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Peacham, Henry
The compleat gentleman : fashioning him absolute in the most necessary and commendable qualities, concerning mind, or body, that may be required in a person of honor. To which is added the gentlemans exercise or, an exquisite practise, as well for drawing all manner of beasts, as for making colours, to be used in painting, limming, &c — London, 1661

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https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.25552#0085

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Obfervations in Survey os the Earth. * 69
searchable and stupendicus work, (heweth us in the Tea Set olausMag-
thelikenesseand (hapes, not only of Land-Creatures> ms his ^escrip-
as Elephants,Horses^Dogs,Hog*, Calves, Hares,Snails, Souhern parts
&c. but of Fowls in the Ayr; as Hawks,.Swallows, Vul- of the woria,
Hires,and a number the like ; yea, it affordeth us Men
and Women ; and among men, even the Monk : but
hereof see Junius in his Batavia 5 and if you please, Holland, is to
Alex, ab Alexandra, with some other?/ be seen a Mer-
Neither is itlesTe strange, that the Earth also, os maid’s dead
purpose, as it were, to be even with the £ea, in some bodv hanging
degree ; though it doth not produce living Fisties,yet up*
the shels os divers; and the bodies of some; the re-
sembJances of them, in perfest done it doth : such as
are to be found in divers places of the World : and
particularly, near Verona,in Italy : concerning which,
learned men, that have taken pains to search into the
wonders of nature, have divers conjettures; and do
not agree(as in a thing of such abstruseness,no wonder)
among themselves : but this 1 conceive to be most pro-
bable, that they are bred (not transformed ) in, and
by the earth it self: which is the opinion of divers.
£ome, very learned, are of opinion, that they were
once living creatures : but whether bred therein the
earth, where now found ; or brought thither, out of
the sea, and by what chance,is another question. The
Reader that desireth further satisfastion in this point,
mud have recourse to learned Naturalists,and Philoso-
phers, as Hier. Fracastorius, and others.
Moreover, what inestimable wealth it asfordeth in
Pearls,Coral,Araber,and the like!
By reading,you shall also find what strange Earth-
quakes, re moving of whole Towns,Hills,&c. have been
upon the face os the Earth, railing of it in one place,
leaving Gulfs and Vasiity in another*. And (Lucius Mar-
o'«j,and Sextus Julius, being Consuls in Rome') in the
Coun ry of Mutinum, two Mountains iner, and joyned
themselves together.
In the raign of Kero, Vesiius Marcellm being Over*
K 3 - see*
 
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