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A DISCOVRSE upon Coins, by Signor Bernardo Davanzati, a Gentle∣man of Florence; being publickly spoken in the Academy there, Anno 1588.
1. THE Sun and Internal Heat do separate, as it were by Distillation, the best Juices and Sub∣stances in the Bowels of the Earth; which being percolated into proper Veins and Mines, and there congeal'd, grown solid, and ripen'd, they are in time made Mettals: whereof the most rare and perfect are Gold and Silver, resembling the two great Luminaries of the World in Splendor and Colour. Fire nor Rust will not consume them; they are not subject to be destroy'd by Moths, Worms, or Rottenness; nor do they waste much by use. They may in Wire or Leaves be extended to an in∣credible Fineness, and have something in 'em that is Divine; at least certain Indian People think so, who fast when they are digging for Gold, and forbid themselves the Company of Women, with all other Pleasures, out of an old Su∣perstition.
2. Now, Gold and Silver contribute very little in their own nature to our Lives, for which all Earthly Things seem to have been created. Yet Men, as if they would