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

Page concordance

< >
Scan Original
81 69
82 70
83 71
84 72
85 73
86 74
87 75
88 76
89 77
90 78
91 79
92 80
93 81
94 82
95 83
96 84
97 85
98 86
99 87
100 88
101 89
102 90
103 91
104 92
105 93
106 94
107 95
108 96
109 97
110 98
< >
page |< < (122) of 370 > >|
134122That the Moon may be a World. us; they are the Words of Fienus (as they
are quoted by Fromondus in the above cited
place) poſſunt maxime permutationes in cælo fieri
etiamſi a nobis non conſpiciantur;
hoc viſus noſtri
debilitas &
immenſa cœli diſtantia faciunt. And
unto him aſſents Fromondus himſelf, when a
a little after he ſays, Si in ſphæris planetarum
degeremus, plurima forſan cœleſtium nebularum
vellera toto æthere paſſim diſperſa videremus,
quorum ſpecies jam eveneſcit nimiâ ſpatii interca
pedine.
‘If we did live in the Spheres of the
‘ Planets, we might there perhaps diſcern ma-
‘ ny great Clouds diſperſed through the whole
‘ Heavens, which are not viſible by reaſon of
‘ this great diſtance.
2. Mæſlin and Keplar affirm, that they have
ſeen ſome of theſe Alterations.
The Words
of Mæſlin are theſe (as I find them cited) In
eclipſi lunari veſpere Dominicæ Palmarum Anni
11Differt. 2.
cum nunc.
Galil.
item Somn.
Aſtron.notd
ultima.
1605.
in corpore lunæ verſus Boream, nigricans
quædam macula conſpecta fuit, obſcurior cætero
toto corpore, quod candentis ferri figuram repre-
ſentabat;
dixiſſes nubila in multam regionem ex-
tenſa pluviis &
tempeſiuoſis imbribus gravida,
cujuſmodi ab excelſorum montium jugis in humi-
liora convallium loca videre non raro contingit.
‘ In that Lunary Eclipſe which happened in the
‘ Even of Palm-Sunday, in the year 1605.
there
‘ was a certain blackiſh ſpot diſcern’d in the
‘ Northerly part of the Moon, being darker
‘ than any other place of her Body, and repre-
‘ ſenting the colour of red hot Iron;
You
‘ might conjecture that it was ſome dilated
‘ Cloud, being pregnant with Showres;
for
‘ thus do ſuch lower Clouds appear from the
‘ tops of high Moun tains.

Text layer

  • Dictionary

Text normalization

  • Original
  • Regularized
  • Normalized

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index