Page:The Discovery of a World in the Moone, 1638.djvu/101

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84
The discovery

because hee was an ignorant imposter, but yet consider that originall, from whence hee derived most of his knowledge, and then, perhaps, his witnesse may carry with it some probablity. He is commonly thought by birth to be an Ismaelite, being instructed by the Jewes in the secrets of their Philosophy,[1] and perhaps, learned this from those Rabbies, for in his Alcaron, hee talkes much of mountaines, pleasant fields, and cleare rivers in the heavens, but because he was for the maine very unlearned, he was not able to deliver any thing so distinctly as he was informed. The Cardinall Cusanus[2] and Iornandus Bunus, held a particular world in every Starre, and therefore one of them defining our earth, he saies, it is stella quædam nobilis, quæ lunam & calorem & influentiam habet aliam, & diversam ab omnibus aliis stellis; a "noble starre having a distinct light, heat and influence from all

  1. Azoara. 57. & 65.
  2. Cusa. de doct. ign. l. 2. cap. 12.
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