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<p>Perception and experience alike inform us, that the earth

we inhabit is an island: since wherever men have approached

the termination of the land, the sea, which we designate ocean,

has been met with: and reason assures us of the similarity of

those places which our senses have not been permitted to survey. For in the east<note anchored="yes" place="unspecified">What Strabo calls the eastern side of the continent, comprises that

portion of India between Cape Comorin and Tana-serim, to the west of

the kingdom of Siam: further than which he was not acquainted.</note> the land occupied by the Indians, and

in the west by the Iberians and Maurusians,<note anchored="yes" place="unspecified">Strabo's acquaintance with Western Africa did not go further than

Cape Nun, 214 leagues distant from the Strait of Gibraltar.</note> is wholly encompassed [by water], and so is the greater part on the south<note anchored="yes" place="unspecified">By the south is intended the whole land from the Arabian Gulf or

Red Sea to Cape Comorin.</note>

and north.<note anchored="yes" place="unspecified">From Cape Finisterre to the mouth of the Elbe.</note> And as to what remains as yet unexplored by

us, because navigators, sailing from opposite points, have not

hitherto fallen in with each other, it is not much, as any one

may see who will compare the distances between those places

with which we are already acquainted. Nor is it likely that

the Atlantic Ocean is divided into two seas by narrow

isthmuses so placed as to prevent circumnavigation: how

much more probable that it is confluent and uninterrupted!

Those who have returned from an attempt to circumnavigate



<pb n="8" />



the earth, do not say they have been prevented from con-

tinuing their voyage by any opposing continent, for the sea remained perfectly open, but through want of resolution, and

the scarcity of provision. This theory too accords better with

the ebb and flow of the ocean, for the phenomenon, both in the

increase and diminution, is every where identical, or at all

events has but little difference, as if produced by the agitation of one sea, and resulting from one cause.

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