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

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[41.] LONDON, Printed for VVilliam Lee at the Turks-head in Fleetſtreet. 1669.
[42.] TO THE READER.
[43.] To the preſent Age and Poſterity, Greeting.
[44.] THE HISTORY OF Life and Death. The Preface.
[45.] THE Particular Topick Places; OR, ARTICLES of INQUISITION TOUCHING LIFE and DEATH.
[46.] Nature Durable, and not Durable. The History.
[47.] Obſervations.
[48.] The Hiſtory.
[49.] An Obſervation.
[50.] Deſiccation, Prohibiting of Deſiccation, and In-teneration of that which is deſiccated and dried. The Hiſtory.
[51.] Obſervations.
[52.] Length and Shortneß of Life in Living Creatures. The Hiſtory.
[53.] Obſervations.
[54.] Alimentation, or Nouriſhment: and the way of Nouriſhing. The History.
[55.] Length and Shortneſs of Life in Man. The Hiſt@ry.
[56.] Medicines for Long Life.
[57.] The Intentions.
[58.] The Operation upon the Spirits that they may remain Youthful, and renew their Vigour. The Hiſtory.
[59.] The Operation upon the Excluſion of the Air. 2. The Hiſtory.
[60.] The Operation upon the Bloud, and the Sanguifying Heat. 3. The Hiſtory.
[61.] The Operation upon the Juices of the Body. 4. The Hiſtory.
[62.] The Operation upon the Bowels for their Extruſion of Aliment. 5. The Hiſtory.
[63.] The Operation upon the Outward Parts for their Attraction of Aliment. 6. The Hiſtory.
[64.] The Operation upon the Aliment it ſelf for the Inſinuation thereof. 7. The Hiſtory.
[65.] The Operation upon the laſt Act of Aſsimilation. 8.
[66.] The Operation upon the Inteneration of that which begins to be Arefied, or the Malaciſſation of the Body. 9.
[67.] The Hiſtory.
[68.] The Operation upon the Purging away of old Juice, and Sup-plying of new Juice; or of Renovation by Turns. 10. The Hiſtory.
[69.] The Porches of Death.
[70.] The Hiſtory.
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7945Century II. unlikely, that thoſe that make Recorders, & c. know this already; for
that they make them in Sets.
And likewiſe Bell-Founders in fitting the
tune of their Bells:
So that enquiry may ſave tryal. Surely, it hath been
obſerved by one of the Ancients, that an empty Barrel knocked upon wi h
the finger, giveth a Diapaſon to the Sound of the like Barrel full:
But how
that ſhould be, I do not well underſtand, for that the knocking of a Barrel
full or empty, doth ſcarce give any Tone.
There is required ſome ſenſible difference in the Proportion of creat-
11187. ing a Note towards the Sound it ſelf, which is the Paſſive;
and that it
be not too near, but at a diſtance:
For in a Recorder, the three upper-
moſt holes yield one Tone, which is a Note lower than the Tone of the
firſt three.
And the like (no doubt) is required in the winding or ſtopping
of Strings.
THere is another difference of Sounds, which we will call Exterior and
22Experiments
in Conſort,
touching
Exterior and
Interior
Sounds.
Interior.
It is not Softinor Loud; nor it is not Baſe, nor Trebble; nor
it is not Muſical, nor Immuſical.
Though it be true, that there can be no
Tone in an Interior Sound;
but on the other ſide, in an Exterior Sound, there
may be both Muſical and Immuſical.
We ſhall therefore enumerate them
rather than preciſely diſtingulſh them;
thobgh to make ſome adumbration
of (that we mean) the Interior, is rather an Impulſion or Contuſion of
the Air, than an Elyſion or Section of the ſame;
ſo as the Percuſſion of the
one towards the other, diffsreth as a Blow differeth from a Cut.
In Speech of Man, the Whiſpering, (which they call Suſurrus in La-
33188. tin,) whether it be louder or ſofter, is an Interior Sound;
but the Speak-
ing out, is an Exterior Sound:
And therefore you can never make a Tone,
nor ſing in Whiſpering;
but in Speech you may. So Breathing, or Blow-
ing by the Mouth, Bellows, or Wind (thoughloud) is an Interior Sound;
but the blowing thorow a Pipe, or Concave (though ſoft) is an Exterior.
So likewiſe, the greateſt Winds, it they have no coarctation, or blow not
hollow, give and Interior Sound;
the whiſtling or hollow Wind, yieldeth
a ſinging, or Exterior Sound;
the former being pent by ſome other
Body, the latter being pent in by his own Denſity:
And therefore we ſee,
That when the Wind bloweth hollow, it is a ſign of Rain;
the flame, as it
moveth withinit ſelf, or is blown by a Bellows, giveth a murmur or Interior
Sound.
There is no hard Body, but ſtruck againſt another hard Body, will yield
44189. an Exterior Sound, greater or leſſer;
inſomuch, as if the Percuſſion be over-
ſoft, it may induce a nullity of ſound, but never an Interior Sound;
as when
onetreadeth ſo ſoftly, that he is not heard.
Where the Air is the Percutient, pent or not pent, againſt a hard Body,
55190. it never giveth an Exterior Sound;
as if you blow ſtrongly with a Bellows
againſt a Wall.
Sounds (both Exterior and Interior) may be made as well by Suction, as
66191. by emiſſion of the Breath;
as in Whiſtling, or Breathing.
IT is evident, and it is one of the ſtrangeſt ſecrets in Sounds; that the
77192.88Experiments
in Conſort,
touching
Articulations
of Sounds.
whole Sound is not in the whole Air onely, but the whole Sound is
alſo in evety ſmall part of the Air.
So that all the curious diverſity of

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