CHAPTER
III
All Evasions answered; That there was no
new Creation of waters at the Deluge: And that it was not particular or
National, but extended throughout the whole Earth. A prelude and preparation to
the true Account and Explication of it. The method of the first Book.
THOUGH in the preceeding Chapter we
may seem to have given a fair trial to the common opinion concerning the state
of the Deluge, and might now proceed to sentence of condemnation; yet having heard of another plea, which
some have us'd in its behalf, and another way found out by recourse to the
Supream Power, to supply all defects, and to make the whole matter intelligible,
we will proceed no further till that be consider'd; being very willing to
examine whatsoever may be offer'd, in that or any other way, for resolving that
great difficulty which we have propos'd, concerning the quantity of water
requisite for such a Deluge. And to this they say in short, that God
Almighty created waters on purpose to make the Deluge, and then annihilated them
again when the Deluge was to cease; And this, in a few words, is the whole
account of the business. This is to cut the knot when we cannot loose it; They
show us the naked arm of Omnipotency ; such Arguments as these come like
lightning, one doth not know what Armour to put on against them, for they pierce
the more, the more they are resisted: We will not therefore oppose any thing to
them that is hard and stubborn, but by a soft answer deaden their force by
degrees.
And I desire to mind those persons in the first place of what
St. Austin hath said upon a like occasion, speaking concerning those that
disprov'd the opinion of waters above the Heavens (which we mentioned before) by
natural Reasons. "We are not, saith he, to refute those persons, by saying,
that according to the "Omnipotence of God, to whom all things are possible,
we ought to believe "there are waters there as heavy as we know and feel
them here below; for our "business is now to enquire according to his
Scripture, how God hath constituted "the Nature of things, and not what he
could do or work in these things by a "miracle of Omnipotency .I desire
them to apply this to the present argument for the first answer .
Secondly, let them consider, that Moses hath assign'd causes of the
Deluge; Forty days Rain, and the disruption of the Abysse; and speaks
nothing of a new
33
creation of water upon that occasion. Those
were causes in Nature which Providence had then dispos'd for this
extraordinary effect, and those the Divine Historian refers us to, and not to
any productions out of nothing. Besides, Moses makes the Deluge increase
by degrees with the Rain, and accordingly makes it cease by degrees, and that
the waters going and returning, as the waves and great commotions of the
Sea use to do, retir'd leisurely from the face of the Earth, and setled at
length in their Chanels. Now this manner of the beginning or ceasing of the
Deluge doth not at all agree with the instantaneous actions of Creation and Annihilation.
Thirdly, let them consider, that St. Peter hath
also assign'd Causes of the Deluge; namely the particular constitution of
the Earth and Heavens before the Flood; "by reason whereof, he saith,
the World that was then, perisht in a Deluge of water." And not by
reason of a new creation of water. His words are these, "The Heavens and
the Earth were of old, consisting of water, and by water; whereby, or by
reason whereof, the World that then was, being overflowed with water,
perished."
Fourthly, they are to consider, that as we are not rashly to
have recourse to the Divine Omnipotence upon any account, so especially not for
new Creations; and least of all for the creation of new matter. The matter of
the Universe was created many Ages before the Flood, and the Universe being
full, if any more was created, then there must be as much annihilated at the
same time to make room for it ; for Bodies cannot penetrate one anothers
dimensions, nor be two or more within one and the same space. Then on the other
hand, when the Deluge ceas'd, and these waters were annihilated, so much other
matter must be created again to take up their places: And methinks they make
very bold with the Deity, when they make him do and undo, go forward and
backwards by such countermarches and retractions, as we do not willingly impute
to the wisdom of God Almighty.
Lastly, I shall not think my labour lost, if it be but
acknowledg'd, that we have so far clear'd the way in this controversie, as to
have brought it to this issue; That either there must be new waters created on
purpose to make a Deluge, or there could be no Deluge, as 'tis vulgarly
explain'd; there not being water sufficient in Nature to make a Deluge of that
kind. This, I say, is a great step, and, I think, will satisfie all parties, at
least all that are considerable; for those that have recourse to a new Creation
of waters, are of two sorts, either such as do it out of laziness and ignorance,
or such as do it out of necessity, seeing they cannot be had otherwise; as for
the first, they are not to be valu'd or gratifi'd; and as for the second, I
shall do a thing very acceptable to them, if I free them and the argument from
that necessity, and show a way of making the Deluge fairly intelligible, and
accountable without the creation of new waters; which is the design of this
Treatise. For we do not tye this knot with an Intention to puzzle and perplex
the Argument finally with it, but the harder it is ty'd, we shall feel the pleasure more sensibly when we come to loose it.
It may be when they are beaten from this new Creation of
water, they will say the Element of Air was chang'd into water, and that was the
great storehouse for the Deluge. Forty days Rain we allow, as Moses does,
but if they suppose any
34
other transelementation, it neither
agrees with Moses's Philosophy, nor St. Peter's; for then the opening
of the Abysse was needless, and the form and constitution of the Ante-diluvian
Heavens and Earth, which St. Peter refers the Deluge to,
bore no part in the work; it might have been made, in that way, indifferently
under any Heavens or Earth. Besides, they offend against St. Austin's rule
in this method too; for I look upon it as no less a miracle to turn Air into
Water, than to turn Water into Wine. Air, I say, for Vapours indeed are
but water made volatile, but pure Air is a body of another Species, and cannot
by any compression or condensation, so far as is yet known, be chang'd into
water. And lastly, if the whole Atmosphere was tum'd into water, 'tis very
probable it would make no more than 34 foot or thereabouts; for so much Air or
Vapours as is of the same weight with any certain quantity of water, 'tis
likely, if it was chang'd into water, would also be of the same bulk with it, or
not much more: Now according to the doctrine of the Gravitation of the
Atmosphere, 'tis found that 34 foot of water does counterbalance a
proportionable Cylinder of Air reaching to the top of the Atmosphere; and
consequently, if the whole Atmosphere was converted into water, it would make no
more than eleven or twelve yards water about the Earth; Which the cavities of
the Earth would be able in a good measure to suck up, at least this is very
inconsiderable as to our eight Oceans. And if you would change the higher
Regions into water too, what must supply the place of that Air which you
transforn into water, and bring down upon the Earth ? There would be little but
Fire and Æther betwixt us and the Moon, and I am afraid it would endanger to
suck down the Moon too after it. In a word, such an explication as this, is both
purely imaginary, and also very operose, and would affect a great part of the
Universe; and after all, they would be as hard put to't to get rid of this
water, when the Deluge was to cease, as they were at first to procure it.
Having now examin'd and answered all the pleas, from first to
last, for the vulgar Deluge, or the old way of explaining it, we should proceed
immediately to propose another method, and another ground for an universal
Deluge, were it not that an opinion hath been started by some of late, that
would in effect supplant both these methods, old and new, and take away in a
great measure the subject of the question. Some modern Authors observing what
straits they have been put to in all Ages, to find out water enough for Noah's
Flood, have ventur'd upon an expedient more brisk and bold, than any of the
Ancients durst venture upon : They say, Noah's Flood was not Universal,
but a National Inundation, confin'd to Judaa, and those Countries
thereabouts; and consequently, there would not be so much water necessary for
the cause of it, as we have prov'd to be necessary for an Universal Deluge of
that kind. Their inference is very true, they have avoided that rock, but they
run upon another no less dangerous; to avoid an objection from reason, they deny
matter of fact, and such matter of fact as is well attested by History, both
Sacred and prophane. I believe the Authors that set up this opinion, were not
themselves satisfied with it: but seeing insuperable difficulties in the old
way, they are the more excusable in chusing, as they thought, of two evils the
less.
35
But the choice, methinks, is as
bad on this hand, if all things be considered ; Moses represents the
Flood of Noah as an overthrow and destruction of the whole Earth ; and
who can imagine, that in sixteen or seventeen hundred years time (taking the
lower Chronology) that the Earth had then stood, mankind should be propagated no
further than Judæa, or some neighbouring Countries thereabouts. After
the Flood, when the World was renew'd again by eight persons, they had made a
far greater progress in Asia, Europe and Africa, within the same
space of years, and yet 'tis likely they were more fruitful in the first Ages of
the World, than after the Flood; and they liv'd six, seven, eight, nine hundred
years a piece, getting Sons and Daughters. Which longevity of the first
Inhabitants of the Earth seems to have been providentially design'd for the
quicker multiplication and propagation of mankind; and mankind thereby would
become so numerous within sixteen hundred years, that there seems to me to be a
greater difficulty from the multitude of the people that would be before the
Flood, than from the want of people. For if we allow the first couple at the end
of one hundred years, or of the first Century, to have left ten pair of
Breeders, which is no hard supposition, there would arise from these, in
fifteen hundred years, a greater number than the Earth was capable of; allowing
every pair to multiply in the same decuple proportion the first pair did. But
because this would rise far beyond the capacities of this Earth, let us suppose
them to increase, in the following Centuries, in a quintuple proportion only,
or, if you will, only in a quadruple; and then the Table of the multiplication
of mankind from the Creation to the Flood, would stand thus ;
| Century | 1 | . . | 10 | 9 | . . | 655360 | ||
| 2 | . . | 40 | 10 | . . | 2621440 | |||
| 3 | . . | 160 | 11 | . . | 10485760 | |||
| 4 | . . | 640 | 12 | . . | 41943040 | |||
| 5 | . . | 2560 | 13 | . . | 167772160 | |||
| 6 | . . | 10240 | 14 | . . | 671088640 | |||
| 7 | . . | 40960 | 15 | . . | 2684354560 | |||
| 8 | . . | 163840 | 16 | . . | 10737418240 |
This product is too excessive high, if compar'd with the present number of men
upon the face of the Earth, which I think is commonly estimated to be betwixt
three and four hundred millions; and yet this proportion of their increase seems
to be low enough, if we take one proportion for all the Centuries ; for, in
reality, the same measure cannot run equally through all the Ages, but we have
taken this as moderate and reasonable betwixt the highest and the lowest; but if
we had taken only a triple proportion, it would have been sufficient (all things
consider'd) for our purpose. There are several other ways of computing this
number, and some more particular and exact than this is, but which way so ever
you try, you will find the product great enough for the extent of this Earth;
and if you follow the Septuagint Chronology it will still be far higher. I have
met with three or four different Calculations, in several Authors, of the number
of man-kind before the Flood, and never met with any yet, but what exceeded the
number of the people that are at present upon the face of the Earth. So as it
seems to
36
me a very groundless and forc'd
conceit to imagine, thatJudæa only, and some parts about it in Asia,
were stor'd with people when the Deluge was brought upon the old World.
Besides, if the Deluge was confin'd to those Countries, I do not see but the
Borderers might have escap'd, shifting a little into the adjoining places where
the Deluge did not reach. But especially what needed so much a-do to build an
Ark to save Noah and his family, if he might have sav'd himself, and
them, only by retiring into some neighbouring Countrey; as Lot and his
family sav'd themselves, by withdrawing from Sodom, when the City was to
be destroyed ? Had not this been a far easier thing, and more compendious, than
the great preparations he made of a large Vessel, with Rooms for the reception
and accommodation of Beasts and Birds ? And now I mention Birds, why could not
they at least have flown into the next dry Country; they might have pearch'd
upon the Trees and the tops of the Mountains by the way to have rested themselves if they were weary, for the waters did not all of a sudden rise to the
Mountains tops.
I cannot but look upon the Deluge as a much more considerable
thing than these Authors would represent it, and as a kind of dissolution of
Nature. Moses calls it a destroying of the Earth, as well as of
mankind, Gen. 6. 13. And the Bow was set in the Cloud to seal the
Covenant, that he would destroy the Earth no more, Gen. 9. I I. or that
there should be no more a Flood to destroy the Earth. And 'tis said, verse
13. that the Covenant was made between God and the Earth, or this frame of
Nature, that it should perish no more by water. And the Rainbow, which was a
token and pledge of this Covenant, appears not only in Judæa, or some
other Asiatick Provinces, but to all the Regions of the Earth, who had an
equal concern in it. Moses saith also the Fountains of the great Abysse
were burst asunder to make the Deluge, and what means this Abysse and the
bursting of it, if restrain'd to Judæa, or some adjacent Countries ?
What appearance is there of this disruption there more than in other places ?
Furthermore, St. Peter plainly implies, that the Antediluvian Heavens and
Earth perisht in the Deluge ; and opposeth the present Earth and Heavens to
them, as different and of another constitution: and saith, that these shall
perish by Fire, as the other perisht by water. So he compares the Conflagration
with the Deluge, as two general dissolutions of Nature, and one may as well
say, that the Conflagration shall be only National, and but two or three
Countries burnt in that last Fire, as to say that the Deluge was so. I confess
that discourse of St. Peter , concerning the several States of the World,
would sufficiently convince me, if there was nothing else, that the Deluge was
not a particular or National Inundation, but a mundane change, that
extended to the whole Earth, and both to the Heavens and the Earth.
All Antiquity, we know, hath spoke of these mundane
Revolutions or Periods, that the World should be successively destroy'd by Water
and Fire; and I do not doubt but that this Deluge of Noah's, which Moses
describes, was the first and leading instance of this kind: And accordingly
we see that after this Period, and after the Flood, the blessing for
multiplication, and for replenishing the Earth with Inhabitants, was as solemnly
pronounc'd by God Almighty, as at the first Creation of man, Gen. 9. I.
with Gen. 1.28. These considerations, I think, might
37
be sufficient to give us assurance from
Divine Writ of the universality of the Deluge, and yet Moses affords us
another argument as demonstrative as any, when in the History of the Deluge, he
saith, Hen. 7. 19. The waters exceedingly prevailed upon the Earth,
and all the high Hills that were under the whole Heavens were covered. All
the high Hills, he saith, under the whole Heavens, then quite round the
Earth ; and if the Mountains were cover'd quite round the Earth, sure the Plains
could not scape. But to argue with them upon their own grounds ; Let us suppose
only the Asiatick and Armenian Mountains covered with these
waters, this they cannot deny; then unless there was a miracle to keep these
waters upon heaps, they would flow throughout the Earth; for these Mountains are
high enough to make them fall every way, and make them joyn with our Seas that
environ the Continent. We cannot imagine Hills and Mountains of water to have
hung about Judæa, as if they were congea1'd, or a mass of water to have
stood upon the middle of the Earth like one great drop, or a trembling Jelly,
and all the places about it dry and untouch'd. All liquid bodies are diffusive;
for their parts being in motion have no tye or connexion one with another, but
glide and fall off any way, as gravity and the Air presseth them; so the surface
of water doth always conform into a Spherical convexity with the rest of the
Globe of the Earth, and every part of it falls as near to the Center as it can ;
wherefore when these waters began to rise at first, long before they could swell
to the heighth of the Mountains, they would diffuse themselves every way, and
thereupon all the Valleys and Plains, and lower parts of the Earth would be
filled throughout the whole Earth, before they could rise to the tops of the
Mountains in any part of it: And the Sea would be all raised to a considerable
heighth before the Mountains could be covered. For let's suppose, as they do,
that this water fell not throughout the whole Earth, but in some particular
Country, and there made first a great Lake; this Lake when it begun to swell
would every way discharge it self by any descents or declivities of the ground,
and these issues and derivations being once made, and supplied with new waters
pushing them forwards, would continue their course till they arriv'd at the Sea;
just as other Rivers do, for these would be but so many Rivers rising out of
this Lake, and would not be considerably deeper and higher at the Fountain than
in their progress or at the Sea. We may as well then expect that the Leman Lake,
for instance, out of which the Rhone runs, should swell to the tops of
the Alpes on the one hand, and the Mountains of Switzerland and Burgundy
on the other, and then stop, without overflowing the plainer Countries that
lie beyond them; as to suppose that this Diluvian Lake should rise to the
Mountains tops in one place, and not diffuse it self equally into all Countries
about, and upon the surface of the Sea : in proportion to its heighth and depth
in the place where it first fell or stood.
Thus much for Sacred History. The universality of the Deluge
is also attested by profane History; for the fame of it is gone through the Earth, and there are
Records or Traditions concerning it, in all parts of this and the new-found
World. The Americans do acknowledge and speak of it in their Continent,
as Acosta witnesseth, and Laet in their Histories of them. The Chineses
have the Tradition of it, which is the farthest part of our Continent; and
the nearer and Western
38
parts of Asia is acknowledg'd the
proper seat of it. Not to mention Deucalion's Deluge in the European partS,
which no question is the same under a disguise: So as you may trace the Deluge
quite round the Globe in profane History ; and which is remarkable, every one of
these people have a tale to tell, some one way, some another, concerning the
restiluration of mankind; which is an argument that they thought an mankind
destroy'd by that Deluge. In the old dispute between the Scythians and
the Ægyptians for Antiquity, which Justin mentions, they refer to a former destruction of the World by Water or Fire, and argue
whether Nation first rise again, and was original to the other. So the Babylonians,
Assyrians, Phoenicians and others, mention the Deluge in their stories. And
we cannot without offering violence to an Records and Authority, Divine and
Humane, deny that there hath been an universal Deluge upon the Earth; and if
there was an universal Deluge, no question it was that of Noah's, and
that which Moses describ'd, and that which we treat of at present.
These considerations I think are abundantly sufficient to
silence that opinion, concerning the limitation and restriction of the Deluge to
a particular Country or Countries. It ought rather to be lookt upon as an
Evasion indeed than Opinion, seeing the Authors do not offer any positive
argument for the proof of it, but depend only upon that negative argument, that
an universal Deluge is a thing unintelligible. This stumbling-stone we hope to
take away for the future, and that men shall not be put to that unhappy choice,
either to deny matter of fact well attested, or admit an effect, whereof they
cannot see any possible causes. And so having stated and propos'd the whole
difficulty, and try'd an ways offer'd by others, and found them ineffectual, let
us now apply our selves by degrees to unty the knot.
The excessive quantity of water is the great difficulty,
and the removal of it afterwards. Those eight Oceans lay heavy upon my thoughts,
and I cast about every way to find an expedient, or to find some way whereby the
same effect might be brought to pass with less water, and in such a manner, that
that water might afterwards conveniently be discharg'd. The first thought that
came into my mind upon that occasion, was concerning the form of the Earth, which I
thought might possibly at that time be different from what it is at present, and
might come nearer to plainness and equality in the surface of it, and so might
the more easily be overflow'd, and the Deluge perform'd with less water. This
opinion concerning the plainness of the first Earth, I also found in Antiquity,
mention'd and refer'd to by several Interpreters in their Commentaries upon Genesis,
either upon occasion of the Deluge, or of that Fountain which is said, Gen.
2.6. to have watered the face of the whole Earth: And a late eminent person,
the honour of this profession for Integrity and Learning, in his discourse concerning the Origination of mankind, hath made a like judgment of the
State of the Earth before the Deluge, that the face of it was more smooth and
regular than it is now. But yet upon second thoughts, I easily see that this
alone would not be sufficient to explain the Deluge, nor to give an account of
the present form of the Earth, unequal and Mountainous as it is. 'Tis true this
would give a great advantage to the waters, and the Rains that fell for forty
days together would
39
have a great power over the Earth, being
plain and smooth ; but how would these waters be dispos'd of when the Deluge
ceas'd ? or how could it ever cease ? Besides, what means the disruption of the
great Deep, or the great Abysse, or what answers to it upon this
supposition ? This was assuredly of no less consideration than the Rains, nay
I believe the Rains were but preparatory in some measure, and that the violence
and consummation of the Deluge depended upon the disruption of the great Abysse.
Therefore I saw it necessary, to my first thought, concerning the smoothness and
plainness of the Ante-diluvian Earth, to add a second, concerning the disruption
and dissolution of it; for as it often happens in Earthquakes, when the
exteriour Earth is burst asunder, and a great Flood of waters issues out,
according to the quantity and force of them, an Inundation is made in those
parts, more or less; so I thought, if that Abysse lay under ground and round the
Earth, and we should suppose the Earth in this manner to be broken, in several
places at once, and as it were a general dissolution made, we might suppose that
to make a general Deluge, as well as a particular dissolution often makes a
particular. But I will not anticipate here the explication we intend to give of
the universal Deluge in the following Chapters, only by this previous intimation
we may gather some hopes, it may be, that the matter is not so desperate as the
former representation might possibly make us fancy it.
Give me leave to add farther in this place, that it hath been
observ'd by several, from the contemplation of Mountains and Rocks and
Precipices, of the Chanel of the Sea, and of Islands, and of Subterraneous
Caverns, that the surface of the Earth, or the exteriour Region which we
inhabit, hath been broke, and the parts of it dislocated: And one might instance
more particularly in several parcels of Nature, that retain still the evident
marks of fraction and ruine; and by their present form and posture show, that
they have been once in another state and situation one to another. We shall have
occasion hereafter to give an account of these Phaenomena, from which
several have rightly argu'd and concluded some general rupture or ruine in the
superficial parts of the Earth. But this ruine, it is true, they have imagin'd
and explain'd several ways, some thinking that it was made the third day after
the foundation of the Earth ; when they suppose the Chanel of the Sea to have
been form'd, and Mountains and Caverns at the same time; by a violent depression
of some parts of the Earth, and an extrusion and elevation of others to make
them room. Others suppose it to have come not all at once, but by degrees, at
several times, and in several Ages, from particular and accidental causes, as
the Earth falling in upon Fires under ground, or water eating away the lower
parts, or Vapours and Exhalations breaking out, and tearing the Earth. 'Tis
true, I am not of their opinion in either of these Explications; and we shall
show at large hereafter, when we have propos'd and stated our own Theory, how
incompetent such causes are to bring the Earth into that form and condition we
now find it in. But in the mean time, we may so far make use of these Opinions
in general, as not to be startled at this Doctrine, concerning the breaking or
dissolution of the exteriour Earth ; for in all Ages the face of Nature hath
provok'd men to think of and observe such a thing. And who can do otherwise, to
see the Elements displac'd and disordered, as they seem to lie
40
at present; the heaviest and grossest bodies
in the highest places, and the liquid and volatile kept below; an huge mass of
Stone or Rock rear'd into the Air, and the water creeping at its feet; whereas
this is the more light and active body, and by the law of Nature should take
place of Rocks and Stones ? So we see, by the like disorder, the Air thrown down
into Dungeons of the Earth, and the Earth got up among the Clouds; for there are
the tops of the Mountains, and under their roots in holes and Caverns the Air is
often detain'd. By what regular action of Nature can we suppose things first
produc'd in this posture and form ? not to mention how broke and torn the inward
substance of the Earth is, which of it self is an uniform mass, close and
compact: but in the condition we see it, it lies hollow in many places, with
great vacuities intercepted betwixt the portions of it ; a thing which we see
happens in all ruines more or less, especially when the parts of the ruines are
great and inflexible. Then what can have more the figure and mien of a ruine,
than Crags and Rocks and Cliffs, whether upon the Sea shore, or upon the sides
of Mountains; what can be more apparently broke, than they are; and those lesser
Rocks, or great bulky Stones that lie often scatter'd near the feet of the
other, whether in the Sea, or upon the Land, are they not manifest fragments,
and pieces of those greater masses ? Besides, the posture of these Rocks, which
is often leaning or recumbent, or prostrate, shows to the eye, that they have
had a fall, or some kind of dislocation from their Natural site. And the same
thing may be observed in the Tracts and Regions of the Earth, which very seldom
for ten miles together have any regular surface or continuity one with another,
but lie high and low, and are variously inclin'd sometimes one way, sometimes
another, without any rule or order. Whereas I see no reason but the surface of
the Land should be as regular as that of the water, in the first production of
it. This I am sure of, that this disposition of the Elements, and the parts of
the Earth, outward and inward, hath something irregular and unnatural in it, and
manifestly shews us the marks or footsteps of some kind of ruine and
dissolution; which we shall shew you, in its due place, happen'd in such a way,
that at the same time a general Flood of waters would necessarily over-run the
face of the whole Earth. And by the same fatal blow, the Earth fell out of that
regular form, wherein it was produc'd at first, into all these irregularities
which we see in its present form and composition; so that we shall give thereby
a double satisfaction to the mind, both to shew it a fair and intelligible
account of the general Deluge, how the waters came upon the Earth, and how they
return'd into their Chanels again, and left the Earth habitable; and likewise to
shew it how the Mountains were brought forth, and the Chanel of the Sea
discover'd: How all those inequalities came in the body or face of the Earth,
and those empty Vaults and Caverns in its bowels; which things are no less
matter of admiration than the Flood it self.
But I must beg leave to draw a Curtain before the work for a
while, and to keep your patience a little in suspence, till materials are
prepar'd, and all things ready to represent and explain what we have propos'd.
Yet I hope in the mean time to entertain the mind with scenes no less pleasing,
though of quite another face and order: for we must now return to the beginning
of the World, and look
41
upon the first rudiments of Nature, and that
dark, but fruitful womb, out of which all things sprang, I mean the Chaos: For
this is the matter which we must now work upon, and it will be no unpleasing
thing to observe, how that rude mass will shoot it self into several forms, one
after another, till it comes at length to make an habitable World. The steddy
hand of Providence, which keeps all things in weight and measure, being the
invisible guide of all its motions. These motions we must examine from first to
last, to find out what was the form of the Earth, and what was the place or
situation of the Ocean, or the great Abysse, in that first state of Nature:
Which two things being determin'd, we shall be able to make a certain judgment,
what kind of dissolution that Earth was capable of, and whether from "that
dissolution an Universal Deluge would follow, with all the consequences of it.
In the mean time, for the ease and satisfaction of the Reader,
we will here mark the order and distribution of the first Book, which we divide
into three Sections; whereof the first is these three Chapters past: In the
second Section we will shew, that the Earth before the Deluge was of a different
frame and form from the present Earth; and particularly of such a form as made
it subject to a dissolution: And to such a dissolution, as did necessarily
expose it to an universal Deluge. And in this place we shall apply our discourse
particularly to the explication of Noah's Flood, and that under all its
conditions, of the height of the waters, of their universality, of the
destruction of the World by them, and of their retiring afterwards from the
Earth; and this Section will consist of the Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh and
Eighth Chapters. In the third Section we prove the same dissolution from the
effects and consequences of it, or from the contemplation of the present face of
the Earth: And here an account is given of the Origin of Mountains, of
subterraneous Waters and Caverns, of the great Chanel of the Sea, and of the
first production of Islands ; and those things are the Contents of the Ninth,
Tenth and Eleventh Chapters. Then, in the last Chapter, we make a general review
of the whole Work, and a general review of Nature; that, by comparing them
together, their full agreement and correspondency may appear. Here several
collateral arguments are given for confirmation of the preceeding Theory, and
some reflections are made upon the state of the other Planets compar'd with the
Earth. And lastly, what accounts soever have been given by others of the present
form and irregularities of the Earth, are examin'd and shew'd insufficient. And
this seemeth to be all that is requisite upon this subject.