Wilkins, John, A discovery of a new world : or a discourse tending to prove, that 'tis probable there may be another Habitable World in the Moon ; with a discourse concerning the Probability of a Passage thither; unto which is added, a discourse concerning a New Planet, tending to prove, that 'tis probable our earth is one of the Planets

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7159That the Moon may be a World. ſo with a more familiar view behold her
Condition.
And becauſe you ſhall have no
occaſion
to queſtion the Truth oſ thoſe Expe-
riments
, which I ſhall afterwards urge from
it
;
I will therefore ſet down the Teſtimony
of
an Enemy, and ſuch a Witneſs hath always
been
accounted prevalent:
you may ſee it in the
above
nam’d Cæſar la Galla, whoſe Words
are
theſe:
Mercureum caduceum geſtantem, cœ-
11De phœ-
nom
. cap. 1.
leſtia nunciare, &
mortuorem animas ab inferis
revocare
ſapiens finxit antiquitas.
Galilæum
verò
novum Fovis interpretem Teleſcopio caduceo
inſtructum
Sydera aperire, &
veterum Philoſo-
phorum
manes ad ſuperosrevocare ſolere noſtra ætas
videt
&
admiratur. ‘Wiſe Antiquity Fabled
Mercury carrying a Rod in his hand, to relate
News from Heaven, and call back the Souls
of the Dead;
but it hath been the happineſs
of our Induſtrious Age to ſee and admire Ga-
lilæus, the new Embaſſador of the Gods, fur-
niſhed with his Perſpective to unfold the Na-
ture oſ the Stars, and awaken the Ghoſts of
the Ancient Philoſophers.
So worthily and
highly
did theſe Men eſteem of this excel-
lent
Invention.

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