IXQUISITIO LEGITIMA DE MOTU. 153 



Nodi et globi motuum, and how they concur and how 

 they succeed and interchange in things most fre- 

 quent. 



The times and moments wherein motions work, and 

 which is the more swift and which the more slow, 

 and where they take their beginnings and where 

 they leave. 



The convenience or disconvenience which motion hath 

 with heat and tenuity, and how these three meet, 

 sever, and vary. 



The power in motions corporal of agitation, fire, time. 1 



The effects of motion, and what qualities it induceth 

 respective to every motion. 



The force of union in motions, and the analogy there- 

 of. 2 



Carta divisionis primce, sive ad apparentiam primam. 



Agitatio, sive Motus absque termino, sive Motus se 



exercens. 

 Latio, sive Motus ad terminum, sive Motus itinerans. 



Agitationis species duae : Agitatio placida ; Agita- 

 tio in<juieta. 



Agitatio placida, sive Motus conversionis, sive 

 Ourulis. 



Agitatio inquieta duplex : Agitatio relevationis et 

 tentationis ; Agitatio trepidationis. 



1 In the margin of the MS., opposite the last four paragraphs, are the 

 following notes; written apparently at another time, and without any spe- 

 cial reference to the particular paragraphs against which tln-y happen to 

 stand. They are written consecutively, one under the other, with strokes 

 f the pen between to separate them. " The instruments and efficients. 

 Subjectum quasi efficiens generale, efficiens tanquam subjectum proxi- 

 muin. Periodi et processus motuum. Spatia orbis virtutis." 



2 This last article appears to have been added at another time. 



