Boyle, Robert
,
New experiments physico-mechanicall, touching the spring of the air and its effects
,
1660
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in the Viol ſhrinking into a very nar
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row compaſs, the Glaſs did, as we expe
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cted, fall down to the bottom of the
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Jar. </
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>But being deſirous before we proceed
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ed to any new. </
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>Experiment, to try once
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more whether the little Glaſs that had
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the weight in it might not alſo be raiſ'd.
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>After we had ſuffer'd the Engine to re
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main cloſ'd as it was, for five or ſix
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hours, the Pump was again ply'd with
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ſo much obſtinacy, that not onely a
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bout the upper part of the Jar there ap
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pear'd a good number of bubbles (but
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very much ſmaller then thoſe we ſaw
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the firſt time) but afterwards there
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came from the bottom of the Jar, bub
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bles about the bigneſs of ſmal Peas: which
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the Pump being ſtill kept going, fol
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low'd one another, to the number of forty,
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coming from the ſtopp'd Violl; whoſe
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mouth, it ſeems, had not been ſhut ſo
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ſtrongly and cloſely, but that the included
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Air, dilating it ſelf by its own ſpring, made
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itſelf ſome little paſſage betwixt the Wall
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and the Glaſs, and got away in theſe bub
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bles; after which, the unſtopp'd Glaſs be
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gan to float again, the Air ſhut up in it </
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