It cannot therefore be denied, that fire proceeding from
the stars which are above the clouds, may fall on them, as
we frequently observe on serene evenings, and that the air is
agitated by the impulse, as darts when they are hurled whiz
through the air. And when it arrives at the cloud, a discordant kind of vapour is produced, as when hot iron is
plunged into water, and a wreath of smoke is evolved. Hence
arise squalls. And if wind or vapour be struggling in the
cloud, thunder is discharged; if it bursts out with a flame,
there is a thunderbolt; if it be long in forcing out its way,
it is simply a flash of lightning[1]. By the latter the cloud is
simply rent, by the former it is shattered. Thunder is pro-
1. fulmen and
fulgetrum;
Seneca makes a similar distinction between fulmen and fulguratio: "Fulguratio est late ignis explicitus; fulmen est coactus ignis ot impetu
jactus." Nat. Quæst. lib. ii. cap. 16. p. 706.
2.