Page:Mathematical collections and translations, in two tomes - Salusbury (1661).djvu/183

 your gun still; and if the mark shall move, the gun must be kept upon the mark by moving. And upon this dependeth the proper answer to the other argument taken from the shot of a Canon, at the mark placed towards the South or North: wherein is alledged, that if the Earth should move, the shots would all range Westward of the mark, because that in the time whilst the ball, being forc'd out of the Piece, goeth through the air to the mark, the said mark being carried toward the East, would leave the ball to the Westward. I answer therefore, demanding whether if the Canon be aimed true at the mark, and permitted so to continue, it will constantly hit the said mark, whether the Earth move or stand still? It must be replied, that the aim altereth not at all, for if the mark doth stand still, the Piece also doth stand still, and if it, being transported by the Earths motion, doth move, the Piece doth also move at the same rate, and, the aim maintained, the shot proveth always true, as by what hath been said above, is manifest.

Stay a little, I entreat you, Salviatus, till I have propounded a certain conceit touching these shooters of birds flying, whose proceeding I believe to be the same which you relate, and believe the effect of hitting the bird doth likewise follow: but yet I cannot think that act altogether conformable to this of shooting in great Guns, which ought to hit as well when the piece and mark moveth, as when they both stand still; and these, in my opinion, are the particulars in which they disagree. In shooting with a great Gun both it and the mark move with equal velocity, being both transported by the motion of the Terrestrial Globe: and albeit sometimes the piece being planted more towards the Pole, than the mark, and consequently its motion being somewhat flower than the motion of the mark, as being made in a lesser circle, such a difference is insensible, at that little distance of the piece from the mark: but in the shot of the Fowler the motion of the Fowling-piece wherewith it goeth following the bird, is very slow in comparison of the flight of the said bird; whence me thinks it should follow, that that small motion which the turning of the Birding-piece conferreth on the bullet that is within it, cannot, when it is once gone forth of it, multiply it self in the air, untill it come to equal the velocity of the birds flight, so as that the said bullet should always keep direct upon it: nay, me thinketh the bird would anticipate it and leave it behind. Let me add, that in this act, the air through which the bullet is to pass, partaketh not of the motion of the bird: whereas in the case of the Canon, both it, the mark, and the intermediate air, do equally partake of the common diurnal motion. So that the true cause of the Marks-man his hitting the mark, as it should seem, moreover and besides the