. The astrologer of the nineteenth century . ttimes: and especially during the twentieth year, although there issufficiency of benevolent influence, to render the name of much ce-lebrity, and the fame hereafter acquired may be more durable. The astrological student will not fail to notice the curious con-junctions in the horoscope, namely, of the moon, ©enu0, and $J£ar0,in the earthly, and Saturn and $er0Cf)el in the airy trigon. Thisproves what I have before advanced, that such a confluence of rayscause celebrity and a public name. The singular station of the©eorflian is also deserving strict


. The astrologer of the nineteenth century . ttimes: and especially during the twentieth year, although there issufficiency of benevolent influence, to render the name of much ce-lebrity, and the fame hereafter acquired may be more durable. The astrological student will not fail to notice the curious con-junctions in the horoscope, namely, of the moon, ©enu0, and $J£ar0,in the earthly, and Saturn and $er0Cf)el in the airy trigon. Thisproves what I have before advanced, that such a confluence of rayscause celebrity and a public name. The singular station of the©eorflian is also deserving strict attention, and the remarkable ap-pearance of 8$ercur2 in his own house will go far to prove thereality of the planetary dignities, which those who are learned inthis science must readily admit; and if not, I shall hold no othercontroversy, but remind them of the saying of Plato—0YAEI2 ArEftMETPHTOS EIZITO. 432 CIRCLE VI.—SECT. XII. The Nativity of Mr. John Varley,THE CELEBRATED ARTIST AND JUDICIAL ASTRO-LOGER. ILLUSTRATION, No. The study of astrology itself, as professing to discover, by celestial phenome-na, future mutations in the elements and terrestrial bodies, ought perhaps not tobe despised. The theory of the tidesy for example, is altogether an astrologicaldoctrine, and long before the days of Isaac Newton was as well understood as it isat this moment. The fact of these allegations might be so easily ascertained,that it is surprising they should still be pronounced incredible, and denied ratherthan contradicted.—Blackwood^ Magazine, No. 59. This gentleman is well known among the lovers of the fine arts forhis skill in that department of human talent; and it is no less wellknown, that he has already soared to a height far above mediocrity,and is considered as a man of first rate abilities in the line he hasadopted, a fact the publicity of which evades any possible idea offlattery from the pen of an astrologer. This skill in occult philoso- REMARKABLE NATIV


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