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).

It would much contribute to the History of Colours, if Chymists would in their Laboratories take a heedfull notice, and give us a faithfull account of the Colours observ’d in the Steams of Bodies either Sublim’d or Distill’d, and of the Colours of those Productions of the Fire, that are made up by the Coalition of those Steams.  As (for Instance) we observe in the Distilling of pure Salt peter, that at a certain season of the Operation, the Body, though it seem either Crystalline, or White, affords very Red Fumes:  whereas though Vitriol be Green or Blew, the Spirit of it is observ’d to come over in Whitish Fumes.  The like Colour I have taken notice of in the Fumes of several other Concretes of differing Colours, and Natures, especially when Distill’d with strong Fires.  And we elsewhere note, that ev’n Soot, as Black as it is, has fill’d our Receivers with such copious White Fumes, that they seem’d to have had their In-sides wash’d with Milk.  And no less observable may be, the Distill’d Liqours, into which such Fumes convene, (for though we will not deny, that by skill and care a Reddish Liqour may be obtain’d from Nitre) yet the common Spirit of it, in the making ev’n of which store of these Red Fumes are wont to pass over into the Receiver, appears not to be at all Red.  And besides, that neither the Spirit of Vitriol, nor that of Soot is any thing White; And, besides also, that as far as I have observ’d, most (for I say not all) of the Empyreumatical Oyls of Woods, and other Concretes, are either of a deep Red, or of a Colour between Red and Black; besides this, I say, ’tis very remarkable that notwithstanding that great Variety of Colours to be met with in the Herbs, Flowers, and other Bodies wont to be Distill’d in Balneo:  yet (as far at least as our common Distillers Experience reacheth) all the Waters and Spirits that first come over by that way of Distillation, leave the Colours of their Concretes behind them, though indeed there be one or two Vegetables not commonly taken notice of, whose Distill’d Liqours I elsewhere observe to carry over the Tincture of the Concrete with them.  And as in Distillations, so in Sublimations, it were worth while to take notice of what comes up, in reference to our present scope, by purposely performing them (as I have in some cafes done) in conveniently shap’d Glasses, that the Colour of the ascending Fumes may be discern’d; For it may afford a Naturalist good Information to observe the Congruities or the Differences betwixt the Colours of the ascending Fumes, and those of the Flowers, they compose by their Convention.  For it is evident, that these Flowers, do many of them in point of Colour, much differ, not only from one another, but oft times from the Concretes that afforded them.  Thus, (not here to repeat what I formerly noted of the Black Soots of very differingly Colour’d Bodies) though Camphire and Brimstone afford Flowers much of their own Colour, save that those of Brimstone are wont to be a little Paler,

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