Page:Mathematical collections and translations, in two tomes - Salusbury (1661).djvu/191

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Dialogue. II.
165
example, we see them whil'st they are alive to fly upwards, a thing altogether impossible for them to do as they are grave bodies; whereas being dead they can onely fall downwards; and therefore you hold that the reasons that are of force in all the kinds of projects above named, cannot take place in birds: Now this is very true; and because it is so, Sagredus, that doth not appear to be done in those projects,The answer to the argument taken from the flight of birds contrary to the motion of the Earth. which we see the birds to do. For if from the top of a Tower you let fall a dead bird and a live one, the dead bird shall do the same that a stone doth, that is, it shall first follow the general motion diurnal, and then the motion of descent, as grave; but if the bird let fall, be a live, what shall hinder it, (there ever remaining in it the diurnal motion) from soaring by help of its wings to what place of the Horizon it shall please? and this new motion, as being peculiar to the bird, and not participated by us, must of necessity be visible to us; and if it be moved by help of its wings towards the West, what shall hinder it from returning with a like help of its wings unto the Tower. And, because, in the last place, the bird swending its flight towards the West was no other than a withdrawing from the diurnal motion, (which hath, suppose ten degrees of velocity) one degree onely, there did thereupon remain to the bird whil'st it was in its flight nine degrees of velocity, and so soon as it did alight upon the the Earth, the ten common degrees returned to it, to which, by flying towards the East it might adde one, and with those eleven overtake the Tower. And in short, if we well consider, and more narrowly examine the effects of the flight of birds, they differ from the projects shot or thrown to any part of the World in nothing, save onely that the projects are moved by an external projicient,An experiment with which alone is shewn the nullity of all the objections produced against the motion of the Earth. and the birds by an internal principle. And here for a final proof of the nullity of all the experiments before illedged, I conceive it now a time and place convenient to demonstrate a way how to make an exact trial of them all. Shut your self up with some friend in the grand Cabbin between the decks of some large Ship, and there procure gnats, flies, and such other small winged creatures: get also a great tub (or other vessel) full of water, and within it put certain fishes; let also a certain bottle be hung up, which drop by drop letteth forth its water into another bottle placed underneath, having a narrow neck: and, the Ship lying still, observe diligently how those small winged animals fly with like velocity towards all parts of the Cabin; how the fishes swim indifferently towards all sides; and how the distilling drops all fall into the bottle placed underneath. And casting any thing towards your friend, you need not throw it with more force one way then another, provided the distances be equal: and leaping, as the saying is, with your feet closed, you will reach

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