It cannot be unknown to any that
have travell'd into the Dominions of the Czar of Muscovy, that this
famous rising Monarch, having studied all Methods for the Encrease
of his Power, and the Enriching as well as Polishing his Subjects,
has travell'd through most part of Europe, and visited the Courts
of the greatest Princes; from whence, by his own Observation, as
well as by carrying with him Artists in most useful Knowledge, he
has transmitted most of our General Practice, especially in War and
Trade, to his own Unpolite People; and the Effects of this
Curiosity of his are exceeding visible in his present Proceedings;
for by the Improvements he obtained in his European Travels, he has
Modell'd his Armies, form'd new Fleets, settled Foreign Negoce in
several remote Parts of the World; and we now see his Forces
besieging strong Towns, with regular Approaches; and his Engineers
raising Batteries, throwing Bombs, &c. like other Nations;
whereas before, they had nothing of Order among them, but carried
all by Ouslaught and Scalado, wherein they either prevailed by the
Force of Irresistible Multitude, or were Slaughter'd by heaps, and
left the Ditches of their Enemies fill'd with their Dead
Bodies.
We see their Armies now form'd
into regular Battalions; and their Strelitz Musqueteers, a People
equivalent to the Turks Janizaries, cloath'd like our Guards,
firing in Platoons, and behaving themselves with extraordinary
Bravery and Order.
We see their Ships now compleatly
fitted, built and furnish'd, by the English and Dutch Artists, and
their Men of War Cruize in the Baltick. Their New City of
Petersburgh built by the present Czar, begins now to look like
ourPortsmouth, fitted with Wet and Dry Docks, Storehouses, and
Magazines of Naval Preparations, vast and Incredible; which may
serve to remind us, how we once taught the French to build Ships,
till they are grown able to teach us how to use them.
As to Trade, our large Fleets to
Arch-Angel may speak for it, where we now send 100 Sail yearly,
instead of 8 or 9, which were the greatest number we ever sent
before; and the Importation of Tobaccoes from England into his
Dominions, would still increase the Trade thither, was not the
Covetousness of our own Merchants the Obstruction of their
Advantages. But all this by the by.
As this great Monarch has
Improved his Country, by introducing the Manners and Customs of the
Politer Nations of Europe; so, with Indefatigable Industry, he has
settled a new, but constant Trade, between his Country and China,
by Land; where his Carravans go twice or thrice a Year, as Numerous
almost, and as strong, as those from Egypt to Persia: Nor is the
Way shorter, or the Desarts they pass over less wild and
uninhabitable, only that they are not so subject to Flouds of Sand,
if that Term be proper, or to Troops of Arabs, to destroy them by
the way; for this powerful Prince, to make this terrible Journey
feazible to his Subjects, has built Forts, planted Collonies and
Garisons at proper Distances; where, though they are seated in
Countries intirely Barren, and among uninhabited Rocks and Sands;
yet, by his continual furnishing them from his own Stores, the
Merchants travelling are reliev'd on good Terms, and meet both with
Convoy and Refreshment.
More might be said of the
admirable Decorations of this Journey, and how so prodigious an
Attempt is made easy; so that now they have an exact
Correspondence, and drive a prodigious Trade between Muscow and
Tonquin; but having a longer Voyage in Hand, I shall not detain the
Reader, nor keep him till he grows too big with Expectation.
Now, as all Men know the Chineses
are an Ancient, Wise, Polite, and most Ingenious People; so the
Muscovites begun to reap the Benefit of this open Trade; and not
only to grow exceeding Rich by the bartering for all the Wealth of
those Eastern Countries; but to polish and refine their Customs and
Manners, as much on that side as they have from their European
Improvements on this.
And as the Chineses have many
sorts of Learning which these Parts of the World never heard of, so
all those useful Inventions which we admire ourselves so much for,
are vulgar and common with them, and were in use long before our
Parts of the World were Inhabited. Thus Gun-powder, Printing, and
the use of the Magnet and Compass, which we call Modern Inventions,
are not only far from being Inventions, but fall so far short of
the Perfection of Art they have attained to, that it is hardly
Credible, what wonderful things we are told of from thence, and all
the Voyages the Author has made thither being imploy'd another way,
have not yet furnish'd him with
the Particulars fully enough to
transmit them to view; not but that he is preparing a Scheme of all
those excellent Arts those Nations are Masters of, for publick
View, by way of Detection of the monstrous Ignorance and
Deficiencies of European Science; which may serve as a Lexicon
Technicum for this present Age, with useful Diagrams for that
purpose; wherein I shall not fail to acqaint the World, 1. With the
Art of Gunnery, as Practis'd in China long before the War of the
Giants, and by which those Presumptuous Animals fired Red-hot
Bullets right up into Heaven, and made a Breach sufficient to
encourage them to a General Storm; but being Repulsed with great
Slaughter, they gave over the Siege for that time. This memorable
part of History shall be a faithful Abridgement of Ibra
chizra-le-peglizar, Historiagrapher-Royal to the Emperor of China,
who wrote Anno Mundi 114. his Volumes extant, in the Publick
Library at Tonquin, Printed in Leaves of Vitrify'd Diamond, by an
admirable Dexterity, struck all at an oblique Motion, the Engine
remaining intire, and still fit for use, in the Chamber of the
Emperor's Rarities.
And here I shall give you a Draft
of the Engine it self, and a Plan of its Operation, and the
wonderful Dexterity of its Performance.
If these Labours of mine shall
prove successful, I may in my next Journey that way, take an
Abstract of their most admirable Tracts in Navigation, and the
Mysteries of Chinese Mathematicks; which out- do all Modern
Invention at that Rate, that 'tis Inconceivable: In this Elaborate
Work I must run thro' the 365 Volumes of Augro-machi- lanquaro-zi,
the most ancient Mathematician in all China: From thence I shall
give a Description of a Fleet of Ships of 100000 Sail, built at the
Expence of the Emperor Tangro the 15th; who having Notice of the
General Deluge, prepar'd these Vessels, to every City and Town in
his Dominions One, and in Bulk proportion'd to the number of its
Inhabitants; into which Vessel all the People, with such Moveables
as they thought fit to save, and with 120 Days Provisions, were
receiv'd at the time of the Floud; and the rest of their Goods
being put into great Vessels made of China Ware, and fast luted
down on the top, were preserv'd unhurt by the Water: These Ships
they furnish'd with 600 Fathom of Chain instead of Cables; which
being fastned by wonderful Arts to the Earth, every Vessel rid out
the Deluge just at the Town's end; so that when the Waters abated,
the People had nothing to do, but to open the Doors
made in the Ship-sides, and come
out, repair their Houses, open the great China Pots their Goods
were in, and so put themselves in Statu Quo.
The Draft of one of these Ships I
may perhaps obtain by my Interest in the present Emperor's Court,
as it has been preserv'd ever since, and constantly repair'd,
riding at Anchor in a great Lake, about 100 Miles from Tonquin; in
which all the People of that City were preferv'd, amounting by
their Computation to about a Million and half.
And as these things must be very
useful in these Parts, to abate the Pride and Arrogance of our
Modern Undertakers of great Enterprizes, Authors of strange Foreign
Accounts, Philosophical Transactions, and the like; if Time and
Opportunity permit, I may let them know, how Infinitely we are
out-done by those refined Nations, in all manner of Mechanick
Improvements and Arts; and in discoursing of this, it will
necessarily come in my way to speak of a most Noble Invention,
being an Engine I would recommend to all People to whom 'tis
necessary to have a good Memory; and which I design, if possible,
to obtain a Draft of, that it may be Erected in our Royal Societies
Laboratory: It has the wonderfullest Operations in the World: One
part of it furnishes a Man of Business to dispatch his Affairs
strangely; for if he be a Merchant, he shall write his Letters with
one Hand, and Copy them with the other; if he is posting his Books,
he shall post the Debtor side with one Hand, and the Creditor with
the other; if he be a Lawyer, he draws his Drafts with one Hand,
and Ingrosses them with the other.
Another part of it furnishes him
with such an Expeditious way of Writing, or Transcribing, that a
Man cannot speak so fast, but he that hears shall have it down in
Writing before 'tis spoken; and a Preacher shall deliver himself to
his Auditory, and having this Engine before him, shall put down
every thing he says in Writing at the same time; and so exactly is
this Engine squar'd by Lines and Rules, that it does not require
him that Writes to keep his Eye upon it.
I am told, in some Parts of
China, they had arriv'd to such a Perfection of Knowledge, as to
understand one anothers Thoughts; and that it was found to be an
excellent Preservative to humane
Society, against all sorts of
Frauds, Cheats, Sharping, and many Thousand European Inventions of
that Nature, at which only we can be said to out-do those
Nations.
I confess, I have not yet had
leisure to travel those Parts, having been diverted by an
accidental Opportunity of a new Voyage I had occasion to make for
farther Discoveries, and which the Pleasure and Usefulness thereof
having been very great, I have omitted the other for the present,
but shall not fail to make a Visit to those Parts the first
Opportunity, and shall give my Country-men the best Account I can
of those things; for I doubt not in Time to bring our Nation, so
fam'd for improving other People's Discoveries, to be as wise as
any of those Heathen Nations; I wish I had the same Prospect of
making them half so honest.
I had spent but a few Months in
this Country, but my search after the Prodigy of humane Knowledge
the People abounds with, led me into Acquaintance with some of
their principal Artists, Engineers, and Men of Letters; and I was
astonish'd at every Day's Discovery of new and of unheard-of Worlds
of Learning; but I Improv'd in the Superficial Knowledge of their
General, by no body so much as by my Conversation with the
Library-keeper of Tonquin, by whom I had Admission into the vast
Collection of Books, which the Emperors of that Country have
treasur'd up.
It would be endless to give you a
Catalogue, and they admit of no Strangers to write any thing down,
but what the Memory can retain, you are welcome to carry away with
you; and amongst the wonderful Volumes of Antient and Modern
Learning, I could not but take Notice of a few; which, besides
those I mentioned before, I saw, when I lookt over this vast
Collection; and a larger Account may be given in our next.
It would be needless to
Transcribe the Chinese Character, or to put their Alphabet into our
Letters, because the Words would be both Unintelligible, and very
hard to Pronounce; and therefore, to avoid hard Words, and
Hyroglyphicks, I'll translate them as well as I can.
The first Class I came to of
Books, was the Constitutions of the Empire; these are vast great
Volumes, and have a sort of Engine like our Magna Charta, to remove
'em, and with placing them in a Frame,
by turning a Screw, open'd the
Leaves, and folded them this way, or that, as the Reader desires.
It was present Death for the Library- keeper to refuse the meanest
Chinese Subject to come in and read them; for 'tis their Maxim,
That all People ought to know the Laws by which they are to be
govern'd; and as above all People, we find no Fools in this
Country, so the Emperors, though they seem to be Arbitrary, enjoy
the greatest Authority in the World, by always observing, with the
greatest Exactness, the Pacta Conventa of their Government: From
these Principles it is impossible we should ever hear, either of
the Tyranny of Princes, or Rebellion of Subjects, in all their
Histories.
At the Entrance into this Class,
you find some Ancient Comments, upon the Constitution of the
Empire, written many Ages before we pretend the World began; but
above all, One I took particular notice of, which might bear this
Title,Natural Right prov'd Superior to Temporal Power;
wherein the old Author proves, the Chinese
Emperors were Originally made so, by Nature's directing the People,
to place the Power of Government in the most worthy Person they
could find; and the Author giving a most exact History of 2000
Emperors, brings them into about 35 or 36 Periods of Lines when the
Race ended; and when a Collective Assembly of the Nobles, Cities,
and People, Nominated a new Family to the Goverment.
This being an heretical Book as
to European Politicks, and our Learned Authors having long since
exploded this Doctrine, and prov'd that Kings and Emperors came
down from Heaven with Crowns on their Heads, and all their Subjects
were born with Saddles on their Backs; I thought fit to leave it
where I found it, least our excellent Tracts of Sir Robert Filmer,
Dr. Hammond L...y, S....l, and Others, who have so learnedly
treated of the more useful Doctrine of Passive Obedience, Divine
Right, &c. should be blasphem'd by the Mob, grow into Contempt
of the People; and they should take upon them to question their
Superiors for the Blood of Algernon Sidney, and Argyle.
For I take the Doctrines of
Passive Obedience, &c. among the States- men, to be like the
Copernican System of the Earths Motion among Philosophers; which,
though it be contrary to all antient Knowledge,
and not capable of Demonstration,
yet is adher'd to in general, because by this they can better
solve, and give a more rational Account of several dark Phænomena
in Nature, than they could before.
Thus our Modern States-men
approve of this Scheme of Government; not that it admits of any
rational Defence, much less of Demonstration, but because by this
Method they can the better explain, as well as defend, all Coertion
in Cases invasive of Natural Right, than they could before.
Here I found two famous Volumes
in Chyrurgery, being an exact Description of the Circulation of the
Blood, discovered long before King Solomon's Allegory of the
Bucket's going to the Well; with several curious Methods by which
the Demonstration was to be made so plain, as would make even the
worthy Doctor B------
himself become a Convert to his
own Eye-sight, make him damn his own Elaborate Book, and think it
worse Nonsence than ever the Town had the Freedom to imagine.
All our Philosophers are Fools,
and their Transactions a parcel of empty Stuff, to the Experiments
of the Royal Societies in this Country. Here I came to a Learned
Tract of Winds, which outdoes even the Sacred Text, and would make
us believe it was not wrote to those People; for they tell Folks
whence it comes, and whither it goes. There you have an Account how
to make Glasses of Hogs Eyes, that can see the Wind; and they give
strange Accounts both of its regular and irregular Motions, its
Compositions and Quantities; from whence, by a sort of Algebra,
they can cast up its Duration, Violence, and Extent: In these
Calculations, some say, those Authors have been so exact, that they
can, as our Philosophers say of Comets, state their Revolutions,
and tell us how many Storms there shall happen to any Period of
time, and when; and perhaps this may be with much about the same
Truth.
It was a certain Sign Aristotle
had never been at China; for, had he seen the 216th Volume of the
Chinese Navigation, in the Library I am speaking of, a large Book
in Double Folio, wrote by the Famous Mira-cho-cho-lasmo,
Vice-Admiral of China, and said to be printed there about 2000
Years before the Deluge, in the Chapter of Tides he would have seen
the Reason of all the certain and uncertain
Fluxes and Refluxes of that
Element, how the exact Pace is kept between the Moon and the Tides,
with a most elaborate Discourse there, of the Power of Sympathy,
and the manner how the heavenly Bodies Influence the Earthly: Had
he seen this, the Stagyrite would never have Drowned himself,
because he could not comprehend this Mystery.
'Tis farther related of this
Famous Author, that he was no Native of this World, but was Born in
the Moon, and coming hither to make Discoveries, by a strange
Invention arrived to by the Virtuosoes of that habitable World, the
Emperor of China prevailed with him to stay and improve his
Subjects, in the most exquisite Accomplishments of those Lunar
Regions; and no wonder the Chinese are such exquisite
Artists, and Masters of such sublime Knowledge, when this Famous
Author has blest them with such unaccountable Methods of
Improvement.
There was abundance of vast
Classes full of the Works of this wonderful Philosopher: He gave
the how, the modus of all the secret Operations of Nature; and told
us, how Sensation is convey'd to and from the Brain; why
Respiration preserves Life; and how Locomotion is directed to, as
well as perform'd by the Parts. There are some Anatomical
Dissections of Thought, and a Mathematical Description of Nature's
strong Box, the Memory, with all its Locks and Keys.
There you have that part of the
Head turn'd in-side outward, in which Nature has placed the
Materials of reflecting; and like a Glass Bee-hive, represents to
you all the several Cells in which are lodg'd things past, even
back to Infancy and Conception. There you have the Repository, with
all its Cells, Classically, Annually, Numerically, and
Alphabetically Dispos'd. There you may see how, when the perplext
Animal, on the loss of a Thought or Word, scratches his Pole: Every
Attack of his Invading Fingers knocks at Nature's Door, allarms all
the Register-keepers, and away they run, unlock all the Classes,
search diligently for what he calls for, and immediately deliver it
up to the Brain; if it cannot be found, they intreat a little
Patience, till they step into the Revolvary, where they run over
little Catalogues of the minutest Passages of Life, and so in time
never fail
to hand on the thing; if not just
when he calls for it, yet at some other time.
And thus, when a thing lyes very
Abstruse, and all the rumaging of the whole House cannot find it;
nay, when all the People in the House have given it over, they very
often find one thing when they are looking for another.
Next you have the Retentive in
the remotest part of the Place, which, like the Records in the
Tower, takes Possession of all Matters, as they are removed from
the Classes in the Repository, for want of room. These are
carefully Lockt, and kept safe, never to be open'd but upon solemn
Occasions, and have swinging great Bars and Bolts upon them; so
that what is kept here, is seldom lost. Here
Conscience has one large Ware-house, and the Devil another; the
first is very seldom open'd, but has a Chink or Till, where all the
Follies and Crimes of Life being minuted are dropt in; but as the
Man seldom cares to look in, the Locks are very Rusty, and not
open'd but with great Difficulty, and on extraordinary Occasions,
as Sickness, Afflictions, Jails, Casualties, and Death; and then
the Bars all give way at once; and being prest from within with a
more than ordinary Weight, burst as a Cask of Wine upon the Fret,
which for want of Vent, makes all the Hoops fly.
As for the Devil's Ware-house, he
has two constant Warehouse- keepers, Pride and Conceit, and these
are always at the Door, showing their Wares, and exposing the
pretended Vertues and Accomplishments of the Man, by way of
Ostentation.
In the middle of this curious
part of Nature, there is a clear Thorough-fare, representing the
World, through which so many Thousand People pass so easily, and do
so little worth taking notice of, that 'tis for no manner of
Signification to leave Word they have been here. Thro' this Opening
pass Millions of things not worth remembring, and which the
Register-Keepers, who stand at the Doors of the Classes, as they go
by, take no notice of; such as Friendships, helps in Distress,
Kindnesses in Affliction, Voluntary Services, and all sorts of
Importunate Merit; things which being but Trifles in their own
Nature, are made to be forgotten.
In another Angle is to be seen
the Memory's Garden, in which her most pleasant things are not only
Deposited, but Planted, Transplanted, Grafted, Inoculated, and
obtain all possible Propagation and Encrease; these are the most
pleasant, delightful, and agreeable things, call'd Envy, Slander,
Revenge, Strife and Malice, with the Additions of Ill-turns,
Reproaches, and all manner of Wrong; these are caressed in the
Cabinet of the Memory, with a World of Pleasure never let pass, and
carefully Cultivated with all imaginable Art.
There are multitudes of Weeds,
Toys, Chat, Story, Fiction, and Lying, which in the great throng of
passant Affairs, stop by the way, and crowding up the Place, leave
no room for their Betters that come behind, which makes many a good
Guess be put by, and left to go clear thro' for want of
Entertainment.
There are a multitude of things
very curious and observable, concerning this little, but very
accurate thing, called Memory; but above all, I see nothing so very
curious, as the wonderful Art of Wilful Forgetfulness; and as 'tis
a thing, indeed, I never could find any Person compleatly Master
of, it pleased me very much, to find this Author has made a large
Essay, to prove there is really no such Power in Nature; and that
the Pretenders to it are all Impostors, and put a Banter upon the
World; for that it is impossible for any Man to oblige himself to
forget a thing, since he that can remember to forget, and at the
same time forget to remember, has an Art above the Devil.
In his Laboratory you see a Fancy
preserv'd a la Mummy, several Thousand Years old; by examining
which you may perfectly discern, how Nature makes a Poet: Another
you have taken from a meer Natural, which discovers the Reasons of
Nature's Negative in the Case of humane Understanding; what
Deprivation of Parts She suffers, in the Composition of a Coxcomb;
and with what wonderful Art She prepares a Man to be a Fool.
Here being the product of this
Author's wonderful Skill, you have the Skeleton of a Wit, with all
the Readings of Philosophy and Chyrurgery upon the Parts: Here you
see all the Lines Nature has drawn to form a Genius, how it
performs, and from what Principles.
Also you are Instructed to know
the true reason of the Affinity between Poetry and Poverty; and
that it is equally derived from what's Natural and Intrinsick, as
from Accident and Circumstance; how the World being always full of
Fools and Knaves, Wit is sure to miss of a good Market; especially,
if Wit and Truth happen to come in Company; for the Fools don't
understand it, and the Knaves can't bear it.
But still 'tis own'd, and is most
apparent, there is something also Natural in the Case too, since
there are some particular Vessels Nature thinks necessary, to the
more exact Composition of this nice thing call'd a Wit, which as
they are, or are not Interrupted in the peculiar Offices for which
they are appointed, are subject to various Distempers, and more
particularly to Effluxions and Vapour, Diliriums
Giddiness of the Brain, and Lapsæ, or Looseness of the Tongue; and
as these Distempers, occasion'd by the exceeding quantity of
Volatiles, Nature is obliged to make use of in the Composition, are
hardly to be avoided, the Disasters which generally they push the
Animal into, are as necessarily consequent to them as Night is to
the Setting of the Sun; and these are very many, as disobliging
Parents, who have frequently in this Country whipt their Sons for
making Verses; and here I could not but reflect how useful a
Discipline early Correction must be to a Poet; and how easy the
Town had been had N---t, E---w, T. B--- P---s, D-- S-- D---fy, and
an Hundred more of the jingling Train of our modern Rhymers, been
Whipt young, very young, for Poetasting, they had never perhaps
suckt in that Venome of Ribaldry, which all the Satyr of the Age
has never been able to scourge out of them to this Day.
The further fatal Consequences of
these unhappy Defects in Nature, where she has damn'd a Man to Wit
and Rhyme, has been loss of Inheritance, Parents being aggravated
by the obstinate young Beaus, resolving to be Wits in spight of
Nature, the wiser Head has been obliged to Confederate with Nature,
and with-hold the Birth-right of Brains, which otherwise the young
Gentleman might have enjoy'd, to the great support of his Family
and Posterity. Thus the famous Waller, Denham, Dryden, and sundry
Others, were oblig'd to condemn their Race to Lunacy and
Blockheadism, only to prevent the fatal Destruction of their
Families, and entailing the Plague of Wit and Weathercocks upon
their Posterity.
The yet farther Extravagancies
which naturally attend the Mischief of Wit, are Beau-ism,
Dogmaticality, Whimsification, Impudensity, and various kinds of
Fopperosities (according to Mr. Boyl,) which issuing out of the
Brain, descend into all the Faculties, and branch themselves by
infinite Variety, into all the Actions of Life.
These by Conseqence, Beggar the
Head, the Tail, the Purse, and the whole Man, till he becomes as
poor and despicable as Negative Nature can leave him, abandon'd of
his Sense, his Manners, his Modesty, and what's worse, his Money,
having nothing left but his Poetry, dies in a Ditch, or a Garret,
A-la-mode de Tom Brown, uttering Rhymes and Nonsence to the last
Moment.
In Pity to all my unhappy
Brethren, who suffer under these Inconveniencies, I cannot but
leave it on Record, that they may not be reproached with being
Agents of their own Misfortunes, since I assure them, Nature has
form'd them with the very Necessity of acting like Coxcombs, fixt
upon them by the force of Organick Consequences, and placed down at
the very Original Effusion of that fatal thing call'd Wit.
Nor is the Discovery less
wonderful than edifying, and no humane Art on our side the World
ever found out such a Sympathetick Influence, between the Extreams
of Wit and Folly, till this great Lunarian Naturalist furnisht us
with such unheard-of Demonstrations.
Nor is this all I learnt from
him, tho' I cannot part with this, till I have publisht a Memento
Mori, and told 'em what I had discovered of Nature in these remote
Parts of the World, from whence I take the Freedom to tell these
Gentlemen, That if they please to Travel to these distant Parts,
and examine this great Master of Nature's Secrets, they may every
Man see what cross Strokes Nature has struck, to finish and form
every extravagant Species of that Heterogenious Kind we call
Wit.
There C--- S--- may be inform'd
how he comes to be very Witty, and a Mad-man all at once; and P---r
may see, That with less Brains and more P--x he is more a Wit and
more a Mad-man than the Coll. Ad--- son may tell his Master my Lord
the reason from Nature, why he
would not take the Court's Word,
nor write the Poem call'd, The
Campaign, till he had 200 l. per
Annum secur'd to him; since 'tis known they have but one Author in
the Nation that writes for 'em for nothing, and he is labouring
very hard to obtain the Title of Blockhead, and not be paid for it:
Here D. might understand, how he came to be able to banter all
Mankind, and yet all Mankind be able to banter him; at the fame
time our numerous throng of Parnassians may see Reasons for the
variety of the Negative and Positive Blessings they enjoy; some for
having Wit and no Verse, some Verse and no Wit, some Mirth without
Jest, some Jest without Fore-cast, some Rhyme and no Jingle, some
all Jingle and no Rhyme, some Language without measure; some all
Quantity and no Cudence, some all Wit and no Sence, some all Sence
and no Flame, some Preach in Rhyme, some sing when they Preach,
some all Song and no Tune, some all Tune and no Song; all these
Unaccountables have their Originals, and can be answer'd for in
unerring Nature, tho' in our out-side Guesses we can say little to
it. Here is to be seen, why some are all Nature, some all Art; some
beat Verse out of the Twenty-four rough Letters, with Ten Hammers
and Anvils to every Line, and maul the Language as a Swede beats
Stock-Fish; Others buff Nature, and bully her out of whole
Stanza's of ready- made Lines at a time, carry all before them, and
rumble like distant Thunder in a black Cloud: Thus Degrees and
Capacities are fitted by Nature, according to Organick Efficacy;
and the Reason and Nature of Things are found in themselves: Had
D---y seen his own Draft by this Light of Chinese Knowledge, he
might have known he should be a Coxcomb without writing Twenty-two
Plays, to stand as so many Records against him. Dryden might have
told his Fate, that having his extraordinary Genius flung and
pitcht upon a Swivle, it would certainly turn round as fast as the
Times, and instruct him how to write Elegies to O. C. and King C.
the Second, with all the Coherence imaginable; how to write Religio
Laicy, and the Hind and Panther, and yet be the same Man, every Day
to change his Principle, change his Religion, change his Coat,
change his Master, and yet never change his Nature.
There are abundance of other
Secrets in Nature discover'd in relation to these things, too many
to repeat, and yet too useful to omit, as the reason why Phisicians
are generally Atheists; and why Atheists are universally Fools, and
generally live to know it themselves, the real Obstructions, which
prevent fools being mad,
all the Natural Causes of Love,
abundance of Demonstrations of the Synonimous Nature of Love and
Leachery, especially consider'd a la Modern, with an absolute
Specifick for the Frenzy of Love, found out in the Constitution,
Anglice, a Halter.
It would be endless to reckon up
the numerous Improvements, and wonderful Discoveries this
extraordinary Person has brought down, and which are to be seen in
his curious Chamber of Rarities.
Particularly, a Map of Parnassus,
with an exact Delineation of all the Cells, Apartments, Palaces and
Dungeons, of that most famous Mountain; with a Description of its
Heighth, and a learned Dissertation, proving it to be the properest
Place next to the P---e House to take a Rise at, for a flight to
the World in the Moon.
Also some Enquiries, whether
Noah's Ark did not first rest upon it; and this might be one of the
Summits of Ararat, with some Confutations of the gross and palpable
Errors, which place this extraordinary Skill among the Mountains of
the Moon in Africa.