<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031"></SPAN></p>
<h2> VII. SIGNS IN THE MOON </h2>
<p>At that time, whilst Penguinia was still plunged in ignorance and
barbarism, Giles Bird-catcher, a Franciscan monk, known by his writings
under the name Aegidius Aucupis, devoted himself with indefatigable zeal
to the study of letters and the sciences. He gave his nights to
mathematics and music, which he called the two adorable sisters, the
harmonious daughters of Number and Imagination. He was versed in medicine
and astrology. He was suspected of practising magic, and it seemed true
that he wrought metamorphoses and discovered hidden things.</p>
<p>The monks of his convent, finding in his cell Greek books which they could
not read, imagined them to be conjuring-books, and denounced their too
learned brother as a wizard. Aegidius Aucupis fled, and reached the island
of Ireland, where he lived for thirty studious years. He went from
monastery to monastery, searching for and copying the Greek and Latin
manuscripts which they contained. He also studied physics and alchemy. He
acquired a universal knowledge and discovered notable secrets concerning
animals, plants, and stones. He was found one day in the company of a very
beautiful woman who sang to her own accompaniment on the lute, and who was
afterwards discovered to be a machine which he had himself constructed.</p>
<p>He often crossed the Irish Sea to go into the land of Wales and to visit
the libraries of the monasteries there. During one of these crossings, as
he remained during the night on the bridge of the ship, he saw beneath the
waters two sturgeons swimming side by side. He had very good hearing and
he knew the language of fishes. Now he heard one of the sturgeons say to
the other:</p>
<p>"The man in the moon, whom we have often seen carrying fagots on his
shoulders, has fallen into the sea."</p>
<p>And the other sturgeon said in its turn:</p>
<p>"And in the silver disc there will be seen the image of two lovers kissing
each other on the mouth."</p>
<p>Some years later, having returned to his native country, Aegidius Aucupis
found that ancient learning had been restored. Manners had softened. Men
no longer pursued the nymphs of the fountains, of the woods, and of the
mountains with their insults. They placed images of the Muses and of the
modest Graces in their gardens, and they rendered her former honours to
the Goddess with ambrosial lips, the joy of men and gods. They were
becoming reconciled to nature. They trampled vain terrors beneath their
feet and raised their eyes to heaven without fearing, as they formerly
did, to read signs of anger and threats of damnation in the skies.</p>
<p>At this spectacle Aegidius Aucupis remembered what the two sturgeons of
the sea of Erin had foretold.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />