<arrow.to.target n="marg762"></arrow.to.target> <lb/>
tions; the one is its ri&longs;ing and falling alternately towards the <lb/>
one and other extremity; the other is its moving and running, to <lb/>
&longs;o &longs;peak, Horizontally forwards and backwards. </s><s>Which two dif&shy; <lb/>
ferent motions differently re&longs;ide in divers parts of the Water: <lb/>
for its extream parts are tho&longs;e which mo&longs;t eminently ri&longs;e and fall; <lb/>
tho&longs;e in the middle never ab&longs;olutely moving upwards and down&shy; <lb/>
wards, of the re&longs;t &longs;ucce&longs;&longs;ively tho&longs;e that are neere&longs;t to the ex&shy; <lb/>
treams ri&longs;e and fall proportionally more than the remote: but on <lb/>
the contrary, touching the other progre&longs;&longs;ive motion forwards <lb/>
and backwards, the middle parts move notably, going and re&shy; <lb/>
turning, and the waters that are in the extream parts gain no <lb/>
ground at all; &longs;ave onely in ca&longs;e that in their ri&longs;ing they over&shy; <lb/>
flow their banks, and break forth of their fir&longs;t channel and re&shy; <lb/>
ceptacle; but where there is the ob&longs;tacle of banks to keep them <lb/>
in, they onely ri&longs;e and fall; which yet hindereth not the waters <lb/>
in the middle from fluctuating to and again; which likewi&longs;e <lb/>
the other parts do in proportion, undulating more or le&longs;&longs;e, <lb/>
according as they are neerer or more remote from the middle. <lb/>
<arrow.to.target n="marg763"></arrow.to.target></s></p>

<p type="margin"><s><margin.target id="marg762"></margin.target><emph type="italics"/>Water ri&longs;eth &amp; <lb/>
falleth in the ex&shy; <lb/>
tream parts of the <lb/>
Ve&longs;&longs;el, and runneth <lb/>
to and fro in the <lb/>
midst.<emph.end type="italics"/></s></p>

<p type="margin"><s><margin.target id="marg763"></margin.target><emph type="italics"/>An accident of <lb/>
the Earths motions <lb/>
impo&longs;&longs;ible to be re&shy; <lb/>
duced to practice <lb/>
by art.<emph.end type="italics"/></s></p>

<p type="main"><s>The fifth particular accident ought the more attentively to be <lb/>
con&longs;idered, in that it is impo&longs;&longs;ible to repre&longs;ent the effect there&shy; <lb/>
of by an experiment or example; and the accident is this. </s><s>In <lb/>
the ve&longs;&longs;els by us framed with art, and moved, as the above&shy; <lb/>
named Bark, one while more, and another while le&longs;&longs;e &longs;wiftly, <lb/>
the acceleration and retardation is imparted in the &longs;ame manner <lb/>
to all the ve&longs;&longs;el, and to every part of it; &longs;o that whil&longs;t <emph type="italics"/>v. </s><s>g.<emph.end type="italics"/> the <lb/>
Bark forbeareth to move, the parts precedent retard no more <lb/>
than the &longs;ub&longs;equent, but all equally partake of the &longs;ame re&shy; <lb/>
tardment; and the &longs;elf-&longs;ame holds true of the acceleration, <lb/>
namely, that conferring on the Bark a new cau&longs;e of grea&shy; <lb/>
ter velocity, the Prow and Poop both accelerate in one and <lb/>
the &longs;ame manner. </s><s>But in huge great ve&longs;&longs;els, &longs;uch as are the very <lb/>
long bottomes of Seas, albeit they al&longs;o are no other than cer&shy; <lb/>
tain cavities made in the &longs;olidity of the Terre&longs;trial Globe, <lb/>
it alwayes admirably happeneth, that their extreams do not <lb/>
unitedly equall, and at the &longs;ame moments of time increa&longs;e <lb/>
and dimini&longs;h their motion, but it happeneth that when one of its <lb/>
extreames hath, by vertue of the commixtion of the two <lb/>
Motions, Diurnal, and Annual, greatly retarded its velocity, <lb/>
the other extream is animated with an extream &longs;wift motion. <lb/>
</s><s>Which for the better under&longs;tanding of it we will explain, rea&longs;&shy; <lb/>
&longs;uming a Scheme like to the former; in which if we do but &longs;up&shy; <lb/>
po&longs;e a tract of Sea to be long, <emph type="italics"/>v. </s><s>g.<emph.end type="italics"/> a fourth part, as is the arch <lb/>
B C [<emph type="italics"/>in Fig.<emph.end type="italics"/> 2.] becau&longs;e the parts B are, as hath been already <lb/>
declared, very &longs;wift in motion, by rea&longs;on of the union of the <lb/>
two motions diurnal and annual, towards one and the &longs;ame way,