Bacon, Francis, Sylva sylvarum : or, a natural history in ten centuries

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Grandia ſæpe quibus mandavimus Hordea Sulcis,
Infœlix
Lolium, & ſteriles dominatur Avenæ.
This work of the Tranſmutation of Plants, one into another, is inter Mag-
nalia
Naturæ:
For the Tranſmutation of Species is, in the vulgar Philoſophy, pro-
nounced
impoſſible:
And certainly, it is a thing of difficulty, and requireth
deep
ſearch into Nature:
But ſeeing there appear ſome manifeſt inſtances of
it
, the opinion of impoſſibility is to be rejected, and the means there of to
be
found out.
We ſee that in Living Creatures, that come of Putrefaction,
there
is much Tranſmutation of one into another.
As Caterpillers turn into
Flies
, &
c. And it ſhould ſeem probable, that what ſoever Creature having
life
, is generated without Seed, that Creature will change out of one Spe-
cies
into another;
for it is the Seed, and the Nature of it, which locketh
and
boundeth in the Creature, that it doth not expatiate.
So as we may
well
conclude, that ſeeing the Earth of it ſelf, doth put forth Plants with-
out
Seed;
therefore Plants may well have a Tranſmigration of Species.
Wherefore wanting Inſtances, which do occur, we ſhall give Directions of
the
moſt likely tryals:
And generally, we would not have thoſe that read
this
work of Sylva Sylvarum, account if ſtrange, or think that it is an over-
haſte
, that we have let down particulars untried:
For contratiwiſe, in our
own
eſtimation, we account ſuch particulars more worthy than thoſe that
are
already tryed and known.
For theſe latter muſt be taken as you
finde
them, but the other do level point blank at the inventing of cauſes,
and
Axioms.

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