Page:Three Books of Occult Philosophy (De Occulta Philosophia) (1651).djvu/9

 your Mater. Many tranmarine Philoophers, which we only read, you have convered with: many Countries, rarities, and antiquities, which we have only heard of, and admire, you have een. Nay you have not only heard of, but een, not in Maps, but in Rome it elf the manners of Rome. There you have een much Ceremony, and little Religion; and in the wildernes of New England, you have een amongt ome, much Religion, and little Ceremony; and amongt others, I mean the Natives thereof, neither Ceremony, nor Religion, but what nature dictates to them. In this there is no mall variety, and your obervation not little. In your paage thither by Sea, you have een the wonders of God in the Deep; and by Land, you have een the atonihing works of God in the unaccesible Mountains. You have left no tone unturned, that the turning thereof might conduce to the dicovery of what was Occult, and worthy to be known. It is part of my ambition to let the world know that I honor uch as your elf, & my learned friend, & your experienced fellow-traveller, Doctor Charlet, who have, like true