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A51304 The immortality of the soul, so farre forth as it is demonstrable from the knowledge of nature and the light of reason by Henry More ... More, Henry, 1614-1687. 1659 (1659) Wing M2663; ESTC R2813 258,204 608

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separate may figure the Aire into shape and speak through it Quare igitur Intelligentiae moventes corpora coelestia haec facere non possunt cum suis instrumentis quae tot ac tanta possunt quae faciunt Psittacos Picos Corvos Merulas loqui And a little after he plainly reasons from the power the Intelligencies have of generating Animals that it is not at all strange that they should raise such kinde of Apparitions as are recorded in History But if these Celestial Intelligencies be confined to their own Orbs so as that no secondary Essence reach these inferiour Regions it is impossible to conceive how they can actuate the Matter here below But if there be any such essential emanations from them whereby they actuate the Matter into these living Species we see in the World of Men and Brutes nothing hinders but the same emanations remaining may actuate the Aire when this earthly fabrick fails and retain the memory of things transacted in this life and that still our Personality will be conserved as perfect and distinct as it was here 10. But this conceit of Pomponatius is farre more foolish then theirs that make onely one Anima Mundi that passes through all the Matter of the World and is present in every place to doe all feats that there are to be done But to acknowledge so many several Intellectual Beings as there be fancied Celestial Orbs and to scruple or rather to seem confident that there are not so many particular Souls as there be Men here on Earth is nothing but Humour and Madness For it is as rational to acknowledge eight hundred thousand Myriads of Intellectual and Immaterial Beings really distinct from one another as eight and an infinite number as but one that could not create the Matter of the World For then two Substances wholly independent on one another would be granted as also the Infinite parts of Matter that have no dependence one on the other Why may not there be therefore infinite numbers of Spirits or Souls that have as little dependence one on another as well as there should be eight Intelligencies whenas the motions and operations of every Animal are a more certain argument of an Immaterial Being residing there then the motions of the Heavens of any distinct Intelligencies in their Orbs if they could be granted to have any And it is no stranger a thing to conceive an Infinite multitude of Immaterial as well as Material Essences independent on one another then but two namely the Matter and the Soule of the World But if there be so excellent a principle existent as can create Beings as certainly there is we are still the more assured that there are such multitudes of spiritual Essences surviving all the chances of this present life as the most sober and knowing men in all Ages have professed there are CHAP. XVII 1. That the Authour having safely conducted the Soule into her AErial condition through the dangers of Death might well be excused from attending her any further 2. What reasons urge him to consider what fates may befall her afterwards 3. Three hazzards the Soule runs after this life whereby she may again become obnoxious to death according to the opinion of some 4. That the aerial Genii are mortal confirmed by three testimonies 5. The one from the Vision of Facius Cardanus in which the Spirits that appeared to him profest themselves mortal 6. The time they stayed with him and the matters they disputed of 7. What credit Hieronymus Cardanus gives to his Fathers Vision 8. The other testimony out of Plutarch concerning the Death of the great God Pan. 9. The third and last of Hesiod whose opinion Plutarch has polisht and refined 10. An Enumeration of the several Paradoxes contained in Facius Cardanus his Vision 11. What must be the sense of the third Paradox if those AErial Speculatours spake as they thought 12. Another Hypothesis to the same purpose 13. The craft of these Daemons in shuffling in poysonous errour amongst solid Truths 14. What makes the story of the death of Pan less to the present matter with an addition of Demetrius his observations touching the Sacred Islands neare Britain 15. That Hesiod his opinion is the most unexceptionable and that the harshness therein is but seeming not real 16. That the AEthereal Vehicle instates the Soule in a condition of perfect Immortality 17. That there is no internal impediment to those that are Heroically good but that they may attain an everlasting happiness after Death 1. WE have now maugre all the oppositions and Objections made to the contrary safely conducted the Soule into the other state and installed her into the same condition with the AErial Genii I might be very well excused if I took leave of her here and committed her to that fortune that attends those of the Invisible World it being more seasonable for them that are there to meditate and prefigure in their mindes all futurities belonging to them then for us that are on this side the passage It is enough that I have demonstrated that neither the Essence nor Operations of the Soule are extinct by Death but that they either not intermit or suddainly revive upon the recovery of her aiery Body 2. But seeing that those that take any pleasure at all in thinking of these things can seldome command the ranging of their thoughts within what compass they please and that it is obvious for them to doubt whether the Soule can be secure of her permanency in life in the other world it implying no contradiction That her Vital Congruity appropriate to this or that Element may either of it self expire or that she may by some carelesness debilitate one Congruity and awaken another in some measure and so make her self obnoxious to Fate we cannot but think it in a manner necessary to extricate such difficulties as these that we may not seem in this after-game to loose all we won in the former and make men suspect that the Soule is not at all immortal if her Immortality will not secure her against all future fates 3. To which she seems liable upon three accounts The one we have named already and respects an intrinsecal Principle the Periodical terms of her Vital Congruity or else the Levity and Miscarriage of her own Will Which obnoxiousness of hers is still more fully argued from what is affirmed of the AErial Genii whose companion and fellow-Citizen she is whom sundry Philosophers assert to be Mortal The other two hazards she runs are from without to wit the Conflagration of the World and the Extinction of the Sun 4. That the AErial Genii are mortal three main Testimonies are alledged for it The Vision of Facius Cardanus the Death of the great God Pan in Plutarch and the Opinion of Hesiod I will set them all down fully as I finde them and then answer to them The Vision of Facius Cardanus is punctually recited by his son Hieronymus in his
of the Platonists unless they should speak of that particular Order themselves were of for it is likely there may be as much difference in their ages as there is in the ages of several kinds of Birds and Beasts Thirdly That our Souls are so farre mortal as that there is nothing proper to us remaining after death Fourthly That they were nearer allied to the Gods then we by farre and that there was as much difference betwixt them and us as there is betwixt us and Beasts Which they must understand then concerning the excellency of their Vehicles and the natural activity of them not the preeminency of their Intellectual Faculties Or if they doe they must be understood of the better sort of those AErial Spirits Or if they mean it of all their Orders it may be a mistake out of pride as those that are rich and powerful as well as speculative amongst us take it for granted that they are more judicious and discerning then the poor and despicable let them be never so wise Fifthly That they know all secret things whether hidden Books or Monies which men might doe too if they could stand by concealedly from them that hide them Sixthly That the lowest sort of them were the Genii of the Noblest men as the baser sort of Men are the Keepers and Educators of the better kinde of Dogs and Horses This clause of the Vision also is inveloped with obscurity they having not defined whether this meanness of condition of the Tutelar Genii be to be understood in a Political or Physical sense whether the meanness of rank and power or of natural wit and sagacity in which many times the Groom exceeds the young Gallant who assigns him to keep his Dogs and Horses Seventhly That such is the thinness and lightness of their Bodies that they can doe neither good nor hurt thereby though they may send strange Sights and Terrors and communicate Knowledge which then must be chiefly of such things as belong to their aerial Region For concerning matters in the Sea the Fishes if they could speak might inform men better then they And for their corporeal debility it is uncertain whether they may not pretend it to animate their Confabulators to a more secure converse or whether the thing be really true in some kindes of them For that it is not in all may be evinced by that Narration that Cardan a little after recites out of Erasmus of the Devil that carried a Witch into the Aire and set her on the top of a Chimney giving her a Pot and bidding her turn the mouth downwards which done the whole Town was fired and burnt down within the space of an hour This hapned April the 10. Anno 1533. The Towns name was Schiltach eight German miles distant from Friburg The Story is so well attested and guarded with such unexceptionable circumstances that though Cardan love to shew his wit in cavilling at most he recites yet he finds nothing at all to quarrel at in his Eighthly That there are Students and Professors of Philosophy in the AErial World and are divided into Sects and Opinions there as well as we are here Which cannot possibly be true unless they set some value upon knowledge and are at an eager loss how to finde it and are fain to hew out their way by arguing and reasoning as we doe Ninthly and lastly That they are reduced under a Political Government and are afraid of the infliction of punishment 11. These are the main matters comprehended in Facius his Vision which how true they all are would be too much trouble to determine But one clause which is the third I cannot let pass it so nearly concerning the present Subject and seeming to intercept all hopes of the Souls Immortality To speak therefore to the summe of the whole business we must either conceive these aerial Philosophers to instruct Facius Cardanus as well as they could they being guilty of nothing but a forward pride to offer themselves as dictating Oracles to that doubtful Exorcist for his son Cardan acknowledges that his Father had a form of Conjuration that a Spaniard gave him at his death or else we must suppose them to take the liberty of equivocating if not of downright lying Now if they had a minde to inform Facius Cardanus of these things directly as they themselves thought of them it being altogether unlikely but that there appeared to them in their aerial Regions such sights as represented the persons of men here deceased it is impossible that they should think otherwise then as we have described their Opinion in the fore-going Chapter that hold there is but one Soul in the World by which all living Creatures are actuated Which though but a meer possibility if so much yet some or other of these aerial Speculators may as well hold to it as some doe amongst us For Pomponatius and others of the Avenroists are as ridiculously pertinacious as they And therefore these Avenroistical Daemons answered punctually according to the Conclusions of their own School Nihil proprium cuiquam superesse post mortem For the Minde or Soul being a Substance common to all and now disunited from those Terrestrial Bodies which it actuated in Plato suppose or Socrates and these Bodies dead and dissipated and onely the common Soul of the World surviving there being nothing but this Soul and these Bodies to make up Socrates and Plato they conclude it is a plain case that nothing that is proper survives after death And therefore though they see the representation of Socrates and Plato in the other World owning also their own personalities with all the actions they did and accidents that befell them in this life yet according to the sullen subtilties and curiosities of their School they may think and profess that to speak accurately and Philosophically it is none of them there being no Substance proper to them remaining after death but onely the Soul of the World renewing the thoughts to her self of what appertained to those parties in this life 12. This is one Hypothesis consistent enough with the veracity of these Daemons but there is also another not at all impossible viz. That the Vehicles of the Souls of men departed are as invisible to this Order of the Genii that confabulated with Facius Cardanus as that Order is to us and that therefore though there be the appearances of the Ghosts of Men deceased to them as well as to us yet it being but for a time it moves them no more then our confirmed Epicureans in this world are moved thereby especially it being prone for them to think that they are nothing but some ludicrous spectacles that the universal Soule of the World represents to her self and other Spectatours when and how long a time she pleases and the vaporous reliques of the dead body administer occasion Now that the Vehicles of the Souls of men departed this life after they are come to a setled condition may be
farre thinner and more invisible then those of the fore-named Daemons without committing any inconcinnity in Nature may appear from hence For the excellency of the inward Spirit is not alwaies according to the consistency of the Element with which it does incorporate otherwise those Fishes that are of humane shape and are at set times taken in the Indian Sea should have an● higher degree of Reason and Religion then we that live upon Earth and have bodies made of that Element Whence nothing hinders but that the Spirit of Man may be more noble then the Spirit of some of the aerial Daemons And Nature not alwaies running in Arithmetical but also it Geometrical Progression one Remove it one may reach far above what is before it for the present in the other degrees of Progression As a creeping worm is above a cad-worm and any four-footed beasts above the birds till they can use their leggs as well as they but they are no sooner even with them but they are straight far above them and cannot onely goe but fly As a Peasant is above an imprison'd Prince and has more command but this Prince can be no sooner set free and become even with the Peasant in his liberty but he is infinitely above him And so it may be naturally with the Souls of men when they are freed from this prison of the Body their steps being made in Geometrical Progression as soon as they seem equal to that Order of Daemons we speak of they may mount far above them in tenuity and subtilty of Body and so become invisible to them and therefore leave them in a capacity of falsly surmising that they are not at all because they cannot see them 13. But if they thought that there is either some particular Ray of the Soule of the World that belongs peculiarly suppose to Socrates or Plato or that they had proper Souls really distinct then it is evident that they did either equivocate or lye Which their pride and scorn of mankinde they looking upon us but as Beasts in comparison of themselves might easily permit they making no more conscience to deceive us then we doe to put a dodge upon a dog to make our selves merry But if they had a design to winde us into some dangerous errour it is very likely that they would shuffle it in amongst many Truths that those Truths being examined and found solid at the bottome we might not suspect any one of their dictates to be false Wherefore this Vision being ill meant the poison intended was that of the Souls Mortality the dangerous falseness of which opinion was to be covered by the mixture of others that are true 14. As for that Relation of AEmilianus which he heard from his Father Epitherses it would come still more home to the purpose if the conclusion of the Philologers at Rome after Thamus had been sent for and averred the truth thereof to Tiberius Caesar could be thought authentick namely that this Pan the news of whose death Thamus told to the Daemons at Palodes was the Son of Mercury and Penelope for then 't is plain that Pan was an humane Soule and therefore concerns the present question more nearly But this Narration being applicable to a more sacred and venerable Subject it looses so much of its force and fitness for the present use That which Demetrius adds concerning certain Holy Islands neare Britain had been more fit in this regard Whither when Demetrius came suddainly upon his arrival there happened a great commotion of the air mighty tempests prodigious whirlwinds After the ceasing whereof the Inhabitants pronounced 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That some of a nature more then humane was dead Upon which Plutarch according to his usual Rhetorick descants after this manner 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. As the lightning of a lamp brings no grievance with it but the extinction of it is offensive to many sogreat Souls while they remain kindled into life shine forth harmlesly and benignly but their extinction or corruption often stirs up windes and tempests as in this present example and often infects the aire with pestilential annoiances 15. But the last Testimony is the most unexceptionable though the least pretending to be infallible and seems to strike dead both waies For whether the Souls of men that goe out of these earthly bodies be vertuous or vitious they must die to their AErial Vehicles Which seems a sad story at first sight and as if Righteousness could not deliver from Death But if it be more carefully perused the terrour will be found onely to concern the Wicked For the profoundest pitch of Death is the Descent into this Terrestrial Body in which besides that we necessarily forget whatever is past we doe for the present lead 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a dark and obscure life as Plutarch speaks dragging this weight of Earth along with us as Prisoners and Malefactours doe their heavy shackles in their sordid and secluse confinements But in our return back from this state Life is naturally more large to them that are prepared to make good use of that advantage they have of their Aiery Vehicle But if they be not masters of themselves in that state they will be fatally remanded back to their former Prison in process of time which is the most gross Death imaginable But for the Good and vertuous Souls that after many Ages change their AErial Vehicle for an AEthereal one that is no Death to them but an higher ascent into life And a man may as well say of an Infant that has left the dark Wombe of his Mother that this change of his is Death as that a Genius dies by leaving the gross Aire and emerging into that Vehicle of Light which they ordinarily call AEthereal or Coelestial 16. There may be therefore by Axiome 36. a dangerous relapse out of the AErial Vehicle into the Terrestrial which is properly the Death of the Soule that is thus retrograde But for those that ever reach the AEthereal state the periods of life there are infinite though they may have their Perige's as well as Apoge's yet these Circuits being of so vast a compass and their Perige's so rare and short and their return as certain to their former Apsis as that of the Coelestial Bodies and their athereal sense never leaving them in their lowest touches towards the Earth it is manifest that they have arrived to that life that is justly styled Eternal 17. Whence it is plain that perseverance in Vertue if no external Fate hinder will carry Man to an Immortal life But whether those that be thus Heroically good be so by discipline and endeavour or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by a special favour and irresistible design of God is not to be disputed in this place though it be at large discussed somewhere in the Dialogues of Plato But in the mean time we will not doubt to conclude that there is no Internal impediment to those that
by those of their own Tribe 6. Other reasons of the security we find our selves in from the gross infestations of evil Spirits 7. What kinde of punishments the AErial Officers inflict upon their Malefactours 427 Chap. 11. 1. Three things to be considered before we come to the moral condition of the Soul after death namely her Memory of transactions in this life 2. The peculiar feature and individual Character of her AErial Vehicle 3. The Retainment of the same Name 4. How her ill deportment here lays the train of her Misery hereafter 5. The unspeakable torments of Conscience worse then Death and not to be avoided by dying 6. Of the hideous tortures of external sense on them whose searedness of Conscience may seem to make them uncapable of her Lashes 7. Of the state of the Souls of the more innocent and conscientious Pagans 8. Of the natural accruments of After-happiness to the morally good in this life 9. How the Soul enjoys her actings or sufferings in this Life for an indispensable Cause when she has passed to the other 10. That the reason is proportionably the same in things of less consequence 11. What mischief men may create to themselves in the other World by their Zealous mistakes in this 12. That though there were no Memory after Death yet the manner of our Life here may sow the seeds of the Souls future happiness or misery 435 Chap. 12. 1. What the Spirit of Nature is 2. Experiments that argue its real Existence such as that of two strings tuned Unisons 3. Sympathetick Cures and Tortures 4. The Sympathy betwixt the Earthly and Astral Body 5. Monstrous Births 6. The Attraction of the Loadstone and Roundness of the Sun and Stars 449 Chap. 13. 1. That the Descent of heavy Bodies argues the existence of the Spirit of Nature because else they would either hang in the Aire as they are placed 2. Or would be diverted from a perpendicular as they fall near a Plate of Metal set slooping 3. That the endeavour of the AEther or Aire from the Centre to the Circumference is not the cause of Gravity against Mr. Hobbs 4. A full confutation of Mr. Hobbs his Opinion 5. An ocular Demonstration of the absurd consequence thereof 6. An absolute Demonstration that Gravity cannot be the effect of meer Mechanical powers 7. The Latitude of the operations of the Spirit of Nature how large and where bounded 8. The reason of its name 9. It s grand office of transmitting Souls into rightly prepared Matter 458 Chap. 14. 1. Objections against the Souls Immortality from her condition in Infancy Old age Sleep and Sicknesses 2. Other Objections taken from Experiments that seem to prove her Discerpibility 3. As also from the seldome appearing of the Souls of the deceased 4. And from our natural fear of Death 5. A Subterfuge of the adverse party in supposing but one Soul common to all Creatures 6. An Answer concerning the Littleness of the Soul in Infancy 7. As also concerning the weakness of her Intellectuals then and in Old age 8. That Sleep does not at all argue the Souls Mortality but rather illustrate her Immortality 9. An Answer to the Objection from Apoplexies and Catalepsies 10. As also to that from Madness 11. That the various depravations of her Intellectual Faculties doe no more argue her Mortality then the worser Modifications of Matter its natural Annihilability And why God created Souls sympathizing with Matter 471 Chap. 15. 1. An Answer to the experiment of the Scolopendra cut into pieces 2. And to the flying of an headless Eagle over a barn as also to that of the Malefactors head biting a Dog by the eare 3. A superaddition of a difficulty concerning Monsters born with two or more Heads and but one Body and Heart 4. A solution of the difficulty 5. An Answer touching the seldome appearing of the Souls of the deceased 6. As also concerning the fear of Death 7. And a down-bearing sense that sometimes so forcibly obtrudes upon us the belief of the Souls Mortality 8. Of the Tragical Pomp and dreadful Praeludes of Death with some corroborative Considerations against such sad spectacles 9. That there is nothing really sad and miserable in the Universe unless to the wicked and impious 481 Chap. 16. 1. That that which we properly are is both Sensitive and Intellectual 2. What is the true notion of a Soul being One. 3. That if there be but One Soul in the World it is both Rational and Sensitive 4. The most favourable representation of their Opinion that hold but One. 5. A confutation of the foregoing representation 6. A Reply to the confutation 7. An Answer to the Reply 8. That the Soul of Man is not properly any Ray either of God or the Soul of the World 9. And yet if she were so it would be no prejudice to her Immortality whence the folly of Pomponatius is noted 10. A further animadversion upon Pomponatius his folly in admitting a certain number of remote Intelligencies and denying Particular Immaterial Substances in Men and Brutes 491 Chap. 17. 1. That the Author having safely conducted the Soul into her AErial condition through the dangers of Death might well be excused from attending her any further 2. What reasons urge him to consider what fates may befall her afterwards 3. Three hazzards the Soul runs after this life whereby she may again become obnoxious to death according to the opinion of some 4. That the aerial Genii are mortal confirmed by three testimonies 5. The one from the Vision of Facius Cardanus in which the Spirits that appeared to him profest themselves mortal 6. The time they stayed with him and the matters they disputed of 7. What credit Hieronymus Cardanus gives to his Fathers Vision 8. The other testimony out of Plutarch concerning the Death of the great God Pan. 9. The third and last of Hesiod whose opinion Plutarch has polisht and refined 10. An Enumeration of the several Paradoxes contained in Facius Cardanus his Vision 11. What must be the sense of the third Paradox if those AErial Speculators spake as they thought 12. Another Hypothesis to the same purpose 13. The craft of these Daemons in shuffling in poysonous Errour amongst solid Truths 14. What makes the story of the death of Pan less to the present matter with an addition of Demetrius his observations touching the Sacred Islands near Britain 15. That Hesiod his opinion is the most unexceptionable and that the harshness therein is but seeming not real 16. That the AEthereal Vehicle instates the Soul in a condition of perfect Immortality 17. That there is no internal impediment to those that are Heroically good but that they may attain an everlasting happiness after Death 503 Chap. 18. 1. The Conflagration of the World an Opinion of the Stoicks 2. Two ways of destroying the World the Ancients have taken notice of and especially that by Fire 3. That the Conflagration of the World so farre as it respects us is to be understood onely of the burning of the Earth 4. That the ends of the Stoicks Conflagration are competible onely to the Earths burning 5. An acknowledgement that the Earth may be burnt though the proof thereof be impertinent to this place 6. That the Conflagration thereof will prove very fatal to the Souls of wicked Men and Daemons 7. Five several Opinions concerning their state after the Conflagration whereof the first is That they are quite destroy'd by Fire 8. The second That they are annihilated by a special act of Omnipotency 9. The third That they lie sensless in an eternal Death 10. The fourth That they are in a perpetual furious and painful Dream 11. The fifth and last That they will revive again and that the Earth and Aire will be inhabited by them 12. That this last seems to be fram'd from the fictitious 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Stoicks who were very sorry Metaphysicians and as ill Naturalists 13. An Animadversion upon a self-contradicting sentence of Seneca 14. The unintelligibleness of the state of the Souls of the Wicked after the Conflagration 15. That the AEthereal Inhabitants will be safe And what will then become of Good men and Daemons on the Earth and in the Aire And how they cannot be delivered but by a supernatural power 524 Chap. 19. 1. That the Extinction of the Sun is no Panick feare but may be rationally suspected from the Records of History and grounds of Natural Philosophy 2. The sad Influence of this Extinction upon Man and Beast and all the aerial Daemons imprison'd within their several Atmospheres in our Vortex 3. That it will doe little or no damage to the AEthereal Inhabitants in reference to heat or warmth 4. Nor will they find much want of his light 5. And if they did they may pass out of one Vortex into another by the Priviledge of their AEthereal Vehicles 6. And that without any labour or toil and as maturely as they please 7. The vast incomprehensibleness of the tracts and compasses of the waies of Providence 8. A short Recapitulation of the whole Discourse 9. An Explication of the Persians two Principles of Light and Darkness which they called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and when and where the Principle of Light gets the full victory 10. That Philosophy or something more sacred then Philosophy is the onely Guide to a true 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 538 FINIS Errata PAg. 222. l. 5. for Gamaitus read Gamaieu's 2●4 l. 10. for Tyc r. Tye. 327. l. 2. for Immortality r. Immorality 458. l. 22. for stooping r. slooping 462. l. 13. for E F H r. angle E F H. 488. l. 9. for inclogg'd r. in clogg'd 521. l. 16. for lightning r. lighting 528. l. ult dele those
made dying men visit their friends before their departure at many miles distance their Bodies still keeping their sick bed and those that have been well give a visit to their sick friends of whose health they have been over-desirous and solicitous For this Ecstasie is really of the Soul and not of the Blood or Animal Spirits neither of which have any Sense or Perception in them at all And therefore into this Principle is to be resolved that Story which Martinus Del-Rio reports of a Lad who through the strength of Imagination and Desire of seeing his Father fell into an Ecstasie and after he came to himself confidently affirmed he had seen him and told infallible circumstances of his being present with him 13. That Cardan and others could fall into an Ecstasie when they pleased by force of Imagination and Desire to fall into it is recorded and believed by very grave and sober Writers but whether they could ever doe it to a compleat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or local disjunction of the Soul from the Body I know none that dare affirm such events being rather the chances of Nature and Complexion as in the Noctambuli then the effects of our Will But we cannot assuredly conclude but that Art may bring into our own power and ordering that which natural causes put upon us sometimes without our leaves But whether those Oyntments of Witches have any such effect or whether those unclean Spirits they deal with by their immediate presence in their Bodies cannot for a time so suppress or alter their Vital fitness to such a degree as will loosen the Soul I leave to more curious Inquisitors to search after It is sufficient that I have demonstrated a very intelligible possibility of this actual separation without Death properly so called From whence the peremptory Confessions of Witches and the agreement of the story which they tell in several as well those that are there bodily as they that leave their Bodies behinde them especially when at their return they bring something home with them as a permanent sign of their being at the place is though it may be all the delusion of their Familiars no contemptible probability of their being there indeed where they declare they have been For these are the greatest evidences that can be had in humane affairs And nothing so much as the supposed Impossibility thereof has deterred men from believing the thing to be true CHAP. XVI 1. That Souls departed communicate Dreams 2. Examples of Apparitions of Souls deceased 3. Of Apparitions in fields where pitcht Battels have been fought as also of those in Churchyards and other vaporous places 4. That the Spissitude of the Air may well contribute to the easiness of the appearing of Ghosts and Spectres 5. A further proof thereof from sundry examples 6. Of Marsilius Ficinus his appearing after death 7. With what sort of people such examples as these avail little 8. Reasons to perswade the unprejudiced that ordinarily those Apparitions that bear the shape and person of the deceased are indeed the Souls of them 1. THE Examples of the other sort viz. of the appearing of the Ghosts of men after death are so numerous and frequent in all mens mouths that it may seem superfluous to particularize in any This appearing is either by Dreams or open Vision In Dreams as that which hapned to Avenzoar Albumaron an Arabian Physitian to whom his lately-deceased friend suggested in his sleep a very soverain Medicine for his sore Eyes Like to this is that in Diodorus concerning Isis Queen of AEgypt whom he reports to have communicated remedies to the AEgyptians in their sleep after her death as well as she did when she was alive Of this kinde is also that memorable story of Posidonius the Stoick concerning two young men of Arcadia who being come to Megara and lying the one at a Victuallers the other in an Inne he in the Inne while he was asleep dream'd that his Fellow-traveller earnestly desired him to come and help him as being assaulted by the Victualler and in danger to be killed by him But he after he was perfectly awake finding it but a Dream neglected it But faln asleep again his murdered friend appeared to him the second time beseeching him that though he did not help him alive yet he would see his Death revenged telling him how the Victualler had cast his Body into a Dung-cart and that if he would get up timely in the morning and watch at the Town-gate he might thereby discover the murder which he did accordingly and so saw Justice done on the Murderer Nor does the first Dream make the second impertinent to our purpose For as that might be from the strength of Imagination and desire of help in the distressed Arcadian impressed on the Spirit of the World and so transmitted to his friend asleep a condition fittest for such communications so it is plain that this after his Death must fail if his Soul did either cease to be or to act And therefore it is manifest that she both was and did act and suggested this Dream in revenge of the Murder Of which kinde there be infinite examples I mean of Murders discovered by Dreams the Soul of the person murdered seeming to appear to some or other asleep and to make his complaint to them But I will content my self onely to adde an Example of Gratitude to this of Revenge As that of Simonides who lighting by chance on a dead Body by the Sea side and out of the sense of Humanity bestowing Burial upon it was requited with a Dream that saved his life For he was admonisht to desist from his Voyage he intended by Sea which the Soul of the deceased told him would be so perillous that it would hazard the lives of the Passengers He believed the Vision and abstaining was safe those others that went suffered Shipwrack 2. We will adjoyn onely an Example or two of that other kind of Visions which are ordinarily called the Apparitions of the dead And such is that which Pliny relates at large in his Epistle to Sura of an house haunted at Athens and freed by Athenodorus the Philosopher after the Body of that person that appeared to him was digged up and interred with due solemnity It is not a thing unlikely that most houses that are haunted are so chiefly from the Soules of the deceased who have either been murdered or some way injured or have some hid treasure to discover or the like And persons are haunted for the like causes as well as houses as Nero was after the murdering of his Mother Otho pull'd out of his bed in the night by the Ghost of Galba Such instances are infinite as also those wherein the Soule of ones friend suppose Father Mother or Husband have appeared to give them good counsell and to instruct them of the event of the greatest affairs of their life The Ghosts also of deceased Lovers have been reported to adhere
Government of Men does on several sorts of brute Beasts and the AEthereal Powers also have a Right and Exercise of Rule over the AErial Whence nothing can be committed in the World against the more indispensable Laws thereof but a most severe and inevitable punishment will follow every Nation City Family and Person being in some manner the Peculium and therefore in the tutelage of some invisible Power or other as I have above intimated 4. And such Transgressions as are against those Laws without whose observance the Creation could not subsist we may be assured are punished with Torture intolerable and infinitely above any Pleasure imaginable the evil Genii can take in doing of those of their own Order or us Mortals any mischief Whence it is manifest that we are as secure from their gross outrages such as the firing of our houses the stealing away our jewels or more necessary Utensils murdering our selves or children destroying our cattel corn and other things of the like sort as if they were not in rerum natura Unless they have some special permission to act or we our selves enable them by our rash and indiscreet tampering with them or suffer from the malice of some person that is in league with them For their greatest liberty of doing mischief is upon that account which yet is very much limited in that all these Actions must pass the consent of a visible person not hard to be discovered in these unlawful practices and easy to be punished by the Law of Men. 5. And the AErial Genii can with as much ease inflict punishment on one another as we Mortals can apprehend imprison and punish such as transgress against our Laws For though these Daemons be invisible to us yet they are not so to their own Tribe nor can the activity and subtilty of the Bad over-master the Good Commonwealths-men there that uphold the Laws better then they are amongst us Nor may the various Transfiguration of their shapes conceal their persons no more then the disguises that are used by fraudulent men For they are as able to discern what is fictitious from what is true and natural amongst themselves as we are amongst our selves And every AErial Spirit being part of some Political subdivision upon any outrage committed it will be an easy matter to hunt out the Malefactor No Daemon being able so to transfigure himself but upon command he will be forced to appear in his natural and usual form not daring to deny upon examination to what particular Subdivision he belongs Whence the easy discovery of their miscarriages and certainty of insupportable torment will secure the World from all the disorder that some scrupulous wits suspect would arise from this kinde of Creatures if they were in Being 6. To which we may adde also That what we have is useless to them and that it is very hard to conceive that there are many Rational Beings so degenerate as to take pleasure in ill when it is no good to themselves That Socrates his Aphorism 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may be in no small measure true in the other World as well as in this That all that these evil Spirits desire may be onely our lapse into as great a degree of Apostasy from God as themselves and to be full partakers with them of their false Liberty as debauched persons in this life love to make Proselytes and to have respect from their Nurslings in wickedness And several other Considerations there are that serve for the taking away this Panick fear of the incursations and molestations of these aerial Inhabitants and might further silence the suspicious Atheist which I willingly omit having said more then enough of this Subject already See Cap. 3. Sect. 7 8. 7. If any be so curious as to demand what kinde of Punishment this People of the Aire inflict upon their Malefactors I had rather referre them to the Fancies of Cornelius Agrippa De Occult. Philosoph Lib. 3. Cap. 41. then be laught at my self for venturing to descend to such particularities Amongst other things he names their Incarceration or confinement to most vile and squalid Habitations His own words are very significant Accedunt etiam vilissimorum ac teterrimorum locorum habitacula ubi AEtnaei ignes aquarum ingluvies fulgurum tonitruorum concussus terrarum voragines ubi Regio lucis inops nec radiorum Solis capax ignaráque splendoris syderum perpetuis tenebris noctis specie caligat Whence he would make us believe that the subterraneous caverns of the Earth are made use of for Dungeons for the wicked Daemons to be punished in as if the several Volcano's such as AEtna Vesuvius Hecla and many others especially in America were so many Prisons or houses of Correction for the unruly Genii That there is a tedious restraint upon them upon villanies committed and that intolerable is without all question they being endued with corporeal Sense and that more quick and passive then ours and therefore more subject to the highest degrees of torment So that not onely by incarcerating them keeping them in by a watch in the caverns of burning Mountains where the heat of those infernal Chambers and the steam of Brimstone cannot but excruciate them exceedingly but also by commanding them into sundry other Hollows of the ground noysome by several fumes and vapours they may torture them in several fashions and degrees fully proportionable to the greatest crime that is in their power to commit and farre above what the cruellest Tyranny has inflicted here either upon the guilty or innocent But how these Confinements and Torments are inflicted on them and by what Degrees and Relaxations is a thing neither easy to determine nor needful to understand Wherefore we will surcease from pursuing any further so unprofitable a Subject and come to the Third general Head we mentioned which is What the Moral condition of the Soul is when she has left this Body CHAP. XI 1. Three things to be considered before we come to the moral condition of the Soul after death namely her Memory of transactions in this life 2. The peculiar feature and individual Character of her AErial Vehicle 3. The Retainment of the same Name 4. How her ill deportment here lays the train of her Misery hereafter 5. The unspeakable torments of Conscience worse then Death and not to be avoided by dying 6. Of the hideous tortures of external sense on them whose searedness of Conscience may seem to make them uncapable of her Lashes 7. Of the state of the Souls of the more innocent and conscientious Pagans 8. Of the natural accruments of After-happiness to the morally good in this life 9. How the Soul enjoys her actings or sufferings in this Life for an indispensable Cause when she has passed to the other 10. That the reason is proportionably the same in things of less consequence 11. What mischief men may create to themselves in the other world by their Zealous mistakes in this
12. That though there were no Memory after Death yet the manner of our Life here may sow the seeds of the Souls future happiness or misery 1. FOR the better solution of this Question there is another first in nature to be decided namely Whether the Soul remembers any thing of this Life after Death For Aristotle and Cardan seem to deny it but I doe not remember any reasons in either that will make good their Opinion But that the contrary is true appears from what we have already proved Lib. 2. Cap. 11. viz. That the immediate seat of Memory is the Soul her self and that all Representations with their circumstances are reserved in her not in the Spirits a thing which Vaninus himself cannot deny nor in any part of the Body And that the Spirits are onely a necessary Instrument whereby the Soul works which while they are too cool and gross and waterish Oblivion creeps upon her in that measure that the Spirits are thus distempered but the disease being chased away and the temper of the Spirits rectified the Soul forthwith recovers the memory of what things she could not well command before as being now in a better state of Activity Whence by the 33. Axiome it will follow that her Memory will be rather more perfect after Death and Conscience more nimble to excuse or accuse her according to her Deeds here 2. It is not altogether beside the purpose to take notice also That the natural and usual Figure of the Souls AErial Vehicle bears a resemblance with the feature of the party in this life it being most obvious for the Plastick part at the command of the Will to put forth into personal shape to fall as near to that in this life as the new state will permit With which act the Spirit of Nature haply does concurre as in the figuration of the Foetus but with such limits as becomes the AErial Congruity of life of which we have spoke already as also how the proper Idea or Figure of every Soul though it may deflect something by the power of the Parents Imagination in the act of Conception or Gestation yet may return more near to its peculiar semblance afterwards and so be an unconcealable Note of Individuality 3. We will adde to all this the Retainment of the same Name which the deceased had here unless there be some special reason to change it so that their persons will be as punctually distinguisht and circumscribed as any of ours in this life All which things as they are most probable in themselves that they will thus naturally fall out so they are very convenient for administration of Justice and keeping of Order in the other State 4. These things therefore premised it will not be hard to conceive how the condition of the Soul after this life depends on her Moral deportment here For Memory ceasing not Conscience may very likely awake more furiously then ever the Mind becoming a more clear Judge of evil Actions past then she could be in the Flesh being now stript of all those circumstances and concurrences of things that kept her off from the opportunity of calling her self to account or of perceiving the ugliness of her own ways Besides there being that communication betwixt the Earth and the Aire that at least the fame of things will arrive to their cognoscence that have left this life the after ill success of their wicked enterprises and unreasonable transactions may arm their tormenting Conscience with new whips and stings when they shall either hear or see with their eyes what they have unjustly built up to run with shame to ruine and behold all their designs come to nought and their fame blasted upon Earth 5. This is the state of such Souls as are capable of a sense of dislike of their past-actions and a man would think they need no other punishment then this if he consider the mighty power of the Minde over her own Vehicle and how vulnerable it is from her self These Passions therefore of the Soule that follow an ill Conscience must needs bring her aiery body into intolerable distempers worse then Death it self Nor yet can she die if she would neither by fire nor sword nor any means imaginable no not if she should fling her self into the flames of smoaking AEtna For suppose she could keep her self so long there as to indure that hideous pain of destroying the vital Congruity of her Vehicle by that sulphureous fire she would be no sooner released but she would catch life again in the Aire and all the former troubles and vexations would return besides the overplus of these pangs of Death For Memory would return and an ill Conscience would return and all those busie Furies those disordered Passions which follow it And thus it would be though the Soule should kill her self a thousand and a thousand times she could but pain and punish her self not destroy her self 6. But if we could suppose some mens Consciences seared in the next state as well as this for certainly there are that make it their business to obliterate all sense of difference of Good and Evil out of their minds hold it to be an high strain of wit though it be nothing else but a piece of bestial stupidity to think there is no such thing as Vice and Vertue and that it is a principall part of perfection to be so degenerate as to act according to this Principle without any remorse at all these men may seem to have an excellent priviledge in the other world they being thus armour-proof against all the fiery darts of that domestick Devil As if the greatest security in the other life were to have been compleatly wicked in this But it is not out of the reach of meer Reason and Philosophy to discover that such bold and impudent wretches as have lost all inward sense of Good and Evil may there against their wills feel a lash in the outward For the divine Nemesis is excluded out of no part of the Universe and Goodness and Justice which they contemn here will be acquainted with them in that other state whether they will or no I speak of such course Spirits that can swallow down Murder Perjury Extortion Adultery Buggery and the like gross crimes without the least disgust and think they have a right to satisfy their own Lust though it be by never so great injury against their Neighbour If these men should carry it with impunity there were really no Providence and themselves were the truest Prophets and faithfullest Instructers of mankind divulging the choicest Arcanum they have to impart to them namely That there is no God But the case stands quite otherwise For whether it be by the importunity of them they injure in this life who may meet with them afterward as Cardan by way of objection suggests in his Treatise of this Subject or whether by a general desertion by all of the other world that are able
affirmes to live a long time divided and to run backwards and forwards and therefore he will have it to look like many living Creatures growing together rather then one single one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 De Juvent Senect Cap. 2. But yet he will not afford them the priviledge of Plants whose Slips will live and grow being set in the Earth But the instances that belong to this Objection ascend higher for they pretend that the parts of perfect Animals will also live asunder There are two main instances thereof The one that of the Eagle Fromondus mentions whose head being chopt off by an angry Clown for quarrelling with his dog the Body flew over the barn near the place of this rude execution This was done at Fromondus his fathers house nor is the story improbable if we consider what ordinarily happens in Pigeons and Ducks when their heads are cut off The other instance is of a Malefactour beheaded at Antwerp whose head when it had given some few jumps into the crowd and a Dog fell a licking the blood caught the Dogs eare in its teeth and held it so fast that he being frighted ran away with the mans head hanging at his eare to the great astonishment and confusion of the people This was told Fromondus by an eye-witness of the fact From which two examples they think may be safely inferred that the Souls of Men as well as of the more perfect kinde of Brutes are also discerpible That example in the same Authour out of Josephus Acosta if true yet is finally to this purpose For the speaking of the sacrificed Captive when his Heart was cut out may be a further confirmation indeed that the Brain is the Seat of the Common Sense but no argument of the Divisibility of the Soule she remaining at that time entire in the Body after the cutting out of the Heart whose office it is to afford Spirits which were not so far yet dissipated but that they sufficed for that suddain operation of life 3. The Third Objection is from the seldome appearāce of the Souls of the deceased For if they can at all appear why do they not oftner if they never appear it is a strong suspicion that they are not at all in Being 4. The Fourth is from the Fear of Death and an inward down-bearing sense in us at some times that we are utterly mortal and that there is nothing to be expected after this life 5. The Fifth and last is rather a Subterfuge then an Objection That there is but One Common Soul in all Men and Beasts that operates according to the variety of Animals and Persons it does actuate and vivificate bearing a seeming particularity according to the particular pieces of Matter it enforms but is one in all and that this particularity of Body being lost this particular Man or Beast is lost and so every living creature is properly and intirely mortal These are the reallest and most pertinent Objections I could ever meet withall or can excogitate concerning the Souls Immortality to which I shall answer in order 6. And to the First which seems to be the shrewdest I say that neither the Contractedness of the Soule in Infancy nor the Weakness of her Intellectual Operations either then or in extream Old age are sufficient proofs of her Corporeity or Mortality For what wonder is it that the Soule faln into this low and fatal condition where she must submit to the course of Nature and the lawes of other Animals that are generated here on Earth should display her self by degrees from smaller dimensions to the ordinary size of men whenas this faculty of contracting and dilating of themselves is in the very essence and notion of all Spirits as I have noted already Lib. 1. Cap. 5. So she does but that leisurely and naturally now being subjected to the lawes of this terrestrial Fate which she does exempt from this condition suddainly and freely not growing by Juxta-position of parts or Intromission of Matter but inlarging of her self with the Body meerly by the dilatation of her own Substance which is one and the same alwaies 7. As for the Debility of her Intellectuals in Infancy and Old age this consideration has less force to evince her a meer corporeal essence then the former and touches not our Principles at all who have provided for the very worst surmise concerning the operations of the Minde in acknowledging them of my own accord to depend very intimately on the temper and tenour of the Souls immediate instrument the Spirits which being more torpid and watry in Children and Old men must needs hinder her in such operations as require another constitution of Spirits then is usually in Age and Childhood though I will not profess my self absolutely confident that the Soule cannot act without all dependence on Matter But if it does not which is most probable it must needs follow that its Operations will keep the lawes of the Body it is united with Whence it is demonstrable how necessary Purity and Temperance is to preserve and advance a mans Parts 8. As for Sleep which the dying Philosopher called the Brother of Death I doe not see how it argues the Souls Mortality more then a mans inability to wake again but rather helps us to conceive how that though the stounds and agonies of Death seem utterly to take away all the hopes of the Souls living after them yet upon a recovery of a quicker Vehicle of Aire she may suddainly awake into fuller and fresher participation of life then before But I may answer also that Sleep being onely the ligation of the outward Senses and the interception of motion from the external world argues no more any radical defect of Life and Immortality in the Soul then the having a mans Sight bounded within the walls of his chamber by Shuts does argue any blindness in the immured party who haply is busy reading by candle-light and that with ease so small a print as would trouble an ordinary Sight to read it by day And that the Soule is not perpetually employed in sleep is very hard for any to demonstrate we so often remembring our dreams meerly by occasions which if they had not occurred we had never suspected we had dreamed that night 9. Which Answer as also the former is applicable to Apoplexies Catalepsies and whatever other Diseases partake of their nature and witness how nimble the Soule is to act upon the suppeditation of due Matter and how Life and Sense and Memory and Reason and all return upon return of the fitting temper of the Spirits suitable to that vital Congruity that then is predominant in the Soule 10. And as for Madness there are no Apprehensions so frantick but are arguments of the Souls Immortality not as they are frantick but as Apprehensions For Matter cannot apprehend any thing either wildly or soberly as I have already sufficiently demonstrated And it is as irrational for a man to conclude
conceives that that monstrous child that was borne at Emmaus in Theodosius his time with two heads and two hearts was two persons but that other borne Anno 1531. with two heads but one heart who lived till he was a man was but one person Which he conceives appears the plainer in that both the heads professed their agreement perpetually to the same actions in that they had the same appetite the same hunger and thirst spoke alike had the same desire to lye with their wife and of all other acts of exonerating nature But for that other that had two hearts and was divided to the Navel there was not this identity of affection and desire but sometimes one would have a mind to a thing and sometimes another sometimes they would play with one another and sometimes fight See Sennert Epitom Scient Natural Lib. 6. Cap. 1. 4. But I answer and first to Aristotles authority that he does not so confidently assert that every Monster that has but one heart is but one Animal For his words run thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Where he onely speaks hypothetically not peremptorily that the Heart is that part where the first Principle of life is and from which the rest of life in Soul or Body is to be derived For indeed he makes it elswhere the seat of Common Sense but that it is a mistake we have already demonstrated and himself seems not confident of his own Opinion and therefore we may with the less offence decline it and affirm and that without all hesitancy that a Monster is either one or more Animals according to the number of the heads of it and that there are as many distinct Souls as there are heads in a monstrous Birth But from the heads downwards the Body being but one and the heart but one that there must needs be a wonderful exact concord in the sense of affections in these heads they having their Blood and Spirits from one fountain and one common seat of their passions and desires But questionless whenever one head winked he could not then see by the eyes of the other or if one had pricked one of these heads the other would not have felt it though whatever was inflicted below it is likely they both felt alike both the Souls equally acting the Body of this Monster but the heads being actuated by them onely in several Which is a sufficient answer to Sennertus 5. The weakness of the third Objection is manifest in that it takes away the Existence of all Spirits as well as the Souls of the deceased Of whose Being notwithstanding none can doubt that are not dotingly incredulous We say therefore that the Souls of men being in the same condition that other Spirits are appear sometimes though but seldome The cause in both being partly the difficulty of bringing their Vehicles to an unnatural consistency and partly they having no occasion so to doe and lastly it being not permitted to them to doe as they please or to be where they have a minde to be 6. As for the Fear of Death and that down-bearing sense that sometimes so uncontroulably suggests to us that we are wholly mortal To the first I answer that it is a necessary result of our union with the Body and if we should admit it one of the imperfections or infirmities we contract by being in this state it were a solid Answer And therefore this fear and presage of ill in Death is no argument that there is any ill in it nor any more to be heeded then the predictions of any fanatical fellow that will pretend to prophecie But besides this it is fitting that there should be in us this fear and abhorrency to make us keep this station Providence has plac't us in otherwise every little pet would invite us to pack our selves out of this World and try our fortunes in the other and so leave the Earth to be inhabited onely by Beasts whenas it is to be ordered and cultivated by Men. 7. To the second I answer that such peremptory conclusions are nothing but the impostures of Melancholy or some other dull and fulsome distempers of blood that corrupt the Imagination but that Fancy proves nothing by Axiome 4. And that though the Soul enthroned in her AEthereal Vehicle be a very magnificent thing full of Divine Love Majesty and Tranquillity yet in this present state she is inclogg'd and accloy'd with the foulness and darkness of this Terrestrial Body she is subject to many fears and jealousies and other disturbing passions whose Objects though but a mockery yet are a real disquiet to her minde in this her Captivity and Imprisonment Which condition of hers is lively set out by that incomparable Poet and Platonist AEneid 6. where comparing that more free and pure state of our Souls in their celestial or fiery Vehicles with their restraint in this earthly Dungeon he makes this short and true description of the whole matter Igneus est ollis vigor coelestis origo Seminibus quantū non noxia corpora tardant Terrenique hebetant artus moribundáque membra Hinc metuunt cupiúntque dolent gaudéntque nec auras Respiciunt claust tenebris carcere caeco To this sense A fiery vigour from an heavenly source Is in these seeds so far as the dull force Of noxious Bodies does not them retard In heavy earth and dying limbs imbar'd Hence fool'd with fears foul lusts sharp grief vain joy In this dark Gaol they low and groveling lie Nor with one glance of their oblivious minde Look back to that free Aire they left behinde This is the sad estate of the more deeply-lapsed Souls upon Earth who are so wholly mastered by the motions of the Body that they are carried headlong into an assent to all the suggestions and imaginations that it so confidently obtrudes upon them of which that of our mortality is not the weakest But such melancholy fancies that would beare us down so peremptorily that we are utterly extinct in death are no more argument thereof then those of them that have been perswaded they were dead already while they were alive and therefore would not eat because they thought the dead never take any repast till they were cheated into an appetite by seeing some of their friends disguised in winding-sheets feed heartily at the table whose example then they thought fit to follow and so were kept alive 8. I cannot but confess that the Tragick pomp and preparation to dying that layes wast the operations of the minde putting her into fits of dotage or fury making the very visage look ghastly and distracted and at the best sadly pale and consumed as if Life and Soule were even almost quite extinct cannot but imprint strange impressions even upon the stoutest minde and raise suspicions that all is lost in so great a change But the Knowing and Benign Spirit though he may flow in tears at so dismal a Spectacle yet it does not at all suppress
strains of eloquence but I loving solid sense better then fine words shall not take the pains to recite them 13. At what a pitch his understanding was set may be easily discerned by my last quotation wherein there seems a palpable contradiction Veniet iterum qui nos in lucem reponet dies quem multi recusarent nisi oblitos reduceret If nos how oblitos If oblitos how nos For we are not we unless we remember that we are so And if mad-men may be said and that truly to be besides themselves or not to be themselves because they have lost their wits certainly they will be far from being themselves that have quite lost the Memory of themselves but must be as if they had never been before As Lucretius has excellently well declared himself De rerum naturâ Lib. 3. Nee si materiam nostram conlegerit aetas Post obitū rursumque redegerit ut sita nunc est Atque iterum nobis fuerint data lumina vitae Pertineat quicquam tamen ad nos id quoque factum Interrupta semel cum sit retinentia nostri Where the Poet seems industriously to explode all the hopes of any benefit of this Stoical 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and to profess that he is as if he had never been that cannot remember he has ever been before From whence it would follow that though the Souls of men should revive after the Conflagration of the World yet they have not escaped a perpetual and permanent death 14. We see therefore how desperately undemonstrable the condition of the Soule is after the Conflagration of the Earth all these five Opinions being accompanied with so much lubricity and uncertainty And therefore they are to be looked upon rather as some Night-landskap to feed our amused Melancholy then a clear and distinct draught of comprehensible Truth to inform our Judgment 15. All that we can be assured of is that those Souls that have obtained their aethereal Vehicles are out of the reach of that sad fate that followes this Conflagration and that the wicked Souls of Men and Daemons will be involved in it But there are a middle sort betwixt these concerning whom not onely curiosity but good will would make a man sollicitous For it is possible that the Conflagration of the World may surprise many thousands of Souls that neither the course of Time nor Nature nor any higher Principle has wrought up into an AEthereal Congruity of life but yet may be very holy innocent and vertuous Which we may easily believe if we consider that these very Earthly Bodies are not so great impediments to the goodness and sincerity of the Minde but that many even in this life have given great examples thereof Nor can that AErial state be less capable of nor wel be without the good Genii no more then the Earth without good men who are the most immediate Ministers of the Goodness and Justice of God But exemption from certain fates in the world is not alwaies entailed upon Innocency but most ordinarily upon natural power And therefore there may be numbers of the good Genii and of very holy and innocuous Spirits of men departed the consistency of whose Vehicles may be such that they can no more quit these aerial Regions then we can fly into them that have heavy bodies without wings To say nothing of those vertuous and pious men that may haply be then found alive and so be liable to be overtaken by this storm of fire Undoubtedly unless there appear before the approach of this fate some visible 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Jupiter Sospitator as the heathens would call him they must necessarily be involved in the ruine of the wicked Which would be a great eye-sore in that exact and irreprehensible frame of Providence that all men promise to themselves who acknowledge that there is a God Wherefore according to the light of Reason there must be some supernatural means to rescue those innocuous and benign Spirits out of this common calamity But to describe the manner of it here how it must be done would be to entitle natural Light and Philosophy to greater abilities then they are guilty of and therefore that Subject must be reserved for its proper place CHAP. XIX 1. That the Extinction of the Sun is no Panick feare but may be rationally suspected from the Records of History and grounds of Natural Philosophy 2. The sad Influence of this Extinction upon Man and Beast and all the aerial Daemons imprison'd within their several Atmospheres in our Vortex 3. That it will doe little or no damage to the AEthereal Inhabitants in reference to heat or warmth 4. Nor will they find much want of his light 5. And if they did they may pass out of one Vortex into another by the Priviledge of their AEthereal Vehicles 6. And that without any labour or toile and as maturely as they please 7. The vast incomprehensibleness of the tracts and compasses of the waies of Providence 8. A short Recapitulation of the whole Discourse 9. An Explication of the Persians two Principles of Light and Darkness which they called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and when and where the Principle of Light gets the full victory 10. That Philosophy or something more sacred then Philosophy is the onely Guide to a true 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. THE last danger that threatens the separate Soule is the Extinction of the Sun which though it may seem a meer Panick fear at first sight yet if the matter be examined there will appear no contemptible reasons that may induce men to suspect that it may at last fall out there been at certain times such near offers in Nature towards this sad accident already Pliny though he instances but in one example yet speaks of it as a thing that several times comes to pass Fiunt saith he prodigiosi longiores solis defectus qualis occiso Dictatore Caesare Antoniano bello totius anni pallore continuo The like happened in Justinians time as Cedrenus writes when for a whole year together the Sun was of a very dim and duskish hue as if he had been in a perpetuall Eclipse And in the time of Irene the Empress it was so dark for seventeen dayes together that the ships lost their way on the sea and were ready to run against one another as Theophanes relates But the late accurate discovery of the spots of the Sun by Shiner and the appearing and disappearing of fixt Stars and the excursions of Comets into the remoter parts of our Vortex as also the very intrinsecal contexture of that admirable Philosophy of Des-Cartes doe argue it more then possible that after some vast periods of time the Sun may be so inextricably inveloped by the Maculae that he is never free from that he may quite loose his light 2. The Preambles of which Extinction will be very hideous and intolerable to all the Inhabitants of