Miscellanies Upon Various Subjects eBook

John Aubrey
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 161 pages of information about Miscellanies Upon Various Subjects.

Miscellanies Upon Various Subjects eBook

John Aubrey
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 161 pages of information about Miscellanies Upon Various Subjects.
that one in black habit came to her, whose face was so bright and glorious she could not behold it; and also he had such brightness upon his breast, and (if I forget not) upon his arms.  And told her, that her mother’s prayers were heard, and that her mother should shortly die, and she should suddenly recover; and she did so, and her mother died.  She hath the character of a modest, humble, virtuous maid.  Had this been in some Catholick country, it would have made a great noise.

’Tis certain, there was one in the Strand, who lay in a trance a few hours before he departed.  And in his trance had a vision of the death of King Charles ii.  It was at the very day of his apoplectick fit.

There is a sheet of paper printed 16 ... concerning Ecstacies, that James Usher, late Lord Primate of Ireland, once had:  but I have been assured from my hon. friend James Tyrrell, Esq. (his Lordship’s grandson) that this was not an ecstacy; but that his Lordship upon reading the 12, 13, 14, &c. chapters of the Revelation, and farther reflecting upon the great increase of the sectaries in England, supposed that they would let in popery, which consideration put him into a great transport, at the time when his daughter (the Lady Tyrrel) came into the room; when he discoursed to her divers things (tho’ not all) contained in the said printed paper.

GLANCES OF LOVE AND MALICE.

“Amor ex Oculo”:  Love is from the eye:  but (as the Lord Bacon saith) more by glances than by full gazings; and so for envy and malice.

      Tell me dearest, what is Love ? 
      ’Tis a Lightning from above: 
      ’Tis an Arrow, ’tis a Fire,
      ’Tis a Boy they call Desire.*

* Mr. Fletcher in Cupid’s Revenge.

’Tis something divine and inexplicable.  It is strange, that as one walks the streets sometimes one shall meet with an aspect (of male or female) that pleases our souls; and whose natural sweetness of nature, we could boldly rely upon.  One never saw the other before, and so could neither oblige or disoblige each other.  Gaze not on a maid, saith Ecclus. 9, 5.

The Glances of envy and malice do shoot also subtilly; the eye of the malicious person, does really infect and make sick the spirit of the other.  The Lord Bacon saith it hath been observed, that after triumphs, the triumphants have been sick in spirit.

The chymist can draw subtile spirits, that will work upon one another at some distance, viz. spirits of alkalies and acids, e.g. spirits coelestial (sal armoniac and spirits of C. C. will work on each other at half a yard distance, and smoke;) but the spirits above mentioned are more subtile than they.

      “Non amo te Sabati, nece possum dicere quare,
      Hoc tantum possum dicere, non amo te”.

      Fellow, I love thee not, I can’t tell why,
      But this, I’ll tell thee, I could sooner die.

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Miscellanies Upon Various Subjects from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.