Boyle, Robert
,
New experiments physico-mechanicall, touching the spring of the air and its effects
,
1660
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full of fair water, you ſhall ſee the Water
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and Wine by degrees mingle with one an
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other; the one falling downe as it were in
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little colour'd ſtreames, and the other aſ
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cending into its room in the like curled
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ſtreames, ſometimes preceded by round
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parcels of water, which, by reaſon of their
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tranſparency, looke almoſt like bubbles.
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<
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>The other circumſtances of this Experi
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ment, belonging not all of them to our
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preſent purpoſe, we ſhall content our
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ſelves with taking notice of one which
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ſeemes the moſt important, and may illu
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ſtrate and confirme ſome things former
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ly delivered. </
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<
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>And it was, That if, when
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the
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ſuperficies
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of our Smoke lay ſmooth
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and horizontal, a hot iron were held near
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the our ſide of the Receiver, the Neigh
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bouring part of the included fumes (for
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the reſt did not very much alter their for
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mer
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ſuperficies
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) being rarified by the heat,
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would readily aſcend in a large Pillar of
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ſmoke to the very top of the Receiver,
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yet without ſeeming to looſe a diſtinct
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ſuperficies,
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or to be confounded with Air;
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below which, upon the receſs of the ad
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ventitious heat that by agitating it im
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pell'd it upward, it would againe ſub
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ſide. </
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