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A13217 Speculum mundiĀ· Or A glasse representing the face of the world shewing both that it did begin, and must also end: the manner how, and time when, being largely examined. Whereunto is joyned an hexameron, or a serious discourse of the causes, continuance, and qualities of things in nature; occasioned as matter pertinent to the work done in the six dayes of the worlds creation. Swan, John, d. 1671.; Marshall, William, fl. 1617-1650, engraver. 1635 (1635) STC 23516; ESTC S118043 379,702 552

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in Psal. 16. 12. And further seeing it is said that righteousnesse shall dwell in the new earth as well as in the new heaven it may from thence be gathered that both the heaven and the earth shall be the seat of the blessed and that the saints shall follow the Lambe whithersoever he goeth and that there shall be an intercourse between the said heaven and earth which is as Jacob in his vision saw when the angels were some of them ascending some descending that ladder which reached from heaven to earth or as Moses and Elias were seen talking with Christ upon the Mount But herein let us not be too bold for in this we may soon wade too farre namely if we should nicely determine how the saints shall then be disposed of whether some alwayes to the heaven some alwayes to the earth or such like things which to us are unrevealed Let it therefore suffice that although the manner of this change be secret and not known in every point yet the change it self is most certain and therefore hold we most certainly this truth for our stay that the world shall end and leave we the manner thereof to be exactly and particularly revealed by him who will very quickly perform it But of the time when in the following Section Sect. 3. ANd thus much concerning the manner of the worlds ending Now follows the time when But here I purpose not to meddle with any thing which shall tend to the precise scanning of it I will leave that to them who out of a desire they have to lanch into the deep have pried too farre I fear into the secrets of the Thunderer for oftentimes we see that they do but wisely tell us foolish tales and smoothly bring long lies unto an end because they say more then they have warrant for To whom Du Bartas by our famous Silvester thus sendeth greeting You have mis-cast in your Arithmetick Mis-laid your counters gropingly ye seek In nights black darknesse for the secret things Seal'd in the Casket of the King of kings 'T is He that keeps th' eternall clock of Time He holds the weights of that appointed chime And in his hand the sacred Book doth bear Of that close-clasped finall CALENDER Where in Red letters not with us frequented The certain Date of that Great Day is printed That Dreadfull Day which doth so swiftly post That 't will be seen before foreseen of most Yet such is the folly and curiositie of many that they will needs undertake to tell us when this time shall be which if they could then it seems it should not come as a snare upon the world nor yet steal upon us as a thief in the night But so it shall do For of that day and houre knoweth no man saith our Saviour and we may take his word because himself by his humanitie could not know it although in his humanitie by reason of his Godhead he was not ignorant of it Had he not therefore been God as well as man and of a divine as well as humane nature he must have remained ignorant in both with men and angels Mar. 13. 32. And furthermore concerning us that we be not too bold the same lesson which he taught his disciples is also ours not to know the times or the seasons which the Father hath put in his own power as it is Act. 1. 7. From whence we may learn that whilest we exercise our selves in things that be too high for us we shall sooner betray our own curiositie then deliver a truth For Maxima pars eorum quae scimus est minima pars eorum quae nescimus The greatest part of those things which we know is the least part of what we know not Whereupon I cannot but think that the predictions of men in this kinde especially seeing they are so various must needs be as true as those amongst the brood of presumptuous Astrologers concerning the end of Christian Religion which as Du Plessie observeth from them should have been some hundreds of yeares before this time nay it should then have ended when indeed it began most of all to flourish And so I doubt not but am certain that the world also should have had many endings before this time according to the doting froth of some mens idle fancies which if need were I could relate But as time was little beholding to them for cutting it off so short in like manner they were as little beholding to time for discovering their lies so plainly I will therefore before I meddle further with such approved liars leave them unto their best friends to gain if they can their credit for the time past and addresse my self to examine those who talk of a time yet to come Amongst whom the Jews have a tradition which although they fetch from the school or house of Elias yet we are not bound to credit it For it was not Elias the Prophet but a Rabbin of the same name as the learned know and who more fabulous or more full of vain fancies then those their greatest Doctours Six thousand yeares saith he the world shall stand and then it shall be consumed by fire Two thousand yeares shal be void or without Law two thousand yeares shall be under the Law and the last two thousand shall be the dayes of Messiah or Christ. Thus farre Elias And that this opinion hath been favoured by some of old and is also favoured now by some of our time I am not ignorant which chiefly they do for this reason namely because the six dayes of weekly labour do bear the Symbole of 6000 yeares wherein mankinde should endure the cares and troubles and travels of this world and then shall come that Sabbath of Sabbaths in the heaven of heavens when they are to rest from their labours Or as God was six daies in creating the world before there was a Sabbath so he shall be 6000 yeares in governing it and then the seventh begins an eternall rest in heaven Now this they ground upon the words of S. Peter who speaking of the day of judgement noteth that a thousand yeares in Gods sight are but as one day and one day as a thousand yeares 2. Pet. 3. 8. So that in this regard for six dayes of weekly labour they would have 6000 yeares of worldly trouble and the like before it endeth But if this weaknesse be the greatest strength for maintaining their assertion then I do not doubt to see their cause fainting upon the ground as not being able to subsist or stand upright For first concerning the Rabbin had he been a Prophet he would certainly have been a better Seer This I am sure of that he was much deceived in the particular division of his time in making three periods all of 2000 yeares apiece For although the yeares of the world have been diversly accounted by sundry authours yet you shall not finde the Rabbins just number of 2000
Zanchius his opinion was not much differing for speaking of strange rains he confessed concerning some of them that they were produced by such causes or the like as I before alledged concluding for the rest which were more occult that they were truely prodigious and caused either by the power of God as portenders of his wrath or else by the sleights of the devil through Gods permission Artic. 3. Of Dew DEw offers it self in the next place as being a neare kinsman to rain For it consisteth of a cold moist vapour which the sunne draweth into the aire from whence when it is somewhat thickened and condensed through cold of the night and also of the place whither the sunne exhaled it it falleth down in very small and indiscernible drops to the great refreshment of the earth And this is certain that the morning and the evening are the onely times when it falleth the reason being in regard of the sunne which both positively privatively causeth it Dew at night is caused privatively dew in the morning positively At night or in the evening privatively because when the sunne setteth the lowest part of the vapour not being high enough to hang in the aire falleth down through absence of the sunne And in the morning positively because at the return of the sunne the residue of the vapour together with the augmentation of it haply by some condensed aire caused by cold of the night is dissolved by his approaching beams and so made fit to fall rather then hang any longer For look what vapours are about the Horizon at the rising of the sunne are dispersed by his first approach and so it comes to passe that the morning as well as the evening affordeth dew But know that if the vapour be not conveniently placed that is if it be very high above the Horizon or in a loftie station of the aire then the sunnes approaching beam neither dissolveth nor disperseth it whereupon we have no dew but rather look for rain because the matter of dew is still in the aire staying there till it be turned into a cloud and so into rain And now by this you may see what is the materiall what the efficient what the formall and lastly what the finall cause of dew The materiall cause is a subtil and moist vapour being the thinnest of all vapours The efficient cause is the temperate cold of the night together with the absence and approach of the sunne The formall cause is the sprinkling of most thin drops which the hand can scarcely perceive And the finall cause that without rain the earth may have some refreshment Yet neverthelesse this I finde concerning dew as it is of a calorificall nature that rorilentas segetes collectas putrefacit because every externall heat is putrefactive Also dew is a great enemie to sheep begetting a deadly rot in them or a dangerous flux of the bellie which cometh to passe in regard of the humour being of much viscositie and not throughly refined or purged Wherefore your carefull and skilfull shepherds will never drive out their sheep to feed untill the sunne or the winde have licked the tops of the grasse and flowers Also know that a windie night hindereth the falling of dew Some say three things hinder it viz. winde great heat and cold for the most temperate and calm times afford it when other times want it As for the kindes of dew I cannot but joyn with them who divide them into three For there is first common dew secondly sweet dew and thirdly bitter blasting dew The common dew is ordinary Sweet dew is threefold 1. Manna 2. Mel. 3. Ladanum Manna is said to be white like sugar by some it is called Coeli sudor The matter of it is a fat and pure vapour not tainted with any putrid or corrupt Exhalations Or according to some it is roris melliti genus sed concreti a kinde of hony-sweet dew but concrete or compact more close together it falleth in the East parts Arabia Syria c. As for that Manna which God rained to the Israelites in the wildernesse some think that it was altogether miraculous others that it was ejusdem speciei cum Manna vulgari of the same kinde with common Manna which I also think because Iosephus in his third book and first chapter writeth that in his dayes there was great store of it in that part of Arabia wherein Moses was 40 yeares with the Israelites What should hinder this opinion I see not unlesse because the common Manna is of a purging qualitie and therefore to be taken for a medicine rather then for food To which I finde an answer that haply at the first it might work the like effect on their bodies also till it expelled the humours proceeding from the onyons and leeks that they eat in Egypt but afterwards through custome it might not work at all upon them or else God for their good that they might be fed might allay that qualitie in it by his mighty power for God resting from all his works on the seventh day created no new species of anything afterwards Fuohsius a learned Physician testifieth that there falleth great store of Manna upon the mountain of Libanus which is eaten without harm although they take it in plentifull abundance Yet neverthelesse it cannot be denied but that the Israelites had many things miraculous in theirs as that they could not finde it on the Sabbath day that he which gathered little and he which gathered much had alwayes sufficient for his eating and the like All which proclaimed the power of God In which regard he saith that he fed them with Angels food Not that the Angels eat of it but because it was cibus excellentissimus a most excellent kinde of meat insomuch that were the Angels to be fed with bread they might be fed with this In which sense we also call that which is daintie meat meat for a King or a Prince intimating the goodnesse of it So also the poets called their Myrrhina or their Nectar the drink of the Gods because it was a liquour of such excellencie But besides this the Scripture in like manner saith that it was bread from heaven as well as Angels food Not that it came from heaven if heaven be taken in a strict sense but because it was a symbole of Christs descending from heaven as it is John the 6. Moses gave you not that bread saith our Saviour but I am that bread of life come down from heaven Or else it is said to come from heaven because it came out of the aire for so the word signifying heaven is often used as the fowls of the aire are said to flie in the open firmament of heaven Gen. 1. 20. The clouds are called the clouds of heaven and the windes the windes of heaven although they be but in the aire Dan. 7. And thus much concerning Manna
QVEMTRANSFIXERVNT which signifie They shall look on him whom they pierced the numerall letters being in either of these so many as will make 1532. Secondly for the yeare 1533 they had this false proof binding still upon numerall letters which they gathered out of these words IESVS NAZARENVS REX IVDAEORVM Iesus of Nazareth king of the Iewes here being so many as will make 1533. Thirdly for the yeare 1578 thus it was viz. they take these words ADVENTVS DOMINI and in them they have 2012 out of which number they subtracted 517 which they gathered from DIES ABBREVIABVNTVR and then the remainder makes 1495 unto which they adde the number of the letters a c n t s in adventus which were not numerall before yet by their naturall position in the alphabet or crosse-row they give 56 then again by the same reason they take 27 out of o and n the non-numerall letters in the word Domini both which numbers being added to 1495 do make 1578. Fourthly for the yeare 1588 the manner of calculating is as before for the yeare 1645 unto which number having raised their summe they subtract a e n t s viz. 56 and so they have 1587 yeares which they reckon compleat and referre their prediction to the beginning of the yeare 1588. Vide Gerardum in locis communibus pag. 185. Tom. 9. Fifthly for the yeare 1623 thus was the fancie IVDICARE VIVOS MORTVOS To judge the quick and the dead Now here as before they were led by numerall letters having so many as would make 1623 in which yeare they dreamed of the worlds ending Now these times we know are past long since but the event you see hath not answered to the prophesie Things therefore of the like nature being yet to come and built upon the same grounds cannot but prove as false But what need many words be spent about the confutation of such idle dreams and foolish fantasies Surely that great and terrible day of the worlds ending is a thing of greater moment then that it should be thus dallied with Let not therefore the quintessence of wit expose us to such impudent folly For although it may somewhat please us in shew yet when the best is made of it that can be it will be proved not onely the doting froth of a wittie brain but also a superstitious and an heathenish vanitie I have seen a world of fancies more upon this subject especially such as may be taken out of Cusa who was made Cardinall under Pius the second But seeing they are as idle as the former and built upon as false grounds I scarce hold them worth the answering Yet having come thus farre let me go a little further because in the next place I hope to meet some wiser men granting as indeed they ought that the precise day and houre of the worlds ending cannot be known yet they would not have any to be so base of judgement as to conclude thereby that an apparent length of this last age may not be found or that seemingly between such and such yeares the judgement day shall not be known to come For is it prophesied and why are prophesies if they either may not or cannot be understood It is recorded in Matth. 24. 15. Let him that readeth understand It is said Dan. 12. 10. None of the wicked shall understand but the wise shall understand And Revelation 1. 3. Blessed is he that readeth and they that heare the words of this prophesie and keep those things which are written therein for the time is at hand And Dan. 12. 4. it is said that these things towards the end shall be unsealed for many shall runne to and fro and knowledge shall be increased Now here I may answer that although some understand the foresaid texts to have relation to the times towards the worlds ending yet there be no few who contradict it affirming that what they alledge out of Daniel was accomplished about the time of Antiochus and that by running through which some reade running to and fro is meant the diligent perusing of the book namely that though at the first it were not regarded yet many in time to come should give their mindes unto it being as Polanus expoundeth thus to be understood that in the great persecution under Antiochus many shall be found faithfull who shall cleave unto this prophesie And as for the wicked not understanding it we must apply it unto the false brethren which should be in those dayes of persecution and give way unto Antiochus his wicked proceedings labouring to seduce and betray their brethren and they themselves living without any care to observe the accomplishment of this prophesie never comparing the event with the thing prophesied For as was foretold Dan. 11. 34. many shall cleave unto them fainedly c. And for sealing it up unto the end is meant the not making it too common on the sudden because from the time of these visions untill the dayes of Antiochus were about 300 yeares In which regard it is said concerning that other prophesie of the Revelation that it must not be sealed up because the time was at hand Revelat. 22. 10. Yea some part of it was not onely presently to take effect but even then in act chap. 1. verse 19. And as for that in Matthew it hath relation unto the destruction of Jerusalem under Titus and Vespasian Or secondly be it so that I do not altogether condemne this their inquirie because I verily think that a modest and religious search into these mysteries may see very farre yet neverthelesse seeing interpretours of such mysteries are not as yet at one among themselves especially in their Synchronismes and periods of time it cannot be denied but that even in them there is much matter of doubt although they stand upon better grounds then Hesychius did whom S. Austine confuted so that it is hard to say when such a time appeares indeed to be And further were it so that we had perfect Synchronismes of all things prophesied in the Revelation for that prophesie doth most concern the end and knew how to link them together yet if we erred in the true placing of our first link it must needs be that the end of our reckoning either fall short or else overshoot that period which otherwise might point out an apparent time if not directly of the worlds ending yet of such prophesies as shall be fulfilled before it endeth for perhaps that which some take to be the apparent time of the worlds ending may as well be taken for the time wherein other things prophesied shall be accomplished but how long the end shall be after them is unknown We know that the seventh Trumpet shall give an end to all because when that seventh Angel came and stood upon the sea and upon the earth he lift up his hand and voice to heaven swearing solemnely by him who liveth for ever 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
omnipotence in not working all at once but sheweth that he worketh all things according to the counsell of his will which in this work of creation prosecuted both by an order of time and degrees is so farre from eclipsing his power that it rather doth demonstrate both his power and wisdome to be infinite and that he hath so done his marvellous works that they ought alwayes to be had in remembrance Psal. 111. 4. For in wisdome he hath made them all And why not all at once was because the counsell of his will was otherwise But may we not yet enquire a further reason why it pleased the Almighty thus to will such a space and would not rather produce this All perfect at once This perhaps may be thought a question too curious to be determined because Gods will is a sufficient reason in all his actions and therefore it is better left then looked into Which surely might well be so if the reasons urged prove too eagle-eyed and unprofitable not bettering us in our dulnesse or want of knowledge But otherwise if they instruct man in any thing pertinent to his present condition and inform him so as he may be somewhat reformed by them then they may be urged without the brand of nicenesse or imputation of curiositie First therefore we may joyn with them who say that perhaps it pleased Gods infinite perfection to take this leisure because if the creatures had been made all at once they might be thought to be increate and not made at all nor yet to have the like sense of their infirmitie as now they have one seeing another made before them Secondly seeing the world was thus perfected by degrees before man was who being made was the chief inhabitant of it me thinks so orderly to raise such a sumptuous palace for mankinde whilest yet mankinde was not what was it but the declaration of a greater kindnesse and a demonstration proving how kinde how carefull and how gracious God would be to us ever after being made and therefore now we must not distrust him but in all our wayes acknowledge him and he shall direct our paths Prov. 3. 5 6. For so he hath promised and so he doth perform to all that love and fear him causing every thing to work together for their good nay for their best as the Apostle speaketh Or as the Psalmist hath it No good thing shall he withhold from them who live a godly life Psal. 84. 12. Thirdly by this example mankinde may reade a lecture against himself if heedlesly or hastily he behave himself in any work and shall not rather proceed soberly and by degrees making haste as it is said by leisure For true it is that with us a soft pace goes farre Which made one fix this contemplation upon the works of creation saying How should we deliberate in our actions which are so subject to imperfection seeing it pleased Gods infinite perfection not out of need to take leisure Upon thought of which let us Make sober speed for 't is observ'd by proof That what is well done is done soon enough Festina lenté Nam sat citò si sat bene Thus having as it were considered the first part of the first dayes work we may now come more nearely to that which is the beauty of it I mean the Light which some call Gods eldest daughter or the first distinguished creature wherewith the Lord decked the world as with a garment Sect. 2. The creation of the Light ANd now concerning this bright creature no sooner did God say Let it be but lo it was He commanded that it should shine out of darknesse as speaks the Apostle and that being separated and set apart from the darknesse the first of dayes might be and Gods good works appeare beginning with the Lights proceeding to shew forth his exceeding glory But of this resplendent creature without which the beauty of the rest could not be seen there are no few opinions 1. Some would have it a spirituall Light and so under it they comprehend the creation of Angels But surely in my judgement their opinion is the founder who make it a naturall and materiall Light onely such as now is in the Sunne the Index of time and the worlds bright eye For as the office of the Sunnes light is now to distinguish between the Day and the Night so was the office of this Light being commanded to shine out of darknesse before the Sunne was made which being made was the subject ever after to retain it If it were otherwise or any other light where is it now shall we say that it is either extinguished or applied to some other use surely I think not because God who made all by the power of his word needed no instrument or help in the work of his creation And therefore that Light which at the first made his works appeare is no spirituall Light but such and the same that now is in the Sunne And yet perhaps as Aquinas thinketh it was but Lumen informe quod quarto die formatum est An informed Light which on the fourth day had its perfect form And as for the creation of Angels it is not like that they were made this first day but on the fourth day For it is very probable that there was the like order observed in making of the invisible world which was in the visible and that on the second day not onely the visible but also the invisible heavens were created yet so as both of them remained as it were unpolished or unfinished untill the fourth day For then as the outward heavens were garnished with Starres so might the inward and highest heavens be beautified with Angels This me thinks is not obscurely pointed at in Job chap. 38. vers 7. Where wert thou saith the Lord to Job when the starres praised me or sang together and all the sonnes of men shouted for joy it being here evident that when the Starres were made the Angels also had then their being rejoyced before God which was but upon the fourth day of the creation All this I say might well be thus although Moses doth not directly mention it which was because he applied himself to the simple capacitie of the people describing the creation onely of sensible things being that which at the first he intended and did in plain tearms testifie in the beginning of his historie when he said These Heavens and this Earth of which I spoke before And further were the creation of Angels comprehended under the creation of the heavens and light what were this but to leave the literall sense which is to be followed in the historie of the creation and to cleave unto Allegories But secondly concerning this Light others think that the element of fire was signified by it whose effect is light and whose act and qualitie is to enlighten which made one therefore say that The uncreated Light
Comets be burnt consumed and wasted in the starrie heavens it seemeth that there is no great difference between them and things here below for if there were it might be thought that they would not suffer such earthly matter to ascend up their territories such I say as doth either wholly or in part compose them Wholly or in part I adde because perhaps even the heavens themselves may afford some matter towards the generation of them especially if they be new starres such as Aristotle never saw wherefore he writes that a Comet consisteth altogether of an hot drie and a kinde of oylie exhalation drawn from the earth and questionlesse in such as are utterly below the moon it is even so but if they ●…e higher and continue longer they as well as new starres may have some help from such matter as the heavens afford towards the generation of strange appearances which though they have yet that they have no earthly matter is not excluded because next under God the efficient cause of these things is attributed to the starres and their operation for when they are aptly and conveniently placed and aspected then by their power working upon things here below they draw up hot drie and oylie exhalations and these exhalations afford unto Comets that matter whereof they consist Ptolomie attributeth much in this kinde to Mars and Mercurie and so do many others else beside him and why the yearely aspects of these starres do not alwayes produce such effects is because they are not alwayes aspected in the same manner but sometimes in one part of the heavens sometimes in another and cannot therefore produce their intended effects without either the meeting or avoiding of apt or inconvenient occurrences But I conclude and do yet affirm that the nature of the heavens is certainly such that the waters above the heavens might passe or issue through them in the time of the Floud and yet the heavens not be dissolved nor suffer damage by their falling damage neither in corrupting them nor yet in leaving a vacant place by coming all away of which in the fourth dayes work when I come to speak of the starres I shall adde yet something more CHAP. V. How to understand the word Heavens and of the severall Regions of the aire together with a consideration of such appearances as we use to see there Sect. 1. ANd now to go on with the residue of this dayes work God saith Moses called the firmament Heavens c. By heavens in this place Moses meaneth onely the visible heavens because he speaketh onely of the visible part of the world And yet the same word which is here used is sometimes put for the aire wherein windes clouds and fowls do flie sometimes for the upper Firmament where the sunne moon and starres are set and sometimes for the high places where Angels dwell And hereupon it was that S. Paul mentioned the third heavens wherein he saw things unspeakable The first of these is like to the outward court of Solomons temple and is the most open to us The second is like his inward court lesse open and abounding with starrie lights or lamps never going out And the next is as the Sanctum Sanctorum whither he is entred once for all who is a Priest for ever and maketh intercession for us In the two lowest is no felicitie for neither the fowls nor starres are happie It is the third of these alone where the blessed Trinitie enjoyeth it self and the glorified spirits enjoy it And questionlesse in this highest part must needs be more then exceeding glorie seeing the other two within the concave of the Firmament are so full of wonder But of the one of them I shall need to speak little in this dayes work yet of the other under it as being more pertinent something must be added Sect. 2. Parag. 1. Of the Aire and the severall Regions in it VVE may therefore now if you please look into the Aire and here following the common path and separating it from the starrie heaven I must say that it is divided into three stages or Regions although I verily think as afterwards shall be shewed when I come to speak of the starres that all this space even from the earth to the eighth sphere is nothing else but aire The highest Region is said to be exceeding hot and also drie by reason of the neighbourhood that it hath with the fierie element as is said and with the starres by the force of whose beams it receiveth heat which is also much increased by following the motion of the heavens The lowest Region is somewhat contrary for it is said to be hot and moist hot chiefly by the reflection of the sunne-beams meeting with the earth and moist by reason of the proper nature of the aire and also by reason of the vapours exhaled out of the earth and water This is the qualitie which commonly is attributed to this Region But I think that we may rather say it is variable now hot now cold and sometimes temperate differing according to the times and seasons of the yeare In which regard Du Bartas writeth thus Warm-temper'd show'rs do wash it in the Spring And so in Autumne but more varying In Winter time 't is wet and cold and chill In Summer season hot and soultry still For then the fields scorched with flames reflect The sparkling rayes of thousand starres aspect The chief is Phoebus to whose arrows bright Our Globie Grandam serves for But and White Neither is it altogether variable in regard of time but also by reason of the diversitie of place some climates being more hot and drie some more cold and moist then others which cometh to passe according to their distance from the Equinoctiall towards either of the Poles Thus for these two Regions But now concerning the middle Region it is alwayes cold yet surely in its own nature it would be warmer then the Region which is here below were it not cooled by a cold occasioned by the reflection of the Sunne-beams For they reflecting upon the earth drive up above the beams of their reflection much cold from below which being daily supplied is kept as a continuall prisoner between the heat above and the heat beneath Or if you will take it thus namely that it is cold but not extreamly cold yet cold I say it is in respect of the two other Regions which are hotter then it And this coldnesse happeneth partly through the causes before expressed and partly by reason of the Aire in it which cannot follow the motion of the heavens seeing it is hindred by the tops of the mountains And hereupon it is that the Philosophers make this a rule saying that the farrenesse from a circular motion gives quietnesse coldnesse and heavinesse even as the nearnesse gives motion heat and lightnesse Which in this thing concerning the middle Region is found to be true the
at the rising of the Sunne Fromond Met. lib. 6. Du Batt a Halo Graecis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nominatur hoc est Area quoniam ut Seneca testatu●… apud veteres terendis frugibus loca destinata fere rotunda suerunt Latini Coronam vocant quia rotundâ plerumque constat figurâ sidera cingere atque coronare videtur The signification of Circles f They are very seldome seen about the Sunne because of winde in the day time or because the Sunne either draweth the vapours too high or else disperseth them too much In the yeare 1104 there was a blazing starre and 4 circles about the Sunne which was a signe of the new kindling malice again between Henry the first King of England and his brother Duke of Normandy Stow in his chron The efficient cause of the Rain-bow The materiall cause The formall cause The colours in the Rain-bow Moon-bows The finall cause How to judge of the weather by the rain-bow The derivation of Iris signifying the rain-bow The rainbow was before the Floud A grosse absurditie of some who think that there shall be no rain nor rain-bow 40 yeares before the worlds end What the Jews do at the sight of the rain-bow a On Gen. chap. 9. pag. 898. b Dr. Willet on Gen. a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 na●… ●…hilosoph b Qu●… clara sunt alboque apparent colore 〈◊〉 visum movent qu●… vero nigra obscura sunt minus cum afficiunt c Si magna fuerit vorago si non it a magna hiatus non●…natur Titclman a It is said that clouds have sometimes fallen down to the earth with great noise to the te●…rour damage of such as had them in their Zenith which clouds came but from the highest part of the lowest region yet neverthelesse they were generated in the middle Region but waxing very heavie have sunk down by little and little till at last they seem to fall no further then the lowest Region But this is seldome They may also fall by drops through their own weight b Nigredo in nubibus ob vaporum densitatem oritur qu●… lumen collustrans non admittit Et sic é contrá ●…it Albor viz. è vapore subtiliore parùm conspissato quem radius facillimé pe●…etrat ●…quabiliter in illum spa●…gitur Goclen Dis●…us Phys. c 〈◊〉 rubedo 〈◊〉 significat quia rubedo nubem rara●…t est●… solis 〈◊〉 ejúsque 〈◊〉 ab●… esse ●…tat Sed 〈◊〉 rubedo plu●…ias 〈◊〉 ventos promi●…tit quia vapores humidarum sub densarum 〈◊〉 absumi non 〈◊〉 Ibid. The height of the clouds How the clouds naturally hang in the aire a This may be seen if any will but assay to poure water from an high place Ordinary and extraordinary rains Prodigious rain Worms Frogs Fishes Wheat b Paragraph ●… art 3. and elsewhere c Fulk in his Meteors Milk * Which may the sooner be done in summer and in hot countreys Flesh. Bloud d Lanquet ●…tow c. Object Answ. Wooll Stones Iron Earth Red crosses e Ru●…finus Histor. Eccles. lib. 1. cap. 39 f Theod. Histor. Eccles. lib. 3. cap. 20. Reasons concerning Red crosses at other times g Lib. 4. cap. 6. * So also in Westphalia ann 1543. at Lovane 1568. ipso Pentecostes die And in the yeare 1571 in duione Embdensi in Frisus Orientalibus See Fromond Meteor Lib. 5. cap. 6. art 3. The devil many times worketh in the Aire * Psal. 78. 49. How it comes to passe that the devi●…s knowledge is farre beyond mans * Matth. 8. 31. Job 1. 12. h Saxo Grammat Olaus magnus * Ephes. 2. 2. Exod. cap. 7 8. i Sentio inquit tales 〈◊〉 is ver●… prodigio●…as esse fieri 〈◊〉 solâ Dei potentiâ eoque iram Dei portendere qualis fuit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pluit sulphure igne supra Sodomam alias urbes aut etiam 〈◊〉 praestigi●… Deo permit ten●…e fieri Zanch. Tom. 3. lib. 3. cap. 5. qu●…st 6. Thes. 3. Why dew is but in the morning and at evening Why no dew is a signe of rain a Tit●…lm 〈◊〉 lib. 6. cap. 6. How sheep may●… get a deadly flux 〈◊〉 of dew Three kindes of dew Manna Of the Israelites Manna b 〈◊〉 o●… 〈◊〉 The Israelites Manna was not without miracle in many respects * Psal. 78. 25 26. How Manna is said to be Angels food c Myrrhina is a wine mixed with Myr●…he and other sweet ●…pices How Manna is said to come from heaven Hony-dew d Lib. 11. cap. 12. e It riseth with Sol about the end of July f Which is about the 17 day of April Ladanum the third kinde of sweet dew g Plin. lib. 12. cap. 17. Blasting dew h Magir. Phys. Com. lib. 4. cap. 6. a Lib. 1. de Mete●… c●…p 10. Hot things cooled are soonest congealed Arist. Met. lib. 1. cap. 11. The matter of snow Why snow is white a Fulks Meteors b Havenreut com In Arist. de Met. lib. 1. Warm winters hurtfull c Lib. 17. cap. 2. One and the same cloud may give the mountains snow and the valleys rain The reason of sleet Crystall d Fulk Met. What hail is Winter-hail how and where it is made The sundry fashions of hail-stones Hail doth many times much hurt How the heathen used to secure their fields from hail and other harms * Psal. 107. 34 35 Charms unlawfull The descending mist is twofold Why mists and fogs stink A rot for cattell and an harm to men How by a mist to judge of the weather * And that 's the reason why when it hangs on the stubble or the like places we see so many little spiders busie in it for the matter doth as it were feed them and perhaps through the Sun-beams generate them The first opinion Answer a D●… dicit Deum producere ventos de thesauris suis hoc tantùm innuit ventorum materiam exhalati●…nen in terra tanquam thesauro inclusam esse unde De●…s ventos producit per causas intermedias naturales quae sunt calor solis terr●… Havenreut Psal. 74. 17. 18. A soc●…nd opinion * Psal. 104. 3. † Ibid. * Psal. 18. 10. † Ibid. vers 14. Answer ●… third opinion Answer b Met●…r lib. 1. cap. 13. Winde is more then the motion of the aire Another opinion * The reason of which fiction was because the clouds and mists rising about the s●…en Aeolian Islands of which he was king did alwayes portend great store of windes c Metamor lib. 1. a L●…d de orig●… font cap. 3. The cause and effects of an earthquake The definition of winde b Met. lib. 2. cap. 4. Why it useth to rain when the winde is down The aire moved augments the winde How the windes are moved and by what c Haven●●us de Mes. lib. 2. cap. 4. Where 〈◊〉 motion of the winde beginneth Particular windes Why the winde bloweth not alwayes one way Opposite 〈◊〉 Oblique windes Whis●…ing windes The matter of winde not