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Philosophicall fancies
Newcastle, Margaret Cavendish (1624?-1674)
[section]
A Dedication to FAME.
An Epistle to Time.
A Request to Time.
An Epistle to my BRAINE.
AN EPISTLE To a troubled FANCY.
An Epistle to Contemplation.
An Epistle to my Musefull Thoughts.
Another to the Thoughts.
Reason, and the Thoughts.
No Judge In Nature.
Of Perfection.
Of Inequalities.
Of Unities.
There is no Vacuity.
Of Thin, and Thick Matter.
Of Vacuum.
Similizing the Spirits, or Innate Matter.
Of the Working of severall Motions of Nature.
Of the Motions of the Spirits.
Of Sense and Reason exercised in their different shapes.
Of the flowing of the Spirits.
Of the Motion of the Planets.
The Motion of the Sea.
A Dialogue between the Body, and the Minde.
A Request to my Friends.
AN ELEGY.
[But be it bad, or good, it is my owne]
[Lord how the World delight to tell a Lye!]
[For had my Braine as many Fancies in't]
A Farewell to the MUSES.
[Great God, from Thee all Infinities do flow]
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Philosophicall fancies
Of
Vacuum
.
If
Infinite Inequallity
doth run,
The Readers may take either Opinion.
Then must there be in
Infinite Vacuum
.
For what's
unequall
, cannot joyned be
So close, but there will be
Vacuity
.
Philosophicall fancies