T ILLINOIS Production Note Women Printers Digital Collection Rare Book & Manuscript Library University of lllinois Library at Urbana-Champaign ZOZ3 W. Ys & _ 7 '* Being, An For the Year of our Blefſed'Saviour's Incarnation, to Holy Writ, and the beſt of Ecclefiaſtical Hiſtory, 56 29.. It being Bifſextile, or Leap-Yearſi, the World by Scripture, with a' Continuation of the Church Hiſtory;: &c. | to -the year of Chrift 700 :. Asalſo the Riſing and Setting of. the Sun, Monthly Obſervations, with a general Judgement on the Year, from the quarterly Ingreſs,'with two Nativities of .two:Children born of one Mother, and both died of. Convullion. fits:. - With other things, | Calculated and referted to'the Meridian'sf Lowdom, Byz Stndent in Phyfick and Aſtrology*. | Conſidera mirabilia Dei' fortis, Job 37.14. Printed' by Z. D." for the Company of 'STATIONERS, 768 o: To his Ingenious Friend, Mr. C Oaron, , my\Friend,; jtill Tet thy, Knozvleclge clime, J) \Stl monnt thy Genius tY, what's more fizblzme. Diſtain uull, Rarth, where Pride ajid Envy rove, | Scale thou the Sky, fit in the Court 0f]ove Beſtride bis Eagle, then brave Gannimed, Charm thou with Wit, as be with Beauty did, Bluſh all ye Sons of Oxfmd bluſh,for ſhame, Tour toylſome, Learning .ſlafi loft i5. your, Fame,-+ Gonſult your *:Mother, whilſt I'm pleas” dto]ee *:Uni- (My happy Friend)-their lov'd Atironomy, g veifity, Their nobleſt Science, thus ont done by thee, ' Thow. who by Induſtry far.more doſt kaow, Thanthey to Kindred and Compulſion owe, NEzlice you mft_expecd, ſome Hate ſome Love, #bole,Cropps of: Envy here, aiid Grains abave ,] The:Sun, thy Father, will tloy IWorth debate, | An for tldy Knowledge, willithy Km)wledge bate. [ 1 i Hnd will not hu#t t:)at Wit he did znfþzre !_ j Thou point'ſt bis Fourneys, doſt his Conrſe reveal," 1 Tel”ft all bis Ramb.es,which-thou ſhould(t conceal Werite'(t his Durens Age the Empreſs. of the Slqe:,% And when' he does\ the ſlrning fair! Surprize | Tho ſhow'ſt. her dear, elipſe to Humane Eyes,” This does inrage the God of. A.therial fire, ' ( But for thy (,mnf)rt He is {tillthy Sire, S Fly then to Heav'n, where thy Re/ations are, | Y'y Brother Plſſznet and-thy;S$ifter. $tar, Petition [ove, and if be prants thy dne, | Then thox ſha;t be*a Conficllation too. C _ctſſ) 0 Nat.ctſiſſPoWEIſi ——o_n_enm—_nrewen N —e ree rrrernn m emn eDn em umcs emn R mnns mn mn m AT e: R EIEAEEETES A certain Probation of the account of Yearsfrom the Creation of the World to the Birth 0 Chrift'; \proving from the Holy Scripture that there were 1n that Interval 3949, ayd no i more, Courteous Readery, Gnorance and Error, the, one Parent to Romze, and the othe? I the Iſſue of Parads[e, haye crept {o' into the boſoms*ot Adams Poſterity, that 'Knowledge' is become a flave.to.the faſhion, and Trurh1s. tarned ſtranger.:. For, fo often .hath this kind of Hiſtory been\bandied by.the , Gamfters of ſeveral Ages, that it doth not only make young Inquiters doubr, but thoſe who ought to be better principled in points of Faith, doquelti-| on whether there were-ever ſucha.rhing as a'Creation or;nor-. And theretore for. rwo forts'of.men 1 .have taken this pains, Firft, forthoſe whodoubr, and are willing to be infortmed ; and Secondly, for thoſe who neither know .nor dovbrz and yet are willing to be rightly -1nformed. 'I being 'moved by theſe per- ſwaſions,was willing.tocalt in my mite- among.the reſt, in hope |. to ſerye ihis curious Age in_this matter,.[ am now-abour to dit- courſe from the holy Scriptures which thing being done and b-- lieved, thete will doubtleſs no Golzdh appear among the Phi> liffr2es;who-thall date to"contemn the Holt of 7/raei: —tor, | Magna'Veritas, & prevalebje, Which time for methods fake T will divide intoftx parts, or Epocha's, viz, Firſt, From Adazito the Flood, ( Seſoml/)) From the Flood, .to.the Promiſe made to Abraham: Thirdly, Fromthe Promiſe made to Abraham, to the 1ſfracl-/| ztes going out of Egypre R . Fowurthiy, From the going.our of Zgypr, to the Foundation of the Temple, : _ Fifthly, Erom the Foundation of the Templez.ro the Babylo- iſh Captivity. And, _ S4xthly, From thart Caprivity,ro the Birth of Chriit, O_ F emn: s k - LUZ : ,. - ſſ,f ot Divifions only, v/z,. The frit, to the Flood. The ſecond, to Abraham., And the-third to (ſihr;ſt The firſt of, theſe they call *Aſyavy) Tem/zm oZſZ'urſizm and by ſome, Tempes inane, The fecond, Hewinor,'Tempcs Hero- icum. And_the- third, "I5921x05 Tempws Huſtorteum, . \But this 04zrer, I ſhall wholly 1 egle&theſe things, and_come to my marter it ſelf,/in which Þ ſhall follow Or:ganme. And firft, of taat Exochafrom Adam to theFlood, Hemach 6512 |Merhuſalzh the Flood,were 1656 years Methiſalah|S1185; S Lamech compleat, 2 may appeor by Lamech 1 l183) OIveak; che' precedent 'years' col ledted ; yet Nrcephorms, Enſebius, 'and the Sepruagrrt, make chat interval to be 2243, bur this 'is altogether talſe. , Secez4ly,* To'the Promiſe made to Abr aham="Sths being 190 years old; begat 4rphaxad, two years after the Flood. Adam 130] [Seth In the 600 year of Noah's Sexh - 1105} f}ſi Enos ' Age, the Elood came upon Enos L}] gol £[Cainan the Earth, and 'continued Caman - 70] 2 |Mahalaleel/|the fpace of one whole year Mahalaleel 8 65\ <\Fared ſo'thatall the years from Jmed =h 62. o {Henoch c&eCreation to the end of f B [ Bur fome of our latter Writers have made but three Periods Periods, ] Arphaxad 35 - 'Sulah Abraham being 75 years old Salah 8130'2) Heber departedfrom Harz; Hence, Heber £134 -Phalech theſe years all colle&ed, make | Phalech &30 4 " |Regu vp the «compleat numbcx of Regu 1 13218 'U (Saruch | 365;'this being added to 1656, Saruch |&130| 5 ?[Nachor Þthe yearsfrom the Creition ro Nachor " "ÞR129] [Thare the' Flood, make up 202.35 to | Thare 70|{dbrahbam\ which; in the Epocha's,the Re- cent Fews. and . Rabbrns, agree, nand 3n this ſecond lpterval,| Nrcephorus make I157 yeats. Thirdly, From the Promiſe made to A&raham to the'going out of Eg5pt, which was 430 years, according 'to; the APOfflL { Paul, Gal. 3, 17. And Moſes, .Exori 12.:40, And'is thus pſO\u{ From the Calling of .4brah172 to the Birth of/1ſczacy are 25 | years, Gen,21, V. 1. I/aacwas 60 yeats old when Facob and | E/am weleborn, Gen, 25.26. Hence, Foſeph muſt beborn in -ti\c 91 year of Facob's age, as will ſi\ppear from rhe Supputation ! of the yearsof Facob and Foſeph 3 for the year of jctſſtſiſi $birrh ;is not mentioncd/in the holy-Scripture —— 'therefore ob- ſiſſl\(.* l ITIIIE I C —— ſerve —— Foſeph was 30 years old when he wastaken out of Priſon, Ger. 41.46. Afterwards there were 7 years of Plenty and two. of Famine compleat,. in which Foſeph.made himlelf known to his breth ren, when they came- the ſecond timeinto Egypt to buy Corn, Ger. 45.11- Andjn the third, y-ar of the Famine, when Faceb went down into Egyp, and, beiug brought before Pharaoh, who asked. his age, . he then: faid he was'x30 yeats old, Gez. 47. 9. So that the' 13oth year of F acob agrees to the 3gth"year of Foſeph; From whence 'it *is plain, that Foſeph was born in the g1it year of Facob's age; and all the days of Foſeph were*1to yeats, Ger. 50. 22,” Hence from the} Death-of Foſeph to the Birthof Moſes were 64 yeatrs, and fiom the Birth of Moſes to the 'going out of Egypr, is 8o years, Exod.'7.7.” And theſe nuinbers colle&ed, "make up the com<- pleat ſum of*430 yeats inclufive, from Abraham's going from Haram,' tothe 1ſraelites going out-of Zgypt : The half of which time ( faith Czlviſcs ) was ipent' by Abraham, Tſaze and Facob, in'the Land of Canaar';, but the other half by Jzcob andhis Poſterity in the'Land of * Zgypr, Hence is'doth appear, That the. 7{raelsres departed "from Egypr in the 2453. year from the Crearion. The/forrth Epocha' is, To the laying the Foundation of the Temple of Solo-on, and was from the going out 'of Egyp: 480 years; -and is thus proved, Moſes was Captain of the People in-the Wilderneſs 40 years, for he died in the 1 2oth' year of his Age, Dewe. 4. 3, Joſbwa the firit Judge in 1/7el, governed- 18 years, and Fe died- when he was 1 16 yeatrs'old, ]:/þ. 24. 29. Othonel, governed the Petople' 40 years, Judp. 3; 11, Ehyd or Aod, 8 years, J»dg. 3. 30. Deborah and Barach 4o years, [yudg. 5 3t. Graeon ruled 40, Jwdg. 8.28. Abimelech 3 years, Judp. 9.22. Tola z3 years,' ]-dg. 10. 2. Jarr 22-years, ſwdg, 10. 3. Jephtha 6 years: Judg. 12.7. {bezar 5 years, Judg,12. 9. Eloz' to years, Jwudg. 13: 17 Abdon B yeats, J-dp. 12, 14- Sampſou 20 years, Judg.'16. 3 ElL; the Prieſt 40 years, 1 84m: 4. 18, Sammel and Saul 40 years, Ats 13.21, A 3 Davsd D D D SC D D EDEL IEE IDIRG l Toie EEE R E EISaER R a —aAEIEIIES e: TC EETGGT FI IHS S. S-S" David 40 YEears,: 2.S4ms 5.4- : And laft of all, So/ozzor 3 years,, and.in the _beginning of the fourth-he began;to. Build the Temple,/;; .and all_theſe numbers Colletted), makeup the, compleat fumot, 4 80 years, according to the: Relarion.ot the holy, Penmans. 1;King..6; I,, Hence it plain- ly appears, that the Foundation of: this,Lemple, was Laid 2933 ,years afterjthe Creation of the Warld,-thar, is, in-the,2934rh. year Currant, in-the-Month 279 2f> thar is,0ur dpril, The fifth Epochz is from th2-Foundatiowof the-Temple: to the Babylomfſh Caprivity, and Deftruftion/and:Sacking ofthe.City, inthe - 11th year of Zedek1ah's/Reign, 12King. 25: 2.,To:which \timeis numbred'/425- years, -and /is thus proved by irhe-Reigns ot theKings of *[,ds.” 'VFor 'Solozzan being dead;-the, Kingdom was divided, »and © was Governed; by/the-Kings of 'F#da and {/- rael. "Therefore Solomgn baving. begats to:Build the Temple.m the fourth/year: of his Reign, He+Reignedin all/afterwards, M cont IN ITETIOTY PWW SEne Rn R r nnnenn———n——nnrrnnrnee emn nernnen A emn nnenne em Yiears, 36 Aziurith, 52 Rehoboamy' 17 Jotham, 16 - Temple happened'; And 1n Abia, 18 Achas, 16 \the year ( from the Creats- Af4, at- " Hezekrah,' 29 onofi the World ) /3360,| Joſhaphat, a5 Manaſſeth 55 from the iFlood 1704+ 41d | Joram, 8 Ammon, 2 from the guingout of Egypt ſi Ochoſras, 1: Joſiar, 3.I++-:907. ayÞ rAtbalian, - » Joachion,”" 11 Sixthly.and laſtly,.from Foasy ho.- * jo.ſſzſ/mg, ; this »Defſtruction: of, tle Amaſtasy" 29 & : TemPpie:to4the; Birth! of Here:ke;ng Jechonias, Chrilt ;in,which partthe an Inter- Monrhs-:1.- $+ /Seriprure: is,flent.1/and Regn. yea. - x-- Ledekrahy, 11 therefore we muſt be aſhſt- a5 THHY aþ - ſi\ ' {a which ed by Heathet Hiitory: As| vear by the ( jeup. of big'1 \/ 'the Olympiadsthat of Na-| {econd book Rergn, the bonaſſar,che Foundation of | l of” Kings, Devaſtat - Rome,” ſi z ! Cha? 14- en of this I: is generally agreed to | |and I5. C:ry and by all,that the Deftrudtion | !ſi of this City -and Temple] happenzd in the ſecond year of the 47 Olympiad, which agrees | to the 153th Year of Naborafſar, and to the I64h of the Foundation of Rem-, and was the. 1 86 Olympigaical Year. Authors aHo agree, That, oug Saviour Sut ered in rhe 859 Oly?7geadical Year, and from the Foundation of Kore 9$6) gſimd from the Creation of the World 2932. N(\ſſ\)\/ Nowjif we Subſtra& 186, -the Olympiadical Yeary in which the City was Deftroyed;” from $08, the Ohmpradrcal Year in which Chrift was Crucified, the Remainder,\1s622,) whichvis the Tnterval between the Deſtruction a1d/ Chrifs Paſſion: 02 | -*Again, 1f we SubftraQt' 33,5 the Years. cempleat'of: Chriſt's Age, from 622, there remaines''599 Years and'a few-days, from theDeſtruQtion of the Temple, to'the Birth of-Chrilty December the 25th, according tothe ]el12n numerationy.. Another way to.compurethis timey is briefly;athusz which is elaborately. performed: by»Oxeganws.: Buti T\mulc beſhorts. Firſt, They number to:-the/Edidt. of.C5r44-60Years; 2Ficth thenee''to'thar"Edi&t. of Darmue the-Baitard,, 208;1 Thingly, From' thence ro-the Building-of the City and.Walls of Jeraſaulen:, 493" Fonrthly,- From'thence to the Death bf - Alexanderg,49 3, Fifthty, Fo'the Epochaiof the Syrogrechans,. 12years ;\And; Laftlyy*From that Eporha'to the Paſlion/of |Chrilt,/ 344% »All which Numbers colleted, .make up the forementioned?ſum of 62%;; "frgm- which-taking 33 there yemains.. 589,.as\before, and-/is*withonr doubt-true and rational, Henes, the Number.of Yearsintheſefix Epochs's of time.,' are a's followeth; From "Adam to the Flood, 1659 Fromthe Flood to the Promiſe ro Abraham, ..367 / Years\ pro- Fromm thePromiſe to rhtDepart,out of Zgjpt 430\ wved from FromtheDep. ro the Pound.of rhe Temple, . 489 bolyScri- From theFound. of the Temp. ro its Delrruct, 427\N prore, Fromthence torbe Birth of Chriſt, 1 589 6 2949, According to:my Afſ.rtion in my laſt Y ears Almranach, A'4 Fanuary THOUIS eAR ERIIE N FOUREE A P EDEI AN IIDSEES IN" IN AR To rhis years\Entrance are we Mortals brought, Andnow we ſee whar laſt years motion wrought, Satwrs hath* chang?d his fign, and we our face, And Plors'that plagu'd Us are our Neighbours Caſe: Alr! Chyonos, Chronos ! Fove will ſhortly riſe And' wipe. the tears from flately Londow's Eyes, =< Samts" SjS Days..! D5 ',O +1/ſe.| Weather and Monthly Iplace 1 ſers. m*t{-fiuctlflffiect: OBbſervations. Wa &S. 21B 2 4'A3\I end mjſſlalt ſiſſRece_a*eſi;Z mal, 2\b OQcQay Stevb|IL 819 © 4* 97%_7 year 15 fac benum : |. 31 £ |Otay Joha.|, 22 53 IWith froſt, o 1 Tegmere pacem, - 40 Celeſphorus [2 67 57 IN 4 begia |65 {ettareeam, x.- 9 ” - 6 e1Simeon,,. " |: 2017 56 IIthis withcold. Plali34- T4- LIEbE B2ny fL . 317.55 5 Frofi: the 4,5,8!This aphorilti- d Jwagus. | 177 54 S\dGVY 6dayes, L'cal afſertion-of a ſſEZ'hSYdſil%S. 29\7 53. 3jitorms of wind |the P{almiſt g b{Marcellinus. |nt 127.32.0 [{A2Y chang- jmay and dorh 10 CiPaul Erem. | 747 50 51 © P able air. lax wdll com- 11 =S 5]7 49 5[lOY i{mand our obe- I2f &fArchard 19 47 5{the air inclin'd {dience as-our t3if Hilarias ” m 3_0_ 45 SÞy... .. {memory, .and 14/$JFcliy 5 P ©2/7 45 31 Apog..... tolwouldio,God i5}d Maurtins | +7 44 5|moiſture, per- Ft were; practi- 16 b Marcellus - F g 7 42 3jhaps ſnow, yet {{ed.in-all the 17; £ [Antonins 79', 4 $jnot very cold;. |Dominions of ' W .1'7 39 5[The air cloudy Emurope : But, 14.7 38 Si% hHY and jtzmeo, ltrange ? z I 9! £ Wſi:]f%actn 20! f IFab. & Sch, 27;7 35 5loyer-caſt, for |news from | \ ona5 AV 11 Flt-23 j zl;g {/gmcs ; 25' 35 Slgamlſſ hſome nort hern 22 incentius l 32 El,924X, A O'Kingdoms and FEL '!Kingdoms an 23|b X 9,..30 5 Countries in 24] C[ETimothens I ?4?7 39 SiCold ſeren air, |Exrope, as if 25 30n g. t'\(* S/,28. 5 - herewerea”” 2'6. p POHCZ'(!'PUS | 23 7 26 5 q Perig, '._\robabi'lity of 27, f£1Chryſoi.om|& 7\, 24 5| ETEEIIS mn EnS ———_—__— Full Moon the 5 day, at 11 atnight. Laſt Quarzer the 13 dayz at 8 at nighr, New Moon the 21 day, at one afrernoons Firſk Quarterrhe 28 day, at8 in the morning. » The Hi'/ZC:v\'ſſ')' of the Chaurch. COZZLZ'fl;{e,;l, & : with other t/']mgſiſ. 31% » Conftamtime the Grear,the then Fort' Royal of Chrifti- |2nity, procezded in his Chriftian Zeal, to ſertle a ge- neral-and duiable Peace inthe Churth of God ;'and to this end, he-aboliſhed thoſe/Beathen 1Idolatrous Ce- remomes ufedinFgy>r; Ro#6, Helrovolge,Frdea,Se, as'the Cz[zt'twsſimezzſict'rſizlp}, caHed rct-fi%u; in Egypty to whichthey attribured/the caufe 6f *he Tnundation of| N1lus.: In Rome the Glads#toves,'ot thoſe Feneers who! uſed:in rhe'{ight of the'People'to kill one! another for paſtime, werediſcharged-and aboliſhed;"In Heltzpolzs,, the filthy: Cuttom of young Womenz*who' were tdlera— ted to proffitute themfelvesto'Strahgers till they were' married; was by the Enperor forbidden. In Z:de4, rhe! Altar builr under the Oak of 2252#8,where the'Anvels| appeared to Hbr45amzatter uſed byth&-Pagans to.offer Sacrificeupon;hedetttoyed, and built a holy Temple in theroomof it for Divine Service: Thisfecond Soloman did likewife buijd Jivers Temples befides for che Wor-; thip of God, as in Ferhlehear, 6n Mount Oliyer,Mount} Calvary; and other places. . And Jaft'of all hebuilt rhar| 33*famous Ciry in-Thyzc44; ( now the refidence of 'the Grand-S1gnor)'called Con/tantineple, which he at firft called Novz Romep. At laſt being minded to miake War upon the Perſza7s, purpofed in his Journy to be bapti- zed in Fordar ; but falling fick at Nzcomedsd, he was preventedy and /ſhoxrtly after dieds and lett the Empire to his three Sons; of which Conftantiug lived longeft, and therefore Fonly mention him. This Emperor was poifoned with the Arian Hereſy, by means of an 4x- r14y Prieſt kepr in the Court by Conflantia his Aunt. ' | —— 1:94{): Iy1 auratygſue? [:Y 7 +$troA 16 pau%gſia.l Þ 341 5m: t ee AMRER R WMZ 23 I OTW 08 em - C emn Rn mn a rr IE ca— edn M d eB emn Great God ! by our gom* Pzſſwct thou hqſt ſen_. The Balſam of a healing Parliament, 'To Cure the wounded, : And make b hn Imen ſee Rites, Laws, R_el!bx on, King's ſecurity, BY which *tis Kings ſiznd Subjects Keep their own, Andb} which Rſixlſi Rebels receive vheu doom Sct,m; Ds 71./ Wem})er ctſſnl MM;/U[) - Dct); P'ctzce 5 /ett /71:4tud/AſſlzcctJ Oþſcty 1tons, : | S. 1657 I5 5; {1:4Gieat Stares="*]| |E}Pur, Mar, 297.14 5 m2n of diyers 3 f4B lafius $L-I2[7.125: Q'J ©! Countries 4: |Veronica 2417 11 \5\ Wind and re- j1nd Kingdoms 51.#|Agarha Ik . 87 10 Sf P ELLMaxia©|meet about the 6\.Þ]Dorothea 2917:+ 8 5i\miflion of cold{carificition of 71 jRomwald | :: 217,.5.5 51 4pog. divers Privi- _ 14/7,14 5{Vallous Wea:ſiedgesand | gc |Apollonia 257 I,,5;[] %9 - ther;jtheſe relate to |' f Scholaſhca m ..815 59.6.2\ H© - wet the German 2016-57 5 A hi&. cand:{Princes: and D zis 55 Zjmowry Citics,.and 13tb\gabus 4'5.53 by gſpme partof 14\£|Valentine 29 6:516;*&:Þ-Q the:Kingdom Vp.;- 9i6 48 6 \Pleaſant warmlof Sweeland. 4 e [Julianus.; 2-2-6 46 5'411 tor ſeveraljDivxers Ambal- 17jfiAugo $i16 42 5ſſdavs ſadorsareſent 18 ConCOſdxa 1956 49 6/ * Þ 8\ from Kingdom to-Kingd. but P 19|aſimeon Ep.1] X., 6 38 6 ngd. 1 Eucharius I8is -26:.5|A brikait», {theConclufion 21|0! Cambert V..-3j6.34) ("'\virh ciouds &will be/fruit- 1916/ 32 6/perhaps rains -jlefs- S. 316 31 6 {D Persgs %Engl-mdis ; I716, 30 6| [b eit; with 4 25|:0: \ſ\ctoum IL.-1{6..28 6 !happy agree- 26; ThNeftorius- "Þſſſi" 4G ſi'!Co d airand;;;jment..betwist 29\6 {Auguſtings 29.6 24 6/ Ah? {Ztowaldll\mg and Par], 28 *Vf&cauus } 4198;14'6-21 6riſie end wind Pray God eln c266. 20 0)and ſnow, continue that !Suuſhine 6 g CWN MA TN HT CT AR ON SC B RIREET 5 OCEIESTIOAIEVY ATAS ELE B PT IEICIIBOLIIES AT EEDID OAeeSPoasen C —n————_—oe—e— TIEEBIFI A GAD IEESED D ESEE mn N D [a'v 365 1 Flian his Coulin , afterward;an Apoftate' being Eull Moon/ the 4 day, at 2 afternoon. Laſt Quarrer the 72 day, at 5 at nighr. New Moon the 22 day, at one 'in the morning. Firſt Quarter rhe 26 day, at 6 ar nighr, The Hiftory of the! Church and Emperors. 14 call'd home from. Banithmenc, cauled - a cruel Perſecution to ariſe on this-ground, he perfwaded the Emperor,, that' the- word opooiog,, which:ioni- ferh Confubſtantialy was inot'founs 1n, the:Bvok/of God, and that the inſertion 'of this word"*into''the Faith1aid-down Þþy the/Nzcere Council, wasthe occa-' fion of-many Debates end Concevtions inzhe Uhurch, In'this Petſecution many goo0d> Biihbps faffered; : as chirty in- Egypt and; Ly644, fourteen other wetevbas niſhed,/andfo wereftarved 3-a5mal{s" many Chriltians in #lexandria ſuffered under that Arrian Wolty'Geot 211ls- 1n the end'the Emperor pinecd him{alt to-death, (as fairh Theodorerus ) becauſe:'he had changethar 'good Form of theN-cert Faith zand leic the Empitety I C pervertedby Maximes an Epheſsan Philoſopherywhom % Valentizian;the Emperour akerwards puniche& withi death) in the b:ginning of his Reignheneitoreathoſe Biſhops to their placesagain, \whoMm Corſantis had baniſhed, yernor for any love he did bare xo*Religion, / but toimpair the fame of Cor/tzrt ru ThisEmperor) abſtained a while fronbloodthed and cruelry , bur af- rerwards proved the worit of Perſecurors, and-greateſt hater of rhe Chriſtians 3 for when they. complained of hatd uſage, he ſcoffingly retorted'that faymg of our Saviotir uporrthem, 'Bleſſed are they who ſuffer Perſe. cotion for Tighteou{neſs ſabe. At lengthi:decerved by an 14 Pe7f7.24 Slave, 'and had into:the Wildernels, he was"wounded"by a'dart from* an unsnown hand and died;'crying, O Galzlee, mae tm.V1ci/H, A eeeeceee eereeernennnnmeeeenneerneeee eeerEer ern rer e r re CS C ['Y*9 19 77 f - Ue £ *%a604£- paul Heoneary that rhou Sweet like the Raſ% ht , - what Wiſe Man woſiiſiffiffire, » but prickly like the Brrar ; He nere wants. woe that's great 3 Huſh, ſure] hear Some whiſpering News, as if _new Cowges, Netghbours, rouze, _And of alittle, 'RS| Sarnts Ds 1© 7 (Weather and Monthly 6 D Days. Zf_ſ—'_e_'ſſct_ & /ert. mutuſitlſidſhectx!obſhrwznom. : 1} D[Dayid 6 18 6|breth gales of {F-lying reports 21 £/Chad. Biſh-| 21[g 16 60 Þ P wind fof diversthings 3 f |Marinus 46' I4 6/X Þþ @ but relating to for- 419 [Adrian I6({5 12 '6jnot cold as it reign affairs, 51 A {Euſebins ' 295 10 6/ſometimes is eſpſiecia]ly of 6| b|Erodilinus | : 11 6 8 6juſedtobein Iperchandize- 7 2215 6 6jY Apog. ing, and per- 8[ D |Cyprianus [M, 4{g 4 6{the begining {haps of our 9] C [Franciſca I6|g 2 610f March. Kingdoms tooz 1of f [Alexandrin.| ,. 28|g » 6/\The ajr incli-of the ſhip- IN g]Oſwin Þ 195.58 7hnediomoiſture wrack of ſome I2|T [Gregorius 225 56'7/ H© Cold Fmerchant-men 13]b {Nicephorus | p. alg 54 5iG d'Y and {ſouthward, I4 I7 553 7 Cloudy, with D.TE\z;nt H1Xe Ate 15}0 Longinus 3N 50 7 h 5 une difcordia 60 {yriacus |R 13 487 ſharpair. "ater drvites' 17] E [Gertrud 27\5 46 7\wind and rain:\; mMagnates, 18 [Patricius | M 12 $ 44 7 ] [Great contro- . I9[8 [;ofephus 265437&g0Y lverſies among 20 D[Cuthbere, [V* 11 5 41 719 Ecliſed. ſ?grcar and no- 21 2715 39 731Aſib P ittrangehle men of 224 d {Aphrodifius {& Izfg 3 7Eþ Cuoull e7 Coun. 23j e | heodo:e 275 35 7,all weathet' t;ries beyond 24] e jPigmenius [IT Tifg 35 7 /for this ſeaſon."ſeq, eſpecially ZS o 6 26 5 34 ct ?Frd?ſſ?CC) HO[— 26|g|Caltulus. |& gl; 32 7! land & Flan- 27] f {Joban Erem| 23]5 30:7} The month 'Jers, 28 $L- 65 28 Tiends with gen-'France begins 29] h [Zuſtatins 13}5 26: 7jtle ſhowres. ;again to grow 3o{ e |Patro, Biſh.| 1 15 24 7i bhd oreat. 21l f [Balbina 13 22 7/. h CS TAT IEC R H Dn R IRREEEEE S. 4 Plots appear, I:t Hollazd uſe her Care, Pray come take your ſhare. ['qa'V VI Q ©O 369 38 O Full moon the, 5 day ar, 6 in the morn. Laſt quarter the 13 day an hour before noon. New moon the 20 day. two hours before noon. Firſt quarter. 27 day at 2 in'the morn. The Hiftory of the Church and Emperors, Fullan being dead, Fovinian was choſen Emperour by the Rozzas Army, who refuſed to accepr of that So- veraignty , till the Army with 'one conſent owned themſelves Chriftians, He: made Peace with the King of Perſia, and- called home the baniſhed Chriſtians ; whoſe counſel he reſolved tofollow, in the end he in- tended to go to Conſtartinople, and by the way heend- ed kis Lifein a ſmall Village called Dadaſfana. After the death of Fovir1an, good Yaltntinan waschoſen Emperour by the Rozzan Army ; He wasan Officer under F#474z, and for beating a Heathen Prieft, who|}, ſprinkled holy water upon his Garment, he-was.turn- ed out of that Court, for which God made him amelȝds by giving him-the whole Empire, in which he carried himfelf like a faithful zealous fervant of God, Sud- denly after his Ele&ion he ctoſe/his Brother Yalersto be his 'affociate in the Government /: He proved a turbalent man againſt the Chriftians of the Eaſſe_ſn ) Churches where he ruled ; he did many horrible Vil- lanies 4 For Example, that upon the Badies of Proce- pÞ1us, Agelon, find Gomerarins, the firſt whereof he rent in, twain-by tying his Leggs' to the tops of two Trees bowed together, The other'two he ſawed aſun- der, akhough he had given an; Oathto-them-before, God for their ſafety : But the Gorhs fighting with him, pur hinyto flight, who takivg a mall Village forhis Reſuge, was by the Gorhs burnt there with the Village. Suddenly after Yalentian: died by bleeding, ;and lefr two Sons,' z. e. Gratianzs, whoſe Mother was Severay and alenz4an the ſecond, his Mother F4/#sna, '$qa60py 8 #ymrarf |"Na "$4721 E1 R3 of PUP UP1319D Apral What itrange effefts are threatnednow to ti \1 By Landand Sea, in Commonwealths and all, Hence'Treafons; Freicheties and Cheats enſue, Pirats and-Shipwracks, nay and Murders too. Sea and Land makes one Globe, yer that can't make One Man, nor he one quier hour take. => 55 | Samts I Ds j© rjr - Weather and Montfſſ[) 5 } I\z): place N [ert. m;ctmalfl/])]ech Obſflmt:om* 18 \Hugo. : 251520 7\Pleaſint {pring Who. would be 2 %ſiMaria 2 71-17.7X ÞF - -ing}Great -and 31: |[Agapes 19i5 14 7,weather, with|known 1n this 4 yi tt l{s 1z 7(1 Apog.-.rain.jWorld,ſeeing 5 c Vmcenuuf- 13i5/10 /dſioLnn {uch miſerjes 6 *.. [Sixrus ..2515 .8.7 do.attend 1t 3 7 c Emh}pus P PeS47 Publick -hur- Dlon)ſius I9}5 2.7\d WJ Windſues in King- g [Prochoxus vp 15 14 ſanu bluftering !doms b) ſi]:zgkul L315...0: 7{ir meſims ot-rray- £ t 2:314;56. 9 rors and'trea- dſi Fulius ; dg ons;, and ſuch | f ” [[uſtinius 5/>x h © gentleſvi/lanous TILUAUUZ ; bgiſiuuff thowrs: 1Ct10ns Is Q Baſiliffa YEZ max d OETunt m lts I6} ,*;Carifias 17 {Anicerus: 18 ſtlrtd, .at#0- E' þ? l-2es Fþrctz[one: BIC( rerig, !ſſ'ſi"ſictl W. 24 | d Ah!hſiſ'e btf\ coot Bafterd}29/ ( o 7 389 The Hiftory of the Church and Emperors. Gratianyus with his brother YValentinian being both but young, chole Theodoſezes a man expert in Govern=} ment and Wartare, to him -he committed the govern-|. m-nt of the Eaſt: Grarz4x in'the beginning of 'his Reigncalled home thoſe good' Biſhops which thar Ar/|, 1448 pcrſecutor, YValens, had Baniſhed, and 'thortly afterhe' was murdered by .1-dragarhing, that treache-. rous'Captain of Maximus ; Valentin, ſurvivings'was perſwaded by his Mother to perſecure 4-mzbroſe Biſhop vf «Milarne, becauſe he would not embrace the'Arrium Hereſy 3 bur the Tyrant' Maximmws approaching”"to tta'y'with his Army, ſhe was forc't to fly to ULricmnz | torfſafery; and ſo the Biſhop had reft, -Bur Theodoſozs) being reſvlved to revenge the death of his friend Gratz- | an, \eads' an 'Army :againſt the” Tyrant Maximms » whoſe Captains for fear.of Theodoſpus,did deliver their Maſtey-bound into his hands, whom he/put to death " andnotlong at:er /Valenr5zi2n was murdered byExge- 15 andhis Captain » 4rbogaftzs, when he was in his bed, againit whom Theodeſ7;e5 marched again-with an Army,and beingengaged 1n Battel, it wentſhard of his | fide; - but the good Emperor rerired to his Prayers, and | God-initantly ſent a mighry Wind'in the face of Zzge- xir,that it blew their Darts back inro their own faces. Ewgenius fell ar the feet of Theodoſizes to beg his par- don, bur'the Souldiers perſued him fo cloſe that they 1{lewhim) and. ArbogaZzs,the Author of all this Miſ- 395 chiet,'fled,' and being out of hopes of ſafery, ſlewhim- felfo7 At his return from- Battel he-contrated/a'fick- n6;ahd ſoon afrer died in the 60 year of kis Age, and 16th year of his Reign, and leftrwo Sons. FAQ'A *$.19791. 91 7911Jopoag 1 peu - uritutmu d Hrvi9 Here's RoyabSorwith his juſtr Fove Tohjoyn'd, - Jufticeand-Power'juttly, Catt apd-Coyn?d; Next ruffling .Ma7-5-at Chronos Calts his rays3 And gives us.rain atter 'fome cloudy days, Mars Wi.h much Iabour .doth his /Jezs win, Both warm their fancics by the flames of fin, ——— Saents | 5 JOuns. eather:and Monthly,c DA VSs * 'Plct{ſſ*e_ E'S'ſi /'Z)t—t } .M#tfffldl J-ſſ/ſiffi' O%/(%ſilct\/d!t 7 08 : : P - —— — - - ;| | Some emweat? Dlov. Crue's' 22/4 79 gf& Þ © ,. withſyiclds his bedy ' P" Þ4 17 grain, atter - tothe Grave, <£ 54 16 8/X Þ 4 which|and not 1ong g Johaſſn_ Por[ſſ 28 4. \4_ 2 CAPCC*Y 4 hOt ſiſift@ſ ſome em1 _ a jjever;]_-y PYA-10j4-138 oS © q ſeaſorjacnt Lſi'lergy_ b Staniflays 423\4%.2.8 - ſman fubmits F V.5,6:4114. 8 :0thelike fate, j I9/4 to 8|Gcntle breath-|No ſoonet.' 5 | X 249 8d.% 9 ing fentered ILy' his| 15'/4 5 gjwinds, »wn houfſe, but | gjServatius 294 68 hefell Retto- a. {Lfidorus V14/4" 5 8 Hars rifinefgradez'and'fo b |Sophia 28:4). 4 ſi;*fi? with thi|-ontinues.” 1 | Kor D LSnI13. 4 28 C er2lewdfhopetheMer- | d |Torpetus. ' | - 28/4 1-gJand+the Moonſchants-of this | e [Porentius » Frr 344 o $in of with Þ |Siry,/ under £ 1 , * 283 59 9:&9 & IF, willſchat fign, are | g S 13.3 58 gjg cſtrange qnot hable and | a |Hofpirius "27'3 559 various' wea-:tubjeH to thoſe| b {Juliana N 243 56/9'rher, misfortunes, 24/3.55 9 The reſt.of theſFour 'Stars D4.44 1W-.47:345.4 9.month like teþaearly-in»g/ E |Urbanus 19 3 54 9 prover wer 1 jmoavik the | f 31 11g 53 of DPlecagesgand || 27 g|Bedavener} 139 32 3 29 {in'min & | ſiS!a. Helconiis 17 25 3\52'g9 Q-4pog:! tor. |b rhcm,lhopf?i 29/b. | lm 7i34%54'9:the endof it, foodes no hurt zO 19{'1 Fr gwiththunder -|to lre!;md,yet,ſi 31| d ſPetronella |p 1{3: 50 9g.and Storms/ iCave Lorſiz-mc_ſſ_ct; 5 C rrereeeee eC aCEI eH IRe eCR Full Moon the 3 day, at 4 afternoon, Laſt quarter the 12 day, an hour before noon, New Moon the 18 day, at 21n the morn. Firſt quarter the 25 day, at 2 in the Morn. ſi; Tve Hiſtory of the Church and Emperors, } PRTETIET C3 \3,9 Thendoſins left two Sons, Arcadius and Honorius ; IAr ca/jus was 2 meck godly Emperor, but had net ithe courage of his Father , and his clemency was labuſed by his Wite Eudoxia : Ruffinus his chief Coun- (cellor, and Ganig his chief Captain, were offended at {Cbr}ſofloms freedom in reproving of firi, and there- fore Theophilus Biſhop of Alexandria gathered 2 Council z which becauſe Chryſoftom rcfuſed to be |chere, they apprehend him for contempt, he is de- Thus we fee what a blaſt of ill counſel cando ina Princes car. Stilico the Etnperors Father in Law ſtirred np the Fandales , Burgundians and Almanes, to inyade the Kingdom of France, to_the end that Honorius being over-charged with, bufineſs, $:z1ico nyight the better work hisdefigns , which was toſertle the Kingdom upon Zucherius his Son, 41z} Alaricus King of the Goths invades 7taly, befiegeth Kome, and Sacks it, and commits many hoſilities ; ln the end Arcadius dies, and his Son Theodoſius the 413jecond rules the Eaſt part of the Empire with his flociate Falentinian, after called the third ; he was he Son of 7lacidia his Fathers Siſter, and he reign- \:lnclc Honorius; after wholſe death he chuſeth for his|. t i ed 31 years, eyen to the fourth year of Hartia- ausS. 'poſed, and after depofition followed beniſhment :| '$47ak 67 3114080 pu7 $11}794 ['Y''A Four Stars 1N T1sr4s '* What does'this preſape? : ' What news cell they'to' this'admiting ave? , | Gain, Greatnels, Grandeur, 1s/ſome peoples/glory;/ | _ While fome opprelt tells:bur/a-mournfub ſtory. ;:..ſi; New gſudges riſe,-ſet-difference on rhe ſcore; |_They're patd at laſt, Ter'great men keep'on ſhore. ZIZI Siins J-9 JO rije |weither and© 7 THonthly j I'V_'ctſſ--t: ® Days.'” plſſce &- ſets. m_m,ctZA/ct?/etZsj Ob/ewwctns {-L! Pſilmplnl 13}3 $0' 9 & EL. M @[zſſz is entred-Fr, 2.£ Marcellin 2513 49 9 Cloudy,wirhithe ” Afcendatic| f B]Era,ſmus %'VP 713 49 id 99 (9 jof London:great, 4 E!Quu'mus | - 12013. 149 9d4 2: 2 jglorious; and 5 Si Bomf.acxus 313\ 48 9wmd& rajn.iperpetual,,may -/15{13:43-9]. The Air ſcz !]. thoſe bleſ vPaulus ] 293. 48 9 'rccn&clear gcti]ings be.. tha 8 £ Mcdardus X .1213: 48 9 \Various wea-lthis glorious D fiFelicianus. 25/3 47 9ther with fitar ſhall pro 10-15 OnupHhri. |'V 913 47 9'd2,£o7'hght— uce ro thatCt —u a,ſt 313 47 913 Perzg.ningity ' while * he f1 Baſilxus 583 47 94 259 thun+jtranſeirs *thar 3! X f 22,3 47 9dcr& ſtforms. fign V43',2'8% 4 /val &Ruf, 11" 513-48 95 bcmg inc: XS'YFModf:tſi'cus l 22\3 48 9Wlth all thC#[L, ſhew-lomne \6 £ |Richardus 95 513 4: 9 fixPlaners inigreat Afembly 7F;Paula.[iz |/ >-24[3-49.9 che-! ſpace of cither in Par 3 3 3 ©, allmd 1n ; , 513.49..9 3 days and a;jliament - or_ If)fi*Gſſer.&procti' ,.18/3 49 SzfcnyhourswilleOunc'\l now & | 2.3 49 9give variety;approaching”* 21 D; Albanus l PLEWT S of weather.” frowards” the., 13 8 iWalburg. 273. 51 9 Theait clon-\weſt{'part®of 323 f3l dc].trud 93 51 Sf hO dy, this Twin-City 24" 1 243 '52- 9with ſome* Eto dcbatefoine 25" Amphzba. Wlſſ 53 53: 9ſuden ſtormsxthmgs of:1 mo- 26: b | 27 { 23 Þ ; | £ - ſi **'F'ſiſſ }oan &P 15'3 547.9:D f0g- of /Nent, :_27,3,. $96 h. % hzſhf 9,3-/55,9.a0d p(:nhagsi - P © -21 3-56, 9.thunder 33 55 9 4 ,13 G | mn mm nem——es ; A t D —— ' Fill Mooh the 2.day,. t 4.inthe ftiorg. Laſt quarter;the 9 day, -at 6: at.higts ' NewiMoon the 16:day; at.9:itthe morn Firſt quarcer the:231day, ats atinight; emn ermnernn ) - \The Hiſtory Zſ the Church and Empergrs: 428 2nd 919: colle@t a great Library, whichtheyſay; wa; notinferior to thit of Vrolomens Philadelfhusbe made a brieyous colleCiion of the Laws of Kings'& Princes, in-which path F:ſtinjarafterward walked,and whoſ / ſſ'cxample he alſo followed;;. hewasagreat affiſtant to %all men defirous of learning,his/houſe wasÞke.aſag- | Quuary for readingof holyſcriptures&devout praiers:| he was of z meck,gentle,good diſpoſition,and as ſome[* | fay.almoſt beyond meaſure:In theſeEmperorsdays thfi! ; | Empire began to.decay in, the welt {and ſo continned! '.;e1ll-carolus Magnus)by the means ofquarrels &tnva-"&$ iſlons 3for-Genſericus K.of the Yandales, & 4tilak of:|.: 'the"27xmms,'entred/the Empire 3 with the lalt of which R [Paleminian and Kheodoriticas K of the weltern;Goths5us 'foright;& atthattime werelain 180020 men' Theodo= o fsatlaſt dieth,” he having received harm'iby.a fall'% 'from ® Horſe, his death'being lamented by all,and -his 8 [perſon 38 worthy to be remembred by all'good/men £ 5 470 after;whole death Yartianus was preferred to'the Go.. * vernment, who,although he came to theCrown when the-Empire was inyolved in {o many miſeries by the' Goths, Fandales, Eunns, &c,. yet by the proyidence.of & {God, he teigned quietly, &. Gied peaceably,& left bes & hin@ hin-grear-grief'1n peoples hearts:; that ſo good £6""8jrains. Popularclamors' uſi :Tſhuruus _25!4 68.8 againfſt fome 20" C!am f 94 59 8 | mer pf-qurho- { ;H!ppoht : ſſ2235 17 ZMM ©jity. 1: -fome' \ * 4 b EL;cbzus R1. 27 Northern' Kmg-! 1e\e*t- 1: 18s : o Windy - and{doms' & Count-| 416:.0 Rog*zus. - 1,5' 6 mjcurbulenc air ſrries of -Fuzope. $174£;04ab/baw.” 13 18 71 Difference *and, 18 t]Helcna /1- 2515.:10-7 empeſiuous diſcord the be-' ' Þs. BSebaldus:J11t-:715..22-7-C Apog. andiginnings of | | 29 a-bBernardus.|' 1935 14 70 Þhg uvſea-[quarrels, begin | 27 b_Cyrmcz 4 7,1,5 16-7]fonable wea fdayly' fo - 10-) jſizz S. S word xzjg 18,7ther, tharder Þcctrcaxc if. ſome 'ggjd 'a_cheusfſſſſ-_-ſſ-ſi-;i-ȝzſi 29 7l'<ſſhtmngar<'}parſis oſ th\ H4 B po 31 ,ſg 229 >troubled 4wortd,: | ; Fz;gſi:'f.-ſſ TQg&0v1CHS *fſ*lgſiz 24 7}A1r - het Billand ſimd ſctizſi&ſſg*' ragzus: 23 2j8- 26 730' Q58: uOLſiſiJ)TſiZ ;knoW ] ſſ'?jct7 g -R],ſiq;ffijks ,1618428 75: (Bwarm that there is/a 3 þjAuguſiin 29ls 5o AC-O 7 4 of " and &* em 12 1315; 3} TIſhowres con jin:c nuW g Felfx ct-yggſſ 7c]ude the j t w iAdrianus- ſſ;*'**—-*—__.ct CIIr LDS e2 3 em e- R 34-2%-b.9mon]_ ,. {/ —_— - iJ O N\*:F ——_ _ 4 = Laſt quarter, the 7 day, at 5 1n the-morn.: R -The Hiſtory of the Charch and Emperors. '$4> 2nd410 'the 'end he'died'; and; his Nephew Fuſtinian '"that-end he had'grear ſuccefs-bythe courage! andy:; condutt of his'Caprains, Peliſgrius and Narſes. xar—_ R re e er eRn ere EI B aPn EPO AT IN eC ICT New.Moon the"14,94y, at.s in'the morn, Firſt;quarter, the! 22,.44y,..48.4.10 the morn; Full Moonithe 29.d2F», 5 5.atnight. '*""";]T:iſſ POISOM DN SC (=1 ENR | Fuſtinus was a godly man,-and reſtoredtheBiſhops 3 iwhom Indſtatizs had baniſhed, . and baniſhed therar- 8: | = [rien and Eutichian Biſhops ; about thistime Theodoris E fcm King'of the Gotbs;' having obrained-rule in'taly, F {Was 2 great Perſecutor of Chriſtians, and-fenr Ams: 'bafſadors to Faſtine to do ſo likewiſe, -or elſethreat> R ned him with the force of his Army : He wasalways Þ '2 great. trouble to the Church,. for which in the end 8 .God: fmore him with, madnels and..a_ Delirinm, 18 ” 'which he lingering died; -Soon after. 2 great Earth- - quakewith fireruined the City of Amioch, in which, | calamity. Eupbraſius the Biſhop of that place pcriſh-ſi-l | £d; for whoſe death the good Emperor' fell :int9 31 fir-of 'melancholy';/ through his ſorrow and gricf : fiieceeded; him, who would allow no"Faith"'to*be'F openly profeffcd, | bur that which was allowed*by'> the four general Councils preceeding, although 'his Wife Theodora was 2 great favourer of the H:refie of " \Eutxctes. This Emperor uſed/all his endeavour to.s recover.what his predeceſlors had loſt in, :ſr2, Afichys” and 'Furope .(-for the :Roman Empire | was now !lofh\.: and''they! were called Grecian Emperors:) atidto\:! Philoſophy. chat knows'no.caute but” uacrer And motion 4. 'yer owns Godithe Got of Nature: Hence flows. our gaod and l ; chere Wars, : ſp)ſſ The Judgment of;an angry Deicy.. Ther's none ſo good, nor none {o bad but may (The-one- for love, Yother for fear ſhou'd) Pray. = S Sapnts:þ ) '&:| : prmratberiand zozzm[y ! & Days. place. @'fitt nutual Aſpetts OU/cvvſizLzom uloudymouſſctſſf. Divers. meec| ffAcgid.Ab:| 265 37 7 /43[Veroniex 5 111s 40 7j* Þh © and ings and.con- '.ajSeraphia 259 42 7| C Perg. un;ventionsamong b heodofia] It'16 l $'44 Jſhealthful men_ of preat|: 24 5 45 7weather. - jpower” and! e-|| : JjOneſiphor j&5 8 '5::487[Rawcold and,minence. to;re-|/ *% Dunſtan 21j5, 50 7jovercaſt. - concile):differ-|! : >I Rz Nat, Mar,\ 55 51 7|T He weather,ences:,-bet| all © 7 mn-j£0-n0 purpole : RI ctGorgomus, 185 53 Hilfarjus P '5 $7.7 *o" P tab]c\Thc Governprs h Foeſſhx - 145. 59 7Þand rajn-likeof divers Cotn ' 41 *27,6 1:6)© Eclpſed, jtries in danger 13 DjAmatus'© 2" 9}6 26 of their” Hves gExalc.Cru,' '-21,6' 3 6} Cloudy/andjby- treachery. 15 f:Nicomed./m 356 4 '6]& H Coldlffilſ?ſ Iterbo- 15 B Euphemi.' - 15 6 6:61) Apog:windsmines dbceptionrs(4. ctl.ampert , 27;6 8.6 3 en fraudas!! ,g bþ.;Fereolus { Z. 9:6110:5}: Good,news !ar- -216 12.6 frives. from-7a-l | 20 fl Euflacms Y$ 36 .14 6/Xd'©, * h WW »;i Barha- 21-C 19'56-15. 619 AN 9. ctffia and_other 22 £ Maurmus - -28s 18 or the ,weſtern . 8' Eſdras 106 266) Pſſlamano'ns. ! \ 24 A Ropercus- 246 22 57B Max,o! The City of| | 26" þ CLcopha X 75 24' 6 , London® health- 26 l 21.6'25116f7 þ ful, and fo hke;| 27 d Coſ.:& da N 66 28.:6{Wind&: rame ſCfflM'T 28 z;Wencefla ſſ 2656 30 6 269 ©; 29 'f 5 Michaal, 5 56 97+6 30, g]crommus -ſi: ;___.721;6 ,32 6þC,Per92. \ Laſt quarter: the! 5:day,-anhour beforemoon)sc!4 New:Moon the 12 day;-ar$at night. - FirRquarter the'zo day//atreathight; Full Mognthe 28 day, \at 4 inthemorn”. The Hiſtory of the Church and Emperorss.% |= S. L - ——_ y—__ p— | [a*V Belliſarius alſo recoyered. the 1fleof Sicily.tovthel. Roman power, and then returning to Xome was recet- ved with.great glory:;-but howthe was afterwardT&|; warded, Jet other Eiitorians inform you. Fuſtiniau made an Abridgment of the romay Laws; which were before 1g"grext Veltnes, andcalled. 2 general'Councel #t Conftantinople', and foon' after died, and 7/te 'his Nephew Tucceeded him. *In this Emperors days all things ſucceeded 111, and'the ]Empire went, to ruige; for Alboinus , 'King of thel Longobards., pofſeſſed himtclf of Zaly 4 and Coſroeſ! King.of . Perfigtook, the Town of Apamia with.many(- others : at laſt he diedwhen he had reigned46 years; 59 rjand-Fiberius ſucceeded-him;in whoſe days therewere - [horrible tronbles &deſolations throuzhour thewhole Empirezfor the Perſians in Africkand Nreſopbtamiaxhe Goths and Pundales in Spain and Traly were always.in|, motiqn ;" but in the end'of his ragn, he having flib-j7 dued many of his enemies,. was ſomething quier :.yet; iſt1l! the 5rrign herefiz prevails,and the Gorbs and.Ge-h1 ouv H —be $75 *53E34 91 PUOIR A jttNe m S1142214, TY ” » &) i '9429 pY Mn HS A dales, were of. that perſwaſions'. Tiberiug hayangy ireigned:; by. himſelf four years,. hedied, and*flfdct-ſ "1tins,.who. married kis Daughter, qucceeded himt| he proſperes in-his War againltthe'Porſizns';, butaÞ} terward fghting againſt the Selavanians, Geheadt- ed fooliſnly ; for which peaTon the people ſer up Phocas in his tead, who playedthe Burcher with his Maſter, kis Wife and five Children. - Y - EPete afpt An if , "JAT D A o oinetr ed m &- L - ' A » ON AR '$1poF of SHITT4R? LIOn L ne en erreaes ereereenterenen R nmo—s l | | Thus Flars and Sh EOPLCUUCCCCUCYY C ECEIECCCTGE el " -Mars to bright.;Zoue doth akind Aſpe@ [rew. , And So!'s obſcur'd, by Satwys:lowring brow. © | Friends af. er_diffterence better do apgree;”” 2 arps ſweerer rrne harmeny.'' " Stiloon ſquares Saturr, Mars ſerves Venus (o,'' (T 1 This by authority, 1. lct you know, T. Searts\,9'S TO r1iſe.] weather and Mon[bſſl_)ſſ__! & S. Days 1 | plart.| 7 ſets. muturl Aſpetts| Obſeroations.,. \4-a/Remigs.[1L..516..25 6 Awarm plea-|The High:ways 2: hjLeodegar 206 33 6 ſant Air thelinfeſted © with 3C\x7-9-Trin.}<0 4@6 40.6% 2 &f ſea J[Rodbers', 'the 14 dſſFran_cſcus 196 42 6 fonconfiderdjpeople have an| 5 BfPlacuct_xus A 2!6 44 6 Dh© Clow-jill 'opinjon off 16] £ |Sagarts 156 46" 6dy and'oyer- theirGovernors 4 '7| R{Sergins 28"6 43 6ccaſt. TheGovernors, 83 4 iPelagra R 11'6 50.6| Stateimen; and - o{Þ Dionyſzusct 236:52 6A Þþ $ Rulers of; Kings to{r3 p.Trin}/= $5:54 6 Win.&ſtorm.jdoms opprets 411]0 Burchard | '. 186.45 6% F7.5.... Ithe commonal 12 YlWMſCdUS,ſſ 39.6.53.6... Cold Air, jty of Nat'ions,! 13þ fColmanus j1 1257 o.5 11 þ $ withjeven*® ro Tnſur- {144 3 Calixeus 247 / 2.5 ( Apog., windjre&ions! ' [75þa \Ter ela ” 1 67 45 and fnow- $' *feparates (76] 1Gallus 13'7 64 like. froma"& of 5| 17 * 5 PT 29,7 - 8 5 Cold Winterjand! applies to [13\D'S:, Lyke VS'127-10, 5 morningsbeijche | 2 -0f b! 19 e Fridiſe R 249 12: 5 ginto appearſfrom .the ſ=-] [Z6\'f:Caprafus/ $2/116.5,114) 5 venth, .and cle- { 213 Urtola| ,1 9:7..15, 5 Stormy-and[venth.; houſes;' '22:a;Sorcula | X 25 18.5 wet for ſomeſhere; are, mat-| i231bT p 157 20 «days, with fters of, canters| 24 ; | . 297 21 <[1.4 2 coldjence' going onl, {bel-h Chirprats 14 7 23 5 & © & andjperween''the | 28 Evaritivs |' 29 7 24s perhaps King'of Frangs {27; £ Capitolin 'o 147- 26''<{(now: and-the!\States 123] B Sim &1ud] 229110285 20 Bevig. of Holland, ,229 a Naroiflas 1TD|4.4/7 30 50 Aycold;Air 55 H'Theoneftibcls 299 .36:gends.the;;, M !?—-fctſiſi'ct*" G 14 75$Svgd d MOnL - ] The H1iſtory of the Church and Emperovs, > Laſtquarter” the 4'day, at'7 atnight; , New Moon the 12 day, at noon. K Firſt quarter the 20 day, 2t 4 atrernoon, Full-Moon the,27; day, at.2afternoon. 41S R SC — = Þ.... Phocas being. advanced by the cry of the peoples} eeeneee emn emn e nrneeynrnenennnnrnnnpernnnlng, -1as.7boczs,' 'one who' for villany, treachery and. nme= 1=:hus;chere;chath beeg-2 bleNſed-brood of, Bixds bhatcht| and haying baſely murdered his Maſter,: his Wife@nd} five of their Children, -he was. proclaimed Emperor £0aiby the Koman Soldiers, and he reigned cight years th cxuelty,. drunkenneſs and letchery, in whica yiccs_l he.ſurpaſſed, all men, .and was Juſtly called-rhe _cala.-l mity of. the. Foman Empirez,nothing fucceeded.well »- under thisMurderer. / There-were now great differencesbetween:the Pa- triarch of 'Rome and.the Parriarch of Conſtantinople for Supremacy: ;+the - Patriarch -*of Conſtantinople thoughtie washis _die, becauſe rhat City"was the) "|Emperors' ſeat;* the Patriarch' of ,zome 111d, that City. was but'a, Colony of Rome,. and tiiat the'Gree cians themſelyes. 10 their Letrers. Itiled rhe Empcctſſrm_ſi,ſſ-ſſ' "AvToxea7% Tov ecunior, tofhis controverly Pho-[# ca5/putian,endz; andordiined Powifacins the third! to be, called&univerſalBihop, !and the:Chur h of .rome, t6 be thetheatof all others ; and-this dignity thecRoe! mm Church begged (as Platind ſaith ): atirhe: hands! of Phocas;2=£=Sure this cannor chuſe but be'a \\*h()l_c-ſſ ſorn healing Church, irbeing founded - ar@atichons- 'Zed_ in_their univerſal title, by fo worthy 2 Patrom y-97997 _ & u3r 8 P3 k STIE9 A edn Ya MAt Prte l A D CS C AEE ASS SlA A ETAA) EI o der:was Nulli ſecutdus, : But,, Duals, Pater ralrs fl4-! in.this neſt, which: have: ſo-filled the Worla! with] errors , everyiingdom :withzblood afd.; murder.| Princes Courtsivith«fa@tion, 7apd their iown-Oburch {with hereſt "thatnowrhere! » ©* dotihy D OGE nnnmmmennes mtry 'Wiſe Mariners pmmde againft aſfo florm, | By early pradence'they prevent their harm'; Great meng;andthem greatiwirs, will act youT ſec Ey crafty ſirarageins prodlbionfly y _ I fear the infPence of ſome. crue! Stzr Lcr God keep. Europe-from-a-holy-War:- gctctmt_\- CS 76 n/e mtathix" and| Monthly | P U =DaJs._ P'}Z Þ ſets, mutual Aipeftsd Obſervations, 77B e ?5 7.34 slſne weather|. Some conven-! 2 efAn Souls”£L V21736 Svctmablc, tion for |.the 3| £'Theophil. 11 97 61 38" $(cloudy , yericompoſing, di® 4 $[agricola-'TX"' 517239 SIYA H" in (ferences.,, and s| & |Pow-:Trea.'.n 1 2E17 40 5chn1ng to fciling things, | 6: Þ Seyerus E-=.--3[7 42 Sdſilþ 9 coldtn®a pcacdable 7* i p el 151/43'5 Showr.warm poſtere; buthy 2: D Claudius 277.45:5 Dg 5 wind;the-unhappy* g £ [Cheodor. {VL .917-46. 5 whlch ſtormsdifference&f>. | rof £[Tryphon | \_ 2117. 48-5| (T Apog/} per-ſan Ambaſlador "i'} Martin |{ 517 49 5 haps. may;jand- a Ck*rgv 12 4]Cunibert. 1417. 59 5 blowup ſnowſman,.it;is;;pre-!; .3 b: Eugenius 2C17 52 58 Þ 9 Theſvenred, { , Vp' " B17-53 Swcarhcr ya_| Hence. 1s pro-| | ,5 'D Leopoldus! - *21]7 '55 5'riable and {duced Libels, f ſſ 16, £|Edmun E: 2 57 55 5\windy. and Pamphkrs, 17 {©Anianus I 1517.-57/5\Wind Vincti " ! 12 FjGelitus 2817.58 5ſſnmg rorain.|-Evil' Connerls 19-A|Ponrianus X 14]7 5945 awarm moiſhdifturbs>:rhe | 20 hi4gapius 243 0 4;A1r for-ſomejConrts of:Prin-' | | | x; $Þ.1 $13 x 4days. - &5.:-and theit- .-> 22 0 ſſc:rcxha 22 3 2.4 8 5:.5]}Ffkommon+ de- I [=3 £Clemens;{S 713 3 J'p; [1.SQ-jbates are,now 24 £ (,hrykoaon 221% 4 4C PrJg, . .Jabout.; Jarge.. {2s AiKarherina 30 943 &8 "{ums of money; {;5 a{Conradus FI 249 16 4 God preſcrve } 1 '27, h }_ Ma\umus 163 1 8Þ36 P > L0ndo0; from ©| 128]&| - 29B 7 4 | fires, {20] d [Saturnians' 7]8 3-4\ A cold raw} 120.g 5 3 21\> - 8-4ſfeafon, clou- 5.' { 4 Z d) -___,_-—-—--*'-*__——_—*——*"——'————*-——-———————_ Laftquartet the.3;day,. at;6mibeNormn::! New Moon:the; 12 dayz--at6 inthemornic; Firſt quarter the 19day,-at 61n the'morn, Full Moon the 25 dayg\ati2t! atimight. C eC Rm eR eD C em em r m eR m m e e T [av} ly pray Y or in_judgment to deſtroy them--+-but :rof | ;; \return to.Phocas,----In|the end Priſcus his Son'inÞ.. ' [FaW,. Zeraclianus the'Father- of Zeraclins the'nexr ;o | 623 The Hiftory of the. Church and Emperors. doth nſiothiſſng remain -to_appear, but: the; hand ,off God," in mercy to conyert them (for whichIhearti- Emperor,:and Phocius,: whoſe Wife Phocas had dif-|,2 | W | honeſtly abuſed,;. conſpired” againſt him, and"over-|= came him,”and/broughthim to/z7zractins, who com- & matided his/head;! feet,” and ſecret members ro be cut,> off;' and the*ſtuitip'of his body to. be burar by. theþ8|.| 61z Souldiers3 'after whom #eraclius. ſuccecded..,., Inj93 1, this Emperors days began the Monarchyrof the Sara-l &), e21s, 1and the blaſphemousDactrine of Mahomer=>-, thus---the Sqracens {eryed the Emperor in Wars 4-f the ſhedding of; 7 4 $H© Uinueblood'% and/. 6 £for (foine ©/further: S ſſ'ſictiþ'\!ays" ofs = 2 0 —== E- _ | Laſt quaiter the'z'day,”ar 9at mgnr. 5 New Moon the i't day, 'at'2 in the-morn, Firſt quarter th2 18'aay, at7 arnight, Full Moon 2 hours before noon on chriſimas day. ——_——— Tke Hiſlory af the Church.and Emperors. 0 | | I This 41charon 1s a compoſition of| the Jewiſh;” Pa- gan//and/Chriſtian Religion, -and was impoſed: upon l l 'rheir new Conquelt;0it is 2 great credir/tothe zz Church to be Contemporary in: beingand be- ]ginning with this' fation ; ſure: the Devil was' more <..0 ordinarily induftrious abont thistime, ro ſpew out; two.ſuch Herefies which have almolt ſpread 'over [the face of.the, whole earth.- 'In the end Heraciinl died, zand.Conſtzztinus. ſucceeded, him, who reigned 642:bar:'\four months, and was poiſoned. by Marting his 'Mother-in-Law,;:to-the 'end'her Son might reign, but ! !they were-prevented by being bork banithed by the *UBroYonrgfucry ay: . *gx2a4 £1-Srwrmrgſno 3 *53to k" 1" Serttors, and Con#ans hisSon ſucceeded him;-he 669 followed rhe faorſteps'of 'zeractius, and did fomeuns ]worthy chings againſt 'the Church ; atlaſt hedream- ed he was.delling at The//alonica, and the Interpre- tersrold him, ,it.d1d foreſhey he ſhould beiovercome by kis Enemies,, as if -the word fignthed, S3g,ama '%yixnv, that-is; render- the-victory to.another, | Sud- 'denly after hewasflain by/his own Seryants as he was 84 bathinghimſelf,and Cenſtanrinus fucceedea him-;, he Was 2 good'man, and'did good feryice hothfor God; : a0d ,the Empire3-he lived: peaceably ,cand hevdicd; quietly, and. Zuſtinian ſacceeded him j his reign was cruel and bloody by the perfwaſion of Srephanus and \Theodoras Who, were atterward by-Leontjus b—urnedz alive: in;the;belly.of -2 Braz-n Bull for,thcir painsſſ}—.ct | zct |{ Fuſtivian farhis cruelty was, isted of. all /men,, +and 70z was ſlain by Flias one ofyfis,owr $ervapts, -n llre's þ A brief fkromthe Creationto this preſent C e: YEAT®,1680s ,. þ Since the Creation-of the World-. —S T He GreebChurches, 7188 : *.. The'Reman Churches, 6978 -.SJThe Fens andancient Rabbing, -5440 £ C Lhe acccount.of Holy Scriprure, 5629 3 ſſTh-e Floodof..oab, | 3973 - The promife made to:.A4brabam, 3667 x: l The going of: the /ſractizes from E£gypry 3197 © | The foundarion of 'the Temple 2695 ſi The buttding. of Reme, 24 12 l .4 The carryiag eaptive to Bablon, 2276 : v3Th + Deat ſi 1647 4 The deſtruftion of Feruſulem-by Titus, « T60g I * t-Englaud received the ChriſtianFaith, I501 "Þ The death'of \Conftantine the Great, 1335 " Paintirg 2nd Glazing was brought into Zrgland, © Yoag g .} Feſtminſter- H) was buile, o0582 4. The firſt Mayor of Zondong 0490 ©G.z The invention of Gugs, 0303 » "The Maffacre in Frazce, ST07 7 Tilbury Camp, 0090 | \ ©0075 ! The Earl of Srafford was beheaded, - 0039 ; The Jriſt-Rebellion, 0Rober 2.3, 164s 0039 q+dgebih bghr, and Brainford fight, ::0038 }ſifimrflctn-Maar fght. 7aly: 25 0036 * $Worceſicr- fight, -> 0029 wek " * gl w7h * ©O020 } Three Blazing-ſtarsand 2grear Plague iti Zondo#, avrs > &The a. . 1. 0014 *.4 Three Suns appearedat,once Dfiober \19s..:..1 »11 14.,,0002 2 Two Moons were ſeen Fanuery 6, ” ©00L \ The 18 years Parliament was diſſolved Fan.24. ooo1 M d Aſtrological. Predicttonsby John Partsidge. He Yeats 1698; /arid 1675; having been ſafhcigntly-Prog l digionus,” Wwillnor#be'impertinent ro-Jer Poſterity know, what prodigious Apparitions' Natifreand:the-Airafforded - us,, beſides the Configurations of thofe glotious bodiestheStars. On 0#0ber the 102h, /1678, ( it, being rhe day, of that.great Eonjunttion of H and ,' 40 1663") thereowere three; Suns ſcerin the Weſt partof the'Merrd;a-;the Sun rhen being 27 degs Ska half in -*:, the beginting of their'appearancegras/alicile before three of cthe Clock, and they-expired abGur-toln,"orfalite -tleafter. - The manner and accidents-of this-paoeca,. was/briefly; thus : There were two,mock Suns ina dite& Line wichthe-tyue one, the rrue Sun being inthe middlesyand-that mock-Sun which wasto the Weſtward'of the truze one, didþ excced the trueSun- Luſtte and Glory, biut rhar to' the Eaſtwatd of "the true 0ne, did thine more dull and pale than the true- one, ahd'was longer.dura= bie'than the- other © of them, and whenthey both expired, thicy, left two red ſpots behind'them. pArAn SaHANS CL And this is not barely the Relarion of -one Man,but an accourit by ſeveral Letters from- Mardenhead and. Readreg, and"other, Places, & alfo by ſome wotthy Genclemen,who Tknow to.beMerr & Integity, that affirm they ſce them at Hown/ow-Heath, be- Yond,. and at Wird/ors i&c," the Letters T. would Print, but my, 'Bounds are'too ſinall;,——- Upon theſe 1 writ' my Judgmene Pholoſophically and [4ſtrologically, 4ntending to yreſent it to the World in publick,. but for jome policical Reaſons' it was not ſuf= fered to be Printed; whereuporT gaveraway-ſome Copies's and for the verity of theſe Predictions, ſome of ourIngenious Nobi- lity have been curious'Obfervers, and I-hope to their ſatisfadtion. Afrer this, it was my.chance to cdhe. into the company-ot that Ingenieus and Learned Divine, -Dr. Pargiter, who -was pleaſed to'give me an account'of ſuch a"Phaſma that he had oblerved, on Swnday the 28: of | Fuly.116984 tmee days before the of of Þ, and-Y, and'alſo ſhewed me the. Dragram which he had ingeni= ouſly drawed for his own Curiofity, and the ſeryice of his/Friends, this Prodigy was thus'obſerved. '——On S:2day'about 7 of the Clock in the Morni ng, 2 he was Riding: over A Hi](( near Northampronſhire)) to his Living, he ſaw/the_true Sun, and on. , each fide a mock Sun;-jn.a Cirele, and a'white Line paſſing through the bodies of them'a"lirrle obl3que 3 and theſe c_qqtinui d i*'_ſ,ſiſi:*. #Q "N & Aſtrological Predifions _&forrhe ſpaceof onehour,;and. were feemno-more.....; . ' /.:; Sinice theſe, there i5;an Account from,Lemerg from an,Inge- |'nious-Ganzlemansone.,Mr. Fames Matthas to. Mr. Gadbyry, whiclygives-an.account of. twe-Moons which.appeared F annary :the62h abourt rof.the Clock at Night,. which 1s.no.lefs. remark- »able chanthe others;. the. manner ot thetr- appearance. was: thuss v-&-> Whenithey :firſt appeared,, the: Convex part. of this mack - Moon-was regeived;into the hollow.part -of the: true-one at equal : diftance-evety; where;. but.-before they diſappeared, the lower : Horn /of-the mock- Moon. did-almoit:touch the lower Horn,,of >the-true/ons. | 9 S. 459 43 : 7 This Account I: have given, . thac thoſe who are able, and . do -underitandyhis worchy.inquiry from the Stars, may ſer the Ej- . %ſſ}zres of.theſe diltinRly.,..and thence. oblerve the harmeny-of Nature. : . Aſpice convexa nutantem pondere mundymy Terraſqz trafluſq; marss, C elumg; profundums Aſpice venturo latentar ut omnga;(eclo. | | ſſ : +.,.) Virgilins, Eclg,q- Aſtrological Predictions for the:Tear 1878.,- -: ANd'firſt for the Sun's plate ,December 1699, at which- time *K.'the Winter Quarter begins, - and-is'this year Decemberthe 11th, 3 hours/14 minutes P. M. Ex harmo. Celeſt, -: Yavac. ad.f1. 9 © Lat... Londot-. -: byJohn Parttidger>., - Theparticular Aſpe&s'which uſher in'che®aQions of ehigQ oxr- tEare; The & of H and'F4; the & of Trand F,theepPofÞy and the'©;iandrhs [7] of Y and 'Q, from/fixed” figns,” andhence will \ be ptodnced * Marter- of admiration ſyficjienr/ for whis Quarter, atid'chetheginning of the year alſo, in fome "Countvies/fot/far remote from' Englond."And the firitthing that 2ypears; is4he eftets of the ( of the'Y and @, thetime and the# ffatrs of this Winter having'been generally {pent hitherto in''S neilts$Con- 'fultations, Embaſſies 5 . And- other meetings of 'States-Men,7is now.corhe to-norhing, allExpeRarions ate-fruitrate, ahd the'beſt of Council bath been without effett, Arid would yenvknow who hath'been the-caufe of all this/2 Why, *uis all-by #he means of 2 Wonin,= and ſhe'not/at all miſtruſted for'/any fuchthing. This'makes the Landsof the Lioz mourn, Beats Pacsfresry Þ cans not'nanie her, bur after fome time ſhe ſhall be known althouglr it be toglare: ' | pe ' This doth 'but ('tauſe great murmurings') -procure- matter vainſt rhe & of the ©and H, and the'& of: the*@*and B Tri frtia Regibus nobilibuſque, in his exaltation talling into the Angle of the Weſts ſtirs up ditterence berween Kings and Subje&s, between Kingdonv and Kingdom, 5 ſeparated from:ang? of; Hz and f of '@, andnexr applies to the *of''Q 3 -here- Councils and endeavours areuſed to Ruine the Innocent, -when they:Teaſt ſuf< pe&tit, Ter the Hollander take heed tharthe Frexch do not ſup- preſs their Northern Merchants coming from Gererburgn » or Normay, neither ate their E2/t-134;4 Traders inlefs danger- This quarter affords News from the $3/#:ghts, of ſome eminent Service perfornied in the'Med;teranean;]he Truny and Algerme Pirates receive_damage in thelr Maritine Trade of Thieving ; neither' is Conſtantinople It felf quiet from” Troubles,. or ſafe from Sickneſs, - 2 . The A8ions of this quarter will' be; Prodigiouffy : Villanous, and have a general rendency.to Miſchief and Confufion ; among all thoſ&Places, Things, and Men, fignified by Y, &4 ©, and H, and to this pur;ofe {peaks Haly, Segnificat quod Homines 3n {t invicem drſcordabunt & profequentir {e mutzo vdio,, © ceſſaint ſecfamiltariter 4nviſere, Fol. 398/ ,. Itfignifies ( ſaikhe ) that Men ſhall Difagree and Quarrel onewith another, , and proſecute BN eachother-with mutua} Hate, ahd.they fhall Jeave of thenagcu- {(i Romed way ot-yifcing each orher, whryhs . E 2 Ern 144: :: Aftrological Prediftions ” Byriwe'ſhouldobfervea Figure ſer. from that time che Qert« ters P by. the'Carolme Tables, 'we ſhall fnd H inthe 12ch houſes* and the © $and J 1n the 673 if ſo, we have juſt cauſe:to fear a ſickly Wintfer,” and that the Monrhrof Decemb:y in particular thall be-very Tubje& to:Covghs, Colds, Lungs diſtempered with %ſirſil Flegm,ſſſſſi'Pluriſics, and other diſtempers of the Thorax and &DC1 - iaets, ; 25 S. 5 " Mars W." Sipnificat bellums & depredationes, & tributa- tones,” marten m hominbus Favenibas,"&c. " And this is made the worl e'by the intermixedRays of the ©, » and &, for-F is going tg'Combuſtion, And he alfo aids'rhe '© by his preſence, and' H aff}ifts 'them both 'by his oppuſite Rays.t—— It would be Worth while for all thoſe 'curious Scepticks: who will nor- believe any thing' of Starry influence, to obſerve the Afffairs/of ifome Countries.in Zzrope, under the influence' of 'thefe Oppoſitions ; for perhapsaviſible Truth-may 'conyince: them,' when an Argu- ment canhot,— ' But to/our purpoſe.— } Gx4do ſpeaks full and plain to the tharter in hand,” Yerzent; ( ſaithhe ) mals, injuriay TXe, Conentiones, "atq;, Contrarietates,, inter divites ſeu nobhs les atg; magnates regionum gque ſunt indiviſune- fignts 1#:qu9 fwuerit Mars, Pars 4. Cap. 58. _Evils, Injuries, Quarrels, Con- tentions and Concrarie-ies, ſhall happen between the Rich,. No- ble and Great Men of thoſe Kingdoms,. which. 'are in the Diviſi- on of that'Sign in which & was's"{nſurgent entm 1n eas exguertts, & nitentaricontratos, ut expellant cos de ſuys eivit atibus atgue Regionthze': Vhey 1hall rife againſt one atiother by Wars, and endeavourto aive onnorher from- their Ciries and Country, fo that it feeths as well'to threaten InſurreCtions,. as Foratgn In- vaſions, |{nd attemptsby Enemies + Yerthereis Þ caſteth his X to H, arid bis Ato F andrhe © ; here is ſome great Prince un- dertakesto pacifie this, Hear, and perhaps he'may ſend ſome Cler- y-manz or Civilian,” with'an Embaffy to that purpoſe : But I earthere is not Logick enough in the Gown-tg convince the Ar- gument of-a lopg'oword ; andfo:much for/the Wimer Quarter 1675 55 L0 S. "RDOQLY? ; The Spring Qarter begin&alwaysat that punfum-of time whenthe © enters the firſt ſcruple off » YebTerra primum prn- bgm 5 and that happensthis- year 1680,. March the gth, thy Mn Gadbmry's Favies; hours 0-min;-ex-raba. Aſtrone. Fn- ftawr. 3 h, 15 ni. extebulys Harmons Caleſt, 3 15 mn 'l'ecgnct ut bj John Partridge., But from thoſe Tables"of Mr. Thomas 'Srreeefitis atgh, 14 ms F'M, theffollowingParadigmas ſhew the opexauonsdrpmthoſc Tablcs and the Hdrmamſi os (ſia[eſtſi alſo. S * ® WAT. . Street s_ Caroline.”! AATerpus. (Anom. med.;Precef Equii:! Ldatnlt ,. - debf. #.18.:d%.m ed 66 »116., 13 4019 928; 24c9þ - 19: H 29: 9:1 11 15 AFÞ March. b-: 29 $+-12 S8:6+I b; dies 9. 8. 52 !4 1 IHb d3208 hora'5s 12-19 j: :4m1f, - 34ct . Ano.:med.;8. 21:%2:390. 25'39 >14- Diſt. Oap.,11'"'1 20-38 iorecel; ££quj'0"28 3 39/21 Locuatohs 'o0 oo 00 00 Y .-0005%8 Wings Harmony. - Ar, empres Long-irud.ſi(ſſbſſ Ap}ſſſc'}ion O {atum,. S. d 3..4. : I601., - 19 !9 58 343 543 28 69 1. 1..38 19: [11-29 24 xo 19-3i Myarti,.'\'11:-29-.8 19 10 lies - 9 $.52.15 ' haia' -3 7T 24 Min. F5 37 lec &5 -: H =yy Mot. med.}ur 25 58 16ſi3 7 ſ47 Apheli. ©|3* 7 .4 47 : Ans,*folis}3/ 29: 5:3/ 29 Locus ToliS)og/00!do:ogh\? 2.071 bus ” \ 3 C3 _ Here : \ .Q -N \Wct\_ Wky itT $S0 4AS - *{Sole Preteriente ,pri- & {num pundum Atietis; * 0 z Har.g. 5h,14 23 Þ.M. 1680. £v Da 2 Fad vacy, n wY, - Lar, Londing, - « R oaane ed ows ; \ C r e ny ez or dn ntod emn dn + I T N Heteis an angry Figure'to 'give our Judgment upon; for here i5Y infl'top, Þ in with $, vupon the Cuſp of the ſeyenth Houſe, 'agd the'© in'the feventh "in I'to H in the tenth,” and H anl d alſg 11 almoſt within Orbs,they being now applying..—- *The influence"of the 'Hybernal Ingreſs will latgely ſſiare in the | effeAs wirh this, as to thete Northern Kingdoms 'and Countries, &4 and & in'g' inX, adoubled bodicd Sign, and applyingto the 1 of H'in'thetenth in 2 ſhews ſome privare underhand deal-" ing 15 now 'a_managing by ſome. Countries Eaſtward from” Ez7- {az4, burthe Effects will more vifibly appear abont eight or nine Weeks after thie Ingrefs ;bur'the effe&s of all theſe Invemtions are defigned for. Wars, and may perhaps break out into Hoftility abour'thactime ;For 4'in'the'{eventh in'E3 to H, and fo near m & withthe©, can ſhewno leſs, : * EetrhecuriousReader take'norice, that '& is here in exaft fJ. totheplace of thelait F of Hand@Fin It : Theeffe&s of thar Conjanfion, thall ſhew themſelves' in'the World to the purpoſe, under the' influence 6f this Tngrefs, ©' Tire World ſhall again be abufed* with" Lyes, falſe'Reports and Stottes, to defame good Mens Reputation,” great' Falfhood and Deceics, and* 4 publick ” znd univerl{al $pirit of Declufion and Villany,"is the troub}e__cf ' ome .by Joba Partridge. ſome- Countries and Kingdoms in E#ropey efpecially thoſe ſubje&t to $ and ;.” neither will thoſe under 'V ſcape wholly free. Mars in the ſevenith, 18 a general Incendiary in a Revglution, and 3s, the ,occafion, of greatTroubles in'the Worldp according 1 to the DoArine of " Haly:" Ss Mars. fuerit in [eptima, c/f 774/ws & damnoſis, qni ſignificat inimicitias fDiſcorara magnasy & - || atcident hamumbes firta, anterfedtrones multes © rixa\an allo |\\| anno : 1t.. & ſhould be in. the ſeyenth Houle, ic Benitfies| Holh- lity, Envy, and great Diſcords, and.Thefrs, Murders, and great Contencionsthall happen to Men ih;that Year, The Sun in the ſeyenrh .doth. alſo advance this DoQrine of Hly, and will bring * / ſome great Prince in aS a Sufferer in the*Common Fate; and_ Haty ſcems to render a Reaſon why, QCzod Reges mn [ups rebus ſe ab- ſcond@nt,v &. conſrltabant ſem. facientres & , fatta (4 1n magns ſecreta.s For.indeed *eyery_ one either will, or would ſcem ro be inquiring into thingswhich ate kept private and fectet, *which.it ill, then rhey.mwft have an, il] effe& when known'in the publick. '$447z ought not to be-targor. in'this kind of Judgment, for by his pokition, he. threagens as dangerous Accidents as anyare ſig- nified by &, their. nature and quaſity conſfidered 3 for H is Lord of. the fifth Houſe, .and dilpolitor of ..9.theres' ſheinto Y,and H. in [to,d,and,,J lord, of the-tenth.in_ 3 to-Halſo-;-Some .: very;great Men,. as well Gown-men, as Goyernours,.will cortcact xx fome publick Odium_upon «their Perſons..and. Reputation, from... the effects and of .the vature of P in the fift peregrine, -which, fi$-» nihes.Dripking and. Venery, Gc.;. And from the [7. of, & ip.ther... ſeyenth, whichgnities Contention, Strite, ,and-publics aGs.of - Holtility,— : The. Eoglith of all_is, There will be Diffe- rences and Quar:elingZDiſputes abour Priviledges, and.diyers other things. which.come under the_norion; of _Mexr and. 7wnms. 1 | God grantthele things arenot the TegScouCr moacus, they. uly-:;» | ally. are ſo, enars But Nature. hath an.Intercour{e-with extremes, .whoſe medi-.; » | ums ate the ſweereſt of Injoyments. -,Hence,adark Nightmakes..” us:prize.a bright Day asd Sicknel(s. makes us know..the worth. of © Health, Thepains of a Wound, .makes us know. tgeeaſe of 12 .. whole Skin, .©'8 cortra, - By theſe, and ſuch like, rhe Wildom e£-, the Alnnghty brings us to- know the miſery and,mortality ot our.., Nature ; thcrefore whaterer.God, is plealed:to lay, uponuss.we.;. ought to bear it patiently, thereby. ſhewing, to.the World;the Lt's:.4 &l zige Lelrovialb [evologiou Predifiiins fieof our ChiianVirruies;' and wharſcevet Affliidons 'wefall underTetirs humbly-:conſefs';' Dex#' 2ffe Drms fidelizu, "Fubtz? grard ipſo plarebiy.. 3 4 D B ON JT ITT0208 « Sztars in therenth hooſe of any® Figurey elther -of Nativity. Mundane Revolutions,.or Queſtions,” doth always” bririg' Troyu bles and Perplexitiss fo'thar Perfon, or Kingdom, concernd hiseffed&s!: "Sutwrmms m decima frenficat merorens ac triftityiicn D attrattronts & giavitare; ex parte Regrs, 'fewt pateſtitest per. plexitates Carterrs'tIt fenifies Grief 'and Sorrow_j, and Heavi. nef{s'to ſome Prifceer Ring,and that he ſhall be ſubje& to the dol mi%ion-and perplexity 6f a'Priſon,"or Confinement, Þ'is Tord: of' therenth, in of of 'F'and'EV of H3 falſe Accufations and high Crimes laid to' ſomepreat Perſons charge, which will g0 near his Liſe either by*Sorrowor' Puniſhment 3 or to uſe my Authors wotds'for it. " Percntietur Flagellis,"and' Guido Bona, Taith,"'S; Saturns fuerit in Cancro fronificat multi}-li_mtianem aquarnm #luvjarum"ac piſcium," locuftatum & repentium Terra, Par, 4, 2ap. 52 TF Þ ſhould bein &, it Fenifes abundance of Rain, Fiihes," Locuſts,” and things creeping” upon the Earth,7 And Albumazar Taith,.S: fuerit in 5 quiequid iþſe figntfeavery fivs bonum five malum, erit in parte ſeptentriones « That when H ſhallbe in 'S, whatſcever he ſignifies, whether good' or ew), 3e\hall happen in'the Northern parts ; and whatſoever Kingdom it havpens in, it ſhall talliprincipally upon the "North'part of jt. =TheKinfdoms and*Count: tes paſſive-in theſe effeRs, are'Fol. Innd *Scerlayd, Zealand's Buroundy', the lower Norm ndy, E#2land\ France; Denmarks Twns , Conſtantino*les V, enzce, ( which City it wilbeminently 'concerny” 1 pray God*keep them fromDiviſions " Geroa, -Tork ; St. Andrews, Worms, Rhrias, - "Wittenberpy” Florences” Patlyua, Bromſwicky and' perhaps 'Zox- don, e- threatens' Scotland', and ſome 'of the' North"parts'> Exgland,. with ſome"utinſna) Diſtemper , ftranige complicared " "Feavers' HeH2nd growsMutinous, their Trade: decteafes, and rh&Common Peoplepoſſeft of ſtrange Fears and\Apprehentions,”? havipg 2493 695infon' of*their Governours 3 "Couffantinople danger by the'Slaves,” or Fin7z,arres, perhaps both'; Burginnaly, Zenlandy Hollead, Seorland, WNormanily, ike to fulfer by Di- ferences, or publick Invafions by extranevus Enemies.” " J/lord”" of the Affccndarit ing with '4; willafi&molipart of Flanderg and 'the{ ZopiComntinres withidivers! Diſcaſes; 'proceeding-from! badAir and Provilion, Laſtly, eDn _— : byJohn. Partridges [Aaftly;. TheD'diſpofirrix-of H: i5-in:2N to-the'O/ and 1n Feceps tiok with-3"Snd"thisÞ all the Balfam-we, have tecontemperate, theformer Corrofives,the Y-and.2L are both in,.Cadeat Honſes and. the;Q is'bclieged by the illRays.of the two'Malevolents handgs ſo char he is in-an-ill conditian/to,oppoſe the Logick of .an Enew mies.Argument:and,much;eſs. able to,make-bim: of, biyperſagt fion, . *Let: theCaptious -Schnolmen,. and. Seholaſtick Quarrel-1 lers, emake anoiſe-with; their Logick : Nature. moves.in.a.more; quier Sphere, Jand.it is Tnfluencenwbich ſubordinazely governs.the, World.. The-Stars.receive no motion from{ the-Earth, +yer, than is. nouriſhed;. fruftified;- afid agitarzd. by. their-Rays, ,1 1S che.con. cordance and agreement.|of Rays. only,with the, Humours, and Conftitutions of Nature,, which: is the; grear Witchcraft ot-the World, for icis the Rays. of. rhe Stars-alone which . are,cauſcs of Condenfation and RarefaRtions\and other.alterations of .the [Air and Marrer.\ and.is but the con currcnce, between Cautes/and Ef< fefts, as may be..ſcen.in, the.cleyation.and.depreflign of .the Li.. quor in a Weather-Glaſs,. whith'without doubt moves according to the mation'of. the Atmolphere, -cirher Surſum or Deorſum. Tothis purpoſe Ars/fotletelis us, Calun ergotium per matung, tun lacis beneficse, 1m anferioren mundumggits. That.the. Hea« vens operatepon the/World as. well by-motion, as by;the|bene- fit_of Light,;.And Ptalomemss, and, Albumazary as quored by Mazirns ſays-plainlys: ({peaking,of. thoſe, two/properties b&/ofe mentzoned )Czibys dyohrus l adduut tertizyn modum, infitas © 4nnatas fiellarum viresy G4a9_in{{uentias.vocanty"exnguibus aiverſs-oriuntur \effedtus, utan Lona vs eft hun:edttands,. 4n\Sq- thrno.refroger amdes. in Mercurio, ex0itdnds Ventos, .4m fole cale- faciendss, 1n Marte, exiccandi, &cc 1. . To whichtwo,; dome -: add athird;.as the.innate.and._intr infick-vertue.or Force ofirhe Sthts,. which they.calbInfluences, fromwhich doatife divers Ef.. Fefts. ;..a5 inthe; Y; tlie, power of Hamectation,t.in; H of Reftige.. ration, in.J of railing Windss;;in-.zde',© of Waimings it-drof Exiccating or drying. - This.alchongh. butnorionaly underſtodds!; 35Tufficient tointormusthar the ;Srars have ſomething;morethan. 4 their bare, Light, ,if.nor,-.they .are.ng.more thana-Giowworm: in 2 Symmer-evenint; " Quz velt: deciply Ne» Ego xoſca melzor ,." AndſolT leaye the Judgment of this Haltzyeat » - kis18 the time.of theIngreſs. by thei Tables imuanme, C |-fte )-0f.the-©,intothe firfi pointiofi 23 and: this ishe Figurer; © enters Ws | Sepreenb, 11, by 21.. A,* (n : min.'s, *Soft. 45. Bn e1 P. M, 1680, | \Þ-\ Jatg IXHdYÞ _ : ad&'©. Loxdims. ſſ Lat, — ——————— - : confirudted to that time, —— Put if. we ſhould acceptof ithe Catroline: Calculation;' jewill be. nearer the Meridian, and the D in,&,with Þ would cylminate ; and the latter degrees. of 41 would-aicend the Horizon,: with 2þ.in the ſeventh, and Hinnhec eighth houſe,—— But rake which Figure yot will, ,ll the Pla-/: ners wall bſifiſi?ffict.ſſf rram, and all in good; Alpe& one: with ano-" ther _('the ) and, Þ excepted ) tor here is Hin $with .the D ad.5,,and d in with ©-and 9, and $ alfo applys-to.the./A\ of - who is alwoſt ſtationary near the Horoſcope of the.. Twinz, City. - Zordon is.bleſt with Peace, Pienty,, and Content, -more.; rhan-ſome Citiesin Emrope, and that in agreat meaſure -ro6; if.; the..confiders. the Miſeries &f her Neighbours,: and what TrOUs:, vies ſhe hath undergone/in-ſomelate years, and at. that timewhen.;: Þ is ſtationary, the Royal Sun in 0 & in A, beholds hiſiſi : | ' wit "byJokn'Partridges..:- _ Yith n,amicable Ray..... Here i5.2. Cordial Rohorativero ſome... Icical\Stareeman 11 this City, orparts? adjacent; 'whothark' | pent the Spirits of his Reputation, in_ftrivingeith an angry : aate. What if Iſhould fay he bath 12 degrees.'of $\ aſceſſnding, thereabouts; { bope now all Aninofities are-laid alide, wand | ethe God of Equiry give every Man'his due. - l % near the place of the lait S of H and-g,-andgn D tſio%'ſichc and D, ſhews'preat Complaiats againſt ſome efminent Gown- 2 g gAINT Man (1 think"he ſhould belong to'the Clergy ) by. the®Com. ,ſſ monalty whor te hath ofended* by.tfome* unhappy Dealings, and them unhandſome too 3 andthis 18 managed by ſuch”a vne #is fignificd by J in #t, rhar is 2 learned witty Secrerary, Law= jer; Atnbaſſadot, or'other in genions 1earned Man, : ; Here are-divers endeayours uſed to ſettle Exuropeina quiet Eo-z flure 3gain;and to compole the Difference of ſeveral Nations;they being weary of theWarsz and ar&now willing to evJoy the pro- bt 'of their Laboiirs 'in Peace;.. and; to this purpoſe Aare" maiy {*nt to divers Courts: fome tomediare and perſuade:their Eriends to heal/and compoſe rheir Differencesz others to/propound atid offer - Articles of Aptecmient in order to Peace and Quietheſs, bur in thofe places w%xere there is no Wars,to'fetrle all in a peace- ible Conditi6o, and: fi e& the Inbabifanis from” Uproars/and Suſpicions; | | 23 thy of Notice inthe Pablick, for Nature is not nv » ſo Reltleſs This Quarter will be ſpent without any eminentA-Hon wor. * and\ Troubleſome. 95 itharh been for fome'Years/Þaſt, "Things". aswell'ts Men b2eif t5 b: weaty of thoſe Bxtremes," Pay e# Dwlciſſin#terim” thope the Poblick Affairs tend to Peaccand * Quiergefs, but rhE* Aſtrological Judgment upon theſe *Events, iuitbe handled and Jiſcourſed in_the Judgment-of the 'Brumat Quatrtef, 'thisFigure being able to give"no" ſatisfa&ory Refola-” tioni ih'thoſe things. © FITS KAR " d of!Deverybey ,vit being the*aay following the 'TnSrefs,*buthe" ſuffers'a very” "grent'Eclipſe in the beginning of =,inthe fxth and ffth'Houfcs'f Heayen 4 but becaule the Effects will not-ap= pearincheWorldtilt"the Yearenfuing, fo1 fhall referthe par-"* tidiir”Jods nenr rheteof t&theYTrar 'r681, fi IL RV . Ojſi' tt A if Nofooner Yoththe 87: decline the Weltern Horizonthe 42:þ* , _______ Aftfological Prediflivas l 1 ”" Of. the Eclipſes Ahis-preſent Tear, 1685;% maaHere wilbe burtwo Eclipſes this-year, 4nd they of|th l. __ $wn only,.For there wWilt 6& 16: Eull-Moon Eclipſed ihi * :year,” becabſe beththeſe 'of 'the $797 are centra] ; thekir| before: the$w#s Apogeon, -andthe other after jr. W The,$1,tof thoſe Happens the"z0:6"of March, about 1þ the Clock in the Morning, and will appear acoral Eclipſeto.thof who inhabirt the Sourh part of .4-merica, *+. 04 Theſecond.is onthe-x2th of Seprember, about 8 of thcC}ſſoJ at Night 3.no-part of tais Eclipſe will be viſible in England,\ I-ſhall now' offer to the Cenſures. of the Ingenious, two Nati, vitiess.: borh the Children born' of the Fame Mother, and bot diedjot.the ſame-Diſeaſe, z. e,. of Convulſion Fits, ſhe h!hſi/inſigſiſſ had divers Children, before theſe, to the number of five.or;{vs and they all died-of this Diſeaſe ; the Figures follow,” with|th Afrological Cayles of their Diſeaſes and eaths. ;ſſ Divers havethe opinions-of Authors been concerning this: Dife caſe, *and-but-ew of-them agreeing on its particular Caufe,- Fer- nel::c is:of-the-opinion;”that1tis-produced-fro po ſſ halations,. and Arſenical, Vapours , 'Fol./ ro4.' De ;b4;._ rers Carnſore— Paracelſus, and-after him Quercetanus, 15 of opl * nion, 1tis caufed-by. the Vapours. of a Mercurial Vitriglage”Hus mours, which arife from” the lower Venter, and by irsJharp and Armoniack qualitygut» pencerrates the.Meninges.,cf the Brctain'ctJ from whence is mſioducecf thoſe Vellicatious and Convullions of the Body, ArſyHed. 7rac, Foli315., Yetrin his Hiſtory of thav Dileaſe, Fo/,/105- he.faith ( and indeed it is Ratienal.too )-ir proceeds from rhe firſt principles of Blood in the Womb,,that ha- ving imbib'd all the depraved principles of the Sexey Natyrale, and the Sampury Mezftrualis,'from.: whence according to theit, Pliloſophy, is praduced this, Morbews Comtialis.c—— Crolizus makes; itto beoneof the four primiive and principal Diſeaſes in the Bady of Man, to which other Diſcaſes ,are r&ferrable,” Chy- : 2 Baſulied inÞrinciÞio. Ryveres tells us, It is ah imperfatt ob{truftion of the Venrricles'of the Brain, and that the Brain in ticPajoxiſm labouts to exper it,” D#T;"Cap;y, Prax, Mezi!ſi ; . \,* - 1 Aya ' P. \ . # 4 4 N # Y & Q % / } 4 - A P x £ C 4 # F l ; = '\\ f 2 \*\ ; t H J Sioomk d — 4 mn —— m _— = ————— ” The firſt Nariſſvſſicy of the BOY. - Natus,, May 7.. Þo.22: min.40. P. M. L665-« Da&@hd 2ad d Las. Londine. The-Tecond-:is of 'the N D AUGH TER- ,. 6 Nata - fait March 2- b; 23.:130« , P. M— 166*?'; : yamhHATads $ Lats: Londirl. " Aftrological PrediGiovy . Atd vhivagteesowell ro-thEgpinion of Pararelas, For M AoQi monigus Himonts -excite the”Expulſive Paculty, to' explode the enemy. of Nature. " But to*the Afſtrological Cauſe.—— The' }%'rain is by all Philofophieal'Phyficiatts acktiowledged.to be the prifcipal part,affe&ed;as Riveris,” Quercer. th toco ostdtus And it is alſa oWned'byall Aftrologers,” that the Brain is unden ' the Moor,,apt jits Facu]:ies" govemed” by 29 as you may.ſee in iny V9ze Meri/m, 'Part 1. Page'17,18. and Part 3 Pag. 130« Then by howuch” the*mbre the” » and P are atfited m any Nativity, without thegoodRays'of the $92, and, P. by ſo.much the more.js the'Native-poſſeRt with cthis AMorbzes Cadacis," and: if the affliting Planets happen'to be lords'of Dexth, asin the.ſixth, cighth, ortwelfth, the Natfre diesoftharDiſcaſe, In the fir{t Figure, the ) doth not behold ?3, but' on' the con- trary ſhe is in '&? to'Þ, *and he lord of the fixth Honſe, and who is lord' of the eight,” is in dire&t & to theAſcendant, and 4 who hath Dignities in the eighth, is-allo in - \with the Y in 'S, which ſigntfies. the Head and. Brain, -mote princi ally than any part of the Zodiack ; and if 'we ſhonld admit ſigut of an hour tobe miſtaken in time, and.make t 1 degrecs of &,. aſcend-, ing, we ſhall bave the') in the 127þ, and þ in the {ixth;, and then divers of Orsganzss Aphorifmns. take place 1n the'Figure, Tom. y, Fel. 657. de Epile;tiov.—— The Child Hived. till Tt was about five. Weeks 01d, and died of Convyulfions. P: In the ſecondFigure, the y by her Eatitude, and 'the. obli- quiry of her Deſcenſign, is hur five degrees/ and 2 few minutes In 7,-fo that ſheis in diret-f3-ro F; in 3 he-Peregrine and Cadent: and_hee if weallow but a few minutes in\time milta- ken inthe Birth; weſhall have Y on the .CuB) of. the Aſcendant in DOto 5 inY and H-omthe Culp of thF tenth in- ( ro the D in the Gxth, and the Sy% in. the teurh. in' (3 to &- in-thefixth, and.Þ.in 1his Figure lord. of. the feventh, eighthzandmiyth Houfes,. 'The Firs hrft fetxcd the Child 4pr/l thetgeh. whenhe) : Þ came tothe'd of the Sumin,N, apd it lived threeWeeks/ and: | dicd,. ;having, ſhmctfmes had fbrty Fits)and.more 'in c-wemy,-fb\fifj ROWIS mn - - " o? f forho1nf'? }3 { b m l 44 \ - by: John Paxtiidpe.! ; *> Weigh and be gone-my.Barks time.calls thee hencey : Thou need{tnor-fear, zhy, Guard's thy-Innocetmes Thou-muſtmeet, Storms-and Pirates, «yet be ſafſes® Although thou carry netther Sword.nor Staff., / -: ” Mavgre each Momus, 1'lethy-Owner-be, ” For none bur peeviſh Scepticks queſtionhee. " With pity, prithee; gravely.tell.thoſe Men, Ef) ” - Fhey are Fools pick-Quarrels, WiſeMen \laugtbat them4 4 Fle thank their -Malice, and RevengeVle ſparey " 'For 1 am Born under amore-courteous.Star. | " "Nay ! tell all Scepticks,, whether of-Church oz-Stats,7: *:'That 1 pretehd-not to an unerring-Bate, - Baritſh alliDiſcord,; nouriſh Amity, Think well of all, whothink-notillof thee. 7 : Zove give the ConduQ, may the Seas prove kind, ® "Heayensfill thy Sails, wich-hopeful Gales of -Wind: -" AE% T@ Otte- From Fames Street Co- -vert.. Garden , next . » '*, 27 | Id()()_x_- to the Keings- ſi : 56SE FHead, Aprit the 18:h ; 76 (116 76 e3 14 5 C mn mn mm on Pn mn nnogr, T. ADVERTISEMENT $+ : f < 4 : - g ' |A N-Ephemeris of the Cxleftial Morions and Aſp=Qts,..with F3-the-Eclipfes of 'the Luminaries for 20 Yeats, by Fohw Gadbaury, Student " Phyfick and Aftrology, beginning .47n9 $683 wherehisfirſtpart ends*%; The faid' farlt part, beginning at h:be Year:1692, and'ending at the Year,168z, Both which are Brintcd for, and Sold by the Company of S74tioners.” ” ' {(T'His is to Advertiſe all thoſe concerned, That thereis to be " Sold moſt admirable pleafantRemedics for all orts of Agaes, it r2aſonable Rares, at the Houſe of Mr. Fobr Conyers, Apo- 85 : theegay, IInr arn rnn emn nener e I ernen e W EEOGIGE A _ » P Aftrological Prediftionr; 8c. theeary, at:the Sign” of the White Lion-in Flce?treer Lonuon! HavingbeengSormertyuted andapproved of- by the-late Emihent - Phyfician Phſtor-Gl:foz;: RegiusProteffors B — - + - 1)10, invito, Ezlici Prncipi Foharne Polonia Regi, Magno Duci L:rh#ams, Re;r GarmentPatcgyricum:; Quo ſtuper- dizilla Vicoriz,4 Tarc/s reporatz grdinerecitantur. Authore Guleelmo Smithio,. Auglo. Impenſis Fohannis Glibrandy Bis bliopale Landinen/ie., 1679, : ( 71 AN TI &TAT PLB HiSive dAnimadverſrones ih Malathit Thurſftint, M.D. Diattibam de Reſpirationis uſu ;primaris AuRore. Georgio Emtio; E.A. M. 1. & Col. Lox Soci. Diſcourſe of che Riſe 2nd; Power: of Parliaments, .of Laws, of ;Courts of Jdicarure,/ of : Liberty, -of 'Property, andRe+ Tigionz of the Inrereſt-of England in refetence to France, of Taxes, and of-'Tradey &,. - t Vindication'and Defence of 4/ralogy, being a. moſt ingeni. ” 'ous Anſwer to.che/learned Dr. Henry Moor, by Mr. Batler. | VAde-Memm, or an-Epitomy of. 4/trology , infilting briefly upon Qaeltions, "Nartvifics, and Eleftions, 5 and is 'the Sum'of all our great Volumes, by Fohn Partridgg. VOx Lunart, or, A Philoſophical and Aſtrological Diſcourſs upon two Mygons, &c, with ſome Remarks ypon the,Con4 . Jan&ions 'of Sarars and\ Faprrer for 130,Years palt,, by Fohn : Pareriage. bo l tteet : 43Yf Rodromw Mbcipg an Aftrological Judgment, with PrediQtions *.,. upon the Oppohitions in._ December_16799 and the Conjun- &iomof-S4ize.wand Mars, in.dxguſt 1680,. with.other things: and-what-may thence probably happen it Ezrope,..&c, With the Nativity. of the. Plot., :and ſame.\Remarks thereon, by Fob! Partridge, ,. They being all ſix fold by Will:amBromwich)y ai the: » three Bibles.in Laudgate-ſireet, , araes D : } | z , q m Þ R l Ber! dn d6z. 7 e5 d e64 Aao. 4 - - LÞIIQH A l arth AHNN 3 eB IN P +102/9 e14 TI reaE m PT B M s - ”