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A44321 Lectures and collections made by Robert Hooke. Hooke, Robert, 1635-1703. 1678 (1678) Wing H2618; ESTC R23972 80,779 142

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into it were uncorrupt and sound nor in any of them could we find what we very confidently presumed to be there viz. the Bullet Wherefore I resolved to seek it the way by which it must have entred and accordingly dividing the Trachea at its insertion to the Lungs I thrust in a bended Probe to the left branch and there felt him lying loose about two inches within it which with my fingers I easily expressed at the divided end of the pipe to do which I laid it bare so far as where the Bullet had lodged and I protest to my wonder I found it not any way injured or altered by hardness erosion c. though the Bullet had divers impressions from the later The sanguiferous vessels though lacerated and cut in the dissection did yield little or no Blood either fluid or coagulate Thus far is true History and matter of fact I must now beg your pardon if I presume to give my sense and apprehension of some of those Phaenomena here related The extenuation of the body the absumption of the serum in the Heart-bag and the contraction of the Heart were the effects of the Tabes and that occasioned by the Bullets injuring the Lungs and pectoral vessels The lump of coagulate blood found under the Heart-bag was extravasate from the rotted veins and arteries of the Lungs That strange substance lodged between the Pericardium and the Bullet was either a Polypus and the excrescence of some part or it was generated by nature and substituted for a cushion to defend the Heart from injury by so uneasie a neighbour That Polypuses have been found in the Heart is affirmed by Nicolas Tulpius Marcellus Malpighius G. Garnarus c. but their shape and texture differing vastly from that of ours giveth reason to believe this to be none especially considering that they all excrescing from the Heart or some carneous part are inseparably united and radicated to their original and are spungy whereas this was nothing less having no root nor so much as an adhesion any where saving at the tail the small end of which being rotted by the Lungs into which it continued did easily divide upon my endeavour to draw it out the body of it also lay loose in the aforesaid interstice and as easily slipped out as a Wen or a Struma when the containing parts are opened It s substance was not fungous but of a soft firmness like a Kidney and in what ever circumstances it may resemble a Polypus as it doth the figure of that of the Nose vide N. Tulpii ob med lib. 1. obs 26. yet it also differs from all other excrescences besides in what hath been mentioned in that it was not rooted in any fleshy bony or muculous part and such the Lungs are well known not to be it must therefore be the stupendious effect of Natures industry and laid as a cushion to defend the Heart c. It s composition being so delicately soft and yet firm enough for such a purpose Its magnitude situation c. concurring also to confirm this opinion concerning it besides which I do almost remember and believe though I cannot be positive that the pulsant pain he had so violently in his Breast toward the left side decreased gradatim from the time of the deglutition if that be true whatever the substance were or its cause its effects were very propitious manifesting nature to be not only a diligent supplier of her own defects but as industrious to produce strange and unaccountable relief in such emergencies as this before us A resembling story we have from A Pareus lib. 8. cap. 15. The abscess was without doubt from a Phlegmon of the Lungs and because for the most part it was below or beyond the Bullet it proceeded rather from its obstructing and so stagnating the Blood and recrements in that Lobe than from extravasation What occurred of the latter was expectorated or remained in such Coagulums as that found under the Heart The cause of the Bullets falling rather into the left than the right Ramus of the Trachea is obvious from the more supine and direct figure thereof corresponding with the trunk as the figure doth manifest which consideration together with the Bullets being loose in the pipe renders the unsuccessfulness of Dr. Mayow's attempt very wonderful I am inclined to believe it was so either for want of a more early trial or a more skilful tryer than him who was employed about it The way was ingeniously contrived and as the Doctor himself told me had been successfully experienced in the like occasion Certainly had not the distance of the Doctors abode and very important avocations denied his personal assistance or had any other person skilled in Anatomy c. been substituted the Bullet from his own favourable shape and more propitious gravity and particularly from the strong efflations they provoked together with the assistant posture of the body would have been extruded Had they instead of hanging him perpendicular made him incline a little to the right side to have made the left Ramus more prone and at the same time made him distend the pipes by sucking in as much breath as they could contain their other means might have been effectual which I am induced to presume from the prosperous effects of the like attempt and yet wanting many of their advantages I mean the reversion of a Stone when sticking and not able to pass through the Urinary Channels Let any Physicians seriously perpend the difficulty of this with the advantages for the former and they will justifie my opinion The erosion of the Pleura and Diaphragme was from the acidity of the matter gnawing and corrupting them for though the Trachea wonderfully escaped such impressions the Bullet discovered on its superficies divers marks of erosion which all acids produce with much facility upon the saccharous or saline parts of Lead as is to be seen by immersing it in vinegar And now Sir to relieve your patience no less than my own perhaps already wearied with the prolixity of this Narrative give me leave to conclude with suggesting that I am of a belief having perused most of the publick accounts of this kind that scarcely a rarer accident and accompanied with such stupendious circumstances hath occurred to the present age than this that an extraneous body so large so heavy so hard should slip down that difficult and unusual way of the Weason and abide so long in the organs of respiration in so aged a person admitting after it such exercises as he performed Riding Marriage c. that nature should so unaccountably provide such a pertinent sence against injuries accidentally accruing and that even the smallest Ramifications of the Trachea though immersed in such a Cadaver should be preserved from injury thereby I am sure in the voluminous Observations of Schenckius Horstius Riverius Bartholine Burnet c. nor among all the stories in Mr. Oldenburg's Transactions or the Miscellanea Curiosa of the Leipswick Doctors hath it a Parallel This and whatever is else contained in this History as my 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I submit to the better sense and reason of the Learned not presuming to be positive in any thing save in affirming my self c. JAMES YOVNG P. S. For the plainer understanding where the Bullet lodged in the Wind-pipe I have drawn and sent you an exact figure of the Trachea excarnified as it s to be be found in Gerrard Blassius Syntagma Anatomicum J. Veslingi See figure Y in the III. Table C points to the Trachea divided under the Larynx D the right Ramus of the Trachea E the left F the place where the Lungs adhered to the Pleura g g g c. the extremities of those branches of the Aspera arteria divaricated into the rotten Lobe H the Bullet in the pipe where it was found ERRATA PAge 1. line 17. foot p. 2. l. 6. ioyned p. 8. l. 21. 〈◊〉 p. 11. l. 5. is diffused p. 11. l. 17. Fostor p. 12. l. 33. within the sphere of its activity p. 12. l. 34. dele as p. 14. l. 8. ether p. 19. l. 7. common sights p. 22. l. 31. 〈◊〉 p. 23. l. 19. been produced p. 24. l. 27. add see fig. 4. p. 27. l. 5. of this orb p. 27. l. 21. ♏ p. 28. l. 27. sixth figure p. 29. l. 18. perige p. 29. l. 25. B B E. ib. l. 26 27. H H I p. 31. l. 9. for put p. 32. l. 28. stream of bu●bles p. 35. l. 29. add fig. 9. p. 38. l. 28. to get out of l. 34. of finding the p. 46. l. 31. Baldwines p. 49. l. 17. downwards shall touch p. 54. l. 26. Scolopendra p. 69 l. ult Suns phase p. 71. l. 25. for 43 put 34 p. 83. l. 8. to my wonder p. 93. l. 3. blot out first p 96. l. 14. plano c●nnexes p. 101. l. 22. for table put tube p. 101. l. 30. Seul p. 102. l. 17. magnified l. 23. the paralellogram l. 24. page 241 p. 104. l. 6. for fluid put feild This Revolution of the body of ♃ upon its Axis I first discovered in May 1664. and published in the first Transaction which was a considerable time before it was discovered by Monsieur Cassini but we are obliged to him for the perfecting the Theory as we are also for many other rare Discoveries and excellent improvements in Astronomy
of this nature will be acceptable to the renowned Society I have adventured again to send you some of my farther Enquiries to be communicated to that learned Philosophical Company Since I wrote of the Blood of Eels and of young Eels I have not been idle to view Blood but especially my own which for some time I have indefatigably examined after that I had put it into all conceivable motions Among which Observations I well saw that the globuli of my own blood took the same figure which I formerly mentioned that the Globules of the blood of Eels appeared of to the eye upon seeing which I doubted again at the cause of the smart which the blood of the Eels causes in the eye These my many times repeated Observations of my own blood I made to no other end than if it were possible to observe the parts out of which the Globules of the blood consisted With observing this I found the globulous blood much more pliable than I did imagine the same before I have at several times bended these Globules before my eyes that they were three times as long as broad without breaking the Vesicule of them and besides I saw that the Globules of blood in passing by and through one another did by reason of their pliableness receive many sorts of figures and coming thence into a larger place they recovered their former globulosity which was a very great pleasure to observe and withal that the Globules of blood coming many together and growing cold thereby came to unite and made a matter very smooth wherein there were no more parts distinct to be taken notice of much after the same manner as if we supposed a Dish filled with balls of wax set over a fire by which they would quickly be melted together and united into one mass by which uniting of the Globules I concluded this to be the reason of the accident which is called the cold fire and of that also which causes the hands or fingers to be lost by cold but I leave this to others And I did very clearly also discover that there were six other smaller Globules of blood contained within each of the former and larger Globulous Vesicles and withal I took much pains to observe the number of the same very small globules out of which the greater Globules do consist that at last I strongly imagined that every of the greater Globules consisted of six smaller Globules no less pliable than the aforesaid for oftentimes I saw very clearly how the small Globules joyned and adapted themselves according to the figure the Vesicle or larger Globule stretched at length had taken being themselves stretched after the same manner and thus made one of the larger Globules stretcht out to appear by the lesser within it stretched also with it as if it consisted of long threads Moreover I put the greater Globules into so violent a motion that their Vesicles burst in pieces and then the lesser Globules appeared plainly to be scattered This first Globule I can see as plainly and great as with the naked eye one should look upon the eggs or spawn of a Cod-fish About nine or ten years since Dr. Graff opened in my presence the vein of a Dog and let out so much blood that the Dog grew faint then he opened the Artery of another Dog and by a pipe transfused the blood of this second into the first whereby the first was recovered the second was faint Then the said Doctor injected back into the Artery of the second a quantity of Cows milk supposing thereby to preserve the second dog alive saying milk was blood but no sooner was the milk put into the artery but the dog died And whereas 't is commonly said that milk is Blood therefore I shall relate of what parts the Milk consists so far as I have hitherto discovered I have said heretofore that the Milk doth consist of Globules swimming in a thin clear watery matter which we call Whey but as the great Globuli of Blood are all of the same bigness so in the Milk they are quite differing being of as many sizes and magnitudes as we can imagine between the smallest sand and a barely corn all of them being as clear as Crystal save only that through and between the same drive some irregular particles for the most part rounded these had a fatty substance which I imagined to be the latter their irregularity I imagined came from the impression of the encompassing Globules made on them in which posture they grew cold Viewing the aforesaid differences of the Milk Globules I supposed that the Milk vessels have no other parts included but the matter out of which they are all made and that the same matter so long as included in the vessels consisted of one uniform matter so that one could not distinguish parts and that the same vessels discharging this uniform matter into other vessels containing a substance of a quite differing nature which I suppose to be the Whey comes to be separated into these Globules of so differing magnitudes This may be represented by having two vessels filled the one with Fat representing Whey the other with Quicksilver resembling the uniform matter of the Milk these blended together the Quicksilver will be separated into small Globules of differing magnitudes and kept distinct by the fat Or further it may be explained by a dissolution of some gums in Spirit of Wine a drop of which being put into rain water which I compare to Whey the Gum becomes separated immediately into an incredible number of small clear Globules which makes it appear also as white as Milk it self and thence I suppose that the whiteness of Milk hath the same cause I have been often minded by some that flesh was nothing else but clodded blood yet for all my endeavours I was never able to find the first particles of blood in the fibers of the flesh but only such as are contained in the first Globules The last Summer being sickly for some weeks I voided much Flegm which was green tough and acid in the throat which yet continues but nothing near so much as before and some of it which I voided in the morning was of so heavy a matter that it sunk in the water the ponderosity of it I found to proceed from its not being filled with airy bubbles which most Flegms are mixed with By this means I observed my Flegm very often and found it to consist of tough slimy moisture mixt with many Globules and the tougher the Flegm was the greater was the quantity of Globules and from them also proceeded the green colour of it All these Globules were of one and the same bigness with the first Globules of the blood and indeed the blood is of the same make but only of a different colour for as I observed the greater blood Globules to consist of six lesser so here I could see them more plain only they seemed more slender and tender
since the appearances may be solved by Circles of any bigness proved by the eighth figure 29. Allowing inequality of motion or more compound curve lines nothing can be determined The circular Orb it seemed the most probable solves Kepler's acceleration according to the increase of a line of Tangents 30. A gravitation towards the Sun makes out the motion of the Comet and Planets and of the Blaze The Blaze explained by experiment of ♂ dissolved in oyl of Virt. 31. This experiment and hypothesis farther explained and applied to explain the Blaze which is from thence bent brighter on one side than the other not direct from the Sun 32. Cometical body and motion as old as the world yet wasting in the Aether explained by fire Dissolution by menstruums 33. Thence the proprieties of Comets conjectured and the sum of the foregoing discourse repeated being the end of a Lecture Recourse to Tycho Brahe's Observation 34. for making out the Comets Orb. His supposing its motion unequal without reason a shift Mr. Horrox his hypotheses in the ninth figure a product of chance 35. A discourse on it and some objections against Tycho's 36. Kepler's hypothesis examined by these Observations of Tycho's found the most likely but with some alteration Line of Trajection bent a little Motion accelerated towards the Sun retarded from it 37. The swifter and further off the Comet from the Sun the less the bend explained by the tenth figure 38. The way of enquiring parallax by Telescopes 39. further explained A second way by two Observers in distant places propounded The third way of Sir Chr. Wren his Majesties Surveyor-General 40. Set down and demonstrated by a Geometrical Problem 41. How exactly all those Observations he had were made out by it together with his own Schemes both which I had in the beginning of Feb. 1664-5 42. Some other Papers about Comets added being reflections on Mr. Descartes and Kepler's hypotheses from particular tracings of the Comets of 1664. and 1665. A Scheme of the later Observations of that of 1664. added and some reflections being all the papers could be found about those Comets 43 44. Animadversions on this of April last Why the former conjectures were adhered to concerning the light of Comets 45. Several sorts of shining bodies enumerated 46 To which the light of the Comet seems to have most affinity and how produced 47. Further described and explained 48. The reason of its parabolick figure demonstrated from the proprieties of motion from or toward a gravitating body as the Sun 49. Concerning the wasting and lasting of the Cometical body The bigness and nature of the Particles that compose the Blaze 50. Some difficulties in this supposition concerning the action of the Aether in levitation and ascent dissolution shining c. cleared and explained by Experiments 51 52 53. But would have been further examined by Observation if there had been opportunity 54. That these assertions about the light of Comets may not seem too paradoxical some further Considerations and Observations about light are added and some new ways propounded 55 56. Mr. Boyle's Memorial concerning a Phosphoros written for his own use inserted in which he first names the Author of it and describes his Apparatus 57 58. Then the observables 1. Two spoonfuls of matter enlighten a large glass sphere 2. A little enlightens a large Cylinder 3. Liquor shaken had a smoke and flasht 4. A dry substance affirmed to have continued shining 2 years flashed 59. 5. Some dust of this on a Carpet twinckled like Stars Writing on paper with it shin'd and smelt of Sulphur and Onions 60. 7. The hand on which it was rubbed shin'd but felt no heat 61. It fired Gun-powder first warm'd 62. And white paper held over coals Other tryals propounded but refused 63. Some Experiments made on the Phosphoros Baldwini in vacuo and in the open air 64. Preserved in Vacuo but destroyed in Air. 65 66. Monsieur Gallet's Letter to Monsieur Cassini acquainting him with his Apparatus for observing ☿ in ☉ 67 68. His Observation of sour spots in ☉ 69. The particulars observed 70. 71 72. Monsieur Cassini's Reflections on these Observations 73 74. Mr. Hally's Letter to Sir Jonas Moore containing an account of his Observations of ☿ sub sole three Southern Stars The two Nubeculae c. 75 76 77. Mr. Cassini's farther discoveries about the diurnal motion and several new appearances in ♃ 78 79 80. A second Discourse called Microscopium or some new discoveries with Microscopes in a Letter of Mr. Leeuwenhoeck 81. 82. A confirmation of some of them by Observations here 83. Mr. Leeuwenhoeck's second Letter containing Observations of the Globules of Blood Milk Flegm Gums first dissolved then precipitated out of the Spirit of Wine Eels a thousand times thinner than a hair 84 85 86 87 88 89. The ways how these discoveries were made here 1. By holding the liquor in small pipes how fill'd how made The Lamp Pipe Oyl Manner Materials for making them described 89 90. Muscovy-glass used instead of these Pipes and how the Microscope was fitted for this purpose 91. What light convenient Surfaces of bodies not perfectly fluid apt to delude an Observer 92. Plates removing that deluding cause and what farther use of them 93. How to find the figure and texture of Animal and Vegetable parts Instance in a ligament of Beef 94. The figure of Muscles hinted and an instrument stretching them before the Glass described 95. A description of the Microscopes used 1. Of the single Microscope and its advantages and difficulties 96. another sort more easie described and the ways how to make and use it explained 97. Causes that vary the distance of objects from the Globule The use of Selenites and Looking-glass-plates for holding the liquor A Microscope of one single refraction 98. The only inconvenience of them hinted how prevented by double Microscopes Where these are made 99. The double Microscope and its parts uses and advantages described 100. The benefit of a dark Room and appropriated lights And a digression in answer to P. Cherubines Accusation 101. Some Observations made with this Microscope hinted Animalcules in the steeping of other Grains besides Pepper Their smallness estimated and compared to a Whale Muscular fabrick hinted Milk Blood Fat Sugar Allum c. viewed 102 103. Mr. Young's Letter of one who trying to cure a Colick by leaden Pills slipt one into his Lungs grievous symptoms ensue 105. Helps of skilful Physicians in vain attempted and particularly of Dr. Mayow of suspending with the head downward though in the interim he married and had Children yet it kill'd him 106 107. His body diffected and remarkables taken notice of and their causes explained by Mr. Young from 107. to 112. COMETA OR Remarks about Comets ON Saturday morning April 21. 1677. I first saw the Comet of which I had been advertised the day before It appeared in the Sign Taurus between the base of the Triangle and the unformed Stars in the
every piece of it though infinitely divided the same proprieties it hath it self This magnetical virtue I say having such a relation and being forced thus to vary 't is very probable that the internal parts to which it hath a respect have a variation likewise and consequently that these internal parts which are supposed generally very dense compact and very closely and solidly united may be notwithstanding more loose and ununited and movable from certain causes To proceed therefore I say that it seems very probable to me that the body of Comets may be of the same nature and constitution with that of the internal parts of the Earth that these parts may by the help of the Aether be so agitated and blended together as to make them work upon and dissolve each other in the same manner as we have often had examples of some of the parts of the Earth a late instance of which was at Mongibel or Aetna in Sicily where the Fire continued for a long time and produced very considerable effects That this internal agitation may confound the gravitating principle and so leave the parts in a greater freedom to be dissolved by the encompassing Aether which is the agent that sets the other two at work to destroy each other that it may at length prey upon both and dissolve them both into it self and consequently not only the parts thus dissolved are elevated to a greater distance from the center of the Star or Nucleus or the superficies of it whose gravitating or attractive principle is much destroyed the Coma being in this Comet four or five Diameters of the Star or Nucleus but having given those parts leave thus far to ramble the gravitating principle of another body more potent acts upon it and makes those parts seem to recede from the center thereof though really they are but as it were left behind the body of the Star which is more powerfully attracted than the minuter steaming parts for I suppose the gravitating power of the Sun in the center of this part of the Heaven in which we are hath an attractive power upon all the bodies of the Planets and of the Earth that move about it and that each of those again have a respect answerable whereby they may be said to attract the Sun in the same manner as the Load-stone hath to Iron and the Iron hath to the Loadstone I conceive also that this attractive virtue may act likewise upon several other bodies that come within the center of its sphere of activity though 't is not improbable also but that as on some bodies it may have no effect at all no more than the Load-stone which acts on Iron hath upon a bar of Tin Lead Glass Wood c. so on other bodies it may have a clean contrary effect that is of protrusion thrusting off or driving away as we find one Pole of the Magnet doth the end of a Needle touched on the opposite part whence it is I conceive that the parts of the body of this Comet being confounded or jumbled as 't were together and so the gravitating principle destroyed become of other natures than they were before and so the body may cease to maintain its place in the Universe where first it was placed Whence instead of continuing to move round some central body whether Sun or Planet as it did whilst it maintained it self entire and so had its magnetical quality as I may so call it unconfounded it now leaves that circular way and by its motion which always tends to a straight line and would be so were it not bended into a curve by the attractive virtue of the central body it flies away from its former center by the Tangent line to the last place where it was before this confusion was caused in the body of it In this line 't is probable it passes from one part of the Heavens to another and so passes through the spheres of the activity of multitudes of central bodies in the passing through which spheres 't is not improbable that those parts which by their dissolution are made of a nature differing from the body in the center are rather expelled from than attracted towards it and so being by this dissolution rarified and loosened from the middle and by their acting upon one another and dissolution of the Aether made of another nature after they have every way dispersed themselves to a considerable distance from their proper body are converted and driven in a way almost opposite to that expelling body and so continue to be driven away to such a vast distance as to make out that prodigious length of the tail or Blaze of some Comets such as was that of 1618. which as Kepler reports was extended to 70 degrees from the body or head of it till at last they are dissolved also and commixed with the Aether within them So that though I suppose the attractive power of the Sun or other central body may draw the body towards it and so bend the motion of the Comet from the streight line in which it tends into a kind of curve whose concave part is towards the Sun by reason that there are some central parts of it which are not yet destroyed and so retain somewhat of its gravitating principle yet I conceive that all those parts of the Comet which are thus wrought upon by the other and changed into another state and are very much rarified and produce light are of a clean contrary nature and recede from the center of the Sun much after the same manner as we find any combustible body with us as Coal c. where we find that the body of the Coal before it be resolv'd into smoke is a very dense and very heavy body and tends to the center of the earth but the parts thereof agitated by the Air and Aether into steams and smoke and those yet farther dissolved into flame do tend upwards and from the center of the earth Now though one cause of the recess of flame from the center of the Earth be the gravity of the ambient Air. Yet 't is not impossible but that there may be somewhat also of positive levity conjoyned therewith Most certain it is that there must be a tendency of receding as well as a tendency of approaching the center of the Earth and other attracting body And there may be much said for the supposition that the recess of the purest Aether from the center is the cause of the motion of the grosser Aether and of all other bodies towards it though there are also very considerable arguments against it But this discourse is not my present business though it may hereafter be the subject of a Lecture in this place for upon it do depend some of the greatest operations in the universe And as in the History of the Creation we have an account of the production of light immediately after the making of matter which is a motion of recess from
had would permit which though they were very short and transitory observations and I wanted time to repeat them so often as I could have desired yet even from them I was sufficiently satisfied that I had reason to adhere to my former conjecture that the light of the Comet did not depend wholly from the reflection of the Sun beams from the parts thereof but rather from its own light for upon well considering of the form of this Comet I manifestly saw that the middle of the blaze was brighter than the side parts thereof and especially that part which was immediatly opposite to the Sun was the brightest of all which would have been otherwise if the light had depended wholly from the deflection of the rays of the Sun for one might rationally conclude that the Nucleus or Star in the middle which reflected so great a quantity of light should have caused a darkness in the parts behind it as we see all strong reflecting bodies do and consequently that the middle part of the stream or blaze especially that which was next the body should not have been so bright as those other parts to which the light of the Sun had a more free access unless it may be said that even the Star it self though it seem so bright is notwithstanding not so Dense but that it admits rays enough to pass through it unreflected to inlighten the parts behind it But this seems not so likely since be the body of the Star supposed a thousand times thinner than a Cloud which yet t is hard to suppose since it gives so considerable a reflection yet it being in all probability ten thousand times bigger in bulk the rays in passing through so great a bulk must needs meet with more obstruction than in the thinnest Cloud and yet we find that there is no Cloud so thin but casts shadow opposite to the Sun and therefore in probability this would do the like but I diligently observed that there was no such appearance here but the contrary that is that where the shadow should have been there was the lightest part of all the blaze and consequently in probability it did depend upon some other cause than a reflection of light It is a hard matter to assign the particular cause of its light but it seems from these circumstances to be very probable that it was in part at least from its own nature whether that might be somewhat of that of the Sun and Stars or of that of our fire or of that of decaying fish rotten wood glow-worms c. or of that of the Ignis Fatuus at Land or Sea or like that of Sea-water or a Diamond or like that of the falling meteors or Star-shoots it will be very hard to determine unless one had a much greater stock of observations to build upon But it may possibly be somewhat of the nature of them all though it agree not in all particulars with any one of them All these ways that I have named seeming to agree in one particular and that is an internal motion of the parts which shine whether that motion be caused by some external menstruum dissolving it as in fire and Ignes fatui or an external motion stroke or impulse as in a Diamond Sea-water and possibly some Ignes fatui or from the parts of the bodies working and dissolving one another as in decaying fish rotten wood glow-worms or whether it be susceptible of a much more subtil impulse even from light it self as the Bononian stone and Bladwines Phsophorus which seems to be so harmonious as I may so speak to the motion of light that a new motion is thereby raised in it and continues for some time to move of it self after the impulse or influence ceases not much unlike the unison string or other sounding body which in Musick receives a tremulation and sound from the motion and sound of the unison body or string that is struck To me It seems most probable that the body and parts of the Comet are in a state of dissolution whether that dissolution be caused by the parts of the Aether through which it passes after the manner as a Torch is dissolved by the air or whether by the internal working of the constituent parts one upon the other as in Gun-powder shining Fish and rotten Wood I cannot determine but I rather guess it to be in some things analogous to the one and somewhat to the other though not exactly the same with either And this I conceive from the figure and make of the shining parts for if it had been of the same nature with a Torch the blaze would have resembled that of the flame of a Torch or Candle that is the sides would have been brighter and the middle darker as I have shewn in my Lampas whereas it was very manifest that the middle of the blaze was brightest and of that blaze that which was next the Star or Nucleus was brighter than that which was further off whereas in flame the contrary is very observable as I have in the said Treatise shewn From the shape of the figure the manner of its dissolution seems to be thus The Star or Nucleus in the middle seems to be the fomes or source from whence all the light proceeds this we suppose to be a dense body encompast with a very fluid body such as the Aether seems to be but of such a loose and spongy nature as that the Aether doth cause those parts which are contiguous to it to be dissolved and expanded into it self This dissolution and expansion I conceive doth generate or cause the light that seems to proceed from it that dissolution causing such a motion of the Aether as is necessary to produce the appearance of light now so long as any part thereof remains in dissolution so long doth it continue to shine as is also observable in the flame of any body burning in the air but when the part separated from the body is quite dissolved into the Aether the effect of shining ceases as it doth also in the parts of flame Now I have observed that the blaze is so very much rarified that first the Aether I conceive comes very freely to every particle of the body after it is separated from it but especially to the outermost and continues to be incompassed with it so long as till it be quite dissolved into it which I conceive to be at a little farther distance from the head than the greatest length of the blaze seems to be to our sight And further I conceive that the outward parts being thus incompassed more perfectly with the free and undisturbed Aether are sooner dissolved into it than those of the middle and consequently the sides seem first to disappear and the middle parts continue their shining to a much greater distance from the Star in the head though somewhat also of that appearance may be ascribed to the dispersing and rarity of the parts near the
is taken up into it and kept suspended therein though the parts of the Gold be fifteen times heavier than the parts of the Aqua Regis So Pit-coal though very heavy is yet taken up into the Air and kept suspended therein though it will be found to be some thousands of times more ponderous than the menstruum of the Air that keeps it suspended Many reasons I could produce to shew the great power of the Aether and the universality of its activity almost in all sensible motions but reserving them for another Discourse hereafter I shall at present only mention those suppositions which seem to have the greatest difficulty in this Theory viz. how the dissolution of the parts of the Star by the incompassing Aether should cause light and secondly how it should cause an actual Levitation of the dissolving particles upwards For the explication of these two difficulties I must at present crave favour to explain them by examples taken from operations of Nature in the Atmosphere wherein we live very similar and analogous to them First for the production of light we find that the Air incompassing the steams of bodies prepared by heat or otherwise and made fit for dissolution doth so operate upon them as to make them fly and part asunder with a very impetuous motion insomuch that the small particles or Atoms of the dissolved bodies do not only leave one another but depart and dart out with so great an impetuosity as to drive off all the incompassing Air from their Center from whence they flew and this I take to be the cause not only of their Light but also of their Levity upwards this may be seen very plainly by the small parts of crackling Char-coal which upon the blowing them with Bellows and so crowding a great quantity of the fresh menstruum on them fly and dart asunder with great celerity and noise but is abundantly more evident in the kindling of Gun-powder where the impetuosity is so very great as to drive away not only all the incompassing Air but all other bodies though never so solid that hinder its expansion in the performing of which operation the Aether hath a great share as I may hereafter shew 't is very probable that the Aether in the same manner dissolving the particles of the Star causeth the Atoms thereof to fly asunder with so great an impetuosity as to leave a vacuity even of the parts of the Aether which flying asunder doth not only cause light by impressing on the Aether a stroke or pulse which propagates every way in Orbem but maketh such an agitation of the the Aether as causes a rarefaction in the parts thereof whilst the parts that are once actually separated by continual rebounding one against another before they come to be at rest and quietly to touch each other prolong that first separation or vacuity between them This Explication though it be somewhat difficult yet I hope it is intelligible and may be with probability enough supposed to be the true cause of the appearance whilst there is nothing therein supposed which is not manifestly the method of Nature in other operations and though the supposition even of the Aether may seem to be a Chimera and groundless yet had I now time I could by many very sensible and undeniable experiments prove the existence and reality thereof and that it doth actually produce not only as sensible effects as these I have named but very much the same and many others much more cosiderable which by Philosophers have hitherto been ascribed to quite different causes Had I been able to have made some other observations which I designed if I had had the opportunity of seeing it some of the succeeding Nights I should have hoped to have explained several other difficulties concerning the nature of the body and blaze of Comets but being therein prevented I must leave them till I can make some further observations on some Comets that may hereafter appear In the mean time that what I have discoursed concerning the light of Comets may not seem so altogether paradoxical and unintelligible as some may imagine I have here added an account of some trials and observations made on shining substances of natures exceedingly differing from those that are commonly to be met withal And this I the rather do not only because it affords an instance of shining where there is no Air but that hereby I may enlarge the limits of their imagination who shall consider of this subject For nothing is more apt to misguide our reasoning than a narrow and limited knowledg of causes we are not to conclude the body of a Comet a sulphureous vapour exhaled from the Earth and kindled above because here are such vapours observed and such effects produced nor a collection of Sun beams made by a Lentiformed vapour after the manner of a Burning-glass as some eminent Writers have lately done because some such appearances may be Artificially produced in a smoaky or thickned Air since if we diligently inquire we may find that light which is the most sensible quality of Comets that affects our senses may be and really is produced by very many and those very differing ways In Nitre and Sulphur kindling each other by heat we have one way in a body burning in the Air a second in a heated Iron or Glass a third in a piece of Iron hammered till red hot a fourth in rotten Wood and decayed Fish a fifth in Glow-worms Scolopondras and other living Worms and in the sweat and excrements of other living creatures a sixth in a Diamond rubbed a seventh in Dews Ignes fatui c. an eighth in Sea-water a ninth in the Bononian stone and in the Phosphorus Baldwini which I take to be much of the same nature a tenth in the Phosphorus of Mr. Kraft an eleventh and possibly wholly differing from all these may be the light of the Sun a twelfth and that of the Star may differ from that of Sun and the Comet may be differing from all the rest Whether they be so or not the being acquainted with the several proprieties of them will the better enable one to judg of what is pertinent to be observed in Comets in order to find out which is concerned The Phaenomena of most of these shining bodies are very common and obvious and therefore needless to be added but that of the Bononian stone prepared and that of the Phosphorus Baldwini lately discovered by Mr. Baldwine are rare and hard to be got and the effects of them are wholly differing from all the ways I have yet met with and will therefore prove Experimenta Crucis highly instructive in the Theory of Light of which more hereafter As for the Phosphoros Fulgurans of Mr. Kraft more scarce and rare than the other 't is wholly differing from any of the rest and very strange and surprising at least it appeared so to me who had the good fortune to be present at a good part of
the experiments made by the Author in the presence and at the Chamber of the Honourable Robert Boyle Esq that great Judg and Promoter of all curious inquiries into Nature and Art who at my earnest intreaty was not only pleased to commit to writing what he observed but for the information of Curious and Inquisitive Naturalists to give me liberty here to publish it A short Memorial of some Observations made upon an Artificial Substance that shines without any precedent Illustration September 1677. ON Saturday the fifteenth of this month I was after supper visited by Mr. Kraft a famous German Chymist who was pleased to come and shew me a strange rarity he hath newly brought into England to the sight whereof he allowed me to invite several members of the Royal Society he being desirous because the matter he imploys is very costly and of difficult preparation to be a good Husband of it and by shewing it to several curious persons at once to exempt himself from the need of showing it often The Company being met the Artist took out of a pretty large box he had brought with him divers Glass Vessels and laid them in order on the Table The largest of them was a Sphere of Glass which I guessed to be four or five Inches in Diameter being hollow and intire save that in one place there was a little hole at that time stopt with sealing wax whereat to pour in the Liquor which seemed to me to be about two Spoonfuls or somewhat more and to look like muddy water made a little reddish with brick-dust or some other powder of that colour he also took out of his Box three or four little pipes of Glass sealed or otherwise stopt at both ends being each of them somewhat bigger than a Swans quill and about five or six Inches long and having at one end a small fragment or two of that matter that was to shine in the dark He likewise laid upon the Table three or four Vials of several sizes but none of them judged capable to hold above very few Ounces of water in each of which Vials there was some Liquor or other that was neither transparent nor well coloured which Liquors I confess upon his making no particular mention of what they were to do I was not curious to compare together either as to quantity or as to colour Besides all these substances which were fluid he had in a small Crystalline button Bottle a little lump of matter of which he seemed to make much more account than of all the Liquors and which he took out for a few moments to let us look upon it whereby I saw that it was a consistent body that appeared of a whitish colour and seemed not to exceed a couple of ordinary Pease or the kernel of a Hasel Nut in bigness some other things 't is possible Mr. Kraft took out of his Box but neither I or for ought I know others of the Company took notice of them partly because of his hast and partly because the confused curiosity of many spectators in a narrow compass kept me from being able to observe things as particularly and deliberately as I would gladly have done and as the occasion deserved Which Advertisement may I fear be but too applicable to a great part of the following Narrative The forementioned Glasses being laid in order upon the Table the windows were closed with woodenshuts and the Candles were removed into another Room by that we were in being left in the dark we were entertained with the ensuing Phaenomena I. Though I noted above that the hollow Sphere of Glass had in it but about two Spoonfuls or three at most of matter yet the whole Sphere was illuminated by it so that it seemed to be not unlike a Cannon bullet taken red hot out of the fire except that the light of our Sphere lookt somewhat more pale and faint But when I took the liberty to hold this Glass in my hand and shake it a little the contained Liquor appeared to shine more vividly and sometimes as it were to flash II. I took one of the little pipes of Glass formerly mentioned into my hand and observed that though the shining matter had been lodged but at one end yet the whole Glass was enlightened so that it appeared a luminous Cylinder whose light yet I did not judg to be always uniform nor did it last like that which was included in the Vials III. In the largest of the Vials next the Spherical already mentioned the Liquor that lay in the bottom being shaken I observed a kind of smoke to asscend and almost to fill the cavity of the Vial and near the same time there manifestly appeared as it were a flash of lightning that was considerably diffused and pleasingly surprized me IV. After this I took up that small Crystaline Vial that I lately called by a name familiar in our Glass-shops a Button-Bottle wherein was contained the dry substance which the Artist chiefly valued as that which had continued luminous about these two years and having held that Vial long in my hand in the same position in reference to my eye and lookt attentively at it I had the opportunity to observe what I think none of the Company did that not only this stuff did in proportion to its bulk shine more vividly than the fluid substances but thaat which was the Phaenomenon I chiefly attended though I could perceive no smoke or fumes ascend from the luminous matter yet I could plainly perceive by a new and brisker light that appeared from time to time in a certain place near the top of the Glass that there must be some kind of flashy motion in the matter that lay at the bottom which was the cause of these little coruscations if I may so call them V. The Artist having taken a very little of his consistent matter and broken it into parts so minute that I judged the fragments to be between twenty and thirty he scattered them without any order about the Carpet where it was very delightful to see how vividly they shined and that which made the spectacle more taking especially to me was this that not only in the darkness that invironed them they seemed like fixt Stars of the sixth or least magnitude but twinkled also like them discovering such a scintillation as that whereby we distinguish the fixt Stars from most of the Planets And these twinkling sparks without doing any harm that we took notice of to the Turky Carpet they lay on continued to shine for a good while some of them remaining yet vivid enough till the Candles being brought in again made them disappear VI. Mr. Kraft also calling for a sheet of Paper and taking some of his stuff upon the tip of his finger writ in large Characters two or three words whereof one being DOMINI was made up of Capital Letters which being large enough to reach from one side of the page to the other and