Page:The Discovery of a World in the Moone, 1638.djvu/76

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
of a new World.
59

how otherwise would the parts about us in a Sunne-shine day appeare so bright, when as all the rayes of reflexion cannot enter into our eye?

2. It is compact, and not a spungie and porous substance. But this is denied by Diogenes, Vitellio, and Reinoldus,[1][2][3] and some others, who held the Moone to bee of the same kind of nature as a Pumice-stone, and this, say they, is the reason why in the Suns eclipses there appeares within her a duskish ruddy colour, because the Sunne-beames being refracted in passing through the pores of her body, must necessarily be represented under such a colour.

But I reply, if this be the cause of her rednesse, then why doth she not appeare under the same forme when she is about a sextile aspect, and the darkned part of her body is discernable? for then also doe the same rayes passe through her, and therefore in all likelihood

  1. Plut. de pla. phil. l. 2. c. 13.
  2. Opt. l. 4.
  3. Com. Purbac. Theo. p. 164.
should