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Experiments and Considerations Touching Colours (1664) by Robert Boyle
page 8 of 285 (02%)
omnium maxima ac involutissimá, in quâ etiam cum multum actum erit, omnis
ætas, quod agat inveniet; sed in omni alio Negotio, longè semper à perfecto
fuere Principia._

[1] L. Annæ Senecæ Natur. Quest. l. 6. c. 5.

* * * * *

_The Publisher to the_
READER.

_Friendly Reader,_

Here is presented to thy view one of the Abstrusest as well as the
Gentilest Subjects of Natural Philosophy, the _Experimentall History of
Colours_; which though the Noble Author be pleased to think but _Begun_,
yet I must take leave to say, that I think it so well begun, that the work
is more than half dispatcht. Concerning which I cannot but give this
advertisement to the Reader, that I have heard the Author express himself,
that it would not surprise him, if it should happen to be objected, that
some of these Experiments have been already published, partly by Chymists,
and partly by two or three very fresh Writers upon other Subjects. And
though the number of these Experiments be but very small, and though they
be none of the considerablest, yet it may on this occasion be further
represented, that it is easie for our Author to name several men, (of whose
number I can truly name my self) who remember either their having seen him
make, or their having read, his Accounts of the Experiments delivered in
the following Tract several years since, and long before the publication of
the Books, wherein they are mentioned. Nay in divers passages (where he
could do it without any great inconvenience) he hath struck out
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