
:
4.
md Common
Eryori^
235
fore-finger, as deducable f rotfi Julius i and fome upon the Foliux who names that ring Corionos. Again, That the praftceot the ancients had any fuch refpeft of cordiality or reference unto the heart, will much be doubted if we confider their rings were made of Iron; fuch was that ot ProSo melhius who is conceived the firft that brought them in ufe. as ?Uny affirmeth, for many years the Senators of Kome did not wear any rings of Gold; but the flavcsworc generally Iron rings That the until their manumiflion or preferment to fomc dignity.
Rings ancicnrly
of Iron-
Lacedemonians continued their Iron rings unto his daies, Tliny alfo delivereth ; and furely they u{ed few of Gold ; forbefide that Lycurgus prohibited that mettal,we read in ^^^f^f,that having a AcfiTi to guild the face of Apollo.,xhty enquired of the Oracle where they might purchafsfomuch gold ; and weredirefted unto Cr^fus King of L)dia. Moreover whether the Ancients had any fuch intention, the grounds which they conceived in vein, nerve or artery, arc not to be jufttfied, nor will infpeftion confirm a peculiar vcflel in this For as Anatomy informeth the Bafilica vein dividing into finger. two branches below the cubit, the outward lendeth two furcles unto the thumb, two unto the fore-finger, and one unto the middle finger in the inward iide; the other branch of theBililica fendeth one circle unto the outfidcof the middle finger, two unto the ring, and as many unto the little fingers ; fo that they all proceed from the; Bciiilica,and are in equal numbers derived unto every one. In che fam^ manner are the branches of the axillary artery diffributed into the hand; for below the cubit it divideth into two parts the one running along the Kadius, and pafling by the wreft or place of the pulfe, is at the fingers (ubdivided into three branches whereot the firft conveyeth two furcles unto the thumb, the fecond as many to the forefinger, and the third one unto the middle fin ger 5 the other or lower divifion of the artery defccndcth by the Ulna, and furnilhcth che other fingers ; that is the middle with one furcle, and the ring and little fingers with two. As for the nerves, they are difpofed much after the fame mannerjand have their original from the brain, and not the heart, as many of the Ancients conceived ; which is fo far from affording nerves unto other parts whence the that it receiveth very few it fclf from the iixt conjugation, or pair nerves pro cecd. of nerves in the brain. Laftly,Thefe propagations being communicated unto both hands, we have no greater rcafon to wear our rings on the left, then on the right ; nor are there cordial confiderarions in the one, more then And therefore when iorejius or the ftanching of the other. blood mak ;s ufe of Medical applications unco the fourth finger, he confines not that praftiee unto the lejft, but varicih the fide af2 cording
Hh
1^6
Boolt 4.
according to the noflril bleeding. So in Fcivers, where the heart primarily fuffereih, we apply medicines unto the wrcfts of either arm 5 io we touch the pujle of both, and judge of the afftdionsof the heart by the cne as well as the other. And ahhough in indifpofiticns of liver or fplcenj confiderations are made in Tblebotomy yet when the heart IsafTe^^cd, men relpcftively to their fituation
-,
havethought itas efleftiialtobleed on therightas theleftj and although alfoitmay be thought a nearer refpeft is to be had of the left, becaufe the great artery proceeds from the left ventricle, and fo is nearer that arm 5 it admits not that confideration. For Vnder the channel bones the artery divideth into two greatbranchesjfrom which trunk or point of divifionjthe diflanceunto either
hand
is
equal,
hath alleadgcd another reafon 5 affirming that the geflation of rings upon this hand and finger, might rather be ufed for their conveniency and prefervation, then any cordial relation. For at firfl f faith he^ it was both free and ufual to wear rings on either hand ; but after that luxury encreafed, when prctious gems and rich infculptures were added, the cuftom of wearing them on the right hand was tranflated unto the left; for that hand being lefs imploycd, there* by they wcrebefl preferved. And for the famereafon they placed them on this finger ;for the thumb was too aftive a finger, and is commonly imployed with either of the reft : the Index or forefinger was too naked whereto to commit their pretiofitics, and hath the tuition of the thumb fcarce unto the fecond joint: the middle and little finger they rejefted as extreams, and too big or too little for their rings, and of all chofe out the fourth, a* being leaft ufed of any,as being guarded on either fide,& having in moft thispeculiar condition, that it cannot be extended alone and by it felf, but will be accompanied by fome finger on either fide. And to this opinion afTenteth Alexander ah Akxandro, Annulum nuptia'
therefore Macrobius difculling the point,
And
tas in finiftra ferebat^ crediderimne attererettir. begat or promoted the common opinion, was the common conceit that the hear t was feated on the left fide ; but how far this is verified, we have before declared. The ^Egyptian
lent prior
much advanced the fame, who unto this finger deri* ved a nerve from the heart 5 and therefore the Prieft anointed the fame with precious oyls before the Altar. But how weak Anatomijis they were, which were fo good Embalmcrs, we have already fhcwed.And though this reafon took moft place, yet had they another which more commended that praftice: and that was the number whereof this finger was an Hieroglyphick. For by holding doivn the fourth finger of the left hand, while the reft were e;{ten
praftlce hath
Book 4*
andCemmoHlfrors*
237
and magnified number of fix. ded 5 hath graphically declared Antiquity exprcfTed Vierius , For as on the left they acnumbers by the fingers of either hand counted their digits and articulate numbers unto an hundred on the right hand hundredsand thousands 5 the deprefling this finger, which in the left hand implied but fix, in the right indithey fignificd the perfeft
:
way
of numeration,
may we
con*
Vijhliti atqj'fuos
And however
gant what
is
it
were intended, in
this fenre
delivered of
Wifdom,
her right hand, and As lor the obfervation of L^w/7<^ an eminent Phyfitian, concerning the gout; however it happened inhis Country, we may obferye it otherwife in oursi that is, that chiragrical perfons do fuffer in this finger as well as in the reft, and fometimes firft of all, Hand-gouty and fometimes no where elfe. And for the mixing up medicines perfons. herewith, it is rather an argument of opinion, then anyconfiderable eflfcft; and tveas highly conceive of the praftice in Viafalmay
that is, in the a Palm.
making of
that plaiftcr, to
ftir it
with the
(tick of
Chap.
Of
is
V.
the right
'
hand' and that the ufe of the other is a digreflion or aberration from that way which nature generally intendeth.Wc do not-deny that almoft all Nations have ufed this hand, and afcribed a prcheminence thereto: hereof aremarkable pafTage there is, Gen. 48. And Joje^h took them both, phraim in his right hand towards Ijraeh left hand, and Manages in his left hand towards 7/r/?f A right hand, and 7/r/?fiftretchcd out his right hand and laid it upon Ephraiws head, who was the younger, and his left hand upon Manages head, guiding his hands wittingly , for Manaffes was the firff.born 5 and when Jofepb Hh 3 faw
that
that certainty to be alfo IT generally believed concerning the right and what
is
fufpicious,
238
Book
4.
hand upon the head of Epbram^ itdifpleafcdhim, and hchdd up his fathers hand to remove it from Ephraims head unto Manaffes head, and Jofeph faid, Not fo my father, for this is the firft-born, put thy right hand upon his head : The like appeareth from the ordinance of Mofes in the confecration of their Priefts, Then (halt thou kill the Ram, and take of his blood, and put it upon the tip of the right ear of yia' roMy and upon the tip of the right ear of his fons, and upon the thumb of the right hand , and upon the great toe of the righu foot, and fprinklethe blood on the Alcar round about : That the Perfjam were wont herewith to plight their faith, is tcffified by ViodoYus That the Greekj and Romans made ufc hereof, belide the teflimony of divers Authors, is evident from their culfom of difcumbency at their meals, which was upon their left fide, for (o their right hand was free, and ready for alHcrvicc. Nor was this onely in ufe with divers Nations of men, but was the cuftom of whole Nations of women ; as is deduceable from the Amazones in the amputation of their right breaftjwhereby they had the freer ufe of their bow. All which do (ecm to declare a natural preferment of the one unto motion before the other; wherein notwithftanding in
:
fubmiffion to future information, we are unfatisfied unto great dubitation. Forfirft, if there were a determinate prepotency in the right, and fuch as arifeth from a conftant root in nature, we might expeft the fame in other animals, whofc parts are alfo differenced by dextrality ; wherein notwithftanding we cannot difcover a di ftinft and complying account ; for we find not that Horfes, Bulls, or Mules, are generally ftronger on this lide. As for animals whofe forelegs more fcnfibly fupply the ufe of arms, they hold, if not an equality in both, a pre valency oft-times in the other , as Squirrels, Apes, and Monkies ; the fame is alfo difcernable in Parrets ; and
menobfervethattheeyeof a Tumbler
is biggeft, not ccnflantly in one, but in the bearing fide. That there is alfo in men a natural prepotency in the right, we
cannot with conftancy affirm, if wc make obfcrvation in children; who permitted the freedom of both, do oft-times confine unto the left, and arc not without greaf difficulty refirained from it.And
therefore this prevalency
lity,
is
t'lc
latera-
or cuffom determines
indifferency.
,
Which
is
the refolu-
Problem
is
do differ by ufe and cuffom, which have no place in the ienfes. For right and left as parts infervient unto the motive faculty, are differenced by degrees from ufe and
and
left
afliiefaftion.
Book 4*
259
aflliefaftion, according whereto the one grows ftronger, and oft^^icnje the times bigger then the other. But in the fenfes it isothcrwife 5 ior they acquire not their perfeftion byufeorcuftom, but atthcjirft ^f^y^n v?e equally hear and fee with one eye, as well as with another, proceeds. And therefore, werethis indifferency permitted, or did not inftitution, buc nature determine dextrality* there would be many more Scevolaes then are delivered in ftory; nor needed we to draw examples of the left, from the Tons of the right hand; as we rcadof (even thoufandinthe Armyof the B^MJtfwirf^. Trueit is,^thatalthoughtherebcan indifferency in cither, or a prevalency ^s'dextr!!/ indifferent in one, yet is it moft reafonable for uniformity, and fundry refpeftive ufcs, that men (hould apply themfelves to the conftant ufe of one ; for there will otherwile arifc anomalous di fturbances in manual aftions, not onely in civil and artificial, but alfo in Military afiairs, and the feveral aftions of war. Secondly, The grounds and reafons alleadged for the right, are
^^
notfatistaftory,
and afford no
reft
Ariflotle,
deficiency himfelf; Katio ntaterialh (S^iithhd) fangutMi* crapiudo tnuhitudo ; that is, the reafon of the vigour of this lide, is fimul
&
the crafljtude and plenty of blood, but this is not fufficient ; for the craffitude or thicknefs of blood, affordeth no reafon why one arm (hould be enabled before the other, and ci^ plenty thereof, why both not enabled equally. Fahfiusis of no other conceit, deducing the reafon from the Azygos or vofa fine pari, a large and confiderable vain arifmg out of the cava or holiow vein, before it
and placed onely in the for the Azygos communicates no branches unto the arms or legs on either fide, but difperfeth intotheribs onbo'h, and in its defcent doth furnifii the left Emulgent with one vein, an.i the firft vein of the loins on the right iide with another; which manner of derivation doth not confer a peculiar addition unto either. Clius Kodigintts undertaking tOv^ive a reafon of AmbidexterSjSc left- handed men,delivcrMen, faiih he,ate Ambidexter?, and ufe both eth a third opinion hands alike,when the heat of the heart doth plentifully difperfe inenters the right ventricle of the heart,
is
'his perfwafory
to the left fide,and that of the Liver into the right,and the (pleen be alfo much dilated; but men are left-handed when ever it happeneth that the heart and Liver arefcat'd on the left-fide ; or when the
Liver
is
on the right
i\6.e^
yet fo obdufted
its
;
virtue into
c right.
Which
if
rea-
juffly in-
finifter fide,
would
As
for
240
Book 4.
which (liould hinder the Liver from enabling the dextral parts j wc muftnot conceive it diffufech its vcrtiic by meer irradiatioHj but by its veins and proper vefTcIs, which common sl?ins and teguments cannot impede. And for the feat of the heart and Liver in one fide, whereby men become left.handed, it happeneth too
rarely to countenance an effeft fo common ; for the feat of the Liver on the left fide is very monftrous, and rarely to be met with in Otherwife not confiderin" the obfcrvaiions of the Phylicrans. ambidextrous and left handed menjdo totally fubmlt unto the efficacy of the Liver
; which though (eated on the right fide, y ec by the fubclavian divifion doth equidiftantly communicate its aftivii ty unto either arm ; nor will it falve the doubts of obfervationj for many are right-handed whofe Livers are weakly conftituted, and
many
uf e the left,in
and we obferve in
And therefore the brain, efpecially the fpinal marrow , which but the brain prolonged, hath a fairer plea hereto tor thefe are the principles of motion, wherein dextrality confifts ; and arc diBy which divifion tranfvided within and without the Crany. mitting nerves refpeftively unto either fide j according to the in* differency, or original and nativity prepotency, there arifeth an eis
-,
fide.
And
fo
may
it
be
aftively ufe
the contrary arm and leg ; for the vigour of the one dependcth upon the upper part of the fpine,but the other upon the lower. And therfore many things are Philofophically delivered concerning right and left, which admit of fome fufpenfion.That a woman
upon a mafculine conception advanceth her right leg, will not be found to anfwer flrift obfervation. Tht males are conceived in
the right fide of the womb, females in the left, though generally delivered, and fupporred by ancient teftiraony, will make no infallible account-, it happening oft-times that males and females do
lie
upon both
It
is
fides,
and Hermaphrodites
for
ought we know on
alio fufpitious what is delivered concerning ihe right and hft tefticle, that males are begotten from the onejand females from the other^ For though the left feminal vein proceedeither.
th from the emulgenti and is therefore conceived to carry down aferiousand feminine matterjyet the feminal Arteries which fend forth the aftive miterials, are both derived from the great Artery.
Bcfide,tbis original oftheleft vein was thus contrived, to avoid the pulfation of the great artery, over which it muft have pafled to attain unto the tefticle.
Nor can we
of parts which have one end and officej for in the kidneys which have one office, the right is feated lower then
fituation
Book
4.
left,
24 j
then the
the Liver. And therefore alfo that way which is delivered for mafculine generation, to mike a ftrait ligature about the left tefticle, thereby to intercept the evacuition of that part, deferveth conlideration. For one fnraceth unto generationjES hath beenobferved in femicaftrati" on,and oft-times in carnpjs ruptures. Befide, the feminal ejaeu lation proceeds not immediately from thetefticle,but from the fpermatick glandules 5 and therefore Ariftotie affirms (and reafon cannot deny ) that although there be nothing difFufed from the tefiicles, an Horfe or Bull may generate after caflration ; that is, from ^ ^ the flock and remainder of feminal matter, already prepared and orBu?mar ilored up in the Proflates or glandules of generation. generate after Thirdly,Although we fhould concede a right and left in Na- they be gelt. ture,yct in this common and received account we may err from the proper acccption;niiftaking one ficie for another; calling that in man and other animals the right which is the left, and that the left which is the right, and that in fome things right and left which is
Forfirft the right
lieth free,
mi
givcth
way unto
and
Ieft,are
ding to common acception, that is, refpeAively from one man unto anothcr,orany conflantfitein cach;asthoughthatfhould be the right
in onCjwhich upon confront or facing^ftands a thwart or diagonially unto the other ; but were diftinguilhed according to the aftivity
and predominant locomotion upon either fide. Thus Arijiotie in his excellentTraft de incejfu animaliuMy^Ccnhcth fix pofitions unto animals,an(wering the three dimenfionsjwhich he determincth not by fite or pofition unto the hcavens,but by their faculties and fun^ions;
and
is,
Sini^ra : that thcfe are Imum ^ummumiAnte Ketro^ Vextra the fuperiour part, where the aliment is received, that the lower extream, where it is lafl expelled ; (o he termcth a man a plant in. verted s for he fuppofcth the root of a tree the head or upper part
thereof,
&
whereby it receiveth its aliment, although therewith it reCenter of the earth, but with the other the Zenith ; and the fpefts Thofe parts are antethis pofition is anfwerable unto longitude.
and meafurc profundity ,where the fcnfcs, cfpecially the eyes which are oppofite hereunto. The dextrous and finifjrous parts of the body, make up the latitude;and arc not certain and inalterable like the other 5 for that, faith he, is the right fide, from whence the motion of the body beginnethjthat is, theaftiveor moving fide j but that the fmifler which is the Of the fame determination weaker or more quiefccnc part. were the Flatonkks and Pythagorians before him ; who conceiving the heavens an animated body , named the JE/z/?, the right or dextrous part, from whence began their mo
riour
are placedjand thofe pofterior
I i
tion
242
Book. 4. motion and thus the Greeks j itrom whence the tames havebof* rowed their appellation, have named this hand ^^/. denomiiyating imot irom the (ite, tut office, form J^x*i^t capiOf that is, the band which receivcth,or is ufually implied in thataftion. Now upon thefe grounds we are moft commonly miftaken, dcm fining that by fituation which they detirmined by motion 5 and giving the term of right hand to that which doth not properly admit it. Forfirft, Many in their Infancy are finiftroufly difpofcd, and divers continue all their life Afisig?/, that is, lelt-handcd, and have but weak and impcrfcft u(e o\ Uie right ; now unto thefe,thac hand is properly the rightjEc not the other efteemtd (o by fituation.
Ettqmries
itito
:
Vulgar
Thus may Arifiotle be made out, when he affirmeth the right claw of Crabsand Lobfters is biggeft, if we take the right for the moft
fide, and not regard the relative fuuation: for the one generally bigger then the other, yet not alwayes i pon the fame fide. So may it be verified what is delivtred by Scaliger in his
vigorous
is
Comment, that Palfies do ofteneft happen upon the Ictt lide, if undcrftood in thisfenfe; the moft vigorous part prottfting it felf, and protruding the matter upon the weaker and lefs refill ive fide.
cut off the right hand Pbilofophically executed, is impartial j otherwife the amputation not equally punifheth all. Some are Afi^iAfJ/M that is, ambidexerous or right handed on both fides ; which happeneth onely untoflrong and Athletical bodies, whofehcajand fpirits arc. able to afford an ability unto both. And iherchr^ Hippocrates faith, that women are not ambithus the of Malefaftors,
if
And
Apt
for con-
tencion
dexterous, that
indifferently
is,
for
Arifiotle (ay, that of thisconftitution was AJieropus in Homer, and Partbenopeus the 'thehan Captain in Statins : and of the fame, do fome conceive our Father Adam to have been as being perfeftly framed, and in aconftitution admitting leaft defeft. Now in thefe men the right hand is on both fides, and that is not the left which isoppofite unto the right, according 10 com'
make
And
fo
may
onely
men
arc ambidexterous
men
Strongly or 6 for corporal cxercife.
acccption.
AfJLwtvtefh
as
bilevous or left-handed 01. both fides 5 (uch as with agility and vi gour have not the ufeof either; who arenotgymnaftically compofed ; nor aftively ufc thofe parts. Ntw in thefe there is no right
hand : of thisconftitution arc many wcmenj and fome men, who though they accuftom themfelvcs unto either hand, do dexterouf-
make ufc of neither. And therefore although the Political advice of Arifiotle be very good, that men (hould accuftom them, felves to the command of either hand: yet cannot the execution or
ly
and Common Errors* Book. 4. Or performance thereof be general : for though there be many founJ that can ufc both, yet will there divers remain that can ftrcnuoufly make ufe of neither. Laftly, Thefe lateralities in man arc not onely fallible, if relatively determined unfio each other, but made in reference unto the heavens and quarters of the Globe : forthofe parts are not capable of thefe conditions in thcmfelves, nor with any certainty refpeftively derived from us, nor from them tons again. And firft in regard of their proper nature, the heavens admit not thefc finiffcr and dexter refpefts ; there being in them no diverfity or diftinually fucceeding each other
245
ference, buta fimplicity of parts, and cquiformity in motion coii ; To that from what point foevcr
we compute, the account will be common unto the whole circularity. And therefore though it be phulible, it is not of confequencc h.rcto what is delivered by Solinus, That man was therefore a Microcofm or little world, becaufc the dimenlions of his pofitioi^ wereanfwerable unto the greater.for as in the heavens the diftance of the Narth ind Southern pole, which arc eff eemed the fuperiour and inferiour points, is cquall unto the fpace between the Eaft and Weft, accounted the dextrous and finiftrous parts thereof j fo is it for the extent of his fathome or diftance betwixt alfo in man thcextremity of the fingers ol either hand upon expanfion, is e* quail unto the fpace between the fole of the foot and the crown. But this doth but petionarily infer a dextrality in the heavens, and we may as reafonably conclude a right and left laterality in the Ark or naval edifice of Noah. For the length thereof was thirty cubits, the breadth fifty, and the height or profundity thirty 5 which well agreeth unto the proportion of man ; whofc length, that is, a perpendicular from the vertex unto the fole of the toot is fextuple unto his breadth, or a right line drawn from the ribs of one iide to another , and decuble unto his profundity; thatis^ a direft line between the breaft bone and the fpine. Again, They receive not thefe conditions with any afTurance orff ability from our felves.Forthe relative foundations and points of denomination, are not fixed and certain, but varioufly defigoed according to imagination. The Philofbpher accounts thatEafl from whence the heavens begin their- motion. The Aftronomer regarding the South and Meridian Sut)>ca]ls that the dextrou?part of heaven which refpefteth his right hand 5 and that is the Weft.
:
Poets refpefting the Weft, affignche name of right unto the North, their right han(f ; and (o muft that of Ovid be Declarable f**^ oriexphir\':dutq', du dextra zon todidemq-, finijira. But Augurs or "'P'" ' Souchfayers turning their face to the Eaft, did make the right in ^o*^ ^ ^'^ the South 3 which was alfo obferved by the Hebrews and Chalda rfalm. 8^. rg. I i 1 am
which regardeth
244
Book
4.
Now
it
if
we mme
will be no that the right fideot heaven which is fcatcd Eafterly unto u?, when we regard the Meridian Sun the inhabitants beyond the JEquator and Southern Tropick when they face us, regarding the Meridian, will contrarily define it j for unto themjthe oppofite part of heaven will refpcft the lef tjand the Sun arife to their right.
>
the quarters of heaven re/ptllvely untoour fides, certain or invariable denomination. For if we call
thus have we at large declared that although the right be ufed ; yet hath it no regular or certain root in nacommonly moft
And
ture.
Since it is not confirmable from other animals Since in it feems cither indifferent or more favourable in the other but more reafonable for uniformity in aftion, that men accuftom unto one: Since the grounds and reafons urged for if, do noway' fupport it : Since if there be a right and ftronger fide in nature,yet may we miftake in its denomination ; calling that the right which Since fome have one is the left, and the left which is the right. And laftly. Since thefe affeftiright, (ome both, fome neither. ons in man are not oncly fallible in relation unto one another, but made alfoin reference unto the heavens i they being not capable of thefe conditions in themlelvcsjnor with any certainty from usjnor
:
Children
admiflion we ow unto many conceptions That is, concerning right and left, requircth circumfpeftion. how far we ought to rely upon the remedy in Kiranides^ihat is, the lefc eye of an Hedgehog fried in oyl to procure fleep, and the right foot of a frog in a Deers skin for the gout, or that to dream of thelofs of ri^t or left tooth, prefageih the death of male or female kindred, according to the doftrine of Artefnidorus. What
verity there
manby evenandodd,afcribingtheodd
numeral conceit in the lateral divifion of unto the right fide, and parity or foby imparity and left ; of letters in mens the even unto names to determine misfortunes on either fide of their bodies, by which account in Greek numtvdiUOD^Hefhdjius orFuicaHwzs lame And laftly, what io the right foot, and Anibal loft his right eye. fubftance there is in that Aufpicial principle, and fundamental doftrineof Ariolation, that the left hand is ominous, and that good things do.pafsfiniftroufly upon U5,becaufethe left hand of manrelpeftedtherighthandof theGods, which handed their favours unto us.
is
in that
Chap.
Book 4*
anA Common
Errors*
245
being
gall breaketh ; that women drowned Iwim prone, but men fupine, or upon their backs j are popular affirmation?, whereto we cannot
aflent.
And firft,
that
man
fhould
fwim
naturally, becaufe
weob-
fcfve
it is
aniniaJs,
we cantict well
concludej
for other animals fwim in the fame manner as they go, and need no other way of motion lor natation in the waier, then for proAnd this is true whether they move;er grcflicn upon the land. Uterai that ifj two legs of one Iide togcther,which is Tolluiation or ambling', or/Jfr ^/rtWftrwWjlifting one foot before, and the crofs
foot behind 9 which is fuccuffaticn or trotting^ crwhctherffr tlie fiontetn or quadratumj^s Scaliger terms it, upon a (quare bafe, legs of both fides moving together, as Frogs and faliant animal?, which is properly called leaping. For by thefe motions they are able to fupport and impell themfclves in the water, without alteration in the (iroak of their legSjOr pofition of their bodies. But with man it is perfoimcd oiherwife: for in regard of iite
he alters his natural poftureand fwimeth prone; whereas he walAgain, in progrcflion the arms move parallel to the kethertft. arms and legs unto each other ; but in natation they the and legs,
and make all forts of Angles. And laftly,in progrelfive motion, the arms and legs do move fucctffively, tut in natation both together 5 all which aptly to perform, and foasto fupport and advance the body, is a point cf Art, and fuch as fome in their young and docile years could never attain. But although it be
interfeft
acquired by
wecbferve
finition ; for once obtained, it is not to be removed; nor is there any who fron) difufe did ever yet forget it. Secondly, That perfons drowned arifc and float the ninth day
when thfir gall breaketh, is a quefuonable determination both in the time ard caufe. For the time of floating, ir is uncertain according to the time of putrefaftion, which fhall retard or accelerate according to the fubjeft and feafon cf the year ; for as we obferved, cats and mice will arife unequally, and at different time?,
though drowned at the fame.
Such
as are fat
fconefi, for their bodies foonefl ferment, proacheth nearefl unto ayr : and this is
why dead Eels will not float, becaufe faith he, they have but (lender bellies and little far. As for the caufe, it is not (b reafonably imputed unto the breakI
i
ing
Book
4,
body,
gall aS the patrefaftion or corruptive firmentation of the whereby the unnatural heat prevailing, the putrify ing parts
inflation,
fpui
inous affeft to approach the ayr,and afcend unto the furfaceotthc Andthis is alfo evidenced in eggs, whereof the found ones water. fink, andfuch as are addled fwim* as do alfo thofe which are termed hypenemia or wind-eggs ; and this is alfo a way to fcparate feeds, whereof fuch as are corrupted and fteril, fwim; and this agreeth not onely unto the feed of plants lockt up and capfmlated in their husk?,but aUo unto the fperm and fenunal humour of
man ; for
tcft
of its tertilicy. That the breaking of the gall is not the caufe hereof, experience For opening the abdomen^ and taking out the hath informed us. And begall in cats and mice, they did notwithftanding arife. caufe we had read in Rhodiginus of a Tyrant, who to prevent the emergency of murdered bodies, did ufe to cut off their lungs, and found mens minds poffeflTed with this reafon; we coraiKitted fome unto the water without lungs,which notwithftanding floated with And tocompleatthe experiment, although we took the others. bladder, and alfo perforated the Cranium, yet guts and the out
would they ari{e,though in a longer time. From thefe obfervations in other animals, it may not be unrealonabic to conclude the fame in man,who is too noble a fubjeft on whom to make them expre(and the calual opportunity too rare almofi to make any. Now ihall ground this effeft from gall or choler^ becaufc it is the any if higheft humour and will be above the reft ; or being the fisry humour will readied furmount the water, we muft confefs in the common putrefcence it may promote elevation^ which the breaking of the bladder of gall, fo fmall a part in man, cannot confiderably
ly,
advantage.
That women drowned float prcme,that is,with their beldownwardjbut men fiipine or upward, is an aiTertion wherein and were it true, the reafon althe hoti or point it felf is dubious leadged for it, is of no validity. The reafon yet currant was firfl exprefTed by Piinyi velutifudori defunSlorunt tarcenu natura, nature modeflly ordaining this pofition to conceal thefhameof the dead which hath been taken up by S'o/>;?j, Rhodiginus, and many more. This indeed ( as Scaliger termcth it J is ratio civilis mn fhilojopbica^ ftrong enough for morality or Rhetoricks, not for Philofophy or Phyficks. For firfl, in nature the concealment of fecret parts is the fame in both fexes, and the (hame of their reveal equal : fo ^dam upon the tafle of the fruit was alhamed of his nakednefs as well as Eve.Snd fo likewife in America and countries unacquainted with habitsjwlicre modefly conceals thefe parts in one (ex, it doth it alfo
Laftly,
lies
-,,
in the
Book 4*
247
in the other ; and therefore had this been the intention of nature, not only women but men alio had fwimed downwardsjthe poftuf e in reafon being comon unto both,where the intent is aifo conion. Again, While herein we commend the modcftyjwe condemn the
of nature : for that prone pofition we make her contiive woman, were beft agreeable unto the man in whom the the unto fecret parts are very anteriour and more di(coverabIe in a fupine and upward pofture. And therefore Scaliger declining this rea-
wildom
fon, hath recurred unto another from the difference of parts in both ventre vajio funt ntulieres flenoque mteJiinU, itaque mi^ fcxes } ivnpUtur fubfidet, inanior maribm quibiis nates preponderant : nitf
^od
&
If fo, then
men with
CaUi^yga, and
women
largely
make the larger cavity for the Infant, women, and confcquently the parts appendant They who afcribe are more protuberant then they are In men. the caufe unto the breafls of womenj take not away the doubt ; lor thtfy refolve not why children float downward, who are included But hereof we in that fex, though not in the reafon allcadged. ceafe to difcourfe, left we undertake to afford a reafon of the golden tooth, that is, to invent or affign a caufe^when wc remain un
Anatontijh obferve, that to
'f-
of the caufe
or unafTurcd of the effeft. That a Mare will fooncr drown then a Horfe,though commonly opinion'djis not 1 fear experienced nor is the fame obf erved, in But that a man cannot (hut the drowning of whelps and kitlins.
fatisfied
:
ovcd ^"
impofture.
or open his eyes under water, eafie experiment may convift. Whether Cripples and mutilated perfons, who have lofl thegreatefl part of their thighs, will not fink but float, their lungs being abler to waft up their bodies^ which are in others overpoyfed by the hinder legs ; we have not made experiment. Thus much we oU ferve, that animals drown downwards, and the fame is obfervaBut in the ay ble in Frogs, when the hinder legs are cut off. moft feem to perifh headlong from high places $ however Vulcan thrown^from heaven, be made to fall on his feet.
Chap.
VII.
Concerning Weight*
men weigh heavier dead then alivc,if experiment hath not failed U8,we cannot reafonably grant. For though the tryall hereof cannot fo well be made on the body cf man, nor will the
Hat
difference be fenfible in the abate ot fcruplcs or dragms,yet can we not confirm the fame inleffer animals, from whence the inference
is
248
is
Book
4,
it is true in all. For good s and exaftly weighing and ftrangling a Chicken in the Scales ; upon an immediate ponderation,we could difcover no fenfible difference in weight 5 but (ufFering it to lie eight or ten hours, until it grew perfeftly cold,it weighed mod fcnfibly lighter ; the like we at-
tempted,and verified in Mice,and performed their trials in Scales, that would turn upon the eighth or tenth part of a grain. Now whereas fome alleadge that fpirits are lighter fubftance?, and naturally afcendingjcio elevate and waft the body upward, whereofdead bodies being deftitute, contraft a greater gravity; although we concede that fpirits arc light comparatively unto tHe body,yct that they are abfolutely fo, or have no weight at all, we For ^\nci Philofophy affirmeth,that (pirits caanot readily allow. are middle fubftances between the loul and body, they muft admit of fome corporiety,which (uppofeth weight or gravity. Befide, in carcafles warmjand bodies newly difanimated,while tranfpiration remainethjthere do exhale and breath out vaporous and fluid parts, which carry away fome power of gravitation. Which though we allow, we do not make anlwerable unto living expiration; and therefore the Chicken or Mice were not To light being dead,as they would have been after ten hours kept alive ; for in that fpace a
Nor if it had (lept, for in that fpace abateth many ounces. of {leep,a man will fometimes abate fourty ounces; nor if it had bQzn in the middle of Summer, for then a man weigheth fome pounds lefsjthen in the height ofwinter; according to experience, and the ftatick Aphori fms of San^or'm* Again,Whereas men affirm they perceive an addition of ponderoHty in dead bodies,comparing them ufually unto blocks Scftones, whenfoever they lift or caf ry them; this acceflional preponderancy is rather in appearance then reality.For being deftitute of any motion,they confer no relief unto the Agents, or Elevators which makes us meet with the fame complaints of gravity in animated & living bodiesjwherethe nerves fubfide, and the faculty locomotive feems abolifhedjas may be obferved in the lifting or fupporting of persons inebriated, Apopleftical,or in Lypothimies and foundings. Many are alfo of opinion,and fome learned men maintain, that men are lighter after meals then before, and that by a fupply and addition of fpirits oSfcuring the grofs pond crofity of the aliment
man
ingefled
miftake if they diftinguifh not the fence of levity unto themfclves, and in regard of the fcale or decKfion of trutination. For after a draught of wine, a man may fecm lighter in himfelf from fudden ref e6kion,although he be heavier in the balance,from a corporal and ponderous addition ; but a man in the morning is
lighter
Book.
4.
and Common
Errors,
249
lighter in the fcale, becaufe in fleepfome pounds have perfpircd 5 and is alfo lighter unto himfcir, bccaufe he is refcfted. And to fpsak ftriftly, a man that holds his breath is weightier while
his lungs are full, then upon expiration. For a bladder blown is weightier then one empty, and if it contain a quart, exprefled, and emptied it will abate about a quarter of a grain. And we fomewhat miftruft the experiment of a pumice-ftone taken up by MontanuSi in his Com*
ment upon i4wc^<j', were declaring howtherarity of parts, and numerofity of pores, occafioneth a lightnefs In bodies, he affirms that a pumice-flone powdered, is lighter then one intire 5 which is an expe
riment beyond our fatisfaftion ; for be(ide that abatement can hardly be avoided In the Trituration ; if a bladder of good capacity will fcarce include a grain of ayr, a pumice of three or four dragms, cannot be prefumedto contain the hundred part thereof j which will not be fenfibic upon the exafteft beams we ufe. Nor isit to be taken ftriftly what is delivered by the learned Lord Ferulant, and referred unto further experiment i That a dilToIution of Iron in agua fortify will bear as good weight as their bodies did before , notwichftanding a great deal of wafte by a thick vapour that ifliieth during the workings for we cannot find it to hold neither in Iron nor Copper,which is diflblved with lefs ebullition ; and hereof we made trial in Scales of good exaftnefs : wherein if there be a defeft, or fuch as will not turn upon quarter grain?, there may be frequent mlftakes in experiments of this nature. But ftranger is that, and by the favorabkft way of trial, will hardly be made out what is delivered by Hamerus Poppus, that Antimony calcin'd or reduced to affi:s by a burning glafs, although it emit a grofs and ponderous exhalation , B'^i'^f^'* ^fl^^' doth rather exceed then abate its former gravity. N^verthelefs, flrange ""'"" it is j how very little and almofl infeniible abatement there will be fometimes in fuch operations, or rather fome encreafc, as in the refining of metals, in the teft of bone afhes, according to experience: and in a burnt brick^as Monfieur de Calve affirmeth.Vtiftake may be made in this ^ Fierra,' way of trial, when the Anmmony is not weighed immediately upon the calcination ; but permitted the ayr, it imbibeth the humidity thcreof,and
fo repaireth
its
gravity.
Chap.
VIII.
THat
250
Euripides.
Book
4.
experience, not well underftanding Anatomy^ and the ufe of parts. For at the throat there arc two cavities or conducing parts j the one the Oefophagus or gullet, feated next the fpinf,a part official unto niuritionjand whereby the aliment both
is conveyed unto the flomack j the other Cby which tis conceived the drink doth pafs ) is the weazon, rough artery, or wind-pipe apart infervient to voice and refpiration ; for thereby theayr defendeth into the lungs, and is communicated unto the hsart.And therefore all animals that breath or hays lungs, havealfo the weazon; but many
Mow
herein
men contradift
have the gullet or feeding channel, which have no longs or wind-pipe 5 which havegils, whereby the heart is refrigerated ; for fuch thereof as have lungs and refpiration, are not without the weazon as Whales, and cetaceous animals. Again, Befide thefe pans deftin'd to divers offices, there is a peculiar provifion for the wind-pipe, that is, a cartilagineous flap upon the opening of the Larinx or throttle, which hath an open cavity for the admiflionof the air; but left thereby either meat or drink fhould defcend. Providence hath placed tht Epiglottis, LiguU^or flap likd an Ivy leaf, which alwa^yes clofeth when we (wallow, or when the meat and drink pafleth over it into the gullet. Which part although ^11 (lave
as fifhfs
not that breath,as all cetaceous and oviparous animalsjyec is the weazon fecured fome other way ; and therefore in Whales that breath left the water ftiould get into the lungs, an ej;ftion thereof is contrived by a Fiftula or fpout at the head. And therefore alfo though birds have no whyamaYi Epiglottis, yet canthey focontraft the rimor chinckof their ti*^ii Larinv Larinx, ^ ^ ^ cannot drink j 'tr c . dry wet of or to the ingefted prevent adminion ^^ either whereof ; and at
,
J-
/ij"7
And
breath once.
g,et,-
it
be ejefted.
dcrftood,
when we read
any
another by an hair in
ntilk,^
fome truth there is in the afTertion upon the experiment of Hippocrates, who killing an Hog after a red
(hallftill affirni, that
Now if
potion, found the tinfture thereof in the Larinx; ifany will urge the fame from medical praftice, becaufe in affeftions both of Lungs and weazon, Phyfitians make ufe 0/ fyrupes, and lambitive medicines*
(ome may diiiill and inlinuate into the wind-pipe, and medicines may creep downjas well as the rheum before them; yet to conclude from hence, that air and water have both one common pafTage, wereto ftatethe qusflion upon the weaker file of thediftinftion, arrd from a partial or guttulous irrigation, to
are not averfe to acknowledge, that
we
CHAP.
Bo6k4
and Common
Erroff*
251
Chap.
Of
IX.
Sneezing.
Oncerning Sternutation or Sneezing, and the cuftome of (alutiDg rorbleffing upon that motion, it is pretended, and generally btlieved to derive its original from a difeafe, wherein Sternutation proved liiortal, and fuch as Sneezed, died And this may feem to be proved from Carolm Rigonm, who in his Hiftory of Italj^ makes mention of a Peftilcnce in the time of Gregory the Great, that proved pernitiousand deadlyto thole that Sneezed. Which notwithftanding will not fufficiently determine the grounds hereof that cuflome having an elder
. :
then this Chronology affordeth. For although the age of Gregory extend above a thoufand, yet is the fable of the Fullers wife, this cuftome mentioned by Apuleius, who lived three hundred years before; by FHhj in that Problem of his, Cur St ernut antes falutantur i and there are alfo reports thatT^^erius the Emperor, otherwife a very fower man, would perform this rite jnoft punftuallyunroothers,and expeft the fame from others,unto him{ehPetronius ^ri'iffrjwho lived before them both,and was Proconful of Bythinia in the raign of Nero, hath mentioned it in thefe words, Gy-
Mra,
ter continuo ita flernutavit ut grahatum , motum Euniolpus converfus^ Salvere Gytona jubet. C<eUus Khodiginus hath ati example hereof among the Gree\sy far antienter then thelcjthat is, in the time of Cyrus the younger; when confulting about their retreat , it chanced that one among them Sneezed ; at the noife whereof, the reft of the Souldiers called upon Jupiter Soter. A CoIIeaios There is alfo in the Greek Anthology, a remarkable mention hereof in of GreekEpan Epigram upon one Vroclus ; the Latine whereof we (hall deliver, as P^^'j? ^'j^^*
ad
quern
we
"
''^
"^*
Nonpotis
Natnq:)
ef}
No
Sternutamentumi tarn procul aure fonat, hand his nofe can never wipe, His hand too little is his noie to gripe. He Sneezing calls not Jove, for why ? he hears Himself not Sneez , the found' fo far from's ears. Nor was this onely an antient cuftom among the Greeks rndKowans^ Ve rebus (Ab '^^' and is flill iniorcewith us, but is received at this day in the remcrefty^g^^,^
Troclus with his
V^n%oi Ajrka. For fo we read in Co i/7^i 5 that upon a Sneez of the Emperor ot Adonomotapa, there pafTed acclamations fucccflively thrcu4h
the City. And as remarkable an example there is of the fame cufton^, in 2 the
Kk
252
Book 4.
the remoteft parts of the Eaft, recorded in the travels of Tinto. But the hiftory will run much higher, If we (hould take in the Kahi>/ictf/ account hereof; that fncezing was a mortal fign even from the
Buxt. Lex.
ChiUi.
was taken off by the fpecial fuppliation of Jactb, a thankful acknowledgement, this falutaiion firft be8^" ^"*^ was after continued by the expreffion of Tobim Chatim^ or vitahna, by ftandcrs by, upon all occafion of fneezing. Now the ground of this ancient cuftom was probably the opinion the ancients held of fternutation, which they generally conceived to be
it
firftman; undl
From whence, as
a good fign or a bad, and fo upon this motion accordingly ufed, a Salve or zry cufp as a gratulation for the one, and a deprecation from Now of the wayes whereby they enquired and determined the other. itsfignality i the firft was natural, arifing from Phyfical caufes, and confcquences oftentimes naturally fucceeding this motion; andfoic effecmed a good fign. For fneezing being properly a whence Stcr- "^^^^^ ^^ ^"^^^ niotion of the brain, fuddenly expelling through the noftJIs what is nutation or Sncezir<g pro- offenfiveuntoit, it cannot but afford fome evidence of its vigour; and ceeds. therefore faith /ir//Jot/l?, they that hear it, we'wuwi^// / '/sg^^ honour it Problem Scft. ^s fomewhat facred, and a fign of Sanity in the diviner part
^^*
In what a fign of
f
; and this from the praftice of PhyfitiansjWho in perfons near death, do ufe Sternutatories, or fuch medicines as provote unto fneezing;
he
iliuflrates
good.
the faculty arife, 'and Sternutation enfueth , they conceive life, and with gratulation receive the figns of fafety. And ioisitalfoof good fignality, according to that of Hippocrates^ that
when if
hopes of
is
profitable unto
women
in hard la-
bour
t KiDg.4.-35.
and
fo is
it
Catalepfies
and Coeffefts
ma's.
And
in this natural
way
it is
InwhatofbadoF
and may give hints of deprecation, as in difeafes of the cheff : ;|or therein Hippocrates condemneth it as too much exagitating : in the beginning of Catarrh( according unto Avicen>ta, as hindering concoft4on, in new and tender conception8(as Plinj obfervcth)
fignes,
The
fecond
way was
luperfiitious
"bath illuftrated in tefiimonies, as ancient as theocritus and Homer : as appears from the Aihenian m.iftir, who would haveretired, becaufe a boat-man fneczed ; and the teftimonyof AujHn^ that the Ancients were wont to go to bed again if they fneezed while they put on their
^'fiioe.
Aiid in this way it was alfo of good and bad fignification ; fo hath a Problem, why fneezing from noon unto midnight was goods but from night to noon unlucky ? So Eujiathius upon Homer obfervcs, that fneezing to the left hand was unlucky, but profpcrcus unto the right ; fo, as Piutarcb relateth, when Ihemijhcles facrificed in his galley before the battle oi Xerxes^ and one of the ^fliftants upon the right hand Sneezed; Euphramides the Southfayer, prefaced the viftoryof
Arijiotle
the Greek^i
Thus
Book
4.
perceive
Thus wc may
353
conceived j and thefe opinions hereof in all ages, not any onedifeafeto have been the occafion of this falutc and deprecation. Arifing at firft
from
this
vehement
able unto theftanders by j from whence fome finding dependent effeSs to^enfuejothcrs afcribing hereto as a caule what perhaps but cafually or inconncxedly fucceeded^hey might proceed unto forms of fpeeches, felicitating the good, orMeprecating tl^vil to follow.
C H A ^4"X.
Of
tht Jew^,
is,
an evil favour , is a received opinion we know not how to admit: although concede many queftionable points, and difpute not We will the verity ot fundry opinions which are of affinity hereto. acknowledge that certaine odours attend on animals^ no lefs then cer^ tain colours; that ][4'^afent (mels are not confined unto vcgitables, but found in divers aninajUand fome more richly then in plants.And though the Problem of i^ri/^(wenquire why none fmels fweet belidethe Parde i yet later difcoveries add divers forts o{ Monkeys, the Givet Cat and Gazela , from whicfc our Musk proceedeth. Wc confefs that befide the fmell of the fpices, there may be individual odour*, and every man may have a proper and peculiar (avour ; which although not pcrccpti* ble unto man, who hath this fenfe, but weak,yct fenfible unto Dogs,who hereby can fingle out their Matters in the dark. We will not deny that particular men have fern forth a pleatant favour, as Ti&/'fcr/xrf and P/tarch reportof Alexander the great, and Jzetzesand Cardan do tcA'ifK ofthemfelves. That fome may alfo emit an unfavery odour,we have no reafon to deny 5 for this may happen from the quality of what they have taken the Factor whereof may difcover it felf by fwcatand urine, as being unmafterablc by the natural heat of man, not to be dulcified by ccncoftion beyond an unfavory condition : the like may come to pafs from putrid humours, as is often difcoverable in putrid and malignant fevers. And fome-time alfb in grofs and humid bodies even in the latitude of fanity ; the natural heatof the parts being infufficient for a perfeft and through digeftion,and the errors of one concoftion not reftifiablc by another. But that an unfavory odour is gen'ftlitious or national unto the Jews^ if rightly und^ood, wc cannot well concede j nor will the information ot reafon6te induce it. For firft, Uponconfult of there ^will be found noeafieafTurancc to faften a material or tcmperath^tal propriety upon any nation ; there being fcarce any condition (but what depends upon clime) which isnot cxhauftcd Kk 3.
is
THat
TeUffi ftink
naturallyjth at
and nation
there
r^^
254
Book
4.
exhauftcd or obfcured from the commixture of introven'ient nations either by commerce or conqiieft; much more will it be difficult to make out this affeftion in the Jewer^ whofe race however pretended to be pure, muft needs have fuffered infeparable commixtures with nations of all forts 5 not onely in regard of their profelytes, but their univerfal difpertion ; (omc being ported from (everal parts of the earth, o-
and fwollow;dup in thofe nnionswhcreth^y planFor the tribes of JlfK/m, Gad^ pan oiManaJJes and Haphtbali^ \yhich were taken by AJfur,2ind the reft at the lacking oi Samaria^which were led away by S^aLmnaJJerinto Aj^jria^ and after a year and half
thers. quite loft,
ted.
arrived at Arjereth, as is delivered in E/^/^^jjihefe I fay never returned, and are by the Jeypes as vainly expefted as their Mejjas. Of thofe of the trlbsoijuda and Betfjaw^n, v^hich were led captive into Babylon by Nehucbadnezzer^ many returned unto Zorobabelj the reft remained,
The tribes that returned to Judea'^ were afterward widely difperfed 5 forbefide fixteen thoufancf which 7it((s fent to Kom unto the triumph of his father rf/jp/z/wff, he fold no lefs then an hundred thoufand for Not many yetres after tAdrian the Empcrour, who ruined the flavcsi
whole Countrey,tranfplantedmany thoufands into ^/?/M,from whence they difperfed into divers Countreys, as into France and England^ but were baniftied after froiii both. From Spain they difperfed into Africa^ Italj) Connantimple^ and the Dominions of theTi^r^. where they remain as yet in very great numbers. And if ( according to good relati* ens ) where they may freely fpeak it, they forbear not to boaft that there are at prefcnt many thoufand Jews in Spain^ France and England^ andforaedifpenfed withall, even to the degree of Priefthood ^ it is a matter very conliderablC) and could they be (melledout, would much advantage, not oncIy the Church of Qhrift, but alfo the coders of " Princes;! r: Now having thus lived in feveral Countriesjand alwayes in fubjeftiGnj they muft needs hav fuffered 'many commixtures } and we arc furc they are not exempted fromthecoramon contagion of Venery contrafted firft from Chriftians. Nor are fornications unfrequent between them both 5 there commonly palling opinions of invitement, that their Women defire copulation with them, rather then their own Nation, andafIt being therefore feft Chriftian carnality above circumcifedvenery. acknowls'Jg Jdj that fome are loft!, evident that others are mixed, and
-
>
.;
notalTured that any are diftinft, it willbehard toeftiblifh this quality u)ponihQ J ewesy unlefswealfo transfer the fame unco thofe whofe generations are mixed, whofe genealogies are Jewifi^and naturally derived from them. Aeain, If we concede a National unfavourinefs in any people, yet
fhall
Book
4.
255
feldom offending or (iiperfluiry of meats ; whereby they prevent indigcftion and crudities, and confcquently puvrefcence of humours. They have in abomination allflcfh maimed, or the inwards any way vitiated 5 and therefore They obferve noc onciy fafts at cat no meat but of their own killing.
hereto then any,and that in thofe re(hall we gards which mod powerinlly concur to (uch efFefts,that is, their diet and j^eneration. As for their diet, whether in obedience unto the precepts of reafonjorthe injuiiftionsof pariimonyjtherein they arc very temperate.; The /efwrgenerallwery in ebriety or excels of drink, nor erring in gulofity
find the Je^es lefs fubj
^^'"P^'^^^^'
certain times, but are retrained unto very few difhcs at all times ; fo few, that whereas Saint Fftfrifheet will hardly cover our* tables, their law doth icarfe permit them to fet forth a Lordly feaft ; no any way to anfwer the luxury of our times, or thofe 6f our forefathers. For of and luch as compleat otir flcfti their Law reftrairis them many forts, feafts; That animal, Propter convivia natum, they touch hot, nor any
of its preparations, or parts fo much in refpeft at Koman tables ; nor admit they unto their board;, Kai-e?, Conies, Herons, Plovers or fwans. Of fifhes they onelytafl of fuch as have both fins and fcales ; which are^dn// eflguk comparatively but few in number, fuch onelyyiiaith Arijiotlcy whofe ?"f /'^'^oroj^" ejKg or fpawn is arenactous;whereby are excluded all cetaceous and car-^'""^^^'^^' tilagienous fifhes; many peftinaljWhofe ribs are reftilineahmany coftal, "J^'JJ'^^'^^^^^'^J^which have theirribsembov/ed; all fpina', or fuch as have no ribs, btitohely a back boneiferfome what analogous thereto, as Eels,Congers, Lamppiesj all that arc tcftaceoos, asOyfterp, Codes, Wilks, Schollops, Mul'cles; and likewife all cruftaceous, as Crabs, Shrimps and Lob(lers. So that obferving a fpare and fimple diet,whercby they prevent the generation of crudities h and fafting often whereby they might alfo di^eft them i they muft be lefs inclinable unto this infirmity then any other Nationjwhofe proceedings are not fo reafonable to avoid it. As for their generations and conceptions ( which are the purer from good diet, J they become more pure and perfeft by the ftrift obfervation of their Law 5 upon the injunftions wherecE, they feverely obferve the times of Purificationjand avoid all copulatlMi,either in the uncleannefsof themfelves , Or impurity of their women. A Rule, Ifear, not fowell obfervedby Ghriftiansj whereby not onely conceptions are preproceed, fo vitiated and,dcfiled}tht duYabfc^nqQi^ the birth. Which,when the conception meets with thefe impurities,muft needs be very potentj fince in the purefl and n^o^^Tfte original fairconccptions,learned men derive the canfeof Pox and Mea2els,from or matcridl principles of that nature 5 that is, the tnenftruous impurities in the mo- caufescf fhe thers bloodjand virulent tinftures contrafted by the Infant, in the nutri- I'oxandMeaif they
vented, but
nation?, remain
upon
mentofthewomb.
-'j
...:i
/.,.
^^'s*
Laftly, Experience will convift it ; forthis offenfiveodor is no way difcoverable in their Synagogues where many are, and by reafon of
their
is
thefamedifcernablein
commerce
2 55
Book
4.
commerce
this
or converfadon with fuch as are cleanly in apparel, and dc* cent in their Houfes. Surely the Viziars and Turkjfh Bama'sarc not of
oppinionjwhoas
Sr.
Jewoi their private Counfel.And were this true, t\iz Jews themfelves do not ftriftly malce out the intention of their Law, for in vain do they
Icruplc to approach the dead, wholivingly are cadaverous, or fear any outward pollution, whofe temper pollutes themfelves. And laftly, were this true, our opinion is not impartial ; for unto converted Jewes
Cr^n.
34.
who are of the fame {eed, no man imputcth this unfavoury odor ; as though Aromatized by their converfion, they loft their fcent with their Religionjand fmclt no longer then they favoured of the Jew, Now the ground that begat or propagated this afTertion, might be the diftafteful averfnefs of the Chriftian from the Jew, upon the villany of that faft, which made them abominable and ftink in the noftrils ofallmen. VVhich real praftife, and metaphorical exprcflion, did afwas a fraudulent illationjfor favour their father. J^co^ acknowledged inhimfelf, when hefaid, his fons had made him ftink in the land, that is, to be abominable unto the inhabitants thereof- Now how dangerous it is in fencible things 10 ufe metaphorical cxpreffions unto the people, and what abfurd conceits they will fwallow in their literals ; an impatient example we have in our own profeflion; who having called an eating Ulcer by the name of a Wolf, common apprehenfion conceives a rea-" lity therein ; and againft our (elves, ocular affirmations arc pretended CO confirm ir. The naftinefs of that Nation, and fluttifti courfe of life hath much promoted the opinion, occafioned by their fcrvile condition at firft,and inferiour wayes of perfimony ever fince 5 as is delivered by Mr. Sandys^ They are generally fat, faith he, and rank of the favours which attend upon fluti^ifli corpulency. The Epithetes afligned them by ancient times, havealfo advanced the (amesfor Ammianus Marcellinm defcribeth them in fuch languagejand Martial more ancient,in fuch a relative expreiHon
ter proceed into a literal conftruftion; but
ftich
an
evill
fetj forth
unfavoury Baffa.
Mallaniy
NiffVc'oCiK,
lejMRJa olerc,
Deflcrilitate
^"J* '
^P'^fl.
^odjejunia Sabbatarhrum quam quod oies, olere Baffa. From whence notwithftanding we cannot infer an inward Imperfeftion in the temper of that Nation ; it being but an efFeft in the breath from outward obfervation, in their ftrift and tedious faftinfiji and was acorn* mon efFeft in the breaths of other Nations,became a Proverb among the Greeks, and the reafonthereof begot a Problem in Arijiot/e. Laftly, If all were true, and were this favour conceded, yet are the reafons allcadgedforitnowayfatisfaftory. Hc^fr/w, and after him Alfariui Crci;,imputes this cffcft unto their abftinence from fait or fait meats ; which how to make good in the prefcnt diet of the Jews, we know not > nor (hall we conceive it was obferved of old, if we confider
they
'
Book.
4.
great part
257
we cannot deny a
was eiten by the Priefts. And if the offeris, once in the ins were of flefti, it was falted no lefs then thrice, that upon the top and Altar, the footftep of the fait, at chamber of common Nor if they refrainMaimonides. by delivered at large is as thereof,
ed
all fait, is
there are not noted for Amimals, moft carnivorous ill odours, which eat no fait at all 5 after the fathers our probably and Nations, whole Children, many Creation there being indeed in every thing we cat, a natural and con-
for
many
as
all
cealed
tears,
as
fait
to contain
',
Another caufe is urged by Campegiusy and much received by Chrifti* ans that this ill favour is a curfe derived upon them by Chrift , and ftands as a bag or brand of a generation that crucified their Satvator. But this is a conceit without all warrant 5 and an eafy way to take oii diA method of many Writers, ipute in what point of obfcurity (oever. which much depreciates the efteem and value of miracles j that is, therewith to falve not onely real verities, but alfo non-exiftencies. Thus have elder times not onely afcribed the immunity of Irelandfrom any venemous beaft, unto the ftaff or rod of Tatrick j but tb e long tayles of Kent^ untothe malediftionof ;^/}2Af. Thus therefore, although we concede that many opinions are true which hold fome conformity unto this, yet in afTenting hereto, many difficulties muft arife ; it being a dangerous point to annex a conftant property unto anyNation,and much more this unto the Jf wjiince its not vcrifiible by obfervation fince the grounds are feeble that fhould eflablifh it, and laflly, fince if all were true , yet are the reafons alleadged for it, of no fufficiency to maintain it.
-,
C H A p.
Xt.
Of Pigmies.
BY
Pigmies we underfVand a dwarfifh race of people, or loweft diminution of mankind,comprehended in one cubit, or as fomewill have itjintwo foot or three fpans; not taking ihem fingle,but nationally confideringihem,and as they make up an aggregated habitation. Where* of although affirmations be many,andteftimonies more freq lent then in any other point which wife men have caff into the lift of fables j yet that there is, or ever was fuch a race or nation,upon exat and confirmed teftimonies, our ffriftcft enquiry receives no fatisfaftion. I fay,exaft teftimonies,firftj In regard of the Authors, from whom we derive the account j for though we meet herewith in Herodotus ,
LI
Vbilo^
258
Fhilojlratusy
Ew^nims into
Meloy Ftiny^
iS'&^*.^
Vulgar
Book 4*
and ni^ny more; yet were they dcrU vative Relators, and the prlmativc Author was Homr \ who ufing often
(imilies, as
well to delight the ear, as to illuftratc his matter, in the third ot his Iliads, compareth the 7'i'o;<?>fi unto Cranes, when they defcendagainft the Pigmies j which was more largely fet out- by Opparty Jinjenal, hlantuany and many Poets finee, and being onely a pleafant
hgment in
rent
ftill
the fountain,
became a folemn
and cur-
it ; Strabo an exaft and Judicious Geographer,hath largely condemned it as a fabulous ftory in lib. I. Julius Scaliger a diligent enquirer, accounts thereof, but as aPoetical fiftion j Vlyffes Aldrovandus a moll exaft Zoographer in an ex-
andaPoetital
account o^Homer^ and the fame was formerly conceived by Eujiathiusy Albertus Magnus a man o^.times too his excellent Commentator. credulou8,herein wasmorethen dubious; for heaffirmeth, if any fuch dwarfs were ever extant,they were furely fome kind of Apes : which is a conceit allowed by C4r^<7%andnotefteemed improbable by many others.
Hift. animal,
lib.8,
There; are I confefs two teftimonies, which from their authority ad* mitof confideration. The firft of -^ri/^ot/e, whofe words are thc/l'f Is*, j^ 5 TlTT^'i &c. That is. Hie locus eff qutm incolum Fygmaif mnenim idfam bula eji, fed puftlluM gew/Si ut aiunt. Wherein indeed Arijiotleplsncsthc jiriftotle^hit is,the wary and evading aflcrcor ; For though with mHeji fabula^ hefeem at firft to confirm it, yet at the laft he claps in, Sciunt And therefore I pb^ aiuntp, and (hakes the beU.ef he put before upon it.
ferve Sca/iger hath not tranfiated the
firft
;
perhaps fuppofing
it furi'eptir
tious or
unworthy fo great an afTerior. And truly for thofe bocks of aniraals, or work of eight hundred talents, as Atkeneus terms it, although ever to be admired, and contain moft excellenttruths; yet are many tWngs-therein delivered upon rehtron, and (ome repugnant unto the hiftory of our fenfes i as we are able to make out in feme, znd Scaliger
hath obfcrved in
Comment
upon
i^^ekf x?.
1
that piece.
f
3.
&
retra^ fuas fufpenderunt in muris tuis per gyrunt: from whence notwith* ftanding w.e cannot inter thisafTertion, tor firft the Tranflators accord nor, and the, Hebrew word Gammadiam is very varioufly rendred, Thoi)^,h Aquillji Fatablus and Lyra will have it Pygwaiy yet in the Sep*
lo in the Arabicl{_znd high Chalde Cappaetotiam^ i\y Syymnacbui Medes^ and in the But in th.' Calde^ Cappadocians ; in Symmacus^ French-i thofe of Gamad^ Jheddotio)! of old, and Iremelius of late, have retained the Medes.
tuagint,
it is
Dutch'
\n
t\\Q
Textuary
word
Italian,
Low
Book 4.
thy walls roundaTranflators, that is, bout, and the <5;w>/?</iwf were in thy towers. Nor do men onely dificntin the Tranflation of the word, fcut in- the Expofition of the fenfe and meaning thereof j for fome by G'ammadms underfland a people of Syria., (o called from the City GamaU ; feme ^r.f M//er; hereby undcrftand the Cd:;?/>/^od^, many the Medes' and hereof Fd- ^^<^
259
r^iwhath
Watchmen
o'^T)^^
cdptlon^ofA'-
might well becalledPigmies, the Towers of that City being fo high, /e^,f, that unto men belo w,they appeared in ai citbital ftature*. Others expounded it quite contrary to comon acception,that isnot men of theleafi-jbut of thelargeft lize; fo doth Cornelius conftrue Tygniai or viri cubitalesythsLt is, not men of a cubit high, but of the largeflltature, whole height like that of GiantSjis rather to be taken by thecubitthen the foot 5 in which phrafc we read the meafure of Coliah whofe height u Qiid to. be fix cuOf affinity hereto is alfo the Expofition of JeronVy not bits and a fpan. taking Pigmies for dwarfs, but ftout and valiant champions 5 not taking the fenfe of wb^fx**, which fignifies the cubit meafure,but that which exprefTeth Pugils that is, men fit for combate and thi exercife of Thus can there be no fatisfying illation from this T^xt, the thcfift. dlverfity or rather contrariety of Expofitions and interpretation Sj idi? ftra6\:ing more then confirming the truth of the ftory.
;
Again, I fay, exaditeftimonies-, in reference unto circumflantial relations fo diverfly or contrarily delivered. Thus the relation of Ari4 j^ot/tf placeth them above iE^/'t towards the head oi: Nyk in Africa-^
and
Pliny
m a third
Cerama
fight
with Cranes,
huiMenecles inAtheneus affirms they fight with Partridges,fomc (ay they ride on partridges, and fome on the backs of Rams. Laftly, 1 (ay, confirmeS tcflimonies ; for though Paulus Jovius delivers there are Pigmies beyond ^tf^'flx; Pigafeta, about the Molluccas; and Olaus Magnus placeth them in Greenland j yet wanting frequent confirmation in a matter fo confirmable, their affirmation carrietii but ^ xhe ftory flow perfwafion ; * and wife men may think there is as much reality of Pigmies inthe jj Pigmies of Paracelfus ; that is, bis non- Adamicai men, or mid* rejefted. die natures betwixt men and f^pirits.. By Pigmies There being thus no fufficient confirmaticm of their vcrity/ome doubt intending Fai* may arife conc<;rning their pofTibility, wherein, fince it is not defined J.'and other in what dimeniions the foul may exercife her f aculties,we (hall not conthe ear'JSy elude impoffibilityj or that there might not be a race of Pigmies, as there Nymphs
\\
is
and the opinion oiAu^in, and Salamanders, his Comment Ludovicus 5 but to believe they fhould be in the ^^ flature of ^P'''*^^ ^^ a foot or fpan requires the preafpcftion of fuch a one as PhiletM the Po-
fometime* of Giants. So
may we
take
jri
unto his feet left the winde 2V>;Ik, ^c. Ihoiild blow him away. Or that other in the fame Authour, who was fo little ut ad ohUm aceederet-:,^9iot^ fo ftrange,that we might herein exIjI 2 cufe
;
et
m Atkenus
who was
vepkmak
26o
Book 4,
cufe'thc Printer, did not the account oi Mlian accord unto.it, as Caufabonehith obferved in his learned An i mad vcrlions. Laftlyjifany {uch Nation there were, yet is it ridiculous what racn have delivered of them 5 that they fight with Cranes upon the backs of Rams or Partridges ; or what is delivered by Ctefias, that they are iVrgroes in the middeft of Jndia; whereof the King of that Countrey, entertaincth three thouland Archers for his guard. Which is a relation below the tale oiOberon; nor cculd they better defend him, then the Emblem faith, they offended Hercules whilft he flcpt, that is, to wound him no deeper, then to awake him.
Chap.
XII.
that
is^
Sixty three,
The
great
Climafterical,
; the fcnfc apprehending them in lefler magnitudes then their demenfions require ; fo itbeholdeth the Sun, the Stars, and the Earth it felf. But the undcrftanding quite otherwife : for that afcribeth unto many things far larger horizons then their due circumfcriptions require : and receiveth them with amplifications which their reality will not admit. Thus hath it fared with many Heroes & moft worthy perfons, who being fufficiently commendable from true and unqueff ionable mcrits,have received advancement from falftiood and the fruitful flock of fables. Thus hath it happened unto the Stars, and Luminaries of heaven: who being fufficicntly admirable in themfelveSjhave been fet out by effefts, no way dependant on their efficiences, & advanced by amplifications to the queflioning of their true en dowments^ Thus is it not improbable it hath alfo fared with number, which though wonderful in it felf, and fufficiently magnifiable from its dcmonflrable afFcftions,hath yet received adjeflions from the multiplying conceits of men, and ftands laden with additions, which its equity will not admit. And fo parhaps hath it happened unto thenumber,7 and 9,which muftiplied into themf elves do make up Sixty three,commonly cffeemed the great Climafterical of our lives. For the dayes of men are ufually caff up ty Septenaries,and every (eventh year conceived to carry fome altering charafter with it,either in the temper of body,mind,or both. But among all other, three are mofl remarkable, that is, 7 times 7 or fourty nine, 9 times p or eighty one, and 7 times 9 or the year of Sixty three; which is conceived to carry with it the moft confiderable fatality ; and confilling of both the other numbers was apprehended to comprife the vcrtue of either: is therefore expefted and entertained with fear,& effecmed * ^^^^^^ of fate topafs it over. Which notwithftanding many fufpeft to be but a Panick tcrrour, and men to fear they jyflly know not what : and
Book
4.
find
Common Erfors*
261
tofpeak indifferently, I find no {atisfaftion : nor any fufficicncy in the received grounds to eftablifli a rational fear. Now herein to omit Aftrologicalconfiderations ( whic.h arc but rarely introduced)the popular foundation whereby it hath continued,! sfirft, the extraordinary power and fecret vertue conceived to attend thcfe numbers : whereof we muft confefs there have nor wanted not onely e# fpecial commendationSj butveryftngular conceptions. Among Philofophers, Pythagoras ieems to have played the leading part 5 which was long after continued by his difciples, and the Italick^ School. The Philo(bphy of Flato^ and moft of the Fiatoniffs abounds in numeral confidera* tions:alx)ve all^Thilo the learned Jew^hnth aded this part even to fupcrftition : bellowing divers pages in {umming up every thingjwhich might advantage this number. Which notwithftanding, when aferious Reader (hall perpendjhe will. hardly find any thingthat may convince his judgcmcnt,or any further pcrfwade, then the lenity of hisbeUef> or prejudge-
ment of reafon inclineth. For firfti Not only the number of 7 and 9 from confiderations
abftrufej
have been extolled by moft, but all or moft of the other digits have been as myfticaUy applauded. For the number of One and Three have not been onely admired by the Heathens, but from adorable grounds, the unity of God, and myfterieof the Trinity admired by many Chriftians. The number of four (lands much admired,not onely in the quaternity of the Elements,which are the principles of bodies,but in the letters oi the Name of God, which in the Greek^. Arabian, TerfmUyHebrew and ^gyf^ tiau, confiftethof that numbcrj and was fo venerable among the Pytha^goriansy that they fwore,by the number four. That of (ix hath found ma ny leaves in its favour > not onely for the dayes of the Creation, but its natural conjideration, as being a perfeft number, and the (irft that is compleated by its partsjthat is, the iixt, the half, and the third, i> 2. 3. Which drawn into a fum, make fix. The number of ten hath been as highly extolled, as containing even, odd, long, plain,quadrate and cubical numbers h and Arijhtle obferved with admiration, that Bar* harians as well as Greek^s^ did u(e a numeration unto Ten ; which being lo general, was not to be judged cafualjbut to have a foundation in nature.So that not onely 7 and 9, but all the reft have had their EIogie3,as maybe obferved at large in Rhodigiuufy^ and in (everal Writers: fince every one extolling number, according to his fubjcft, and as it advanta* gedthc prcfent difcourfein hand. Again, They have been commended not onely from pretended grounds ^ in nature, but from artificial, cafual or fabulous foundations fohave fome endeavoured to advance their admiratlonjfrom the 9 Mufes, from the 7 Wondersof the World,from the 7 Gat^sof T&f^ : in that 7 Cities contended for Horner^ in that there are 7 Stars in Vrfa tKJmr^ and 7 in Charles wayn,;or Plauftrum of I^r/4 wajor. Wherein indeed although the ground be natural, yet either from confiellations or their re
:
LI
markable
2^2
Book
4.
commend any ot
:
her number^
the ftars in Sagitta^ 3, from the girdle of Orion^ and yet are fuch 4 from Equkulusy Crujero^ or the feet of the Centaur as thefe dapt in by very good Authors, and fome not omitted by Fhilo^ Nor are they onely extolled from Arbitrary and Poetical grounds,but from foundations and principle?, falfe, or dubious. That Women arc menftruant, and Men pubefccnt at the year of twice (feven, is accounted a punftual truth ; which period nevertheless we dare not precifely determine, as havingobferved a variation and latitude inmoft; agreeably unto the heat of clime or temper ; men ariling varicufly unto virility, according to the aftivity of caufes that promote it. Sanguis men' firuofuf ad idem, ut plurimmi fepwmm durat^ hkh Philo. Which notwithftanding is repugnant unto experience, and the dodirincoi Hippocrates, who in hisbook, de dita, plainly affirmeth,itis thus but with few women, and onely fuch as abound with pituitious and watery humours. It is further conceived to receive addition, in that there arc 7 heads of Nyleyhut we have made manifeft elfewhere, that by the difcription of Geographers, they have been fomctime more,and are at prefent fewer. In that there were 7 Wife men oi Greece-, which though generally rc ceived, yet having enquired into the verity thcreo*, we cannot fo readifor in the life ofThales^ who was accounted in that ly determine it 5 number, Viogines Laenius plainly faith, Magna deeorum mintero difcordia eji', fome holding but four, fome ten, others twelve, and none agreeing in their names, though according to their number. jj^ ^^^^ jj^gj,g are juft y planets or errant Scars in the lower orbs of hea-
i^ncz/ S)idereus.
dcmonftrablc unto fenfe, that there are many more two more in the orb of Saturn, and no lefs then four more in the fpherc of Jupiter. And the like may be faid of theFleiades or 7 Stars,which are alfo introduced to mignifie this num. bcrifor whereas fcarce decerning fixjwe account them 7,by this rlcation, there are no lefs then fourty, That the heavens are encompafled with 7 circles, is alfo the alven
;
but
it is
now
'
legation ot Tbilo
',
which
Tropicks, the Equator, Zodiack, and the Milky circle ; whereas by Aftronomersthey are received in greater number. For though we leave out the Laftcous circle (which Aratus^Geminus^ and Fro* clusy out of him hath numbred among the reftj yet are there more by four then Phtio mentions ; that is, the Horizon, Meridian and both the Colures; circles very confiderabic, and generally delivered, not onely by Ptolomie, and the Aftronomers fincc his time , but fuch as flourished long before, as Hipparchus and Eudoxus. So that tor ought I know, il it make for our purpofe, or advance the theme in hand, with equal liberty^ we may affirm rhere were 7 Sybils, or but 7 figns in the Zodiack circle of heaven.
That
Book
That
that
4.
263
quaterf, beati
;
will have it, 7 times happy, hath much advanced this 3!^'''^f ''*'{** number in critical apprchenfions ; yetisnotthis conftruftion fo indu- ^g**^''^^ bitable to be received, as not at all to be queftioned : for though RhoMis as
men
and othen from the authority of Macrobius Co inter* yttServius his ancient commentator conceives no more thereby then a finite number for indefinite , and that no more is implied then often happy, ^rr^^o the ancienteftof them all, conceives no more by
oinuiiBeroaldus
pret
it,
Homerj then a full and excciTive expre(Tion j whereas in commoil phrafe and received language, he fticuld have termed them thrice happy; herein exceeding that number.he called them four times happy, that is, more then thrice. And this he illiftrates by the like e<preflion of Horner^ in the fpeech of Circe j who to exprcfs the dread and terrcKir of the Ocean, flicks not unto the common form of fpeech in the ftrift account of itsreciprocations^ but largely fpeakine, faith, it ebbs and flows no lefs then thrice a day, terque dierevontit fludus^ iterumqu9 roforbet. And fo when tis faid by Horace, Jlices ter ampltus , the expcficion is fufficient , \i we conceive no more then the letter fairly beareth, that i-,. four times , or indifinitely more then thrice. But the main confiderations'which moft fet off this number, areobfervations drawn from the motions of the Moon, fuppofed to bemeafured by fevens j and the critical or decretory dales dependant on that number. As for the motion oF the Moon, though we grant it to be meafured by fevens, yet will not this advance the fame before its fellow numbers; for hereby the motion of other Stars are not meafured, the fixed Stars by many thoufand years, the Sun by 3^5 daie?, the fiiperiour Planets by more, the inferiour by fomewhat lets. And if we confider the revolution of the firft Movable, and the daily motion from Eaft to Weftjcommon unto all the Orbs^; we fhall find it meafured by another number, for bein^ performed in four and twenty hours, it ismadeup of 4 times 6 and this is the meafure and ftandard of other parts of time, of moneths, ofycars,01ympiade5, Luftres, Indiftions, of Cycles
this in
...
*''
'
&
Jabilies,
^c.
^.
Again, Moneths are not onely Lunary,and meafured by the Moon,but,Qn*g(J j alfo Solary,and determined by the motion of the Sun ; that is, the f pace wherein the Sun doth pafs 30 degrees of theEcliptick. By thismoneth DeoHomeflri Hi/'/>ocr<zrjcompated the time of the Infants geftation in the womb ; p'^'^fw. for 9 times 3,0, that is, 270'daies, or compleat 9 moneths^ make up fourty weeks,the common compute of women. And this is to beunderftood, when he faith, 2 daies makes the fifteenth, and 3 the tenth part of a moneth. This wasthemoneth of the ancient Hf^r^jvi before their departure out oijE^yp: and hereby the compute will fall out right,and the account concur, when in one place it is faid,the waters of the flood prevailed an hundred and fifty daycs, and in another it is delivered that they
^'^^
264
Book
4.
they prevailed from the feventeenth day of the Tecond moneth, unto the feventeenth day of the fcventh. As for hebdomadal periods or weeks, although in regard of their Sabbaths, they were obfervcd by t\\zHehre)s^ yet it is not apparent, the ancient Gr^^i^f or Romanes u fed any but had another diviiion of their moneths into Ides, Nones
:
and Calends.
Moreover,M6neths howfoever takenjarenot exaftly divifiblc into feptenariesor weeks,which fully contain (even days: whereof four times do make compleatly twenty eight. For, befidethe ufual or Calendar/ monethjthere are but four confiderable i the moneth of Peragration, of Apparition,of Conrecution,& the medical or Decretorial moneth^whcrof fome comcfhort, others exceed this account. A moneth of PeragratioUjis the time of the Moons revolution from any part of the Zodiack, unto the fame again and this containeth but 27 dayes, and about 8. hours: which cometh (hort to compleat the feptenary account. The moneth of Confecution, or as fome will term ir, of progrefllon, is the fpace between one con junftion of the Moon with the Sun, unto another : and this containeth 29 dayes and an half : for the Moon returning unto the fame point wherein it was kindled by the Sun, and not finding it there again ffor in the meantime, by its proper motion it hath pafTed through 2 fignes) it followeth after, and attains the Sun in the Ipace of 2 daic?, and 4 hours more, which added unto the account of Peragration, makes 29 dales and an half : fo that this moneth exceedeth the latitude of Septenaries, and the fourth moneth of Apparition, is part comprehendeth more then 7 dales. the fpace wherein the Moon appearcth ( dedufting three dales wherein k commonly difappeareth ; and being in combuftian with the Sun, is
:
prefumed of
hours.
lefs aftivity, )
and
26 dayes and 12
The medical moneth not much exceedeth this, conlifting of 26 dayes and 22 houres, and is made up out of all the other moneths. For if out of 29 and an half, the moneth of Confecution, we deduft 3 daies
and 12 hours : whereto
ti'
of difappearance, there will remain the moneth of Apparition 26 daies if we add 27 dayes and 8 hours,the moneth of Peragration, there willarire$3 dayes 2nd 10 hours, which divided by 2, tnakes 26 dayes and 22 hours, called by Phyficians the medical moneth : introduced by Gden againft Archigenesy for the better com* pute of Decretory or Critical dayes. As for the Critical dayes ( luch 1 mean wherein upon a defertation
feniible alteration,
deduced from
Aftrology,ihen Arithmetick for accounting from the beginning of the direafe,and reckoning on unto the (eventh day,the Moon wil be in a Tetragonal or Quadrate afpeftjthat is, 4figns removed from that wherein the difeafe began:in the fourteenth day it will be in an oppolite afpeft: and at the end of the third (epcenary,Tetragonal agdin:as wil moft gra-
phical'/
; ;y
Book.
4.
and Common
Errors,.
265
phically appear in the figures of Aftrologers 5 efpscially Lucas G anr kits J)e diehus decretorm. Again, CB.'liie that computing by the Medical moneth, the firft hcbdomadeor feptenarycoiififts of 6dayes, feventeen hours and an hal^, the fecond happeneth in 13 daies and eleven hours, and the third but in
the twentieth natural day ) what Galen firft, and Aben^Ezra lince obferved in his traft of critical day es, in regard of Eccentricity and the picicleor lelTer orb wherein it moveth, the motion of the Moon is va-
For rious and unequal whereby the Critical account muft alfo vary* though its middle motion be equal, and of 13 degrees, yet in theocher fom:timelefs then twelve. For moving it moveth (omstimes fifteen, pcrlormeth its motion more flowly then of its orb, it part upper in the in the lower j infomuch that being at the height, it ariveth at the Tetragonal and oppofite figns (boner, and the Critical day will be in 6 and 13 and being at thjlowell^, the Critical account will be out of the latitude of 7, nor happen before- the 8 or ninth day. Which are confiderations not to be neglefted in the compute of decretory dayes, and manitelily declare that other numbers muft have a refpeft herein as well as 7 and fourteen. Laftly, Some things to this intent are deduced from holy Scripture thus is the year of Jubile introduced to magnifie this number, as being a year made out ot 7 times 7; wherein notwithif andingthere may be a mifapprehenfion; for this arif.-th not from 7 times 7,that is, 49 ; but was obferved the fiftieth year, as is exprefTed, and you (hall hallow Anthe fiftieth year, a Jubile (hsM that fiftieth year be unto you. fwerable whereto is th,;Expofition of the Jen>s tbemfelves, as isde'Levh2r. livered by Ben-Maimon ; that is, the year of Jubile, cometh not into the
;
,
account of the years of 7,butthe fourty ninth is the releafe,and the fiftieth, the yczvoi Jubile. Thus is it alio cflcemed no fmall advancement unto this number, that the Genealogy of our Savi'^ur is fiimmed up by AUt. So all the 1 4, that is, thisnumber doubled ^ according as is exprefred. generations from Abraham to David urs fourteen generations, and from Vavid unto the carrying away into Babylon, are fourteen generations and from the carrying away into B/^^j/o^ unto Chrift are fourteen geWhich neverthelcfs muft not be (friftly underffood as nunerations. meral relations require ; for from David unto Jeconiah are accounted by Matthew but 14 generations j whereas according to the exaft account in the hilforyof Kings, there were at leaft 17; and 3 in thisaccount^ that
i.
For fo it is delivered by whereas in the Regal Genealogy thtre are three fucceiruns between forO^'^ior Vzziab was the (on of Amazias, Amazias o{Joas,Joai oi Azariah and Azariab fo that in (irift account, Joram was the Abavus or grandof Joram father twice removed and not the father of Ozias. And thefe fecond
is,
the
Ahazioi) Joas and Amaziof areleft out. Evcngelill ; and Joram begat Ozias
Mm
mea^fiire
of time in the
Royal
266
al
EnquirietintoP^Hlgar
chronology of Judab
:
Book
4.
for though Azariah reigned but one year, yet Joas reigned fourty, and ty^'tnazias no Uifz then nine and twenty. However therefore thefe vvcre delivered by the Evangelift, and carry
ftriftly
to
ot numbers.
Laftly, Though many things have been delivered by Authors concerning number, and they transferred unto the advantage of their na ture, yet are they off times otherwife to be underftood, then as d^ey are vulgirly received in aftive and cafual c on fj derations , they being many times delivered Hieroglyphically, Metaphorically, lliuftrativcly, and not with reference unto aftion or caufality. Ti uc it is,that God made, all things in number, weight and meafure, yet nothing by them or through the efBcacy of either. Indeed our dales, anions and motions being meafured by time C which is but motion meafured) whatever isobfervable in any, fats under theaccountof fomenumberj which notwithftanding cannot be denominated the caufe of thofe events. So do we inJLiftly alfign the power of Aftion even unto time ie felf ; nor do they fpeak f ropcrly who fay that Time confumcth all things; for Time is not effeftive, nor are bodies dcftroycd by it, but from the af^ion and paffion of their Elements in it ; whofe account it oaely afibrdeth ; and meafuring out their motion, informs us in the Periods and terms of their duration j rather then effefteth or phyfically produceth the
waOcrkis.
miracHlis^
De
areconfirma-
eccultis natuia
Bel, Lib.
y.
drawn from Writers, who have made obfervatrons, or fet down favourable rcafons for this Climaftcrical year ; (o have Henrkus Ran" zovim^ Bapijia Codronchus, and Levimts Lemnm much confirmed the fame but above all, that memorable Letter of ^g/?i fent unto his Nephtvf Caiui, wherein he encourageth him to celebrate his nativity, for he had now efcaped Sixty three, the great Clima6^erical and
;
which notwithftanding rightly perpended^ dangerous year unto man it can be no (ingularicy to qucftion it, nor any new Paradox to deny it. For firft^It is implicicelyjand upon confeqaence denied by Ati^9tle in his Politicks, inthatdifcourfe againft P//zfo, who meafured the vicif^ fitude and mutation of States, by a periodical fatality of number. Proloraiex\\2X famous Mathematician plainly faith, he will not deliver his doftrines by parts and numbers which arc ineffeftual, and have not the
:
nature of caufes ; now by thefe numbers faith Kodiginus and Mirandula, he impliethClimafterical years, that is, feptenaries, andnovenaries fet down by thebareobfervation of numbers. C^n[orinus 2in Author of great authorityj and (ufScientantiauicy, fpcakesyet more amply in his
hookVe die
Natali, wherein exprefly treating of ClimaAcrical dayes, he thus delivcreth himfclf. Some maintain tliat 7 times 7, that is,fourty nine, ismo0 dangerous ol any other,, and thisit the nioft general oginion
Book
4.
26y
pinion; others unto 7 times 7, add 9 times 9, that is, the year of eighty onCjbothwhich confifting of fqiure and quadrate nnmbers^wcre thought by Tiato and others to be of great conlideration i as for this year of fix ty three or 7 times 9, though (ome efteem itof moft danger, yet do I conceive it lefs dangerous then the other tor though it containeth both numbers above named, that is, 7 and 9, yet neither of them fqiarsor quadrate j and a s it is different from them both, fo is it not potent in either. Nor is this year remarkable in the death of many famous men. I find indeed i\\ditArijmle died thisyearjbut he by the vigour of his mind, alongtimefnflained a natural infirmity of flomackj fo that it was a greater wonder he attained unto fixty three, then that he lived no longer. The Pfalm of Mfr/<?i hath mentioned a year of danger differing from allthefe and that iscen times 7 or fevcnty ; for fo it is faid, the dayes And the very fame is affirmed by So/oh, of man are threef core and ten. as Herodotus relates in a fpcech of his unto CrjusjEgo annis feptuagiftta human vit mcdum definio. and furely that year muli be of greateft dan-,
which is the Period of all the reft-, and feweft fafely pafs thorow which is fet as a bound for few or none to pal?. And therefore the confent of elder times, fetUng their conceits upon Climafters not onely diffcTing from this of ours but one another ; though feveral Nations and Ages do fancy unto themfelves difierent years of danger, yet every one cxpe^ls the fame event, and conftant vcricy in
ger,
that,
each.
Again, Though Vano divided the dayes of man into five portions, Hjppocrites into 7, and Solon into ten; yet probably their divilions were to be received with latitude, and their confiderations not flriftly to be confined onro their lafl unities. So when Farro cxtcndetli Fuertia unto 1 5 . Th ere i s a la Juvent unto 3 5 . Adolefcenti a unto 30. titude between the terms of Periods of compute, and the verity holds good in the accidents of any years between them. So when Hjppocrates divideth our life into 7 degrees or images, and maketh the end of the iirfl 7. Of the fecond 14, Of the third 28. Of the fourth 35. the
Of
fifth 47.
happencth; herein cilely by 7 and nine, and emits the great Ciimafterical ; befide there is between every one at leaff the latitudeof years,in which fpacc or in7 terval, that is either in the third or fourth year, what ever falleth out is equally vercfied in the whole degree, as though it had happened in the fcvcntb. Soion divided it into ten Septenaries, becaufc in every one thereofJ a man received fome fenfible mutation , in tfrc firfl is De. dentition or falling of teeth : in the fecond Pubefcence; in the third the beard groweih : in the fourth flrengch prevailes : in the fifth maturity
foriffuejin the fixtTOoderation of appetite J in the feventh prudence, &c^ Now herein there is a tolerable latitude, and though the divifion proceed by 7, yet is not the total verity tobereflraincdunto the laft
And oi the feventh,die laft year when ever it we may obferve, he maketh not his divifions pre-
Mm
year;
268
Enqniries into Vulgar Book 4. year; nor conftantly tobe expiftedchebearclfhoulcibscompIeatat2i. or wifdom acquired juft in 49, and thus aUo though 7 times 9, contain one of thofe f cptenaries, and doth aI(o happen in our declining years $ yet might the events thereof be imputed unto the whole fcptcnary ; and be more reafonably entertained with fome latitude, then ftriftly reduced unto the laft number, or all the accidents from 56 impatcd unto63. ThirdIy,Although this opinion may (eem confirmed by obfervation, and men may fay it hath been To obfcrvedjyet we fpcak alfo upon experience, and do believe that men from obfervaiion will colkftnofatisfaftion. That other years may be taken againft it, efpecially if they have the advantage to precede it 5 as fixty againft fixty three, and fixty three againft 66. For fewer attain to the latter then the former; and fo furely in thefirft Septenary do moft die, and probably alfo in the very firft year ^ for all that ever lived were in the account of that year.; belide, the infirmities that attend it are fo
them
De
catena tern-
poTii,
alive that is not paft it. Fabritius Paduanius diicour-iing of the great Cliraafterical, attempts a numeration of eminent men, who died in that year ; but in fo fmall a number, as not fufScient to make a confiderable induftion. He mention
any
tUt
and
Fluto,
himf elf
tius fell
in the
82
for Viony[ms, as Cenforinus witneflTeth, he famifhed year of his life ; Xmocfates by the teftimony of Laer:
As
nick.^
and died the fame year and Viogines the y by the fame teftimony lived almoft unto ninety. The date of fUinto a cauldron,
is
:
teos
not exiftly agreed on,l: ut all diffent from this which he de Neanthes in Laertius extendeth his daies unto 84. Sjadas unto 82. Butfferwi^;7j definethhisdeath inSi. And this account fccm
death termineth
eth nioft
exaS
for
if,
as
lirft
he delivereth, PUto was born in the 88 Olym* year of the 108, the account will not furpafs
the year of 81, and fo in his death he verified the opinion of his life,and of the life of man, whofe period, as Cenforinus recordeth, he placeth in the Quadrate of 9 or 9 times 9, that is, eighty one : and therefore as Se^
neca delivereth, the AJ/zgici/rwi at Athens did facrifice unto bim, as declaring in his death fomewhat above humanity ; becaufe he died in the day of his nativity, and without deduction juftly accompli fhed the year of eighty one. Bo jie I confefs, delivers a larger lift of men that died
Method
Hiff.
*"
^^'^^
Y^^^'j
Adoriuntuf innnmerahiles anno fexagefivio tertio, Ariftoteles^ Erafmusy Lutherus, Melandhon, Sylvius^
Alexander, Jacobus Suirmius^ Nicolaus.Oijanus^ Ihamas Linacer^ eodem Wherein btfide, that it were not difficult to anno Cicero cafIts eji. make a larger Catalogue of memorable perfons that died in other yearr, we cannot but doubt the verity of his induftion. As (or Sylvius and A
lexAnder,
Jippus,
which of thatnamehemeaneth I know not; but iot Chry^ by the teftimony of Laertius, he died in the 73 year, Bocatiusia the 62 , LiftaceniiQ 64, ^ndErafmus exceeded 70^ 2islau/us- Jovius hath
.
de
Book
4.
aftd
Common Enon,
26^
delivered in his Elogyoflearned men. And as for Cicero^ as Vlutarcb' in hislifeaffirmethjhevvasflain in the year of 645 and therefore /ure the queftion is hard (et, and we have no eafie reafon to doubtjwhen great andentire Authors fhall introduce in judifiable examples, and autho-
by what is not authentical. Fourthly, They which proceed upon ftrift numeration?, and will by {iich regular and determined wayesmeafure out the lives ot men, and periodically define the alterations of their temper-, , conceive a regularity in mutations, with an equality in conftitutions, and forget that vaFor feeing we affirm that wo- Cholerick riety, which Phyfitians therein difcover. men do naturally grow old before men, that the cholerick fall (hort in rncncoinmen"" '' longaevity o( the fanguine, that there is /?;;;> tfte/^;if^tfw, and ma* ny grow old before they arrive at age, we cannot affix unto them all one common point of clanger,but fihould rather aflign a refpeftive fatality unto each. Which is concordant unto the doftrine of the numerifts, for they affirm that one number re.and fucb as maintain this opinion fpefteth men, another women, as Bo^i, explaining that of Seneca, Septimus qiiifq'y annus <etati Jignum imprmit, fubjoins Hoc de maribus diCmm^ oportuit) hoc primum intuerilket^ perfedum numermny id eji^ fextum fcemi" ftas feptenarium mares immutare, fifthly, Since we cfteem this opinion to have fbme ground in naturej and that nine times feven revolutions of the Sun, imprint a dangerous Charafter on (uch as arrive unto it ; it will leave fome doubt behind, in what fubjcftion hereunto were the lives ofour forefathers prefently after the flood, and more efpecially belore^itj who attaining unto 8 or 900 years, had not their Climafters computable by digits, or as we do account them 5 for the great Climaftcrical was paft unto them before they begat children, or gave any Tcftimony of theirvirility; for we read not that any begat children before the age of fixty five. And this may aUo afford a hint to enquire, what are the Clima(3:ers of other animated creaturesjwhereof the lives of fome attain not fo far as this of ours, and that of others extend a conliderable fpacc beyond. Laflly, The imperfcft accounts that men have kept of time, and the difference thereof both in the fame and divers Commonwealths, will
rize their affertions
For though there Wv^e a and others might be out in their account, aberring feveral wayes from the true and juft compute, and ciHing that one year, which perhaps might be another. For firfl. They might be cut in the commencement or beginning of their account ; for every man is many moneths elder then he computeth. For although we begin.the fame from our nativity* and conceive that no arbitrary, but natural term of compute, yet for the duration of life pr exiftence, we participate in the womb the ulualdi. ftintions of time; and are not to be exempted from the account i age and life, where, we are fubjeft todifeafes, and often fufferdcath.
much
Mm
And
<
2-70
Book 4*
Avicenna and others,have upon us numeral rehttonsand temporal contiderations in the womb; notonely affirming the birth of the feventh moneth to be vital, that of the eighth mortal, but the progreflion thereto to be nr^afurcd by rule, andtohold a proportion unto motion and formadon. As what receivsth motion in the fcventhj to be pcrfcftj^d in the Triplidtiv.'s; thuC is, thetimeof conformation unto motion is double, and that from motion unto the birth, treble 5 So what is formed the 35 day, is moved ihe feventy, andbom^he2ioday. And therefore if any invifiblecaurality there be, that aft^r fo many years doth evidence it felf at Sixty three, it will be queftionable whether its aftivity onely ftt out at our nativity, and begin not rather in the wopib,. wherein we place the like confiderations. Which doth not onely"ente^!e this afTcTtion, but hath already entfcroiled the endeavours of AWtjIbgy in the ercftion of Schemes, and the judgement of death or d^lfips^ for being notincontroulably determined, at what time to begm^^.^ether at conception, animation or cxclufion (it being indifferent untO the influence of heaven to beein at either) they have invented another way, that i?, to begin ab Hora qu^fiioms^ as Halj^ MeffahaUachy GanivetuSy and Guido Bo-
have delivered. Agiin, In regard of the meadire of time by moneths and years, there will be no fmall difficulty; and if we fhallfh-iftly conlider it, many have been and ftill may be miflaken, For neither the motion of the Moon, whereby moneths are coniputed ; nor of the Sun, whereby years are accounted, confiftcih of whole numbers, but admits of fraftions, and broken parts,3S we have already declared concerning the Moon. That of the Sun confifteth of 565 daie8,and almoff 6 hours, that is,wanting eleven minutes; which fix hours omitted.or not taken notice of, will in procefle of time largely deprave the compute ; and this is the occafion of the BifTextile or leap-year, which was not obfervcd in all times, nor
flatus
punftually in all Common-Wealths ; fo that in Sixty three years may be lofl almoft 18 dayes, omitting the intercalation of one day every fourth year, allowed for this quadrant, or 6 hours fupcriiumerary. And though the fame were obfervcd, yet to fpeak ifriftly a
there
man may be fbmewhatout in the account of his age at Sixty three, for although every fourth year we infcrt one day, and fo fetch up the quadrant, yet thofe eleven minutes whereby the year comes fhort of perfeft 6 hourSj will in the circuit of thofe years arife unto certain hours ; and in a larger progrefTion of time unto certain dayes. Wfiereof at prefcnt we finde experience in the Calender we obferve. For the Julian year of 365 dayes being eleven minutes larger then the annual revolution of theSuni there will arife an anticipation in the eminent in * -^^i^no^ves ; and as JuH^'mus computethjin every 136 year they will an. spherawlob^ ticipatc almoft one day. And therefore thofe ancient men and Ncfiors de S'acro bofco. of old times, which yearly obfervcd their nativicies^might be miff aken
Book 4*
and Common
Errors*
271
in the dayj nor that to be conftrued withouta grain of Salc,which is delivered by Aiofes ; Ac the end of lour hundred years,evcn the fclf fame For in that day, all the hoftof Ifrael went out of the land of JEgypU
fpace of time the j^quinoxes had anticipated and the eleven minutes far above a day. And this compute rightly confidered will fall fowler on them who caft up the lives of Kingdoms, and (uin up their duration by particular numbers : as ?Uto firft began, and (ome have endeavoured linceby psrfcft and fpherical numbers, by thcfquare
had amounted
and cube of 7 and 9 and 1 2, the great number o( Plato. Wherein indeed Bodine hath attempted a particular enumerationjbut ( befidcs the miftakes commitdblcin the folary compute of years ^ the difference of
Chronologic
difturbs the fatisfaftion and quiet ot his computesjlome adding, ethers detrafting, and, few punftually according in any one year; whereby indeed (uch accounts fliould be made up j for the variation in
'
"^"'^^'
an unite dcftroycs the total illation. Thirdly, The compute may beunjuft not onely in a ftrift acception, of few dales or hours, but in the latitude alfo of fome years ; and this may happen from the different compute of years in divers Nations, and even (uch as did maintain the molt probable way of account their year being not onely different from one another, but the civil and common account difagreeing much from the -natural year, whereon the
:
confideration
rinus
is
founded.
and
revolutions of the
Now hereby the account of the one would very much year what. 'exceed the other A mm in the one would account himfelf 63, when
dayes longer.
:
one in the other would-think himfelf but 61 j and fo although their na tivities were under the fame hour, yet did they at different years believe the verily of that which both cftecmed affixed and certain unto The like miftake there is in a tradition of our dayes ; men conone. ceiving a peculiar danger in thebegimiing dayesofMay, fctout as a fatal period unto confumptions and Chronical difeafes ; wherein notwithftanding we compute by Calender?, not onely different from our AnceftorSjbut one another; the compute of the one anticipating that ot the other ; fo that while we are in ApriljOthers begin May, and the danger is part unto one, while itbeginneth with another. Fourthly, Men were not only out in the number of fome dayes,the Ia titude ot a few y^ars, but might be wide by whole Olynipiades and divers D:cades of years. For as Cenforimts relateth,the ancient Arcadians ^^p jj^f obferveda year of three moneths, thQCariarts of fix, the Ueriatts ot ^ccomt^qT^ four; and as Bhdorus and Xemphon de jEquivocis, allcadgeth, the an- meafureof a cicnt JE^pians have ufed a year of three, two, and one moneth fo year, that the Climafterical was not onely different unto thofc Nations, but but unreafonably diftant from ours; for Sixty three will pafle in
:
their
272
their
>
Book
4.
before they arrive fo High as ten in our?,Nor if we fiirvey the account of Kome it felf, may we doubt they were inJitaken Tand if they feared Climafterical years , might err in their numeration. For the civil year whereof the people took notice, did {ometinies come (ho^^, and fometimes exceed the natural For accordm2;K.o Varro, Suetonims and 5'<r/c?r/^j their year Cvinlifted firftof ten
moneths
^ which comprehended but 304 daiwS, that is, 61 lefs then ours containethjafter by Numa or Tarquine from a fuperftitious conceit of imparity were added 5 1 daies, which made 35'5, one day more then twelve
revolutions of the Moon. And thus a long time it continued, the civil compute exceeding the natural j the correftion whereof, and the due ordering of the Leap-year was referred unto the Pontifices j who either upon favour or malicejthat fome might continue their offices a longer or (horter times or from the magnitude of the year that men might be ad-
vantaged, or endamaged in their contrafts, by arbitrary intercalations depraved the whole account. Of this abufe Cicero accufed Ferr^j, which at laft proceeded fofar, that when Julius Cfar came unto that office, before the redrefs hereof he was fain to infert two intercalary moneths unto November and December, when he had already inferted 25 daies unto February j fo tha(;that year confifted of 445 daies j a quarter ot a year longer then that weobferve; and though at the hft the year was reformed, yet in the mean time they might be out wherein they fummed lip Climafterical observations. Laftly, Oneway more there may be of miflake, and that not unufual among us, grounded upon a double compute of the yearj the one begining from the 25 of March, the other from the day of our birth, unto the fame again, which is the natural account. Now hereupon many men frequently mifcaft their daies 5 for in their age they deduce the account not from the day of their birth, but the year of our Lord wherein they were born. So a man that was born in januiry 1582, if helive tofall fick in the latter end of March 1645, willfumup his age, and fay lam now Sixty three, and in my Climafterical and dangerous year ; for I was borne in the year 1 582, and now it is 1645, whereas indeed he wanteih ftiany moneths of that year, confidering the true and natural account unto his birth; and accounteth two moneths for a year and though the length of time and accumulation of years do render the miftake infenfible ; yet is it all one, asif one born in January 1^443 (hould be accounted a year old the 25 of March 1645. All Vk'hich perpended, it may be eafily perceived with what infecurity of truth we adhere unto this opinion; afcribing notonely effefts depending on the natural period of time unto arbitrary calculations, and fuch as vary at pleafure ; but confirming our tenets by the uncertain account of others and our felves. There being nopofitivc or indifputable ground where to begin our compute ; that if there
.
<
were
and Common Book. 4ware, men hive been fcveral wayes m'ftaken
Errors,
273
; the beft in fome latitude, compute cf divers ftates, different the to according others in greater, exceeding error in the nafome,the years of irreconcilable the (hort and frame of others, and the lapfcs and falfe deduftions of ordina-
tural
ftritt account and critical witty determinations of the diftraft alfo will reafon, examcn of life, comes almoft every fcof enemy the Saturn That Aftrology. unto that where vcnth year, unto the quadrate or malevolent place, about every feventh day arrivcth unto Moon the thatas : begun it remaineth about as many years,as the a contrary fign^fo Saturn, which holdcththefameconfideration in and inonelign, dayes moon doth Period?. Which caufethefepericulous in dayesjdoth Moon the as years Horofcopr, unto the together with other Planets,and prof eftion of the thefevcnth houfe, oroppofite iignes every feventh year ; opprcfleth li-
mafiw
any defirc to be informed how different the are from thofe of the ancientsi how every one hath prefcnt obfervations with many other obfervables, impugning the Climaftericalsj different
lately pablilhed,
if
Further (atisfaaion
^^^fciT'
prefent opinion.
Chap.
XIH.
Hereof to fpeak diftinftly : among the Southern conftellations are which bear the name of the Dogjthc one in 1 6 degrees of latitude, containing on the left thigh a Star of the firft magnitude, ufually called Procyon or Anticanis, becaufe fay fome it Jm Pmjm fur rifeth before the other; which if truly underftood, muft be reftrain- '"'^^^^'''^ ^^"'^"' """ ed unto thofe habitations, who have elevation of Pole above thirty in is there Horace^ Mention thereof to degrees. who feems two miftake or confound the one with the other 5 and after him in Ga* the remarkableft Star of the other (hould be leriy who is willing, called by this name ; becaufe it is the firft that arifeth in the conftellation ; which notwithflanding, to fpeak flriftly, it is nocjun-
Icfs we except one of the third magnitude own and our elevation, and two more on
in the right
his
paw
in his
head in and beyond A fecond and more confiderable one tfierei?, the degree of fixty. and neighbour unto the othcr,in 40 degrees of latitude,containing 18
"^
. .
StarSjwhereof that in his mouth of the MTm^mtudc,the Greekj callugg^^j.^^ Se*, the LatinesCanit major ^ and we emphatically the Dog^Star.
Nn
Now
274
Book
4.
the rifing of this Star, net .cormically, t^at is^ with the Sun, but Heliacally, that is, its emerfion from theraics of the Sun, the Ancients computed their canicular (iaies;conc^rning which there generally paffeth an opinion, that during thofe daies, all medication or ufe
Now from
to be declined, and the cure commited unto nature. And any feriation in nature, or juftitiums imaginable in profcfiions, whofe fubjeft is natural, and under no imerof Phyfick
is
way of mutation dus feafon is commonly term ed the Phyfitians vacation, and ftands (o received by mofl men. Which conceit however general, is notonely crroneus, but unnatural, and fublifling upon foundations either falfe, uncertain, miffaken,or mifappled,
-,
mankind that indubitable affent it findeth. For firff, which feems to be the ground of this affertion, and not td" be drawn into queftion, that is, the magnified q.iality of this Star conceived tocaufe, or intend the heat of this feafon, whereby thefe dayefi become more obfervable then the reft ; we find that wifcr Antiquity was not of this opinion. For, feventeen hundred years ago it was as a vulgar error rcjefteci by G^wm/tf, a learned Mathcpiaticlan in his Elements ofAftronDmy; wherein he plainly afhrmeth, that common opinion, made that a caufe, which was at firfl obferved but as a fign. The rifmg and Ccttingboth oft1iiStar and others being obfcrved by the Ancients, to denote and teflifie certain points of mutation, rather then conceived to induce or effeft the fame. Forour fore-father<,(aith he, obferving the courleof rheSun, and marking certain mutations to happen in his progrefs, through particular parts of the Zodiack, theyregiflred and fee them down in their Parapegmes , or Aftionomical Canons; and being notable to defignc thefe times by daie^, montths or years ( the compute thereof, and the beginingof the year being different ,according undefepveSjHot of
to different Nations ) they tliought beft tp fettle a general account unto thefe alterations by fome known and invariable j and to determine did conceive the riling and fetting of the fixed Stars; they fuch and figns ; not afcribing thereto any part of caufaliiy, but notice and Hgnification. And thus much feems implied in that exprcflion qfitfow^r,whenfpeaking
all
au* implied in the word of Ftolomj , and the Ancients, %; Vk7tfy.7ttff , that is, of the fignifiration of Stars. The term of Scripture alio favours it, as that of Ifai ah, Nolite tewfora: Let Ximere afignis cli ; and that in Geuefis, Vt Jint in figna there be lights in^ the firmament^ and let them be for iigns and for
of the
is
&
^afons.
I
^'myfiusPe'
riegeft.
leading magnifiers of this Star were thcjEgjip* admirers of dogs in earth an heaven. Wherein they wor fl^^PP^^ Aftubk or Menuriufi the Scribe of Saturn, and Counfellcr of Ofy^^h the great inventor of their religous rit?, and Promoter of good unto Mgyp* Who was therefore tranflated into this Star ; by tlie
tiansj the great
M^pians
.
Book
4.
275
by the JEthioplans j from whence that name, its is by (omeconjeftured. had ftar Dogs or the <S<ri^tf And this they looked upon, not with reference unto heat, but cocleftial influence upon the faculties of man, in order to religion and allfagacious invention; and from hence derived the abundance and great fertility of ^gypt^ the overflow of Nyjus happening about the And therefore in Hieroglyphical monuments, Muiis afcent hereof. is defcribed with a Dogshead, with a Crocodile between his legs, with a fphere in his hand, with two ftars, and a water pot ftanding by him; implying thereby, the rifmg and fetting of the Dogsftar, and the inundation if the River Njlus. But if all were filent, Galen hath explained this point unto the
life;
who expounding;
the
reafon
riling
why
and
of Stars ; it was faith would proceed on figns and principles bcft known unto all Nations. And upon his words in the firftof theEpidemick<', fub virgilm pluvia erant ntultJi^ he Ih thafo Autnmmo circa Eqninoxhm thus enlargeth. Iff faith he J the fame compute of times and moncths were obfervcdby all Nations, HippocrateshdiA never made any mention either ot A^^^urus, Pleiladesor the DogStar5 but would have plainly faid, in Mfl'Cf^<?/rf, in themonethDion, thus orthus was theayr di{^ pofed. But for as much as the moneth Dion is onely known unto the Macedonians^ but obfcurc unco the Athenians and other Nations ; he found more general diftin6tions of time , and inftead of naming moneths, would ufually fay, at the ^quinox,the rifing of the Pleiades,
feftions of the year
by the
he, becaufe he
&
And by this way did the Ancients divide the f eafons or the Dog -Star: oftheyearj the Autumn, Winter, Spring, and Summer. By the ^^^firigHowthe Anofthe Pleiades, denoting the beginning of Summer, and by that tients divided ofthe Dog-ftar, the declination thereof. By this wny Ariiiotle through the feafons of all his books of Animals, dillinguifheth their times of generation, fhe year, latitancy, migration, (anity and venatiom And this were an allawable,way of compute,and ftill to be retained, were the lite of the Stars as inalterable, andtheirafcentsas invariable asprimative Aftronomy conceived them. And therefore though Arijiot/e frequently m entioneth this Star,and particularly affirmetb thatFlhes in the Bofphorus are beft catched from the arife of the Dog.ftar, we mull not conceive the fame a meer eflfeft- thereof. Nor though Scaliger from hence be wil ling to infer the efficacy of this Star, are we induced hereto; except becaufe the fame Philofopher affirmeth ; that Tunny is fat about the riling of the Pleiades, and departs upon Arfturus or that mofl infers are latent , from the fetting of the 7 Srars; except, I fay, he gives us alfo leave to infer that thefe particular efFels and alterations proceed from thofe Stars ; which were indeed but defignations of (uch quarters and portions of the yoar, wherein the fanie were obferved. Now whac Piinj affirmeth pi' the n 2
^^
27^
Enquiries ifttoVHlgar
Book 4*
the Ofix, that it feemeth to adore this Star, and taketh notice thereof, by voice and fternutation; untill wc be better aflured of its verity we*
not falve the fympathy. Secondly, What (lender opinion the Ancients held of the efficacy of this Star, is declarable from their compute. For as G^w/j affirmcth, and Petavius his learned Commentator proveth, they began their account from its Heliacal cmerfion, and not itscofmical afccnt. T^hc cofmical afcention of a Star we term that, when it arifeth together what the Cofmical. with the Sun, or the fame degree ot the Ecliptick wherein the Sun abidcth.-and that theHelaicaljWhen a Star which before for the vicinity of what the He- the Sun was not vilible,being further removed,beginneth to appcar.For Uacal afcent the annual motion of the Sun from Weft to Eaft being far fwifter then ot Stirs IS. jhat of the fixed Stas, he muft of necclTity leave them on the Eaa whilft he hafteneth forward,andobfcurcth others to the Weft:and fo the Moon who performs its motion fwifter then the Sun fas may be obferved in
ihall
Con janftions and Eclipfes^ gets Eiftwardoutot his rayes , and appears when the Sun is Ctt. If therefore the Dog.ftar had this effcftuall heat which is afcribed unto itjit would afford beft evidence thercof,and the feafon would be moft fervent, when it arifeth in thcprobableft place
their
'
I
of itsaftivity, that is, the cofmical afcentjfor therein it arifeth with the Sun, and is included in the fame irradiation. Bjt the time obferved by the Ancients was long after this afcent, and in the Helaical cmerfion ; when it becomes atgreateft diftance from the Sun, neither rifing with it nor near it. And therfore,had they conceived any more then abarefignality in this Star, or afcribed the heat of the feafon thereunto j they w6uld not have computed from its Heliacal afcent, which was of inferi<our efficacyjnor imputed the vehemcncy of heat unto thofe points wherin it was more remifs, and where with lefs probability they might make
out itsaftion.
ThirdIy,Although we derive the authority of thefe dayes from ob Nervations of the Ancient?,yet are our computes very differenr,and fuch as confirm not each other. For whereas they obferved it Hcliacally, ws
Cofmlcally, for before it arifeth Heliically unto our is even at an end. Again, we compute not oncly from different alccnts, but alf o from divers StarSi they from the greater Djg-ftar, we from the kffer ; they from Orions, we from Cephalus his Dogjthey from Seirius,we from Procyon; for the beginning of the Dogdaies withusisfct down the 19 of July, about which time the Icflei? Dog-ftar arifeth with the Sun: whereas the ftar of the greater Dog afccn* dcth not until after that moneth. And this mitlake will yet be larger, if Bahb, CAmcn-xhc compute be made flrlfter, and as X>r.Bainhrigge late Profcflbr of A ^w flronomy in Ox/br<i,hath fet it down. Who in the year 1629 computed, that in the Horizon of Ox/or^,the Dog-ftar arofe not before the J 5. day of Auguftiwhen incur Almanack accounts, thofe daies arc almoft ended. So that the common and received time not anfwcring the true com-r
it
feem to obferve
latitudcjthe
Summer
pu
'
Book
pute,
4nd Common Errors* 4. it fruftratcs theobfervations of our felves. And being alfo difTei
277
rent from the calculations of the Ancients, their obfcrvations confirm not ours,nor ours theirs,but rather confute each other. Nor will the computes of the Ancients be fo Autheiitick unto thofe,
who
(hall take noticcjhow commonly they applieH the celeftial defcriptions of other climes unto their own ; wherein the learned Bainhrigius juftly reprchendeth Manilius^ who transferred the Mgyftian dcfcripti-
and
B<iv^/iyic^ Spheres*
is
the ArgumentofC?^w/;/i) were there any fuch efyet could ic but weakly evidence the fame in Sammerjit bemg about 4c degrees diftant from the Sun 5 and fhould rather manifeft its warming power in the Winter, when it remains con
Fourthly, Cwhich
joyned with the A^un in its Hybernal converlion. For about the 29 of Ofto.and in the 16 of Scorpius, and fo again in January, the -S'un per,! forms his revolution in the fame parallel with the Dog- ftar. Again, If we ftiould impute the heat of this feafon, unto the co-operation of any ftars with the Sun,it feems more favourable for our times, toafcribe the fame unto the conftellaiion of Leo, Where beiidcs that the Sun is in his proper houfe.it is con joyned with many ftars ; whereof two of the firft magnitud'5& in the 8of Auguft is corporally con joyned with Bafilifcus; a ftar of eminent name in Aftrologyjand feated almoft in the Ecliptick. Fifthly, If all were granted, that obfervation and reafon were alfp for itj'and were it an undeniable truth,that an effeftual fervour pioceeded from this ftar , yet would not the fame determine the opinion now
in queftion
illations.
;
it
different latitudes, unto fome the ca* nicular dales arc in the Winterjas unto fuclias have no latitude, but live in a right fphere, that is, under the Equinoftial line 5 for unto thenr
it arifeth
unto them
fame
the-^un is about the Tropick in Cancer 5 which feafon \^ inter, and the ^^un remoteft from them. Nor hath the pofition in the Summer, that is, in the Equinoftial points, any
is
-,
when
for in the one point the S^r\ is at the Meridian, beadvantage from it fore the Dog-ftar arifeth j in the other the ftar is at the Meridian,before
the
Sii'a
afcendcth.
canicular daycs at all; as namely all thofe what lati' which have more then 7 3 degrees of Northern Elevation j as the Ter- ted" have no ritory oi Nova Zembla^ part of Greenland And Tartary y for unto ^S da at
that habitation the Dog-ftar
is inyiiible,
'
Horizon.
Unto
it
carrieth a various
ferent rcfpeft
unto fome
it
afcendeth
when Summer
is
ther we compute Heliacally or Cofmicallyj for though unto e^/^xaudria it arifeth in Cancer, yet it arifeth not unto Biarmia Cofmi* cally before ic be in Virgo,and Heliaeally about the Autumnal Equinox.
Nn
Evstt
2yQ
ble,
Book 4
much
confidcra*
whether we conlider its afccnt, Meridian, altitude or abode above Horizon. For it arifeth very late in the year, about the eighthe Of M-ridian Altitude it hath teenth of Leo, that is, the 3 1 of July* but23 degreeSjfo that itpUies but obliquely upon us,and as the Sun doth about the 23 of January. And laftly, his abode above the Horizon is not
great ; for in the eighteenth of Leo, the 31 of July, although theyarife together 5 yet doth it (et above $ hours before the Sun, that is, before two of the clock,afcer which time we are more fenfible of heat, then all
the day before. Secondly, In regard of the variation of the longitude of the Stars, we are to confider ( what the Antients obferved not^ that the fite of the fixed Stars is alterable, and that (ince elder times they have fuffered ^^^} The longitude ^ ^^""^^ ^"^ confiderable variation of their longitudes. ^^V*^"^' ^ ^^''' ^ Tpeak plainly, is its diftance from the firft point of nume^^^ Itar is ration toward the Eaft ; which firft point unto the Ancients was the verNow by reafon of their motion from Weft to Eaft, they nal ^Kquinox. have very much varied from this point:the firft Star of Aries in the time o^Metoni\\c Athenian wis placed in the very interfeSion, which is now
Which
much
diftraft the
opini*
on of the Dog-ftar, not onely in our day es, but in times before and after i for fince the world began it hath arifen in Taurus, and if the world laft, may have its afcent in Virgojfo that we muft place the canicular dayeFjthat
is,
firft
what
cli
the denation of a
is.
Star
Age, and in the Autumn in Ages to come. Thirdly,The Stars have not onely varied their longitudes, whereby their afcents have alterdy; buthavealfo changed their declinations, whereby their riftng at all, that is^j their appearing bath varied. The declination of a Star we call its (hortcft diftance from the Equator. Now though the poles of the world and theEquator be immovable,yet becqufc the Stars in their proper motions from Weft to Eaft, do move upon the Poles of the Ecliptick,diftant 23 degrees and an half from the Poles of the Eqjator, and defcribe circles parallel not nto the Equator, but the Ecliptick;they muft be therefore fometimes nearer, fometimes removed further from theEquator. All ftars that have their diftance from the Ecliptick Northward not more then 23;d^reesand an half C which the greateft diftance of the Ecliptick from theEquator J may is in progreflion of time have declination Southward , and move beyond the Equator; but if any Star hath juft this diftanceof twenty three and an half (as hathCapcUaonthe back of Erifthonius^ it may hereafter move under the Equinoftial; and the lame will happen rcfpeftively utito ftars which have declination South ward.x^nd therforc many ftars may be vilible in our Hemifphcrc,which are not fo at prefentj
and
Book 4'
and many which are
and Common
Errors,
"^J^
of cur Horizon^ and And therefore the time may come appear unto Southern habitations. that the Dog liar may not be vifible in our Horizon, and the timf: hath beenjWhen it hath not fliewed it felf unto ourntighbour latitudes. So that canicular dayes there have been none, nor (hall be 5 yet certainly in all times fome feafon of the year more notably hot then
at prefenf, (hall take leave
other.
Laftly, We multiply caufes in vain j and for the reafon hereof, we need not have recourfe unto any Star but the Sun, and continuity of For the Sun a(eending into the Northern figns, begttteih itsaftion. firft a temperate heat in the ayr ; which by his approach unto the folftice he intendeth 5 and by continuation increafcth the fame even upon ^ For running over the fame degrees again, that is, in Leo, declination. alveVbe^fo^^ which he hath done inTauru?, in July which he did in May j he aug- hct. menreth the heat in the later which he began in the firft j and ealily intendeth the fame by continuation which was well promoted before. So is it oblerved, that they which dwell between theTropicks and the Equator, have their fecond fummer hotter and morematurative of fruits So we obferve in the day (which is a (hort year) the then the former. greateft heat about two in the afternoon, when the Sun is pa(t the Me* ridian Cwhich is his diurnal folftice) and the fame is evident from the,
. .
So are the colds of TKer^Tiometer or obfervations of the wetherglafTs. the night (harper in the Summer about two or three after midnight,and the frofts in Winter ftronger about thcfe hours. Solikewiie intheye^r 'We obferve the cold to augment, when the dayes begin to increafe, though the Sun be then afcennve,& returning from the Winter Tropick. And therefore if we red not in this realon for the heat in the declining part of Summer, we muft difcover freezing (tars that may refolve the latter colds of Winter; which whoever defires to invent, kthim ftudy the Stars of Andromeda^ or the nearer conftellation of Pfg<?/s,which are about that time afcendent. It cannot therfore feem ftrange,or favor oC fingularity that we have cx amined this point.Since the fame hath bin already denied by fomejltncc the authority and obfervations of the Ancients rightly underftood, do not confirm itjfinceour prefent computes are different from thofe of the AncientSjWhereon notwithflanding they depend*, iince there isreafon againft it, and if all were granted, yet muftit be maintained with manifold reftraints, far other wife then is received. And laftly, iince from plain and natural principle?, the doubt may be fairly lalved , and notclapt up from petitionary foundations and principles uneftabli*
fhed.
But that which chiefly promoted the confideration of thefe dayes, and medically advanced the fame was the doftrine of Bjppocrates'j a Phyfician of fuch repute, that he received a ttftiniony from a ChriTiie firli ia his ftian , that might havig been given unto Chriit.
book.
lU
28o
Qui nee jailers
Book
4*
hooV^de AereiAquis^&locis.Syderum ortij&c.Thatis,we are to observe the fifing of Stars, cfpecially the Dog-ftar, ArfturuSj and the fetting of the poteji necfdli* pjei^des or feven Stars.From whence notwithftanding we cannot infer the general efficacy of thefc Stars, or co-efficacy particular in medications.Probably expreffing no more hereby then if he fliould have plainly faid, efpscial notice v;c are to take of the hottefl timein Summcrjof thg Difcafes com- beginning of Autumn and Wiiiter 5 for by the riling and fetting of thofe "'*" ^^^^ ^^^^^ ""'"^ *"^ feafons defined. And therefore lubjoynes this d ^h^' S^^^^ ^uoniam his temporihus morbi finiuntur, bccaufe at thefe times wbMfcafons. reiiion, difeales have their ends j as Phyfitians well know, and he clfewhere affirmethjthat feafons determine defeafes,beginning in their contraries; as the fpring the difeafes of Autumn, and the Summer thofe of Winter. Now C what is very remarkable) whereas in/ the fame place he advifcth to obferve the times of notable mutations,asihe Equinoxesj and the Solftices, and to decline Medication ten day es before and after ; how precifely foever canicular cautions be confidercd, this isnotobferved by Phyfitians, nor taken noticeofby the people. And indeed fhould we blindly obey the reflraints both of Phyfitians and Aflrologers,we fhould contraft the liberty of our prefcriptions, and confine the utility of Phyfick unto a very few dayes. For obferv ing the Pog-daies, and as is exfomeldaies before, likewifc ten dales before and after prelTed,
points j by this obfervation alone dales. hundred an Whereunto if we add the two exempted are Egyptian dales in every moneth, the interlunary and pleniluconjuSions nary exemptions', Eclipfes of Sun and Moon , the Equinoftial and Solfticial
of Planets , and the fite of the Luminaries under the fignes (wherein fome would induce a reflrainc of Purgation or Phlebotomy) there would arife above an hundred more 5 fo that of the whole year the ufe of Phyfick would not be fecurc
much above a quarter. Now as we do not flriftly obferve thefe daics fo need we not the other ; and although conlideration be made hereof, yet mufl we prefer the nearer indication, before thofe which are drawn
from the time of the year or other coelcftial relations. The fecond Tcflimony is taken out of the laft piece of his Age, and after the experience ( as fome think ) of no lefs then an hundred years, thatisjhis book ofAphorifms, or fhort and definitive determinations ante Caftem in Phyfick. The Aphorifm alleadged is this. Sub cam Anticane^ fay fomr, including dif[icilei funt ptirgationes. Sub Caw both the Dog liars; but that cannotconfifl with the Greek: tWwir^ og/wrJf^ nor had that Critifcifm been ever omited by Galen, Now how true this fentence was in the moneth of Hippocrates^ and with what reflraint it mufl be underftood by us , will already appear from the difference between us both, in circumftantial rela-,
&
&
tions.
And
and Chronology ; he
Book4
281
rcign o^Artaxerxes Longmani/s, about the 82 Olympiadc, 450 years when Hippu '^' *"*^" before Chrift ; and from our times above two thoufand. iince have already declared wj as thcStarshave varied their that time ( J
Now
longitudesjandhavingmadelargeprogreflionsfrom Weft to Eift, the time of the Do^-i>ars afcenc muft alfb very much alter. For it arifeth later now in the year, then it formerly did in the (araclatitudej and far later unto us who have a greater elevation 5 for in the dayes of Hippocrates this Star afcended in Cancer which now arifeth in Leojand
will in pro^relllon of time arife in Virgo. And therefore in regard ol the time wherein he livedjthe Aphorifm was more confiderablc in his days then in ours, and in times farpaft then prefent, and in his Country then ours. The place of his nativity was Coos, an Ifland in the Mjirtoan Sea, not far from Khodes, defcribed in Maps by the name of Lango, and called by the 'turhv!i\\o are Mafters thereof, Stancora \ according unto Ttobmy of Northerii latiiude 36 degree?. That he lived and writ in thcfe partJ is not improbably coUefted from the Epiftlcs that paffed betwixi him zwA dnaxerxes as alfo between the Citizens of Abdera, and Cow, in Which place being (eated from our latitude the behalf oWemocritm. of 5 ^ 1 6 degrees Southward, there will arife a different conitderationj and we may much deceive our felvesif we conform the afccnt of Stars in one place unto another, or conceive they arife the fanfc day of the moneth in Coos and in England. For 3.S Petavius computes in the firft Julian year, at tAlexandria of latitude 31, the Star arofe cofmically in the twelfth degree of Cancer, Heliacally the 26, by the compute of G^minuf about this time at ilW^^ of latitude 37, it afcended cofmically the 16 of Cancer, Heliacally the firfl of Leo j and about that lime at ilowe of latitude 42, cofmically the 22 of Cancer, and Heliacally the For uiuo places of greater latitude it arifeth ever later j fo firft of Leo. latitudes the cofmical afcent happeiieth not before the fofne that in twentieth degree or Virgo^ten daies before the Autumnal Equinoxjand
.,
if
they compute Heliacally, after it, in Libra. Again, Should wc allow al!,and onely compute unto the latitude of For if in the Coos^ytt would it not impofc a total omiffion of Phyiick. hottcft feafon of that climejall Phylick were to be declined, then furely in many other none w^' r- to be ufed at any time whatfosver ; for unto many partSjnot onsly in the Spring and Autumn,but alfo in the Winter the Sun is nearer^then unto the clime of Coos in the Summer. The third confiJeration concerneth purging medicines, which are at prefent far diffjrent from thofe implied in this Aphorifni, and fuch three degrees as were commonly ufed by Hippocrates. For three degrees we mike of of pnrg^tions. purgative medicines: Tne fiiil thereof is very benign, nor far removed from tb.e nanire of Aliment, into which, upon d-feft of working, it i<; oft-times converted ^ and in this form do we account
Manna^
CjJJjiZj
'tamarindesy
whereof wc
find no mention
282
Book
4.
mention in Hjippocrates. The lecond is alfo gentle, having a familiarity with Come humor, into which it is but con verted if it fail of its operaiion : ofthis fortare Aloe, Rhabarb^ Senna, &c. Whereof alfo few or none were known unto Hippocrates. The third is of a violent and venemous quality, which (ruftrate ot its aftion, aflumes as it were the nature of poyfon ; fuch as are Scammoneum, Colocynthis, Elaterium, Euphorbium, Tithymallus, Laureola, Peplum, &c. Of this
lortit
is
manifcft Hippocrates
i
mzdc
;
and Quinfies
afcribed,
Tetrablib.i:'
Sem.
5,
that is of Pepper , Sal Armounto Piogenes in Mtim Euphorbium, of each an ounce, the Dofis whereof four fcruples and an half 5 which whofoever (hould take, would fin4 in his bowels more then a canicular heat, though in the depth
niac,
'
of winter ; many of the like nature may be oblerved in Mtiusy or in the bookPf Vinamidiisj^Ccnbcd unto Galen^which is the fame verbatim with the other. in regard of the fecond, and efpccially the firft degree of Purgatives, the Aphorifm is not of force j but we may fafely ufe them, they being benign and of innoxious qualities. And therefore Lucas Gauri^ en's, who hath endeavoured with many tcftimonies to advance this con?
Now
lidcration, at length concedeth that lenitive Phyfick may be ufed, efecially when the Moon is wellafifcfted in Cancer or in the watery figns.
of the third degree the Aphorifm is confiderable : purgabe dangerous 5 and a memorable example there is in the mc* dical Epiftles oiCrucm, of a K.ow<z Prince that died upon an ounce of From the ufe whereof we refrain Diaphaenicon, taken in this fcafon. riot onely in hot feafons, but warily exhibit it at all times in hot difejtfC3. Which when neccflky requires, we can perform more fafely then the Ancicnts,as having better wayesof preparation and correftion j that iSjnot onely by addition of oiherbodies,but feperaticn ot noxious parts
But in regard
tions
may
from
their
own.
Butbefide the fe differences between Hippocrates imd us^ thePhyficians of thefe times and chofe of Antiquity; the condition of the diicdle, and the intention of the Phyfitian, hold a main conlideraiion in what time and place foever. For Phylick is either curative or preventive; Preventive we call that which by purging noxious humors, and the caufes of difeafes, preventeth ficknefs in the healthy, or the recourfe thereof in the valetudinary ; this is of common ufe at the fpring and fall, and we commend not the fame at this feafon. or curative Phyfick, W;; term that, which reftoreth Difeafes Chrc-'^^**"?"'^^^ Patient unto Sanity, and taketh away difeafes aftually afftfting. the nicalandANowof difeafes fome ^re chronical and of long duration, as quartan e cutewhat they be. Agues, fcurvy, c^c. Wherein b scan fe they admit of delay we defer the cure to more advantagious feafons ; Others we term accute, that is, of fhort duration and danger, as Fevers, Pleuriilcf, &c.
In.
Book
4.
attdcommon'ErYOYs,
q^3
In which, becaufe delay is dangerous, and they arifc unto their ^&x.t before the Do^-dayes determine j we apply prefent remedies according unto Indications; refpefthig rather the acutensHe of t\\t difeafe, and precipitancy of occafion, then the rifing or fetting of i'tirs; the cff;fts of the one being difputible, of the other afljred and inevitable. And althotich Aftrology may here put in, and plead the fecrct in^ Sfrong purgaflucnce of this .Tar ; ynGtrlen in his Comment, makes no fuch conli* JJJ]^ fven^'^in deration ; confirming the truth of the Aphorifm from the heat of the J[jg|4'acof' In regard that bodies fumraer, and year ; and the operation of Medicines ejehibited. being heated by the (iimmer, cannot fo well thdure the acrimony of ^hy. purging Medicines 5 and becaufe upon purgations contrary motions enitiej the heat of theayr attrafting the humours outward, and the aftion But thefe are readily falved of Medicine retrafting the fame inwardin the diftinlions before alleadged 5 and particularly in the conftitution ofour climate and divers others, wherein the ayr makes no fuch exhauliion of fpirits. And in the benignity ot our Medicines ; whereof (bmein their own natures, others well prcpared,agitate not the humors?
or
fober
&:
regulated Aftrology;
we
is more truth therein then in Aftrologers; in fome more then many alIow,yet in none fo much as fome pretend. We deny Qpt the in- . ^' fluence of the ftars, but often fufpeft the due application thereof j for though we fhould affirm that all things were in all things ; that heaven were but earth celelfified, and earth but heaven terreilrified, or that each part above had influence upon its divided affinity below ; yet how to (ingle out thefe relations, and duly to apply their aftions, is a work oft-times to be effected by fome revelation, and Cabda from above, rather then any Philofbphy, or fpeculaticn here below. What power fcever they have upon our bodies, it is not requlfite they fliould deftroy our Reafons,that isjto make us rely on the ilrengtb of N*-ture, when (he is leaft able to relieve us , and when we conceive the heaven againft us, to ref ufe the afliftance of the earth created for us. This were to fuffer from the mouth of the Dog above, what others do from the teeth of Dogs b'elowjthat is,to be afraid of their proper remedy, 8c refufe to approach any water, though that hath often proved a cure unto their difeafe. There is in wife men a power beyond the 5tars 5 and Jfjeofa mad Vtolomy enconrageth us,that by fore-knowledgejwe may evade their a* dog there enftions j for, being but univerfal caufcs, they are determined by par' fues an hidroticular agents ; which being inclined, not conftrained, contain with* pf^hia or fear in themfelves the cafting aft, and a power to command the con- ^^^^^'"'
hold there
clulion.
Laflly, If all be conceded, and were there in this Aphorifm an unreflrained truth, yet were it not reafonable to infer from a caution a non-ufance or abolition, from a thing to be ufed with difcretion, not to be ufed at all. Becaufe the Apoftic bids us beware of Philofo-
Oo
pfcy,
284.
Book
4.
phy, heads o^ extreamity will have none at all 5 an ufual fallacy in Tulgar and Icffe diftinftivc brains, who having cncc ovcrfliotthe mean, run violently on, and find no reft but in the extrearas. Now hereon we have the longer infifted, becaufe the errour is material, and concerns oft-times the life of man ; an errour to be taken notice of
by State, and provided againft by Princes, who are of the opX, n'lon of Solomou, that their riches confift in the multitude of their iuhm.
jefts.
An errour worfe then fome reputed Herefiesy and of greater dang^^ to the body, then they unto the foul, which whofoever is able to A Phyfuian. /^or Themijon reclaim, he fliall fave more in one fummcr then Ihemifon deftroyed in agras Mxumra any Autumn: he (hall introduce a new way of cure, prefervingby tccidmt HM, Theory, as well as praftice, and men not onely from death, but from
Juvenal.
dcHroying themfclvcs.
THE
285
FIFTH BOOK
Of many
things queflionableas they
THE
an common'
ly dejcrthed in
TtUures.
Chap.
I.
Of
the Ti^nre
of
the Pekcan.
pifturc of the Pelican, opening hcrbreaft with her billjand feeding her young ones with the blood diftilling from her.
forth not onely in
in
thcCreltand Schucheon of many Noble families; bath been aflferted by many holy Writers, and was an Hierogliphick of piety and pitty among the Egyptians 5 on which confideration, thfey fpared them at their tables. Notwithftanding upon enquiry wc find no mention hereof in Ancient Zodiographcrs,and fuch as have particularly difcourfcd upon Animals, as AriJiotteyElianj Tliny^Solimts and many more;who feldom forget proprieties of fuch a nature,and have been very pun6tual in lefs coniiderable Rccords.Some ground hereof 1 confefs wc may allow, nor need we deny a remarkable afieftion in Pclecans toward their young; iorEiian di( courfing of Storks,and their afFeftion toward their brood;} whom they infttufttoflic, and unto whom they re-dclJTer up the provifion of their bellies, coneludeth at lafl, that Herons and Pelecans do the like. As for the teftimoniesof Ancient Fathers, and Ecclefiaffical Writers, we may more fafely conceive therein fome Emblematicall then any fo doth Eucbmus confefs it to be the Emblem of real Story
.*
Oo
"
Chrift.
j86
Book 5. unwilling literally to receive that account oijcm rom^ that perceiving her young ones deftroycd by Serpents, ihc openethher fide with her bill, by the blood whereof they revive and return unto life again. By which relation they might indeed illuftrate the deftruftion of man by the old Serpent, and his reftorement by the blood of Chrifl : and in this Icnfe we ftiall not difputethe like relations of Aujime^Ifielore, Albertm^ and many more .-and under an Emblematical intention, we accept it in coat-armour. As for the Hieroglyphick, of the Egypians^ they erefted the fame upon another conlideration, which was parentall afFeftion j manifcft^d
Chrift.
And wc are
in the proteftion of her young ones, when her neft was fct on fire. For as for letting out her blood, it was not the aflertion oH\\q Egyptians^
but fcems rranflatcd unto tfie Pelecan from the Vulture, as Fierius hath plainly delivered. SedqttodPelicaMu/nC^ut etiamalih pier ifque perfuajumell) rojiropedus diffecantem pingunt^ ita lit [uo [anguine filios alat^ ab JEg)ptiorum hijioria valde alienum eji , illi enim vulturem tantum id
facere tradiderunt
v*
-^
->,,-.
'.
.\
'
'
^;
The
blgnefs
of a Pclecan
Of her Crop,
Andlaftly, As concerning the pi(^ure, if iiatufalfy examined, and not Hicrogliphycally conccivccf j it coutaincth nJany imprOprietiesj difagreeing almofl: in all things from the true and proper defcription. For, whereas it is commonly fet forth green or yellow, in its proper colour, it is inclining to white j excepting the extremities or tops of the wing f eatherSj which are black. Itli defcribedin thebignefsof a Hen, whereas it approachcch and fometimcs exce^^kth the magnitude of a Swan. It is commonly painted with a fhort bill; whereas that of the Pelican attiineth fomciimes the length of two fpans. The bill is made acute or pointed at the end ; whereas it is flat and broad, and fomewhat inverted at the extream. It is defcribed like, fiff}pcdes, or birds which have dieir feet or claws divided; whereas it is palraipedous, or fin-fcotedlii^e Swans and Gcefej according to the Method of natuce, in tatiroftrous or fiat-bild birds ; which bciflg generally fwimmer8,tlie organ is wifely contrived unto the aftion, and they are framed with fins or oars uptBtheif feet; and thr6f)pe they neither light, nor build on trees, ifweesccept Cormoranjts, who tiiake their nefls like Herons. Lafily, There is one part omitted more remarkable then any other, ifaat is, the chowle or crop adhering unto the low*
cr fide of the bill, and fodefccnding by tlie throat ; a bag or fachel very obi crvable, and o< a capacity almofl beyond credit; which not* withflanding, this animal could not want; for therein it receiveth Oyfter?, Cochels, Scollops, ^nd oih^r teij^ceous animals j whkh being noc able to break, it retains them until they open, and vomiting thefti op, This is chat part pre krved for a rarity, taTces out the meat contained. and wherein f a SarMius delivers) in onedefcfitedj a Negr9 child was
found*
CHAP.
Books*
dffdCfim^etiBrr^tSf
287
Chap.
Ofthe Figure of
U.
Dolphins,
Hat Dolphins are crooked, isnotonely affirmed by the hand of the Painter, but comrooaly conceived their natural and proper figure; which is not onely the opinion of our times, but feems the belief of elder time before ug* For, bedde thecxpreflions of Ovid und
Timy, their Pourtraifts in fome ancient Coyns are framed in this figure, as will appear in fomc thereof in Gefner^ others in Geltfxusy and Loivi^ nus Hulfills in his difcriptidn oi Coyns, from Julim Cfar unto Khodulphus the
Ucond,
Notwithftanding, %3 fpealc ftriftlyin their natural figure they are ftreight,^nor have their fpine convexed, or more confiderably embowed, then Sharks, Porpofes, Whales, and other Cetaceous animals, as Scdiger pisdnly affirmeth : Corpus hahet mn ntagis curvum quant reliqid pifces. As ocular enquiry infornieth ; and as unco fuch as have not had the opportunity to behold them, their proper pourtraifts will difcovcr in Khodeletiusy Gefnery and Aldrovandus. And as indeed is deducibis from pictures themfelves ; for though they be dravrn repandous, or eonvexcdly crooked in one piece, yet the l3olphin that carrieth Arion is concavoufly inverted, and hath its, (pine deprefled in another. And anfwerably hereto may we behold them differently bowed in medalls, and the Dolphins of Tarus^indFuIius do make another iiexure from
that of Conimo dus und Agrippa. And therefore what is delivered of their Incurvity,
miifl either be taken Emphatically, thatis, not really but in appearance ; which happfineth, when they leap above water, and fuddenly (hoot down again 5
which is a fallacy in vifion, whereby ftraight bodies in a fudden motion protruded obliquely downward, appear unto the eye crooked ; and
thisistheconftruftionof BeUouius. Or if it be taken reallyj it rauft notuniverfally andpcipetually; that is, not when they (wim and remain in their proper figures, but onely when they leap, orimpetuouily whirl their bodies any way ; and this is the opinion of Gejnerus* Of laftlyjt muft be taken neither really nor emphatically, but onely
Emblematically
and Iwifter
by incurvityjand under fome figure of a bow and in this fenle probably do Heralds alfo receive it, v/hen from a Dolphin extended, they diftinguifli a Dol*
beft exprefTed their velocity
:
men
phinembowed.
And thus alfo muft that pifture be taken of a Dolphin clapfing an Anchor that is, not really, as is by nioft conceived out of affeftion unto man, conveighing the Anchor unto the ground ; but embleraatically>
:
acca'
288
Book 5.
according as Vierm hath cxpreffed it, The fwifccft animal conjoyned with that heavy body, implying that common mofdl, Fejima lente : and that celerity ftiould alwayes be contcmpered with cunftation.
Chap.
Ofthe Figure of a
III.
Grajj30ppet\
Here IS alfo among us a common dcfcription and pilure of a Graftiopper, as may be obfcrvcd in the piftures o^ EmblematiftSjin the coats of feveral famiTies,and as the word Cicada, is ufually tranflated in Diftionaries. Wherein tofpeak ftriftly,if by this word Grafhoppcr, we undcrfland that nimal which is implkd by t^tti^ with the Greeks, and by Cicada with t\\QLatinei\ we may with fatety affirm the pifture is widely miftaken, and that for ought enquiry can inform,
there
Frov. 30.
no fuch infeft in 'England. Which how paradoxical foever^upon enquiry, will prove undeniabletruth. For firftjThat animal which xh^French term SautereHe.vje a Grafliopper, and which underthis name is commonly dcfcribcd by uf is na* mcd AKfi( by the Greek^i by the Latines Locujtaj and by our (elves in proper l\ e xh a Locuft ; as in the diet of John Baptiji, and in our tranflation,thel.oc/h have no Kingjyet go they forth all of them by bands. Again, Between the Cicada and that we call a Grafhopper, the differences are very many, as may be obferved in themfelves, or their defcriptt*
ig
(trift
ons in Mattbiolusy /Hdrovandus and Aifuffetus. For firft, They are dilFe* rendy cucullated or capuched upon the head and back, and in the Cicada the eyes are more prominent : the Locufls have Antenna or long horns before, with a long falcation or forcipated tail "behindj and being ordained for faltation, their hinder legs do far exceed the other. The Locufl or our Grafliopper hath teeth , the Cicada ncne at all; nor any mouth according unto ^ro/?ot/f; the Cicada is moft upon trees ; and laftly, the fritinnitus or proper note thereof, is far more (hrill then that of the Locuft ; and its life fo fhort in Summer, that forprovifion it needs not have rccourfe unto the providence of the Pifmire in Winter. And therefore where the Cicada muflbe underftood, the pid^ures of Heralds and Emblematifts are not exaft,nor is it fafe to adhere unto the intcrj relation of Diftionaries i and wemuft with candour make out cur
own Tranflaticns: for in the plague of Egypt) Exodus 10. The word knfK is tranflated a Locuft, but in the fame fenfe and fubjcft. Wisdom 16. It is tranflated a Grafhopper; for them the bitings of
Grafhoppers and flies killed whereas we have declared before, the Cicada hath no teeth, but is conceived to live upon dew j and the poffi* bility of its fubfiftence is difputcdby Limy,Hereof 1 perceive Miifetus haih
:
Book
28^
hath taken notice, difTenting from Langiut and Lyco^enes, while they deliver,the Cicadas deftroyed the fruits in Germany^ where that infeft is not found; and therefore concludeth, T/zw ipjos quam alios decep* t9s fuiffe autumo , dum locujias cicadas effe vulgari errore crederent. And hereby there may be fome miftakc in the due difpenfation of Medicines defumed from this animal j particularly of Diatettigon commended by JEtius. in the affeftions of the kidneys. It muft be likewife underftood with fome rcftriftion what hath been affirmed by Ifim dorci and yet delivered by many, that Cicades are bred out of Cuecow fpittle or Woodfear ; that is, thatfpumou?, frothy dew or exudation, or both, found upon Plant?, efpecially about the joynts of Lavinder and Rofemary, obfervable with us about the latter end of May. For here the true Cicada is not bred , but certain !c Is, that out of this, fome kind of Locuft doth proceed; for herein may be difcovered a little infeft of a feftucine or pale green, referabiing in all
parts a Locurt, or
Laftly,
what we
it
call a Graftiopper.
improper, and the term of Grafhopper not appliable unto the Cicada ; for therein the organs of motion are not contrived for faltation, nor are the hinder legs of fuch extenfion, as is obfervable in falient animals, and fuch as move by leaping. Whereto the Locuft is very well conformed ; for therein the legs behind are longer then all the body, and make at the feeond joynt acute angles, at a con fiderable advancement above their backs. The miftake therefore with us might have its original from a defeft in our language ; for having not the infeft with us, we have not fallen upon its proper name, and fo make ufe of a term common unto it and the Locuft ; whereas other countreys have proper expreflions for it: So the Italian calls it Cicada^ the Spainard Cigana, and the French Cigale ; all which appellations conform unto the Original, and properly exprefTc this animal.
fe!f is
The word
CH
Of
the fi&ure
p.
V.
Parents, the not unlike unWhich to Cadmus or his wife, in the a^ of their Metamorphofis. is not a meer piftorial contrivance or invention of the Pifturer, but an ancient tradition and conceived reality, as it ftands delivered by Beda and Authours of fome antiquity ; that is, that S.ithan appeared not unto Eve in the naked form of a Serpent, but with a Virgins head,_,th at thereby hejmight become more acceptable , and his tempis
the Pifture of Paradife, and deluflon of our INSerpent often defcribed with humane vifage;
Pp
cation
290
ceit
not to
En^pimes into Vulgar Book 5. Which nevcrthelefs, isa'coiibe admitted, and the plain and received Hgare, is with betas Tierius Obfervcth
ter reafon
embraced.
For
firft,
fhape had proved a difadvantage unto Sathan^ affording notonely a fufpicious amazement in Ez/f, before the faft, in beholding a third humanity belide her felf and Adam 5 but leaving (ome excufe unto the leflfer reafon
humane
woman
;
that
is,
which afterward the man took up with to have been deceived by another like
her
felf.
Again, There was no inconvenience in -the fhape- afTumed j or any confiderable impediment that might difiurb that performance in the common form of a Serpent. For whereas it is conceived the woman muil needs be afraid thereof, and rather flie then approach it; it was not agreeable unto the condition of Paradife and ftate of inno# ccncy therein; if as in that place as mofl determine, no creature was hurtful or terrible unto man, and thofe dellrudive effefts they now difcover fucceeded the curfe, and came in with thorns and briars. And
therefore Eugubitius
incurreth
( who affirmeth this Serpent was a Bafilisk ) no abfurdity , nor need we infer that Eve fhould be deftroyedimmediatly upon that Vifion. For noxius animals could offend them no more in the Garden, than ISIotih in the Ark ^ as they
peaceably received rheirnimes, fothey friendly pofTefTsd their natures and were their conditions deflruftive unto each other, they were not fo unto man, whofe conffitutions then were antidotes, and needed not fear poiions. i\nd if ( as mofl conceive ) there were but two cre-^ ated of every kind , they could not at that time deflroy either
man orthemfdv;
fore alfo
for this
had fruflrated the command of multipliand imperfefted the Creation. And there-
if Cain were the liril man born, with him entered not onely the aft,butthefirft power of murther; tor before that time neither could the Serpent nor Adam deftroy Sve>, nor Adam and Etfg each other; for that had overthrown the intention of the world, and put its Creator to
day over again. Moreover, Whereas in regard of fpeech, and vocall conference with Eve , it may be thought he would rather affume an humane ftiape and organs , then the improper form of a Serpent; it implies no material impediment. Nor need we to wonder how he contrived a voice out of the mouth of a Serpent, who hath done the like out of die belly of a Pythoniifa, and the trunk of an Oke 3 as he did for
aft the fixt
Whereas
it
fliape
flie
man was
i fortie conceive fhe might not yet be priviledged with fpeechjand being in the no^
vity
Book
5.
291
vity of the Creation, and in experience of all things, might not ^^^JJ^Jj^jj^ Belide (he might be igno- at the Serbe affrighted to hear a ferpent fpeak. rant of theirnature?, who was not verfed in their names, as being pent sfpeak notprcfent at the genaral furvey of Animals, when Adam adignedi^S* Nor is this onunto every one a name concordant unco its nature.
opinion, but the determination of Lombard and 7cjiatus 5 and of Cyr;// unto theobjeftion of Julian, who compaced this ftory unto the^ables of the Greekj.
ly
my
'
.'.
.
"I
.
>
."I f
C H A p.
V.
Navels,
manner
And
this is
in the Picture of our.firft Parents, both delineated with obferveable not on ly in ordinary and ftained
ot their pofterity are
and others:
Which notwithftanding cannot be allowed, except we impute that unto the firft caufe, which we impofe not on the fecond ; or what we deny unto nature, we impute unto Naturity it felf ; that is, that in the
firtt and moft accompliflied piMg,the Creator afiefted fuperfluities, or ordained parts without ufe or office. For the ufe of the Navel is to continue the Infant unto the Mother, and by the vefTels thereof to convey its aliment and fuftentation. The what the Naveflels whereof it conlifteth, are the umbilical vein, which is a branch ^hat ufe. of the Porta, and implanted in the Liver of the Infant; two Arteries
likewife ariling from the lliacall branches, by which the Infant recei veth the purer portion of blood and fpirits from the mother; and laft' ly, the Urachos or ligamental paflage derived from the bottom of the bladder, whereby it difchargeth the waterifh and urinary^ part of its aliment. Now upon the birth, when the Infant forfaketh the womb, alchougb it dilacerate, and break the involving mentbrancs, yet do the(e vcffels hold, and by the mediation thereof the Infant is connefted unto the womb, not onely before, but a while alfo after the birth. Thefe therefore the midwife cuttcth off, contriving them into a knot clofeunto the body of the Infant; from whence enfueth that tortuofity or iconiplicated nodofity we ufually call the Navel ; occa* fionedby the colligation of veffels before mentioned. Now the Navel bcirtgap*rt, not precedent, but (ubfequent unto generation, r^^^'ThttAdm tivity orparturition, it cannot be well imagined at the Creation or ex and vehad traordinary formation o{ Adam^ who immediately iffjed from the Ar- no Navels, tifice of God; nor alfo that ol 'Eve\ who was not folemnly begotteft, but fuddenly. framed, and anomaloufly proceeded kom Adam. ^ And if we be led into conclufionsthat Adam had alfo this part, bcPp 2 caufe
2Q2
Book
5.
caufe we behold the fame in our felvcs, the inference is not reafonable; for it we conceive the way of his formation, or of the firft animals, did carry in all points a ftrift conformity unto fucceeding produftion?, wc might fall into imaginations that Adam was made without Tecth,or that he ran through thofc notable alterations in the veflels of the heart,
which the Infant (uffereth after birth : we need not difpute whether the egg or bird were firft ; and might conceive that Dogs were created blind, becaufe we obfervc they arc litcred fo with i|s. Which to afhrm, is to confound, at leaft to regulate creation unto generation, the firft
Afts of
in that general indulgence, Encreafe
which were determined the fecond of Nature ; and Multiply, produce orpropa* gate each other ; that is, not anfwerably in all points, but inapro^ longed method according to leminall progreflion. For the formation of things at firft was different from their generation after j and although it had nothing to precede it, was aptly contrived for that which fliould
God, unto
fucceed
.
it.
as having
no other
his pofterity without the fame: for the feminalityof his fabrick con tained the power thereofjand was endued with the f cicncc of thofe parts whofe predeftinations upon fucceffion it did accomplifh. All the Navel therefore and conjunftive part we can fuppofe in
on his Wfaker, and the connexion he muft needs have unto heaven, who was the son of God. For holding no dependence on any preceding efficient but God; in the aft of his produftion there may be conceived fome connexion, and Adam to have been in a momcntal Navel with his Maker. And although from his carnality and corporal exiftence, the conjunftion feemeth no nearer then of causality and efieft ; yet in his immortal and diviner part he feemed to hold a nearer coherence, and an umbilicaliiy even with God himfelf. And fo indeed although the propriety of this part be found but in fome animals, and many fpecies there are which have no Navel at all ; yet is there one link and common connexion, one general ligament, and neceffary obligation of all whatever unto God. Whereby although they aft themfelves at diftance, and fecm to be at loofe; yet do they hold a continuity with their Maker. Which catenation or conferving union when ever his pleafure (hall divide, let go, or feparate ; they (hall fall from their exiftance, eflence, and operations: in brief, they muft retire unto their primative nothing, and (brink into
AdamyVJ2i'& his dependency
their
Chaos again. They who hold the egg was before the Bird, prevent this doubt in many otl^er animals^ which alfo extendeth unto them; For birds are
nourifhed by umbilical veffels, and the Navelisraanifcftfometimesa day or two after cxclulion. The fame is probable in alt-oviparous cxclufions, if the leflcr part of eggs muft ferve for the formation, the
,
Book.
5.
AtidHommm
Errors,
is
299
out in the eggs of of Porwiggles or Tadgeneration the in improbable not is and Snakesi poles, and may be alfotrue in fome vermiparous exclufions : although thereof ) the whole Maggot is ( as wc have obferved the daily progrefs part remaining. any without Fly, enough to make a
The fame
made
little
Chap.
of
the TiUures
VI.
of Eafiern Nations^ and the Jews at their feafis efpeciallji our Saviour at the Fajfeover*
of the j'f'^5 and Eaftern Nations at their concerning the gefture otour Saviour at the PafTeoverjwho is ufually defcribed fitting upon a ftool or bench at a fquare table, in the middeft of the twelve, many make great doubt; and (though they concede a tablc-gefture ) will hardly allow this ufual way of Seflion. Wherin reftrainingno mans enquiry, it will appear that accubation, or lying down at meals was a geftufe ufed by very many Nations, That the Pfr//4i ufed it, befidc the teftimony of humane Writers, is de-^^^^^ ducible from that pafTage in Efiher. That when the King returned into the place of the banquet of wine , Haman was fallen upon That the Varthians ufed ir, is evi' the bed whereon Efiher was. 6.tnx. kom Athemus^ who deHvereth outofPojj?J^oi^5 that their King That Cleopatra thus lay down at meals, on an higher bed then others. entertained ^^^t^o^y, the fame Author manifefteth when he faith, rtie That it was in ufc among the C5r^fi^J,the prepared twelve Tricliniams. word Triclinium implieth, and the fame is alfb declarable from many That is was not out of Fafliion places in the Sy mpofiacks of Plutarch. in the days of Arifiotle^ he declarcth in his politicks 5 when among the Inftitutionary rules of youth, he advifeth they naight not be permitted to hearlambicksandTragediesbefore they were admitted unto difcumbency or lying along with others at their meals. That the Romans ufed this gefture at repaft, befidc many more, is evident from Lypfiuf^ Mercurialis^Salntafiut andCiaconius^ who have cxprefly and diftinftly
treated hereof.
Now of their accumbing place?, .the one was called Stibadion and Sigma,carrying the figure of an halt Moon,and of an uncertain capacity, whereafter it received the name of Hexaclinon, Oftoclinon, according unto thatofM/znio/j Accipe Lunata Jcriptum tejiudine Sigma :
0^0
capita veniat quifquis amicus erit.
left
2QA
Book
5.
and the mod honourable perfon, if he were not Mafter of the feaft, poffeffed one of thofe rooms. The other was termed Triclinium, that is, Three beds encompaflingatable, as may be feen in the figures thereof, and particularly in the Khamnufian Triclinium,(et down by Mercu' The cuftomary ufe hereof was probably deduced from tae freMerc. De Aitc rialis. Oyma^jiica. ufe quent of bathing,after which they commonly retired to bed, and refected themfelves with rspaft ; and fo that cuftom by degrees changed their cubiculary beds into difcubitory, and introduced afaftiion to go from the baths unto thefe. Asfor theirgefture or pofiticn, the men lay down leaning oh their Theancient gefture or po- left elbow,their back being advanced by fome pillow or fott lubftance : iition of the the fecond lay fo with his back towards the firit, that his head atbody at feafts. tained about his bofom ; and the reft in the fame order. For women, they fat fometimcs diftinftly with their (ex, fometimes promifcuoufly with men, according toaffeftion or favour, as is delivered by Juvenal,
GreMiojacuitmvanuptameriti. Siietomm of Caligula, that at his feafts he placed his fifters, with whom he had been incontinent, fuceffively in order below him. Again, As th<;ir beds were threes fo the guefts did not ufually exceed that number in everyone 5 according to the ancient Laws,and proverbial obfervatlons to begin with the Graces, and make up their feafts with
And by
the Mufes.
Fm,thathe
lay
And therefore it was remarkable in the Emperour Lucias down with tweWe which was faith Julius Capitolinusy
:
frjiterexampUmaprwft:, not accovd'ingto the cadom of his Predeceffors, except it wereat publick and nuptial fuppers. The regular number was alfo exceeded in this laft fupper, whereat there were nofefs then thirteeoj and in no place fewer then ten, for, as Jofephus delivereth,
it
number.
Laftly, For the difpofing and ordering of theperfons The firft and middle beds were for tfte gucfts, the third and Icweft for the Mafter of thehoufeand his family; he alwayes lying in the firft place of the laft bedjthat is next the middle bed; but if the wife or children were abfent, who the Um- their rooms were fupplied by the Umbrae, or hangers on, according to that oi Juvenal Locus eji plurihus Vmhris, Forthegueftg, brxwercac Banquets. thehonourableft place in every bed was the firft excepting the middle or lecond bed ; wherein the moft honourable Gueft of the feaft was plalu'.Scalig faced in the laft place, becaufe by that pofition he might be next the the Mafter lying in the firft of the SiSmTrc".^^^"' of the feaft. For gueftin the laft place of the fecond, they bed, principal laft and the b!ewa i. muft needs be next each other; as this figure doth plainly declarf, and whereby we may apprehend the feaft of Verperma made unto Seriorius, defcribcd be SalujUuii whofe words we fhall thus read with Salma*
:
-^
&
fins
Jgituir
difcubiiere
'
Sertoriafs
inferior
in medio lecto
fupra
;
Fabim
Book
Fdbius',
295
Antonm
Imo
Mcenas
in [ummo-. Infra Scrib a Serf oriiVerfius', alterfcriba ntedius inter tarquitium , Vominum Terpen-
&
nam
'paJui
sntuiffiiVA
pudng
smpij^
stmtuns snooj
oj h*
^5
"
2'
ft
Si"03
At this feaft there were but feven ; the middle places of the higheft and middle bed being vacant; and hereac ^vas ^'tmor/'wf the General and principal gueft (lain. And fo may we make out what is delivered by Plutarcif in his lifcj that lying on his back, and railing himfelf up, ferpenna caft himfelf upon his ftomack ; which he might very well do, being Matter of the feaft,and lying next unto him. And thus alfo from this Tricliniciry difpofure, we may illuftrate that obfcure expreffion of That the Northwind was in the middle, the North Eaft on the Seneca For as appeareth in higher fide, ahd the North Weft on the lower. the circle of the winds, the North Eaft will answer the bed of Antmiusy and the North Weft that of Terpenna. That the cuftom of feafting upon beds was in ufe among the Hehrewsiin^iny deduce from Ezekjel. Thou fatteft upon a ftately bed, and ^^
,
^'
a tabic prtpared before it. The cuftom of Difcalccation or putting off their (hoes at mealsjis conceived to confirm the famCjas by that means keeping their beds clean, and therefore they had a peculiar charc:;e
if they
toeatthepafsover with their fhoes on; which Injunftion were needlef]^, ufed not to put them off. However it were in times of high antiquity, probable it is that in after ages they conformed unto the
lafhions
2^6
E^qumef
fafh Ions of th e Ajjyrians
into Vulgar
laftly
Book 5
of the Romans,
being reduced by Pompey unto a Provincial fubjeftion. Thatthis difcumbency at meals was in ufc in the daies of our Saviour, is conceived probable from feveral speeches of his exprcffed in that phra(e scven unto common Auditors, asLw^^ i4'Gw invitatus fuerit adnuptias, mndifcumbas in primo /oco, and bsCides many more, Matthew 23. When reprehending the ^cr/i^i and F harifeesy he Cdihby Awant pro*
toc/ifias 5
id
ejf,
cathedraSy in Synagogis
protocatkedms^ fivcy primus priwos recubitus in Cms, the terms arc very diftinft, and by : wherein
&
Lukf
7.
Matth. 2.
an Antithefis do plainly diftinguifti the pofture of fittingj from this of lyingonbeds.The confentof the Jevpsviith the Romans in other cere* monies and rites of feaffiiig, makes probable their conformity in this. The Romans waftied, were anointed, and wore a cenatory garment and that the fame was praftifed by thejews^ is deduceable from that expoflulation of our Saviour with Siwony that he waftied not his feet, nor anointed his head withoyl; the common civilities at feftival entertainments and that exprtflionof his concerning the cenatory or wedding garment, and as fome conceive of the linnen garment of the young man or St. John, which might be the fame he wore the night before at
:
:
the
laft
Supper.
That they ufed this jeflure at the PafTover, is more then probable from the teftimony of Je7i/^ Writers, and particularly of 5i-w/7iwo
Exod. 12.
recorded by Scaliger Ve emendatione temporum. After the fecond cup according to the Inftitution. The fun asketh what meaneth of this fervice ? Then he that maketh the declaration , faith, How different is this night from all other nights > for all other nights we wafh but once but this night twice j all other we cat leavened or unleavened bread, but this onely leavened 5 all other we eat fletti roafted, boyled or baked, but this onely roafted, all other nights we eat together lying or fitting, but this only lying along. And this pofture they ufed as a token of reft and fecurity which they enjoyed, far different from that, at
the eating of the PafTover in Mgypt. Thatthis gefture was ufed when our Saviour eat thePaflbver, is not conceived improbable from the words whereby the Evangelifts exprcfs the fame, that isj dvcc^riTrvMy^avuHii^zuy K5!iiKrf.3K^,i*i'etw.9i<su, which terms do properly fignifie, this gefture in Arijtotle, Athenus, Euripides^ Sophoclesy
and
all
the like
para-
m^hmuw
"'
Matth 26.
fohii i3
Laftly, if it be not fully conceded, that this gefture was ufedatthe PafTover^ yet that it wasobferved at the laft (upper, feems almoft incontrovertible, for at this feaft or cenatory convention, learned men make more then one fupper, or at leaft many parts thereof. The one of the PafTeover, cr eating of the Pafchall firft was that Legal Lamb with bitter herbs, and ceremonies defcribed by Mofes. Of this it is faid, then when the even was come he (at down with the
Book5
2i^y
the twelve. This is fuppofed when it is faid, that the Supper being cnt ded, our Saviour arofe, took a towell and waflied the Difciples feet; The fecond was common and Domefticall, confiftingof ordinary and and undclined provifions j of this it may be (aid , that our Saviour
took his garment, and fat down again, after he had wafhcd the Difciples feet, and performed the preparative civilities of fuppers ; at this tis conceived the fop was given unto Judas^ the Originall word implying (omebroath or decoftion, not ufcd at the Paflbvcr. The third ot latter pirt was Eucharifticall* which began at the breaking and blefling oi the bread, according to that of MatihrtVy and as they were eating, Jefus took bread and blefled it. Now although at the Paflbver or firft fuppcr, many have doubted this Reclining pofture, and fomehave affirmed that our Saviour flood ; p^ veter\im yet that he lay down at the other, the fame men have acknowledged, as fitibut, ChryfoJiomy7heophylaQ,Aulim,md many more. Andif the tradition will for the very Triclinium is to be hold, the pofition is unqucftionable feen at Romet brought thither by Vcf^afiauy and graphically (et forth
-,
by
Cafalius,
Thus may 5c properly be made out ; what is delivered, John 1 5. Erat recumhm anus ex Vifcipu/is ejus injiwi Jefu quern diligebat j Now there was leaning on Jefus bofomoneof his Difciples whom Jsfus'lovedj
which
naturall,
gcfture will not (b well agree unto the pofition of fitting, but is and cannot be avoided in the Laws of accubation. And the
is
Emperour
Cxnabat NervK cum faucis^ Veitnto rccumhebat preprm atque etiam in finu ; and from this cuftomc arofe the word w/r4fl<', that is, a near and bofom friend* And therefore Cmfabon juftly rejefteth Theopkyla^l ; who not confidcring the ancient manner of decumbency, imputed this gefture of the beloved Difci- Not pie unto Rufticity, or an aft of incivility. And thus alfo have fome
whom
he favoured
in
Evan,
conceived, it may be more plainly made out what is delivered of Mary Luks Magdalen. That (he flood at Chrifts feet behind him weeping, and be* gan to wafh his feet with tears, and did wipe them with the hairs of her head. Which aftions, if our Saviour fate, fhe could not perform {landing, and had rather flood behind his back, then at his feet. And therefore it is not allowable, what is obfervablc in many pieces, and even of Raphael Vrbin; wherein Mary Magdalen ispifturcd before our Saviour, wafhing his feet on her knees ; which will not coniift with the ftrift de
fcription
7'
Now whereas
on
}
may feem
to be di (countenanced by oar
it fitting, it
illati-
and
of fefllon or recubation, doe onely (ay that he placed himfelfe at the table } and when ours expreffsth the fame by fitting, it is in relation unto our cuftom, time, and apprehenfion. The like u;oi occafion
CLS
is
2^8
18
not itnufual
gar renders it, die book; which is an cxpredion proper unto the paginal books of our times, but not (o agreeable unto volumes or rolling books in u(e among What Venari- the Jerps^ not oncly in elder times, but even unto this day. So when ^,or ^e penthe 5<?w/irir/r delivered unto the holi two pence for the pro jj; js faicjj vifion oi the Levite 5 and when our Saviour agreed with the Labourers GofpVl is for a penny a day ; in ftrift tranflition it (hould be (even pence half penny ; and is not to be conceived our common penny, the fixtieth part of an ounce. For the word in the Original is S'mdtUi, in la tine, Denarius^ and with the Ilow<?5 did value the eight part of an
Eft^umes wto Vnlgar Book 5. when it is (aid, Luk^ 4. 7/|tf <toC,C\'itVj and the VulCum -phcafet libruMy ours iranflatethit, hefhutor clofed
Co
ounce, which after five (hillings the ounce amounteth unto feven pencq half penny of our money. Laftly, Whereas it might be conceived that they cat the Pafleovcr {landing rather then fitin^,or lying down, according to the Inftitution, ^^0^' ** Thus fliall you eat, wirh your loins girded, your (hoocs on ^i'Sye^l> over omitted, your feet, aad your ftaff in your hand xhejews themielves reply^ this was not required of (ucceeding generations, and was not obferved, but in the polTeover of Egypt% And fo alfo many other in junftions were afterward omitted, as the taking up of the Pafchal Lamb,from the tenth day, the eating of it in their houfes difpcrf ed j the ftriking of the blood on the door pofls , and the eating thereof in hafte. Solemnities and Ceremonies primatively enjoyned, afterward omitted ; as was alfo this of ftation, for the occalion ceaiing, and being in fecurity, they applyed themfelevs unto geftures in ufe among them. Now in what order of recumbency Chrift and the Difciples were Cajalius from the Latcran difpoled, is not Co eafily determined. Triclinium will tell us, that there being thirtcen,five lay down in the firft bedjfivc in the la{l,and three in the middle bcd;and that our Saviour That John lay in the fame bed polTeflTcd the upper place thereof. That fecms plain, becaufe he leaned on our Saviours bofom. Veter made the third in that bed, conjefture is made, becaufe he beekened unto John^ as being next him, to ask of Clirifl, who it was that ftiould betray him. That Judas was not far off feems probable , not onely becaufe he dipped in the fame difh , but becaufe he was fo near, that our Saviour could hand the fop unto
him,
CHAP.
Book
5.
'
295
Chap.
Of
the ViBure
Vll.
hair.
ANother
hair,
Piftiire there
of our Saviour
according to the cuftom of the Jews, and his defcription 'Wherein indeed the hand of the lent by Lentuluf unto the Senate. Painter is not accufable, but the judgement of the common Speftatour; conceiving heobferved this faftiion of his hair,becaufe he was a A7<iz/znt^, and confounding a N<z^<irire by vow, with thofe by birth or
education.
6.
And was
to refrain three
Wine, cutting the hair, and approaching unto the dead ; and (uch a one was Sampfon. Now that our Saviour was a Na^ zarite after this kind, w^ have no reafon to determine j for he drank Wide, and was therefore called by the Pharifeesy a Wine-bibber i he approached alfo the dead, as when he raifed from death Lazarus^ and the
daughter of J aims. The other Nazarite was a Topical appclletion, and appliable unto fuch as were born in Nazareth, a City o{ Galilee^ and in the tribe of Naphtali. Neither if ilriftly taken was our Saviour in this fenfe a Nazarite
;
for
receive that
his return
he was born in Bethlehem in the tribe of Judah ; but might name, becaufe he abode in that City} and was not onely
paflTed the filent part of his life, after
from Mgyph as is delivered by Matthew, And he came and dwelt in a City called Nazareth, that it might be fulfilled which was (poken by the Prophet, He (hall be called a Nazarene. Both which ^^.''f'J^oncer. kinds of Nazarites, as they are diftinguifliable by Zain, and tfade in f^ ^*<^^* for as Janfenius the Hebrew lo in the Greek, by Alpha and Omega obferveth, where the votary N^z/zr/fe is mentioned, it>is written, NC*^4l- as Levit.6. and Lament. 4. Where it is fpoken of our Saviour, we read it, N2fH', as in Matthew, Luk^ and John\ only Mark^ who writ his Gofpel at Kome, did Latinize, and wrote it Nrt{'<^V
-,
^rwr
Chap.
VIII.
'
his
not conlencaneous unto the authority of Expofitors, or the circumftance of the Text. For therein it is delivered that Ifaac carried on
Oil 2
^QO
his
Book
5.
back the wood for the racrifice;which being an holocauft or burnt offering to be confumed unto aftie?, we can not well conceive a burthen for a boy ; but fuch a one unto Ifaac, as that which it typified was unto Chrift, that is, the wood or crofs whereon he fufFcredjwhich was too heavy a load for his (boulders, and was fain to be relieved therein
we
and makes
far from a boy, that he was a man grown, and at believe ^^/^/'^w^jwhoplaceth him in the laft o{Adole him twenty five years old. And whereas in the
Vulgar Tranflation he is termed puer^ it muft not be ftriftly apprehended (for that age properly endeth in pubertyiand extendech but unto fourteen)but refpeftively umoAbraham;vfho was at that time above iix fcorc. And therefore alfo herein he was not unlike unto him, who was after Men ofemi-"" jgj dumb unto the flaughter , and commanded by others who had Icnent f^"|^^" gions at command 5 that is, in mecknefs and humble fubmiffion. For prowc 5 . j^^ J j^g refifted, it had not been in the power of his aged parent to have cnforcedi and many at his years have performed fuch afts,as few befides Vavid was too ftrong for a Lion and a Bear; Fontpey at any. had defervcd the name of Great ; Alexander of the fame cognomination was GeneralijJiMo of Greece ; and Ambal but one year after, fuccceded ^/<iritf^ in that memorable War againft the Romans.
Chap.
X.
r one
and fomc of ancient Bibles, Mofei is dcfcribed with defcription we find in a (ilver Medal 5 that i supon fide A/o/ horned, and on thereverfc the commandment againft Which is conceived to be a coynage of forae Jivps^m fculptilc Images.
__ horns.
N many pieces,
The fame
derifion of ChrifWans, who firft began that Pourtraft. The ground of this abfurdity, was (urcly a mfflake of the Hebrew Textjinthe hiffory of M?/when hedefcendcd from the Mount upon
,
xerf.
an horn, and to (hine, which the Vulgar Tranflation conforming unto the
that
is,
^5.
videbant faciem Igmrabat quod cornuta effet fades ejus, former. But the Chaldee piraphnCe, tranflated by P^w/ai Mofes effe cornutam. Mofes nefciebat quod rnuhus ejfet Fagiuf, hath otherwife cxprefTed it. Et vidermtfilit Israel quod mult a eJfet clarity ejtts, glorU vultus fp/endor gbrU faciei ndofes. The expreflionofthefeptuagint is as large, Mi^mmi
i
"^it
^i
n ^mf(gr@'
<A<9&ffi^9yGiorificatus
eji
afpedus
cutis,
feu
coioris
far
ciei.
And this
of the
pafTage of the
;
New
Old Teftament is well explained by another wherein icis delivered, that they could not ftedfaftly behold
Book*
5.
andCommon
Errcrs.
that is,forthe
3^'
*/?
'H^gc^u
gWy
of his
And furcly the expofition of one Text is bcft perforcountenance. their conftruftions, where the ; men vainly interpofing another med by
And therefore fome have feemed What kind of Scripture decidcth the controver fie. ftory of il^i&4^ the harlot, "fjoi "'^ ^ too aaivc in their expofitions, who in the an Hoftefs ; for , the^";|f.;^''*^' fignifieth word alfo the have given notice that <?m, which signifies not an termed plainly is Jiht Hebrews the Epiftle to
Hoflefs, but a pecuniary and proftituting Harlot; a term applied unto Lais by the Grf^i^/,and diftinguifhed from Jwa^* or arnica as may appear in the thirteenth of Athtn^us, Andtherefore more allowable is thetranflation oitrentelius^ ^od fplendida fad a ejfet cutis faciei ejus 5 or as 'Efiim hath interpreted it,/^
cies ejus erat radiofa, his face
was
radiant,
and
difperfing
beams
like
horns and cones about his head 5 which is alfo confonant unto ihc original fignification, and yet obf erved in the pieces of our Savi-ourand the Virgin Maryy who are commonly drawn with fcintillati* ons, or radient Halo's about their head ; which after the Fr^wc^ expref' fion arc ufually termed, the Glory. Now if befides this occafional miftake, any man (hall contend in this Pifture, and that no injury is done unto Truth propriety a bccaufean horn is the Hicroglyphick of authority, difcription, this by power and dignity, and in this Metaphor is often ufed in Scripture; the piece I confefs in this acception isharmlefi and agreeable unto Mofes : and under fuch emblematical conftruftions, we find that Alexander the Great, and Attila King of Humes^ in ancient Medals But if from the common miftake, or are defcribed with horns.
many
any folary coniideration we perfift in this defcription 5 we vilifie the myfteryof the irradiation, and authorize a dangerous piece conformable unto that of Jupiter Hammon 5 which was the Sun and therefore defcribed with horns; as is delivered by Macrohius i Ham*
monem
quern
Veuw
hitsfingunt^quihtts id ammal valet, ficut radiis foLY/e herein alfo intimate And if ( as Mathe Pifture of Pan, and PagaM emblem of Nature,
crobiuf
and very good Authors concede) Bacchus (who is alfo ^^'chusiappokd fcribcd with horns) be the fame Deity with the Sun; and ifCastobethefame Vo^us well contendeth) Mofes and Bacchus were the fame prfon;perfon,Dferitheir defcriptions muft
g^^^
of*'"*''^*''''""'''
aq
CHAP.
202
Book
5.
'Chap.
X.
ofthe Scutcheons
of
the Tribes
of
ifiael.
pafs over the Scutcheons of the Tribes of Ifrael^ they are nfually defcribedl in the Maps of Canaan 2^ndi fevcral other pieces; generally conceived to be the proper coats, and diftinftlve badges of their feveral Tribes. So Reuben is conceived to bear three Bars wave, Judah a Lyon Rampant, Dana. Serpent nowed, Simeon
T TT 7E will not
V V
as
Oen. i9'
a fwordinpale the point erefted, &c. The ground whereof is the laft Bencdiftion of Jacob, wherein he rcfpeftivcly draweth compariions from things here reprefented. Now herein although we allow a confidcrable meafure of truth, yet whether as they are ufnally defcribed,thcfc were the proper cognizance?,
and coat-arms of the Tribes 5 whether in this manner applyed, and upon the grounds prefumed material doubts remain. Forfirft, They are not ftriftlymade out, from the Prophetical bleffingof Jacob', {ov Simeon and Levi have diftinft coats, that is, a Sword, and the two Tables, yet are they by Jacob included in one Prophefie, Simeon and Levi are brethren, Inftruments of cruelties are in their habitations.
Dett.-iz '
So Jojeph beareth an Ox, whereof notwithfianding there is no mention in this Prophefie for therein it is faid Jofeph is a fruitful bough, even a fruitful bough by a well; by which repetition are intimated the two Tribes defcending from him, Ephraim and Ma^ ftajjes; whereof notwiihftanding Ephraim onely beareth an Ox:True it i?,
;
that
many years after in the benediftion of Mo[es^\t is Caldiofjofeph, His glory is like the firftlings of his Bullock % and fo we may concede, what ro/TF^^- learnedly declareth, that the ^^^ti/z:^ reprefented Jojeph in the Symbole of an Ox ; for thereby was belt implied the dream of fharaoh, which he interpreted, the benefit by Agriculture, and provident provifion of corn which he performed ; and therefore did Serapis bear a bufliel upon his head. Again, If we take thefe two ben?diftions together, the refemblances are not appropriates and A^ofes therein conforms not unto Jacob-, for that which in tlie Prophefie of Jacob is appropriated unto one, is in thebleflingof A/o/made common unto others. So whereas Judah Is conjpared unto a Lion by Jacob, Judah is a Lions whelp, the fame is applied unto Van by Mofes, Van is a Lions whelp, he (hall leap from Bajhan, and alfo unto Gad, he dwelleth as a Lion. Thirdly, It a Lion were the proper coat of Judah, yet were it not probably a Lion Pvampant, as it is commonly defcribed, bur rather couchant ordcrmaur,as fome Heralds and K^r^i'i^ do dettrmineiaccording to the letter of thcTeyn, Kecumbens dormijiiut Leoj Hecoucheiasa Lion,and asayoang Lion, who fhallroufe him?
'
Laftly,
Books*
when
it
is
and Common
faid,
Errors*
305
Every man oF the Children oi Ifrael {hall Laftlyj ^'*^' * nitch by his own ftandard with the Eniign of their fathers houfe ; upon enquiry whatthefe ftandards and Enfigncs were there is no {mall inccrtaiuty j and men conform not unto the Prophelieof y^'c-jj^. Chriliian ExpoGtors are fain herein to rely upon the KaUins, who not withif and^ ing are various in their traditionf, and confirm not thefe common defcriptions. For as for infcriour cnfigns, either of particular bands or houfcs, they determine nothing at all 5 and of the foure principal or Legionary ftandards, that is, oi Judah-iKeubetty Ephrami, and Van ( un- ^he like alio der every one whereof marched three Tribes J they explain them very p. Fagiusu^pThap varioufly. Jonathan who compiled the Thargum concdves the colours on the and thebrefl-plate, toanfwer precious (tones, in the |"j^^^*?'^'^ of thefe banners upon which the names oi the Tribes were engraven^ So the ftandard for ^^^^It^. the Camp of J^^ was of three colours, according unto the ftones, jv^m. i. Chalcedony, Siphir, and Sardonix ; and therein were exprefled the names of the three Tribes Judah Iffachar^ and Zabulon^ and in the middeft thereof was written,R.i{e up LordjEt let thy enemies bs fcatterci ', ^'""* '' and let them that hate thee flee before thee ; in it was alfo the pourtrait of a Lion. The ftandard of Rfw^t/z was alfo of three colours, Sardine, Topaz, and Amethyft 5 therein were exprefTed thenzmtsoiKeubeniSiIfrael, The Lord meoH,!indGadf in the middeft was written, Hear our God, the Lord is one; Therein was alfo the pourtraiture ofapg^f, 5. But Abenezra and others, befide the colours of [the field, Hart. do fet down other charges, in Rfubem the form of a man or mandrakcj in that oi Judah a Lion, in Ephraims an Ox, in Dan's the fi,
gure ofaniEgle. And thus indeed the four figures in the banners of the pincipal {quadrons of Ifrael are anfwerable unto the Chcrubins in the vifion E^ekft. oi Ezekieli every one carrying the form of all thefe. As for the I ikencfs of their faces , they four had the likenefs of the face of a Man, and the face of a Lion on the right fide, and they four had the face of The common " ^"'^ an Ox on the left fide, they four had alfo the face of an Mi^le. And ^^f her unto the pictures (whcfeGofpelsjjj^g'^^pj^"^'/ conformable of the Evangelefts are the Chriftian banners^ are fet forth with the adition of a man or ted. Angel, an Ox, a Lion, and a jEgle. And thefe fymbolicaHy repre(ent the Office of Angels, and Minifters of Gods will ; in whom is required underftanding as in a man,courage and vivacity as in the Lion, icrvice and Minifterial officioufncfs as in the Ox, expedition or celerity
of execution, as in the J^gle. From hence therefore me may obfervc thatthefe de{criptions,the molt authentick of any, are neither agreeable unto one another, not- unto the Scutcheons in queflion. For though they agree in Ephraint and Judah^
that
is,
the
Ox
as
and KeubeHf
figure
'
304
figure
Book.
of a Man, Hare, or Mandrake, from three Bars wave. Wherein notwithftanding vve rather declare the incertainty of Arms in this particular, then any way queftion their antiquityifor hereof more ancient examples there are,thcn the Scutcheons of the Tribes, ifOfjrU, Mizra* im or Jupiter the Juft, were the Son of C^^/w ; for of his two Sons, as ThcAntiqui- "Oiodorm delivereth, the one for his Device gave a Dog, the other a of bearing ^^if. And, befide the fhield o{ AchiUisy and many ancient Gr^fi^^ : if Scutcheons. ^^ receive the conjefture of Vojfiusy that the Crow upon Corvinus his head, was but the figure of that Animal upon his helmet, it is an example of Antiquity among the Romans, But more widely muft we walk, if we follow the doftrine of the Cabalijisy who in each of the four banners infcribe a letter of the Tetragrammaton, orquadriliteralnameofGod; and myfterizing their *"^8nes, do makethe particular ones of the twelve Tribes, accommofcir^gricH/fKdable unto the twelve fignes in the Zodiack, and twelve moneths in the 4. u, lib. year : But the Tetrarchical or general banners, of JudahiReuben,Ephra im^ and Van^ unto the fignes of Aries, Cancer, Libra and Capricornus : that is, the four cardinal parts of the Zodiack, and feafons
of the year.
Chap.
Of
Piftures
XI.
Sibyls.
for their Pro-
the PiBurei
Sibyls
of the
arc very common, and of the THe phefiesofChrifl high efteem with Chriflians; defcribed
in
commonly with youthful faces, and in a defined number. Common pieces making twelve, and many precifely ten ; obferving therein the account
of learned Varro ; that is, Sibylla "Deiphica, Erythrda^ Santiay Cuntana^ Cumda^ or Cimmerian Hellefpontiacay Lybica^ Phrygian 'Xiburtina^ Per* In which enumeration! perceive learned men are not fatisficd, fica.
and many conclude an irreconcilable incertainty i fome making more, For Suidaiy though he afothers fewer, and not this certain number. firm that in divers ages there were ten, yet the fame denomination he
affordeth unto
forth the Icons
Beyjardus in hisTraft of Divination hath Cet of thefe Ten, yet addeth two others, Epireticay and JEgyptia; and fome affirm that Prophefying women were generally
more;
named
Sibjls.
1
Others make them fewer M<irfwj CapelU two; Pliny znd Solinus three; JE^ian iour^ and Salmatius in e&h hut fevent For drfcour*
fing hereof in his Plinian Exercitations, he thus determinetli
licet
;
Kidere
hodierms PiCtores^ qui tabulas proponunt Cumanx Cumex , thry quafi trium diverfarum Sibyllaruttt ; cunt una eademque
&
Ery
fuerit
Cumana^ Cum^a^
& Erjthr^a^
ex plurijtm
&
dodijjimorum Auiborum
[ententia
Books*
fententia.
305
Boyfardm gives us leave to opinion there was no more then one ; for fo doth he conclude, In tanta Scriptorum varietate liberum eadem in diver fts regionibus peregrinarelinquunm LeUori credere^anuna reddidi(fe comperitur^ an ^ lures loc'n ubi oracuia ah in a forth ftt tay cognomen
&
extiterint
refolution of their number : And therefore not difcovering a Irompensof thebeft Writers, we have no reafon to determine the fame from the hand and pencil of Painter?. As toiir^hing their age, that they are generally defcribed as young
women,
is
facerdosy
fieth the
and Servius in his Comment amplithe books unto Tarquitt, and whofe
Hiftory
plainer then any, by Livie and Gellius is termed Anus iAnut, quift no woman of ordinary age, but full of years, ^nd Avitjme menproperly that is, according to the Etymologie of Fejius ; and^^dota^re, of dayes the in confonant unto the Hiftory ; wherein it is faid, that Tarquin though fhe dored with old age. Which duly perpended, the Licentia pidoria. is very large j with the fame reafon they may delineate old Nejhr like
AdonU) Hecuba with Helens face, and Time with Abfolons head. Buc this abfurdity that eminent Artift Michael Angela hath avoided, in the Pifturcs of the Cutnean and Perfian Sibyls, as they (land defcribed from
the printed fculptures of
Adam
Mantuanus.
Chap.
XII.
requires
confideration
is
not excufable)
the thing it fclfe is qaeftionable; nor is it indifputably certain what manner of death fhe dyed. Plutarch in the life of ^^roj?^ plainly delivereth, that no man knew the manner of her death ; for fomc affirmed (heperifhed by poyfon, which fhealwayes carried in a little hollovv comb, and wore it in her hair. Befide, there were never any Afps difcovered in the place of her death, although two of her Maids periftied alfo with her ; only it was faid, two fmall and almoft infenfiblepricks were found upon her arm ; which was all the ground that Cfar had to prefiime the maimer of her death. Galen who was contemporary unto Plutarch^ dellvereth two wayes of her death that fhe killed her felfe by the bite of an Afp, or bit an hole in her arm, and poured poyfon therein, ^fr^^athat lived before them both hath alfo twj opinions; that fli^ dyed by the bite of an Afp, or elfe a poifonous ointment. We nii'^ht queftion the length of" the A(ps, which arc fomctimes
:
defcribed exceeding
fliort
nioft
3o6
Book
5.
moft conceive (he ufed, is above four cubits long. Their nuo^ber is not imqaeftionable 5 for whereas there are generally two dcfcribedj guflus QzsFlutarcb relateth J did carry in his triumph the Image of Cleopatra buc with one Afp unto her arm. As for the two pricks, or little fpots in her arm, they rather infer the fex, then plurality : for like the Viper, the female Afp hath four, but the male two teeth; whereby it left this in^preflion, or double punfture behind it. And laftly, Wc might queftion the place; for fomc apply them unto her breft, which notwithftanding will not conlift with the Hiilory 5 and Petrus ViClorim hath well obferved the fame. But herein the mjftake was eafie,it being the cuftom in capital malefaftors to apply them unto the breafl:,as thcAuthor Pe Iheriaca adPifoftem an eye witnefs Alexandria) where C/fo/?tftrtf died, determineth : I beheld, hcrsoi Alexandria, hovi fuddenly thefe Serpents bereave a man faith he, of life; for when any one is condemned to this kind of death, if they intend to ufc him favourably , that is , to difpatch him fuddenly, they fatten an Afp unto his breft ; and bidding him walk about, he prefcntly pcrifheth thereby.
Aw
Chap. XIIl. /*
Ofthe
to contain fundryimproprieties.Some will enquire why Alepunder the Great is defcribed upon an Elephant for,we donot'finde he ufed that animal in his ArmieSjmuch Icffe in hig
critical fpeftators
THe Piftures
may feem
is famous in Hiftory, and its name alive to Befidc, he fought but one remarkable battel, wherein there were any Elephants , and that was with Forus King of ! dia J in which notwithftanding , as Curtius ArrianttSy and Flutarch And if bccaufe he fought report , he was on Horfcback himfclf.
is with propriety fet upon their backs : with no reafon is the fame defcription agreeable unto Judas Mac Inf Undore as may be obferved from the hiftory of ths Maccabees andalwbis Antiquii cabeus, To xmio Julim C[ar, whofe triumph was honoured with captive Ele-
againft Elephants, he
',
phants, as
Laurus-hxidi if alfo
may be obferved in the order thereof, let forth by Jacobus we (hould admit this defcription upon an Elephant,
yet were not the manner thereof unqusftlonable, thatis, in his ruling the beaft alone , for bcfide the Champion upon their back , there wasalTo a euid or ruler, which fat niore forward to command or guide the beaft. Thus did King Per^/i ride when he was overthrown by e^/ifx. W^r; and thus are alfo the towrcd Elephants defcribed, Maccab.2- 6.
Upon
Book
5.
3C7
which covered eveUpon ry one of them, and were girt faft unto them by devices : there were alio upon everyone of thenuhirty two ftrong men, belide the Indian
the bcafts there were ftrong towers of woo(?,
Others will demand, not onely why Alexander upon an Elephant, but Hf(f/or upon an Horfe : whereas his manner of figh ting, or pre/cnt|inghim(elt in battel, was in a Chariot, as did the other noble Jnjansy who iS Pliny affirmeth were the firft invcnters thereof. The fame way of fightistcftificdby Z?iWor^, and thus delivered by Sr. f^aherRartf* leigh. Oi the vulgar little reckoning was made, for they fought all
on (oot, flightly armed, and commonly followed the fuccefs of their Captains ; who rode not upon Horfes, but in Chariots drawn by two or *hr e Horfes. And this Wis alfothe ancient way of fight among the Bri4 and there want tains^ as is delivered by Dio/!&rf, Cfar, andj^acitus notfomv who have taken advantage hereof,and made it one argument of their original from Jroy. Laftly, By any man verfed in Antiquity, the queftion can hardly be avoided, why the Horfes of thefe Worthies, clpecially o{Cfar, are defcribed with t le turnitureof great laddies, and ftirrops ; for faddfes largely t^ken, though fome defence there may be, yet that they had aot the ufe of ftirrops, fccmeth of lefler doubt 5 as TanciroUm hath obferved, as Volydore Virgil, znd Fetrus ViHorius have confirmed, exprefly De inventisna difcourling hereon 5 as is obferv^ble from Pliny, and cannot efcape our f^rum^vaTt* eyes in the ancient monuments, medals and Triumphant arches of the ^J^'^^*' Ramans. Nor is there any ancient claflical word in Latine to exprefs (1^^005^ net them. For Staphia, Stapes or Stafeda is not to be fouind in Authors of ancient, this Antiquity. And divers words which may be urged of this fignifii cation, are either later, or fignified not thus much in the time of C^ jar* And therefore as Li;?/^f obferveth, left a thing of common ufe ftiould want a common word, Francifcus Philelphus named their Stapedasy and Bodims Subicus, Pedaneos. And whereas the name might promife fomc Antiquityjbecaufe among the three fmall bones in the Auditory Organ by Phyfitians termed Incus, Malleus ^nd iiapes, one thereof from (omc refemblance doth bear this name ; thefe bones were not obferved,much lefs named by Hyppocrates, Galen, or any ancient Phyfitian. But as Laurentius ohlervcth, concerning the invention oftheftapes orftirrop bone, there is fome contention between Columbus and IngraJJius; the one of Scicilia, the other o( Cremona, and both within the compafs of this Century: The famcisalfodeduceable from very approved Authors : Poljbius fpeakingof the way which Antbat marched into Italy, uleth the word CiCtifiATiFctu, that is, fsLithPtlrus Vi&orius, it was ftored with devices for men to get upon their horfe?, which afcents were termed Bentata, SLod in the life of Caius Cracchus, Plutarch expreffrth as much. For endeavouring to ingratiate himlelf with the people befides the plar 2 cing
',
2o8
Eftquiries
ifrto
Vulgar
Book
5.
VereMn.
...
cing of ftoncs at every miles end ; he made at nearer diftanccs certain elevated place? , and Scalary afcents, that by the help thereof they might with better cafealcend or mount their horfe?. Now^if we demand how Cavaliers then defiitute of ftorrops did ufually mount their horfcs j as Liffius informeth,the unable and fofter fore of men had their titiUxfSy or Stratores , which helped them up on horfe back, as in the paftifeof Crajfus in Plutarch, and Caracalia in Spartiams^ and the latter example of Valentinianusy who becaufe his horfe rifcd before that he could not be fetled on his back, cut off the right hand of his Strator. But how the aftive and hardy perfons mounted, Vegetius refolves ^^^ ^^^^ ^^^^ ^^^^ ^^ ^^^1^ ^j. j^^p ^p^ ^^^ therefore they had wooden horfes in their houfes and abroad : that thereby young men might enable themfelves in this aftion : wherein by inftuftion and praftifc ihey grew fo perfcft, that they could vault upon the right or left and that with their fword in hand , acording to
that of Virgil
Pofcit equos atque armafintul, faltuque fuperhus
Enticat%
And
alii
again
lHfrnant
currus &corforafaltu
Jnjiciuntin equos.
So
down
them.
Julius Pollux advileth to teach horfcs to incline, dimit and bow their bodies, that their riders may wiih better eafeafcend
And thus may it more caufally be made out, what Hippocrates affirmeth of the Scythians , that ufing continual riding, they were generally molefted with the Sciatica or hip-gout. Or what SuetO' nius delivereth of Germanicus^ that he had (lender legs, but
encreafed them by riding after meals; that is, the humours defccnding upon their pendulofity, they having no fupport or (uppcdaneoua (lability.
Nowif any (hall fay that thefc are petty errors and minor lapfes j not ccnfidcrably injurious unto truth , yet is it neither reafonable nor fafc to contemn inf eriour fa'ficies ; but rather as between falfliood and truth , there is no medium , fb (hould they be maintained in their diftances : nor the contagion of the one, approach the linceri*
ty
of the other.
ClTAP.
XIV.
the
in the pofture of
Painter confidently fetteth forth the Pifture of Ahraham^ facrificing hisoneJy daughter
Thus
Book.
5.
309
and hath had the atteft of many worThus is it commonly %. ui h Notwithftanding upon enquiry wc find the matter JJ*^ -^jj^.j thy Writers. doubtful, and many upon probable grounds to havebesn of another his danghter.
opinion conceiving in tHis oblation not a natural but a civil kitid/w^/g. of death, and a reparation onely unto the Lord. For that he purfued not his vow unto a literal oblation, there want not arguments both
ii. 3p.
from the Text and reafon. For firft, it is evident that (he deplored her Virginity, and not her death Let me go up and down the mountaines, and bewail my Virginity, 1 and my fellows.
*,
Secondly,
When it
is
to his vow, it is immediately fubjoyned, Etnon cognovit virunty and fhe knew no man; which as immediate in words, was probably moft near in fcnfe unto the vow. Thirdly, It is faid in the Text, that the daughter of Ifraei went year* ly to talk with the daughterJf/>^t^/7^ four dales in the year; which liad (he been (acrificed, they could not have done: For whereas the word is fometime tranflatcd to lament, yet doth it alfo fignifie to talk or have conference with onf^ind by Tr^ /* //ii,who was well able to Judge of the
Original,
it
is
in
cuttt
this
ferife
tranflated
Ibant
filii
Ifrae/itaruttjy
ad csnfabulandum
it isaUo fet down from this annual conccurfc of the daughters of Ifrael, it is not improbable in future Ages, the daughter of Jephthahcamc to be worfhipped as a Deity ; and had by the Samaritans an annual feftivity ob-
fi/iajephthaci, quatuor diehus quotannis i And fo in the marginal notes of our Tranllation. And
fcrved unto her honour, 2isEphiphamush2ith left recorded inthcHereiie of the Mdchidecians. It is alfo repugnant unto reafon ; for the offering of mankind was ag^nft the Law of God, who fo abhorred humane facrifice, that he
admitted^ot the oblation of unclean beafts, and confined his Altars but unto few kinds of Animals, the Ox, the Goat^ the Sheep, the Pigeon and its kinds : In thecleanlingof the Leper, there is I confeffe, mention made of the Sparrow ; but great difpute may be made whether it be properly rendrcd. And therefore the Scripture with indignation oft-times makes mention of humane facrifice among the Gen^ tiles 5 whofe oblations fcarce made fcruple of any Animil ; facrificing not onely Mm, but Horfes, Lions, iEgles ; and though they come not into holocaufts, yet do we read the Syrians did make oblations of filhes unto the goddefs VercetoAt being therefore a facrifice To abominable unto God, although he had purfued it, it is not probable the Ptielis and Wifdome of Ifrael would have permitted it ; and that not
onely in regard of the fubjeft or (acrifice it felt, but alfo the facrifi-* cator, which the Piftare makes to be Jephthah ; who was neither Prieft, nor capable of that Office', for he was a Gileaditey and as the Text affirmcth, the fon alfo of an harlot. And how hardly the
Rr3
Prieft-
5 1
Pricfthood
Enquims intd
example there
Vulgar
Book
5.
is in the ftory ot Ozias. Secondly, The offering up of his dawghter was not onely unlawful, and entrenched upon his R-cligion, buthadbcenacour(cthathad much condemned his difcretion ; that is, to have punifhed himfelfe in the ftriftcftoblcrranceofhis vow, when as the Law of God had allowed an evafion ; that is, by way of commutation or redemption, according as is determined, LevU. 27. Whereby if (he were between the age of five and twenty, (he was to be eftimarcd but at ten fiiekeh, and if between twenty and fixty, not above thirty ; A (urn that could never dif courage an indulgent Parent; it being but the value of fervant flain 5 the inand will make no greater noifc then confiderable Salary of Judas three pound fifteen fhillings with us. And therefore tlieir conceit is not to be exploded, who fay chat from the ftory of Jephtbah facrificing his own daughter, might ipring the fable of ^g<rw^io/2, delivering pnto facrifice his daughter Iphigenia^ who was alio contemporary unto Jephthah : wherein to anfwer the ground chat hinted it, Iphigema was not (acrificed her felfe, but redeemed with an Harr, which hiana ac-,
:^.
..
run generally for the words, Whatfoevcr (hall come forth, &i:. Yet might it be reftrained in the fence, for whaiioever was facrificable, and juftly fubjed: to lawfuH immolation ; and fo would not have facriBccd either Horfe or Dog, if they had come out upon him. Nor was he obliged by oath unto a-ftril: obfer vation of that which proroifTorily was unlawfull ; or could he be qii.dified by vow to commit afaft which naturally was abominable. Which do^rine had Herod undcrftood, it might have faved John BapUjis hcsid } when he promifed by oath to give unto Herodias whatfoevcr fhe would ask that is, if it were in the compafTe of things, which he could lawfully grant* For his oath made not that lawfull which was Illegal before; and if it were unjufl to murthcr Jobx, the fupervenicnt Oath did not extenuate the faft, or oblige the Juror unto it. Noyv the ground at leaft which much promoted the opinion, might be the dubious words of the text, which contain the fence o^ his vow $ rooil men adhering unto their common and obvious acception. What* ioever fhall come forth of the doors of my houfe fhall Turely be the Lords, and I will offer it up for a burnt offering. Now whereas it is faidj Erit Jehovy oferam illud holocaujium^ The word fignifieth both and aut, it may be taken disjunftively ; aut offeraw^ that is, it fhali cither be the Lords by feparation, or elfe, an holocauft by common oblation j even as our marginal tranflationadvertifcth; and as Treme" Urn rendreth it , Erit inquam Jehovdi , aut offeram iUud holocai4jium ; and for the vulgar tranflition, it ufeth often &^ where aut mart be prefumed, as Exsd, 21. Si quis fercufferit patnm ntatretn, that
his
Although
vow
&
&
&
is,
not
both 5
but
cither.
There being
therefore
two
wayes
to
Book
and Common
Errofs,
gii
2-
to difpofe of her, either to feparatc her unto the Lord, or offer her as a fa- ^"f"' erificcj it is of no neceflity the latter fhould be neceflary; and furcly lefs
and
mufl
i
'
Jl
<
iH
Chap.' XV.
Of
the
P0Hn
and many I perceive have condemned it. The ground or occafion of this defcription are; the words of the holy Scripture, efpeci* ally of Matthew and Mark^ for !% and John are filent herein 5 by them it is delivered, his garment was of Camels hair, and had a leable,
THe
very queftiona-
here it feeros the Camels hair is thern girdle about his loins. Painters for the skin or pelt with the hair upon it taken by But this Expofition will not fo well conlift with the ftrift accepta* tionofthe words ; for MarK i. It is faid, he if as, if <f\i^t^^ rfif^H ifg^H, and Matthew, 3. nx* ' hlviM^M fx' JW^<^> that is, as
the vulgar tranflation, that ot Biza^ that ofSmtus ^iutut, and Clement the eighth hath rendered it j veHimentum babe^at e filii camelinis % which is as ours tranflateth it, a garment of Camels hair 5 that is, made
Now
of (ome texture of that hair, a courfe garment % a cilicious or fack* futable to the aufterity of his Ufe ; the feverity of his Do* ftrine, Repentance j and the place thereof, the wildernefs, his food and diet, locufts and wildc hony. Agreeable unto the example of /irfi, who is faid to be virplofus^ that is, as Junius and Tremelius inter- a Kings i, prec , Vefie viHoJo cin^us^ anfwerable unto the habit of the ancient Pro. pjicts, according to that of Z<tt:W>. In that day the Prophets (hall be afbamed, neither (hall they wear a rough garment to deceive ^ and fu- ^'*'^*- ^ 5* table to the Cilicious and hairy Vefis of the ftrifteft Orders of Friers, who derive the inliitutioii of their Monafiick life from the example of
cloth habit
:
li
JobnandElias.
-.;"",
is properly intended, the cxpreffionof the Scripture is plain; fois it (aid, Heb. 11. They wandred about ' ityn'tit /f<tff/ j that is, in Goats skins j and fo it is faid of ourfirft PdrcncSjGf 5. that Go4 made ihenj ;j^TMt.A|i^rt9rjp VefiefpeJlJceas^^ or coats of skins j which though a natural habit unto all , before the invention of Texture,was foftiething more unto Jdam^vjho had newly learned to die j for unto him a garment from the dead, was but a
As
for the
an habit of mortality. any man will fay this habit of Johny was neither of Camels skin, nor any courfe Texture oi ^tshair, but rather feme finer
diftate of dcath,and
Now
it
Weave
5 12
Book.
much
5.
Weave
of
CamcIotaGrograin or the
like, in as
fuppofedto be made of the hair of that Animal, or becaufe t\\2i^^Mlunt affirmeth, that Camels hair ot Verfiay is as fine as Milefmn wool, wherewith the great ones ot that place were cloathed, they have difcovered
an habit, not onely unfutable unto his leathern cinfturejand the courp. nefsot his life ; but not conliftcnt with the words of our Saviour, when reafoning with the people concerning 7ofe>, he faith, What went you out into the wildernefs to fee ? a man clothed in foft raiment? Behold, they that wear foft raiment, are in Kings houfes.
Chap.
XVI.
in Parif.
from hence, common eyes conceive an hiftory (utable unto this defcription, that he carried our Saviour in his Minority over fome river or water : which notwithftanding we cannot at all make out. For
Now
we
; nor of any remarkable Vecm'.vjho lived 250 years after ChrifV. This man indeed according unto Hiflory fufFered as a Martyr in the fecond year of that Emperour, and in the Roman Calender takes up the 21 of July. The ground that begat or promoted this opinion, was, firft the fabulous ad jcfticns of fucceeding agesjunto the veritable afts of this Martyr, who in the moft probable accounts was remarkable for hisftaff, and a .,v man of a good feature. Thefccondmightbe amiftakeor mifapprchenfion of the Pifture, moft men conceiving that an Hiftory which was contrived" at firft but as an Emblem or Symbolicall fancy : as from the Annotations of Baronius upon the Rowan Martyrology, LipeJlous in the life of Saint Chriffopher hath obferved in thefe words j ABa Saint Chriftopher i a multis depra vatainveniuntur : qaod quidem non aliunde or iginemfurn ffiffe certUm ejii ^^^^ '7^'^ fymbolicas figuras iwperiti ad veritatent fuccejju temporis itaque cuntia ilia de fan&o Chryfiophero pingi confueta^ tranftulerint
much
in
hiftori<e
alicujus
exiftimandum
ell ejje
expreffam
imaginem
that
is
by many
which
of Saint Chriftopher are depraved furely began from no other ground, then, that
,
The
Afts
men tranflated
Book 5
verities
:
515
Chniiopher^ is what Emblem this wasjor what fcription, then any real Hiftory. its lignificition, conj^fturts are many ',PJerm hath fet dovvn on*?, that
Now
is>ot thcD.lciple of Ohrift ; forhf had that will carry Chrift upon his (hoLilders* mutt rely upon the ftaff of his dircftion , whereon if he firmeth himlclf, he miv be able toovercome the billowes of rcliildnce, and in the vertu: of this ItafF, Wkztliditoi J aco by paisoverthe waters of
Of otherwifethus j He that will fuSmit his (houMers u to Jordan. Chrift, (hill by the concurrence of his power encrea/e into the ftrc igth of a Giant 5 and being lupported by the If-tfTof his holy Spirir5fhall not be overwhelmed by the waves ct the world, but wade thorow all refinance. \ Add alfo the myftical reafons of this pourtraft alleadgel by Vida and Xerifanusi and the recor.lcd (lory oiChnjiopher^ that before his Marcyr ^nton. GaJfeU dom he requcfted oiGod, that where ever his body were, the places /fo/14:/ 4nfi^/fliould
be treed from peftil-.nce and ml L hiefs, from infeftion. And therefore his pifture or pourtract, was ufually placed in publick wayes, and at the entrance of Towns and Churches, according to the received Diftick
Cbrijiophorum videofy pojtea tutus
eris.
tates
Medio:**
nenfes%
Chap.
XVII.
raoft
is
fa*
dcfcription dependeth a folemn ftory,how by this aichievemcnt he redeemed a Kings daughter: which is more efpecially believed by the Eg/i/^, who fe Protestor he is : and in
Komcy
he
is
fet
his defcripcion in the Eu^^UJh jI-] forth in the Icons or Cuts of Martyrs
hy Cevalerm: and
all this according to the Hijioria Ltmbardka, orj golden legend of Jacobus de Voraign. Now of what authority foever this piece be amongft us, it is 1 perceive received with different beliefs j for
lome believe the person and the ftoryjfonie the perfon, b ut not the ftory 5 and others deny both. Thatfuch a perfon there was, wefhall not ontend ; forbefidesoDc. Heilin hath clearly affsrted it inhisH=ftjry of St. Ge^rgff, Theindiftinftion of many ii the community o( nime or the mifapplication of th.- aft s o'. on; uato another, hath made Tone doubt thereof. For of this nam; we m:et with more then one in Hiftory,
thers,
S f
and
^14
and no
lefle
Book
5.
two conceived
of Ca^padocia,
liant Souldier andChriftian Martyrjbehcadcd in the reign of Viocltfian. This is the George conceived in this Pifturejwho hath his day in the Ho-
fo
many
fables are
dcHvcrcd,whole ftory
is (ct
by Metaphmjies, and his miracles by Turonehfts, As for the ftory depending hereon, (ome conceive as lightly thereof, as of that of Perfeus and Andronteda;cotty dmring the one to be the father of the other ; and feme too highly aiTcrt it. Others with better moderation 5 do either entertain the lame as a lahulous addition unto the true and authentick ftory of Saint George or elfe conceive the li',
be a mifconftruftion of the Symbolical ex*. apprehending a veritable Hiftory, in an Emblem or predion, piece of Chriftian Poefie. And this Emblematical conftruftion hath been received by men not forward to extenuate the afts of Saints ; as from BaroniuSiLipellous the Carthufian hath delivered in the Life of St. George^
teral acception
to
figurant illam Saint Georgii qua effingitur eques armatusy qui haji cufpi* de hojieyH interficit, juxta quant etiam vtrgo pofita vnanus fupylices tendens, ejus explorat auxiliunt^SymboIi potim quam hiHorix alicujus cenfettda ex" Confuevit quidem ut equejiris mliti ntUies equejiri imagine prejja imago. ye/(frri : that is, ThePiftureof Saint George^ wherein he is described like a Carafficr or horfeman compleatly armed, &c. Is rather a fymbolic^l image, then any proper figure. Now in chePiftureof this Saint and Souldier, might be implied the Chriftian Souldier and true Champion of Chrift. A horfeman armed Cap ape, intimating the Ptfw/'/w or complcat armour of a Chriftian; combating with the Dragon, that is, with the Devil, in defence of the Kings daughter, that is> the Church of God. And therefore although the Hiftory be not made out,it doth not difparage the Knights and No* bleorder of Saint GMrgfiwhofe cognifance is honourable in the Em blcm of the Souldier of Clirift, and is a worthy memorial to conform unto its myftery. Nor, were there no fuch perfcn at all, had they more rcafon to be aftiamed, then the Noble order of Burgundy j and Knights of the Golden Fleecej whofe badge is a conf efled fable.-
Chap.
Of
THePii:ureof
XVIII.
jFfrowufually dcfcribedathisftudy, with a Clock hanging by, is not to be omitted, for thous,h the meaning be allowable, and probable it is that induftrious f'athcr did not Itt flip.. his time without account 3 yet muft not perhaps that Clock befetdown to have been his meafure thereof, ror Clocks or Automatous organs,
wh ereby
Book
5.
31
dydore Virgil
not known, makes inftancc in Clocks and Guns. Now Jerom is no late Writer, but one of th^ ancient Fathers, and lived in the fourth Century,
in the reign of 'theodofiut thefirft. It is not to be denied that before the daies of Jerom there were Horologies, and fevcral accounts of time; for they meafured the hours not
onlvby drops of water in glafTes called Clepfydrae, but alfo-by fan-! im gbir^s callsd Clepfammia'. There were alfo from great antiq (ity, Scioterical or Sun Dials, by the (hadow of a ftile or gnomon denoting the hours of the day : an invention aferibed unto Anaximhies by Fliny* Campus Martiut, from an obeHereof a memorable ore there was
and golden figures placed horozontairy about it ; which was brought out of JEgypt hy Ai4guflus^ and Adcv'ihtd by Jacobus Lawrus. And another oi great antiquity we meet with in the Itory of <?" a peculiar chias h for {o it is delivered in King. 2. 20. That the Lord brought thedefcripnon ftiadow bickward ten degrees; by which it had gone down in the a"d particular Dial of Ahaz. That is, fay fome, ten degrees, not lines ^ for the hours conftruftion were denoted by certain divifions or fleps in the Dial, which others di- R^chamr ^^ ftinguiflied by lines, according to that of Ferfius fee down Culisk erefted,
ries de
Cafi
Stertimui indowitum quod difpumare Falernum, St^ciatf quinta dum linea. tangitur umbra.
^^^* ^"P
9'
or within an hour of noon. circular motiinventions, and horologies com* tiojjs. pofed byTrochilick or the artifice of wheels; whereof fome are kept in motion by weight, others perform without it. Now as one age inftruQ-sanothcrjand time that brings all things to ruine perfefts alfo every thing; fo are thefe indeed of more general and ready ufe then any that went before them. By the Water-glalTes the account was not regular :for from attenuation and condenfation, whereby that Element is altered, the hours were fhorter in hot weather then in cold, and in Summer then in Winter. As ifor Scioterical Dials, whether of the Sun or Moon,they are onely of ufe in the aftual radiation of thofeLumiBaries; and are of little advantage unto thofe inhabitants, which for many moncths enjoy rK)t the Luftre of the Sun.
iSjthe line next the Meridian,
That
Oi
new
It is I confefs no eafie wonder how the horometry of Andquity difcovered not this Artifice j how Architas that contrived the moving Dove, or rather thcHelicofoiphieoi Archiwedes, fell not upon this way. Surely as in many things, fo in this particular, the prcfent age hath far (urpafTcd Antiquity ; whofe ingenuity hath been (o bold not only to proceed below the account of minutes ; but to attempt perpctuall motions , and engines whofe revolutions ( could their lub-
ftancc
njS
Book
5.
might out^Jifft the cxemilary mobility, and out-meafure time it felf. For fucha one is thatmintiuncd by John Vee, whofe wcrdsarethefe in his learned Preface unto Euclide : By Wheels flrange works andincrtdiblcare done : A wondrous example was Iccn in my time in a certain Inflrumcnt, whicli by the Inventor and Artificft' was fold for twenty talents of gold ; and then by chance had received fome injury, and one Janel'us of Cretfiona d]i\ mcndtl t Tame, and prclented it unto the Empcrour Charls the fitt. Jeronmui Cardanus^ can be my witnefs, that therein was one Wheel that moved in (uch a ratr,thaC
in fevsnthouland years only his own period fbould be finillied ; a thing almoft incredible, but how far I keep within my bounds, many mca
ytt alive can
tell.
Chap. XIX.
Of the Pi&ures
t^/MermaidSjUnicorns, andfame
others.
T>Agon\\\c\'
'
eyes have efcaped the Pifturc of Mermaids 5 that is, according {.oHoracehi^ Monfter,\vith womanshead above, andfifhy extremity below j and thefe are conceived to anfwcc the (hapc of the ancient -9/r^w^ that attempted M^onVlyffes. Which notwithflanding were of another defcriptioa, containing no fifliy compofure,but made up of Man & Bird i the humane mediety varionfly placed not only abovfjbut bwlow according wnio ^lian^Suidjs^Servius^Boccatius & Aldrovandus.vv\\o)[izth. referred their deicriptionunto the fiory of fabulous Birc-fs; according to thedefcfiption of 02//(^, and the account thereof in Hjgiww^, thatthey were the daughters of Me/powf"e, and metamorphofed into the (hape of man and bird by Ceres^ And therefore thefe pieces fo common among as, do rather derive
'Ew
doi,ofwhac
form.
V agon:,
which
figure above,
and
fi(hy fhape
Sm-
ftump^or as Zremellius and oiir margen renders it, Of ly remained, when the hands and upper part fell before the Ark th^{\\Z'^Qoi Artergntes, or Ptrcfto with the Phxnitians', in wbofe fifhy and feminine mixtur", as f-me conceive, were implyed the Moon and the Sea, 01 the Deity of the wateis ; and therefore, in tbt^ir lacrifices, they made oblations of fiiher. From whence were probably occaii-^ onedthePiftiH'eso-iV<frVi?f and Triio^ij among the Grecians^ and fi'ch a^ we read in Macrohius^ to have been placed on the top of the Tcmf Ic
^','. v :,,. of Saturn* are unwilling to '<jueftion "the Ptoyal Supporters of ,E;^g/<w/<^, that is, the approved defcriptions of the Lion and the Unicorn. Although.if in the Lion,thepofition of the pizelb' prcperjand that the na'.
.
.
We
theiii
rctrox:cpulation,or their
coupling
Book.
5.
andCommonlErrorsi
317
coupling and pifsing backward,, according to the determination of Arifiotle AH that urine backward do copulate 'jrvyn^* dunatim^ ov{ a^
.
As tor th.'. Unicorn, if ithave the headof aDeer, .ind the tail of a Boar, ^%Vartomanms dc^cnhah it, how agreeable ic isi,i this piftuic eveiy tycniay dilccrn. If it be made bifulcous or cloven tooted, itagrecth unio thf delcription o\ V artommanus ^ butfcaicc of any opofcth that futh as divide the hoof, do al.o they being both of the fame nature, and admitting divJlion together. And ladly, if the horn have this fituation, and be fotorwardly affixed, as is defcribed, it will net be eafily conceived,
ther
j
and
Artfiotle fuf
i
teed from the ground ; and therefore we cbferve, that Na tureinother cornigerous animals, hath placedihe horns higherand reclining, as in Bucks 5 in fome inverted upwards, as in tht Rhinoceros, the Indian his, and Unicornous Beetles 5 and thus have fome affir* meditis featedin this animal. We cannot but obfcrve that in the Pifture of Jonah and others. Whales are defcribed with two prominent {pouts on their heads; whereas indeed they have but one in the forehead, and terminating over the Wind pipe. Nor can we overlook the Piftureof Elephants with Catlles on their backs, made in the form of land Calilcs, or ftationary fortifications, and anfwerable unto the Arms ot Caji He, or Sr. John Old Cafklc, whereas the towers they bore, were made of wood, and girt unto their bodies 5 as is delivered in the books of MaccabeeS) and as they were appointed in the Army of Antiochus. -.'i We will not dilpute the Pifturesof Retiary Spiders, and their pofitionin theweb, which is commonly made lateral, and regardingthe Horizon j although it be obferved, we (hall commonly finditdcwnWird, and their heads refpefting the CenterWe will not controvert the Pifture of the feven Stars ; although if thereby be meant the Phiades, or fubconftellation upon the back of Taurus, with what congruity they where the fe. are deicribed, either in fiteor magnitude, in a clear night an ordinary yen i'caubc eye maydiicover, from } ly unto April. We will not q^cftion theficuaccd. tongues of A Iders and Vipers, defcribed like an Anchor; nor the Picture ot the Flower de Luce: though how- far they agree unto their natural draughts, let every Spcftator determine.
how it can
Whether the Cherubims about the Ark be rightly defcribed in the Pifture, that is, onely inhumane heads, with two wings or rather in the Chape of Angels or youne men, or fomewhat at leaft with , ^^^^^ fetr, as the Scripture teemsto imply. Whetherthe Crofs feen intheair hy Conffantiiiey were of that fi^i^ure wherein we rcprelent it; or r.* thcr made out of X and P, the two firft httcrs of 3cf*roV W.le. ther the Grofs^ of Chrifl did anfwer ths common hgure ; wliether fo far advanced above his-head; whether the feet were (6 difpofed, tW is, on^ upon another, or (cparately nailed, srfome S r 3 vrich
common
3.13.
5i8
Books.
with reafon defer ibe it:wefhall not at all contend. Muchlcfs whether Dolin ti^g houfe ok Viogeneivicrc a Tub framed of wood, mid after the mann*rof our, or rather made of earth, as learned men conceive, andfo dmc""^''^' ^"^"' fhould be too more clearly make out that cxpreflion of Juvenal, ^c. critical to qaeftion the letter Y, or bicoinous eUmcm oi Tythagoras, orthe\ilt lefsthen the ri}j;ht, thati-S the making; ot the horns equal and io dcftroying the Symbolical intent of the figure ; confounding the narrow line of vcrtue, with the larger road oi vice; anfwcriblcunto *^^ narrow door ot heaven, and the ample gates of hell, expreflcd
We
^y
^^^j.
Pluto's houfc.
(hall
we
(hall
not
how difTenting from the pieces of Antiquity, the Pigods and goddeffes are dcfcribed, and how hereby their fymbolical fenfe is loft > although herein it were not hard to be inforTncdicom Phornutuf,Fulgentm, and Albricm. Whether H^rc/ be Phnnutdi mtura deorutn. ^^VQ properly defcribcd ftrangling then tearing the Lion, as ViCiorius Fulg. mjthQh- hdith difputed, nor how the charafters and figures of the Signs and git. Planets ije now perverted, as Sdmafius hath learnedly dctlared. W 7l/6ricde ^eo-^m (jifpet^ce with Bsars with long tails, fuch as are defcribed in the rummagim. ^^yres of heavens we (hall tolerate flying Horfes, black Swans, Hy. dra'ij Gcntmr's, Harpies and Satyrs ; forthcfe are monftrofities, rarities, or clfe Poetical fancies, whofe fhadowcd moralities requite Wherein indeed we muft not deny a liberty; their fubftantial fallities. nor is the hand of the Painter more rcftrainable, then the pen of the Poet. But where the real works of Nature, or veritable afts of ftory are to be dcfcribed, digrefllons are abberrations ; and Art being but the Imitator or fecondary reprefentor, it muft: not vary from the verity of the example; or defcribe things otherwife then they truly are or have been. For hereby introducing falfe Ideas of things, itpcrverts and deforms the face and fymmetry of truths
congruity, and
ftures of their
Chap.
of the
CErtainly of
XX.
all men that fuflfered from the confuilon of Babel, the Egyptians ^ound the beft cvafion for, though words were confounded, they iny^ntcd a language of things, and fpake unto each other by cooimon notions in Nature. Whereby they difcourfed in filcnce, and were intuitively underftood from the theory of their Exprcffcs. For they alTumed the fliapes of animals common unto all eyes ; and by their conjunftions and compofitions were able to com,
mu-
,;
Book
319
raunlcate their conceptions, unto any that co-3pprehendcd the Syntaxis of their nature s.Th is many conceive to have been thcprimative way
of writing, and of greater antiquUy then letters; and this indeed might Adam well have fpofcen,v;houndcrftanding the nature of things, had the advantage of natural exprcffions. Which the JEgjpiam but , taking upon truft, upon their own or common opinion ; from conceded miftakes they authentically promoted errors} defcribingin their Hieroglyphicks creatures of their own invention; or from known and conceded animals, erefting fignifications not inferrible from their
natures.
And firftj Although there were more things in nature then words which did exprefs them; yet even in thefe mute and filent difcourfes, to exprefs complexcd fignifications, they took a liberty to compound and piece together creatures of allowable forms into mixtures incxiftent. Thus began ths defcriptions of Griphins Bifilisks, Phoenix , and many more which Emblematifts and Heralds have entertained with fignifications anlwering their inifitutions ; Hieroglyphically adding Martegres, Wiverns, Lion fifhes, with divers others. Pieces of good and allowable invention untoche prudent Speftator , but arc lookt on by vulgar eyes as literal truths , or abfurd impofsibilities, whereas indeed they are commendable inventions,and
;
fiftitioully fet
of inconfequentfigi they had many unqueflionably drawn, nification , nor naturally verifying their intention. Ihili inftance but in few, as they ftand recorded by Orus. The male fex they expreffed by a Vulture, becaufe of Vultures all are females, and impregnated by the wind; which authentically tranfmitted hath pafTed many pens, and became the affertion of Mlian^ Amb^afey Bafil,^ Iftdore,Tzetzesy Fbilesyind others. Wherein notivithffanding what injury is offered unto the Creation in this confinement ot fcxjand what difturbance unto Philofophy in the conccfsion of windy conceptions , we (hall not here declare. By two dragms they thought it fufficicnt to (ignifie an heart; becaufe the heart at one yearweighcth two dragms, that is, a quarter of an ounce, and unto fi ty years annually encreafeth the weight of one dragm, after which in j^ his the fame proportion ic yearly decreafeth; fo that the life of a man/ofhU doth not naturally extend above an hundred. And this was not onely rica, a popular conceit, but confcntancous unto their Phyflcal principle?, as Heurmm hath accounted it. A woman that hath but one child, they exprefs by a Lionefs for that conceiveth but once. PVcundity they fet forth by a Goar, becaufe but feven dales old , it beginneth to ofe coition. The abortion of a woman they difcribe by an Horfe kicking a Wolf; becaufe a Marc will cafl her foal if fhc tread in the track ofthat animal, Dcfor-
We
phi!liArla-
520
Enquiries
ittto
Vulgar
Bock.
5.
Dw'formity they fignifie by aBarj becaufc that animal yearly exchani^cth its (ex. A woman delivered of a female child, they imply by a Ball lo king; over his \dt flioulder becaufc if in coition a Bull part from a Go w on that fide, the Calf will
andanunftablelnanbyanHyaena,
prove a female. All which, with many more, how far they eonfent wiih truth, we (hall not difparage our Pweader to Jirpute,ard though (ome way allowable unto wj fee conceits, who could diftinftly receive their lignifications: yet carrying the mijefty ot Hieroglyphicks, and fo tranfmltted by Authors : they crept into a belief with many, and favourable doubt with moft. And thus, 1 fear, it hath fared with the Hieroglyphical Symboles ot Scripture: which exceilmtly inc^nded in the fpecies of things facrificedjin the prohibited meats,in the dreams ofpfe/j. are oft-times wrackt beyond raoh^Jofepb, and many other p.iiTiges con(tru6lions di(paraging their inlarged into and their fymbolizations,
:
true intentions.
Chap.
XXI.
F an Hare crofs the highway,therc are Tew above threefcorc years .that are not perplexed thereat ; which notwithftanding is but an 'i:
Augurial terror, according to that received expreffion, In Aujficatum dat iter ohlatus Lepus. And the ground of the conceit was probably no greater then this, that a fearful animal palfing by us, portended unto us fomething to h: feared : as upon the like conlideration, the meeting
fuperftitious
obfervation prohibited unto the Jeips^ as is exprefled in the Idolatry of Maimonidesy and is referred unto the iin of an obferver of Fortunes, or th^t abufeth events unto good or bad Agns, forbidden by the Law The gronnd of ^ Mofes which notwithftanding fometimes fucceeding, according many vain ob- to fears or dcjir s i have left imprcfsions and timerous cxpeftations in
',
fervations.
Deht.i8.
321 And Common Errors* Kipa, let out by us. And thcreforcthc Emblem of Superftition was well w mblem in the Piftiireof an Owl, an Hare, and an old woman. And it no way ^^^^ ^^,tiQ
Book
5.
confirmech the Augurial conlideration, that an Owl is a forbidden food iconoiogkde in the Law of Mo[es; or that Jfrw/iz/fw was threatened by the Raven C(j?/4re Ar;4. and the Owl, in that expreffion of Ifa. 94. That it (hould be a coart for OwIS) that the Cormorant and the Bittern (hould poiTefs it, and the Owl and the Raven dwell in it. For thereby was onely implied their enfuing defolation, as is expounded in the words fucceeding
>
He
(hall
draw upon
it
and the
ftones of eni-
ptinefs.
is an authentick prefagement of ill luck, nor 3. The falling of Salt can every temper contemn itjfrom whence notwithfjanding nothing can be naturally feared ; nor was the fame a general prognoftick of future evil among the Ancients, but a particular omination concern' ing the breach of friend(hip. For Salt as incornipiible, was the Symbole of friendftiipj and before the other fervice was offered unto their gueftsj which it it cafually fell, was accounted ominousj and their amity of no duration. But whether Salt were not onely a Symbole of f ricndlhip with man, but alfo a figure of amity and reconciliation with God, and was therefore obferved in facrifices 5 is an higher fpecula-
tion.
4. To break the egg- (hell after the meat is out, we are taught in our cbild-hood,and pra^^ife it all our lives; which neverthelefs is but a fuperftitious relift ; according to the judgcmsnt of Vlinyi Hue pertixet ovorunty
ut exrobuerit quifque, calices pminus frangi^ aut eofdem codearibus per' for left forari j and the intent hereof was to prevent witchcraft
-,
witches fhould draw or prick their names therein, and venefieioufly mifchief their perfons, they broke the ihell, as Palecantpm hath
obferved.
5. The true Lovers knot is very much magnified, and ftill retained in prefents of Love among us ; which though in all points it doth not make out, had perhaps its original from Nodus Herculaniu^ or that which was called Hercules his knot, refembling the (naky complication in the caduceus or rod oi Hermes ; and in which form the Zone or
our cheek biirn^th or ear tingleth,we ufually fay that fome of u?,which is an ancient conccit,and rank-d among fu* perflitioiis opinions by Pliny. Abfemes tinnitu auriunt pdjentire [ermines defe rtce^tum ej^ according to that dilHck noted by Valecam* pus, Garrula quid tot is rejon^H mihl noCiibus mris
6.
When
body is talking;
.<*
be mad ^ outfwicho:ic
the]
coucelDon
Tt
of
522
Book
$*
The
Original
of a fignifying Genius, or univerfal Mercury ; conducing founds unto their diftant fubjefts, and teaching us to hear by touch. 7. When we defire to confine our words, we commonly fay thev arc fpoken under the Rofe ; which cxprtftion is commendable, if the Rofc
S)^J^'TR*^V^
^^Nazian-
beitl'^t
^^^
Vtque
Sic
latet
Kofa Verna
OS vincla feraty
va/idtfqueartteturhabems^
Indicatque
the Rofe,
And is alfo tolerable, if by defiring a fccrecy to words fpoke under we onely mean in focicty and compotation, from the anci-
ent cuftom in Sympofrack meetings, to wear chaplcts of Rofes about we condemn not the Germane cuflora, which over the Table defcribeth a Rofe in the feeling. Bjt more confiderableit
is, if
Lewmuf, and others have recordedj that which Cupid confecrated unto Har' /'ocr^r^jthcGodof filence, and was therefore an Emblem thcreoti to conceal the pranks of Venery ; as is declared in this Tetraftick,
af?
the
Rofc was
Eft Rojaflos vetferisi cujus quo fail a laterenu Harpocrati matrix ^ dona dicavit Amor ;
Inde
Kofam
fairefl, is
of Europe; whereof although there feem no natural ground, yet is it the continuation of a very ancient opinion, as Tetrus Viiiorius and Caujabon have obferved from a pafTage in AtheHus wherein a F^r^/iftf thus defcribeth himfelf; To every table firft I come. Whence Torridge lam card by feme ACapatieus at flares I awy To enter any Room a Ram Like rpbips and thongs to alii ply,
in
;
many
9. To fit crofs Icg'd or with our fingers pcftinatcd or (but together is accounted badjand friends wil 1 perfwade us from it. The fame conceit religioufly poflfffcd the Ancient?, as is obfervable from Pliny.
was an old
vencficious prafticc,
hinder th delivery of Alcmna i And therefore, as Pierius obfervth , in the Medal of Julia Pia , the right hand of Venus was
made
Book
5.
323
the infcription ot Venus Genetrix $ for the complication or peftinatioii of the fingures was an Hieroglyphick of impediment, as in that place he declareth.
and ftatary times of pairing oi nails , and cutting of by many a point oi confidsration ; which is perhaps For piaculous it but the continuation of an ancient fuperftition. upon nails their the Nu'idinae, pare obferRomanes to was unto the by feared in others certain alfo was dales day; and ninth every ved according to that of Anfonm, Vngues Ader curio ^ of the weeki Barbam Jove^ Cypride Crines i and was one part of the wlckednefs
10.
(et
hair, is thous^hc
"
^ that filled up the meafure of Manajjes , when 'cis delivered that he times. obferved common faftiion it istonourifli hair upon the mouls of the 11. face; which is the perpetuation of a very ancient cuftom ; and though
''"''^'
innocently praftifed among us, may have a fuperftitious original, according to thai of Flinj^ N^vos in facie tondere religiofuw habent nunc tttulti. From the like might proceed the fears of poling Elvclocks ot complicated hairs of the head, and alfo of locks longer then the other hair; they being votary at firft, and dedicated upon occafion ; preferred with great care, and accordingly cffcemed by others, as appears by that oi Apukiusy Adjuro -per dulcem capilii tuinoduium, 12. A cuftom there is in moft parts of Europe to adorn Aquedufts, fpouts, and Citterns with Lions heads: which though noillaudable ornament, is of an jEgyptian gsneolo^ie, who praftifed the fame under a fymbolical illation. For becaufethe Sun being in Leo, the flood of Nitui was at the full, and water became conveyed into every part , they made the fpouts of their Aqucdufts through the head of a Lion. And upon fome cceleftial refpefts it is not improbable the great Moguli or Indian King doth bear for his Arms a Lion and the Sun. J 5. Many conceive there is fomewhat amifs, and that as we u- Symbolical fually fay, they are unbleff unlill they put on their girdle. Where- fignifications in ( although mofi know not what they fay J there are involved of ^^^ girdle. unknown conhderations. For by a girdle or cinfture are fymboli* cally implied Truth, Refolution, and readinefs unto aftion, which are parts and venues reqjjred in the ferviceof God. According where* to we find that the Ifraelites did eat the Pafchal Lamb with their loins girded ; and the Almighty challenging jFoi, bids him gird up his loins like a man. So runneth the expreflion of P^r^r, Gird up the loins of your minds, be fober and hope to the end: fo the high Prieff 7/^. jr. was girt with the girdle of fine linnen : fo is it part of the ho' ly habit to have our loins girt about with truth; and fo is it alfo faid concerning our Saviour, Righteoufnefs (hall be the girdle of his loins, and faithfolnefs the girdle of his reins. Moreover by the girdle, the heart and parts which God rcq iires
are
34
are divided
Concupifcen*'^^'
Book
5.
from the infcriour and epithiimetical organs ; imp\yi;ig thereby a memento unto purification and cleanncfs of heart, which is commonly defiled from the concupifence and affeftion of thofc parts', and therefore unto this day the Jevos do blefs themfelvcs when they put on their zone or cinfture. And thus may we make out the doftrlne of Pythagoras, to offer facrifice with our feet naked, that is, that our infcriour parts and fariheft removed from reafon might be free, and of no impediment unto us.Thus ^c/bz/(',though dipped in Styx, yet having his heel untouched by that water 5 although he were fortified clfewhere,he was flain in thn part, as only vulnerable in the inferiour and brutal part of Man. This is that part ofEvesLnd
her pofterity the devil
ftill
is
Jer.iii
which adhcreth unto earth, and walks in the paths thereof. And in this fecondary and fyrobolical fenfe it may be alfo underftood, when the Priefts in the Law wafhed their feet before the (acrifice 3 when our Saviour wafhed the feet of his Difciples, and faid unto Ff ter, If I wafh not thy feet thou hafl no part in mc. And thus is it Symbol ically explainable, and imply cth purification and cleannefs, when in the burnt offerings the Prieft is commanded to wafh the inwards and legs thereof in water ; and in the peace and fin- offerings, to burn the two kidneys, the fat which is about the flanks, and as we translate it, the Caul above the Liver. But whether the /tfTP^ when they blefled themfelves, had any eye unto the words of Jeremy, wherein God makes them his Girdle j or had therein any reference unto the Girdlejwhich the prophet was commanded to hide in the hole of the jTOckof Euphrates, and which was the type of their captivity, wc
leave unto higher conjsfture.
i4 The Pifture of the Creator, or God the Father in the fhape of an old Man, is a dangerous piece, and in this Fecundity of fefts may cri'jed humane revive the Anthropomorphites. Which although maintained from the figure unto expreflion of Darnel, I beheld where the Antient of dales did fit, whofe hair of his head was like the pure wool; yet may it be alfo dcrivawhich they conceivedhe tive from the Hieroglyphical dcfcription of the gypians', who to created roan exprefs their Encph, or Creator of the world, defcribed an old man inhislikenefs-j^al^jgy^^n^^^fjg^ with an egge in his mouth; which was the Era* blemof the world. Surely thofe Heathens, that notwithflanding the exemplary advantage in heaven, would endure no piftures of Sun or Moon, as being vifible unto all the world, and needing no reprefentation, do cvidentl) accufe thcprafticeof thofe pencils, that will defcribe And he that challenged the boldeft hand unto the pidurc inviiibles. of anEcho, muft laugh at this attempt, not onely in thedefcription of iiivifibility, but circumfcriptionof Ubiquity, and fetching underlines incomprehenlible circularity. The piftures of the JEi(j/'/w^ were more tolerable, and in their faCertain Hertticii;
who
af-
For
Book.
5.
and Common
Errors,
325
For though they implied the fame by an eye upon a Scepter, by" an ^4^shcad, a Crocodile, and the like: yet did thefe manual defcrip*. tions pretend no corporal rtprefentations j nor could the people mi fSo though the Cherub conceive the fame unto reall correfpondencics. carried fome apprehenfion ot Divinity, yet was it not conceived to be
the (hape therof.-and fo perhaps becaufe
it is
metaphorically predicated
confuming fire, he may be harmkfly defcribed by a flaming reprefentation ; Yet if, as fome will have it, all mediocrity of folly is foolifti, and becaufe an unrequitable evil may enfue, an
of God, that he
is a
fentments
; we (hall not urge fuch repre* we could (pare the holy Lamb for the pifture of our Saviour, and the Dove or fiery Tongues to reprcfcnt the holy Ghoft. 15. The Sun and Moon are ufually defcribed with humane fafces ;
whether herein there be not a Tagan imitation, and thore vifages at firft implied AfoUo and Viana^ we may make fome doubt, and we find the ftatuaof the Sun was framed with nies about the head, which were the, We (hould b; too Iconomi-^'' ^"^""^1indiciduous and unfhaven locks of Apollo. calto queftion the piftureg of the winds, as commonly drawn in hu-^jl^'j||^'' mane heads, and with their cheeks diftcnded, which notwithftanding^.7.a. a^p^. we find condemned by MinuUMi as anfwering poetical fancies, zvAlicar,^^ Fet. the gentle defcription oi EolttSyBoreasyznd the feigned Deities of winds. Hainoujn 16 We (hall not, I hope, difparagethe refurreftion of our redeem-""'^ '^^'"'^^* cr, If we fay the Sun doth not dance on Eafter day. And though we would willingly alTent unto any fympathetical exultation, yet cannot conceive therein any more then a Tropical expreflion. Whether any inch motion there were in that day wherein Chrift arifed, Scripture hath not revealed, which hath been punftuall in other records concerning folary miracles: and the Areopagite that was amazed at the no notice of this. And if metaphorical expreflions go fofar, we may be bold to affirm, not onely that one Sun danced, but two arofe that day : That light appeared at his nativity, and darknefs at his death, and yet a light at bothi for even that darknefs was a light unto the Gentiles^ illuminated by that obfcurity. Thai 'twas the firfl time the Sun fet above the Horizon $ that although there were darknefs above the earth, there was light beneath it, nor dare we fay that hell was dark if he were in it. ly^ Great conceits areraifed.of the involution of membranous covering, commonly called the Silly 'how, that fometimes is found about the heads of children upon their birth, and is therefore preferved with great care, not onely as medical in di^eafcs, but effeftuai in fucceO, concerning the Infant and others 5 which is furely no more then a continued fuperftition. For hereof we read in the life of Antonius Aduered by 5f<?rti<?w, that children are born fometimes with this natural capjwhich Mid* wives were wont to fell unto credulous Liwyers, who had an opinion it advantaged their promotion.
Eclipfe, took
Biit
^26
But to rpeak
Enquirtesmto Vulgar
ftrif^ly,
Book
5.
and thus to be conceived 5 Animal conceptions have three teeuments, or membranous films which cover^em in the womb, that is, the Corion, Amnio?, and Aliantois the Corioni^the outward membrane wherein are implanted the Veins, Arteries and umVilical veffcl?, wh(*r.^by its nouri(hment is conveyed : the Allanrois a thin coat fcated under the Corion, wherein are received the watery reparations conveyed by thf llrachu:,that the acrimony
the effcft
is
natural,
Be
formito
Th- Amnios is a general in veftthereot fiiould not offend the skin. mcnt 5 containing the fudorous or thin ferofity pcrfplrable through the about the time when the Infant breaketh thefc coverings, skin.
Now
f<itu.
it
it
which faith Spieaelimy e-ther proceedjth from the tough; nefsof themembrane or weaKnefs of the Infant that cannot get clear And therefore herein (ignifications are naturall and concluthereof. ding upon the Infantj but not to be extended unto magical fignalities, or any other perfon. 18 That tisgoodto bedru' k oncea monerh, is a common flattery of fenfuality, fupportingit felf upon Phyfick, and the healthf^ul efFefts ot inebriation. This indeed feems plainly affirmed by Avicenna aPhyfitian of great authority, and whofe religion prohibiting Wine,
neareft coit
But Avenoes a man of his own faith wa s could lefs extenuate ebriety. ot another belief 5 reftraining his ebriety unto hilarity, and in effcft making no more thereof then Seneca commtndiahy and was allowable inCato', that is, a fober incalefcencc and regulated aeftuation from wine 5 or what may be conceived between Jojefh and his brethren, when the text exprefl!eth they were merry, or drank largely; and whereby indeed the commodities (et down by Avicenna^ that is, alleviation of ipirits, refolution of fuperfluities, provocation of (weat and urine may alfo enfue. But as for dementation; fopition of reafonjand the diviner particle from drink, though American religion approve, and Tagan piety of old hath praftifed it, even at their (acrifices, Chriftian morality and the doftrine of Chritt will not allow. And furely that religion which excufcth the faft of Noahy in the aged furprizal of fix hundred years, and unexpefted inebriation from the unknown efFefts of wine, will neither acq lit cbriofity, nor ebriety in their known
and intended
pervcrfions.
indeed, although fometimes effefts (ucceed which may relieve the body, yet if they carry mifchief or peril unto the foul, wc are therein reftrainable by Divinity, which circumfcribeth Phyfick, and circumftantially determines the life thereof. From natural confiderations, Phyfick commendeth the ufe of venery; and happily, inccfi,
adultery, or ftupration
jugal copulation,
And
may prove
which notwithftanding muft not be drawn into praftife.And truly cfl^s, con fequents, or events which we commend, arife
ott.
Book
5*
327
condemn. Thus from the faft of Lof, we derive the generation of Kmh^ and bleffed Nativity of our Saviour ; which nctwithftanding did not extinuate the incefiuous ebriery oi the {generator. And if, as is comnionly r.raed, we think to extenuate ebriety from the benefit of vomit oft fuccedine, Egyptian fobriety will condemn us, who purged both wayes twice a moneth, withand we fooliftily contemn the liberal hand out this perturbation of God, and ample field of medicines which Toberly produce that
:
aftion.
19. A conceit there is, that the Devil commonly appeareth with hoof, wherein although it fecm exceffively ridiculous, ^here^^jJj^Q^^^^Q^' cloven a may be fomewhat of truth ; and the ground thereof at firf} might ly faidtoapbe his frequent appearing in the fliape of a Goat, which anfwers that pear with a defcriptiop. This was the opinion of ancient Chriftians concerning cloven foot, the apparition of Panite, Fauns and Satyrs } and in this form we read of one that appeared unto Antony in the wildcrnefTe. The fame is aUo confirmed from expofitions^ of holy Scripture ; for whereas it is faid. Thou Ihalt nos offer unto D^vills, the Originall word is Segh' mrinty that is, rough and hairy Goats, becaufc in that fhapethe De- Levit. 17. vill moll often appeared ; as is expounded by the Rabbint, as IreweBw hath alfo explained; and as the word Afcimah^ the rod oi Entath is by fome conceived. Nor did he only afTums this fhape in elder tira::s, but commonly in latter dayes, efpecially in the place of his worfhip : If there be any truth in the confefHon of Witches, and as in many (fories it ftands confirmed by Bodinus. Andthereforea Goat is not In his Dmo' improperly made the Hieroglyphick of the devil, as Tierius hath expref- nmania. fed it. So might it be the Emblem of fin, as it was in the lin offering 5 and fo likewifc of wicked and linfull men, according to the expreffion of Scripture in the method of the laft dirtribuiion ; when our Saviour !hall fcparate the Sheep from the Goats, that is, the fons of the Lamb from the children of the devil.
.
Chap. XXII.
Offome
1;
others.
temperamcntall dignotions, and conjefture of prevalent humours, may be collefted from (pots in our nails, we are not averfe to concede.. But yet not ready to admit fundry divinations, vulgarly raifed upon them. Nor do wc ofjferve it verified in others, v;hat ^^ '^'^'^'^eme '^^'^'""' Cardan difcovered as a property in bimfelfe ; fo have found therein fome fignsof moft events that ever happened unto him. Or that
^TpHat
there
is
much
Cheiromancy, that
;
do iignifi3 things
paft
in the middle,
things
328
Bock.
things present ; and at the bottom, events to come. That white fpecks prefage our fclicityj bkw ones our misfortunes. That thofe in the nail ot the thumb have fignifications of honour, thofe in the forefingerj of
riches,
Jations,
and fo refpedively in other fingers, (according to Planetical ret from whence they receive their names) as Trka(fM hath taken ficcioluf and up, well rejcftetb. -We (hall not proceed to querie, what truth there is inPalmiftrie, or divination from thofe lines in our hands, of high denomination. Although if any thing be therein, it feems not confinable unto man
,
but other creatures are zXCo confiderable; as is the fore- foot of the Mool , and efpecially of the Monkey i wherein we have obferved the table line, that of life, and of the liver. 2 That Children committed unto the fchool of Nature, without inftitution would naturally fpeak the primitive language of the world, was the opinion of ancient heathens, and continued fince by Chriftians : who will have it our Hebrew tongue, as being the language of Adam, That this were true, were much to be de(iref, not only for the eafie attaintment of that ufefull tongue, but to determine the true and primitive Hebrew. For whether the prefent Hebrew, be the unconfounded language of Babel^ and that which remaining in Heber was continued by Abraham and his pofterity, or rather the language of Pkanicia and Canaan^ wherein he lived, fome learned men I perceive do yet remain unfatisficd. Although I confefTe probability flands faireft for the for^ nor are they without all reafon, who think that at the confumer fion of tongues, there was no conftitution o^ a new fpeech in every
.*
but a variation and permutation of the old, out of one comraifing fcverall Dialefts 5 the primitive tongue remaimight under- nmg ftjU intire. Which they who retained might make a fhift to un^^^^^^^ "^^ ^ ^^^ ^^^* ^y vertue whereof in thofe primitive times T^ ^ofk^' ' and greener contuiions, Abraham of the family of Heber was able to fal^Nations! convcrfe with the Chaldeans^ to underftand Mefopotamians^ ChananiteSf FhiliJiifiSf and Egyptians : whofe feveral Dialefts he could reduce unto the Original and primitive tongue, and foto be able to underftand
family
them.
3. Though ufelefT: unto us, and rather of moleftation, we commonly refrain from killing Swallows, and effeem it unlucky to deftroy them whether herein there be not a Pagan reliqat.*, we have fome ^h'*"f i?/^^ For we read in Elian, that thefe birds were facred '^''*' reafon to doubt. unto the Penates or houfhold gods of the ancients, and therefore were
The fame
'
is!
^'
prefcrved.
The fame
and we
Swallow.
they alfo honoured as the nuncio's of the fpr ing $ had a folemn fong to welcome in the
4. That Candles and Lights burn dim and blew at the apparition ot fpirits, may be true, ifthe ambient ayr be full of fulphurioiisfpirits, as
it
Book^*
929
And may be alfo vcrcficd, arc able to extinguifli them. by bodies of fuch effluvjums. vifible makethemfelves do
But of lower ^l^,^ before conlideration is the common foretelling of ftrangers, from the fungous the apparition parcels about the wicks of Candles; which onely fignifieth a moift and of a fpirit. pluvious ayr about them, hindering the avolation of the light and favillous particles : whereupon they arc forced to fettle upon the Snaft. 5. Though Coral doth properly preferreand faften the Teeth in men, yet is it ufed in Children to make an eaiier paffage for them : and for But whether this cuftom were that intent is worn about their necks. prefumed an amulet or dcfenfative afounded, as fuperfticiouny not For the fame is delivered gainft fafcination, is not beyond all doubt.
^J tum^^^*
by
fltny.
5
Arufpices religiofum
52,
trantur
&lwrculi infantU aliigatiy tutelam habere crtduntur. of exploration and peculiar way of Rhabdomancy Aftrangekind 6. in mineral difcovcriesj that is, with a forked hais ufed which that is zel, commonly called Mo[ei his Rod, which freely held forth, will ftir
And though many there arc who if *any mine be under it. good, make it yet untill better information, wc are to attempted have of opinion with AgricoUi that in it felf it is a fruitlefs exploration, ftrongly fcenting of Pagan derivation, and the virgula divina proverbiThe ground whereof were the Magical rods in P^ ally magnified of old. * in Hormr that of Mercury that charmed %Argusy and F^tf^if thatof Poets that of Circe which transformed the followers of Vlyjfes. Too boldly ufurping the name of Mofes rod, from which notwithffanding, and that of Aaron, were probably occafioned the fabels of all the reft. For that o^Mofes muft needs be famous unto the Egyptians ; and that of Aaron unto many other Nations, as being preferved in the Ark, until the deand play
ftruftionotthe Temple built by Solomon, 7. Apraftifc there is among us to determine doubtful matters,by the opening of a book, and letting fall a ftaff 5 which notwithftanding are The firft an imitation of Sors ancient fragments of Pagan divinations. tes Homericy or Virgilian^, drawing determinations from verfes cafu-
''*'
meulhcs^
*
The fame was praftifed by Severm, who entertained ominous hopes of the Empire, from that verfc in Virgil, Tu regere im perio populos Romane memento; and Cordianut who reigned but few daiff was dilcouraged by another, that is, 0>ienduniurrishunc tantumfata, Nor was thisonely pcrformedin heathen Author?, nee ultra effefxnunu but upon the facred Text of Scripture, asGregorius Turonenfis hath lelt forae account and as the praftifeof the Emperor HeracUus , before his expedition into i4/ij wwor, is delivered by Ctf^rff. As for the Divination or decifion from the flaff; it is an Augurial f elique, and the praftife thereof is accufed by Godhimfelt; My people ask counfel of their (locks, and their ftaifdeclarnh unto them. Of this kind of Rhabdomancy was that praftifed by Nabuchad:nofirin that Caldean mifcellany, delivered by Ezel{fel The King of Baby/on
ally occurring.
-,
'"
^'
Vv
ftood
530
F-xeK- 24".
Book
ftood at the parting of the way, at the head of two wayes to ufe divination, he made his arrows bright, he confulted with Images, he looked in the Livrj at the right hand were the divinations o^ Jerufakm, That ip, as EjHiu expounded it, the left way leading unto Kabbah^ the chief City ot the Ammonites, and the right unto Jerufalem, he confulted Zi^oA and entrails, he threw up a bundle of arrows to fee which
2 Kini
and falling on the riglit hand he marchec^ toway of Belomancy or Divination by Arrow* hath been in requeft with Scythians, AUnes^ Germans, with the Africans and "tur^s oi Algier. But of another nature was that which waspra^'l.\<y9.^^^^^^y^^^^'^i when by an Arrow fliot from an Eaftern window^ h&
like
pre-fignifisd the deftruv^ion of Syria', or when according unto \\y^ three ftroafcs of Joajh, with an Arrow upon the ground, he foretold the number of his viftories. For thereby the fpirit of God particu* lar'd the famcj and determined the ftroaks of the King, unto three, which the hopes of the Prophet expefted in twice that number.
We
many
other;
onely re-
fcring unto Chriftian confiderations, what natural effefts can reafbnably be expefted, when to prevent the Ephialtes or night-Mare we hang
up an hollow ftone in our ftables ; when for amulets againft Agues we When for Warts, ufe the chips of Gallows and places of execution.
the Moon, or commit any maculated part unto the touch of the dead. Swarms hereof our learned Selden and critical Philologers might illuftrate ; whofe abler performances our ad^
fjl^^^^''"'^'
'
'
ventures do but lolicite. Mean while I hops they will plaufibly receive our attempts, or candidely correft our mifconjeftures. cannot omit to obferve, the tenacity of ancient cuftoms, in 8. the nominal obfervation of the feveral dayes of the week, according to Gentile and Fagan appdlitions: for the Original isveryhic^h, and as old as the ancient Egyptians , who named the fame according to the leven Planets, the admired ftars of heaven, and reputed Deities among
We
them.
coeleftal order,
afligning a feveral day j not according to their or as they are difpofed in heaven ; but after a diatefTeron or mulical fourth. Fcr beginning Saturday wich Saturn, the (upremeft Planer, they accounted by Jupiter and Mars unro Sol, making
Sunday, From Sol in like manner by Venus and Mercury unto Luna, making Mundayi and fo through all the reft. And the fame order they, confirmed by numbering the hours of the day unto twenty four,accord ing to the natural order of the Planets. For beginning to account from Satur-p, Jupiter, Mars, and Co about unto twenty four, the next day will fall unto Sol, whence accounting twenty four, the next will happen unAnd fo with the rcff, according to the acto Luna, making Munday. count and order obfervcd ftiH among us. The Jews themfelves in their Aftrologlcal confideration?, concerning
Nativities,,
Book
5.
551
and planitary hours, obfcrvc the fame order upon as witty foundations. B ;caufc by an equal interval, they mafce feven triangles' the bafes whereof are the fevenlides of a (ejjtilateral figure, defcribed within a circle. That i?. If a figure of fevea fides be defcribed in a circle, and at the angles thereof the nimesof the Planets be placed, in their natural order on it : if we begin with Saturn, and fucceffively draw lines from angle to angle, until fcven cquicrural triangles be Cujusiconadefcribed, whofe bales are the (even fides of the feptilateral figure; puddoil. hf. The firft being made by Sa- f'^reUhap. i r. the triangles will be made by this order. turn, Soi and Luna, that is, Saturday, Sunday, and Mundayj and fo ^' ^^Wf -P*,
Nativities,
the reft In theorder ftill retained. But thus much is obfervable, that however in cceleftial confiderati* ens ihey embraced the received order ofthe Planets, yet did they not retain either charafters, or names in common ufe among us ; but decli-
*"""'"""
ning humane denominations, they afligned them names from fome remarkable qualities ; as is very obfervable in their red and fplendent ^^ u"^' But the change of their names '^^ Planets, that is, of Mars and Venus. difparaged not the confiderationof their natures j nor did they thereby rejeft all memory of thcfe remarkable Stars i which God himfelf admitted in his TaDemacle, if conjcfture will hold concerning the Golden Candlcftick j whofe fhaft refembled the Sun, and fix branches the
'
Planets about
ir.
Vifcffy
Dum veteresavias
Vv2
THE
SIXTHS O O
Ofjundry common
andHifloricall.
opinions
K:
Qoftno^aphicall
The
firft
Chap.
I.
Cofjcerftwg the beginning of the Worlds that the time thereof is notprecifely to be kpown^ as men generallyfuppofe: Ofmens enquiries in whatfeafon or point of the Zodiackjt began*That as they are generally made they are in vain^andas particularly
of the feafons and four Jlftronomers andfhy^ Jitians, That the common compute of the Ancients^ and rvhich is yet retained by moft^ is unreafonable and erronious* ^ffome Divinations and ridiculous didu&ions from one part of the year to another. And of the Vrovidettce andWif of Cod in the fit e and motion of the Sun.
applied uncertain.
Of
^
the divijion
quarters
of
the year
according to
iOncerning the World and its temporal circumfcriiptionf, whoever Qiall ftriftly examine both cxtreams,- will eafily The age of perceive there is not only oblcurity in its end, but its be ^^c world not ginning; that as its period is infcrutable, ^o isitsna-j^YiSiMblef" tivity indeterminable That as it is prefumption to cn^qiiircafter theone,fo is thereno reft or fatisfaftory dccifion inthc other: and hereunto we (hal more readily aflent,if we examine thcinformaiions,
"
^^^.^
and
334
Enquiries into Vulgar Book 5, and take a vicwot the feveral difficulties in this point; which wc ftiiU more eafily do, if we confider the different conceits of men, and
duly perpend the imperfeftions of their difcoveries. And firft, Thehittories of the GentiUi afford us (lender fatisfaftion, nor can they relate any ftory, or affix a probiblc point to its beginning. For feme thereof (and thole of the wifeft amongft them^ are fo fac from determining its beginning, that they opinion and maintain it never had any at all ^ as the doftrine oji Epicurus implieth, and more
hishooksVt Casta declareth. Endeavouring to with arguments of reafon> and thofe appearingly demon flrative; whercinhis labours are rational, and uncontroulabie upon the grounds aflfiimcd, that is, of Phyficil generation, and a Primary or firft matter, beyond which no other hand was apprehended. But herein we remain futficiendy fatisfied fromAib/, and the doftrine delivered oi the Creation ; thatis, apcoduftionof all things out of no* thing, a^ formation not onely of matter, but of form, and a matcriation even of matter it felf. Others are fo far from defining the Original of the World or of mankind, that they have held opinions not onely repugnant unto Chronology, but Philofophy ; that is,that they had their beginning in the foil where they inhabited ; adumtngor receiving appellations con* why the/4t6e-formable unto fiich conceits. So did the Athemam term them(elves *'*'^*^*'" '' ^^^^^^^^^^ i andintcftimony thereof did wear a golden a golden rn.**^ * Infedt on their heads ; the fame name is alfo given unto the Inlanders, fed upon But this is a contheir head, or Mli^</i inhabitants of this Ifland by CUjar, ceit anfwcrable unto the generation of the Giants ; not admittable in Philofophy, much lefs in Divinity, which diftinftly infor'meth we are all the feed of t/fdanti that the whole world pei-iffied unto eight perfons before the flood, and was after peopled by the Colonies of the ions of NMh. Therewas therefore never any Autochthon y or man arifing from the earth but ^i/zj ; for the woman being formed out of the rib, was once removed from earth, and framed from that Element under incarnation. And fo although her produft ion were not by copulation, yet was it in. a manner feminal : For if in every part' from ivhence the feed, doth flow, there be contained the 1dea of the whole j there was a fcminality and contracted Adam in the rib, which by the information of a foul, was individuaAnd therefore this conceit applyed unto the Oci* ted into Eff. ginal of man , and the beginning of the world , is more juftly For then indeed men (hall rife out of appropriiible unto its end. .the earth: the graves lliall (hoot up their concealed feeds, and in that, great Autumn, men (hall fpring pp, anci awake from their
ipoCithoiy Arifiotle in
confirm
it
Chaos again.
Others
5oo]k
Md Common Brorf*
^3 f
Others have been fo blind in dcdtiGing the Original of things, gr delivering their own bcginmngs, that when it hath faHen in* ^o controvcrlie , they have not recurred unto Chronologie or the Records of time: but betaken themfclvcs unto probabilities and Thus when the two ancient the conjeflturalities of Fhilofbphy. Nition$5 Mg^ftf^ns and Scjthiam contended for Antiquity , the Egyptians pleaded their Antiquity from the fertility of their foil, j^'' interring that men there firft inhabited, where they were with nioft facility fuftai.ned 5 and fuch a land did they conceive was
,
JE,gyp
a cold and heavier Nation urged more afrom the two aftive Elements and Principles of all thiog^s, fire and water. Forif of all things there was ftrft an union, andith|*tfice over. ruled thereft ; fucely that part of earth which was coldeft, would firft get free, and afford a place of habitation. But if all the earth were firft involved in water, thofepirts would furely firft appiar, which were moft high, and of moft elevated fituacutely, deducing, their Arguments
lion,
and
t\\Q
fiich
ivom
Mgyp^itns^
confirmed
it
their
accounted but two thou fan i years. As for the JEgyptians they invented anothir way of tryal ; for That men as the fame Author relateth 5 Pjammitidms their King attempted this^P^^^ y?^^y decifion by a new and unknoivn experiment, bringing up two In-ftJJft b"t"bv fants with Goals, and where they n3ver heard the voice of man iinftruaion concluding that to be the ancicnteft Nation, whofe language they and indication, fhould firft deliver. But herein he forgot that fpecch was by inftruftion not inftinftjby imitation, not by nature, th^t m;n do fpeak in feme kind but like Parrets, and as they are inftrufted, that is,infimple terms and words, exprefling the open notions of things; which the lecond aft ot Realon compoundeth into propofitions, and And howfoever the laft into Sylogifms and forms of ratiocination. the account of Manethon the ^Egyptian Prieft run very high, and it be evident that Mizraim peopled that Country fwhofe name with thcHebnws'n beareth uoto this day) and there* be many things of
great Antiquity related in
Holy
Scripture, yet
was
countnot very ancient ; for Pto/(y their Country-man beginncth his Aftronomical compute no higher then Nabonaffery who is conceived by fome the fame with Salmannff'er. As for the Argument deduced from the fertility of the fod , duly enquired , ic rather overthroweth then promoteth their antiquity 5 tor that Country whofe fertility they fo advance, was in ancient times no firm or open land, but fome vaft lake or part of the Sea, and became a gained ground by the mud and limous mauer brought down by the River
536
Enquiries intoVnlgaf
Book.^.
Wusy which fctlcd by degrees into a firm land. According as is cxprc(i UdhyStraboy and more at large by H^rc^otwx, both from the JEgypi* an tradition and probable inducements from reafon, called therefotcfluvii dorntm,
an
acceflion of earth, or
the R-iver.
and
Some indeed there are, who have kept Records of time, of a confiderablc duration, yet do the exafteft thereof afford no or any way fatisfaftion concerning the beginning of the world ,
LalMy,
The moft Authaitick records point out the time of its creation. beft approved Antiquity are thofe of the Chaldeans ; yet in the time of Alexander the Great , they attained not (b high as the flood. For as Sintplkins rehtcth ^ Arifiotle required of Caltjihenesy wha accompanied that Worthy in his expedition, that at his arrive.' at Babylon^ he would enquire of the Antiquity of their Records; and thofe upon compute he found to amount unto 1903 years; which account notwithilanding arifeth no higher then 95 years after the flood. The Arcadians 1 confefs , were cftcemed of great Antiquity, and it was ufually faid they were before the Moon according unto that of Seneca, Sydus pojiveteres Arcades editunt; and
and
But this as Cenfmnus obprior ilia fuit. muil not be taken grofly, as though they were exiflent before that Luminary ; but were (o efteemed, becaufethey obfervedafct courfeof year,before the Gr^^^i conformed their year unto the courfc and Motion of the Moon. Thus the Heathens affording no fatisfaftion herein , they are moft likely to manifcfl this truth, who have been acquainted with holy Scripture, and the facrcd Chronology delivered by Mofes ,
that
f erveth,
down this account^ computing by certain interby memorable ^r<ri, Epoches^ or terms of time. As from the Creation unto the flood, from thence unto Abraham^ from Abraham unto the departure from JEgyp, &c: Now in this number have onely hicti Samaritans, Jews and Chrifiians. For the Jews they aDifferent ac4 gree not in their accounts , as Bodine in his method of Hiftory countsjpcwi^ hath obferved out of Baal Seder, Kahbi Na(Jom, Gerfom, and other? j ^" whofe compute the age of the world is not yet $400 years. cenng'^t1ie"' Age of the The fame is more evidently obfcrvable from two mofl learned World. Jf^h ^^'^ and J^fephus', who very much differ in the accounts of time, and varioufly fum up thefe intervals afTented unto by all. Thus Fhih from the departure out of Mgypt unto the building of cho Temple, accounts but 920 years, but Jofephtu fets down 1062. Vhih from the building of the Temple to its dcftruftion 440. Jo' Philo from the Creation to the deftniftion of the fephus 470 : Temple 3573, but jofephus 351^. Philo from the Deluge to the deftruftionof the Temple I7i8> but Jofephus 1913. In which com
diftinftly fets vals,
.
who
putes
Book 6.
557
putea there are manifcft difparities, and fuch as much divide the con cordance and harmony of times. for the Samaritans', their acco\int is different from thefe or any others; for they account from the creation to the deluge, but 1302 years; which comesh to pafsupon the difFcrent account of the ages they begat children. For whereas of the Patriarks fet down when texts account Jared 1 62 when he bet Latinc and Greek Hebrew the the Samagat Enoch, they account but 62, and fo in others. judges times of Chronology and the ritans were no incompetent
Now
thereof i for they embraced the five books of Afofes, and as it feernh, preferved the Text with far more integrity then the Jews 5 who others obferve, did feveral way es corzs tcrtuiiany Chr^foftom, and rupt the fame, cfpecialiy in paffages concerning the prophefies of Chrifti So that us Jtrome profefTeth , in his tranflation he was fain fometime to relieve himfcH by the Samaritane Pentateuch amongft others in that Text, Veutrinomy 27. MaUdi^ius omnis qui
-,
^^^' non prritanfent in omnihuf qu fcripta funt in libra Legit, From no is juftification by the there Law, and hence Saint Vaul interreth urgeth the Text according to the Septuagint Now the Jewes to afford a latitude unto themf elves , in their copies expunged the word ^3 or Syncategorcmatical term ontnis : wherein licth the ftrength of the Law, and of the Apoftles argument : but the Samiritan Bible retained it right,and anfwerable unto what the Apo
.
as
{lie
had urged.
for Chriftians from whom we fliould expcft the exaftefl and moll concurring account, there is atfo in them a manifeft difagree* ment, and fuch as is not eaiily reconciled. For firft. The Latines accord not in their account ; to omit the calculation of the Ancient?, of Atiftin^ Bede, and others, the Chronology of the Moderns doth Jofepkus Scalliger , whom Hdvicus feems to maniteftly diffent. follow, accounts the Creation in 765 of the Julian period ; and from thence unto the. Nativity of our Saviour alio weth 3947 years; But Vionyfiits Vetavius a learned Chronologer diflenteth from this compute almofl 40 years ; placing the Creation in the 730 of the J/i<i period, and from the nee unto the Incarnation ac-
As
for if
we
re-
cur unto ancient computes, we (hall find that Clemens Alexandrinus, an anciant Father and Preceptor unto Origen, accounted from the
Creation unto our S iviour, 56^4 years; for inthcfirftof his Stromiticks, he coUeftsth tlie time from Adam unto the death of Commidus to b^ 5858 years ; now the death of Commodus he placeth in the year after Chrift 194, which number dedufted from the former, there remainerh 5664. "theopbilus Bifhop of Antioch X
558
Book
6.
Antioch ^cco^mttlh. unto the Nativity of Chrift ^515, dcdutcablc from the like wa) of compute, for ih h.\s ^v^ hook ad Antol;^chum^ he accounteth from Adam unto'^//m/7/f F^t/^hj y6j^5 years j now that Emperor died in the year of our Lord 180, which dcdufted fronj the former fiimme, there femaineth '^'^ly Julim Africanus an ancient Chronologer, accounteth lomewhatlefs, that 18,5500. Eufebius, Orofms and others diflent not much from this , but all '. ', exceed five thou fand.
'
'
'
'The
By what
latter
PeMks
obfefvith^atH been
ac-
The firftaccOLints untjo our'Saviour 5501, and this hath been obferved by Nicephorusy 7heofhanesy ^""^ Maximus. The other accounts 5509 i and this of all at prefent is generally received by the Church of Confiantinople^ obferved alfo by-. the Mofcovitej aslhave feert in the date of the Emperors letters 5 wherein this year of ours 1645, is from the year of the world 7154, %hich doth exatftly a^Vee unto thrs laft account 550^, for if unto that funlnle be added 1845, theproduft will be 7154, by this Chronology are many Greek Authors to be underftood; and thus Martims Crujius to be madeout, when in hii Turcograecian hiis
i*educed unto two or three accounts.
City of CpHJiantimple was taken by the Turks in Now according unto iliefeChrbnologlfts, the Prophecy of Wik the Rabbin, fo much in requeft With the jewSf and in feme credit alfo with Chrifiians, that the world fnould laft but fix thouf and years, unto thefelfay, it hath been long and cut of memory difproved , for the Sabbatical and 7000 year wherein the World (holild end (as did the Creation on the feventh day) unto them is long ago expired; they are proceeding and numbers exceeding thofe in the eight thoufand year, dayes which men have m'ade the types and fhadows of thefe. But certainly what Marcus Leo the Jew conceiveth of the end of the heavens, exceedeth the account of all that ever (hall be j for though he conceiveth the Elemental frame fhall end in the Seventh or Sabbatical Millenary} yet cann6t he opinion the heavens and more durable part of the Creation (hall perifh before fevcrt times feven, or 49,that i?, the quadrant of the other feven, andperf eft Jubilee of thoufands. Thus may we obferve the difference and wide difTent of mens opinions, and thereby the great inc^rtainty in this eftablifhment. The Hebrews notoncly diflenting from the Samaritans, the La* tines from the Greeks, but every one from another. Infomuch that all can be in the right it isimpoffible ;that any one is ft?, not with
ftory he deliverSjthe
the year
^^S,that is,i^6i.
a(rurance determinable. And therefore as Tetavius confcfTeth, toeffeft the fame exaftly without infpiration it is impoilible, and beyond
God
himfclf.
And
therefore
alfo
what
Book
6^
af$4
common Err&rst
a^^
what latlsfaftlonmay be obtained froip thofe violent dlfputes, and ^agcr enqjircrsin what day ot the moneth the world began, ci* thcrof Mirchor03[obcr J likewife in whit face or poficion of the Moon, whether at the prime or full, or foon after, let our fecond and feriousconliderations determine.
of N^w the reafon and ground of this diiTeot, is the unhappy diff> Thecaufcc nee between the Greek apd Hebrew Ejitions of the Bible, for unto ^ ^'^ercnt rence thefc twoLmguages have all Tranfluions conformedj the holy Scriabout"he e pture being firft delivered in HcbreWjand firft tranflited into Greek, of the wImFor the Hebrew i it is incontrovertibly the primitive and fureft text
and to prcferve the fame entire and uncorrupt,there hath been ufed the higheft caution humanity could invent. ForasiL. Bf. Maimn hath declared, if in the copying thereof one letter were written tj^^ice, or if one letter but touched another, that copy was not admitted into their Synagogues, but onely allowable to be cead in Schools and private families. Neither were they caretull pnsly in the exaft number of their Seftions of the Law, but had alfo the curiolity to number every word, and affixed the ac- ^^'^''^P^'on cpuntuntp their teveraiboojks. Notwithftandin^ all which, divers Hebrelv'^Texc corruptions en fusd, and feveral depravations flipt in, arifing from of the Bible and ^nnifeft ground?p as hath been exaftly noted by Morinus in his preface unto the Septuagint. As for the Septaagint, it is the firft and moft ancient Tranflation % and of greater Antiquity then the Chaldee veriion ; occafioned by the requeft of Ftoiomeus VhiUdelfhus kirjig of Egypt, for the ornament of his memorable Library i unto whom thp high Prieft a3dreflT^d lix Jews out pf cvcrj? Tribe, which amounteth unto 72 ; and bythefe was effefted that Tranflation we ufually term the Septuagintjor Tranflation of feventy .Which name,however it obtain from the number of their perfons, yet in refpeft of one common Spirit,it ^he C A' was th? Tranflation but as it were of one.man. For as the ftory rcia* of the Sepr'uatetbj althotigh they were fet apart and fevered from eachpther, yet g'nctrannawcre their Tranflations found to agree in every point, according as ^'P'^^ is related by F^i/o and 7opp6wr although we find not the fame in ^l^,^'^^ Anji^^sy who hath expr;fly treated thereof. ^ dciTZlZ. Tfiis Tranflation in ancient times was of great authority, by tibut. -t^is nianyiof the Heathens received fome notioasof the Creation and the mighty works of Gpd i Thisin exprefs terms is often followed by the Evangelifts, by the Apoftles, and by our Saviour himfelf in theqjQtations oi the oldTeftament. This for many years was ufed by the Jem tbemfelves, that is, fuch as did Hellenize and
to rely on,
mmy
difperfedly dweltpatof Paleftine with the Greeks j and rhis aUo the fucceeding Chriflians and ancient Fathers obferved ; although
is,
of Aqmla, Iheodofius^
Xx
and
'
240
Book
6*
and Symmachui ; for the Latitie tranflation of Jenm called now the Vulgar, was about 800 years after the Septuagint ; althougfi
fiAfnt.inPA'
ti^pre y,as alfo a
Pjqj^
uj^om.
Latinc tranflation before, called theltalick verafter loft upon the general reception of the "Which notwithflanding (as he himof Saint tranflation Jerom. felf acknoivledgcth) had been needlefs , if the Septuagint copies
Which was
But, (bc-
and
i^gyft
^^tfxr^
followed the copy of Hefychm , Antioch and CoHJiantinopie that of Lucian the Martyr, and others that of Origen) the Septuagint was much depraved, not onely from the errors of Scribes, and the emergent corruptions of time , but malicious contrivance of the Jewes j as Jujiin Martyr hath declared , in his learned dialogue with tryphon and Morinm hath learnedly ftiewn from ma-
fctr'iwe,
ny confirmations.
cially effeded
Whatfocver interpretations there have been fince, have been cfpewith reference unto thefe, that is, the Greek and Hebrew text, the Tranflators fometimes folbwing the one, fometimes adhering unto the other, according as they found them confonant unto truth, or moft correfpon dent unto the rules of faith.Now how* ever it cometh to paffjthcf e two are very different in the enumeration of Genealogies, and particular accounts of time ; for in the Tccond interval, that is, between the flood and Ahrahanty there is by the Sep* tU3gint introduced one Cainanto be the fon of Arphaxad and father oi Salahi whereas in the Hebrew there is no mention of fiieh a perfon, but Arpbaxad is fet down to be the father of Salah, But in the firft interval, that is, from the Creation unto the flood, their difagreement is more confiderable ; for therein the Greek exceedeth the Hebrew, and common account almoft 600 years. And 'tis indeed a thing not very ftrange, to beat the difference of a third parti in fo large and colleftive an accounr, if we confidcr how
differently they are fet forth in
bers.
So in the Prophefce of lonah, both in the Hebrew and La tine Text, it is faid. Yet forty dayes and Ninevy (hall be overthrown : But the Septuagint faith plainly, and that in letters at length, Tfmtntug^, that is, yet three dayes and Niwvj' fhall bedcftroycd. Which is a difference not newly crept in, but an ob* icrvation very ancient, difcufl^cd by Aujiin , and Jbeodoret , and was conceived an error committed by the fciibe. Men therefore have rai fed different computes of time, according as they have followed tfieir diflerent Texts ; and fo have left the hiftory of times far more perplexed then Chronology, hath re'
duced.
'-
Book.
6,
AftdCommon Err&rsy
yet were there
34
a deterfixed point of
rations agree,
no fmall
difficulty to fct
down
minable Chronology, or eftablifli from hence any For the doubts concerning the time of the Judges are intime. explicable j that of the Reigns and (uccefljon of Kings is as perplexed } it being uncertain whether the years both of their lives and reigns ought to be taken as compleat, or in their beginning and but currant accounts. Nor is it unreafonable to make forae doubt whether in the firft ages, and long lives of our fathers, Mofes doth not iometime account by full and round numbers, whereas ilri):ly taken they might be foroe few years above or under as in the age of Noah^ it is delivered to be juft five hundred when he begat itJ^wiwheraspcr* haps he might be feme what above or below that round and compleat number. For the fame way offfpeeeh is ufual in divers other ev
;
prefllons;
articulate
Thus do we
and
and
number, do write theTranflation of Seventy} whereas we have (hewn before, theprccife number was feventy two. So Is itfaidthat Chrift was three dayes in the grave ; according to that of Mattherfi , as Jonas was three dayes and three nights in the Whales belly Co (hall the Son o{ man be three dayes and three nights in the heart of the earth: which notwithftanding mu(lbe taKenSynecdochically j or byunderftandingapart for an whole day; forhe remained but two nights in the graven for he was buried in
the aifternoon of the firft day, and arofe very early in the morning on the third ; that is, he was interred in the eve of the Sabbath, and arofe the morning after it.
number of years be determined and and there be without doubt a certain truth here-
in
no flcnder difficulty at what point to begin or terminate the account. So when it is laid Exod. 12. the fojourning ol the children of Jfrad who dwelt in Egypt was 430 years, ic cannot be taken ftriftly, and from their firft arrival into Egypt , for their habitation in that land was far lefs but the account muft begin from the Covenant of God with Abraham^ and muft alfo comprehend their fojourn in the land oi Canaan, according as is expreifed, G/J!/.3. The Covenant that was confirmed before of God in Chrift, the Law which was 43.0 years after cannot difannul. Thus hath it alfo happened in theac*
;
count of theyoyearsof their captivity, according to thzt of Jere* My, chap. 20. This whole land fhall be a defolation, and thefc Nations (hall ferve the King of Babylon 70 years- Now where arifeth no fmall difficulty; to begin or end this compute, for there were three remarkable captivities and deportations of 4he Jews. The firft was in the third or fourth year of Joa* cbiiiti and &tAoi Nabuehodauozcry -when Daniel was carried away 5
Xx
the
oA^
Book
^.
the fccond in the reign of Jeconiah^ and the eighth year of the fame King ; the third and molt deplorable in the reign of Zedechia^y and in the nintccnth ye^r oi N^buchododozor, whereat both the Temple and City wire burned. Now fiich is the different conceit of thefe times, that men have computed from all ; but the probibleft account and moft concordant unto the intention o^ Je-
Chap. i'i.
of King Cyriif remy, isfromthcfirft of Ntthuchodomzonxmothe over B/r^yo 5 although the Prophet Zachary accounteth trom the Lord of hofts, How long! Wilt thou not have mercy oa laft. Jerufalem^ againft which thou hift had indignation thefe threercore and ten years ? for he maketh this expoftulation in the fecond year of Varhtf Hifiafpes j wherein he prophelied> which is about eighteen
76 Weeks.
years in account after the other. Thus alfo although there be a certain truth therein, yet is there no cafte doubt concerning the feventy weeks, or feventy times feven years of Vaniel : whether they have reference unto the nativity or paflion of our Saviour, and efpecially from whence, or what point of For thus is it delivered by the Angel time they are to be computed. Gabriel Seventy weeks are determined upon thy people ; and again in the following verfe ; Know therefore and underftand^ that from the going forth of the Commandment to reftorc and to build J^fr/<r/fw unto the Medias the Prince, (hall be feven weeks, and threefcorc and two weeks, the ftrcet ftiali be built again, and thewallcven in troublefomc times; and after threefcore and two weeks fhall Mefliah be cut off. Now the going out of the Commandment to build the City, being the point from whence to compute, there is no (lender controveriie when to begin. For there- are no left then four feveral Edifts to this effeft ; the one in the firft of Cyrus^ arm jthc third and fourth in the (evcnth, the other in the fecond of and in the twentieth of Artaxerxes Longtmamts ; although as F<rtrfz/iwf accounteth, it bfft accordeth unto the twentieth year of Artaxerxesy from whence Nehemiah deriveth his Commillion. Now that computes are made uncertainly with reference unto Chrifl, it is no wonder J fince I perceive the time of his Nativity is in
:
controverfie,
TertuJlian conceive
his time, is
fifty,
lefs his age at his Paflion : For ClemenU and he fuffered at thirty ; but Irenus a Father neerer further off in his account, rijatis, between forty and
::3
\'
and no
l\.Av
LongoMomanm
fecret
S^in
Excentricity
fcruple,
yearly to
move one
two
period 4557
fore if in the time of Hi/^f/zrcfewy, that is in the year of the Juliim it was in the fifth degree of Gemini^ and in the dayes of
tycha
Book 6.
'Xycko
;
is
543
our Lord 15S8, or of the world 55^4; the fame was removed unto the fift degree of Camera by the proportion of its motion, it was at the Creation firft in the beginning of Aries^ and the Pcrigcum or neareft point in Libra, But this conceit how ingeniogs Or fubtile (oever, is not of fatisfaftion; or yet agreed in what time precifcly it being not determinable , * tewpoTum"t 4* ' the Apogeum abfolvedi gne degree, as Petavius hath alfo deliBrake t that
vcred.
Laftly,
However
thcfc or
other
difficulties intervene
and that
our felves in the exaft compute of tlme,yet may the common and ufuall account; nor are thefe differences derogatory unto the Advent or paffion of Ghrift , unto which indeed they all do fecm to point j for the Prophecies con^* ccrning our Saviour were indefinitely delivered before that of D^nk/j (o was that pronounced unto Eve in Paradife, that after BalaaWi thole of Ifaiah and the Prophets , and that memorable one of Jacobs the Scepter ihall not depart from Ifrael until Shilo come; which time notwithftanding it did not define at all. In what year ttierefore foevcr, either from the deftruftion of the Temple, from the reedifying thereof, from the fk)od, or from the Creation he appeared, certain it is, that in the fulnefTe of time he came. When he therefore came is not fo confiderable, as that he is come in the one there is confolation, in the other no fatisfaftion. The greater Qucrc i?, when he will come again 5 and yet indeed it is no Qtiere at all ; for that is never to be known , and therefore vainly enquired and authentick obfcurity, un'tis a profclTed known to all but to the omnifcicncc of the Almighty. Certainly the ends of things are wrapt up in the hands of God, hee that undertakes the knowledge thereof, forgets his own beginning, and difclaims his principles of earth. No man knows the end of the world, nor afTuredly of any thing in it : God fees it, becaufe unto
it is prefent ; he knoweth the ends of us, but not of himand becaufe he knows not this, he knoweth all things, and his knowledge is endlefTe, even in the objcft of himfelf.
his Eternity
felf:
CHAP.
344
Bock. 6,
Chap.
Of
mttjs Efiquirkf in
II.
T.odi-*
made
and
as particularly^
uncertain.
Concerning
(omc arc ready to enquire, others to dctermins, in what feafon, whether in the Autumn, Spring, Winter or Summer the World, had its beginning. Wherein we affirm, that as the qucftion is gcnnrally, and in refpcft of the whole earth propofed, it is with manifeft injury unto reafon in any particular determined ; becaufc when ever the World had its beginning it was created in all the(c The world For, as we have elfewhere delivered, whatfoever figne the fom-. began in all poflefl^th ( whofe receflfe or vicinity dcfineth the quarters of g^^^ ^ ^^^^ ^^^^ feafons were aftually exiftent ; it being the na'^^ 7^*"^ ) ters o??h"' turc of that Luminary to diftingui(h the feveral feafons of the year; ycar. all which it makcth at one time in the whole earth, and fuccclTively Thus if we fuppofc the Sun created in Libra, in any part thereof. in which fign unto fome it maketh Autumn ; at the fame time it had been Winter unto the North cm* pole, for unto them at that time the Sun beginncth to be invifibic, and to (hew it felf again unto the pole of the South. Unto the pofition of a right Sphere, or direftly under the Equator, it had been Summer } for unto that fcituation the Sun is at that time vertical. LTnto the latitude of Capricorn, or the Winter Solftice ic had been Spring j for unto that pofition it had been in a middle point, and that of afcent, or approximation ; but unto the latitude of Cancer or the Summer Solftice it had been Autumn $ for then had it been placed in a middle point, and that of dc
fccnt, or elongation.
And
ly,
if
we
this
was
fhall take it literally what Mo^es defcribed popular* alfo the conftitution of the firft day. For when it was
evening unto one longitude, it was morning unto another ; when And therefore that qucftion, night unto one, day unto another. whether our Saviour ftiiU come again in the twilight fas is conceived he arofe ) or whether he fliall corns upon us in the night, according to the comparifon of a thief, or the Jemjh tradition, that he
will
Book.
6,
And Common
Errors*
545
will come about the time of their departure out of JEgyptj when they eat the Palsover, and the Angel pafT^d by the doors of their For if the houfesi thisQiicre I fay needeth not further difpute. earth be almoft every where inhabited, and his comming f as divinity affirmeth) muft needs bee unto all; then nuift the time of his appearance be both in the day and night. For U unto Jerufalenty or what part of the world foever he ftiall appear in the night, at the fame time unto the Antipodes, it muft unto^ them , broad day unto the twilight be day i if Indians j if noon unto themjyet night unto the Americatis'j^nd Co with
variety according unto various habitations, or difFwrent pofitions of a?? will be safily conceived by thofe who underftand the affeftions of different habitations, and the conditions of /4r<eci, PeAnd fo although he appear in the night , yet rieciy and Antipodes.
the Sphere,
dayof jjdgement or Doomf-day well retain thatnamej for one revolution of the Sun, which maketh the day and And yet to fpeak f^riftly, if f as night, and that one natural day. the Apolile affirmeth ) wefliall be changed in the twinckling of an eye f and as the Schools determine ) the deftruftion of the world
may
the
that implieth
Kux^ifJi-tpr.
fhall
we
admits not the parts thereof, or ufc at all the name of time, when the nature thereof (hall perifti. But if the enquiry be made unto a particular place, and the qu^ftion determined unto fomc certain Meridian 5 as namely, unto Mefopotamia wherein the feat of Farad ifc is prcfumed, the
is indeed in nature alfo Yet pofitively to define that feafon, there is no flender difficulty; for fome contend that it began in the Spring 5 as ( befidc Eufebius, Amhrofe, Bede, and Iheodoret ) fbme few years pafi Henrico Philippi in his Chronologic of theScripture.others are altogether for Autumn and from hence do our Chronologers com mence their compute ; as may beobferved in BeivicHs, Jof.Scaligerj Calvifiusy and PetaviM,
determinable.
CHAP.
S^6
Book
6.
Chap.
III.
and which
is Jiill
retained by
AS
nox of
lar
Between
the
Now this diviiion although it be reguAries again. Winter. equall, is not univerfal; for it includ^^th not thofe latitudes v^hich h^ve the feafons of the year double; as have the inhabitants under the J^quator, or clfe between the Tropicks. For unto them the Son is vertical twice a year,mak'ng two diftin^: Summers in the So unto thofe which live under the different points of vercicality. in the Sun Equinox it is Sunimecj in which is when the Equator,
and
points
it maketh Spring or Autumn unto ua; zn<^ unto them it is Winter when the Sun is in cither Tropic I^ ; \vi\ereas unto ui
aifo
And the like will hapit n?aketh ajwayes Summer in the one. Ti:opicJlj;Sj and pen unto thoie habitations, which are bctw.?ea the Equator. A fccond and more {enfible divifion there is obferved by Hipp^cram Ust and moft of the ancient Greekj^ according to the rifing and fetting of divers flars 5 dividing the year, and eftablirtiing the account of feafons from ufual alterations , and (enfible mutations In the ay, difcQvered upon the rifing and fetting of thofe ftars, accountin.5 the Spring from the ^quinoxial F^'nt of Aries ; from the rifing of the Piciadef, or the fcveral ftars on the back of Tauru?, Summer; from the rifing of Arfturus, a (lar between the thighs of Bootes, Autumn i and from the fitting of the Pleiades, Win-
ter,
Book
Winter.
6,
t^^j
diviiions bscaufc they w^re iinsq ill, they'w:r3 fain to (ubdlvile the two larger portionsj that is of the SuTm.r and Winter qiarters ; the firft part of the Summer they named ^ietu the
tiicfc
Of
fecond unto the rifin* of the Dog-ftar, "Vi from fhence unto the
(ecting of ArftaniSj 5ot*j. The Winter they divided alfo into three parts; the firft part, or that of feed time they named ^^V*"*'. ths
middle or proper Winter, >*f<**^ the laft, which was their plantThis way of divilion was in former ing or grafting time fvvitiia. ages received, is very often mentioned in Poets, tratiflated from one Nation to another $ from the Greeh unto the Latines, as is received by good Author 5^; and delivered by Phylicians, even unto our time?. Now of thefe two, although tiie firft in fome latitude may be retained, yet is not the other In any to bi admitted. For in regard of time ("as we declare in the Chap, of canicular ^ayesj the ftars do vtry their longitude?} and confequently the limes of their afcenfiori aiid defcerilion. That ftar w^iich is the term of numeration, or point
and longi-
tude in procefs of time, and removing from Weft to Eaft, almoft one degree in the fpacc of 72 years, fo that the fame ftar, (Ince the age of Hippocrates who ufcd this account, is removed in confequentia abou
27
dcgre?s.
Which
difference
Again, In regard of different latitudes, this cannot be a fcriett or reafonably applyed unto many Nations. For whereas the letting of the Pleiades ot feven ftars, is defigned the term of Autumrt, and the beginning ok Winter ; unto fome latitudes thefe ftars do never fet, as unto all beyond 67 degrees. And if in feveral and far diftant latitudes we obferve tlie fame ftar as a common term of account unto both, we (hail fall upon an uncxpefted, but an unfufFerable abturdicy i and by the fame account it will be Summer unto us in the North, before it be fo unto thofe, which unto us are Southward, and many degrees approaching nearer the Sun. For if we confult the Doftrine of the fphere, and obferve the afcenfion of the Pleiades, which makcth the beginning of Summtr, we (hall difcoverthat in the latitude of 40, Thefe ftars arife in the 16 degree of Taurus ; but in the latitude of 50, they afcend in the elevcth degree of the fame fign, that is, 5 dayes fooner j (o (hall it be Summer unto LoH'
rul?,j
douy before
it
it
grow hot
in Spain.
This is therefore no general way of compute, nor reafonable ro be derived from one Nation unto another ; the defeft of which ccnfideration hath caufed divers errors in Latine Poets, tranflating thefe cxprcllions from the Greek^^ ; and many difficulties even in the Greeks
Yy2
them*
348
thenifelves
;
Book. ^.
which living in divers latitudeSjyet obfcrved the iame compute. So that to make them outjwe are fain to u(e diftinftions fometime computing coimically what they intended heliacally and fometime in the fame exprefsion the rifing heliacally > the letting cofmically.Othcrwifc it will be hardly made out, what is delivered by approved Authors ; and is an obfervation very confiderable unto thote which meet with fuch exprcffions j as they are very frequent in the Poets of elder times, efpecially Hf^o^, Aratus^ Virgil, Ovid , Munillius and Authors Geoponical , or which have treated de re rufiica, as Confiantine, Marcus CatOy Columella^ PaUadius and Varro.
'>
',
Laftly, The abfurdity in making common unto many Nations thofe confiderations, whofe verity is but particular unto fome, will more evidently appcar^if we examine the Rules and Prcctpts of fomc one climate, and fall upon confideration with what incongruity they
Thus
is it
advifed by Heftod.
^tlante natis
orientibus
Ante
tihi
%0 Atlantides ah[condanturi
\
or their fetting:
when
the
Sun
and not their Heliacal obfcuration , ortheir the luftre of the Sun ^ as Strvius upon this place would at that time thefe ftars are many figns removed from
ari(cth
,
fow
Now herein heftriftly advileth , not to begin to before the fetting of thefe ftars i which notwithftanding without injury to agriculture , cannot be obferved in England ; for they fct
that luminary.
unto us about the 12 of November, when our Seed-time is almoft cndtd. And this diveriity of clime and cceleftial obfervations , precifcly obferved unto certain ftars andmoneths, hath not only overthrown the deduftions of one Nation to another^ but hath perturbed the
obfervation
Book 6
feftivities
349
and ftatary Solemnities, even with the Jevpi obfervation of thcnifclves. For unto them it was commanded that at their entrance into the land of Ctftftf, in the fourteenth of thefirft moneth (that is Abib or Nifan which is Spring with us ) they (hould obferve the celebration of rhe PafTeovcr ; and on the morrow after, which is the fifteenth day, the feafl of unleavened bread; and in thefixteenth of the fame moneth, that they (hould offer the firll (heaf of the harveft. Now all this was f eafible and of an eafie poflibijity in the land of Canaan^or latitude oi J erufalent; {or fo it is obferved by fcveral Authors in latter times; and is alfoteffified by holy Scripture in times very For when the Children of Jfrael paiTed the river Jordan, far before. it is delivered by way of Parenthefis, that the river overHowcth
its
,
*
banks in the time of harvcfl ; which is conceived the time wherein they pafTed ; and it is after delivered, that in in the four* tecnth day they celebrated the PafTeovcr: which according to the Law of Mo{es was to be obferved in the firft moneth, or moneth of
^
-'
Abib.
And therefore it is no wonder, what is related" by LV, that the Difciples upon the Veuteroprotooi as they paiTed by, plucked the ears of Corn. For the Veuterofroton or fecond firft Sabbath, was the what the
firftSibbathaftertheDeuteraorfccondofthePafTeover, which was Sabbaton And this is alfo evidenced from the fQ^^llk^l' the fixteenth of Nifan or Abib, receivedconftruftionof thefirft and latter rain. I will give you ^as* the rain of your land in his due feafon, thefirft rain and the latter Deut. n. For the firft rain fell upon the feed-time about Oftober, and rain.
was to make
ear,
and
fell
in
oAbib or March, the firft moneth : according as is exprcfTed* iCnd he will caufe to come down for you the rain, the former Joel rain and the latter rain in the firft moneth; that is the moneth of ^bib wherein the PafTeover was obferved. This was the Law o{ Mofesy and this in the land oi Canaan was well obferved, according to the firft inftitution : but fince their difpertion and habitation in Countries, whof c conftitutions admit not fuch tempeftivity ot harvefts; and many not before the latter end of Summer ; notwithftanding the advantage of their Lunary account, and intercalary moneth Veader affixed unto the beginning of the year, there will be found a^reat difparity in their obfervation; nor can they Ih-iaiy and at the fame Icafon with their forefathers obferve the commands of God. To add yet further, thofe Gcoponical rules and precepts of Agriculture which are delivered by divers Authors, arc not to be generally received; but refpeftivelyunderftood unto climes wh<:reto they are determined. For whereas one advifeth to fow th's or that at one feafon^a fecond to fet this or that at another, ic mult be Z 2
2.
;5o
Book
6.
bccoaceived rdjuivcly5& every Nation muft have its Country Farm; For herein wc may obfervc a mamfeft and vifible difference, not nely in the feafons of harveftj but in the grains themfelve?. For with us Barley-harveft is made after Wheat-harveft, but with the Ifraelitds and Mgyptians it was otherwise ; (o is it cxpreflTed
by way of priority, Ruth the 2. So Kuthkcpt fail by the maidens of Boan to glean unto the end of Barley- harvcft and oi Wheat-harvcft; which in thcplaguc of hayl in Mgyp is more plainly delivered^ "ExoA^, And the Flax and the Barley were (mitten, for the Barley was in the ear, and the Flax was boiled, but the Wheat and the Rye were not fmitten, for they were not grown up. And thus we fee the account eftabli(hed upon the arife or defccrtt of the ftars can be no realonablc rule unto diftant Nations at allj and by reafon of their retrogreHion but temporary unto anyone.
andfo artiricial the habitude of this inferiour globe unto the (uperiour, and even of one thing in eachuntdthe other that general rules arc dangerous 5 and applications moft fafc that run with fccurity of circumftance. Which
fiderations, for fo diftinfl: is the relation,
:
rightly to
effcft,. is
beyond the
fubteley of fenfe,
and
requires' the
ajrtificeof reafon.
Chap.
fame compitatimofdayes and Of
the year unto another.
IV.
diduSfiffrts
of one
part'
0^
'Ourthly> There are cert^n vulgar opinions concerning dayes and conclufions popularly deduced from certain dayes of thcmoiieth ; mencommonly belicvingthe days increafc ^nd-decreafc equally in the whole year : which notwithftanding 13 unto truth.For they incrcafe in the month of March, That the days ^^"^y* ""^P^^^^nt in the two moneths ot January and February :and almoft as much as incr.-afe and dccreafc unedecreafe as much in September, as they do in July & Auguft. For the qually. dayes ipcreafe or decreafe accordmg to the declination of the Sun, that is, its deviation Northward or Southward from the ^Equator* Now^his iligrefliDn is not cqua^uic near the -/Equinoxial interfeftions,ic is right and greatcr,near the Solftices more oblique and lefler. So from the eleventh of March the vernal Equinox, unto the eleventh of April the Sun decUneth to the North twelve degrees, from the eleventh xxf April unto the eleventh of May but eight, from
thcnee
Book 6
251
bat three and a hal< : all which make twenty two degrees and an half, the grcatcftdccUnationof theSun. And this inequality in thedediAation of the Sun in the Zodiack or line of life, is correfpondent unco the growth or declination of man. For fettingout from infancy we increafe not cqually,or regulirly attain to our ftateor perf eftion : nor when we defccnd from our ftate, is our declination equallt or carrieth us with even paces unSolilice
Summer
to the grave. For, as Hi/'Pccrrfrfi a^Srmeth, a man is hotteft in the firftd^yof hislifci and toldeft in the laft : his naturai hcgtfciteth forth mod vigoroufly a|#^9 and dcclineth moft (enlibly at hit. And fo though the growth offnan end not perhaps untihwnty one, ytt is his ftature more advanced in the firft feptenary then in the i'ecord, and in the fecond, more then in the third,and more indeed in the firft fevcu yearfi, then in the fourteen fucceeding jfor, what ftature we attain unto at fevcn years, we do fometimcs but double, nioft times comes (hort of at one and twenty. And fo do we decline again : Forin the latter age upon the Tropick and firft defccnfion iroTiour declination : but declining foiftice, we are fcarce feniible of further, our decrement accelerates, we fet apace, and in our laft dayei precipitate into our graves. And thus are alfo our progrefllons in the womb, that is, our formation>motion, our birth or exclafion. For
The natural
Pr^poition of
gJ'oTtT
m theVorld
&c
^^^
yj^^^^
our formation quickly cffcfted, our motion appeareth later, and our exclufion very long after : if that be true which Hifpecrates and Avicennn have declared, that the time of our motion is double unto that of formation, and that of exclufion treble unto that of motion. As if the Infant be formed at thirty five dayes,it movtth atfeventy, and is born the two hundred and tenth day, thac is, the feventh monethjorif it receive* not formation before forty five daycs, it jveth the ninetieth day, and is excluded in the two hundred and leventy, thatis, thenineth moncth. There arc alfo certain popular prognofticfcs drawn from fcftivaliJ in the Calender, and conceived opinions of certain days in monethsj fo is there a general tradition in moft parts of Europe, that inferreth the coKinefsof fuccecdinj? winter from the flaining of the Sun upon CandlemM day, or the Purification of the Virgin Mary^ according to
is
Si Sdfphndefcat Maria
-pur ifie
am e,
aftte-
is it ufual amongft us to qualifie and conditionate the twelve moneths oi ths year anfwcrably unto the temper oi the twelve days in Chriftma? 5 and toafcribe unto March certain boj rowed dayes from Z2 2
So
2^2
Book
6.
from April j all which men fcem to believe upon annual experience of their own, and the received traditions of their fore-fathcrs. Now it is raanifeil, and moft men likewife know, that the Calenders of thefc computers, and the accounts of thefe dayes are very different ; the Greeks difTcnting from the Latines , and the Latinei from each other ; the one obfcrving the Julian or ancient account, as great Brittain and part of Germany > the other adhering to the Gregorian or new account, as Italy^ France^ Spain^ and the United Now this later account by ten days Provinces ot the Netherlands. at leaft anticipateth the other 5 fo that bef^e the one beginncth the accountjthe other is paft it ; yet in the fevgarf calculations, the fame events isem trues and men with equal opinion of verity, expcft and confefs a confirmation from them all. Whereby is evident the Oraculous authority of tradition, and the eafie feduftion of men, neither enquiring into tlve verity of the fubftance, nor reforming upon
repugnance of circumftancc.
And
thus
may
who
fuperftitioufly
ob*
unto themfdves an obfervation of unfortunate moneths, or dayes, or hours ; As did the Mgyptians, two in every moneth, and the Romans, the dayes after the Nones, Ides and Calend?, And thus the Rules of Navigators niufl often fail, fetting down, as KWi^ii obferveth, fufpefted and ominous dayes in every moneth, as the firft and feventli of March, the fift andlTxt of April, the fixt, thetwclfth and fifteenth of February. For the accounts hereof in thefe moneths are very different in our days, and were different with feveral Nations in Ages pafi 5 and how flriftly foever the account be made, and even by thefelf-fame Calender, yet is it poffible that Navigators may be out. For fo were the HoU landers, who paffing Well ward through /m>/^A///;rtf, and compafsing the Globe, upon their return into their own Countrcy,found that they hadlofl a day. For if two men at the fame time travel from the {ameplace,the one Ea(tward,the other Weflward round about the Cirth,and meet in the fame place from whence the firfl fetforihiit will fo fall out, that he which hath moved Eaftward againft the diurnal motion of the Sun, by anticipating daily fomething of its circle with his own motion, will gain one dayj but be that travelleth Weflward, with the motion of the Sun,by feconding its revolution, Qiall lofe or comc&ortaday. And therefore alfb upon thefe grounds that D^/w
down
was feated
in the
middle of
the- earth, it
was no exaft
decifion, befell
caufe two eagles let fly Eaft and Wefi by Jufiter^ their meeting out juft in the Ifland Velos.
CHAP.
Book
6,
^d common Errofs,
353
Chap;
V.
A Digjrejjion of
the Sun,
the mfdom
man
in
fome
things, his
and blindnefs in others, that is, in the roeafure of durati* on both of years and feafons, let us a while admire the Wifdom of Cod in this diftinguiflier of times, and vifiblc D;ity ( as fome have termed ic) the Sun; which though fome from ics glory adore, and all for its benefits admire, we (hall advance from other confiderations, and fuch as illuftrate the artifice of its malcer. Nor do we think we can CKcafe the duty of our knowledge, if we onely be*
flow the flourifh of Poetry hereon, or thofe commendatory conceits which popularly fet forth the cminency of this crcatuit ; except we afcend unto fubtilcr confiderations, and fuch as rightly undcrftood , convincingly declare the wifdom of the Creator. Which fince a Spanifh Ph yfitian hath begun, we will enlarge with our dedudionsjandthiswefhall endeavour from two confiderations its proper fituation, and wifely ordered motion. Ancf firfl we cannot pafs over his providence, in that it moveth at all ; for had it flood fHlI, and were it fixed like the earth, there had been then no diflinftion of times, either of day or year, of Spring, of Autumn, of Summer, or of Winter for thefe feafons are denned by the motions of the Sun ; when that approacheth nearefl our Zenith or vertical point, we call it SumV<ilef\mit
^^M'
Sacr.
K
(|s^
mer, when furthefl off, Winter, when in the middle fpaccs, Spring or Autumn, whereas remaining in one place thefe diftin6\:ions had ceafcd, and confequently the generation of all things depending on their viciffitudes 5 making in one hemifphere a perpetual Summer, And thus had it ^j, . l in the other a deplorable and comfortlcfs Winter. "' alfo been continual day unto fome, and perpetual night unto others i turaf dayl for the day is defined by the abode of the Sun above the Horizon,and the night by its continuance below ; fb fhould we have needed ano ther Sun, one to illuflratc our Hc'mifphere, a fecond to enlighten the other 5 which inconvenience will cnfus in what fite focver we place it, whether in the Poles,or the JE^ lator, or between them both ; no fpherical body of what bi2;nefs (o^vrr illuminating the whole fpherc of another, although ir illumin its ijmcthing more then half of a leffer, according unto the doftrinc of the Opiicks. ' Aaa His
2 54
His
Book
6.
is again difccrnable, notoncly in that it moveth at bare motion, but wonderful! in contriving the line of its revolution ; which is (o prudently effefted, that by a viciditudc ill tvcry pare of one body and light it fufficeth the whole earth, affording thereby a the earth is poffiblc or pleafurable habitation in every part thereof j and that is IiabitabJe; ^^^^ jj^^ Ecliptick ; all which to cff'eft by any other circle it had been impoflible. For firft, if wc imagine the Sun to make his courfc ouL of the Ecliptick, and upon a line without any obliquity, let it be conceived within that Circle, that is cither on the Equator, or el(e on either fide : (for if we fliould place it cither in the Meridian or Colure?, bcfidc the fubverfion of its courfe from Eaft to Weft, there would enfue the like inconimodities.) Now if we conceive the Siin to move between the oWiquity of this Eclipiiek in a line upon onf. fide of the Equator, then would the Sun be viflible but unto one pole, that is the fame which was ncarcfl unto it. So that unto the one it would be perpetual day, unto the other perpetual night; the one would be opprcfTed with conftant heat, the other with In^ fufferable cold; and fo the dcfcft of alternation would utterly fmpugn the generation of all things ; which naturally requirS a vicifli* tude of heat to their production, and no leffe to their increafe and confcrvation. , But if we conceive it to move in the Equator j firft unto a parallel fphere, or fuch as have the pole for their Zenith, it would have made neither perfcft day nor night* For being in the ^uator it would interfeft their Horizon, and be halfe above andhalfe beneath it : or rather it would have made perpetual night to both ; for though in regard of the rational Horizon, which bifefteth the Globe into equall parts, the Sun in the Equator would intcrfcft the Horifon : yet in refpeft of the fenfible Horifon (which is defined by the eye ) the Sun would be vifiblc unto neither. For if as ocular witneffes report, and fome alfo write, by rcafon of the convexity of the Earthy the eye of man under the Equator cannot difcoverboth the poles neither would the eye under the poles difcovcr the Sun in the^quat^ tor. Thus would there nothing fruftifie either near or under them : The Sun being.Hori2ontal to the poles, & of no confidcrable altitude unto parts a reafonable diftance from them. Again, unto a right fphere, or fuch as dwell under the Equator, although it made a difference in day and night, yet would it not make any diftinftion of feafons for unto them it would be conftant Summer , it being always vertical, and never deflefting from them : So had there been no fruftification at all , and the Countries fubjefted would be as unhabitable , as indeed antiquity conceived them.
wifdom
its
all,
and in
|^
.*
Laftly
It
the
pofitiod
fosver
Book
6,
dnd Common
Errors,
355
foever, although it had made a day, yet could it have made no year i for it could not have had thofe two motions now afcribcd unto it, that IT, from Eaft to Weft, whereby it makes the day, and likewire from Weft to Eaft, whereby the year is computed. For according to
Aftronomy, the poles of, the Equator are the fame with thofe of the Frinmnt Mobile. Now, it is impoffible that on the fame circle, having t(ie fame poles, both thefe motions from oppofite terms, (hould be at the fame time performed i all which is (alved, if we allow the Sun an obliquity in his annuall motion, and conceive him to move upon the Poles of the Zodiack, diftant from thefe of the
,
world 23 degrees arid aii halfc. Thus may wedifccrn the neceflity of obliquity, and hpw-incohveni^ntits motion had beeaupon a. circle ,> paraleii^o ttic-^Equatpr, or upon the^quator it (elie, J .] Now with what Providence this obliquity is determined, we fhall perceive upon the cnfuing inconveniences from any deviation. For firft, if its obliquity had been leffc (as inftead of twenty three degrees,
its
,.
twelve or the half thereof J the vicifljtude of fcafons appointed for the generation of all things, would furely have been too (hort j for diiSerent feafons would have hudled upon each other; and unto {bme it had not been much better then if it had moved on the ^qua* cor. But had the obliquity been greater then now it is, as double, or of 40 degrees ; feverall parts of the earth had not been able to endure the difproportionable differences of feafons, occafioned by the great receffe, and diftance of the Sun. For unto fome habitations the
Summer would have been extream hot, and the Winter excreani cold j likewife the Summer temperate unto fome, but exceffive and
in extremity unto others, as unto thofe who (hould dwell under the Tropick of Cancer, as then would do lomc part of Spain, or ten degrees beyond, as Germany^ and fome part of England', who would have Summers as now the Moors of Africa, For the Sun would fometime be vertical unto them : but they would have Winters like thofe beyond the Artick Circle ; for in that feafon the Sun would be re* moved above 80 degrees from them. Again, it would be temperate to fome habitations in the Summer, but very extream in the Winter temperate to thofe in two or three degrees beyond the Artick Circle, as now it is unto us; for they would be equidiftant from thatTrof
we are from this at prefent.. But the Winter would be Sun being removed above an hundred degrees, and fo confequently would not be viflble in t^cir Horizon, no pofition of fphere difcovering any ftar diftant above 90 degrees, which is the diftance of every Zenith from the Horizon. And thus if the obliquity of this Circle had been IcfTe, the viciflitude of ieafons had been fo fmall as not to be diftinguiftied 5 if greater, fo large and difproportipiQk, even as extream, the
Now
'^"
j.-^
Book^.
for its fituationjalthough it held this Ecliptick line, yet had it been fcated in any other Orb, inconveniences would enfue of condition like the former ; for had it been placed in the lowcft fpherc
Now
of the Moon, the year would have confifted but of one moncth for through every oart of the A competent '" ^^^^ ^P*^^ ^^ ^^^^ '^ would have paffed diftinftion of Ecliptick : fo would there have been no reafonable diftinftion of
*,
(eafons required for the generation and fruftifying of all things contrary fcafons which deftroy the effcfts of one another Co fudden* Befides by this vicinity unto the earth, its heat had ly fucceedirtg.
'
been intollerablc ; for if (as many affirmj there is a different (enfe of heat from the different points of its proper Orb,^nd that in the Apogeum or htgheft point (which happcncth in Cancer) it is not fo hot under that Tropick, on.thi fide the iBquator, as unto the other fide In the Perigeum or loweft art of the eccentrick (which happen* cth inCapricomusJ furely being placed in an Orb far lower, its heat would be unfufferable, nor needed w a (able to fet the world
,.
on
fire.
But had'it been placed in the highcfl Orb, or that of the eighth fphere, there had been none but ftatoes year, and a far leffi diftinftion of feafbne for one year had then been many, and according' unto the flow revolution of that Orb which abfolveth not his courfc in many choufand years, no man had lived to attain the account Thcfe are the inconvcniencies enfuing upon its fituation thereof. in the extreamqrbs, and had it been placed in the middle orbs of the Planets, there would have enfued abfurditics of a middle nature unto them; Now whether wc adhere unto the hypothcfis of Copernicm^ affirm^ ingthe earth to jnove^ and the Sun to ftand (iill$ or whether we hold, as fomeof late have concluded, from the fpots in the Sun, which appearand difappear again; thatbefides the revolution it aiakeeh with its Orbs, it hath alfo a dinetical motion, and rowls upon its own poles : whether I fay we affirm thefc or no, the illatitions before mentioned are not thereby infringed. We therefore conclude this contemplation, and are not affraid to believe, it may be literally iaid of the wlfdom ot God, what men will have figuratively fpoken of the works ofChrift. that if the wonders thereof were duly defcribcd, the whole world, that is, all within the laft circomfercnce, would not contain them.For ashis Wikdom isinfinite,focannot the due cxprcJTions thereof be finitCaand if the World comprife him nol, neither can it comprehend the fiery of him.
.*
C9urt0us Kzader^ Stumble not Ht the difagreeing numbers of the fa' gesi ffr the difcourfe is intirelj continuid^ and the numbers of the pages only a cafual mijtaf^^
Chap.
VI.
Book,
6,
5f^
^,
CHAP.
Oncerning
thf
VI.
was fiexderly peopled
Vulgar opimon^
firft
rebtions, they are fo fabulous in -D^//f^/oj flood, that they are of little For the Heathens (as Varro accounteth) make three diiiinclions of tim.e : the firft from, th^ beginning of the world unco the general Deluge oiO<iyges-, they terme Adelon, that is, a time not m.uch unlike that which was before tim.e, imm.anifeft and unknown ; becaufe thereof there is ahnoft nothing or very obfcurely delivered: for
though divers Authors have m.ade tome m.ention of the Deluge, as ^J^anethon the Egyptian Prieft-, Xenofhon de <i^e[t{ivociiy Fa^ius T'lcior de Aureofeculo^ Mar. Cato de Originibt^, znd Arc bilochn* the Greek, whoin>troduceth alfo the Teftim.ony of Mofes in his fragment de tempmbns- : yet have they delivered no account of whit preceded or went before, fofefhm^ I confefle, in his difcourfe againft Affion induced the antiquity of the J ewes unto the flood, and before from, the Teftim.ony of Humane W'riters? injRing efpecially upou^-^/^/V^of D^?</c/, pronimm ny^^ gyptitis^ and Berofm i and confirm.ing the long duration of their lives, nor, only from thefe, but the authority of Befiod^ Erathim, BelUnktfs, ^nd AgeJiUfu. "BerofHsi\\tCbaldeanVne.9c^ writes moft plainly, m.eiitionin:; the City of (;/, thenam.e ofiVc/^A and his Tons, thebuildngctf the Ark, and alfo the plac:e of its landing. And IHodorm SicMlm hath in his third book, apaflage, which exam.ined, advanceth as high as Addm J for the ChaidfOnsy. faith he, derive theOriginal of their Aftrono-
Bbb
m.ie
jyo^
mie and
ander the Great:
ry
Book.^.
now
thoufand years before the Monarchy oiAlextheyeares whereby rhey computed the Antiqui-
Lunacompute will arife unco the time of Adam. For fourty three thoufand Lunary yeares make about three thoufand fix hundred thirty foure yearesj vvnich anfwereth the Chronology of rim.efrom the beginning of the world unto the reign of Alexander, as Annim oiViterbo computeth in his Comment upon Berofm. The fecond fpace or interval of time is accounted from the flood
:
the
unto the firB Olympiad, that is, the year of the World 3174. which extendeth unto the dayes of IfAtah the Prophet, and fome twenty years before the foundation of iJow^: this they term Mythicon or fabulous, becaufethe account thereof, efpeciallyof thefirftpart, is fabuloufly or im.perfelly delivered. Hereof fome things have been briefly related by the Authors above-mentioned more particularly by Bares Phrygitu, X>iSlys:Creteyifts^ Herodotus, Diodorus Siculuj^ zndTrogfis Pompius ; the m.ofl famous Greeky OQ.ts lived alfo in this Interval, as Orpheus, LiriHs,
:
and herein are comprehended the grounds reinventions of Poetical fables, which were alfo taken up by hiftorical Writers, perturbing the Chaldean and <i/gypian Records with fabulous additions ; and confounding their names and ftories, with their
and
own inventions^
Ages, they term Hiwherein matters have been more truly hiftorified, and may therefore be believed. Of thefe tim.es alfo have been written Herodotus^ Thucydides,Xenophon,Diodorus and both of thefe and the other preceding fuch as have delivered univerfal Hiftories or Chronologies ; as (to omit Philo, whofe Narrations concern the Hebrevps,)Eu' fehius,fulius Africanus, Qrofius , * ^j do oi Vienna, Afarianns Scotm, Hi'
The
third
-^
Carion, Tineda,
Salian,
and with
us Sir
Walter Rawleigh.
Now from thefirft hereof that mofl: concerneth us, we have little or noafliftance? the fragm.ents and broken records hereof enforcing not atall ourpurpofe. And although fome things not ufually obferved, may be from thence colleiled, yet do they not advantage our dii^ courfe, nor anyway m.ake evident the point in hand. For the fecond, though it diredlly concern us not, yet in regard of our laft Medium and fome illu/lrations therin,we fl-all be confirained to make fome ufe thereof. As for the laft, itconcernes us not at all ; for treating of times far below us, it can no way advantage us. And though divers in this laft Age have alfo written of the firft, as all that have delivered the general Accounts of tim.e, yet aretheirTra6l:ates little Auxiliary unto ours,nor -afford us any light to detenebrate. aud clear the
,
Truth.
As for holy
Scripture
chere
may
alfo
feem
'
therein
Book.^.
AndCommonBrrmsl
'^f^'^Cc
*
therein but {lender information, there being only left a brief narration hereof by Mofes^ and fuch as affords no determination. For the Text deiivereth but two Genealogies, thatis, ofO/ffandi'ef^ intheiins of
''
Seth there are onlv ten defcents, in that of Cain but fevqn, and thofe in a right line with mention of father and fon ; excepting that of Lamech^ where
deducible,
it
is
and a daughter.
Notwith-
delivered therein, and what is alfo will be probably declared what i> by us intended, that is,
is
what
the populous and ample habitation of the earth before the flood.Which we fhall labour to induce not from poftulates and entreated Maximes,
of m.ens
but undeniable principles declared in holy Scripture ? that is, the length T(,atthe etrth lives before the flood, and the large extent of time from Crea- was generally
peopled before
the tlood.
lion thereunto.
WelLall only firft crave notice, that although in the rehtion oiMofes there be very few perfons m.entioned, yet are there many m.ore to be prefum.ed ; nor when the Scripture in the line of Set h nominates but ten perfons, are they to be conceived all that were of this generation The Scripture lingly delivering the holy line, wherein the world was to be preferved, firli in Noah, and afterward in our Saviour. For in this line it is maniteit there were m.any m.ore born then are named; for it is faidofthemail, th'tihey begat Tons and daughters. And whereas it is very late before it i^ Lid they begat thofe perfons which are named in the Scripture, thefooneil at ($. k mult not be iinderftood that they h>id none before; but not any in whom it pleafed God the holy line
;
fliould
be continued. And although the expreflion that they begat fons and daughters be not determined to be before or after the m.ention of
thefe, yet
muR
it
be before in fome
it is
for before
it is
faid that
^dam hewife,
andh.idafon; v^hich m.utt be one of the daughters of Adam., one of And fo for thofe whereof it is after faid, he begat fons and daughters. ought can be dif roved there m.ight be more perfons upon earth then are comar.only fupi" ofed, when Cain flew Abel nor the fad fo hainoufly to be aggravated in the circumfiance of the fourth perfon living. And v^hereas ic is fud upon the Nativity of Seth. God hath 'appointed me another feed in (lead of /ibel^ it doth not imply he had no other all this while ; but not any of that expectation, or appointed (as his nam.e implies) to m.ake aprogrelTion in the holy line; in whom the world was to be faved, and from^whom he lliould be borne, that was myftically flam
;
in Abel.
ground to induce the num-erofity of people before the the long duration of their lives, beyond 7. S. and 9. hundred
doubt,
Which how it conduceth unto populol^ty we fhall make buc if we conuder there .ire tvvo main caufes of num.erothat is, a frequent and m.ultiparous way of they filUhe world \s\i\y others, though they exill Bbb 2 "
fityin
anykinde orfpecies,
breeding, whereby
f,^^
372'
e>d(l:
Book.
5.
not longthemfelves? of a long duration and fubfiflence, whereby they do not only replenifh the world with a new annumeration of others, but alfo^ maintain the former account in themfelves. From
the
caufe TVe m.ay obferve exam.ples hi creatures oviparou?, as firft Birds and FifHty'; in verm.iparou?, as Flies, Locurts, and Gnats; inaOf the firrt there is a great nim.als alfo viviparous, as Swine and Conie^. example in the herd of Swine in Galilee^ although an unclean beafl:^ and
Of the other a remarkabh one in Jthemusy one of the Cyckdes now called Stampalia^wh^Tin from two that were imported, the number fo increafed, that the Inhabitants were conftrainedto h.ive recourfe unto the Oncle of Df/the Ifle Jfiipalea,
Others there are which make good the paucity of their breed with the length and duration of their dayes, whereof there want not examples in anim.als uniparous ; Firft, in bifulcous or cloven-hoof't, as A Million of Camxls and Beeves, whereof there is above a m.illion annually flaine Beeves yearly It is alfo faid of Job^ that he had a thoufind yoke of Oxen, in England. killed in g^^^ ^^ thoufand Cam.eh, and of the children of Ifrael pafTing into the **" * hnd of Canaan, thatthey took from, the Midianites threefcore and ten thoufand Beeves ; and ot the Arm.y ofSemiramii, that there were therein one hundred thoufand Cam.els. For Solipeds or firm.-hoofed anim.als, asHorfes, Afles, Mules, &c. they are alfo in m.ighty number, fo is it that the Midianites loft fixdelivered that Job had a thoufand ihe-Afles ry one thoufand Aftes. For Horfes it is affirmed by Diodorus, that Ni~ 7iHi brought againft the BaBrians two hundred eighty thoufand Korfes after him i'fw*>^?ij five hundred thoufand Horfes, and Chariots one hundred thoufand. Even in creatures ft6ril and fuch as do nor generate, the length of life conduceth m.uch unto the m.ultiplicity of the fpecies for the num,ber of Mules which live far longer then thiir Dam.s or Sires, in countreys where they are bred, is very rem.arkable, and far m. ore common then Horfes. For Anim.als multifidoos, or fuch as are digitated or havefeveral di:
two
that
is,
Men
their produ<Stions
The withftanding very num.erous. carrieththe young two yeares, and conceiv^eth not again (as Sdvardus
Lopez ^^tm^th) in many
vantage
years.
;
after, yet doth their Age requite thisdifadthey living com.m. only one huncfred, fometi.m.e two hundred Now although they be rare with us in Europe, and altogether un.
America, yet in the two other parts of the world they are in great abundance,as evidently appears by the relation of Cordis ab Horto, Phyfician to the Viceroy at Goat, who relates that at on 2 venation the King of Stan took four thoufand ; and is of opinion they are in other
parts in
greater"
known unto
number
though
then herds of Beeves in Europe. And unacquainted with our Northern droves
Book
6.
f.u*
-^
we coniider
;
Counrey to another
we conceive them very number of teeth tranfported from one th^y having only two great teeth, and thofe not
;
to exceed
yer muft
the
fallingorrenevMn?. As for man, the difadvantage in his-fingle ilTue is the fam.e with thefe, andinthe lateneile of his generation fom.ewh.it greater then any; yet
and not interrupted tim.e thereof, and the extent of his atprefent, if not then any other ffecies, atleaft becomes dayes, he more numerous then thefe befcre-m.entioned. Now bein^ thus numerous atprefent, and in the m.eafiTrii of threefcore, fourfcore, or an
in the connnual
dayes extended unto tlx, feven, or eight hundred, would be proportion Jibly m.ultiplied; their timiesof generation being not only multiplied, but their fubfiftence continued. For though the great Grand-childe went on, ih^ Petrucifis znd firft O- The term for though he out -lived thatperion riginal would fubfift and m.ake one of the world ; and becam.e a granger unto his proper ^''^']? ^^?^ all the term.es of confanguinity, So by compute of Scripture K^dam lived unto the ninth <="^^"S"'"f2l pro'^eny. generation, into the dayes of Lantech thetatheroF NoAh; MethufeUh accoumd,asin unto the year of the Hood; and Noah was contemporary unto all from. x\xi.AhorciEnoch \xm.o Abrahdm. So that although fomedied, the father behold- "y^""*
hundred years,
if th-^ir
their generations
ftill be very great which lived in the laliCentury, Whereas inoursbridgthe earth would fcarcexrontain their num.be r. ed and Septuagefmial Ages, it is very rare, and deferves aDiilick to behold the fourth ganeraiion. Xerxes com^hini rtill remaining ; and what he lamented in his Army, being almoll deplorable in the whole world; m.en felcoin arrivin?, unto thofe years whereby Mnhtifelah exceecednine hundred, and wh-it Adam Qim.e iliort of a thoufand, was defined icng ago to be the age of man. Now although the length of dayes conduceth m.ainly unto the num.eroiity of mankind, and it be manifeft fro.m Scripture they lived very long", yet is not the period of their lives deter.minable, and fom^e might be longer livers, then we account that any were. For(to om.it that conceit of fome, thir Ad^^m was the oldeft man, in as much as he is conceived to be created in the maturity of mankind, that is, at <o. (for in
number of
alive,
Survivors m.ult
now
aviikur aitrtrat'
dicriaujjliit
^<^*
down they begat children) fo that adding this num.ber he was 2 1 years older then any of his pofterity) that even Methtifelah was the longefl liver of all the children of Adam^ w-e need not grant; nor is it definitively fet down by Mofes. Indeed of thofe
that age
it is
(;
^zi
unto
hi?
o.
ten m.entioned in Scripture, with their feveral Ages it m.uft be true ; but whether thofe feven of the line of Cain^ and'their progeny, ox any of the fons or daughters pofierity after them out-lived thofe, is not expreffed
.in
holy Scripture
and
it
will
line of
C^/;;,
if
we concede,
that fe-
As
for
Bbb
what
374
what
is
lEnquirieUnto Vulgar
JBook.^.
not permit the life of ajiy unto a thoufand, becaufe (alluding unto that of David) no man fhould live one day in the fight of the Lord ; although it be urged by divers, yet is it methinks an inference fomewhat Rabbinical ; and not of power to perfwade a ferious Examinator. Havmg thus declared how powerfully ihe lenj^th of lives conduced unto popuIoEty of thofe times, it will yet be eafier acknowledged if we defcend to particularities, and confider how many in feven hundred years m.i^ht defcend from one m.an ; wherein coniidering the length of their dayes, we m.ay conceive the ^reateft number to have been alive
alledged, that
commonly
God would
together. And this that no reafonable fpirit may contraditl, we will declare with manifeft difidvantage ; for whereas the duration of the world unto the flood was above i^oo. years, we will make our compute in lefle then half that time. Nor will we begin with the firil m.an, but allow the earth to be provided of women fit for marriage the fecond
or third firft Centuries ; and uill only take as granted, that they might beget children at fixty, and at jin hundred years have twenty, allowing for that num.berfourtyyeares. /)[;Nor will we herein ingle out feJahj or account from the longeil: livers, but make choice of the fhorteft of any we finde recorded in the text, exceptin-, Enoch who after he had lived as .'nany yeirs as there be dayes in the year, was tranflated at 365, And thus from one /lock of feven hundred years , multiplying flill by twenty, we /hil] mid thepro ;u6l robe one thoi.frnd , three hundred forty feven m.illions , three hundred fixtyei^ht thoufand, four hundred
1
^f
-^
and twenty.
io.
2
I
400. 8000.
^,200,000. 46,000,000. 1,286,000,000.
15
I
7
I
The
Confiinmople
oi Europe,
ProducSl
'|
i,g7.,^68,i8 J
^'^^'^ ^'^^ computed by Methufelah^tht fumme had exceeded five hunthoufind m.illions. As large a number from, one ilock as m.ay be conceived in Europe ? efpecially'if in (^ortfiantlnople ^ the greateftCity thereof, there be no more then Setero accounteth? feven hundred thou-
^^^^
fand foivls. Which duly confidered, we fhall rather adm.ire how the earth contained irsinhibitants, then doubt its inhabitation ? and might conceive thedclu'.e nor fim.ply penall, but in fome way alfonecelTary, as m.any have conceived of tranflations,if ^tiam had not finned,and the race of
Now
'
Book.^
375
s^^^j
whereas fome to make good their longevity, have imagined compute were Lunnry; unto thefe we murt reThat if by a Lunary year they underftand twelve revolutions of the \ ly JV:'oon, ih.it is :5=r4dayes, eleven fewer then in the Solaryyear; there, at kart not fufficient to convince or extenuwill be no great c'irference But if by a Lunary year they mean one revolution of ate the qv.elUon. the Moon, th^tis^a moneth, theyhril introduce a year never ufed by and what is delivered before of the Hebrews, in their Civ il accompts the Chalce n years , ( as Xenofhcn giv^es a caution ) was only received in Secondly, they contradict the Scripture, the Chronology of their art>. which makes a'^plain enumeration of m.any moneths in the account of In the tenth m.oneth, in the Deluge ; for fo it is exprefled in the Te>t. Conthe frit day of the moneth were the tops of the mountains feen cordant whereunto is the relation of hum.ane Authors , Jnundationes prima novimeflris inundatio terrarum fnb prifco Ogjge* Me- ^^"Pj^^^^f lures ftiere^ ''^' par ffi foji priwum diluvium Ogygitemporibii^ notatuw^ cum sotinut loco hec nfwi^e ampliw wenftbui diem continua tjcx inumbrajjei , 1)tlcn ante cmmvem yjfs terras radiiifoUs illuminatum fortiturr.ejue ex eo mmen. And laiily, rhey fall upon an abfurdity , for they make Enoch to beget children about fix Forwhereasitis faidhebegat cJ5ffr/7///"f/<i^ at 6^^ if v^e years of aje. every m.oneth a year, he was at that time fome fix years fhall account fo many moneths are contained in that fpace of for half, and an
that the year:^ of their
:
Now
':
&
'>
time.
Having thusdecLired how much the length of m.ens lives conduced unto thepopulofity of their kind, our fecond foundation m.uft be the large extent of tim.e , from, the Creation unto the Deluge, that is (accorring unto received com.putesaboiit 165 years) a longer time then hath palled fince the Nativity of our Saviour: and this we cannot but conceive fufficient for a very large encreafe, if we do but affirm, what Th.it the earth m.ight be as popureafonable enquirers will not deny the Flood , as we can manifeft it before of years lous in that number whereas there may be conceived And num.ber after. fam.e the was in fome difadvanta :e , in-regard that at the Creation the original of m.ankind was in two perron> , but after the Flood their propagation ifliied an leaft from fix; againft this we might very well fet the length of their lives before the Flood, which were abbreviated after, and in half this Notwithftancing to fpace contrailed into hundreds rrtd threefcores. equalize accounts , we will allow three hundred years, andfo long a tim.easwe canm.inifelt from the Scripture, There were four m.en at leaft that begat children , Adam, C^in^ Seth, and ms ; fo iTnall we fairly and favourably proceed , if we affirm the world to have been as populous in fixteen hundred and fifty years before the Flood , as it was in Now how populous and largely inhibited it wag thirteen hundred after: within this period of tim.e , we fhall declare from probabilities , and feveralteflimonies of Scripture and humane Authorj.
<j
And
^^
37^
And firft , To
the
^/;^Wm^
Ark
is
/^o
r/!z/^<tj^
Book. ^.
prefumed to have
manifeft the fame neer thofe parts of the earth where refted , we have the relation of holy Scri-
pture accounting the genealogy of fafhn, Cham, and Sem, and in this lart, four defcents unto the divifion of the earth in the dayes of Pf/f/,
^uvetti!'
which time although it vveri not upon comm.on compute much above an hundred years , yet were they at this time mightily encre.ifed. Nor can we wfll conceive it otherwife , if we confider that they began already to wander from their firdh-ibitation, and were able to attempt fo mighty a work as the building ot a City and a Tower , w hofe top llould reach unto the heavens. \\ hereunto there was required no flender num.ber of perfons, if we confider the m.agnitude thereof, expreiiedby fome, and conceived to be Turris BcU in HerodctHs and the m.ultitudes of people recorded at the ere^^ing of the like or inferioar Structures for at the building of Solomons Tem.ple there were threefcore and ten thoufand that carried burden?, andfourfcorethoufand hewers inthem.ountains , befice the chief of his Officers three thoufand and three hundred ; and at the eredin^ of the Fyra.'nids in the Rei-n of King Cheops, as Herodotus reports , there were decern myrUdes , that is an hundred And though it be faid of the .'Egyptians , Vorrum thoufuid m.en. yet r'id the fums ex} ended in Garfra?}9cre worffi cafe mfa6 vioUre lick and Onyon>, amounr to no iefs rhsn one thoufand (ix hundred Ta;
:
.
&
&
-^
lents.
The
firft
is
m.entioned in Scri-
alfo
Recorded in Hu,
as befide Beroftu
for
Nimrod
of the Scriptures is Btlw of the Gentiles , and AJ^nr the Him.e with JVi^ his Succeflor. There is aUb m.ention of divers Cities , pa- tiiularlyof Nineveh and RefenexpreUed em.phatically in the Text to be a
great City.
by the
Warr of
the jVonarchs of AiVyria with the Ba5trians, Indians, Scythians, jthiopians, h rm^nians, Kyrcanians, Parthians, Periian -, Suf:an> ; they
vanquilHng (asI)/Wor/ relatedi) jEgypt , Syria, and all Afia Minor, even from. Bofphorus unto Tanais. And it is faid, th.u Semiramis in her expedition .igainif the Indian broui^ht along with her the King of Arabia. About'the lame time of the Aflyri m Monarchy, do Authors place that of the Sycionians in Greece, aitd foon after that of theArL,ives, and not very Ion j after, that of the Athenian^ under Cecrops, and within our period aflum.ed are hilloriiied many m.em.orable adions of the Greek;, as the expedition of the Argonautes, with the m.o.T: fam.ous wars of Thebes and Troy. ThatCanardi alfo and ^gypt were well peopled far within this period, befides their pl.intation by Canaan andMifraim, appeareth from
'.
rhcHifioiyof Abraham , who in Iefs then 400 years after the Flood,journeyed from. Mefopotamia unto Canaan and itgypt , both which be found
BoQk, 6.
'3^7
^^^
found well peopled and policied into Kingdomes: wherein alfo in 456 years, from threcfcore and ten perfoiis which came with Jacsb into iE* ijypt, he became a mighty Nation ; for it is faid, at their departure, there journeyed from Rhamefis to Succoth about fix hundred thoufand on foot, that were men, befides children. Now how populous the Land from whence they cam.e was, may be collected not only from their ability in commanding fuchfubje^ons and mighty powers under thefn^ but from the feveral accounts of that Kin^dome delivered by Herodotus. And how foon it was peopled , is evidenced from the pillar of their King Ohris , with this Infer iption in T)iodoriu j Mihi pater eft SMurnns deorttm junior, fum veroOfjris nx qui totHm peragravi cf bem Kfe[\ ad In-^
dicrum fints^ ad los efKoq\ [nm project hs qui Jepentricysi fubjacutt ujq; << Now a<xoroing unto the Ifiri femes, C^a/ia^ partes ttfo- udOceanttm. belt determinations Ofjri^ was Aifruim, and Sutumut Sgjftiui the fam.e after whofe name -^tgy^^t is not only called in Scri^^ture the with Cham Land of Ham, but thus m.uvh is c^llo tefti.ie.i by Fhtarch-^ for in his Treatife de Ofjride , he deUvereth th t Xg) pt v^as calleri Chawia a Chawo Ncefilio , that is from. Cham the Son of Noi^h. And if according to the confent of ancient Fathers, eAdam was buried in the fame place where Chrift was crucified, that is, Mount Calvarj, the fird man ranged far before ch^ Flood,and laid his bones m.any miles from that place, where its prefumed he received them. And this migration was the greater, if as the text exprefleth, he was c^O: out of thcJEait-fide of Para dife to till the ground, rjid as the Pofition of the Ch:irubi?fi.^ iMMyeth, who were placed atiheEaft-endofthe Garden to keip tairn^ from 1 1 'i-- c::'oLthe Tree o. life. Th.ittheextre.nn and rem.ote parts of the earth were "in'thts^TrWe inh.ihiteci is pLo in kicible from the like teftimonies; for (omitting the ni'ineration of fofphfts, and the genealogies of the Tons o( Nsah) that Jtaly was inhabited, appeareth from the Records of Liifie, and DioHalicarnajffMs^ the {lory of <tyneas, Evander, and Janitf^ njftHs,
;
' ;
Vv'ho
^"^-^
Ofnis
,
-
^nur^m
^ft//"""* were.
Anneus olVittrbo, and the Choro^raphers oi Tt'klf do, make to' No Ah. Th.tt *$*/>///> was a Ifo peopled, ism.ade out from, the frequent mention thereof in Horner ^ the Records of 'T^^Wurz/j' and others j butefpeciallyfroma rem.arkable palfee touched by Are" tius Tend Ran^aantts Bill op of LucerHtm, but fully explained by Thomas Faz..elli in his accurate Hiilory o^Sicilie; that is,- from an ancient infcriptionin a done at <Ptiw>'Wo, exprefled by him. iri'its proper characters,
\^\\^\n
and by
efi
alius potenspYteter eptndem Deum,tjef^efi alius viBcr prater euTtdem quern colimus BeHm'.Bti'jns tttrris pr^fe^us efl- Sapha^/m/Eliphar,^//* Elau/r/f-
qmdem ipjinomen efi B^ychyfed Pharath.The Antiquity of the inhabiraciorj- of Spain is alfo confirmablie j not only fro.m B^rofas in tjie plantation oiTff^'balj^ aCity continuing yet in bisnamejbut the {lory ofG'rr/w,the'rrar^Ig Ccc of
tris
jacobj?/iiIfaacJ?///Abraham.:#' turri
tttrri
hmcproxima nomen
efl
378
ErKluirlesinto Vul^i^
Book.^.
of HercHles and hU pilLirs, and efpecially a pwiflage in Straboy which advanceth unto the time of Nlr.m^ thus delivered in his fourth Book. Jht Spaf7iards (faith he) affirm thitthey have hid Lavves and Lettersabove fix thoufand yeares. Now the bpanUrdi or Ibcnam oWlcrvin^ (as A^wo^/jo;? hath celivered) (^yinnn tjuadrimeftrcm^ foure i^oneth{ unto a year, thi> compute will make up 2000, fol-iry ye.irc?, \vhlch is about the fpace of time from Straho^ who lived in the dayes of Atignfltify into the rei^n of CMinm. That Aiiitiritan'm and the Coaft of zAfricA were peopled ve^y foon, is the conjcilure of many wife men, and that by the T/;ri:;?;V;W, who left their Countrey upon the invafionof Canaan by the Ifradites.^ot befide the conformity of the Pmicl^or Carthaginian Lin^uage with th.it o^Phxnicia, there is a pregnant and very remarkable tefUmony hereof Procopiufy who in his (Qcond d:; be//ovandaiicoy recordeth, that in a town of C^iauritania Tingitana^ zhtVQ was to be feen upon two white Columns in the Phaniclan language thefe enfuing words ; Nos CMauncifumm CfHifuginiHS a facie Uhofchuctfiln JVuni^ prxdatoris. The fortunate Ifiands or Canaries were not unknown ? for fo doth Straho interpret that fpeech in Ilo/n. r of P rot cm unto CMer.eL-us.
Sed te qua terrdt fojiremus terminus extat-, Elyfium in C(.wpHm cocLftia numlna ducHnt.
like mi hr we affirm from credible hiflories both of France phJ rm.ny^ and probably .>lfo out of our own Countrey. For omitting the fabulous and lr')cin original delivered by jeofrejf of Monn.'omlXf and the exprefle text of Scripture ; that the nc^oijafh.t did people thelfles of the Gentiles ; the Britiijh Original was fo obfcure in Cafars timCy that he affirmeth thelnhnd inhabitants were ^^^ origin , that is, fuch as reported that they had their beginning in the Jfland. Thic/r /^^<^ourneighbotir-Ifl.uid was not long time without iiihabitants, maybe, made probable by fundry accounts; although we abate the l.rac ition of Bartlolartt^ the Scythian^ who arrived there three hundred years after the flood, or the relation of (j/r<?/<^/// ; thacOy^:ria the daughter of yV^/) dwelt there before. Nowfhould we call in the learned account of -S(?c/)4/^^y.s deducing the ancient names of Countreysfrom T/;d;/?iV/^/f, who by their planhave left unto very many tations, difcoveries, and fea-ne ;otiations, ^chm.(3toi<. Countreys, /^/M'WiV/^^j-dene'T.inations , the enquiry would be much '*^*"'** fhorter, and if 6/j^/' in the /*/'a?>/V/^;. -Origin il bebut the region of fc-/Vf, Lnfitania^ or/^or///^^/ the Countrey of Almonds, xlBrittanicx were at lirtt Baratanaca^ or the Land of Tinj and l hernia, or he'andy were but ikmaey or the fa rrheil h 'bituion ; anJ thefe names impofed and diffrerfed by Phxa'c'. n Colonies in rheir feveral navi ation^' i the Antiquity ofhabicationsmi^htbemore clearly advanced.
The
"
Thus
Book.^.
37^
Thus though vve have decJared how largely the world was inhabited within thefpace ofi:?oo. years, yetmufticbe conceived more popufor a greater part of the earth hath lous then can be clearly evinced ; ever been peopled, then hath been known or defcribed by Geographers, as will appear by the difcoveries of all Ages. For neither in HerodotM or ThucydUes do we finde any mention of Romcy nor in Ptolomy oivciZrny p^rts oi Europe^ Afiaoi Africa, And becaufe many places we have declared of long plantation, of whofe populofity notvvithdinding or memorable aftion* we have no ancient ftory ; if we may conjedure
of thefe by what we finde related of others, we lliall not need many words, nor aflbme the half of I ^00. years. And this we mi3ht illufirate from the mighty a^ of the Ajfyrians performed not long after the flood ; recorded by Jufilne and DioAnMS^ who makes relation of expeuitions by Armies more numerous then have been ever fince. For N'mus King of AJfyria brought againfl: the Bacirtans 700000. foot, Semiramu his Succeffor led againft the 2ooooo.horfe, lodoo.Chariors. Indians 1 500000. foot, 500000. horfe, 100000. Chariots, an3 as many upon Camels; And it is faid, Stanrobat s the /^/V King met her with greater forces then Hie brought againft him. All which was performed within lefle then foure hundred years after the flood. New if any imagine the unity of their hnguagc did hinder their difperfion oefore the flood , wc confefle it fome hindrance acfirftjbut not much afterward. For though it mi-^ht reftrain their difperfion, it could not their populofity; which neccflfarilie requireth tranfmigration andemiifion of Colonies, as we reade of Ro varjs^Gretkj.Pha/V/^^j in ages paft, and have beheld examples thereof in our dayes. We may alfo obferve that after the flooi before the confufion of Ton:^uesmenbeg.in todifperfe: fcr it is faid, they -ourneyed towirds and the Scri^^ture it f-lf exprefl'eth a neceffity conceived of the Eaft
,*
Tower is fo delivered
in
the text, Left we be fcattered abroad upon ih^ f ice of the earth. Again, ifnnYimaj.ine the plantation of the earth more eafic in regard of Kavi.ation and Shipj-ing discovered fince the flood,whercby the
and divic'ed parts of the eatth are now inhabited; ^^ 'l^"^ *''^^" Whether an whether there were Iflands or no before th- flood, i^ not yet iflmds before determined, and is with probability denied by very learned Au- the Fiood.
Iflands
fider that
thots.
apprehenfioh that it was lefle inhabited, about a 120. years before the fiood, and it came to pafle that when men began to mulrirly upon the ficeof the earth. Befide that this m.ay be only meant of the race of Caln^ it will noc import they were not multiplied before, but that they were at that time plentifully encreafedrfor fo is the fame word ufed in other parts oi Scripture. And fo is ic afterward in the gJChaper faid, that No..h began to be
Lafily, if
it is
we
fliall lall
into
becaufe
faid in Gen. 6.
aa husbandman, that
is,he
aits therof:
c c a
To
^S6
Book.^,
fo itis faidof our Saviour, that he began ro caft them out rhac boi^ht and fold in the Temple, that is, he aitually caft them out, or v^ith alacrity effeeled ir. Thus have I declared my private and probable conception.' the
enquiry of this truth, but the certainty hereof let the Arithmetickof the laft day determine ; and therefore expCvft no further belief then proOnlydefire men would not fwallow dubability and reafon induce. bioficiesfor certainties, and receive as* principles points mainly controvertible
; for we are to adhere unto things doubtful in a dubious opinative way. It being reafonable for every man to vary his opiand nion according to the variance of his reafon, and to affirm one day
Wherein although at laft we mifl'e of truth ; notwithlianding in harmlefle and inoffenfive errors, becaufe we adhere unto that, whereunto the examen of our reafon 5, and honeft enquiries induce us.
what he denied another.
vve die
CHAP.
VII.
OfEafandiVeJf.
THe next
fkail be
and con-
which hath been the obvious conception of Phiiofophers and Geographers, magnity'ing the condition of India^ and the Eaftem Counabove the fetring and occidental Climates, fome afcr&ing treys,
hereto the generation of gold, precious ftones and fpices, others the and naturalendovvm.entsofmen conceiving the bodies of this fiojation to receive a fpecial im.preflion from the firft Salutes of the Sun, and fom.e appropriate influence from his afcendent and oriental radiations. But thefe proprieties affixed unto bodies, upon coniiderations deduced from Eaft, Weft, or thofe obfervable points of the Sphere, howfpecious and plaufible foever, will not upon enquiry bejuftified
civility
;
is no Eaft and VV^eft in niture,nor are thofe abfolute and invariable,but refpe^live and mutable points,according un-
t different longitudes, or diftant parts of habitation, whereby they fuffer miany and confiderable variations. For firft, unto fom.e the fam.e pare will be Eaft or Weft in refpe6t of one another, that is, unto fuch as inThus habit the fame parallel, or differently dwell from Eaft to Weft.
as
unto Spaif?y Itnly lieth Eaft, unto Italy Grccc , unto Gre c- Terfia, and unto Perjta China ; fo again unto the Countrey of Chwa^ perjia lieth Weft, unto Terfia Greece ^ unto Greece Italy ^ and unto Italy Spain. So that the fame Councrey is fometimes Eaft and fometimes Wtft ; ^^^ Vnrc ^rfm though Eaft unto Greice^ yet i? ic Weft unto China,
Book.^.
andCommntrrours:
^.gj
p'^iV
/
Unto other hibirations the fame poinc will bebwh Eaft^tnd Weft ; thofe that are Antipodes, or feited in points of the Globe diauiito as metrically oppofed. So the Americans are Antipodal unto the Indians,
is both Eafl and Weft i>rtto America , according one fide or ths other , to the right or to the from as it il-iall be re^-arded middle point , either by Eaft or Weft any from out fetting and kfr , the diftance unto the place intended is equal , iitdin the fame fpace of
rr-j
,.
To a third chat have the Poles for their vertejc , or dvVell in the portion of a parallel fphere , there will be neither Eaft flor Weft , at leaft For if ( as the name Oriental implyeth ) the greateft parr of the year, they llall account that part to be Eaft where ever the Sun arifetb, or
that
is
occidental or fetteth
For half- the year it is. below they have n^^ither the one nor thfe other. their Horizon , and the other half it is continually above it , and circling round about them. interfe6leth not th^ Horizon , nor leaveth any
And if (which will feem very reafonable ) that parr 11 ould be term.ed the Eaftern point., where the Sun at jEquinox, and but once in the year arifeth , yet will ttiis ,alfo difturb the cardinal accounts, nor will it with profiriety admit that appellation. For that
part^ for this com.pute.
fiirely cannot be occoujited Eaft , which hath the South on both fides j which ftotwithftanding this pofition m.uft have. For if unto fuch as live under the Pole , that be only North which is above them. , that m.uft b^ Southerly which is belowthem ; which is all the other portibn of th^ Globe i befide that part poilefled by them. And thus thefe points of Eatft andAA'eft being not abfolute in any,refpeaive in fom.,and not at all realting into othe'rsiwe ranot hereon eftabliOi fo general conriderations,nor
reasonably erel fuch im.utable afl'ertions, upon fo unftable foundations. Now the ground that begat or promoted this conceit , was fintamiftake in the apprehenfion of Eaft and V/eft , confidering thereof as of
the
North and South , and computing by thefe as invariably as by the o* ther; but herein, upon fecond thoi^hts there is a great diiparity. For the North and Southern Pole , are the invariable terms of that Axis whereon the heavens do move and are therefore incommunicable and Wbattiit fixed points; whereof the one is not apprehenhble intheothdr. But Northern and ^"'>*"^ole9: otherwife for the quite is revolution of with Eaft and Weft it ; the Orbs
;
being
all
and wherefoever therein the Eaft point be determined by fuccelTion of parts in one revolution every point becomieih Eaft. And fo if where the Sun a;ifeth,that part be termed Eaft, every
the Axis are mutable
habitation differing in longitude, will have this pbiriC alfo different; in as
much as the Sun fucceflively arifeth unto every one. The fetond ground , although it depend upon the former
eth nearer the effect
;
approach* out and divided according to priority of afcent; whereby his influence is con^ Cccj, ceived
,
and that
is
fet
'7' >,
382
ceivd
tate India
Book.^.
more favourabk unto one Country then another, aiid to felicimore tl>en .my after. But hereby we cannot avoid abAirdities,
as infer effe^ls
and fuch
For
firft,
by the fa-nc
we affirm the /i<^/4;< richer then the American^ the yfwf/'*crf will a ho be more plentiful then i^t Indian, and England or Sfnin mere fruitful then Ht/pajjia/a or golden Caftle in as much as the Sun
reafcn that
,
;
one looner then the other 'ny Nation fubjedled unto the fime parallel v-erfity of longitude from each other.
arifeth unto the
try
Secondly, an unfuft'erableabfurdity will enfue: for thereby a Counmay be more fruitful then it felf: For India ig more fertiie then SfAin^ becaufe more Eail, and that the Sun arifeth firft unto it Spain likewife by the ftm.e reafon more fruitful then America , and tAmericn
:
tiien India
fertile
fo that Sfain
it
is lefs
fruitful
lefs
Country then
felf excelleth.
Laftly, If we conceive the Sun h.ith any advantage by priority of afcent, or makes thereby one Country more hippy^then another , we introduce in^uditiable determinations , and impofe a natural partiality on that Luminiry , which bein^ equidift mt from the earth , and equalSSegemmit
exerciut.
in ihe Eaft as in the Weft , hi 5 Power and Efficacy in both ^X removed places muft be equal , as Boeti^u hith taken notice, and Scaiiger h^Lih graphicjlly. declared. Some have therefore forfaken this refuge of
Sun , and to falve the effect h.we recurred unto the ini-uence of the Stars , making their activities Nationil , and appropriating their Powers unto particular Re2,ions. So Cardan conceivcth the tail of Vrfa Major peculiarly refpei^eth En'ope whereas indeej once in 24 houres it aJfo abfoJveth its courfe over AJia and America. And therefore it will not be eafie to apprehend thofe Stars peculiarly glance on us , who muft of neceffity carry a co nm.on eye and regard unto all Countryes , unto whom their revolution and verticityis aho
the
:
common.
The effedls
therefore or different produl- ion > in fever,^ Countryes,
which we impute unto the adion of the Sun, muft furely have nearer and more immediate caufes then that Lum.in.iry. r^nd thefc if we place in the propriety of cli me , or ccnlition of fo'l wherein they are produced, we lliall m.ore reifon.ibly proceed, then they wh'>aicribe themuntotheadliviry of the Sun. Whofe revolution bein^ re_ul'r, it hath no power nor efficacy peculiar from, its orientality but equilJy difperfeth his beams , unto all which equally , and in the fvm.e reftriAnd being an imiverfal and indefinite a^^ent, dtion , receive his luftre. tlie^ffeils or productions we behol i , receiv: not thdr circle from his
,
or quali, but are determ.ined by the principles of the place , of that Region which adm.its them. And this is evident not only JKgem.s, m.inerals, and miett^ils, butobfervableinpljntsandanim.als; jvhpreof fome ,are common unto many Countfycs , fome peculiar unto
caufality
ties
,,
Book.^
Ad Common
Srrours.
3 S3
J/^Jf
^
^^^^*^g
of all f bin- s wifely contrivin.^ the-.n in their proper feminaries, "nt commode and where they beft maintain the intention of their fpeties, whereof tics of fevcral if iheyhcivenota concurrence, rnd be not lodged in a convenient Countrycs. fr.atiix, they are not ext iced by the efficacy of the Sun; or failinj in particular c'ufes , receive a relief or futfitient promotion from the univerial. For although fuperiour powers co-operate with inferiour JClivities , snd !riay (as lome conceive) carry a ftroke in the pis' 1-Iickandf:;rm?.ave dnnight of all things, yet do their determinations belong unto particular agents, and are defined froir. their proper printiples. 1 hiis the Sun which with us is fruitful in the generation of Fro; s, To.-ds2ixl Serpents , to this effeil proves impotent in our wherein as in all other carrying a comm^n afpec^, ic' neighbour IflanJ concurrerh but inro [ reciifpofed efels; and only fufciwtes thofe forms, vvhofe determinations are feir.inal, and proceed from the Idea of them;
felves.
Novvvvhereas there be m.any obfer\'ations concerning Eaft, and divers conhderations dt Art which feeni to extol the quality of that'
unaeriiood they do not really prom.ote it. That the from the Afcendent , that is the firfthoufe of the heavens, whofe beginning is toward the Fall, ic y^^, doth not advantage the conceit. For , heeflabliihetb not his Judge- gicafjui) . mentupon the oriaitality thereof, but confidereth therein his hrft ments rpon afcent above the P.orizon ; at which time its efficacy becomes obferva- Nativitksbe ble, and is conceived to have the I'lgniHcation of life , and to refpetl: the* "J?*" f">*n the condition of all things, v\hich at the fame tim.e arile from their cau- " ^^"''^'^fit'-i ^ andafcend to the Horizon with it. Now this afcenfion indeed but as we have delivered before , iii falls out refpeilivel) in the Eaft fome r options there is no Ealkrn pointfrom. whence to ccm.pute thefe ^'oisit in a parallel fj-b. re for unto them fix houfes are afcentions. continuallvdeprefled, and fix never elevated and the planets themfelves , wnofe revolutions are of more fpeed , and influences 6i higher confideration, m.uft find in that place a very im.perfeift regard; forhalf their peric&d they abfolve. above , an<i halt' beneath the Horizon. And I'o for fix years , no man can have the hap^ inefs to be born under fupiter : sndfor ijfteento^etherall mutt efcape the afcendent ciominionot'Saturit.y \ci -.'.i^i That Arijlotle in his Politicks , commends the fituation of a City which is open towards the Eaft, and admitteththe rayes of the rihng" Sun, thereby id implied no m.ore particular efficacy then in the Weft: But that f ofition is comTr. enc'ed , in regr'rd the damps and vaparous exhalations ingendred in the abfence of the Sun, are by his returning rayes the fooner difpelled ; and men thereby the m.ore early en;oy a
point,
ii'
rightly
'.
'
i.
'
Upon
the
like
consideration
it
is ,
thr
771, 3^4
'
f^pirifS iKtorulgay
th^C i'^/JiWJ* r^rro
Boo)t, ^,
'
P<W W'*^*
'
pin, ^.
comm^ndeth the fai^ fituation , and expofeth hi* F^r-m unto the iquinoxial afcent of the Sun , and that PAlladim advifeth the Front of his Edifice llioqid fo refpci\ the South , that in the rifing rayes of the winter Stinne , and defirlt angle it receive the cline a little from the winter letting thereof. And concordant hereunto is the inftruiUon of Cohmelhy De fofitme vi[U which he contriveth into Sunimer and winter habitations, ordering thit thi \A inter lodgings regard the \\ inter afcent of the Sun , that is South-Eaft ; and the rooms of repaft at Supper , the ^Equinoxial fetting thereof, that is the Wert th.u the Summer lodgings regard the iEquinoxial Meridian: but the rooms of cxnation in the Summer , he obverts unto the Winter afcent , that is, South-Eall ; and the Balnearies or bathing places, th^t they may remain under the Sun until evening , he expofeth unto the Summer fetting, that i>, North-Wefl , in all which, although the Cardinal points be mtroquced , yet is the confideration Solary , and onely determined unto the afpeil or vifible reception of the Sun. Jewes and Mahometans in the.fe and our neighbour parts are obfervfid jto ufe fome gellures towards the Eaft , as at their benediilion , and ti^e.ikilting of tbyir meat; And though iB^ny ignorant fpe6^ators, and 170^ a few of th<; actors conceive fome-Magick or m.yftery therein , yet is the Ceremony only Topical, and in a mem.orial relation unto a place they honour. So the jewes do carry a refreil and cijft an eye upon Jerufalem foj: which pratlice they are not without the example of their Forefathers, and the encouragement of thrir wife King; Forfeit is fiiid that I}anfl went into his houfe , and his vvindowes being o^^ened towards, ^frtilfkm , he kneeled upon his knees three times a day , and hat prayer or prayed. So is it exprefl'ed in the prayer of Solomon ,
'.
Itt^eii.
fupplicationfoeverhem.adebyany man, which lliall fpread forth his hands towards this houfe if thj? people go out to battel , and ihall gray unto tha Lord toward^ the City which thou haft chofen , and c6f ward; the hou^ which I have chofln to build for thy Name , then hear* tbou in heaven their prayer and their fuppiication , and maintain their caufe. Now the obferva-tion hereof, unto the Jewe^ that are dif^^erfed VVi^ftward, and.fuchasmort converfe withus), diredeth their regard unto the Eaft But the words cf Solomon are appliable unto all quarters of Heaven and by the Jev\:es of the Eafl andLSouth muft be regarded in a contrary polition. So Dariiel in Babylcn looking toward ^er^/<^f,, h^dhis face toward theWefJ;. Sa! the Jewes in their own land looked upon if from all quarters. For the Tribe of Judah beheld it to the North Manaffes, Zfihulon and Nepthali unco the South iim^f and <v^ unto the VVeft only the Tribe oi Dan regarded it dixe^Uy or to the due Eaft. So when it is,'Tid, when you fee a Cloud therife out of the We(l , you fay there cometh a lliower^ and.fo it-is .o^f^rvatiott was refpeitiye unco jndM nor. is this ^ reafonableillation
:
in
$iy> mUI the winds brought rain from liiat quarwr; But this confides, ration cannot be transferred \mto India oi China ^ which have a, vail SeaEaflward, and a vafter Continent toward the Weft. Solikewife when it is faid in the vulgar Tranflation , Gold comcth out of the ^'^^* North , it is no reafonable inducement unto us and many other Countryes , from fome particular mines feptentrional unto his (ituaticn , to fearch after that mettalincoldand'Northern Re^ons, which we moft plentifully difcover in hot and Southern habirations. For the Mahoraetans,as they partake with all Religions in fomeching^ For in their obferved ^eftures , they fo they imitate the Jew in this. hold a regard unto Mecha ^nd Medina Talnabi , two Cities in Arabia fdiix i wheEe their Prophet was horn and buried ; whither they peDand from whence they exped he tliould' return fQi:m their pilgrimages And therefore they direct; their foces unco thefe part* ; vvbicb again. untothe. Mahometans of ^4r^^7 and -E^7;>t lie Eaft, and are ili fome Wherein notwithftand' p<>int thereof unto many other parts of Turky. ingjhere u no Oriental refpeiV; for with the fame devotion on the orther fide they regard thefe pares toward the- Weft;, and. fo with variety wherefoever they are feated^ coforming -unto the ground of their con:
ception.
Fourthly, Whereas in the ordering of the Camp of //rae/, the Baft is appointed unto the Nobleft Tribe , that is the Tribe of' fft^Mh, according to the command of God , In the Eaft-fide toward the lifing of the Sun, lliall the Standard of the Tribe of yw^i^ipitch if doth' not Num.%, For herein the Eaft- is not to be taken peculiarly extol that point. ftridly,butasirrit:nineth or implyeth the foremoft.phce; for ^i/^^ had the Van , and many Count ryes through which they pafled were feattThus much is implyed by the Original , and e^i. ed Eafterly unro them prefled by Tranflations which ftriitly confonn thereto : So TrwteliMt
quarter
: .
Andfaniju, CafirahabenttHtnabtinteriere^arteOrieyitem vtrftti ^ ixxih lumef^o cajirorum Jtide-^ fo hath R. Sobtacnjatichi&cgormd^iz^x^t foremoft, or before, u the Eaft quarter ,andi the VVeft is called behinde. And upon this interpretation may all be Gilved that is alledgi^ ble againft it. For if the Tribe of Jftdah were to pitch' b^fisre the Ta* bernacle at the Ea(l , and yet to march firft , as is commanded , ^umiK ic. there muft enfue a diforder in the Camp V nor couid they conveniently obferve the execution thereof; For when^ they fete oat; fro!ft ./I/f J/;74 6 where the Command was dehvered , they m^ide-b^Ki*ward unto Rithmah from Rijfah unco Ezicftgaber , abouc fourtfeeft ftitions they marched South: From Almon DUlatk'airt^ itito\.\A\ ihit Mountains of Tabarim and plains of Moab towards fordan the fa':e of their march was Weft So that if fftdah were ftriclly to pitch iAl-tht-Eaft of the Tabernacle, every nif.ht he encamped in the Rear And if ( as fome conceive ) the whole Camp could not be
Ddd
Jefs
^/y-f
gStf
lefs
Book.tf*
it
marched foremoft
or fet out
firft
had been prcpofterous for him to hive who was moft remote from the place
Whefe the
f^'^'^if^k*' thinic. lomc
U
'
to be approached. Fifthly , That Learning, Civility and Art^ hid their beginning in the Eaft , it is not imputable either to the ailion of the Sun , or its Orien%i\\X}j , but the firft plantation of man in thofe parts , which unco Ett^ refpea of Eaft. For on the mountains of Ararat ^ r^'f? do carry the ^^^^ ^^ p^^ ^^ ^^^ j^-j j j-^^^^ ^ between the Eaft-Indies and Scjrthh, as Sir W. Raleigh accounts it , the Ark of Noah refted ; from the taft rhey travelled that built the Tower of BAbel : from thence they were difberfed and fucceflfively enlarged, and Learning good Arts , and all Civility communicated. The progreflion \^hereof was very fenfible ; and if we confider the diftance of time between the confuficn of Babel , and the Civility of many parts now eminent therein , it traveUed late and flowiy into our quarters. For notwithftanding the learning of Bardes and Druidejof elder times, he that fhall perufe that work of Tacittu de moribni Germanorum , may eafily difcern how little Civility two thoufand the like he may observe concern^ years had wrought upon that Nation jng our felves from the fame Author in the life of ^gricola , and more
:
difparagement of thofe that glory in the antiquity of their Anceftors, affirm the Britains were fo fimple , that though they abounded in Milk, they had nor the Artifice of Cheefe. LaftJy, That the Globe it felf is by Cofmographers divided into Eaft and Weft, accountingfrom the firft Meridian, itdoth not eftablifli this conceit. For that divifioais not naturally founded, but artificially fet down, and by agreement; as the apteft terms to define orcommenfurate the longitude of places. Thus the ancient Cofmographers do place
the divifion of the Eaft and WefternKemifphere, that is the firft term of longitude in the Canary or fortunate Iflands ; conceiving thefe parts the extreameft habitations Weft ward But the Moderns have altered that term , and trimfl.ited it unto the Azores or Iflands of Saint Michael^ and that upon a plaui.ble conceit of the fmali or infenhble variation of the Compafs in thofe parts , wherein neverthelefs , and thoueh upon fecond invention , they proceed upon acomm.on nndno appropriate foundation; for even in that Meridian farther North or South the Com.pafs obfervably varieth ; and there are alfo other places wherein it variefh not , as Alphonfo and Rodoriges de Lagn will have it jbout Gapo de la* ^Agttllasm Africa^ as^-/<ro/cjaftirmethin the (horcof Pelcponne/w in Europe: and as (y7^fr/w averreth , in the midft of great Regions, in moft parts of the earth.
:
CHAp^
Book.^.
mdCommfi Err0ttru
i^f
jpr
CHAP. VIIL
Of
the
%iver Nilm,
uncontroulably and under general confent many opinions , which notvvithftanding upon due examination, do admit of doubt or reftri6lion. It is generally efteemed, and by m.oft unto our dayes received , that the River Nllui nath feven oltiaries ; that is, by feven Channels disburdneth it felf into the Sea. Wherein notwithfbnding, befide that we find no concurrent determination of agespaft, and a pofitive and undeniable refute of thefe prefent ; the affirmative is mutable, and m.uft not be received without all limitation. For fome , from whom, we receive the greateft illuftrations of Anti-^ tjuity, have made no mention hereof ; So//afrhath given no nuni-" per of its Channels, nor fo m.uch as the name thereof in ufe with all Hiftorians. Sratoflenes in his defcription of <^gyft hath likewife pafled
are paflant
HEreof
Arlflotle is fo indiftintl in their names and numbers, that of Meteors he plainly affirmeth the Region of zyg/pt (which ^^^^ we efte'em the ancienteft Nation in the world)wa?a meer gained ground, (^^ ^ became and that by the fetling of mud and limous matter brought down by the dry laad. Rfiver A//i, that which was at firlt a continued fea, was raifed at laft into a firm' and habitable Countrey. The like opinion he held of Meorts Talut^ that by the floods of Tanals and earth brought down thereby it orew obfervably fhallower in his dayes, and would In procefs of time b^piife a firm land. And though his conjefture be not as yeefulfilled, yeif is the like obfervable in the River Gil on-, a branch of Euphrates and Oliver of Paradife , which having in former Ages difchatged it felf into the Perfian Sea , doth at prefent fall fliort ; bein^ loft in the Lakes oi CI: aided., and hath left betvveen the Sea, a large and confiderable part >.'.';''' of dry land. ;; Others exprefly treating ^h^reof, have diverfly delivered them.felves; J^erodotm in his Euterpe makes m.ention of feven ; but carelefly of two thereof; that is BaiiinKum, and Bucolicnmy for thefe, faith he, were not the natural currents, but made by Art for fome occafional convenience. Strr.ho in his Geo?japhy naming but two , Teleufiacttm and r^A?;?/f?/w V plainly afh"mieth\here were many more then feven; In../> t(rha'callaqmtjejuey&c.'\\\txt ZTQ. {{^\xh\\^) m.any remarkable towns within the currents of Njlc efpecially fuch which have gi^***n the' nam.es unto the Oftiaries thereof, not unto all, for they are eleven, ahd ^ur belides , but unto feven and m.oft confiderable that is CanoficMmy
them
over.
firft
in the
^^
'
,.
Bo/i^itimm
Se/efifjeticum
SebenKet'ia^my 'VharHnictim
Mendejttitni'
,
TanklcHm mdi
of the
artificial
up the num.be r
one
f/^'^j
Ttobmj an
^A-gyf-^
Ddd'
'
^74
t^8
Enfthies
tHHVul^
Bo6k, 5V
tian^ and born at the Tf //*/ mouth oi Nile , in his Geography makethnine: and in the third Mi]|>56f^//*t, ha^h unto their mouths prefixed their feveral Names; Heracieoticnm , Bolbiiinum ^ SebenneticHm,
'Plrjepmm-, Diolcos-,
:
^^athm
trvftrnf
^eftdejinm-, Tanlt'icam
Teleujia-
then three different T//7. All which comidered , we may eafily difcern that Authors accord iiot either in name or rium1?er f and muft needs confirm the Judgemeht of Maglmfs , deOfiiorum NilinHr nomhtilfHs ) valde ahtt^uifcriptoresdifcordant. mero Modern Geographers and travellers do much abate of this number, for as vi/^//W and others obferve, there are now biit three or four moneths thereof; as 6'//V//^ T^r/W long ago , and Bellon-ui fince, both occular e^jnirers with others have attefted, For below C^/Vi?, the River divides itfelf into foiir branches , whereof two make the chief and navigable ftreams, the oiie runnmg to Tf/A^/T/^w of the Ancients, and nOYfDamiata-y the other unto ^<?w/>/W , and now i^c^/c.-rr^ ; th^ tf*i<<.R<lation other two, faith Mr>, Sandys , do run betweeii thefe ; but poor in waOf thofe feven mentioned by Herodotpu , and thofe nine by Tr a* ter.-. iomy t thefe are all X "could either fee or, hear of. Which much confirmetih the teftimony of the Billiop olTyre , a diligent and occular ^nqnlwonder much rer\ who in his holy war doth thus defiver hiihfelf. at the Ancients, wno affigned feven mouths unto Nilm : which we no otherwife falve, then tnat by procefs of tim.e, the face of places is altered, and the River hath loft his channels ;^ or that our fore-fathers did never obtain a true account thereof. :-,.;.,,. 'r\^n'^- ,\i And therefor^ when it is faid in holy yrr//>/rf , The torS^ih^f terly deftroy the tongue of the J^gyplan i^^ ^ and with his rhi^^ J|a.i|. X Ji If. ^^^ y^ ^^jj ^^^ j^-^ y^^^^ ^^gj. j.j^ Riyej. >ind fliall fmite it in the fethere are
lefs
no
We
c^
/^
.^
If this expreffion
coh^
cerneth the River Nllm-iit muft only refpeit the feven principal ftreams. But the place is very obfcure , and whether thereby be nor m.eapt the River Sufhrates , is not without good controverlie , as is colledibfc ff om the fubfequent word? ; And there ftiall be an highway for the remr nant of his people, tbat fhall be left from y4^r/< , and from the bare. gf^H9Ui* name^/Wr, emphatically ftgnifying Sn^hrMes^ and thereby the dieST\ X ^^" ^^ f h^ Ajfyrian Stnplre into many fra6lions , which might faciIj, litafe their rff^r: as Grotlm hath obferved ; and is more plainly made out, if the ^p<?crr/'/' of ^_f^r^, and that of the ^f<7c^/;'// have any rer Vf|ii6.ix.
'
ladonhejeta LaftV^', whatever was or is their num.ber , the contrivers pf C'^rJs and Maps afford us no afl'urance or conftant defcription therein. For whereas Ttolomy hath fet forth nine , Hondlm in his Map of Afrlcat makes but eight, and in that of Europe ten. Ortelim in the Map of the Turkjfh S^jHpre , fetteth downeight , in that oi^yfg^ypt eleven ; and M^gtnw in his Map of that Gonntrey hath obferved the fame number.
.
And
cHversOtReir^.
fafthcfy wflihailithderffe fimtftllvcffllty ^'d aifto^g '" c' ' ..: hj : m'; ;; i/.-- - .:u;' :: . r: :. ;; -.
-
Thas may
fVciHIy
\\-fe
a^t'buntita'srferentlyreiitecl
byth^
Ancient ^^ that
Wel^e
k is wickhiably rejelled bytthe M<^derrt*y and rhuit be For if we receive them all into account, they received by any.
more then fev;:ti, if Grtlythdnaturil^UceSj they wefe fewer; and hovverer we fe^^ive*h'em, there Ys no a^reiable 'iiid cortft^nt defcriptibn thivecf. And- therefore hbW teafonable'if is to draW cohtinitaland durable t^edu^lions from alterable ^nd tthd^tfaih Foundational let theih confid^r who make the gates of T/^(r^f!r, and the rnouths bf this Rivei: a confianr and continued periphrafis for this number, and in tbeir Poetical expreflions do giVe ihe' 'Rivef^ihat Epithite utitio^ cft2^
i^. The fame River
this
' -
'
/,
!'
'
^:-'
\
feafth,
--^^^
is
alfo acc<&\inted
Pater.)''3Lnd
rhle!
greaiteft
df the
baH^
:
thtvtliotQFlHvidrH7
\yyOrt<^iitt)
if
b6
ti-ue,
many Maps
ffiuft^be
>..:. .^-..^ '. laiii r; r-^ gbpfl^ATufhor^ reiiouncecl-// Fof firft, in the delincatiftift t<f Ifiiny Maps of J^frica, the RIt*? iVr^Vcrexcecdeth it about ten degrtesifi length, that'4^j flo Ifefleth^
beyond thb ^Cquatot ic maketh Nbft^ and deHetog afte t We{ilward,' \vitHou^ 'WA ^riWers, c'dntinueth ^teit courfe ^boiit 40: degiree^j and at length Avich hfiny ^reat Cutfelits dlsbtirdeiieth'itT^lf inf thfe Occidental Ocean. Again,' if we credit the defcriptions of go6d Authors, other Rivers excel yirrihrtiss 'in4i{| hiffery o? '^ iexdt^etef'^ it^irtlength;6rbreadth,orboth.
ilk
mm^fed
Wileis.
i ^.'
For
arifing
'
mrd^il'rhoft
degf ees,
'
'
VVliichJ^tryyjtfeedfaihg
if hfet inleftg-th,
^etin breadth^ndde^^ti'nly.%i
grai?fed fo'^kcelit. T6r the magnitude of 'N'tlvi^ tioftdfteth in th^ Amenfiondf lt)r{gitude,afldis inconfiderable in the o^r ; vvhat-ftr^ftl
it
nafi, iel^i'tioris
maintaineth beyond ^/f;?^ or ^f>^a-). and fo forward unto its- ori^i^ ate Ve'tyim^ffea; butbefbvv the'fe jplaeei, addftfther relrfoved fr6m theh^d,' the cutreiitis but lYai^rbw, afici wer^a^i^eiH the HiSory of the 7'^ri(>', the-"r^rf^r horfemen\df'5f7^,li, fftani over tl^A^/Vf from Ckiro^ to meet the ioitt^o^Tbrionibiiii. B'a^tifia penitura(y *<''<<' N: 5f<?rf //? expi^fly treating hereof,' preferreth the River 6fP/^rfin
^i
Ocean in
'"
before they approafch-fo near as'ib Which by Ctrrdav is teriii'ed j:hat is the Rjiver Ore^ liana iri the fame Coit^sMaglm^s delivereth, hath been' navii^ated dooo. tinent;, which, miles ';^ a'ild bj>ens in a chaiinel of ninety leagues broadi fo that, as ayf- ro/?^ an ocular vvitrtefle, recordeih, they that faik in the middle, caxii iteait^ no HridoFeithcrflde.
it
exceedefd by that
'
ofmisMertionwas
Pdds.
of:
(^-"i
J^o
'.
Book.^.
of ,^hptAncitit5j arifmg from the indifcovery of its head For as things unknown feem greater then they are, and are ufually received with amplifications above their nature; fa might it a I fo be with this River, whcfe head being unknown, and drawn to a proverbial obfcurity, the opinion thereof became wichout bounds; and men mult needs con* ceit a large extent, of that to which the difcovery of no man had fee ^ period. And this an ufiial way to give tjie fuperlatiye unto things of en
aiid when a thijlg is very great, prefently to detobe-thegreateftofall. "VShercas indeed Superlatives are difficult ; whereof there being but one in every kinde, their determinations are dangerous, and m.uft not be made without great circumfpeilion. So the City of Ao,f ismagnihed by the Latlms to be the^reatelt of the earth ; but time and Geo^ raphy inform us, that Cairo is bigger, and ^ififujfinChiftahr exceedeth.both. So isQlymfm extolled by the Gre kj) as aa hill attaining unto heaven ; bur the enlarged Geography of aftet-times m.akes fjght account thereof, when they difconrfe of -^-
minency inany^kind;
fine
it
The greatcft
Cities cf the
World.
The higheft
Hills.
So have
all
Ages conceived,
;
and nioft;
Wren is rhe leaft of Birds yet uhe ndeven of our own plantations havefliew*
ihfe
toaim9.
K^d truly,kinde, as
it is
matter, but irr^olli?!^ truly .fOvCprnpreh^^nd^Godj who in^Jee^ if and approachall thii^gs.u;^ppri 4i;i;>gs as they ariijj unto ',p^^^ untoGod;.of defcend. to im|verft:6i*Gn, -and drayv nearer unto nor, thing, fall both imperfe611y into our apprehenlions, the one being
very difificultjo define JthemiA>!iiibl& things u^iio is iti^ is no .<*afie kj^f^n: tq >-oinprehend the and the afel:ipns of thai ,vvhich isney.tnoi^hbouf unto
nothing,
too weak
other.^
for- oiiTrrconccption,
our
conception too
Thirdly, diy^^ cpnff^tions there arc <pncernin; its iiicrem^nt or iiirr ^n^atipn. Xhefir(^unyv*irily opinions^ that this encreaieorannual or veriptowing is proper umo Jv^//^, and not agreeable unto, any orher R^ ver ; which notwithdandiii::; is common unto many currents of -(<(fr/c^,.
For about the fame ytinie the River N/t>^fr ;^i\^ Zaire do overiflovvi and fo do the Rivers beyond the MountainS'.of the Moon, as Suaftja, and Spirlro Snu: o. And not only the fe in^y^fnca, bur feme aUb in /^, rop and v^/?W, .for fo.it is re^pprt^dof ^'^<'?M?'/.^'*^ ^^4 ^^ dothr^^ctfro report of Djiiyia in Lii^oni^ f.iind ch^fii^^^H'^lfo obferA^ablc.in th^
Jofti.3
River Jordan in ''udea. ; for fo i$ it delivfCfedi, ti\-i^.jprJ{a- .oyerfiowefh allhisbanksin tl^fimcofharvdK - A r of Theeffeil indeed iswondejrful inalL' anfl'thecaufesfurelybeii re,
-i
folvabJe from obfervarioii> ma^e in phe!Go>mtreys_themfylv^s, the parts through which they pafle, or whence they t.ike their Q;ri^n.il, ,, That of A^/7w hath b,;en attempted by many,, i^nd by fomc to that defpair
of
Book.tf
Ad Common
Srrot4rl,
3pi JJ^f
of refolution, that they have 6nly referred it untdth? Pfoyidcncc of God, and his fecrct iiYanuduftion of all thmgs unto their ^ends. But T * '""/' ' clivers have attained the truth, and the caufcs alledgedbyD<^or*,5fingofNi?iiN <T<?, .5"/ r^^7, and others, is aUovvable; that the inundation of 7V/7wiir Egjpt proceeded from the rains in <.ythiopia\ and the mighty fourcc of waters falling towards the fountains thereof. For this ^inundatioih ci)to I he Effjr^ti^.m happeneth when it is \^ irire^littto- the. Ethii^'tms^ which h^ibiiations, although they have no cold Visiter, (the ^uri^tefirop no farther removed from them in Cancer, tlieii unt6us in Taut usy
_
'
yet is ihe .fervour of the aire fo well remitted,, as it admits a Sufficient* j.eneration of vapours, and plenty ofi'fhr'ovvresenfiiift^thcreupdn. This Theory of the Ancients is finee eoiifirined by 'expefrience of the Mo-
derns
adefcriptiopofc/t/:t&/>/^; afiifmrrtg-chat froW ^-rtiiddk bf fuKi? unto Sejitr/jthtr, there (qW in his;time continual faines. As alfb-
j4montHs Ferd'wandm^ who in an, EpiWd written from thence, and' noted by Codlgms , affirmeth, that dii'ririg the Winter, in thofe Coun-"
j- !;:._., ..A ... treys titfrepafled no day without rain. to tranflate is alfo ufuai, rem.arkable a this quality into a-^ropri,
Now
in
and where we adm.ire an effeft in one,' toopiriibn there is not the ith thefe conceits do common apprehenfions enany other. conceiving tertain the antidotal and- wondrous condition of Ireland only in that land an immunity from venomous creatures: but unto the fame will be affirmed of Cvetay him. that fhall further enquire, memorable in ancient ftories, even unto fabulous caufes, arid benediThe' fame is alfo found m-'Ehujw ction from the birth of jHpiter. or Evifa, an Ifland near ii/< j<>rc< upon the Coaft of Spaik. With" thefe apprehennons do the eyes of neighbour-Spectators behold e/4E:r^^ the flaming mountain in Sic ilia but Navuators tell us there is a burning mountain in Illmd , a more rem.arkable one in Ten riffa of the and m.any Vulc:no's or fery Bills elfewhere. Thus CrocoCf.narics^ diles were thought to be peculiar unto Nile^ and the opinion fofpfifefled' Alexander^ that when he had aifcovered fome in Gano^ es, he fell upon conceit he h^d found the head of Nilas ; but later dtfcoveries affirm,that they a; e not only in Afta and Africa^ but very frequent in fome.
ery,
rilce
-,
eth,
different
from
&c.
to Cancer; wherein they warily deliver them.felves, and referve a reafonabfc Jatitude.So when Hippocrates faith,iS^ Cane ante Canem dijjicilef fmt pHrgattQnes I There is a latitude ofdayes comprifed therein;.
&
ioi
'
^ ,M,iH! '
,
deliv^^ tbief affi^tipjis io hmm^i with, che *var^ terjnps of C/Vc mfign^fx^f^fe: ,*n<ft i)en llypodorm tr^nflateth that pare of
rf.,
(^
his,
,^\|i^f^^f
becaufe th^;
e5^P0feQ*v^ffp4:de(ikftbe! i^k.wii
of cisv^r? 4%l^ ^ po^ ^ftirmin^ i; "^Pg^)^^hb<fjfjarevihe;l!^^,ofie^; he altoue^h but one day, thafiis, the Cajcnds J foip iAthe(f^<'W'^jA|;cok#c,. tfe^fecon^day isthe fpurtfa^of
r.;^aif^ we^e'the day^efinitivpi
it
of ihi
niSe
i?i
mag^ hi percdved:theraines
of its
that
nacijral expeii;"
JiqifaJjUfi
inujpcatipn.
^nd
m^iK
obfery^d. in earth, or fandabputiithe Rjiver ; by the weight wk^of(as good Authors report) they ^yg uj^i^fi,ti^sday,a knovykd^f, of i^s
ei^tieafei
.
>:r
't:r.;,p,:.L-
,-1-:
r_
^'.r
^;,-,
-
,'
iajQifyj in
caufes,
to
d^,.
cfe\, and fu^h' are thsi caufes of, this inundatifi,>whi^h fahnpt indeed be regular, and therefore their eflfe^ noc J3:<fgnp.ftkabk Ji.k?^ clig>resH iB^r d?pei-jding upo^ rl^e clouds an4
riys a .iixftdMcid. co^i^a'nt
..
.
cjefcent of iTipvyer^ in: <:^thiop/ii^ vvhith h jye their ^enetfition fronfi va-
they.muftftibmip/thei^rex^nce ufjto conclngeti'v ci^, and.iiidur-etiaAtitipaupft'pnri receiCpn froin th^ movable cqndiiii^, pftLOf thw caufes. And th^rdforej fom,e yearsrthyri?, hack bc>;n iio tv^ crea/e ac aU, a^ f<{>aae: conceive in the yeai;s ot/ainine wider I'tjaraoh^ as StneQky. nor and. diyefs;rdate of .the eleventh year of r/t>/.tf/-<z ; Som.e years ith-ichj nine >)^ars together, as.i-J. teflihedrbvC^/(/?/'fc-?.
pprpuS(e^haJai^ion>'i^
,
.
alib' reoardtd,
uiijally it
was expected,
as
3.C-,
hnippened.'uvthedayesof Theo<^./^<.; Avhereat the people vyeterecidy to mutiny, becaufe they mi^t not facriiioe . unto the Ri er, according to the cuf ionie of rheir Predecoi:<^%' toSi^^pp^yi^Xifi JVtcephrjii
i
Now this is alfo .in ufual way of miftake, and many are deceived whor too ftiidVty confkue the tecaporal confideratio^l of thiii^s. Thus bpoks wilLteli us, and Yv:e are made .tp.beUeve; th..ic. rlie fourteenth ye^r males aiciftrr-inificai ^nd pubficejit ; but hg thit^iliaHenquire into thegpner^ lity, will rati}iiriidher^ unto the cautelous aflertion of cArifior/e^ that IS, his fepiem aw'i (^4S^s^U1d fhcnhv/i.rjafU^Ax parte. That Whvlps arel:^indenineday^?,andBhen begin to fet;:, is generally believed, but as,
wehave
cJ|iyU
Ahd.jto ipeakiiiaiUyi
duatm^
Book.^.
6kuating and indifferent
md Common
efifc^ls,
ErtMru
apofitivc type or period. For
difficulties
'3^1
y^/
to
affix
in dfefts of far
more
regular cafualicics,
do often
arifc,
which meafureth all things, we ufc tallowance Thus while we conceive we have the account in its commenfuration. of a year in 565. dayes, exa6^ Enquirers and Computifts will tell that is a ijuarter of a day. us, that we efcape 6. houres, And fo in a day which every one accounts 24. houres, or one revolution of the Sun; in ftriit account we muft allow the addition of fuch a part as the Sun doth make in his proper motion, from Weft to Ea(t, whereby in one day hedcfcribeth not a perfeft Circle. Fourthly, it is affirmed by many> and received by mofl, that it never raineth in Egpt^ the river fupplyin^ that defeat, and bountifully requiting it in its inundatittti but this muft alfo be received in a qualified fenfc, that is, that it raines but feldomc at any time in the Summer, and very rarely in the Winter. But that great (howres do fomerimes fall upon that Region, belide the Aflertion of many Writers, we can confirm from hononrable and ocular teftimony, and that not many That Eg)ft ^^^ '^i'V years palt, it rained in Grand Cairo divers dayes together. The fame is alfo attefted concerning other parts of Egyft^ by Pro- Sj^J^'^"'* ffer Alfwpts^ who lived long in that Countrey, and hath left an accu- Baromt. rate Treaty of the medical practice thereof. Cayrl raro decldnnt plt^ in omnibus locis marl adjacent! bw^ AlexanAriAy ^cltifnqm vi-f p/nit iar a IJJtm.'&fape; thMiiSy it Tzm^th feldcm at C^/r(7, but at ^lexojidria, Damlata^ and places near the fea, it raineth plentifully and often. hereby we might adde the latter teftimony of Learned Mr.
it felf,
;
and even
in time
&
Greaves^ in his accurate defcription of the T^r^iw/^f. Behald I Befide, Men hereby forget the relation of holy Scripture, wlllcaufe it to rain a very great hail^ f^ich as hath not been in Egypt Wherein God threatning fine: the foundation thereof ^ even until noiv. fuch a rain as had nothapned, it muft he prefumed they had been acquainted with fome before, and were not ignotant of the fubftance,
"*<'^'*
The fame concerning Rarilme nix-, grando^ it feidome fnovveth or Whereby we muft concede that haileth. fnow and hiile ^q fometimes fall, becaufe they happen feithe
hail
the circumflance.
Profper
f^lpimu-,
dome.
Now this miflake arifeth from a mifapplication of the bounds or limits of time, and an undue tranfition from one unto another ; which to avoid, vve muftobferve the punctual differen<res of time, and fodifiingiiilli thereof, as not to confound or lofe the one in rhe other.
For things m.ay come to pa{re,5c wper, PlerunKjHey Sdpe-, aut NnnqHam^ Aliciuandoy Raro ; that is, Always,or Never, for the moft parr, or Sometimcs> Ofrtimes, or Seldom. Now the deception is ufuaj which is made by the mif-application of thefe;men prefently concluding that to happen Dfcen,which happenech but fometimes that never,which happeneth but
:
Ecc
feldom,
^y^-
3^4
Book. ^.
feldom; and that alway, which happeneth for the moft part. So is it faid, the Sun fhines every day in Rhodes, becaufe for the mort part So we fay andoelieve that a Camelion never e.ueth, it faileth not.
but liveth only upon
aire,
whereas
dom
but
many there
are
who have
indeed beheld
it is
it
to feed
on
flies.
And fo
Jj2>yi//'*
Ifa.11.s5'
borne in the eighth moneth live not, that is, for nor it feems in fotmer the m.oft part, but not to be concluded alvvayes ages in all places for it is otherwife recorded by Arifiotle concerning the births of Egypt. Laftly, it is commonly conceived that divers Princes have attempted to cut thelfthmus ortra(ft of land which parteth the Arabian and Mediterranean 'k.x'.- but upon enquiry I finde fome difficulty concerning the place attempted; many with good authority affirming, that the intent was not immediately to unite thefe Seas, but to make a navigable channel between the Red fea and the Nile, the m.arks whereofit was firft attempted by Sefoflris, after by Dat are extant to this day rinsy and in a fear to drown the Countrey, deferred by them born ; bu was long after re-attempted, and in fome manner effeiled by Phliadelphui. Andfo the Grand Signior, who is Lord of the Countrey, conveyeth his Gallies into the Red Sea by the Nile for he brin7,erh them down to Grand Cairo, where they are taken in pieces, carried upon Camels backs, and rejoyned together at Sues, his port and Naval ftation for that fea, whereby in efe^l he a6ls the defign ot'C/eopatray who after the battel of A^lu^/ in a different way would have conveyed
iris faid that children
;
:
>
-,
Red
Sea.
therefore that proverb to cut an IfihmM,'thAt is, to take great pains, and effe(5t nothing, alludeth not unto this attempt ; but is by
And
Erafmm
applied unto feveral other, as that undertaking of Cnidians to cut their Ifthmus, but efpecially that oiCorlmh fo unfucceflefully attempted by many Emperours. The Cnidians were deterred by the peremptory diflwadon oi Apollo, plainly com.manding them to defift
he would have made that Countrey an Iperhaps will not be thoughr a reafonable difcoufirft. But ragement unto the adlivity ofthofefpirits which endeavour to advantage Nature by Art, and upon good grounds to promote any part of the Vniverfe ; nor will the ill fucceffe of fome be made a fufficient determent unto others, who know that many learned m.en affirm, that Iflands were not from the beginning : that many have been made fince by Art, that fomelfthmes have been eat through by the fea, and And if policie would permit, that of Paothers cut by the Spade ; nama in America were moft worthy the attempt it being but few miles
for if
fland at
this
:
open a Shorter
CHAP,
Book.V.
355 J7J.
CHAP.
Of
Contrary
apprehenfions are
the
IX,
Red
Sea,
made of the
Erythrajan or
Red
Sea
mofl apprehending a material rednelfe therein, f;orn whence they derive its common denomination ; and fome fo lightly couceiving hereof, asifithadnorednefTeat all, are fain to recur unco ot he orii-
wherein to
we
do
vv^jj
Sj^j,,
ti,g
^^
Gulph
it
reafon to
remember
it
call it
was
full
of fedge,
or they
found
thereof do know
a City of Arabia.
Mahom:tam who are now Lords by no other name then che Gulph of Mecha
the
Thettream of Antiquity derivcth its name from YimgErythrmy nominal deduction from rednefle, that they plainly deny there is anyfuch accident in it. The words of CrAb Erythro rege indltHw efi r,o^en^ tiftsnYQ plain beyond evafion, proper qmd igMari rnbcn aqnas crtdmt Of no m.ore obfcurity are the words of Phibfiramsy and of later times, Sabelllcm ; Smite
fo fleightly conceixing of the
:
p rfuaf'Am
cjma, ab Erythro eft 'vulgo xnbras alicttbi jfe marls aq^oi-, r:ge nomcnpelugo Inditum. Of this opinion was A/idra4 Cor[alius
>t
Pimy^Soiinpti^ DloCaJftm^
although they denied not all rednelfe, yet did they reheupon the Original from King r///7r^/. Others have fallen upon ch^ lik^, or perhaps the fame conceit un-
who
der another appelluion ; deducing its name not from King fryf/^rr^f, but Efvi or Edoryj^ whofe habitation was upon the coafts thereof. Now Edom is as much as Erythrm^ and the Red Sea no m.ore then the /-
dumeani
fom whence the pofterity of Edom removing towards the Moreexaftly^ Mediterranean coaft; according to their former nomination by the hereof Bo bar. GreeRs were called i^/:7<^A'V/W or red men: and from a plantation and 'f and Mr, colony of theirs,, an Ifland near Spain^ wasbycheGreek-defcribers c^'Hw/*".
is dech^tdhy Strabo^ndSoliftus. Very many omitting the nom.inal derivation, do reft in the grofle and literal conception thereof, apprehending a real rednefle and con-
'
term.ed r/V/7r^, as
'
.
ftant colour
fea receiyeth a
Of which opinion are alfo they which hold the red^nd m.inious tinlure from fprings, wells,and currents that fall into it;and of the fim.e belief are probably many Chriftians, who conceiving thepaflage of rhe Jfraclltcs through this fea to have l>een the type of Baptifm,'' according to that of the Apoftle,All werebaptiied imro Eee 2
of parrs.
cor.io.x
7/^
3^^
J?;^^/Vi/Wtf
y'ulf^ar
Book.
unto (J^ofes in the cloud, and in the Sea : for the better refemblance of the blood of Chrift, they willingly received it in the apprehenfion of according to that of rednefle, and a colour a^reable unto its myftery unde nobis Aug.infohin' yif*/}i^-> Slgmficdt trar: tUudruhrHm B^.p-ifmnm Chrlfil',
:
utm,
Baftifnjpu Chrlfil nlfi fayigtttrt: Chrlfil conf.cratm} But divers Moderns hoc confidering thefe conceptions
and appeal-
ing unto the Teftimony of fenfe, have at hft determined the point concluding a rednefle herein, but not in the fenfe received. Sir f-Va!-: ter Raivleigh :om his own and Tormgal obfervauons, doth place the
from red Iflands, and the rednefle wherein Coral grows very plentifully, and from whence in great abundance is is tfanfported into Ettrope.. The oblcrvations of Alberciuer^ue^ and Stepha'ipu de GarKa(3Lircil[l Johaxnes de Barros^ Fernandins de Cordova relateth) derive this rednelle from the colour of the fand and argillous earth at the bottom ; for b^in^ a Ihallow fea, while ic rowletn to and fro, there appeareth a rednefle upon the water ; which is moft difcernable in funny and windy weather. But that this is no more then a feeming rednefle, he confirmeth by an experiment ; for in the reddeft part taking up a veflel of water, ic difNor is this colour differed not from the complexion of other Sea^. coverable in every place of that Sea, for as he alfo obferveth, infome places it is very green, in others white and yellow, according to the And fo may PhUocolour of the earth or fand at the bottome. firatHs be made out, when he faith, this Sea is blew; or Bello^lHsdQnying this rednefle, becaufe he beheld not that colour about Sues ; or when Corfalizs at the mouth thereof could not difcover the fame. Now although we have enquired the ground of rednefle in this Sea, for what is forgot by many, and known yet are we not fully fatisfied Sea, another Red whofc name we pretend not to there is few, oy make out from thcfe principles i that is, the Pf r/<? Gulph or Bay, which divideth the ^Arabian and Perfian jQbore, as Pliny hath defcribed it, LM^re rHhrumin duos dividitur finwy is ^niah Qrtente efi Perji" CHS appelUtftr ; or as Sollnm cxprefleth it, Qtii ah Orlente efi Perficm whereto aflenteth appellatHTy ex adverfo nude ^Arabia ifi-, ArabicHS ; Smdas-i Orte/tus, and many more. And therefore there is no abfurdity mStraboy when he delivereth that Tifns ixid Euphrates do fall into the Red Sea, inid Fermndltts de Cordova^ jufily defendeth his
rednefle of the Sea, in the refledion
of the earth
at the
bortome
diew,
to.
Intmifcetfr.
Noi hathAraytany
hvi whdt
only the Perfian 4ca received the fame name with the is ftrange and much confounds the t^in^iony
the.
Book.^
the
tis^
And Common
SrrourS,
3P7 jf/^
j
Srj/thrw
ceived to be buried in an Ifland of this Sea , as Dionyjius', ^fer^ Otrtihich vv^re of no lei's probability then the and Suidiu do deliver. other , if ( as with the fame Authors Stroh aflirmeth ) he was buried
neer Ca^amania bordering upon the Terfian Gulph. And if his Tomb was fecn by Nea-.chw it was nor fc likely to be in the Arabtan Gulph; lor we read that from the River IrJ.us he came unto Altxandcr at BaNow Babylot, was feated upon hloft > fome few dayes before his c'e.uh. the River nj)hra!es^ which runs into the l^erjicn Gulph. And therefore however the Latins exprefleth k in Strabo , th.it Nearchus fuffered
-,
yet
is
the
QriginaL''oA.Tf:i%fa-/xj5f
that is^
That therefore the Red Sea or Arabian Gulpb received its name from perfcnal derivation, thoUi,h probable, is but uncertain; that both the Seas of one name lliould have one com.mon denominator y lefs probable ; that there is a grofs and material redncfs in either , noc
to be aflBrmed that there is an emphaticil or appearing rednefs in one,, not well to be denied. And this is fuflicient to m.ake good the Allegoand in this diftin6tion may we julUfie the name of ry of the Chriftians the Black Sea, given unto 7^orw, Euxinm : the name cAXamhui , od
: :
or the
Red
Sea in America.
HAP.
Of
I'T
ing
is
X.
moft
:
evident not onely ia the general. frame of Nature , that things m.anifeli unto fenfe , have proved obfcure unto the underftand-> proper and appropriate objeils, wherein we affitm the But even
fail us.
Thus of
colours in general, under whofe glofsandrVerniifhall things are feeny no man hath yet beheld the true nature ; or pofitively fet down their in^
controulable cauies. Which while fome afcribe unto the mixture of the Elements , others to the graduality of Opacity and light ; they have left our endeavours to grope them out by twi-light , and by darknefs al-: mofttodifcover whofe exiftence is evidenced by Light. The C^^ymlfls The Pr jneJ-i have laudably reduced their caufes unto Sal, Sulphur, and Mercury ; and P^' of Coloafci
it
out fo well in this, as in the ob;els of fmell anci tafte, been more acceptable: For whereas they refer
Sapor unto Salt , and Odor unto Sulphur, they vary much concerning Sulphur; fome reducing it unto Mercury, fome to Sulphur; others uiito Salt, Wherein indeed the laft conceit doth not opprefs the for*
Eeej
mei^
, ; ;
//^
A9S
mer
Sn^mrles intoVulgAr
Book^tf.-
; and though Sulphur feem to carry the mailer-ftroak, yet Salt may have a ftrong co-operation.'^ Forbefide the fixed and terreltrious Salt there is in natural bodies a Sahiter, referring unto Sulphur ; there is alfo a volatile or Armoniack Salt , retaining unto Mercury ; by which Salts the colours of bodies are fenfibly qualified , and receive degrees
of
lulhre
or obfcurity
fuperficiality or profundity
fixation or volati-
Their general or
firtt
er
Natures being thus obfcure, there will be greatfor being farther removed ;
fall into more complexed confiderations and fo require a fubtiler act of reafon to diflinguiili and call forth their natures. Thus although a man underfiood the general nature of colours , yet were it no eafie Problenie to refolve , \Vhy Grafs is green ? "Why Garlick, Molyes and Porrets have white roots, deep green leaves, and black feeds ? W hy feveral Docks and forts of Rhubarb with yellow roots, fend forth purple flowers ? V^ hy alfo from Latlary or milky plants which have a white and lacleous juice difperfed throuoh every part, there arife flowers bkw and yellow ? Moreover, befide the fp^cifical and firftdii^reflions ordained from the Creation, which mi^ht be
urged to falve the variety in every fpecies ; Why lliall the marvail of Peru pro luce its flowers of different colours,'and that not once, or conftantly, but every i-!y, and varioufly? WhyTidipsof one colour produce fonie of anorher , and running through ahnolt all , ilioul iHll efcapeatlew? An laflly, \A/by fome men, yea and they a mihry and confiderable part of mankind , iliould firll acquire and hill retain the glofs and tintlure of blicknefs ? Which whoever ilrictly enquires, ihall iincl no lefs of darknefs in the caufe , then blacknefs in the efte:^! k felf there arifing unto examination no fuch fmsf;:i6tory and unquarreliable reaions , as may confirm the caufesfienerally received; which are but -two in num.ber. The heat and fcor chef the Sun ; or the curfe of God
'
on
/^^a'w/an'i
hi.poltenty.
-j/;
.1
otr:^:
The firft was i.ene rally received by the Ancients , who in obfcurities hid no hi; her recourfv^ then imto Nature as. may appear by a ifcoiirfe
,
ieems to be implied in thofe Problemes whi<--h enquire why the Sun makes men black , anc] not the fire? Whyit whirensvvax^ yet blacks the skin? By the word c/thiops k felf, applied to the mem.orableit Nations of Nctjroes > that \\ ofa burnt and torrid Countenance. Thcifmcy of the fible infers alfo the Antiquity of the 'opinion; which: deriveth the complexion from the deviation of the Sun , and th?. conflagr-irion of all thijigs under Phaeton. But this opinion though generally im.braced., was I perceive ^^' je6ldbyv^r/!/?tf^/ja very ancient Geographer.; as is difcovered by StrSe-. It hath been c'oubtedby'fevero^L modern Writers, particularly by 6rietiitfi ; \Ad ampJv and fati^faito>rily rifcufled as we know by no Jii^.^' \V6- fti'ili di-ireiiDje endeavour a full delivery hejo;, declarijft^
conceriiing this point in S:rabo.
By
.-irip<^:/i it
the
Book.^.
the grounds of doubt
tion.
,
X99 j^^y
opinion in this reafon , do and upon confequence overthrow it in anorher. For whilft they make the River Scr/aga to divide and bound the Moors , fo that on the South-li' e they a.e black , on the other only tawny ; they imply a fecret caufality Heiein from, the air, place or river ; and feem not to deThe efteds of \yhofe adUvity are not precipitoufly rive it f:om the Sun. abrupted, but gradually proceed to their ceOations. Secondly, if we nffirm. that this effect proceeded , or as we will not be backvva; d to concede, it may be advanced andfom^ented from the fervour of the Sun ; yet do we not hereby difcover a principle fufficient to decide the queflion concerning other anim.als ; nor doth he that affirmeth the heat makes m. an black, afford a reafon why other anim.als in the fam.e habitations maintain a conftant and agreeable hue unto thofe in other parts , as Lyons, Elephants, Camels, Swans, Tygers, Eftriges. \'Vhichthoughin 8^f//('/)/^, in the difadvantage of two Summers, and perpendicular Rayes of the Sun , do yet make <ood the complexion of their fpecies, and hold a colourable correfpondence unto thofe in milder Regions.. Now did this complexion proceed fiom heat in man, the fam.e would be com.m.unicated unto other anim.als which equally partiFor thus it is in the efFe6ts cipate the influence of the common Agent. of gold, in Regions far removed from the Stm for therein m.en are not only of fair complexions, ^ray-eyed , and of light hair , but m.any creatures expofed to the air, defied in extremity from^ their natural colours ; from b.own, ruflet and black , receiving the complexion of Winter, and J\\\isOloHs Alagmsxthtzs^ that after the Auturning perfed white. begin to grow white ; thus Mlchovms reportFoxes Equinox, tum.nal eth , and we want not ocular confirmation , that Hares and Partridges tun white in the Winter ; and thus a white Crow, a proverbial rarity with us, is none unto them ; but that infeparable accident of l^orfhyrie
tacitly
-,
is
Thirdly,
if
the fervour of the Sun, or intem.perate heat of clime did complexion , furely a migration or change thc-eof
m.ight caufe a fenfible, if not a total mutation ; which notwithftanding For Negroes tranfplanted , although into experience will not adm.it. cold and fiegmatick habitations, continue their hue both in them.felvei', and alfo their generations ; except they mix with diffeent complexions; whereby notwithftanding there only fucceeds a rem.iflion of their tin-
^ures
many defcents
a ftrong
riginals
and moft cbfervaole in the Moors in Bra/i/ia , which tranfplanted about an hundred years paft, continue the tinctures of their
Grand
Signior
fathers
400
fathers unto this day.
Boole. ^.
And fo Ukewife fair or white people cranflatcd into hotter Counrryes, receive not imprefTiens amounting to this complexion , as hath been obferved in many SHrofeir^ns who have lived in and as Edvardw L'^pes teftifieth of the Sfamjh rhe land of Negroes Plantations , that they retained their native complexions unto his daycs. Fourthly , If rhe tervour of the Sun were the fole caufc hereof in 9j^thiof'tayoi^ny\M^doi Negroes^ it were alfo rcafonable that Inha:
unto the fame vicinity of the of its rayes , fliould alfo diredion and , partake of the fame hue and complexion, which notwidiilanding they do not. For the Inhabitants of the fame latitude in ^fia are of a dift'ercnt complexion , asare the Inhabitants of ^^^5^'^ and Java^ infomuch that fome conceive the Negro is properly a native of Africa, and that thofe places in y^/^ inhabited now by ^^j'^r/, are but the mtrulicms of Negroi-s arrinng firft from Africa , as we generally conceive of Madagafcar , and the adjoyning Iflands, who retain the fame complexion unto this day. But this defetl: is more remarkable in Am. rica^ which akhouoh fubje6tcd unto both the Tropicks, yer are not the Inhabitants black between, or near, or under either ; neither to the Southward in Brajilia'y fh'^h or l^eru ; nor yet to the Northward in Hifpauiola^ Cafiiiia-t del Orot ox Nicaragua. And although in many parts -therof there l^e at prefent fwarms o Negroes ferying under the Spaniard^ yet were they all tranfportcd from Africa, fince the difcove ry of Coinmbm ; and arc not indigenous or proper natives of An',erica. Fifthly , We cannot conclude this complexion in Nations from the for even in Africa chey be vicinity or habitude they hold unto the Sun Negroes under the Southern Tropick, but are not at all of this hue either under or near the Northern. So the people of Gualata^Agadst Garamates,2nd of Goaga, a'll within the Northern Tropicks are not Negrors ; but on the other fide about C^po Negro, Cf^^^y a^d Madabitants of the
fame
latitude
fubjc^fled
Sun
gafcar, they are of a jetty black. Now if to fah e this Anomaly we fay the heat of the Sun is more powerful in the Southern Tropick becaufe in the fign of Capricorn hWs out the Perigcum , or loweft place of the Sun in his Excentrick whereby he becom.cs nearer unto them then unto the other in Cancer, we lliallnotobfolve the doubt. And if any infill upon fuch niceties, and will preftime a different effeit of the Sun , from fuch a difference of place or vicinity we l"hall baliance the fimc with the concernment of its motion, and time of revolution , and fay he is more powerful in the Northern Hemifphere, andl in rhe Apogeum ; for therein his m.ora-tion is flower,and fo bis heat refpe6livcly unto thofe habitations,as of duration, fo alfo of m.ore effedt. For, though he abfolve his revolution in ^6'yd':\yts, odd hours and minutes, y^tbyreafon of Excentricity , his motion is unequal , and hi-; courfe far lon^^er in the Northern Semicircle , then in the Southern ; for the latter he pafleth in a 178, that is:,
-,
eleven
Book,
15.
andCmmn^m^^^
40X J'^<
eleven ckyesmore., So is his prefcpce moire continued untd che Northern Inhabitants ; and the longe/t day in Cancer is longer unto us> rhen that in Capricorn unto the Southern Habitator. Befide, hereby, we only infer an inequality of heat in different Tropicks , but not an' equality of effetls in other parts fubjeiled to the fame. For , in the fiime degree, and as near the earth he makes his revolution unto the ^mer'ican-, vvhofe Inhabitants notvvithftanding partake
effevit.
not of theiaine
from the Dog-ftar , we Ihall introduce an effeil proper unto a few , fromacaufe com.mon unto many for upon the fam.e grounds that Star iTiould have as forcible a power upon Anr.r'cd and fix ; and although it be not vertical unto any part
herein
relief
;
And if
we feek a
of Afid-^ but only palleth by Bcach-y in terra wcogpita ; yet is it fo unto Araerlca , and vertically palTeth over the habitations of Tern and Brnfilia.
Sixthly, And which is very confide rable , there are Negroesm Africa beyon J the Southern Tropick , and fome fo far removed from it , as C^eographically the clim.e is not intemperate , that is, near the Cape of good hope , in 36 of the South^ern Latitude. Whereas in the fame elevation Northward , the Inhabitants of Amertck are fair; and they of ui ope in Caj^dy-i Sicily and fome parts of Sfain , deferve not properly fo low a name as Tawny. Laftly, whereas the Africans are conceived to be more peculiarfy fcorchedand torrihed from the Sun , by addition of drinefs from the foil, fro r. want an \ dcfed of water ; it will not excufQ the doubt. For djti parts whiv^h th^ Negroes poiiefs, are not fo void of Rivers and moifture, as is prefumed j tor on the other fide the mountains of the Moon^ in that great trac\ tallvid Zanz^ibar-, there are the mighty Rivers oi Ska-> f^a^^hd Spiri'o San:o on this fide the great river Zaire, the mii^hty Nj/e and Ni. er ; whi- h do not only naoiften and ccntemperate the air by th-ir e>haJ.uiGn J, hut refreOi andhumedate the earth by th^ir annuBei'4de,inth;itpartof Aifriea^-, which with aildiiadfal. InundatJotJ<;.. vantage is mcjft'dry , that is, in fituation between the Tropicks , defe6t of rivers and inunda Lions, as alfo abundance of fands, the people are and that is Lybid , which with the Greekj carnotefkemed /\^<^ Toeineftf ties the name of,aII^/r/<j-^, A Region fo defert, dryandfandy, that Travellers {m Ltoxt^om) &m f^in.ico carjriy/wwe? on their Camels ; whereof they find not adrop fometime in fix oj feven daye$. Yet is. this Coimtry accomited by Geographers no part of tirra Nigrltarttmy and Pioiomy placeth herein the Lettc9 cy^thifpes , or piile and Tawny Moors. ...... /: \ Now the ground of this opinion might be jhe vifible quality of blacknefs cbfervably pro^iuced by heat , fire and fmoak 7 but efpecially witla the Ai;cienti>, iiifc vjol^m e(ken} the)Thdd of the heat of theSun/, in ^
,
'y
<
'
"
,\
'
thereof ^
'
'
-^^
-'*'^
Fff
'
vvith^
yfi>
40a
JSnquiries into
Vu\g
But
Book.^
how far
they were mi-
ftaken in this apprehenfion , modern Geography hath difcovered ; And as we hive declared , there are many wirhm this Zone whofe complexi-
as
unto blacknefs.
And if we fhould
i'?,
ftridly in-
heat of the Sun , whofe fervour may fwart a livin;^ part , a dead or diliolving flelli ; can yet in animals, vvhofe parts are fucceffive, and in continual flux, produce this deep and perfect glofs of Blacknefs.
Thus having evinced, at leaft made dubious, the Sun is not the Author ^ this Blackiiefs ; how, and when this tiniturefirft be^^an is yet a Ridcau!*of*the" Htimi black, die, and pofitively to determine, it furpafleth my prefumption. Seeing nefs prcbibly, therefore we cannot difcover what did eflfe^l it, it may afford fome It may be therepiece of fatisfadion to know what mi^ht procure it. fore considered , whether the inward ufe of certain waters or fountains
_..
.
.
firft produce the effe6t inqueftion. For, of the like we have records in Arlfiotle^Strabo^ and Tllny, who hath made a coUedion hereof, as of two fountains in Boeotia , the one making fheep white , the other black ; of the water of Slberis which made Oxen black, and the like effecl it had alfo upon men, dying not only the skin, but making their hairs black and curled. This was the conceit oi ArifiobnlHs^ who received fo little fadsfa^lion from the other, or that it mi-ht be caufed by heat, or any kind of fire, that he conceived it as reafonable to impute the effeil unto water. Secondly, It may be perpended whether it might not fall out the fame way that lacohf cattel became fpeckjed , fpotted and ring-ftfaked, that is, Dy the Power and Efficacy of Imar^ination ; which produceth effeils in the conception correfpondent unto the phoney of the Aents in generation ; and fometimes aflimilates the Idea of the Generator into a For, hereof there pafs for current many reality in the thing ingendred. indifputed examples ; fo in f^Z/'/'ofr^fff we read of one , tb:.tfrom the view and intention of a Picture conceived a Negro ; And in the Hiftory of Hdiodorc of a Moorilli Queen , who upon afpe6tion of the ndeptmapui pi^ureof Andromeda^ conceived and brou hc forth a fair one. And ^^^'^^^'^^^^^'^^^^^^ fay it w.isthebeghming of this complexion; tt-^nhuii!m^ induced imagination which having once impregnated the feed, by firft , ^inationis. found afterward conn jrent cooperations, which were coniinued by Clhnes, w hofe coniiitition advantaged thi f.vi\ im.preiron. Thus PIotinui conc.iv~th white Peacocks firft came in Thus many o inion that from afpeilion of the Snow, which lyeth long in Norchern Regions, and hi;^h mount nns. Hawks, Kites, Bears, and other creatures becom.e Why Bears, white ; And by this way Anfi 'n conceiveth the devil provided, they ne*" ^^"^ wanted a white f^ o:ted Oxe in ^^^^t for fuch n one they worj !me tUr*
'
?!ct"cei.
Thirdly, It
is
Book,^.
mtdC.oMmQjt. EvrourS,
koj j ^
Aich a caufe and the like foundation of Tin6iure, as dotfa the black Jaundies, which meeting with congenerous caufes mi^t fettle durable inclinations, and advance their generations unto that hue, which were naturally before but a degree or two below it. And this tranfmiUlon we
"A
'
the eafier admit in colour, if we remember the like hath been ef-^ felled in organical parts and figure; the Symmetry whereof being cafually or purpofely perverted ; their morbofities have vigoroufly defliall
fcended to their pofterities, and that in durable deformities. This was the beginning of Macrocefhall ^ or people vvirhlong heads, whereof Ji iff aerates hath clearly delivered himfelf frlmttm editus eft In:
^w
farst caput cjfu ten. Unm fnanibHS efjiMgHnt ^ C? in loMgltudine adolefcere ^* 'f *^i hoc luftltHtHMf r'lmum huj'i[modi y naturA dedhvit'iHm-, fuccef- ^"^*'' coaunt temporwln ^aturam ablity ut frolnde inftituto nlhU ampllpu opm ver /
'y
<?
ommhm corporis part'ibpts provemt , ex faexmorbofismorhofunt. Si tghnr ex calvis catv'iy ex cttcins cacti y (y* ex diflortis y utpltirtmum y dlftortt gignuntHr y eadem^ in c Aieris formii valet ratio y <jHid prohihet cur nonex macrocsphalU macrocephali gigyiantur ? Thus as Ariftotle obferveth , the Deers of
ejfct
;
ms qmdem [annm
Arglnufa had their ears divided occafioned at firft by flitting the cares of Deer. Thus have the Qnnefes little feet, moft Negroes great Hps and fiat Nofes ; And thus many Spaniards y diwd Mediterranean Inhabitants, which are of the Race of Bardary Moors (although after frequent commixture ) have not worn out thzCamojs Ncfe unto this
;
pi^j nofe.
day.
Ne^roesy or Gypfies acquire their complexion by annointmg Bacon und fat fubrtances, and o expofing them to the Sun. In Guinie Moors and others, it hath been obferved, that they frequently moyften their skins with fat and oyly materials, to temper the irkfome drinefs thereof from the parching rayes of the Sun. \A/hether this pra6life at firlt had not fome efficacy toward this complexion , may alfo be confidered. Laftly, If we flill be urged to particularities , and fuch as declare how, and when the feed of Adarti did firft receive this tinfture ; we may fay that men became blAck in the fame manner that fom.e Foxes, Squirrels, Lyons, firft turned of this complexion, whereof there are a conftant fort iji divers Countryes; that fo.me Chau^hs came to have red legs nnd bills, that Crowes became pyed ; All which m.utations however they began , depend on durable foundations ; and fuch as may continue A nd if as yet we mult fa rther define the caufe and manner of for ever. this mutation, we muft confefie, in m.atters of Antiquity, and futh as are decided by Hiftory , if their Originals and firft beginnings efcape ^ d^vs. relation , tliey fall into great obfcurities , and fuch Thus if you dedut as future Age=; feldom.e re:*uce unto a refolution.
Artificial
the adminidration of Angela, and that they difperfed the creatures into all purts after the flpod , as they had congregated them into Nouios Ark before; Fffz
x^'
^0 A
before
fundry
'
,
E^Htrhi
it
ifffo
V$AgAr
Book. 6,
will be
no eafiequeftion to
refolve,
ani-
How
^^^ ^^^^ ^j-^^ difperfed into Iflands, and almoft how any into America *
*""ucome^io
bcVoundin
liands.
E/i<JJ
cum ve-
^erit folvet
iukium,
the earth , fince HiFhilofophy. by For whereas it ij ftory imputed unto Anthropophagy , or the eating of mans flefh; rh.it caufe hath been common unro many other Countryes , and there have been Canibals or Men-eaters in the three other parts of the world , if we credit the relations of Ttohn^y^ Straho and T^l'my. And thus if the favourbale pen of A^ofes had not revealed the confufion of tongues, and pofitiyely declared their divifion at Bai^e/^ our difputes concerning their beginning had been without end i and I fear we muft have left the hopes
filent, isnoteafily refolved
of that decifion unto Eiioi. And if any will yet infift, and urge the queflion farther ftill upon me. I fhall be enforced unto divers of the like nature, wherein perhaps I
no greater fatisfadion. I iliall demand how the Camels of BaBria came to have two bunches on their backs , whereas the Cam.els o^Arabla in all relations have but one > How Oxen in fome Countryes began and continue gibbous or bunch-back'd ? what way thofe many different fhapes, colours, hairs, and natures of Dogs came in > howtheyoffom.e Countryes became depilous, and without any hair at all, whereas fome forts in excefs abound therewith? How the Indian Hare came to have a long tail , whereas that part in others attains no higher then a fcut ? How the Hogs of Illyria which Arifloth fpeaks of,
fhall receive
whereas in other parts they are biCod himfelf? All which with many others muft needs feem ftrange unto thofe that hold there were but two of the unclean fort in the Ark ; and are forced to reduce thefe
becam.e folipcdes or whole-hoofed
,
varieties to
unknown original fince. However therefore this complexion was firft acquired
,
;
it is
evidently
Mfgms may
be propagated,
and by the tinfture of the slfin as a fpermafo that they which are (irantical part traduced from father unto Son gers contraft it not, and the Natives which tranfmigrate , omit it not without commixture , and that after divers generations. And this afte6lion (if the ftory were true) miight wonderfully be confir.ned, by what ^^^/W and others relate of the Emperour o cyth opU, or Trefier John^ who derived from Solomon is, not yet defcended into the hue of his Country, but rem.ains a Aiulatto-^ that '\^^ of a Mongril com-maintained by generation
.plexion unto this day.
fem.inal, yet are
Now although we
we not of Herodotm
Artfiat le^ and fince by fenfe and enHis affertion againft the Hiftorian was probable, that all feed was white ; that is without great controverfie in viviporous Aftimals,and fuch as have Tefticles, or preparing veflels wherein it receives a manifeit dealbatioh. And not only in them, but (for ought I know) in Fiflies not abatingtbe feed of Plants, whereof though the skin and covering be black.
quiry.
Book. 6.
jtoiis
4^5
^oj?^^
the feed andfruilifying parr notfo: as may be obferved in the Moft controvertible it feems in feeds oiOnioKs^ Fjaxie, snd Baji/. whereof Lobfters,, notvvirhttanding at the veand Fro.^s, cf the fpavvn contradling by .degrees a blacke(le, arii white, fpavVn 19 the inr-Ct ry
fvverable in the
one
iintai:he colour
of the
fliej],
Animal which firit pro<?eedeth it alfo be in the generation and ff erm of NethAt being firft and in its naturals white, but upon fepitration of
that
is
thai
accidents before invifible become, apparent; there ariHng i lliadow or dark etfiorefcence in the out-fide; whereby not only their legitimate and tim.ely births, but their abortions are alfo dusky, before .".^f.-i. .ii.!> they have felt the fcorch and fervour of the Sun. ..
,
,::.:..,.
-
a.;
t '
'
ni
'
.!'
-
.,;.
^v
.-
;:
'
.:...,
,,
^r-.../
'<
r
>^ tn i ; I-''
i
i-
nn'
i'
'i
rt.->
r--
^
.
^'"^; ,y
.
-> -J
,'
-
'
'
/Hi
<'i
rii
j
'u.iii
i.
CHAP.
Of
XI.
the [(tme,
Second opinion there is, that this, complexion was firft a cur0' of G od derived unto them, from han^, upon whom it was ixh hich notwif jiliandr fii(^ed for difcoyering the nakedneffe o( Np^h. ing is fooner affirmed then proved, and ca rrieth with itfundry imFor firft, if we derive the curfe on Cham^ or in general probabilities. upon his poflerity, we fliall denigrate a greater part .of the earth-then was ever fo conceived ; and not only paint the Ethiopians and reputed fons of C/fc, but the people alfo of jE^^/if, Arabia^ Ajjfp-U, and. ChaUta. i for by this race were ihefe Countreys alfo peopled. And if concordantly unto i^^ro/w, the fragment oi Cato de OriglK'i{>Hs^{oTQ.t things of Haiicarfiajfem^ Macroblm^ and out of them of jLf^;?^r<? and Annipti^ we (hall conceive of the zuwqU o( C hamefe oiChamt, we which parr may introduce a generation of A/f^^rorj as high as Italy was never culpable of deformitie, but hath produced the magnified examples of beauty. Secondly, the curfe mentioned in Scripture was not denounced upon C/r^w, hi\t Canaan his youngeft fon, and^thereafons thereof are divers. The firft, from the Jewiflb Tradition, whereby it is conceived, that Canaan made thedifcovety of the nakednefle of Noah^ and notified it unto Cham. Secondly, to have curfed Cham had been to curfe all his poftericy, whereof but one was guilty of the fad. And lafily, he fpared Cham^ becaufe he had bleffed him before. Now if we confine this curfe unto Canaan^ and think the fame fulfilled in his poflethen do we induce this complexion on the Sidonians ; then rity ; .was the promifed land a rra6l of Negroes. For from Canaan were de cended t\\^Canaanltest 'iehnjitcs-, Amorltesy Gergez^'nes^ and ///-r./W, which were poflefled of that land, Fif 3 ^ Third,
'
'^
40^
Thirdly,
Equmes
alAough we
into Vul^Ait
Book.^.
upon
or them CO derive it. For the particularity of their defcents is imperfectly fee down by Accountants, nor i^ it diftindliie determineable from whom thereof the Ethiofiafis are proceeded. For whereas thefe of Africa
the Tons o Chanty yet were
one of
not
Chawy
For the land of Chusy which the Septuagint tranflates cyfr/j/i?^/.-?, makes no part of^/r/V.?, nor is it the habitation of Blackmores, but the Countrey of v^r^'<?, efpecially the Happy and Stony poflefTions and colonies of all the fons of Chus^ excepting Nlmrod and HaviUh ; poflefled and planted wholly by the children of r/);, that is, hy Sahah z\\d K^amahy S^hachay and the hns o( Kaawahy Dedafjy and Shi^hay according unto whofe names the Nations of thofe parts have received their denominations, as may be colleiled from Pliny and PtoUmy ; ajid as we are informed by credible Authors, they hold a faire An.ilogy in their names, even unto our dayes. So the wife of UMofes translated in Scripture an EthicpiaK^znd fo confirmed by the fabulous relation of ]ofe-bhuy was none of the daughters of Africa^ nor any Negroeof c^f/o/>/<?, but the daughter of lethr&y Prince t^ndVnd} oF Madla^-^ which was a part of cy^rahla the ftony, bordering upon the Red Sea. So the Queen of SMa came nor unto Solomm out of cyErhiopia. but from Arahiay and
not fo
ealily
made out.
the fon of tharp?,rtthereof which bore the nam,e of the flrft planter, Chus. So whether the Eunuch which Thllip the Deacon baptized, were fervant unto Candace Queen of rhe Africayi ^yErhiopia (although Dam'tanm a Goes Cod.iantiSy and the Ethio^ick relations averr)
yet by many, and with ftrong fufpitions doubted. So that Army of a million, which Zir<?/jKing ofc/fA/V;.''^isf.;idto bring againft A^ /rf, was drawn out of Arahi^ty^ni the plantations of Clmsi nor our of fySthlopiay and the remote habitations of the Moors. Fot it is faid that fa purfuin^ his victory, took from him the City Gerar ; now Gerar\yis no City in or near i^thiopiay but a place between Cadefh :ind Since therefore thefe Zur-, where Abraham formerly fo/ourned. African Et hiop i^.M '^rt not convinced by the com.m.on acceptionto be the fons of Chusy whether they be not tne pofteririe oF Phut or Mlzraiwyov both, it it not afl'uredly determined, For (J^'/Vr^/^?, he poflcfFtd Egypt y and the Eaft parts of Africa. From Lubym his Ton came x\\zLyblansy and perhaps from them the Ehloplnyis. Phut poflefled Mauritanlay andtheWeftern parts of y/frrV/^, and from thefe perhaps <lefcended the Moors of the Well, o: Mr.ndlngay Melem tte and Gtilnte, But from Canaany upon whom the curfe was pronounGed,none of thefe had their original, for he was reftrained unto Canaan and Syria ; although in afrer-Ages many Colonies c'ifoerfed, and fome tliereofuponthecoaflsof-4^r/V^, and prepoflelTions of his elder brois
thers.
Fourdily,
Book, 6
curfe
snd Common
Strourf,
407*
Fourthly, to take away all doubt or any probable divarication, the nor need we difpute it, like the is plainly fpecified in the Text, mark oiCfiw ; Scrvta frvornm eritfratribHsfnis^ Curfed be C<rf, a
he be unto his brethren; which was after ful//r^//V<?j-, the po^eri^ ty of Si}. \\ hich Profhecie Abrahani weM underftanding, took arr oath of hisfervantnotto take a wife for his fon JfaacoMt of the dui^hrersof rher^<i*r/ff/ ; and the like was performed by Ifaac'm the behalf of his fon Vc(7^. As for Cham and his other fons, thi^ curfe attained them not ; for Nlmrod the fon oiCi:Hs fet up his Kin^^domc in Bahylvn^ andere6led the firll great Empire ; A<fiz,rai'm and his po-iktity grew mighty Monarch? in g/pt and the Empire of the Ethlo^ pifi.ni huh been as lar,e as cither. Nor did the curfe defcend. in generalupon the pofterity oi Canaan: for iho. Sldonlans^ Arkjtes^ Hamathitesy Smites^ Arvadites^ and Zewerites feem exempted. But v\hy there being eleven fons, five only were condemned, and fix efcaped the mafer\'ant
of fervants
fiball
',
beyond difcovery. Whereas men affirm this colour was a Curfe, I cannor make odt the propriety of that name, it neither feem.in_^ fo to them, nor realedi(fticn, is a fecret
Laftly,
fon.ibly unco us, for they rake fo m.uch concent therein, that they erteem deformity by other colours, defcribing the devil, and terrible obj'eils,
white.
exa6lly perpend
And if we feriouOy ccnfulc the definitions of beauty, and what wife men determine thereof, we ftiall not appre-
hend a curfe, oj any deformity therein. For firft, fome place the effence thereof in the proportion of parts, conceiving it toconfiftin a comely comm.enfurability of the whole unto the parts, and the parts be tween themfelves which is the determination of the beft and learned Writers. Now hereby the Moors are not excluded from beauty there being in this defcription no conlideration of colours, but an apt connexion and fram.e of parts and the whole. Others there be, and thofe
j-
moft in number, which place it not only in proportion of parts, but alBut to mike Colour efiential unto Beauty ,there will arife no (lender difficulty ; Fot zArlfiotle two definitions of pulchritude, and Gal'n in one, have made no m.ention of colour, Neirlier will it agree unto the beauty of Animal!?^ wherein notwithftanding there is an approved pulchritude. Thus horfes are handfome un<^er any colour, ?nd the fymmetry of parts obfcures the con'.ide ration of complexions. Thus in concolour Animals and fuch as are confined into one colour, we meafure not their Beauty thecby; for if a Cow or Black-birde grow white, we generally account it more pretty ; And in almof^ a monftrofity c'efceiKJ to oi-inion of deformity. By this way likewife the
fo in grace of colour.
Moores
ftaiionary
efcape
colour,
the
curfe there concurring bO' of deformity and fometimes not any unto Beauty.
:
The
':^X ^o^
"^
^qmhii^toVttl^Ar
'
Book. ^^
-The PUtonitk cf!n|:ciinplators rej<<9: both thefe defcriptions founded upon parts and colours, or either ; as M. Leo the Jew hath excellently difcoMEfed in his Genealogy of love ; defining beaury a ibrmai grace, which delights and moves them to love which comprehend ir. This grace, fay they, difcoverable outwardly, is the Refplendor and Ray Come int^ripur aiid iriv liable Beauty, and proceedeth from the formw of compoHnons amiable. Vvhofe faculties if they can they beget in the fubje6t an agreeable aptly Ci)ntrive the matter, andpleafing beauty; if over-ruled thereby, they evidence not their perFor feeing that out of the fame m.a.fe^iions, but run into deformity. tetials, Thfrfitesznd.Pcris^ Beauty and Monflrofity may be contrived; the form^$ and operative faculties introduce and determ.ine their perfe-
4li,on8.
Which in nacuraibodies receive exa6i:nefl'e in every kinde, according to the firll /<a^f^ of tbe Creator, and in contrived bodies the fancie of the Artificer. ..And byjhis confideration of Beauty ,the Moors alfo are not excluded, but hold a common lliare therein with all Mankinde.
'J^aftlyi
^.j,,
r..
we
and of colour*, yet todefcend or determine in what fymmetiry and colour it coxju{ifted., were a flippery defignation. For Beauty; [j^deterniin^ by opijiipn, and fcems to have no efien<:e that holds on notion withal ; that .feemi^g beauteous uncaonv, whi-h haihno fivour wijih another ; and
ailQv\(t'he,
intp
finguli^rities,
it
i%uucal, of
' ,
f){pi'-
fcein a;,fee.ibk, Thus Vindss/liaM mike ikt;N)-^r6;eRi cot?>tLly r^^HO tbe'.M.poifi an Aqi.iline or h.iyvked one yrjte the W-fK/^'^fVy.:. a iarg;e and frpmin-mt no^ v..nf Q .he ^ontjitt ; but Dpng :of A^14f'th^fe<ire a*.ceptable in o^ropiii^nriT-hi^farne think it mpft oi;i>amencai to v\ear t&ir- jbratekts oi^ 4^k V^'tiils, others fT,y. it
FaJiy^Mv0'-9f9frmityi 9i
it;
i>,bSEt|;f.r,to:bavet(ticm,a|>^^^
th[cir;y^gfjies,i'
tCr.v\i^r;|hejr,(J%|f-;?n<jvj^y/el^ri^l
t^
^a;;,- :orJiy!jf,>vi;l:i
-exq^gi^
fei^
they
.
t|at>g thej)i
intheir
Ji^;/s,
cheeks or nofes;
^^^^ i^i
Thus Humer ro
or li-ht
^(M^pm^At.
novy thi^
.
cjiktl^hcr.
>^^-^ b
tr^^y
blevy-eyed.;,-
amiable then the black. Thus we th^ the bhckne-fie of ti^.MjC^.ors .a,s ugj)
co'.nel-y)
I^i)
And, howioeyex (^,^rber^^ under this complexi,on^ yet ji^ ^he-,|V;^autie ^ ot" oiiti-^fvio^r bi^cjjnefje is, ce^nmended, when it is f^id,. his lock>j ^re'buO?ie,; and bjt^ck as a ^laveg Sp that to infer this a^ a <;i\i;ie, ,qr to reafoft it as a de f'^f mity ^ is np^ >Y^'^y reafo^iable ; rh? two, %ndft|^i^^,-of Be,My, Sy:in^ii5^:ry,-^d i^nijjlejdoijj. /ec(|iv,in fufh v^U'i'r ous apprel\e-of^pj>,j i;jfhaj;r;io4dv vuipi) >>ift. h^;i5j\po\f;i^!^l/oT)iyibf^,^ eurfe or undeniable deformity, without a manifeft and confefied degree
b^f
by the
Fc>j:ts
Ot'mondionr)'.
Laltly,
Book.^.
Laftly, itis a very
^9^:?'
method unto Philofophy, and a perpetual promotion of ignorance, in points of oblcurity, nor open unto eafie confide ations, to fall upon aprefenc refuge unto Miracles; or recur unto i'limediate contrivance from the unfea chable hands of God. Thus in the conceit of the evil odor of the Jews, Ch ifUans
without a farther refearch into the verity of the thing, o" enquiry into draw up a jud-,ement upon them from the palTion of their Saviour. Thus in the wondrous efteils of the-ciine of /r/^/;^, and the freedom from all venomous creatures, the credulity of common conceit imputes this immunity upon the beneai^lion of S. Patrlci^^ as BidanndGyraiJui have left ecorded. Thus the Aiie hivinj a peculiar mark of a crolfe mace by a black lift down his back, and another athwart, o at rij^hr angels aown his il-oulders ; common opinion afcribes this figure unro a peculiar li n ^tion ; UncQ that beaft had the honour tobear our Sasiouronhisback. Ce.Dinly this is a courfe more defperate then Antipathies, Sympathies, or occult qualities, wherein by a final and fatisfailive difcernnient of faith, we lay the laft and particular effedls upon thehrll and _eneral caufe of all tnings, whereas in the other, we do but palliate our determinations; until our advanced endeavours do totally rejed , or partially falve. their evalithe caufe,
ons.
^
GAAP.
XII.
A Digrefjion
concerning Blacknejfe,
Here being therefore two opinions repugnant unto each other, it And bem.ay not be prefumptive or skeptical to doubt of both. fhall we colours, caufeweremiinimpefe6^in the general Theory of although wherein blacknefle at deliver prefent a (ho:t difcovery of
;
perhaps
no greater fatisfailion then others, tempts exceed any for we fhall Emperically and
afford
;
we
yet
ll)all
our at-
fenfiblie difcourfe
hereof ; deducing the caufes of Blacknefle pom fuch Originals in nature, as we do generally obferve things are denigrated by Art. And herein I hope our pro:,relinon will not be th6ught unreafonable ; for Art being the imitation of Nature, or Nature" at the fecond hand; it is but a
fenf.ble expreffion of effe^s
moved
caufes
dependant on the fame, though more reand therefore the works of the one may fetve to difco-
defying excretion
and comprehending
Qact
dennes
'^Y'^-^to
'
Book.
6,
itj a reparation of moift and dry parts made by the action of heat or fire, and cblourmg bodies objeffed: Hereof in his Meteors, from the qualities of thefubje^he raifeth three kindes the exhahtrons f om ligneous and lean bodies, as bones, hair, and the like, he call^ih M^f-, fuptw J frorti fat bodies, andfuch as have not their fitnefs
;
confpicuous or feparatcd he termeth f^iyw<^ fr^'go^ as wax, rofin, pitch, or turpentine ; that from unfituous bodies, and fuch whofe oyliNew every one of thefe nefle is evident, he nameth uvikia or ttidor. do black bodies objcftedunco them, and are to be conceived in the footy and fuliginous matter exprefied. I fay, proceeding from the fulphur of bodies torrified, that is the oylie fat, and unctuous parts wherein confift the principles of flammabiliry. Not pure and refined fulphur, as in the fpirits of wine often rectified ; but containing terreftriouS parts, and carrying with it the volatile fait of the body, and fuch as is difUnguiHiable by tafte in foot, nor vulgar and ufpal fulphur; for that leaves none or very little blackneffe, except a metalline body receive the exhala-
ooh. /''.:
I fay,' torrified, fiiidged, Or fuff-ring fom.e impreflfion fi-om fire ; thus ar^ bodies cafually or artificially denigrated, which in their naturals are of another complexion: thus are Charcoils made black by an infection of their own fuffitus, fo is it true what is affirmed of combuftible
bodies.
Adufianlgra^teri^fiaalha',
black at
firft
become white,
allies. And fo doth fire cleanfe and purine bodies, becaufe it confumes the fulphureous parts, which before did make them foul and therefore refines thofe bodies which will never be m.undified by water. Thus Camphire of a white fubftance, by its fnligo affordeth a deep black. So is pitch black, althou^^h it proceed from the fame tree with Roiin, the one diftilling forth, the other forced by fire. So of the fuffitus of a torch, do Painters make a velvet black fo is Lam.p-black made fo of burnt Harts-horne a fable fo is Bacon denigrated in Chimneys fo in Feavers and hot diftempers from cholSr aduft is caufed a blacknefs in our tongues, teeth and excretions ; fo are uflilago, brant corn and trees black by blading ; fo part > cauterized, gangrenated, fiderated
: :
and mortified become black, the, radical m.oifture, or vital fulphur fuffering an excinition, and fmothered in the part affeited. So not only actual but potential fire : not burning fire, but alfo corroding water will induce a blacknefle. So are Cfiimneys and Furnaces generally black, except they receive a clear and m.anifed fulphur for the fmok^ of fulphur will not black a paper, and is commonly ufed by vvomen to whiten Tiffinie?, which it performeth by an acide vitrioWliythcfmoke Jqus^ and penetrating fpirit afcending from it, by reafon whereof nor'will it eafily light a Candle, un^^ ^ ^^^ ^?^ ^ kindle any thing phorbfacbnf*'. F^^ til that fpirit be fpent, and the flame apprcacheth the match. This
:
'
is
Book.
6*
ai CmfnonEmurs,
^H \/9^
is that acide and piercing fpirif which with fticha^lvity arid coinpuniStion invadech the brains and noftrils of thofe that receive it. Arid thus when
i^t-//-?;?/** affirmeth that Charcoals made out of the wood of Oxy cedar are white , Dr. Jordan in his judicious difcourfe of mineral waters yeeldeth the reafon , becaufe their vapours are rather fulphureous then of any
So we fee that Ttnh coals vviJl not black other combuftible fubftance. limien being hanged in the fmoak thereof, but ratlrer whiten it, by reafon of the drying and penetrating quality bf fulphur ^ which will make red Rofes white. And therefore to conceive a general blackiiefs in hefl^ and yer therein*lhe pure and refined flames of Sulphur , is no Philofophical conception , nor will it well coniift with the real efie<fts. of ics nature. :i ^^' vii il^iiiw iait.fiitvb AOi;'oii^ ll:, Th^fe are the advenient and iartificial Wa^^es of denipjiatibn , alnrwcrably whereto m.ay be the n.ituralpro^efs. Thefe are the wayes vvhere- by culinary and common fires do operate , and correfpondent hereunto may be the effv;6ls of fire elemental. So may Bitumen , Coales , Jet, Black-lead, and clivers mineral earths become black ; being either fuliginous concretions in the earth , or iuflrering a feorch from denigrating So men and other animals receive difPrinciples in their formation. ferent tindlures from conftitutiori and camplexional dflorefcences, and defcend fUll lower, as they partake of the fuliginous and 'denigrating hu* Andfo may the;e//?/'^f/<rffj or jV^r/if/ become coal-black, Inour; from fuliginous etfiorefcences and complexional tinftures arifing from
fuchprobabiliti-2s, as
wehwedechredbefore.
;.
hereby Wiies become black , is .an Atraoitncoufe cx>nJitibn'.or ir.i .ture , th :.t i a vitriolace or cop^eToferquaHty corijoyntin'^! witfa iTfterreRrious and ailiingent humidity; for fo is A>ira}vientma Sc:iptormm y or wri? in^ Ink commonly made by copperofe caft. upon a I fay a vitriolous or copperous quality decoiilion or infufion of'iialls. for vitriol i> the adli/c oc chi-f iiv^redtent in Ink, and no other fait dnat
>\
I know will 'Irika riie>' colour vVirhiialls ; neithei Alom , Sairgena, Ni- w^u 't.; -~ tre; norAr^uoniAck. ISrowartificialGOpperDfe, andfuchaswexom* n,on Coppe*-' monlyufe, risa rou:h rndacritrioniQuskindof -fak-dr'awn out of fer* rofeis. reous anderu-^inous e rths , pnrraking chiefly of Iron aud Coffer ; the
.
blew of Copper, the reen moii of Iron NorisitunufualcodifTolve fra jnenrs of lion in th.- liquor 'thereof , for advarnca^e in the concre.
tion.
I fa^v a teticefkious 6r aftringent humidity; for witthout this there will enfue .no dn^l;ure ; for Copperofe in a decoction rif Letrnce
or Mallows afford no bbck,. which Vvithanafiringenc mixture it will do, though it be made up with oyle ,^ as in priniin^i; and: painting Ink. But whereas in this compofition we ufe onelj/ ^^it-galls , thnt- is an excrefcence from the Oak, therein vve follow and beat up the old receir; for .7ny plant of :auftere-and.ftiptick pares will flifiici , as I have ejcpeiimented in Br.ijlsrti y Mrrvhalans , Myrt^^A' Brahmtica ,. BaiMtftium
GgS2
of
^13
.
Er^qHmesinto f^ul^ar
of what colour foever, do leave
red
:
Book.^
:
in che
And
fo Diof-
cor Ides in his receitot Ink, leaves out gall, and with copperofe
makes
ufe
of foot.
Now if we
ed
fait
vitriol this
more
fix -
thereof; For the phlegm or aqueous evaporation will not denigrate; nor yet fpirits of vitriol , which carry wi^h them volatile and nimbler Salt : For if upon a decoilion of Copperofe and Gall, be poured the fpirits or oyl of vitriol, the liquor will relinqui^ his blacknefs the gall and parts of the copperofe precipitate unto the bottom , and the
Ink grow clear again ; which indeed it will not fo eafily do in common Ink , becaufe that gum is diflolved therein, which hindereth the feparation; But Golcothar or vitriol burnt , though unto a rednefs containing che fixed fait, will make good Ink and fo will the Lixivium., or Lye
;
but the Terra or Infipid earth remany things foragroft and ufeful red. And though Spirits of vitriol, projected upon a decodion of galls, will not raife a black, yet if rhefe fpi:its be any way fixed , or return into vitriol again , the fame will not a6t their form.erparts and denigrate as before. Ajid if we yet make a m.ore exafl enquiry, by what this fait of vit iol more peculiarly gives this colour, we lliall f nd it to be f om a metalline condition , and efpecially an Iron Property or ferreous participation. For blew Copperofe which deeply partakes of the copper will do it but
;
but ferves in
'
is made of Copper will not do it at all Buc of Iron infufed in vinegar, will wirh a dec oilion, rof ga Ik make good Ink, without any Copperofe at all and fo will infufion of Load-fione, which is of affinity with Iron. And though more confpicuoufly in Iron , yetfucha Calcanrhous or Atramentoiis quality, we will not wholly rejefl in other m.ettals, whereby we often obferve black tindures in their folutions. Thus a Lemmon, Quince, or rt^arp Apple cut wiih a knife becom.es immediately bl.5ck: And from the like cau:e. Artichokes ; fo fubiimate beat up with whites of eggs, if touched with a knife, becom.es incontinently black. So yJ^uafo'tij uhofe ingredient is vitriol, will make white bodies black. So Leather drefled with the bark of Oak, is eafily made black by a bare folution of Copperofe. So divers Miner^il waters and fuch as participate of Iron, upon an infuiion of galls, become of a dark colour; and entering upon black. So fteel infufed, makes not only the liquor dusky, but in bodies whe-^ein it concurs with propO tionable tindlures m.ikcsalfo the excretions black.! And lo alfo from this vitiiolous quality ylfercHnus du/cu- ^ and vitriolvbm.itive occafion bla<;k e fections. But whether thi:; denigrating quality in Copperofe p.oeeedeth from an I on pa' ticipation , or rather in Ilon from'* vitrioloiis communication ; or whether black tiuilwes from
weakly
Verdigrife which
the
filings
-^
metal-.
Book.^
and Common
Srrours*
^^"i-^ju^
metallical bodies be not Froni vitriolous' paTs contained in their fulphur, f:nce coT.mcn fulyhiir cont^iineth alfo much virrici, m<iy adn^.ic conlide*r.uion.
it
Vitriol are the powefijl Deni^yarors. Sichacon irionthere is naturally in foine living creatures.
that black
humour by
Ar'ijhrl'
mined -^^^^
Atrar/fcrtuv:^
ii natural l!y
maybe
in fom.e PKints,
whereby they extinguilli inflam.niation^,- cor obo-ate the ftomack , and are efteemed fpecifical in the tpileplie. Such .;n At am.entous condition there is to be found foinetime in the blood, when that which fom.e call Acetum^ oiht's F'itrioi'^-n, concurs with part^ prepacheries
;
tin,Ll:ure.
And
^
fo
yldoors
become Negroes
mi^hc of
there are vitriolous parts,qualities, and How a vitrio" in living bodies ; for tliere is a fowr lous quality
inli-
beeometh miLlcr and more agreeable unto the fence , and this is that ve .itable vit.riol , whereby cive s pLints contain a grateful Jliarpnefs, a; Lemm.onSjPom.egranats, Cher.ies, or an auftee and inconAnd that not only co6ledrou:hnefs, as Sloes, Medlars and Chinees. viniol is a caufe of blacknefs, but that the lalts of. natural bodies do carry a powerfnUhoke in the tin^ure and vernilli of all things, we fhall not c'eny, if we contradi<il: not experience , and the vihble art of Dyars, who advance ond graduate their colours wirh Salts. Fo: the decodUonofiim.ples which bear the vifible colours of bodyes decoded, are dead and ev^nid , without the conmixion of Alum, Argol, and the like. And
pKints,
^*"S bodies,
.,
So Cin.ibar becom.es. apparent in Chymicr.l preparations. redby the acide exhalation of fulphur, which otherwife prefentsa pure: and niveous white. So fpirits of Salt upon a blew paper make an orient red. So Tartar o: Vitriol upon an infuiion of Vrolets affords a delightthis is <^lfo
fiil
crim.fon.
^
Saltpeter, j>n
fides thereof;
fpirits in
wonderfuhvhat variety of colours the fpirits of elpediliy, if they be kept in a gl.ifs while they pierce the.
Thus
it is
I fay,
plmts the-eof perhaps acquire their verdure. And from, fuch folary irraciations m.ay thofe wondrous varieties aiife , which are obfevable in Animals, as Mallards heads, and Peacocks feathers,
the earth the
receivin.; intention or alteration
^^
colours^
^f
plants, &<v.
arifc.
acrording as they are p"efented unto- may the li^ht. Thus Saltpeter, Am.moniack and Mineral fpirits emicdele<L^,-!ble 3nd various colours ; and common Acjucforns will in fome green and narovv m.outhed glaffes, about the verges the.reof, fend forth a deep and Gentianella blew. Thus have we r-t lilt drawn our con;e6>ures unto a period; whereinv iCour contem.pktions afford no fatisfacftion unto othe rs, I hope our at-
Ggg3
te-T-pts:
t^ 414
Book. ^.
tempts will bring no condemnation on our felves, ( for befides that adventures in knowledge are laudable, and the aflayes of weaker heads afford oftentimes improveable hints unto better ) although in this long journey we mifs the intended end ; yet are there many things of truth difclofed by the way ; and the collateral verity, may unto realbnable i^zculations, requite the capital indifcovery.
CHAP.
Of
XIII.
gypfies.
y\ and
Uch wonder
natu:'al
it is not we are to feek in the original of z^thibpars Nt^rois , being alfo at a lofs concerning the Original
Opinions con'5^^^"S
Gypfiej
.^^*<^''
of Gypfies and covnterfeit ^<9(7r/, obfervable in many parts oi Enro^e^ liyi.jid-i and tAfrica. Com.mon opinion deriveth them from tyEgyp , and from thence they derive ihenifelves, according to their own account hereof, as -4<f?//?^rdifcoverediii the letters and pafs which they obtained from Sigifmmid the Emperour, that they firft cam.e out of lefler <t/^;/>r, that having defe6led from the Chriltian rule , and relapfe unto Pa^an rices, fome of every family were en oyned this penmce to wander aoout the world; or as Av.n.h.m delivereth, they pretend for this vagabond courfe, a judgement of God upon their Forefathers, who refufed ^^ entertain the Virgin Mary and Jefus , when llie fled into their Coun^'
which account notwithflandmg is of little probibility for the ge, who enqui e into thc^ir original, infift not upon
:
^ndare fo
little
from
rir^j/ accounting,
Bergoma^ fetcheth them from ( hul^, o/^"w^ iSy/t^/Wrf from fome part of Tartary ^ B I'o^ins no further then f^'aUchia aad Bulgaria^ no^ Auentiy:Hs then the confines of Utat-^
themorii^,inaily SyriMy:s^ Thll':fppis
<j/
'
gar'ia.
tfhfcrvit.Li.
makerh evi;!ent; who met Matatea, and , the villages on the b.mks oi Nilnsy who norwirhlbnnin^; were accounted ftrangers unro that Nation, and wanders from forreign parts, even as they are e(leemed with us. That they came not out of cygvp: is alfo-probable, becaufe their firft Gypfies fr ft knownin^cr- appearance vvasin (jt^rw^jwyjfince the year 1400. nor were they obferminy, ved before in other parts of Ettrop?^ as is deducible from Mftf^fiiry GeneThat they are no
e^^<ryj!?r/^/
,
Ihn'ms
Grand Cairo
hrard,C'f~afitffM,^ndOrte/ius.
"
vi
;,.
'
[
firit
lei
is
alfo probable
from
their
Book.^.
andCoimiontrrowrs,
^^^
^^^
thiiir language , which was the Sclavonian tongue j and when they wandred afterward into Frar,ce ^ they were commonly called Bohmlans^ which name is ftill retained for Gypfies. And therefore when Cra/itfm delivercth, thsy hrft appeared about the Balcick Sea, when Bdlomm de-
from Bulgaria and JVaUchla^ and others from about Huthey fceak nor'repucnantly hereto for the language of thofe Nations was SclavoniAn; at ieaft fom.e dialeil thereof. But of what Nation foever they were the firft, they are now almoft of
riveth them,
ffariii-,
: -
all;
unto them fomeofeverycountrey where they w^mderj loft 7 or whether at all again, is not without fome Nations have out-lafted others of fixed habitations: BeUen. ohfef' unfetled doubt for been Kinifhicd by moftChrifiian Princes, yet vat l.z. have Gypfies though and have ihey found fome countenance from the Great Turk, whofuffereth ^^"jc!* ^^^ ihem to live and maintain publike Stews near the Im.perial City in Ti- mateth '^^"'"^ rat ofwhom he often maketh a politick advantage, imploying them as Gypfies. Spyes into other Nations,under which title they were baniilied by Charls
aifociating
the
Fifr.
CHAP.
Offome
XIV.
others*
comm.only accufe the mcies of elder times in the improper of heaven alTigned unto Conftellations j which do not feem to have been com.monly committed by Geographers and Hiftorians, in the figural refemblances of feveral Regions on earth ; \\ hile by Livjsnd]M/\ts Ruftictif the Iflandof Britain is m.ade to refemble a Italy by Numaiamts to belike anOak-^**^/'' ''*?'''* long diili or two-edged axe while the phancy of Strabo m.akes the ha- ^"''* ^^''"' Spain Ox-hide an and leaf: bit^ted earth like a cloak , and Dieny'-m Jftr will have it like a fling with many others obfervable in good writers, yet not m.ade out from
figures
;
;
WE
the letter or fignihcation ; acquitting Aftronom.y in their figures of the Zodiack wherein they are nor juftified unto ftrid refemblances, but ra:
ijeSMloboU made out from the effeils of Sun or Moon in thefe feveral portions cap. z, ofheaven, or from peculiar influences of thofe conftellations , which fome way make good their names. Which notwithftanding being now authentick by p refer iption may be retained in their naked acceptions , and names tranflated from fubflances known on earth. And therefore the learned Heveliui in his accurate Selenogrophy , or defcription of the Moon, hath well tranflated
ther
,
the
of
Seas and Mountains, unto the parrs then ufe invented names or humane denomination', with witty congruity hath placed Aiomt Sinai Taurns-, M&otis ^alm^ the Mediterranean Sea, Mattritania^ Sicily and fa mithat
arid rather
-,
More
41^
Book.^..
ouc ofthe greater andleflerSr .us, which put together do makeup words, ?h^?*'* "** wherein CabalilHcal Speculators conceive they read rhe events of future to make out the Gnffircl out ^^^^i^ 3 ^nd how fro'.n the Scars in the head oiMednfay of.R. Cbomcr, vvovdCharah ; and thereby defolation prefi^nified unto Grjtc^'or ja. vaf7, numeraliy characterized in that word, requireth no ri^id Reader. It is not ea!:e to reconcile the different accounts of longitude, while in modern tables the hundred and ei.,hty egree, is more then thirty deAthM.T!iirMr gtees beyond that part > where iVs/^??/}' pl.iceth an i8o. Nor will the i proxmio. Avider and more Wcflern term of Longitude, from whence the Moderns begin their comm.enfuration , fuificiently falve the difference. The ancients began the meafuve of Longitude from the fortunate IllanJs or Canaries, the MoJernsfrom the A?ores or Iflands of S. Michael; but fince the Azores a-e but fifteen dei^rees more Weft , why the Moderns flici'ld reckon i^o- where 'Pfr/^^;?>'accounteth above 220. or though ^'^^^ ""^ ' ? c'egrees at the Weft ; they iliould reckon 30 at rhe Eaft, WLoheriris Huts ^^^7 beyond the Ome menfure, is yet to be determined ; nor would it be d'tjibis. much adv.mta^ed, if we ft-.ould conceive rhit the compute ot 'Vtolomy ^vere not fo agreeable unto rhe Canaries, as the Hefpericies or Ifiands of Cabo Vcrd\ Whether the coT.pute of m.oneths from the firft appearance of rhe Moon , which divers Nations [iv efollowed , be not a more perturbed way , then that which accounts fi-om the con unction , may fcem of reafonable doubt , not only from the uncertainty of its appearance in is I ^^^'' ^"^ cloudy wenther, but unequal time in any, that is fooner or lat^ <^.\. ter, according as the Moon fl-iail b^ in rhe ligns of long defcenfion , as When the Moon will be l-'ifc s^ Ar'tes^ 7 aurtt!^ in the Peri ,eum or fwiftcft motion , and in the ?" f* hP ^"^''^hern Latitude wher by fometim.es it m.ay be feen the very day of c*ft t fcrftdayo the change, as will obfer\'ably happen 1 (5^4. in th^ moneths of zy^prll May ? or whether alfo the compute of the day be exactly made f om and Wby^the Sun is ken after it -the vihble arifing or fetting of the Sun, becaufe the Sun is fometip.es naisfflt, or natu- turally fet, and under the Horizon, when vifibly it is nbove it ; from, the rally under caufes of refraction, ?nd fuch as .m.ake iis ehold a piece of filver in a bai e Horjun. ^^^^ v\'hen water is put upon it, which we could not difcover before , as
letters in tht heavens, iiutle
c
'
W hither the Globe of rhe earth be but a point, in refpeit of the flats
an':'
firm.ament, or
h':^\v if the
upon
from
if-
To
ferences of refradtion ? V\ hither if the motion of rhe Heavens ftiould ceafe awhile, all things whit thc^Yo: Id infl-'ntly perilli ? and whether this aflertion doth not make the
,
motion of the p^j.^.^ of fubluntry thin-;s, to hold too loofe a c'epcndencv upon the firft Heavens fer^ r , n ~. l cA '^"- conferving canle ? at leifl umpute too much unto the motion of the ntb.^Mci Lib. heaven^-, vxhofeem.inent a6tivitiesareby heat, li^htrnd influence, the
-,
motion
it
felf
of
Book. 7.
of celeftial
ferved.
virtues
417
hath learnedly ob-
J^Z
'**
Whether CoTiets or Blazing Stars be generally of fuch terrible efels, have conceived them; for^Jince it is foimd that many, from whence thsfe prediitions are drawn , hive b^en above the Moon; why they m.ay not be qualified from their pofitions , and afpe6b vvhirh they hold with ftars of favourable natures; or why lincethey may be conceived to arife from the effluviums of other Stars, they may not reas elder times
or iince the natures of the fixed ; AlUoIogically differenced by the Planets , and are efteemed Martial or Jovial, according to the colours whereby they anfvver thefe Planets ; why although the Red Com.ets do carry the portenfions of Mars , the bri;htly-white iliould not be of the Influence of Jupiter or Venus,anfwerably unto Cor Scorpii and Arflurus; is not abfurd to doubt.
Stars, are
Hhh
THE
.0
io6fe f:
andC(ff'tfl0nBmttri
Mi
^^
THE
SEVENTH BOOK
ofHoly Scripure.
CHAP.
of
I.
'Hat the Forbidc^en Fruit of Paradife was an Apple, is commonly believed, confirmed by Tradition, perpetuated by \\ ritings, Verfes, Piilures ; and fome have been lo bad Profodlans^ as from thence to derive the Latineword^^/^w/, becaufethat fruit was the fitftocJj ca/ion of evil ; wherein notvvithftanding determinati- Opinions, ons are prefumptuous, and many ,1 pcrceive,are of an- wh kinde other
in the myftery of Gvrofim Btcwpu reviving the conceit o^ Barccph^,:^ peremptorily concluderh it to be the IndUn^i<^-UQty and by a witty Allegory labours to confirm" the ft^md Again, fome fruits pafle Under the name of ^dams ^ppi^^, which^ft common acception admit not that appellation the one defcribed by <M^,thiotm under -the name of ^omn n Ad.imly a very far fruit, atla Wot unlike a Citron, but fom.ewhat ibur^ier, chopt and cranied, '\ntJgarly conceived the m arks of Adam\'^ttti\\. Another, the fruit '6fWt
belief.
it
of
the
Vine
'*^t)i(i<iaMc
-,
whofe
fruit lay
tranf^relTion
>,
plant
'vvliich
Mnfa^
'hixt
Hhh
eommonJy
^^
420
monly
or
Sn^mrUs
the Apples of Paradife
itAo yulgiir
Book.
not refembling an Apple in figure, and ; Which fruits a chough rhey have reCucumber. in tafte a Melon ceived appellation? fuicjble unco the Tra( ition, yet can we nor from No rr.or^ then zArbor thence infer thsy were this fruir in queftion vittty fo. commonly c Ailed to obtain its name from thi Tree of life in Paradife, or yirbor juda, 'to be the fame which fupplied the gibbet unI :
wherein is only paris no determination in the Text was the fruit of a Tree good for foovi, and pleafmc unto the eye, in which regards many excel the Apple; and therefore learned men do wifely conceive it inexplicable ; and Thllo puts determination unto defpair, when he affirmeth the fam.e kinde of fruit was Surely were it not requihte to have bpen connever pro uced fince. cealed, it had not paffed unfpecitied ; nor rhe tree revealed which concealed their nakednefle, and that concealed which revealed it ; for And the like in the fame chapter mention is made of Fig-leaves. particulats, although they feem uncircumftantial, are oft fet down in fo is it fpecined that LtUs fate under a Juniper-tree, holy Scripture uihfalom handed by an Oak, and ZachcM got up into a Sy comore. And although to condemn fuch Indererminables unto him thct dc^ manded on what hand Fenns was wounded, the Philofopher thought it a fuflRcient refolution to re-enquire upon what leg King Philip halD^tfi/ScUtict, ed ; and the /<''-f notijidoubte ly refolvedof the Sciatica-fide of Ja^ ^MGen.;i.t5* coh^ do cauteloufly in their ciet abUain from, the finews of borh yet ^^'^^ are there many nice particulars which may be authentically determined. ThatP-t'-r Cut off rhe ri.ht care of cJ^^?/f /:;//, is beyond all doubt. That our Saviour eate thePafleover in an upper room., we miay deterAnd fome we may concede which the Scripture mine, from the Text. That the Dyal of ^haz. was \'hctd upon the plainly def.nes not. Weft-lide of the Temple, we will not deny, or conrradiil tbedefcrifiionoi yidilcomipti. Th^x. Abrahams Tervant put hi h nd under his ric^htthigh^ wefhallnot queftion; and that the Thief en the right to make good h.'ind was U\Z(iy and the other on the left reprobated^ the Method of the laft judicial difm.iir.on, we are ready to adndr. But furely in vain we enquire of what woo J \\xsM/f rod, or the tree f^isceifus tfl Or thourh Tradition or humane HiRory truntuscuprcf that fvveetned the waters. mvj\i afford fome li hr, whether the Crown of chornes was made of Pa^ fut. olivd fii P^^^*'"*P'f''f'"ii\iuTiis; whwth.r the Crofle of Chriil were ma.^e of thofe foure woods ^^^''*'"^ ^' D;i;vr>zrff, or only of Oak, atcorcin^ unto L/p wand %"rte ftiV i ^" ^^^ O'orop.'tic, we i ,bour not to determine. For though hereof p.udenc tme lignum. Symbols .iridpous Allegories be m.aJebywifer Coneeivers yet common he -ids will fiie unto fuperftitious apflicatious, and barclly avoid miraculous or mai ical expeditions. Now the ground of reafon. thac occafioned this exprefTion by an
;
>
Apple,,
Book. 7
oftd
Common
Brrours,
44 j A/?.
is
this fruit,
and which
often taken
So the GoddefTe of Gardens is termed Pon.ona ;. fo the for any other. Proverb expreflerh it to give apples unto ty^lc'mow, fo the fruit which
fo in the Garden of Hcfferidesy ^ar'is dtcidzd was called an Apple ; (which many conceive a fi^lion drawn from Paraciife) we reade of golden Apples guarded by the Dragon. And tofpeak ftritlilyin this for belide the appellation, they placed it more fafely then any other crear variety of Apples, the word in Greek comprehenderh Orenges, Lem.m.on=;, Citrons, Quinces ; :ind as Rue l/iw defineth, fuch fruiLs as ^^ j a- have no rtone within, md a foft covering without; excepting the Pom.e- ttm\'itur^ And will extend m.uch farther in the acceprion of Sp'getiHs^ tfigogein um granite. who comprehenderh all round fruits under the name of Apples, not ex- Herbirim. '-luding Nuts and Plumbs. It hath been promoted in fome conftrudlions from a paffaje in the C^/itic/es, as it runs in the vulgar Tranflation, Sulr arbor: ma.h [nfclta- Cjin.?. vi tCy ihi comtpta ffi maier tn^^ tbi vi'data efi gemxrixtHa. Which w-ords notwithftanding parabolieally intended, admit no literal inference, and are of little force in our Tranflation, I raifedthee under an Apple-tree, there thy mother brought thee forth,, there fhe brouL,hc So when from abisket of Summer-fruits or thee forth that bare thee. Apples, as the Vulgar rendreth them. Ciod, by .-/w^// foretolu the deftrudlion of his people, we cannot fay they had any reterence-unto the but ihereby was fruit of Paradife, which was the deflrudtion of m.m declared the propinquity of their defolation ; and that their tranquillity was of no lon;^;er duration then thofe horary or foon decaying fruits of Summer. Nor whjn it is faid in the fam.e Tranflation, l^oma, defi- pruStat Hirmi the apples that thy foul lurted after dcrii anirnA tux difcejlcrtint a te^ are departed from thee, is there any aljufion therein unto the fruit of paradi e. But thereby is threatned unto Bah^lo^i^ihaz the pleafures and And we reade in PlerifUy delights of their Palate fnould forfake them. that an Apple was the Hiero^lyphick of love, and that the 5f^r^ of Sothelutle Cupids in. the fir ^c;.;^ was made with one in her hand. gures of P/?//fl/?r^/^^ do play with Apples in a Garden ; and there want phiioflf-j.^ not fom.e who have fymbolized the Apple of Paradife unto fuch con^ j?gHr.6.Dc i;
'
llruftions.
moiibus.
fruit,
curiofity
we
then troubhn.j our felves in its decifion ; this only we obferee, when thin are left uncertain, m.en will afllirethem bydetermin-tion. V hich is not only verified concerning the fruit, but the Serpent that^perfwaded j many defining the kind or fpecies thereof. So ij'tf*?':;:v7/rf and ro;w:_/?<?r affirm, it was a Dragon, E/r-^.. gnhir.Hs a Bafilisk, Delrlo a Viper :^nd others a conm.onfnake. Wherein wjjjt ikuicibe^. men ftill continue thedeluHon cf the Serpent, who having deceived Scrpcnc was^ .ve iiithe_maui> fets herpofterityon worktomiftake in the circum- &<^-
was
tafled,
:;?
Hhh.3
ibncey,
i^K
^i'i
rfaiice,
tie
thi^metrmm^
Book. 7
and end^yourS to propagdt6 errors at ^y hand. And thofe ^utdy moft defireth which concern either God or hitnfelf j for th?y cfiflionour God who is abfolute truth and goodnefle ; but for himfelf, who is cxtreamly evil, and the worft (he can conceive, by aberration of conceit they extenuate his depravitie, and afcribe fome goodnefle unto hun.
CHAP.
That a CHafthath one
'Hat t
II.
%ib
leffethen a
Woman.
is
leffe
then a
Woman,
;
common con-
Osexofibus wi.
from theHiftory of Vjf-wfJ^j, wherein it ftands delivered, that Eve was framed out of a Rib of Adam whence it is concluded the fexe of m.an flill wants that Rib Oiir Father loft m Ev:. And this is not only palTant with themanj/, but was urged againft ^o/w^w in ain Anatom.ie of Ms at Pip^ where having prepared the Scheleton of a \Y6man thit ch.mced to nave thirteen ribs on obe fide, therearofea party that cried him down, and even uiito oaths aftirmed, that this was the rib wherein a woman exceeded. Were this true, it would ocuUrly filerice that difpute out of which fide Eve vvas framed it would determihe the opinion of 0/;'<?/?:r, that /he Was made out of the ribs of
ceit derived
;
i'
fid^Sj "oriiicha^ from "the exprefl^on 0/ the Text maintain there aplurahty of ribs reqiiir'ed, Yndrtli^ht indeed decry the parabolical expbfition of Origeh^ C'^j tdy?^ and luth as fearing to concede a plohrtrofity, or mutilate the integrity of ^^^w. preventively conceive the Creation of thirteen ribs. But this will not c6nli(} wiih re^fon O" infpedion. For if we furHow many arid theriin the compare of bones, ribs commonly vey the Scheleton of both Sexes, in men and we /Kali readily dif'cover th t m.en an i wo nen have foure and twenty women. ^^^^ that is, twelve on eaib ide- leven i^reat^r annexed unto theSterribh,'and five letfcr vvHich come lliort thereof, wherein if it fometimes happen that either Sex exceed, the conformation is irregular, defleling from the common rafe or number, and no mote inferiible upon inahKinde, "then 'the moniltolity of the fonof Rdfl-a^ or the yltiolis exceiTe in the number of fingers and tOes. And althou^i fooie' difference there be in f.,fjirt\, "and the fem'ale os inominatum h^
both
\yas
ibmewhit
the
of
'
firf^Aatomy.
"
'
'
Again,
llQpk.j.
Agaui,
andCo^mnErrom.
^^ j
^^^
pU-hough we concede there vvanted one rib In the Scheleton of oy^darK, yetAvere it Jre^ugiiant L^k6' k^foriati^ totrdnoh obrervaci^ on ihat'fiis Fonerity moulc^VVahtrheftfflV/ l?of tv^ "6bl^rve that murifather unto from fon ; the blinde begetting rranfmitted not are lations
fucK as can fee, meh^Yithpnd eye'/hiM^ own peribns do conifer piii P^ffe*^ 'For the {?itd' conve'yeth witF/irnt^t oiiry thee^^
tilite in their
their generanoris.
fin^^le Idea bf whereby "it rrarifmits ifheif perfe'dliphs'ahd 'infirmities ; but '^c^uVle and oyer agaiii; viberetiy ft>frfetim6sit muftiplicioufly delineates " the tame, as in TvVihs, in mixed ^n^ numerous generations. And' 50 That every Tpeak iriore ftri6lly, parts of thefeed'dofeem'jto contain tbe Idea and pare of the feed povyer of the whole; fo Parents deprived of handsjbeget manualiillies, contains the I'^^ ?^ 1^^. ^nd the de'fe^^ of thofe parts is fuppHed by the Idea of others. So" hi ,
"^yery part,
'
'
'one grain of
vhoieAniraat
ihf^^^^^^
'
minatipn, there
"whence
lieth dormant th6 vertuality 6ii{imy other, fometimes .proceed above an hunared ears.
md from
And
thbs
out the caiife of niultiparous productions ; for though !ine feminal 'materials difpeffe and feparate in the Matrix, the formative ^ppeKitor vyiil hot delineate a part, but endeavour the formation of the yi^fe; 'effeling the Tamers far asth^'matterwill pefrmit, and from And therefore, though "<fividirig materials, attempt entire formation.
'may
)3t fiiade
it may not be impoflible what is coiiHrmed ztLaafft range, concerning .the Countefle of Hqlla^ici, nor what .AlhertHs reports And if we'confi'der the maghaH,of the bir^h of an hundred and $fty; we fliall not c<pntfovert its p6/5b|Iipes fdilie i^hmgsy in ^^ner^tion Jtjes Qf in ^thers : nor eafily dueftidn that gr^ac \y6rk", vvhofe vvdnders are cnly fecpiid unto thpfe of th^ Creation, and a clofe a^pfehenfioii oftbe one, might pephaps' afford a gliiiimefijig %bt, ahd'crei>urciiIous' glance of t|ie ' '' ' ' ' " ''-"^ ^' "
,>yondrous
^<^
'
'
'
'
'
'o^ber.'"
'
'
[\
'
i.j
* ..;i .
:!'
lUorivY
Hi
Of Methufdah.
'Hat hath bee every where opinioned by
times,
is
all
men,
and in
all
to difpure
longeft liver of all the pofterity oiAdam^ \\k. qui^fetly beleeve j. butthat he mult needs be fo, is perhaps tfeldw Paralovy to dtny. tor hereof there is no determination from the Textj wherein it i only
particulated he was the Ic^igeft Liver of all the Patriarks vvhofe age is there expref[ed,but thathe out-lived all other^,\ye tarinor weircohcludc.
is mentioned before the flood,the text exwas the fhorteft Liver; who faw but ^^^5.
'years.
y/.-^
424
'
Book. 7.
reft,
But'to afiirm
furely
an
illation
whereto
vve
cannot
Again, Many pcrfons there were in thofe dayes of longevity, of whofe age notwithftanding there is no account in Scripture ; as of thi race of Cyin^ the Wives of the nine Patriarchs, with all the fons and daughters that every one begat ? whereof perhaps fome perfons mighi: out-live Metk'^fe/ah ; the Text intending only the mafculine line of Seth , conduceable unto the Genealogy of our Saviour , and the antediluvian Chronology. And therefore we muft not contrail the lives of thoi^ which are left in lilence by Mofe^ ; for neither is the age of aAbel exprefled in the Scripture , yet is he conceived far elder then commonly opinipned ; and if we allow the coricluiion of his Epitaph as made by Adam , and fo fetdownby SaHan , Tofmt ntdtnr.s p.iter , cki a fji'o j ifUti^ fojlitimfo'-et , AJino ab ortH rer*im 130. Ah AbAc nctb 129. "VVc ihall not need to doubt. Which notwithftanding Cf.jet.w and others confirm, nor idt fiiiprobable", if we conceive,that >4^f/ was born ifi the fecond year of Ad.^,my and Scth a year after the death of Abel : for fo it being faid, th.it <iAdam was an hundred and thirty years old "wheh he begat 5'<//? , -/i?^.7muft,perifti the year before, which was'one hundred twenty niiie.' '/.\," And ifthcaccountdfr^/ extend unto the Deluge, it may not be improbable that fome thereof exceeded any of Seth. Nor is it' unlikely in life, riches, power and temporal blefifings, they, might furpafs th^iii in this world, whofe. lives related unto the next. For 10 when the feed o^Jrcob was under "aAiii^ion and captivity , that of Jfrnad d.nd ^fa,H flourin-idd andgrevv mi<,hty, there proceeding fom the one twelve Princes, from the other no lef;'theh fourteen Dukes and eight Kings. And whereas the age of C/^;andhis pofteriry is not delivered in the Text, fome do falve It from the fecret method of Scripture , which fometime wliolly omits, but feldome or never delivers the entire dufatioii oi' wicked and faichlefs perfons, as is obfervable inthehiftory of /?, and Jth thouibt the Kings of //r Wand JW/?/?. And therefore when m.ention is made by Tome to be that Ijhm^: I lived i ^ 7 years/oirie coriceivehe adhered luito the faith of of the race of Abraham for fo did others who were not defcenied from Jacob ; for *'"' Jft^isthoughttobeah /i^?>^,7, nndofthefeedof/". Laftly ("although we relye not thereon ) we will nor omit irhat conxtit ur ed by learned men , that /<//fi^/7^ Avas ejdej then ^feti-Mfelch-^ inafmuchasht\vas<;r-ea,tedintheperfei1ageofi!^an, which vyas in thofe dayeg 5c or.^oy^ar? ,, for about that timewe read chit they begat children; ib that if unto 9 rp we add 60 ye ITS, he will tKcztdMethnfchh. Andthercforeif not in length rtfdaye^, atleiftinold age he furpaffed others ; he was ol'^er then all, ho was never fo young as atty.. For though he knevy old sge, lie was nevpr acquainted with puberty' , youth -or Infancy ; and fo in a ilrut account lie be^at children at one year old.
.
.\-\
And
Book, 7*
and CnmnoftSrmrf^
%*X^y7
thar men are of the feme age which the fame year ; Sve was as old as her huC compafs of within are born their Adam-, and ^/ fon coepanous unto both. Parent and band Now that conception, that no man did ever attain unto a thoufond years, -becaufe none fhould ever be one day old in the fight of the Lord^ thoufand years are but one unto whom according to that of David , day ? doth not advantage MethnfeUh, And being deduced from a po^ pular expreflion , which will not ftand a Metajyfhyfcal and ftriil examination , is not the force to diuert a ferious enquirer. For unto God jl thnthoufand years are no more then one moment, and in his fight he I , for all parts of time are alike felai: lived no nearer one day then unto him> i nco whoin none are referrible ; and all things prefent, unto whom nochin^, i.> part or to come. And therefore, although we bemeafured by the Zone of time, and the flowing and continued inftants thereyet can we not of, do weave at laft a line and circle about the eldeft thus commenfurate the fphere of Triffrtev^tjlf^^ or fum up the unfuccel^ five and ftable duration of God.
CHAP.
IV.
THat
the
no Rain-bow appear fourty years before the cud of and that the preceding drought unto that great flame OiaU exhaufithe materials of this Meteor, was an aflertion grounded upon no folid reafon but that there was not any in fixreen hundred years , that is, before the flood , leems deduceable from holy Scripture, G. g, I do fet my bow in the clouds , and it fliall be for a token of .a Covenant between me and the earth. From whence notwithflandtng we cannot conclude the non-exiftenc^ of the Rain-bow ; nor is: that Chronology naturally eftablijlied, which computeth the antiquity of effe6ls arifing from phyfical and fetled caufes, by additional impoiitions from voluntary determinators. Now by the decree of reafon and Philofophy , the Rain-bow hath its ground in nature , and caufed by the layes of the Sun , falling upon a roride and oppofite cloud: whereof fome reflected, others refrajdted, beget that ferrii-circnlar v^iery vvegei nerally call the Rain-bow; which mufl fucceed upon concurrence of caufes and fubjedts aptly predifpofed. And therefore, to conceive there was no Rain-bow bsiore, becaufe God chofe this out as a token of the Covenant, is to conclude the exiftence ct things from their fignalities, orofwharis objected unto the fenfe, aco-exiftence with that whichis internally prefented" unto th underftandin^. With equal reafon wt
there fhall
,
World
may
j^^^
Book. 7
may infer there was no water before the iniUtution of Baptifm,nor bread
and wine before the holy
Again, while
Thit there it lUin bow of
the.Mpon.
loVrfo; Eucharift. men deny the antiquity of one Rain-bow, they ancientr For, befide the folary Iris which God llievved unto ly concede another. Ntah , there is another Lunary, whofe efficient is the Moon vifibJe and fome degrees aQi^jy ijj the night, moft commonly at full Moon bove the Horizon. Now the exilknce hereof men do not controvert,
, ,
although effeled by a different Luminary in the fame way with the other. ^And probably appeared later , as being of rare appearance and rarer obfervation , and many there are which think there is no fuch thing in Nature. And therefore by cafual fpetators they are.Jookt upon like prodigies, and fignifications made, not figniiied by their natures. Ihall not need to conceive God made the Rain-bow at Laftly this time ,- if we confider that in its created and predifpofed nature , ic was n)Qre proper for this fignification then any other Meteor or celeflial appearancy whatfoever. Thunder and Lightning had too much terrour to have been tokens of mercy ; Comets or Blazing Stars appear too feldome to put us in mind of a Covenant to be remembred often : and might rather fignifie the world ilould be once deftroyed by fire, then never again by water. The Galaxia or milky Circle had been more probable; for ( befide that unto the latitude of thirty , it becomes their Horizon twice in four and twenty hours , and unto fuch as dive under the Equator , in that fpace the whole Circle appeareth ) part thereof is vifible unto any fituation ; but being only difcoverable in the ni^ht, and when the ayr is clear, it becomes^of imfrequent and comfortlefs fig'
We
nification.
'
A ^ed Star had not been vifible unto all the Globe, and fo of too narrow a fignality in a Covenant concerning all. But Rain-bows are feeri unto all the world, and every pofition of fphere. Unto our own elevati6n they m.ay appear in the morning, while the Sun harh attained abofit fourey five degeees above the Horizon ( which is conceived the lar^eftfem.idiameter of any Iris ) and fo in the afternoon when it hath declined unto that altitude again; which height the Sun not attaining in winter, Rain-bowes may happen with us at noon or at any
time. Unto a ri^ht pofition of fphere tncy may appear three hours after the rifing of the Sun, and three before its fetting ; for the Sun afcending fifteen degrees an hour , in three attainethfourty five of a latitude. Even unto a parallel fphere, and fuch as live under the pole , for half a year fome fegments may appear at any. time an<i under any quar:>i; :>!-. ter, the Sun not fetting, but walking round about them. But the propriety of its Election moft pro{rerly appeareth in the naTbe natural tural fignification and pro..;nofiick of i^ felf ; as containing a mixt 'fisFor being in aroride cloud and ready fignjfioMonof nality of rain and fair wCather:
it
thfe
ayr
but becaufe
when
no univerfiHliowres,
aft^coniequentJy no Deluge,
'
Book.7.
andCmmonyrours,\
'
427^.
A<;
deep were open, in vain men lookt for the Rain-bow for at that time It was thereit could not be feen, which after appeared umo N'oah. fore exiitent before the flood , and had in nature fome ground of its adUnco that of nature God fuperadded an affurance of his Prodition. mife, that is, never to hinder its appearance, or fo to replenilli the heavens again, as that we fhould behold it no more. And thus without' difparaging rhe promife, it mi^hc rain at the fame time when Godihew* ed it unto Noah ; thus was there more therein then the Heathens underftood, when they called it the NuncU of the gods , and the laugh of weeping Heaven ; and thus may it be elegantly faid ; I put my bow, not my arrow in the clouds, that isj in the menace of rain the mercy oiffair.^'/*' ?'*''* weather^ ot \ ua 7ni ^Jiwjqa.d -fii Jl c: T.>rAv ^d: Xii\>A .crjrbsid : /j^^'W'* Cabaliflicahhsads, whro fconli that^rcffion mEfay'ydo make a book j/i. 4 4. 5 of heaven , and read therein the great concernments of earth, dolitterally play on this, and from its femicircular figure , refembling the Hebrew letter 3 Caph , whereby is fignified the imcomfortable nwnber of twenty-y at which ] of ph was fold , which Jacoif lived under Laha^ and do note a propriety in its fignification; at whidh men were to go to war as chereby declaring the difmal time of the Deluge. AndChriftian conceits do feem to drain as high, while from the irradiation of the Sun upon a cloud they apprehend the myftery of the Son of Righteoufnefle in the obfcurity of flefb, by the colours green and red , the two deftru6tionsof the world by fire and water ; or by the colours of blood and water, chemyneries of Baptifm, and the holy Eucharift. Lauddble tnerefore is the cuftome of the "jevptsy who upon the appei* ranee of the Rain-bow, do magnifie the fidelity of God in the m.emory of his Covenant ; according to that of Syracldes^ look upon the Rainbow, and praife him. that made it. And though fome pious and Chriftian pens have only fym.bolized the fame from the myftery of its colours, yet are there other affe6lit)ns which might admit of Theological allufi?NorAvould he find a more improper fub;e(ii, that fhould confidet. ons. rbat the colours are made by refraction of Light, and the.fhadows that limit that lij^ht ; that the Center of the Sun, the Rain-bow, and the eye of the Beholder muft be in one ri^hrline, that the Spei"tator muft bs between the Sun and the Rain-bow, that fometime three appear, fc^pie*time one reverfed. With many others, confiderable in Met'iorological Di\ inity , which would more fenfibly make out the Epitbite of tbe Hea- ^biunrnciis^ thens ; and the exprelTion of the fon of Syrach. Very beautiful is the Rain-bow, it compafleth the heaven about with a glorious circle , and the hands of the moft Hi5h ha\'e bended it.
.
'
Ini
CHAP.^
('/^e
4*^
E/iefmriesuao Vulgar
Book.7.
CHAP. V.
P/Sem, Ham, ^nd Japhet.
the three fons of iVTc^/;, Sewy Ham-, and Ja^ht, that ^theorder of their nativity was according to that of numeration, and Jafhet xhe youngeft fon, as moft believe, as Anfiin and others account, tbcfonsof J<;?^^f , and ^:o/i<?^/ need not grant: nor will it fo well concord unto the letter of the Text, and its readieft Interpretations. Forfoisitfaidirt our TranfladQn,5fw the father of al thefonsof //f^^r, the brother of lathet the elder fo by the Septuagint , and fo by that of And therefore when die Vulvar rea< it, Fratre Japhet maTremslius. jors , the miftake,as Jtiius obferveth, might be committed by the negle&t of the Hebrew accent ; which occafioned Jerom fo to render it, and many after to believe it. Noristhat Argument contemptible which is deduced from their Chronology ; for probable it is that A^o^i^h^d none of them before , and begat them from that year when it isfaid he was Again it is five hundred years old , and begat Sem, Ham, and Japhet. faid he was fix hundred years old at the flood, and that two years after 5^iwwasbut an hundred; therefore 6'fw muft be born when N^ah was five hundred and two, and fome other before in the year of five hundred >, and one. Now whereas the Scripture afifordeth the priority of order unto Semy we cannot ftom thence infer his primogeniture. For in Sf'/* the holy line was continued and therefore however born , his genealogy was Gauu* moft remarkable. So is it not unufual in holy Scripture to nominate the * younger before the elder fo is it faid , That Tarah begat zyihaha^y So Rebecca ^ Nach'or and Haram ; whereas Haram was the eldeft. termed the mother of J^ro^and Sfau. Nor is it ftrange the younger {hould be firft in nomination, who have commonly had the-prjoriry in 2a divine be. the bleflings of God, and been firft in his benedidion. So^^f/wasac-:. nediftionsthe^ cepted before Caw , Jfaac the younger preferred before I(hmael the el^^^ J*^'^^^ before /^?/, Jofeph was the youngeft of twelve , and David ISdut the eleventh fon and minour cadet of /f/^. Laftly; though /^/'/'^t were not elder then 5f;, yetmuftwenotafr: firm that he was younger then Cham ; for it is plainly delivered, that after ^^w and /^/'/'^^ had covered iV^t?^/?, he awaked, and knew what his youngeft fon had done unto him viU 5 j^ewnp-, is the exprertion of the Septuagint, F llitis minor o Ieront^ zndimimmHs oiTremelim, And upon thefe grounds perhaps lofephus doth vary from the Scripture enumeration, and nameth them., 5fw, /^p^^A, and Chaw, \y\iich. is alfo obJ^oah cum trihus filils , Semo , JapetOy ferved by the Annian Berojpu Chem. -And therefore although in the priority of Sem ajid laphety there may befom difficulty, though Cyrils Epiphamui, and Aftfiin have accounted
Ci^Oncermiig
^^
'
Book. 7.
couiired
^19 //i^
Annalifl^ and Tetavltu the Chronologift contend for the fame ; yet C^i^.m is more plainly and confefledly named the youngefl in the Text. And this is more conformable unto the Pagan Hiftory and Gentile ac-
count hereof, unto whom Noah was Saturn , whofe fymbol was a Ship "^f"' ^^'^^ *1 relatmg unto the Ark , and who is faid to have divided the world be- ^^^P "'^^ tween his three fons. Ham is conceived to be /^;Vfr , who was the fon G n'*'^ youngeiKon; worlliipped by the name of f/^yw<>/7, which was the ^y- Reiding'^-* gypiamvtA African name for lupter , who is faid to have cut off the "^od^^ abfci-* genitals of his father, derived from the hiftory of Ham^ who beheld '''"''fcr^wfl; the nakednefs of his, and by no hard miftake might be confirmed from ^''^^ "> the Text, as Bocharrw hath well obferved.
as
7cVclpiMx
[acta.
CHAP.
llDOt the Tmer
vl.
of fome generality, that our Fathers after the Tower of Bahel to fecure themfelvcs againft a fecond Deluge. Which however affirmed by lofephm and others, hath feemed improbable unto many who have difcourfed hereon. For ( be'fide that they could not be ionorant of the prom.ife of God never to drown the world again , and had the Rain-bow before their eyes to pu t them in m.ind thereof) it is improbable from the nature of the De-' luge ; which being not poflibly caufablefrom natural fliowres above, or watery eruptions below, but requiring a fupernatural hand, and fuch as all acknowledge irrefiflible ; we muft difparage their knowledge and judgement in fo fucccflefs attempts. Again, They mult probably hear, and fome might know, that the waters of the flood afcended fifteen cubits above the higheft mountains. Now, if as fome define, the perpendicular altitude of the higheft mountains be four miles ; or as others, but fifteen furlongs , it is not eafily conceived how fuch a ttru6lure could be effected. Although we allowed the defcription of Herodotus concerning the Tower of Belns , whofe loweft Story was in heighth and bredth one furlong-, and feven more
flood attempted the
N Opinion there
upon it; abating that of the Annian .8 <?ro/^ , the traditional reoilerom , and fabulous account of the Jewes. Probable it is that attempted was feafible , otherwife they had been amply foolthey what ed in fruitlefs fuccefs of their labours, nor needed God to have hindred them, faying, Nothmg will be reftrained from them, which they begirt
built
lation
to do.
It
ftar,
"
v\
as
is
in the
dayes
43^
^^^iries
into
Vul^M
Book. 7,
dayes of Herodotus ; it was rather a feac of amenity and pleafure , then conducing unto this- intention. It being in a very great plain , and fo impropera place to provide againft a general Deluge by Towers and e-
minenc
were
Fain to
make
manner
tHtftory of the
\World,
of <!yayft. And therefore ^I'^WaLer Raleigh accordingly objeileth : ^^ ^^^ Nations which followed "A'/W^^i, flill doubted the furpriXe of a fecondf^ood, according to the' opinions of the antient Hebrewes ^ it foundeth ill to the ear of Re^fon , that they.wouldhave foent many years in that low and overflown valley of Mtfofotamia-, And therefor^; in this fituation , they chofe a place more likely to have fecured them from the worlds deli'u6^ion by fire, then another Deluge of water: and as Pierlw obferverh ) fome have conceived that this was their intention.
Tht reafon is delivered in the Text. Let us build us a City Tower , whofe top may reach unto heaven , and let us make us a name, left we be fcattered abroid upon the whole earth as we have
Laflly,
^rnd a
j
already began to wander over apart. Thefe -were the open ends propofed unco the people ; but the fecret defign of Nlmrod^ was to fettle onto himfeif a place of dominion and rule over his Brethren, as it after fucceeded , according to the delivery of the Text, the beginning of his
"^
CHAP,
VII.
0/ the Mandrakes of Leah, not omit the Mandrakes of Leah , according to the hiof Geriefis. And Reuben went out in the dayes of Wheat:harveft, and found Mandrakes in the fiel 1, and brought them, unto hi> Mother L(f^/); l\\zx^.%Achel\^\^^^^x\x.o L-ah^ ave me, I pray thee, of thy fons Mandrakes niidfhe faid unto her, is it a fmall matter that thou haft taken m.y husband, and wouldeft thou take my foi^s Mandrakes p.Iio? And /^<sr/;i?/ faid. Therefore he iliall Jye with tliJc this m^.ht for ^ thy fcMis Mandrakes. Prom whence hath arifen a common conccicj. that Rachel requefted thefe plants as a medicine of fecim.-aiion , or whereby ftie n:i ht become fruitful. \\ hich notwiLhftanGin:^ is very C[ueftionabJe, and of incertain truth. For firft from the compatifon of one Text with another, wherh^r the Mandrakes here m.entioned , be the fame plant which holds that name with us, thereisibme caufeto doubt. The word i.^ ufed in another place of Scripture, when the Church inriting h;r beloved into the i^dds, among the deli, htful fruits .of Grapes andPonie^ranates, it is faid, The Mandrakes give a fmelj , and at our gates' are all manner ot
Hiall
WE
ftory
plea-
Book. 7
fruits.
and Common
Srrours,
42 ^^
^j
fleafam Delighr, our Mandrakes afi ford a papaverous and unpleafant odor , whether in the Jeaf or app'Je,. as is difcoverable in their fimplicity or mixture. The fame is aJfo dubious from the cifterent interpretations : for though the Septuaginc and do render it the Apples of Mandrakes in this Text , yet in the other of the Canticles ^ ihe Chaldy Paraphrafe termeth ic Balfame, R. Solomon^ as Drnfta obferveth , conceives it to be that plant the A^ O leafier-, and Geor^lns Venaust the Lilly, and rabit;!Ks named Jefepiin. thatihe word Dudaim-, may comprehend "any plant that hath a good fmeJl , rcfembkthawomans breft, and flourillieth in wheat harveft*
Irfefhni
'
/uninrand 'rnmclim interpret the fame for any amiable fiowers of a pleafanc and delightful odour: but the Geneva Tranflators have been m.ore wary then any: for although they ret.iin the word Mandrake in
the
the Text, they in eftei^retrail it in the Margin : wherein is fee down: word in the Original is DW^/Vw , which is a kind of fruiter flower
urknown.v
Ko
lliall
w- wonder
at the diflent
,
we perpend how varioufly the vegefa>u\ ^6 bles of Scripture are expounded , and how hard it is in many places to in H.^Soripru" m.ake out the/j? c/rj dererm.ined. Ihusare we at variance concerning how varioufly,
if
the plant that covered lonat ; which though the Septuag,int doth render expoimded. Colocynthus, the Spanljk Calabaca, and ours accordingly a Gourd : yet the vulgar trantlates it Hedera or Ivy ; and as Grotim obferveth , lerom
thus tranlVited
it
,
not
The
Italian of D/Wrf//,
Ge-rjcva Tranflators
B. fo hath ours in the Mar^in,fo: pal?^ia Cbrifil is the fam.e with Reclntu^
The
word Kikaion
have herein been alfo circumfpe6>,for they have and. ouis hath alfo aflixedthe fame ,
Nor are they inc^eed alwayes the fame plants which arc. delivered under the fame name , and appellations commonly received amongll So when it is laid of SoIotkou^ that he w it of plants from the Ce^ us. darof Ltbanm^ unto the Hyfop that groweth upon the wall, th:it is, fromthegreateft unto the fm.aliefl, it cannot be well conceived our common Hyfop ; for neither is that the ieaft of vegetables, nor obfervedtogrowupon walls, but rather as Lem-nms well conceiveth , fome kind of the Capillaries, which are ver)' fm.all plants, and only grow upon walh and flony places. Nor are the four fpecies in the holy oyntment, Cinnamon, Myrrhe,Calam.us and Calfia , nor the other in the holy perfume, Frankincenfe, Stail:e Onycha, and Galbanum , fo agreer ably e\ pounded unto thofci Rule with us, as not to leave confiderable doubts behind them. Nor mufl: that perhaps be taken for a fimple un* guent, which Matthew oftly term.eth a precious oynrment ; but rather a compofition , as cJW^rj^an'i/(7A imply by piiUckAW^, that is faithy;atta$bi$li''. fully difpenfed, and as may be that famous composition defcribed \>y nfifi:,
.
DiofcoridfSy
'
JDw/coriiw,
Myrrhe, Balfam and Nard ; which (J//^;? affirmeth to have been in ufewitn the delicate Dames of %ome\ and that the beft thereof was made at LaodlccA-, from whence by Merchants it was conveyed unto other parts. But how to make out that Tranflation concerning the Tythe of Mint, Anife and Cumin, we are (till to feek; for we find not a word in the Text that can properly be rendred Anife "the Greek being *''^4' which the Latines call Anethum^ and is properly Englillied Dill. LafHy, What Meteor that was that fed the IfraNof do they lites fo many years, they muft rife again to inform us. V7)o^iJfimum make it out, who will have it the fame with our Manna , nor will any cbry(<^fton. one kind thereof, or hardly all kinds we read of, be able to anfwer the
Mtgnenumde Ddimt,
qualities thereof, delivered in the Scripture; that is, to fall
flus^ Amomum,
upon the
ground, to breed worms, to melt with the Sun , to talt like fre{h oylc, to be grounded in mills, to be like Coriander feed , and of the colour of
Bdellium..
not deducible from the Text o: concurrent fentence of do reft in the determination of ^// that ilie r'eiired them for rarity , pulcritude Nor is ic probable fhe woL.ld have rehgned her bed unto or fuavity. X?^/?, when at the fane timeline had obtained a m.edicine to fuiStiHe And thetefore Drnfu- who hath exprefly and f.ivourably berfelf. treated hereof, is fo far from conce: in^ this intention', that he plainly concluderh,//>c quo modo illis .' mentem vsnerh co'j:ctr neqiio\ ^owthis conceit fell into mens minds, it cmnot fall into mine; for <he Scripture delivereth it not , no: can it be clearly deduced from the
Again,
It is
Comments,
Text.
fect
Thirdly, If ^^tc/jf/ had any fuch intention, yet had they no fuch ef, for rtie conceiv ed not m.any years after of J)[efh ; whereas in the mean time /.e^/;had three children , Ifachar^ Zabuhn^^nd Dinah.
Laftly,
Although
at thit
main-
ly queftionable wfiether they had any fuch vertue either in the opinions
ofthcfetim.es, or in their proper nature. That the opinion was po* pular in the Lmd of Canaan^ it is improbable, and had Leah underftood thus much , Die would not furely have parted with fruits of fuch a faculty, efpecially unto k^icl <?/, who was no friend unto her. As for its proper nature, the Ancients have gene ally efteem.ed it Narcotick or '{lupefaiHve , andisto befounJ in the Lift of Poyfons , fet down by Dhfcorldes^, Galert^ cyn'Hf^ z/Egineta^ andfeveral Antidotes delivered by them againft it. It vvaslconfef^ from, good Antiquity, and in the dayes of T7c<ophr^Jf-^sa.ccoimxtd3. Philtre, or plant that conciliates af-
fedion
rnof^
pn lb -^elivefcd by Dlofcorides. And this intent might feem p obablc, had they not been the Wives of hoIy7^'^* had Rach /prefented the.m. unto hi-n, an 4 not rec^uefted them for her felf. Now \y\m^DmftorIdes aifirmth in favour of this tj^tk , that the grams
;
'
Book. 7.
grains of the apples
435
^^
cf Mandrakes muiidifie the Matrix , and applied with Sulphur, ftop the fluxes of vvomen, he overthrowes again by qualities deftruitive unto conception ; affirming alfo that the juice thereof purgeth upward like Hellebore, and applied in peflaries provokes the menftruous flowes, and procures abortion. Petrns Alfpanus ^ or Pope
7^/- the twentieth fpeaks
more
wherein among the teceits of fecundation , he experimentally commendeth the wine of Mandrakes given wirh^ Trip her a magna^ But the foul of the medicine may lie in Triphera magna-, an excellent compofiAnd whereas Letion , and for this effed"^ commended by Nicolam, viriHs Ltmr.'tHs that eminent Phyfitian doth alfo concede this effeft, it '\s from manifeft caufesand qualities elem.ental occafionally producing the fame. For he imputerh the fame unto the coldnefs of that fimple , and is of opinion that in hot climates, and where the uterine parts exceed in hear , by the coldnefs hereof they may be reduced into a conceptive conditution , and Crafis accommodable unto generation -whereby indeed we will not deny the due and frequent ufe may proceed unto fome effeil , from whence notwithftanding we cannot infer a fertilitating conditioner property of fecundation. For in this way all vegetables do make fruitful according unto the complexion of the Matrix ; if that excel in heat, plants exceeding in cold do reilifie it ; if it be cold, fimples that are hot reduce it ; if dry,moift, if moift,dry corred^ it ; in which But ro diihnguiiTi thus much is a divilion all plants are comprehended. point of Art , and beyond the Method of %/;chels cr feminine PhyAgain, Whereas it may be thought that Mandrakes may fecunfick. date , fmce Poppy hath obtained the Epithite of fruitful, and that fertility was Hieroglyphically defcribed by Ve^m with an head of "Voppy in her hand; the reafon hereof was the multitude of feed within it fe If , and no fuch m.ultiplying in humane generation. And laftly, whereas- they may feem to have this quality, fmce Opium it felf is conceived to cxtimulatc unto venery, and for that intent is fometimes ufed by Turkjy Terfmn.'^ and moll oirental Nations ; although w'mchrtis doth feem ro favour the conceit, yet Ama-ms Lnfitanns^ and %pdertcHs a Cojtro are againft it ; Caret as ab horto refutes it from experiment ; and they fpeak probably who affirm the intent and cffe^ of eating Opium , \z not -fo much ro invi_'orate themfelves in coition, as to prolongtheaift, and fpin otit the motions of carnality.
;
Kkk
CHAP.
7
Enquiries into
^>i^ 434
yd^ar
Book.
CHAP.
VIII.
Common conceit che e is of the three Kings of Colle'm , concv^i,vedto bw the wife men that travelled unto ou: Sa\ iour by the diredion of the Scar, wherein ( omitting the lar^e difcourfes of Baro/ii/, Piwda-, and MontcxHtiHs ) tliat they might te Kinos, befidd the ancient Tradition and authority of many fathers , the Scripture aUb implieth. The Gentiles fhall come to thy light, and Kings to the brit^htnefs of thy rifing. The Kings of Thurfis and the Ifles, the Kings of Arabm and ^^^^ihallofter gifts, which places moft Chriftians and many Rah^ bins interpret of the Mejfiah. Not that they are to be conceived poThc Magi or tent Monarchs , or mighty Kings , but Toparks , Kings of Cities or wife men. narrow Territories.; fuch as were the Kings of Sodom ^nd Gomorrah^ ^^^ Kings of Jericko and <iy^i , the one and thirty which Jojhuah WbaTmanner fubdued, and fuch as fome conceive the friends of job to have of Kings they
were.
-
been.
there were three,
'
^/>''
But although we grant they were Kings , yet can we not be aflured Fo: the Scripture maketh no mention of any number , and the number of their prefents, Gold, Myrrhe , and Frankincenfe, concludeth not the number of their perfons, for thefe were the commodities of their Country , and fuch as probably the Queen of Sheba in one perfon had brought before unto Solomok. So did nor the. - -'^ Tons of J^fj?/' divide the prefent unto Jo/>/)/7, but are conceived to carry one for them all, according to the expreflion of their father ; Take, of the beft fruits of the land in your veflels, and carry down the man aprefent. And therefore their number being uncertam, what credit is. r"'' j-Q be given unto their names. Gaffer^ Mekhior^ B^Mhai^ar^ what to the '* charm thereof againft the falling ficknefs , or what unto their habits, comiplexions,.and corporal accidents, we muft re lye on their uncertain ftory, and received pou:traits of Collcln. Laftly, Although we grant them. Kings, andth'ce in number, yet could we not conceive that they were Kings of Co//.';. For though 0//f/ were the chief City of the Vbll^ t\\t\\ci[\tdVb,opolis ^ and afterwards Agripplfja , yet will no hiflory inform us there were three Kin^^s thereof. Bef.de, thefe being Rulers in their Countryes , and returning home , would have probably converted their fub;e*5ls but according unto MHnficr, their converfion was not wrought until feventy years after by Materms a Difciple of Teter. And laftly, it is faid that the wife men came from the Eaft, but fe^/Z^/^ is feared Weit-ward from Jerufuhm , for ColUlri hath of longitude thirty four degrees, but lemfa/fw feventy two., j^^
^ :
Book.r.
andCommon
all this
Errours,
435 -^v^^
The ground of
of Arabia , and defcended from Abraham by Keturah , who appre- ^"^ ^^^ ""* hen'in^ the myftery of this Star, either by the Spirit of God , the prophefie of BalaAtn , the prophefie which 'Snetonlm mention? , received an J confbntly believed through all the Eaft, that out of Ju-y one ihould com.e that fhould rule the whole world or the divulged expectancy of the Jevves from the expiring predi(ilion of Daniel ^ were by the fame conJu6led unto J^f^ , returned into their Country, anJ were after baptized by Tho.i-.'as. From whence about three hundred years after, by Helna the Emprefs their bodies were tranflated to Cenfiantinople , from whence by Enfiatitu unto MiUne , and at laft by Rcnatus the BifKop unto ColL in where they are believed at prefent to remain , their monuments lliewn unto fttan^ers, and having loft their Arabian titles, are crowned Kings of ^c?//^^.
: :
CHAP.
Of the food 0/ John Bapiift^
C"^ ^Vvilde-honey,
IX.
Locufts
and m.ight rather call into controverhe the meaning of Wildthey were the tops or tender crops of trees for opinions con," whith conceit is plauGble in Latine , but cerning *xf/:
:
honey.
vvillnotholdin Greeks, wherein the word is <*V<r, except for <tp^, J'u, or the we re>id <t^poJ^pv*, or a.^i^Qvii^ which fignifie the extremities of trees , of ^l^^ ^-a^' which belief have divers been m.ore confidently Ifidore Peleufota-, who J"^'**^?""* in his Epiilles plainly aftirmeth they think luilearnedly who are of another belief. And this fo wroucjit upon Baronins^ that he concludeth in
:
neutrality
Hac enmfcribat
;
efl
& tottim
^
arborum fnmmitates f^nificare. Sed fall'tur^ foich Montacurius, nam conffat comrarium^ Ax.pl<^e6 a^ud nuL lnmaHthorcinclafsicHm^^''^^^vAftamficarc. But above z\\T*arace4fn5 vvith m.oft animofity promoteth this opinion , andin his book de mellcy fpareth not his friend Erafmus. Hoc a mnnullis ita exflicatttr Htdicam
&
nam
,
conft-at
Gr-tcam- dittion.^m
*JtpiJ^f
0*
Loc flam
infeUi genus
&
LocuBas aut
kkki
hri
i /ll/
-
Al^
Book,7.
'"
T he
bable
more prowbar.
lartmn poffwit-^ velutl Jeronlmusy Er^fmui',<f^ alii Prophet a Neotericl i Lattmtati iwmortdi. A third aftirmeth that they were properly Locufts : that is , a /heathwinged and fix-footed infedt, fuch as is our Grafhopper. And rhis opinionfeems more probable then the Other. For befide the authority of Ot^tgen-iJ^omtChryfo^ome^HlUarytrndAmhrofe to confirm it; thij is t(ie proper fignification of the word , thu^- ufed in Scripture by rh^ Snidai on the word Septuagint, Greek vocabularies thus expound it. A*f ^ obferves it to be that animal whereon the Baptift fed in the defert in this fenfe the word is ufedhy ArlHotte^ Diofcorides, Galen , and fe-
And lalHy , there is no abfurdity in this interveral humane Authors. pretation, or any folid reafon why we (hould decline ir, it being a food permitted unto the Jewes, whereof four kinds are reckoned up among
Befide , not onely the Jewes, but many other Nations clean meats. That the c/long before and fince, have made an ufual food thereof. thioflans-i MaHrhanians-, and <iy4rablans , did commonly eat them. , i> that they liill teftified by Dlodoms-, Strabo-, Sol'mus-t <i>^l\an and Pliny
:
feed on them is confirmed by Xf^, Gadamuflus , and others. John therefore as our Saviour faith , came neither eating nor drinking that but fared is, far from the diet of Jer^/^/^w, and other riotous places courfly and poorly according unto the apparel he wore , th.it is of Camels hair the place of his abode , the WilderneTs ; and the doilrine
: :
CHAP.
That John
X.
'^-
" *'
then that of Jofefh the wandring Jew yet being deduced from by Authors of all times , itiliallnot efcapeour It is drawn from the fpeech of our Saviour unto Teter after enquiry. the prediilion of his Martyrdome ? Tetrr faith unto Jefus Lord, and what fhall this man do ? Jefus faith unto him. If I will that he tarry untillcome, what is that to thee? Follow thou m.e ; Then went this faying abroad among the Brethren , that this Difciple lliculd not
tier
:
He conceit of
vangelift, although
the long-living, or rather not dying of John the Eit feem inconfiderable, and not much weigh-
-,
die.
Now the apprehenfion hereof hath been received either grofly and in the general, that is not diilinguiiliing the manner or particular way ot this continuation , in which fenfe probably the grolTer and undifOr m.ore dillindly appreh<;nciing the m.nncerning party received it. ; that immortality is, that Join. Lho. Id never properly die, his ner of
l^^
EHm
uncil
'
BooL7
mdCmmaErrom,
^^jZzc
until about ihe coining of Ch^ift ; and lliould bs flain with thetn imclcr I will give power Antichriii, nccordin^to that of the Apocalyps.
my two witnefles, and they iT:\all prophciiea thoufand two hunthreefcoredayes cloathedin rickcloth, and when they iTiall and dred havKfiniihed th^ir telii'iiony, theBeaft ihic afcendeth out of the boctomlelsfit, il.aLI make war agamtt the ai, and il-iaJI o\'e^coine them, and kill tliem. Hereof,as Baro'^ias obfocvech , within three hundred years after Chitlt , HijrpoJytns the Martyr was the hrtt aflertor , but hath been maintained by many fmce; by LMnaplra/l.s,by Frecu/phm^ but efpecially by Georgim 7rapezHtitis, who hath exprelly created upon this Text , and although he lived but in the laft Century, did ftill affirm that 7tf/: was not yet dead. As for the grofs opinionthat heiliould not die , it isfuflficienrly refuted by that wliith firlt ccc afioned it , that is the Scriptu'.e it felf, and no further off, thenthe very fubfequentverfe: Yet Jefus faid unto him, be fhould not die , but if J will th^t be tarry till I come, \\ hat is that to rhee? And this was written by y'/:' iiimfelf, whom the opinion concerned ; and is conceived many years after, when 'P^f r had fuflfered and fulfilled the prophecy of Chrili For the particular conceit,the foundation is weak^ nor can it be made out from the Text alledged in the Apocalyps for befide that therein two perfons are only named, no mention is made of fohfz, a third AThe fame is overthrown by Hi/lory, which recordi\or in this tragedy. th not only tfie death of foh/i , but afligneth the place of his burial., y. , thjt is Ephefi s,, a City in ^//^ minor , vvhither after he had been banitli- Ir :iji Eyan^ ed into Tafnas by Domitlan, he returned in the reign oi Nerva^ there gcijft^, where And this i?, tefUfied and when. c^.ceafed , and was buried in the dayes of Trc)an, by f rom-i by TertHllian^hy C hryfofiom^nd EnfebiHs^ in whofe dayes his 2Jc Scriptor^ Sepulchre Was to be feen ; and by a more ancient Teftimony alledged ^<^f^^fi''ft* ^^ '''''^''* alfoby him., thatisof P)/;rr^f^jBilliopof//?f//, not m.any fucceflfions after fd^ \ whofe words are thefe in an Epiftle unto VlUor Bifhop oi%l/me; Johannes llleqmfHprafeEiusDomir.i rectimb.bat ^ Do^or oft'lntus-^ apud Ephcfttm dormivlt \ many of the like nature are noted by BarmiuS', JaKfenli^s-^ Sfiius-, Llpellons-, and others. Now the miain and primitive ground of this error, was a grofs miftake in the words of Chrift, andafalfe apprehenfion of his meaning; underftanding th.Tt pofitively which was but conditionally expreiled , or receiving that affirmatively which was but concefTively delivered. For the words of our Saviour run in a doubtful ftrain , rather reprehending then Satisfying the cuioiity of Teter ; as though he lliouId have faid , Thou hall thy own doom. , v\hy enquired thou^^after thy Brothers? What] relief into thy afi.iition , will be the fociety of anothers ? Why pryett thou into the fecrets of Gods Judgments ? If he rtay until I come, what concerneth it thee , whofhalt befureto fuffer before that time? And fuch.an anfwer probably he returned , becaufe he fore-knew John fhould Kkk.3 not
unto
. : , .
.'
,
438
iiotfuffcr
ji.
Enqdiries
v;ioIent'
into^d^Af
hu
grave in peace.
Bc)ok.7
Jeath
buc'^'gd funco
Which
had Peter afluredly known, ic mi^hc have caft: fone water on his flames, and fmothered thofe fires which kindled after un:o the honour of his Mafter. Now why amon^^all the reft John only efcaped the death ofa Martyr, Of all the Aptftles, Sjohn the reafon is given ; becaue all others fled away or withdrew themfelvej onlyisthoughc at his death, and he alone of the Twelve beheld his pallion on the ^^^^^' "VV'herein notwichf landing, the alTiilion that he fuffered could eda*nur^"' a mount unto lefi then Marty rdo.ne for if the naked relation , at "^^ death: And leaft the intentive conhderation of thit palfion, be able Hill, and at this why? cifadvamae.e of time, to rend the hearts of pious Contemplators; furely the near and fenfiblevifion thereof muft needs occahon agonies beyond the comprehenfion of flePn and the trajeilions of fuch an cbjeil more fharply pierce the Martyred foul of johi^ then afterward did the nails the cruzified body of Tetcr. Again, They were miftaken in the Emphatical apprehen/;on> .placing the confideration upon the words, If I will: whereas it properly la'y linthefe,\\henIcomc. Which had they apprehended, as fome have fince, that is, not for his ultimate and laft rerurn , but his coming in judgement and deflru6tion upon the Jewes; or fuoh a coming, as ic might be faid, thatthitgin^rationlliouldnoc pafs before it was fulfilled they needed not, m.uch Icfy nsed we fuppofe fuch diuturnity. For -after the death of iK-ter., John lived to behold the fam.e fulfilled by f^efpaJiaK nor had he then his //;///<:<;/ 'W/;;^- , or went out like unco 5/-?i?*A/,butoldinaccomplii'htobfcuriti^s aiid having feeu the expire of X>*r;2/V/..predi6Vion, as fome conceive, .he accomplrfhed his RcveIa.tion. But befides this original an J prim iry foundation, divers others have made impreitons according unto different age^andperfons by whom they were received. For fome e.' ablillied the conceit in the Difcipks -and: Brethren, which were c:ontem,porjry unto him , or lived about the fame time wirh him. ; and this was firl> the extraordinary affedion our Sa\ iour bare un:o his Difcipie', who hadi the honour to be calkd the Nowfrom hence they mi^ht be apt to beBif^ir le.vvhom JellsJoved; lieve their Malier wo-ld difpenfe with hi-; r'euh , or furfer him to live t-bfechim return in fdory, who was the only ApoHle that birheld him to riie in 'ijy.onoi'-r. /norher was the beUef ,md o;.. inion of thoe ti ne?, that Chriihvould fiidr.'enly come ; for they held not; en orally the fame opinion with their fucceflors, o:- ak defcencin4 ages after fo riany Centuries buL conceived his coT.ing would not b>! lon^ after his palfion, according, unco feveral expreifions of our Saviour grofly underilood, Thcf. 2. u-j^,^ ^y^A |.[^^ ^^,^,^ opinion net long after reprehended by St. ?< tti ^^ ^.^ and thus onceiving h'u coxing would not be lon;Z, they might be in '-n<:edto beiie\e his favourite lliould live unto it. LaiUy , the long life of 7 <?/?>' mi ht much advantage this opinion ; for he fui^ived the o^ ther tvyclve, hcAvas aged 22 years when he vv-ij' cailedby /Chrili,. and
: ; :
.
>
;
.
'
Book. 7
25 that
is i>8 is
and Common
Srrours,
43^ -^j^
^ohn,
0"^
k"^"
after
theageof Piiefthoodat his death, and lived pj years, that his Saviour, and died not before the fecond year of Ir^jun, ^sim
JitTn
Now having out-lived all his fv;IlovYS,ihe World was confirmed he mi^hc live ftill', and euen unto the coT.in^ of his Ma(le^ The ^,rounds which proxcced ic in fucceedin j a^es , were ef.-^edal ly two. Ine hrit his elcape of martyrdoiP-e for whereas all the relt flittered foT.e kind of forcible death, we have no hiltory that he fuffered any and men ini^hc think he was not capable thereof^ For as HiRory ia-. fonr.eth, by the coir.mand of Domiti^.n he was cajiUriro a Caldron of(
-
Sav?<fu"'^
future ages apprehending he futtered no violent death, and finding alfo the means th.u tended thereto could take no place , they miuht be, confirmed in their opiniony that death had no power over him,that he m.i^hc live alvvayes who could
Now
not be deftroyedby fire, and was able to refift the fury of .that elemcqC' whi.h nothing llnall rehft. The fecond was a cocrupti.on crept into the. Latine Text, reading for 5/, 5/V /-/? MJ<frf ^(j/9 whereby the anfwer of Qur Saviour becomeih pofitive, or that he will h.ive ic fo ; which way of reading was m.uch received in former ages , and is Rill retained in the vt-Lar Trandation ; but in the Greek and original the word is ^tK, fignifying Si or if, which is very different from -?, and cannot be tranflated for it: and anfwerable hereunto is the tranflation of/'Wj and lremeiiy.sy and that alfo annexed untQ the .Greek by the authority of
;
S'.xtus (^'fiintw.
third confirmed ic in ages farther defcending, and proved a powargument unto all others following ; becaufe in his Tomb at E~ whereupon af.hf^s there was no corps or relique thereof to be found rifed divers doubts, and m.any fufpitious conceptions fome bellevinohe was not buritid, fome th't he was buried but rifen again,, others that he defcenied alive into his Tomb, and from thence, departed after. But all thefe proceeded upon unveritable grounds, as HaroKius hath obferved, whoalledgethaletterofff/f/z/^^BiiTiop of T\o:ne^ unto the Council of if/j/f/w/, wherein he declareth.the reliques oi John \sziq highly honoured by that City ; arid a paffage alfo of Chryfoftome in the Hom.iliesofthe ApoRIes, That 7 <?/>;? being dead, did cures in Ephfus,
erful
; j
t
The
though he were ftill alive. And fo I obfer\'-e that y?/>/;^jdifcuirin^ this point, concludeth hereupon, i^tiod corpus eyts nur.qHamrepcriatur^ hoc noK diccrent JiveterHmfcripta diLgcntur perl'tflrajfent. Now that the firft ages after Chrift, thofe fucceeding , or any other, fliould proceed into opinions fofir divided from reafon, as to think of immortality after the fall of ^^<?-*, o: conceit a man in. thefe latter tim.es ll\ould out-live our fathers- in the firft; although it feem very flran^e , yet is it not incredible. FcJ the credulity of men hath been deluded into the like conceits ; and as IrcKem and 7 'er:ull'ia mention, one i^/f^i/fr a 5<t;;2^r;V^w obtained belief in this very point; whofe JC|0(9triAe ic was, that death fliould have no power on his Difciples,
as
and,i
/^^^4^
nqumes.TntoVulgitr
Baok.7.
and fuchasrcceivedhisB-Tftifm (ihould receive iaimoTDiJ icy therewith. 'Tvvas furely an apprehenfion very fh-ange ; nor ufually falling either fro.Ti the abfardities of melancholy or vanities c ambition. Some indeed have been fo affeiledly vain , as to counterfeit immortalrry , and have ftoln their death, in a nope to be efkemed immortal ; and others have conceibut furely few or none have fallen upon fo bold vved themfelves dead an errour^ as^ not to think that they could die at all. The reafon of thofmighty ones, wbofe ambition could furfer them to be called gods, would nwerbe flattered into immortality but ths proudeft thereof have by the daily didlares of corruption convinced the impropriety of that appel;
:
lation.
And furely, although del ufion may man may forget bis nature,
For the inconcealable imperfeitions of ourfelves, or their daily exam^ ^Icsinothers, will hourly prompt U9 our corruption, and loudly tell us wd are-thefong of earth.
'''
CHAP.
More carKfendiOHJly
XI.
of fomeotherJ^
' .
.
Any others there are vvbich we refigjj unto Divinity, and perWhether Z>.i'z//^ were punilhed haps defcrve not controveriie. only for pride of heart in numbering the people, as moftdohold, or whether as fvfphus ^nd many maintain , he fiiffered alfo for not performing the Gommandment of God concerning capitation ; that whw'n the people were numbred, for every head they iliouldpay unto God a Surely , if it were not the occalion lliekel, we iliall not here contend. Eod. 'o. * * of this plague , we muft acknowledge the omilfion thereof was threatned with that puniiTiment, according to the words of the Law. When thou takeft the fum of the children r>/fr^e/, then fhall they give every man a ranfomc for his foul unto the Lord, that there be no plague amongft them. Now how deeply hereby Cod w%is defrauded in the time of D^vld, and opulent State of Ifrael, will eafily appear by the fums of former luflrations. Forin the firfl, the filver of them that were num.bred was _ g ^'^ '^ an hundred Talents, and a thoufand fevcn hund-ed threefcore and fifteen fhekels ; a Bekah for every man, that is, hilf a lliekel, after the i"hekel of theSaniluarvi fo^ every one from twenty years old and upwards, fo: Gx hundred tnoufmd, and three thoufand and five hundred and fifty m.en. Anfwe -able whereto we read in fofcph-As^ l^effaQ-^n ordered that every Whnthe At- manof the Jewesiliould bring into the Capitol two dragms ; which am.ounts unto fifteen pence, or a quarter of an ounce oftilvervvith us, and tick dragm i-. What the di For an is equivalent unto a Bekah , orhahf afliekcl of the Sar^ftuary. diachmurr. and A-tct-ck dragm is feven pence half-^penny or aquarter of a iliekel, and a didragm, ische word ufedfor Tribute money, or half^ Mif* T"'i7. d.^ichjiitmordouble
*
.
'
--'-
'
..
.\\y
::/,..
Book. 7^
a rhekel
;
a>^C&mfHmrm}rs^
W^4X^
and a ftater the mcney found in the fiflics mouth vvas two Didrachmums,oranwholeiliekcI, and tribute fuflBcient for our Saviour > /; and for Tettr, Wc will not queilion the Mctamorphofis of Lots wife, or whether flic were transformed into, a real Statua of Salt ; though fome conceive that cxprefiion Metaphoiical , and no more thereby then a laflin^ and durable column , according to the! natare oi SaJt , which admittcCh no cc^-* ruption in which fenfcthe Gdvenant of God is termed a Coycnanc bf Salt; anditisalfofaid,GodgavcthcKingdome unto I>^i//^, for ever, ^^ 'f!.-;.; ;. i (:/i. ri^.-ioi f.u..; ;:.,; jj.iIw or by a Covenant of Salt; } That hfahm was hanged by tHe hair of the headi. and not caught npi by the neck, as/^'/^pAw ^onceivetb, and the common argament againil. long hair affirmeth, we'are not ready to deny. Although I confefs;^*^ great anddiearned party there are of another opinion ; although if he ha3> his Motion or Helmet on , I could not well conceive it i although the iranflatjon of Jerom or. Tremdim do notipborc it , and ouPown fecms ra-"
'
'
; .:-i u, .v .: ihertooyerthiowit. That Jnd^s h.inged.himfelf, m*ichinorc', tiiat he 'pecitlied thereby, ws fliall not raife a doubt. . Although f.anfeaius difcourfing the point , pro-, duceth the teftimony of Theofkyla^ and Smhymimy that he diedi:iidc by the Gallows,, but under a cart wheel ; and Baronius alfo deliveteth> this was the opinion of the Greekj , and derived as high as 'Tapoi-t one of the Difciples of fohn. Although how hardly the exprcflton of Mat" thew isrecOncilr-bleirnrothaF of '35*e-f'r , and that he plainly hanged himfelf, wirh that, thatfalling head-long he burft'afundcr in the midtt, with many other, the learned iG"r<?r/.f plainly doth acknowledge. And Jaftly, Alinouih as he alfo urgeth, the word i.'Trny^ATo'm. i^iatthewy doch How ^uim not only {ignifiefufpenfion or pendulous illaqueation , as the common n*'5''t<**' pidture defcribeth it , but alfo fuffocation , ftrangulation or intercepti,
>
pflfof breath
fif -fpif it , i'rtni
,
which may
acife
from
grief, defpair,
and deep
deje(ftion.
'*"
in whicii fenfe itisufed in the Kiftbry of Tokk concerning \h\im^r\ <r?^jf tm dir^ylA^xu, Itatrrfiata eft flritngnlmQite'^^^f^ff
fnmerety,ry irnhjumus \ and fo might it happen from the faorroiirxif* mind unto Ji^das. So do many of the Hebrewes affirm , that Achitophe/ Wis alfo ftrangled, that is, not from the rope, but paflion. For the
"^"^
^"'''
Heb:evv and Arabick word in the Text, not only fign^fiesvfijfpenfion; but inQi^,nation, as Grot'ms hath alfo obferved. o-.i -ivvt^.tr; <:-vi^ u .Vv Many more there are of indifferent truths , whofe dubious expofitions, worthy Divines and Preachers do often draw into wholefome and fober ufes, whereof we fliall not fpeak ; with induftry we decline fuch Paradoxes, .^nd peaceably fvA)mit unto their received acceptions.
.
oijulcis)
-fttt^i^ 01
i\ \
j'
-r ^sf
bno^gl^^p^
!;^
c'lv;b/il5ioriwnii
CHAP.
XII.
Of thrCrJfaticat ofOrdtlcs.
and nocvvic&out all hticude, as dcrftood in a qualified thoi^h precifely there were none after , nor any decay before. For ( what we muft confefs unto relations of Antiquity ) fome pre-decay is ebfervahle from that of Ctrtfrtf,iirged by Bar*mus ; Cur ifio modo y^m orMuU Delphid fi^n edutnur-t^/tu nmdo Mofira 4itatt\^ pdj^tftdiu^ ut mhit That during his life they were not altogether fojfit efe contentftim. diflnb, is dedudcabJe rom Suetoniut iuthe life of Ti^riw,\\ho atremptij^tofnbverc the Grades adjoyning unto "J^^wr, was deterred by the Lots or Chances which were idelivered at >*r^f/?<'. After hisdeath we meet with many ; SuetomHs reports, that the Oracle of tAntittm forewarned C'/i^it/ato bermK o C/t/jS*uiy who was one that confpirejliis 'Plutahh enqmiing why the Oracles of Greece ceafed , exceptdeath. etfa that of Lehadia : and in thefame place Demrtrins affirmeth rlie Oracles c Mopfus and Amphilcchm were much frequented in bis dayes. In brief, Hiftories aire frc<yicnt inea^ampies , and there want not fome even to the reign of J/iW. VJbat therefore may conlift with faiftory, by ceffation of Oracles with MontacHtim wcmay underftand their interciilon, not abfcilfion or con&mmatc defolation ; their rare dclix'ery, not total dereliAion, and-yet iaa regard of divers Oracles , we may fpeak ftri^y, and fay there was a proper ceflation. Thus may we reconcile the accounts <k times, and allow thofe few and broken divinations , whereof we read in ftory and undeniable Authors. For that they received this bl ow from Chrift, and no other caufcsaUec^ed by the heathens y &om' braculous confiiffion they cannot deny, vvhereofupon record there are fome very remarkaWe. The firft that Oracle pf-D^//>iw/ dclivercdunto nAMiufiw,
i
mncc at the coming of Chriil,is beft unTHat Oracles csdfed orgrcw fenfe,
Deufipfegtt^rnojis
no more
Book, t*
markiWe,
by
^pffi^cr
44I
^J/
defe<!jt
of
Of acks;
A
.
third reported
Ettftbitts in
the
mourned , declaring his Oracles were falfe, and that thorighce' ous upon earth did hinder hm from fpeaking truth. And a fourth related by r/?etfii<7rfr, and delivered by ^f^^^* Daphnew unto lutian upon his P^r/-^/? expedition, that he ll:iould remove the bodies about him before he could return an anfvver ; and not long after- his Temple was
burnt with Lightning. . All which were evident and convincing aeknowledgcmcnts of that
'
Power which iTiut his lips, and reitrained that delufion which had reigned fo many Centuries. But as- his malice is vigilant, and the fins ef men do ftill continue a toleration of his mifchiefs> he rcfteth not , nor
,
firft
deceived.
therefore, expelled
delufion,
Andhe
TfeccJevHs
^^
i^
'
runs into corners, exercifing minor trumperies, andatting hk deceits vn Witches, Magicians, Diviners, and fuch inferiour feducers. And yet ( what is deplorable ) while we apply our felves thereto , andaflfirming
that
^'^^ImTo*' *
Jf^,^*
^*^
his
a refolutionfrom fuch fpirits , while we lay the devil is mute, yet confefs that thefe can fpeak, while we deny the fubftance , yet pra^^life the
effeil and in the denied folemnity maintain the equivalent eflBcacy , in folios Altar ftill doth fmpak ; not vain we cry that Oracles are down ; .\i .1^ ^x:;' ^ .*_.'? v.;:. irthe fire of -D^/f'/'<?j out unto this day,. Impertinent it is unco our intention, to Ipeak ifl geberd'of Oracles,
'
and many have well performed it. The plaineft of others was that recorded by HerodotH:^ and delivered unto p'ceftu , who as a cryal of his omnifcience fent unto diftant Oracles ; and fo contmed.with the mef* fengers, that though ki fevenal places^ yec at the f^ecime they ^iould demand what O'ocffa was then a doing. Among all others the Oracle of Delphos only hit it , returning anfvver, he was boyling a Lamb with a Tortoife, in a brazen veffel, with a cover of the fame metal. The ftile is haughty in Greek, though fomwhat^k)werk^l4tiaei--;v
S^iorii efifpattttm '& rtHmtTHS wihi>ioti4i Artna^ AlutHmpirctpio , fantts nihil audlovoam,
P'rit ad i^osfrnffts nidoruflndinn acris^ QHitJernela^mnacoqn\tHr ctimcAtnelahete^ A^re infraftratOy& JiratumHldcfHper4sefi, -;:: vv rtijm -.oi jd-.cf: oiu ooi e:!.c"i:.viti
,
liio
tiYj
:,
' '^
'
^^yi^lhd^li "'-''
an':
,.
'-^^'^
mute
I underftand,
i'*
1 1
Hereby
'
'\J'S'
-444
Book. 7
Hereby indeed he acquired much vvealrh and more honour, and was reputed by Crcefm as ^ Deity : und yet not lon^ after, by a vulgar fallacy he deceived hisFavourice andgreatcft fri.ini of Oracles into an
irreparable overthrow \yjCyrui.
Jikelyall to have that rciie or
And furely, th2 fame fuccefle are depend uponnm. Twi? the firft play and as tine hith rendred him more per-
'Tis therefore the foverai^n degree of folly, and a crime not only againft God, but alfo our own reafonS) to exped a favour from the devil whofe mercies are more cruel tfcen thofe of /*ctjffhemns ; for he devoures his Favourites firft, and the nearer a man approacheth, the foonerheis koidxt^hy Moloch. In brief, hij favours are deceitful and double -headed, he doth apparent good, for real and convincing evil after it ; and cxalteth us up to the top of theTemple; but to tumble us down from it.
;
GBAP*
XIV.
Of the. DB^h'ofkMoxXt',
*T*Hat^r//?(7f/^ drowned himfelf in nf/, asdefpairin^ to refolvc; the caufe of its reciprocation, or ebb and flowfcven times a day, with this determination, Si qnidem cgomncaplet , tticaftes me^ was
the Afl'ertion oi Procopw^ Naz^lan^i^ejt^ Jf*fiJ"^ Mnrtjry and is generally Wherein, becaufc we peirceive men have but an believed amongft us. imperfed*^ knowledge,: fome conceiving r/))=f to be a River, others
"o'^
^,
rally.
"
-,
"''''
J Jf^enf
part to plice
it
we
firft
advertife,
it
or channel of the Sea, running begenerally lignihetb any hithdefinedit ; as we reade of as;7"//W>Ptf//^.v two.fhores, meen: thiis wliereof we treat, r/Hellefponuachm-, fjxrhAm and j Eur If tm Etiholcm or Chalcidlcus^ that is, a narrow pafTage of Sea diviuing
ftrait, fret,
Tfouehingtbe
death of ^Ari^^*^''
now called G'^/^i? Ae I<fegrofon:^ e>^rf/V^, andthejilandof ^<4, from the name of the liland and chief City thereof; famous in the wars oi Ant'iochm-, and taken frpm the Ven2uamhjM4hQ-v^t'^?kQi^^^' Now that in this n;)f or fret oiNegrofonty^vi^ upon the occafion mentioned, ^r/y?<?f/^ drowned himfelf, as many affirm, andalmoft For without avy mention all believe, we have fomc room to doubt.
of this, we finde tvyo wayes delivered of hi? death by Diogenes L tertl^Sy who exprefly treateth thereof; the one from Eumolus and PhavoHe7riftsy that being accuied of impiety for compofing an Hymn unpp withdrew NlchonAcus) he he begat fan Concubine his whofe w;w(upon
into ^^/f/if, where drinking poifon he died;, the
Hymne
is
extant in
YHi-
^^mlwy
Another by 4pollodo-
Book. 7^
rus^ that
omI Common
his fixty three,
Srirours.
I-'in^uillinent
445f-i\f
mack, in
hereto
is
SmdHs and CcK[orly:iu. An J if that were which Rahbibc)Jofph affirmeth, he found in an Egyftt:aihoQk of Jibraham Sapiens Per lz.ol that y^rZ/^^^f/f acknowledged all that \va> wrictenintheLavvof Aff^/i-^, and became at lait a Lictus it Frofelyre; it would alio make improbable thi> received way of his death, f </> <?. Again, befide the negative of Authority it is alio deniable by reifon; nor will it be eafie to obtrude fuch def^erate attempts iiponv^ri(}otle, from unfcitisfa<5lion of reafon, who fo often acknowledged Who in matters of difficulty, and fuch which the iir.becilUty thereof. were not without abftrufities, concei/editiufncient to deliver conjetturaliiies. Andfurely, he that could fomerimes fit down with hi^h improbabilities, that could content himfelf, and think to fatisfie others, that the varie3ation of birds was fron'theirjiving in the Sun, or ere^^i. on made by deliberation of the Tefii cles; would not have been de;e6lcd unto death with this.He was fo well acquainted with o",and '^anfOy h^ trum^ ^nlAnQulfl^ aswe obfervein the Queries of his Problems: which Vot-jj and cottb' ?n>^y, fortaJfc^^ndpUram^He^ as is obfeivable had certainly re{ied with probabilities, and through all his Works Nor would his refolutions have ever glancing conjeilures in this run into that mortal Antanaclafis, and defperate piece of Rhecorick, to be compriz'd in that he could not comprehend. Nor is it indeed ta be made oat he ever endeavoured the particular oi EuripHs, orfor much as to refolve the ebbe andflow of the Sea. For, asrico-ner-catm and others obferve, he hath m.ade no mention hereof in his Worlfs, aUhv^Utih theoccafion prefent ic felt in his Meteois whereinr he difouteth the'^afFeflions of the Sea ; nor yet in his Problem.s, akhought in the twenty third See^ion, there be no leUe then one and fourty Que ties of the Sea. Some mention there is indeed in a work of the propriety of Elements, afcribed unto Arifiorl , which notwithftandin^ is not repu-^ tedgenuine,and was perhaps the fame whence this was urged by P/r^r(r/j. TJepUcitju^bh' Laftly, the thing it felf whereon the opinion dependeth, that is, the ifrphorum,.. variety of the fiux and the reflux of EtiripHs, or whether the fame do ebbe and flow feven times a day, i>no:incon:rovertibk For though PoMpovius Aiela-t and after him Solm-As^tn^ /'//;?;' have affirmed it, yet I obferve Tlncydldes-^ who {peaketh often of ^^^4;^, had omitted it. Paufanitts ^n ancient Writer, who hath left an xa6l:defcriptioi> oi Greece-, and in as particular a way as L''andr.o oiltaly., o: C^mbden of great Br'.tiw., defcribing not only theCountrey, Town3 and Rivers,
clearly-
made
*'
no mention
hereof.
cy/-
zvAStrabo that accurate Ge^ ographer fpeaks warily of ic,that is, '? ?>i'n, and as men commonly reported.And fo doth ^MoMaginns yVeloclsac varu fiuStfis ej} mare Hbicjuater in dky^Ht fiptieSfH). ati-i dicHHt^reciprocaKtiir afiHs.BffUromoTS plainljj
Lllr
7//
. .
4/
J^ 44^
"
Book. 7.
ll dly hen che comft mar ThisSeavvich wondrous impetuofirmtnimente fidicafettevolte^ &c. ty ebbeth and floweth four times a day , although it be commonly faid
, and generally pinioned, that Arlfiotb defpairinj the drowned himi'elf therein. In which defcription by four times a day, it exceeds not in number the motion of other Seas, taking the words properly,that is,twice ebbing and twice flowing in four and twenty hours, Andisnomofe thenwhit T^pw^/tf 'Porrchacci z^m\t\h in his defcription of famous Iflands, that twice a day it hath fuch an impetuous flood, as is not without wonder , Llvy fpeaks mo e particularly,
feven times
reaibn,
ftatio
cH
, f/on
fpties
die (ficHtfamaferr) tempor thus certis reciprocat ^ fed t mere inmodum 'venti, nuKc huc^ntiKc illucverfnmari^ velut monte prAcipitidevolHtm tor-
There is hardly a worfe harbour , the fret or channel of Enripta not certainly ebbing or flowing feven times a day, according to common report ; butbeinguncertainly, andin them.annerof a winde
rens rapimr.
, is whirled away as a torrent down a hill. But the experimental teflim.cny of Gilltw is moft confiderable of any \ who hiving beheld the courfe theeof, and made enquiry of Millers thic dwelt upon its fli ore, received anfwer, that it ebbed and flowed four
tiaies a day, tiiat is, every fix houre;?, accorcUng'to the Law of the Ocean; but that indeed fometimes it obferved not that certain courfe. And this irregularity, thoui.,h feliiom.e happening , together with its unruly and tumKltuous motion , m.ij.ht afford a beginning unto the comm.on opinion. Thus may the exprellion in Ctefphon be made out ; And by this m.ay uiriflotle oe interpreted , when in hi,s Problems he feem.s to borrow a Metaphor (vo'Tl Ettripuj while in the fi\'C and twentieth Se(^ion he enquireth, why in the upper parts of houfes the ayr doth Euri-.; pize, that is, is whirled hither and thither. Now thAt which gave life luito die afi'ertion,mi^ht be his death at Cha/-r, fw,rhe chiefCity oi Enh^a-U feated upou ^;<r/)jw,where 'tis confefled by] pined aw.iy in the too anxiou? ail he ended his days.That he emaciated enquiry of its reciprccations,altho.igh not drowned therein,as/^/?cW/V/W relateth, fome conceived , was a half confelFion th;:reof not juttiiiable, from Antiqi.ity. Surely the Philofo}:hy of flux and reflux was very i:nperfc^l of old amon^ the Greeks; and Latines; nor could they hold a fufticient Theory thereof, who onely obferved the Mediterranean,, which in fome piace> hath no ebb, and not m.uch in any part. Nor can wfe nfiirm. our knowledge i-; at the height, who have now the Theory of,
:
&
V\ hile
we
refer
ic
we
Ocean, but no general falve for Greeks V and Sea<; which know no flool; nor refohewhy it flowe^ three or four foot at l^mice in the bortom of the Gulf, yet fcarce at all.
j.!ve
fome
firisf;?6lion for
the
.It
And
there-;
MfeoId-abj^iHiitre^.hvU^ caufed
new
Boot/i
andCommnErrours.
447 |.>y
H)'po;^cfis of CvpertiJCHs , OX the Diurnal and annual motion of tlic carcb, endeavour to falve the flowcs and motions of chcfe feas, illiiftra*^ ting thji fame by w.uerin aboal, that riling or falling to either fide, according to the motion of the vefrel the conceit is ingenuous, falves fome doubts, and is difcovered at l.irge by Cja/lUo. But whether the received principle and undeni.ible aftion of the jr.f bjc doOin Moon may not be dill retained, although in fome difference of appli- Cibcut !Ma!i: chat is, not by a fimple operation- upon H w the Mooii cation, is yet to be perpended ^
,
'the furphace or Rif eriour pares, but excitation of the nicro-fulphureous ""J
c"<c the
andpartsdilpofedtointum.efcencyatrhe bottom; not by atteniutionofihe upper pa t of the Sea, (whereby Ships wodd draw m. ore water at the flow then at the ebb ) but inrutgefcencies caufedfirit at the bottom, andcarr)'ing the upper part before them: fublidjn^ and failing again, according to the motioa of rbe Moon from the Meridian, and languor of the exciting caufe and therefore Rivers am Lakes who mnt thefe fetmenting parts at the bottom, are not excited imto a^u^lions, and therefore fome Seas flow higher then others, according to And the plenty of thefe fpirits, in their fubmarine conftitutions. therefore aifo the periods of flux and reflux are various, nor their enaccording to the temper of the terreous parts creafe or decreafe equal
fpiriis,
:.
:.
'^^'"S*"''
wryRivLf^''*'
andi.akesebb.
^^^^^
^Xuc lonTtri
Whence
the violent flows
pro*
"cd in fome
^?"*""
'^"'''
"ni*
t the
oufly
-
bottom who as they are more hardly or eafily moved ^ do bey n, comhiue or end their intum.efcencies.
:
vari-
wherdU'
Agars and impetuous flovvs in fome. arftuaries and Rivers, as is obfervable about Trjm an i Hnmb:r mEtiglandy which may alfo have fome erfeil: in the boifkrous tides of EttrifHs ^ not only from ebullitions at the bottom, butalfo from the. iides and lateral parts, driving the ftreams from either fide , which arife, or fall according to the motion in thofe parts, and the intent or remifs; operation of the firfl: exciting caufes, which maintain their activities aiove and below the Horizon even- as they do in the bodies of plants and animals, and in the comm.otion o^Catarrhes. However therofore ri Hot kdi^dt what was his end, oruponwhac occafion , althou-,h it be not altogether aflured j yet that his memory and worthy name fliall live, no man will deny, nor grateful Scholar and if according to the Elegy of ^o/^z?, a man may be onely tioubt faid to be happy after he is dead , and ceafeth to be in the vifible capacity of beatitude , or if according unto his own Ethicks, fenfe is nor ePfential unto felicity , but a man may be happy without the apprehenfioni thereof; furely in that fenfe he is pyramidally happy ; no: can he ever perilTi bur in the Euripe of Ignorance, or till the To;rent orBarbarifiii:
cjuick excitations are made., m.ay arife thofe
:
overwhelm
all.
Alike conceit' the re pafleth of Melijigen?s al'iMUom^r ^ the Fatherpoet , that he pined away upon the Riddle of the Firhcrmen. But: JferoMttis who wrote his life hjtth cleared this point ; delivering , that
EalTlng.
'
'
<J
'
4 'M^
Book .fi"
palTinofrom Samosunto Athens , he went fick afhorc upon thq Ifland Josy vwere he died , and was folemnly interrcdupon the Sea fide ;.' and fo decidingly condudeth, Ex hoc agritHdlne (xtremnm diem clanJit^Home^ noH-^ arhitr^.ntHr aliqul -^ ^yEuigmitatts pcrplcAttate ew^Hs, Homtrt Death, rttsinfo-, fedmorho.
rj,
;
CHAP. XIV.
Of*
".
^^jv/]^*/ Fhiloxenu^.
'T'Hat relation of
\w2,?hiloxenm^
mii^ht take
ti/iriftotle^
more pleafure in
and conceit generally receiv'^d conceVhof a Crane , that thereby he meat, although it pafs without excepti-
^^ ^
^^'
not only doubtful in the ftory, but abfurd in the For though his wilh were fuch asiis dedefire or rcafon alledged for it. Jivered , yet had it not perhaps that end, to delight his guft in eating, but rather to obtain advantage thereby in finding , as is declared by Mlrar.dttU. Arlilotle ( faith he ) in his Ithicks and Problems, accufeth 'P/>;loxcKHi of fenfi.ality , for the greater pleafure of guft defiring the neck of a Crane which defire of hi., aflenting unto Anftotle^ I have formerBut fince I perceive that ArifiotU for this accnfation Jy condemned hath been accufed by divers Writer?. For Thlloxerm was an excellent >lulician, and defired the neck of a Crane, not fo: any pleafure at meat, -but fancying thereby an advantage in finging or warbling , and dividing -the notes in m.ufick. And many Write s there are which mention a yufician of that nam.e , as Tlutarclj in his book againrt Ufury , and A' risictle him.felf in the eighth of his Politicks, fpeaks of on^l^ hlUxems ;aHiifician,th2t went off from the Dorick Dytherambicks unto the Phry;
:
on , upon enquiry
falfe,
i;
-not re^fonable,
For
it'
we
we
neck to conduce but little i,n:o it. Fo: the ton :,ue of tafte, and the tip thereof the moft exail-diHinguillier, it will not ad* 4'antage thii guft CO have the neck extended; wherein the Gullet ansl conve)ingparts are only feated , which partake not of the nerves of guftation , or appertaining unto f^por , but receive them only from the whereas the nerves of taHe defcend from the third and fou tij fixth pair propagations , and fo ciffi.fe themfelves into the tonrue. And therefore Cranes, Hems and Swans have no advantage in tafte beyond Hawk-',
;
-'
refpcfit
JS'or, if we confider
it,
liad
Nature
Book, 7.
andC^mmmErrMri.
44^ ^-iJ^
rent contrivmce of nefeks, but rather unto rfiepitt?<:-ontAind, the compofure of the rert of the body , and the manner v\4iereby they feed. Thus animals of lon;4 legs, h.we generally long necks-; th.ic i:i, for the conveniency of feeding as hiving a neceflity to apply their mouths unto So have Hordes, Camels, Dromedaries long necks, and all the earth.
tall animalb', except the Elephant , who indefe6^ thereof is furnished So have with a Trunk, wichout which he could not attain the ground. Cranes, Herns, Storks and Shovelards long necks and fo even in m.an, vvhofc figure is erctSl, the length of the neck followeth the proportion of other parts and fuch as have round faces or broad chefts and fhoulders, have very feldome long necks. For, the length of the face twice exceedeth that of the neck, and the fpace betwixt the throat-pic and the Again, anim.als are navel, is equal unto the- circumference thereof. franied with long necks, according unto the courfe of their life or feeding: fomany with iliort legs have long necks, becaufe they feed in the water, as Swans, Geefe, Pelicans, and other fin-footed anim.als. But KaA'ks and birds of prey have ibort necks and trulTed legs ; for that which
:
:
Ion: is weak and flexible , and a fhorter figure is bett accom.modated unto that intention. Lai^ly, the necks of animals do vary, arcor^iing ta the partes that are contained in them^ , which are the weazon and.the -\xU Such as have no weazon and breath not , have fcarce any neck, as let. moft forts of fiilies; and feme none at all, as all fots of peilinals, Soals, Thornback, Flotinders ; and all cruftaceous animals,,as Cr?vife{; .;.:..:. ^r:..f Crabs and Lobiiers. All which conliJered, the V\\(h of 1 hJuxems vAWhithy -tq-nm. More excuHble had ic been to have wilbed hiijifelf arj with reafon. exaiier in tall ph^n any. Ape, which if com.mon conceit f e:.k true , Rather fome kind of granivoroas bird then a Crane , for in this fenfc they are fo exquihte , that up-on the firft perk of their bill , they can diftin^uilb the qualities of hird bo::ies ; whiv-h the fenfe of m.an difcerns notWithout martication. Rather fome ruminating animal , that he mi^ht have eat his m.eat twice over, or rather* as 7 heoph'i/ys dbferved in .Ath KAKSf hisdefire had been m.ore reafon^ble, hadhevyil'Hed him.feff an Elephant, or an Horfe for in thefe animals the appetite is m.ore vehement, rnd they receive their viands in large and plenteous .manner. And this indeed had been m.ore fuitable , if this were the fam.e Thilox<r/?j 'whereof PUtarci fpeakeih , who was fo uncivilly greedy, thaf to n_roffethem.^, he would preventiv-efy deliver his.no/kils in,the
is
'
i'^
ci4n.
A;;
:[ ';
'
"
::
'
:
'
";
'
feem m.ore i^afoijable, yx!t dowe nor obferve thitCr-'nesandbirdsof longnecks have any mufical., but harlb anil claniousthro.its. But birds that are canorous, and whofe notes we-m.oft commend, are of little throats and I'Kort necks, as; K'-?Jhtingak?,FiriL4}<ts,lLinnets, Canary birds ai^d Lad's; tmiy,^ altfhojih'che weazon , throtle and rdiiguebe the infinnnent^'af \6iti^ m and
,
alrhouch
it
AW
Mm
d .
<7 ^
/ 45 ^
Book 7
.
chiefly
tions, yetcannorvve afTi^n the caufe unto any parti cuhr foroiatioa ; and I perceive the beft thereof,the Nighcirvgale, h.uh fome dif^idvamage in the tongue, which is not accuminate and pointed as in the reft , bit
feemeth
as it
fable of Thllomela^
were cut off, which perhaps might give the hint unto the and the cutting olf her tongue by Terepu.
CHAP.
Of
the
XV.
Lak^ Afplialtltes.
Oncerning the Lake Afphahites-, the Lake of Sodom , or the dead Sea , that heavy bodies caft therein fink not , but by reaion of a fait and bituminous thicknefs in.the water float and fwira above , narrations already made are of that vanety , we can hardly from thence deduce a fatisfa6lory determination ; and that not only in the iflory it
felf,
As
deliver
it
too largely ; as ^Hlny^ who atTirmeth that bricks Mandevil goeth further, that iron fwimmeth, and will fwim therein, feathers fink. Mnnfler in his Cofmography hath another relation > aK though perhaps derived from the Poem of Tertnllian y that a candle burning fwimm.eth, but if extinguillied finketh. Some m.ore moderately , as Jofephm , and many other affirming onely that living bodies float , nor peremptorily averring they cannot fink , but that indeed they do not eafily defcend. Moft traditionally , as 9^/f, J'/ivjf , SoiiJiHi and Strabo , who feems to m.i^take the Lake Serbonls for it. Few experimentally, moft contenting themfelves in the experiment of refpajlan , by whofe command fome captives bound were dicaft therein, and found to float as though they could have fwimmed vers contraditlo ily , or rontrarily , quite overthrowing the point. inthe fecon' of his Meteors fpeaks lightly thereof, ^^^^ l^^ Arifio'
varioufly
1 fear
: : /.:
I
fome
Biddulfhi
ncrsrittm
* "'^
which word is varioufly rendred, by fome as a fabulous ac-B/^^wZ/j^^^ divideth the comrTK)n ^' count , by fome as a common talk. accounts of udea into three parts , the one , faith he , are apparent
iti'
^oX6y^zl
feconJ apparent falilioods , the third are dubious or between form he rjnketh the relation of this L^ke. But yifor he afdrejv Thevec in hisCofmo^jra. hy doth ocularly overthrow it No>v firmeth,, he faw an Afs withhi^ Saddle caft therein and drowned. f thefe relation fo different. or contr.uy unto each other , the fecon is moft moderate and fafeft to be embraced, which faith, tbu living bodies fvvim therein , thit is, they do not eafily fink: and this, untij exa^l experiment further determine , may be allowed , as beft conr ^
truths, the
;
both
in which
>
flftent.
Book. 7.
fiftent
and ComtnonB^ours,
45* 9^:^
with this quality, and the reafons alledged for it. As for the caufe of this effeil , cornirion opinion conceives it to be This indeed is probathe fait and bituminous thicknefs of the water. ble, and may be admitted as far as the fecond opinion concedeth. For certain it is that folt water will fupport a Greater burden dien frefh ; and we fee an egg will defcend in fait water, wnich will fwim in brine. But
'
that iron fhould float therein, from this caufe is hardly granted ; for heavy bodies will only fwim in that liquor , wherein tne wd^hc of their bulk exccederh not the weight of fo much water as ic occupieth or taBut furely no water is he avy enough to anfwer the ponderofiketh up. ty of iron , and therefore that mettal vvill fink in any kind thereof , and it was a perfe6t Miracle which was wrought this way by Elifl;a, Thus we
perceive that bodies do fwim or fink in different liquors, accordin;^ unto the tenuity or gravity of tfaofe liquors which are to fupport them. S6
(alt warerbeareth that weight which will fink in vine^er, vineger that which will fall in frelTi water , frclli water that which will fink in fpitits of Wine, and that will fwim in fpii its of Wine which will fink in clear oyl ; as we m.ade experiment in Globes of wax pierced with lij.ht So that although it be conceived an hard matflicks to fupport them. ter to fink in oyl, I believe a man iliould find it very difficult, and next
And thus will Gold fink in Quick-filver, to flying, to fwim therein. and other metals fwim; for the bulk of Gold is onely heavier then th.it fpace of Quick-filver which it containeth : and thus
whereiii iron
alfoinafoluiionof one ounce of Quick-filver in two oi A^nafonts^ the liquor will bear Amber, Horn, and the fofter kinds of flones, as we " ", have made tryal in each. But a private opinion there is which crofltth the common codceirj m.aintained by fome of late, and alkdged of old by Strabo that the floating ofbodies in this Lake proceeds not from the thicknefs of the water , but a bituminous ebullition frona the bottom , whereby it wafts The verity up bodies injected , and fuftereth them not eafilytofmk. thereof would be enquired by ocular exploration, for this way is alfo probable. So we obferve , it is hard to wade deep in baths where fprin^s arife ; and thus fometime are bails made to play upon a fpouting
.
-,
flream.
And therefore,
flinguilli
until judicious
di-
do not
,
we do not
we
a difficulty,
;
difficulty defcehd in But to conclude an imor affirm .vhereas things not cafily fink, they
,
or with
more
'
is
imities
Tlnrs
'J ,
which oftentim.es give indilirndl: accounts of proxand without' refirainc tranfcend from one another, forafmuchas the toirid Zone was conceived exceeding hot , arid
Mm m 2
of
^4*45'
Baok.7.
of
, the opiniong of men fo advanced its conftituciconceive the fame unhabical)le , and beyond poITibility for man to live the cin. Thus, becaufe there are no y^^ohits'iw Englandi nor have been obferved for divers generations , coinmon people have proceeded into opinions , and fome wife men into affirmations , thsy Thus will not live therein, although brou:.ht from other Countryes.
difficult
,
hAbication
on
as to
mojft
the contrary
ih.it
there
bi:
IrsU^d ; buc we luve beheld fome in that Countrey; and though but few , fome Gob-wcbs we behold in Irilli \y ood in o^Uftit. Thui^the Crocodile from an egg growing up to an exceeding magnitude, common conceit, and <iSvers Writers deliver , it hath no period of enAnd thus in brief , in mofl apcreafe, but groweth as lon^ as it Uveth. prehenfions the conceits of men extend the conhderations of things, and pilate their notionsbeyond the propriety of their nitures.
110 Spiders in
CHAP.
XVI.
H^Utlo/is.
0/ dh. rs other
Xi,
TPHe relation of-^z/i'rr(Tf/, and now common in every mouth, of X the woman that conceived in a bath, bv attraikin^ the fperm or jfeminal effluxion of a man admitted to bath in fome vicmity unto her,
i have fcarce faith to believe ; and had I been of the Jury , iliould have hardly thought I bad found thef.uher in the perion that Rood by her. ^is a new and unfeconded way in Hiftory to fornicate at a diihnce, and much offendeth the rules of Phyfick , wnich fjy, there is no generation without a joyntem.iffion, nor only a vinual, but corporal and carnal
And al th ough v^n'.^a:/* and his adherents be cur off the contagion. one, who conceive no effectual ejaculation in women, yet in defence <rf the other they cannot be introduced. For, if as be delivererh, the inoE-^ dinate longitude of the organ, thou.,h in its proper recipient, maybe
means to improlificate the feed furely the diltance of place, with rlie commixrure of an aqueous body , muft prove an effeitual impediment, and utterly prevent the fuccefs of a conception. And the efore thit conceit concerning the daughters of Lo:^ that they were impregnated
a
;
by theibf fleeping father, or conceivea by feminal pollution received at diihnce from him, will ha-rdly be admitted. And therefore what is rcCcneraiionj by lated of devih , and the contrived del ufions of fpirits, that they fteal ihc devil very the feminil e millions of man , and tranf^nit rhem into their votaries Iflaprobibi?. i^ coition, is much to be fufpefted , and altor^ether to be denied , that
thee.enfueconceptionuhereupon however husbanded by Art, and thw.wifeil ijianagery of that moftfi^bdie i.iipo*ier. And therefore alfo
;
thac
. ..
Book.7*
andConmonnirours'.
^^fj^^-
ihat ourmagnlfiecl^fr/;>wasii>us begtren by the devil, h agroundand as vain to think from thenee to give the reqlon lefie conception ; For if a generation could fucceed, yet iliould fpiiit. of his prophetical of the devij, who is but an Auxiliary, faculties the inheiit iflue not the
and
no
univocal
Ador ;
no: will
concur to fuch
produ6^-ions.
Anda^khouah ic feemsnot impo(Tibl6, th.it impregnation may fucceedfiom feminaifpirits, and vaporous irradiations containing the active principle, vvitlwut m.aterialandgrofleemiiTion?; as it happenetH fometimes in imperforated perfons, and rare conceptions offom.e m.uclji
Asmaybealfo con;ei^ured in the coition under puberty or fourteen. of fome infects, wherein the female m.akes inrrufion into the male ; and as fome would have it, from the contintied oecafion in H^ns, from one fingle tvead of a Cock, and little flock laid up near the vent, fufticient ^j-etwiUnot thefamefuffice tofupport the for durable prolification ; Itory in quellion, wherein no coipulent emiffion is acknowledged, anin the ftory of Btur^y fvverable uuto the fable of the i a/mndifis, begotten in the fame m^nnar on the daughter of the Prophet. Jcremi'e.
'''.
'.
'
y '""''.
7, The Relation oi Luclll'm-, and novv become common, concern^ ing C?ajf^s the Grandfarher of Mcrcm the wealthy Romane^ that he nevet lau5hcdbuD once in all his life, and th.u was at an Ajfe e.uinc^ For, ifaninifferent and unridiculpus thiftle^, is fomethingHrange. it will be objet\ coiild draw his habitual aullerenefle unto a finile ; hard to believe he could with perpetuity refift the proper motives of Laughter which is a fweet ccntrailion of the Laughter, For the thereof. mufclesof theface, and apleafant aoiEadon of the vocal Organs, is what kind ofnot meekly voluntary, or totally within the j.urifdidion of our felves r Paflionitis. but asicm.ay be condrained by corporal contadtion in any, and hath been enforced in fome even in their death, fo the new unufual o; unex-which piCfent ihem.felves- to any man in his iife, f eiled jwcult'^ities,
Ad
atfomb
foul,
Ei\Tle
Certainly the and-raifeaiiriiefrom moft compofed terr>pers. and the wits of thofe Afifiids we-edullwiienthefe thin_s hapned, gesfliotof thefe of ours; when men could m.aintain fuch imm.utable faces, PS to remain like ftatues i*ndef the flatteries of wit,and perfift unThe- fpi.its in hell,, and Pluto akeiable at all efforts .of Jccularrty. himfelf,. whom- Lucian Aakes to .lau^h at paltages upon earth-, will
plainly
Hen^ctlttts^
rej:6t:ing
condemn 'thefe Siturnines,- aild make ridiculous the m.agnificd who weptprepofteroufly, and made a hell on earth for
;
theconiblations of Life, he palfed his dayes in teares, and the! >'i >_ r uncomi"ortable attentlm.ents of bell. Thefame conceit there pafleth concerning bt^r blelTed Siviour,
->,.
is fometimes uf^ed^s- nn high exam.ple of gravity. And thisis qpinioned, becaufe in holy Scripture it is recoided he fometimes wept,
and
Mmm
hut
^jVtt
454
"
Bn^uiries'mtoP^ulgar
Book.7.
"^
but never that he laughed. Which howfoever granted, it will be hard to conceive how he pafled his younger years and childhood without a fmile, it as Divinity affirmeth, for the afliirance of his humanity unto men, and the concealment of his Divinity from the devil,hepafled this age like other children, and fo proceeded until he evidenced the fame. And I'urely herein no danger there is to aiffirm the a<^ or performance
AZeXui
dmut
^. r.
of that, whereof we acknowledge the power and eflential property; and wbeiby indeed he moft nearly convinced the doubt of his humanity.Nor need we b.: afraid to afcribe that unto the incarnate Son^which fomtime? is attributed unto the uncarnate Father; of wh>m ir is fliid. He that dweltcth in the Heavens fV.aJl lauc3h the wicked to Icorn. For a liugh there is of contempt o: indi5nation, as well as of mirth or Jocolity; And that our Saviour wa? not exem.pted from the ground hereof, that is, the paifion of anger, re,ulated and riduly ordered by Rearon,the fchools do not deny: and'beiides the experience of the money-changers and Dove-fellers in the Temple, is teftified by St. Joh^, when he faith , the fpeech of David
^Yas fulfilled in
ttf^ coMc<i/>
our Saviour. this opinion confifterh in the iIIation;it being not reafonable to conclude from Scripture negatively in points which are not ijiatters of faith,and pertaining unto falvation.And rherfofe although inthedefcription of the creation th^re be no mention of fiire, Chtiliian
it reafonable prcfently to annihilate that eiejnent, or pofitively to decree there was no fuch tiring at all. Thus whereas in the brief Narration oi Mofcs there i; no record of wine before the
ilood,
Only in
;?^'
ihc
we cannot fati;;fa<ftorily conclude tlut Noah was the firft that ever word Brain js fcarce m.enrioned once,
Heart above an hundred times in holy Scripture; Phyficians that difpure the principality cf parts arc not trom hence induced to bereave the animal Organ of its priority .Wherefore the Scriptures being ferious,and commonly omitting ^uchPaJler^^ies, it will be unreafonable from hence ro fpondem.n all la^u^cer, and from.con iderations, .inconiderable codifcipline a m.an ourof ihi,s nature. For th.ii i> by a, fulHcal feveriry, to banilli aU:urbanity;wiiofe harmlevand coniined.condition,as itilanis cominienr dtQ by morality.fo i^it fonliftent with Reli^ionjand do: h not oftend Di< ': ---.r^ir-vinity. ,_ V j'v;') i' :..--.'I!
.
.'!
4.The cuftom ki,s<^P6pes ro ch^mgeitheir inline at .their creation:ani the Author thereof is commonlj' faidito be /^'>rf-t-.^'/prc,or fwinesface? v4i9 therefvj>re alVum.ed the flije of ^tgii^i the fecond, .as being ailumed fq;itV)ul a,4ia?iiie ;lliould<iil}ionouc the jChair;ofif/-/r.j; wherein notwithftandingjfrom A^ontacHtiits :tn others. J fin J there m.ay be'f^m.e miftake. For Adajfoniw who wFit the lives of Popes, acknowlediieth he was not the firft that changed his name in that Sea.; nor ns T.Iaria aftirmeth, have all hisSucceflbrs preciiely cpncinuedthat.cuftom; for ^^drian. the
i
denominaBorca
tions.
'
Npi, i;;iC;pr^yeii-,(gr
prQij-ifele,
'
ifiiw:j!if%m
m"
Book.7'
i?tfrf rf<^;
ArdtorYminnrmrf,
f
4$f
Porf ^) f or tWs was his firname oroemilitious appellation: nofwas it th<? cuftom to alter that with the other; but he commuted his ChriiUan name Feter for Ssrg-it4s, becjufe hz would feem to decline the name of Petey tht recond.Afcrupk, I confefre,not tiiou^Jit confider.iblc in oibe r Seas, whofe Originals and firft Patriarchs h ne been lefle difputed; nor yet perhaps of that reality as to prevail in points of the fame nature. For the names of the ApoOles, Patriarch's and Prophets have been all limed even to affectation; the Name of jefus hath not been appropriate, butlbm.e in precedent ages have born that name, and m.anyfince have not rcfiifedthe Chrillianncnne oi Snjarmel. Thus are there few names more frequent then Mofes and Abraham amcng the Jews; The Twri^f without fcruple affedl the name of yI//?A'(7w^f, and with oladneffe receive fo honourable cognomination. And truly in humane occurrences there ever have been m.any well diretled intentions, whofe rationalities will r ever bear a ridd examination, and ihourih in fome way they do command their Authors,an'd fuch as firlt began them, yet have they proved infufficient to perpetuate Thus was it a worthy refoimitation in fuch as have fucceeded them.. luticn oi Godfrey ^ and moft ChiiRians have applauded it, That he refufed to wear a Grown of gold,where his Saviour had worne one of thorns. Yet did not his Succefiors durably inherit that fcruple^but fome were anointed, and folemnly accepted the Diadem, of regality.Thus J//w,^^gufiw^ and 7 iberitts, withgreat humility or popularity refufed the name 'oil moratory but their Succefiors have challenged that title, aud retain the fame even in its titularity. And thus to com.e nearer our fub;eft, the humility of Gregory the Great,would by no means adrrut the ftile of uni^ verfal Bil"hop, but the am.bition of iioi/yVrci? made no fcruple thereof, nor of more quealie refolutions have been their Succefiors ever
Ijnce.
5.
^^
That Tamer lane^\% a Scyr him Shepherd, from Mr. KnoUs- and o-- TurlCi^YEythers, (lom Aiha3:,(ftz\Qn:ncd Arahianwho wrote his life^ and was ftory. 5pei:laror of m.any of his explon:s,we have reafons to deny. Not only for his birth, for he was of the blood of the Tartarian Em.perours, whofe father Og had for his poftefiion the Countrey of Sagathy \ which was no flender Territory, but comprehended all that rraft wherein were contained Bi^itiriwa^ SogdiAnayMargiana-, and the Nation of the Maffagetes^ whofe capital City was. Sawarcand ; a place though now decaid, of great efteem and trade in former ages. But fiom his regal Inauguration,
.
for
it
is
faid, that
Kingdom, and m.en of War unto him.Andalfo from his education, for as the ftory fpeaks it^ he was inftruited in the Arabian learning, and
the
afterwardexercifedhimfelfe therein. >^r^^// learning was in a manner all the liberal Sciences, efpecially the Mathematicks, and! 11acaral rhilofophy,wherin not many Ages before him there flouritlied^vi:ennayAverroesyAveMX:OAryGebery^lmanz^rjZndAihaz.eyC02.Xiomm&l
Now
un0
<
uivto
ic l^e
him
that
wrote
powy \xwio Av'icsr.r,.t^ii'Ci'\]\\i\\\^it fixteen books. ot'OpUf^ks^ elkem with ci^^es paft, and texuary unto our days, >; .:' .Jv*"
.-i
Qi' great
'^
ftoiiui declareth.
Nowthegroundofthismilbke was furely that which theTurkilli hiSome, yCaich he, of our hirtorians will needs have 7"^, ;
:
medfine to be the foji. of, a Shepherd. JJut this they have faid not knowing at all the cul:k)tP-e of their Countrey wherein -the principal revcnewsof the Knii* <ind Nobkij cohiiiteth in cartel; who dei^^ifing ^old and filyer, abound mall forts thereof.- And this was the occalxon that fome men call them Shepherds,andaIfo affirm this Prince descended from them. .Now, if it be reafonable, that great men whofe pofleffion are chiefly in cartel, Tnouid bear the nam.e of Shepherds , and fall juppn fo low denominatioi'is then may we fay that Ahmhamvas a Shepherd, although too powerful for. four Kir)gs that ,7<^. vvas of that 'condition, who beiide Camels and Oxen had feven thouifand flieep and jet is faid to be the greacefi man in the Eail. Thus was A'icjha Kin^ of Moab a Shepherd, who annually }'aid unto the Crown of J{rae[ , an hundred thoufmd lam.bs , and as many Ra:m.s. Surely it is no dillionorablecourieof life which -'^'^''{/V:f and. '^Trgr^ have made exem.plary 'tis a profelfron fupporced upon^the natural way of acquifition , and though .contem.nedbythe ti/ ff^/if/^w , much counren.inced by the Hebrews, And certainly Avhofe fa-crihces required plenty of Sheep and Lambs. they were very mui'icrous, for, at the confecration of the Temple , beiide two and twenty thoufand Oxen, King Solomon lacri^ced *in hundred and the '[^m^ is ob.ervable from the, daily .iind twenty thoufcind d^eep provilionof hishoufe which was ten fat Oxen,rwcnry.<)xen out of the paftures, and an hundred Sheep, bc^'ide rovvibuck, f.illovv I>eer, ^tndfatWherein notwithllanding (if a punctual relation thereof Dcfc ip;ion o{ ted Fowls. the Tuikifh do rightly inform, us ) the Grand Seignior doth exceed: the daily proScr:^ho, fince y^^^^j, of yvhofe SeragUoin the Reign aiAckmet^ belule Beeves, conf^^'^^'^sd two hundred ihecp, lambs and kids when they were in feafon oi^e 5'iily pr'ovifion ,' chickens one huncf the Sciaglio. buix}rd, ca.lves ten, gc>:;fe hfcV:, Jiens^ two hundied -pidgeons hundred paiciniol") 'j^a an dred, r. ^--Ml^ And therefore this m.ifhke.cont^erniig the Noble TrtmerLvie ^ was lilie that concerning DcwofihrKcs , who is- faid to be the Son of a Blackfmith, according to common .conceit, and that vhandfome exprelTion of
;
Qficm p^rtfr
ardsfj.'is yrza/fx
foKc'i^iifjis-,
fuHflfje lifptUy
{ilainiy af-
this-
Book.7.
^iT'4'4Xy
ad
many flaves
that
CHAP.
XVII.
others.
Of fame
I.
\XJ E
VV
are fad
when we
Chieftain of Jii^/W^,
who,
Goths, Perfians, and his Trophies in three parts of the worid, had at and was reduced to that diftrefs, lalt his eyes put out by the Emperour, that he begged relief on the high way, in that uncomfortable petition, Date obolnm Be/ifarlff. And this we do not only hear in Difcourfes> Orations and Themes, but finde it alfo in the leaves of Trf r^ Cr/V/;>w, VlAterrams^ andother worthy Writers. But, what m.ay fome what confolate all men that honour vertue, tve do not difcover the latter Scene of his mifery in Authors of Antiquity, or fuch as have exprefly delivered the ftory of thofe times. For, Snidasis filent herein, C edrems and Zo^arHSy two grave andpundual Authors, delivering only the confifcation of his goods, omit thehiftoPaulus Dlacoms goeth farther, not only pafluig ry of his mendication. over this ad, but affirming his goods and dignities were reftored. A^ gathim who lived at the fame time, dcclareth he fuffered m.uch from theenvieof the Court: but that hedefcended thus deep into atfiiili- 'ArcxATSjor on, is not to be gathered from his pen. The fame is alfo omitted Atcam hifi. hy Procopius a contemporary and profefled enemy unto J//^/^and Be/if^rius , who hath left an approbricus book againft them
both.
ciatpts
and hopes we are not fingle, but Andrcat Aland FranclfcHs de Cordua in his D/dafcalia^ have both declaratorily confirmed the fam.e, which is alfo agreeable unto the judgement of Nlcolaus Alemannur^ in his notes upon that bitter hiftory of ProcopHs. Certainly fad and tragical ftories are fcldome drawn within the circle of their verities ; but as their Relators
in this opinion
And
do
either intend the hatred or picy of the perfons, fo are they fet forth with additional amplifications. Thus have fome fufpeled it hath hapned unto the ftory of Oedipus ; and thus dd we conceive it hath fared with that of T^^/^/, who hiving finned beycn i aggravation, and committed one vilhny which cannot be exarperited by all other; is yet charged with the murther of his reputed b other, parricide of his father, andinceft with hi& own inother, as Fbrilegns or Mi^ttheat of And thus hath it perhaps befaikn the Wefiminfii r hath at lacge related.
Nnn
noble
2 4"^^
4:S?^
liable Beitfar'iM,
Book.7,.
who, upon iniligation of the EiTlprefle, havin^* conand very hardly treated Pope Serverim Latine^pens, as a judgement of God upon thisfadl, have fet forth his future fufferings: and omitting nothing of amplification, they have alfo delivered" this: which notvvi'thftanding J(?^^;?f/ the Greek, makes doubtful, as may appear from his lambicks in >5^rd?//, and might be a miftake or mifapplicaiion: tranflating th? affiiilionof one man upon another, for ^^^ ^^^^ ht(d unto Johannes C^ppadox^ contem.porary unto Belifarinsy VtrRc'i "Afrh o$o- ^"d in great favour with Jufiini^n ; who being afterward banillv ed ^heuTti^tu, into Ezypt-, was faine to beg relief on the high way.. 2. That /?^j Decttmanm^ or the tenth wave is greater and m.ore dangerous then any other, fome no doubt will be]offended if we deny ; and hereby we fhall feem to contradiil Antiquity ; for, anfwerable unto the literal and common acception, the fame is averred by many' Writers, and plainly defcribed by OW^.
trived the exile,
;
,
. '
"Which notwlthftanding is evidently falfe ; nor can it be made out by obfervation, either upon the fho re or the Ocean, as we have with diligence explored in both. And furely in vain we exped a regularity in tht waves of the fea, orin the particular m.otions thereof, as we may
general reciprocations, whofe caufes are conftant ; and effefts Whereas its fluctuations are but motions fubfervient ; which windes> ftorm.es, fhores, fhelves, and every interjaccncy irregulates. Which femblable reafon we might expeit a reits
in
therefore correfpondent.
whereof though fome be ftatary, fome anniand the reft do tend to determ.inate points of heaven,yet do th^ blafts and undulary breaths thereof maintain no certainty in their courfer nor are they numeral ly feared by Navigators. Of affinity hereto is th2it conceit o O^/um Dicumamm, fo called, becaufe the tenth egge is bigger then any other, according unto the reafon alledged by f^/fw, DecHmanaova d'lCHnmr^ cjuiaovHmdeclmHm TuaJHs nafchur. For the honour we bear unto the Clergy, we cannot but wifh this true ; but herein will hz found no more of verity then in the other and furely few will aflent hereto without an implicite credulity, or Pythagorical fubmilTion unto every conception of numgularity in thewindes;
verfary,
:
ber.
For, furely the conceit is numeral, and though not in the fenfe ap-i prehended, relateth unto the num.ber of ten, as Vrancifcni Sylvitu Jbath moft probably declared.For,whereas amongft Timple numbers or di^ therefore whatfoever was the gits, the number of ten is the greateft greateft in every kinde,might in fome fenfe be named from this number; Nowj becaufe alfo that vvhich was the greateft, was metaphorically by
:
fome:
Book. 7.
fome
this
Ca^^f
at firft called
this
therefore
The conceit is alfo Latine ; for the Greeks to expreflc the greatcft wave, doufe the number of three, that is, the word 'rp'w^'*, which is whence arofe the proverb a concurrence of three waves in one, t^twia'A KdKay, orarriflu6\uationofevils, \yhich Erafmus doth render MAlorHmfiti^Hs DecHmanHi. And thus, although the termes be ve-,
ry different, yet are they made to fignifie thefelf-fame thing ber of ten to explain the num.ber of three, and the (ingle
;
the
num-
number of
one wave, the colleflive concurrence of more. 3. The poiion of Paryfatis^ reported from Oejiasby Plutarch in the and life of zArtaxerxeSf whereby anointing a knife on the one fide, therewith dividing a bird with the one half fbe poifoned Statira, and fafely fed her felfe on the other, was certainly a very fubtile one, and But furely wc fuch as our ignorance is well content it knows not. had discovered a poifon that would not endure Tandoraes box , could
;
be Satisfied in that for which its coldnefle nothing could contain but an Afies hoof, and wherewith fome report that Alexander the great was poifoned. Had men derived fo (Irangean cffe^^ from fome occult or hidden qualities, they m.ight have filenced contradiilion \ but afcnbing it unto the manifeft and open qualities of cold, they mujft pardon our belief;who perceive the coldeft and moft Stygian waters may be included in glaffes j andby^r//?of/f who faith, that glaffe is the perfedleft work of Art, we underhand they were not then to be invented. And thoi^h it be faid that poifon will break a Venice-glaffe, yet have wc not met with any of that nature. Were there a truth herein, it were the beft Prefervative for Princes and Perfons exalted unto fuch And though the fears; and furely farbctter then divers now inufe. beft of China dillies, and fuch as the Emperour doth ufe, be thought by fome of infallible vertue unto thiseffeft; yet will they not, I fear, be And though alfo it able to elude the mifchief of fuch intentions.
be true, that God made all things double, and that if we look upon the works of the moft High, there are two and two, one againft another j ^^ what kvSi God Almighty that one contrary hath another, and poifon is not without a poifon unto
it
we
felf; yet
tbinE^'doublt.'
known then their Antidotes, and fome thereof do fcarce admit of any. And laftly, although unto every poifon men have delivered many Antidotes, and in every one is promifed an equaliry onto its adversary, yet do we often finde they faile in their eft^edls Moly will not refift a weaker Cup then that of Circe; a man may be poifoned in a Lem.nian dilli without the miracle of hhtt^ there Is no confidence in the earth of Pml and if it be meant that no
:
^^^^
VAdittx.
poifon could work upon him,we doubt the ftory,and expeit no fuchfucr \' v /. cefle from the diet of hrikates,
Mh
Nnn
^4f
^^^
fair
tn^irieunto yu{qar
Book.
unto Alexander a with this intent, ei-
that fcht
ther by convcrfe or copulation coinplexionally to deftroy him. For my part, although the delign were true, I lliouid have doubted the fuccefs.
be poflible that poyfons m.ay meet with tempers whereto , and weobi'erve from fowls th.it feed on fiAies , and others fed with garlick and onyons, that fimple aliments are not alvvayes concoited beyond their vegetable qualities ; and therefore that even after carnal converiion , poyfons may yet retain fome portion of their natures yet are they fo refrailed , cicurated and fubdued, as not to make good their firft aiid deftruilive malignities. And thereFor, though
it
rhey
j.
fore the Stork that eateth Snakes, and the Stare that feedeth
lock, though
upon Hem-
no commendable
For, animals that can innoxioufly digeft chefe poyfons, become antidotal uato the poyfon digefted. And therefore whether their breath be artra^led, or their flefh ingefted, the poyfonous reliques go ftill along with their antidote , whofe fociety will not permit their m.alice to be deftru^live. And therefore alfo animals that are not mifchieved by
yen^ck.
poyfons which deftroy us , may be drawn into Antidote againft them the blood or flcfh of Storks againft the venom of Serpents , the Quail againft Hellebore , and the diet of Starlings againft the drou/ht of Sogrates. Upon like grounds are fome parts of Animals Alexipharm.acall unto others ; and fome veins of the earth, and alfo whole regions , not only deftroy the life of venomous creatures, but alfo prevent their productions. For though perhaps they contain the feminals of Spiders anJ Scorpions, and fuch as in other earths by fufcitiarion of the Sun m.ay arife unto aiiim.ation ; yfet lying under command of their Antidote, without hope of emergency they are poyfoned in their m.atrix by powers ea-lily hindrine the advance of their originals, whofe confirm.ed forms they
are able to deftroy.
V.
of the Wandring Jew is very ftrange , and will hardly is there a formal account thereof fet down by Matthew Trfr/ir,from the report of an Armenian Biiliopjwho came into thi.'j Kiiigdome about four hundred years ago , and had often entertained this V} anderer at his Table. That he was then alive , was firft called C'trtaphi/ftSy was Keeper of the Judgement Hall , whence thrufting out our ., Saviour with expoftulation for his ftay, was condwnned to ftay until his Ttrt flu %i and by the name of Jofeph-, return ; was after baptized by <iAnanlai df.timmm m/n^>rti$nec was thirty years old in the dayes of our Saviour , remembred the Saints VW9' that arifed wirh him , the making of the Apoftles Creed, and their feSurely were this true, he might be an happy arvcral peregrinations. but muft impardonably conbitrator in many Chriftian controverfies demn the obftinacy of the Jewes , who can contemn the Rherorick of fuch miracles, and blindly behold fo living and lafting conftory
The
>
v^rfionso
6.
Ckarec
Book. 7
and Common
Srrours,
4^1/
^ /^i
6. Clearer confirmations muft be drawn for the hiftory of Pope ^c?^;/, who fucceeded. Lfi> the fourth , and preceded /^r;?f^/<5/ the thi.d , th^n And fince it is delivered with aiKnt cTiid fcrtim iv.any we yet difcover. jLf^//^n/ hath difcovcred , that ancient learned the fmce many; by co-ifuutio fji if'!is Fo/o>7M , who is chiefly urged for it, had not this buladejoMnn. cofi^s oC {lory in it ; fince Jiot only the fkeam of Latine Hifloriins have oinirted i^Jf 'jP o*"^
Man
it,
but ?/ji>^/w
ih>i
Patriarch, ^J^^etropha^^s
Smyr^amy^indibz
Qx^Cpt:a-- ^fbu^o
ted Greeks have made no mention of it, but conceded ^f;7:^^/c7 the. third Succc'flbr unto Leo the fourth , he wants not grounds that doubts
It.
Many things hillorical whicii feem of clear conceflion , want not affirmations and negations, according to divided pens : as is notorioufly obfervable in the (tory of Hildebrand or Gregory the fevcnih , repugIn fuch divided renantly delivered by the Im.perial and Papal party. hath much depraved hiltory, if the equity of the wherein partiality cords Reader do not corred the iniquity of the Writer, he will be much,
confounded with repugnancies , and often finde in the fame perfon, Numa and Nero. In thin5S of tliis nature m.oderation muft intercede^ and fo charity may hope, that Roman Readers will conftrue many pafla- Of Luther ^*^'^^> ^'^^ ges in Bo/fecJh Fayiu, ScUHJfelhrrg , and CochUtu. filled Bacoyj is with the Fryer year of that flory a made braEvery , iR.og. Ba on 7. 2en head to Ipeak thefe words, 7 Ime is , Which thoup,h there want not mimriu. ox< the like relations, is furely too litterally received , and was but a myfti- 2"^^^' ^"^ <'^'/"""'^ cal fable concerning the Philofophers great work, wherein he em.inenrImplying no more by the copper head, then the veflei lylaboLireJ. wherein it wa:; wrought , and by the words it fpake, then the opportunity to be watched , about the Temfm ortm^ or birth of the myftical child^, or Philofophical King of Lullius the riling of the Terra follata o^Ar
:
mldus-,
fufficientiy im.pregnated
afcend-
eth white and fplendent. Which not obferved, the work is irrecoverably Ibiefioperls-perfellloant an- ^^ \oi\', according to that of 7Vfrj ^<?i^j-. nlhllittlo ; cj'ion'iam ipfa die^ tmmo hora^ ormntHr elenientafimplicl^ depti- prctfofa,
antcquam volem ab Igne. , he m.ifled the intended treafure. W'hich had he obtained , he mignt have made out the tradition of making a brazen wall about England. That is, the moft powerful defence , and flrongeft fortification which Gold could have efrata-, cjua. e^ent fiatim compofitione^
Now
feiled.
8. Who can but pitty the vertuous Epicurus-, who is commonly conceived to have placed his chief felicity in pleafure and fenfual delights, and hath therefore left an infamous name behind him ? How true, let them determine who read that he lived feventy years,and wrote more books then any Phylofopher but Chryfipptu^ and no lefs then three hundred , without borrowing from any Author. That he was contented with bread and water. , and when he would dine with Jove^ and pre--
Nn;a3
tend:i
J- J Ait
En^mrteunto Vulgar
Book./.
tend\intoepulauon> he defired no other addition then a piece of C/t^rThat fhall condder the words of Seneca^ Nondico^ qmi r'ldiftn cheele. veri(]', nofi/orHW^feElam Epicnri fiagltwrum mag'ifirHm ejfexfed lllud di~ CO male andit infamis fi^& Immerlta. Or fhall read his life,his Epijftles, his Teftament in Laertitt^, who plainly names them Calumnies , which are commonly faid againft them. The ground hereof feems a mifapprehenfion of his opinion, who placed his felicity not in the pleafures of the body, but the mind, and tranquility thcreof,obtained by wifdom and vertue,as is moft clearly determined in his Epiftle unto Maneceus. Now how this opinion was ^^^ traduced by the Stoickj , how it afterwards became a common be^lu'Ep1cu?r ^ licf,and fo taken up by Authours of all uges,by Clcero^PltitarchyClememy Ambrofe and others ; the learned Pen ofGaJje^dui hath difccvered.
'
'
CHAP.
XVill.
OTher
relations there are, and thofe in very good Authours , which though we do notpofitively deny, yet have they not been unqucfiioned by fome , and at leaft as improbable ttuths have been received by others. Unt fome it hath feemed incredible what HerodotHs reporteth of the great Army of X^r.v^j ,that drank whole rivers dry. And unto the Authour himfelf it appeared wrondrous ftrange, that they cxhaufted not the provifion of the Countrcy , rather then the waters For as he maketh the account , and Budeus de Ajfv corre6ling thereof. the mif-computeof/^/ziif<^,deliverethit; if every man ofthe Army had had a chenix of Corn a day , that is, a fextary and half; or about two pints and a quarter, the Army had daily expended ten hundred thouflind and fourty Medimna's , or meafures containing (ix Builiel^-. Which rightly confidered, the <iAbd"rites had reafon to blefle the Heavens,that Jffnvaeatbut one meal a day; and Vythlus his noble Hoft, mi^ht with lefle charge and poflible provifion entertain both him and his Army. And yet may all be falved,if we take it heperbolically , as wife men recei' e that exprelTion in Job^ concerning B.hemuih the Elephant Behold, he drinkethup a river and haiteth not.he trufteth that he can draw up J(?n//; into his m-outh. 2. That y5?wi/'^,?/ eat or brake through the Alpeswith Vinegar, may b,e too grofly takcn,and the Author of his life annexed unco Plntarch affirmeth oncly , he ufed thi^ artiHce upon the tops of fome of the highell m.ountainss. For as it is vulgarly underllcod, that he cut a paflage for his Army through thofe mighty^nQuntviins^-it may feeme incredible , not
;
Boofc.7
^andCommonBrroursl
A.St"4
not only in the greatneffe of the eftel,but the quantity of the eflficient: and fuch as behold them, may think an Ocean of Vinegar too little for that efteft. 'Twas a work indeed rather to be expelled from eathquakes and inundations, then any corrofive waters, and much condem.neth theJudgement of Xf r.va, that wrought through Mount i^thos with Mactocks.
:;.
parabolical figures, at three furlongs,or asfomewill haveit , at the diihnce of three miles, founds hard unto reafon, and arificial experiencer and therefore jufily jqueftioned by Ktrchtrns , who after long enquiry
coMXd'rwidthyix.
fired at
fifteen
paces.
And therefore
were nearer
p^
.^.
;ajri.
fome thirty paces : at which diflance notwithftanding the effeil was very great. But whereas m.en conceive the /hips were m.ore eafily fei on flame, by reafon of the pitch about them, it feem.eth
no
make
it
boy I, not-
eafiiy let
iuDn
fire.
4. The flory of tge f^^//, whereof three hundred and fix marching cainrt the p^elcmes^ were all flaine,and one child alone to fupport the
afa-
mily rem.ained; is furely not to be paralleld,nor eafie to be conceived, except we can imagine, that of three hundred and fix, but one had childrenbelowthe.ferviceofwar ; that the reft were all unmiarried , or the:
wife but of one im.pregnated. ^. The received ftory oiMlh^ssho by daily lifting a Calf, attained an? ability to carry it being a Bull,is a witty conceit,and handfomly fets fortb
the efiicacy of Afruefa6lion. But furely the account had been more reafonably placed upon fome perfon not much exceeding in ftrength , and fuch a one as without the affiftancc of cuftom.e, could neve: have perform.ed that ait; which fome may prefume that AZ/Vo without precedent:
artifice
as relations declare,
or any other preparative, had ftrength enough to perform. For he was the-molipancratical man of Greece , and as
,
he
was able to perfift ere6l upon an oyled plank , and nor to be removed by the force or prorrufion of three men. And if that be true which Athinius reporteth, he was little beholdiug to cuftome for this ability. For in the Olympick games, for the fpace of a furlong , he carried an Oxe of foure yeares upon his Ihoulders ; and the fame day he carried it in his belly: for as it is there delivered he eat it up himfelf.Surely he had been a proper gueft at Grandgoufiers feaft, ^ ^htUh. and might have m.atcht his throat that eat fix pilgrims for a Salad. 6. It much difadvantageth the Panegyrick of Synefms^ and is no fmaH vvho writ jn cifparagemenr unto baldnefle, if it be true what is related by ^^llan the praifcoC: concerningc//(r/;//j, whofe bald-pate was miftaken for a rock, arid '>*^'^'^clle. fo was brained by a Tortoife which an Eagle let fall upon it. Certainr in the perfpicacy of that AnimaK ly^ ic-. was very great miftake
^<^ 4^4
An argument
or initancc a
En^utrlei'mto VuI^ay
critically difpofed
Book.7.'
^ono/l'^''"^' canb.
Some men , would from hence confute the opinion ^f Copernicus, never conceiving how the motion of the earth below, iliouid not wave from a knock perpendicularly direded from, a body in f he ayr above. 7. Ic crofleth the Proverb , and Rome miu;ht well be built in a.day ; if that were true which is traditionally related by Stnzbo-, that the^reat Q\iiZ'i AKchinlcM-i^Tarfiu , were built by 5^r<^<^/9^/>^/w both in one day,
according to the infcription of his m.onument , Sardanapalas AnmcyndaraxisjiliHs-, yinchialcnO' I'arfumHna, dn edificavif 'THaute7n hofpes
Ede,Lude,Bibjy&c. which if Ilrii'tly taken, that is, for thefiniiliing thereof, and not only for the beginning; for an artificial or natural day, and not one of Daniels weeks, that is, feven whole years ; furely thiir hands were very heavy that watted thirteen yeares in the private houfe of Solomon it m.ay be wondred how fourty years were fpent in the ereilion of the Temple o^Jerufalcm , and no lefs- then an hundred
:
Certainly
;
it
one of fix an Art quire lolt with our Mechanicks,aworknottobemadeout, but like the walls o^ Thek's,
aiidfuch an Artificer as
Ar,jfh'irr7,
The
or
Syracufia
King Hk
^" w h*^BUr at u
.
had been a fight only fecond unto the Ark , to have beheld the great Syramfia , or mighty lliip of Hiero, defcribed in Athsnem \ and ^^^^^ h'^^*^ thought ic a very large one , wherein were to be found ten ^:t^^|3|^<5 fQj- hQ,-;^es, eight Towers, befides Fifh-ponds, Gardens, Triclinium.s, and many fair rooms paved with Agarh, and precious f tones. But
8.
It
nothing was impolTible unto ^?-c/;/WrfW, the learned Contriver thereiliall we queilion his removing the earth, when he finds an immoveable bafe to place his Engine upon it. The relation of Plutarch of a youth of Sparta , thit fuffered a 9.
of; nor
-"A
Lift of
^
^^me
ibis
hiftorical
Fox concealed under his robe to tear out bis bowels, before he would either by voice or couiitenance betray hi^ theft; and the other of the sp^j-can Lad , that with the (lime refolution fufte -ed a coal from the Al^'^^
and"\hc
following
^ions..
^^ '^"^" h^^ ''*^^^^-' ^li^hcugh defendtdby the Author that writes his life, sc- islpe:-ceivemiftri'ftedby menof Judge-v.ent , and the Author with an Alfu;ec'ly ir was a Noble Nation that ainnt, is m.ade to flilve himlelf. could afiord an hint to fuch inventions of patience, and upon whom , if
verities, at leall fuch verifimiliiies of fortitude were placed. AVcre the Xlory true, they would have m.ade the only Difciples for Z<^ko, and the 5^ t?/V ,and m.i^ht perhaps have been perfwaded to laugh in Pha-
not fuch
/<_,(
/cT/j his
Bull.
10. Ifany man n-iall content his belief with the fpeech of Balaams Afs, without abelief of that of Mahom'.'ts Q^:{\^\ ^ or Livis Oxe if any man make a doubt of Gi<ies ring in ^ (flmns , or conceives he muft
:
be a Jiw that believes the Sabbatical river in fofephus. If any m.an will how the tail of an African Weather out*\eigheth the body of a good Calf, that i-;, an hundred pound , accord,
ins:
, ,
Book. 7
'
'md Common
Brrottrs,
^^^ ^
.
JJ
ing unco Leo Afrlcavtu^ or defires before belief, to behold fiich a creature as is the Ruck in VuhIhs Venems , for my pare I lliall not be angry
anyone
lliall
is
not known to Nation was deaf which dwelt atthefallof A^///^ , the laughing and weeping humour of HeracUtm and DentocrltH.'y \\ith many more , he fliall not want fome reafon and
ilory of the Antivconsy tlie taking of the City of Babylon^
fome therein
that the
p^^/i^^,,,- ni*,
fi^i^j^
af-
by Sertorlm.
'
thofe frag-
common
whe-
ther the Pillar which J'^/^P^^^ beheld long ago , TcrtHllUn long after, and Banl-olomotis de Sil'ignlaco , and Borchardtts long fincc , be the
ife ; whether this were the hand of Paul , or lame with that of Lots which is comm.only lliewn the head of Peter , if any doubt, I ihall^ not m.uchdifpute with their fufpitions. If any man lliall not believe the Turpentine betwixt 7- r/<?/.7 and Bethiem under which the Virgin fuckled cur Saviour, as fhe palled between thofe- Cities; orthc figtreeofBethanylTievvedtothis day, whereon Zachen^ afcended to J..'^?'"P'^ behold our Saviour ; I cannot tell how to enforce his belief, nor do I fomewhatcon'. think it requifite to attempt it. For, as it is no reafonable proceeding trary lo reafon. to compel a Religion , or think to enforce our own belief upon ano.rher, who cannot wichouc the concurrence of Godsfpirit, have any indubitable evidence of things that are obtruded. So is italfo in matters of comm.on belief, whereunto neither can we indubitably affent , with* out the co-operation of our fenfe and reafon, wherein conlills the principles of perfwalion. For, as the habit of Faith in Divinity is an argument of things unfeen, and a {table affentunto things inevident, upon authority of the Divine Revealer , So the belief of man which depends* upon hum.ane teftim.ony , is but a ftaggering aflent unto the aftirmative,., not without fome fear of the negative. And as there is required the Wofd of God, or infufed inclination unto the> one , fo m.uft the a<ftual fenfation of our fenfes, at leaft the non-oppofition of our reafons procure our aflent a-nd acquiefcence in the other. So when Snfebkis ^v\ holy Writer aftirm.eth, there grew a ftrange and unknown plant jaear the
that
-,
ftature of Chrift,
eretledby his Hem.arroidal patient in the Gofpel,whicl^ attaining unto the hem. of his vefture, acquired a fudden faculty to cure/
all difcafes.
Although he
faith
he
favv
ic
as humane belief ? Som.e believing, others, opinioning, a third fufpe6ling it m.i^ht be ocherwife. For indeed , in., matters of belief the underftanding aifentiiig unto the relation, either
Ooo
there
Book,^.
there
may be a confidence of the one, yet if there be not a fatisfaclion in the crher, there will arifefufpenfions i nor can we properly believe until fQinearFumentQfr;afon, or of our proper fenfe convince cr de:
termine our dubitations. And thus it is alfo in matters of certain and experimented truth for ifunto one th,u never heard thereof , a man fhould undertake to perfvvade the affections of the Load-ftonc, or that Jet and Aniber atrra6leth ftravYS and lij,ht bodies, there would be lirtle Rbetorick in the auThus although it be true that thority ciArlftotle^ Pllnj^ or any other. theftringofa Lute or Viol will ftir uponrheftroakof an l.nifon or Diapazon in another of the fame kind ; that Alcanna being green, will fuddenly infeil the nails and other parts with a durable red ; chat a candle put of a Musket will pierce through an Inch-board, or an urinal force a naij through a tMank ; yet can few or none believe thus much without a vifible experiment. VVhich nocwithftanding falls out more
happily for knowledge j for thefe relations leaving unfatistadion in the Hearers, do lUr up ingenuous dubiofities uiito experiment, and by an
fJ U-O Li
l
.1
'
1 .1
i'j-C'^jJ'. li
'
CHAP. XIX,
Of fame ReUttons
wk/jfe truth
we fear ^
Who
'
tjtd
r1 '"
lugtihiu *
h^Jt As there are many Relations whereto we can affent , and -make doubt thereof, fo tnere are divers others whofe verities we fear, and heartily wiili there were no truth therein. \, It is an Hnfufferable affront unto fili>il piety, and a deep difcouragement unto the expe6lation of ail aged Parents, whoHiall but read the ftoryof that barbaroi Queen; who after fhe bad beheld her Royal parents ruine, Ity yet in the arm.s of his aflaffme, and caroafed with him in the skull of her Father. For my pare , I ibould have doubted the operationof Antimony, where fuch a potion would not work ; 'twas an aft merhinks beyond Anthropophagy , and a cup fit to be ferved up only at the table of v^f r<?w. 2. "\A bile we laugh at the ftory of Pygmaleort^ and receive as a fable tii.1t he Cell in love with a Sutue we cannot but fear it may be true, vyhar is delivered by //fro^orrw concerning thQcyEgyptian PoUindlors, Of fucb as annointed the dead ; that fome thereof we re found in the ad of carnality with them. From wits that fay 'tis more then incontinency for Hy/oi to fport with Hecul^a^zn^ youth to flam.e in the frozen em. braces of ^ge, we require a name for this: wherein Tetrr/jiw o: Alar^'^ cannoi relieve t\s^ Ttie tyranny oiMcK^mm did never equal the
;
'
vitiofity
Book.7.
/"^
4^-/ r/
vidofityof this /w^ ,' that could embrace corruption, and mate a Miftreis of che grave ; that could not refift the dead provocations of beauty , whofe quick invitements fcarce excufe fubmiftion. Surely , it luch depravities rhere be yet alive, deformity need not defpair ; nor will iht eldelt hopes be ever fuperannuated, fince death kith fpurs , and car-*' cafles have been courted. 3. lamhejrtilyforry, andvvilTiitwerenoctiue, what to the ditlio* hour of ChrilUanicy is affirmed by the Italian ; who after he had invei^ cied his enemy to difclaim. his faith for the redemption oC his life , did prefently poyniird him., to prevent repentance, and aflifl'e his eternal Lodg-haKde^ death. Thcvillanyof this Chriftian exceeded the perfecution of Heathens, whofe m.a lice was never fo Lon^im.inous as to reach the foul of their enemies J or to extend unco the exile, of their EljfiHms. And though the blinc'nefs of fom.e ferities have favaged on the bodies of the dead, and been lb injurious unto worms, as todifenter the bodies of the yet had they therein no de/i^n upon the foul ; and have been deceal'ed
;
fo far
from the
it
them many
life
fouls
and
a
fa-
were
in their
again.
It is
fomewhat
voureth of hell, to dedre the fociety, or comfort our felves in the felJowfhip of others thar fuflfer with us ; but to procure the m.iferies of others in thofe extrem.ities , wherein we hold an hope to have no fociety our felves, is methinks a ftrain above Lucifer^ and a prajecl beyond the primary fedudion of hell. 4. 1 hope it is not true, and fome indeed bave probably denied, what is recorded of the Monk that poyfoned Henry the Emperour , m. a 'Twas a fcandalous wound unto Chridraught of the holy Eucharift. fiian R,eli^icn,and I hope all Pagans will forgive it, when they lliall read
that a Chriflian was
poyfoned in
efte6l
;
a cup of Chrift,
and received
his
bane
,
in-
Had he believed
and furely the
Tranfubftantiation
fin it felf
he
received an ag-
gravation in that opinion. It much com.mendeth the innocency of our Forefathers, and the (im.plicity of thofe times, whofe Laws could never
dream
I will
fo hi^h a crim.e as parricide : whereas this at the leaft m.ay feem to out-reach that fail, and to exceed the regular diilinilions of murder.
:
not fay what fm it was to ?6t it yet may it feem a kind of martyrdom.etofufferby it. For, a It h ou h unknowingly, he died for Chrift Cerhi^ fake , and loft his life in the ordained teUimony of his death. tainly, had they known it , fome noble zeals would fcarcely have refufed it ? rather adventi.iinj^ their cw death, then refufing the m.em.ori^ al of his. Many other accounts like thefe we meet fometimes in hiftory , fcan-* dalous unto ChriPaanity , and even unto hum.anity ; whofe verities not Hu]'^ fo^h^i. oniy, but \^ hpfe relations honeft minds do deprecate. For of Cns hete;
JJ^'lp"^^^'
roditalj.
if'
'
c/ 4^8
rocUcal, and
Ert^uiries
mto yd^ar
'
\
,
Book.7
there
Is
or prefidcnt
oft times a
fm even in
their hiftories.
fiiouldbe accounted new > that fo they may be efteemed monftrons. They omit of monftrofiry as they fall from their rarity for, men count
Who writ DC
Antiquu de
invcmionj
hit.
itvenialtoerre with their forefathers, and foolillily conceive they divide a fin in its fociety. The pens of m.en may fufficiently expatiate without thefefingularities of villany ; For, as they encreafe rh^ hatred of vice in fome, fo do they enlarge the Theory of wickediiefs in all. And this is one thing that may make latter ages wo:fe then were rhe former ; For, the viciffus exam.ples of ages paft, poyfon the curiofity of thefe prcfent, affording a hint of fin unto feduceable fpirits , and foliciting thofe unto the imitation of them , whofe heads were never fo perverfly principled as to invent them. In this kind we comm.end the wifdome and goodnefs of Galen , who would not leave unto the world too fubtile a Theory of poyfons ; unarming thereby the malice of venomous fpirits, whofe ignorance muft be conrented with Sublimate and Arfenick. For, furely there are fubciler venen.itions , fuch as will invifibly deftroy , and like the Bafilisks of heaven. In things of this nature filence commendeth hiftory 'tis the veniable part of things loft ; wherein the re m.uft ney^j. j.[[q ^ Pancirollus, nor remain any Regifter but that of hell, yet,if as fome Stoicks opinion, and Si nee a himfelf difputeth,thefe unruly afte^blions that m.ake us lin fuch prodigies , and even fins themthere is anhiUory oi Africa and fto.y of Snakes in felvesbeanim.als thefe. And if the tranfanimation of Tythiigorm or m.cthod thereof were true, th.it the fouls of m.en tranHTiiirated into fpecies anfwering
:
^^
fome men
verm.any Serpents,
Satan entered.
And though
the ob;e5lion of Vlato lliould take place, that bodies fubjeiled unto cor* ruption, m.uft fail at laft before the period of all things, and growing
rits
fewer in number, muft leave fom.e fouls apart unto them.feh^es ; the fpiand of m.any long before that time will find but naked habitations meeting no aiTimilables wherin to re-act their natures, mft certainly an:
LACTANT.
Trmiis faplcntid gradm
ejr-,falf>i inte.'ligcre,
FINIS.
o >i'
An
A
Alphabetical Table
A
P-424
Air. i^f Albertus Magnus his Charafter. 3$ Aldrovandusjhis diligence commend*
ed.
AAA A?
AbihtiesjCfcientifical efpeciall/j )
f^f^^'-
proved.
Abraham.
258
Alexander,
AlnicnJs not good
nef?.
againft:
307
drunken1 1
f poTbly
his
pow99 102
91
113
Alvarez a
Tefuir.
A.ccubaaon
Amber how
engendred.
UKaK
^.1
Ambodexcers. America.
Ahi^jhibologie.
239,242 70
14 177 95
Adym. 2, 3, i6p, 1S4, 2 ,.25292.334,^73 Adams Mav~ ;l. 2iy2. How cidci then
.
Amphi^bna.
Anvil
t
.
MechuCelah.
JLra^eroir-,
244
28
ively ic Irecanie
Adiian the
iEg}pr5
til
Amulets
how piim
ni land. 331.
3p2 143 i^g> i* '^'^^ 33 V T^'-eii' anciqniry. 336 Anchovy, .Egyptian Po.lln6tors,or anointersof And s, a hill in Peru. 390 the dead, their piodigious carnali- Animals tie tranfmutation of their ty. Sex and Species. 183 466 .^.ian, his Character. 22,33 Anibal, his eating through the Alps -^Iqnacor. with vinegar. 462 35^}, --Equinoxes their Anticipation. ^4 270 Ant? ci, who they be. Aquivocacion. Antropomorphices, v^hat they were i^,
324
Antidotes. 4^0,
liments.
Antimony.
Antipathies.
Advent of thrift.
342
249 220
An
Antipodes. Antiquity. 21. Primitively
lon=^.
Ajj}hdetical
26, 381
TdU,
334
Flefl:r!cal.
Sd.,
Athenian?.
how
fiabu-
Attraaion
^j^ 88,89
Antoiiiiis Mizaldiis.
Anus5Etyniologically what. Ape^ of cxqiiitite talk. Apis? the i^gyptian Idol. Apstite fcnfual.
'
23 36 305
4^9 402
9 23 412
Attraftion magnccical. y? Aiirum potabile* 201 Authority. 27, 28, 29 Azoresj or Iflands of S.Michael. 3S6
Abel tower,
built.
why
Arcadians, ther anciqnity. 336. hi what fence elder then the Moon. ib.
Archimedes his burning glaffes, 463 His removing the eartb. 464 Areopagus what. 42 192 Argus.
Ariilocles errors 15, 22. His arguing for the eternity of the world. 334.
43?
:
whether
it
propagate
n^
35
BafilsHexameron.
ebbing and of the Sea. flowing 445. His Maximc touching felicity. 311 Ariftorle, a Profelyte of Mofes Law.
154 Bayes, whether good againfl thunder. 112 Bear, the Animal. i48yi49
Beafts clean
and unclean.
it is.
Beauty, what
407,408. Determiibid.
Where he
di-
ned
Bees.
chiefly
ibid.
409 Art. Alhes what proportion of water they they are will contain. ^6. white. 409 Aftrologicall the in Afcendent
Beeves of England,
killed yearly.
Why
372
and
344534; fuppofeci
383 305 AfphakideSjOr the lake of Sodom.4'51 VVhy bodies fink not ealily therein.
ibid.
misfortunes ac lall:.457. His haid ufage of Pope SyWenus. 458 Bellonius, his diligence commended. Ill Belomancy, or divination by Arrows.
Afs, the Animal of that kind. 409 Aftomi or Plinies men without mouths
19^
Aftrologers.
12,270
283
330 Belus 16,429 Belus and Nimrod, Gen. 10. the fame perfon 374 Bemata,anciently what they werc.307
Berofus. 369 227 Bernacles, or the Goofe 'trees. Bcver the Anfmal. 144, 145, 140
Whether any
ib.
AtheiiL
Atheiviis his Charafter.
22,
34
bezoar
"An AlphdeticAl
Bezoar, comnionlj xtTt^ctmtd. 205 Bible corrupted by the Jews. 337. Depravations in the original text. 339. Hebrew and Greek copies difcordanc
ibid. 340
' <^\
TdW,
Canaries or the forajiiafc Iflande. 386 Candle, one difcharged out of a Musket through an inch board. 466 Candlemas day. 351 Candles burning blue. 328
Canibals.
270. Admirable
Births.
Carbuncle whether
it fliine
Cardans charaler.
Ves Cartes,
1.
103 36
41034113 412
Blindneff.
89
VVeakncfTe of humane nature. 8
187, 188
77
com37S
175
after
2.
Erroneous difpo-
mended.
Bodies incombuftible. Bodies drowned why they float a time. 246. Heavy bodies, in quantity of liquor commonly fwim. Boetius de Boot commended.
Caufes of com-
fition in
3.
man.
9
ibid.
mon
errours
Mifapprehenlion.
what they
4. Painters.
39
13
Centaur es.
451
77
Cham
the fon of Noah^ he and Jupiter the fame perfon. ^2^ Cham's progenie how extended. 405,
227 233
24
97 ;r6
^_, 139
406 Chaldeans, their Recordshow antient 336. By what years they compute the antiquity of their lecters. 370 Charcoal how 'cis made black. 410 Charon the ferry- man of hell, who he
was
Cheek-burning.
24
-,21
Brums
andCaiTius,
^7
^or
^^j^
CAbala
of the Stars. 4165427 Cabeus. 71^88 Cain whether he intended to kill Abel
3, 37 13
China dilhes of what matter. 102 Their fuppofed vertue againftpoyfons. lUU^.
^.^^
^aira
Cameliom
Cornel.
.
225 j.q
liv'd.
269-
15^^404
385
115, 410 curfcd for the
9.
how
10 uncertain.
Campofthelfraclitc?.
Camphries operation.
Chus,
his i/Tue
Canaan
faft
how
it is
difperfed.
Cinnamon what
how made.
405
Clemens Alexandrinus.
Ppp
C leopacia
[A/t
A\^hdetted Tahle*
Chrocodile,
391.
305 Ciimafterical year. 260. The opinion thereof whence ('probably,} pro
Cleopatra dyin^.
moted.
Climates.
Why reported to
280
348
far
45
71 399
31 117 81
how
Clove w h at t h ey
Cockarric". Cocks-tgg.
109
150, 151
Cot' on.
Colours. 152,413. The colour. 307. Colours whether eilential to beauty. 407
48
.137
nLceflarih folium
CiUtk-fifli.
cl
413
Columbus.
Conjets.
70
ftape.
31^
it is.
:
374 411
Coi
Why
necks.
329
their
386 140
Daniels feventy weeks. 542 David, what his ii'n was in numbering the people. 4^0 David George. jj Day natural what. 3^^ C of the week, how anciently S namedfrom the Planets. 330 Daies^ of the year, how they cnci eafc
Countrej^s,
their
peculiar
rarities,
j^q
be ominous
whence proceedin::^. 383 Creatures, generally-' all of them meat for fome people. 212. Their dependance upon God. 292. Creatures prefaging VVeather.i6i. Creatures fubterraneous. 60 Credulity, w^at. 17
Crefles.
t or unfortunate. 0,^2 Declination of the Sun. 3505351 Deer. 155^ ^^^ Deformities fpecifical not to be granted. 217 Delos the Ifle, whyfaidto be in the midft of the earth, 2-50 Deluge, whether univcrfal. 369. Mentioned by heathen Authors, ibid. At what age of the world i. was.364,3^5
Critical day,
(
what it
is.
183 264 53
lied. ib.
Cryftall
J > y
The
Deity.
'
^.j
what
it is.
feverall ditferenceF.
59 56
58
Demollhenes,
why
o: a Black-fmich.
456
in the Gofp.l,
common'y axco.neied.
Denariu.-, or the
penny
what
"
'tis
a Magnetical
198 bo62
Earth habitable in all the parts of it. 3 '54. Hovv peopled before the flood. 369,370^371. Earths motion, oneinilanceagaiiifVif. Eaft and Weft in nature.
^
463
Education.
Eftiuxions' corporeal.
his
^^g'Egg-fiiell
,
Tub.
Dioniedes Dionyiius Heracleoncus.
his horfes.
~
318 24 268
why
it
is
Dioniiiiis Petavius.
337
out. 321 Electiiral bodies, w!)a^ 86. difference in atcrafting. ibid, how performed,
Diofcorides, his Charafter. 32 Difeafes determined by feafons. 280 Difeafes Chronical and acute. 282 Diflblution of bodies concrete. 55 Divinations. 4733293333 Divine providence. 40 DogSjhow they iingl^ o'-it their mailers in the dark.253.The variety of their
(hape and colours.
87 Elderburies whether poyfon or no.i 17 Elephant. 135513651375156,307 Elephants, their docility. 1385 139. Their age commonly. 372. Their trunk for what it ferves chem. 449 Elias the Rabbin. 333
Elve-lockf.
323
164.
404
fo hoc.
Embleniesof a Guardian.
cundity. 319.
Dog-lkr.
27452755276;28o340i
273.
Dog-days
Dolphins:.
.
why
279 287
Dooms-day. Dove.
Of Feibid. Of
,
ibid.
321
Diachnia what. 440 Dragon, how deftroyed by Daniel. 93 D^eanl'^. 42343 Drowning. 246,247 Drunkennefs (latary, orto.be tipled oncea moheth5Vvhecher it be health. .
Epicur/ ans. Epicurus, his life and manners. 4t>r His doftrine of felicity. 462 Epiphauius. 15 Errors in $ fpeeohesin fcriprure before the deluge. 6,7 13 Errors nbout Chrift. 45^46
Ercrnity.
25^3
330 42
full.
I
32.'',
how
cauied.
.
113
Dyarstheir AiT.
tars,
Etymologies
Eye
!
105 (he wondred no^ ac 291. the Serpencb fpeaking. 290, 291 Eunucli>.
ridicui0.i>.
I, 2,
Why
rirurtis.
I/ti'.-ipuH, V.
157
Ganges
ti[V(^:.7er.
hat
is
ic \', 4/,7.
Whether that
and 444
^^^
llowi as
pi eccnded.
Generanon.
i575 1^8,
4<2
F
I-
\bii
452
may-
be
ought of ir.
463 24
13, 14
Fallacies in
Generations scquivocalj yet regular. 107 Genius, or the natural inclination of mcuy where efpeciailj to be regard-
Fafcination.
Failing.
152 199 Faiihj Theological what it is. 465 Fear I'y'^.Hjdrophobia or Fear of Water upon bicing of a mad dog. 283 Figure of man ereftjVvhac. 225'. What Seiante or fitting. ibid. Figures of things v/hence Fire Culinary ^qr of the kitchin. 199. Striking tire. ib. Fledi not commonly eaten before the flood. 209
Flies.
Geographers, not any complear, or dtrfcribing all the habitable parts of oftheearch. ^yg Geryon and Cerberus. 24
Gihon
che river. Gen. 2. how loft. 387 Dr. Cilbert commended. yo Ginger what ic is, and how made. 109
its
Girdle,
fymboiical
figniiication.
323 321
made
of.
76.
221,224
tenth wavc
Wic of Giafs anciently. 459. Venice Glafs not broken by poyfon. ibid, whether ic be poyfon. 92.whether malleable. 93
222, 223
Food,
po.Tibly
fufficient
ing Hefh.
Glow-worm.
172 Frier Bacon, the myfterie of his bra4^1 zen head. 409 F/z/igflapi-'operly what.
Frogs.^
F/^jwwwhat.
410
Goat. 15633193327 Goats blood. 91 Gold, whether a cordiall. 94. Its fwiming in CIijickiilver.451. Gold potable. 17b Goropius Becanu?. 204 Grcia M^ndax. 23 288, 289 Grafhopper. Mr. Greaves, his defcription of the
^
Pyramids!.
Gregorian Account.
Griffins.
GAlen.
Galcns
difcoiirfesofpoitons.
10, 28
honefl: intentions in his
Gunpowder
portion,
its
ingredients. 97.
468
Gunpowder which
polTible.
447
13?
703 98 Gyplies,
^'fff
Al^hdeticAl
Tdk,
known
ibid.
Germany.
Grand
Sig-
415
H
Hand-gout. Haies i823i83.Hare and Cabbage, Cato's diet. 2 1 i.The Indian Hare. 404 Heart of man, how placed. 2313232 Hebjew language. 328 Heftor. 307 Dr. Heilins hiflory of S'. George. 313 Henry the Eniperour, probably not poyfoned in the Chalice. 467 HeracUcus his folly. 453
Hercules. 318 Hcreiles touching our B.Savlour.45j46
^
Anus and Noah,byfomc taken for the fame perfon. 377 I ce to be made at any ti me 55
( Jud. 11.
Idolatry
Jepchah
237,238 237
daughter.
Jcronymus Cardanus
[ews-ear.
his
Jews. 253. How difperfed 254. Some of their Tribes quite loft. ibid. Uncertain in their Chronologic, or account of times.336. Why prefcribed in their dyec. 211. Not generally of
ofcoiinfell to the
any ill favour. 253, 254. Commonly Turks great OtHcers, or Baiha-. ibid.Their
Captivi-
Hermaphrodites. Herod.
169, 185
11
,
moneth. 349.Their fedulity to preferve their Bible encire.339.Their Malignity aties.34i.Tijeir Intercalary
gainft the Sepcuaginc. 340. dring ]ew;i his ftory. Imagination the power thereof.
Herodotus HalicarnaQIcus
after.
his
Cha3
1^
Wan460 402
12
Hevelius, his Selenography or defcription of the Moon. 416 Hieroglyphicks, wliofe Invention. 38.
Impoftors.
Improlihcation orEarremiefs in Vv'omen one caufe of ic. 452 Ink how mad:. 411,412
Infeft^ 114,222,223 Intercalation of dayes. 272 IntDxicaioii. 113 Joannes Tzetzes his Charafifcr. 35 Job, an Iduma an or of the race ofEfan.
Homers
ly.
Hollanders. death.
it iignifies
352
448
Hierogliphical-
Horn, what
301
fenfible. 354,355
424
?vfandevil, his Character.
'
Sr.John
Sr.
St.
-
32
Horfe.139. Horfe kicking a wol . 319 Horfes 280000 brought into field by Ninus, 500000, by Semiramis, 372 28 Grotius commended. Hugo 'or Hiim-bud in America, a bird little 300 bigger then a beetle.
John Eaptift,
his
dyet what.
435
438.Whcn he wrote
How
Hyfop on
the wall.
Jonahs
'^fi
Mphdeticd Tdle^p
43 359 32
Jonah's gourd.
Jofephus.
oviiis, his Char-ft^er.
.
Lead.
Ireland. 409. Spiders obferved in Ireland. 452 Iron, i:'s verticity."' 65, 66, 202
Ifaac, at
facnticc''d.
Ifhniael.
Lcandro
201 of Italy. 445 Learning and arts primitively froui whence. 286 Leeches. 95 Lcvinus Lemniu.f, 70j433
^
his defcrlption
Ilidorus Hifpalenfis.
Iflaiids,
379.
'~
iiious creature-;.
How
Iflands
Liquation or melting.
Livia.
354 57
153
Li
ie's
Ox.
its
Loadftone
verticity. 66,
67.'
464 not
Judgements by
Julia.
urin.
II
185
10
23j 33
68 its inclination. 67. Declinacion tni variation. 6S, caufcs of this variecy.^f.rhc change of thi.^ \a iety. ib. its atti ai\on not hindr.d by garlick or a dianiond.7^. whether ic a.tiafts any thing but Iron. 7c5. how to preff rve ir.'b.
known to antiquity.
Ivy cup
its
pioperry.
117
how
defii
oyed.-b. erroi
K
Sr.
K'
Enelm
Digby commended.
S8,89 15^
King ot Serpents.
Kings of Coilein.
Kings-fiflbe?^
of atri aftion in LoaJltone?. 77. whet er it can fifp;.nla body in the ayr.80. Loadftone powder what operadoh. ib. whether it cures the 81 gone. Longevity of Animal?, how colltft 'd.
434
161 3O5 35 75 ^5
LongomontanuT.
Lots wife, her transformation.
3-r2
Kircherus commended.
Lubim.
Lucian.
L'^es venerea^
441 4^^
where
ic firft
23 began. 404
1
5
pus
eli
infabi: la.
Lybia,
its
dnnciii,
4^^
LAmech.
7
that MAce, nutmeg.
M
the skin of a 1^9 Macroccphali, or people with long heads
it
^91 Lamp. ^89 Lampries. Laughter, what kind of paHion. 453 the kinds of Laughter. 454- Whe-
is
'
heads. 403 Macrofcelirm or flender legs, how holpcn. 308 ATahomet. 1O5II51651SJ3S. Mahomets
-'^'
Alphdetlcal tdlr]
Mechiifelah^ in what year he died. 373 VVhether the longeft iiv'd. ibid. Milo, liisPancratie or mighty fti engch
-
Camel, 4^4. Mahomets Tomb hangs Minerall fpirits. nocintheayr. 7P Minotaure. MahumetanSj partaking of all religi- Mint.
55
24
18;
ons. 384 Mif-apprehenfion. Magi, or the Wife men f Matth. 2. j Miaetoc, or vifofs arhortus what what manner of Kings they might
be.
13
it rs.
no
407
187
434 Mizraim.
Magnes carneus.
r
J
Mageticall.
body what.
effefts,
how
73 62 wrought. 63
Molls
Monarch, the firft that ever was 376. Aflyrian Monarchs, their wars and
conquerts.
rocrcs,
whether Magne83,84,85
37^> 379
^^c^\^
Magnetifnus pretended.
Man, his growth and decrement, how proportioned, 351. whether Mans body be Magneticall. jj Mandrake, impoftures about the root.
I oi. how produced, 107. whether it indangereth life to pull it up. ib. Magots turne into fiyes. 114
416
Moriniis,
his
Exercitationes
Biblicxy
commended. 304 Mofes why piftur'd with horns, 300His Chronologic, 33(^3341. The diff ciilries of
it.
Manna.
^
432
23
ibid.
His defcription
his
338 Gofpel.
29P
Marrow Spinal, what it is. 386 Mauritania and the coaft of Africkjby whom peopled at Hrf}. 378 it ferveth, 416, Motions Artificial. Meats, peculiar to fome Nations, through cullom or fuperilicion.2 1 1, Mountaines, their higheft altitude.
212,213. Meazels.
Motion Tonical or extenfive, what. 136. Motions retrograde, 177. Motion of the heavens, to what effeft
429
255
24 Medication upon the Paffion. 438 Men, lighter after fleep, then before j dead, then alive j in Summer then in
Medea.
more
372
N
NAyles, how to be
tire.
Winter.
Mercurialis, his Gymnafika.
ed.
248
commend136,293
^8
Tlie Meridian.
327
uin Jlphdetical
Tmei^^
Noicherii pV?>e to the Indies. (,q Nofes, theMorillij the Perlianj the
caiife of error?. 61 I^arions5geiicrHllynow mixtbyComnifrctor Conqueft. 254 Nativities, why taken from the A-
Names Names
ridiculoiifly derived.
431 105,116
Roman.
Numbers,
408
Nutmeg.
'
383
and for what \\(e. 2^1. Navil of Bi) ds, of Snakes, of Porwiggle?, &:. 293 Nazarite, by birth, or by vow. 441 Neck of Animals, how contrived by Nature, and for w'har. 448
it is,
'
o
OAte?.
183 Objeft, why fometimes appearing double. 192 Obfervations fuperfiitious. 321, 322, 323
Oeftridge,
The particular caufes thereof^ 405. Negroes in America, not J//i^/go/x, or Natives of that Coun399,
402',
how
it
eats Iron,
200
399 Ncrves,whence they fpring. 2355Nervesof taftc. 448 Nicander, his Charafter. 34 Nidor, properly whar. 409 Nierenibergius ajefuit, his conceit of man. 76 Niger, a river in Africa. 389
trey.
Olaus Magii=. 78,399 Olympiads, in what year of the world they began. 370 Ophir, what place. 71
Opium, its etteft in venery. Oppan, his Charat?r. Opcicks, a Maxime in them.
433
34-
353
Oracles. 15. Their ccaiing. 442. The acknowledged caufe thereof, ibid.
Nigromancy
&c.
rcjefted.
42
how
fafhion-
faid to iit with its ed. 450, breall alwayes againft a Thorn.
Why
its Olliaries,
228 or feve-
What
the fea. 387, 388. cauferh its overflowing. 162, 391. Some years it overflows not.
443 Oracle of Praenefle, of Antiuni^ of Delphos. 442 Oreglian, a river ill America. 389 Oreihs. i o Organs, in the intention of Nature infer tlieaftion pro^i'r for them. 188,193 Organ of tafte. 448 Orgafmm^ whar. 180
'
392 Ninus, and AiTur mentioned. Gen. 10. thefilmeperfon, 376 Noah's Ark, where it fi^'ft refted. 386 Ncah, whether he knew the e^eft of wine, before he was overtakyn.3265 454. Nodh and Saturne^ held (.0 be the fame perfon, 429
Orpheus,
Oforius.
his Harp.
23 24 137
377
23
Ovum
^An Alphdetica!
OvufHdecumaHum^
proverb.
wV'
TdUl
ofthe four Evangclifts.
thc^ rcafon
of the
Owl, an ominous
bird.
458 320
303
Piftilres, viz^
PAlmeftrie.
Pallies,
327
fidenioft
on which
com-
70
At what
of the Sibyls. 304 ofCleopacra. 305 of the nine Worthies. 306 of Jeptha. 308 of. S.John Baptifl:.3 1 of.S.Chriftopher. 312 of. S. George. 313 ofS. Hierom. 314 of Mermaids, Unicorne, &c. ^16
'
224
black, and Rofin not fo.
178
Pitch,
why
Paryfatis, hei^poyfonM knife. 459 Pallages of meat and drink. 249, 250
410
Plagiarifm, or tranfcribing of
thors.
Au23
ibid.
Pafsover..
Palfion,
Irafcible,
349 Concupifcible,
lift
of Plagiaries.
Planets.
330, 331
445 217
25 36
Planets, or feven.
Plants,
114
285,286
12
iignifieth.
3S9 Plate, a river in America. Plato. 184, 268. his objetion againft
the Pythagorean MetempfychOiis,
Pleiades,
Plenriiies.
Peter crucified.
r cius,
Pe
whacit
438 373
more then
feven,
or Colonies. 378.
ed.
39
152 Antidote iu
'
be procur^.
'
'
'
y-^
JCp poifons, but hath its Nature. 1 ?45iJ ^oifonous Animals^ why nocfoun;! iri
: -
'Tome
COtfnt^fie/.'i X^-^''
*:
c',.
j'.js^
Phltbotomie, or letting
'
blibod.
'
236
Pole, Northern and Southern, what I'. 381 they be. Polytheifm or multiplicity of God?.
_
41
229
Pomney.
16
Q,qq
Popes,
^An Mphahetical
popes,
TdUy^r
301
change
their
at their creation.
454
461
Pope Joan,
Story of HiUitbrand, or Pope Gregory 7 1*! partially reported. ibid. popular iniperfeftions taxed 8, p, 19. popular error, from difficulties to conclude impoflibilities. 451
Porwiggles.
Pofitions of the body.,
^27
115
173 176
^20
naXit-
Pox.
Prateolu?;.
i55
15
commended.
3?
Reafon.
R.ed-fea, what,
28 27
Pndlftlons Augurial, &c, whence they came. 47 Prefages, from Spiders, Magots, deceitful!. 114 FergaVio:, or the praying Locuft of province. 230 Priefts, why they wafli'd their feet commonly before Sacrifice. 324 Prefterjohn, or theEmperourof iEthiopia. 404 Procopius, his 'A'U//7, or Arcana hijioria^ an inveftive againft Juftinian. 457
Progrefllonof /Cnimals. 135 Proportion betwixt theface and neck.
396 46$ Rcmora a fi/h. 227 Revenge, how prodigioufly aftedby an Italian. a^(,j Reward of vertue and vice. 40 Ribs how many commonly in men and women. 422 Ridiculous receipts in PhyJick. 3 o Rings. 234 Rings, Bracelets, Jewels. &-c. how diverfly worn. 408 Gyges His Ring. 464 Ring- finger. 234 Rivers and fftuaries, why fubjeft to
Religion, not to be compelled.
fuch violent flows.
Providence of Nature. 194 388 Ptolomy, where he was born. Pythagoras, his allegoricall precepts moiailizM. 14. His precepts con211 cerniug Fifh.
447
112
Rofe of Jericho.
Proverb.
CL
QUailes.
^giiince.
228
SAbbaton
Deuteroproton, Luke.
it
d.
Qiiiiuayj a City in
C hina..
412 390
what Sabbath
Salamander.
was.
349
174, 175
Salmalius commended.
273
Salomon.
Salt. 257.
7
.
Abbin?.
Radifhes.
7, i68, 184
221
97
183
.397 Spirits
1 ''^
''
^n
Alphdetical Tahiti
339. Its primitive authority
cred't. ibid, ^ince impared.
and
ibid.
^ Serapis'.
456 202
ibid
30
289,421
177
upon Virgil
45?5
2 90,443
How he
fell.
51
commended.
SferraCavalloy
its
Cham, Gen.
377
iS'ibyls.
men,
253
and
left in
man.
304 240
152 325 2
239
18
a
fin.
Scepticifm cenfured.
322
ufe in
.
Schoolmen,
Smal
coal,
Gun
Smoak.
powder.
97 322
410 H. Scripture. 37546. Tranflation of Smoak of Sulphur. 226 H. Scripture. 339 Snakes. twelve Tribes. Snayls. the 1913199 Scutcheons of 302 Antiquity of bearing Scutcheons. Sneezing. 25 i.Cuftoms obferved upcn Sneezing. 252 304
Scythians.
335
Snow.
Why conimonly fubjeft to the Sciciaciii or hip-gout. 308 Seafonsof the year, how made and
diilingufhcd. 353. Neceffary for the 354 produftion of things. Sea, its ebbing and flowing. 446. How pollibly caufed by the iVoon. ibid. How unequal in lome feas. 447 Seballion Cabot. 69 Seed, an Id/^aof the whole Animal contained in every part of it. 423 Sem, whether the eidell fori of Noah. 42S ; Semiramis, fier army againft the Indians.
Sp
der.
220
Senaga^ a
Seuft;
fi
rivjer.,
cm
the brain.
379 399 1 90
172 Animals, what m nner of fubitance they be. 248 5ponge. 93 208 Standing at the pafsover. Stars,fheir Afcenc Heliacal, and Cofmical, what they be. 276. Their Longitude; what it is. 278. Their DcCiinacion, w. ac. ibid. Thcfcvni
Spigelius
Spirits, thofe in
commended.
Srars. 3 17.
it
Fixed
Siar^.
417
.|^^i
was.
Staiils
id
63, 64
Steel.
Sti rropg, their ufe
.S'toick^.
not ancient.
307 42
176
55
TAinft,
an
Infeft,
gerous to cattell
how
bred. 90 Stones retaining light in darkners.103 Eagle Stone, of what vcrtne. ib. Stork. 218 of Codes, ? C of Sevola,
'
Tahacotms,
Talmudifts.
...
222
.
his art.
84,160
Tamerlane
Whence
heard,
how
Tarantula, what.
227
fphere, ^ Stories fHr-<( of the AmazonS/^463 peted upon the taking* 464
'.
"464
Thargum.
2
his defcription
Thomas
Sicilie
Fazelli,
of
onj
commended.
HeracliruSjd^r.
250 98
112
The
thorne ac GlafTenbury.
it is.
136
96
3^5
166.
Anciently
how
and motion, how admirably -accommidated by God^to the heceiljties and ilate oFthe inferiour vvorldj 353, 354, 355. By what motion it makes the day, by what the year. ibid. Its Veneticail motion, vvhar.ibid.Its moiion unequaU^and how. 400. How feen fomtimes after it is fet. 416
.-
meaCured. 315. The three grtjat diftuiftions oi time /jnce the crieation.
Adelon:, Mjth'i'cO/i^ Hiftoricon^
wHat
they import. 369,370 Toads. 171,220 Torp#do. 223 Torrid Zone. 26 Tranfparency of bodies whence. 60
'
Ti'icliniuni,
Superfoctation what.
185. PoHlblein
our B. Saviour
rift,
women, unto
i^iipinity taxed.
a perfeft birth,
,
ibid
or the Table on which inftitute?! the Euchareported to be at Rome. 297 36 246, 401
-'
.
ij
216;,
Trinum Magicum.
Trppicks.
Swallows. Swans.
32? 217
loit
^
398
to be
245
''^'V
'
'227
Tc-tzeSj his
Charader.
35
Weight.
Weight of men.
Whelps. White-powder. Wine, how fpoiledby Thunder. 113 nation of the compafs, what i: Whether good to be drnnke once a Thepaticular 68. caufes of i?. nioneth. 326 the Variadon. ibid. 693 75. In fomc Witches. 45 places none at all. 386 Wolf, a difeafe. 256 ULiluity ofGoJ. 5 Wolf the Animal. 155 Veneiy. 157 Wolves, live in England. why to faid Verdigreefe. 412
,
VA
'
Vefpalian. 50 Vegetables^ their vertive impaired by ^ the flood. 209 Vices epileinicall, or a general fuc-
452
into men. 183, 184 Wormes. 153, 221 Wood, petrifying, or turning into
ftone.
Women, changed
54 319
Violl-ftrir.g
X
T^Enocrates Platonicus.
faid to drink
another. ^66 Viper. 1783 306 Virgilj aPlagiarie of whom. 23 Viiion Beatirical. 7
268
Unicorn. 202, 203 Unicorns-horn, that commonly us'd in England, what. 264 Univeriitics. 20
Voilius.
111 iiial,
271
ibid
How
346
its
plank.
466
all
females, as hath
319
Enith, what. 68. Its certain diftance from the Horizon. 355 18 Zeno his paradox.
54
Zodiack, the line of life. 351 Zone, the Torrid Zone whence conceived to be inhabitable. 45 ij 452
S.
FINI
HYDRIOT A.PHIA
OR,
Urnes
found in
NORFOLK
Together with the
OR THE
QuinGunGiall Lozenge, or Net-work Plan^
tations of the Ancients, Artificially,
rally, Myftically
Natu-
Confidered
L O 2^7)
N,
i'y.Ci iiV/xtc'iS
i*
'ct.v.'.o'i
V li
TO MY
Worthy and Honoured Friend
THOMAS
Hen
Le
g%0 S
of Croftrvick^ Efquire,
tbe Funerall pyre was out, and the laft valedidion Over, men took a lading adieu of their interred Friends, little expeding the cu- Kpo,p,;o, riofity of future ages (bould comment upon J"^*""-^their afhes, and having no old experience oi^j^^fflj^ the duration of their Rcliques, held no opinion of fuch a f- ^/witm-tf
ter-confidferations.
But who knows the fate of his bones, or how often he is rca'jy^ but' to be buried ? who hath the Oracle of his aOics, or whether Sea bethey rc to be fcattered ^ The Rcliques of many lie like the ^""3?"^ rvm^ioi ^ Vompeys,\n all parts of the earth; And vjhtn Greenland. they arrive at your hands, thefe may feem to have wan- * ^^^"g'^t drcd farre, who in a direft ^ and Meridian Travcll, have c?mo. piubut few miks. of known Earth between your felfe and the tsrch.
Pole.
^'un^T
-:vv'' V
'*Urt\fu''
That the bones. of T/&^/^< fliould be feen again ^ in A- the mppathens^ was not beyondconjedure, and hopeful expe^arion 3 ^'''""'^' but that thefe fhould arife fo opportunely to f^rve your leli, ccWeH to was an hit of fate and honour beyond prjcdi^ion. ^ TtrfouniJ the cannot but the wi(h thefe We Urnes might have cfitdoPj'J^"Jj..
.:
their
(howi
'
The
Uptjtle Ueatcatqry.
to refound the acclamations and honour due unto you.But thcfe arc fad and fepulcbral Pitchers, which have no joyful! voices 5 filently cxpr effing old mortality, thcruines of forgotten times , and can only fpcak with life, how long in this corruptible frame, fome parts may be uncorruptcd ^ yet worthily able to out-laft bones long unborn, and nobleft pyle ^ apofleffed .^,, UlongUS,
by
troe
tiemanSir
prcfent not thefe as any ftrange fight or fpcaade un^nowD to your cycs, who havc beheld thebeftof Urnes, are your felf no S^'ed and nobleft variety of AQies 5 niyhono- {lender after of Antiquities, and can daily command the
Geu-
that
Wc
Who
redFriend.
(Abiitad
pinres.
^j^^ ^^ ^^ ^^^^ Imperial! faces 5 Which raifeth your thoughts unto old things, aodxionfidcrationof times before you, when even living men were Antiquities 5 when the living might exceed the dead, and to depart this v7orld, could not be properly faid, to go unto the ^greater number. Andfo run up your thoughts upon the ancient of dayes, the Antiquaries trueft objcftjunto whom the eldeft parcels are young,
an Infant ; and without 8 ^Egyptian account makes but fmallnoife in thoufands. were hinted by the occafion, not catched the opporru* nity to write of old things, or intrude upon the Antiquary,
i which
"*'*idfo*^
and earth
it
felf
many years
^^'
We
are coldly drawn unto difcourfes of Antiquities, who have fcarce time before us to comprehend new things, or make out learned Novelties* But feeing they arofeasthey lay, almoftin filence among us, at leaft in (hort account fuddenly paflcd over 5 we were very unwilling they fliould die again^
We
to live,
to keep men out of their limes, and difcourfe of fragments in them, is not impertinent unto our profcffion 5 whofe ftudy is life anddeath, who daily behold examples MyS"eOfmortality,andofall men leaft need artificial fWf?tfV, or hath exce!- coffins by our bed fide^ to minde us of our graves, kntiy well jjg jjjjjg fQ obfervc Occurrences, and let nothing remarkhath left To much ed, ^anr'' able efcape us 5 The Supinity of elder dayes worthyto in filcncc, ortime hath fo martyred the Records, that the
'
humane
n!nced"by
i^igennous
mf"t^* ^^ "^*
^^0^ induftrious heads do find^ no e^Cie work to ereft a aew Bfka^ma, Tis opportune to look back upon old times, and conteni-^'
[plate
'
Ilfc'e
to be away, and iniquity comes at long ftrides upon us. We have enough to do to make up our felves from prefent and pafled times, and the whole ftage of things fcarce fervcth for our inftruftion. A compleat peece of vertue muft be made up from the c^/^/of all ages, as all the beauties of Greece could make but one
flies
handfome P^dvus,
Arthur were digged up ', the old 'In thethne Race might think, they beheld therein fomc Originals o^oUimy themfclves 5 Unto thefe of our Urnes none here can pretend Q^Mn. relation, and can only behold the Reliques of thofe perfons, who in their life giving the Laws unto their predeceflbrs, after long obicurity, now lye at their mercies. But remembring the early civility they brought upon thefe Countreys, and forgetting long palled mifchiefs 5 mercifully preferve their bones, and pifle not upon their alhes. In the offier of thefe Antiquities we drive not at ancient are farre from e Families, fo long out-lafled by them 3 Tcfting your worth upon the pillars of your Fore-fathers
We
We
whofe merits you illuftraie. honour your old Virtues ^ conformable unto times before you, which are the Nobleft Armoury. And having long experience of your friendly converfation, void of empty Formality, full of freedome, con^ flant and Generous Honefty, I look upon you as a Gemme Adams de of the k Old Rock, and muft profefTe my fclf even toUme mpeytien
t^
We
andAfhcs,
May
I.
^^;"''^"
Thontfu ^roKpne.
TO
'
'<rr
TO MY
Worthy and Honoured
Friend
^/ CffOLAS
Cabem^
fee. v>>
'B
ACQ
of Qillingham Efquire.
a Parhlwde men have and fome ^ wthout iffue^ difcourfed b D.Haryy. '^ Be fieri (Xcellently of Generation j / that was never maHer Hortus EyS of any confiderahU garden , had not attempted /Itttitfis. ^" But the Earth is tbf Garden of T<JaSfibjeCf. tlm Biuhini theatrum ture , and each fruitfdl Comtrey a Paradi/e^ Diofcorides Boftfwt;m,r ^^^^ ^^ j^ Qj^^l^ Obfervatims in hU march about tPith Antoni&c My wor and Theophraftus ratfed his generalities chiefly from the US
<*
thy
fritind
y^^/^^
this
maffiefl thereof \
andhsvp New Herb a Is fly from Arfonand di- mcrica u^on m^ from perjeverin^ Enquirers^ and e ddinthofe vers parts, (ingdltrities^ we expeBfuch Defer iptiom. wherein^ England id '/ novpfs exaB^ that it yeehdf not to Other CouHtreys. nmction none,ltft Wepretendnot to multiply vegetjihle divifions by Qitincuncial and Reticulate plants i,or ereci a new Phytohzi^ The Field ^^^V^^J^ oaiitany. traced it jpHng knowledge hard to hath been is any thing fo of new. Of old things rvervr'tte feme thing new, if truth may recei^ifCiddition^ or envy will have anything new^J^nce the Ancients
^ ^oljo^f are yet toQ flsTnLon.
little^
k^ev
\
The
Epiftle Dedicatory)
tkcif^
Tou hdve been fo long cut of trite learnings that 'tUhard to finie A (iib'jcU proper for yott'^ And if you have met with a, Sheet upon t his ^vpe hAve miffed our intenttdn, In thk mnhipUcity of vi>riting^ bye and barren Themes are befi fitted for invention 5
SubjeSs fo o^ten difrourfed confine the Imagination^ andfixonr conceptions unto the notions of fore-vpr iters. Befide ^ fuch Xifcottr(es allow excurfions y and veniaUy admit of coliater all truths though 4t fome dtfl&nce from th'ir prineipals. Wherein if re ^^'npoaata fometimes take wide liberty^ we are not ftngle-^ but erre by great % tnill'JdT denrnme. example,
He
of
this order,
may
efily fail
ftPonfoJpruceaSubje5fyWherei/2we have not affrighted the com mon %.eader with any other Diagramms, then of it felf-^ and
have
indufifioufiy
decUned
illujirAtions
plants.
Tour difcerning judgement fo well acquainted vpith that fludy, mil expe& herein no mathematical truths^ as well nnderfiand' i\mx.2LS there are in nature, HtfWhRui<.s tnghow few generalities and h Scaljger hath found exceptions in mofl Vniverfals of Ax\9ioi\cand without cxTheophraftus. Bow Botanieall Maximes mufl have fair allow- options. ance^ and are tolerably currant^ if not intolerably over^ballanced by
exceptions.
You have
"will
wifely
have Oardens alfo hereafter^ and deltghttng in Flowers en earthy mufi have Lillies and Rofes in Heuv^n, In Garden Dr-
Itghts "ti^ not eafie to hold a Mediocrity 5 that in'iKuating pleafu^ e is feldome without fome extremity. The Antients vt maUy delight'
edinflouripjtng Gardens:^
true ufe ofa flower
j
Many were
Fhrifts that
knew
not the
And in
Plinie?. dayes
commendably
^ff Bed
nemou3 Vegetables^ feme cohfined their dr lights unro (mf^r^le plant Sy and Cato feemed to dote upon Cahbadgf ; Whde the Ingenuous
delight of Tuliptflsjfiands falutedwith
i
hard
language.^ '
even
by.^^^j.
thci'rown
Profefors.
iw'iJaX
*
That tn this Garden Difcourfe^ we range into extrtneom things^ aud,Latiand many parts of Art and T{jture^ we foHow (tew the exam'-'^f^^il'.'in
pie
ofold
rot
fi^.'.Eclg.
of things
is
Jiate of ^lory^
the Symbole of the "F^efitrre&fon^ and tofioariJJj in the we mujifirji befiwn in corruption, Befide the anci-
ent fra^ife of lighle Perfonsy to conclude in Garden-Graves^ and Vrnes themfe Ives ofold^ to be rorapt up flowers and garlands^ Nullamfinevcnia pIacuifle'eloquium,'w^y<?j^^^/y underflood by writers ^ then by Readers
till rvcrh^s have ven common eyes willfinde fomething for emendation. To wifh all Readers ofyour abilities^ were unreafinably to multiply the number of SchoUrs beyond the temper of thefe times. But unto this til'judging age^ vpi charitably dejire a portion of your equity^judgementj candour^ and ingenuity ; wherein you arefo rich^
; nor well apprehended by either^ out hanged //y^tfApellcs hfsPi&ures-j wherein e-
^^ "^^ ^^ ^^fi ^^ diffufion. And being a fiouri(hing brar^ch of th^t of h moftwor- ^ Noble Family^ unto which voe owefo much obfervancCy you are thy S' Ed- fiQt new fety but long rooted infuch perfeBion-^ whereof hiving had
k
^f"^^^i" f^laliing confirmation in your worthy converfation-i conliant amity ronet, my and expreffion j and knowing you aferious Student in the highefl
true
and
gjcana's ofNiture
Friend.
and Servant
Thomas Browne.
^v
*
HYDRIOTAPHIA
Urnc-Burial.
OR,
A brief Difcourfe
^0 \F
CHAP.
L
I.
K^
sN the deep difcovcry of the Subterranean world, a (hallow part would fatisfiefome enquirers; who, if two or three yards were open about the furface, would not care to wrack the bowels of Poro/, a a xhe
rich
and regions towards the Centre. Nature hath fur- mountain niflied one part of the Earth, and man another. ^^^*''"' Thetreafuresof time lie high, in Urnes, Coynes, and Monuments, fcarce below the roots of fome vegitables.Time hath endleffe rarities, and (howes of all varieties ; which reveals old thing s in heaven, makes new difcoveries in earth, and even earth it klf a difcovcry .That great antiquity America lay buried for a thoufand years ; and a large pact of the earth is ftill in the Urne unto us. Though {(Adam were made out of an extradof the earth, all parts might challenge a reftitation, yet few have returned their bones far lower then they might receive them; not afFefting the graves of Giants under hilly and heavy coverings, but content with lefle then their own depth, have wilhed their bones might lie foft, and the earth be light upon them ; Even fuch as hope to rife again, would not be content with
centralintcrrment,orfoderpcrately to place their reliques as toliebc5
yound
yond difcovcry,andinnowaytobefeen again- which happy tohtrivance hath made communication with our forefathers, and left unto our view fomc parrs, which they never beheld thcmfelves. Though earth hath ingrofled the name yetwaterhaih proved the fmarteft grave; which in fourty dayes fwallowed almoft niiaakindc, and the living creation ; Fifties not wholly efcaping, except the fait Ocean were handfomly contcmpcrcd by a mixture of the freih Ele
mcnt.
\
taken voluminous pains to determine the ft ate of the difunion foul upon j but men have been mofl- phantaftical in the fingular contrivances of their corporall diflfolution : whileftthefobereft Na-
Many have
in
two wayes, of
fionple
ing.
That carnal int^rrment or burying, was ofthe elder date, the old examples oi Abraham and the Patriarches are fufficient to illuftrate; And were without competiton, if it could be made out, that Ad.im was buried near Damafcasy or Mount Calvary, according to fome Tradition^ God himfelf that buried but one, was pleafed to make choice of this way, collcftible from iycripture-expreffion, and the hot conteft between 5atan and the Arch- Angel, about dif covering the body of Mofes. But the pradicc of burning was j^lfo of great Antiquity, and of no flender extent. For (not to derive the fame from Hercules jnobk defcriptionsthere are hereof in the Grecian Funcrale of Homer ^ In the formal Obfequies of PatreclHs, and Achilles-^ and fomcwhat elder in the Iheban war, and folemn combuftion of Mcnecem^ and (tArchemo<V the Eighth Judge of Jfrael. r;/j, contemporary unto ConfirmaJ? b!e alfo among the the Trojans^ from the Funeral Pyre of HeEior, SQS^hhv burnt before the gates of Troy, and the (b) burning oiPe/jthiflea the 3ib. I Armz^omm ^een'. and long continuance of that pradicc in the inward ^Amnniawhile- as low asthe Reign of y;if/;Vi, wefindeihat Countries, of y^/^ (c) buret tlie body of his Son, and interred the ofChtoma King ^he rinus,GuraBratcs Kingaflies inafilver Urne. oichionia The fame pradicc extended alio far Weft *,^ndhcCidesHeruIm!s^ a Countrey (^^(g^^^nd Thracians^viwn \x{Q.mi\\ mo^oll\\t Celt,SarmAtiasJ3er' "^ Gauls. Danes, Swedes^ Norwegians; not to omit feme ufe thereof Arnoldis' ^^^^i among Cartlhiginians and- Americans : Ok greater antiquity among Montanis rot in c4' the iSwM^i then mofl: opinion, or Tliny fcems to allow. For ("befide theold TaWe Law^ of burning {d) or burying within the City, of makLTc^raVing the Funeral firC'Wi5hpLT>i^l3iwoQd,or quenching the fire with; wineKkk' dcs. XAanlius th^ CoofijihiffUt the body of his fon : Numa by fpecialdaulc mannus. diiTabul. of his will, was not burnt but buried; And Renins was folemnly bu
.
P'^JJ^^j.^Q
Hominem
aiortuum
notcat la
urbe nc fcpclito, neve i^rito, torn a-itogum afci^rjcpolitp. tq.;4/iltel>v.igenri An Leyium,& Alex ab Alex, cuffi Ti.raqpellp Ror<;iuu^m.dn[iJ|ft^O!i!{UltiHaprobta' iuMta flamma rogo, DeFaft-, Ub, 4. cunft Cari Neapoianagtj'x^^^
in
Corf AW 5;//^ was not the [firft whofc body was burned in Rome^ but of the Come lianV^mWy, which being indifferently, not frequently tifed before; from that time fprcad and becamd the prevalent pradice. Not totally purfucd in the highpfl: run of Cremation; For when even feows were funerally burnt, Pofpaa the wife of Nero found a peculiar grave enterment. NowasallcuftOms were founded upon fome bottom ofReafon, fo there wanted not grounds for this ; according to feveral apprchcnfions of the moft rational diffolution. 5ome being of the opinionofT/j^/^j, that Water was the original of all things, thought it mod equal to lubmit unto the principle of putrifaftion, and conclude in a moid relentment. Others conceived it moft natural to end in fire, as due unto the mafter principle in the compofition, according to the doftrincofHcr4r//fj. And therefore heaped up large piles, moreaftively to waft them toward that Element, whereby they alfo declined a vifible degeneration into worms, and left a lafting parcel of their compofition. Some apprehended a purifying virtue in fire, refining thegroflet' commixture, and firing out the iEihcreal particles fo deeply immerfed in it. And luch as by tradition or rational con jefturc held any hint of the final pyre of all things ; or that this Element at laft muft be too hard for all the reft; might conceive moft naturally of the fiery diffolution. Others pretending no natural grounds, politickly declined the ma- lice of enemies upon their buried bodies. Which confideration led iJ;//^ unto this pradifej who having thus ferved the body of /l</^2rw, could not but fear a retaliation upon his own;entertained after in the Civil wars, and revengeful contentions of /?(?;. But as many Nations embraced, and many left it indifferent, fo others too much affedted, or ftridly declined this praftice. The Indian Brachmans fcemed too great friends unto fire, who burnt themfelves alivc, and thought it thenobleft way to end their dayes in fire; according to the exprefTion of the Indian, burning hirafelf at Athens {f)^ in his laft words upon the pyre unto the amazed fpcftators, Thns I l^'^f ^
.
fire,
the'^nfcription of his
ofthcircarcafTeSjasapolution ofthat Deity. The ?<fr/?,^ ^^1/^^* decli- ^^"^^ ^" ned it upon the like fcruple,and being only folicitous about their bones, ^^^f- ^S" cxpofed their flefh to the prey of Birds and Dogs. And the Perfees now ^L ^Dmaf.
in
/</;<i,
much
as f^r^^r^
which expofe their bodies unto Vultures, and endure notfo or Beers of Wood; the proper Fuell of fire, are led on
with fuch
nicities. But whether the ancient GermAns who buried their dead, held any fuch fear to pollute their Deity ofHerthas^or the earth, we have no Authcntick con/edure.
The ^Egyptians were afraid of fire^not as a Deity,but a devouring Element, mercilcfly confuming their bodies, and leaving too little of them;
ancl therefore
in dry earths, 6r
Ai
hand-
4
grail
tJjdnotapmay Urne-BuriAil
handle me indofurc
confervation.
it
FythagoTMy
Seft
firft
may
contrived the notablcft wayes of intefuch ^Egyptian fcruples imbibed by be conjcftured that Nnrnx and the Pythagorical
in glafles*
And from
waved the
fiery folution.
The 5; J;;^Mj who fwore by winde and fword, death, were To far from burnmg their bodies, that inccrrmenc, and made their grave in the ayr: And
Thereby declining
that
is,
by
life
and
or filh-eating Nations about vEgypt, affeded the Sea for their graven vifible corruption, and reftoring the debt of their bodies. Whereas the old Heroes in Horner^ dreaded nothing more than water or drowning ; probably upon the old opinion of the fiery fubflance of the foul,onely extinguifhable by that Element ; And ther^ fore the Poet emphatically implicch the total deftrudion in this kinde . of death, which happened to Ajax Oilem {g). %ti\iit The old * B^lear$as had a peculiar mode, for they ufcd great Urnes reads i^cLTziKetxt and much wood, but no fire in their barials; while they brulfed the 'f^piodorut ^gQ^ jj^j bones of the dead, crowded them into Urnes, and laid heaps of * Ramufiui wood Upon them. And the * Chmois without cremation or urnal inin iVawgar. terrment of their bodies, make ufeof trees and much burning, while they plant a Pine-tree by their grave, and burn great numbers of printed draughts of flavesand horfes over it, civilly content with theic companies in effigie,, which barbarous Nations exad unto rea,
.
lity*
Marcialis
Chriftians abhorred this way of obfequics, and though they ftick not to give their bodies to be burnt in their lives, detcfted that mode after death affedingrathera depofiture than abfumption, and properly fubmitting unto the fcntence of God, to return not unto afties but unto duft again, conformable unto the pradiccofthe Patriarches^ the interrment of our Saviour, of Peter ^ Paul, and the ancient Mar* tyrs. And fo far at laft declining promifcuous enterrment with Pagans,,
;
fomc have
fuflferedEGclefiaflical ccnlures,for
making no
fcruplc
thereof.
The Mnfeima-'ibilcev crs wiH never admit this fiery rcfoiution. For they hold a prefent trial (ivm their black and white Angels in the grave; which they mud have made fo holloW) that they may rife upon
their knees.
The Jewi(h Nation, though they entertained the old- wayofinhumation, yet (omctimes admitted tliis pradice. For the men of Jabtjh burnt the body of i*.?*/. And by no prohibited pradice to avoid contagion, or pollution, in time of peftilencc, burnt the bodies of their b Amos 6. friends (/?). And when they burnt not their dead bodie8,yet foractimes p. ufcd great burnings near and about them.dcducible from theexprefiions '^jj."*?"^*"* concerning J^Aor^w, Se dech/ as -^znd the fumptuous pyre of ^Ja : And were io little averfe from () Pagan burning, that the Jews lamenting Caf! the death ofC^farthiit friend, and revenger on Pompej, frequented
the
'
5 the place where his body was burnt for many nights together. And as they raifed noble Monuments and ManfoUums for their own Nation (k.) , fo they were not fcrupulous in ereding Tome for others, ac- /^ /^s thae cording to the pradifc of D4/>/, wholeftthat lafting fcpulcbralpyle magnifi.
HydmtAyhay Urne-Buridh
"
Echbatana^\ovtht Median ^nA PerfianKings(l), ^h"'i m^"'" But evcQ in times of fubjedion and hotteft ufe, they conformed not numcntcunto the /f<7?^ pradice of burning ; whereby the Prophecy, was fe- reded by cured concerning the body ofChrift,that itftiould not fee corrupti- Simon, on, or a bone (hall not be broken ; which we bcleeve was aifo pto-^^^^-^-^^ videntially prevented, from the Souldiers fpear and nailcs tha* paft by a.^!^^'^\ the little bones both in his hands and feet : Not of ordinary contri- n^a/wf ttsvancc, that it {hould not corrupt on the crofle, according to the Law '^o''*'/^''oj' oiRomane Crucifixion, or an hair of his head perifli,, though obferva- "t^^^f^ *' bic in Je wifii cuftomes, to cue the haireof Malefadors. P^ i^^ h,jj Nor in their long co-habitation with the ^Egyptians, crept into a alwayes the cuftoaie oftheir exad embalming,wherein deeply flalhing the mufcles, cuftody and taking out the braincs and entrails, they hadbroken the fubjed ot"^Jj^^^' fo entire a Relurredion, nor fully anfwered thetipes of Enochs E/iah^ daycs.* Jd(]. or fonah^ which yet to prevent orreflfore, was of equall facility unto Lib. 10. that rifiug power, able to break the fafciations and bands of death, toAntiq. get clear out ofthe Cere- cloth, and an hundred pounds ofoyntmcnt, and out ofthe Sepulchre before the ftonewas rolled from it. But though they embraced not this pradice of burning, yet entertained they many ceremonies agreeable unto Greek^ and Romane obfcquies, And he that obferveth their funeral Feafts, their lamentations at the grave, their muftck and weeping mourners ; how they clofed the eyes of their friends, how they waflied, anointed, and Icifledihe dead; mayeafily conclude thefe were not meer Pagan-Civilities. But whether that mournful burthen , and treble calling out after ^^/^/<3j^ had any reference to thelaftconclamation, and triple valedidion,u(ed: by other nations, we hold but a wavering conjedure* (^iviliaKS make fepulture but ofthe La w ofnations, others do naturally found it and difcover it alfo in animals* They that are fo thick skinned as ftill to credit the ftory ofthe Phanix^ may lay fomcthing for animal burning : More ferious con/edures finde fomc examples of fepulture in Elephants, Cranes, the Sepulchral Cells of Pifmircs and pradice of Becs; which civil fociety caririeth out their dead,, and hath?
in
exec^uies; ifnotinterrmcnis,.
CHAP-
HjdrkUfhUy Ume-Sarial,
CHAP.
*HE
raent,fo folemnly delivered
II.
Solemnities, Ccremouies, Ritesof their Cremation or enterrby Authours,we (hall not difparage our Reader to repeat. Only the laft: and lafting part in their Urns, colleftcd
fome difcovered among us. many months paft, were digged up between fourty and fifty Urnes, dcpofited in a dry and fandy folic, not a yard deep, not far from one another: Not all ftridly of one fome contaning two figure, but moft anfwering thefe dcfcribed pounds of bones, diftinguiftable in skulls, ribs, jawes, thigh bones, and teeth, with frefli impreflionsof their corabuflion. Befides the extraneous fubftances, like peeces of fmall boxes, or combs handfomely wrought, handles of fmall braffc inftruraents, brazen nippers, and in ^ "= ^^^^ ^^^^^ ^^ ^P'^^' fen? m/by my worthy Near the fame plot of ground, for about fix yards compaffe w.erc friend digged up coals and incinerated fubftances, which begat conjedure Vtjfbmat tiiac ^]^\^ was the Vftrirtaox place of burning their bodies, or fome Sacrificing place unto the Mmes^ which was properly below the furoimiftn. face of the ground, as the >^rrf and >4/t4rJ unto the gods and //i?rofi gftam, above it. That thefe were the Urnes of %^ma}ics from the common euftome and place where they were found, is no obfcure conjefture,notfar from a 'jRj'w.tw^? Garrifon, and but five m.ile from Br^.ncAficr^iktdoyNn by ancient Record under the name of Brarwodmum. And where the adjoyning Town, containing feven Pariflies, in no very different
which occafion
I
lately prefented, in
'*
'
'
found, but Saxon termination, ftiil retsines the Name of Bumham, which being an early ftation,ic is not improbable the neighbour parts were filled with habitations, either of ivo/w^^f/ themfelves, or 5mM/i Romanifed, which obferved the Romae cuftomes. Nor is it improbable that the Romanes early poflefled this Country ;for though wc meet not with fuchftrid: particulars of thcfc paits, before the new Inftitution of C^/?^f/^, and military charge of .the Count of the Saxon fhore, and that about the Saxon Invafions, the DalmatiaM Horferaen were in the Garrifon of Brancbafier'. Yet in the time ofClaudiHss Vefpafian^.md
Severm^t finde nolelfe then three Legions difperfed through the Province of -Sr/Vf.?/;?. And as high as the Reign of CUu-
i^/wj- agreat overthrow was given unto the/cf/,by the ^owrf;^# Lieutenant Ofioritis,Kot long after the Country was fo molefted, thatin hope ofa better ftate Praflaagus bequeathed his Kingdom unio Nero and his
laft
decifivc Battle
with
vj
'
with Taulimts, After whicn time and Conqucft of ylr/ke/a ti.e Licutcmnt of P^efpafa, probsfble it is they wholly poflefled this Gouninto Garrifons or Habitations, bell futablc with their fome Romane habitations, not improbible. in thefe parts, as high as the time o^ Vespafian^ where ihc Saxons a^cx featcd, in whofe thin-fill'd Mappcs we yet findc the Name offVal/igham. Now if the Icerti were but Gammadims , Anconians, or men that lived in an Angle wedge or Elbow of Bnttainy according to the
trey, ordering
fecutities.
it
And
fo
Original EtymologiCjthiscountrey will challenge the Emphatical appellation! as moft properly making the Elbow or Iken of Icenix, That Britain was notably populous is undeniable, from that ex- ? ^f'^'^^w That the Rom^tnes themfelves were early in "S'J^,'' prefiion of Oy^r (m) no fmall number?. Seventy Thouland with their aflbciats flain by Bo- crtberimadicea, affords a fure account i And though tmny 'R^man habitations ^"^ '''^'jf^'* arenow known, yet fome by old works, RaDn piers, Coy ne?j and Urnes^^''^^ ^5%
do teftifie their poffeffiors. Some llrnes have been found at Caflor^]fa!Su'e fome alfo about Southcreeke and not many years pafl, no leffe then ten bello Qd.
Bt4Xtone{n^ not neer any recorded Garrifon. Nor is it ^5* ftrangetofinde %omane Coynes of Copper and Silver among us; of q^^JJ^^c Vefpajian ^Trajan^ Adrian,Q.ommodHSy(i/intomMtis^ SivemSy Sec. But my worthy the greater number of Diodefan ^ Conflamine^ Confians, Va/efts, with Friend
in a field at
many ofVi^orinns FofihumiHs^ Tetricus^ and the thirty Tyrants in the ^f' 7'^" Reigneof Gallienfts; 2ind fome as high a5 Adrianushsivc been fcrind j^^q'^^'^^"
SkhoutThetford, or Sttomagusj mentioned in the itinerary oi Antoninus^ things conas the way from Venta or ^afior unto London (o). But the molt frequent taincd were difcovcry is made at the two C^fters by Norwich and TarmomhU) at P'^^u'^^^**
Burghc.file and Br.ncfler (^)
jffonB'.
JoX"^^
Wtlliam PaFromCaftortoThtftford the Romans accounted thirty two miles, and from thence obfervcd not cor common road to London, but pafled by Combretonium ad Apftm, ^anonium, f MofistCajitr by C4*romagMs, &c. by Bretenham, Ogge^tll.ChelmeJord, Burntwoodi'-Sic. Tarmouth^ found in a place called Eajitloudy-burgh furlong, belongm'g to M Thomat Wood, a perfon of civility, induftry and knowledge in this way, who hath made obfcrvation of remarkabicthings about him, and from whom we hare received divers Silver and Copper Coynes. i Belonging to that Noble Gentleman, and true example of worth Sir Ka}fh Wiu Baronct,my honou-
Kd Friend
BcfideSjthe Norman^Saxon and Danijh peeces ofCuthred^ (^ar.tiws^ ^ A peece milt Am Matilda {a) y and others, fome Brictifh Coynes of gold have *^ "^^"^'^^ been difperfedly found ; And no fmall number of filver peeces neer Nor- ^^^H ^^ rvich; with a rude head upon the obverfe, with and an ill formed found in horfc on the reverfe, with infcriptions IcBuroT. whether im- i3nciH/;zn7 plying Jceni, Dftroriges^ Tffcia, ot Trinobantes, we leave to higher ^^.'^^^ w't/ conjedure. Vulgar Cronology will have NorwichCzikXtzi old as Jnlipition"//r usC^fer ; buthisdiftance from thefe parts, and its Gothick form oin'atlU. flrufture, abridgeth fuch Antiquity. The Briti'.lj Coyns afford con^^ Atth<}rr jefture of earty habitation in thefe parts, thoi'.gh the-CityofAVw^ci^'
aroic
trofc from the ruincs oiVenta, and though perhaps not without fomc habitation before, was enlarged) buildcd, and nominated by the Sa^CMS. In what bulk or populcfity it flood in the old Eaft-angle Mo-
narchy, tradition and hiftory are filent. Confiderable it was in the D4^i/h Eruptions^ when Saenoburnt Thetford and Norwich (c), and Abbas Jonr- zjif^tel the Govcrnour thereof was able to make fome refiltance, tulltnftsy g^^ g^j^j, endeavoured to burn the Danifh^sivy Brmpron
fo
many Coynes
in countries
of their Con-
of hard refolution, except we confider how they buried them underground, when upon barbarous invafions they were fain to defert their habitations in mofl: part of their Empire, and the
flridnefleof their lawsforbiding to transferthem to any other ufes; Wherein the (<5fj5p.^rf.t/ were fingalar^who to make their copper raoney ufeleffc, contempercdit with vinegar. That the Britaws left any,
?fPIat./
vtitLjcurg.
fomc wonder ; fince their money was iron, and iron rings before Cafar; and thofe ofafterftampby permilTion, and but fmall in bulk and bignefle; that fo few of the Saxons remain, becaulc overcome by fucceeding Conquerours upon the place? their coyns by degrees paffed into other (lamps, and the marks of after ages.
Then
of
full
of
ClapidiMs lemes to have the firft progrefle into thefe parts, fince
was overthrown by the Forces of A''^r<?, and u^gncolapwt a end to thefe Conquefls ; it is not probable the Country was fully garrifoned or planted before; and therefore however thefe Urnes might be of later date, not likely of higher Antiquity* And the fucceeding mpei ours defifVed not from their ronqiicfls in thefe and other parts; asteftified by hifloryand medal infcription yet extant. The Province of Britain in fo divided a dillance from Rome^ beholding the faces of many imperial perfons, and in large account no fewer then Caftr^ Clapidim Bnt/imiicus, Vefpa/iay TitHSj A^ etriarif Sever us, Commodns^ 6'^i'<?,and CaracaRa. A great obfcurity herein, becaufe.no medall or ^mperours coyne cnclofed,wh'ch might denote the dates of their cnterrments. ObferSiewf/Survey ofLon- vable in many Urnes, and found in thofe of Spittle Fields by /-(?don^ which contained the coy[\eso^C/audif*s,VefpaJia*i;Cemmodus, Ak' to:fj}fSy attended with Licry matorie^, Lamps, Bottles of Liquor, and other appurtenances of affedionate fuperflition, which in thefe rurall interrments were wanting. Some uncertainty there is from the period or term of burning, or
JB(j^^;c?.t
the ceffationofthat praAifc, M4crobttis affirmeth it was difufed in hisdayss. But moft agree, though without authentick record, that it
coafed with the Antorini. Mofi fafcly to be underflood afler the 'Reigne of thofe Emperours, which afTumed the name o( Antoninus^ exitending unto HdlogahdHs. Not ftriftly after Marcus ; For about fifty
years
years later
we
if
verHs; and
we fo
finde the raa]|nificcnt burning, and confccration of 5^fix this period or ceffation, thcfc Urncs will chal-
lenge above thirteen hundred yeers. But whether this praftife was oncly then
perfons
,
left
or generally about Rowe , and not in other Provinces, wc for after Tenullta, in the dayesof Aftfeold no authencick account, nftciui it was obvioufly objeded upon Chriftians , that they condemned the praftife of burning (e). And wc finde a paflage in Stdomns (/), ^f*"T"^ which affcrceth that pradile in France unto a lower account. And per- ^^f^ntmighaps not fully difufed till Chriftianity fully cftabliftied , which givtmumfepul. ''''"" Win. the final cxtindion to thefe Sepulchral Bonefires. Whether they were the bones of men or women or children , no au . ^J^?'
thentick decifion from ancient cuftome in diftinft places of burial. ^^-piUrtHrit, though not imprebably conjcdured, that the double Sepulture or bury-
ing place of
Abrahim
had
in it fach intenfion.
But from
exility
of
bones, thinnefs of skuls, fmallnefsof teeth, ribbes, and thigh-bones; not improbable that many thereof were perfons of minor zgt, or wo-
men. Confirmable alfo from things contained in them ; In mod were found fubftancesrefemblingGombes, Plates hkc Boxes, faftened with Iron pins, and handfomely overwrought like the necks or Bridges of Mufical Inftruments , long brafs plates overwrought like the handles of neat implements, brazen nippers to pull away hair, and in one a kinde of
C?p<?/^
Now that they accuftomed to burn or bury with them,things wherein they excelled, delighted, or which were dear unto them , either as farewells unto all plcafure , or vain apprchenfion that they might ufc them in the other world, istertified by all Antiquity. Obfervable from
the
when after her Funeral Pyre her Ghoft appeared unto him. And notably illuftrated from the Contents of that Roman Urne preferyed by Cardinai Farnefe f^ j,wherein befides great number of Gemmes Viientfi with heads of Gods and Goddeffes , were found an Ape of Agath , a ^?"oN " 4 Graihopper, an Elephant of Ambre, a Cry ftal Ball, three glaffes, two^'*'
'Tro'perti/iSj^
Spoons, and fix Nuts of Cryftal. And beyond the content of Urncs, in the Monument of Childrtck, the firft (h) , and fourth King from Phara^ mond , cafually diJcovered three years paft at Tetfrnay , reftoring unto ^^J^" the world much gold richly adorning his Sword , two hundred Rabies, chMtr. many hnndrcd Imperial Coyns, three hundred Golden Bees, the bones
^^
and horfefliooofhis horfe enterred with him , according to the barbarous magnificence of thofe day es in their fepulchral Obfequies, Although if we fteer by the conjefture of many and Septuagint expreflion i fomc trace thereof may be found even with the ancient Hebrews^ not oncly from the Sepulcraltreafureof Z)aW, but the circumcifion
knives which Jofnah alfo buried*
Same men
lading pecces
5B
and
and toyes included in them, and the cuitonire of hurtling with many other Nations, might fomewhat doubt whether ail Urnes found amon^ us, were properly %j)mane Reliqucs , or feme not belonging unto oat Brittifh^ Saxon^ or D*<//^ Forefathers. In the form of Burial among the ancient Brittaim , the large Difcourfcs 0^ Cafar-,TadtHs jSind Siraho are filent; For th difcovery whereof , with other particulars , we much deplore the lofs of that Letter which Cicero expcdcd or received from his Brothir ^i>ittts^ as a refolutionof Britttpj cuflomes; or theaciount which might have been
, which in the bignefs of a Bean could fatisiie their thirft and hunger. inStvm,:. But that the Druids i^d ruling Priefts ufed to burn and bury , is expreffed by Fomfonins ; That Bellmus the Brother of Brenms^md King oi Brittains was burnt, is acknowledged by Polydortts ^ as alfo by ytmaftdftsZierexenfs in Hifioria^ and PtnedainhisVuiverfa hifloria.
Dm
',
madcby .ycr/^o^z/V^L/er^w/chcPhyficrin, accompanying the Emperor ^^ might have alfodifcovcred thai frugal Bit (^ of the fx.^^'*^'^^^
*
cerptaptr
Xiphilin.
Old
Brittains
cth.
Spanifh. That they held that pradile in(74//M, C^e/^^rexprefly deliverWhether the Brittains (probably defcended from them , of like
ing
make ufe of burnor whether at leaftfuch as were after civilized unto the RDmang life and manners, conformed not imto this pradife , we have no hiftorical aflertion or denial. But fmce from the tiQcoxmt o{ Tacitus the ;R(?Mf/ early wrought fo much civility upon the Brittifh ftock , to wear the Gown , and that they brought them to build Temples ftudy the %^omcim Laws and Language , that they conformed alfo unJ
,
Haz/oW,
Brendetiide.
lid tjdt.
fo t^cir Religious rites and cuftomcs in burials , feems no improbable conjedure. That burning the dead was ufed mSarmatiay is affirmed by Gagttixus, that xhtSueoKs and G oth Under snitd to burn their Princes and greatperfons, is delivered by Saxe and Olaus that this was the old (germane pradife , is alfo afferted by Tacitus. And though we are bare in hifto;
of fuch obfequies in this Ifland , or that the Saxons , ^ad Angles burnt their dead, yet came they from parts wrhere 'twas of ancient praftife; the Gervtar.es ufing it, from whom they were defcended. And even in Jmland and Sleftvkk. in nAngliaCjm'hrica^ Urnes with bones were found not many years beforeasw But the HAnifh and iVorthern Nations have raifed an t^ra or point of compute from their Cuflome ofburningtheirdead : Some deriving jt from VnguinnS) fomc from Frotho the great ; who ordained by Law, that Princes and Chief Commanders fhould be committed unto the fire, though the common fort had the fomoion grave enterrment. So Starkatterus that old He-ce was burnt, and Bi^g^ royally burnt the ho dyotHarald the K'M\g (lain by him. What time, this cuflome generally expired in that Nariotr^ WC difcern
rical particulars
fntes,
HjdridtAphiay Urne-Bttrial,
11
no affured period
; whctfet it ceafcd before Cbriftianity,or apon their AufgHrins by the Gaul in the time of Ludovkus Pim the Converfion, C^<r/fJ the according to good computes or whether Great, Son of it might not be ufed by fome perfons , while for a hundred and eighty years Paganifme and Chriftianity were promifcuoufly embraced among About which times the Djhcs then), there is no affured conclufion. were bufie in England^ and particularly infcfted this Countrey i Where many Caltles and ftrong holds, weie built by them, or againft them,and a great number of names and Families ftill derived from them. But fince thiscuftome was probably difufed before their Invafion or Conqueft and the Romanes confefledly pradifed the fame, fince their poffeflion of this Ifland, the moft affured account will fall upon the Romanes^ otBrit;
t^ins
Romanized'
However certainit is, th at Urnes conceived of no RontaMe Original, i^/^fpjr^^ are often digged up both in Norway and Denmark^, handfomely defcri- miimnubed, and graphically reprefented by the Learned Phyfician fVorntius (/), menu if And in fome parts of Dennmrhjn no ordinary number , 'as ftands de- ^"W'?*'^*'livered by Authors cxadly defcribing thofe Countrey sfx^). And they Adolphm
Qprmin
Brals and
Tijia^uncarelefs in difpofing the nobleft fort,whiIe daUt coUir, placed large ftones in circle about the Urnes, or bodies which they &c.
in EngUt7d{n)^ or fepulcral
Somewhat anfwerable unto the Monument of Rollrichi{onis*^^^^J^' Monument probably ereded by R^^lo ,^^^\^^\
conquered Normandy.
difcovered.
who
after
what might be
fhire,
in che^ twi-
fon belonged that large Urne found at iA(hhHry{0), containing mighty "*j'.'''r^^ bones, and a Buckler ; what thofe large Urnes found at little Maying- j*' ^1^' p ham (p),or why the Anglefea times are placed with their mouths down- folk, Hoiward, remains yet undifcovered. Unread.
HA
P.
Ill,
PLayftered and whited Sepulchres, were anciently affedlcd ia cadavefour, and corruptive Burials; And the rigid Jews were wont to garnifli the Sepulchres of the {a) righteous; Vlyjfes in Hecuba * Mat.2?. (J?) cared not how meanly he lived, lo he might finde a noble Tomb after death. - ^tr^'dex. Great Princes affeded great Monuments, and the fair and larger Urnes contained no vulgar aflies, which makes that dilparity in thofe which time difcovereth among us. The prefent Urnes were not of one capacity, the largeft containing above a gallon , Some not much above half that meafure ; nor ail of one figure, wherein there is no ftrid conformity , in the fame or different Countreys 5 Obfervablc from thofe reprefented by Cafalifu , Bofio , and others , though all found in Italy :
5
While
'.
jPfa.dg.
cars , and lon necks, but moft imitate*^ and round compofurej whether from any myftery, heft duration or capacity, were but a conjedure. But the common form with necks was a proper figure, making our laft bed likcour firft ; nor much unlike the Urnes of our Nativity, while we lay in ^^^ nether part of the earth (r), and inward vault of our Microcolrne. Many Urnes are red, thefebutof a black colour, (omewhat fmooth , and dully founding , which begat fome doubt , whether they were^ burnt, or oncly baked in Oven or Sun According to the ancient way, in many Bricks, Tiles, Pots, and teftaeeous works and as the word
,
when occurring without addition And chiefly intended by T/w, when he commendetb Bricks and Tiles of two years old, and to make them in the fpring. Nor onely thcfe conte^ais properly to be taken,
.
cealed peeces, but the open magnificence of Antiquity,ranmuch in the Artificeof Clay. Hereof the houfe of LManfolns was built , thus old
flood in the Capitol, and the Stdtua of Hercules made in the Prtfctis^ was extant in P limes dayes. And fuch as declined burning or Funeral Urnes, aScfted Coffins of Clay,according
Jfipiter
Reign of Tarquinim
>
But the fpiric of great ones was above thefe circumscriptions, affeding Copper, Silver, Gold, and Tijr/j^jrr^? Urnes, wherein i'i?t;<?^/f/ lay, after a ferious XapMif view and fcntence on that which fhould contain him(^). Some of thefe ^ ^^^^^ were thought to have been (ilvered over , from fparklings in feTTov'^o^T, eix8/VH it yeral pots , with fmall Tinfel parcels j uncertain -whether from the
,
to the
mode of
PythhgorAS
wx^ftinv, earth,
^if^'
mixture in them. Urnes we could obtain no good account of their cover-ings ; onely one feemed arched over with fome kinde of brickwork. Ot ihofefound at ^A'^o fome were covered with flints, fome in other parts with Tiles , thofe zxTarmoHth Cafler^ were clofed with Romane And fome have proper earthen covers adapted and fitted to bricks. them. But in thd Homericai Urne of Patroclus, w-hatever was the foiid^ Tegument, we finde the immediate covering to be a purple peece of filk ; And fuch as had no covers might have the earth clofcly preffed into them, after which difpofurc were probably fome of thefe,wherein we found the bones and aflies half mortercd unto the fand and fides oF the Urne ; and fome long roots of Quich, orDogs-grals wreathed aor the
firft
Among thele
bout tRe bones^; No Lamps, included Liquors, Lachrymqtories , or Tear-Bottles atended thefe rural Urnes, eitheras (acred unto the(JI/^<?/, or pafii',
oaateexpreflions of their furviving friends. While with rich flames, and hired tears they folemoized their Obfcquies and in the mofrla-
*QHmU*. mentcd Monuments made one part of^their lofcriptions (?). Some finde fepulchral VefTels containing liquors, which time hath incraffated' I**'/^ For befide thefe lachrymacories, notable LaDTps-, with' intogcllies VcjOCels of Oyles and Aromadcal Liquors attended cobteOffukTiw^
crymtpo'
v^noficy and fpirit in them, which ifany *i^^'.' havcfar exceeded the Palats of Antiqaity. Liquors not they bavctafted years annual Magiftrates, but by great conjunftiby of computed to be f periods of Kingdoms fatal the and ons (f). The praughts of Confulary About fire
in the
muftc
*i"n<iff<}
untotncm. iVimm 0In fundry graves and Sepulchres, we meet withRings,Coyncs, and pimmamtm Chalices ; Ancient frugality was fo fevcre, that they allowed no gold annorum to attend the Corps, but ondy that which fervcd to faften their JJ""""* teeth (h). Whether the Opaline ftone in this Urne were burnt upon h ,2ra3/. the finger of thedead, or caft into the fire by fome affedionatc friend, l.yx.dt JhBut other incinerable fubftances u facro. it will confid with either cuftome. were found fofrefli, that they could feel no findge from fire. Thele^^/'""'^'" upon view were judged to be wood, but finking in water and tried by ^qwliuro the fire, we found them to be bone or Ivory. In their hirdneffe and dtntesviw yellow colour they moft refcmblcd Boxi which in Gldexpreflions^'"'nj found theEpithete (/) ofEte.nal, and perhaps in fuch confervato- r^'^r'"'/? lies might have pafled uncorrupted. wtrllfe That Bay- leaves were found greeivin the Tomb of S. Hnmbert {k^,fraude tfto. after an hundred and fifty yeers, was looked upon as miraculous. Re- * Pl'n-^-5f^*'' markable it waj unto old Spedators, that the Cyprelfe of the Temple ^"j^^~''^'! The wood of the Ark and mtrafihto' ofDiana^ laftcd fomany hundred years Olive Rod q{ dartn wereolder at the Captivity. But the Cypreflfe ofphraftw. the Ark of Noah, was the greateft vegetable Antiquity, iJofephHs ^Surim^ werenor deceived, by fome fragments of it in his day es. To omit the Moore-logs, and Firre-tree& found under-ground in many parts of England ; the undated ruines of winds> flouds or earthquakes ; and which in Fl'knders ftili fhew from what quarter they, fell, as generally^ iGorcp. Bf lying in the North- Eaft pofi-cion'(/}. But though we found not thefe peeces to be wood, according to firft canusinNiapprehenfion, yet we miffed not altogether of fome woody Tubfhmce; for the bones were not fo clearly pickt, but fome coals were found araongft them j A way to make wood perpetual, and a fit affociatfor metal, whereon was l?id the foundation of the great Ephejian Tenjpic, and which were made the lafting tcfls of old boundaries, and Landmarks J Whilcft we look on thefe we admire not oblervations of Coals found frefh, after four hundred years (w). In along defer- >of Beriw tc4 habitation ( j, even Eggc-fhels have been found fre(h, not tend- g*cciontilar
:
'^'^'''^'*''
ing t^^orruption.
In the
all
Monument of King
the ivory
were found
j^^^.
rufly
and crumbling
into pcecees.
But our
well
little
fafbened
tbeir
and loft nofthough wantir^ a tenacious moifturefot tbefirmer union of parts, although it be hardly drawn intofufion, ydtdktQKUiXoQiirttboiitteth onto reft.:aad diilolutk^
works,
held
together,
Magneticall quality,
Kan
we admired noc the duration feat the freedom from ruft, and illiavour; upon the hardeft attrition, but now cxpofed unto the piercing Atomcs of aire ; in the fpace of a few moneths, they begin c conceive not thefe Urns to f pot and betray their green entrals. to have defccndcd thus naked as they appear, or to have ehtrcd their graves without the old habit of flowers. The Urne oi PhiUpAmen flowers and ribbons, that it afforded no fight of it *.^JJ[J"fJ was fo laden with Lycnrgus allowed Olive and Myrtle. The Athnians ^c rigid f'^'f ^ "in 'AmphU might faifcly except againft the praftife of DemocritHs to be buried htairofemiufiHian- up in honey ja fearing to embezzle a great commodity of their Gounfcemed too fru^"^y ' *"^ ^^^ beftof that kinde in Europe. But Plato 'caftuT^'
:*en pccces
'sittton.
in
gaJ^Y politick,
who allowed no
larger
maDmifwn.
mod
was had confounded the aflies of thefe Offuarics, yet the earth the Though cd and worthy bones were fo fmartly burnt,that fome thin plates of braffe were found WM.Ct- haU melted among them whereby we apprehended they were not of
S"*^""^' whicii moft learn'
:
the good nefle of chat fepulchral fet at no higher rate then the mean (alary of Ju4au
perfundorily fired as fometimes in military, and dsjc trimut commonly in peftilence, burnings; or after the manner of abjed corps, cunaiyicc. hudled forth and carelcfly burnt, without the Efquiline Port at Rome; Ergo dum which was an affront continued upon Tiberitts, while they but half
the meaneft carcaffes, Antlninuf^
^'* ^""^"^ ^'^ ^^^y * ^^^ '" ^^^ Amphitheater, a<icording to the cu'timw'" 'AfXwVMif ftome in notable Malefadors ; wherea? ATfrofecmednot fo much to Tcii^Hv. A fear his deaths as that his head {hould be cut off and his body not barbarous burnt entire.
^^^^ finding many fragments of fculs in thefe Urnes, fufpeded a mixture of bones ; In none we fearched was there caufe ot fueh conwhen men ftood upon jedurc, though fometimes they declined not that pradife; Thea(hes a rolling of (^) !)*?< were mingled with thofe o( Jt*lia,oi Achilles with All Urnes contained not finglc afhesj Without ^^^*^ ofP^frsf/^i
FcaftT
^^
S^n^cks
in a
Rope, confufcd burnings they affedionately compounded their bones j pa(^ and a knife fionately endeavouring to continue their living Unions. And when diftance
^".'
in their
of death denied fuch conjundions,uniatisfied affections conceived fome fatisfadion to be neighbours in the grave.to iycUrne by Urne, ^v^t^' ' when the **^^ touch but in their names. And many were fo curious to continue Aoncwas their living relations, that they contrived large, and family Urnes, rolled awherein the Aihes of their neareft friends and kindred might fuc!'''*y'^Jj''"^'cefiivcly be received (c), at leaft fome parcels thereof, while their coi^^^^''*' memorials lay in mtnr vefTels about them, failed^ tliey Antiquity held too light thoughts from Objeds of mortality, while loft their Jives to the fome drew provocatives of mirth from Anatomies (d), and Juglers hiughter of fl,g^g^ tricks with Skeletons. When Fidlers made not fo pleafant mirth as Fencers, and men could (it with quiet ftomacks while hangfta^tors'^*^' Athtnsus^ ing was plaid before them. Old confiderations made itwmiments
by
by fculs and bones upon therf monuments. In the igyptlan Obelisks and Hieroglyphical figures, icisnoteafie to meet with bones. The fepukhrai Lamps fpeak nothing Icffe then fcpulturej and in their liteprove often obiccne and antick peeces: where we finde f (f) it is obvious to meet with facrificing patera's, and veffels D/7/ m<wn-^"^' of libation, upon old fcpulchral monuments. In the Jcwifli HjpcgAtm{g) and fubterranium Cell at %?me,vj2LS little obfervable befide*^^^** the variety of Lamps^ and frequent draughts of the holy Candleflick. In autbentick draughts oitAnthtyij and Jerome^ we meet with thighbones and deaths heads; but the cemiterial Cels of ancient Chriftians and Martyrs, were filled with draughts of Scripture ^^toriesjnot declining the ffourifhes of Cyprefle, Palms, and Olive] and the myftical Figures of Peacocks, Doves and Cocks. But iterately affefting the pourtraits of <>*/?, LaTj^rns^ Jonas^ and the vifion of Ezechiel^^it bopefol draughts, and hinting imagery of the Refurredionj which is and fweetens our habitations in the Land of the life of the grave,
ral draughts
D.
M,
Affiles
Md
Pifmires.
Gentile infcriptiom precifely delivered the extent of mens lives, feldomeihemanner of their deaths, which hiftory it felffo often leaves
obfcure in the records of memorable perfons. There is fcarce any Philopher but dies twice or thrice in Laertius ; Nor almoft any life without two or three deaths in Plutarch; which makes the tragical ends of noble perfons more favourably refented by compaflionate
Readers^
rences*
who
findc
fomc
is
relief in
the Eledion
of fuch
diffe-
man.
The
C<o^/p/?/ confounded i'epulchres. For bcfide their real Tombs, many have found honorary and empty fepukhres, The variety of//*- mers Monuments made him of various Countrcys. Emifides (h) had paufan h his Tomb in Africa, but his kpulture in Macedoma, And Severus Aukis, Lsmprld. (J) found his real 5epulcbre in Rome , but his empty grave in
and
1,
'
GalUa.
(kS) eminently above the earth,was not like to findc the quiet of thefe bones. Many ofthefe Urnes were broke by a vulgar difcoverer in hopeofiDck)fedtreafurc. The aflics of Afar-
invitAlex^
He
Urne
^'"^^^'^^^^'
l^T'^'^*""*'
jpjJJ'^
-^ ^
c
ftllus (/)
were loft above ground, upon the hke account. Where pro- vit.Mdrctin fit hath prompted, no age hath wanted fueh miners. For which the The Commoft barbarous xpilators found the rooft civil Rhetorick. Gold once "T^'^g"?^' out of the earth is no more dueimtoit; What was unrcafonably ccm^ {(}- 2^^^ mittcd to the ground is reafonably refumed fi-em it: Let Monuments deric forand rich Fabricks, not Riches adorn mens aflies, the commerce of the finding ow living is not to be transferrediinto the dead; It is not in juftice to take ^*P"khntt.fc thatwhkh none coroplaines talofciand bo man isi wronged where no caffiZor.
Hian
si poffelTor,;
Var. I4I,
What..
Tt^
i
'Tljdriotaphia^ Urne-i^uriAtt,
damnAta and aged ciaders^ Were Thefe crumbling reliques and long-fipcd hodittm particles (uperannatc fuch expedations Bones, hairs, nails, and teeth oi. kbm tm'u the dead, were the creafurcs of okl iorcercrs. Jn vain we revive fuch Prefent fuperftition coo vifibly perpetuates the folly of our certmniis^ pradices Mt dediffe forc-fathers,whcrcin unto old Obfcrvation this Ifland was fo cosiplear,
this f^rr/
;
rh!m^''
Plm.Lzp.
^^^^
^^
lies twelve daycs incorrupted , while his foul was viewing the large ftations ot the dead. How to keep the corps feven daycs from corruption by anointing and washing,
'Tt'i^o's
without exenteration, were an hazardable peecc of art, in our choifefl: pradife. How they made diftind feparation of bones and alhes from fiery admixture, hath found no hiftorical folution. Though they fcemed to make a diftind collcdion , and overlooked not Pyrrhus his Some provilion they might make by fidilc Veffels, Coverings, toe. Tiles, or flat (tones, upon and about the body. And in the fame Field, not far from thefe Urnes, many ftones were found under ground, as alb Topo^^tf. phuRoma fo by careful feparation of extraneous matter , compofing and raking ex Mania- up the burnt bones with forks , obfervable in chat notable lump of ano. Eut GalmttHi C^tmianm (Jf), who had the fight of the Vas Vftrinam, or veffcl wherein they burnt the dead , found in the Efquiline Field at %rlmm Rome, might have afforded clearer folution. But their infatisfadion appeliatum quod into herein begat that remarkable invention in the Funeral Pyres of fomc cadaver A pj-jnces, by incombuftiblc (heets made with a ttiLtmtoi Asbejios ^ inJ^yCap'df/ cremable flax, or Salamanders wool, which preferved their bones and Camp Ef a(hes(rj incommixed. qutiino. How the bulk of a man (hould fink into fo few pounds of bones and !.^.^*^.^afhes, may fcem ftrange unto any who confiders not its conftitution, c" rff "re- and how flcnder a mafs will remain upon an open and urging fire of the conditis carnal compofition. Even bones therafelves reduced into afhes , do avtumm And confilting much of a volatile fait, bate a notable proportion. Although their ^^^" ^^^^ ^^ ^^^^ ^"^ ^^^^ * '^S^t ^'"'^ of cinders. "oL^bonc? according hulk be difproportionable to their weight , when the heavy principle of to Lyftrus. Salt is fired out, and the Earth almoft onely remaineth ; Obfervable in Thofeof (allow, which makes more Aflics then Oake; and difcoversthecom"^" ^"^^"^ ^^ felling Afhes by meafure, and not by ponderatian. pcrfons not Some bones make bed Skeletons (n) , fome bodies quick and fpeeditaM nor fat according efl aOies : Who would exped a quick flame from Hydropicai Heracli' toColuirMtj,^j ? The poifoned Soaldier when his Belly brake , put out two pyres But in the plague of ^//>fj (c) , one private pyre P/^<rfi (^). in GtIcc'* and the SaraecKshurnt in large heaps, 'Thucydidtsjc^ved two or three Intruders .T* Lamm, Cajitle (d) how little Fuel fufHceth. Though fhcwcd King of by the , Patrodus of tookup an hundred foot (?) , a peece of Funeral pyre the ^fp** , burnt Ponsfey-^ And if the burthen of Jfanc were fofficicat boat 'mJ^ou%vU^'^^^^^ for an hulocaul^, a man may carry his own pyre. n-M*.
;
From
17 drawn good burning lighrs, and good medicines (/) againft burning J Though the feminal humor feems of a contrary f S'pran. nature to fire, yet the body compleated proves a combuftible lump, A/^Oi/or. wherein fire findes flame even from bones, and feme fuel almofl; from all parts. Though the {) Metropolis of humidity fecms leaft difpofed ethe braifi.
Hpriotaphiay Urne-BuriaL
From animals
are
unto it, which might render the (culls of thefeUrncs lefs burned then^Wo''"'""* other bones. But all flies or finks before fire almoft in all bodies: When the common ligament is difToIved, the attenuable parts afcend, thcrelt
fubfide in coal, calx or aflics.
feems no ir- Amos 2.1. of dead relations (e) , a paffionate prodigality. He that hath the afhes of his friend, hath an ever- ' ^} ^^l'' lafting treafure : where fire takcth leave, corruption flowly enters ; In h^r hus* bones well burnt, fire makes a wall againft it felf , experimented in co- hand Miu^ pels, and tefts of metals, which confift of fuch ingredients. What the/'^'"Sun compoundetb, fire analyfeth , not tranfmutcth. I hat devourmg agent leaves almoft alwayes a morfel for the Earth , whereof all things are but a colony ; and which, if time permits, [the mother Element will
rational ferity
;
To burn
afties
have
again
,
He that looks for ll-nes and old fepulchral reliques them in the ruines of Temples where no Religcon
:
anciently placed
them. Thefe were found in a Field, according to ancient cuftome, in noble or private burial; the oldpradifeof the ('anaanite! ^ the Family of AbrahAtn , and the burying place oi fofna , in the borders of his poflTefiions and alfo at^reeable unto %om,iMe prad'cc to bury by high;
their
of
chcmthe
whom
Epitaphs of great ones were fain to beg to ftay and look upon them. A language though fometimes ufed , not (o proper in Ghurch-Infcripti- * Sijfe vU^ ens (<). The (cnfible Rhecorick of the dead, to exemplarity of good '<" life , firft admitted the bones of pious men,and Martyrs within Churchwals ; which in fucceeding ages crept into promifcuous praftife. While C onfiantine was peculiarly favoured to be admitted unto the Church Porch ; and the firft thus buried in England was in the dayes of Cuthred. In ur- Khck: Chriftians difpute how their bodies fliould lye in the grave.
nal cnterrmcnt they clearly efcaped thisControverfie:
Though wedc-
minnusde
''*""
dine the Religious confidcration, yet in cemiterial and narrower burying places , to avoid confufion and crofs pofition , a certain pofture were to be admitted ; which even Pagan civility obferved, The Tfr/;^j lay North and South, IhtMegarinKs and Phoemcians placed their heads to the Eaft: The Atheni^s^iomQ thinlc,towardsthe Weft,which Chriftians ftill retain. And Beda will have it to be the pofture of our
Saviour, That he was crucified with his face towards the Weft, we will not contend with tradition and probable account; But we applaud noc ttc 5 C
3
1
H^driotd^Uy Uyne-Buruf,
the hand of theT*aintcr, in exalting his Crols fo high above thoTe on cither fide ; fincc hereof we finde no authentick account in hiftory,and *Ofthmat even the croiks found by H^f/r;;^ pretend no fuch diftindion from lon-
whofc bo-
gicudeordiraenfion. To be knav'd out of our graves, to have our fculs made drinkingour bones turned into Pipcs,to delight and fportour Enemies, bowls,and dy being buried aie Tragical abominations, efcaped in burning Burials. '^^1*^^^ Urnal enterrmcnts, and burnt Reliques lye not in fear of worms, or
d-^Xr?
on
to be an heritage for Ji'erpcnts; In carnal fepulturc, corruptions feem peculiarunto psrts, and Ibraefpeak of fnakesoutof the fpinal marrow, pen of the But while wc luppofe common wormcs in graves, 'tis not eafie to findc
the cutting oCerecloth
feft and^*^'
^^y there
few
fewer or none in
Teeth, bones,andhair, C^""^^^^'* though in frefli decayed bodies. defiance lading corruption. In anHydropical body ten give the moft to nothing corraprcd, years buried in a Church yard, we met with a fat concretion, where
the flcfh
q( jj^g Earth, and the fait and lixivious liquor of the body , large lumps of fat, into the confiltence of the hardeft coagulated dened. but Atter a battle with the Caftle-foap; whereof pare remaineth with us. in colour, proportiTerfians^ the %^mane Corps decayed in few dayes, while the FerJ!dtt bodies remained dry and uncorrupted. Bodies in the lame ground do
ji^g j^jj^-e
^^'^
f "f
^"ffr
like an
whereof
in
the
wc exped no long
The body
of the
Marpre-
quefsof
Do
fet
beyond powder A firmer confidence and compage of parts might be cxpcded from Arcfadion, deep burial or Charcoal. fcript. of The Leicefiergtcatefl: Antiquities of mortal bodies may remain in petrified bones j?.'''^'' ^" though we take not in the pillar of Lof.' wifp, or Metamor, whereof, phofisof OrteliHs (d) feme may be older then Pyramids,in the pecriRujjii,^ The Poet fied Reliquescif the general inundation. When AlsxAnder o^^nt^i the Drfnffinhis Tomb of C/r^/.;, the remaining bones difcovered his proportion, whcre*^^ ^^^^'^ fragments afford but a bad conjedure, and have this difadP^^at found glut- vantage of grave enterrments, that they leave us ignorant of snon- per:
Common Tombs
rons To meagre,
For fince bones afford not only reClieude and ftabilicy, but figure unto the body; It is no impolTib'e Phyfiognomy tocon1^^"^^ ^^ fledily sppendencies ; and after what fhape the mufcles and nuatedThat A full fprcad (/a" carnous parrs might hang in their full confidences. te conceited them to ;7(7/< (hews a well-fliaped horfe behindc>h2ndfome formed fculls, give have been fome analogy of flcdi refemblance. A critical view of bones maktrs a Even colour is not heyvond con]edure,fince good did!!\dionof fexes. o! Vfrvfa?^ it hard to be deceived 'v^ the diftinftion oi Ncgrss fculls. {e) Dantes Itm, and that it was Charadersare to be found in fculls as well as faces. Hercules is not oncfonaldifcovcrics.
eafitcohave dilcovcrcd Homa or Oma in their faces being made by the two lines of their cbcekf, arching over the Eyebrows to t^e a^it, and their funk eyes making O O which n:akes up Omo. Partan tocch'me anellafciK.* utmt.t che nel vifo dt gU hHomini Itgie bitomo Btnhauria qxim conofciuto /' etnme.
:
"y
'
ffj/drioUphtay Urne-BuriaK
ly
J9
inferences
parts make out their comproportlons, and upon whole,or parts. And fince the dimenfions of the head meafure the whole body , and the figure thereof gives con jedure of the principal faculties ; Phyfiognomy out-lives our felves , and ends
not in our graves. Severe contemplators obferving thefe lafting reliques,may think them good monuments of perfons paft, little advantage to future beings, And confidering that power which fubdueth all things unto it felf, that can refurae the fcattered Atomes, or identifie out oTany thing, conceive it But the loul fubfuperfluous to cxped: a refurre(Sion out of Reliques. fifting, other matter clothed with due accidents , may falve the individuality Yet the Saints weobferve arofe from graves and monuments, about the holy City. Some think the ancient Patriarchs focarncftly dcfired to lay their bones in Canaan , as hoping to make a part of that Refurredion , and though thirty miles from Mount (^alvary^ atleaft to lie in that Region, which (hould produce the firft-fruits of the dead. And if according to learned conjedlurc, the bodies of men ftiall rife where their greatert Reliques remain, many arc not like to errc in the Topography of their Refurredion, though their bones or bodies be af- Tmw. in tcr tranflated by Angels into the field oiEz,echiels vifion , or asfome Ezck. will order it, into the Valley of Judgement, ovjehojafhat.
.-
G H A
P.
IV.
CHriftians have handfomely glofled the deformity of death,by cjJreful confideration o f the body, and civil rites which take oft brutal terminations. And though they conceived all reparable by a rcfurred^i- ' ^'^^<? on, cart not off all care of enterrment. And fince the afhes cf Sacri%^aTGm' fices burnt upon the Altar of God, were carefully carried out by the /o^c/o**' fince they acknowledged their txtquiarum, Priefts, and depofed in a clean field bodies to be the lodging of Chrift, and temples of the holy Ghoft, they ^'^^.^" devolved not all upon the fufficiency of foul exigence ; and therefore ^'r^omit^Y^' with long fervices and full fohmnities concluded their laft Exequies , ^mmno J-' wherein {a) to all diftindions the Greek devotion feems moft patheti- ''/, ?'
-,
''
cally ceremonious.
non
revixh
Chriftian invention hath chiefly driven at Rites,which (peak hopes of JJ^^/^^'^1' another life, and hints of a Refurredion. And if the ancient Gentiles Sl<rtz<i
held not the immortality of their better part , and fome fubfiftence after death ; in ieveral rites, cuftomes, adions and expreffions, they contradided their own opinions : wherein J><?7wom/j went high, even
e^-y
ittrari
'^"''" """'-
^hn\.
'^'
to the thought of a refurredion (^), as fcoffingly recorded by Tlmy, <K^Tdxtt What can be more exprefs than theexprefiion oi P hocy Hides (c)} OrfUyJini who would expefl from Lmretius {d) afentenceof Ecclefafles? Be- ^'^'"^"i"-*'
eK
Eec.
x4*' d'TQi
Lucrer.
yj>(Aivciv
&deinceps,
iCtditenm
5
r^tro dt
tmk
quodfiiit ante
Inttmrn,
fore
, , ,
20
HydrJotaphiay t/me-JBurUIl.
, the foul had wings in Homer , which fell hot but flew out of the body into the raanfions of the dead j who alfo obferved that handfome diftinftion of Demos and Sema , for the body
Plato'in
Pb^d.
from Jupiter remained immortal. Thus {d) Sobury his body, fo they would not think they buried Socrates^ and regarding onely his immortal part was indifferent to be burnt or buried. From fuch Confiderations Diogenes might contemn Sepulture* And being fatisfied that the foul could not perifh , grew carelefsof corporal enterrment. T he Stokks who thought the fouls of wife mcnhad their habitation about the Moon^ might make flight account of fubterraneous depofition whereas the Pythagortans and tranfcorporating Philolophers, who were to be often buried^ held great care of their enterrment. And the Platonicks rejcded not a due care of the grave, though they put their afiies to m\^ reafonable expectations, in their tedious term ef return and long fet re^^^^^^'^^
periflied, that
volution.
Men have loft their reafon in nothing fo much as their Relfgicn, wherein ftones and clouts make Martyrs; and fince the Religion of one feems madnefs unto another, to afford an account or rational of old Rites, requires no rigid Reader ; That they kindled the pyre averfly or turning their face from it was an handfome Symbole of unwilling miniftration ; That they wafted their bones with wine and milk^ that the mother wrapt them in Linnen, and dryed them in her bofome, the firft fottering part, and place of their nourifhment ; That they opened their eyes towards heaven , before they kindled the fire, as the place of their hopes or original , were no improper Ceremonies. Their lafb fVak,vAitj valediftion (/) thrice uttered by the attendants was alfo very folemn ^'^^ fomewhat anfwercd by Chriftians , who thought it too little, if n$i tt ordine they threw Hot the earth thrice upon the enterred body. ThatinftrewquoKatura ptrmittet jng their Tombs the %pm(!Kesiffsd:cd the Rofe the Greeks Am^iranjequmur. ^^^ ^^^ myrtle ; that he Funeral pyre confifted of fweet fucljCyprcfs^ Firre, LariXjYevve, and frees perpetually verdant, lay filent expreflions of their furvMving hopes Wherein Chriftians which deck theic Coffins with Bays have found a mere elegant Emblemc. For that tree feeming dead, will rcftore it felf from the root, and its dry and exuccous leaves refume their verdure again which if we miflakc not, wc have alfo obferved in Furze. Whether the planting of Yewe in Churchyards , hold not its original from ancient Funeral Rites , or as an EmblemeofRefurredion from its perpetual verdure, may alfo admit con, ,
i
jedure.
They made
lical
Mufick to excite or quiet the affcdions of their But the fecrct and fymbohint was the hormonical nature of the foul ; which delivered from
ufe of
the
the body went again to enjoy theprimitivcharmony of heaven, from whence it firfl; defcended which according to its progrefle traced by
;
antiquity,
KHS.
and
afcendcd
by Cafricoy
They burnt not children before their teeth appeared, as apprehending their bodies too tender a morlcl for fire,and that their griftly bones would fcarce leave feparable relicks after the pyralcombuftiou. That
they kindled not fire in iheir houfcs for feme dayes after, wasaftridl mctnorial of the late affliding fire. And mourning without hope, they had an happy fraud againft exceffive lamentation, by a common
^^ ^^^^^
opinion that deep forrowsdillurbed their ghodsC^). , /^^, That they buried thcirdesd on their h^clc^, oi in a fupine pofition, rree/. feems agreeable unto profound fleep, an J common pfrture of dying; contrary to the moft natural way ot birih;N(r unlike our pendulous poflure, in the doubtful ftate oi fhc woa;b. D.ogenes was fingular, who preferred a prone fituation in the grave, and fome Chriftians (^} &co likeneither, who declined the figure otrcftj and make choice of an ered: poflure.
That they carried them out of the world with their feet forward; not inconfonant unto reafon As contrary unto the native pofture of man, and his produftion firfl: into it. And alfo agreeable unto their opinions, while they bid adieu unto the world,not to look again upon it; whereas Mahometans vj]\o think to rerurntoa delightful life again, are carried forth with their heads forward, and looking towards their
.-
houfes.
firfl
die or
again,
firft
difcover the
But
dy-
was a vanity of af^ fedion ; as not prefumably ignorant of the critical tefts of death, by appofition of feathers, glaffes, and reflexion of figures, which dead eyes represent nor, which however notftridly verifiable in frefh and warm cadaver s, could hardly elude thetefl", in corps of four or five.
ing or dead friends, or revoke
them unto
life
dayes.
That they fucked in the lafl breath of their expiring friends, was of no medical inftitution, but a loofe opinion that the foul pafled out that way, and a fondnelTc of aflfedion from fomc^ Py- * Frantcjcc^ thagorical foundation, that the fpirit of one body paffcd into another; pJJ^p^/iw which they wiflied might be^heir own. ntbri. That they powred oyle upon the pyre, was a tolerable pradife, while the intention refted in facilitating the acccnfion; But to place good 07fj in the quick and fpeedy burning, to facrifice unto the winds for adifpatch in this office, was a low form of fuperflirion. The Archimime 01 Jefter attending the Funeral trains and imitating ^cfpceches, gefture, and manaers of the dccealijd, was too light for
forely a pradice
;
J^':
22
Hjdmtaphidy Urm-'BuYhU
fucb folcmnitics, contradiding their funeral Orations, ahd doleful rites of the grave. That they buried a peece of money with them as a Fee of the Slj. JiattFerriman, wasapraftife full of folly. But the ancient cuftome of placing coynesin confidcrable Urncs, and the prefent praAife of burying medals in the Noble Foandacions of Europe^ are laadable wayes
of hiftorical difcoverics,in aAioni, perfons.Chronologies; and poftcrity will applaud them. examine not the old Laws of Sepulture, exempting certain perlofls from burial or burning. But hereby we apprehend tiut thefc were not the bones of perfons Planet-ftruck or burnt with fire from
We
Heaven
earth
;
No
unworthy of the condemned unto the Tartarus of Hell, and bottomlefle pit of PlHt9, from whence there was no redemptioncrilegious Malefadors; Perfons in old apprehcnfion
Nor were
onely
many cuflomes
Ob-
danc or obfcure, oftheirftateand future beings; whether unto eight or ten bodies of men to adde one of a woman, as being more inflammable, and unduoufly conftituted for the better pyrall com bufl:ion, were any rational practife: Or whether the complaint of Fen. mders Wife
be tolerable, that wanting her funeral burning (he fuffered intolerable cold in Hell, according to the conftitution of the infernal houfe of Pluto, wherein cold makes a great part of their tortures ^ it cannot pafle without feme queftion. Why the Female Ghofts appear unto Vlylfes, before the Heroes and malculine fpirits ? why the Pfychff or foul of Tirejtas is of the mafculine gender 5 who being blinde on earth fees more then all the reft in hell ; Why the Funeral .^uppers conlifted of Egges, Beans, ^mallage, and Lettuce, fince the dead arc made to eat /^yo/Wf/j about the /;'x,tjmedows? Why fince there is no Sacrifice acceptable, nor any propitiation for the Covenant of the grave; men fet up the Deity of Mertay and fruitlcfly adored Divinities without cars? it cannot efcape fome doubt. The dead feem all alive in the humane Hades ofHomer^ yet cannot we fpeak, prophefie, or know the living) jexcepc they drink blood, wherein is the life of man. And therefore the foules of Pemlope*s Paramours conducted by Mercury chiripcd like bats, and thofc which followed H(?rc/fjmadeanoire butUkea flock of birds. The departed fpirits know things pafi and to come, yet are ignorant of things pefeiK. Agememnon fortelswhat fhocld happen unto Vljffes^ yet ignorantly enquires
thin habit
offtheir
of fpirits was beyond the force of weapons. The fpirits puc malice with their bodies, and Cafar and Pom^ey accord in Latine
Urne-BuriAl,
%'^
tine Hell, yet A ax in H$mef cn^lures not a conference with VljfisX And VeiphobHs appears all mangled in Vergih Ghofts, yet wc meet wich
perfeA (hadows among the wounded ghofts of Homer. Since CharoM in Luc/an applauds his condition among the dead, whether it be handsomely faid of Achilles^ that hvmg contemner of death, that he bad rather be a plowmansfervant then Emperour of the dead? HowHrra/Ze-jhisfoulis in bell, and yet in heaven, and JuIim his foul in a Star, yet feen by (v^</ in heil, except the Ghofts were but images and ftiadoves of the foul, received in higher manfions, according to the ancient divifion of body, louj, and image or fmuUchrhmoilh^m both. The particulars of future beings muft needs be dark unto ancient Theories, which Chriftian Phiiofophy yet determines but in a Clcud of Opinions. A Dialogue between two Infants in the womb concerning the ftate of this world, might handfomlyilluftrate our ignorance of the next, whereof methinks we yet difcourfe in PUtoes den, and are but Embryon Philofophers. Pythagoras efcapcs in the fabulculs hell of Vante (a), among that ^*'^''/""fwarm of Philofophers, wherein whileft we meet with PUto and Socra- * " tes, Cato'is to be found in no lower place then purgatory. Among all all the kt^Epicurfts is moft confiderable, whom men make honeft without an /;i/;/w, who contemned life without encouragement of immortality, and making nothing after death, yet made nothing of the
'
Kingof terrours.
felicities
VVer the happincffe of next world as clofely apprehended as the of this, itwereamartyrdome*to live; and unto fuch as confidcrnone hereafter, it muft be more then death to die, which makes us amazed at thole audacities, thatdurft be nothing,and return into their Chaos again. Certainly fuch fpirits as could contemn death, when they expeded no better being after, would have fcorned to live had they known any. And therefore we applaud not the judgement of Ma* chiavely that Chriftianity makes men cowards , or that with the confidence of but half dying, the difpifedvertues of patience& humility ,havc abafcd the fpirits of men, which Pagan principles exalted, but rather regulated the wildneKfe of audacities, in the attempts, grounds, and cternal fequels of death, wherein men of the boldeft fpirits are often prodigioufly temerarious. Nor can we extenuate valour of ancient Martyrs, who contemned death in the uncomfortable fcene of their lives, and in their decrepit Martyrdomes did probably lofe not many moneths of their dayes, or parted with life when it was fcarce worth the living. For (befide that longtime paft holds noconfidcfation unto a flendertime tocomej they had no fmall difadvantage from the conftitution of old, age, which naturally makes men fearful; And complexionally fuperannuatcd from the bold and couragious thoughts of youth and fervent years. But the contempt of death from corporal animofity, promotethnot our klkity. They may let in the Orchefira^
and
^^
fire,
Jlydriotaphia^
atid tiobleft Scats
Urne-BuridU
fliaking
hands
in the
Mean while
deep in Dante*s
hell,
wherin
wc
meet
which denied their immortalities. But whether the virtuoushcathcn, who lived better then he (pake, or erring in the princif^esofhimfelf, yet lived above Philolophers of more Speat leaft fo low as not to cious Maximes, lie fo deepas he is placed rife againft Chriftians, who beleeving or knowing that truth, have lallingly denied it in their pradife and couverfation, were a quarry too fad
j
to
infill
on.
But allormoftapprehenfionsrefted in Opinions of foaie future being, which ignorantly or coldly beleeved, beget thofe perverted conceptions. Ceremonies, Sayings, which Chriftians pity or laugh at. Happy are they, which live not in that diladvancage of time, when men could fay little for futurity, but from reafon. Whereby the nobleft mindesfcll often upon doubful deaths, and melancholly Diffolutions ; Withthefe hopes Socrates warmed his doubtful fpirits, againft that cold potion, and ^<a;^o before he durfl give the fatal ftroak, Tpentpart of thenight in reading the immortality oi Plato ^ thereby confirming his wavering hand unto the animofity of that attempt.
It is
him he
at
come,unto which this Without this accompliOiment ttte natural expedation and dcfirc of fuch a ftate, were but a fallacy in nature, unfatisfied Confidcrators; would quarrel the; uftice ofcheir conlHcucions, and relt content that Adam had fallen lower, whereby by knowing no other Original, and deeper ignorance of themfdves, they might have enjoyed the happineffe of
inferiour Creatures
throw at a man, to tell is no further ftate to feemcs progreflional,and otherwife made in vain;
who
in tranquillity
having not the apprehenfion to deplore their own natures, And being franica below the circumference of thefe hopes, or cognition of better being, the wifdom of God hath necellitated their contentment: But the fupericur ingredient and obfcured part of our felves, whereunto
all
tell
prefent felicities afford norefting contentment, will be able at laft to us we are more then our prelent felves ; and evacuate luch hopes in
own
accomplifhments.
CHAP.
ffjdrt'aifhi4i Uriu-Suntti,
gr
CHAP.
V.
NOw
iay,
(ince chefe
of clay,
out worn all the ftrong and fpecious buildings above it; and quietly refted under the drums and tramplings of three conquefts; What Prince can promife fuch diuturnity unto his Reliquesi or might not gladly
*
Tibul-.
Time which
to be known by open and vifible confcrvatories, when to be unknown was the means oftheir continuation and obfcurity their protcdion
:
OracuU
^*''^*^'''f
If they dyed byvipfenthands, and were thruft into their Urnes,thefe ^/"^^/^^'" bones become confidcrable, and fome old Philofophers would honour /htthms. (4) them, whofe foulcs they conceived moft pure, which were thus b/w Amyfnatched from their bodies; and to retain a ftranger propenfion unto 7r <mfM them : whereas they weariedly left a languiihing corps, and with fiint 'i^'^^n^' defires of re-union. If they fell by long and aged decay, yet wrapt j^/^o^J]^^*'* up in the bundle of time, they fell into indiftindion, and make but one relinqxtnblot with infants. If we begin to die when we live, and long life be but "'" ""Jf^ a prolongation of death; our life is a fad compofition; we live with f'""^/^'** death, and die not in a moment. How many pulfes made upthelifcof p^j"^g*^Q MethnfeUh^vjcvQ woriifor Archimedes'. Common (Counters {\xmuip Afefet. the life olM'fes his name Qf). Our dayes become confiderable hke pet- ' Accordty lumsby minute accunnilations; where numerous fraftiojis make up '"8 5'*"* but fmall round numbers j and our dayes of a fpan long make not rithmerick one little finger (f). of the hind
lafl neceffity, brought a nearer conformi- wherein there were a happineffe in hoary hairs, and no calamity inl"^^'"^* half (enfes. But the long habit of living indifpofcth us for dying thc^"-^t When Avarice makes us the fport of death ; When Vnind. grew po bandconlitickly cruel ; lud Solomon q.o\M hardly be faid to be the wifeft of tra<ficd,figmen. But many arc to early old, and before the date of age. Adver jJ'^^^^^J fity ftretcheth our dayes, mifcry makes* z/flcmenas nights, and time ^^"^-^^ -^ hath no wings unto it. But the moft tc3iou$ being is that which c^t) Hieroglyph. nn wifh it felf, content to be nothing, or never to have been, which was * One
ty unto
his nativity;
;
beyond the w</f- content of Jc^, whocurfed not the day of his life, but J"ghf Content to have fo far been, as to have a title tofu- jj"|^" ture being Although he had lived here but in an hidden ilate of life, and as it were an abortion.
5
Wh^
Hjdrtotaphla^ Uyne-Buriaf,
fang, or what name Achilles aflumed when women, though puzhng queftions are not be-
onsofTi-
yond
creel
,
bcrm unto
^''"""Jj/
all conjefture. What time the persons of thefe Offuarics eqthe faiflous Nations of the dead, and flept with Princes and Coub-
might admit a wide folution. But who were the proprietaries of thefc 6oncs, or what bodies tbcfe aflies made up, were a queftion above Anciquarifm. Not to be refolved by man, nor ealily perhaps by Kkv]aU^ fpirits,excepc we confult the Provincial Guardians^ or tutelary ob'Jl'"'-''f*''lervators. Had they made as good provifion for their names, as they have done for their Rcliques, they had not fo grofly erred m the arc a^* of perpetuation. Bu! to lubfift in bones, and be but Pyramidally extant^ is a fallacy in duration. Vain aflies, which m the oblivion of names,perfons, times, and fexes,have found unto themfeives, a fruitlefle continuation, and onely arife unto late pofterity, as Emblemes ot mortal vanities i Antidotes againd pride, vamglory, and madding vices. Paj^ara. vainglories which thought the world might lad for ever, had encouragement for ambition, and finding on Atropos unto the itrimortality of their nimes, were never dampt with the nccefilty of oblivion Even old ambitions had thcadvantage of ours, in the attempts "f their vain-gloiies, who ading early, and before the probable Meiidianof time, have by this time found great accomplithraerrt of their defignes, whereby the ancient Heroes have already ou'.laifed their Monuments,, and Mechanical prefervations. But in this latter Scene of time we can* not exped fuch Mummies unto our memor es, when ambition may M^'^'^^ ^^^^ ^^^ Prophecy of EUas f(?), and Charles the lift cannevcr hopeto Ia?/biic^1ix live within two (Jl'Cethnfeli'f o\ Heot0r(f), thoufani years. And therefore reftleffe inquietude for the diuturnity of our memories. JHeftors urito prelent confiderations,. ftemes a vanitv almoff out of date, and famclaltcannot hope to live foiong in our fupgrannuated peece of folly. one face of fmns holds no their have done in perfons. fome names, as of two lives
fellors,
We
proportion to the other. 'I'u to lace to be ambitious. The great muof the world are aded, or time may be too (tort for our de^mous firtnes. To extend our memories by Monuments, whofe death wcPrinc* was ,o > r u -u dayly pray for, and whofe duration we cannot nope, without injury to ftxiant.
Methufilab^
ourexpeftacions, in thcadvent of ihelalt day, were a contradi<5tion towh()fe getierations are ordained in this fetting part of our beliefs. time, arc providentially taken off trom fueb imaginations. And being
We
Bituted unto thoughts ofthenext world and cannot excufably decline the confidcration of that duration, which raaketh Pyramids pillars of
fnow, and
all that's
palf a
moment.
all
The chjraftcr
ofdwh.
lined'Circle {g) muff conclu:ie and (hut up all. There is no antidote againft the Opium of time, which temporally co^fidereth all things. Our fathers findc their graves in our fhort memories, and fadly tell
us
Hy^riotaphldy Urne-Burtal,
77
ttshowwemay be
buried in our Survivors. Grave- (lones teH truth palTc while (bme trees ftand.andjold * ycersC^).Gcnerations fourty fcarce ^Jj* J" I^amilies laft not three Oakes. To be read by bare infcriptions like ma- ken"up,and n^'\wGrHter{i),x.oho\^^ for Eternity by itnigmaticai Epithetes, or other boby Antiquaries, who we were, die* laid firft letters of our names,tobeftudied
and have new Names given us like ra'any of the Mummies, are cold "q'J^[,|^/JII " confolations unto the Students of perpetuity, even by everlaftingy-,,Jp,//
jLanguages.
Antima.
To be content that
a man, not caring
bicionin C^rd^n(kS)
come fliould onely know there was fuch whether they knew more of him, was a frigid amtimes to
mentot
c&///^j
himfelf,
who
dilparaging hishorofcopalindination and judge- ^Oiptrem cares to inh\^\\\s.t Hrppcrates Patients, or J.notumeHc
^
Wow^r, under naked nocninations, without deferts and ^^"^^^^^^^ noble ads, which arc the balfameof our memories, the Entelechi^ and fc"am quafoul of our fubfiftences. To he nameleffc in worthy deeds exceeds a W;/ fm. infamous hiftory. The Camanitt/h womanlives more happily without Cird.wvwd
horles in
^'''^''^''*
the good theef, then Ptl^te ? But the iniquity cf obivion blindly fcattereth her poppy, and deals with the memory of men without diftindion to merit of perpetuity.
Herofiratus lives
cliac
burnt the Temple of Diana^ he is almoft loft that built it; Time hath fpared the Epitaph of v^^r/-^j horfe, confounded that of hirofelf. In vain we compute or felicities by the advantage of our good names, fince bad have equal durations J and Therfites is \\kt to live as long as Agamemnon^ without the fav^our of the everlafting Regifter Who knows whether thebeft of men be known ? or whether there be not more remarkable perfons forgot, then any that fland remembi;cd in the known account of time ? the firfV man had been as unknowrt as the laft, and Af^j/j^/f/^mlcng life had been his only Chronicle. Oblivion is not to be hired: The greater part muft be content to be as though they had not been, to be found in the regifter of God^not in the record of man. Twenty feven names make up the firft ftory, and the recorded names ever fince contain not one living Century. The number of the de^d long exceedeth all that (hall live. The night of time far furpafteth the day,and who knows when was the Equinox? Every houre addes unto that current Arithmetique, which fcarce ftands one moment. And fince death rauft be the Lucina of life, and even Pagans could doubt whether thus to live, were to die. Since our longeft S\m fetsat right defcenfions, and m^lies but winter arches, and thereforeitcannot belong before we lie down in darknefTe, and have our light in afties. Since the brother of death daily haunts us with dying memento* sy and time that grows old it felf, bids us hope no long duration- Diuturnity is a dream and folly of expedation. DarknefTe and light divide the coutfe of time, and oblivion ihares with 5
D2
23
Hydriotaphia^ Urne'BurUll
with memory, a great part even of our living beings; we flightly remember our felicicics, and the fmarteft ftroaks of affliftion leave but ftiort fnnartupon us. Senfe endureth no extremities, and forrowsdeftroy us
or themfelves. To weep into flones are fables. Afflidions induce calofities, miferiesarc flippery, orfall likefnow upon us, vnrhich
notwithftanding
is
no ftnpidicy
is
To be ignorant of
evils to
digeft the mixture ofour few and evil dayes, and our delivered lenfcs not relapfing into cutting remembrances, our forrows are not kept raw by the edge of repetitions. A great part of Antiquity contented their hopes of lubfiftency with a tranfmigration of their fouls. A good way ta continue their memories, while having the advantage of plural fucceflions, they could not but aft fomething remarkable in fuch variety of beings, and enjoyning the fame of their paffed felves, make acGumullation of glory unto their laft durations, others rather then be loft in the uncomfortable night of nothing, were content to recede into the common being, and make one particle of the publick foul of all things, which was no more then to return into their unknown and divine Original again. Egyptian ingenuity was more unfatisfied, con-
* OffWM wB;t^j4-
of their was vanity, feeding * the winde, and folly. The iEyptijj^ Mummies, which Ow^//"^/ or time hathfpared, avarice nowconfuni^th. Mummie is^ become Merchaiidife, i^/x.r4;>w cures wounds, and vniJiMAvifiif, iSoo-jcH* Tharaoh is fold for balfams. af t oUm In vain do individuals hope for immortality, or any patent from oAqHila& blivion, in prefervations below the Moon: Men have been deceived even in their flatteries above the Sun, and fludicd conceits to perpeV. Druf. tuatc their names in heaven. The various Cofmography of that part Eccltf. hath already varied the names of contrived conflellations ; Nintrod is loft inOr/o^, and Oj/r?/ in the Doggc-ftar. Whili we look for incorruptioa in the heavens, we finde they are but like the Earth; Durable in their main bodies, alterable in their parts whereof tcfide Comets
triving their bodies in fweet confiftences, to attend the return
fouls.
But
all
and new Stars, pcrfpeftives begin to tell tales. And the fpots th^t wander about the Sun, with Fbaetons favour, would make dear conviftion.
There is nothing ftri^ly immortal, but immortality ; whatever hath no beginning may be confident of no end. All others have a dependent bting, and within the reach of deftruftion, which is the peculiar
of that neccflary effence that cannot deftroy it felf j And thehigheft ofomnipotency to be fopowerfuiy conllituted, as not to fuffer even from the power ofit felf. But the fufficicncy of Chriftian Immortality fruftrates all earthly glory, and the quality of either ftate after death makes a folly ofpoithumous memory. God who can onely deftroy our fouls, and hath afTured our refurrcftion, cither of our bodies
firain
ornames hath
direflly promifcd
no
duration.
Wherein
there
is
fo
much
''
much
unhappy
frufi-a-
ricn; and to hold long fubfiftenccjlcems but a fcape in oblivion. But man is a noble Animal, fplendid in aflies, and pompous in the grave,
Deaths with equal luftre, nor oraittft)g Ceremonies of bravery, in the infamy of his nature. Life is a pure flame, and we live by an invifible Sun within us. fmall fire fufficcth for life, great flames feemed too little after deatH, while men vainly aflfedcd precious pyres, and burn like Sardaapalftf, but the wifdom of funeral Laws found the folly of prodigal blazes, and reduced undoing fires, unto the rule of fobcr obfequics, wherein few could be fo mean as not to provide wood, pitch, a mourner, and an
iblemnizing Nativities and
llrnc.
Five Languages fecured not the Epitaph of Gordianits ; The man of by one, invifibly interred by Angels, and adjudged to obfcurity, though not without forae marks direding humane difcovcry. Enoch and Elias without either tomb or burial, in an anomalous (late of being.are the great examples of perpetuity, in their long and living memory, in ftrift account being ftill on this Hde death, and having a late part yet to zd: upon this {^ay of earth. If in the decretory term of the world we (hall not ail die but be changed, according to received tranflation 5 thelaft day will make but few graves; at leaft quick Refurreiflions will ancicipatc lafling Se*pultures ; i'ome graves will be opened before they be quire clofed, and Laz^arnshtnovion^tT. When many that feared to die (hall groan that they can die but once, the dilmal (late is the fecond and liv ing death, when life puts defpair on the damned ; when men (hall wi(h the coverings of Mountains, not of Monuments,^ and annihilation (hall be cour-
ted.
have (ludied Monuments, others have ftudiouHy deand f^rne have been fo vainly boifterousj'^that they darft not acknowledge their Graves;wherein(^) Alaricftsictms moft fubtle? who hada Rever turned to hide his bonesat thebottome.|Even5;//^ ''J^rAwn^tr that thought himfelf fafe in his Ur-nc, could not prevent revenging ^5 r**"' ^'' tongaes , and (tones thrown at his Monument* Happy are they"**' whom privacy makes innocent, v;ho deal (o with men in this world, that they are not afraid to meet them in the next, who when they die, make no commctlon among the dead,and are not toucht with that poeforae
;
While
clined them
ticall
taunt ot ;/rfVi^(c).
P)ramidsj Arches^ Obellsl^, were but the irregularities of vain^glory, and wiide enormities of ancient magnanimity. But the moft magnanimous refolution rcfrs in the Chriftian Religion, which trampleth upon
piide,
<j
^**^
and fetson the neck of ambition, humbly puriuing that infallible Argulugt perperuity,unto which all others muftdimini(h their diameters and bQ cmingen* '''^' ^^c poorly feen in Angles of contcngenty (d),
Pious
fpirits
who
of
'
more
'
3[0
HjdnotaphlAy Urne-Bariah
more of this world, then the world that was before it, while they fay obfcure in the Chaos of preordinacion, and night of the ir fore- beings. And if any have been fo happy as trucly to underftand Chriftian annihilation, extafis, exolution, liquefadion, trans foroiation, the kiffe of the ^poule, guftation of God, and ingreffion into the divine ibadow, they have already had an handfome anticipation of heaven j the glory of the world is fiireiy over, and the earth in aflhcs unto
them.
lading Monuments, to live in their produftions, to exift'in their names,and praedicamemt of Chimera s, was large fatisfadion unto old expedations and made one part of their Ely z,iftms. But all this is nothing in the Metaphyficks of true behef. To live indeed is to be again our felves, which being not onely an hope but an evidence in noin
I
To fubfift
In Paris
confome.
f
; 'lis all one to lie in St. Innocents ff) Church yard, as in the Sands of zyj^7pt : Ready to be any thing, in the extafie of being cvcr, and as content with fixioot as the Mokso Ad ianus (/).
ble beleevers
A ftately
Admms
in
Lucan
THE
-QuiX QuJTLcun.cejyectofius,autjift.
eft
.-
QjuntiUaJV: //
GARDEN
OF
THE
CYRU
OR THE
OR
S.
QillNCUNCIAL LOZENGE,
Nct work Plamtations of the Ancients, Artificially
Naturally, Myftically Confidered.
'
By Thomas "Brown D.
ofPhyfiek.
<r%
31
THE GARDEN OF
OR,
Cyrus
callyconfjdered.
CHAP.
I.
fourth day after their Nativities, according to Gen -. tile Theology, may paffe for no blindc apprebenfi-
on of the Creation of the Sun and Moon, in the work of the fourth day ; When the diffufed light contrafted into Orbes, and (hooting rayes,
from Pagan pens, of the creatures of the fourth day
of thofe luminaries. Plainer Defcriptions there are j While the (a) '* divine Philofopher unhappily omitteth the nobleft part of the thirdiand ' ^/''^^ Ovid (whom many conceive to have borrowed his defcription from^'"'**'Mofes) coldly deferting the remarkable account of the text, in three ''*' words ^, defcribeth this work of the third day ; the vegetable creation, ^JH] of the primitive Scene nature foodof animals,and j^oLsimiy ; and firft ornamental
fif il
in opening of Phyfick, in Dietetical confervation. ?^*may pleade high, from medicall the ad Phyfick of though God, For ^}f incaftingfodc^epafleep upon our firft Parent; And Chirurgery (c) \^'^^^^J' findeits whole art, in that one paffage concerning the Rib of ^^^w, out the rib. yet is there no rivality with Garden contrivance and Harbery Forifovv^&JCT* in ^Jofing up Paradife were planted the third day of the Creation^ as wifer divinity ; ^ ^^^ concludcth, the Nativity thereof was too early for Horofcopic a Gardens were before Gardiners, and but fome hours after the earth* For feme Of deeper doubt is its Topography, and locall defignation, yet be- thfrc i$ ingthe primitive garden, and without much {d) controvcrfie feared in ^'"^jj. '^5
ftory
'
the Ea{t
plants,
firft
itis
and
cultivation of
moft
fincethe Ark of Noah Mjf^fdem, mountains of ^rmeniay the planting art arofe whether d^
its
And
^^^^^]^
E:>
pmcijlto.
5^
its
CyraS-gardenyOtthe^if^ufOC^,
Nativicy, about the pUines oi chofe Regions.
And
ii
Zofdajfer vidit
either
Pltny deh7creth)a work However the account of the Penfil or hanging gardens of B^.^yhfr, if made by SemirAmisythe third or fourth from Nr.mod^ is of no (len-
early
der antiquity ; which being not framed upon ordinary Jcvel of ground, but raifed upon pillars admitting under-paflages, we cannot accept as the firft B,iby Ionian Gardens; butaoicie eminent progrefsand advancement in that art, then any that went before it : Somewhat anfwering or hinting the old Opinion concerning Paradife it felf, with
many conceptions
elevated above the plane of the Earth. iV^-^^rWc^/^^flrjWhorafomewilUave to be the famous Syrian ^ing
gion about it, he found no circumlcription to the eye of his ambition, till over delighted with ihe bravery of this Paradife; in his melancholy metamorpholis, he found the folly of that delight,and a proper punifhment, in the contrary habitation, in wilde pUiitations and wandrings
of the
fields.
The Terfian Gallants who deftroyed this Monarchy,maintained their Botanical! bravery. Unto whom we owe the very name of Paradife : wherewith we meet not in Scripture before the time of Solome, and conceived originally Per pan. The word for that difputcd Garden, cxprefling in rbe Hebrew no more then a Field endofed, which from
the fame root is content co derive a garden and a Buckler. ^;Krx the elder brought up in woods and Mountain?, when time and
puifiied the diftate of his education, and brought the treafiires of the field into rule and circnm-fcription, So nobly beautifying the hanging Gardens oiBabjton, that he wasalfo thought to be the author thereof. Ahajuertis ( whom many conceive to have been ArtAxerxes Longi'
power enabled,
mnnHs) in the (h) Countrey and City of Flowers, and in an open Gar'"den, entertained his Princes and people, while Vafthi more modeftly \ZT. plmmh treated the Ladies within the Palace thereof. But if vas fome opinion) King Ahitftterur were Artdxerxes <J^Tnemon in the life
.
ofArtaxerxM.
life and reign anfwerable unto his great memory ,our magwas his (econd brother who gave the occafion of that perfon memorable work, and almoft mirtculous retrait ofXemphoK. ofhigh fpiritand honour, naturally a King, though fatally prevented by the harmlefle chance of /?/?-genirurc i Not onely a Lord of Gardens,
that found a
nified (r;r/
but a manual planter thereof difpofing his trees like his armies in regular ordinaliiwi. So that whik old L^ertas hath found a name in Homer for pruning hedges, and clearing away thorns and briars; while King AttalHsiiv^blot his poyfonous plantations of /^f<w, Hen
bane, Hellebore, and plants hardly admiccedwi chin the wals of ParaWhile many of the Ancients do poorly live in the fingic names dife
I
of Vegetables
gular planter.
^M
.Vtii
*'
'.i
.
,
According whereto
SArdfs,\.\ms rendered
reSlos ordirteSy
(hall take for
T<?t|>^^j< defcribeth
his gallant
plantation at
JRrnfl;ft
by
Strehitns.
omnia per^ulchre in ^uincuncem diretta* Which we "y a^*/ granted as being accord! ^gly rendered by themoft t\t- srirv J^7e gant ofthef/) Latines ^and bynomade term, but in ufe before by 7rE^u7su^Varro* That is, the rowes and orders fo handlomcly difpofed; or five ^'*' "/ ^"^ ^ trees fo feet together, that a regular angularity, and through profped, ^ ~^^*^" was left on every fide 0*ving this name not onely unto the quintuple j^fav,iv^ number of Trees, but the figure declaring that number, which being -^^vj* doubted at the angle, makes up the Letter x , that is the Emphatical "^J^"' '^' decuflation, Of fundamental figure. ^cicero ia though in (ome ancient and modern pradice the area or de- c*t. Mdjor. cuflated plot,might be a perfed fquare,3nfwerable to a Tufcan Pedefialy and the ^^;;?^e^'w<7 or Cinque-point of a die; wherein by Diagonal lines the interfedion was reguUr;accommodable unto Plantations of large growing Trees; and we muft not denic our felves the advantage of this order; yet (hall we chiefly mfift upon that of {) Cur- zBentdiS tifts ind Tort a, in their brief delcription hereof. Wherein the ^<r//;/ Qurms de ^onis-Bap. is made within a longilateral fquate, with opofite angels acute and obtufe at theintcrfedion ;and foupon progreffion making RhombHS or ^JJ/zJ*"
&
Now
Lozenge
figure;
which feeraeth very agreeable unto the Original whereunto we obferve the decuflfated charadersin many confulary coynes,and even in thofe of Conflatttine and his Sons , which pretend their pattern in the Sky ; the crucigerousEnfiguration,
Anfwerable
but
Andrem or BnrgHndian
crofs,
decline the old Theme, fo traced by anand crucifixion; Whereof (ome being right,and of one finglepeece without traverfion ortranfome, do little advantage our fubjed. iVor (hall we take in the myftical T^^w, or the CrofTe of our blcffe Saviour, w hich having in fome defcriptions an Empedon or crofiing foot ftay, made not one fingle tranfverfion. And fince the Learned Lip hs huh made fome doubt even of the cro(re oi St. Andrew ^ fince fome Martyrological Hiftories deliver his death by the general Name of a croffe, and HippsUtus w'\\\ have him fufftr by thefword; we (hould have enough to make out the received erode of that Martyr. Nor (hall we urge the labariimtznd famous Standard of ^^'^^'*^" tof
Whereby
the
way we (hall
tiquity of trofles
ft
tiMe^
or make further u(e thereof, then as the firft letters in the Name of our Saviour Chrift, in ufe among Chriftians,before the daycs of Cowin {a) Sepulchral
.w
'
,^^
Alesuti'
(icr,B^oma
ftanmcy to be obferved
Monuments of Martyrs,in
the SmemnfM,
Reign
5^
CjTuS^GArden^ ortheQuincutMl
Relgb of Adrian, and AntoninHs ; and to be found in the Alitiqui'ties oftheGentiIes,before the advent of Chrift, as in the Medal of King ftohmj^ (igned with the fame charaders, and might be the beginning of fome word or name^which Antiquacies have not hit on. will not revive the myftcriouscrofles of t/dE/^^f, with circles on their heads, in the breaft ofSerapisy and the hands of their Genial Ipirits, not unlike the charadier of FefiHs,iad looked on by ancient Chriftians, with relation unto Chrift. Since however they firft began, the igyptians thereby expreffcd theprocefle and motion of the fpiritof the world, and the diflufion thereof upon the Celeftiai and elemental nature ; implyed by a circle and nght-iincd interfedion. fecret in their Tclelmes and magical CharaAcrs among them. Though he that confidercth the (h) plain croflc upon the head of the Owl in the Late-
We
^e^ow
part'
is
erc^ed upon a pitcher diffufing ftreams fprinkling with to bafins, branches in them, and all deinto water of
fcribed
fftpaewhat
upon
two footed
:
longer, at
Table of Bembns
^^J^^^^'yinthem.
fiudiomiti'
We fliall not call in the Hebrew Teuapha, or ceremony of their Obwaved by the
;
taritinijo^ lations,
*4nwi
unto the four quarters of the world, after And if it were clearly '"^^^^ "^ ^^*^ '^ remarkably delivered from the Traditions of the Rabcm cm"* mnt.cUriff.^^^^'i that as the Oyle was powrcd coronallyor circularly upon the i^ doSiff. head of Kings, fo the High-Pr left was anointed decuffatively or in the ^iS^y form of aX J though it could notefcapea typical thought of Chrift, from myftical confiderators; yet being the conceit is Hebrew, we
prieft
rf
as in the peace-offerings.
*iCtii
Bo/fofJ74
trionfante
erne.
its. verification from Analogy in that language, then to confine the fame unto the unconcerned Letters, of GreeccyQr make it out by the charaders oi Cadmus or Palamedes.
Of. this Quincancial Ordination the Aqcicnts pi:aAifed,muchdif*hfi^cHn^ Smic|rr-CO"rfcd Uttle; and the Moderns have nothing enlarged; which he msMmcm- that more nearly confidereth^ in the form of its fquare RhombHs^ and
fftUHmpr^T decuffation, with the feveral commodities, myfteries, paralielirmc{,,and
Af^'lJ^U *
*
'
of
this order.
Thatthiswasinforaewayes of
no flender Antiquity. In the banging Gardens oi Btuhylonjtom A'ojdennSy Ettfehius, and others, {d) Curtim defcribeth this rule of decpfifation. In the memorable Garden p , J'/^'^Ij^^ofyf /<>#/</ anciently conceived an original phancy,frora Paradife,menxr,^7wK tion there is of well contrived order; For lo hath Didymt^s and EhpVf,n i?<ic/(K/*/expounded the emphatical word. Viomed^s dtkvibmg the Ru*^* '^^'' rail polfions of bjs Father, gives account in the fame Language of Trees being a boy was prom i fed by his father Pha^o/inus orderly planted. And V.ij/lfes'
ons) hints or deliveries there are from
ffl^iloxcimsfourty Fig-,trees,andiifty(Orows
of vines producing
all
kind of.grap?s.
Thar-
Cjrut-Carden
w the Qjancun^]
fuch' order,'
3^
even
defcribing in open Plantations, isdeducibie from Thecphrafiits ; that dclivereth garments plainly their the trees whereof they made ,
who
they were planted mC\' o^X^j , and in fuch order that at a diftance men would miftalic them for Vineyards. The fame feems confirmed in
Creece komz Angular expreffion in (/) yfr//?^//^ concerning the order '"/f^^Af of Vints, delivered by a military term reprefenting the orders of Soul- *^P^'' ''*^* diers, which alfo confirmeth the antiquity of this form yet ufcd in vi- "
neal plantations.
That the fame was ufed in Latine plantations is plainly confirmed from the commending pen oiFanot ^ttintiliaKt and handfome Defcri. J. ption of 1.'^) Virgil. That the firft Plantations not long after the Floud were difpofcd af- rfiSf'nw
manner, the generality and antiquity of this order obierved in ficm mni$ Vineyards, and Wine Plantations , afFordeth fome conjefture. And ^ /^ii fince from judicious enquiry , Sat/t)e who divided the world between ^]?J"?2 bis three (lones, who bcareth a Sickle in his hand, who taught the^^-g^-ff" Plantations of Vines, thefetting, grafting of trees , and the beft part ^M^frrt. pf Agriculture, isdilcovered to hcNoah^ whether this early dilperfed Georg.i. Husbandry in Vineyards , had not its Original in that Patriarch , is no fuch Paralogical doubt. .v,\'r And if it were clear that this was ufed by iV7o4i& after the Floud, I
ter this
it ;
Not willing
ent inventions no higher original then Noah ; Nor readily conceiving thofe aged Heroes, whofe diet was vegetable, and onely , or chiefly confifted in the fruits of the eartb, were much deficient in their fplendid
cultivations
;
left
much
fwaded that Wine was the invention of Noah, that fermented Liquors, which often make themfclves, fo long cfcaped their Luxury or experience; that the firft fin of the new world was no fin of the ojd. That Cain and j4l>el were the firft that offered Sacrifice V '6'r bci-; caufe the 5ctipcarc is filent that Adam or Ifaac offered none iat
all..
,
...
Whether e/fhahamhrou^t up in the firft pla^ting,C.ountrey,.obferved not fc^mc rule hereof, when he planted a grove at Beer-jheba ; or whetheratleaftalike ordination were not in the Garden of Solomon, probability may conteft Anfwer ably unto the wifdom of that cmi-.
.
.
nentBotan61ogcr,ahd orderly difpofer Of alt his other. works. Efpcci^llyXmcetl^is was one pecce of Gallantry jwhercin he purfued the fpccious part of felicity, according tohisowndefcription. I made me^g.jjf. Gardens and Orchards, and planted Trees in them of all kindes of fruit. 1 made me Pools of water, to water therev*/ith the wop^ that bungcth f6!th Trees, vO'hjch was rio'ordinary plant4tidri, if acc6r4|0jg CO the Tar^umy otthaldee' ParMrafe^ it containcdillkindcs of Plaints,
mR-
46
C;jruUGarder>i
and fomc fetched as far as 7</^ ; And the extent thereof were from the wall of 7^rpi/^; unto the water ofSiioah* And iUordan were but Jmt EdeM^thtt is,thc River o^Sden^ Genefar but Ganfar or the prince of Gardens jand it could be made out, thit the Plain ofjordaMwcrc waterednot comparativeIy,but caufally,and becaufe
@od, as the learned (a) aAbramas hinteth, he from the Prototype and originall of Plantations. And fincc ^^'^^ even in Paradife it fclf, the tree of knowledge was placed in the middle ofthe Garden, what ever was the ambient figure; there wanted not a centre and rule of deculTation. Whether the groves and facred Plantations of Antiquity, were not thus orderly placed, either by <]ua ternio's^ or quintuple ordinations, may favourably be doubted. For fince they werefo methodical in the conftitutions of their temples, as to obf^rve the due fcituation, afped, manner, form, and order in Architedonical relations, whether they were not as diftind in their groves and Plantations about them, inform and /pedes refpedively unto their Deities, is not without probability of conjedure. And in their groves of the yun this was a fit number, by multiplication to denote the d which* Kingi9uiHg dayes of the year ; and might Hieroglyphically fpeik as much, as the fet up with rtipiichl Statua of(d) JdnHs in the Language of his fingers. And fincc fo critical in the number of his horfes, the firings of his were ^^^y fo^difpofed
^f^fi.ytftM- it
was
the Paradife of
meiiti
Harp, and rayes about his head, denoting the orbes of heaven, the 5eathat they numerical- fons and Moncth* of the Ycarcj witty Idolatry would hardly be flat ly denoted in other appropriations.
*;'^fr
l
~'t
"
fi
:rt-;-.riftAt-.
" -'
C HA
P. II.
NOr was
all
this
imitation
only a form of pradife in Plantations, 'feat found from high Antiquity, in fundry artificial contrivances
flones,
j
cw
and'
neatmot weagmfe
in the walls
the lithofiata or figured pavements of the ancients, which confifted not of fquare ftorreSj'but were divided into triquetrous fegmeiit5,honeycombsjand lexangular figures,accordipg to F'itriivifisjXhc fquared flones
anj
were placed;
after tDi5^pr4^r;,And
^or;. Tf.intht*sx
twp
bireijvable
iSTf rz/^, the MAuftleum of A%^/.y the I^yramidoftf/?'//, and the (cul^turc- draughts of the larger Pyrarhidsof
'
'
jEgvpt-
And therefore in
commonly
it^
of fci^Jf^'l^ure.aud.'plftijt^, thq ,k;w.es^pd foliafa ifc^ki/Me'cpaimpniv thus cQntrivVt whleli'is put in imitation gf the
^In, c^e taureac (ir^u||^ts
columns,
of aflru. and altars. To omit other analogies, in ArchiteAo^"^* as ^^^ it having nical draughts, which art felf is founded upon (^) fives, its graceful divided number. pceces fubjcft, and xnoft by this Vmmmm*
fvtuYy Comfurt'im, uHum, Leo. Alberti. Five Columcs, Ti//c<i, Dorick^f lonicki CoTimbian^ Cmpomd. Fire different intcrcolumniations, F;cnfij/los, dyftylos^Sy^yksj Artsfijilosj Eujl^ks
Vitru.
The Triumphal Oval, and Civicall Crowns of Laurel, Oake, and And to oMyrtle, when fully made, were pleated after this order. mit the Croffed Crowns of Chriftian Princes; what figure that was which (/^^/-!tf//dercribed upon the head of I'fo the third ; or who firft brought in the Arched Crownj That of Charles the great, f which feeras the firft remarkably clofed Crown, ) was framed afcer this '*^" ^"^ fc) manner ; with an interfeftion in the middle from the main croflirg barres, and the mterfpaces. unto the frontal circle, continued by hand-^^^^^/ '^
fome network-plates, much
infift,
Whereon we
we meet with the radiated, and ftarry Crown, upon the head of ^^^ ^/''*'^^'^ Since the Armenians and Par- str'ad*. gfiflusy and many fucceeding Emperors. thians had a peculiar royall Capp And the Grecians from Alexar,^ /^^r another kinde of diadem. And even Diadems themfelvcs' were
;
butfafciations, and handfome ligatures, about the heads of Princes ^ nor wholly omitted in the mitrall Crown, which common pidure feems to fet too upright and forward upon the head oi Aaron : Worne fometimes fingly, or doubly by Princes, according to their King- Macc.i.ir domes; and nomoreto beexpededfrom two Crowns at once, upon Dc tfrmi/ the head of Ptbmy. And fo eafily made out when hiftorians tell us, Scaccatis, mafcuUtis, fome bound up wounds, fome hanged themfelvcs with diadems. The beds of the antients were corded fomewhat after this fafhion.- ^fuflutis That is not diredly, as ours at prefent, but obliquely, from fide to vide spebn. fide, and after the manner of network ; whereby they ftrengthened -^fpHos*^'"" thefpondae orbedfides, and fpent lefscord in the work : as is demon-
&
^'^^J
'siiLeo'
And as
they lay
.-
legg'd feats
in
in crofTed beds, fo they fat upon feeming crofle- e Arijiot, which form thenoblefl thereof were framed Obfer- Mtchan,
;
the fel/a cnruHs^ or z/Eijle Chajres^ in J a fi^s. That they fat alfo crofTe legg'd
^*^'
many noble draughts declare; and in this figure the fitting gods and goddeffes are drawn in medalls and medallions. And befi dc this kinde of work in Reciarie and hanging tedures, in embroderies, and eminent needle-works ; the like is obvious unto every eye in glafs- windows. Nor onely in glallie contrivances, but alfo in Lattice and Stone-work, conceived in the Temple of Solomon ; wherein the"windows are tQimcd fcfjefira reticnlataj or lights framed like nets. And ^^'v''
5
agreeable
43
fflant.2.
CjrUi'(j Arden^Ot
agreeable unto the Greek exprelfion concerning Chrift in the(w) Cayitic/^j,looking through the nets, which ours hath rcndered,he looketh
forth at the windows, (hewing himfelfe through
his nature.
the laiteflfe ; that partly fecn and unfeen, according to the vifible and invifible fide
is,
of
To omit
pillars of Solomon , with Lillies, and Pomegranats upon a network ground ; and the CraucnU or grate through which the allies fell in the
That the networks and nets of antiquity were little different in the form from ours at prefent, is confirmable from the nets in the hands of
the Retiarie gladiators, the proper combatants with the fecutores. To omit the ancient Conopeion or gnatnet of the Egyptians, the inventors of that Artifice the rufliy labyrinths of Theocritm ; the nofegaynets, which hung froai the head under the noftrils of Princes and that uncafie metaphor of ReticulHm Jecoris, which fome expound
:
;,
the lobe, wethecaule above the liver. As for that famous network o^ Vulean^ which indokd Mars ^nd Venus, and caufed thatunextin^Aff^ipf^ guifhable laugh in heaven ; fince the gods themfelves could not difcern J^'rt^ erapalthough why Vulcan bound them, it, we fliall not prie|intoit ; 7V>pff loofed them, and v^^(7//tf (hould firft difcover them, might Hm!^^^* afford no vulgar my thologie. Heralds have not omitted this order or imitation thereof, whiles they 5ymbolIically adorn their Scuchions with MafclcSjFufils and Saltyrs, and while they dHpofed the figures of Ermins, and varied coats in this Quincuncial method. The fame is not forgot by Lapidaries while they cut their gemms pyramidally, or by aequicrural triangles. Perfpedive piftures, in their Bafe, horifofi, and lines of diftanccs,cannoi cfcape thefe Rhomboidall decuffations.
after this
order doe draw their double Haches. And the very Americans do naturally fall upon it, in their neat and curious textures, which is alfo But this is no law unto obferved in the elegant artifices o^ Europe. the wool of the neat %/tUrie Spider, which feems to weave without tranfverfion, and by the union of right lines to make out a continued furface, which is beyond the common art of Tcxtury, and may flili And he that fhall nettle ^(Jl'tinerva the goddeffe of that myftery. As in tbejiatch the little feeds, cither found in fmall webs, or white round contention Eggcs, carried under the bellies of fome Spiders, and behold how at their firfl produdiott in boxes, they will prefently fill the fame with Mnerva KidArdcb- their webbs, may obferve the early, and untaught finger of nature, "* and how they are natively provided with a ftock, fufficient for fuch
Texture.
The
was
Rurall charm againfl Vodder, Tetter^ and flrangling weeds, contrived after this order, while they placed a chalked file at the
four
^
CjruS-Gtirden , Or The
foar corners, and one in the middle of their fields, which though ridiculous in the intention) was rational in the contrivance, and a good
way to ditfafe the magick through all parts of the Area Somewhat after this manner they ordered the little ftones in the old game of Tentaltthifmus, or calling up five itoncs to catch them on the back of their hand. And with fome relcmblance hcreoG the Prod or
Prodigal Paramours difpofed their men,
Penelope, b j^ EuS)t
For being themfclves an hundred and eight, they fetfifty four ftones onchius, cither fide, and one in the middle, which they called Pf^^/cipf, which
he that
hit was Mafter of the game. In Chefre-boards and Tables we yet finde Pyramids and Squares, I wi(h we had their true and ancient defcription, far difierent from ours,.
ortheC^e?i.z^of the Pfr//<?j-, and might continue fome elegant remarkables, as being an invention as High as Hermes the ^-ecrerary of O- ^^'^^' ^ in the fyrisi figuring the whole world,the motion of the Planets, with Eclipfes difpcfure of Sun and Moon. Phyficians are not without the ufe ofthisdeculfation in Tevcral opegjons^^in the rations, in ligatures and union of diffolved cqntinuities. Mechanicks wars of make ufe hereof in forcipal Organs, and Inftruments of incifion;where the Repub-
infervienc to con-
''.'^^'f?*;f'?''^
and confolidation, union, and divifion, iiluftra- ^J,^ ^^''^'j^^J blefrom Ariftotle'm\.\\Q old Nucifragium or Nutcraker, and the In- Legion inftruments of Evulfion, comprcifion or incifion; which confiftingoftoten Cotwo /^t?^ or armes, converted towards each other, theinnitency and ^Z*""" by ftreffe being made upon the hjpomochlion or fulciment in the decuffaL^quJ^" tion, the greater compreflion is made by the union of two impul- ^j/^^y 'i
,
ends
folution
fors.
his
Epi-
The RomAtte (h) Bataiia was ordered after this manner, whereof as ^^ a fufficiently known Firgt/ hnh Icfc but an hint, and obfcure intimation ^^^^^^^^
For thus were the maniples and cohorts of the Haftiti^ Principes and de & Rc Triarti^hLZtA in their bodies, wherein confifted the ftrength of the miiitari Ro. manonim.
^
rTr.
.1
i:
UII2 Ezz:
RomAae battel,
frincipes,
''By this Ordination they readily fell into each otherjthe Haftati being prefled, handfomely retired into the intervals ofthc
of the
~
Jriarii^
which making as
'
it
were a
.
Fa
new
'
44
cPoljbtui
CpuUGAfden^
Afp'mus.
new body, might joyntly renew the battle, wherein confifted thefecref of their fuccefies. And therefore it was remarkably Cc) fingularinthe battle of^fhca^ that Sapio fearing a rout from the Elephants of the Enemy,left not the Primifesm their alternate diftances,whereby the Elephants pailing the vacuities of the H^/iF^f/,tnighchave run upon them, but drew his battle into right order, and leaving the paffages bare, defeated the mifchief intended
i"hcare
by the Elephants. Out of this figure were Battle, the C^ntus and Forceps^ or the
and wedge Battles, each made of half a Rb-orftbus^ and but diffe* fenced by pofition.The wedge invented to break or worke into a body, xht forceps to environ and defeat uhe power thereof oompofed ^ouc
!?
feledeft Souldery and dilpofed into the form of an V, wherein receiving the wedge, it indofediton both fides. After this Ammiamsi form the famous {d) Najfes ordered his battle againfl the Franks, and by this figure the Almans were enclofcdjand cut in peeces. The %hombHs or Lozenge figure fo vifible in this order, was alfo a remarkable form of battle in the Cyrrc/^;? () Cavalry, oblerved by the Thejfa/Uns, SLud Phi lip King of Maeedon^ and frequently by iht'Tarthians, as being moft ready to turn every way, andbeft to be commanded, as having its duftors,or Commanders at each Angle. IhtLMacedmiitn PhdaHx{z\ong time thought invincible) confifted ofalongfquarc For though they might be fixreen in rank and file, yet when they (hut clofe, fo that the fixt pike advanced before the iirftj though the number might bcfquare, the figure was oblong, anfwerable unto the Quincuncial quadrate ci Cvrtius. According to
Agtthius
of
cia.
s Stirs via
iimUe qua'
dret.
this fquarcThncjdides delivers, the Athenians difpofcd their battle againft the Lacedeme>tlaMs{f) brickwife, and by the fame word the Learned C?/^f///;^; expound eth the quadrat of ('^) ^y^//, after the form
com.
of a brick or
tile.
in<nt. i"i
Virgil,
and pofition of trees, fo was the firft habitation of men, not in round Cities, as of later foundation 5 Fortheform of Babylon the firft City was fquare, and ^o fhall alfo be the laft,
Andasthe
firftftatlon
according to the defcriprion of the holy City in the Apocalyps. Thc^ famous pillarsofi^fAfaeforethe flood, had alio the like foundation, if' they were hut arAidili^vUn Obelis^, and fuch as C^-^"^ and his Egyptian race, imitated after the F!oud
^C7W.
Sic.
But "N^m^/f// which Auchours acknowledge to have exceeded Balfy. wasofa(/')longiIateral figure,ninery five Furlongs broad, and an hundred and fifty tcng,and fo making about fixty miles in circuit,which
Ion,
isthemeafurc cfthrceday.es journey, according unto military marches, or caftrenfial manfioas. 5o that xi'^on.ii cntred at the narrower fide, he found enough for one dayes walk to actainthe heart oftheCity.to make his Proclamation, And if we imagine aCity extending from w'^re. to London, the cxpreflion will be moderate of fix fcote thoufand In'habitation,. fants, although we allow, vacuities; fields, and- intervais of
as
4j
then ten furlongs. And though none of the feven wonders, yet a noble pccce of Antiquity, and made by a Copy exceeding all the red, had its principal parts difpofed after this manner, that is the Labyrinth of i rete^ built upon a long quadrate, containing five large fquares, communicating by right inflections, terminating in the centie of the middle fquare, and lodging ^ Anxomo of the Minotaur i\i we confornt unto the defcription of the elegant rac- ^^^ii^^a. dal thereof in () Agofiitio. And though in many accounts we reckon /;>^ grofly by the fquare,yet is that very often to be accepted as a long-fidcd quadrate which was the figure of the Ark of the Covenant, the table of the $hew-bread, and the ftone wherein the names of the twelve Ttibes were engraved, that is, three in a row, naturally making a longi-^ lateral Figure, the perfed quadrate being made by nine. What figure the flones themfelves maintained, tradition and Scripture are filent,yet Lapidaries in precious ftones affed a Table or long fquare, and in fuch proportion, that the two lateral,and alfo the three inferiour Tables are equal unto the fuperiour, and the angels of the lateral Tables, contain and conftitut<? the bjpthentifA^ or broder fides fubtending.
That the Tables of the Law were of this figure, generall imritation and tradition hath confirmed yet are we unwilling to load the fhoulders oiMofes with fuch maflie (tones, as fome pidures lay upon them, lince'tis plainly delivered that he came down with them in his hand j fince the word ftricf^ly taken implies no fuch mafiie hewing, but cutting, andfafliioningof them into fhape andfurface; fincefome will have^ them Emralds, and if they were made of the materials of MountS'/^^, notimprobable that they were marble: fince the words were not ma^ ny, the letters fliort of five hundred, and the Tables written on both fides required no fuch capacity. The beds of the Ancients were different fronj ours at prefent, which arc almoft fquare , being framed ob-long, and about a double unto their a Ariflou. breadth; not much unlike the ^rf<?, or bed of this Quincuncial qua- ^WaAan,: drate. Thefinglebcdsof 5''''?^ were (^) fix foot, and a little more in length, three inbreadch; the Giant-like bed of 0^, which had four cubits ofbreadthj nine and a half in length, varied not much from this proportion. The Funeral bed of King C^eops^ in the greater Pyramid, which holds feven in length, and four foot in bredth, had no greac deformity from this meafurej And whatfoevcr were the bredth, the length could hardly be Iefle,of the tyranical bed of Procruftcstdnce in a fhortcr ^ pj^^^ ^.^ meafurehehad not be en fitted with perfons for his cruelty of extenfion. vitjbef. But the old fepulchralbed, or -<47^io;^ (/^) Tomb in the marketplace ofMegura, was in the form of a Lozenge; readily made out by the compofure of the body. For thearmesnot lying fafciatedor wrapt up after the ^r^cwwmannerbut ina middle diftcntion, the: including,
;
^
,
lines^will ftridly
make out
that figure.
C H A P
^6
CjruS-Gtrden,
Confidered,
CHAP.
III.
NOw
difcovcr
although this elegant ordinaiion of vegetables, hath found coincidence or imitation in fwidry works of Art, yet is it not alfo deftitute of natural examples, and though overlooked by all, was elegantly obfervable, in feverail works of nature.
Could wefatisfic ourfelves in the pofition of the lights above, or thewifdom of that order lo invariably maintained in the fixed Stars of heaven ; Could we have any light, why the fteilary part ofthefirft mafie, feparated into this order, that the Girdle oi Orion fhould ever maintain its line, and the two Stars in Charle's Wain never leave pointing at the Pole-Star, we might abate the Tyth.xgoricHl Mufick ofthe Spheres, the (evenfold Pipe of Fan ; and the ftrange Cryptography ofGajfarelin his Starry Book of Heaven. But not to look fo high as Heaven or the fingle Quincunx ofthe H)ades upon the neck of Taurus^ the Triangle, and remarkable Crufero aboutthefootofthe(rf?.i':jr; obfervable rudiments there are hereofin fubterrancous concretions, and bodies in the earth ; in the GyffHtn
on TaleHm%h$mboidesy
tht
Gallicia.
A slerta2in& Afiroites^
and
of
S.
Ugooi
The fame is obfervably effeAed in the Julus Catkjs, or pendulous cxcrelccnciesoffeveral Trees,of Wailnuts, Alders, and Hazels, which
Capjtuk fquammata Sluercum
hanging all the Winter, and maintaining their Net-work clofe, by the expanfion thereof are the early foretellers of the fpring, difcovein long ^epp^r, and elegantly in the Jufifs of Calamus AromAticHs^ fo piencifully growing with us in the firfl: palcns of Willows, and in ih flowers of Sycamore, Pctafites, Afphodelu8,and BUtrable alfo
.'
whereof though he taria, before explication. After fuch order ftand the flowry branches
,
faith perra-
ro reperiuntttr
ifi
our beft fpread Verbafcnm, and the feeds about the fpicous head or
Tapf^ Barbatas^ in as fair a regularity as the circular and wrecthed order will admit, which advanceth one (ide ofthe fquarc, miu, yet and makes the fame Rhomboidal. wefindc lu the fquamous heads of Scabious Knapweed* and the elegant facea them commonly with Pniafi^ind in the Scaly compofurc of the Oak-Rofe, which fomc years us and in moii: aboundeth. After this order hath nature planted the leaves in the ?reat numhead ofthe common and prickled Artichoak ; wherein the black and ber!. iliining flies do (helter themlelves, when they retire from the purple Flower about it the fame is alfo found in the pricks, fockets, and imp elTions ofthe feeds, in the pulp or bottom thereof; wherein do elegantly,ftick the Fathers of their mother. To omit the Quincunciall Specks on the top ol the Mi^de- berry, efpecially that which grows
bis tan'
turn invent;
torch of
upon
Cjyus-g a/de/i
Or
Tlje Qutncunx'Niituy.d':)
conjidned,
47
'
the remarkable difpoftire of chofe Antbe.Gnc yellow fringes about the purple Peftill of Aaron^ and elegant clufters ''""' ^^'-
And
HmhelU or skreen-
?J^^^'^
hj^v
ifxjSv
of fome Sea-wracks, Fucus, oaks, in their feveral fiTf 3? kindes, found about the (hoar, with ejcftments of the Sea, are over- J'*>*''''*j^, wrought with Net- work elegantly containing this order, vv^hich plain- ^nJt\l\\T lydeclareth the naturality of this texture; And how the needle the ;)ori of nature delighteth to work, even in low and doubtful vegetaii- f""^'""*
leaves
The Spongy
ons.
Impertu,
or Thicket on the head ofthe Teareli, may ^^ oh- Jj^l^^^^^ ferved in this order : And he that confidcreth that fabrrck fo regular- ivupaif.
The ^r^/?^rw
and ftemm'd with flowers of the royal colour j in the Bauhinu houfe ofthe folitary maggot, may finde the Seraglio of Solomon. And contemplating the cahcular fhafts,anduncous difpofure of their extremities, fo accommodable unto the office of abfterfion, not condemn as wholly improbable theconceit ofthofc who accept it, for the herb (d) Borith, Where by the way, we could with much inquiry ne- *Icr, 2^2* ver difcover any transfiguration, in this abftemious infed, although we have kept them long in their proper houfes, and boxes. Where fome wrapt up in their webbs, have lived upon their own bowels, from Seftember unto July. In fuchagrovedo walk the little creepers about the head ofthe burre. And fuch an order is obferved in the aculeous prickly plantation, upon the heads of feveral common thiftlcs, remarkably in the notable palifadoes about the flower pf the milk thiftle; Andhethatinquircth into the little bottom of the globe thiftlc, may finde that gallant bufli arife from a fcalpe of like difpofure. The white umbrella or medicall bu(h of Elder, is an Epitome of this order : arifing from five main ftemms Quincuncially dilpofcd, and tolerably maintained in their fubdivilions. To omit the lower obfervations in the feminal fpikc of Mercuric weld , and Plan*
ly palifadoed,
tane.
Thus bath nature ranged the flowers of ^antfoyne, and French fuckle; and fomewhat after this manner hath ordered thebufh in J/>zVfrj beard, or houfe-leek v/hich old fuperftition fet on the
honey
;
The
5 S(rt/^
Seagreen or the water (f)Souldier; which, though a military mame from Greece, makes out the Roman order. A like ordination there is in the favaginous Sockets, and Lozenge feeds of the noble flower of the Sunne. Wherein in Lozenge figured boxes nature (huts up the feeds, and balfame which is about
Fenny
fruits clo
natv
-"?
itKsjjpk'
48
Thus
in
it
fdf.
are alfo difpofed the triangular foliations, in the conicall fruit of the firre tree, orderly (hadowing and protefting the winged feeds be-
low them*
The like
inlpicated feeds and flowers, that we fhall not need to take in the fingle Quincunx of Fuchfius in the grouthof themafle fearn, the fce-
dydifpofureofiSramenirchemon, and thetrunckor neat Reticulate work in the coddeoftheSachell palm. For even in very many round (hllc plants, the leaves are fet after
a Quintuple ordination, the firft leaf anfwering the fift, in lateral difpofition. Wherein the leaves fucceflively rounding the ftalk, in four at the furtheft the compafs is abfolved, and the fifth leafe or fprout, returns to the pofition of the other fife before it ; as in accounting upward is often obfervablc in furrepillitorry, Ragweed, the fproutcsof Oaks, and thorns upon pollards , and very rereiarkably in the regular difpolure of the rugged excrefcencies in the yearly (hoots of the
pine.
whereby they fliadow not each other, and in a parallel fituation, and upon fquare ftalkcs would more forcibly bear upon them. And to omit, how leaves and fprouts which eompaffe nottheflalk, ^re often fet in a Rhomboidcs, and making long and fhort Diagonals, do (land like the leggs of Quadrupeds when they go : Nor to urge the thwart enclofure and furdling of flowers, and Blofifomes, berifing atcrofft pofitions
;
fore
as in the multiplied leaves of Pionic ; And explication, the Chiafmus in five leaved flowers, while one lies wrapt about theftaminous beards, the other four obliquely (hutting and clofing
upon each other ; and how even flowers which confift of four leaves, ftand not ordinarily in three and one, but two, and two croffe wife unto the Stilus; even theAutumnal buds, which await the return of the Sun, do after the winter folrtice multiply their calicular leaves, making little Rhombufes, and network figures, as in the Sycamore and Lilac.
The
firfl
putting forth
likeisdifcoverableinihc original prodaftionof plants which two leaves, thofe which fucceed, bear net over each
its
firft
leaves without
in
no
ordinary obfervator*
that obferveth the rudimental fpring of feeds, although not after this order, How httle is required unco efife^ual generation, and in what deminutives the plafl:ick
ftrift rule,
prin-
Quincunx
JN'ataralty Co/jfide/ed.
4^
fords fo
little
exemplified io feeds, wherein the greater ma(s afcomprodudion. In beans the icaf and root fprout from
fides fpilt, and lie by, and in fome pull'd up near the time of blooming, we have found the pulpous fides intire or little wafted. In Acorns the nebb dilating fplitteth the two fides, which foraetimes lie whole, when the Oak is fprouted two hand fuls. In Lupins thele pulpy fides do fometimes arife with theftalk in a refemblancc
the
of two lat leaves. Wheat and Rye will grow up, if after they have {hot fome tender roofs, the adhering pulp be taken from them. Beans will profper though a part be cut away, and fo much fet as fijifieeth to contain and keep the Germenclofe. From this luperfluous pulp in unkindly, and wet years, miy arife that multiplicity of little inleds, which infcft the Roots and fprouts of tender Graines and pul(cs.
In the
little
is
regular,
and not
tranfvertible, as to
make that ever the leaf, which nature inobfervable from their converfion, until they attain
if feeds
be
fet inverfedly.
In vain we exped the produdion of plants from different parts of the feed, from the fame ftfrc//<w or little original proceed both germinations; and in the power of this flender particle lie many Roots, that though the fame be pull*d away, the generative particle will renew them again, and proceed to a perfcd plant ; And malt may be obfcived to grow, though the Cummes be fallen from it. The feminal nebbe hath a defined and fingle place, and not extended unto both extremes. And therefore many too vulgarly conceive that Barley and Oats grow at both ends j For they arife from one prtnSliSpeare Hiding under the husk, firfl iio or generative nebbe, and the ppeareth nigh the top. But in Wheat and Rye being bare the fprouts are feen together. If Barley unhulled would grow, both would appear at once. But in this and Oat-meal the nebbe is broken away, which makes them the milder food, and IcfTeapt toraife fermentation in Dqcodions. Men taking notice ofwhat is outwardly vifible, conceive a fenfible priority in the root. But as they begin from one part, fo they feem to flartand fet out upon one fignal of nature- In Beans yet foft, in Pcafc while they adhere unto the Cod, the rudimental Lcafe and Root arc difcoverable. In the Seeds of Rocket and Muftard, fprouting in Glafles of water,when the one is manifeft the other is alfo perceptible In muddy waters apt to breed DHckj'^cced^ and Periwinkles, if the firft and rudimentall ftroaks of D^ck:weed be obfcrved,the Leaves and Root anticipate not each other. But in the Date itone the firft fprout is neither root nor leaf diftindly, but both together; For the Germination being to pafTe through the narrow navel a id hole about the midft of the Itone, the generative germ is lain to enUngthen it felf,
5
and
jQ
cjruS'^MdenyOiThe
^incmx
Naturdly
Confiderect,
and ihooting out about an inch, at that diftance divideth into the afccnding and defcending portion. And chough it be generally thought that Seeds will root at that end, where they adhere to their Originals, and obfervable it is that the nebbe fets moft often next the ftalk, as in Grains, Pulfcs, andmoft Imall feeds, yetisit hardly made out in many greater plants. For in Acornes, Almonds, Piftachios, Wallnuts, and acuminated fhells, the germ puts forth at the remotell part of the pulp. And therefore to fet Seeds 111 that pofture, wherein the Leaf and Roots may flioot right without contortion, or forced circumvolution, which might render themftronply rooted, and ftraighter, wereaCriticiftne in Agriculture. And nature feems to have made feme provifion hereof in many from their figure, that as they fall from the Tree they may (ye in Pofitions r;grceable to fuch advantages.
Befide the open and vifibleTefticles of plants, thefeminall pores He Sun findes polypody in ftone- wals, the little ftinging Nettle, and nightfliade in barren fandy High-waycs,
in great part invifiblc, while the
.
Scurvy- graffe in Greene-land^ and unknown plants in earth brought from remote Countreys. Befidetheknownlongevityoffome Trees, what is the mort lafting herb, or feed, leems not eafily determinable. Man-
IK met.
iMmCabt^.
drakes upon known account have lived near an hundred years. Seeds found in Wilde-Fowls Gizards have fproi'ted in the earth. The Seeds of Marjorane and 5fr^;??o;f;? carelefly kept, have grown after feven years. Evenin Garden-plots long falow, and digged up, the feeds of lattaria2ind yellow henbane, and after twelve years buriall have pro^ duced themlelves again. That bodies are firll fpirits Taracelfm could affii m, which in the raaturation oi Seeds and Fruits, feems ob(curcly implied by ^riflttle^ when he dclivcrecb, that the fpirituous parts arc converted into water, and the water into earth, and artefted by obfervation in the maturative progrcffe of Seeds, whereinatfirftmay be dilcerned a flatuoiis diften tion of the husk, afterwards a thin liquor, which longer time digefteth into a pulp or kcrncU obfervable in Almondsand large Nuts. An^i fome way anfwered in the progreflionall perfedion of animall femina-^^ tion, in its fperraaticall maturation, from crude pubefcency unto per-: fedion. And even thatfeeeds themfelves in their rudimentall difcoveor fprouts within their coverings, in a diaphanous gcUie, before deeper incraffation, is alfovilibly verified in Cherries, Acorns, Plums* From (eminallconfidcrations, cither in reference unto one another, or diftindion from animall produdicn, the holy Scripture defcribeth the vegetable creation ; And while it divideth plants but into Herl^ and Tree, though it (eemcth to make but an accidcntaildivifion, from magnitude, it tacitcly containcth the naturalldiftin(5lion of vegetable?^ obkrved by Herbari&s, and comprehending the four kindcs. For
riei, appear in foliaceousfurcles,
fiKCC
Cjrui'GArden ,
The Qu'tHCunx
N'aturally Confidered,
fince the moft naturall diftindion is made from the produdionof leaf orftalk, and plants after the two firlKeminail leaves, do either protreed to fend forth more leave.^, or a ftilk, and the folious and ftalky emilfion diftinguilliechheibs and trees, and ftand Authentically differenced, but from the accidents of the ftallc. The i^quivocal pioduftion oi things under undifcerned principles, makes a large part oF generation, though they feem to hold a wide univocacy in theii fet and certain Originals, while almofl every plant breeds its peculiar infed, mod a Butterfly, moth or fly, wherein the Oakfeems to conr-un thelargefl: fcminality, while the Julus, Oak, apple, dill, voolly tuft, foraminous roundles upon the leaf, and grapes under grounj make a Fly with fome difference. The great variety of Flyes lyes in the variety of their Originals, in the Seeds of Catc pillars or Cankers there lyeth not only a Butterfly or Moth, but if they be fterill or untimely caft^ their prodidion'isofcena Fly, which we have alio obfervcd from corrupted and mouldred Egges, both of Hens and Fiflies ; To omit the generation of Bees out of the bodies of dead Heifers, or what is ftrange yet well a tefted? the produdion of eles sch&neveldw cU -in the backs ot living Cods and Perches. The exiguity and lmal!ncfl"e of fome Seeds extending to large pro- P'fi' duftions is one of the magna -.ties of nature, fomewhatillullratingthe worK of the Creatiofj- and vaft produ<5lion from nothing. The true ;(^)feedsofCyprcffcaiidRarapions are indiftinguifhahlc by old eyes.' DoHiJpm, Of the feeds ot Tobacco a thoufand make not one grain. The difpuced ^^'""^*'*''S feeds of Harts tongue, and Maidenhair, require a greater number. (From fuch undifccrna- le (eminalittes arife fpontaneous productions. He that would dikern the rudimentall ffroak of a plant, may behold it in the Origin all of Duckweed, at the bsgn ffe of a piiis point, from convenient waiter in gUlfc-i, wherein awatchfull eye may allodifcover the pundicular Origmals of Periwmi les and Gnats. ^ That 5ceds of fome Plants are lefTc then any animals, feems of no clear deciflon ; That the biggcit of Vegetables e^iceedeth the biggefl: of Animals, in full bulk, and aildiracnfions, admits exception in the Whale, which in length and abve gtound mealure, will aUo con- The long tend with tall Oaks. That the ncheU odour of plants luipaffeth that ^"'^ '^^^*^ of Animals, may feem ot lome doubt, fince aniTuall musk, feems ^^^fy^gy,,^^ <xceU the vegetable, and we finde fo noble a kent in the Tulip- i ly ,anu jjrciy
1
fuund^we Goat- Beetle. whether feminall nebbes hold any fure prop rtionunto feminal cculdi.cvcr enclofures, why the form of the gcrmc doth not anfwer the figure cjijjy^^j*" theendofing pulp, why the nebbe is feated upon the lolid, and not the channcld fide of the feed as in grains, why fincc we often meet with two yolks in one (hell, andfumetimesonc Egge within another, we do not cftener meet with two nebbes in one diffind feed why fince the Egges pf a Hen laid at one courie, do commonfy out- weigh the bird, and 5 G 2
(^ J)
Now
ja
{"yrus-Gardeiriy or the
Qu'mcum
Naturally Confidered^
and fume moths coming out of their cafes, without afliftance of food, will lay fo many Egges as to outweigh their bodies, trees rarely bear
their fruit, in that gravity or proportion
Whether in the germination of feeds according to H/p^tfcT^f^/, the lighter part afcendeth, and maketh the fprout, the heavieft tending downward frameth the root
.
down
Since we obferve that the firftflioot of feeds in water, will fink or bow Whether it be not more rational at the upper and leafing end
-.
Epicurifme to contrive whole difhes out of the nebbes and spirited particles of plants, then from theGallatures and treddlesofEggesj fince that part is found to hold nofcminall (hare in Oval Generation, arc Queries which might enlarge but muft conclude this digref(ion*
And though not in this order, yet how nature dellghteth in this number, and what confcnt and coordination there is in the leaves and parts of flowers, it cannot efcapc our obfervation in no fmall number of plants. For the calicular or fupporting and doling leaves, do anfwer the number of the flowers, efpecially in fuch as exceed not the number of Swallows Egges ; as in Violets, Stichwort, BlofTomes, and Flowers of one leaf have often five divifions, anfwercd by a like number of calicular leaves; as Gef;tiAf}elUyCoKvlvHif4iyBc\\-{[owers.ln many the flowers, blades, or (laminous (hoots and leaves are all equally five, as in cockle, muWcimnd.Blattaria; Wherein the flowers before explication are pentagonally wrapped up, with fome refcmblance of the Ihtta or moth from whence it hath its name ; But the contrivance of nature is lingular in the opening and (hutting of Bindcweeds, performed by five inflexurcs,dillinguifhable by pyramidicall figures, and alfo
different colours.
Th3
rofe at
firft
is
groweth wilde among us; but in the moft luxuriant, the calicular leaves do ftill maintain that number. But nothing is more admired then the five Brethren of the Rofe, and the ftrange difpofure of the Appenlolution
which in defpair of refrom this contrivance, beft ordered and fuiccd for the free elofure of them before explication. For ihofc two which are f mooth, and of no beardare contrived to lye undermoft,as without prominent parts, and fit to be fmooihly covered , the other two which are belct with Beardson either fide, fiand outward and unGovered,but the fifth or half-beardedleafis covered on the bare fide but on the open
dices or Beards, in the calicular leaves thereof,
is
tolerably falved
and bearded like the other, number of leaves have five divifions, and may becircumfcribed by a PcKtagon or figure of five Angles, made by right lines from the extremity of their leaves, as in Maple, Vine, Figge-Trec ^ut firc-lcaved flowers are commonly difpofed circularly about the S(jlm\ according to the higher Geometry ofnature, dividing a cir^^ by five %.AAii^ whidi concurre not to nijike Diameters, as in
(idc ftands free,
Bcfides a
la-ge
Qua--
y3
and fcxangular IntcrfcAions. Now the number of five is remarkable in every Circle, not only as the firft fhaerical Number, but the meafure of fphaerica! motion. For fphscrical bodies move by fives, and every globular Figure placed upon a planCj in direft volutation, returns to the firft point of contaftion in thefirfl: touch, accounting by the Axes of the Diameters or CarJinall points of the four quarters thereof. And before it arriveth unto the fame point again, itmaketh five circles equall unto it fdf, in each progrcflc from thofe quarters, abfolving an equal circle. By the fame number doth nature divide the circle of the i'ca-flarre, and in that order and number difpofeth thofe elegant Scmi-circles, or dentailfockets and eggcs in the Sea Hcdge-hogge. And no mean Obfervations hereof there is in the Mathemaiicks of the neatefl: Retiary Spider, which concluding in fourty four Circles, from five SemidiaQuadrilaterall
meters beginncth that elegant texture. And after this manner doth lay the foundation of the Circular bran /j^ \^, ches of the Oak, which being five-cornered, ii the tender annuali fprouts, and manifefling upon incifion the fignaturs of a Staire, is
fwel'd into a round body Which praftice of become a point of art, and makes two Problcmes in Enclide, But the Bryar which fends forth fhoots and prickles from its angles, maintains its pentagonall figure, and the unobferved fignature of a handfome porch wichin it. To omit the five fmall buttons dividing the Circle of the Ivy- berry, and the five charadcrs in the Winter flalk.of thcWallnut, with many other Obfervables, which cannot cfcape the eyes of (ignal difcerners Such as know where to findc A]ax his name,
after
:
nature
..
Henbane. Quioconcial forms and Ordinations are alfo obfervable in animall figurations. For to omit the hioidcs or throat-bone of aniraals,the/rcuU or werrj'theugk in hiids; which fupportcth the fcjpnU^ affording a pafTage for the winde-pipe and the gullet, the wings of Flyes, and difpofureoUhcirlegs in their firf^ formation from maggots,and the po* fition of their horns, wings and legs, in their jiH^elUn cafes and fwadJing clouts : The back of the Cimex e/^r^o-tfy,found often upon Trees and ielfer plants, dcih elegantly difcover the Bttrgmdian decuffation ;
in GaUtnicunti or ayfrons Mitre in
like
is
And the
tle,
obfervable
in
back, and the handfome RhorabufTes of the Sea-poult, or Werrell, on either fide the Spine, The iexangularCek in the Honey-combs of Bees aredifpofed after
its
which fwimmeth on
much there is not of wonder in the confufcd Houles of Pifmuch in their bufie life and a<5lions, n>ore in the edificiil Palaces of Bees and Monarchical fpirits; who make ih3ir combs fixcorner'd, declining a circle, whereof many ftand not clofe together,
this order,
mires; though
fill
whereby every
common
\^!-
54
Cjrui-GArden^
alfoa
lit
Conftdered,
into a
felf,
which gathering
CyHn-
a circular figure, then cither doth the Square or Triangle* And the Combes rhemfelves fo regularly contrived, that their mutual interfedions make three Lozenges at the bottom of every Ceili which fcveraily regarded
Figures,
conned-
throughout the
found comraonly on the 5ea-fhoar, though nait but rudely makes out the refemblance, and better agrees with the round Cels of humble Bees. He that would exadlydKcern the fliop of a Bees mouth, need obferving ey, and good augmenting glaffes; wherein is difcoverable one of the neateft pecces in nature, and muft have a more piercing eye then mine; who findes out the (hape of buls heads, in the i^ut5x:)f drones prefled out beGom. de liJocie, according to the experiment of Gomefiffs; wherein notwithSalt. ftanding there feemeth foraewhat which might incline a plain fancy, to
for the F^f^ff*
As
med
frora an
honeycomb,
credulity otfimilitude.
-^
is
in the
which we
fmall <prigs^ and in thofe cottonary and wooly pillows? whkh fomctimcs we meet with fattened unto Leaves, there is included an elegant
Net-work Texture , ut of which come many fmall Flies. And,loa reimblance there is of this order in the Eggev of iome Butterflies and moths, as they ftick upon leaves, and other fubrtances ; which being dropped from bebinde, nor direfted by the eye, doth neatly declare how nature Geometriztth, and otferveth order in all chings. like correfpondency in figure is found in the skins and lOutward teguments of animals, whereof a regardable part arc beautiful by this
texture.
As the backs
rcr-
and the Dart-fnake , in the Chiafmus, and larger decuffations upon the back of the Rattle- fnake, and in the clofc and finer texture of the Mater jormkaramy or fnake that delights in Anthils; whereby upon approach! of outward injuries, they can raife a thicker Phalanx on their backs, and handfomcly contrive thenifclves into all kindes of flexures: Whereas their bellies are commonly covered with fmooth femicircular divifions, as bell accommodableunto their quick and gliding -raotioh.v': '/ This way is followed by nature in rhe peculiar aiid rcraarisab'le tail of
markable in the
^^fpis,
the Bever, whei^cinthefca'y particles are difpoled, fomcwbac after thii; order,which is the plainfelt rtfolurion of the wonder of Bi;lhnifis>y\N\\M' be faith, vi^ith inc-edible Artifkchath Nature framrd the cayl<)r Oar of the Bever where hy the Way we cannot \i\3X. j^ifh a model of their houfes, fo muvh extolled' by fjme Defcriicrs: whenein fince they are
:
fo
i^V^tin
confidered,
^^
or whether that magnified ftruflure be any more then ^ rude redangular pyle or meer hovel-building. Thus works the hand of nature in the feathery plantation about birds. Obfervabie in the skins of the * breaft, legs and Pinions of Turkies* Elegantly Gecfe, and Ducks, and the Oars or finny feet of Water^Fowl: and fuch confpicua natural net as the fcaly covering of nfhes, of Mullets, Carps, Ten- ?"i" ?* cheSjd'c. eveninfuchas areexcoriableand confiftof fmaller fcales, as j^g ^^jp. The like Reticulate grain is obfer- pcd skins Bretts; Seals, and Flounders. vablcin iomt %ujfia, Leather. To omit the ruder Figures of the o- ofDiveftracion, the triangular or cunnyfifli, or the pricks of the 5ea-Por-^^'^j.^^^
cupine.
rancGofskin
neat texture,and therefore not unaptly compared unto a net : Wefhall weafdl, "^*^' not affirm that from fuch grounds, the iEgyptianEmbalmers imitated
this texture,yet in their
Hnnen foldsthefameis
ftill
obfervabie
among
Mummies, in the figures of ///and O/^m, and the Tutelary fpirits in the Bembine Table. Nor is it to be over-looked how OrnSy the Hieroglyphick of the world is defcribed in a Net-work covering, from the ftioulder to the foot. And (not to enlarge upon the crutheir neatefl:
handed crfifles, lo often occurring in the Needles of ?/;.^r4o/7, and Obeliskspf Antiquity) the i'f4f/f<c
Teraphims, and
little
//?<^-rf,
Mummies, do
make
on the head o(Ephrair and CHdifaffes^, attd this decujfis is alfo graphically defcribed between them. This Reticulate or Net-work was alfo confiderable in the inward parts of man, not onely from the dtHfuhtegmef^ or warp of his formation, but inthenetty fibres o^ths veines and veflels of life; whereia according to common Anatomy the right and tuAnCverfc fibres are decuflated, by the obVickfihes-j and fo muft frame a Reticulate and Quin* cuncial Fgnre by their Obliquations, Emphatically extending that Elegant cxpreflion of Scripture. Thou haft curioufly embroydered mej thou hafl- wrought me up after the finefl way of texture, and as it were with a Needle. Nor is the fame obfervabie onely in fome parts, but in the whole body of man , which upon the extenfion of arms and legges, doth make outafquare, whofeinterfedion is at the genitals. To omit the phantaftical Quincunx, in P/ato of the firft Hermaphrodite or double man^
a dccuflation ox lacobs Crofle, with their armes, like that
united at the Loynes, which Jupiter after divided. rudimental refcmblance hereof there is in the cruciated and rugged folds of the ReticHlftm, or Net like Ventricle of ruminating horned
animals, which
is the fecond in order,culinarily called the Honey-comb. For many divfions there are in the ftomack of fevcral animals; what number they maintain in the ^carm and ruminating Fifh, common dc-
fcription
5^
office.
The
Tl^^/V/^/^w
by
in
the dry and exuccous part of the Aliment received from the firft Ventricle. For at the bottome of the gullet there is a double Orifice ; What is firft received at the mouth defcendeth into the firft and greater ftomack, from whence it is returned into the mouth again ; and after a fuller raaftication, and falivoHs mixture, what part thereof defcendeth again, in a moift and fucculent body, it Aides down the foftcr and *
more permeable Orifice, into the Omafus or third flomack ; and from thence conveyed into the fourth, receives its laft digeflion. The other dry and exuccous part after rumination by the larger and ftronger Orifice bcareth into the firflfloenack, from thence into the Retica/tinf, and foprogreiTively into the other divifions. And therefore in Calves
newly calved, there is little or no ufe of the two firft Ventricles,for the milk and liquid aliment flippcth down the fofter Orifice, into the third ftomack ; where making little or no Itay; it paffelh into the fourth, the feat of the Coa^aium, or Runnet, or that divifion of ftomack which feemsto bear the name of the whole, in the Greek tranflation of the
Priefts Fee, in the Sacrifice of Peace-offerings.
As for thofe Rhomboidal Figures made by the Cartilagineous parts of the Wezcn, in the Lungs of great Fifhes, and other animals, as %ondeletiu^ dUcovcrcd, we have not found themfo to anfwer our Figure as to be drawn intoilluftration , Something we expedcdin the more difcernable texture of the lungs of frogs, which notwithftanding
being but two curious bladders not weighing above a grain, we found interwoven with veins, not obferving any juft order. More orderly (ituated are thofe cretaceous and chalky concretions found foaietimes in the bignefTc of a fmall fech on either fide their fpine j which being not agreeable unto our order, noryetobfervedby any, we (hall not bercdifcourfeon* But had we found a better account and tolerable Anatomy of that prominent jowle of the (a) Sperma Ceti Whale, then queftuary operaPi6i2. defcribed in tion, or the ftench of the laft caft upon ourfhoar,permittcd, we might ouTFjeHdo. have perhaps difcovered fomc handfome order in thole Net- like feaE^iicm. fgj andfockets, made like Honey-combs, containing that medicall
"*^*
matter,
iaftly, The inceflion or locall motion of animals is made with analogy unto this Figure, by decuflativediametrals, Quincunciall Lines and angles. For to omit the enquiry how Butterflies and breezes move their four wings, how birds and fifties in ayre and water move by
how
faiient animals in
jumping
Cynt- Cxr^n or the Quincmx N'aturally Confidered, Jumping forward feem to arife and fall upon a fquare bafe ; As the (la* tion ot moft Quadrupeds,is made upon a long fquare,(o in their motion tfaeymakcaRhomboides their common progreffion being perform;
5^
ftride.
5tudious Obfervators may difcovcr more analogies in the orderly book of nature, and cannot cfcape the Elegancy of her hand in other correfpondencies. The Figures of nails and crucifying appurtenances, are but precarioufly made out in the GranadtlU or flower of Chrifts paffion And we dcfpair to behold inthefe parts that handforae draught of crucifixion in the fruit of the Barhado Pine. The fcminal fpike of PhaUrt^^ or great (baking graffe, more nearly anfwers the tayl of a And if the man Rattle-Snake, then many refemblances in Porta Colnmnx well made out, it analogies. In b Orchis An^ be excelleth all of Orchis (i) young Wallnuts cut athwart, it is not hard to apprehend ftrange t\i2i* throp^hout *'' radcrs; and in thofeof fomcwhat elder growth, handfome ornamen- ^**"
; :
draughts about a plain crofTe. In the root of Ofntond or Water-fern, every eye may difcern the form of a half Moon, Rain-botv, or half Some finde Hebrew, Arabick, Greek, and the character of Pifcei. LatineCharaftersin Plants J In a common one among us we feem to reade Acai^^Viviu, Lilt I. Right lines and circles make out the bulk of plants j In the parts thereof we fiode Helicall or fpirall rouadles, voluta's, conicall Seftions, circular Pyramids, andfruftums o^ Archtmedesy And cannot overlook the orderly hand of nature, in the alternate fucceffion of the flat and narrower fides in the tender fhoots of the Afhe, or the regular inequality of bignefle in the five leaved flowers of Henbane, andfomething like in the calicular leaves of Tutfdn, How the fpots of Perfiearia do manifert thcmfelves between the fixth and tenth ribbe. How the triangular capp in the flemme or fiylm of Tulips doth conftantly point at three outward leaves. That fpicated flowers do open firfl at the ftalk. That white flowers have yellow thrums or knops. That th& nebbeof Beans and Peafe do all look downward, and fo prefTe not upon each other ; And how the feeds of many pappous or downy flowers lockt up in fotkets after a gomphofis or (7rf ^-articulation, diffofe themfelves circularly into branches of rare order, obfcrvable in I'raioviAn or Goats-beard, conformable to the Spiders web, and the
tal
"**'
*^
$H
%Mti
5^
Cjrui'(jardenyOtThe
^inamx
Naturally Confident,
%adii
inter-woven. even colours hold correfpondencies, and mutuall correlations. That the colour of the Caterpillar will (hew again in the Butterfly, with fome latitude is allowable. Though the regular fpotsin their wings fccm but a mealic adhefion, and fuch as may be wiped away, yet fince they come in this variety, out ot their cafes, there mufl: be regular pores in thofe pares and mciubrancs.defining fuch
in
like
manner
telarely
And how
in animall natures,
Exudations,
fc
Suet, in
vit,
Aug.
That (i>) Augujim bad native notes on his body and belly, after the order and number in the Starre of ^W/irj reaytie^ will notfeem ftrangc unto aftrall Phyfiognomy, which accordingly confidereth moles in the
body of man, or
Phyficall Obfervator*,
Whether
upon
feats
after
them to rule and correfpondency in other the like method medicall conjefture may not be
;
parts inwardly affeded; fince parts about the lips are the critical! of Puftules difcharged in Agues And fcrophuloHs tumours about the neck do fo often fpeak the like about the Mefcntety, may alfo be
confidercd.
may
But that if (heep have any black or deep rufTct in their faces they want not the fame about their legges and feet ; Thatblack Hounds have mealy mourhs and feet That bUck Cows which have any white in their tayls, (hould andif all white in their bodies, yet not miffeoffooae in their bellies if black -mouth'd, their ears and feet maintain the fairc colour, are correfpondent tinftares not ordinaaily failing in nature, which eafily umtesthe accidents ofextremities, fince in fome generations (he tran(*
to fome ccntadion in the
j
;
;
womb
while in the Aarelian CMetaworfhofis the head of the canker becomes the Taylof the Butterfly. Which is in lome way not beyond the contrivance of Art^ in fubmerfions and Inn^utes the parts tfaemfelves,
lays, inverting the
extremes of the plant, and fetching the root from the top, and alfo imitated in handfome columnary work, in the inverfion oftheextremfis; wherein the Capitel, and the Bafe, hold fuch near
correfpondency. In the motive parts of animals may be difcovcred mutuall proportions ; not only in thole of Quadrupeds, but in the thigh-bone, legge, foot-bone, and da ws of Birds, The legs of Spiders arc made after a lefquitertian proportion, and the long legs of fome focufts, double unto fome others. But the internodial parts of Vegetables, or fpaces between the joynts, are contrived with more uncertainty ; though the joy nts them felves in many Plants, maintain a regular Nuii>ber.
In vegetable compofure, the unition of prominent parts feems moft to anfwcr the Apofhyfes or proceflTesof Animall bones, whereof they are the produced parts or prominent cxplantatiom. And. though in
the
>
JSfaturally Confidered,
for
5^
motion, we do not expcft correfpondent Articulations ; yet in the fetting on of fome flowers, and feeds in their fockets, andthe lineallcommifluie of the palp oi feverall feeds, may be obferved fome (hadow of the Harmonyjfomc fliow of the (^vmphojtsor i(?rr ^^-articulation. As for theZ)i^rr^/oy;j or motive Articulation, there is expeded little Analogy, though long-ftalked leaves doc move by long lines, and have obfeivable motions, yet are they made by outward impulfion,likc the motion of pendulous bodies, while the parts themlelves arc united by fome kinde oiffwfhyp unto the ftock. But (landing Vegetables, void of motive- Articulations, are not without many motions. For befide the motion of vegetation upward. and of radiation unto all quarters, that ofcontiacJlion, dilatation, inTo omit clination, and contortion, is difcoverable in many plants. the rofe o{ Jericho, the car of Rye, which moves with change of weather, and the Magical (pit, made oi no rare plants,whicb windcs before the fire, andrcfis the bird without turning. Even Animals near the ClafHs of plants, feem to have the mod reft- ' Fdund '" leffc motions. The Summer worm of Ponds and plalhes makes a long ?^""r waving motion; the hair worm feldomc lies ftill. He that would behold T^cdmlJ a^ery anomalous motion, may obferve it in the Tortile and tiring gotlnthe
ftroaks of (a)
Gnatworms.
ftanding waters ot of
iftefns the Sum-
CHAP.
mer.
IV.
the delights, commodities , myfteries, with other conthis order, we are unwilling to fly them over, in the (hort deliveries oiVtrgily ^^tc, or others, and fliall therefore enfor
AS
ccrnments of
large
with additional! ampliations. By this pofition they had a juft proportion of Earth, to fupply an
e-
quality of nourifhment.
The
cording to the magnitude or vigorous attraftion of the plant,thcgoodne(re, leannefle, or propriety of thefoyl, and therefore the rule of So' /o, concerning the territory of (s/^r/:*;7j, not extendible unto all; allowing the diftance of fix foot unto common Trees, and nine for the Fig and Olive. They had a due diffufion of their roots on all or both fides, whereby they maintained fome proportion to their height, in Trees of large *U>f^^ntm ""^"^ ^'^ radication. For that they ftridlv make good their profundar or depth unto their height, accordmg to common conceit, and that exprefiion ^,j!y,,, of {a) yirgil^ though confirmable from the plane Tree in Pltnj^ and tantumra. lome few examples, is not to beexpeded from the generation of Trees <^'f^ ''Z^^'"'^* almoft in any Kinde, either of fide-fpreading or tap-roots ; Except we ^"^^
5
H2
we
6o
Cyrat'CArden^ or the
Quincum
MyflicAll) Confidered,
j nor commonly to Sea-holly, Liquorilh,
wc raeafurethem by
be found
Sea-rufli,
in
lateral
we except
They had
commodious
radiation in their
growth
and
due ex-
panfion of their branches, for (hadow or delight. For trees thickly planted, do run up in height and branch with no expanfion, (hooting unequally or fhort, and thinneupon the neighbouring fide. And therefore Trees are inwardly bare, and fpring,and leaf from the outward and
of their branches. they alfo avoided the pcrillof (TuvoAeSfio-^s" or one tree perifliing with another, as it happeneth ofttimcs from the fick effluviurns or entanglemeats of the roots, falling foul with each other. Ob{^rvable in Elmes fct in hedges, where if one dicth the neighbouring Tree profpereth not long after. In thisfituation divided into many intervals and open untoUx paffages, they had the advantage of a fair perflation from windes, bruihing and cleanfing their furfaces; relaxing and clofing their pores unto due perfpiration. For that they afford large effluviums perceptible from odours, difiufed at great diftances, is obfervable from Onyons out of the Earth; which though dry, and kept until the fpring, as they ihoocforch large and many leaves, do notably abate of their weight. And mint growing in glafles of water , until it arriveth unto the weight of an ounce, in a fhady place, will fometimes exhauft a pound
fide
Sunny
Whereby
of water.
And as ihcy fend forth much, fomay they receive fomcwhat in: For befide the common way and road of reception by the root, there may be a refedion and imbibition from without ; For gentle {howra refrefh plants, though they enter not their roots ; And the good and bad effluviums of Vegetables, promote or debilitate each other. So EfithymHm and Dodder^ rootlefle and out of the ground, maintaio themfelves upon Thyme, Jftivory, and plants, whereon they hang. And Jvy divided from the root, we haveobferved to live fomc years, by the
cirrous parts
hold-fafts unto
it.
of mint cropt from the root ftripped from the leaves, and fct in glajfes with the root end upward, and out of the water , we haveobferved to fend forth fprouts and leaves without the aid of roots, AXuifcordiMm to grow in like manner, the leaves fet downward in water. Toomitfeverall Sea- plants, which grow onfinglc roots from ftones, although in very many there are fid e- (Hoots and ^^r^j, befide the faftalks
The
ftening root.
pofition they were fairly cxpofed unto the rayes of Sunne, fo confiderable in the growth of Vegetables. For though Poplars, Willows, and feverall Trees be made to grow about the brinks of A^haron, and dark habitdtions oi the dead ; Though fome
By this open
Moon and
grow
in obfcurc
^t
pnmpsaflFordforactimes long bufljy fprouts, not obfervable in any alarge fields of Vegetables are able to maintain their verdure at the botcome andfliady part of the Sea; yet thegreateft nnmber are not content, without the adual rayes of the Sun, but bend,
incline,
and follow them as large lifts offolifequious and ^mi-folAnd fomeobfcrve the method of its motion in their own growth and converfion twining towards the Weft by the South, as Bryony, Hops, Woodbine, and levcral kindes of Bindeweed, which we fliall more admire; when any can tell us, they obferve another motion and Twi'ft by the North at the Antipodes. The fame plants rooted againft an ered Narth-wall full of holes, will finde a way through them to look upon the Sun. And in tender plants from muftard feed, fown in the winter, and in a plot of earth placed inwardly againft a Soflth-window, the tender ftalks of two leaves arofe not ered, but bending towards the window, nor looking much higher then the Meridian Sua. And if the pot were turned they would work themfelves into their former declinations, making their converfion by the aft. That the Leaves ofthe Olive and fome othe trees folftitially turn, and precifely tell us, when the Sun isentred Cancer, is fcarce expedable in any Climate; and Theophrafias warily obfcrves it ; Yet fomtwhat thereof is obfervable in our own , in the leaves of Willows and Sallows, fome weeks after the Solftice. But the great ConvolvaUu or white flowred Zf/Ww^^^ obferves both motions of the Sun> while the floure twifts iquinodionally from the left hand to the right, according to the dayly revolution The ftalk twineth cclipti^ally from the
lowing
plants.
;
right to the
according to the annual converfion. Some commend the expofure of thefe orders unto the Weftcrngales,as the moft generative and frudifying breath of heaven, Buc we applaud the Husbandry of 5fl/<?wo;;, whereto agreeth the dodrineof North- windc. and blow thou South upon my Theofbrafins. Arife garden, that the fpices thereof may flow out ; For the North- winde
left,
up the efflnvtums^ when the South doth open and relax them the Aromaticalgummes do drop,and fweet odours fly adivcly from them.And if his garden had the fame fituation, which mapps,and charts afford it, on the eaft fide of jernfakw,and haviog the wall on the Weitj thefe were the winds^unto which ic was well
clofing the pores-, and (hutting
;
after
expofed.
which they
of plantation ihey encreafed the tlumber of their trees, ^^terma's, and Iquare-orders, which is a commodity infiftedoflby ^rf^'rfl, and one great intent of nature, in thispofition of flowers and feeds in t^c elegant formation of plants, and the
By
this
way
loft in
former Rules obferved in natural and artificial! Figurations. Whether in this order and one tree in fome meafurc breaking the cold, and pinching^ufts of windes from cbeother, trees will not better main* lain their ioward circles, andeirher efcapeor moderate their excentriciucs, may alfo be cocfidered. For the circles in Trees are naturally
<5a
Cyrui'Gardeny
Or Th Q^incuh^
MijiiiAlly Confidertd,
and unco each other, till and piercing windescontrad and dofe them on the weatherfidc, the oppofite femicircle widely enlarging, and at a comely diftancc, which hindcreth oftentimes the beauty and roundnede of trees, and makestfhc Timber lefie ferviccable ; whiles the afcending juyce not readily parting, fettles m knots and inequalities. And therefore it is no new courle of Agriculture, toobferve the nativ6 pofition of treesj according CO North and South in their tranfplantations. The fame is alio obfcrvable underground in the circinations and fpbaerical rounds of Onyons, wherein the circles ot the O'besare ot'ttimcs larger, and the meridional lines (land wider upon one fide then the other. And where the largcnefle will make up the number of planetilyconcencricall) parallel unto the bark,
irolt
Orbcs, thatot L,t/<,and the lower planets exceed ftie dimenfions of5<^rr,and the higher : Whether the like be not verified in the Circles of the large roots of Briony and Mandrakes, or why in the knotts of Deal or Firre the Circles are often eccentrical, although
cal
not
ma plane, but
quiry.
Whether there be not fome irregularity of roundneffe in mofl: pUnts according to their pofition? Whether fomefmall compreffion of pores be not perceptible in parts which ftandagainft the current of waters, as
in
ter,
Reeds, Ball-ruflies, and other vegetables toward the ftreaming quarmay alfo be obferved, and therefore fuch as are long and weak, are commonly contrived into a roundneffe of figure, whereby the water
prefTeth
flags
Icfle, and fleepech more (moothly from them, and even in or flat-figured leaves, the grcatcrpart obverc their (harper fides
float
heating vertues, and why? whether Sargafo formany miles floating upon the Weftern Ocean , or Sea-lettuce, and Phafganium at the bottomeof our Seas, make good the like quahtics? Why Fenny waters afford the hottcft and iwceteft plants, as Calamus, Cyperus, and Crowfoot, and mudd cafl: out of dittches moft naturally produceth
Aifmart.?
fince
Why
little
regard oyl
Why
it
not well without, either in their growth or produdion Why fince Seeds (hoot commonly under giound, and out of the aire,thofe which are let tall in fliallow glaffes, upon the furfacc of the water, will fooner fprout then thofe at the bottom ? And if the water be covered with
feeds contain oyle, thofe at the
many
much oyl
all,
to conjdure.
But
little
concerning
Cjrfts
CjruS'.g aircle/2
Or
TheQuincunxMjficdljconpderei^,
S^
Cyrus or the Babylonian territory ; wherein by no induftry Harp.t' ^/ could make Ivy grow : And Alexander hardly found it about thofc parts to imitate the pomp of Bacchus, And though in thefe Northern Regions we are tooxmuch acquainted with one Ivy, we know too little of a nother, whereby Vc apprehend not the expreilionsof Antiquity, GaUn. dt thef.r) Splenerick medicine ofGalen^ and the Emphafis of the Poet, in ""^- /"'cMa*
the(^)beauty'of the white Ivy.
concerning the growth of Miffcltoe, which dependeth not formofm on\y of the fpecte Si or kinde of Tree, but much alfo of the Soil. And alba. therefore commoa in feme places, not readily found in others, frequent in France, not fo common in Spam, and fcarce at all in the Terlike
The
tmlra
ritory oiFerrara
: Nor eafily to be found where it is moft required upon Oakcs, lefle on trees continually verdant. Although in fome phces the Gliveefcapeth it not, requiting its detriment, in the delightful view of its read Berries ; as C U uji us ohfcrvcd in Sfain^ and Bellonms about Hierufalem. But this Parafitical plant fuffers nothing to grow upon it, by any way of art nor could we ever make it g^ow where nature had not planted it ? as we have in vain attemped by inocculation and incifion, upon its native or forrcign ftock. and though there f^em nothing improbable in the feed, it hath not fucceeded by fation in any manerof ground, wherein we had no reafon to defpair fince we read of vegetable horus , and how Rams horns will root about
;
LinfchoUn,
rural
commodities,
it
in the variety of Figures, which thefe orders open, and doled do make. Whilcft every inclofure makes a 2<j7(7w^i', the figures obliquely taken
parallel lines, and each inupon afquare, affording two Triangles or Pyramids verticallyconjoyned; which in the find Quincuncial order dooppofitely make acute and blunt Angles. And though therein we meet not with right angles, yet every Rhombus containing four Angles equal unto two right, it virtually contains two right in every one.Nor is this flrangc unto Itich as obferve the natural lines of Trees, and parts difpofed ia them.. For neither in the j'oot doth nature affeftthis angle, which (hooting 'downward for the liability of the plant, doth beft effeft the fame by Figures of inclination ; Nor in the Branches and ftalky leaves, which grow moft at acute angles; as declining from their head the root, and dimmifhing their Angles with their altitude : Verified alfo in lefler Plant*, whereby they better fupport themfelves, and bear not fo heavily upon the ftalk : So that while near the root they of ten make an Angle of fevcnty paTts,the Iprouts near the top will often come (hort of thirty. Even in the nerves and mafter veins of ihe leaves the acute angle ruleth ; the obtufe but leldome found, and in the backward part ^f the leaf ; reflefting and arching about the ftalk. But why ofttknes one fide:^^ of the leaf is unequal unto the other, as in Hazell and Oaks, why on eithes fide the
terfeftion built
^
-
'
"
'
Mafter..:
^4
CjruUG AT den^
matter vein the lefler and derivative channels not directly oppofit,nor at equalangles, refpcdivcly unto the adverle fidg, but thofe ofone
part
do often exceed the other, as the Wailnutand many more, dcfor this order
and tapering Trees, parwe have found of affinity units Eflentiali Ornament, in only of great but a tree not to this order. A iolid Rhombus being made by the ccnverfion oftwo Equicrural Cones, as Archimedes hath defined. And thcfe were the common Trees about Babylon^ and the Eaft, whereof the Ark was made;and Alexander found no Trees fo accommodable to build his Navy ; And this we rather think to be the tree mentioned in the Canticles.which drifter Botanology will hardly allow to be Camphir. And if delight or ornamcntall view invite a comely difpolure by circular amputations, as is elegantly performed in Hawthorns; then will they anfwer the figures made by the converfion of Rhombus, which maketh two concentrical Circles ; the greater circumference being made by the lefTer angles, the lefler by the greater. The Cylindrical figure of trees is virtually contained and latent in this order. Cylinder or long round being made by the converfion or turnmg of a Parallelogram, and moft handfomely by a long fquarc^ which makes an equal, flrong, and lading figure in trees, agreeable unto the body and motive parts of animals, the greatefl: number df Plants, and almod all roots, though theirftalksbeangular, and of many corners, which fcem not to follow the figure of their Seeds j Since many angular Seeds fend forth round (talks, and fphaericall feeds arifc from angular Ipindlcs, and many rather conform unto their roots, as the round ftalks of bulbous roots, and in tuberous routs ftemmes of like figure* But why fince the largeft number of Plants maintain a circular Figure, there are fo few with teretous or long-round leaves* why coniferous Trees arc tenuifolious or narrow leafed , why plants of few or nojoynts have commonly round ftalks, why the greatcft number of hollow ftalks are round ftalks or why in this variety of angular ftalks the quadrangular moftexceedcth, were too long a fpecti*
which grows
in a conical figure;
Now. if
we aflfcA coniferous
lation
ded
plants ofdiv:* nature often beginneth circularly in the two firft leaves below,wliilc in the Angular plant of Ivy,(hc exercifeth a contrary
;
leaves above,
Geometry, and beginning with angular leaves below, rounds them in the upper bra nches. Nor tan the rows in this order want delight, as carrying an afped
anfwerable unto the dipteros hypaahros, or double order of columns open above j the pppofite ranks of trees ftanding like pillars in the (^a%>ed:a of the Courts of famous building5,and Porttco*soi the TempUfub'
dialtaofold-^
Somewhat
men
Cyrus-gardeft
Or
theQtuncunXMyflicall;i confidered,
55
of Columns from trees, c(icKcrcifcd; For pcciaHy in their proportional diminutions, is iliuftrated by f^Uruvitts from the fhafts of Firre and Pine. And though the inter-arboration do imitate the Areoft^yhs^ or thin order, not ftridly anfwcring the
that they derived the rule
proportion oHntercoIumnittions
yet in
will not cx
cecdthe intermiflionofthe Columnes in the court of the Tabernacle; which being an hundred cubits long, and made up by twenty pillars, will afford no lede then intervals of five cubits. Befide.in this kindc of afped the fight being not diffufed but circumfcribed between long parallels and the i7rrK/a(r/U09 and adumbration from the branches, itframetha Penthouleover the eye, and maketh a quiet vifion and therefore in diffufed and open afpeds, aien hollow their hand above their eye, and make an artificiall brow, whereby they diredl the difperfei rayes of fight, and by this fbade p'-eferve a a moderate light in the chamber ef the eye ; keeping the pufilU plump and fair, and not contraded or (hrunk as in light and vagrant vi:
iion.
And
of
the world) with colours of mediocrity, that is, biew and green, above and below the fight, anoderacely terminating the acies of the eye.
For moft plants, though ^een above-ground, maintain their original white below it, according to the candour of their ieminal pulp, and the rudimental leaves do firft appear in that colour; obfervable in 5eeds fprouting in water upon the^r firfl foliation. Green feeming to be the firfl fupervenient, or above-ground complexion of Vegetables, fe^ ligature or inhumation , as Succory, parable in many upon Endive, Artichoaks, and which is alfo lofl upon fading in tke Autumn.
And
f>lants,
this
is
aifo agreeable
firlt
; And containing many vegetable feminalities, revealeth their Seeds by greenneffe ; and there-
which
fore foonefl expeded in rain or ftanding water, not eafily found in diflilledor water tkongly boiled ; wheremthc feeds are extinguifhed
'
lafl
worms, like crude and cotnouon water ; And therefore mofl fit foe wholfome beverage, and with malt makes Ale and Beer without
boyling* What large water-drinkers fomc Plants are, the Canary-tree and Birches in fome Northern Countries, drenching the fields about them do (ufHcientlydemonflrate.How water it felfis ib/e to maintain the growth of Vegetables, and without extinAion of their generative or medicall ve tues ; Befide the experiment of Helments tree, we have found in fome which have lived fix years in glaffes. The feeds ofScur. vy-graffe growing in water-pots, have been fruitfiil in the Land; and Afarum after a y^ars fpace, and once cafUng its leaves in water in
y I
the
dd
tion.
Cf^^^-^^^^^^-i ^^
^^^^
vomiting opera-
Nor are only dark and green colours, but (hades and (hadows c ontrived through the great Volume of nature, and trees ordained not onely to protedl and (hadow others.but by their fhades and (hadowing parts, to prereveandchenflithemfelves. The whole radiation or branchings (hadowing the ftock and the roor^^he leaves,the branches and fruk,too much cxpolcdto tlie windes and korcliing Sun. The calicular leaves ^ inclofc ihc tender flowers, and the flowers themfelves lie wrapt about the feeds, in their rudiment and firft formations, which being advanced the flowers fall away ; and are therefore contrived in variety of ^Figures, belt fatisfying the intention ; Handfomely obfervable in hooded and gaping flowers, and the Butterfly bloomes of leguminous pUnt , the lower leat clolely involving the rudimental Cod, and the alax^' or wingy divifions embracing or hanging over it. But feeds themUlves do Uq in perpetual ihades, either under the leaf, orfhutup in coverings- and fuch as he bareft have their husks, skins^and pulps about thctn, wherein the nebbc and generative particle Ueth moift and fecurcd from the injury of Aire and Sun. Darkneffe and light hold irtferchangctble do minions, and alternately rule the feaiinal ftste of things. Light unto (rt) FUto is darknefle unto J/^/>*r*r.Legions ^^ ^*"^'"*^ Ua^Cs jje in their fecond Chaos and Orcm of Htpptcrai^es; till \enebil^l!vi!tenebra Pitting 00 the habits of their forms, they fhew thcmfelve?} upon the orcoj lux. ftageof the world, and open dominion of Jove, They that held the 7ovi. Hipstars^ofbeavenwerebutrayes andflafhingglimpfcs of the Empyreal Jig^> through holes and perforations of the upper heaven, tookofBhe
d\it
5. Heve///
Seleno'
naturaifliadows of ftars, while according to better difcovery the poor Inhabitants of the Moon have but a polary life, and muft paflc half theii
iraphia,
dayes in the (hadow of that Luminary. Light that makes things fecn, makes fomc things invifiUe, were i not for darknefle and the ftiadow of the earth, the nobkft ptrt of the Creation had reuiained unfcen, andthe^tars in heavcoas invifibleas on the fourth day, when they were created above the HorizpfHwitfa.the Sun^ or there was n{)tan eye to behold them; The greatciVmyftery of Religion is exprcfled by adumbration, and in the noblcft parts of Jewi(h Types, we finde the ( hicrnbims flwdouiog the Mercy-feat : life
it felf
of the
all
things
fall
of death, andtoulscieparted bttcnhefiaadows under ebisi>ame. The Suii itTetf is but fhc
.
dack fmHla<-hyumaxi<Xh.gi.n buttheihadovvof Gofdlaftly* It isnowooder tbac this Quintuwiall rder wai ,i
ftijl
fitfl
and
affeded
as
I1
Qinabin'*er
cuncialiy,
m the
ob):(!l,. receive
Upon ihc'A^fimt or
or,
.
pS:ure friMn(;hj<Aff
Qmncanx
TTaiufaily
Con^red,
6y
ftcr the decullation of the ftyes ac the hole of the horne/coat, and their refraction upon the Chryftalline humour, Anfwctin^ tht f&ramett of the window, and the convex or buPtiing-glaflfes, which rcfra<ft the
rayes that enter it. And if Ancient Anatomy would hold, a like dif* pofurc there tvas ot the optick or vifual nerves in the brain, whereirt
antiquity conceived a concurrence by dccuflation. And this not onely obfervablc in the Lawsof dired Vifion, but in fome part aUo verified in the reflcded rayes of light- For making the angle of incidence equal tothat of reflexion, the vifual ray r^tnmeth QaificUnciaUy, andf
after the
line
the place of vifion, there arifeth a feml-deeulTation which makes the objed fcea in a perpendicular urico it felf, and as far below the r^fledent, as
in water.
it is
from
it
Moon
beheld
of reflexion in moved bodies and founds, decutfacion, observe the rule of equality between incidence and rcflexion;wherby whifpering places are framed
And
this
is
where the voice being delivered ae an equality unto the angle of oMerving one extremity, the focfts of incidence, it will refleft unto tht focus of the other end, and lo efcape the ears of the ftanders in the middle. A like rule is obferved in the reflexion of the vocall and fonorotw line in Ecchoes, which cannot therefore be heard in all ftacions. Bot hapning in woody plantations, by waters, and able to return (ome words; ifreachtby apleafant and well-diviaing voice, there may be
Elliptical arches laid fide-wife
;
heard the fofteft notes in nature* And this not onely verified in the way of fenfe, but in animall and intelledual receptions. Things cntring upon the intell. d by a Pyramid JroHi without.and thence into the memory by another from within the common decuffation being in the underftanding as is deUvered by (a) Bovillfts. Whether the intelledual and phancaftical lines be * Car. Bonot thus rightly difpofed, but magnified, diminidied, diftorted, and y^f^J' "* ill placed in the Machematicks of fome brains, whereby they have ir-""' of things, perverted notions, app'ehenfions regular conceptions, and incurable hallucinations, were no unplcafant Ipeculation. And if Egyptian Philofophy may obtain the fcalc ofinfluences wj^s thus diipofed, and the genial fpirits of both worlds, do trace their way in aicending and defcendmg Pyramids, myftically apprehended in the Letter X, and the open bill and ftradling Legges of a Stork, which was
imitated by that Charader. Of this Figure Plato made choice to illuftrate the motion of the foul, both of the world and man ; while he delivered that God divi-
ded the whole conjundion length- wife, according to figure of a Greek X, and thentu'ning it about reflfded it into a circe; By the circle implying the uniform motion of the firft Orb, and by the right lines,
5
la
the
<55
Cjrui'CArdeny
Or The Quincum
Mj/ftuall)
ton^dtnd,
the planetical and various motions within it. And this alfo with ap plication unto the foul of man, which hath a double afpcdl, one right, whereby it bcholdeth the body, and objefts without ; another circalar and reciprocal, whereby it bcholdeth it fclf. The circle declaring the motion of the indivifible foul, fimple, according to the divinity of itsnature, and returning into it felf; the right lines refpeding the motion pertaining unto fenfe, and vegitation, and the central dccuflation, the wonderous connexion of the feverall faculties conjointly in one iubftance. And fo con joyned the unity and duality of the ioul, and
the three fubftances fo much considered by him ; That is, the indivifible or divine, the divifible or corporeal, and that third, was the Syj^ajis or harmony of thofc two,in the myftical decuffatioa.
made out
And if that were clearly made out which Jufirin tJ^Artyr took for granted, this figure hath had the honour to charaderize and notiiie our* bleffed <S'avioar, as he delivcreth in that borrowed expreffion from
Viatel DecHJfavit eum in univerfo, the hint whereof he would have ^lato derive from the figure of the brazen Serpent, and to have miftaken the Letter X for T, whereas it is not improbable, he iearned> thefe and other myfticalexpreflions in his learned obfervations of iEgypt, where he might obvioufly behold the Mercurial charadcrs, the handed crofTesjand other my fteries not throughly underftood in thefacred Letter X, which being derivative from the Stork, one of the ten facredanimab, might be originally ^gypcianjand brought into Creesa-. by C<i^;/ of that Coufltry*
c HA p.
ConJldereJ.
i)
GHAP.
V.
TO
enlarge this contemplation unto all themyfteriesandfecrccs, accommodible unto this number,wcre inexcufablcPythagorirme, yet cannot omit the ancient conceit of five furnamed the number of dividing between the digits, and hanging in the a Sim. (<) juftice; asjuftiy . Centre of Nine, defcribed by (quare numeration, which angularly di- v-ided will make the decuflated Number; and fo agreeable unto the , , , Quincunciall Ordination, and rowes divided by Equality, and juft <5^ffrw, in the whole coraplantation j And might be the Originail of that'common game among us, wherein the filth place is 5overaign, and carrieth the chief intention. The Ancients wifely inftrudting youth, even in their recreations unto virtue, that is,early to drive at the middle point and Central Seat of juttice. , AercTeoy Nor can we omit how agreeable unto this dumber an handfomedi- a'^^t^/ vifionismade in Trees and Plants, fincc Plmarch and the Ancients *pt;>*t or, have named it the divifive number, juftly dividing the Entities of ^'o.,Arbort the world, many remarkable things in it, and alfo comprehending the i*^"''^'^^"*^^ f 4 )generalldivifion of Vegetables. And he that confiders how moft bajnd that bloflbmes of Trees, and greateft number of Flowers, confift of five fifth which Leaves; and therein doth reft the fetled Pvule of Nature ; So that in ?'"P^1' thofe which exceed there is often found, or eafily made a variety ; J^c ^X may readily dilcovcr how nature rcfts in this number, which is indeed and Sra the firft reft and paufe of numeration in the fingers, the natural Or- whether to gans thereof. Nor in the divifion of the feet of perfed animals doth b^ rnwed And even in the joynts of feet, which ^fX'ovot nature exceed this account. So progref- JiXprc'. in Birds are moft multiplyed, furpafleth not this number fionally making them out in many, that from five in the fore-daw (he hending aldeicendeth unto two in the hindemoft ; And io in four feet makes up f conftrvA the number of joynts, in the five fingers or toes of man. ^ndlslf^"* Not to omit the Quintuple Sedion of a (a) Cone, of handfome cords, offo praftife in Ornamental! Garden-plots, and in fome way difcoverable many yards infomany works of Nature; In the leaves, fruits, and feeds of Vege- J^^'g^'^; tables, and fcales of fome Fifties, fo much confideraWc in glalTes, and LfSf'* the optick doArine; wherein the learned may confidcr the Cryftaliine Hyperbole,
and Lbligo. Antiquity named this the Conjugall or wedding Number, and madeittheEmblemc of the mofV remarkable coniundion, will conce've it duclyappliable unto this handiome Oein the cuttle- fifh
cir cuius.
^^'^'"'i"^''''*'
He that
forgets noc
bow
^ftc-
goricail
70
*''K'iiJ.^'](tf
ideji nupti-
BhTdtr
b ?\itode
hg, 6.
c PlMtireb
probltm.
''^""'**
of that obtcure exprciUonof {a) Hifai, and afford no improbable reafon why Plato admitted lus Nupdall guefts by fives, m t^^ kindred of the [h) married couple. And though a fliarper raydery might be implied in the Number of the five wile and foolifh Virgin?, which were to meet the Bridegroom, yet was the fame agreeable unco the Conjugall Njmber, which ancient Numerifls made out by two and three, the firl^ parity and imparity, the aftive and pailivc digits, the materiall and formal! principles in generative Societies- And not dilcordant even from the ouitomcs ef the Rowans, who admitted but (c) five lorches in their Nuptiall SoIjpanicies, Whtthcr there were any myitery or not implied , the moft generative animals were created on this ds^y, and had accordingthclargeft benediiflion ; And under a Qaintuple confideration, wanton Antiquity confidered the CircumftanceJ of generation, while by this numbr of five they natuiaJly divided the Ncdar of the fifth
Planet.
Ac-
dogXabil.
Be^ the fifth in their Alphabet According to that Cabaliflical >o|^Abram had not had this Letter added unto his Name, be had wa. remained fruitleffe, and without the power of Generation Not oncly becaufe hereby the number of his Name attained two hundred fonrty
eight, the
duftions, the mother of Life and Fountain of fouls in Gabaliliicali Technology is called Binah j wboU Seal and Charad^cr was He. So that being fteril before, he received the power of generation from that
meafiire atid manfion in the Archetype ; and was made conformable eJodxMo unto Bmah. Anduponfuch involved confiderations, the (e) ten of Ht, Sarai was exchanged into five. If any flaall look upon this as a itable number, and fitly appropriable unto frees, as Bodiesof Rcfland Jta* tion, he hath herein a great Foundation in nature, whoobferviug much variety in legges and motive Orgaos of Animals, as two, four, fix, eight, twelve, fourteen, and more, bath paffed over five and ten, and affigned them unto none, or very few, as the PhaUngitmtmonJirofum B afl'anutn.C lufi J AC de Last. Cur foFier,4meric(ey Defcnpt. If perfedly defc ibed. And for the Ikbiaty of this Number, he (hall not wmtthc fphericityof itsnarure, which multiplied in it felf, will return into its own denomination, and bring up the rear oKhe account. Which is alo one of the Numbers that makes up the myflicall Name of God, which confining of Lett^s denoting all the fphaericall NumEmpiiaticatly fets forth the Notion of rUber*, ten, five, and fix megi]Hi, and chat iiiCdligible Sphear, which is the Nature of
&
God.
Many
CjvuS'Ga/cien or the
Quincunx
jidy^icully Confidcred^
5criptufe, per-
"fX
Many
ExpreJliODS by this
haps unjuftly laden with myfticall Expofitions, and little concerning Gur order. That the //r^f^rpj were forbidden to eat the fruit of thetr new planted Trees, before the fifth yeare, was very agreeable vinto the naturail Rules of Husbandry; Fruits beingunwhoirome,and lalTi, befqrc the fourth, or fifth Yeare. In the fecond day or Feminine part of five, there was added no approbation. For in the third or martul;ne day the fame is twice repeated ; and a double benedidion indofcd both Creations, whereof the one in fome part was but an accomplilTimentof the other. ThattheTrefpafTer wasco pay a fifth part above the head or principall, makes no fecret in this Number, and implied no more then one part above the principall ; which being confidered in four parts, the addicionali forfeit muft bear the Name ofa fifth. The five golden mice had plainly their determination frem the niimber of the Princes; That five (houldpnt to flight an hundred might have nothing myftically implyed j confidcring a rank of SouJdters could fcarce cenfift of a lefler number. Saint- P<i/ had rather fpeak five wordsin a known then ten thoufand in an unknown tongue : That is as little as could well be fpoken. A fimple propofition confiding
of three words
five
More confideiaWe there are in this myfticall account, which we muft notbfifton. And therefore why the radicall Letters in the Pentateuch rtiouldequall the number of the Souldiery of the Tribes ; Why our Saviour in the Wilderncfle fed five thoufand perfons with five Barley Loaves, and again, but four thonfand with no leffe then fcvcn of Wheat? Why Jofefh defigncd five changes of Rayment unto Ben" ]4mi ? and David took juft five pibbics out of the Brook againft the lagan Champion ? leave it unto Arithmetical! Divinity, and The- nf<m^^.
.
We
ological explanation.
^n'd
^^"
Yet if any delight in new Problemes, or think it worth the enquiry, fiyg. scalis.-:. whether the Phyficiao hath rightly rightly hit the nominal notation cff Qainque; W^hy tfac Ancients mixed five or three but not four parts of water unto their Wine And Hipf cerates obferved a fifth proportion in the mixture of water with milk, as in Dyfemeries and bloudy fluxes. Under what a blirufe foundation Aftrologers do figure the good oc had Fate ix^m our Children, in ia) good Fortune, or the fifth houfe a 'Aj^Q^ of thcit Celeftial ^chflmes. Whether the ^Egyptians defcribed a Starre Tvyju or by a Figure of five pcMfdtj,'with refcrenoe unto the {b) five Capitall af- borcifmmA pe<5ls, whereby they tranfmit their Influences, or abftrufer Confide^f t'f,t"fifth rations ? Why the Cafaaliftieall DoAors, who conceive the wh ole Se- honfe. Conjur^, /?,fcjVtf/^, or divine Emanations fo have guided the ten-ftringed Harp of
.
''
Z?
numeration d^^bcgJa with the Penbypate Mefon^ or fiffe-ut, and (o place the Tipheftri<ft
oppcfire,
^
gJJJal^'te"*-
rclh
tragonal.
72
C fol faut; upon the fifth firing; Or whether this number be ofcner applied unto bad things and ends, then good in holy Scripture, and why I He may meet with abftrufities of no ready refohition.
If any (hall queft ion th? rationality of that Magick, in the cure of the blindc man by Serapu, commanded to place five fing^r^ on his Altar, and then his band on his Eyes? Whyfincethe whole Comedy cne^1*!^, is primarily and naturally corapiifcd in vr) four parts; and Antiquity i-m-mffKy permitted not foraany perfons to (peak in one Scene, yet would not '^;*^'"Jt^ comprehend the fame in more or leffethcn five ads? Whyamongft' ^^ ' Sea-ftarres nature chiefly dclightcch in five points? And fince there are found fome of no fewer then twelve, and fome of fcven and nine,
why
i
there are few or none difcoverf d of fix or eight ? If any fliall enquire the Flowers of Rue properly confift of four Leaves, the firft and
? Why fince many Flowers have one leaf or (d) it, diverfc three, and the greateft number have Scaliger will as none, urn mlli' confirt of five divided fromjtheir bottomes ; there are yet fo few of folium. two : or why nature generally beginning or fetting out with two oppofite leaves at the Root, doth Co feldome conclude with that order and
'fol'
Aiall
do naturally diflrad their Geomancers do imitate the Quintuple Figure, in their Mother CharaAersof Acquifition and Amifrion,&c. fomewhat anfwering the Figures in the Lady or fpeckled Beetle ? With what
cuCfations, and needles tranfverfly placed
Why
Equity, Chiromanticall conjcdurers decry thefe decuflations in the ? What that dccuffated Figure iitendeth inthemedallof y^/f.vWfrthe Great? Why the Goddeflcs fit com-
monly crofie-Iegged in ancient draughts, Since Jttno is defcnbed in the fame as a veneficall pofture to hinder the birth of Hercules ? If any (hall doubt why at the Amphidromicall Feafts, on the fifth day after
the Childe was born, prefents were fent from friends, of TolypHJfesy five mud i>e only left in that Symbolical muand Cuttle Filhcs ? ? V/hy Proteusin Homer the ^ymbole tiny among the men of of the firft matter,before he fetled himfelf in the midfl of his Sca-Mon-
Why
C^ww
fters,
doth place them out by fives ? Why the fifth years Oxe was acceptable 5acrifice unto lupiter ? Or why the Noble Antoninw in fome
fenc<e
? He (hall not fall on trice or invent and propofe unto acuter enquirerS) naufeating crambe verities and queitions over-queried. Flat
doth
call
the foul
it
(elf a
Rhombus
trivialldifquifitions.
And
thefe
we
and
his
is
flexible truths are beat out by every hammer ; But Vnlcan and whole forge fweat to woik out ^rib;//^^ bis armour. A large field yet left unco iharper difccfocrs to enlarge upon this order^to fearch out
'
73
out the ^ !rfrwV and figured draughts of this nature, and moderating the ftudy of names, and meer nomenclature of plants, to ercft generalities, difelofc unobfervcd proprieties, not only in the vegetable ftiop, but the whole volume of nature ; affording delightfuU Truths, confirmablc by fenfe and ocular Obfervation, which feemstome the fureft path, to trace the Labyrinth of truth. For though difcarfi ve enquiry and rationall conjecture, may leave handforae gaflies and flefliwounds 5 yet without conjunftion of this exped no niortal or difpatching blows unto crrour. But the {a) Quincunx of Heaven runs low, and *tis time to clofe Hyadti are unwilling to fpin out our awa- "">; ^^^ the five ports of knowledge j king thoughts into the phantafmes of fleep, which often continueth jjout^jj. praecogitationsj making Cables of Cobwebbcs and Wildernefles ofnjght, at handfome roves. Bcfidc (^) H/^;??c?-<f(?/ hath fpoke fo little and the that time. {c) Oneirocriticall Maftcrs, have left luch frigid Interpretations from P ' ''l/^'"' pUnts,that there is little encouragement to dream of Paradife it ^^^^'^^'AittmodQNor will the fweeteft delight of Gardens afford much comfort in fleepj rw, 6* Awherein the dulnefie of that fenfe (hakes hands with delegable odours; pomarjir, and though in the (d) Bed of Cleopatra^ can hardly with any delight Strc'*'<*
We
**
**
raifeuptheghoftofaRofc. Night, which Pagan Theology could make the daughter of C^^os^ Although no lower affords no advantage to the defcription of order then that Maflecan we derive its Genealogy. All things began in or:
m^xok,.
; according to the ordainefof order and myflical Mathematicks of the Sity of heaven. Though Somnm in Homer be fent to rowfe up Agamemnon^ I finde no fuch cffedsin thefedrowfie approaches of fleep. To keep our eyes open longer were but to ad our Antipodes, The Huntfmen are up in A^ mericay and they arc already pafl: their firft fleep in Perfia, But who can be drowfie at that howr which fireed us from everlafting fleep f or have fluRibring thoughts at that time, when fleep ic felfmufl end, and as fQme conjedure all fliali awake again ?
FINIS.
J
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####l^#####^##*#########^#i
^he Stationer to
Cannot omit to
the ^ader.
that a
advertife,
fince
,
Book was
this
Eutitulcd, "Natures publiflied not long I Cabinet Z^nlockty bearing the Name of Au-
thour
this
If any
benefited thereby
fo ambitious as to challenge
Work. To
ces
diftinguifli
was the Oiiginall Criticifme, and fomewere fo handfomely counterfeited, that the Entitled A uthours needed not to difclaime them. But fince it isfo, that erther he muft write himfelf, or Others v^ ill write for him, I know no better
Prevention then to afl: termiffion of his Pen.
his
own part
with
leflc in-
Books
Books Printed
for Hen,
Brome
at
the
Gun
in I'vy'Lane,
The Souls Cottflt^^ Being Eight Sermons, fix whereof were preached at Oxford, The ^eem Exchange^ A Comedy, By RichardBrome, Two Ejfays ef Love and iJUarriage, The Grand Impofior Examined^ Or, the Life and Tmllof James Naylcr. The Souls Tcurnkey^ Being a Gonference betwixt MSHnrum and M"" Tuke Moderator of gr* CoS. in London,
Boo \s now in the Prefe which willfljortly be extant.
The Affinity offacred Liturgies^ By Hamon L'Eflrange^ Efq. Five New Comedies which were never before publifhr? By
Richard Bronse, Learned and much deftred Comment arj on the whole Epiftle to the Philippians^ By Natk Tucker Late Preacher of the
Gofpel
at Tortfmoitth,
^*F^P^
:tjA.
T!Jg^l^^