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12 EGONONMEOr CaNnTo 1.|| ;'| Wil
Eve s fſilken couch with gorgeous tints adorn,“|„a 6 3| All|
And fire the arrowy throne of niling Morn. 120
--OR, plum'd with flame, in gay battalions ſpring
ve, and To brighter regions borne on broader wing; MÄ E ] 30, 9 Where lighter gaſes, circumfuſed on high, ie Form the vaſt concave of exterior(ey Ammi !(entiug ||(ie term Eve's fiIken couch, 1. 119. See additional Notes, No. III.| zucht | ZU IV here lohter gaſes. 1. 123. Mr. Cavendiſh has ſhewn, that vl the gas called inflammable air, is at leaſt ten times lighter than light common air; Mr. Lavoifier contends, that it is one of the com-; ponent parts of water, and is by him called hydrogene. Its iM ſuppoſed to afford their principal nouriſhment to vegetables and M thence to animals, and is perpetually riſing from their decom- u poſition; this ſource of it in hot climates, and in ſummer 427 months, 1s ſo great 28 to exceed eſtimation. Now if this light"€ gas paſſes through the atmoſphere, without combining with it,) TEE it muſt compoſe another atmoſphere over the arial one; which/ muſt expand, when the preſſure above it is thus taken away; to| du inconceivable tenuity.| BN /üeN If this ſupernatural gaſſeous atmoſphere floats upon the a&rial' 15 one, like ether upon water, what muſt happen? 1. it will flow(u e from the line, where it will be produced in the greateſt quanti- 140 ties, and become much accumulated over the poles of the earth: nn 2. the common air, or lower ſtratum of the atmoſphere, will be: 38 much thinner over the poles than at the line; becauſe if a glaſs„. globe be filled with oil and Water, and whirled upon its axis, the" centrifugal power will carry the heavier fluid to the circumfer- 10 Wees,| ] | 5| 4| || 4 4| K| GERE ERNE EDER 7 IEEE ARE TTNF STNRIEBERÄNGÜRTHERG 255555 pP" ZUDEM


