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Show of WAr ttnd Puct XVII. Some thing! cannot be made proper, M the Sea, tak!n for the whole or principal part~: tend why? UPon thefe premifes we fay, that the Sea taken ~ither in regard of th~ whole , or in regard of the principal parts , cannot go into prop~r righ~, Which , becaufe lome-do grant It, of pn· • va te pertons , not of nations , we P.rove, firfl: by moral reafon. For , the caule , for which men departed from communion, here ceafeth , the Sea being fo great, that it ca,n ruffice all nations for every ure 'for waterino , for fifhing , for failing. The fame w~e tr, be fpoken of the aire,if any ufe mioht be made thereof, to which the uic of ~he earth were not necdfary ·, as it . is to Hawking"": whence it receivethlaw - pr .a.~ habl· from him , who hath command over the fc ran 1 .d1 JU~.ram1·• Land In the fame manner we judge of o 1 quam c:a 1 • . · d menfun faci- the Syrtes , where 1~ nothlllg that can a • enda eR: air mi"t of culture,and the onely ufe offetch· P()mponius,I. ino fand thence can never be exhauGed. l-i.opus.J?.Quod Thcr~ is alfo.a natural reafon, which for· Vl'U\ C •·ffi~ d l f: 'dto • ~dc:o ;ug ·ra bids t.K Sea confidere as we 1a v.e ar ' ;u~ poffeHo- become proper : becau~e oc;upatr.on pro: rem non ha- ceeds not but in a thmo tenmn~ted · be . ' ta ? o h * . n.r 1mmer.a and liquid thinos becaufe they ave no d,. iX,;I t~ Hnao,n.m;~u-s. bounds of the.u 0. . o' wn, ca~not. be oc cu.· · pr ollfil!' op~, pied , but as they are contamd m fo~e 0 Inq llit Arifio- ther thino: as lakes and ponds ,and nvers, reles, De Ge- becaufe they are contain' d with banks. ner.l. :~.. c. :~., No~ The fecond Part Now the Sea is not contained by the earth1 "Itl de Ocea-· beino equal to the earth or grea tcr * ; no fen fit Jar-. l:J • r h h · ch:asapudPht• whence thehanttent~ lN<ay,t e eart ~s .. con- lofirawm, 3, · tained by t e Sea t. or rna y we 1e1gn a I I. divifion: for when firft the earth was 'Gli· t -Rr ,.;IU"'~' vided, the Sea,moft part, was unknown: Ito-fA¥ lrilf.ll <rH' and fo no way can be imagined for nati- n~ .. f-1-·.~~~ ons [o far diftant to agree upon the div1- Abpol~onduPvhe.r· fi h c h h' h' h a a r u 1- 100. W ererore t e t mgs w tc were Iofirac. Sui i-common to all , and in the firfl: divifion cius Apollint were not divided, they do not now pafs ri~ ~pud Gc:~~ ., into proper rioht by divifion , but by oc- ~~d potefl diCJ • 0 h d' 'd d 1 r e~rca Ocetmum cupattOn ; nor are t ey lVI e , un e1s tffe, cu$:Mndiq;· after they have begun to be proper. ocean~ cir- , · cum[ cribat om- JitJ ttrrts , &. ambiat ? Marcus Adlius apud Livium : Octano , inquit , qui orbtm ttrrarum amplexu ftnit. In Senec~ Suaforiis dici· 1ur Oceanus t&tius orbis vinculum terrarumq; cLJft.:Jdia : Luc:ano, Unda mundum coercens. XVIII. Of things that may be made proper. LEt us now come to things which may be inade proper, but are not yet made t V'd B . fo. Such are many in cult places t, Ilands bu~ ~·Iift~;i<l! in the Sea *, wild beafts , fillies , birds. 6, ' But two things are to be noted , Firil, ,. Nt B'binader, there is a twofold occupation one by the qutU 0"!tpami~ whole, another by the parts :' t~e former ~~':z~~h~~d: ufuall y by the people, or by the1r Ruler : lib, 1., in fine. the other afterward by [everal perlons;yet rather by a(fignatt'on , than free occupati-tiotJ, But if any thing , feifed on in gene-pl, be not divided among feveral Lords , it |