Masquarade du ciel presented to the great Queene of the little vvorld. A celestiall map, representing the true site and motions of the heavenly bodies, through the yeeres 1639, 1640, &c. Shadowing the late commotions, between Saturn and Mercury, about the northern Thule. With the happy peace and union, through the whole little world, made by the goodnesse of Phebus and his royall Phebe. By J.S. Sadler, John, 1615-1674. 1640 Approx. 148 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 23 1-bit group-IV TIFF page images. Text Creation Partnership, Ann Arbor, MI ; Oxford (UK) : 2003-01 (EEBO-TCP Phase 1). A11276 STC 21542 ESTC R3852 99835852 99835852 78 This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal . The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. Early English books online. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A11276) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 78) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1475-1640 ; 975:2) Masquarade du ciel presented to the great Queene of the little vvorld. A celestiall map, representing the true site and motions of the heavenly bodies, through the yeeres 1639, 1640, &c. Shadowing the late commotions, between Saturn and Mercury, about the northern Thule. With the happy peace and union, through the whole little world, made by the goodnesse of Phebus and his royall Phebe. By J.S. Sadler, John, 1615-1674. [10], 37, [1] p. Printed by R[ichard] B[adger] for S[amuel] C[artwright], London : 1640. J.S. = John Sadler. Printer's and publisher's names from STC. With a preliminary privilege leaf. With errata on last page. Variant: lacking errata. 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Masques -- Early works to 1800. 2002-03 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2002-04 SPi Global Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2002-05 TCP Staff (Michigan) Sampled and proofread 2002-05 Mona Logarbo Text and markup reviewed and edited 2002-06 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion This Masquarade Du Ciel may be printed . HENRY HERBERT . Novemb. 24. 1640. In hoc tantùm peccat , quòd nihil peccat . I. T. MASQUARADE DU CIEL : Presented to the GREAT QUEENE of the LITTLE VVORLD . A CELESTIALL MAP , REPRESENTING The True Site and Motions of the Heavenly Bodies , through the yeeres 1639 , 1640 , &c. SHADOWING The late Commotions , between SATURN and MERCURY , about the Northern THULE . With the Happy PEACE and UNION , through the whole LITTLE WORLD , made by the Goodnesse of PHEBUS and His Royall PHEBE . By I. S. LONDON , Printed by K. B. for S. C. 1640. TO THE QUEENE . MADAME , IT cannot be presumption to present That , Which to detaine were Sacriledge . my Plea is , I Durst not but Bring the Letters , which HEAVEN Sends : It endites , what Earth writes ; in THIS most specially , Which it hath Signed , with its owne Hand ; and Sealed , with its owne Signet : Yet , if unacquainted with its Hand , I mistake the Superscription , and present it amisse ; my Hope is , Such Royall Goodnesse , may yet Pardon , MADAME , Your Majesties most Humble Servant I. S. PHEBVS and His Royall PHEBE , King and Queene of Heaven . Poëticall Names , compounded of Greek words signi●ying Light and Life ; Both which , come from the Sunne and Moone . SATVRN , The coldest Planet , remotest from the Sunne and This Earth . With Poets a Great God : which ( being a Northern Genius ) they make to reside about THVLE , a cold North Iland , belonging to the Crown of SCOTLAND , as appeares in the Notes after the M●sque . MERCVRY , in Heaven a Little Planet , ( little in Body , but great in Influence : ) with Poets , the Great God of Learning ; Patron of Schollers , and all Ecclesiasticall men . IVPITER , with Poets Saturns sonne ; in Heaven a Planet neare the Sunne . MARS , a Fiery Planet . The Poeticall God of Warre , and a Generall Enemy to all Peace . VENVS , a Great Bright Planet , going sometimes behinde , but often before , the Sunne in Heaven : With Poets an Old Great Goddesse , and as Great a Friend to Mars , Enemy to Peace . Corona Borea , Celestiall Heroins waiting on PHEBE . Lyra , Celestiall Heroins waiting on PHEBE . Aquila , Celestiall Heroins waiting on PHEBE . Coma Berenices , Celestiall Heroins waiting on PHEBE . Cassiopea , Celestiall Heroins waiting on PHEBE . Most of these Persons are more fully expre●t , page 6. The Severall Scenes , Antimasques , and Entries , in This Device of HEAVEN . THE GENERALL SCENE , is the LITTLE WORLD , or Isle of BRITAIN ; centred within the Sphears of Heaven . page 1. The GREAT QUEENE being seated under a Royall State , a Cloud rising , brings up the First Scene : A Scene of Darknesse , Nightwork , Thunder , Lightning , with all Attendants of Storme and Tempest . NIGHT enters in a hideous shape , holding a Landskip of Horror , inscribed in a strange Dialect ( to cause more Admiration ) ΣKOTOS * : But soaring up too neere the State , is amaz'd at such a Majestie ; and , as dazled with that unexpected Brightnesse , is forced to retire in most confused haste ; in which She lost two of Her Attendants , SILENCE and OBLIVION : Which were still retained behinde Her , as Foyles to grace the following Scene of glorious Brightnesse , rising up like a cleere Day , dawning out of blackest Clouds . p. 3 , 4. In this Scene , Two Celestiall HEROINS * descend from the Sphears ; Presenting the Plot of the Masque , to the GREAT QUEENE ; with a Petition inviting Her , to vouchsafe Her presence to the HERO'S of Heaven , now ready to attend Her , whose Beauty might supply the want of PHEBUS Rayes , who was already Masked within the Sphe●● , expecting Her presence . page 4. These two , re-ascending in a glorious Rain-bow , Sing the first Song to the GREAT QUEENE : who , rising up in a Rosie coloured Cloud , was presently seene , Entring among the Masquers , personating PHEBE ; and at the end of the Masque , was againe seene with Her Royall PHEBUS under the State ; while a Celestiall Cho●us enters singing , and concludes the Masque . page 19. The Plot of the Masque ( presented by ASTRONOMIA and ASTROLOGIA ) consists of two Parts , or Maps : The one Celestiall , the other Terrestriall . The Celestiall Map * , is a most true and exact draught o● the Site and Motions of the SUN , MOONE , VENUS , SATURN , MERCURY , JUPITER and MARS ; with other Heavenly Bodies , through the yeeres , 1639 , 1640 , &c. The Terrestriall Map , is truly to represent , How all Those Motions were shadowed upon Earth , for all That time . But , this last Map ( or History ) is not yet fully perfected , because the exact proportion 'twixt Heaven and Earth , is not yet concluded on , by the best ASTRONOMERS . The Celestiall and Terrestriall Maps , shadowed Both together in one compendious Scheme ; being an Epitomy of the following Masque . PHEBUS , pleasing to blesse the Southern World with his Chiefest Residence , deputes MERCURY to the Northern THULE * ; but SATURN ( having pre-possession ) drives MERCURY back , from THULE . This Quarrell is shadowed in the Antimasque of Night-work , inscribed ΣKOTOS . pag. 3. MERCURY imploreth PHEBUS ; Who , in much Goodnesse , condescendeth to take a Northerne Progresse toward THULE , to reconcile these Two ; yet , lest They should prove Contumacious , He advanceth in Warre-like manner ; attended with JUPITER , MARS , and all their Satellites . pag. 9. But PHEBE'S Royall Goodnesse vouchsafeth to Mediate Peace ; which PHEBUS granteth to his Dearest PHEBE : and so , SATURN and MERCURY are againe setled by PHEBUS in their proper Places . Onely MARS , is Enemy to This Peace , and by divers assayes , Labours to break it . But , PHEBE still opposeth Him ; and so prevaileth , that MARS Fals downe as Thunder-struck ; yeelding himself Prisoner to PHEBUS . PHEBUS returneth again ( leading MARS a Captive-Prisoner ) to His wonted Southern Residence ; to the content and Joy of All . pag. 12.13 . At His Return , VENUS petitioneth for Her old Friend MARS , and begg●th His Liberty ; which at length , PHEBUS granteth , in much Royall Goodnesse ; which ( to all ingenuous Noble Spirits ) is a Bond , much more Strong , then any Chaine , then any Fetter . MARS released ( being more inraged at His Imprisonment ) Plots to incense SATURN and MERCURY againe ; and after divers assayes , at length prevailes so farre , that SATURN begins againe to frown on MERCURY : which MARS so foments , that , ere long , MERCURY is again driven out of THULE , and forced to re-implore PHEBUS . PHEBUS condescendeth to take a Second Progresse toward THULE : yet resolving , rather to prevaile with gentle Rayes of wonted Goodnesse , then by Thunderbolts . But PHEBE again vouchsafeth to interpose Her selfe ; prevailing with PHEBUS , to summon His Grand Councell of all the Seeming Deities . pag. 14. Who meeting in AREOPAGUS * , joyntly agree to Arraigne MARS , for rebelling against PHEBUS ; disturbing the Peace mediated by PHEBE ; incensing SATURN , and with him joyntly opposing MERCURY . MARS thus arraigned , was Cast , by joynt consent , of all the Deities ; and adjudged to forfeit all His Honours , Dignities , Priviledges , &c. to His Soveraigne PHEBUS ; and for ever to be excluded from the Number of Gods . PHEBUS Returneth again to His wonted Southern Residence , in Great glory : while PHEBE still condescendeth to mediate a perfect Peace ; for which , Her Royall Goodnesse p●evaileth with PHEBUS , to continue His Great Councell ; and to summon all the CAUSES into JUPITERS HALL , the Great Councell-Place for all the Gods . Here , SATURN and MERCURY resigne up all Their Possessions , Claimes , &c. into PHEBUS Hands , acknowledging Their dependance on His Royall Favour . PHEBUS receiveth them with wonted Goodnesse ; Which alone moveth Him not onely to re-invest them with all Former Priviledges ; but also to smile on them with new addition of Royall Favours ; well knowing , that Royall Goodnesse , is still wont to Finde , or Make , Loyall Subjects of all Noble Spirits . pag. 16. Thus at length , is a most Happy Peace effected through the whole LITTLE WORLD : at which all the CAUSES joyntly petition , for an Eternall Memoriall of the Royall Goodnesse of PHEBUS and His Royall PHEBE . Who ( after a Bright Cloud of thinne Exhalations had opened it selfe and disappeared ) are Both seen resting under the Royall State ; to the greatest content and Joy of All . Witnessed by a Generall Applause , first begun among all the Deities in Heaven ; and being thence reflected through the whole Scene , was againe counter-echoed by all the Sphears . Whence issueth a Celestiall Chorus singing , and congratulating the most Happy Peace , and Vnion of the Little World , made by the Royall Goodnesse of PHEBUS , and His Royall PHEBE . MASQUERADE DU CIEL : Presented to the Great Queene of the LITTLE WORLD . THE SCENE was centred within a circle of Magnifique Portico's , all fairely Vaulted ; yet so artificially poyzed with such curious Proportion , that without pressure , They supported their Supporters ; Which seemed Silver Pilasters , inter-veyn'd with Streaming Sprigs of finest Gold . Over these , ran an Architrave Freez ; yet shooting up so farr from the eye , that it lost somewhat of its luster , and seemed but Pearle , filleted with sparkles of richest Diamonds . The outward Balcon's , for fenestello's had a continued Chrystall Work , backt with a most glorious prospect , which quickly lost the eye , midst Orient Colours , streamed with Azure , at greatest distance . Within These , was a stately Fabrick , curiously couched into a Sphear ; intermixtly waved with foure Elements ; and foyled about with a Perspective of Clouds ; over which , at distance , NATURE hovered , with an aspect that seemed to admire , rather then view , Arts choise Composure . On This , a Curious Balestrata , finely rais'd ; seeming a LITTLE WORLD Rising up from within a Greater : The Great Globe's Epitomy : Natures Second Draught ; at which Shee smil'd to see her selfe growne an Artist , in more compleat Limning ; For , Her Former lines seemed but as imperfect Assayes , of what she meant to draw in This ; Her Master-peece of all , which with a modest scorne , seemed to disdaine all Admiration . It s utmost Verge , was an Artificiall Border , made of a Naturall Sea ; most lively exprest flowing into a Circle ; whose in-most Area , ( seeming an Iland of Mosaique Work , Terrast with antick knots ) was the Basis to a Royall State , blest with the Presence of the GREAT QUEENE . Over whom , ran a most glorious Canopy ; in which the Graces were seene , each with her silver needle , Enameling rather then Embroyd'ring : and so neatly were the Flowers contriv'd , that with humble reverence they All inclined to the GREAT QUEENE , ( as the Heliotropion to the Sunne ) seeming to acknowledge their Colour to Her Lippe , their Sweetnesse to Her Breath . Toward the Fringe , the Graces met ; and with a pleasant smile , all at once reflected on the last made ( but first intended ) Flower , finely purled with BRITTANNOCLEA 1 ; which was the Soule to This Body , the Motto impres'd on This Device of HEAVEN . The Colour most in Eye , was the Rosie-Lilly-sweetly-mixt Carnation ; yet changeably inclining toward Crimson , which seemed but a Naturall modest Blush , at the presence of the GREAT QUEENE : Who sate Circled about with a Glory of Rayes ; which yet needed not to expresse Her , Whom all knew the QUEENE of glorious Brightnesse : The fayrest Idea of perfect Beauty ; and among Mortals , Vertue 's choisest Sample● , which She makes a Pattern for Her Fairest Draughts : One , whom Nature had taught with best grace to adorne Majestie ; and with the Luster of Her least rayes , to dazle Glory Her selfe , who now stood at distance Blushing , yet ambitious to attend this GREAT QUEEN , Blessing the State● On either hand , stood a ROYALL PRINCE ; Both which , were Darlings to the same Nature , which at Their Birth , thought it no Solecisme to cloath Maturity with ●oungest yeers : Both , with a Youthfull , yet gracefull blush , seemed to Smile , as seeing themselves laden with O●hers Hopes , while They stood as Centre to all the Lines of future Felicity : Over One of them , hovered a Crowne , with this Motto , DON DES CIEUX 2 . Neere These , were placed Two Fayrest Young Ladies , in Rich attire , Carnation guarded with silver deluces ; Their Haire , knotted with Starrs , and powdered with Golden Attoms , rais'd up with a Dazling Ray , darted out from that Sphear of Brightnesse , fixed under the Royall State . At whose beck , a Cloud● in an instant Rising , discovered THE FIRST SCENE . A SCENE of DARKNES ; an Impresse of Horror : a Chaos f●lt , though not See●e . NIGHT , not content with her wonted Sables , affects now a more dismall hue ; Enters , presenting Terror in a Lantskip , shadowed with blackest colours ; The Inscription in a strange Dialect ( speaking more admiration , ) ΣKOTOS 1 . 2 Steepe rising Hils , farr off , ( mocking night , at noone , with shady tops of pathlesse groves ) fill halfe the Scene : Leaving for the nighest part a Solitary Valley , divided with a River ; whose purling Streames ( murmuring through broken rocks ) taught the Woods , beyond , to Tremble ; Their boughs and leaves being shadowed on the Water by the glimring MOONE : Whose weake Beames ( Refracted with frequent flashes of Lightning , breaking out from blackest Clouds ) made up a Faint Light , much more dismall then Darknesse ; For 't was only enough to make Dark Coufusion seeme more Horrid . These Trembling measures , traced in full time , to the crowing of Cocks ( only ecchoed in saddest reports , from farthest distance ) interrupted with harsh unpleasing kroaking , and hideous Scritchings of Nights Forlorne Creatures ; made up the Musick that best accords with Nights Discord . This Scene presents the Antimasques , acted by Drowsie MORPHEUS , Pale PASSION , and Trembling FANCY . At length ( lest Horror yet should seeme imperfect ; ) Nights wonted silence , was forced to degenerate into a Whispering murmur ; Which quickly grew up into a most violent and confused Tumult : which being re-echoed by many Counter-bounds , midst hollow rocks , brake out at once , into most terrible Claps of Thunder ; at which , Nature her selfe , seemed to Startle , as amazed at such unexpected Commotions 3 in her Lower Elements . When This had a while detained the Thoughts , rather then Eyes , of the Trembling Spectators : The Cloud soaring up too neer the Royall State , was instantly dissolv'd and dis-appeared ; while Brightnesse againe unvayl'd Herselfe : at which a New Scene Rose up ( while the Former vanished ) forcing Black Night to post away her Chariot , mounted on her own Birds 4 . But These ( being dazled with that sudden unexpected Brightnesse ) mistooke their Way ; and in sted of falling , soared upwards wincking ( like Seeled Lanners : ) yet not able to mount to the Sphears , began to hover a while in the Ayre : at which pause , Night seemed offering to speake ; had not some present Deity struck her downe ; and so prevented , rather then interrupted , Her Darke intents 1 . At Her Discent , Dull OBLIVION and Soft SILENCE , not able to hold pace with their Flying Mistresse , were forced to stay behinde Her ; and so were still detained , as Foyles , to Grace the following Scene of Glorious Brightnesse 2 . THESE ANTIMASQUES being thus past ; from a Cleere Heaven , opening on either side , came Two Chariots , curiously toucht with Gold , each borne up with a Cloud of Aurora Colour ; gently gliding downe the Ayre in equall pace , till neere the State they met : Where , in an instant dis-appearing , They left Two Seeming Deities , or Second Causes , in forme of most Beautifull young Virgins ; Richly cloathed in Skie Colours , waved with lightest Azure , hightned with silver ; loosly tuckt about with a Starry Girdle , such as Plebeians call a Zodiack ; Their Armes bare , with bracelets of Pearle ; Their Faire Haire Dischevald , mixt with silver : On their Head , a Coronis of Starres ; yet of such different Light , Colour , and Magnitude , that at distance they seemed Roses , sweetly mixt with Lillies ; which joyntly refracted their Rayes , into a most pure Carnation Iris. Both These * addressing themselves of the GREAT QUEENE under the State , with a blushing Startle , as amazd at some unexpected Majestie ( though they expected much ) humbly presented a Little Scrowle , seeming a petiti●n : yet some thought it the Plot of the Masque . What ever it was , Her Majestie received it with a gracious smile , and seemed with much delight to read it ; while They Both , were Rapt up within a glorious Rainebow , mounting up HEAVEN by degrees , while They sung thus , to the GREAT QUEEN . Clouded Eyes in darkest Night , To Thee may glance for Beames of Light : That Sphear of Brightnesse in Thine Eye , Darts Rayes enough to make a Sky . Thy Stock of Beauty hath a powre To dawne a Sun , for every houre . But Pity yet poore Mortalls sight : With Lawn or Cypresse Cloud Thy Light ; Lest Thy Beauty , FAYREST QUEENE , Dazle all , and be Unseene : Celestiall Hero's * Durst not aske To See Thy Face , but in a Mask . With Thee yet PHEBUS * hath prevaild To let Thy Beauty be unvaild : That in His sted Thy Glorious Ray , May Condescend to make a Day , Throughout This Hemisphear ; while He Masked presents a Masque to Thee . 'T is Heaven's Will , That We unseene , Should eccho still * Fairest QUEENE . Which Eccho , was most artificially caught , and continued with most harmonious , soule-ravishing Musick ; While the GREAT QUEENE rose up in a Rosie-coloured Cloud ; and was afterwards seene , with the Masquers , ( yet Unveyld ) Personating PHEBE : At which the Musick sweetly melted , being heard at , distance , as from within the Sphears of Heaven . Whence soone issued PHEBUS , in his wonted Robes : sitting in his glorious Chariot , almost deceiving the sharpest eye and disappearing , midst thickest , yet purest Rayes ; which yet were all but as dark shadowes , foyling that farre more curious Draught within ; to whose Natuall Luster , Glory could adde no artificiall complement : Before Him the brightest Rayes , blusht themselves into Dusky Clouds , as asham'd ; though 't was no shame , to be out shonn by such a Deity . Neere This Sunne ( and yet not neere , for so could none ) stood Two CAUSES , but Second only ; Acted by the Thought , rather then Beck , of This First Moover , in This Second HEAVE●● The Glory of these Two , seemed somewhat above Mortals , because only below PHEBUS ; Whose broken scattred Rayes ( above enough to make Day ) being reflected on These Two , were NATURE'S Measures , for the Highest Beauty , in this Lower WORLD . Their Names were nothing but their Natures , well contracted into JUPITER and MARS ; The one Lightned to the others Thunder , and held the Bolts the other cast : and yet neither did either ; being neither JUPITER nor MARS ( though Both ) but PHEBEIDES . Somewhat Higher , with her VENUS ( attended with Corona Borea , Lyra , Coma Berenices , Cassiopea , Astrea Virgo , with other Celestiall Heroins ) was a Seeming Deity , that might easily have seemed NATURE her selfe ( as the Poets describe Her ) but that Her Age spake her much younger . However , Dame NATURE must now admit her Equall , ( and Grammer make no solecism of Two superlatives ; ) For sure , no Second Place was capable of This Primest of Beauties , Blessing This Scene . And yet with a sweet and gracefull blush , She seemed to contract Her Rayes ; that so Beauty might keepe that distance with Brightnesse , which PHEBE must with PHEBUS . For with This Double-Single Name , Those Two Deities pleased to One themselves : And This was the only way to limit admiration ; For , all curious inquiries were soone answered thus , THIS is PHEBUS , and THIS is PHEBE ; None asked more ; for more could not be said , more could not be Thought . Yet , one thing more there was , at which both Art and Nature stood amaz'd ; each thinking That , the others Skill , Which it selfe , durst not presume to owne . This was a most Naturall Likenesse , Propo●tion , Feature ; yea , Identity it selfe , between This Faire and Glorious PHEBE , now over the State 1 , and That as Faire , Great and Glorious a QUEEN , seene before under it . Most of the Spectators , ●ot having eyes to see One Sunne ( much lesse Two at once ) thought Both Those , but One ; yet with severall names in severall Places : So , over the State They called Her PHEBE ; but under it , The GREAT QUEENE : as of old to the Poets , The same Deity was ( but in severall Places ) PHEBE , DIANA , and PROS●●PINA . Yet some few , that saw with Thoughts , as well as eyes , Thought the One , only , Reall , The other Representative ; as Reflected on some choisest Chrystall , fixt or moved sooner then Thought , yet still after the Motions of the GREAT QUEENE . But , some Sublimate Rosie-Crucians ( that were present with their Spectacles ) not yet content , would needs dive to the Bottome of their Deepest Chrysiple , to search out This artificiall Mysterie of Nature . In discussing of which , They had almost made another Antimasque , or peece of Night-worke , by profound Mysticall Disputations , whether Art or Nature , Sense or Reason , could best separate , abstract , a● least prescind , a Sprightly Genius from its Body ( which they called the Carcer Animae ; the Night of Light ; the Terrean Hecceity of an Etheriall Quiddity : ) so that the same Suppositum might exist in Two distinct Individuums : For , such they thought , the Existence of these Masquers , both in Heaven and Earth , at the same instant . And these suttle Losophers ( which was best of all ) thought this Tactulum of theirs , a fine Grace to this Masque of Heaven : Hoping their Bandore , might happly doe as much for the Bass , at the next Confort , as the Gras-hopper once did for the broken Treble 2 . In the meane time , not pauzing for this Harmonicall Discord below , the Musick suddenly brake forth above : most melodiously continued with a sweet , though saddest Ditty ; whose Ayre , was thought to be the same with That , composed at the Sad parting , of the Grecian Princes , from their Ladies , towards Troy . While the Musick began to pauze with a most patheticall melting Note ; PHEBUS Riseth , and with a most Emphaticall aspect , parteth from His Dearest PHEBE * ; whose Eyes onely ( and they fainted too ) were left able , to breath out a Sighing Vale . The occasion of This Saddest Parting , was some Important Businesse of HEAVEN ; at which PHEBUS himselfe pleased to advance Northward , there to make Two Enemies One Friend : Condescending thus to interpose Himselfe ( though below Himselfe ) rather then by a Thunder-bolt to deale with Both , at greater distance . THE MATTER WAS THIS : PHEBUS , pleasing to blesse the Southern World , with his chiefest Res●dence , Deputed MERCURY to the utmost Northern THULE 1 . But MERCURY is shrewdly there Oppos'd by SATURN ; upon an old Grudge , ere-since MERCURY so sorely foyled CUPID , SATURNS grandchild — Manet altâ mente repostum . Yet at p●esent , SATURN pretends another quarrell ; pleading , Those cold North Climats , subject unto Him , in PHEBUS absence : and , to assert his cause , besides present Possession ( almost the best Point in Law ) He produceth an Old Charter , Patent under PHEBUS Broad Seale , on which Nature had stampt the Armes 2 of HEAVEN . MERCURY offers Dispute ; and doubts not to make his Cause good by force of Argument . But Saturn could handle his Sithe , much better then a Syllogism ; yet , had Logick enough to hold His owne Conclusion , and deny MERCURIES Assumption of ought belonging to Him ; yea , confessing He could not Dispute , He thought best to Moderate ; and Himselfe will Determine MERCURIES Thesi● . And in Conclusion , Be it Right or Wrong , Hee Forceth MERCURY to goe back as he came ; and , which was more , wilily directs That Back-motion into a FALL 3 . MERCURY Falling , Protests against SATURNS Injurious Act ; and to Right Himselfe , Appeales to PHEBUS 4 : while SATURN Reprotests and Antiprotests ; Trusting to the Goodnesse of his Cause ; not knowing that a New Patent might suspend an Old Charter , that was never made , or meant , to be Eternall . To Compose this quarrell , PHEBUS Himselfe condescended to take a North progresse towards THULE 1 ; and , left SATURN should prove contumacious ( which some feared ) He advanceth in Warlike manner ; Sending also MARS before Him , to attend MERCURY ; who , without PHEBU'S speciall Favour , was like to prove by much too weake for SATURN . MARS goeth before , toward MERCURY ; Yet by the Way lingreth a while in VENUS House , on old acquaintance ; But to his Great losse and detriment , for PHEBUS will anon revenge it 2 . JUPITER followes PHEBUS , with His Thunderbolts , but at distance ; and not without some seeming great Reluctancy , going Backward oft , as he seemed to step forward : For loth he was , to hurt his Old Fa●her , yet much more loth , to be disloyall to his Soveraigne PHEBUS 3 . Both at length , are well prevented by PHEBE'S Wisdome : Whose Royall Goodnesse vouchsafeth to mediate PEACE : which PHEBUS Granteth to His Dearest PHEBE . And so , being Reconciled , casts His wonted Gracious Aspect upon SATURN : Who was thus againe setled by PHEBUS in His proper Place , to the Great content and Joy of all 4 . At this , began an Applause through the whole Scene , while the Musick suddenly brake forth againe , melodiously continued by all the Sphears . But , while This was blessing the Scene above ; there hapned an unexpected Accident below , which in a Plebeian Comedy , might well have made an Interlude , and have spared Musick between the Acts : But Heere 't was much below the Genius of a Royall Masque . However , it caused some smiles , though only among the crowd of Lowest Spectators . Thus it was . A Sp●●ist Prognostique that ne're durst Thinke of seeing Heavens Face ( but in a Pond , or through a Peece of Cypresse ) Hearing perchance that Heaven would now be Masked , before the QUEEN : Thought this an Excellent opportunity to bee a Star-gazer , and yet not hurt his neyes . Hee vowes therefore to make one in the crowd ( at this Masque ) though it cost him the Swooning of his last and best Almanack : which he now regards the lesse ; because he presumes , at this Celestiall Vision , to get , at least , a New Edition of his Old Ephe●●rides , now almost at last gasp . Having crowded at length ( with much adoe ) within ken of the Scene : The First thing He heard , was a mutter ( among some next him ) of SATURN and MERCURIES late Great Variance . At first sound of SATURN and MERCURY , He thought This might prove a most incomparable good Notion for his next Calender , were it so Translated , that profane Vulgars also might understand This Sublime Dialect of Heaven ; which He durst think no lesse then Hebrew , ( what ever more ) for This , He had heard , was Heavens Language . Well , this Tranflation shall bee his owne work ; who yet remembred some had told him , His First Minority had Surfeted by eating a Construing Booke ; which made his queasie Stomack , ever since , to nauseate Minced meat ; specially Tongues , which ( with Hartichocks of the Jewish mould ) he had heard the Learned Doctors most forbid , as the hardest to digest : Yet , he resolves to take Heart-a-grace , for once , and so will venture another Surfet . The first Course was soone concocted ; For , SATURN and MERCURY comming aboard , he knew them at first sight , to be peeces of his owne Element ; and so might easily come to signifie any thing in Heaven or Earth . But as for Variance , This he only knew in Practise , and not a word of its Theory ; Therefore durst not venture to translate it ex-tempore ; but thinks best to Empannell a Iury of his best Thoughts , to depose Their verdict for its cognizance . And while They step aside into a By-roome , He was content to leave thinking awhile ; and pleased in much curtesie to condescend so low , as ( all the Interim ) to Grace the Masque with the Tips of his eares . Yet , hearing nothing Heere , but Dumb Shewes ( which he understood no more then Variance : ) His Teeth open by instinct , and hee thinks good ( being moved ) to inure his Docuity , by instructing some next him ; stiching up many reasons , why HEAVEN would come abroad mewd up in a Maske , since French Hoods went out of fashion . But heere by chance , Over-hearing His Iury wrangle about their Verdict for Variance : He resolves to make a New Foreman of the next Gowne he saw . But , This Gown hapning to be lin'd with Furr , he durst not a great while crowd neere it , lest perchance some Mace should hang loose in its pocket , which slipping out , might rase his Memory with old Obligations . Yet , at length , bethinking himselfe , that , of all Vices , Modesty had long beene most Odious ; hee ventures to accost the Furr Gowne : and with a Congruous congie , confessing himselfe ingramm in all the Orientall Tongues , beseeches his Worship to give him to understand , what Variance might meane at Court of Heaven . Mr. Alderman ( for so the other cald him ) either out of depth of Science ; or else willing to horse the Asse , at least to muzzell him , ( Himself being intent on the Masque ) cryed Peace , Peace ; at which the other quickly conjur'd his lips into a Gramarcy of your Honour . Thus having gotten the theory as well as practise of Variance ; and presuming on SATURN and MERCURY'S courtesie ; he scornes to spell any longer , but with most learned confidence , puts all together in one breath ; Thus : Saturn and Mercury , or Heaven and Earth , are at Peace , or Variance . But , in the next Breath , bethinking himselfe hee could not prove his words , if any should chance to question him : He resolves to sleep whole , b● Unsaying all againe ; yet , with a gentle qualilification for his credits sake : and so starts up in a pythick rapture , and swears by the Genius of all the Good Starres in his Horoscope , that what ere he thought , yet he meant , Saturn and Mercury would not , long , be at Variance in Arabick , or Peace in English . Which , he spake the rather , that so he might intimate a most contagious Disease , he lately had , which the Doctors call the Prophetick Tympany : the least Sent of which , he hoped , might easily give him more roome a●d ease in the Crowd . Heere his memory chancing to stumble on some Heroicall Verses , made for his next Kalend●r ; he pleaseth in much courtesie to perfume Them next him , with a spice of his Pottery : and so by learned expiration breathes out these Rythmicall Proses , ushred in , by two or three Antick faces , bare-head . Now * Resteth in His Aquary Lord Saturn , smiling on Mercury , In Trine : 't is well I wot ; but Stay , Till Sirius shall cast his Ray * , And Leo frown : Titan and Mercury , With Saturn Then shall be at Emnity 1 . Enough , no more , yet doe not Wonder , If after Lightning , it doe Thunder . Enough , too much : for speake I dare not now ; But yet I le Think , and care not How . All which , and a great deale More , was but a peece of a non-Licet-Booke , called an All-men-ake : a peece of Felony ( what ever more ) for 't was Stolen out of an old Ephemerides , calculated for another Climat , and not for the Scene of This Royall Masque of Heaven : Whose Heroick Genius disdaines such spurious Comitragick Interludes : and yet This Pedantick ' Strologer , would faine have Canted out his old Prosodia with new Accents , and acuter Tones ; which might perhaps have at length beene over-heard by some of the Masq●ers above ; had not some neere him ( wiser then Himselfe ) quickly husht him , and sent him packing , to learne New Calculations in the Old Counter-house . However , This Discord below , with sweet Cadence , brought in , the Concord above , with the finer grace ; at least to the Lower Specta●tors ; For the Ot●er needed no artificiall Foyles to Grace their most Naturall Harmony , made by Heaven it self , with all its Sphears . And while this Musick melted away by degrees , at the North Horizon PHEBUS Rose in great Glory ; advancing Southward againe with his wonted Attendance , sutabl● to His Majestie : His Triumphant Chariot was drawne by Sparkling Steeds , Foure in Front , as the old Romans were wont to Triumph 1 . Now JUPITER also commeth back again with his Satellites , waiting on the Returne of His Soveraigne PHEBUS ; who , in his Return , exalteth JUPITER 2 , His Loyall and most Humble Servant : who , like a Noble Subject , Thought one Gracious smile , one Glaunce , from his Prince ; more then enough to reward the most faithfull and Loyall Service ( possible ) to His Royall Soveraign . MERCURY also , Leaving a while his Northern Station , commeth Southward : Following PHEBUS , till Hee came to the Royall Palace , and there Rested , Dismis●ing MERCURY with a gracious smile 3 . Only MARS is Enemy to This Pacification : whether out of Naturall Antipathy to SATURN ( ever since He mockt him for Dalliance with VENUS ) or else in Sympathy to MERCURY ( in whose House He had been Billeted most of This Time : ) what ere the matter was , He seemed much inraged , that He must , either returne and strike never a blow ; or else , stay Freezing in the cold Cronian Ocean , as a lump of raw metall , glu'd to the North Pole , by its magneticall vertue 4 . While He lingreth in MERCURIES House ; SATUR● , Threatens him : who quite benumd , and Frozen into a Dastardly Apoplexy ( by the Northern sent of Cold THULE ) is forced to cry mercy : and not able to resist such strong Syllogisms made in Ferio , he Flies thence ; and Flutters Southward againe with all his Ice-ickles . But Comming at length into Southern Heat , He is thawd againe into His wonted Rage ( which was Frozen about THULE : ) and Raging , Enters PHEBE'S Palace ; Hoping by some meanes to divert Her mediation , and so disturb the Pacification 5 . But for all his Spurrs , His Rage is Bootlesse : for , PHEBE soone Opposeth Him in greatest displeasure 1 , being That fire-brand that first kindled debate between SATURN and MERCURY ; and now dur●t smoake also , at That Peace , which Her owne Goodnesse had vouchsafed to mediate with such happy successe . While He yet Raged , PHEBE so prevailed that with a Ray darted out , MARS was dazled ; & suddenly fell dow● as Thunder-struck , yeelding himselfe Prisoner to PHEBUS : And so , being drawne Captive like after the Triumphant Chariot , for shame & grief , He hideth himself under it 2 . VENUS , at first , was affrighted at This unexspected Fall of MARS , & Fled Thence ; yet seemed Ambitious to attend PHEBUS Triumph ; & so hasteth into His Royall Palace ; there to prepare for His Glorious Return 3 . At which , She petitioneth for her old Friend MARS , & beggeth his Liberty : which PHEBUS , at length , Granteth in much Mercy 4 ; Well , knowing that Royall Goodnes , to all Ingenuous No●le Spirits , is a stronger Bond then any Chaine , then any Fetter . MARS , released by PHEBUS , at VENUS ' Petition ; was now no Prisoner , yet MARS still ; and still mindfull of Former Chaines ( such is His Temper still ! ) soon hasteth into VENUS ' House , There to renew Former acqaintance . Thence he plotteth to incense SATURN and MERCURY again : and after divers assays , at length prevailes so farr , that SATURN begins again to frown on MERCURY : which Frowning Disgust , MARS so resents and soments ; that ere long , MERCURY is again Driven out of THULE , and again by SATURN forced to Fall 5 . MERCURY Falling , re-imploreth PHEBUS helpe ( His best refuge : ) after which , PHEBUS condescendeth to make a Second Progresse to●ards THULE : Yet resolves by Gentle Rayes of Royall Goodnes , much rather then by Thunder-bolts , to prevaile both with SATURN and MARS , who now joyntly opposed MERCURY . 6 But PHEBE 7 again vouchsafeth to interpose Her self ; whose owne Goodnesse moveth Her again to mediate Peace ( such still are the Thoughts , breathings , & Motions , of True Royall Goodnes ) for e●fecting of which , She prevaileth with PHEBUS to Sum●on His Grand Councel of all the Seeming Deities . Who , meeting ( according to PHEBUS ' Summons ) in AREOPAGUS 1 ; think best to begin at the Root of Trouble , the Author of the late Commotions in the Littl● World : and so , with generall consent , agree to Arraigne MARS , of Rebellion against PHEBUS ; Disturbing the Peace mediated by PHEBE'S Goodnesse ; Incensing SATURN , and with Him joyntly opposing MERCURY . His Inditement being Heard ; after all Pleas , They all conclude Him One Generall CAUSE of most of the Late Commoti●ns : and joyntly Censure him , to be most justly excluded from the Number of Gods : and deprive him of all Priviledges , Honours , Dignities &c. Which are all rendered back againe into PHEBUS Hands , from whose Royall Favour , they first came 2 . PHEBE still continues to mediate a Full Pacification , between SATURN and MERCURY 3 : to which end , Her Royall Goodnesse prevaileth with PHEBUS to continue His Great Councell ; and summon all the CAUSES at once ; to conclude and attest a compleat , perfect , and Eternall Peace , through the whole Little World . This being Concluded on , PHEBUS Finisheth His North Progresse , and begins , the Second Time , to Returne Southward againe , in Great Glory 4 . Heere a Bright Glorious Cloud Disappearing , The GREAT QUEEN , was againe seene Seated in Royall Majestie , under the State ( as at First . ) At which appeared a Celestiall Chorus , ( Fore-runners to PHEBUS Glorious Return ) Rising up at the North Horizon , like Orient Rayes , Sparkling about Phosporus , till Aurora give place to Phebus ' Rising . These mounting Heaven by Degrees , Sing thus to the GREAT QUEEN : Faire PHEBE , Thou alone hast Eyes , To see Thy Glorious PHEBVS Rise : If Rise He can , Who is at Hight Of Beauty , Glory , and Delight : He cannot Lose , He cannot Get , He cannot Rise , He cannot Set. Or if He Set , 't is still'ith West , And still His Rising maketh East : But if in South He Day doe make , Or to the North a Progresse Take ; Speak Fairest PHEBE , can we call , This PHEBVS Setting or His Fall . When First He pleasd to change His Place , T is True , a while He veyld His Face 1 , Contracting in , His Southern Rayes : But to the North , He Them displayes : Speake Fairest PHEBE can we call , This an Eclipse , Setting or Fall ? 'T was Pity kept him veyld a while ; For if He , Pleased , pleasd to Smile , He Pit'ed Them , He smil'd on , lest They should be Dazled , whom he Blest : Or if he Frownd , 't was Pitty still , That veyld his Frowns , that else would kill . Like Lightning or like Thunder-claps , Them whom He Frownd on : Or perhaps He pit'ed Thee , Himself in Thee ; Lest Thy eye , His Frowns , should see , And seeing Greive Thy Tender Heart : And so Himselfe in Thee should smart . Yet lest the Southern World should misse , His wonted Rayes , Their wonted Blisse ; He left Thy Beauty in His Place , While Going North He veyld His Face . That Veyle was but a Maske , for See How in a Masque He comes to Thee 2 . Heere They entred a Cleere Heaven ( Full of Twinkling Starrs like a Morning Skie before Sun Rising ) singing still ; but seeming to speak to some in Heaven . The Verses not lost by the great distance , were These . Adiew yee Sparkles , Twinkling in Night ; Who mock us , Counterfeiting Light : Once called Starrs , and Heaven's Eyes ; Now Darkest Atoms of the Skies ; All is so Bright with PHEBUS Rayes : Though through a Maske He them displayes . Come See , and Blush , Blushing be gone , And Going Cry , we are out-shone . Thus , while the Song and Musick most sweetly melted away by degrees ; PHEBUS leaveth the North Horizon 3 , advancing Southward again in Greatest Glory : being adorn'd with Rayes of wonted Goodnes and mercy , darted out in a milde and Gracious Aspect ; yet sparkling with Royall Majesty ; which seemed as the choysest Diamond , enshrining it selfe mid'st purest metall ; or as a Fragrant Rose , longing to Carnation it selfe , with the Faire Idea of the whitest Deluce . Soon after His Return , All the CAUSES ( summoned before ) attend him in JUPITERS 1 Hall ( which was first made for the Great Conncell-House for all the Gods , ) where they consult with one consent , for setling a Perpetuall and Inviolable Peace through all the Little World . For this end , at length SATURN and MERCURY jointly resigne up all Their Priviledges , Honors , Dignities , Possessions , Claimes , &c. into PHEBUS Hands . Acknowledging Their Dependance on His Royall Goodnesse : professing They had rather be devoyd of all that might speak them Happy : yea rather not to Be , than be Clowded from His benigne Rays , and quickning Influence : or conti●ue conscious of promeriting His least Frown ; whose wonted Smiles , were more then Light , more then Life . PHEBUS receiveth them with wonted Goodnesse : which , of it selfe , moved Him to re-invest Them againe ; not only with former Possessions , but also with great addition of New Favours . Which to make firme and inviolable , Hee Sealeth , by smiling on Them with most Gracious Aspects ; specially on his reconciled Subject SATURN 2 . Knowing that Royall Goodnesse , is still wont either to Finde , or else Make , Loyall Subjects ; Whose Freest and greatest Liberty , speakes Their Soveraign , the Compleatest Monarch ; Ruling ( not only Bodies with Feare , but ) Soules with Love : Which still was , still will be , the Surest and the Straitest Bond , to all Ingenuous Noble Spirits ; to Rule Whom , is Truly to be a King , a Royall Prince . Thus most Happily was a Compleat Peace setled through the whole Little World ; mediated by PHEBE ; petitioned also and most cordially desired , with one consent , by all the CAUSES ; Granted , Sealed , & confirmed by the Royall Goodnesse of the GREAT KING : Which to maintaine and attest , PHEBUS was graciously pleased to Decree , and Ordaine , Frequent State Meetings , & Consultations , of All the CAUSES 3 . Who , before This First Meeting was disolved ( after a most gratefull acknowledgment of the wonted Goodnesse of PHEBUS and His Royall PHEBE , in quietting those Sad Commotions , so much disturbing the Little World ) did joyntly agree to petition His Majestie , Hee would be graciously pleased , that all Remembrance , of MERCURY ' , and SATURN'S Quarrell , might be wiped out ; not only from His own Breast , ( which His own Goodnesse , of its self , had already done ) but also from the whole Little World ; so that , an Act of 1 OBLIVION might forever , blot out , and quite remove all Staines , and Spots , that might respectively adhere to any of his Loyall , and Devoted Subjects . But , for an Eternall remembrance and Detestation of MARS His Treason ; in Rebelling against PHEBUS ; Disturbing the Peace ; and Disquieting the whole Little World ; His Majestie was petitioned , the Name of MARS might no longer endure in the Court of Heaven . Yet , that all His Former Tenures might still remaine ; But only as Eternall Memorials of the Goodnesse of PHEBUS , and His Royall PHEBE . So , that Heaven should no longer mention the House of MARS or MARS Ioy : But for all These ( in Their Places respective ) The GLORY of PHEBUS 2 : And that the Place where MARS Fell a Captive to His Majestie , should forever , be called in Heaven , The TRIUMPH of PHEBUS and His ROYALL PHEBE 3 . And because in all the late Commotions ; It was much suspected , MARS had been too much Beckt , and abetted , by His old Friend VENUS ( who yet , for some Causes , was not ●ctually excluded from the Seeming Deities ) his Majesty was moved , that the Place where MARS released , had plotted with Venus to incense SATURN ; might no more be called ( as it was before ) the House of VENUS ; But , the Honour of SATURN 4 . The First of these Petitions was soone Granted by PHEBUS ; But the other , not without earnest solicitation of all the Petitioners : For such is Royall Goodnesse , much more prone to Smile then Frowne ; yet yeelding to Both in fittest seasons : Knowing , there is a Time when Publique Good , calling for Justice , leaves no Rome , or Place for any Mercy , but That only , which some miss-call Severity . Heere a Transparent Cloud of thinne exhalations op'ned itselfe , and disappeared * . After which PHEBUS is scene , Resting with His Royall PHEBE , under the State ; to the Greatest content and Joy of All . Witnessed by a Generall Applause , first began among the Deities in Heaven , and being thence reflected through the whole Scene , is againe Counter-echoed by all the Sphears . Which , for a while seemed to Stand still 1 , as Ravisht with admiration at so Happy a Peace through the Little world : Then , as Rap● out of a Pauze ; broke out at once , into most harmonious soul-ravishing Musick ; first heard at distance , as began among the Sphears , ( melodiously Tun'd like choysest Voyces , into sweetest Consort in severall Parts ) then Waved neerer and neerer , till it was artificially Caught , and continued by a Celestiall Chorus ; which Entred the Scene Singing , to Congratulate PHEBUS most happy Return , and Rest with His Dearest PHEBE , after the Peace so well concluded by Their Royall Goodnesse . The Close of the Song was This : You Sacred Fires , no lesse Divine then Bright , Who Dazle Heaven When You Rise , With Luster farr more glorious then Its Light , Which yet doth more then Blesse our eyes . Your Beauty 's more Divine , your Light more Pure , Your Virtue 's Purer then your Light : Eternall Luster ! This shall Bright indure , When other Brightnesse shall be Night . When all the Sphears at once agree , To make one Tune , One Harmonie ; 'T is not so Good , 'T is not so Sweet , As Yours , When You in Consort meet . What was too Harsh , what was too Lowd , To Concord now is sweetly Bowd : Such is Your Musick , Such your Skill , All Notes are Tuned to Your Will . While Iarring Tones did grate our Eares ; We fear'd a Discord ; But our Fears Are Tun'd to Joyes : On Their Bass Part , The Meane and Treble were Your Art . Strike That againe : againe : That Note is sweet ; A Melting , not a Dying Tone ; Your Sweetnesse cannot Dye : then Living meet , Vs , in your Sphear , Your Highest Throne . Nay , now we wrong the World ; All Loyall Soules , Each moment Kneele , and Vow , and Pray , Your Long abode on Earth : This , This controules Our wish ; and makes Vs wish Your Stay . Be long expected in your Highest Sphear ; And long give Light to Mortal's eyes : For , All the Beauty which They Worship Heere , Is but refracted fro●mYours Rayes . And When You Leaving Earth , shall Heaven chuse , Behinde You leave Posterity , Like Flow'rs to gemm and sprout with Heav'nly Dewes , While You Enjoy Eternity , Eternity , Eternity . Heere the Song waved away , Rapt into Lowd ; yet , most melodious Harmony● into which as Melting themselves the Celestiall Chorus dis-appeared . Then , as Animate by some New Genius , began a most Sprightly Dance to the Violins ; which ending in Single Passages , The Ladies Rise to Dance the Revels with the Lords . HEERE THE MASQU● ENDS . THE SCHEME OF HEAVEN , ( Represented in This Celestiall MASQUE ) Drawne according to the Minde of all Astrologers 1 . NORTH SIGNES . ARIES , The Sun's Exaltation : Mars ' House . TAURUS , Venus' Night House : Mars ' Detriment . GEMINI , Mercuries Day House , &c. CANCER , Moons House : Mars ' Fall . Iupiters Exaltation . LEO , The Suns Royall Palace . VIRGO , Mercuries Night House , Joy , &c. SOUTH SIGNES . LIBRA 2 , Venus' Day House : Saturns Exaltation . SCORPIO , Mars ' House and Joy . SAGITARIUS , Iupiter's House and Joy . CAPRICORN , Sa●urn's Night House . AQUARIUS 3 , Saturn's Day House and Joy . PISCES , Mercury's Detriment , Fall , &c. To This SCHEME , most of the Masque Unmaskt , referrs . NOTES on SATURN , and MERCURIES Quarrell , about THULE : with a Curtain Drawn , Veyled from the Great Queene . SATURN and MERCURY , in this Masque of Heaven , are sometime Poëticall , somtime Platonicall , yea Chymicall sometime ; but usually Celestiall ; though shadowed upon Earth also , I suppose , were the Terrestriall or Historicall Map to be seen abroad . Their Quarrell about THULE occasioned PHE●US ' First and Second North Progresse Thitherward . THULE ( with Poets , Vltima Thul● ) is a cold North Isle ; most probably That , now called SCHETLAND , which the Inhabitants yet call Thyle●sall , if Peucer deceive us not . If This be not the True THULE , we yet understand not Ptolomy , Pomponeus Mela , with divers other old Geographers . However , Almost a●l Modern Writers 1 now agree , It must be some one or other Isle belonging to the Crown of SCOTLAND : And some think the old Poëts , by their Thule , meant but SCOTLAND ( the Remotest Part of the British Isle ) For This , was to Them , as Theseus to Plutarch , The Utmost Horiz●n in . Their Map of T●rra Cognita . Their Quarrell about THULE , is First preshadow'd in an Antimasque of Night-worke , or Scene of Darknesse , inscribed in a strange Dialect , ΣKOTOS : And no wonder ; For , even among the Ancients , SATURN ( for the Dusky colour of That Planet ) was usually an Hyer●gliphick of Darknesse 2 . Yea , some will have SATURN come from the Hebrew and Chaldee word Satar , to Hide and be Hid as in Darknesse : which well agrees with the old Poëts Fables of SATURNS Hiding Himself ( when JUPITER pursude Him ) in Italy ; which was thence , They say 3 , first called LATIUM , from Lateo , to be Hid . This QUARRELL , sprung Partly from an Old Anthipathy betwe●n Those Two ( among the Poëts ) eversince MERCURY , ( on his Birth-day , ) before all the Gods , So sorely Foyled CUPID , 4 SATURNS Son , or Nephew , as They say : ( And Plato's Phedrus is the Best Paraphrase on This Fable : ) Partly also from a New Occasion which did anew actuate Their Old Antipathy . This New Occasion was MERCURI●S New Patent , or Deputation unto THULE ; where SATURN had Prepossession , and Claimes much Right from an old Charter patent under PHEBUS ' Broad Seal● , on which NATURE had stampt the Armes of Heaven . 5 SATURNS Possession of THULE is a Noted ' Story among the old Poets and Poeticall Writers : Who had a Tradition that SATURN lay asleep in a Golden Pumice , in the bottom of the North Sea , about THULE : Which Sea is therefore called , by many Writers , The Chronian Ocean , or Sea of Saturn . Of this Poeticall Tradition Eusebius speaks 6 , Plutarch also in divers Places ; in one of which He tels us of an Island in the North Sea , called Saturns Isle ; which probably may be this THULE . His Right to THULE ( besides Present Possession ) He grounds upon an old Charter : In which The For as ●●●h , or Considerations moving , seem Such as These ; ( For the Charter is not much seen abroad . ) First , as , in Heaven , The Re●●●est Planet from the SUN ; and so fittest Viceroy in Climats Re●●●est from the Su●s Residence , now ( for the most part ) Southern . 2do . As Coldest Planet , and so Lord of Cold Regions ; specially Those , which being Northern , are most distant from the Suns Heat , and so most Cold . 3tio . As Lord of Aquarius ( by all Astrologers ) and by consequence Lord of all Islands ; which the Poets place under Aquarius ; specially Cold Islands , and such are all Northern , in the Suns Absence 4to . As in speciall , Lord of the North Sea , or Chromian Ocean ( as was said before ) and so Lord of all Islands in That Sea ; of which THULE must be one . MERCURIES New Patent , or Deputation to This THULE ( notwithstanding SATURNS Possession and Charter ) seems somwhat abstruce ; yet wants not some Faire Considerations moving . For , of all the Planets , MERCURY hath Greatest Latitude from the Ecliptick , which is the SUNS constant Residence ; and so seemes a fit Viceroy for those Climes , which are most Remote and distant from the SUN ; and such is THULE . Also , Astronomers finde MERCURY ( of all the Planets ) oftnest Septentrionall , or Northern , in one or other of his Orbs : For his Great Latitude gaines him one Proper Orbe , unknown to the rest , which They call Eccentrum Eccentri ; which makes Him most Excentricall , and oftest Septentrionall . Which Great Excentricity & Latitude make such Spirall Labyrinths in all his Motions ; That the Best Astrononomers ( Ticho , Kepler , Longom●nt and Lansbergius ) confess , They can not be well Salved , Till his former Motions be corrected , with New and more Exact Calculations . With Astrologers also , Both His Houses have Northern Declination ; and Gemini is as much Northern as any one Part of all the Zodiack : Under Gemini also , Doth Schoner , Pitatus , and others , place the Northern Isles ; and by Consequent under MERCURY , Lord of Geminy by all Astrologers . But the Greatest Consideration in That New Patent or Deputation of MERCURY , seemes His Great Favour with PHEBUS ; which All have still observed : Hence with Astronomers , His stile is Apollinis Sidus , Solis Cancelarius , &c. Yea They say , His Longitude now differs from the Suns , But in some few Punctill●'s , for , he seems to go His Pace , and step His step : insomuch that He is seldome seen abroad , But Lies Hid under the Suns Rayes ( which makes him most Lookt after , but Least seene . ) And no Planet is more with the Sun , But the Moon ; nor is She more , but of●ner . Astrologers also find Him the Greatest Courtier in Heaven , Favorite to Both the King and Queene , ( They meane the Sunne and Moon ) also so V●NUS : from Whose three Characters mixed together , He gets His with Them 1 . Hence also They place the Sun , and Moon's Palaces , ( Leo and Cancer ) in the Midst betweene Mercurie's Houses ( Gemini and Virgo ) on either side of which , are Venus Houses , Taurus and Libra . With Chymists , MERCURY is Cold and Moyst ; and so fittest to reside , in Cold Moyst Ilands ; Such as THULE . These also perceive his Great Favours with , and neere approach to , the Sun and Moon , King and Queen of Mettals , Gold , and Silver . Hence they say , Silver commes neerest to Gold , in Forme and Purity ; but Mercury ( Quicksilver 2 ) in Matter and Gravity : though , of all Mettals , He be most Crude and Indigested . From this neere Approach of Quicksilver to Gold ( in Matter and Gravity ) Some Sublimate Rosy-Crucian Alchymists , have made deep Plots with Sulphur , to make Their Mercury become Sol , of a Subject a King ( in Mettals ) of Quicksilver Gold . But True Mercu●y cannot harbour Trayterous Inclinations : Hence Their Sulphureous Devices , vanish like Powder Plots : And by Best Philosophers 3 , 't is now concluded , that though the True Elixar might or could be found ( 4 the Art of which , was long among the Arabs , AEgyptians also , till Diocletia● burnt Their books ) yet Mercury could never make Good Gold ( King of Mettals ) because They say 3 , He cannot indure the Tryall of fire ( Chymicall , sure they meane , and not the old Saxon Ordeire per fire 5 , which Tryed Good Emma ) Because He hath still had as much Antypathy to VULCAN , as Sympathy to VENUS . But , because This is a Masque of Heaven , and SATURN and MERCURY , Heavenly Bodies : It will not bee amisse to seeke out some place in Heaven , that may parallell THULE upon Earth . And no Place , in all the Zodiack , seems so fit , as AQUARIUS ; a most Cold , Moyst Signe ; under which , also , the Poets place all Cold Ilands ; and Manilius , in speciall seemes to place THULE 6 . Now , as the Poets make SATURNS cheife Residence , in the Chroniaen Sea , about THUL● ; so do all Astrologers make it , in AQUARIUS : which is , with them , Saturns House and Ioy . And This AQUARIUS ( The Celestiall THULE ) may well be the Celestiall Scene of SATURN and MERCURIES Quarrell , as THULE was the Terrestriall . For , of all Places in the Zodiack , AQUARIUS seems most Ominou● to M●RCURY ; Who can never stay Long there , but is either driven Back ( becomming Retrograde ) or else Forced into PISCES ; which , with all Astrologers , is called MERCURIE'S FALL 7 . Now although This Constant Antipathy , between These Two in Heaven , hath still been observed by all Astrologers , in all Ages ; yet , it was never so strong , or strongly actuate , as through the Stadium of This Masque , viz , from 1637 , &c 1 . THE CAUSES OF WHICH , SEEM THESE . First , MERCURIES Great Irritation of SATUR● , by his New Patent , or Deputation , into His THULE , or AQUARIUS . The Date of which New C●●●ission , seemes to be about the end of 1637 : for a little before That Time , MERCURY was Meridionall , and waited on the SUN , with more than usuall Favour : and there seemed to receive a New Commission , to enter SATURN'S THULE , with more than usuall Authority . For , presently on this , He enters AQUARIUS ( Saturns Possession ) and in it , is very Quick and Active ( Videant Astronomi . ) But ere long , SATURN , bestirs himselfe ; and without long dispute ( be it Right or Wrong ; Drives his New Guest out , and forceth him to Fall into PISCES . And , though MERCURY did oft assay to enter again , yet , SATURN as oft Drove him out 2 : ( There is n● Disputing with a crooked Sithe : ) till at length being quite driven out , and Hopelesse , Hee make his addresse to the SUN , seeming to implore His help ; at which the SUN left the Southern Signes , and advanced Northward in the Ecliptick , in Warlick manner ; Entring ARIES , the First of Northern Signes , and House of MARS and so of War , ( MARS being the God of War , with all the Poets . ) And Here begins PHEBUS● First North Progresse 3 ; with all the Scenes and Entries following , in This Masque of Heaven . The Second Cause , may seem , MERCURIE'S most Unfortunat Debility , and Extraordinary Weaknes , in Heaven ; by so frequent Retrogradations , Detriments , Peregrinations , Fals , &c. ( never more . ) through all This Time ; but specially Anni , 1640. and 1641. Which is like to produce Those effects , which ( for about These yeares ) were long since , foretold by the best Astronomers , France ever had 4 . Which is yet more remarkable , and seemes more Ominous , in that , there are so many , and Great Meetings of the Heavenly Bodies ( through this Stadium ) in PISCES 5 , which was still accounted the FALL of MERCURY . A Third Cause , may be , SATURNS Extraordinary Strength , Vigour , and Activity , which hath been in Heaven all this ●ime . For First , for 30 years last past , SATURN was not so well setled in his own possession , as he began to be about the end of 1637. For , till that Time , He came not to his House and Joy AQUARIUS ; in which , when he came , he found MERCURY , Acting his New Commission ; and no sooner saw him , but he drives him out ( even the next day ) and forceth him to Fall into PISCES 6 , as was said before . Againe , at his comming Home then , He was in his A●x ; being in the Apex or Apogeum of his Epicycle , and very neere the Apex of his Eccentrick ; Which ( as still hath been observed ) makes him more Swift in his Motions , and more Active in all his Actions . Thirdly , for all this Time , He hath been much strengthned by divers good Aspects from some of the Chief Heavenly Bodies . For , besides many good Fixt Stars ( both in AQUARIUS ; and in Trine or Sextile , to AQUARIUS ; ) He was well aspected by JUPITER most of all this time : Which is more Prevalent , because JUPITER hath been much in his own House and Ioy SAGITARIUS ; which of it selfe , also , smiles on AQUARIUS in a friendly Sextile . And all Astrologers say , SATURN being well aspected by JUPITER ( specially from SAGITARIUS ) makes great Councellors . Whence come so many Great events upon JUPITER'S Conjunction with SATURN . Of which Conjunctions , the greatest and most remarkable , ( for Europe ) that yet ever was , will be in February 1643 , but in PISCES , as was said before . Againe , He hath of late , been much , and oft , aspected by MARS . in it selfe no good aspect , I confesse ; yet such as ( joyned with MERCURIE'S Former Irritation ) must needs much inrage SATURN ; and so ( by a kind of Antiperistasis ) must needs make him much more Vigorous and Active : for Such is Nature still , when provoked by some Opposite . Hence Astrologers say , MARS with SATURN makes most fierce and desperate Souldiers . But , though SATURN hath been very well setled in his own AQUARIUS , or THULE ; and there , hath beene very Strong and Active , ever since the end of 1637 : Yet is his Strength never like to appeare more , than in the latter halfe of 1640 , and great part of 1641. For , besides his Constant good Aspect with JUPITER , ( either in a Sextile ; or mutuall reception , all that Time ) He will also be a great Significator through all the Summer , and Dominus Autumni ( as Astrologers speak ) for 1640. in 1641 also , there 's scarce a Quarter , or a New Moon , in which SATURN is not one great Significator , if not Dominus Ascendentis : Which makes it very probable , he will be very Active , and Prevalent , for that Time also . * Another Argument of This , is the Good Aspects , which SATURN is like to have ( at least for some of That Time ) from the SUN and MOONE , King and Queene of Heaven . For , though the SUN be directly Opposite to SATURN ( with MARS ) in August 1640 ; and continues Frowning most of that yeare ; yet , in the beginning of December , He begins to Smile on him in a gracious Sextile , ( while the MOON also is very neere . ) And in February 1641 , The SUN and SATURN meet , ( The MOON being also in a Trine with SATURN : ) which is like to produce some notable Event ( but 't is in PISCES ) for , such Meetings and Aspects of the SUN and SATURN still cause Apertiones maximas . A Third Probability of This , may be the extraordinary great and frequent Aspects of MARS on SATURN , ( never more , than ) through that Time . which is more Prevalent , because MARS is ( for the most part ) Dominus Anni 1640 ; Receiving his Commission from a great Meeting of Heavenly Bodies in SATURN'S Houses , at the beginning of that yeere : also , though SATURN be Dominus Autu●ni , yet MARS is with him in Ascendente . But JUPITER aspecting and tempring MARS , makes him lesse Formidable . Three or Foure times in the SUMMER of 1640 , MARS being with SATURN , will joyntly oppose the SUN and MERCURY . The last time , is about the Meeting of the Deities in Areopagus : and this last is like much to hinder the Pacification ; but that MARS is presently dispoyled of all power to hurt , as is said before , pag. 14. And though MARS do oft Frown on MERCURY , through 1641 ; yet , being much in his Detriment and Fall , and Tempered also by JUPITER ; All is like to End well . But , setting aside This Present Quarrell : Their Constant Antipathy wants neither Symptomes nor Causes ; as many appeare in all their Theory . SATURN'S Motion very Slow , except in his Aux : His Influence very Cold ; melancholy also and flegmatick ( except tempred with JUPITER or MARS ; ) Being Remotest from this Earth , and from the SUN ( the King of Heaven ) and so of a Cold Temper , and Dusky Leaden Colour : Whence not only Chymists , but Astrologers , are even forced to call him Lord of Lead , and such like Dark , Black , Coaly Substances , dugg out of the Earth : specially in North Climats . MERCURIE'S Theory , is ( of all the Planets ) most abstruce , perplext and intricat . Though He be Least in Body ( but the Moon ) yet not so in Influence : For , in this , He yelds to none but the SUN and MOON ( King and Queen of Heaven : ) Aspecting These , His Influence is Good to whome Ho●oscopall ; For These He makes Schollers , Ecclesiasticall Men ; yea oft They say , Bishops and Prelats● Yet His Influence is most inconstant ; Whence His Epithets not only with Poets , but Astrologers , are Ancops , Versatilis , Versipellis , &c. Yea the Chameleon of Heaven , at which Plotinus could laugh , when most serious * . Aspecting SATURN Hee useth to Frown ; Being as Swift , Active , and usually Hot , as SATURN is Slow and Cold . Hence Their Aspects raise Great Stormes , Wind , Thunder , &c * . Great alterations in the Ayre , in Mens bodies . Yea , in whole States , &c. if Astrologers deceive us not . For , from his swift motion and sudden mutations in Site and Place , They use to ascribe to Him , ( I know not why ) most of the changes in Wind and Weather ; Temper in Mans Body ; Policy in each State ; Religion in each Church ; &c. but specially if Dominus Anni ; as he was of late . Yet Astrologers ( though Picus 1 laugh them to scorn ) make him a Constant Friend to the X● Religion ; which yet Bacon saith 1 he makes as Abstruce , Perplext and Intricate , as his Motions are in all his Epicycles . In this also , he is Contrary to SATURN ; who some say 1 , useth to Patronize the Iewish Religion ; Because , forsooth , their Sabbath was on His Day ( with us now called Saturday , or SATURN'S Day , though some derive it otherwise 2 ) which Reason of Bacons is of kin to that of Plutarch 3 , who will needs have The Jews Sabbath a Feast to Bacchus , who was ( saith he ) sirnamed Sabbazios ; But I know not where ; For Aristophanes 4 will have Sabbazios Banisht as a Strange ( un-heard-of ) God ; except he could find shelter in Athens , no lesse Superstitious to strange Gods 5 , than Courteous to strange Men * . SUCH is the Celestiall THEORY of SATURN and MERCURY : and such , in part , the Chymicall : the Po●ticall may be next ; and then Platonicall . With Poets ( and all Poeticall Writters ) Each of these Hero's was {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} ( tho one more specially ) which I may translate ( though others will not ) A Man , A Star , A God : But how , or why , is worth inquiry . Whether Multiplicity of Gods , came first from old Phoenicians ( as Sanchun , from him Philo Biblius , & from Both Eusebius 6 ) or else from AEgypt First , thence to the Phoenicians by Cadmus to Chaldee by Belus , to Greece by Orpheus , ( as Diodorus oft affirmes . 7 ) Or first from Chaldeans by Belus , and from him to All other Colonies , ( Belus , & omnes à Belo ) as some maintaine 8 ( Confounding Gods , Idols , and Images . ) I now Dispute not . THIS the Best of Heathens , Uncompell'd confess 9 ; Men , in the World they knew not how , ( except like the New Sun-borne Mice on Nilus Banks 9 , ) by Nature soon wanting , and by Instinct as soon seeking some God ; out of all Entities , chose to Deifie the Best to Sense ( in sted of Better : ) Heaven first , and Heavenly Bodies : of which to Males , they suited Femals out of Earth ( This Lower World : ) coupling Celestials to Terrestrials , to make compleat Generations : the Mother EARTH , and HEAVEN the Father ; whose Influence , in sweet Showers , and Heavenly Dews ; They thought the best Gonorrhea 10 . Thus , the Starry Heaven ( The Highest Sphear , then known , ) was but Husband to this Lowest Earth ( Celi●s to Vesta : ) the next Sphear of SATURN , to Rhea ( for so they call the Element of Water 11 ) JUPITER to JUNO ( the Spheare of Ayre ) the SUN was Husband to the MOONE , which they thought but the Best and Highest EARTH , or Earthly World 12 . THESE , were a while so Happy to be Gods alone , ( But without Temples , Altars , Images , til Belus ' time 13 ) Yet so , that Wise men were not so Sottish , as to Deifie Dead lumps of Earth , or Fire , ( or any sensless Body , Heaven or Earth affordeth ; ) But , They thought , All these were Animate ; at least Actuate by some Living G●nius ; Which they called the Soule , or Intelligence of HEAVEN , SATURN , JUPITER , &c. And to Th●se was given Deity and Worship ; Yet under the Names of the Spheares , Globes , Elements , and Bodies , Which each Genius was thought either to Informe , as a Soule , or Assist and Actuate , as a Separate Intelligence 1 . But ●re long , Fond Superstition ( borne long before , but now ) Creeping out of its Cradle , began to View , think Faire , call Good , Admire , Deifie and Worship , each Mortall , which in Virtue ( I meane Vice ) hath stept but halfe a step above , beyond , the Lowest dregs of Basest Vulgars 2 . This Apotheosis ( or Art of Godding Men ) grew at length so Rif● , that Embryons could no sooner Breath ( nay , even in their First Grave or Winding sheet of Wombe ; ) much lesse be Borne ( I meane Buried in this great Tombe , which we call This World ) but they were streight forc'd to heare ( though not to answer ) the Vows and Prayers of some Sottish Priest , ready to proclaime them Gods . Yet , at first , ( while Madnesse was yet content to be an Infant ) Dead Men , were only made , ( as only able ) to ●eare that Heavy Name of Deity 3 . 4 Hence we finde , Two Ranks of Gods , in all Heathen Divines ; Immortall , Mortall ; so Biblius : Naturall , Politick ; so Tully : Celestiall , Terrestriall ; so Diodorus ( in the places prais'd before : ) to which Varro addes a third , Poeticall ; But These were but Pictures or Shadows of the former Reals . When Art had thus learn'd to Make more Gods then Nature could invent : while Men , Horses , Dogs 5 , did long to Die , and so be Deified : Lest the World should be confounded in its Vows to Namelesse Gods ; ( and Distinct Names , would quickly Fayle to so Numberlesse a Number . ) These Second Gods were wisely made to Share in Name 6 , as well as Nature , with the First , which were Naturall , Immortall , Celestiall Bodies , as was said before . Hence start up so many Celii , Saturns , Iupiters , Mercuries , &c. as were Infamous Famous men in AEgypt , Greece , or any Country else . Yet usually with this Decorum , ( first observ'd in Heaven ; ) the First Founder of any Family of Note , was forc'd a Name-sake upon Celius : The Next Heire on Saturn : the Third , on Iupiter : and so on , in Order of Heavenly Bodies . Nay yet more , These Men-Gods were , as the World was taught , at Death Translated to the Spheares of Those Starrs , whose Name they bore , or Nature most resembled , while here they lived 7 : Isis' Epitaph in Diodorus is not the Thousand instance might be given ; yet prove enough . Being Translated to Heaven , They were thought by some to commence Severall Degrees ; First Heroes , and then D●mons 8 : Though some , more nicely distinguish thus ; Daemons , were properly Naturall Intelligences , the True Genii of the Sphears and Starrs , never Tainted with Fleshy Bodies : But Hero's , were These Artificiall Deities , Snatcht up to Heaven out of Dead Bodies 1 . And from This doubtlesse sprang the Fables of so many Metamorphiz'd into Starrs and Heavenly Constellations ; which are more , then are leaves in Ovids Metamorphosis . Yea , so Deeply Rooted in Earth ( though their Tops were in Heaven ) were These Deastri ; that when Other better Deities , came to be known in the World ; Yet Superstition could not part with so Faire and Numerous an Off-spring : to detaine which , was at length Invented This Plot : that though These might not be made Termini Cultus : Yet they should still remaine as Media : Mediators 2 forsooth , between poore Living Men , and the Great Celestiall Gods ; that were too High , and Farr from any Familiar converse with Men . To These DEASTERS were made the First Images , Columns , Temples , and Idoll Altars 3 : All which were but as Traps to catch and hold some Godded-Soule ( for more familiar converse on Earth ) Charmed from Heaven 4 : For The Supream Celestiall Gods , neither could nor would , be so intrapt , as These good Godded-Soules ; that once knew how sweet it was , to play , and roule themselves in Earthly Bodies ; and so were kept in Heaven , Much against their wils : which in their wonted Liberty , much rather would have chanted to an Organ here below , then be ravisht with the Harmony of all the Spheares above . For ( besides the old Sweet Musick they were wont to have on Earth ; ) They found Heaven at length so crowded ; that ( though content to Sweat ) yet stay they could not , unless so contract , that a Milion might stand on the point of a Needle . Yea , and so , could scarce any place be left in Heaven , for Better ( I meane Worss ) Deasters , which in following Ages , came Thither , Hoping to find as much Ease and Rome in Heaven , as They had found or made in Earth . One of the First DEASTERS was MERCURY : Not that Late Grecian Boy of yesterday , But an Old AEgyptian as Diodorus ; or a Phenician Philistine , or Chananite , as Sanchun 5 , will have him . And if we place him first in Palestina , we doubt not but the Mediterranean Stream might with ease bring him thence , not only down the Ostia Nili , and Ostia Tibridis ; but also to most places of Europe , specially to Ilands , whose Seas are continued to the Mediterranean . Many Mercuries we find in old Historians ; and what was done by All , the Poets in a Rapsody , ascribe to One : thereby making him a most prodigious Monster , no Man ; much lesse a God : yet good enough for a Deaster . Of Five ( or more ) Mercuries , The most famous was the AEgyptian THEUT or THEOT , 6 ( for so they write him ; ) whence came the Month THOTH ; and whence perhaps came {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} , to be the commune Name of God , with Greeks ( whose Divinity was first AEgyptian : ) though I know both Plutarch and Plato too 1 otherwise derive the Greek {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} . A Great God to all AEgyptians , was this THEOT , whom old Greeks call {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} ( and by this Name often named in Eusebius 2 : ) Taught perhaps by Pythagoras , who ( alluding , as it may be , to this Great AEgyptian God ) was wont to call God {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} : which name of God , Plato could well Etymologise , when in the Great God he could find nothing but {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} , Vnum & Idem : While in Materials , scarce ought but {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} ; and in the best Spirituals else , much {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} and but a little {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} . Whence he came to know Parmenides ' meaning ( at which he startled so , when young ) who was wont to say , One was all , and all One ; meaning there was but One True Entity 3 , ( One , because Infinite ; ) All else , were but shadows of This One ; but in themselves {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} , Not True Beings , as Plato often speakes . Most think this AEgyptian THEUT , or First Mercury , the First Lawgiver 4 . Which may be true if taken cum grano salis ; For Tutor he was to Isis , who first governed by Written Laws , if Diodorus deceive us not . Hence is that in Her Epitaph , WHAT I BOUND , NONE COULD LOOSE 5 . This Mercury ( they say ) First Founded Schooles , Compos'd an Alphabet , and taught to speak with Grace , and Accent right ; Which Art he prescribed by Rules of Musick ; whose severall Tones ( the Three Best at least 6 . ) He found by comparing Summer with Winter in a meane proportion of Spring 7 : Which way I more admire then that of Pythagoras , who found all Musicall Proportions , by weighing the Smiths Hammers , which he heard make sweet consort , by knapping on the Anvill 8 . From his teaching to speak well , he was called Hermes ; because {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} : ( which Etymology Plato 9 might learne in every leafe almost of Homer . ) Hence in each Sacrifice , were Tongues sacred to Mercury ; While the Praeco cryed , Favete linguis 10 : which with them was that {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} of which Plato discourseth so Divinely . Hence was Mercury stiled God of Eloquence , and all Learning ; Patron of Schollers , and all Ecclesiasticall persons . Yea to make him Eloquence it selfe , seemed no Harsh Trope . And because Eloquence can insinuate it selfe into every man , and steale his Affections , his Heart , himselfe : Hence Mercury with all the Poets hath still Heard , Vafer , Versutus , Callidus , Fur , &c. Yea so Notorious a Theefe , that no sooner Borne , but in his Cradle , were found 11 , Mars Sword , Venus Girdle , Vulcans Tongs , Apollo's Harp , Iupiters Scepter ; Only He spared His Thunderbolts , because so Heavy and Hot , would burn his fingers , ( who ever dreaded Fire , as was said before ) and might roare so lowd , that all the Gods might wake , and so descry some of his Knaveries : For all could not be Seen or Known . SATURN with Poets , was King of Cre●t ; and being ●ranslated into Heaven ; There became One of Their First Deasters . Yet I find a SATURN much Elder , then That Cretian was , or could be : of whom Sanchu● at large 1 . There was of old ( saith he ) in Palestina , One called ELIOWN , Sirnamed {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} 2 Who , of his Wife Berith , be●●t Heaven and his Sister Earth ; These Two begat SATURN , sirnamed Ilus , and Israell ; with many mo , whe were all called Elohim , because Companions to SATURN sirnamed Ilus . But This SATURN Rebelling against his Father ; was at length so Straitned , that to make his Peace , He was forced to Sacrifice His own , and Only Son 3 . But after This Sacrifice , being translated into SATURNS ' Sphear , He soone became a God , &c. Yet , it seemes Hee left his Corps behind him , here ; to be imb●lmed by the Poets ; who , to preserve it incorrupt , corrupt it themselves , by stuffing it with Bitt'rest Spices 4 . Hence , with Them , He still smels of Rebellion against his owne Father , Whom , he bound ; Cruelty against his owne Sonns , whom he devoured : Yet , could not digest ; For , chancing at length to swallow a Great stone ( in sted of JUPITER ) He began to Vomit , and so was forc'd to cast up all his eaten sonns againe ; but yet much mangled and broaken , for such was the Blessing of His Teeth . To English This Poeticall Fable ; All flie to Allegories : Which indeed are a Panpharma●●n , able to c●re all Diseases ; and sure All , if This One , The Poeticall Phrensy . By SATURN , T●lly will understand Time 5 , Heavens Sonn , yet measuring ( and so limiting or binding ) Heaven it selfe ; Dovouring all his Sonns , being Edax Rerum ; yet bringing up all againe ; for , Corruptio Vnius est Generatio alterius . 6 But , of all Allegories in This , the Plat●●ick seemes most Divine : Their Generall Rule , for Poeticall Divinity , is This ; in Their scholia's on Plato●s Cr●tu●us . Poeticall Names of Station ( such as Vesta ) denote a Perman●nce of Essence in the True God ( whom to be One , and One only , They all acknowledge , When they bee serious and not minded to laugh , as Plato Himselfe speakes 7 ; ) Names of M●tion ( as Rea , Fluxus ) denote Divine E●●lux ad Extra : Names Masculine , Gods Power most Active . Feminine , His Fecundity to Others . CELIUS , SATURN , and JUPITER ( the Three First Great Gods , with Poets : the Three Highest Planets in Heaven ) are with Platonists , the Three distinct Hypostases ( or kinde of Persons ) which they find in All ( much more the First of all ) Intelligent Entities . Which Three , They expresse by the Sphears of Being ( or CELIUS ; ) of Knowledge ( or SATURN ; ) of Activity or JUPITER . These three Sphears we finde in our owne Soules ( as in all Intelligent Beings ) and call them ( to speake in Modern language , lest some should Understand me ) Essence , Vnderstanding , and Will . For , Will With us , is with Them but Activity ; the same , in Re , with Understanding ( as shall appeare anon ) and Both , the same with Essence in each Intelligent , much more the First , Entity . For , if there be Any Entity , wee must grant there is some , ( at least One ) Simple Entity ; else there must bee Infinite Compounds actually co-existing ( which the Masters dare not yeeld . ) That Simple Entity must be Infinite ; ( for , all Limitation speakes Composition ; * ) Therefore but One ; and yet This One , must be All Entity ( possible ; ) else not Infinite . Ergo , the First Entity must have Knowledge and Activity , ( else He hath not All Entity ) Yet in It , These Two must be the Same ; and Both , the same with Entity it selfe ; else It is not Simple Entity . But of This perhaps more anon . I proceed : CELIUS , Their First Hypostasis , is the Sphear of Being ; Essence in all Second Intelligents ; but , in the First , They chuse to call it Entity , rather then Essence , ( which , in the Schools , heares Entity limited to such or such , a Species ; but the First Being is Entitas Simplex , without any Restringent Essence 1 . ) Now , as the Highest Starry Sphear , is but One , and yet All ; ( a kinde of Infinite ) Containing in it All inferiour Beings , not only Locally , but Virtually ( if no more ; ) So , si licet parvis — ; for , this Sensible World is but a Shadow of That Supream , Intellectuall , Infinite ) That First Sphear of Being is One , yet truely All , because Infinite ; containing in it self All Entities ( possible ) yet as in One Entire Spheare ; and hence , say They , the Poets called it {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} , CELIUS , Heaven . Next within This Infinite Spheare , are circled {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} , as Plotinus speaks 2 . Those Second Gods ( sure , he meanes ) who with us are Intelligentiae . Next ( saith He ) is circled {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} ; consisting o● Three Lesser Orbs● {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} ; of These , the First and Best is still Concentricall to Celi●● ; but Reason and Fancy ( the two lower Orbs ) are , too too oft Excentricall . This he saw , who yet was but purblinde , and at best , but in Twilight , or Day-Dawning . This CELIUS must have in himself all Entity ; ( else not Infinite ) all perfections ; Therefore K●owledge , He must be Intelligent . And Having All within himselfe , Hee cannot but know all . For , I suppose ther 's nothing required to perfect Knowledg , but Presentia ( s●u una ) Objecti , ad Potentiam Scibilem , ( for I now will speak in their Dialect : ) and because Beings themselves are not in Us but by their Species ; hence our knowledge is so weake , and Imperfect . This Knowledge of himselfe , They call Reflectio in s●ipsum , which is the very Flower and Top of all Knowledge . CELIUS then Reflecting on Himselfe , Saw within Himselfe , His Owne Image ; Which Image so Begotten , These call SATURN ( and is usually stiled by them {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} 3 , ) on whom They say CELIUS is even Stampt , or Graven , as the Seale on the Signet ; and Hence , the Poets said , CELIUS was bound and cut by His Son SATURN . In This SATURN ( or Image of himself ; ) CELIUS Being Infinite ( and so all ) Entity ; must ( T●ey say ) needs See all severall Ideahs , or Species , which are possible in the Spheare of Entity : as Intelligens , Volens , Amans , Videns , Vivens , and the like ; which yet were summd up all into foure Generall Ideahs , Ens nudum , Vivens , Sentiens , and Intelligens 1 . SATURN thus with Them is The Sphear of Knowledge , or the Ideall World : in Whom Ideahs have Their First place ; and come thence , First into the SATURN ( or Vnderstanding ) of Created Spirits ; Then being Stampt on Severall Lumps of Matter ( as on Wax ) doe there beget the Proles of a Forme ( answer●ng to ●ts Idea in SATURN , as the Picture on the wax , to its Seale . ) This Forme was by Philosophers , well called a Species or {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} , for 't was but a Second Species , or Ideah , Resulting out of SATURN'S Ideahs , as the Species results from the Face to the Chrystall Glasse . But before These Ideahs ( or Sonns of SATURN ) came Thus out , on Matter ; They were First ( They say ) by a Reflex Act of Understanding , as it were swallowed by SATURN Himselfe , ( who looked on them all , as One entire Ideah in Re , Differing only Formally in His owne Vnderstanding . ) Then came out again as divided and broken 2 ; and so were stampt abroad on Matter , and there made , or begat Formes ; of which came This Fabrick , which we call The WORLD . This is the True Platonick Doctrine about Ideahs : which They never dreamt did Exist by themselves , seperate from Matter , ( as some fondly or ignorantly wrangle ; ) Except only in some Intelligent Spirit , which they called SATURN or Spheare of Vnderstanding ; Divine first ; and then Angelicall ; lastly That of Men 3 For Contarenus ( though a Learned man ) is much deceiv'd , in saying , Plato's First Ideall World , was the Angelicall Vnderstanding . In His Prima Philosophia . To the Comming out of These Ideahs from SATURN to Matter , Concurr Rhea ( Divine ●fflux ad Extra ) and JUPITER 4 , Who is Their Third Hypostasis , Activity , or Will ; comming from CELIUS ( Entity ; ) But through SATURN also , who is {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} Vnderstanding . This JUPITER ( Divine Will or Activity ) with Them was He that Made the World ; by stamping some of SATURNS Ideahs upon a rude indigested Moles of Matter , ( which most of Them ( also ) think , He first made out of Nothing . ) Hence all the Platonists use to call This Third Hypostasis , The Spirit or Soule of the World ; That Spirit They meane , That first Made , and now doth Actuate and Govern ; and ( as They too grosly thought ) informe and Animate , This Created World . So that SATURN , with Them was the Ideall Cause ( the Sampler , or Pattern ) according to which ; But JUPITER The Immediate Cause By whom , the World was made 5 . And Thus Phenicians AEgyptians , Grecians , Thuscans , ( all Nations ) were taught to call JUPITER ( the Third Hypostasis , Divine Will or Activity ) The Spirit , that Made the World . So , Speakes Philo , and Porphyry , of the Phenicians , and AEgyptians 1 ; so , Diodorus of AEgyptians and Grecians 2 ; and so , of the old Th●scans ( taught doubtlesse by Pythagoras ) Sencca ; They call JUPITER ( saith he ) Spiritu●● , Animum Mu●di , Ejusque Opific●m , cui proprie convenit Nomen Esse 3 . Hence came JUPITER to be more Known in the World , and more spoken of , by Poets , then either CELIUS or SATURN ; Both whom yet , They granted before JUPITER , in Nature and Time . Thus All Nations confesse , the World was Made by JUPITER ( the Third Divine Hypostasis : ) and the Platonists say , 'T was Made by chusing Some ( and but Some ) Ideahs out of SATURN ; and stamping These upon the Wax of Matter ( as Timeus speakes . ) Some Ideahs , and but Some : For , all could not come forth 4 , They being Infinite : which I must confesse I understand not . For , how could there be Infinite Ind●viduums in Each Species , and yet also Infinite Species ( For , of These only are the Divine Ideahs , as all confesse ; ) and yet but One Infinite ? And how Infinite Species , differing by Degrees of Entity , can be Producible , I yet could ne'r conceive : sith the Last Species ( if I may conceive a Last in Infinite ) must needs , have in it , Infinite degrees of Entity ; and so , indeed , be Infinite : And how Any Infinite may be , or conceiv'd to be , even in Mente Divinâ , possible to b●produced ; I yet see not . But Whether All SATURN'S Ideahs came abroad ; or whether only some came out ; and others not : also whether those that yet have not , may come , or might have come in infinitum ; I dispute not . Only , I see 't is a receiv'd Opinion among the Platonists , that JUPITER did some-how limit or binde SATURN , ( so also the Poets speake : ) as if Divine Will , by its Decree , did as it were , limit Divine Vnderstanding , or Omniscience . So that More Ideahs were , and are , Known by This , as Possible ; which yet Decree hath limited , and made non Futura . Hence Omniscience , or Simplex Intelligentia , of all Possibles ; is with them called SATURNS Law . But the Fore-sight of Those Things , which Decree hath chosen , out of that Infinite Sphear of Possibles , and made Futura ; is the Law of JUPITER 5 ; Which to bee the True Platonick Fate , Seneca perswades mee ( in the Places cited before ; ) though some following Stoicks , much abusde Themselves , and all the world with This ; because They understood it not . Any Mat●riall Thing of This Plato●ick Discourse ( or Paraphrase on P●eticall Divinity ) may cleerely be Found in Plotinus of the Three Hypostases : in Proclus on Parmenid , and Timeus● also His Theologia Platonica . Marsilius Ficin. on Plato's Crat●l●s , Mines , Gorgias , & Politicus : with Plato's Epis●les . Mirandula De Ente & Vno . Ficin. De Immortal , Anim. & on Plotinus . Rossell . on Pymander , &c. Certainly the Greatest , and the Freest Liberty , may well Consist with the Greatest , and Straitest Ne●essity : Not Coactive , at least not Violent ; but that Connate , Naturall ( I had almost said Moral ) Necessity , which each Being hath , to Act and Vent it selfe . Which Necessity hath not place only in Inanimats , ( Fire , Water , &c. ) which we call Naturall Agents ; but in All ; in Rationall I meane Intelligent , ) even Spirituall Entiti●s . Which will more cleerly appeare , by Examining , the Difference , Dependance , or other Relation , between the Platonick Celius , ( or Sphear of Being ) SATURN , or Knowl●dg● ; and JUPITER Their Sphear of Activity : or , to speak in Schoole Terms , between Intelligent Ess●nce , Vnderstanding , and Will ; for so I doubt not to translate their Iupiter , or Active Sphear . For , Will seemes nothing but Activity : A Rationall Will ( may I so speak ? ) A Rationall Activity . Action is so necessary a Companion to Entity , that all things seeme to have as much Activity , as Entity . Every Being is Active in its kind ; ●●d in Acting seems ambitious to vent and inlarge it selfe . As the Spring in a Watch ( newly wound up , ) cannot but spin it selfe out , wider and wider , till it fill its whole Ballance : So , every Being hath its Balance , its Spheare , through which Activity ( its Spring ) must untwist it self , till the Watch be quite down , or the String snapt asunder . Now , That Naturall Desire of Action , which we find in all , ( and call Instinct in some , but Naturall appetite , or Inclination , in Other Beings ) in Rationals , we call a Will : so that , the Phrase of Will is now restrict to Rationals , and These only , but not the Thing : for , might the Phrase Commence , I durst say , Every Being ( even a Stone ) hath as much Will , as Entity ; as much Desire , I meane , or Will to Act , and Vent it selfe . It would then be well discus'd , How or in What , the Will of Rationals , differs from the Will of other Beings ; Sith These also Will as , and as much , as Rationals ; except perchance , Having lesse Entity , they have also lesse Will , or Activity : for , different Degrees of Activity , make me much suspect , There are also Different Degrees of Entity ; even in those Individuums , or Species , which , the Masters teach us , to bee Equall . Is the Difference then in This ? That , Rationals , and these only , have Knowledge also , to Direct and Suspend their Will , or Activity : which else , of it selfe is as Blind as a Stones Will , ( or Appetite to move downward ) and would perchance stumble as oft on Evill as Good , were it not Directed by some Seeing , Knowing , Eye : Yea would of it selfe , I suppose , ever act ad idem , Eodem modo , ad extremum posse ; ( even as the Fires Will in Burning ) were it not as well Suspended , as Directed , by some Knowing Principle , or Act. And if so I cleerly see that Rationals are Free ; But how their Will , of it selfe , is Freer then a Stones Will , Videant alii . Even Those I meane , who make the Will & Vnderstanding , Two Faculties , Distinct in Re . If They be so ; how the Will can follow the Vnderstandings directing , or suspending Dictate ; and yet be Potentia , & Libera & Caeca , ( as the Masters teach , ) I could yet never learn . Violently Drawn , or Forc'd , it cannot be ; and be it selfe , Free , at least a Willing Will . Well then , It must Follow Freely , of it selfe ( I mean ) nullo cogente : and That Either , in a Morall Way ; ( as the Attentive Auditor to the perswasive Orator , Rapt with Freest Violence : ) or else Naturall : either Instinct ( for this is Highest ) or some tacite Sympathy , Occult ( yet Naturall ) appetite ; ( for , so we use to speak , when we would not understand Our selves . ) Of These , the last leaves the Will , no Freer then the Stone to its Centre , the Iron to the Load-stone ; Goodly Liberty ! the Midle , not Freer then the silly Lamb to its Dam : yea , & Instinct too , hath no place , but in Sensitives , at least ; ( for , who eversaid , a Stone moves by Instinct ? ) and so much as Sense , may not he granted to the Will , if it be Potentia prorsus Caeca , as They teach . Nor can it follow Morally , except it be more then Sensitive ; even a Knowing Faculty : for el●e it cannot apprehend those Morall arguments ( by which the Understauding swayes it ; ) but would stand Still , as demurely as the Will of a Stone , when the Orator perswades it to leap up , and become a Star , or Sarr's Intelligence . We conclude then , The Will cannot be Compel'd or Forc'd , with a Lucretian Rape ; and be Free at all : Nor be led , or drawn , only by Naturall appetite , Occult Sympathy ; and be Freer then a Stone : then a Lamb , a Calf , a Sparrow , if by bare Instinct : nor by Morall perswasion ( which sounds most of a Rationall Agent , or Patient ; ) but it also must be a Knowing , Vnderstanding Faculty : The same ( I meane ) cum Intellectu : Except perchance the Tott'ring Ship of Mans Soule , need Two Assisting Vnderstandings , ●o one Mast , ( like the Two Di●scuri , * ) to prevent feare of a Tempestuous Shipwrack ; which One of them , ( if alone ) might sadly preominace . Thus , while we must needs have the Will a Blind Faculty ; yet Free ; and Free in Following the Vnderstandings Dictates ; in Suspension , and Contradictiou of Acts ; and yet a Faculty really Distinct from Vnderstanding ; we must provide room for two Vnderstandings , ( two Candles in One Lanthorn ; ) or else we sweat in Vaine , we tire our selves ; And yet ( however ) in the int●rim , we lose our Will , ( poore Will ! ) at least our Liberty . O Divine Liberty ! How abstruce is thy Theory ; and yet thy Practise much more Difficult ! How Hard it is to Find thee ; yet much more Hard , to Keep , Vse , and Enjoy thee ! What shall we say then ? is Will , in all Agents , ( Naturall Animall , Rationall , ) Equall ; at least equally Free ? for , in each , in all , 't is but Activity ; which must needs still be Active , and Vent it selfe ad summum posse ; even till it fill the whole Area of its Sphear , ( or Balance ) of Entity . May we also say , Suspension , ( with all Contradiction of Acts , &c. ) which seemes an Index of more then common Liberty in Rationals ; Comes not from Will ( strictly so taken ) Which of it selfe would still Act ad extremum ; as well to This as That , to Evill as well as Good ; But from Knowledge , from Vnderstanding , ( I meane the Whole Soule ) which by its light , sees what is Good ; what inconvenient ; and so guides , quickens , or suspends its Acts : Where as Fire , and such like Agents , Act still on , forward , without a stop , without breathing ; because they have not , as Rationals , Oculatas Manus . For shall we say , Our Soule is , but as , a Seeing Hand , or Doing Eye ? or like Plato's Idea of a Good Prince , Philosophus Regnans , or Rex Philosophans ? While it seeth , perceiveth , ( so Philosophus ) 'tis Intellectus ; but while it Doeth , or Commandeth , ( so Rex , ) we call it Will . Its Mediat Acts , are Imperat : Immediat , We call Elicit● . Not that Vnderstanding and Will , are Two Things really Distinct ; but Both make , Both are , but One Soule , under Two Notions . Thus One and the same Commander , Sees his Enemy's approach ; Desires and Plots their Overthrow ; and Commands a Charge . In the First , he is as Intellectus Speculativus ; in the next Practicus , or perhaps Voluntas Eliciens ; in the last , Imperans : In Both , in all , Vna eademque Anima , Intelligens , Volens , ( id est , Agens . ) Yet , may the Names of Vnderstanding and Will , be still retain'd ; if , but to parallell those Two Noble , and truly Vitall Acts ; which we find in that Terrean Soule , that lump of living ( I had almost said Spirituall ) Flesh , which we call our Heart 1 . For , me thinks the Vnderstanding may be fitly cald , the Soule 's Diastole ; by which it sucks in , that pure blood of Truth ; which is concocted in Septo Anim● ; till ( being made true Vitall Spirits , of Morall Goodnesse , ) it be sent out again , by the Soule 's Systole , called Will : whence come all the Motions , or Pulses , which we find in our Morall Arteries . Yet , Both These Sines , s●all make up but One Heart , One Soule . On this Whole , One , Entire Soule ; Rayes of Light , darted from the First Light , ( yet now so Refracted , that they only make , the Soul's Galaxta , Reason . ) Compose Those Ideahs ; Which being drawn a new , by the Pencell of Sense ; and Flowred with Discurse , ( whence Truth results sometimes , like Sparks by knocking Flints ; ) Make up Those Animae Sidera , which we call Habits ; Morall , if of Doing ; Virtues if Well ; but if ill , we call them Vices : But Intellectuall , and Speculative , if of bare Knowing ; if of Directing ( by Knowledge ) towards Action , then we call them Intellectuall Practicall . Of These last , Prudence directs the Morall part of Every Act , ( in Object , End and Morall Circumstances : ) Art the Naturall . For , Both these Parts , have Place in Every Action ( that is Rationall , Human● , as we call it , and not only Hominis : ) and Both these , are directed by Practicall Habits . Whence Arts ( Gram. Rhet. Logick 2 : ) and Ethicks ( which is Prudentia Doctrin●li● , ) proceed by Rules and Pr●cepts ( Directing to speak well or do well ) not by Definitions , Divisions , &c. which belong , to Sciences perse , to Arts , but per accid . All Practicall Habits , are both Docentes & Vtentes ; ( Speculative , Docentes only : ) while the Soule Directs by light , 't is Habitus Docens ; while it Acteth , what is directed , Vtens : which last , if in the Morall part of any Act , seemes to me True Morall Virtue . In This , in All , SATURN directs JUPITER ; Knowledg , Action ; Vnderstanding , Will : or to speak more properly , one and the same Soule , directs its own Activity ( its JUPITER ) by its own Knowledge , or Sphear of SATURN . Our Discourse on SATURN hath been slow and tedious : But such is the Motion of this Planet . This may conclude All . Though SATURN and MERCURY could in re , never agree in Heav'n or Earth ; yet , the Platonists found a way to Reconcile them in Words and Shew : For with Them , They Both are {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} . But SATURN is {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} , Ratio : MERCURY {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} ●Oratio . by which last , They meant much more , then we by Speech : For , they say , MERCURY to SATURN , is Semen Ideale 1 : That Vis Prolifica , by which Ideahs comming out of SATURN , and stampt by JUPITER , on Matter ; do there beget the Embryon of a Forme ; which mature becomes {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} ; a Second Species ; or Ideah . Proles to one of SATURNS Sons , which are the first Ideahs , as was said before . So , that with Them the Vnderstanding ( whither Divin or Humane , ) is SATURN ; an Ideall World : Concepts , or Ideahs , ( drawn in this Vnderstanding ) are SA●URN's Sons : Words , Syllables and Letters , ( by which These Concepts or Ideahs come out , and are exprest abroad ; ) belong all to MERCURY . All this , They think stampt on the Genius of the Planet MERCURY ; which well aspected by SATURN , They say , gives Contemplation : by MARS , Action : with JUPITER , Both : But with VENUS Eloquence and Wit . Thus from a Man , a Philosopher , a Priest , a God 2 ; we are come againe to MERCURY a Wandring Star or Planet ; from whom , all Mercuries first came ; into whom , They were all Starrifi'd again , When Dead Men , but Living Deasters . FINIS . THE AUTHOR'S APOLOGY . * * Martial . Epigram . Innocuos Censura potest permittere Lusus ; — Lusimus Omnes : Et semel — Risit APOLLO . Notes, typically marginal, from the original text Notes for div A11276e-910 * Signifying Darknesse . * Astronomia & Astrologia . * This Map is fully represented in the Masque Vnmaskt . * Of this THVLE ; as of Saturn and M●rc●ries Right to it ; and quar●ell for it● a●e large Note● , both in the Margents of the Masque , and after the Masque . MARCH 1639. APRIL 1639. MAY 1639. JUNE . JULY . AUGUST . Through the ●est of 1639 and great Pa●t o● 1640. 1640. SEPTEMBER . * M●rs-Hill . S●e the Ma●gin●ll N●tes . pag 1. OCTOBER . NOVEMB●R , &c. Notes for div A11276e-2030 THE SPHEARS of HEAVEN , and GLOBE of EARTH . THE LITTLE WORLD , or ISLE of BRITAIN . 1 ●●●tain●●●lory . 2 A Gift f●om Hea●en . 1 A Greek wo●d , sig●ify●ng DARKNES . 2 NIGHT-WORK : b●ing also a desc●●ption of THVLE . In this Antim●●●●● inscribe● ΣKOTOS , is preshadowed the whole P●ot o● the Masque ( more particul●rly personated afterwards in severall Entries ) First , Saturne and Mercuries Quarrell , about the Northern THVLE ; and th●n the Pacification , interrupted awhile by MARS : but at length happily perfected by the Goodnesse of PHE●VS and his Royall PHEBE . 3 Saturne and Mercuries QVARREL . 4 Night-Owles . 1 When these Commotions seemed brought to their end , they here begin againe ; and Rose even in their Fall ( which is more cl●erly exprest anon , When MARS disturbs the First Pacification ; ) ●ut at length all is so well setled , that by some Divine Power , NIGHTS Da●ke intents , seeme Prevented rather then Interrupted . 2 At the end of these Commotions , the CAVSES petition PHEBVS for an Act of OBLIVION pag. 17. Even as the Athenians of old , after the Civill warre , called the Holy Warre , blotted out all , with a Law of Forgeting , entitled AMNHΣTIA . See T●u●●●d . Pa●s●n . Attic. and the S 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 on ●ris●●p● . Pl●t . & Pav . * These Ce●estiall H●roi●es , are ASTRONOMIA and ASTROLOGIA . For as a true Histo●y may ●epresent the Terrestriall , So these Two present the Celestiall Plot of this Masque of Heaven : Being the true place and motions of the Heavenly Bodies ( shadowed on earth ) through 1639 , 1640. &c. * Who were now to be Masquers with her Majesty , in this Masque of Heaven . * Who was already masked within the Sphears . * Heere They were hid in the Clouds ; and a sweet melting Eccho , began in Heaven , and thence being reflected through the whole Scene , made up the last verse FAIREST QUEENE . PHEBVS . IVPITER and MARS . PHEBE ; VENVS : Corona Bor●a , Lyra , Coma , &c. attending PHEBE . 1 In the bright Clouds of Heaven . 2 Rhodigin : Var● Lect● * March 25. 1639. the Sunne parted from the Moone ( the King of Heaven from His Q●eene ) and went Northward in the Ecli●tick ; Being then in ARIES the first of all the Nort●●rn Signes . How t●is ( a● a●l the rest ) was sha●owed o● e●●th , a●o●t t●at t●me , ●●lon●s to History to ●ecord , as in a true Terrestriall Map , parallell to this Celestiall . 1 Of this THVLE ; also of Saturn and Mercuries●ight to it , and Quarrell for it , are la●ge no●es annext to the end of the Masque . 2 The Signe of the Lion ( in Heaven ) ●s by all Astrologers made the proper Palace of t●e S●n , and so the Device of PHEBVS . 3 Divers times since 1637 was M●rcury the Planet driven out of AQVARIVS , SATVRNS house ( shado●ed here under the n●me of THVLE ) and Forced int●PISCES : which S●gne all Astrologers call Mercuries Fall . 4 MERCVRY Fa●ling into PISCES in March 1639 , seemes to appeale to the Su● ; who , was then in PISCES a So●t●ern Signe . 1 As soone as MERCVRY had thus f●llen and appea●ed , the Sunne presently left the Sout●e●n Signes , and advanced Nor●●wa●d in the Ecliptick : y●t in ●arrelike manne● , for ARIES the first of the North●rn signes ( into which the Sun then entred ) is by all Astrologers called the House of MARS , and so of Warre . 2 MARS then also became Northern ( both in Latitude and Longitude ) and went before the Sun toward GEMINI , MERCVRIES House . Yet by the way , lingred awhile in TAVRVS , VENVS House : but to his hurt ; for , TAVRVS is also called MARS Detriment . This is also Poeticall , alluding to t●e old Fab●e of MARS with VENVS taken ●y t●e Sun . 3 IVPITER ( with the Poets SATVRNS sonne ) the● followed the Sun in SAGITARIVS ( so at distance ) but with seeming Reluctancy , being Retrog●ade . 4 May 30● 1639. the Moon seemed to mediate a Peace between the SVN , SATVRN and MERCVRY : for , she aspected them all , on the same Day , in friendly Trine : and the Sun presently ( as reconciled ) smiled on SATVRN in the like Trine . At which SATVRNE was setl●d in his House & Ioy AQVARIVS : but MERCVRY in GEMINI ; under which , Astrol●gers pl●ce LONDON and great part of England . The rest is a Maske , but This a Veyle ; covering Ianus ' head with two Faces : of which , one seemes to smile ( Et quis ●uit alt●r ? ) as if its eye glaunc'd at an old ●nglish C●medy , en●itl●d , WHEN YOV SE ME , YOV KNOW ME , &c. * June 1639. Qui non odit , amet tua Carmina 〈◊〉 : Mart. Epigram . * July August , &c. 1 Ridentem dic●re verum , Quid v●tat ? {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} . ' ●is true , that after a f●w Smiles in Iune 1639 , those Planets continue ●rowning on SATVRN all the rest of that yeare , and most of the next , viz. 1640. But what the Issue will be , appears anon , by the Entri●s follow●ng the Arraignment of MARS for disturbing the Fi●●t Pacification . But , how these mot●on● of He●ven , were ●●adowed upon ●●rth all that time , b●longs to the Terr●striall ( or Historicall ) Map , to represen● . 1 In Iune . 163● . the Sun came to CANCE● ( called the Tropick , because he there begins to turn southward again in the Ecl●ptick ) but came not in●o LEO his wonted P●lace ●ill Iu●y : CANCER being his Hig●est Aux or A●oge●m , s●ems a Triumphant Chariot . 2 IVPITER followed him ( being Relr g●ade ) and was 〈…〉 a gracious 〈…〉 Sun b●●ng i● CANCER whic● all Astr●●oge●s ●a●l IVPITERS EXALTATION . 3 MERCVRY was Nort●ern , A●rill and May , but in I●ne be●ame Sout●ern , followi●g the Sun●●ll he rest in LEO , where he was graciously aspected both by Sun and Mo●n , and then became Northe●n againe . 4 Here ( as in the ●ormer Interlude ) are ●hadowd some unexpected Commotions strangely disturbing the First Pacification : These are raised by MARS the Poe●icall God of warre , Enimy to all peace ; and in Heaven the most fiery Planet . 5 MARS being in GE●MINI , MERCVRE'S H●use , APRIL and MAY , 1639 , 〈◊〉 here aspected by SATVRN ; and towards the beginning of IVNE , He is driven thence : and seem●ng inraged , Enter● CANCER the MOONS House : Put in CANCER the MOON opposed Him● as a●peares by the n●xt Entry ( in This Mas●●e ) which is to ●e ref●rd to the Motio●s of t●e ●eave●l● Bodies , throug● IVNE , IVLY , and the rest of 16●9 . 1 This Op●●sition of ●ARS was but two or three dayes a●ter the MOON had mediated Peace between the SVN , SATVRN and M●●CVRY , about the beg●●ning of IVNE 1639. 2 Presently a●ter T●is ●●●●osition MARS Fe●l Com●●st ( and so was Hid by the Sun-Beams ) in CANCER ; Which Signe is with all Astrologers , cald MARS FAL. 3 When MARS thus Fell in CANCER , VENVS was there : but as affrighted , Fled thence into LEO the SVNS Pala●e , seeming to prepa●e for His Returne , which was in IVLY 1639. 4 In SEPTEMBER MARS was set free ●rom the Sunn's●eames , in LIBRA ; which is the House of VENVS , MARS Constant ●riend , with all the Poets . 5 MARS thus Free ●rom Combustion , &c. Entreth LIBRA , VENV'S House : and thence aspecteth SATVRN and MERCVRY , OCTOB. 1639. Which seems to inrage them ; for soon afte● , They Frown in a bitter Quartile : which Frown MARS so Foments by divers Aspects , that ME●CVRY being met by SATVRN , FEB . 1640. is Driven again out of AQVARIVS ( SATVRN'S House , sha●owed he●e by THVLE ) into PISCES , which signe is wi●h ●ll Astrolog●rs MERCVRIE●S FALL . 6 M●●cury mee●s t●e Sun in Pis●●s & so seems to beg his help : Who ( ere long ) advanceth ●ort●●a●d●●gain ; & in his way , is oppos'd by Sat●rn & Mars ; Who Both also oppose Mercury . Aug. & Sept. 1640. 7 But in Sept. the Moon seem's again to med a●Peace smi●ing on the Sun , Venus , Satu●n and Mars , ( in a Trine ) all in 〈◊〉 . 1 Towards the end of Sept. 1640. Most of the great●r He●venly Bodies a tend the SVN , in the la●ter ●egrees of LIBRA , The Zod●aks North Limit ( ●hat old Hier●gyphick of Iustice & Iudg●ment ) Which with all Astrologers are called Termini Martis , and so here , MARS Hill , or A●eopagus , ( The great Iudg●ment Seat in Athens ) so called , ●ecause MARS was there Tried by his 12 Peeres : of which , Pausanias in his Atticks . 2 In Octob. and Novem● . The SVN takes possession of SCORPIO , the H●use and Ioy of MARS , who is t●us di●poyled● and forfeits all to PHEBVS . 3 Divers Ti●es thr●ugh Sept. Octob. and Novemb. 1640. The MOONE mediates b●twe●n the SVN , SATVRN and MERCVRY , seeming e●rn●stly to desire Peace . 4 In Octo● . 1640. The SVN l●●ves LIBRA ( which is the Bound , or Limit to the Northe●n Signes ) and commeth more and more Southward in in the Ecliptick . 1 This alludes to the Sun's Eclipse May 22. 1639. 2 At these words , began PHEBVS to appeare at the North Horizon , mounting up with Orient Rayes , like the Rising Sun . 3 In Octob. 1640. The SVN comes Southward in the Ecliptick : Having left the Northern Signes at the Autumnall Equinoctiall . 1 About the beginni●g of N●vember 1640 , The SVN in Heaven , comes ( attended with most of the greater Heavenly Bodies ) into SAGITTARIVS , which is with all Astrolog●rs , IVPITERS House or Ha●l ; which with Poets was the Great Councell-House for al● the Gods . 2 In D●c●mb . The SVN b●gins to ●mi●e o●●ATVRN in a Sectile ; which favour increaseth , ●ore and more , till about the beginning of ●●bruary , SATVRN waits upon the SVN who smi●'s on him , ( as pe●fectly reco●●iled ) in a most Gracious Asp●ct . MERCVRY also is neere , but in PISCES , and com●ust . 3 Thus again in F●bruo●y 1642 is a Grea●Me●ting of ●ost of the Heavenly Bodies . But in PISCES . In PISCES also is a ●arr gr●ater Meeting of all the ●la●e●s ( but MARS spe●i●lly SATVRN and IVPIT●R , wayting on SVN and MOON 〈◊〉 . 1643 And if THIS MOST GREAT CONIVNCTION be not Attended with most notable Events ( m●st probably for much good through greatest Part of Europe : All Mathematici●ns must conf●ss , They yet understand not , the Di●lect of Heaven . 1 This was preshadowed i● the Antimasque of Night and Day Da●ing : where , af●er Night was cha●ed away , y●t SILENCE and OBLIVION , ( among H●r Attendants ) were still detained as Foyles to grace the following S●ene of Glorious Brigtn●ss● : This alludes also to the ol●Athenian AMNHΣTIA , o● which b●fore in the marginall n●tes , pag. 4. 2 ARIES , MARS House , is by all Astrologers called the SVN'S Glory or Exaltation . 3 CANCER where MARS Fell Combust , pag. 13. ( and so a Captiv● to the SVN ) i● the MOONS Ho●se , and the SVNS Aux or Triumph . 4 LIBRA , VENVS House , ( which MARS Entred after His Release , and thenc● incensed SATVRN , pag. 13 ) is by all Astrologers c●ll●d SATVRN'S Exaltation or Honour : as app●●res by the Scheam a●nexed to the end of the Masque , pag. 19. * Erit Nubecula fors●n , non Nub●s . 1 This alludes to the Winter Solstice , in which Heaven se●ms to Stand Still a while , while the dayes neith●r increase nor decrease Sensibly : Hence it is called the Solstice , or Sun's Standing Still . Notes for div A11276e-13820 1 Campanell . Astrol. cap. 7● Origan . De Effectib . Astr. Iunctin . Isag. Astrol. cap. 9. Magin . Prol. Ephem . cap. 21. Pitat . introduct. . Astr. pag. 14. with many more . 2 The latter degrees of LIBRA are called Termini Martis ; and therefore in the Masque , Areopagus or Mars ' Hill . pag. 14. 3 On earth THVLE , as appeares in the following Notes , pag. 22. Notes for div A11276e-14340 1 Mer●ator with Hond . Cambdens ●rit. in His North Isles . 2 Ficin. Prolog. in Plotin. Enead . 2. l. 3. 3 Ovid . Fast. 1. Virg. AEnead 8. 4 Lucian Dialog. Apoll. & Vulcan . 5 Of which , see in the ●●squ● , p●g . 8. 6 Eu●eb. Pr●p . lib. 1. ●ap . 17. Plutar●h . Defect . Oracl . & of the Face in the Moone . Cam●den , Brit. Pompo● , Mel. MERCVRIE'S NEW COMMISSION for THVLE . 1 ☉ The Sun : ☽ The Moon : ♀ Venus : ☿ M●rcury . 2 This is Mercurius Princi●iatus ( as th●y call it ) For Mer●ur●us Princ●pians is one of t●ose T●ree Active Pri●ci●les in each ●ody ; which are SAL , SVLPHVR , and MERCVRY . SAL whence comes Taste ) represents ●arth in the Gr●at Wo●ld . SVLPHVR , Fire , ( hence S●ell ; and ●rom SAL and SVLPHVR , so or so mixt , comes such or such a Colo●r . MERCVRY● like Ayre and Water ( moyst and cold ) must st●ll bed●w the SAL a●d SVLPHVR , else they crumble into Atoms : for , N●turall Heat must have Foment from Radicall Moystu●e ; to supply whi●h , some s●eke ●o finde an Artificial●●alsom● of Nature . 3 Sr. Fr. Bacon , Na● , Hist. Cent , 4. Exp. 327. Fernel . de abdit . Rer●m Ca●sis , 4 G●ber A●●bs : Raymund Lull : &c. 3 Sr. Fr. Bacon , Na● , Hist. Cent , 4. Exp. 327. Fernel . de abdit . Rer●m Ca●sis , 5 Ve●steg : Antiquit. Cambd. &c. 6 See Scaliger on Manil. 7 As appeares by the Scheam●of He●ven , annext to the ●n● of the Masque , pag. 19. 1 To that Great Con●u●ct●o● of SATVRN and IVPITER , ( with the rest of the P●anets , but MARS ) in PISCES ●eb . 1643. of w●ich , before in the Ma●que Vnmaskt , pag 16. & p 24. 2 S●e the place and motions of these Planets , in Ianuary 1638. also Ianuary and March , 1639. 3 In March , 1639. see the Masque pag. 8 , & 9. 4 See Predict . Par Iea● Pe●it , pour l'Annee Mil six cens quarante , & quaran●e & un : Impri●è à Troyes 1625. & Predictions Admirables de Michel Nostradamus . Centur. XI . Imp●im● à Paris , 1605. 5 See Ian. Feb. 1640. 1641. 1642. 1643. This last , viz. Feb. 1643 is the most notable Conjunction , yet ever was . 6 Let Astronomers examine the Motions of these two Planets , through December 1637. and Iannuary 1638. * Apertio Portarum ( of which Astrolog●rs speake so much ) is a great Crisis of Heaven , attended with some notable Alterat●ons of Ayre &c. by some great Aspect b●twee●e Planets of Contrary Houses : Chiefly betweene the Sun , Moone , and Saturn ; whose Houses in Heaven are op●osite to the Sun and Moones . Such a Great Apersion will be in Feb. 1641. but a Greater in 1643. * Ficin. Prolog. in Plotin , Enead . 2. lib. 3. cap. 1. * Suff●ci●nt instance of this may be the stormes &c. like to attend the Opposition 〈◊〉 Mercury , by ●atu●n ( 〈◊〉 Ma●s ) about Aug. 16● . 1 Pic. Mirand. in Astrol. lib. 17. cap. 5. 1 Pic. Mirand. in Astrol. lib. 17. cap. 5. 1 Pic. Mirand. in Astrol. lib. 17. cap. 5. 2 Verstegan . A●tiquit . 3 Plutarch Symp. l. 4. qu. 5. 4 Aristoph , Aves . Tull. 2d Leg. 5 Hence come Those Altars to Strang● Gods : of which Paulan , Atticks . Laert. Ep●menid . Philostrat , Apolon . &c. * Xenoph. de Pulit , Athen. 6 Preparat . lib. 1. 7 Diodor , lib. 1. cap. 1.2.6 . & lib. 5. cap. 1. 8 Sr , W. Ral. Purcha● . Genebrard &c. 9 Diod. lib. 1. pt. 1. cap. 2. Plat , Chratyl . Plutarch . Philos. Op●n as among the Iewes , Maim●●●d . Mor N●b . lib. 3. c. 30. and This Ranck of Gods the Iewes called The Host of Heaven . 9 Diod. lib. 1. pt. 1. cap. 2. Plat , Chratyl . Plutarch . Philos. Op●n as among the Iewes , Maim●●●d . Mor N●b . lib. 3. c. 30. and This Ranck of Gods the Iewes called The Host of Heaven . 10 Plutarch , as before . 11 From the Greek {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} to Flow . 12 Plutarch , of the Moones Spots . 13 Euseb. prep. lib. 1. cap. 9. 1 The Platonists rather thought these Genii of the Spheares &c Informing Souls ; but the Peripateticks , & some others , would have them Seperate Intelligences . 2 Belus is thought to bee the First of these Men-Gods ; whence the Iewes call●d all such Baalim , from B●lus the first Baal . 3 Yet at death so usuall , that {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} and {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} , to Die , and to be consecrate or made a God , are Terms almost Synonymous in old Greeks : Philo Byb . Diodor. Porphyr● Lucian , &c. 4 This second rank of Men-Gods was derided by all the world almost ; yea by those that could well digest the Former Naturall Gods or Armies of Heaven . Xenophon de Dictis So ratis : and the Scholiast on Aristop●anes Nubes . 5 Euseb. Prep. lib. 2. cap. 1. 6 Diodor. lib. 1. cap. 1.2 . T●ll . de Nat. Deorum &c. Plutarch Defect . Oracl . 7 Hence most Emphatically were these Dii mino●um Gentium called DEASTRI GOD-STARS ( men deified into Stars ) and hence perhaps came As●er to bee T●rminus minuens , as in Philosophast●r , Grammaticaster , &c. 8 Plutarch Desect . Oracl . Plutarch Pl●cit , P●ilos . lib. 8. Hesiod Op. Di. l , 1. vers , 121. 1 And ●or this were they called Dii Animal●s , Manii , &c. Tull. de ●egib . & Servius in Indice . Turnebus in Adv●●sar . lib. 19. cap. 29. 2 Plato in Chrat●l : Apul : de Daemon , Socrat. Rossel . in Pimand : lib. 2. com : 9. qu : ● . Plu●tarch as before . 3 H●rmes As●lepi●d . Euseb. Pr●p . ● . 5. cap. 2.8 , 9. Herodot : Clio. 4 For , Carmina de Caelo possunt d●duc●re Lunam . 5 Euseb. Prep. lib. 1. cap. 10. 6 The First AEgyptian Month. 1 Plut. Philos. Placit. Plat. Cratyl . 2 Prep. cap. 10. 3 Plato in his Parmenid● Timeus : Chratylus , &c. 4 Plat. Minos wi●h Ficin : 5 Diod : Sicul : lib. 1. 6 Diapason : Diapente : Epitrite . 7 Rossell in Pimand . 8 Ficinus on Timeus . 9 Plat : Chratyl : 10 Scholiast : in Aristoph : Plut. & Nub. 11 Lucian Dialog: Apoll : Vulcan . 1 Euseb. Prep. lib. 1. cap. 10. speaking ●f Phenicia Theolog. 2 Most High : which Phrase may occasion his Reader , to compare this History , with some of the Iews Records of their Elohim , and his B●rith , whence came Heaven and Earth , ●srael , &c. 3 Hence perhaps might come that ●arbarous Sacrifice , of Sonns to Saturn● first began by Phenicians , thence con●inued by Carthaginian Po●●i ( Plat. in Mino● , & Euseb. Prep l 4. c. 16. ) In which Plutar●h c●uld find the etymology of Top●et , while he o●se●ved Hidous Drummings , made b● that which the Iews cald Toph , used to drown the s●d yellings of Mo●ochs bloody Sacrifice . 4 For , su●h would best imbalm : as Aristot. Di●dor . and ●lutarch●bserve . 5 Which Tuly learnt from Plutarchs Philos. quest . where {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} & {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} are thought n●●re of K●n● . 6 Astrolegers salve all thus : with them Saturn is Malign●n● , and bindes or hinders H●aven's good influence ; killing all ●is Sons , to whom he is Hor●scopa●l : yet he is also boun● or limited , by Iu●iter , ( the next Planet below ●im ) whose good Rayes temper Saturn . 7 Plat. Epist. a● Dionys. * For , let us inq●●re why a Man is not also an abstract Intelligence : yea why not All Entity ? sure ●ither because he cannot , or el●e because he will not : ( he will be a Man , and nothing els● , nothing more . ) Both these Reasons imply Composition in Man : for , if Mans ●ssence , Power , and will , we●e Prorsus Idem● one of them could not bound or limit the oth●r . 1 But all Second Beings are said to bee compound●d of Es●e ( Entity ) and Ess●ntia , which is such or ●uch a Restring●n● , limi●ing to such or ●uch a Speci●s : only the First , is purely Tra●sc●●de●t . 2 En●ad , 6. lib. 9. cap. 8. 3 Insomuch that a great Platonist●eading that Phrase in a Div●ne writer ; said , he stole it from his Master Plato : as Euse●ius reports in hi●Prep . 1 From these foure ( or else from the foure Metaphy●●call Ideahs , Ens , V●um , V●●um , ●onum ) ●ome Platonists think the First Caus● , in all Languag●s , is sti●ed ●y a ●etragramm ( or Name with fou●e Letters● ) of which Fici●us oft discourseth , ●n Plato's C●ratylus and other places . 2 Hence the Poets sai● , Saturn first Eat down all His Sons : But cast them up again , yet much broken and mangled : 3 That P●ato hel●thus , and but thus , of Ideahs ; is cleere by his owne Parmenides , Phedo , Phedrus and Timeus : also by P●utarchs Philos : Opin : lib. 1. cap. ● . & cap : 10. who tels us Aristotle denied Plato's Ideahs ; because , denying that the World was created : he kn●w not what Ideahs should or could doe in the Divine Vnderstanding . 4 Hence the Poets say , IVPITER and RHEA , Bound and cut SATVRN , and fo●ced him to bring up His Dev●ured and mangled Sons . 5 Thu● they express● thems●lves CELIVS made the Wo●ld . Like SATVRN , But by IVPITER : They mean His will or Activity wrought acco●ding to t●e Ideahs Drawn in His Vnderstanding . 1 Euseb. Preparet . 2 Diodor. l. 1. cap. 2. 3 Senec. Nat. Q●est . & De Benefic . 4 Which the Poets intimated by saying SATVRNS Sonns came out cut , b●oken , and mangled . 5 Pla● . Min. Go●g . Po●it . with F●c●n . * See on Argonaut : Apolo . the Scholiast , that is {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} . 1 Our Heart hath two Sines , and two chiefe Ac●s or Mo●ions : at the Right Sine it sucks from ●h●Liver pure Blood , and Na●u●al● S●irits ( by its Diastole . ) The Bloud and Spi●i●s ( so suc●● in ) stay a while in the middle Val'ee , which ●hey call Sept●● Cor●is● there meeting wit● pure aire ( suckt in f●om the Lungs ) are all concocted into Vitall Spir●●● ; And These are ●ent ou● ( through all the Arterie● ) by the Hear●s Systole : whence comes our ●ulse . 2 All ●ur Acts are {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} or {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} . This is ●i●ec●ed by M●c●anick Art●● That by Li●erall : which are only Three ; M●thematicks being pa●tly Scie●●e● , partly Mechanick Arts . 1 Plotin. En●●d 3. lib. ● . wi●h Ficinus . 2 For , All These , He was : See Ross●ll , on Py●●●d . 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incomplete or missing word on page 18-a, word 16099: X● incomplete or missing word on page 18-a, word 16356: Po●ticall untranscribed text in non-Roman alphabet at word 16378 on page 18-a incomplete or missing word on page 18-a, word 16796: Celi●s known defects on page A11276-018-b incomplete or missing word on page 18-b, word 16948: G●nius incomplete or missing word on page 18-b, word 16968: Th●se incomplete or missing word on page 18-b, word 17054: ●re incomplete or missing word on page 18-b, word 17158: Rif● incomplete or missing word on page 18-b, word 17256: ●eare incomplete or missing word on page 18-b, word 17705: D●mons known defects on page A11276-019-a untranscribed text in non-Roman alphabet at word 18453 on page 19-a known defects on page A11276-019-b untranscribed text in non-Roman alphabet at word 18489 on page 19-b untranscribed text in non-Roman alphabet at word 18525 on page 19-b untranscribed text in non-Roman alphabet at word 18566 on page 19-b untranscribed text in non-Roman alphabet at word 18592 on page 19-b untranscribed text in non-Roman alphabet at word 18609 on page 19-b untranscribed text in non-Roman alphabet at word 18623 on page 19-b untranscribed text in non-Roman alphabet at word 18632 on page 19-b untranscribed text in non-Roman alphabet at word 18698 on page 19-b untranscribed text in non-Roman alphabet at word 18932 on page 19-b untranscribed text in non-Roman alphabet at word 18976 on page 19-b known defects on page A11276-020-a incomplete or missing word on page 20-a, word 19185: Cre●t incomplete or missing word on page 20-a, word 19189: ●ranslated incomplete or missing word on page 20-a, word 19220: Sanchu● untranscribed text in non-Roman alphabet at word 19256 on page 20-a incomplete or missing word on page 20-a, word 19268: be●●t incomplete or missing word on page 20-a, word 19482: imb●lmed incomplete or missing word on page 20-a, word 19623: Panpharma●●n incomplete or missing word on page 20-a, word 19627: c●re incomplete or missing word on page 20-a, word 19646: T●lly incomplete or missing word on page 20-a, word 19782: Plat●●ick incomplete or missing word on page 20-a, word 19802: Plato●s incomplete or missing word on page 20-a, word 19803: Cr●tu●us incomplete or missing word on page 20-a, word 19816: Perman●nce incomplete or missing word on page 20-a, word 19855: M●tion incomplete or missing word on page 20-a, word 19864: E●●lux known defects on page A11276-020-b untranscribed text in non-Roman alphabet at word 20445 on page 20-b untranscribed text in non-Roman alphabet at word 20463 on page 20-b untranscribed text in non-Roman alphabet at word 20495 on page 20-b incomplete or missing word on page 20-b, word 20502: o● incomplete or missing word on page 20-b, word 20505: Orbs● untranscribed text in non-Roman alphabet at word 20506 on page 20-b incomplete or missing word on page 20-b, word 20523: Celi●● incomplete or missing word on page 20-b, word 20635: K●owledge incomplete or missing word on page 20-b, word 20668: s●u incomplete or missing word on page 20-b, word 20722: s●ipsum untranscribed text in non-Roman alphabet at word 20764 on page 20-b known defects on page A11276-021-a incomplete or missing word on page 21-a, word 20860: T●ey incomplete or missing word on page 21-a, word 21037: answer●ng incomplete or missing word on page 21-a, word 21039: ●ts untranscribed text in non-Roman alphabet at word 21067 on page 21-a incomplete or missing word on page 21-a, word 21410: ●fflux untranscribed text in non-Roman alphabet at word 21442 on page 21-a known defects on page A11276-021-b incomplete or missing word on page 21-b, word 21648: Th●scans incomplete or missing word on page 21-b, word 21664: Spiritu●● incomplete or missing word on page 21-b, word 21667: Mu●di incomplete or missing word on page 21-b, word 21670: Opific●m incomplete or missing word on page 21-b, word 21885: Ind●viduums incomplete or missing word on page 21-b, word 21991: b●produced incomplete or missing word on page 21-b, word 22241: Mat●riall incomplete or missing word on page 21-b, word 22245: Plato●ick incomplete or missing word on page 21-b, word 22251: P●eticall incomplete or missing word on page 21-b, word 22271: Timeus● incomplete or missing word on page 21-b, word 22282: Crat●l●s incomplete or missing word on page 21-b, word 22293: Epis●les known defects on page A11276-022-a incomplete or missing word on page 22-a, word 22337: Ne●essity incomplete or missing word on page 22-a, word 22407: Entiti●s incomplete or missing word on page 22-a, word 22441: Knowl●dg● incomplete or missing word on page 22-a, word 22460: Ess●nce incomplete or missing word on page 22-a, word 22535: ●●d known defects on page A11276-022-b incomplete or missing word on page 22-b, word 23245: el●e incomplete or missing word on page 22-b, word 23406: ●o incomplete or missing word on page 22-b, word 23414: Di●scuri incomplete or missing word on page 22-b, word 23533: int●rim known defects on page A11276-023-a incomplete or missing word on page 23-a, word 23876: Elicit● incomplete or missing word on page 23-a, word 24064: Anim● incomplete or missing word on page 23-a, word 24116: s●all incomplete or missing word on page 23-a, word 24396: Human● incomplete or missing word on page 23-a, word 24433: Doctrin●li● incomplete or missing word on page 23-a, word 24440: Pr●cepts