Foscarini, Paolo Antonio, An epistle to fantoni, 1661

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1depth of all the Myſteries that are couched in this moſt wiſe
diſpoſure
of things: nevertheleſſe being amazed, and tranſported
with
admiration, I will ſay; Who knows but that thoſe three
Bowls
like unto Almonds to be repreſented on each of the
Branches
of the Candleſtick may ſignifie thoſe Globes which are
apter
(as is this our Earth) for the receiving than emitting of Influ­
ences
?
Perhaps alſo they denote thoſe Globes of late diſcovered
by
the help of the Optick Teleſcope, which participate with
Saturn, Jupiter, Venus, and poſſibly alſo with the other Planets?
Who knows likewiſe, but that there may be ſome occult propor­
tion
between theſe Globes and thoſe Myſterious Knops and
Lilies
inſinuated unto us in the ſacred Scriptures?
But this
ſhall
here ſuffice to bound humane Preſumption, and to teach us
to
exſpect with an Harpocratick ſilence from Time, the Indice of
Truth
, a diſcovery of theſe Myſteries: (g) Solomon made ten

Candleſticks
by the ſame Patern of Moſes, which he placed, five
on
one hand and five on another, in the Temple erected by him
in
honour of the moſt High God; which very thing doth alſo,
without
all queſtion, contain moſt abſtruſe ſigniſications.
More­
over
, that Apple of the Knowledg of Good and Evil prohibited
our
firſt Parents by God is not without a Myſtery; which ſome
ſay
was an Indian Figg.
In which theſe things are to be obſerv­
ed
: Firſt, That it is replete with many Kernels, every one of
which
hath a particular Centre.
Secondly, Though of it ſelf it
be
hard and ſolid, yet about its Circumference it is of a more rare
and
tenuouſe ſubſtance; herein reſembling the Earth, which
though
in its Centre, and thoſe parts which are neareſt to it, it
be
ſtony, Metallick, and compact, yet the nearer one approacheth
to
the Circumference, its parts are ſeen to be the more rare and
tenuouſe
: and withall it hath another body, more rare than its
own
, namely the Water, above which there is yet another, more
ſubtil
than all the reſt of inferiour Bodyes, that is to ſay,
the
Aire,
(a) Exod. 25. 31.
(b) My Authour
following
the vul­
gar
Tranſlation,
which
hath an
ligance
in ſome
things
beyond ours,
cites
the words
thus
, Facies Can­
delabrum
ducti­
le
de auro mun­
diſſimo
, Haſtile
ejus
, & Calamos,
& Sphærulas, ac
Lilia
, ex ipſo pro­
cedentia
.
(c) verſe 12.
(e) Though our
Authour
ſpeaketh
here
poſitively of
nine
Months, &c.
Fathers are not
greed
about the pe­
riod
of this planet,
nor
that of Mercu­
ry
, as you may ſee
at
large in Riccio­
lus
, Almageſt.
nov.
Tom. 1. part 1. l.
7. ſect. 3. cha. 11.
num
.
11. page 627.
where
he maketh
Venus
to conſum­
mate
her Revolu­
tion
in neer 225
dayes
, or 7 1/2 Mon.
and Mecury in
bout
88 dayes, or 3
Months
: in which
he
followeth Kepl.
in Epitome Aſtro­
nom
.
p. 760.
(f) verſ. 33, 34.
(g) 1 Kings c. 7.
v. 49. 2 Chron. c.
4
. verſ. 7.

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