Bacon, Francis, Sylva sylvarum : or, a natural history in ten centuries

Table of contents

< >
[121.] The Explication.
[122.] Canon XXVI.
[123.] The Explication.
[124.] Canon XxVII.
[125.] The Explication.
[126.] Canon XXVIII.
[127.] The Explication.
[128.] Canon XXIX.
[129.] The Explication.
[130.] Canon XXX.
[131.] The Explication.
[132.] Canon XXXI.
[133.] The Explication.
[134.] Canon XXXII.
[135.] The Explication.
[136.] FINIS.
[137.] ARTICLES OF ENQUIRY, TOUCHING METALS & MINERALS. Written by the Right Honorable, FRANCIS BACON, BARON of VERULAM, Viſcount St. Alban. Thought fit to be added, to this Work OF HIS NATURAL HISTORY. Nevvly put forth in the Year, 1661. By the former Publisher.
[138.] LONDON, Printed for VVilliam Lee at the Turks-head in Fleetſtreet. 1669.
[139.] ARTICLES OF ENQUIRY, TOUCHING METALS & MINERALS.
[140.] Some few of theſe would be enquired of, to diſcloſe the Nature of the reſt.
[141.] THE BOOK-SELLER UNTO THE READER.
[142.] FINIS.
[143.] NEW ATLANTIS.
[144.] A VVork unfinished. Written by the Right Honorable, FRANCIS Lord Verulam, Viſcount St. Albans.
[145.] TO THE READER
[146.] NEW ATLANTIS.
[147.] The reſt was not perfected.
[148.] Magnalia Naturæ præcipue quoad uſus Humanos.
[149.] FINIS.
< >
page |< < (125) of 389 > >|
159125 5[Figure 5]
Century VII.
THe differences between Animate and Inanimate Bodies, we
11601. ſhall handle fully under the Title of Life, and Living
22Experiments
in
Conſort,
touching
the
Affinities
and
Differences
,
between
Plants
and
Inanimate
Bodies
.
Spirits, and Powers.
We ſhall therefore make but a brief
mention
of them in this place.
The main differences
are
two.
All Bodies have Spirits, and Pneumatical parts
within
them;
but the main differences between Ani-
mate
and Inanimate are two.
The firſt is, that the Spirits
of
things animate, are all contined with themſelves,
and
are branched in Veins, and ſecret Sanales, as Blood is:
And in Living
Creatures
, the Spirits have not onely Branches, but certain Sells or Seats,
where
the principal Spirits do reſide, and whereunto thereſt do reſort:
But
the
Spirits in things Inanimate are ſhut in, and cut off by the Tangible parts;
and are not pervious one to another, as Air is in Snow. The ſecond main
difference
is, that the Spirits of Animate Bodies are all in ſome degree (more
or
leſs) kindled and in flamed, and have a fine commixture of Flame, and
an
Ærial ſubſtance:
But Inanimate Bodies have their Spirits no whit in-
flamed
or kindled.
And this difference conſiſteth not in the Heat or Cool-
neſs
of Spirits;
for Cloves and other Spices, Naptha and Petroleum, have ex-
ceeding
hot Spirits (hotter a great deal than Oyl, Wax, or Tallow, &
c.) but
not
inflamed.
And when any of thoſe weak and temperate Bodies come to
be
in flamed, than they gather a much greater heat, than others have unin-
flamed
, beſides their light and motion, &
c.

Text layer

  • Dictionary

Text normalization

  • Original
  • Regularized
  • Normalized

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index