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A89305 Horlogiographia optica. Dialling universall and particular: speculative and practicall. In a threefold præcognita, viz. geometricall, philosophicall, and astronomicall: and a threefold practise, viz. arithmeticall, geometricall, and instrumentall. With diverse propositions of the use and benefit of shadows, serving to prick down the signes, declination, and azimuths, on sun-dials, and diverse other benefits. Illustrated by diverse opticall conceits, taken out of Augilonius, Kercherius, Clavius, and others. Lastly, topothesia, or, a feigned description of the court of art. Full of benefit for the making of dials, use of the globes, difference of meridians, and most propositions of astronomie. Together with many usefull instruments and dials in brasse, made by Walter Hayes, at the Crosse Daggers in More Fields. / Written by Silvanus Morgan. Morgan, Sylvanus, 1620-1693.; Goddard, John, fl. 1645-1671, engraver. 1652 (1652) Wing M2741; Thomason E652_16; ESTC R202919 57,946 133

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name will last and be in memory From age to age although for infamie What more abiding Tombe can man invent Then Books which if they 'r good are permanent And monuments of fame the which shall last Till the late evening of the World be past But if erroneous sooth'd with vertues face Their Authors cridit's nothing but disgrace If I should praise thy Book it might be thought Friends will commend although the work be nought But I 'le forbeare lest that my Verses doe Belie that praise that 's only due to you Good Wiue requires no Bush and Books will speak Their Authors credit whether strong or weak W. Leybourn ERRATA REader I having writ this some years since while I was a childe in Art and by this appear to be little more for want of a review hath these faults which I desire thee to mend with thy pen and if there be any errour in Art as in Chap. 17 which is only true at the time of the Equinoctiall take that for an oversight and where thou findest equilibra read equilibrio and in the dedication in some Copies read Robert Bateman for Thomas and side for signe and know that Optima prima cadunt pessimas aeve manent pag. line Correct ● 10 equall lines 18 16 Galaxia 21 1 Galaxia 21 8 Mars 24 12 Scheame 35 1 Hath 38 8 of the Tropicks polar Circles 40 22 AB is 44 31 Artificiall 46 ult heri 49 4 forenoon 63 29 AB 65 11 6 80 16 BD 92 17 Arch CD 9 ult in some copies omit center 126 4 happen 126 6 tovvard B 127 26 before 126 prop. 10 for sine read tang elev   Figure of the Dodicahedron false cut pag. 4 LF omitted at end of Axis 25 For A read D 26 In the East and West Diall A omitted on the top of the middle line C on the left hand B on the right 55 Small arch at B omitted in the first polar plane 58 For E read P on the side of the shadowed line toward the left hand I omitted next to M and L in the center omitted 81 K omitted in figure 85 On the line FC for 01 read 6 for 2 read 12 line MO for 15 read 11 96 A small arch omitted at E F G H omitted at the ende of the line where 9 is 116 I L omitted on the little Epicicle 122 THE ARGVMENT OF THE Praecognita Geometricall and of the Work in generall WHat shall I doe I stand in doubt To shew thee to the light For Momus still will have a flout And like a Satyre bite His Serpentarian tongue will sting His tongue can be no slander He 's one to wards all that hath a fling His fingers ends hath scan'd her But seeing then his tongue can't hurt Fear not my little Book His slanders all last but a spurt And give him leave to look And scan thee thorough and if then This Momus needs must bite At shadows which dependant is Only upon the light Withdraw thy light and be obscure And if he yet can see Faults in the best that ever writ He must finde fault with me How ere proceed in private and deline The time of th' day as oft as sun shall shine And first define a Praecognitiall part Of magnitude as usefull to this art THE PRAECOGNITA GEOMETRICAL THe Arts saith Arnobius are not together with our mindes sent out of the heavenly places but all are found out on earth and are in processe of time soft and fair forged by a continuall meditation our poor and needy life perceiving some casual things to happen prosperously while it doth imitate attempt and try while it doth slip reform and change hath out of these same assiduous apprehensions made up small Sciences of Art the which afterwards by study are brought to some perfection By which we see that Arts are found out by daily practice yet the practice of Art is not manifest but by speculative illustration because by speculation Scimus ut sciamus we know that we may the better know And for this cause I first chose a speculative part that you might the better know the practice and therefore have first chose this speculative part of practicall Geometry which is a Science declaring the nature quantity and quality of Magnitude which proceeds from the least imaginable thing To begin then A Point is an indivisible yet is the first of all dimension it is the Philosophers Atome such a Nothing as that it is the very Energie of all things In God it carryeth its extreams from eternity to eternity in the World it is the same which Moses calls the beginning and is his Genesis 't is the Clotho that gives Clio the matter to work upon and spins it forth from terminus à quo to terminus ad quem in the Alphabet 't is the Alpha and is in the Cuspe of the Ascendant in every Science and the house of Life in every operation Again a Point is either centricall or excentricall both which are considered Geometrically or Optically that is a point or a seeming point a point Geometrically considered is indivisible and being centrall is of magnitude without consideration of form or of rotundity with reference to Figure as a Circle or a Globe c. or of ponderosity with reference to weight and such a point is in those Balances which hang in equilibra yet have one beam longer than the other If it be a seeming point it is increased or diminished Optically that is according to the distance of the object and subject 'T is the birth of any thing and indeed is to be considered as our principall significator which being increased doth produce quantity which is the required to Magnitude for Magnitude is no other then a continuation of Quantity which is either from a Line to a plain Superficies or from a plain Superficies to a Solid Body every of which are considered according to the quantity or form The quantity of a Line is length without breadth or thicknesse the forme either right or curved The quantity of a Superficies consisteth in length and breadth without thicknesse the form is divers either regular or irregular Regular are Triangles Squares Circles Pentagons Hexagons c. An equilaterall Triangle consisteth of three right lines as many angles his inscribed side in a Circle contains 120 degrees A Square of four equall right lines and as many right angles and his inscribed side is 90 degrees A Pentagon consisteth of five equall lines and angles and his inscribed side is 72 degrees of a Circle A Hexagon is of six equall lines and angles and his side within a Circle is 60 degrees which is equall to the Radius or Semidiameter An Angle is the meeting of two lines not in a streight concurring but which being extended will crosse each other but if they will never crosse then they are parallel The quantity of an angle is the measure of the part of a Circle