TO
THE
K I N G ' S
MOST
Excellent Majesty
SIR,
NEW -found
Lands and Countries accrew to the Prince, whose Subject makes the first
Discovery; And having retriev'd a World that had been lost, for some thousands
of Years, out of the Memory of Man, and the Records of Time, I thought it my
Duty to lay it at Your Majesty's Feet. 'Twill not enlarge Your Dominions, 'tis
past and gone; nor dare I say it will enlarge Your Thoughts; But I hope it
may gratifie Your Princely curiosity to read the Description of it, and see the
Fate that attended it.
We have still the broken Materials of that first World, and
walk upon its Ruines; while it stood, there was the Seat of Paradise,
and the Scenes of the Golden Age ; when it fell, it made the Deluge; And this unshapen Earth we now inhabit, is the Form it was found in
when the Waters had retir'd, and the dry Land appear'd. These things, Sir, I
propose and presume to prove in the following Treatise, which I willingly submit
to Your Majesty's Judgment and Censure; being very well satisfied, that if I
had sought a Patron in all the List of Kings, Your Contemporaries: Or in the
Roll of Your Nobles, of either Order: I could not have found a more
competent Judge in a Speculation of this Nature. Your Majesty's Sagacity, and
happy Genius for Natural History, for Observations and Remarks upon the Earth,
the Heavens, and the Sea, is a better preparation for Inquiries of this kind,
than all the dead Learning of the Schools.
Sir, This Theory, in the full extent of it, is to reach
to the last Period of the Earth, and the End of all things; But this
first Volume takes in only so much as is already past, from the Origin of the
Earth, to this present time and state of Nature. To describe in like manner the
Changes and Revolutions of Nature that are to come, and see thorough all
succeeding Ages, will require a steddy and attentive Eye, and a retreat from the
noise of the World; Especially so to connect the parts, and present them all
under one view, that we may see, as in a Mirrour, the several faces of Nature,
from First to Last, throughout all the Circle of Successions.
Your Majesty having been pleas'd to give encouragement
to this Translation, I humbly present it to Your Gracious Acceptance. And 'tis
our Interest, as well as Duty, in Disquisitions of this Nature, to Address our
selves to Your Majesty, as the Defender of our Philosophick Liberties; against
those that would usurp upon the
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Fundamental priviledge and Birth-right of Mankind, The
Free use of Reason. Your Majesty hath always appear'd the Royal Patron of
Learning and the Sciences, and 'tis suitable to the Greatness of a Princely Spirit,
to favour and promote what soever tends to the enlargement of Humane Knowledge,
and the improvement of Humane Nature" To be Good and Gracious, and a Lover
of Knowledge, are, methinks, two of the most amiable things in this World,. And
that Your Majesty may always bear that Character, in present and future Ages,
and after a long and prosperous Reign, enjoy a blessed Immortality, is the
constant Prayer of
Your MAJESTY'S
Most Humble and most
Obedient Subject,
THOMAS BURNET.
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