BIBLIOGRAPHY
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With
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of that Country (London, 1727). Cyrano de Bergerac,
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toire comique des Estats et Empires de la
lune (Paris, 1656;
seven other editions 1659-87). Quotations
in this article are
largely from The Comical History
of the States and Empires
of the Worlds of the Moon and Sun...
newly Englished
by A. Lovell (London, 1687). Daniel Defoe, The Consoli-
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the
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ana-
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iter subterraneum novam telluris theoriam (Hafniae
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Lipsiae, 1741). Quotations are from A Journey to the
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Samuel Johnson, The Prince of Abissinia. A Tale in
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Volumes (London, 1759), the first edition of Rasselas. See
also J. E . Hodgson, Doctor Johnson on Ballooning and Flight
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Jonathan Swift, Travels into
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Voltaire, Le Micromégas de M. De Voltaire (London, 1752).
Quotations are from the English translation in The
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of Voltaire, with notes by Tobias Smollett, Vol. III.
(London,
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a New World
and Another Planet (London, 1638). The work is
often called
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Bernard Zamagna, Navis aeria et elegiarum
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Mary B. McElwain, Smith College
Classical Studies, No. 12
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Secondary Bibliography.
J. E . Hodgson, The History of
Aeronautics in
Great Britain from the Earliest Times to the
Latter Half of the
Nineteenth Century (London, 1924).
Aldous Huxley, Literature and Science (London, 1963).
Francis
Johnson, Astronomical Thought in Renaissance
England (Baltimore, 1937). Alexandre Koyré, From the
Closed World to the Infinite Universe (New York,
1958).
T. S. Kuhn, The Copernican Revolution
(Cambridge, 1957).
Marjorie Nicolson, Voyages to the
Moon (New York, 1948;
reprint, 1960); idem, Science and Imagination (Ithaca, 1956);
idem, The Breaking of the Circle (New York, 1960);
idem,
with Nora M. Mohler, “Swift's 'Flying Island' in the
'Voyage
to Laputa,'” Annals of Science,
2 (October, 1937), 405-30.
H. H. Rhys, ed., Seventeenth Century Science
and the Arts
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Modern World (New York, 1926;
Cambridge, 1938; many
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MARJORIE HOPE NICOLSON
[See also
Cosmic Images; Cosmology; Macrocosm
and
Microcosm;
Myth; Newton...; Optics.]