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The Sun, and Moon have obtained the administration or ruling of the Heavens, and all bodies under the
heavens. The Sun is the Lord of all Elementary vertues, and the Moon by vertue of the Sun is the mistress of
generation, increase, or decrease. Hence Albumasar saith, that by the Sun and Moon life is infused into all
things, which therefore Orpheus cals the enlivening eyes of the heaven. The Sun giveth light to all things of
it self, and gives it plentifully to all things not only in the Heaven, Aire, but Earth and Deep: whatsoever
Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa: Occult Philosophy. Book II. (Part 3)
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good we have, as Iamblichus saith, we have it from the Sun alone, or from it through other things.
Heraclitus cals the Sun the fountain of Celestiall light; and many of the Platonists placed the soul of the
world chiefly in the Sun, as that which filling the whole Globe of the Sun doth send forth its rayes on all
sides as it were a spirit through all things, distributing life, sense and motion to the very Universe. Hence the
ancient Naturalists called the Sun the very heart of heaven; and the Caldeans [Chaldaeans] put it as the
middle of the Planets. The Egyptians also placed it in the middle of the world, viz. betwixt the two fives of
the world, i.e. above the Sun they place five Planets, and under the Sun, the Moon and four Elements. For it
is amongst the other Stars the image and statue of the great Prince of both worlds, viz. Terrestiall, and
Celestiall; the true light, and the most exact image of God himself; whose Essence resembles the Father,
Light the Son, Heat the Holy Ghost. So that the Platonists have nothing to hold forth the Divine Essence
more manifestly by, then this. So great is the consonancy of it to God, that Plato cals it the conspicuous Son
of God, and Iamblicus [Iamblichus] cals it the divine image of divine intelligence. And our Dionysius cals it
the perspicuous statue of God. It fits as King in the middle of other Planets, excelling all in light, greatness,
fairness, enlightning [enlightening] all, distributing vertue to them to dispose inferior bodies, and regulating
and disposing of their motions, so that from thence their motions are called daily, or nightly, Southern, or
Northern, Orientall, or Occidentiall, direct, or retrograde; and as it doth by its light drive away all the
darkness of the night, so also all powers of darkness, which we read of in Job; Assoon as morning appears,
they think of the shadow of death: And the Psalmist speaking of the Lyons [lion's] whelps seeking leave of
God to devour, saith, The Sun is risen, and they are gathered together, and shall be placed in their dens;
which being put to flight, it followes, Man shall go forth to his labor. The Sun therefore as it possesseth the
middle Region of the world, and as the heart is in Animals to the whole body, So the Sun is over the heaven,
and the world, ruling over the whole Universe, and those things which are in it, the very author of seasons,
from whence day and year, cold and heat, and all other qualities of seasons; and as saith Ptolomy, when it
comes unto the place of any Star, it stirs up the power thereof which it hath in the Aire. So as with Mars,
heat; with Saturn, cold; and it disposeth even the very spirit and mind of man, from hence it is said by
Homer, and approved by Aristotle, that there are in the mind such like motions, as the Sun the Prince and
moderator of the Planets every day bringeth to us; but the Moon, the nighest to the Earth, the receptacle of
all the heavenly Influences, by the swiftness of her course is joyned to the Sun, and the other Planets and
Stars, every month, and being made as it were the wife of all the Stars, is the most fruitful of the Stars, and
receiving the beams and influences of all the other planets and Stars as a conception, bringing them forth to
the inferior world as being next to it self; for all the Stars have influence on it being the last receiver, which
afterwards communicateth the influences ot all the superiors to these inferiors, and pours them forth on the
Earth; and it more manifestly disposeth these inferiors then the others, and its motion is more sensible by the
familiarity and propinquity which it hath with us; and as a medium betwixt both, superiors and inferiors,
communicateth them to them all; Therefore her motion is to be observed before the others, as the parent of
all conceptions, which it diversely issueth forth in these Inferiors, according to the diverse complexion,
motion, situation, and different aspects to the planets and others Stars; and though it receiveth powers from
all the Stars, yet especially from the Sun; as oft as it is in conjunction with the same, it is replenished with
vivifying vertue, and according to the aspect thereof it borroweth its complexion; for in the first quarter, as
the Peripatetickes deliver, it is hot and moist; in the second hot and dry; in the third, cold and dry; in the
fourth cold and moist; and although it is the lowest of the stars, yet it bringeth forth all the conceptions of
the superiors; for from it in the heavenly bodies beginneth that series of things which Plato calleth the
Golden Chain, by the which every thing and cause being linked one to an other, do depend on the superior,
even untill it may be brought to the supreme cause of all, from which all things depend; from hence is it,
that without the Moon intermediating, we cannot at any time attract the power of the superiors. Therefore
Thebit adviseth vs, for the taking of the vertue of any Star, to take the stone and herb of that plant, when the
Moon doth either fortunately get under or hath a good aspect on that Star.
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Chap. xxxi. Of the Observation of the fixt Stars, and of their Natures. | | | Vertues. |