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22 to ours; an thee are Animals. And if this be allowed, it almot necearily follows, that there mut be Herbs for Food for them. And as for the Growth and Nourihment of all thee, ’tis no doubt the ame with ours, eeing they have the ame Sun to warm and enliven them as ours have.

But perhaps ome Body may ay, we conclude too fat. They will not deny indeed but that there may be Plants and Animals on the Surface of the Planets, that deerve as well to be provided for by their Creator as ours do: but why mut they be of the ame Kind with ours: Nature eems to love variety in her Works, and may have made them widely different from ours either in their matter or manner of Growth, in their outward Shape, or their inward Contexture; he may have made them uch as neither our Undertanding nor Imagination can conceive. That’s the thing we hall now examine, and whether it be not more likely that he has not oberv’d uch a Variety as they talk of. Nature eems