456
struck w
th. a violl bow which yealded 4 or 5 seuerall &
very Di
stinct sounds to wit the Lowe
st a fifth a fowrth &
an eighth & 12 higher.
but2
dly another large Gla
sse holding about 3 quarts almo
st filled
w
th. water was struck on the Edge w
th. a viol bow & it was
very vi
sible that according to the sound was the number
of the places in
the gla
sse where the water played..the
places were either 4. 6. 8. 10. 12. and some more Con
founded & broad which seemd to participate of 2 sounds -
3. seuerall experiments were tryed w
th small gla
sse canes in
the Exhau
sted Receiver to see whether the water would
ri
se in them but vpon tryall there could be nothing -
certainly concluded from them. some of them being
stoppd
by the melting of the cement on the top of them.
But a syphon being tryd It was found that the water would
Run through the same out of one ve
ssell into another as
well when
the air was exhau
sted as before.
mo
r. Pappin made a tryall of ^ /small/ pipes clo
sed at the top in his exhau
sted
Reciuer affirming that it would a
scend into such a pipe as well
as if it were an open small pipe in common air, but we could
not perceiue that the water did a
scend in it till some air being
Let into
the Receiuer the water went to the top of the Seald pipe
And by
all the Exhau
sting
could be used /it/ after wards
we could . . . /It was/ made
tht water to De
scend againe
out from
the top of
the pipe
M
r. Hooke acquainted
the Society that mo
r. Chardin was in
Town and that he had spoken w
th him. he was de
sired to
Indeauour to bring him the next Day to the Society.
Ref: CELL/RS/HF_458 © Centre for Editing Lives and Letters