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

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TAke a ſmall Wax-Candle, and put it in a Socket of Braſs or Iron, then
1131.22Experiment
Solitary
,
touching
the
Secret
Nature
of
Flame.
ſet it upright in a Porringer full of Spirit of Wine, heated;
then ſet
both
the Candle, and Spirit of Wine on fire, and you ſhall ſee the flame of
the
Candle open it ſelf, and become four or five times bigger then other-
wiſe
it would have been, and appear in figure Globular, and not in Pyramis.
You ſhall ſee alſo, that the inward flame of the Candle keepeth colour, and
doth
not wax any whit blew to wards the colour of the outward flame of
the
Spirit of Wine.
This is a noble inſtance, wherein two things are moſt
remarkable
;
the one, that one flame within another quencheth not, but is
a
fixed Body, and continueth as Air or Water do;
and therefore flame would
ſtill
aſcend upwards in one greatneſs, if it were not quenched on the ſides;

and
the greater the flame is at the bottom, the higher is the riſe.
The other,
that
Flame doth not mingle with Flame, as Air doth with Air, or Water
with
Water, but onely remaineth contiguous;
as it cometh to paſs be-
twixt
Conſiſting Bodies.
It appeareth alſo, that the form of a Pyramis in
Flame
, which we uſually ſee, is meerly by accident, and that the Air about,
by
quenching the ſides of the Flame, cruſheth it, and extenuateth it into
that
form;
for of it ſelf, it would be round: And thereſore Smoak is in
the
figure of a Pyramis reverſed;
for the Air quencheth the Flame, and re-
ceiveth
the Smoak.
Note alſo, that the flame of the Candle, within the
flame
of the Spirit of Wine, is troubled, and doth not onely open and move
upwards
, but moveth waving, and to and fro:
As if Flame of his own Na-
ture
(if it were not quenched) would roul and turn as well as move up-
wards
.
By all which it ſhould ſeem, that the Celeſtial Bodies (moſt of them)
are
true Fires or Flames, as the Stoicks held;
more ſine (perhaps) and rari-
fied
, than our flame is.
For they are all Globular and Deternate, they have
Rotation
, and they have the colour andſplendor of Flame:
So that Flame
above
, is durable and conſiſtent, and in his natural place;
but with us, it
is
a ſtranger, and momentany and impure, like Vulean that halted with his
fall
.

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