which-, if ptrbapt it /bouldbc found out by you cit , r . q „* e fone a li 9 uando a 
(which 1 can hardly believe it rvifin this cafe vobis excoguetur ( quod vi* 
the Church mill not at all ftrfk to 
that thefe places are to be underjtood in a ft- clarare,loca ilia in fenfu figu- 
gurative and improper fence , according to T *!° & >mproprio intdligenda 
that of the Poet, Terr#que Urbefquc re- urbefque recedunt. 
cedant. 
Whence this Author concludes, that the faid Jefuite a {Turing 
us that the inquifition hath not absolutely declared-.that thofe Scri- 
pture-places are to be understood literally , feeing that the Church 
may make a contrary declaration, no man ought to fcrupie 
to follow theHypot^/is of the Earths motion , but only forbear to 
maintain it in public till the prohibition be called in. But to 
return to the matter in hand, this Author, upon all thefe obferva- 
tions and relations of Caff mi and Campani, doth find no reafon to 
doubt any more of the excellency of the Glafs ufed by them, 
above his j except this difference may be imputed to that of 
the Air^ or of the Eys. But yet he is rather inclined to afcribe it 
to the goodnefs of their Glades, and that the rather, becaufe , 
he would not be thought to have the vanity of magnifying his 
own; of which, yet he intimates by the by , that he caufed 
one to be wrought, of 1 50 Pariftan feet ; which though it pro- 
ved none of the beft , yet he defpairs not to make good ones of 
that , and of far greater Length, 
Signor Campani’s Anfiper : and Monfieur 
AuzoutV Animadverfom thereon. 
1 he other part of this French Trad, conteining Campani’s An- 
fwer, and Mr, Aus^ut his Refldlions thereon, begins with the pres 
tended Shadows of the Ring upon Saturn^ and of Saturn upon the 
^m^.Concerniog which, the faid Campani deeiareth, that he ne- 
ver believed them to be Jh a dows, made by the Tfyng upon the Disf^ 
of Saturn, or by the body of Saturn upon t : he^mg,but th ePimms 
of thefe bodies, which being unequally Luminous, did fhew thefe 
appearances. In which Explication, forasmuch as it reprefen ts, 
that the faid Campani meant to note only the Inequality of the 
Light, which, he jmth> his GlafTes did difeover, Mr, Au\out does 
fo 
