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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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the Firmament that is appointed to this separating office but the whole Firmament as any one may see if he do but observe the words of God producing and assigning it Neither do we finde that the Firmament is any more then one To divide it into parts so as they imagine is not to divide it into parts but rather to make so many Firmaments as they imagine parts like as every scale of an onyon is a severall and differing scale and not one the part of another And besides neither is there the same reason between the parts of water and these supposed parts of the Firmament for then when God made the Sunne Moon and Starres he would not have said Let them be in the Firmament but above the Firmament for they are farre higher then the clouds yet I say they being higher then the clouds he is said to place them but in the Firmament and they being no more but in it how improperly do we affirm those things to be above it whose places are lower then either Sunne Moon or Starres And secondly admit Job tells us that there are waters bound up in thick clouds doth not Jeremie also tell us that they are drawn up in vapours from the earth which as hath been shewed cannot at all times be but then when there is a naturall concourse of causes to effect it whereas the out-spread Firmament is to be alwayes between them separating them not at times but continually And as for the rain proceeding from those waters which we call the clouds it stayeth not long in the aire but forthwith falleth down again shewing that of right their proper place is here below and therefore we make not three kindes of waters as if we would be contrary to Moses in saying that there are other waters above the concave of the Firmament which on this second day of the worlds creation were separated from all other waters Wherefore observe but this they being separated on this second day how could they be such as the aire affordeth for the middle Region of the aire which is the place for the clouds was not untill the third day Not untill the third day I say because it is found by experience and from sufficient witnesse proved true that the tops of the highest mountains do reach up unto that place which we call the middle Region of the aire being some of them more loftie then the clouds As for example in Iapan there is a mountain called Figeniana which is some certain leagues higher then the clouds And in Ternate among the Philippine Islands there is a mountain which as Mr. Purchas in his pilgrimage relateth is even angry with nature because it is fastened to the earth and doth therefore not onely lift up his head above the middle Region of the aire but endeavoureth also to conjoyn it self with the fierie Element And of the mountain Athos between Macedon and Thrace it is said to be so high that it casteth shade more then thirtie and seven miles Also the mount of Olympus in Thessalie is said to be of that height as neither the windes clouds or rain do overtop it And although I omit sundry others of exceeding height it is also written of another mount so high above the clouds that some who have seen it do witnesse that they have been on the top of it and have had both a cleare skie over their heads and also clouds below them pouring down rain and breaking forth with thunder and lightnings at which those below have been terrified but on the top of the hill there was no such matter This surely was that mountain which Mr. Lydiat meant when he said that etiam aestivis diebus even in the summer time when the clouds are at the highest those on the top of the mountains have had fair weather and withall perceived that there was plentie of rain about the middle height of the same hills Thus we see that there are lofty mountains And indeed their loftines is the cause of a middle Region for the hils hindering the aire from following the motion of the heavens do make it about their tops a fit convenient place to thicken these vapours into clouds which by the attractive power of the heavenly bodies are drawn up thither Wherefore that I may conclude the place of the middle Region being both caused and also overtopped by sundry high mountains it will appeare that there was no middle Region of the aire untill the third day because the waters were all over the earth and standing above the hills untill that very day For then and not before God gathered them together unto one place and made the drie land to appeare which before was covered with waters as with a garment Psalm 104. Rarior aqua saith one velut nebula terras tegebat quae congregatione densata est The thinne water like a mist or wet cloud covered the earth which by gathering together was made thick In which regard it may be said saith Aquinas that it was as naturall for the water to be every where about the earth as for the aire to be about both water and earth yet neverthelesse propter necessitatem finis saith he for the necessitie of the end namely that plants and living creatures should be upon the earth it was meet that the earth should be so uncovered and the waters so gathered that the drie land appeare Now this was a work pertinent unto the third day and before this work done there could be no middle Region and the middle Region being on this day and not before how can the waters in the clouds be those waters which were separated by the out-spread Firmament on the second day Neither do I here argue à facto ad fieri because in the very creation of this Firmament God then said Let it be between the waters that is even then beginning its office and art of separating them Which that it is even so we see he speaketh next concerning the lower waters and makes no more mention at all of those upper ones because he had already done with them and left them in their place unto which he had appointed them But furthermore this tenent is not a little helped by a consideration of the cataracts or windows of heaven which in the dayes of Noah were opened and poured down rain by the space of fourty dayes For me thinks the clouds could not be those windows of heaven because it rained fourty dayes and before it left raining the waters were higher then the hills being when fourty dayes were ended fifteen cubits above the highest mountains as in the historie of the Floud is manifest And hereupon it was that one once by the same reason concluded and said that either it did not rain fourty dayes which assertion we are sure is false or else it rained from some other where then from the middle Region For seeing the middle Region it self was
same power remains still in the starres to exhale the matter as well after it comes into the highest Region of the aire as before it came there neither need we then imagine an abatement of their exhaling vertue Object 1. But perhaps it may be thought that the nature of the place above the Moon doth sufficiently denie the ascent of any terrene Exhalation so high there being too great a difference between the one and the other between the matter ascending and the matter of that place whither it ascendeth Answ. To which I may partly answer as before in the 4. Chapter and 3. Section that seeing the out-spread Firmament in the creation was taken from that masse of matter which lay here below and separated from it rather then created of any newer matter that therefore I say there cannot be so great a difference as to bring in such an Antipathie as will not at all suffer any terrene Exhalation to scale those flammantia moenia mundi or battlements of heaven but rather that without reluctancie or any great striving the one may admit of the other and entertain it as a guest neare of kin unto it self or unto the nature of that place where the continuing starres have ever had their residence For if I urge it further it may well be proved even by opticall demonstration that the great vast space from the earth as high as the fixed starres themselves is not of a diverse nature from the Aire for if it were then there would be a multitude of Mediums between the sight and the thing visible but there is no multitude of Mediums For where there is a multitude of Mediums there the beams which come to the sight from the thing visible would beget a multiplicitie of refraction in the said raies or beams but it is manifest that there is onely one refraction found in the beams of the starres and that but onely when they are neare to the edge of the Horizon at which time the ascending vapours are between our sight and them And therefore there is but one kinde of Medium by which the starres offer themselves to our sight And being but one Medium there cannot be such diversitie of natures between the heavens and things compounded of the elements Whereupon it may be concluded that an Exhalation may ascend into the territories of the starry heaven and so by consequent have a mutuall concurrence with such matter as the heavens do naturally afford towards the generating of supralunary Comets or new admired starres Indeed I must confesse that were I of Pythagoras his opinion I then would cry out with Auditus in the Comedie Heark heark list list now c. What are you deaf do you not perceive the wondrous sound and the celestiall musick the heavenly orbs do make with their continuall motion Or I would imagine firm spheres or solid orbs and so set an undoubted stoppage and hinder the passage of any Meteor above the Moon But seeing that tenent is made the fit subject of laughter I therefore passe it over Object 2. But may not the Element of Fire stand in the way and so consume such matter as ascendeth before it come beyond the Moon Answ. To which it is answered that the chiefest cause why men have been perswaded to think that Fire is generated immediately under the spheres and that within the concave of the Moons orb the said Fire as it is there generated hath there its place of residence is for no other reason but because of an imagined attrition of the spheres and orbs Which seeing they are taken away and that all is filled with Aire the Elementarie fire is not hindred from ascending but may have a more loftie station For questionlesse this kinde of fire as it is not visible to the sight so neither may it be thought any other thing then the more subtill light and hot part of the Aire in which regard it must needs be both in and of that part which is nearest to the highest heavens For both the motion of the heavens is there most swift and also there is the greatest neighbourhood to that infinite number of starres fixed in the heavens An earthly Exhalation may therefore climbe above the Moon and yet not runne through a fiery purgatory or be consumed by the way Mr. Lydiat our countreyman his opinion is that if we consider of this Element not as it is absolutely pure then the greatest part of it is in the starres of which see more in the fourth dayes work and some also is under ground as being there a great cause of generating metals occasioning the burning and breaking out of sundry sulfurous hills and the like But of this enough And in the consideration of it I have made way you see for the admittance of terrene Exhalations to joyn their forces towards the effecting of supralunarie Comets or new and strange admired starres This I say I have proved as a thing both possible and not unlike But that they do alwayes therefore thus concurre I am not certain neither will I stand curiously to decide it Let therefore learned Tycho his tenent go for currant concerning Cassiopea's starre that the heavens onely were the materiall parents of it and especially the Galaxia or white milkie way unto the edge of which place whilest it appeared it was situated and continued visible in the same for the space of 19 moneths or thereabouts And thus I conclude adding herewithall concerning other Comets whose station hath been supralunarie and time of continuance any thing long that if in them there could be any right to challenge a portion out of the same storehouse then questionlesse they were tyed to rest beholding both to the heavens and also to the earth for the matter of their composure But for ordinary Comets the case must needs be otherwise seeing their place and small continuing time confirm it These things for mine own part I think more probable then if I should affirm that the Planets afforded certain Exhalations which by force of the Sunne are expired and exhaled from them and being exhaled are made the matter of all kinde of Comets above the Moon yea and New starres also as some affirm consist of no other causes wherein they dissent from Tycho thinking contrary to him that the Galaxia affords no matter toward the composure of these appearances For as Fromondus a late writer affirmeth Simon Marius beheld a New starre in the yeare 1612 in Andromeda's girdle and one Iustus Prygius beheld another in the constellation of Antoninous Kepler in the yeare 1602 saw one in the constellation of Pisces and David Fabricius in the yeare 1596 saw another in the Whale all of them farre enough distant from the Galaxia or milkie way But suppose all this must the continuing starres therefore needs be forced to waste their own bodies and spend themselves in teeming such ample portions of matter as are required for glittering
which will drown bastard children that be cast into it but drive to land them that be lawfully begotten Or is not this strange which he also mentioneth of a certain well in Sicilia whereof if theeves drink they are made blinde by the efficacie of the water The like I finde in other authours concerning certain fountains in Sardinia for it is said that they have this marvellous propertie namely that if there be a cause to draw any one to his oath he that is perjured and drinketh thereof becometh blinde and the true witnesse seeth more clearely then he did before Solinus and Isiodore report it Solinus also and Aristotle make mention of a water called the Eleusinian or Halesinian spring which through the noise of singing or musick is moved as if it danced or capered up and down whereas at other times it is still and quiet But I conclude and as that honoured Poet cannot but say Sure in the legend of absurdest fables I should enroll most of these admirables Save for the reverence of th' unstained credit Of many a witnesse where I yerst have read it And saving that our gain-spurr'd Pilots finde In our dayes waters of more wondrous kinde Unto which in things that are strange and not fabulous let this also be added that God Almighty hath proposed infinite secrets to men under the key of his wisdome that he might thereby humble them and that seeing what meer nothings they are they might acknowledge that all are ignorant of more then they know for indeed this is a rule 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 those things which we know not Sect. 3. Of the drie-land appearing after the gathering of the waters THe waters were no sooner gathered but the drie-land then appeared and this may be called the second part of the third dayes work For the end of the gathering of the waters was that the earth might shew it self and not onely so but that also it might appeare solid and drie Two things therefore saith Pareus did the earth in this act principally receive one was that it might be conspicuous the other that it might be solid and drie and both depended upon the law of great necessitie For first had it been continually covered with waters how could it have been a place for habitation either man must have been otherwise then he is or else the earth must as it was be uncovered Secondly were it uncovered and not also drie and solid it could not conveniently have bore up those living creatures weights and other things which tread and presse upon it Whereupon Expositours well witnesse that earth is so named from the Hebrew Erets which say they implieth a thing trod and runne upon by the creatures on it and heavenly orbs about it The same word spoken of particular places is englished land as the land or earth of Canaan and the like Here then it appeareth that this was that time when the earth received her proper elementarie qualitie which it had potentially before but not actually till now Now therefore it being not onely uncovered but also made drie it might easily be distinguished from the other three elements of fire aire and water For the proper qualitie of the fire is heat of the aire is moisture of the water is coldnesse and of the earth is drinesse These qualities I say are most proper and peculiar to them yet so as the aire is not onely moist but of a moderate heat as being nearest to the element of fire the water not onely cold but also moist as coming nearest to the nature of aire and the earth not onely drie but something cold as being hoast or landlord to the water and upon these terms the elements are combined together there being in all an harmonious order pointing to him who in number weight and measure hath constituted all things I will not go about to prove that the earth is the centre of the world for fear I should be like to him who disputed whether snow were white onely I will adde that even as an infant is potentially rationall by nature but is made rationall in act by youth or yeares so it was with the earth both before and after the drying of it Unto which let this also be joyned that the earth is not so arid or drie that it is void of all moisture for then it would be dissolved and fall into dust But it is arid and dry that it might be solid and firm retaining in the mean time even in the solid parts of it such a conveniencie of humour that all parts may both be glewed together and also have sufficient nutriment for the things which like to a teeming mother she either bringeth forth or nourisheth in her wombe Thus was the earth prepared and thus was it made a fit habitation for man to dwell on But as if man were not alwayes worthy to tread upon such a solid foundation we see it often shakes and quakes and rocks and rends it self as if it shewed that he which made it threatened by this trembling the impietie of the world and ruines of those which dwell upon the earth For though the efficient materiall and formall causes of an earthquake be naturall yet the finall is the signification of an angry God moved by the execrable crimes of a wicked people according to that of David in the 18 Psalme at the 7 verse The earth trembled and quaked the very foundations of the hills also shook and were removed because he was wroth Fear chills our hearts What heart can fear dissemble When steeples stagger and huge mountains tremble The Romanes in times past commanded by publick edict that prayers and supplications should be made in time of an earthquake but they must call upon no god by name as on their other holy-dayes for fear they mistook that god unto whom it belonged And the most ancient of the Grecians called Neptune the shaker and mover of the earth because they supposed that the cause proceeded from the fluctuations and flowings of waters up and down in the hollow places under ground Others thought that the shaking proceeded from the downfalls of subterranean dens or caves and that sometimes whole mountains sunk in and they caused the trembling But by that which I said before in the generation of windes it appeareth that what it is which is the cause of windes above the earth is also the cause of trembling and shaking in the earth For when it happeneth that aire and windie spirits or Exhalations be shut up within the caverns of the earth or have such passage as is too narrow for them they then striving to break their prisons shake the earth and make it tremble Now this imprisonment is said to be caused thus namely when the earth which is dry by nature
how the sea comes to be salt It followeth to shew why rivers be not salt as well as seas Now for the better explaining of this the first thing considerable will be concerning the originall of fountains and rivers Aristotle handled them amongst Meteors of a watry kinde because he supposed that there was the same originall of rivers within the earth which was of watry Meteors in the aire above the earth For if this aire saith he coming neare to the nature of a vapour is by cold turned into water then the aire which is in the caverns of the earth may be by the same cause condensed into water also According to which grounds we cannot but make this the originall of fountains and rivers namely that they are ingendred in the hollow concavities of the earth and derive both their birth and continuall sustenance from the aire which piercing the open chinks or chasma's of the earth and congealed by the cold of those places dissolveth into water as we see the aire in winter nights to be melted into a pearlie dew sticking on our glasse windows and being grown to some quantitie it will either finde a way or make a way to vent its superfluitie All which agreeth very well to the nature of the aire which seeing it is hot and moist the heat being gone it is thickened and so easily turned into water And as for a continuall running of rivers caused by this water it is saith Aristotle by a perpetuall succession of new aire But to this opinion we may not absolutely make subscription for although aire may be thus converted into water yet the sole matter of rivers cannot come from hence it may haply be an helping cause but not a prime or principall cause For first sith the aire is a thin subtil bodie there is necessarily required an abundance of aire to make but a little quantitie of water insomuch that it is not doubted by some without cause whether the dennes and hollow places of the earth be vast enough to receive so much aire as can make water enough to runne along untill it break out into a river or spring Secondly there be many fountains which have as it were a kinde of ebbing and flowing at certain direct and set times which they keep as constantly as the very sea it self As for example among other strange rivers Plinie makes mention of Dodon Jupiters fountain which evermore decreaseth from midnight untill noon thence it increaseth untill midnight again And in the island Delus the fountain of Inopus as he also affirmeth keeps his course with Nilus Also he makes mention of a little island in the sea over against the river Timavus or Brenta in Italie having certain fountains in it which increase and decrease according to the ebbing and flowing of the vast bodie of Amphitrite or the sea Wherefore the wise man Siracides thought more truely Ecclus. 40. 11. concerning these things affirming that all things which are of the earth shall turn to the earth again and that which is of the waters doth turn again into the sea Which saying of his I do not say is much strengthened but absolutely confirmed by one more authentick then it self namely by that of Solomon Eccles 1. 7. where it is witnessed that all rivers runne into the sea yet the sea is not full unto the place from whence the rivers come thither they return again Which testimonie makes it plain that the sea is the principall cause of all rivers and if therefore Aristotles aëriall vapours have any thing to do in this generation it is as much as nothing yet that which they are able to do I imagine they perform joyning themselves with the currents which come from the sea and so they runne together in the veins of the earth either untill free leave be given them to come abroad or that like Hannibal in the Alps they work themselves a way Now in this there is little or no difference between Solomon and Plato together with the ancient Philosophers before him although Aristotle dissenteth For that which Solomon calleth the sea Plato calleth the great gulf of the earth saying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 id est Ad illum hiatum omnes fluvii confluunt ex hoc vicissim omnes effluunt that is Into this gulf all rivers do both flow or assemble themselves and also by their courses come or flow out again But what need more words It is without controversie that rivers have their first originall from the sea that is the fountain-head from whence all fountains have their heads Neither can the saltnesse of the sea and freshnesse of rivers stop this current For concerning springs it is true indeed that they are fresh and this freshnesse notwithstanding their salt originall may be ascribed to percolation and straining through the narrow spungie passages of the earth which makes them leave behinde as an exacted toll the colour thicknesse and saltnesse So that you see sea water though in it self of a salt and brackish savour by passing through divers windings and turnings of the earth is deprived of all unpleasantnesse and by how much the spring-heads of rivers are remote from the sea by so much are their waters affected with a delightfull relish yea and why they ascend up to the highest mountains already hath been declared Unto which may be added that they come not with a direct course from the sea unto those hills neither do they ascend directly upwards on the sudden but by degrees and so winding themselves through many crooked passages and turnings they do as it were scrue themselves up to the convenientest place of breaking out and cannot go back because the sea is a farre heavier bodie then the vein that cometh from it even as the bloud in our veins is nothing in proportion to the liver from whence each vein of bloud hath its first beginning But I draw towards a conclusion adding in the last place that of waters be they seas or rivers we have a threefold use and benefit First that out of them drink may be afforded to man and beast as it is Psal. 104. 11. They give drink to every beast of the field the wilde asses quench their thirst c. Secondly that running through the earth as bloud through the bodie by interlacing it and sometimes overwhelming it they make the earth able to produce those fruits which are necessary for the life of man which benefit of overflowing so fattens the whole land of Egypt that the priests of that countrey did thereupon ascribe the beginning of time or of every thing that now is to that time of the yeare when their Nilus overflowed or when it first began to lift up it self above the banks and diffuse an ample portion of manuring bountie into the lap of the land which is as good to them as if Iupiter should descend in a golden shower And for other places where there be
happeneth to be watred by continuall rains then not onely the pores and caverns thereof are stopped and closed up but even the aire and Exhalations within the earth are increased To which purpose Dr. Fulk in the third book of his Meteors writeth saying The great caves and dens of the earth must needs be full of aire continually for there is no vacuum in nature but when by the heat of the Sunne the moisture of the earth is resolved many Exhalations are generated as well within the earth as without and whereas the places were full before so that they could hold or receive no more except part of that which is in them be let out it must needs follow that in such countreys where the earth hath few pores or else where they be stopped with moisture that there I say these Exhalations striving to get out do either rend the earth or lift it up that thereby either a free passage may be had or else room enough to abide within I am perswaded that as in other windes there be also in this subterranean fires which help to move and stirre the Vapours and Exhalations Neither do I think that the Sunne is the onely cause of shutting the pores of the ground for then earthquakes would in a manner be as frequent and common as dryings after a rain Some of the other Planets therefore have their operation in this effect Which as Astrologers witnesse is Saturn being of an astringent nature and chiefly in earthie signes must this be produced For say they if Saturn have the sole dominion either in the revolution of the world or in any great conjunction or in the ecliptick place and be strong in earthie signes such as be Taurus Virgo and Capricorn and shall behold the Moon when she is impedite with a quadrate or opposite aspect then he foresheweth that there will be an earthquake And questionlesse this is not altogether idle For the influence of the Planets is divers and may as well according to their places and positions work these effects as have any power at all in the changes and alterations of the aire in the producing of Meteors cherishing of plants and the like And happily it is not Saturn onely nor the bright beams of the Sunne but other of the Planets also being conveniently placed and disposed which helpeth forward this sad effect Authours vary about the kindes of earthquakes some making more some fewer kindes Aristotle De Meteoris lib. 2. cap. 8. maketh onely two Tremor and Pulsus a Trembling and a Beating Some adde a third which they call Hiatus Others make seven And some adde onely foure to which may be joyned a fifth The first is when the whole force of the winde driveth to one place there being no contrary motion to let or hinder it Many hills and buildings have been rushed down by this kinde of earthquake especially when the winde causing it was strong For if it be a feeble winde it onely looseth or unfasteneth foundations if lesse feeble then without further harm the earth onely shakes like one sick of an ague This is called a laterall or side-long shaking The second is not so much laterall as perpendicular or upright which is when the earth with great violence is so lifted up that the buildings are like to fall and by and by sinketh down again For after the winde that caused the earth to swell is broke out of prison the earth returneth to his old place even as it was before The third kinde is Hiatus a gaping rending or cleaving of the earth one part being driven so farre from another that whole towns cities hills rocks rivers seas and the like are swallowed up and never seen again The fourth is a shaking that causeth sinking and is farre differing from the former For now the earth splitteth not but sinketh this being in such places where though the surface of the ground be solid yet it hath but a salt foundation which being moistened with water driven through it by the force of the shaking Exhalation is turned into water also Thus was the Atlantick Ocean caused to be a sea whereas before it was an island according to the testimonie of famous Plato who lived in his flourishing fame about 366 yeares before Christ was born and before his time it was that this island sunk Where by the way in a word or two may be discussed not so much how the late discovered parts of the world came to be peopled as how at the first to be unknown Concerning which this I think may be supposed that America was sometimes part of that great land which Plato calleth the Atlantick island and that the Kings of that island had some intercourse between the people of Europe and Africa Some have related that they were the sonnes of Neptune and did govern part of Europe and Africa as well as of the said island in which regard there was knowledge of the late known parts long ago But when it happened that this island became a sea time wore out the remembrance of remote countreys and that upon this occasion namely by reason of the mud and dirt and other rubbish of the island For when it sunk it became a sea which at the first was full of mud and thereupon could not be sailed untill a long ●…me after yea so long that such as were the sea-men in those dayes were either dead before the sea came to be cleare again or else sunk with the island the residue being little expert in the art of navigation might as necessitie taught them sail in some certain boats from island to island but not venturing further their memorie perished And not onely so but also thus this island sinking might so damp up the sea that neither those that were in these parts did ever attempt to seek any land that wayes to the Westwards nor yet those who were remaining upon that part of the island that did not sink would ever attempt to seek any land unto the Eastwards and so the one forgot the other More I might say touching this thing but this perhaps is more then enough Yet that such an island was and swallowed by an earthquake I am verily perswaded and if America joyned not to the West part of it yet surely it could not be farre distant because Plato deseribes it as a great island neither do I think that there was much sea between Africa and the said island But I leave this digression and proceed The fifth kinde of earthquake is contrary to the former for as before the ground sinks down so now it is cast up like as in the second kinde already mentioned onely this is the difference that now it returneth not to its place again but remaineth a great mountain an embleme whereof may be seen in the busie mole casting up hills in a plain ground And note that if such a rising be in the sea it not onely causeth overflowings but produceth
viz. God commanded this elementarie light to be that so the thinner and higher element severed from the aire might by his enlightning operation effect a light some shining and the aire according to the nature thereof receive it which to the fire was an essentiall propertie to the aire an accidentall qualitie approved of God as good both to himself and the future creatures Thus some But others except against it affirming that this light was moveable by the presence of it making day and by its absence making night which could not have been had it been the element of fire unlesse it be more or lesse in one place then in another and not equally dispersed Or as Pareus answereth it could not be the element of fire because that is above the clouds according to the common rules of Philosophie and therefore in his judgement the fierie element was not untill the second day being created with the Expansum or stretching out of the aire But unto these exceptions I think an answer may be framed as I perhaps shall afterwards shew you Thirdly if as some have done we should think that this was the very light of the sunne and then in the sunne or in such a cloud or subject as was the matter of the sunne the text would be objected against it which affirmeth that the sunne was not untill the fourth day for the creation of that was but then although the light was before Fourthly Aquinas saith Lux primo die fuit producta secundum communem lucis naturam quarto autem die attributa est luminaribus determinata virtus ad determinatos effectus secundum quod videmus alios effectus habere radium solis alios radium lunae sic de aliis Whereupon he concludeth that howsoever it was it was but an informed light untill the fourth day Now therefore amongst a multitude of opinions which are besides these already mentioned I for mine own part cannot but preferre this as the best namely that the light for three dayes space wanted a subject such as now it hath and yet it did perform the same office which now it doth being fastened to a subject or to the bodie of the Sunne which is Vehiculum lucis A Chariot for the light For we may easily perceive that in the works of creation there is such an harmonious order observed as that there may be an union and reduction of all things of one kinde to their own heads and centre As for example the upper waters must be severed by the out-spread firmament and the lower must repair all to one sea as their naturall subject and as for heavie substances they hasten downwards and the light ones they fly upwards In like manner that light which at the first was dispersed and fixed to no subject doth presently as soon as the sunne was unite it self unto that body as now it is This of all other seemeth to me the best opinion to pitch upon and the most probable in this kinde which may well be as an Embleme how God will one day gather his elect from all coasts of heaven to the participation of one glorie S. Paul applieth it to our regeneration thus God who commanded the light to shine out of darknesse hath shined in our hearts c. that we who were once darknesse are now light in the Lord. And in this consideration I think we need not much dissent from them who would have the element of fire signified by it which opinion was before mentioned for howsoever it be that that element be now dispersed or wheresoever placed yet it might be that the first light shined from it thus I say it might be because we may not reason à facto ad fieri or from the order of the constitution of things in which they now are to the principles of their institution whilest yet they were in making And for further proof of this I do easily assent to them who have probably affirmed that the starres and lights of heaven contain the greatest part of this fire as afterwards in the fourth dayes work shall be more plainly shewed This I have said as seeming to me the best and most probable tenent although perfectly to affirm what this light was must be by our enlightning from him who commanded that it should shine out of darknesse Of which shining and darknesse seeing the Sunne was not yet made which by his course and turning about makes it day and night at the same time in divers places it may be said that it was day and night at the same instant now over the face of the whole earth which made one therefore say that the first darknesses were not loco divisae sed planè depulsae à luce ut nusquam essent yet so as that they should either return or depart according to the contraction or expansion of this first light caused by a divine dispensation Thus Pareus And now of thee oh bright-shining creature it may be said that hadst thou never been the beautie of the world had been as nothing For thou art the beautie of all the beauties else as saith Du Bartas Gods eldest daughter Oh how thou art full Of grace and goodnesse Oh how beautifull Quest. But if God made the Light was he not before in darknesse Answ. No For he needs not any created light who is himself a Light uncreated no corporall light who is a spirituall one God is light and in him is no darknesse at all 1. Joh. 1. 5. He made this light for our mortall journey on earth himself is the Light of our immortall abode in heaven neither did he more dwell in this light that he made then the waters were the habitation of the Spirit when it was said that the Spirit moved upon the waters But see there was Night Light and Day before the Sunne yet now without it there is neither which sheweth that we must allow God to be the Lord of his own works and not limit his power to means And surely as it was before man was made so shall it be after he is dissolved For then as the Prophet speaketh The Sunne shall no more be thy light by day neither shall the Moon give light unto thee but the Lord shall be unto thee an everlasting light and thy God thy glory Lastly unto this amongst many things let me adde but one thing more God made light on the first day so Christ arose from death on the same day being the first of the week And he is the true light which lighteth every one that cometh into the world Of which light if we have no portion then of all creatures man is the most miserable Sect. 3. Of the intercourse between day and night WHat now remaineth God called the light Day and the darknesse Night 'T is true Th' All 's Architect alternately decreed That Night the Day the Day should Night succeed Of both which we have more then
may be also thought that both these waters dropping from clouds in the aire and also all other waters under the canopie of Heaven or within the concavitie of this Expansum are but the lower waters and those other which are separated from them must be in an higher place viz. above the firmament and so shall they be divided by the firmament otherwise not To which purpose Du Bartas thus I 'le rather give a thousand times the lie To mine own reason then but once defie The sacred voice of th'everlasting Spirit Which doth so often and so loud averre it That God above the shining firmament I wot not I what kinde of waters pent Or as Hyperius also writeth Assentiemur Mosi ac simpliciter statuemus aquas non tantùm infra firmamentum ubi in portiones quasi regiones certas eae ipsae sunt distributae aliaeque per aërem circumvehuntur aliae terris sunt adglutinatae verùm etiam super illud esse alias undique circumfusas That is Let us assent to Moses and plainly determine that there are not onely waters below the firmament as it were divided into certain portions and regions some of them carried about through the aire some fastened to the earth but also that there are other waters above the firmament spread round about it Which thing is also thus further manifested because those waters that are separated by the firmament are to be at all times separated For God in the creation of this firmament did not onely command that it should separate but also that it should be separating that is Let it continually separate or divide the waters from the waters quasi voluerit nullum esse tempus quo non distinguat as if he would have it that there should be no time wherein it might not distinguish between the one the other Which as it cannot be do●…e unlesse there be alwayes waters to be distinguished so neither can it be pertinent to those waters in the clouds because the aire is often cleare and those bottles of rain are not alwayes there And again it is from the vapours drawn from below that clouds and rain come which cannot at all times be but then onely when there is a naturall concourse of causes to effect it And then again when they are there they be soon gone for the rain proceeding from those vapours which we call the clouds stayeth not long in the aire but forthwith falleth down again and so by little and little the vapour consumeth and the cloud is gone How can it therefore be that these should be those supercelestiall waters separated from all other waters by the firmament seeing the firmament is above them and not onely so but also their proper place is here below being but at times drawn from hence and then it is as it were against their wills which makes them therefore hasten hither again with all the speed they can whereas on the contrary the firmament is to be between those waters and not over them separating them not at times but continually Neither may it seem strange how the out-firmament can be able alwayes to uphold them seeing as hath been said it was made strong by stretching out lifting then the waters up with it and therefore well fitted for this office and can no more fall then the heaven it self whose beams or rafters are laid in the waters as the Prophet speaketh Psalme 104. 3. And hereupon it also was that noble Bartas said I see not why m●…ns reason should withstand Or not beleeve that He whose powerfull hand Bay'd up the Red sea with a double wall That Israels host might scape Egyptian thrall Could prop as sure so many waves on high Above the Heav'ns starre-spangled canopie This was his opinion concerning the waters separated by the firmament of which opinion are sundry more But on the contrary side are other some who are of another minde affirming that they are meant onely of those waters in the clouds for say they the aire is called the firmament so also is the skie c. And of the clouds it is said in Job that God bindeth up his waters in thick clouds and the cloud is not rent under them So that first as every part of the water is called by the name of water in like manner every part of the firmament is called by the name of the firmament in which regard those waters in the clouds although no higher then the aire may be taken for those waters which the firmament doth separate and secondly that place in Job sheweth no lesse making it appeare how and in what manner the waters are separated by the firmament Furthermore Ex ipsa nubium natura saith Pareus From the very nature of the clouds this appeareth to be so for what other thing are the clouds but waters separated by force of the diurnall heat and by the cold of the aire made thick whereupon as Plinie calleth them they are said to be Aquae in coelo stantes Waters standing in the heavens Also it may be added saith Pareus that Moses makes mention but of two kindes of waters superas inferas the higher and the lower but the clouds are waters as hath been shewed and no low waters therefore they are the upper waters unlesse there be three kindes of waters which is contrary to Moses Besides this saith he is confirmed by the grammaticall construction of the words For Moses saith not that it divided from the waters which were supra Expansum but thus viz. from the waters which were desuper Expanso The sense therefore is not that the waters were carried up above the whole Expansum or Firmament but rather that they were carried upwards so as that with the firmament they were supra and desuper that is above and on high Also the name of heaven confirms no lesse for saith he the Expansum is called according to the Hebrews Schamajim or Shamajim from Sham There and Majim Waters which derivation is common And therefore those upper waters are not quite above the Expansum or the Firmament but are there that is in the Firmament namely in the middle Region of the aire Thus we see the difference concerning these waters And now let the reader choose which opinion likes him best But for mine own part I like this latter worst yet let me not tie another to be of the same minde any further then he pleaseth for it is no matter of faith and therefore we have our free choice according to the best reasons and most forcible demonstrations Wherefore let me proceed a little further that thereby as neare as I can I may set down that which seemeth to me the best meaning and nearest to the truth First then I answer that they do mistake who divide the Expansum into parts as if in so doing they could absolutely cleare the matter in question for it is not a part of
such a nature as that the rain falling through them should dissolve or corrupt them Those indeed who follow Aristotle make them of a Quint-essence altogether differing from things compounded of the Elements But for mine own part more easily should I be perswaded to think that there is no such fifth essence in them but rather that they are of a like nature with the Elements or not much differing For first although Aristotle deny any change or alteration to have been observed or seen in the heavens since the beginning of the world yet he was deceived For Hipparchus who had better skill in Astronomie then ever Aristotle had he as Plinie witnesseth telleth us out of his own diligent and frequent observations that the heavens have had changes in them for there was in his dayes a new starre like unto that which was once in Cassiopea And that which is beyond the authoritie of the greatest philosopher doth also witnesse as much I mean the sacred voice of the everlasting Spirit affirming that the two parts of this universe the heavens as well as the earth do both of them wax old even as doth a garment which is as if it should be said that by little and little they are changed tending so long to corruption till at last shall come the time of their dissolution What great difference then can there be between the heavens and things here below seeing in their own natures both of them do tend to corruption and are subject to mutation Besides as it is with Man who is the little world so certainly it is with Macrocosme who is the greater world but man changeth and declineth daily not being now as heretofore he hath been and so also as a good consequence it must follow that the greater world doth also suffer change and by declining alteration That man declineth saith one is a thing most manifest For men are of lower stature lesser bones and strength and of shorter lives then their forefathers were Now from whence cometh this but from the declining estate of the greater world The earth we see which is the lower part of it is not so fruitfull as before but beginneth to be barren like the wombe of Sarah neither do the fruits which she bringeth forth yeeld so much nutriment as heretofore they have done And how cometh that to passe but because the heaven also fainteth For the Planets wax old and cannot afford so great vertue and influence to these lower bodies as in times past they did which Plinie and Aulus Gellius testifie And indeed this must needs be a manifest proof seeing lesse and weaker bodies are conceived every Age in the wombe of nature that nature therefore waxeth old and weary of conceiving Also saith he if a man do but behold the face of heaven the Moon looketh pale and wan Mars lesse rubicund Sol lesse orient Iupiter not of so amiable and favourable countenance Venus more hypocriticall and all the rest both of the wandring and fixed starres more weak and suspicious then they did before That mighty Giant which was wont to runne his unwearied course now waxeth wearie as if he would stand still in heaven as he did in the dayes of Joshua for he shineth more dimmely and appeareth more seldome then before being much nearer to the earth then of ancient times For if we may give credit to the calculations of the chief masters in Astronomie the Sunne quoth Copernicus and after him also Stofler is nearer to the earth then it was in the dayes of Ptolomie by the space of twenty six thousand six hundred and sixtie miles or as Philip Melanchthon saith nine thousand nine hundred seventie and six miles to whom saith Di●…tericus assenteth that famous mathematician of our age David Origanus in his Prognostication for the yeare of our Lord 1604. All these are proofs and although we do not greatly contend concerning this last allegation of the sunnes approach so neare us yet neverthelesse the assertion in generall is true enough that the heavens as well as the earth as they grow older and older do suffer change and in that regard their natures cannot but be much alike Unto which adde this namely that these visible heavens of which we now speak were taken from that masse or lump which lay here below and that the whole lump was created at once in which regard it cannot be denied that they differ toto genere or altogether but that they are of a much like nature with inferiour bodies or things here below And as for Aristotle he never would so earnestly have defended the contrary had he not known that it was an excellent means to colour that which he also held concerning the worlds eternitie But besides all this the observations of our best and modern Astronomers make much against him for they have modestly and manifestly proved that not onely new starres but comets also have been farre above the moon As for example that strange starre which once was at the back of Cassiopea's chair was of an extraordinarie height above it for it shined without any difference of Aspect Parallax or diversitie of sight even untill all the matter whereof it consisted was consumed having alwayes as the observers thereof do witnesse one and the same station to every of the starres both in all climates and also in all parts of the heaven no diversitie of sight at all observed all which in the lowermost Planets is otherwise and perceived most of all in the moon because the Semidiameter of the earth according to which quantitie we dwell from the centre hath a sensible bignesse unto the distance of the moons sphere from us Had therefore that New starre Comet or what you please to call it been lower then the moon and not in the starrie heaven then like the inferiour Planets it would have suffered a Parallax or diversitie of sight and never have kept such a regular motion as it did contending not to be overcome of the starrie heaven in its motion but to keep as it were an equall pace with it thereby shewing that it was even in the Ethereall heaven it self For this is a rule that by how much a starre is higher then the earth by so much it imitateth the highest heavens in their daily motion Neither was it this starre alone but others also after it even Comets themselves whose places were found to be above the moon for observing more diligently and exactly then in former times the observers could easily demonstrate this truth also thinking thereupon that many of those Comets which have been seen in former ages were burnt out even in the starrie heaven it self and not so many of them below the moon as generally without serious observation have been supposed Longomontanus proveth this both in that last Comet which was seen in the yeare 1618 and also in other Comets before it And now what of all this Nothing but onely thus viz. If
poyson of the Exhalation whereof the Comet consisted unto some such place as lieth obvious unto it and the like Yea and upon the raising of windes come often showers and rains or else overflowings of banks upon high tides and other loftie waters which are forced over upon the violence of the windes Astrologers say that Comets do most hurt either unto those places to which they are verticall or unto those countreys which are subject to the signe wherein they are for they maintain that such and such countreys are subject to such and such signes but omitting part of that they also tell us which stands with good reason that in earthie drie signes they produce barrennesse by reason of drought in waterish signes barrennesse also by reason of too much wet in aierie signes extraordinary winde in signes of a fierie triplicitie extraordinary heat warres fires drought and the like and in all of these seeing their operation is extraordinary some one perilous and infectious sicknesse or other Besides they also tell us that if a Comet be in fashion like unto a sword it then signifieth warres and destruction of cities c. If it be stella crinita or blazing round about and of divers colours then it signifieth winde seditions heresies and the like but if it be blackish with a short tail and no hairs then it is a signe of barrennesse together with long and continued warres But know now that although these and the like accidents be produced by Comets yet if Comets should not be the case would be farre worse for mankinde and more readily would eager death seize upon him For if that which is the matter of Comets were not taken into one place and drawn so as it is up into the aire it would kill us by being dispersed about our dwellings such being the nature of their poisonous Fumes as they by experience know who have seen the danger of damps whilest they played the part of Pioners under ground Wherefore let me adde that the end for which Comets are is threefold for either they appeare for a Politicall end for a Theologicall end or for a Naturall end In respect of a Politicall end they are so to be taken for the Heralds of future calamities that men being forewarned may be forearmed and provided either to shun the threatned disaster or else to endure with patience the common and inevitable misery In respect of a Theologicall end they are either a signe of calamities or else the efficient cause of calamities If they be a signe then their end is this viz. that they may be monitours instigatours and admonishers to repentance and to desire and expect either the turning away or mitigation of those publick punishments But if they be the efficient causes of miserie then their Theologicall end is that they are sent as the instruments of punishing some such enormous malice and contumacie of mankinde as would not be kept under or restrained by any humane law or discipline And lastly in respect of a Naturall end it is that those pestiferous windes spirits or breathings which are gathered from metallique liquours and the like in the earth should be taken up farre into the aire from the common seat of men that thereby we may partake the lesse of their malice for being burnt out and consumed there they can lesse hurt us then if they were below If they should remain in the earth they then as they often do would rend and shake it or should they remain below in the neare neighbouring aire they would poison us sooner then above because if the aire be infected when they are on high and a great way from us much more would it be infected should they be below and round about us But of Comets I have said enough And now methinks I am led from them to a consideration of such appearances as are called New starres such as were in the yeares 1572 1596 1600 1602 1604 and 1612. Artic. 2. Of New starres and especially of that which was in the Constellation of Cassiopea Anno Dom. 1572. NOw here I must confesse that I know not what to write for how they are generated or what they signifie is a matter of most intricate question Noble Tycho that Phenix of Astronomie and after him Longomontanus with certain others have been perswaded that they were more then Comets and generated farre otherwise or of other matter then fierie Meteors are being first set a work so to think by the sight of that strange and admirable New starre which was seen in the constellation of Cassiopea seen from the ninth of November in the yeare 1572 untill the last of March in the yeare 1574. Which starre was indeed truely admirable and as I may say attended with a sad event I mean that cunningly plotted Massacre of Protestants in France at the solemnization of a marriage between Henry of Navarre chief of the Protestants partie and lady Margaret sister to the French King Charles the ninth then reigning and chief authour of the foresaid Massacre at which wedding there was not so much wine drunk as bloud shed thirtie thousand Protestants and upwards of the best and most potent being sent through this Red sea to the land of Canaan Or if this New starre were not attended with that particular accident because the Massacre was in August and the starre appeared not untill two moneths after yet we may hope that rising after such a butcherie and so soon after it as it did that therefore it came to animate distressed Christians shining at the first with a cheerfull countenance but at the last turning into a martiall and bloudie hue as if in so doing he which sent it would have the world take notice that his righteous servants should see truths enemies be they where or whom they will confounded at last by martiall discipline and that those who had made havock of others should be troden down at last themselves although for a time they fairly bore it out But by what instruments the execution of these projects should be performed we cannot tell Yet this I verily think may be said that those late blessed and admired proceedings of the prosperous and successefull GUSTAVUS ADOLPHUS King of Sweden whose manifold and sudden conquests made him a spectacle to the astonished world that those I say do point us to him above all men as being the man appointed to shew the first effects of that strange starre and that it was to have an operation farre surpassing the saddest consequents of former threatning Comets To which purpose I finde that learned Tycho hath added a kinde of propheticall conclusion to that book of his which he wrote concerning this New starre wherein he declareth according to his modest and harmlesse rules of art proceeding in them not like a doting heathenish starre-gazer that the effects were to be declared by succeeding events which as they shall not begin
then the other and yet in a manner as subtill swift and pure otherwise it would not blast but burn 3. The third kinde is Fulmen Urens and this is magis igneum quàm flammeum more fiery then flamie being of a grosse and earthy substance having much slimie matter in it which makes it therefore set such things on fire as are combustible whensoever it meeteth with them And yet there are some things which as it is said the lightning hurteth not As for example The Eagle Joves bird is free The laurell is not hurt neither can the earth be wounded any more then 5 foot deep Such places also as are covered with the skins of Seals or Sea-calves are secure wherefore of old time the tents of the Emperours were covered with them for their better safetie Suetonius telleth us a storie of the Emperour Caligula how he was scared with Thunder who although he bragged and boasted of himself that he was a god and threatned warre with Iupiter for a shower of rain that fell against his minde was neverthelesse by and by so terrified with thunder and lightning that he thereupon runnes and hides his head under a bed Moreover it is said that if lightning kill one in his sleep it openeth his eyes if it kill one whilest he is awake it shutteth them The reason being because it waketh him that sleepeth and killeth him before he can shut his eyes again and him that waketh it so amazeth that winking he dieth before he can open those eyes of his which the sudden flash of the lightning caused him to close And know that it is not good to stand gazing upon the lightning at any time for when it doth no other hurt if it be any thing neare us it may dry up or so waste the crystalline humour of the eyes that it perish the sight or it may swell the face making it to break out with scabbes or leprosie caused by a kinde of poyson in the Exhalation which the pores of the face and eyes admit and receive For this is certain that the matter of lightning seeing it cometh from sulfurous and other poysonous metallick substances is much infected and therefore hurteth where it entreth Sect. 2. Parag. 5 Of such Meteors as are fiery onely in appearance Artic. 1. The Galaxia is no Meteor ANd thus have I done with all those kinde of Meteors which are fiery in very deed whether pure or mixt Now it followeth that I speak of such as are fiery onely in appearance not being such as they seem to be but rather seeming more then they are Some account eight of them and make the Galaxia or milkie way to be one But that last may rather be left out For although Aristotle would have the Galaxia to be a Meteor yet his opinion is worthily misliked of most men and that not without good reason For if it were a Meteor and of the nature of the Elements as Exhalations are it would be at the length consumed like to other Meteors but this circle never corrupteth nor decreaseth and therefore it is no sublunarie concretion attracted and formed out of the starres which are above it and placed by their power in the highest part of the aire Moreover if this his tenent were true why hath it continued the Galaxia I mean in the same form place and magnitude alwayes from the beginning of the world untill now And besides other starres might also attain to the like luminous concretion as well as those which he imagineth to be over it And moreover this milkie way of Aristotle would admit of a Parallax were it so as he perswadeth and according to the opticall consideration saith noble Tycho by the shining of the fixed starres through it it would beget a strange refraction differing farre from that which is occasioned by the vapours that are seen about the Horizon For they seldome rise to the twentieth degree of altitude whereas this proceeding from the Via lactea would reach to the greatest height Wherefore we may say that it is rather of the nature of the heaven or a certain heavenly substance but somewhat thicker then the other parts of heaven or if you will much like to the matter of the starres or to the substance of the moon but diffused and spread abroad and not conglobated into one bodie as the starres are For although all be filled with aire from the earth to the fixed starres yet there the matter may begin to be more thick firm and solid and so the waters above the heavens are the better upheld For conclusion therefore not reckoning this amongst any of these Meteors fierie onely in appearance I may account them in number seven As thus 1. The colours of clouds 2. Many Sunnes 3. Many Moons 4. Beams of light 5. Crowns or circles about the Sunne or Moon 6. The Rain-bow 7. Chaps or openings in the skie Concerning all which in generall although they seem to burn yet they do not but are caused by refraction and reflexion of light either from the Sunne or Moon or brightest Planets Artic. 2. Of colours in the clouds ANd particularly for the appearance of colour in the clouds it ariseth not from the mixture of the foure qualities as it doth in bodies perfectly mixt as herbs stones c. but onely from the falling of light upon shadow or darknesse the light being in stead of white and the shadow or darknesse in stead of black Not that they are alwayes perfectly white and black for they differ according to the qualitie and composure of the cloud wherefore some be very white and that is when the vapour whereof the cloud consisteth is very subtil and thin some yellowish when the vapour is thicker some ruddie and duskish when it is meanly thick some black when it is very thick and some greenish when it is more waterie then ordinary being best discerned when it is farre from the Zenith and obvious by an oblique aspect The red and ruddie colours are seen onely in the morning and evening when the light of the sunne is not in his full force for at other times his light is too vehement cleare strong and piercing And by a diligent observation of these colours I think a man may as easily judge of fair or foul weather and the like as a physician may of the temperature of the bodie by inspection of the urine But of colours you may see more afterwards Artic. 3. Of many Sunnes and Moons ANd now concerning many Sunnes they are called Parahelii from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is as if one should say apud solem because they are as it were with the sunne in place as also not absent from him in splendour and fashion Their generation is after this manner viz. when a smooth waterie cloud which is of equall thicknesse quiet and still is placed on the side of the sunne not under the sunne
before when there was onely light in those thinne parts in stead of fire And thus have I shewed you the naturall cause of all fiery Meteors Sect. 2. Parag. 6. Of watery Meteors and their severall kindes NOw it followeth that I speak something of watery Meteors and shew after what manner they are generated They be called watery because they consist most of water their substance being that kinde of Exhalation which we call Vapor and not Fumus And that which in the first place offereth it self is Nubes a Cloud Artic. I. Of Clouds I Begin therefore with clouds And a cloud is a vapour or Exhalation cold and moist drawn from the earth out of wet or watery places by heat of the Sunne into the middle Region of the aire where by cold it is so thickened and knit together that it hangeth untill either the own weight or some resolution causeth it to fall If it be a great cloud it is Nubes if it be but a little one it is called Nubecula The name comes ab obnubendo id est operiendo coelum from hiding or covering the heavens because a cloud through the thicknesse that the vapour is condensed into hindereth that a lesse portion of the heavens is conspicuous then otherwise would be It is also two-fold either fertill or barren A fertill or fruitfull cloud affordeth rain but a barren cloud doth not because it is at length by the blasts of winde and vertue of the heavenly bodies turned into thin aire And to either of these clouds belong motion colour Their motion is caused by the winde most commonly through whose force they are driven to and fro But if the windes blow not then they are drawn along by the Sun and made a companion with him in his travels alwayes moving that way which the Sunne goeth Concerning their colours I spake before in Paragraph 5. Article 2. And therefore here you may expect the lesse yet let me say that they are either simple or mixt Black or white are simple because they consist of no other colours But red green and the rest are mixt They appeare white when the vapour is thin for then it is easily pierced by the light which disperseth it self into it But when they appeare of a black colour then the vapour is thick and more closely condensed insomuch that the beams of light cannot be admitted As for their rednesse it may be caused two wayes according to Goclenius either through the adustion of the aire magno aestu incensum as he saith Or propter retusum radium Solis by reason of the beams of the Sunne beat back again which falling upon a watery cloud that is thickly condensed pierceth not but being doubled causeth rednesse as in the morning and this is a signe of rain but the other is not For the other rednesse is in such a cloud as sheweth the drinesse and adustion of the aire the cloud it self consisting of a smokie humid substance unto which is joyned a kinde of drie and adust matter This therefore is a signe of fair weather being seen in the evening towards the place of Sun-setting according as it hath been said of old Serò rubens coelum mané indicat esse serenum Concerning green clouds they are altogether watery and as it were already resolved into water which receiving into them the light appeare green like unto water in a great vessel or in the sea and deep rivers Blew clouds come something neare to the nature of black excepting that the black are thicker And note If when the Sunne sets there appeare or arise black dark clouds it portendeth rain Also observe the place opposite to the Sunne at his setting viz. the East and see if that be cleare for if it be pestered with black clouds there is but small hope of fair weather that night or the next day The common opinion is that the height of the clouds is not above nine miles But it is agreeable to no reason at all why any certain height should be determined for they are of unequall heights differing both according to the matter of their composure and also according to the time of the yeare being lower in winter then in summer for when the sunne hath the greatest force they then ascend the higher and in his smaller force they hang the lower By which it appeareth that the sunne helpeth to uphold them and keepeth them although heavier then the aire even in the aire for they sometimes also follow his motion But note that it is not the sunne alone which upholds them for the aire it self is also a cause of their not falling and that both within the clouds and also without them within the clouds for the clouds are of a spungie nature and full of pores which are filled with aire le●…t there should be vacuum and this aire heaveth them up causing them to aspire without the clouds also because they do as it were float up and down in the aire as some heavie things do in the water and yet not sink unlesse their substance be too earthie and heavie Artic. 2. Of Rain FRom clouds I proceed to speak of rain And rain is nothing else but as it were the melting of a cloud turned into water Or according to Aristotle it is the flux of a fertill cloud resolved by the heat of the sunne into distilling drops of water which being depressed with their own weight fall down to the earth For when the matter of the cloud being a cold vapour and earthly humour is drawn from the earth and waters into the middle Region of the aire and there thickened through the cold dwelling in the confines of that place it is at the last dissolved and cannot therefore but fall down in drops which drops if they be great are caused either by the quick resolution of the cloud or else by the little distance of it from the earth But if they be smaller then either the great distance or slow resolution maketh them of no ample quantitie The first of these is named nimbus the other is called imber And note that the dissolution as hath been said proceedeth out of heat which is not onely of the sunne but of windes also of an hot temper as is seen in the southern winde which bloweth up rain sooner then any other winde And as for rains which come from cold coasts and at cold times of the yeare if the cloud be not at such times as some may think dissolved through the heat of any winde it dissolveth it self through its own weight being a little holpen by the sunne for it continueth in the aire even whilest it can stay no longer And at these times also if we consider all aright we shall finde that the winde somewhat helpeth although not so speedily as from hotter coasts for naturally there is a kinde of heat in every winde because it is an Exhalation hot and drie although by accident as from
also makes mention of others who would take the skins of Crocodiles Hyena's or Sea-calves and lay them here and there about their grounds or else have a bloudie Ax lifted up in threatning manner against the heavens or an Owl set staring up with her feathers spread abroad All which are but magicall devilish and absurd practises such as even an old doting woman whose confidence is the sheers the sieve cannot but acknowledge to be void of any the least shew of reason fit therefore for heathens onely and not for Christians For let Christians know that there is a God above who can better secure their seed sowen then all those magick spells and foolish fopperies For A fruitfull land he maketh barren because of the wickednesse of those who dwell therein Or as it is in the 28 of Deuteronomie If thou shalt hearken diligently unto the voice of the Lord thy God to observe and to do all his commandments c. then shalt thou be blessed in the citie and in the field Blessed shall be the fruit of thy body and the fruit of thy ground But if thou wilt not hearken unto the voice of the Lord thy God cursed shalt thou be in the citie and cursed in the field Cursed shall be thy basket and thy store Yea and cursed shall be the fruit of thy body and the fruit of thy land Beside adde unto this the danger of devilish practises with the unlawfulnesse of charms and incantations For thus again the Scripture speaketh There shall none such be found among you For all that do these things are an abomination to the Lord as it is Deuteronomie 18. at the 10 11 and 12 verses Here then I end this discourse concerning hail and now proceed to speak of mists Artic. 7. Of Mists COncerning which I like their division best who make two kindes of mist the one ascending the other descending That which ascendeth saith Dr. Fulk goeth up out of the water or earth as smoke but seldome spreads it self any thing farre being most of all seen about rivers and moist places The other saith he namely that which goeth down towards the earth is when any vapour is lifted up into the aire by heat of the Sunne which not being strong enough to draw it so high that the cold may knit it suffereth it to fall down again after it is a little made thick and so it filleth all the aire with grosse vapours obscuring the Sunne from shining on us Now this last kinde of mist may be two-fold either congealed or incongealed That which is congealed comes neare to the nature of that matter whereof white frosts consist and is never but in a very cold time it often also stinketh which perhaps comes to passe in that the matter whereof it is made was drawn out of lakes or other muddie and stinking places Or thus the matter of this mist hath much earthy substance in it which the hindering cold suffereth not to be consumed and from this comes an unpleasant and an unwholesome smell This water as also the water of dissolved frost is very bad for cattell to drink for it will quickly rot them Neither can it be good for any one to walk abroad in such a mistie time For by breathing we draw this unwholesome vapour into our bodies and so corrupt our lungs extreamly But for incongealed mists they are in warmer and more temperate seasons coming neare the nature of that matter which is the matter of dew Some call it a sterill vapour hanging neare the earth being neither moist enough to drop like rain nor yet hot enough to be carried up on high into the aire Yet as sterill as it is sometimes we finde that it is but the forerunner of rain For when it departeth if it ascendeth then rain followeth if it descendeth then expect a hot and fair day And here an end concerning mists Artic. 8. Of our Ladies threads or those things which fly up and down the aire like spiders webs FOr mine own part I must confesse I have not seen many who have writ any thing concerning this cobweb-like kinde of Metcor and therefore at the first I rested doubtfull not knowing whether it were best for me to speak any thing of it or no. But at the last finding that some false tenents were engrafted amongst the ignorant as if they perfectly knew what thing it was I thought good to adde something whereby their fond opinion might be taken away who as in a dream suppose it to be spunne from out the spiders bowels which cannot but be a strange absurditie For it is evident that some one of these threads containeth more matter then many spiders their bodies not being big enough to afford a thing so copious neither are their webs at any time of such a length or their threads of such a thicknesse as these thus flying about the aire This Meteor therefore since it is a Meteor may rightly be supposed to proceed out of a through-boyled or digested vapour being mixed with earthy and slimie Exhalations and although it be no spiders web yet the temperature of it little differeth from that viscuous humour and slimie excrement which they in their spinning send out from them As for the time it appeareth neither in Summer nor in Winter but in the Spring and Autumne because it requireth a temperate heat and temperate drinesse Yet the chief time is Autumne because the Aire hath then some drie relicks of the late Summers Exhalations left and they are very necessary towards the tempering and generation of this Meteor And thus I end not onely this Article but the whole Paragraph also coming at length to speak of that third kinde of Meteor which in the beginning I propounded to be handled last Sect. 2. Parag. 7. Of Aiery Meteors wherein is shewed the naturall cause of windes Artic. 1. Of the divers opinions concerning winde IN the former Paragraphs and Articles pertinent to the second Section of this chapter I spoke at large as is apparent of every sort both of fierie and waterie Meteors now therefore if you please you may go along with me to those which are called aierie wherein I purpose to speak concerning the generation of windes shewing upon what causes they depend And by the way I would have you observe a packet of opinions which have been posted to and fro as if they were pertinent to the purpose 1. For some in the first place may be found who immediately referre the motion and generation of windes unto God because the windes are said to be brought out of his treasures as you may reade Psal. 135. 7. And in the 4. of Amos at the 13 verse He formeth the mountains and createth the windes To which I make this answer that they who send us concerning these and the like things to God and to his decree in nature or to the might of his power have said indeed that which
part whereof is circa mundi medium from whence may be had in readinesse alwayes that which is sufficient to water and fructifie the earth and leave a place for habitation The other circa mundi extremum as in a great treasure and plentifull store-house from whence per mediam aëris naturam both the starres are cherished their beams made wholesome to the world and also the expense of these lower waters salved in what is needfull for the earth as a bad debter either sends back none or little of that which it borrowed not being easily turned into any other element From whence saith he we may answer that question amongst the ancient Ethnick Philosophers mentioned by Plutarch 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Unde nutriatur mundus And indeed for mine own part I also think that the starres are of such a nature or substance that in their kinde they stand in need of daily sustentation like a lamp which can burn no longer then the oyl lasteth which ever feeds it For the heavens are subject to change and alteration neither is there any necessitie compelling us to attribute a quintessence to either of them especially seeing we are certain that the world is not eternall but that we may as well and as probably grant them to be of the same nature with the elements as formerly I have related Which being granted I suppose them to be chiefly of a fierie nature and this perhaps they took from the highest part of the aire in the supream height of heaven which reacheth to the utmost extent of the out-spread firmament For there is that which we call the Elementarie fire there I say and not in a lower place although Aristotle would have it in concavo lunae or next under the orb of the moon of which see more in the second dayes work And herein I do willingly also embrace the opinion of Plato that the starres for the most part are fierie yet so as they in some sort participate also of the other elements that thereby their bodies may be as it were glewed together and firmly concreted into a durable lump differing no otherwise from a Comet then ice doth from crystall or a cleare solid gemme from bright brittle glasse An experiment whereof we have in that new starre of Cassiopea's chair which because it was of a more solid composition then ordinarie comets and of a nearer nature to the matter of the continuing starres did therefore appeare like one of them lasted a long while with them before it was extinguished for had it not been exalted to a great perfection and solid composition of the parts it had been gone extinct and vanished a long while sooner And in granting to them something of every element although their greatest portion especially in the sunne be fierie it comes to passe that they have differing qualities of which see more afterwards in the Astrologicall part of this dayes work Neither shall I need to stand upon it as a thing necessary for me to prove whether they make warm the aire and us by any heat which is formally in them or by the attrition made with their beams Onely know that it is hotter in summer then in winter because when the beams of the sunne come nearest to a perpendicular trajection their heat is the greater because their reflexion is the stronger But leaving this give me leave to proceed and to prosecute more fully the matter in hand that thereby I may shew my meaning now more clearely concerning the daily nourishment of these bright heavenly lamps For as hath been said seeing their chiefest matter is of that nature of which it appeareth to be they must of necessitie be nourished out of some store-house or other otherwise the world comes to decay impavidum ferient ruinae and the very ruines will strike him who fears it not For satisfaction therefore in this it cannot be amisse to remember the opinion amongst sundry of the ancient Philosophers who said the truth and yet erred in declaring it as Cleanthes who allowed the matter of the sunne to be fierie and that it was nourished by humours attracted from the ocean Also Anaximander and Diogenes after whom Epicurus and the Stoicks thought in like manner that the sunne was nourished by waters and lest it should perish through any defect of aliment they fondly supposed that the oblique motion which it had from one Tropick to another was to finde out moist humours that thereby it might live perpetually Now these things very worthily were held by Aristotle to be ridiculous and absurd as in the second book of his Meteors at the second chapter is apparent Yet neverthelesse succeeding times did in a manner pitch still upon the same tenents and would not onely have the sunne and rest of the Planets but even all the other starres nourished by vapours and watrie humours as well as they For amongst others it was Cicero's opinion in his second book De natura deorum making the sea and waters of the earth their daily store-house See also Seneca in his 6 book and 16 chapter of Naturall questions and Plutarch in libello de Iside and Plinie in his Naturall historie lib 2. cap. 9. whose words are these Sydera verò haud dubiè humore terreno pasci c. These indeed spake the truth but as I said before they erred in declaring it For it is nothing probable neither may it be granted that all the seas or waters in the world are able to afford moisture enough for such a purpose And therefore smile I at those fable-forgers Whose busie-idle style so stiffly urges The heav'ns bright Saphires to be living creatures Ranging for food and hungry fodder-eaters Still sucking up in their eternall motion The earth for meat and for their drink the ocean Nor can I see how th' earth and sea should feed So many starres whose greatnesse doth exceed So many times if starre-divines say troth The greatnesse of the earth and ocean both For here our cattell in a moneth will eat Sev'n times the bulk of their own bulk in meat Wherefore be pleased to call to minde what was formerly mentioned in the second day concerning the waters above the heavens set apart from these below by the out-spread Firmament but how it is that there they are and that the out-spread Firmament is able to uphold them let the alledged reasons in the foresaid day be again remembred And then observe that these waters were certainly separated for some purpose for Deus Natura nihil faciunt frustra God and Nature make nothing in vain He made all things in number weight and measure saith Solomon so that there is nothing which was not made for something I do therefore consent again to those who suppose that these waters do daily nourish and cherish the starres thereby also so tempering and ordering their beams that they may remain wholesome to the world turning also and attenuating those drops with
which they are cherished into thin aire and so doing nature is kept from perishing before her time Neither let it seem strange although the starres be granted to consist most of a fierie temper that therefore they cannot be cherished by watrie humours for it is certain that fires are endued with sundry qualities or forces according to the divers mixtion of matter or divers disposition of the subject From whence it comes to passe that a bituminous flame is not quenched but nourished in water and the fire of lightning is said to burn the fiercer when we strive to quench it These waters therefore sweating in the likenesse of thin vapours through the utmost extent or roof of the out-spread Firmament which was made strong by stretching out and by which they are upholden do both supplie that decay of aire which otherwise would be and also do so temper and cherish the diuturnitie of the starres that thereby they shall continue untill the end of the world Elementorum transmutationes saith one sunt inaequales ergò proportiones ac majores quidem eorum quae faciliùs transmutentur in alia hoc ex necessitate non dico ad mundi aeternitatem sed diuturnitatem Aqua autem multò magìs mutatur in terram quàm terra in ipsam aër hoc aquae damnum sine maximo sui dispendio resarcire nullo modo potest nisi ab aquis supercoelestibus And perhaps the daily wasting of these waters may be the cause that the world is perceived to have a successive declination and to grow old as doth a garment untill at the last age for want of matter to keep an harmonious transmutation in the conservation of it shall according to the determined purpose of Almighty God suffer it to end as being worn out and little able to continue any longer Which when it shall be or how he intendeth to shorten it rests onely in the secret counsel of the holy Trinitie the divine word neverthelesse testifying that as tokens before it there shall be signes in the sunne and the moon in the heavens and starres For the starres shall fall from heaven and the powers of heaven shall be shaken Cadent de coelo stellae saith one non ratione substantiae sed lucis quia lumen suum retrahent obscurè reddent Which saying agrees directly to my meaning when I speak of the waters wasting For as the elements before from time to time have suffered a transmutation and shall now begin to devoure one another so the starres shall fade and perhaps be weakened in their qualities by having the lesse powerfull elementarie part in them turned by the more powerfull or if not so yet much altered by that sensible decay in the waters above the heavens And thus though I differ from Aristotle and the Peripateticks yet I have not much declined from the paths of other ancient Philosophers or from the steps of Plato in which how farre in my judgement we may follow the Academicall sect the Stoicks and those of Epicurus hath been related Howbeit I leave all free to the more judicious though for mine own part I think thus of the worlds Systema Let therefore those of the adverse part pitch their censure with the more favour and so I proceed to the following articles Artic. 2. Of their order and place in the skie and how it comes to passe that one starre is higher then another HAving already shewed that the whole concave of the heavens is filled with no firmer matter then soft and penetrable aire and that the starres have no solid orbs to uphold and move them it may not unfitly be questioned how they should hang in such a weak yeelding place and yet according to their times keep such severall certain distances one from another as we see they do To which perhaps some would answer that every starre in respect of his either more or lesse fiery qualitie doth either more or lesse ascend from the centre and so according to his gravitie or levitie rest naturally higher or lower as in his proper place the aire having a like power in the upholding of fiery bodies which the water hath in carrying of airie bodies For as a piece of Brasill or Lignum vitae will sink lower into the water then some lighter kinde of wood wherein there is more aire In like manner that starre which hath most of his matter from the more grosse elements takes his place in the lowest room whereas the lighter ones are naturally seated higher And indeed this is an answer which would serve the turn and bear out the matter well enough if there were no starres but those which we call the fixed starres for they are never observed to be higher or lower but alwayes of one and the same distance from the centre But seeing there be Planets likewise whose distances are unconstant and whose places are at some one time farre more absent from the earth then at some other nay Mars is sometimes nearer then the sunne seeing it is so I say their gravitie or levitie cannot absolutely be the cause but rather ought this to be referred to that infused force which his hand first gave them who placed them there For as the Sea being stirred by the moon to a loftie flux and having lifted up his rolling waves above the neighbouring banks would in all probability overflow the earth if the Almightie had not infused it with some occult qualitie saying Hitherto shalt thou come and no further as we reade in Job So likewise the starres would not keep their high and low places at certain infallible times so as they do and be so orderly in their motions as they are were it not from the power first put into them when they were placed in the firmament of which I spake but a little before when I shewed they were no living creatures For conclusion therefore I like well of the former reason if it be referred to the fixed starres but as concerning the Planets we see that it holdeth not in all and every part nor yet is absolutely found sufficient And yet for further satisfaction of the curious let it be supposed that the aire is ever thinnest in that place whereunto the sunne is nearest so that though the Planets naturally have but one place yet accidentally they may be found either higher or lower according to their approaching to or from the place of the sunne like as may be seen in one and the same weight if it be proved how unequally it will sink in divers waters and in waters of a differing thicknesse Of which reade more in Mr Lydiat his Praelectio Astronomica in the fourth and eighth chapters But in the mean time ever after admire the wisdome of thy Maker and praise his holy name For he hath so done his marvellous works that they ought to be had in perpetuall remembrance O never let these works forgotten be Their art is more then humane
of Kings chap. 17. 16. and chap. 21. 3. and chap. 23. 5. and in Jeremie chap. 19. 13. and in Zeph. chap. 1. 5. and in the Acts chap. 7 42. For in all these places the holy Ghost calleth the starres the host and armies of heaven thereby amplifying the divine power of God by the force and power of these glorious creatures and this also is further confirmed by that in the song of Deborah Judg. 5. 20. where it is expressely testified that The starres fought from heaven the starres in their courses fought against Sisera Thus farre Scripture And now let experience also speak that thereby they who will not frame their understandings to be taught by the one but will seek for strange expositions may be forced to yeeld and acknowledge the truth by compulsion of this other in the front whereof I cannot but remember the noble Poets saying Senselesse is he who without blush denies What to sound senses most apparent lies And ' gainst experience he that spits fallacians Is to be hist from learned disputations And such is he that doth affirm the starres To have no force on these inferiours 1. As for example when the sunne shifts his habitation how diversly are the seasons differing insomuch that although the frostie beard of winter makes us tremble and shiver through extremitie of cold the warm lustre of the summers raies causeth us on the contrary to sweat and as it were pant through heat 2. Also the terrible accidents that succeed eclipses may not be forgotten nor vilipended for these testifie that the sunne by his heat and light quickeneth after an admirable fashion all earthly creatures being as it were the sourse and conserver of vitall heat and that the moon also hath a great power over inferiour bodies For if it were otherwise such lights coming to be hidden from the earth where there is a continuall revolution of generation and corruption could not cause after their eclipses the nature of inferiour things to be so altered and weakened as they are both in the elements and also in bodies composed of them 3. And furthermore who seeth not how orderly the tides keep their course with the moon of which I have spoken in the third dayes work 4. Also it is an observation that seldome faileth viz. that we have thunder and lightning in the summer time at the meeting of Mars with Jupiter Sol or Mercurie and for the most part great windes when Sol and Jupiter or Jupiter and Mercurie or Mercurie and Sol are in conjunction 5. And again the increase and decrease of bodies or of marrow bloud and humours in the bodie according to the increase and decrease of the moon doth speak for that horned queen and signifie that her vertue is not little For as she fills with light the marrow abounds in bones the bloud in veins the sap in trees the meat and moisture in the oister crab and creafish 6. Moreover experience also teacheth that all such wood as is cut for timber if it be not cut after the full moon will soon be rotten 7. Also those pease which are sown in the increase never leave blooming And as some report the pomegranate will bear no fruit any longer then just so many yeares as the moon was dayes old when it was first set and planted The Heliotropium with certain other flowers and plants we likewise see that they keep their course with the sunne And Plinie reports in his 37 book at the 10 chapter that the Selenite is a stone which hath the image of the moon in it increasing and decreasing according to her course in the heavens And doth not Cardan also report for certain as Sir Christopher Heydon it may be affirmed that the heavens in some sort do work upon mens mindes and dispositions And hereupon it comes to passe that Mars doth sometimes sow the seeds of warre by his working upon adult choler and the like Or the aire being greatly out of tune causeth not onely many sicknesses but strange disorders of the minde and they breaking out into act do many times disturb states translate kingdomes work unluckie disasters and the like of which I spake before in the second dayes work And now know that if the operation of the heavens in this be but so farre forth as the soul depends upon the bodily instruments all that is done to the soul is but an inclination for there can be no compulsion where the cause is so remote And therefore let it be observed that it is one thing to cause another thing to occasion or one thing to inferre a necessitie another thing to give an inclination The former we cannot averre to be in the power of the starres forasmuch as mans will which is the commandresse of his actions is absolutely free from any compulsion and not at all subject to any naturall necessitie or externall coaction Howbeit we cannot deny a certain inclination because the soul of man is too much indulgent to the body by whose motion as one worthily observeth it is rather perswaded then commanded There is therefore no Chaldean fate to be feared nor any necessitie to be imposed upon the wills of men but onely an inclination and this inclination is not caused by an immediate working of the starres on the intellectuall part or minde of man but occasioned rather mediately or so farre forth as the soul depends on the temperaments and materiall organs of the bodie In which regard I hope never to be afraid of the signes of heaven neither is there cause why I should ever curse my starres seeing I know in this the utmost of their power And as it was said to that Apostle My grace is sufficient for thee so may every one take it for granted that there is a second birth which overswayes the first To which purpose one makes this an observation Iustè age Sapiens dominabitur astris Et manibus summi stant elementa Dei Do godly deeds so shalt thou rule the starres For then God holds the elements from warres Or as another not unfitly also speaketh Qui sapit ille animum fortunae praeparat omni Praevisumque potest arte levare malum The wise for ev'ry chance doth fit his minde And by his art makes coming evils kinde And in a word that pithie saying of Ioannes de Indagine shall close this Article Quaeris a me quantum in nobis operantur actra dico c. Dost thou demand of me how farre the starres work upon us I say they do but incline and that so gently that if we will be ruled by reason they have no power over us but if we follow our own nature and be led by sense they do as much in us as in brute beasts and we are no better For agunt non cogunt is all that may be said Artic. 2. Whether it be not a derogation from the perfection of things created to grant that the starres have any kinde of power
to raise extraordinarie storms and tempests the windes blow seas rage and clouds drop presently after they seem to call Questionlesse natures instinct works in them a quicker insight and more sudden feeling and foresight of these things then is in man which we see even in other creatures upon earth as in fowls who feeling the alteration of the aire in their feathers and quills do plainly prognosticate a change of weather before it appeareth to us And of these not onely the poets but others also have written The Poets fein there were three Mermaids or Sirens in their upper parts like maidens and in their lower part fishes which dwelling in the sea of Sicilie would allure sailers to them and afterwards devoure them being first brought asleep with hearkening to their sweet singing Their names they say were Parthenope Lygia and Leucasia wherefore sometime alluring women are said to be Sirens Neither can I but admire what I finde recorded in the historie of the Netherlands of a Sea-woman who was taken up in the streights of a broken dike neare to the towns of Campen and Edam brought thither by a sea-tempest and high tide where floating up and down and not finding a passage out again by reason that the breach was stopped after the floud was espied by certain women and their servants as they went to milk their kine in the neighbouring pastures who at the first were afraid of her but seeing her often they resolved to take her which they did and bringing her home she suffered her self to be clothed fed with bread milk and other meats and would often strive to steal again into the sea but being carefully watched she could not moreover she learned to spinne and perform other pettie offices of women but at the first they cleansed her of the sea-mosse which did stick about her She was brought from Edam and kept at Harlem where she would obey her mistris and as she was taught kneel down with her before the crucifix never spake but lived dumbe continued alive as some say fifteen yeares then she died This is credibly reported by the authour of that history by the writer of the chronicles of Holland and in a book called the Theatre of cities They took her in the yeare of our Lord 1403. Moreover Plinie telleth us of Tritons and Nereïdes which were Mermen or Men-fish of the sea And in the yeare 1526 as the authour of Du Bartas his summarie reporteth there was taken in Norway neare to a sea-port called Elpoch a certain fish resembling a mitred Bishop who was kept alive some few dayes after his taking And as the said authour writeth there was one Ferdinand Alvares secretarie to the store-house of the Indians who faithfully witnesseth that he had seen not farre off from the Promontorie of the Moon a young Sea-man coming out of the waters who stole fishes from the fishermen and eat them raw Neither is Olaus Magnus silent in these things For in his 21 book and first chapter having mentioned fishes like to dogs cows calves horses asses lions eagles dragons and what not he also saith Sunt belluae in mari quasi hominis figuram imitantes lugubres in cantu ut Nereïdes etiam marini homines toto corpore absolutâ similitudine c. that is There be monsters in the sea as it were imitating the shape of a man having a dolefull kinde of sound or singing as the Nereïdes There be also Sea-men of an absolute proportion in their whole body these are sometimes seen to climbe up the ships in the night times and suddenly to depresse that 〈◊〉 upon which they sit and if they abide long the whole ship sinketh Yea saith he this I adde from out the faithfull assertions of the Norway fishers that when such are taken if they be not presently let go again there ariseth such a fierce tempest with an horrid noise of those kinde of creatures and other sea-monsters there assembled that a man would think the very heaven were falling and the vaulted roof of the world running to ruine insomuch that the fishermen have much ado to escape with their lives whereupon they confirmed it as a law amongst them that if any chanced to hang such a fish upon his hook he should suddenly cut the line and let him go But these sudden tempests are very strange and how they arise with such violent speed exceeds the bounds of ordinary admiration Whereupon it is again supposed that these monsters are very devils and by their power such strange storms are raised Howbeit for my part I think otherwise and do much rather affirm that these storms in my judgement are thus raised namely by the thickening and breaking of the aire which the snortling rushing and howling of these beasts assembled in an innumerable companie causeth For it is certain that sounds will break and alter the aire as I have heard it of a citie freed from the plague by the thundering noise of cannons and also I suppose that the violent rushing of these beasts causeth much water to flie up and thicken the aire and by their howling and snortling under the waters they do blow up and as it were attenuate the waves and make them arise in a thinner substance then at other times so that nature having all these helps in an instant worketh to the amazement of the mariners and often to the danger of their lives Besides shall we think that spirits use to feed and will be so foolish as go and hang themselves on an hook for a bait They may have occult qualities as the Loadstone hath to work strange feats and yet be neither spirits nor devils for experience likewise teacheth that they die either sooner or later after their taking neither can a spirit have flesh and bones as they have But to conclude Alexander ab Alexandro in the third book of his geniall dayes hath written one whole chapter viz. the 8 concerning these sea-men affirming that it is no fabulous report to say there be such he describeth them to be fish in their lower parts and like to men in their upper parts affirming moreover that they be very venereous and desirous of women loving them or lusting after them Whereupon he relates a storie of a certain woman who was taken up and carried to the sea by one of these Mermen concubitûs causà that he might couple himself with her Which monster the inhabitants took soon after but refusing meat he died and they then made this law that no woman should adventure to come neare the sea except her husband were with her This happened in Epirus a countrey of Greece In the kingdome of Congo which lieth in the African part of the world there is in the river Zaire another kinde of hog-fish differing from that already mentioned It is called Ambize Angulo or Hog-fish It hath as it were two hands and a tail like a target which eateth like pork and