Micrographia - Some Physiological Descriptions of Minute Bodies Made by Magnifying Glasses with Observations and Inquiries Thereupon by Robert Hooke
page 158 of 465 (33%)
page 158 of 465 (33%)
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colour, or in the suppos'd production, but is very conceivable, and may be
possible. The greatest difficulty that I find against this _Hypothesis_, is, that there seem to be more distinct colours then two, that is, then Yellow and Blue. This Objection is grounded on this reason, that there are several Reds, which _diluted_, make not a Saffron or pale Yellow, and therefore Red, or Scarlet seems to be a third colour distinct from a deep degree of Yellow. To which I answer, that Saffron affords us a deep Scarlet tincture, which may be _diluted_ into as pale a Yellow as any, either by making a weak solution of the Saffron, by infusing a small parcel of it into a great quantity of liquor, as in spirit of Wine, or else by looking through a very thin quantity of the tincture, and which may be heightn'd into the loveliest Scarlet, by looking through a very thick body of this tincture, or through a thinner parcel of it, which is highly _impregnated_ with the tinging body, by having had a greater quantity of the Saffron dissolv'd in a smaller parcel of the liquor. Now, though there may be some particles of other tinging bodies that give a lovely Scarlet also, which though _diluted_ never so much with liquor, or looked on through never so thin a parcel of ting'd liquor, will not yet afford a pale Yellow, but onely a kind of faint Red; yet this is no argument but that those ting'd particles may have in them the faintest degree of Yellow, though we may be unable to make them exhibit it; For that power of being _diluted_ depending upon the divisibility of the ting'd body, if I am unable to make the tinging particles so thin as to exhibit that colour, it does not therefore follow, that the thing is impossible to be done; now, the tinging particles of some bodies are of such a nature, |
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