Experiments and Considerations Touching Colours (1664) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 260 pages of information about Experiments and Considerations Touching Colours (1664).

Experiments and Considerations Touching Colours (1664) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 260 pages of information about Experiments and Considerations Touching Colours (1664).
of the Affirmative; so that among Mineral Bodyes, some of those that are White, may be far more capable, than those I am reasoning with seem to have known, of Eclipsing others, and of making their Colour Praedominant in Mixtures.  In further Confirmation of which may be added, that I remember that I also took a lump of Silver and Gold melted together, wherein by the AEstimate of a very Experienced Refiner, there might be about a fourth or third part of Gold, and yet the Yellow Colour of the Gold was so hid by the White of the Silver, that the whole Mass appear’d to be but Silver, and when it was rubb’d upon the Touchstone, an ordinary beholder could scarce have distinguish’d it from the Touch of common Silver; though if I put a little Aqua Fortis upon any part of the White Surface it had given the Touchstone, the Silver in the moistned part being immediately taken up and conceal’d by the Liquor, the Golden Particles would presently disclose that native Yellow, and look rather as if Gold, than if the above mention’d mixture, had been rubb’d upon the Stone.

  [15] See Scaliger Exercit. 325.  Sect. 9.

EXPERIMENT XIV.

I took a piece of Black-horn, (polish’d as being part of a Comb) this with a piece of broken glass I scrap’d into many thin and curdled flakes, some shorter and some longer, and having laid a pretty Quantity of these scrapings together, I found, as I look’d for, that the heap they compos’d was White, and though, if I laid it upon a clean piece of White Paper, its Colour seem’d somewhat Eclips’d by the greater Whiteness of the Body it was compar’d with, looking somewhat like Linnen that had been sulli’d by a little wearing, yet if I laid it upon a very Black Body, as upon a Beaver Hatt, it then appear’d to be of a good White, which Experiment, that you may in a trice make when you please, seems very much to Disfavour both their Doctrine that would have Colours to flow from the Substantial Forms of Bodyes, and that of the Chymists also, who ascribe them to one or other of their three Hypostatical Principles; for though in our Case there was so great a Change made, that the same Body without being substantially either Increas’d or Lessened, passes immediately from one extreme Colour to another (and that too from Black to White) yet this so great and sudden change is effected by a slight Mechanical Transposition of parts, there being no Salt or Sulphur or Mercury that can be pretended to be Added or Taken away, nor yet any substantial Form that can reasonably be suppos’d to be Generated and Destroy’d, the Effect proceeding only from a Local Motion of the parts which so vary’d their Position as to multiply their distinct Surfaces, and to Qualifie them to Reflect far more Light to the Eye, than they could before they were scrap’d off from the entire piece of Black horn.

EXPERIMENT XV.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Experiments and Considerations Touching Colours (1664) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.