Boyle, Robert, New experiments physico-mechanicall, touching the spring of the air and its effects, 1660

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1I foreſaw this gheſs to be liable, namely,
That, no heat intervening, there appear'd
nothing that ſhould raiſe the Water into
exhalations and give them an impulſe.
I
thought it might be ſaid that motion a­
lone, if vehement enough, may, with­
out ſenſible heat, ſuffice to break Water
into very minute parts, and make them aſ­
cend upwards, if they can no where elſe
more eaſily continue their agitation.
For
Iremember, that Travelling betwixt Ly­
ons and Geneva, I ſaw, not very far out of
the Way, a place where the River of
Rhone coming ſuddenly to be ſtreighten'd
betwixt two Rocks, ſo near each other,
that a Man may (if my Memory fail me
not) ſtand aſtride upon both at once: that
rapid Stream daſhing with great impetuo­
ſity againſt its Rocky Boundaries, does
break part of its Water into ſuch minute
Corpuſcles, and put them into ſuch a mo­
tion, that Paſſengers obſerve at a good di­
ſtance off, as it were a Miſt ariſing from
that place, and aſcending a good way up
into the Air.
Such, I ſay, was my ſuſ­
picion touching the Wind we have been
conſidering, but it ſeems ſomething odde
that aqueous Vapors ſhould, like a dry
Wind, paſs through ſo long and tortu-

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