Fifteenthly, Having well excited the Stone, I nimbly plung’d it under Water[40], that I had provided for that purpose, and perceiv’d it to Shine whilst it was beneath the Surface of that Liquor, and this I did divers times. But when I indeavour’d to produce a Light by rubbing it upon the lately mentioned Cover of the Box, the Stone and it being both held beneath the Surface of the Water, I did not well satisfie my self in the Event of the Trial; But this I found, if I took the Stone out, and Rubb’d it upon a piece of Cloath, it would not as else it was wont to do, presently acquire a Luminousness, but needed to be rubb’d manifestly much longer before the desired Effect was found.
[40] XV. We likewise Plung’d it as soon as we had excited it, under Liquors of several sorts, as Spirit of Wine, Oyl both Chymical and express’d, an Acid Spirit, and as I remember an Alcalizate Solution, and found not any of those various Liquors to destroy its Shining property.
Sixteenthly, I also try’d several times, that by covering it with my warm Spittle (having no warm Water at hand) it did not lose his Light.[41]
[41] XVI. Having found by this Observation, that a warm Liquor would not extinguish Light in the Diamond, I thought fit to try, whether by reason of its warmth it would not excite it, and divers times I found, that if it were kept therein, till the Water had leisure to communicate some of its Heat to it, it would often shine as soon as it was taken out, and probably we should have seen it Shine more, whilst it was in the Water, if some degree of Opacity which heated Water is wont to acquire, upon the score of the Numerous little Bubbles generated in it, had not kept us from discerning the Lustre of the Stone.
Seventeenthly, Finding that by Rubbing the Stone with the Flat side downwards, I did by reason of the Opacity of the Ring; and the sudden Decay of Light upon the ceasing of the Attrition, probably lose the sight of the Stones greatest Vividness; and supposing that the Commotion made in one part of the stone will be easily propagated all over, I sometimes held the piece of Cloath upon which I rubb’d it, so, that one side of the Stone was exposed to my Eye, whilst I was rubbing the other, whereby it appear’d more Vivid than formerly, and to make Luminous Tracts by its Motions too and fro. And sometimes holding the Stone upwards, I rubb’d its Broad side with a fine smooth piece of Transparent Horn, by which means the Light through that Diaphanous Substance, did whilst I was actually rubbing the Stone, appear so Brisk that sometimes and in some places it seem’d to have little Sparks of fire.


