【占星四书】《第一书_4》行星之力量_Of the Power of the Planets.

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4. Of the Power of the Planets.
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The active power of the sun's essential nature is found to be
heating and, to a certain degree, drying. This is made more easily
perceptible in the case of the sun than any other heavenly body by
its size and by the obviousness of its seasonal changes, for the
closer it approaches to the zenith the more it affects us in this
way. Most of the moon's power consists of humidifying, dearly
because it is close to the earth and because of the moist
exhalations therefrom. Its action therefore is precisely this, to
soften and cause putrefaction in bodies for the most part, but it
shares moderately also in heating power because of the light which
it receives from the sun.
It is Saturn's quality chiefly to cool and [moist] rarely, to dry, probably because he is
furthest removed both from the sun's heat and the moist exhalations
about the earth. Both in Saturn's case and in that of the other
planets there are powers, too, which arise through the observation
of their aspects to the sun and the moon, for some of them appear
to modify conditions in the ambient in one way, some in another, by
increase or by decrease.
The nature of Mars is chiefly to dry and to burn, in conformity
with his fiery colour and by reason of his nearness to the sun, for
the sun's sphere lies just below him.
Jupiter has a temperate active force because his movement takes
place between the cooling influence of Saturn and the burning power
of Mars. He both heats and humidifies; and because his heating
power is the greater by reason of the underlying spheres, he
produces fertilizing winds.
Venus has the same powers and tempered nature as Jupiter, but acts
in the opposite way; for she warms moderately because of her
nearness to the sun, but chiefly humidifies, like the moon, because
of the amount of her own light and because she appropriates the
exhalations from the moist atmosphere surrounding the
earth.
Mercury in general is found at certain times alike to be drying and
absorptive of moisture, because he never is far removed in
longitude from the heat of the sun; and again humidifying, because
he is next above the sphere of the moon, which is closest to the
earth; and to change quickly from one to the other, inspired as it
were by the speed of his motion in the neighbourhood of the sun
itself.