No work of the mid-seventeenth century better illustrates the variety of world-views available to the naturalist and the experimental philosopher than Thomas Browne's
The Garden of Cyrus(1658). Also known as
de Quincunx(from the diamond figure of four points plus the centre-point), its ostensible purpose was to discover quincunxes, or figures of five, in the natural and the artificial world – in plants, in battle-formations, in the angle of incidence in which light strikes the retina. These examples alone indicate the eccentricity of the project, a quality which has both delighted and bothered Browne's readers. Although it is true that
Cyrusis a catalogue of quincunxes, or “emphaticall decussations”, it is far more than that. In this essay, more than any other of his works, he…
1084 words
Citation: Preston, Claire. "De Quincunx, or The Garden of Cyrus". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 04 July 2003 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=5714, accessed 26 November 2024.]