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A43489 An astrological discourse with mathematical demonstrations proving the powerful and harmonical influence of the planets and fixed stars upon elementary bodies in justification of the validity of astrology : together with an astrological judgment upon the great conjunction of Saturn & Jupiter, 1603 / written by that worthy, learned gentleman, Sir Christopher Heydon, Knight ; and now published by Nicholas Fiske ... Heydon, Christopher, Sir, d. 1623.; Fiske, Nicholas. 1650 (1650) Wing H1663; ESTC R16056 46,071 129

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12. 7. Oedipus or A Resolver being a Clew that leads to the chief Secrets and true Resolution of Ammorus Natural Moral and Political Problems by G. M. 12. 8. The Celestial Lamp enlightening every distressed Soul from the depth of everlasting Darkness to the height of eternal Light by Tho Fettisplace 12. Choyce Poems with several excellent Tradegies and Comedies 1. Fons Lachrymarum or a Fountain of Tears from whence doth flow Englands Complaint Jeremiahs Lamentations with an Elegy upon that Son of Valor Sir Charls Lucas by John Quarls 8. 2. Nocturnal Locubrations or Meditations Divine and Moral with Epigrams and Epitaphs by Robert Chamberlin 3. The Vnfortunate Mother a Tragedy by Thomas Nabbs 4. The Rebellion of Comedy by Tho Raulins 5. The Tragedy of Messalina by Nathaniel Richards 8. Excellent Peeces of Divinity of certain Orthodox Divines with other Sermons viz. 1. The Remedy of Discontentment or a Treatise of Contentation in whatsoever condition fit for these sad and troubled Times by the right Reverend Father in God Joseph Hall late Bishop of Exon and Norwich 12. 2. The Grand Sacriledg of the Church of Rome in taking away the sacred Cup from the Laiety at the Lords Table by the late Reverend Daniel Featly Doctor in Divinity 4. 3. The Cause and Cure of Ignorance Error Enmity Athiesm and Prophaness or a most hopeful way to Grace and Salvation by R. Young 8. 4. A Bridle for the Times tending to still the Murmuring to settle the Wavering to stay the Wandering to strengthen the Fainting by John Brinsley Minister of Gods Word at Yarmouth 5. Comforts against the Fear of Death being short Meditations of that precious Gentlewoman Mrs Anne Skelton of Norwich wherein are several Evidences of the Works of Grace in her own Soul which were the stay of her Heart against the Fear of Death by John Collings of Norwich 6. Iacobs Seed or the Excellency of seeking God by Prayer by Jeremiah Burroughs Minister of the Gospel to the two greatest Congregations about London Stepney and Criple-gate 12. 10. The Zealous Magistrate A Sermon by Thomas Trescot 11. Britania Rediviva or a Soveraign Remedy to cure a sick Commonwealth in a Sermon preached in the Minster at York before the Iudges at the Assize Aug. 9. 1649. by John Shaw Min. of Hull 9. The Princes Royal or a Sermon preached in the Minster in York before the Iudges March 24. 1650. by John Shaw Minister of Hull 10. Anatomy of Mortality divided into eight Heads 1. The Certainty of Death 2. Meditations of Death 3. Preparations for Death 4. The right Behavior in Death 5. The Comfort in our own death 6. The Comfort against the death of friends 7. The Cases wherein its lawful and unlawful 8. The glorious Estate of Gods children after death By George Stronde ERRATA REad Page 4. li. 2. is above a. p. 13. li. 15. proportion l. 24. operation p. 22. l. 26. this p. 23. l. 6. with the quality p. 24. l. 8. so far p. 27. l. 5. operation l. 7. ardor p. 48. l. 7. the general p. 50. l. 6. Historiarum Commentarios l. 23. sine p. 54. l. 8. this p. 55. l. 9. make like p. 58. l. 25. also in p. 60. l. 12. of these l. 28. to the true p. 63. l. 23. the same l. 25. Cauda Cygni p. 66. l. 17. are so p. 67. l. 14. Passion p. 70. l. 26. by r. of p. 72. l. 26. their r. these p. 74. l. 22. Ark p. 75. l. 1. me r. we p. 78. l. 4. of r. as l. 6. constituted p. 79. l. 22. of the Circum p. 80. l. 5. that either p. 99. l. 19. your r. their p. 102. l. 22. hapned CHAP. I. Of Winter NOt without great Judgment doth Pliny affirm those that first understood the obliquity of the Zodiack Rerum fores aperuisse For besides that the finding out hereof prepared the way first to find out the periodical motions of the Planets The Philosopher himself teacheth us that the variety generation and corruption of all things dependeth chiefly hereupon And common experience driveth us to confess the access and recess of the Sun unto the four Cardinal Points of this Circle to be the most general and assured cause of the years successive alteration Upon this ground I affirm the Winter quarter to take his true beginning at what time the Sun making his entrance into the Tropick of ♑ hath attain'd his greatest declination Southward from our Zenith or Vertical Point From whence divers Impediments evident in Nature do follow which bereave our Septentrional parts of that heat and vigor wherewith at other times the Sun being nearer and more elevated doth preserve and cherish the Elements and all things composed of them whether vegetable or sensative CHAP. II. The first Reason of the difference between the Heat and Light in Summer and Winter drawn from the diversity of Stay above the Horizon FOr whereas first of all continuance of action doth necessarily add force of operation to all natural Agents it cometh to pass in Winter by reason of the Suns remote Position that his continuance above the Horizon is shortest and his absence under the same longest thereby now causing the shortest days and longest nights For example the Elevation of the Pole at the honorable City of London is observed to be 51. g 32′ and the greatest declination of the Sun in this our Age is 23. g 31′ 30″ Therfore in the Winter Solstice the Sun finisheth his Diurnal Ark to them of this City in 7 hours 34 minutes and for this consideration can heat the Air here but a little while seeing the same is not one third of a natural day at which time nevertheless he remaineth hidden under the Earth more then twice so long and so ceaseth from calefaction imparting no benefit of his light and heat to us at all Whereas in Summer the Sun persisteth 16 whole hours and 26 minutes in operation not ceasing above seven hours and a half from action by reason of his absence under the Horizon Wherefore look what proportion 7 hours 34 minutes have to 16 hou 26 min the like difference there shall be betwixt the Suns operation in Summer and Winter in respect of his diverse stay above the Horizon which not to be too scrupulous is a double proportion the one to the other CHAP. III. The second Reason of the foresaid Difference drawn from the difference of Vnion in the Beams SEcondly In the work of the Stars Union of Beams is a thing regarded as of special consequence But it is clear to them that have any insight in the Opticks that in Winter the Union of the Beam incident with the Beam reflected is not comparable with that which the greater Altitude of the Sun causeth in Summer and therefore the effects depending upon this Union must accordly be increased or diminished in proportion That this is true Diagram Suppose A B in the first Figure and C D in the
AN Astrological Discourse With Mathematical DEMONSTRATIONS Proving the Powerful and Harmonical Influence of the Planets and fixed Stars upon Elementary Bodies in Justification of the Validity of ASTROLOGY Together with an Astrological Judgment UPON The great Conjunction of Saturn Jupiter 1603. Written by that worthy learned Gentleman Sir CHRISTOPHER HEYDON Knight and now published by NICHOLAS FISKE Jatromathematicus LONDON Printed by J Macock for Nathaniel Brooks at the Angel in Cornhil 1650. THis exquisite Treatise having been near 40 years detained in private hands is now by the good hand of God made publike it being the One and only Copy of this Subject extant in the World Pen'd it was by the incomparably learned Sir Christopher Heydon Knight whose able Pen hath so strenuously vindicated Judicial Astrologie as to this day not any Antagonist ●●●…st encounter with his unanswer able Arguments In this Tractate that very thing which all Antagonists cry out for viz. Where 's the demonstration of the Art is hear in this Book by ●●●●●● able Mathematical Demonstrations so judiciously proved that the most scrupulous may receive full satisfaction I shall only add thus much that we may herein admire the divine Providence of God who so long since elevated the Conceptions of this learned Kt to go on with to perform and perfect so high and so sublime a piece of learning and yet deferred its publication until both the times and mens minds also were by his all-guiding hand made capable of its reception The Work speaks its own merits I am thine WILLIAM LILLY To the Reader RICHARD FORSTER Doctor in Physick one of the Colledg of Physicians in London in Astronomy very learned and in Astrology no less skilful as many yet living do very well remember for although he was Physician to Robert Dudley that great Earl of Leicester yet did he survive him and dyed long after King Iames came into England by this Doctors means Sir Christopher Heydon Kt. of the County of Norfolk became not onely a Lover but an admirable Student in Astrology and to say truth I do not find in all my reading that any of the Ancients did exceed him in Knowledg herein Some years after K. Iames his coming into England this learned Knight to manifest his gratefulness unto Doctor Forster from whom he acknowledged his initiation in this Study did present unto him in London in a well written hand this ingenuous and deep piece of Philosophy which I now make publike Doctor Forster as my self well know received it as an inestimable Jewel and preserved it in his Study amongst the rarest and choicest Pieces therein but death depriving this learned Doctor of life in that year he was President of the Colledg by great providence this ensuing Treatise came into my hands which I have carefully preserved with great respect both to the Author and matter it self I have many times endeavored its impression but without success for until of late years such was the error or rather malice of the Clergy who only had priviledg of licensing Books of this nature that they wilfully refused the publication But of late casually shewing this Manuscript to my worthy friend Elias Ashmole Esq he earnestly desired it might be made publike freely offering to be at the charges of cutting the Diagrams in brass that so the work might appear in its greater lustre I might here fall into a serious and just Commendation of every particular Chapter of this Work and the weight almost of every word in each Chapter but sith the Work it self is short I will not anticipate thy reading but refer thee to the book it self having abundantly satisfied my self in these my aged days to have added somewhat to the raising up of Astrology which during all my years and they are more then 70. hath been strangely kept under and aspersed by men malicious and unlearned so that although I had my self many times serious thoughts of expressing my own Astrological Conceptions in publike yet was I ever either dehorted by Friends or retarded by a servile fear of incuring the then present Powers However if God shall enlarge my days I hope hereafter to be serviceable to the learned Society of Astrologers unto whom I heartily commend this at present and in the future such other Pieces as he shall enable me to perform while I live and am called Thine Nicholas Fisk Philiatros Astrophilus Courteous Reader These Books following are printed for NATHANIEL BROOKS and are to be sold at his shop at the Angel in Cornhill 1. PLanometria or the whole Art of Survey of Land shewing the use of all Instruments but especially the plain Table whereunto is added an Appendix to measure regular Solides as Timber Stone the like and to find the contents of Timber tree as it groweth useful for all that intends either to sell or purchase by Ol. Wallingby 8. 2. An Arithmatick discovering the secrets of that Art in Numbers and Species in two Books 1. Teaching by precept and example the operation in Numbers whole and broken by Decimals a new practise use of the Logarithms Napyers bones with new Propositions touching the Quantities qualities and Rules of Medicines 2. The great Rule of Algebra in Species resolving all Arithmatical Questions by supposition with a Canon of the powers of Numbers fitted to the meanest capacity by Jonas Moor late of Durham 8. 3. Tactometria or the Geometry of Regulars after a new most exact and expedious manner in Solids not only in respect of magnitude or demension but also of gravity or ponderosity according to any metal assigned with useful Experiments falling in by the way of measure weight And withall the like artifical Practical Geometry of Regular-like Solids and of a Cylindrir body for liquid or Vessel Measure with sundry new Experiments never before extant for gauging a work very useful for all that are imployed in the Art Metrical by John Wiberd Doctor in Physick 4. Records Arithmetick or the grounds of Art teaching the Practises of Numbers and Fractions after an easie manner Histories with curious Discourse of Humane Learning 1. The English Gentleman and English Gentlewoman both couched into one volume with the Ladies Love-Lecture and a Supylement called the Turtles Triumph by Richard Braithwait Esq Folio 2. The History of the Golden Ass 4. 3. The Painting of the Ancients the beginning progress and Consummation of that Noble Art and how those ancient Artificers attained to their still so much admired Excellency 5. Israels Redemption or the Prophetical History of our Saviours Kingdom on Earth that is the Church Catholique and Triumphant with a Discourse of Gog and Magog or the Battle of the the great Day of God Almighty by Robert Maton of Exon-Colledg in Oxon. 8. 6. An Introduction to the Teutonick Philosophy being a determination of the original of the Soul at a Dispute held in the publike School at Cambridg at the Comencement March 3. 1646. by Charls Hotham Fellow of Peter-House