Vox caelorum. Predictions defended : or, The voyce of the celestiall light, wherein is proved five things: 1 That the starres have received influences. 2 That they operate and worke upon sublunary things, according to the nature and quality of those received influences. 3 That God hath revealed those received influences to man. 4 That it is not unlawfull to predict according to the knowne nature and quality of those received influences. 5 That it is not unlawfull to call the starres by such and such names; as Pleyades, Arcturus, Orion, &c. And divers places of the Scriptures opened and cleared. With a vindication of M. William Lilly his reputation against the Epirrhesian antagonists, in these times of discovery of new lights. By Henry Harflete, practitioner in the mathematickes.

  • Harflete, Henry, active 1653
Date:
[1646]
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Also known as

Voyce of the celestiall light.
Predictions defended.

Publication/Creation

Imprinted at London : For Mat. Walbancke, [1646]

Physical description

12 unnumbered pages, 59 pages, 1 unnumbered page

References note

Wing (2nd ed.) H767.
Thomason 1179[1].

Notes

Publication date from Wing.
Running title reads: Predicitons defended.
Annotation on Thomason copy: "march 19th 1645".
Reproduction of the original in the British Library.

Reproduction note

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Mich. : UMI, 1999- (Early English books online) Digital version of: (Thomason Tracts ; 167:E1179[1]) s1999 miun s

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