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A53987 A miscellany of divers problems containing ingenuous solutions of sundry questions, partly moral, partly of other subjects / translated out of French by Henry Some ...; Meslange de divers problèmes. English Pellisson-Fontanier, Paul, 1624-1693.; Some, Henry.; Thoms, Samuel.; Pellisson, Georges, d. 1677. 1662 (1662) Wing P1108; ESTC R20442 80,919 296

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which I understand not reproach to him his contradictions fight against him with those arms which he hath put into my hands and appear more able and more understanding by this censure of him then indeed I am On the contrary to commend any one with success one must not suppose for ttue any thing that he saies but must prove and maintain it by reasons fetcht elswhere PROB. 35. What is the reason that when the Winter hath been very cold they commonly say the Summer that follows will be very hot THere are sometimes some slight things the clearing whereof fails not to bring some light to our common sense and in this number one may reckon this which at first sight hath some difficulty by reason that one would think the quite contrary that if the Winter hath very much cooled the Earth and Air they should be the more difficultly heated by the following Summer Is it therefore quite otherwise that the heat of the Summer finding the earth and air very cold doth redouble its violence by the opposition of its contrary Or else do they say so because they see that one contrary doth naturally succeed another in the same degree as for example the water doth naturally ascend as much as it hath descended the excess of heat in a feaver ariseth to the same violence with the excess of cold great friendships leave behind them great enmities and great displeasures when they end produce extream contentments after an extraordinary cloudy and wet season we enjoy an extraordinary serenity and purity of air and much fairer then that which went before it and one that is recovered from a great sickness hath commonly better health then he had before and recovers a soundness that is more firme and of a greater value then that which he had lost Or else is it that when the Winter hath been extraordinary cold it hath also been necessarily dry by the same reason the earth being very dry is disposed to receive a great heat Or else that when it hath been long cold it is a sign that the matter of the cold and Northern wind or of the other causes that do cool the air is spent for a long time and therefore it is likely it will be very hot PROB. 36. What is the reason that Fear makes ones hair stand on end FOr the clearing of this Problem I think it is needful to consider in the first place that Admiration and Fear have some affinity and do often accompany one another Which being so it seems that as Admiration makes a Chilness run through ones whole body by reason that it brings into the soul a certain shadow of Fear So Fear makes the hair stand on end out of some mixture of Admiration Indeed this seems so much the more probable because the frights which make the hair stand on end must spring from a danger whose image presently strikes the soul and yet it knows no cause of it and that those frights which come upon us when we think we see dead men or Ghosts or Devils do chiefly produce this effect because they are not only fearful things but also very admirable as being supernatural Virgil hath excellently well comprized this for when he would expresse the Fear which the ghost of his wife Creusa strook into Aeneas the prodigy of Polydorus's tomb the arrival of Mercury that came to bring him a message from Jupiter or the Fear that Turnus was in seeing an infernal monster flap his buckler with its wings upon all these occasions he puts down this circumstance that their hair stood up right because that all these things were as Admirable as terrible But in other kinds of fear he is contented to mention only coldness and trembling And if any demand of me why Admiration makes the hair to stand up right I answer that the soul having its faculties intent on the consideration of that which appears admirable doth also contract the organs of the brain and with them the skin that covers the head Now a man may easily imagine that we cannot contract this skin but by pulling it up nor pull it up but the hairs will stare a little It is true that the motion of fear doth also contribute thereto because it makes one cold and that a part of our body cannot be cold without being a little more contracted then before PROB. 37. Whence comes it that many being in a frenzy have spoke Latin or Greek without having ever learned either of these languages MAny of those that have examined this Question endeavouring to rid themselves of the great difficulty which it presents at first to the mind have in my judgement made use of such answers as are more against all appearance of reason then the Question it self and given us remedies worse then the disease For they would give such strange force to our imagination that no man of a sound judgement is able to give credit to their vain discourses Wherefore omiting all that they have said of it we will search only amongst known causes according to our custom the reason of so marvellous an effect First then it is remarkable that those words which many being in a frenzy have pronounced in a tongue which they knew not have been ordinarily Latin or Greek or sometimes Hebrew according to the report of those that have treated of them In the second place I suppose that the words which they have thus spoken did not make any discourse that was coherent or that was pertinent to that which was asked them since that the transports of their frenzy hindred them from discoursing rationally These two things being thus supposed one may add that although those that have spoken Latin Greek or Hebrew in a frenzy never studied it and yet they easily may have heard those words before which they spoke seeing that these three languages are commonly taught throughout Europe and that private houses and those places which are set apart for speaking in publick do very often retain them Now it is possible that these words at the same time when they heard them made some impression in the organs of their memories which through its weakness did not appear to them untill they fell into madness because that the heat of the frenzy by its immoderate subtilizing of the spirits of the brain renders the sense of the imagination so quick and so delicate that there cannot be in its organs any impressions so weak which it discovers not and is lively enough affected with it And that the images of certain things can lodge in our memories and we have no knowledge of them at all because they are only painted very weakly and as it were with dead colours may sufficiently be proved by Reminiscence which brings to our minds many things which we thought we had utterly forgotten Besides many otherlike impressions are also made oftentimes in the other organs of our faculties and we never perceive it and it is not to be doubted
greatness of it makes us weep even in the midst of our joy through a kind of pitty we have of our selves Or else shall I take it thus that in the sudden motions of a great joy the dilatation of the spirits of the heart is so great that it is weakned thereby and that our soul finding its own weakness by this means is apt to be wounded by every reflexion that hath never so little of trouble in it Or lastly do not these tears of joy proceed from hence that learning all on a sudden that we are delivered from some great evil under which we have lain a long time the news cannot presently gain an entire belief in us and that as a body that is frozen doth not lose its coldness at that very instant it is brought to the fire by the same reason our soul cannot lose that impression of its passed sadness at the very same instant that the good it was deprived of becomes present to it See then the causes which it seems may be given of that marvellous state of man wherein he weeps although he have a serene spirit by an accident which we see sometimes happen in the air when it rains and shines both at once There are are also Tears which abundant laughter brings into our eyes but they are not of the same species with those I spake of but now and I conceive they proceed only from that great and violent agitation which laughter causes within us for there is no passion which shakes a man all over with greater violence and it may very well be that a motion so violent forces out of the eyes some humidity as we see that the violent agitation of a vessel wherein there is some liquor makes some drops of it sparkle out and as the wind that shakes the trees after a rain makes those drops which lay there fall to the ground PROB. 6. Whence comes it that many very wicked men are oftentimes the best friends IT is found by experience that very bad men are often most zealous friends to them that they bear an affection to nay sometimes more then the best of men To enquire then the causes of this effect is it not that there is a kind of amity which is not begotten by reason but by a means more low namely long acquaintance and familiarity so that souls of the lowest rank and that have the least of reason are not incapable of it but on the contrary are in some sort more capable than others because not governing themselves by judgement they do only follow the impressions of other things amongst which that which length of time and use makes is none of the least Or else is it not because good men are friends only ad aras that is as far as will stand with Religion and wicked men beyond So that if they must only prostitute their consciences to their friends and tread underfoot all things sacred and despoile themselves of the fairest ornaments the soul can be adorned with they do it very willingly Or else is it not that as dogs are faithful to us and succour us against those that set upon us partly indeed out of love but partly also because it is their disposition to be easily provoked so wicked men help us with great ardour against our enemies and combat them with great animosity not only for the affection they bear us but partly also for that by reason of their natural curstness and venome of which they are full they are more apt to be inflamed with a violent choler Or else is it because it is very natural for us to love with violence something without us wicked men that love neither God nor Justice nor common goodness are constrained by the force of nature to love infinitely some particular persons Or else is it that cultivating only that part of their duty which consists only in friendship and keeping that only as a remainder of the beauty of the soul which hinders them from altogether resembling savage beasts they have the more love for that as a mother hath the more love for her son if he be her only one Or lastly is it not that the nature of things is such that generally in every extream there is some light mixture of the contrary extream For instance we see by experience that in cold Countries there are sometimes in summer more violent heats then those of the hot Countries and on the contrary the subtilty of the air of the hot Countries is the reason that sometimes the cold there is more penetrating than that of the cold Countries The Germans that pass for the least subtle people of Europe have more of subtilty than any of the rest in all sort of mechanick inventions The most ingenious people are commonly the most awkward and unapt in some slight things Melancholy persons are subject to more violent joyes then those that are sanguine covetous people according to the vulgar opinion are sometimes carried out to a greater excess of prodigality then prodigals Men extraordinary valiant do often tremble more then others at the sight of a great danger Women whose visage is more properly then that of men the seat of Beauty are also more susceptible then men of an extream and horrid ugliness Lastly to return to the mixture of goodness and wickedness one of the cruellest Emperours of Rome could not as the Historian saith be present at the acting of a Tragedy but those faigned miseries which he there heard raised a compassion in him which made him weep We read as much of another Tyrant of Greece of the same nature and when a man is arrived at the highest degree of wickedness the last crime he commits is to be his own murderer and voluntarily to throw himself into everlasting pains by the violence of the remorse of his conscience In which there seems to be a certain air and shaddow of magnanimity and heroick goodness PROB. 7. What is the reason that the Wind which comes in at a window or a little hole is more dangerous than that which we feel abroad in the open field UPon this Problem some may possibly think that as the water meeting with a very narrow channel becomes more rapid so the wind that comes in at a door or a window or a small chink for the same reason redoubles its violence Which is very true but nothing to the purpose for the clearing the difficulty of this Question because it is certain that a very little wind gliding in at a cranny is more apt to hurt one then another wind much more violent when one is in the open field This cause then being thus rejected is it not rather because the wind which we suffer in the open field doth presently close the pores through its coldness and so arms us against it self whereas the wind that comes into the house by some little hole finds us hot all the time and consequently doth as long as it continues blowing
familiar things ought to be favoured against all those that consist in Sympathie or in secret influence or in specifick qualities and yet no doubt we ought to have recourse to these last but it is only as people that are like to be drowned catch at thorns and embrace them in that pressing need that is to say when we find no other means to deliver our selves from a difficulty for so long as there is any other means of escaping it if it be but any thing tolerable this must needs be very bad But to come to the present business Those which have considered that the heat of the Moneth of August is greater then that of the Moneths of June and July although in them the Sun be nearer to us and strikes us with less oblique rayes and makes longer dayes have thence inferred that this excess of heat proceeds from the influence of a Star which is called the Dog to which they have also given other ill qualities for this if we will believe what they say of it is the cause that in August the heat of the Sun is more malignant even when it is no greater then in the other Moneths of Summer that many creatures and especially Dogs do then run mad and that it is then more dangerous to go into the water and that sicknesses are more frequent and greater and that men feel some particular weaknesses in all the parts of the body But all things well considered it will be found that there is nothing in all this that should oblige us to attribute secret and particular vertues to the Dog-star and to leave the large field of known and ordinary causes For first I do not see why we should wonder that the Sun is hotter in August then in July though it be true that in August he regards us somewhat more obliquely and that the dayes are shotter the reason of it is because the Earth having been exceedingly dryed by the former heats is more apt to be violently scorched as we see that any dry thing set before a lesser fire receives a more violent heat then a thing that is moist from a fire that is much greater That this reason is pertinent there is an experience that methinks proves it plainly enough it is that though at noon the Sun be nearer to us and cast more direct rayes on us then he doth any time after yet those that travel in Summer do perceive a more violent heat two or three hours after-noon then at noon it self the reason whereof is that at noon the moisture of the morning is not so well dryed up either on the grass or the air or the earth as it is a while after This example is so put to the subject I apply it to the Question in hand that there cannot be found any difference in it and it may serve well enough to prove what I say for as somebody hath well observed the images of the Four Seasons of the year are to be seen in one only Day in which the Morning by its moisture represents the Spring Noon and sometime after is like the Summer Solstice and the two Moneths that follow it the Evening to the Autum and the arrival of Night to the arrival of Winter Now as this reason renders the heat of August greater it is manifest that withall it renders it necessarily more malign But yet if it be objected that it is often more malignant then that of other Moneths without being more violent I answer that this doth not yet force us to fly to a secret cause for if it were necessary to attribute this particular malignity to the influence of some Star it would follow also that we must give influences to some other Star for to render a reason of the particular malignity of the Sun in March which as having a very feeble hear one would think should not be able to be hurtful and to engender so easily rhumes and catarrhs But to say the truth these two several malignities are the effects only of the course of the year and of two contrary extreams for the Sun in March hath something of malign and dangerous by reason of the great humidity it meets with in the earth nay and in our brain on which it acts so weakly that instead of dissolving it only dilates it And on the contrary the Sun in August is extraordinary hurtful through an excess of dryness which it finds in the earth after it hath endured the heats of a great part of Summer and in our bodies which the same heats have dryed It is this dryness which at this time disposes beasts to madness though indeed Dogs run mad not only in August but also very often in the Moneths of June and July or September which need not for this borrow any thing of the Dog-star From this excessive drynesse proceeds likewise the weakness which we feel then in our bodies and the disposition which this season puts us in to divers maladies for every extream is alwayes nigh an evil and easily falls into one or rather is one it self To conclude if those that swim in this Moneth do find that the waters are more unwholsom then they were before a man may say it is because their more pure and subtile parts have been exhaled by the precedent heats and that what remains is gross and impure And I do not see that there is any thing in this we should need to attribute to the Dog-star more then in the other things we mentioned THE END