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The Discovery

strength in these consequences, and certainely their such weake arguments could not convince that wise Philosopher, who in his other opinions was wont to bee swayed by the strength and power of reason: wherefore I should rather thinke that he had some by-respect, which made him first assent to this opinion, and afterwards strive to prove it. Perhaps it was because hee feared to displease his scholler Alexander, of whom ’tis related[1] that he wept to heare a disputation of another world, since he had not then attained the Monarchy of this, his restlesse wide heart would have esteemed this Globe of Earth not big enough for him, if there had beene another, which made the Satyrist say of him,

Æstuat infœlix angusto limite mundi.[2]

"That he did vexe himselfe and sweate in his desires, as being pend up in a narrow roome,

  1. Plutarch. de tranq. anim.
  2. Iuvenal.
when