The Green and Purple made the Purple appear more Dirty.

The Blew and Purple made the Purple more Lovely, and far more Deep.

The Red parts of the Marbl'd Paper look'd upon with the Yellow appear'd of a

Red far more like Scarlet than without it.

But the Fineneſs or Coarſeneſs of the Papers, their being carefully or ſlightly Colour'd, and divers other Circumſtances, may ſo vary the Events of ſuch Experiments as theſe, that if, Pyrophilus, you would Build much on them, you muſt carefully Repeat them.

EXPERIMENT IV.

The Triangular Priſmatical Glaſs being the Inſtrument upon whoſe Effects we may the moſt Commodiouſly ſpeculate the Nature of Emphatical Colours, (and perhaps that of Others too;) we thought it might be uſefull to obſerve the ſeveral Reflections and Refractions which the Incident Beams of Light ſuffer in Rebounding from it, and Paſſing through it. And this we thought might be Beſt done, not (as is uſual,) in an ordinary Inlightn'd Room, where (by reaſon of the Difficulty of doing otherwiſe) ev'n the Curious have left Particulars Unheeded, which may in a convenient place be eaſily taken notice of; but in a Darken'd Room, where by placing the Glaſs in a convenient Poſture, the Various Reflections and Refractions may be Diſtinctly obſerv'd; and where it may appear what Beams are Unting'd;

and which they are, that upon the Bodyes that terminate them, do Paint either the Primary or Secondary Iris. In purſuance of this we did in the above mention'd Darken'd Room, make obſervation of no leſs than four Reflections, and three Refractions that were afforded us by the ſame Priſm, and thought that notwithſtanding what was taught us by the Rules of Catoptricks and Dioptricks, it would not be amiſs to find alſo, by hiding ſometimes one part of the Priſm, and ſometimes another, and obſerving where the Light or Colour Vaniſh'd thereupon, by which Reflection and by which Refraction each of the ſeveral places whereon the Light rebounding from, or paſſing through, the Priſm appear'd either Sincere or Tincted, was produc'd. But becauſe it would be Tedious and not ſo Intelligible to deliver this in Words, I have thought fit to Referr You to the Annexed Scheme where the Newly mention'd particulars may be at one View taken Notice of.

EXPERIMENT V.


The Explication of the Scheme.
PPP. An Aequilaterotriangular Cryſtalline Priſm, one of whoſe edges P. is placed directly towards the Sun. A B & α β Two rays from the Sun falling on the Priſm at B β. and thence partly reflected towards C & γ. and partly refracted towards D & δ. B C & β γ. Thoſe reflected Rays. B D & β δ. Thoſe refracted Rays which are partly refracted towards E & ε. and there paint an Iris 1 2 3 4 5. denoting the five conſecutions of colours Red, Yellow, Green, Blew, and Purple; and are partly reflected towards F & ζ. D F & δ ζ. Thoſe Reflected Rays which are partly refracted towards G & η. colourleſs, and partly reflected, towards H & θ. F H & ζ θ. Thoſe reflected Rays which are refracted towards I & ι. and there paint an other fainter Iris, the colours of which are contrary to the former 5 4 3 2 1. ſignifying Purple, Blew, Green, Yellow, Red, ſo that the Priſm in this poſture exhibits four Rainbows.