PART III.  A VOYAGE TO LAPUTA, BALNIBARBI, LUGGNAGG, GLUBBDUBDRIB, AND JAPAN.
8. CHAPTER VIII.
 
[A further account of Glubbdubdrib.  Ancient and modern history
 corrected.] 
Having a desire to see those ancients who were most renowned for
 wit and learning, I set apart one day on purpose.  I proposed that
 Homer and Aristotle might appear at the head of all their
 commentators; but these were so numerous, that some hundreds were
 forced to attend in the court, and outward rooms of the palace.  I
 knew, and could distinguish those two heroes, at first sight, not
 only from the crowd, but from each other.  Homer was the taller and
 comelier person of the two, walked very erect for one of his age,
 and his eyes were the most quick and piercing I ever beheld.
 Aristotle stooped much, and made use of a staff.  His visage was
 meagre, his hair lank and thin, and his voice hollow.  I soon
 discovered that both of them were perfect strangers to the rest of
 the company, and had never seen or heard of them before; and I had
 a whisper from a ghost who shall be nameless, "that these
 commentators always kept in the most distant quarters from their
 principals, in the lower world, through a consciousness of shame
 and guilt, because they had so horribly misrepresented the meaning
 of those authors to posterity."  I introduced Didymus and
 Eustathius to Homer, and prevailed on him to treat them better than
 perhaps they deserved, for he soon found they wanted a genius to
 enter into the spirit of a poet.  But Aristotle was out of all
 patience with the account I gave him of Scotus and Ramus, as I
 presented them to him; and he asked them, "whether the rest of the
 tribe were as great dunces as themselves?" 
I then desired the governor to call up Descartes and Gassendi, with
 whom I prevailed to explain their systems to Aristotle.  This great
 philosopher freely acknowledged his own mistakes in natural
 philosophy, because he proceeded in many things upon conjecture, as
 all men must do; and he found that Gassendi, who had made the
 doctrine of Epicurus as palatable as he could, and the vortices of
 Descartes, were equally to be exploded.  He predicted the same fate
 to ATTRACTION, whereof the present learned are such zealous
 asserters.  He said, "that new systems of nature were but new
 fashions, which would vary in every age; and even those, who
 pretend to demonstrate them from mathematical principles, would
 flourish but a short period of time, and be out of vogue when that
 was determined." 
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