The Major Works (English Library) (77 page)

BOOK: The Major Works (English Library)
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11
. i.e. water germander.

12
. i.e. the river Acheron (
Odyssey
, X, 509–10).

13
. i.e. in a room.

14
. ‘bending downeward’ (Bullokar).

15
. i.e. at the summer solstice (see next note).

16
. i.e. on Midsummer Day.

17
. In
On Plants
, I, x, 1.

18
. ‘that is toward the Eastern or Western points’ (
Pseudodoxia Epidemica
, II, 2).

19
. i.e. in the direction of the sun’s (apparent) annual motion.

20
. Song of Solomon 4.16; cf. Theophrastus on the impact of winds, in
On Plants
, IV, i, 4.

21
. Suitable arrangement; in Varro,
On Agriculture
, I, vii, 2. On ‘
quaternio’s
’ see above,
p. 333, note 60
.

22
. Literally ‘deviations from the circular form’. Cf. ‘eccentricall’ in the next paragraph.

23
. Spherical layers (
R
).

24
. ‘In a lop-sided onion of seven or more rings, those closer to the centre on one side are larger than those farthest from the centre on the other’ (
H
).

25
. i.e. upstream.

26
. Turn.

27
. Theophrastus,
On Plants
, IV, iv, 1, and Plutarch,
Alexander
, XXXV; respectively.

28
.
Of the Temperaments and Powers of Simples
, VII (Browne marg.), where Galen gives a prescription for splenetic patients.

29
. ‘fairer than the white ivy’ (Browne marg., quoting the Latin of Virgil,
Eclogues
, VII, 38).

30
. i.e. insition: engrafting (
OED
).

31
. ‘
Satio
, the acte of sowinge of come’ (Elyot).

32
. Linschoten,
Discourse of Voyages
, I, 61 (Browne marg.). The Royal Society was to express an interest in the reputed ‘horns taking root and growing about Goa’, only to discover that ‘it was a jeer put upon the Portugues, because the women of Goa are counted much given to lechery’ (
§ 187
).

33
. i.e. joined by their apexes.

34
. i.e. degrees.

35
. On conic sections (as before,
p. 361, note 100
). An ‘Equicrurall’ cone is an isosceles (as above,
p. 337, note 25
).

36
. Genesis 6.14; Arrian, VII, 19; and Song of Solomon (‘Canticles’) 1.14 – respectively.

37
. Pruning in circular fashion.

38
. Stalks.

39
. Inner halls of Roman houses.

40
. Open-air temples (
subdialia
is synonymous with
hypætbros
).

41
. Arcades with recesses.

42
. In
On Architecture
, V, i, 3.

43
. With thinly spaced columns.

44
. ‘the space betweene pilars’ (Elyot).

45
. Spacing.

46
. Exodus 27.9–11.

47
. Shading.

48
. i.e. the eye’s pupil.

49
. Unshaded (
R
).

50
. ‘that parte of the eie, whych is called the syghte… Also the front of an hoste, at the joynynge of battayle’ (Elyot).

51
. Brilliant whiteness.

52
. i.e. burying under ground.

53
. i.e. seminal principles (of growth).

54
. Slimy covers.

55
. Helmont had planted a willow’s stem in sterilised earth; watered only with rain or distilled water, its weight multiplied over thirty times within five years.

56
. Used as an emetic.

58
. ‘Orcus’s light is Jupiter’s darkness, Orcus’s darkness is Jupiter’s light’: Hippocrates (Browne marg., quoted in Latin).

59
. i.e. dispenses with natural occultations or eclipses. So Hevelius in his study of the moon (Browne marg.).

60
. As above,
p. 325, note 2
.

61
. The Incarnation was prefigured ‘by types / And shadowes’, as Milton was to write in
Paradise Lost
(XII, 232–3; cf. above,
p. 70
). Hence,
inter alia
, ‘the cherubims of glory shadowing the mercy-seat’ of the Tabernacle (Hebrews 9.5) prefigured the advent of Christ (Luke 1.35: ‘the power of the Highest shall overshadow thee’).

62
. Image.

63
. Cf. above,
p. 71
: ‘
Lux est umbra Dei
’.

64
. i.e. the
camera obscura
. The paragraph describes accepted theories of vision, both modern and ancient, involving patterns diagrammatically represented as > (‘the decussation’) and >— (‘semi-decussation’).

65
. i.e. by a force strong enough to make them rebound (
M
).

66
. Well-tuned (
R
).

67
. i.e. animate, and therefore spiritual.

68
. In his treatise
Of Perception
(Browne marg.). Bovillus makes his point with a diagram of several crossing lines (see
M
).

69
. i.e. fantastical: pertaining to vision.

70
.
Timaeus
, 36b-d; merged in the next paragraph with Justin Martyr’s
First Apology
, LXX. The argument must be visualised, for it involves not only Christ’s initial in Greek (X) and the Cross (+
or
T) but patterns which, made by the intersecting circles if rotated on a vertical axis, pass through the Greek letter
theta
(θ) representing thanatos or death (cf. above,
p. 309, note 21
; and
§198
).

71
. Union. Also ‘communication between a man and a god’.

72
. ‘make knowne’ (Bullokar).

73
. ‘He placed him crosswise in the universe’. So Justin Martyr (above,
note 70
), who attributes the statement to Plato.

74
. Numbers 21.8–9.

75
. Cf. ‘the mysterious crosses of
Ægypt
’,
above, p. 330
. ‘Mercurial’ refers to both Hermes (Mercurius) Trismegistus [cf. the handed crosses ♀,
above, p. 357, note 76
] and the sign of the planet Mercury
(
G2
).

1
. i.e. the mystical import of numbers according to Pythagoras and his disciples.

2
.
δ
κη
(Browne marg.):
dike
or justice.

3
. A marginal note provides the diagram
which ‘by square numeration’ becomes
with the number five ‘hanging in the centre of Nine’.

4
. i.e. nine-pins (
M
).

5
. In
The Cessation of the Oracles
.

6
. i.e. the four constituents of matter – ‘fire, water, earth, and aire’ (as above,
p. 124
) – and the quintessence (ether).

7
.
‘Arbor, frute
, suffrute
, herba
, and that fifth which comprehendeth the
fungi
and
tubera
’ (Browne marg.). Cf. above,
p. 350, note 46
.

8
. ‘As Herns, Bitterns, and long claw’d Fowls’ (Browne suppl.).

9
. i.e. claws.

10
. Ellipse, parabola, hyperbola, circle, triangle (Browne marg., named in Latin).

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