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A64608 Logopandecteision, or, An introdvction to the vniversal langvage digested into these six several books, Neaudethaumata, Chrestasbeia, Cleronomaporia, Chryseomystes, Nelcadicastes, & Philoponauxesis / by Sir Thomas Urquhart of Cromartie ... Urquhart, Thomas, Sir, 1611-1660. 1653 (1653) Wing U137; ESTC R3669 114,144 164

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apparitions 38 I saw once a young man who for his cunning conveyance in the Feats of Leger Demaine was branded by some of that Fry for Sorcery and another for being able by vertue of the Masson word to make a Masson whom he had never seene before without speaking or any other apparent signe come and salute him reputed by many of the same Litter to have had a familiar their grosse ignorance moving them to call that supernaturall or above the naturall reach of meere man whereof they knew not the cause 39 By which meanes Mathematicall Thaumaturgies Opticall magick secrets of nature and other Philosophicall mysteries being esteemed to be rancke Witch-craft they ruine the best part of Learning and make their owne unskillfullnes Supreame Judge to passe an Irrevocable sentence upon the Condemnation of knowledge 40 The matter notwithstanding would be of lesse danger were this the worst but to this ignorance of theirs is concomitant so much wickednes that when an action of any extraordinary performance is done although by a man of a most approvable conversation to a very good end such as the curing of the diseased or releeving men out of apparent peril yet if the cause thereof be unknowne to them they will not be so charitable as to attribute the effect to a good Angel albeit their faith obliege them to beleeve that the Spirits belonging to any of the nine celestiall orders are for the atchievement of such masteries in nothing inferior to the infernall Demons but instead of Gabriell Raphaell Michaell and such good Spirits by whom I think it is more prob●ble an honest man would be assisted in works of a strange and hidden operation then by the bad ones they ascribe the wonderfullnes of the exploit to the inspiration of Beelzebub Abadon Lucifer or some other of the F●ends of Hell so malevolently they asperse the reputation of gallant men whose deeds surpass their Capacity 41 Truly those two qualities of Ignorance and wickednes conjoyned are of such pernicious consequence that no Nation or Common-wealth wherein they get footing is able long to subsist for rapine coveteousnes and extortion flowing from the one as from the other doth all manner of Basenes Pusillanimity and cowardize ignorance affecteth the Braine and wickednes the Heart Yet both the Braine and Heart of a common weale by the mischeiously vnskillfull and illiterately malicious are equally depraved 42 For remedy of so generall a Calamity seeing universality hath its existence in individualls would each amend but one the totall would be quickly rid of this Lamentable infection 43 Therefore since ever I understood any thing knowing that the welfare of the Body of a government consisteth in the intirenes of its noble parts I alwayes endeavoured to employ the best of my Brain and Heart towards the furtherance of the Honour of that Country unto which I did owe my birth 44 In prosecuting whereof as the heart is primum vivent so was it my heart which in my younger years before my braines were ripened for eminent undertakings gave me the courage for adventuring in a forrain Climat thrice to enter the Lists against men of 3 severall nations to vindicate my native Country from the Calumnies wherewith they had aspersed it wherein it pleased God so to conduct my fortune that after I had disarmed them they in such sort acknowledged their Error and the obligation they did owe me for sparing their Lives which justly by the Law of Arms I might have taken that in Lieu of three enemies that formerly they were I acquired three constant Friends both to my selfe and my compatriots whereof by severall gallant testimonies they gave evident proofe to the Improvement of my Countreys credit in many occasions 45 As my Heart hath been thus devoted to the love of my native soile so have my Braines to the Honour thereof discharged so much duty that betwixt what is printed and what ready for the presse I have set forth above a hundred severall Bookes on Subjects never hitherto thought upon by any 46. Let no man think that I have spoke this in hope of future benefit or by way of regret I should have faild therof in times past vertue in my estimation whether morall or intellectuall carrying alwayes along with it a recompence sufficient nor yet out of pride or vaine glory in extolling of my own praises which as willingly as to live I would have smothered but that the continuall receiving of bad offices for my good intentions hath wrought this excursion out of my pen. 47. Could any man imagine I should have been singled out amongst all those of Scotland to suffer most prejudice without a Cause that the wickedest of all the Land should be permitted to possesse the best part of my Inheritance vnder colour of a law by meer iniquity and other little better then he to gape after the remainder without any fault of mine 48. who would think that some of my Tenants whilst I was from home being killed and neer upon three thousand pound sterlin worth of Goods taken from them by a pack of villaines who could pretend for their robery no other excuse but that they had been plundered by others no reparation or justice should be granted although oftentimes demanded that I should be extorsed in matter of publique dues beyond any of my neighbours that a garrison should be placed within my house and kept there ten months together to my almost utter undoing upon no other pretence but that the stance thereof is stately and the house it selfe of a notable good Fabrick and contrivance and in the mean while a party both of horse and foot remain nevertheles quartered upon my lands till the remotest Highlands should pay their sesse-mony that neighbor Garisons besides my own should by parties inforce me upon their Governours bare tickets to furnish them with what provisions they pleased and yet nothing thereof be allowed unto me although I presented a Bill to that purpose to the Scots Committee of Estates as I did forthe quartering of severall Troops of horse for many months together without any allowance 49. These grievous pressures with many other and as many more I have sustained by the ministry of the Land whereof I make account in the large treatise of my Aporrexises to give notice more at length have occasiond this digression in a part which likewise having proceeded from a serious consideration of the two aforesaid scurvie quallities that move the Inhabitants of this I le to run every foot to superna●ural causes engageth me to say that as it is a maxim in Philosophy that entia non sunt multiplicanda sine necessitate So that it is no lesse in congruity to avouch that a thing hath miraculously been done by God or that for atchievement thereof the help of an evill Spirit because of his being reputed of more experience then man hath been required thereto when in the mean while perhaps the performance of it by
destructive unto Scotland and that the cause of God could not produce Diabolical effects Your holiness amongst the Zelots of the Nation did give way to beleeve the truth of both And when moreover I avouched that money should never be held in such estimation that either to honestie or a good name any summe however so great ought to be preferred Your discretion amidst many of the Ecclesiastical Armie did in very deed acknowledge the veritie of the saying although verbally you denyed it And at last when to be charitable to distressed men whose misery could not with reason be imputed to their own fault was by me represented to be an especial act of goodness you out of your love amongst the Scotish Merchants condescended to it Whereby most seriously perpending the manifold or rather innumerable testimonies of your goodness holiness grace discretion wisdome liberalitie reverence mercie pietie generositie magnificence love and other unexpressible respects I have perceived to flow from your highness in behalf of me whether I applyed my self to the Nobilitie Souldierie Gentrie Clergie or Burger degree of the Consistorian partie of the Scotish Nation I must needs promise in acquital of these incom●rehensible good deeds out of your endless and immense bountie so undeservedly erogated whilst I breath to break my parole unto you to be to you dishonest and prove disloyal to you in my trust to curse you in malicious thoughts reproach you with scandalous words and wrong you with cruel and unconscionable deeds to do you injustice deceive and cosen you to persecute you with hatred envie and rancour of mind and according to the infallible rules of the Sacred Evangile dictamen of reason and precepts of Philosophie to approve my self your faithless implacable and wicked enemie and consequently to your contrary opposite every body upright true and honest and to your contradictorie foe some body an affectionate trustie stedfast and unalterable both Friend and Servant Thomas Vrquhaer● The Contents Of the First BOOK entituled NEAUDETHAUMATA THe Author in this first Book of his Introduction discloseth many excellent overtures for the furtherance of Literature Esp●cially in the facility of contriving expressions for any conception the mind of man is able to afford He plainly setteth down the analogie that ought to be betwixt things and words and that to make a perfect Language things semblable in nature should be signifyed by words of a like pronunciation He proveth all hitherto known tongues to be full of imperfection both by reason of the insufficiencie of their Alphabets and for that there are many common things which cannot without circumlocution be expressed by them He compareth the learned Languages with one another giveth freely his opinion of all vernacularie tongues and demonstrateth an universal defect in all and each of both the one and other because of the common necessity they are driven unto of mutual borrowing for conveniencie of elocu●ion The Author also in this Book utterly rejecteth the vulgarly received opinion of the origin of Languag●s and very neatly twits the opposers of those curious arts where●n there is no harm He confuteth that disproportion in matter of number twixt words and things wherewith the smattrers in knowledge would cloak their inability of giving unto every thing its proper term and sheweth how for the advancement of Learning and Vertue clearing the mind of all prejudicat tenets the brains and heart should be purged of malice and wilful ignorance the two plagues of a Common-wealth the bad acquitals he hath received from some great men of his own Countrey he but glanceth at to incordiat other his compatriots with more respect in times coming to men of no lesse desert declareth what injury to that deity unto which the heavens are subservient is done by those lazie Sciolists who frequently seek after supernatural causes where the natural is obvious to the eyes of our understanding The Author likewise setteth forth in this Book the possibility of framing a new idiome of far greater perfection then any hitherto spoken and that the performance of such an undertaking will without doubt exceedingly conduce to the benefit and contentment of all ingenious Schollars By its Logopandocie or comprehension of all utterable words and sounds articulat he evidenceth the universality of the proposed Language and by infallible reason proveth whilst there is no other world but this the impossibility of forming any other such Lastly The Author after his delivery of a genuine and upright gloss on three passages of Solomon Terence and Paul in confutation of some Scholiasts Idolizers of corrupt antiquitie who had mis-interpreted those texts concerning the nature of new inventions most manifestly avoucheth that exquisit inventions will never be wanting so long as good spirits are extant on the earth and in concluding this his first Book with sixtie and six several advantages this Language hath above all other exposeth to the view of the judicious Reader many inestimable secrets worthie the perusal of the best wits of the time The first BOOK OF THE INTRODVCTION To the Universall Language intituled NEAUDETHAUMATA OR Wonders of the new SPEECH which as a Preface thereto comprehendeth its most necessary Prenoscendas together with some Miscellanie Articles concerning the AUTHOR himself 1 WOrds are the signes of things it being to signifie that they were instituted at first nor can they be as such directed to any other end whether they be articulate or inarticulate 2 All things are either real or rational and the real either naturall or artificial 3. There ought to be a proportion betwixt the sign and thing signified therefore should all things whether real or rationall have their proper words assigned unto them 4. Man is called a Microcosme because he may by his conceptions and words containe within him the representatives of what in the whole world is comprehended 5 Seeing there is in nature such affinity 'twixt words things as there ought to be in whatsoever is ordained for one another that Language is to be accounted most conform to Nature which with greatest variety expresseth all manner of things 6. As all things of a single compleat being by Aristotle into ten Classes were divided so may the words whereby those things are to be signified be set apart in their several storehouses 7. Arts Sciences Mechanick Trades notionall faculties and whatever is excogitable by man have their own Method by vertue whereof the Learned of these latter times have orderly digested them Yet hath none hitherto considered of a mark whereby words of the same Faculty Art Trade or Science should be dignosced from those of another by the very sound of the word at the first hearing 8. A Tree will be known by its leaves a stone by its grit a Flower by the smel Meats by the taste Musick by the ear Colours by the eye the severall Natures of things with their properties and essentiall qualities by the Intellect and accordingly as the things are in themselves diversified the