This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1846 Excerpt: ... "go For to brynge the mater to the hole efl'ecte; And fantasy than hath the hole aspecte, The ymagyned matter to bring to finysshement, Wyth good desyre and inwarde judgement. And estymacion doth well comprehende---The space, the place, and all the purveyaunce At what time the power might entende To brynge the cause ...
Read More
This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1846 Excerpt: ... "go For to brynge the mater to the hole efl'ecte; And fantasy than hath the hole aspecte, The ymagyned matter to bring to finysshement, Wyth good desyre and inwarde judgement. And estymacion doth well comprehende---The space, the place, and all the purveyaunce At what time the power might entende To brynge the cause unto perfyte utteraunce. Often it weyeth the cause in balaunce, 'By estymacyon ony thinge is nombred, 7, -? H By length or shortnes how it is accombred. Fyftly, the mynde, whan the fourth have wrought, Retayned all tyll the minde have _made ' An outwarde knowlege to the mater thought, Bycause nothynge shall declyne and fade, ---It kepeth the mater nothynge rethrogarde, But dyrectly, tyll the minde have proved All suche maters whyche the iiij. have moved. Plauto, the connynge and famous clerkc, ' That well expert was in phylosophy; "-W10 Doth right reherse upon natures werke, How that she werketh upon all wonderly, Bothe for to minysshe and to. multeply, In sondry wyse by great dyreccyon ' After the maner with all the hole affeccyon.--In my natyf language I wyl not opres, More of her werke, for it is obscure; Who wyl therof knowe all the perfeytnes In phylosophy he shall fynde it ryght sure, Whyche all the trouth can to hym discure. 15'.No man can attayne perfecte connynge ' But by longe stody and diligent lernynge. THE ryght hygh power natures natuiygg, Natu13.rna_de the bodyes above, " In sundry wyse to take theyr workynge, _/That aboute the worlde naturallye do move, As by good reason the phylosophres prove, That the planettes and sterres instrumentes be To natures werkynge in every degre. God gave great vertue to the planettes all, 3.1130 And specially unto depured Phebus, To enlumyne the worlde ever in specyall; And th...
Read Less