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

List of thumbnails

< >
61
61
62
62
63
63
64
64
65
65
66
66
67
67
68
68
69
69
70
70
< >
page |< < of 862 > >|
1Recent Aſtronomers, who ſeem willing
to enlarge its bounds as much as they dare,
does reach.
But leſt you ſhould expect my ſeconding
this Reaſon by Experience; and leſt you
ſhould object, That moſt of the Experi­
ments
that have been propoſ'd to prove the
gravity of the Air, have been either barely
propoſ'd, or perhaps not accuratly try'd; I
am content, before I paſs further, to menti­
on here, That I found a dry lambs-bladder
containing near about two thirds of a pint,
and compreſſ'd by a packthred tyed about
it, to looſe a grain and the eighth part of
a grain of its former weight, by the receſs
of the Air upon my having prickt it: And
this with a pair of Scales, which when the
full Bladder and the correſpondent weight
were in it, would manifeſtly turn either
way with the 32 part of a grain.
And if
it be further objected, That the Air in
the Bladder was violently compreſſ'd by
the Pack-thred and the ſides of the
Bladder, we might probably (to wave
prolix anſwers) be furniſh'd with a Re­
ply, by ſetting down the differing weight
of our Receiver, when empty'd and when
full of uncompreſſ'd Air, if we could here
procure ſcales fit for ſo nice an experiment;

Text layer

  • Dictionary
  • Places

Text normalization

  • Original
  • Regularized
  • Normalized

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index