Boyle, Robert
,
New experiments physico-mechanicall, touching the spring of the air and its effects
,
1660
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time then another, we are not yet pro
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vided of any better Anſwer, then this
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general one, That the Air about us,
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and much more that within the Receiver,
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may be much alter'd by ſuch cauſes as few
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are aware of: For, not to repeat thoſe
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probable Arguments of this Aſſertion
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which we have occaſionally mention'd
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here and there in the former part of this
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Epiſtle, we will here ſet down two or
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three Inſtances to verifie the ſame Propo
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ſition. </
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>Firſt, I finde that the Learned
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Foſephus Acoſta,
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among other Judicious
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Obſervations he made in
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America,
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hath
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this concerning the Effects of ſome
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Winds;
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There are
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(ſays he)
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Winds which
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naturally trouble the Water of the Sea, and
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make it green, and black; others, clear as
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Cryſtal.
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> Next, we have obſerv'd, That
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though we conveyd into the Receiver our
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Scales, and the
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Pendula
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formerly men
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tion'd, clean and bright; yet after the Re
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ceiver had been empty'd, and the Air let in
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again, the gloſs or luſtre both of the one,
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and of the other, appear'd tarniſh'd by a
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beginning ruſt. </
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>And in the laſt place, we
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will ſubjoyn an Obſervation we made
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ſome Years ago, which hath been heard
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of by divers Ingenious Men, and ſeen </
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