A prognostication. | ||||
eclipticall cause: but by supernaturall, or miracle. For it was at the full moone, | ||||
scriptures witnes: which inforced Dyonisius Areopagita* at the time of his | ||||
passion, to speake thus: Eyther ye God of nature suffereth, or els the frame of the | ||||
worlde is dissolved. | ||||
Many things by the Eclipses are gathered, as Longitudes of countries, the | ||||
Quantity of the Sunne, contayninge the bignes of the Earth 162 times: the | ||||
compasse of the Earth 21600 miles: whose thicknes, according to Archimedes | ||||
rule is 6872 miles, and eighte elevenths of a mile. | ||||
The quantity of the moone is the 43 part of the earthe. | ||||
The sunne contayneth the globe of the moone 7000 times. | ||||
Saturnus comprehendeth the bignes of the earth 91 times. | ||||
Jupiter 95 times. Mars, once, and ten sixteenthes. Venus the 37 part. Mercu= | ||||
rius, one, 32000 parte of the earthe. | ||||
Note here, that Alfraganus* affirmeth the least fixed starre perfectly seene, | ||||
as bigge as the whole earthe. | ||||
The distaunce or miles that the moone is from the | ||||
Earth, and every planet from other. | ||||
As some have published, it is from the earth to the moone, 15750 miles. | ||||
From the moone to Mercurie, is 12812. miles. | ||||
From Mercury to Venus, as many miles. | ||||
From Venus to the Sunne, is 23437 miles and a halfe. | ||||
From the Sunne to Mars, is 15725 miles. | ||||
From Mars to Jupiter, is 78721 miles. | ||||
From Jupiter to Saturne, as manye miles. | ||||
From Saturne to the Firmamente, 120485. miles. | ||||
The whole summe from the earth to the firmamente, is 358463 miles & a halfe. | ||||
The naturall causes of many Sunnes or moones. | ||||
These came to passe, when a thicker cloude is gathered toward the side of the | ||||
sunne or moone, in which the broken beames of the sunne doe leake ye fashion | ||||
and very forme of that sunne. Thus as followeth, sayth Plinius* in his | ||||
second booke of the historye of nature, and 31 chapter. No moe sunnes are per= | ||||
ceived in our time then three: and they are never seene, ayther above or be= | ||||
neath the sunne, but on the sides: never in the nighte, but onelye at ye sunne | ||||
riseinge, or goeinge downe. | ||||
A way to get the Golden number*, or | ||||
prime without a table. | ||||
Adde unto the yeare of our Lorde, one, then divide that summe by nineteen, | ||||
the remayne is the prime, or golden number. | ||||
The Epact* is |
Abbreviations are underlined like this Wm. and the expansion may be seen by moving the cursor over it.
An entry outlined like this has a note which may be seen by hovering over it. |
Transcribed by LF and JW