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1pleasanton - Blue and SunLights - Their Influence Upon Life, Disease &C.

The document discusses the influence of the blue color of the sky and sunlight on the development of animal and plant life, as well as its potential effects on health and disease. It presents the author's experiments and observations conducted between 1861 and 1876, aiming to attract scientific interest in the subject. The preface emphasizes the importance of understanding natural forces and proposes that variations in temperature and seasons may be influenced by atmospheric conditions rather than solely solar effects.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
525 views240 pages

1pleasanton - Blue and SunLights - Their Influence Upon Life, Disease &C.

The document discusses the influence of the blue color of the sky and sunlight on the development of animal and plant life, as well as its potential effects on health and disease. It presents the author's experiments and observations conducted between 1861 and 1876, aiming to attract scientific interest in the subject. The preface emphasizes the importance of understanding natural forces and proposes that variations in temperature and seasons may be influenced by atmospheric conditions rather than solely solar effects.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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B

.
r
I
9

o
A
THE

INFLUENCE
OF THE

BLUE EAT OF THE SUNLIGHT


AND OF THE

BLUE COLOUR OF THE SKY,


IN DEVELOPING ANIMAL AND VEGETABLE LIFE;
IN ARRESTING DISEASE, AND IN RESTORING HEALTH IN ACUTE AND
CHRONIC DISORDERS TO HUMAN AND DOMESTIC ANIMALS,

A3 ILLTJSTKATED BT TUB EXPERIMENTS OP

GEN. A. J. PLEASONTON, AND OTHERS,


Between the years 1861 and 1876.

Airessefl to lie PiMelpMa Society for Promoting Agriculture,

"Error may be tolerated, when reason is left


free to combat itS'Tttomas Jefferson,
u
Ifthii tluory be true, it upsets all other theories." Richmond Whig.

PHILADELPHIA:
CLAXTON. REMSEN A HAFFELFINGER. PUBLISHERS.
F.ntercd according to Act of Congress in the year 1876,
Cv GEN. AUGUSTUS J. PLEASONTON,
In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C.
PREFACE.

HAVING "been ranch interested In the phenomena of the physics of the earth,
the author, in offering to his readers a second edition of his work, "On the
Influence of the Blue Color of the Sky in Developing Animal and Vegetable

Life," may be indulged in his introduction into this preface of some views that
his observations have led him to entertain relative to the variations of tempera-

ture, and changes of our seasons, which are in harmony with the subjects treated
by him in this work.

The first edition of the following memoir was printed for distribution
among scientific and literary institutions, and among persons of culture, for the
purpose of attracting the attention of those for whom it was intended, to the
subjects of which it treats. It was hoped that its publication would invite
investigation into the nature, composition, and influences of those great forces
which, in the poverty of our language, we call imponderables, that is to say, not
to be weighed in the balance, and consequently never to be found wanting.
This expectation is likely to be realized, if we may judge from the general
interest that appears to be taken in the memoir, which has been manifested in
the numerous applications that have been made to the author, from various
parts of our country, for copies of it. The edition has now been distributed,

yet so many persons who have applied for copies of the memoir are still without
it, that it has been deemed advisable to issue another edition.

If, by a course of study, and observation of the great forces of nature, as

they are exhibited, not in the laboratory, upon the minutest scale, but in those
grand operations by which physical changes are at every moment developed
before our eyes,we can succeed in penetrating the mysteries of their origin,
of their evolution, of their application, and of their reciprocal conversions into

each other, we shall become indeed wise in our generation, and mankind in the
future will be able to rejoice in a development never yet reached in any pre-

ceding age.
By way of Illustration of this idea, we may suggest that this planet it

surrounded, at variable altitudes above its surface, by a canopy of cold, increas-

ing in intensity with its distance above the earth. Now, we may ask, what
produces the changes of our seasons? We answer, simply the descent or ascent
of columns of this canopy of cold I

It has been observed, for any years, that the first frost of the autumn
appears in Texas or Louisiana, or some other of the Gulf States, while at tho
amo time no frost is observable In other localities situated much farther to tho
north tho commonly supposed place of departure of our winters. This frost,

therefore,must come from tho descent of tho cold of the higher atmosphere
immediately over tho locality where It prevails. Following the valley of the
Mississippi and those of Its tributaries, frost appears successively in various
places along those routes, till it reaches the vallies of tho Northern Lakes,

running along which It Is felt In Northern New York and the New England
States, and subsequently In the Middle and Southern Atlantic States. It does
not reach the vicinity of Philadelphia until some fifteen or twenty days after
it has shown Itself on the Gulf of Mexico. Now would It not seem that tho
Influences producing this frost are telluric, and not exclusively solar, as hitherto

they have been supposed to be*

We know that in the ocean there are columns of fresh water which differ in

temperature from the surrounding se^ "water, and with which they do not
mingle for a long time. So is it for a hundred or more miles at sea, distant from
the mouths of the great rivers Amazon, Orinoco, Mississippi, etc., whose fresh
waters do not mix with the waters surrounding them, owing to tho difference
salt

of their densities. In like manner the cold air of the upper atmosphere descends
In columns of various extent over particular localities, to vary the temperature

and change tho seasons, on tho surface of our earth, without mixing with tho
wanner and more expanded air beneath, which it displaces.

Tho spring and summer Reasons are produced by Increased radiations from
the interior heat of the earth, forcing upwards tho dense cold of winter, whose
particles are so close together as to prevent tho intrusion among them of the
expanded warm air in its ascent. Much of the heat of tho lower atmosphere is
also developed in the conversion of vapor into clouds by condensation from cold.

It Is In this way that our seasons arc changed. Let our savans discover
how and why these effects ore produced. Until they do, it may bo suggested
that they are owing to electrical atmospherical disturbances in tho upper atmos-

phere, repelling the negative electricity of those regions, and forcing the cold
iii

air to the surface of the earth, where It wanner and more rarefied
displaces the
and expanded air, and condenses in rain, snow and hail, the vapors it contains,
driving the displaced warmer air to the tropics, and tho heat from the tropics
attracted to the condensed vapor in the clouds in tho temperate zones to liquefy
them in rain, producing winter.

In the opposite manner tho warm seasons of spring and summer are pro-

duced by the positive electricity of the surfaco-air of tho earth becoming warmed
by increased radiation of heat from the interior of tho earth, repelling itself,

and displacing the upper strata of cold air, till by induction of electricity tho

temperature of the season is established-

Geologists toll us that in the early existence of this planet, the greater part
of the earth's surface was covered with ice, and that this period of time is called

the Glacial Period.

Let us imagine that the igneous action of tho elementary substances of tho
interior of the earth's crust, just before that period,might have been so intense
as by the radiation of its heat to the surface of the earth to rarefy the lower

atmosphere, converting into vapor the water it contained, and forcing it upward
till the whole surface of the earth was almost incandescent.

To canopy of cold repelled by its own negative


restore tho equilibrium, tho

electricity from above, which has been increased by the currents of polar elec-
tricity, largely developed by this central and interior igneous action and
attracted by tho positive electricity in the heated atmosphere below descended
to the surface of the earth, condensing the vapors of the atmosphere into rain,
and afterwards and snow, driving the remainder of the wanner air
into hail

of what we now, tho temperate zones, to the tropics, and covering the
call,

surfaces of the earth, from tho poles to the tropics, with a dense mantle of ice,

freezing the rivers, bays, and seas of those latitudes. The internal central fires
thus concentrated, in due season increased their radiation of heat, and melted
the superjacent ice, which, breaking from the sides of glaciers in large masses,
slid and rolled to the ocean, there becoming icebergs, and carrying with them

those immense boulders which, torn from tho mountain sides by the adhesion
of the ice, have left the traces of their furrows on the slopes of the mountains,
and have marked their courses
till, by the melting of the bergs, they have

been dropped in the ocean, which subsequently, by its subsidence, have left
them dry on the land. If such was the cause of the glacial period, it would
require no great stretch of fancy to comprehend the deluge of Deucalion or
that of our great ancestor Noah, when the rain descended for forty daya ;
iv

occasioned no doubt by a lesser descent of the canopy of cold (limiting Its

effect to the condensation of the vapors of the atmosphere into rain) than
that which produced the glacial period.

If ouch effects follow from such causes, we need not be at a loss to account
for the changes of our seasons, or the daily variations of temperature in every

locality.

This edition of our memoir has been printed upon tinted paper with blue
ink, as an experiment, in an attempt to relieve the eyes of the reader from the
great glare, occasioned by the reflection of gas light at night from the white
paper usually employed in tho printing of books. If it shall succeed we may
hope to see the tinted paper introduced for all book* and periodicals.

PHILADELPHIA, July 29, 187L


PREFACE TO THE LAST EDITION.

IN the previous " On


editions of my memoir the Influence of the Blue Colour
of the Sky in Developing Animal and Vegetable Life," an erroneous impres-
sion has been created by the ambiguity of the language employed in describing
the results of my
experiments with light. From the tints reflected from the
outside of the coloured glass, upon certain localities in my terraced garden, I
fancied that the glass itself was of a violet tint, and so attributed the remarkable
results within the grapery to violet rays. Upon my attention having been
called to this apparent discrepancy, I investigated the matter, and found that the
glass was of a dark mazarine blue owing its colour to a preparation of cobalt,
which had been fused with the materials composing the glass during its manu-
facture and that the reflection of the violet ray on the outside was due to the

irregular surface of the glass itself upon which the light of the firmament, as
well as of the sunlight had fallen, and had been thus reflected. Whatever effect

r::iybe produced by the use of violet coloured glass is to be attributed to the


proportion of the blue ray which enters into the composition of the violet rays of
light,and not to those composite rays themselves.
This edition, begun in the summer of the year 1873, has been prepared at
intervals snatched from the occupations of a busy life, which will account "for

ruy incoherences that may appear in the subjects as they are treated herein.
The following memoir was read by GET?. A. J. PLEASONTON.
before the Philadelphia Society for Promoting Agriculture, on

Wednesday, the 3d of May, 1871, at their room, S. W. corner


of 9th and Walnut Streets, in the City of Philadelphia, npon
the following request :

1309 WALNUT ST., April 27th, 1871.


MR DEAR GENERAL:
Will it suit you, and will you do us the favor to explain your

process of using glass in improving stock to the Philadelphia So-


ciety for Promoting Agriculture, on Wednesday next, the 3d of
May, at eleven o'clock, A.M., at their Boom, S. W. corner of Ninth
and Walnut Streets, (entrance on Ninth street) ? You were kind
enough to express to me. in conversation, your willingness to give
us the result of your experiments.
Yours, very truly,
W. H. DRAYTQN,
President*
GENERAL PLEASONTCH.
Mr, President and Gentlemen of The Philadelphia Society for

Promoting Agriculture.

At the request of my old friend and your respected Presi-


dent, J have attended your meeting this morning to impart to
you the results of certain experiments that I have made within
the last ten years in attempts to utilize the blue color of the
sky in the development of vegetable and animal life.
I may premise that for a long time I have thought that the
blue color of the sky, so permanent and so all-pervading, and
yet so varying in intensity of color, according to season and
latitude, must have some abiding relation and intimate con-
nection with the living organisms on this planet.

Deeply impressed with this idea, in the autumn of the year


1860, I commenced the erection of a cold grapery on my farm
in the western part of this city. I remembered that while a
student of chemistry I was taught that in the analysis of the
ray of the sun by the prism, in the year 1666, by Sir Isaac New-
ton, he had resolved it into the seven primary rays, viz red,:

orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet, and had disco-
vered that these elementary rays had different indices of refrac-
tion ; that for the red ray at one side of the solar spectrum being
the least, while that of the violet at the opposite side thereof was
the greatest, from which he deduced his celebrated doctrine
of the different refrangibility of the rays of light ; and further, that
Sir John Ilerschel in his subsequent investigation of the pro-
perties of light had shown that the chemical power of the solar
ray is greatest in the blue rays, which give the least light of any of
the luminous prismatic radiations, but the largest quantity of so-
lar heat, and that later experiments established the fact of the
stimulating influence of the blue rays upon vegetation. Having
concluded to make a practical application of the properties of
the blue and violet rays of light just referred to in stimulating ve-
getable life, I began to inquire in every accessible direction if
this stimulating quality of the blue or violet
ray had ever re-
ceived any practical useful application. My
inquiries developed
the facts that various experiments had been made in
England
and on the European continent with glass colored with j*ach of
the several primary rajs, but that they were so unsatisfactory
in their results that nothing useful came of them so far as any
improvement in the process of developing vegetation was con-
cerned. Finding no beaten track, I was left to grope my way
as best I could under the guidance of the violet ray alone.
rapery was finished in March, 1861. Its dimensions were,
t long, 26 feet wide, 16 feet high at the ridge, with a dou-

ble-pitched roof. It was built at the foot of a terraced garden, in


the direction of N. E. by E. to S. W. by "W. On three'sides of it
there was a border 12 feet wide, and on the fourth or N. E. by
E. side the border was only five feet wide, being a walk of the
garden. The borders inside and outside were excavated 3 feet
6 inches deep, and were filled up with the usual nutritive mat-
ter, carefully prepared for growing vines. I do not think they
differed essentially from thousands of other borders which
have been made in many parts of the world. The first ques-
tion to be solved on the completion of the frame of the
grapery, was the proportion of blue or violet glass to be used
on the roof. Should too much be used, it would reduce the
temperature too much, and cause a failure of the experiment;
if too little, it would not afford a fair test. At a venture I
adopted every eighth row of glass on the roof to be violet
colored, alternating the rows on opposite sides of the roof, so
that the sun in its daily course should cast a beam of violet
light on every leaf in the grapery. Cuttings of vines of some
twenty varieties of grapes, each one year old, of the thickness
of a pipe-stem, and cut close to the pots containing them, were
planted in the borders inside and outside of the grapery, in
the early part of April, 1861. Soon after being planted the
growth of the vines began. Those on the outside were
trained through earthen
pipes in the walls to the inside,
and
icy grew they were tied up to the wires like those which
had been planted within. Very soon the vines began to at-
tract great notice of all who saw them from the rapid growth
\vere making. Every day disclosed some new extension,
and tin- :irdencr was kept busy in tying up the new wood
which the day before he had not observed. In a few weeks
after the vines had been planted, the walls and inside of the
roof were closely covered with the most luxurious and healthy
development of foliage and wood.
In the early part of September, 1861, Mr. Robert Buist, Sr.,
a noted seedsman and distinguished horticulturist from whom
I had procured the vines, naving heard of their wonderful
growth, visited the grapery. On entering it he seemed to be
lost in amazement atwhat he saw; after examining it very care-
fully, turning to me, he said, "General! I Lave born cultivating
plants and vines of various kinds for the last forty years; I have
seen some of the best vineries and conservatories in England and
Scotland, but I have never seen anything like this growth."
He then measured some of the vines and found them forty-
five feet in length, and an inch in diameter at the distance of
one foot above the ground and these dimensions were the
;

growth of only five months ! He then remarked, " I visited


last week a new grapery near Darby, the vines in which I fur-
nished at the same time I did yours they were of the same
;

varieties, of like age and size, when they were planted as yours ;

they were planted at the same time with yours. When I saw
them last week, they were puny spindling plants not more
than five feet long, and scarcely increased in diameter since
they were planted and "
yet they have had the best possible
care and attendance !

The vines continued healthy and to grow, making an abun-


dance of young wood during the remainder of the season of
1861.

In March of 1862 they were started to grow, having been


pruned and cleaned in January of that year. The growth in
this second season was, if anything, more remarkable than it
had been in the previous year. Besides the formation of new
wood and the display of the most luxuiriant foliage, there was
a wonderful number of bunches of grapes, which soon assumed
the most remarkable proportions the bunches being of extra-
ordinary magnitude, and the grapes of unusual size and de-
velopment.
In September of 1862 the same gentleman Mr. Robert Buist,
Sr., who had visited the grapery the year before came again
this time accompa nied by his foreman. The grapes were then
beginning to color and to ripen rapidly. On entering the grapery,
astonished at the wonderful display of foliage and fruit which it
presented, he stood for a while in silent amazement he then
;

slowly walked around the grapery several times, critically ex-


amining its wonders when taking from his pocket paper and
;

pencil, he noted on the paper each bunch of grapes, and esti-


mated its weight, after which aggregating the whole, he came to
me and said, " General do you know that you have 1200 pounds
!

of grapes in this grapery ?" On my saying that I had no idea


of the quantity it contained, he continued, " you have indeed
that weight of fruit, but I would not dare to publish it, for no
8

one would believe me." "We may well conceive of his aston-
ishment at this product when we are reminded that in grape-
growing countries where grapes have heen grown for centu-
that a period of time of from five to six years will elapse
e a single hunch of grapes can ho produced from a young
vino while hefore him in the second year of the growth of
vines which he himself had furnished only seventeen months
before, he saw this remarkable yield of the finest and choicest
varieties of grapes. He might well say that an account of it
would be incredible.
During the next season (18G3) the vines again fruited and
matured a crop of grapes estimated by comparison with the
yield of the previous year to weigh about two tons the vines
;

were perfectly healthy and free from the usual maladies which
ail'ect the grape. By this time the grapery and its products
had become partially known among cultivators, who said that
such excessive crops would exhaust the vines, and that the
following year there would be no fruit, as it was well known
that all plants required rest after yielding large crops notwith-
;

standing, new wood was formed this year for the next year's
crop, which turned out to be quite as large as it had been in
the season of 1863, and so on year by year the vines have con-
tinued to bear large crops of fine fruit without intermission
for the last nine years. They are now healthy and strong,
and as yet show no signs of decrepitude or exhaustion.
The success of the grapery induced me to make an experi-
ment with animal life. In the autumn of 1869 I built a pig-
gery and introduced into the roof and three sides of it violet-
colored and white glass in equal proportions half of each
kind. Separating a recent litter of Chester county pigs into
two parties, I placed three sows and one barrow pig in the
ordinary pen, and three other sows and one other barrow pig
in the pen under the violet glass. The pigs were all about
two months old. The weight of the pigs was as follows, viz :

Under the violet glass, No. 1 sow, 42 Ibs., No. 2, a barrow pig,
!>s., No. 3, a sow, 38 Ibs., No. 4, a sow 42, Ibs., their ag-
.

ate weight 167 Ibs. The weight of the others in the


uon pen was as follows, viz No. 1., a sow, 50 Ibs., No. 2,
:

a BOW, 48 Ihs., No. 3, a harrow big, 59 Ibs., No. 4, a sow, 46


Ibs; their aggregate weight was 203 Ibs. It will be observed
that each of the pigs under the violet glass was lighter in
:it than the
lightest in weight pig of those under the sun-
light alone in the common pen. The two sets of pigs were
treated exactly alike ; fed with the same kinds of food at
equal intervals of time, and with equal quantities by measure
at each meal, and were attended by the same man. Tln v i

were put in the pens on the 3d day of November, 1869, anil


kept there until the 4th day of March, 1870, when they were
weighed again. By some misconception of my orders, the
separate weight of each pig was not had. The aggregate
weight of the three sows under the violet light on the 3d of
November, 1869, was 122 Ibs; on the 4th of March, 1870, it
was 520 Ibs., increase 398 Ibs.
The aggregate weight of the three sows in the old pens on
the 3d of November, 1869, was 144 Ibs., and on the 4th of
March, 1870, it was 530 Ibs., increase 386 Ibs., or 12 Ibs. less
than those under the violet glass had gained.
The weight of the barrow pig in the common pen on the
3d of November, 1869, was 59 Ibs., and on the 4th of March,
1870, it was 210 Ibs., increase 151 Ibs. The weight of the
barrow pig under the violet light, on the 3d of November,
1869, was 45J Ibs., and on the 4th of March, 1870, it was 170
Ibs., increase 124J Ibs. The large increase of the weight of
the barrow pig in the common pen is to be attributed to his
superior size and weight on being put in the same common
pen with the three sows, and which enabled him to seize upon
and appropriate to himself more than his share of the com-
mon food.

If the barrow pig under the violet light had increased at


the rate of increase of the barrow pig in the common pen, his
weight on the 4th March, 1870, would have been only 161,^,
Ibs. instead of his actual weight of 170 Ibs. showing his rate
of increase of weight to have been 8^ Ibs. more than that of
the other barrow pig.

If the barrow pig under the sunshine in the common pen


had increased at the rate of increase of the barrow pig under
the violet glass, his weight on the 4th of March, 1870, should
have been 224$, Ibs. instead of 210 Ibs., his actual weight at
that date.

By these comparisons it seems obvious that the influence of


the violet-colored glass was very marked, although it must be
borne in mind that owing to the great declination of the sun
during the period of the experiment and the consequent com-
parative feebleness of the force of the actinic or chemical rays
of the blue sky at that time, the effect was not so great as it
would have been at a later period of the season but the time
;
10

of the experiment was selected for that very reason. The


animals were not fed to produce fat or increase of size, but
simply to ascertain, if practicable, whether by the ordinary
mode of feeding usual on farms in this country, the develop-
ment of stock could be hastened by exposing them in pens to
mibined influence of sunlight and the transmitted rays
of the blue sky.

My next experiment was with an Alderney bull calf born on


-'tliof January, 1870; at its birth it was so puny and fee-
ble that the man who attends upon my stock, a very expe-
rienced hand, told me that it could not live. I directed him
to put it in one of the pens under the violet glass. It was done.
In -4 hours a v-ry sensible change had occurred in the animal.
It had arisen on its feet, walked about the pen, took its food
freely by the linger, and manifested great vivacity. In a few-
days its feeble condition had entirely disappeared. It began
to grow, and its development was marvelous. On the 31st
li, 1870, 2 months and 5 days after its birth, its rapid
growth was so apparent, that as its hind quarter was then
growing, I told my son to measure its height, and to note
down in writing the height of the hind quarter, and the time
of measurement which he did. On the 20th of the follow-
X
TO), just fifty days afterwards, .my son again mea-
>

1
!;:y
! the hind quarter, and found that in that time it bad
v >x inches in height, rarrji'mij
gained ex"<'f('/
.
its lateral development
with Believing the question solved, the calf was turned into
it.

the barn-yard, and when mingling with the cows he manifested


every symptom of full masculine vigor, though at the time he
was only four months old. Since the 1st of April of this year,
when he was just 14 months old, he has been kept with my
j,
and has fulfilled every expectation that I had
formed of him. lie is now one of the best developed animals
that can be found any where.
Tip 'lemon, are the experiments about which your
M excited. If by the combination of sunlight
and blue, light from the sky, you can mature quadrupeds in
twelve months with no greater supply of food than would be
lor an immature animal in the same period, you can
scan Hie immeasurable value of this discovery
to an agricultural people. You would no longer have to wait
live r the
maturity of a colt; and all your animals
could be produced in the greatest abundance and variety. A
prominent member of the bar a short time since told me that
his sister, who is a widow of a late distinguished general in
11

the army, had applied blue light to the rearing of poultry,


with the most remarkable success, after having heard of my
experiments. In regard to the human family, its influence
would be wide spread you could not only in the temperate
regions produce the early maturity of the tropics, but you
could invigorate the constitutions of invalids, and develop in
the young, a generation, physically and intellectually, which
might become a marvel to mankind. Architects would be
required to so arrange the introduction of these mixed rays of
light into our houses, that the occupants might derive the
greatest benefit from their influence. Mankind will then not
only be able to live fast, but they can live well and also live
&
lone:.

Let us attempt an explanation of this phenomenon. It is


well known that differences of temperature evolve electricity,
as do also evaporation, pressure suddenly produced or suddenly
removed, in which may be comprised a blow or stroke, as, for
instance, from the horseshoe in the rapid motion of a horse on
a stone in the pavement, striking fire, which is kindled by the
electricity evolved in the impact, or, again, from the collision
of two silicious stones in which there is no iron, is electricity
produced.
Friction even of two pieces of dried wood excites combus-
tion by the evolution of hydrogen gas which bursts into flame
when brought into contact with the opposite electricity evolved
by the heat. Chrystallization, the freezing of water, the
melting of ice or snow every act of combination in respira-
tion, every movement and contraction of organic tissues, and,
indeed, every change in the form of matter evolve electricity,
which in turn contributes to form new modifications of the
matter which has yielded it.
The diamond, about whose origin so much mystery lias
always existed, it is likely, is the product of the decomposition
of carbonic acid gas in .the higher atmosphere by electricity,
liberating the oxygen gas, converting it into ozone, fusing the
carbon, and "by the intense cold there prevailing, which is of
opposite electricity, chrystallizing the fused carbon, which is
precipitated by its gravity to the earth.
To the repellent affinity of electricity are we indebted for
the expansive force of steam whose power wields the mighty
trip hammer, propels the ship through the ocean, and draws
the train over the land and to the opposite electricities of the
heated steam and the cold water introduced into the boiler to
12

it, do we owe those


replenish terrible explosions in steam
boilerswhose prevention has hitherto defied human skill.
But the most interesting application of electricity, ig in
nature's development of vegetation. Let us illustrate it :

Seed perfectly dried, but still retaining the vital principle,


like the seed of wheat preserved tor thousands of years in
mummy cases in the catacombs of Egypt, if planted in a soil
of the richest alluvial deposits, also thoroughly dried, will not
germinate. Why? Let us examine. The alluvial soil is
composed of the debris of hills and mountains containing an
extensive variety of metallic and metalloid compounds min-
gled with the remains of vegetable and animal matter in a
state of great comminution, washed by the rains and carried
by freshets into the depressions of the surface of the earth.
o various elements of the soil have different electrical
attributes. In a perfectly dry state no electrical action will
occur among them, but let the rain, bringing with it ammonia
and carbonic aeid, in however minute quantities, from the
upper atmosphere, fall upon this alluvial soil, so as to moisten
its mass within the influence of
light, heat, and air, and plant,
your seed within it, and what will you observe ? Rapid germi-
nation of the seed. Why? The slightly acidulated, or it may
be alkaline water of the rain has formed the medium to excite
galvanic currents of electricity in the heterogeneous matter of
Alluvial soil the vitality of the seed is developed and
able life is the result. Hence vegetable life owes its
to electricity. Herein consists the secret of success-
ful agriculture. If you can maintain the currents of electri-
city at the roots of plants by supplying the acidulated or
alkaline moisture to excite them during droughts, you will
e the most abundant and unvarying crops. To do this,
your soil should be composed of the m<>M varied elements,
mineral, earthy, alkaline, vegetable, and animal matter in a
state of greatly comminuted decomposition.

The poverty of soils arises from the homogeneous character


of their composition. A soil altogether clayey, or composed of
fiilici' I. or the <t<l>ris of limestone, or of alkaline sub-
irily be barren for the want
of electrical exeitement, which no one of the said elements
will ;
; but commingle them all with the addition of
able and animal matter, and you will form a
soil which will amply reward the toil of the husbandman.

What do you suppose lias produced the giant trees of Call-


13

forma? Electricity! Since the west coast of America has


been known to Europeans, and perhaps for centuries be-
fore, it has been subjortvd to the most devastating earth-
quakes. From the Straits of M:i Lallan to the Arctic
Ocean, traces of volcanic action are everywhere visible. Its
mountains have been upheaved, broken, torn asunder, and
sometimes, like Ossa upon Pelion, one has been superimposed
on another.
All volcanic countries are noted in the temperate regions,
where they produce anything, for the exuberance of their
vegetable productions. Etna has been famous for its large
Chestnut trees, which have given a name Catania to the town
near its base.

The mineral richness of California has doubtless, by the


debris of mountains, carried into the valleys where grow
its
these large trees, furnished an immense deposite of various
matter which, under the favorable circumstances of the locali-
ties, have maintained for ages a healthful electrical excitement
resulting through centuries of undisturbed growth in these
vegetable wonders.
Who there that has not been struck with admiration in
is

looking upon the firmament, when the atmosphere was clear-


est, and was unclouded by the slightest vapor, when, in the
brightness of sunlight, it would put on its livery of blue, and
display its resplendent and glorious beauties? How many
myriads of mankind, in all ages, have gazed upon this mag-
nificent arch, of what men call "sky;" and how few have ever
asked the question, Why is the sky blue? and why should its

intensity of blue vary in different latitudes, and in different


seasons ?

HUMBOLDT said he had never seen its blue so intense as in


the tropics and under the equator. Arctic navigators have also
declared, that in the arctic regions the intensity of the blue
color of the sky was amazing. Here are two extremes of lati-
tude displaying the same effect; and in our own temperate re-
many have observed a variation in the intensity of the
lue of the sky, in different seasons, extending from the early
fion
spring until the close of autumn, but never equaling in depth
of color what is represented of it, eithei in the tropics or in
the arctic or antarctic regions.

On no part of our planet is the development of vegetable


life so grand, so various, so excessive and so constant as in the
14

tropics and in the equatorial regions. While this wonderful


disphiv of vegetation is observed in these regions, the exuber-
ance of animal life and the rapid growth of vegetable life in
:.ivtic regions are said to be unequaled in any other part
of our world. Let us see if these results in the two natural
kin_ i

ay not be attributed largely to the same cause.


Recent discoveries have shown that the Zodiacal light over
the equator and the aurorse boreal is and australis are evolu-
f electricity. In the arctic regions there is little doubt
that the auroras are constantly evolved, though they are not
alwavs visible. They have been seen to emerge from the sur-
f the ocean, at short distances from the observers, and
ding into the upper regions of the atmosphere, to present
ations of brilliant light, shooting as it were to
luatorial regions, in rapid flashes, for which they have-
been noted wherever observed.
In the equatorial regions it is well known that at certain
periods of the year the accumulation of electricity in the upper
-phere is so excessive, that the earth is shaken with thun-
derbolts, and the air illuminated by day as well as night with
constant sheets of electric flame, as they rush with frightful
velocity to their great centre of attraction, the earth and ocean
in those regions. Whence does this electricity come, and
where does it go ?
If we may be permitted to form a conjecture, we might
'st that the sixty odd primary elements which enter into
omposition of the crust of our planet such as carbon,,
sulphur, phosphorus, oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen, the metals,,
M'talloids. etc. having been endowed by the Creator with
rical qualities and conditions when they were
.!>!(! tog.-ther in this planet, evolved in the interior there-
of ell light, heat, and magnetism in certain or variable
.

quali 1
quantities. The-e constitute the forces which
in all probability cause the rotation of the earth upon its axis,
volution around the sun. The electricity of
the interior of the earth is supposed to be positive electricity
which, a- -oon as evolved there, would be repelled according
to tl.' electricity of the same character repelling i

towani !es of the earth, and escaping there, would


1'V the
electricity which surrounds the
-

would display itself by night as aurora-,


1

confiscating toward the equator, to !>< there attracted by the


rial regions, and
descending to the earth, to be
15

again absorbed by it, for further use. This escape of polar


electricity into the upper atmosphere, and forming at night
the aurorse, when visible, and by day the blue firmament or
sky, will account for the intensity of the blue color of the sky
both in the arctic regions and the equatorial regions.
This positive electricity of the central interior of the earth,
repelling itself towards the poles, and from there into the at-
mosphere through the arctic and antarctic oceans, and attracted
there by the negative electricity of the upper atmosphere,
forms, by the union of the two electricities, the auroras, caus-
ing those crackling detonations heard during the prevalence
of the most brilliant auroras, in high latitudes and evolving
light, which, seen through the vaporous atmosphere of those
latitudes, is displayed by refractions of its rays in the lumin-
ous corruscations of varying tints as the rays of the sun or
moon are converted into the tints of the rainbow.
The negative electricity of those frigid regions attracted to
the equator through the upper atmosphere is there concen-
trated in enormous quantities, which are conducted and dis-
charged into the earth or ocean in the tropics, by the incessant
fall of water in rain during the rainy seasons, every drop of
water being a conductor of electricity, and every leaf of vege-
tation assisting in the conduct and distribution of this wonder-
ful force into the earth.

As under certain circumstances electricity becomes magnet-


ism, and this again is converted into electricity, we can com-
prehend how the auroral rays in some instances, following the
law of dia-magnetism, are attracted in the northern hemisphere
towards the southwest magnetic currents flowing from east
to west in opposition to the earth's motion from west to east;
hence in the auroras you have rays shooting to the zenith over
the equator, and others moving southwest, and others again
due west.
The simultaneous appearance of auroras frequently observed
in opposite hemispheres in corresponding latitudes would go
to show their origin from a common impulse in the central in-
terior repelling them towards the poles from under the equator.

"We now come to a presumed explanation of one of the rea-


sons for the blue color of the sky.
The sun's ray, or what is called the white light of the sun,
was resolved by means of a glass prism, by Sir ISAAC NEWTON,
into the seven primary rays of light, viz., red, blue, violet, etc.,
16

and their combination again produced the white light- show-


ing 1
analytically of what the sun's light
1

was compos
It was announced in England about the beginning of this

century, that the red ray of light was heating, the yellow ray
Laminating,
. nnd // blue ray in a remarkable degree stimulated
the d< vegetable life.

From this discovery we can imagine the immense influence


which the intensely blue color of the sky in the equatorial
:;d always has had in conjunction with the sun's

liijht, and the heat and moisture of those regions, upon


the development there of vegetable life.
This intensely blue color of the sky in the arctic regions
may also serve to explain the exuberance of animal life there.
It being known that the deeper water of the arctic ocean is
much wanner than the surface water which is often frozen,
furnishes abundant food for its inhabitants. The increased
temperature of this deep water is probably derived from radi-
ation of heat from the interior of the earth under it as all
.ions are more or less volcanic witness Iceland, Jean ;

Spitsbergen, etc. The laws of animal and vegetable


life 1
-ry analogous, what would stimulate one would
probably have a similar effect upon the other.

In the arctic waters you have warmth, food, light and elec-
tric!; ing through the waters into the air, and all stimu-
lat:

Whoever has noticed the color of the electric spark in at-


iieric air, from an
electrical machine, will readily
recog-
it.-> likeness of color to the blue color of the sky.
If expel-in,' ;ld be instituted to ascertain the electri-
cal coiidiiion of tlie .>ky, as associated in'/ It /Av blue color, and
they
shon >15sh the .onneetion, the result would
\B\ blessing- 'iiferred upon
:ii>d. of vitality could be infused into the
Wh;.- ii

it ure
invalid, and the decrepit octogena-
rian! How ra). idly might the various races of our don
anii: multiplied, and how much might their individual
proportions be enlar;.
One of the most beautiful illustrations of the mighty influ-
ence of the blue color of the sky upon vegetation, is to be
d in the ..lor of the leaves of
plants. It is known
that blue and yellow when mixed produce green, which ia
17

darker when the blue is in excess over the yellow, and the re
verse when the yellow predominates. Now let us observe the
process of germination. Seeds are planted in the soil at first
a white worm-like thread at the lo\ver part of the seed appears;
it is white, and contains all the primary rays of light it is the
;

root of the plant, and remaining under the soil continues white.
At the upper end of the seed also appears a white swelling,
which continues to grow upward till it approaches the surface
of the soil, when a change occurs in its color. This is the leaf;
it absorbs yellow from the soil which is brown (composed of

yellow and black), and as it comes within the influence of the


blue sky, it absorbs from it the blue light, which mixing with
the yellow already absorbed, produces at first a yellowish-green,
which finally assumes the deeper tinge of green that is natural
to the plant. The plant blossoms, forms its seeds and seed-
vessels, and having fulfilled its mission, the blue color of the
leaves is eliminated, the leaves become yellow, and absorbing
the carbon of the plant, they change their color to brown the ;

sap-vessels of the leaves are choked by the carbon ; the leaves


are dead and fall to the ground. Thus the blue *ray is the
symbol of vitality the yellow ray that of decay and death.
Robert Hunt, in his Researches on Light, says " that the
rays of greatest refrangibility, viz., the violet, &c., favor dis-
oxygenation, but the rays of least refrangibility, viz., red,
orange, &c., favor oxygenation."
" The of Seunebier show that the most refran-
experiments
of the solar rays, viz., the violet, are the most active in
etermining the decomposition of carbonic acid gas by plants."
fible

These experiments have been confirmed by Mr. Robert


"
Hunt, who says, that experiments have been made with ab-
sorbent media, and the light which has been carefully ana-
lyzed, permeating under the influence of blue light, in every
instance oxygen gas has been collected, but not any under the
* * It is
energetic action of yellow or red light. only the green
parts of plants which absorb carbonic acid: the flowers absorb
oxygen gas. Plants grow in soils composed of divers mate-
rials, and they derive from these by the soluble powers of
water, which is taken up by the roots, and by mechanical
forces carried over every part, carbonic acid, carbonates
and organic matters containing carbon. Evaporation is con-
tinually going on, and this water escapes freely from the leaves
during the night when the functions of the vegetable, like
those of the animal world, are at rest, and carries with it car-
bonic acid. Water and carbonic acid are sucked up by ca-
18

pillary attraction, and both evaporate from the exterir part of


fhe leaves."
" There is no reversion of the processes which are necessary
to support the life of a plant. The same functions are ope-
rating in the same way by day and by night, but differing
greatly in degree. During the hours of sunshine the whole
of the carbonic acid absorbed by the leaves or taken up with
water by the roots is decomposed, all the functions of the
plant are excited, the processes of inhalation and exhalation
are quickened, and the plant pours out to the atmosphere
streams of pure oxygen at the same time as it removes a large
quantity of deleterious carbonic acid from it. In the shade
the exciting power being lessened, these operations arc slower,
and in the dark they are very nearly, but certainly not quite,
suspended."
"Although a blue glass or fluid may appear to absorb all
the rays except the most refrangible ones, which have usually
been considered as the least calorific of the solar rays; yet it is
certain that some principle, has permeated the glass or fluid which
has a very decided and thermic influence. Numerous experi-
ments have been tried with the seeds of mignonette, many
varieties of the flowering pea, the common parsley, and cresses'
under the various tints of glass with all of them the seeds
have germinated, but except under the blue glass these plants
have all been marked by the extraordinary length to which
the stems of the cotyledons have grown, and by the entire ab-
sence of t/'C primula no true leaves forming, the cotyledons
soon perish and the plant dies; uinlcr the blue glass alone has
the process gone on healthfully to the end."
"The changes whi'-h take place in the seed during the pro-
of germination have been investigated by Saussure :
consumed and carbonic arid is evolved and the
;

volume of the latter is exactly equal to the volume of the


former. The grain weighs less after germination than it did
lie loss of weight
varying from one-third to one-fifth.
This loss of course depends on the combination of its carbon
with the oxygen absorbed, which is evolved as carbonic acid."
"K"r the di-eovery that oxygen gas is exhaled from the
plants during the daytime. \ve are indebted to Dr.
tley; and Seiinebier first pointed out that carbonic acid
,'iired for the d ment of the oxygen in this pro-
M. Theodore <! ire and De Candolle
fully estab-
this fart."

The experiments of Seunebier show that the most refrangi-


19

ble of the solar rays, viz., the violet, are the most active in deter-
mining the decomposition of carbonic acid by plants.
knowledge. We know that all the
" We have now certain
carbon which forms the masses of the magnificent trees of the
forests and of the herbs of the fields has been supplied from
the atmosphere, to which it has been given by the functions
of animal life and the necessities of animal existence. Man
and the whole of the animal kingdom require and take from
the atmosphere its oxygen for their support. It is this which
maintains the spark of life, and the product of this combustion
is carbonic acid, which is thrown off as waste material, and
which deteriorates the air. The vegetable kingdom, however,
drinks this noxious vapor it appropriates one of the elements
;

of this gas carbon and the other oxygen is liberated


again to perform its services to the animal world."
" The animal
kingdom is constantly producing carbonic
acid, water in the state of vapor, nitrogen, and in combination
with hydrogen, ammonia. The vegetable kingdom contin-
ually consumes ammonia, nitrogen, water, and carbonic acid.
The one is constantly pouring into the air what the other is
as constantly drawing from it, and thus is the equilibrium of
the elements maintained."

"Beccaria examined the solar phosphor!, and ascertained


that the violet ray was the most energetic, and the red ray the
least so, in exciting phosphorescence in certain bodies."

"M. Biot and the elder Becquerel have proved that the
slightest electrical disturbance is sufficient to
produce these
phosphorescent effects. May we not therefore regard the
action of the most refrangible rays, viz., the violet, as analo-
gous to that of the electric disturbance ? May not electricity
itself be but a development of this mysterious solar emana-
"
tion ?

It has been long knownto chemists that a mixture of chlo-


rine hydrogen gases might be preserved in darkness
and-
without combining for some time, but that exposure to diffused
day light gradually occasioned their combination, and which
is effected with the
greatest speed by the extreme blue and indigo
rays. M. Edrnond Becquerel in 1839 first called attention to
the " electricity developed during the chemical action excited
by solar agency."
The experiments of Dr. Morichini, repeated by MM. Carpa
and Ridolti, that violet rays
magnetized a small needle, were
successfully confirmed by Mrs. Somerville.
20

"Light not solely a radiant visible element It has other


is

properties which cannot be overlooked. It oxidizes, colors,


bleaches. Light becomes absorbed light changes into heat,
and heat into electricity; in i'act, light in its radiant visible
character only shows one of its many phases. Light holds
many forces within its beams. It has properties, powers of its
own, which neither mathematician nor optician can grasp. Jt
jreat chemical agent. Colors are produced by a change
from a polaric act of arrestation yellow and red
resulting
yellow belong to the acids; blue and red blue to the alkalies.
The undulatory theory explains the radiant visible property
of but it does not explain its chemical effects, the opti-
light,
cal polarity of a chrystal and its connection with the polaric
condition of its constituents the diffraction, inflection, inter-
ferences, the oxidation of surfaces as the cause of natural co-
lors, the presence of the chemical action of light, the presence
of heat, electricity, magnetism yet light produces all these
;

phenomena it vitalizes, and the organic action of light is


;

witnessed in the fauna and flora around."


Wehave seen that blue light, and the violet ray which is a
compound of it, and the red ray being the most refrangible
f the solar spectrum excite magnetism, and electricity,
by which carbonic acid gas evaporated from growing plants
is decomposed and oxygen thereof liberated to be absorbed
again in maturing the flowers, fruit and seed of the plant, thus
stimulating the active energies of the plant into its fullest and
most complete development. Now this is just what I think is
done in the vegetable world by the blue light of the firmanent.
That blue light of the lirmanent, not itself electro-magne-
it'

t'lMn. -e forces which compose it in our atmosphere,


and applying them at the season, vi/., the early spring, when
-ky is bluest, stimulates, after the torpor of winter, the
activ "S of the vegetable kingdom, by the decomposi-
tion of its carboni- aeid ga< supplying carbon for the plants
to mature it. and to complete its mission.

In the experiment which I have made in the cultivation of


grapes under violet light, I have endeavored to combine with
it the blue light of the lirmanent, causing the other
rays of the
solar spectrum to be ab-orbod while the blue and violet rays
1

permit 'lie violet glass into the grapery.


The .[M-rature under the white glass and under
the violet glass of the grapery is supposed to have excited
decompose more rapidly the
:

curr- i<-ient to
>nic acid gas that had been evaporated from the leaves of
the vines, than would have been done under the influence of
21

the sunshine alone thus stimulating the increased absorption


of oxygen, and the deposit of carbon in the vines, and con-
stantly and quickly renewing the evaporation of carbonic acid
gas. The result has been seen in the wonderfully large pro-
duct of fruit, accompanied by a prodigious formation of new
wood, to yield the crop of fruit for the ensuing year.
The investigations that have been made during the present
century regarding light have developed the existence of some
remarkable attributes; one of the most astonishing is the dis-
covery that there is no heat per se in the sun's ray, though it
is one of the causes which produce heat. This is established
beyond dispute by the existence of the intense cold which pre-
vails in the upper atmosphere, increasing with its altitude, and
through which all the sunlight which reaches the earth must
pass, but whose temperature it cannot alter. Hence you have
at the present time the line of perpetual snow, according to
Professor Agassiz, at an elevation of 15,000 feet at the equator,
of 6,000 feet at the latitude of 45, and gradually approaching
the surface of the earth till it reaches it at 60 of north lati-
tude, beyond which ice prevails nearly to the pole.

Aeronauts have remarked also at great altitudes above the


earth that the thermometer had ceased to mark any variation
of temperature when exposed in the full sunshine or in shadow.

A curious illustration of the fact that something more is


needed than sunlight to produce heat is to be found in the fact
stated by the famous arctic navigator, Dr. Scoresby, as well as
by others, that when, after a long night in the arctic regions,
the sun had appeared, though the thermometer was below 32
of Fahrenheit, and everything around was frozen hard, he
observed that the pitch with which the seams of the planks of
the ship had been payed, on the side of the ship exposed to
the sun, was melted, notwithstanding the great declination of
the sun and the small angle of incidence, that the nearly hori-
zontal rays of it made as they fell upon the pitch, while that
in the shade on the other side of the ship was so hard that it
was with difficulty broken with a hatchet other objects on the
ship manifesting at the same time the low temperature marked
by the thermometer. I am not aware that any explanation of
this phenomenon has ever been attempted. I may, therefore,
offer to v-icrgest that the pitch being an electric or non-con-
ductor or electricity and negatively electrified when the sun's
ray positively electrified fell upon it, an explosion took place,
heat was evolved, and the pitch was melted thus proving that
22

heat from sunshine is produced by the contact of an electricity


opposed to that of the sun's rays.
As a corollary from what has just been stated, it may be
observed that the heat of the equatorial and tropical oceans is
not derived from the sun. We do not heat our houses by
kindling fires at the tops of our chimneys or boil our water
from above, but rather we descend into our cellars, and make
our fires for that purpose in the furnaces constructed there.
Besides, we know that from the surface of the water, if at rest,
and from its many surfaces, if agitated by winds, the rays of
the sun would be reflected in all possible angles corresponding
to the angles of incidence of the rays themselves, and the heat
would be lost in space. Whence comes, then, this ocean heat
in the tropics, finding its vent in the arctic and antarctic
regions through the Gulf Stream of the Atlantic, and the
Japan. Stream laving the shores of northeastern Asia, and tho
south-eastern current running along the south-western coast
of South America to the Antartic seas ? Does it not come by
radiation from the interior of the earth from those great fires
which, by the elastic gases and vapors engendered there, in
many parts of the world upheave mountains and islands, and
forming chimneys for themselves in their summits, belch out
that superfluous heat, light, electricity, and magnetism which
radiation to the surface of the earth at times is inadequate to
discharge? And are not these great ocean currents of heated
water merely channels or flues of radiation of heat from be-
neath, by which, for climatic purposes, the Omnipotent Creator
levised the means of distributing this interior heat over
the surface of our planet ?
All admit the existence of those great forces of nature in
the interior of the earth, manifested through volcanic action
light, electricity, and
in those imponderable elements of heat,
'tism. Why are those forces there? May they not be
the forces which turn the earth on its axis, and aid in propel-
ling it around the sun? May not the frigid zones north and
south furnish the cold cushions of water in the extreme depths
of the ocean, of the uniform temperature of 39 of Fahren-
heit, and of nearly th> a1
density known to "that element,
for the purpo-e of restraining and
controlling the radiation of
that great interior heat of the earth, which otherwise
might
be wasted ':

Dr. Winslow, in his treatise on light, its influence on life


and health, says" : Accurate calculations have been made as to
the temperature of the ocean. The results obtained
clearly
establish that the lowest degrees of temperature are obtainable
23

on the surface of the water; and that about ten feet below the
surface the thermometer rises several degrees, 90 is said by
Mr. Agassi/; (son of Professor Agassiz,) to be the highest tem-
perature he has known the ocean to attain; at very great
depths of the ocean a uniform temperature of about 39^ has
been found."
The low temperature of the surface water of the ocean is
attributable to the evaporation which is constantly going on,
carrying off the atmospheric heat adjacent, and proving con-
clusively that the Gulf and other warm ocean currents do not
derive their heat from the sun.
These reflections have forced themselves upon me, while
pgndering over some of the great revelations of nature.
In a recent report of the Secretary of the Agricultural Bu-
reau at Washington, he states " On the 15th of June the sun
is more than 23 north of the equator, and therefore it might
be inferred that the intensity of heat should be greater at this
latitude than at the equator; but that it should continue to
increase beyond this even to the pole, may not at first sight appear
so clear. It will, however, be understood when it is recol-
lected that though in a northern latitude the obliquity of the
ray is greater, and on this account the intensity should bo less,
yet the longer duration of the day is more than sufficient to
compensate for this effect and produce the result exhibited."
It strikes me that this explanation is not sound. I remem-
ber several years ago, at Philadelphia, on the afternoon of a
day in August, when the thermometer was at 94, that in fif-
teen minutes the thermometer fell 40, which was owing no
doubt to a descending column of cold air from the upper at-
mosphere, attracted by some local electrical disturbance. The
continuous heat of the preceding summer months could no
more prevent this thermal change at Philadelphia than could
the long day with the oblique sun's rays increase the intensity
of the heat in high northern latitudes.
Professor Maury says "The summer temperature as ob-
served on the very borders of the Polar ocean is absolutely
marvelous. Observations made with a view of determining
this accurately have for some years been taken in Alaska.
One of the observers in the northern district of Yukon states
in the Agricultural Report' for 18G8, ' I have seen the ther-
'

mometer at noon at Fort Yukon, not in the direct rays of the


sun, standing at 112 ;
and I am informed by the commander
of the post that several spirit thermometers graduated to 120
had burst under the scorching sun of the arctic midsummer,
which can only be appreciated by one who has endured it. In
24

midsummer, on the Upper Yukon, the only relief from the


intense heat under which vegetation attains an almost tropical
luxuriance, is the two or three hours during which the sun
hovers near the northern horizon, and the weary voyager in
'
his canoe blesses the transient coolness of the midnight air.'

According to M. de Humboldt, the sky is bluer between the


tropics than in the higher temperate latitudes, but paler at sea
than in the interior of countries ; the blue is less intense at
the horizon than at the zenith. The early maturity of human
life in the tropics is to be attributed to the stimulating influ-
ence of the enormous quantities of electricity, which, continu-
ally passing by day as well as by night in the auroras from the
poles to the equator, and descending to the earth in those re-
gions, in those dazzling sheets of lightning flame, so terrifying
to all who have witnessed them, and conducted by the inces-
sant rains prevailing there in certain seasons of the year de-
oxygenate the enormous volumes of carbonic acid gas gene-
by the exuberant vegetation, as well in its growth as in
1

its decay, thus supplying excessive quantities of oxygen gas to


stimulate and support the animal life, as well as carbon to the
fresh vegetation which is renewed the cir-
being continually
cle of development and decay in the vegetable kingdom being
thus always preserved.
We Lave thus seen that the magnetic, electric, and thermic
powers of the Sun's ray reside in the violet ray, which is a
compound of tho blue and red rays. These constitute what are
the chemical powers of the sunlight.
1 That they are
the most important powers of nature, there can be no doubt,
hout them life cannot exist on tliis planet. Without these
chemical powers there could be no vegetation. Without veg-
etation there could be no insect lite, and no development of
the higher order of animal existence. The earth Avould be
without form and void, and we can now understand the poten-
tial meaning of the first sublime utterance of the
Almighty in
forming this earth, when he said "Let there be Light," and
-
Light.
>regoing premises we deduce the following con-

1. Heat
is
developed by opposite electricities in coujunction
proportion to the quantity and intensity of those elec-
11

tricities in contact with each other, will be the


intensity of the

blue color of the sky, for one of its functions, de-


3 carbonic acid !'l''vi"if carbon to vegetation
and sustaining both vegetable and animal life with its
oxygen.
APPENDIX.

UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE. 119,242.

AUGUSTUS J. PLEASONTON, OP PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA.

Improvement in Accelerating theGrowth of Plants and Animals.


Specifications forming part of Letters Patent No. 119$4%y
dated September 26, 1871.

To all whom it may concern :

Be it known that Augustus J. Pleasonton, of the city of


I,

Philadelphia, in the State of Pennsylvania, have discovered a new


and valuable aid and improvement in accelerating the growth to
maturity of plants, vines, vegetables, cereals, and the flora of the
vegetable kingdom of nature, and of animals., fowls, fishes and
birds of the animal kingdom of nature ; and that I do hereby
declare the following to be a full, clear, and exact description of
the operation of the same by means of combining the natural
light of the sun transmitted through transparent glass with the
natural light of the sun transmitted through blue glass or any of
the varieties of blue, as indigo or violet, in varied proportions of
blue and white glass, from one of blue to eight of white, up to
equal proportions of blue and white, as greater or less caloric is
needed, according to the nature of the plants or animals, to
accelerate their natural growth, increase their vitality, and hasten
maturity ; reference being also made to the accompanying drawing
making a part of this specification, in which the figure represents
one form of construction of a conservatory or grapery, in which
A A A represent the clear or transparent glass, and B the blue
or coloured glass. Proper ventilation is effected by means of wire
cloth placed in the walls, as shown at C, and which can be opened
and closed at pleasure by means of hinged glazed sashes, as shown
at D. There is also represented at E a hinged sash, glazed with
both clear and blue glass, for changing the angle of incidence to
agree with the declination of the sun. These proportions of the
natural light of the sun with the blue or electric transmitted rays
26

may be varied to conform to the specific constitution of tho


varieties oflifo in tho vegetable world and the varieties of consti-
tution in the animal wcrld. and can only ho ascertained throughout
kingdoms by progressive and continued experiment. Tho
l)i, tli

blue electric
proportions of the heating rays and the transmitted
ravs must bo varied to conform to tho constitutional vitality of
able or animal, and care must bo had that tho heating or
caloric light is not in excess of the electric or vitalizing and
growing tran-. mil ted blue light.
routine myself to no particular form, externally or internally,
I

of tho buildings to bo used, whether they apply to tho growth and


propagation of plants, vegetables, fruits, &c., or to the growth
propagation, c., of animals, fishes and fowls; but the best form
is

that building which will receive tho rays of tho sun during its daily
revolution as nearly perpendicular as practicable to the surfaces
of the glass covering, so that tho rays shall bo as little deflected as
ble, and the tiers or rows of blue gbss, violet or other degrees
of blue, shall be continuous over tho ontiro portion of tho building
on which the sun shines, imparting in this way to every portion
of tho interior uniformly throughout the day the caloric and
electric rays in the proportions of white and blue glass in their
alternations. Sucn structures should bo built on curves, conform-
ing to the curve in which tho sun moves in its daily revolution,
and tho alternating rows of white and blue glass should extend
over the portions on which tho sun shines, so that in the course of
tho day plants and vegetables, wherever they grow under tho
glass, will all have the same exposure to tho caloric and electric
transmitted light. Variations from these forms of buildings, and
variations in tho proportion of tho natural caloric and bluo
electric light will, in degree, accelerate tho growth and maturity
of plants and animals depending upon their constitution and
vitality; and tho samo proportions that hasten growth in tho
table kingdom are not tho best for many animals of tho
animal kiiy^dom. Kxperienco alone can determine tho best pro-
Mis of natural and blue light,
depending on tho constitution
of the animal and the nature of In extreme northern
plants.
latitudes the form given to the glass buil lings BO as to take tho
Run'.-
-pendicularly to the surfaces during tho day would
vary from tho form that should ho given in southern latitudes to
same purpo-e. Therefore no one general plan for tho
ruction of conservatories, graperies, houses for animals, &c.,
be adopted i,r dr>rril)ed b.-yond tho rule for tho builders to
>rm tho whapo of the gla>s portions HO as to present their
Around liis building in form to take tho sun's rays us
nearly perpendicularly as practicable, so as to avoid their deflec-
tion. All persons skilled in building will readily understand this
principle. ;i-id I. enable1 to rnako us of the discovery and apply
it to practical use, in whatever
place ho may live, extreme north
27

or extreme south, within the limits of the sun's rising and setting.
I prefer, as a transmitting medium for the electric rays of the
Bun, blue glass, violet and indigo; but I do not confine myself to
the use of glass, as the sun's transmitted rays convey these colors
through other media, producing in degree the same results.
In buildings for the treatment of invalids, whether they be men
or animals, no particular form or construction of hospital, house or
stable will be necessary, as the beds of invalid men and the places
for animals can be so changed that the order of the means for
transmitting the blue light may be very variable. The propor-
tion of electric blue light and the natural light, however, should
be constant, or as nearly so as practicable, after the proportions
are ascertained by experience that prove most beneficial in their
healing process.
I do not pretend to be the first discoverer of the vitalizing and life-
growing qualities of the transmitted blue light of the solar rays,
and quickening life and intensifying vitality.
its effect in
I have found, upon patient and long experiments, running
through many years, that plants, fruits of plants, vines and fruits
of vines and vegetables BO housed and inclosed as to admit the
natural light of the sun through ordinary glass, and the trans-
mitted light of the solar rays through the glasses of blue, violet or
purple colours in the proportion of eight ot natural light to one of
the blue or electric light, grow much more rapidly, ripen much
quicker, and produce much larger crops of fruit than the same
plants housed and treated with the natural light of day, the soils
and fertilizers and treatment nd culture being identical in both
cases and the exposure the same.
I have also found, by repeated and patient experiments of several
years, that young animals, fishes and fowls under the same care,
food, regimen, and treatment grow much more rapidly and to a
much larger size under the influence of the combined natural light
of day with the transmitted blue electric light than when exposed
only to the natural sunlight, and'that their flesh is equally good, and
their health, vigor and constitutions are equal to those that, under the
same circumstances of food, care and shelter, grow in the natural
light. In these experiments with animals, fishes and fowls, I have
not used the same proportions of natural light and transmitted
blue light, viz: eight of natural to ono of blue light, that I used in
my experiments with vines, vegetables and fruits, but with the
first named the proportions of natural and blue light were equal ;
and I prefer not those proportions of the natural caloric light and
the transmitted electric light; yet I do not doubt that other pro-
portions, depending upon the different organic constitutions in
both the animal ami vegetable creations, may be found to combine
life-growing and vitalizing powers even exceeding the results I
have produced, and still more productive of good in creating
greater results. In these experiments I have discovered and
28

proved that the transmitted blue light of the solar rays in its
different degrees of intensity of color, in combination with natural
sunlight, imparts vigour and vitality to the vegetation and life-
gro\ving principle in nature, heretofore unknown and never before
utilizedand applied to practical results of incalculable value to
stock growing, to agriculture and horticulture, both as relates to
time, labor and economy.
1 have also discovered, by experiment and practice, special and

Kpecitic efficacy in the use of this combination of the caloric ra}-s


of the sun and the electric blue light in stimulating the glands of
the liody, the nervous system generally, and the secretive organs
of man and animals. It therefore becomes an important clement
in the treatment of diseases, especially such as have become
chronic, or result from derangement of the secretive, perspiratory
or glandular functions, as it vitalizes and gives renewed activity
and force to the vital currents that keep the health unimpaired, or
restores them when disordered or deranged.
Having thus fully described my discovery and invention, what I
claim, and desire to have secured to me by Letter Patent, is
1. Tho method herein described for utilizing the natural light of
the sun transmitted through clear glass, and the blue or electric
solar rays transmitted through blue, purple or violet coloured
glass, or its equivalent, in the propagation and growth of plants
and animals, substantially as herein set forth.
- The herein described construction of conservatories and other

buildings, when the roof, walls or parts thereof are covered with
alternating portions of clear and blue, purple, or violet glass or
equivalents, as and for the purposes set forth.
In testimoncy that I claim the above, I have hereunto sub-
scribed my name in the presence of two witnesses at the city of
Philadelphia, the 23d day of June, A. D. 1871.
AUGUSTUS J. PLEASONTON.
Witnesses :

II. Tt'MSON,
H. A. NAQLE.

[II.]

In the winter of the year 1872, I called at the Pennsylvania


tul, on 1'ine street, between Highth and .Ninth streets, in this
city, to suggest to its officers the introduction of my plan of using
the associated light, of the sun and the blue colour of the sky in
alh-viating the sufferings of, and probably in restoring to health
many of their patients. On being presented to them, one of the
icians, on hearing my name mentioned, asked mo if
-
the author of the experiments with blue light of which ho
hac" read r n account. On receiving my answer, ho said " I have
;
29

something curious to tell you. I am a native of Brazil, where my


father resides ; I have been educated in the United States;
still
last, week I received a
package of hooks, pamphlets, &c., from my
father, in Bra/il, who had ordered them from Paris. In his ac-
companying letter my father directed myparticular attention to
a French pamphlet which detailed some remarkable experiments
on animal and vegetable life, that had been made with blue glass
and sunlight, that ho thought would be useful to me iu my medical
profession. On examining the pamphlet I discovered it to be a
translation in the French language of your memoir on that subject.
The translator, however, had not mentioned your name in it, in-
even the name of the locality where the experiments had been
made. It evidently was intended to convey the impression that
the experiments had been made in Paris."
If tho translator was a Frenchman we can pardon him for
omitting the name of the author, in memory of the ancient Revo-
lutionary alliance between his nation and our own. We can even
condone his fault, smarting as he must have been under the then
recent loss of Alsace and Lorraine but we think that it might
have occurred to him that the scene of my experiments was also
the locality of the electrical experiments of Franklin, whom his
countrymen and women always delighted to honor, and hence the
name of Franklin's home might have been associated with the
announcement of discoveries in physics that do no discredit even
to those of Franklin himself.

[III.]

THE DIAMOND ITS ORIGIN. In former editions of this memoir


;

I have attributed the origin of the diamond to electricity in the


upper atmosphere decomposing carbonic acid gas, fusing the car-
bon, converting the oxygen gas into ozone, and crystalizing the
fused carbon, under the great evaporating power of the intense
cold there prevailing. The Atheneum says: " A somewhat nove 1
idea is stated by M. Desdemaines Hugon, in a paper '
On tho
Diamond Diggings of South Africa/ which is printed in the Revue
Scientifiquede la France et 1 Etranger. He states that the air is always
J

highly electric where diamonds abound, and he intimates his


opinion that this may throw some light on the formation of that
gem."
30

[IV.]
[From the President of the Indiana University.']
INDIANA UNIVERSITY, 1

BLOOMINGTON, June 15, 1871. }


GEN. PLEAKONTON.
DKAR SIR: I received a few days ago a pamphlet containing
an account of your interesting experiments on the influence of the
blue ray in developing animal and vegetable life. If the experi-
ments, where it so difficult to determine the amount of influence
due to the light, compared with that due to other circumstances,
have been fairly made, as doubtless they have been, you have
opened up a new field of great practical usefulness to all the world.
Thanking you for your kindness in sending mo your treatise, I
remain,
Very respectfully yours,
T. A. WYLIE,

[V-]
[From the President of the
Lehigh University.']
THE
LEHIQII UNIVERSITY, )
Sorm BETFT.EHEM, PA., PRESIDENT'S ROOMS, July 10, 1871. )
MY BEAR GENERAL:
I have just received and at once read your very interesting
paper <>n ci-iU-t rays, &c.
The tacts are astonishing, and your explanation evinces care,
judgment and research.
I shall take pleasure in putting it among our scientific papers,
and thank you for sending it.

Very faithfully yours,

flENRY COPP^E.
GEN'U I'LEASONTON.

[VI.]
[From thr Hon. Wm. M. Men-dith, late Secretary of the Treasury
of the United States."]
M v EAR I'
I
)
N
1

Ihave delayed thanking you tor the pamphlet you sent me,
till I should have read it, which 1 have n<>\v done twice, with
It and pleasure congratulate you sincerely I

on th ry you have made, whkrh must not only be greatly


valuable in Agriculture and Horticulture, but in many o.thcr
ma: II. <

Always faithfully yours,


W. M. MKIM-IDITH.
.

PLEASONTON, Monday, 10th July, 1871.


31

[VII.]

[From Wm. A. Ingham, Esq., a Director of the Lehigh Valley


Railroad Company.']

320 WALNUT ST., >

PHILADELPHIA, August 29th, 1871. j


DEAR GENERAL :

Allo-v mo to return my thanks for the copies of your pamphlet.


I have read with great interest and am satisfied that your dis-
it

covery will have wonderful results, revolutionizing in fact tho


science of horticulture.
I am, very truly yours,
W'M. A. INGHAM.
GEN. A. J. PLEASONTON.

[YIIL]
[From the Hon. Joseph R. Chandler, late Minister Plenipotentiary

of the United States at the Court of Naples ]


153 NORTH TENTH STREET, )
20th September, 1871. j
DEAR SIR:
I thank you for a copy of tho third edition of your pamphlet on
"tho influence of tho blue colour of the sky." I cannot doubt
the importance of your discovery, nor fail to see that the public
must hold itself indebted to you for your interesting and success-
ful experiments.
With great respect, your servant,
JOS. E. CHANDLER.
GEN. PLEASONTON.

[IX.]

DEPARTMENT OP THE INTERIOR, )

PATENT OFFICE. }
WASHINGTON, D.JJC., August 15th, 1871.
A, J. PLEASONTON, Philadelphia, Penn.
Your letter of the 14th inst., relative to your invitation to tho
examiner in charge of the Agricultural class of this office to call
"
upon you to witness the influence of the blue colour of the sky"
in developing animal and vegetable life, is received.
In reply you are informed that Prof. Brainerd is at present con-
fined to his room by sickness, but a leave will be given him for tho
purpose of accepting your invitation, as soon as he is able to travel.
Yery respectfully, your obedient servant,
M. D. LEGGETT,
Commissioner.
32

[X.]

DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR, 1


PATENT OFFICE. j

WASHINGTON, D. C., August 19th, 1871.


DEAR SIR:
I liavo so far recovered from
my late illness as to bo able to pay
compliance with your invitation, for the purpose of
B visit in

examining your improvement in the construction of conservatories.


1
purpose to leave this city on the 8 A. M. train on *
Tuesday,
* * *
and shall therefore bo due at at 1 P. M.
Philadelphia
Respectfully,
J. BRAINERD,
Examiner.
GEN. A. J. PLEASONTON, Philadelphia, Pa.

[XI]
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR,
PATENT OFFICE.
WASHINGTON, D. C., September 6th, 1871.
DEAR GENERAL :

Your drawing arrived this morning, and the patent will now go
to issue, but will take the usual time.
The Commissioner yesterday introduced General Babcoek, who
is Superintendent of Public Grounds, and Consulting Engineer
of the Board of Public Works. The object of his call was to learn
particulars in regard to your cerulean process. I had a pleasant
view with him, at the close of which he desired me to write
ii, asking the privilege of using your invention upon a
grajx-ry which he is now fitting up on the President's grounds.
An :.

Patents, will reach him promptly. ******


.-rectcd to the care of myself or Commissioner of

Respectfully,
GENERAL A. J. PLEASONTON. J. BRAINERD.

[XII.]
PARIS, September 29th, 1871.
Pr K \*<-NTON.
MI SIR: I have just received and read with
great pleasure,
your Tery interesting paper from the Gardener's Monthly, of August
g your experiments on the action of coloured light
fii
plants and animals. You will find in the "Report of tne
33

Department of Agriculture," at Washington, for 1869, a very long


report of mine ''on the influence of cli Dialogic agents, atmospheric
and terrestrial, upon agriculture," where, in the chapters of light
and electricity, I have treated fully all these questions with a
great number of experiments and quotations of authors. At
that time I had no idea of any of your publications, although I
had formed a bibliography on that subject of 1326 articles in
every language. I am preparing a work in French and English
on Agricultural Meteorology, and I should be most happy to
mention in it your experiments, and to receive all that you havo
published. My name may be known to you through my papers
on Meteorology at the French Academy and in America. I was
the founder and director of the observatory at Havana until tho
beginning of our war, being now a victim of my patriotism. I
correspond with several journals of the United States, as tho
American Agriculturist, the Rural New Yorker, etc., etc. * * *
*****
I remain, General, your most obedient servant,
ANDRE POET.
54 Rue Mazarine, Hotel Mazarin.

[XIII.]
PARIS, November 10th, 1871.
GENERAL A. PLEASONTON.
J.
DEAR SIR :Your most affectionate of October 10th, is at hand,
with seven copies of your interesting pamphlet. After a very
careful study of that paper, I should advise you strongly to pursue
your experiments on the influence of coloured lights on vegetable
and animal life. There are still a great many points to be resolved,
and, unfortunately, this important question has been totally
abandoned in our days. Should you publish anything else, pray
do not forget me. I shall be very happy to quote all your experi-
ments in my works. At the next sitting of the French Academy,
I shall also endeavor to have a little extract of your pamphlet
inserted in the Comptes Rendus of that Institution, with a copy
presented in your name, aud also to M. Becquerel, M. Duchartro,
the Meteorological Society, etc. I am waiting for the return of
one of its perpetual Secretaries, M. Elie de Beaumont. I shall
have the pleasure to send you whatever may be published on your
experiments. I have sent another copy to the Meteorological
Society of Yienna, very much interested in the study of periodical
********
phenomena, treated in my second report to the Department of
Agriculture.
I remain your most obedient servant,
ANDRE POEY.
54 Rue Mazarin, Hotel Mazarin.
34

[XIV.]
PARIS, November 24th, 1871.
PLEASONTON.
A. J.
I>KAR Sm As I had promised you I enclose the little extract
:

n toil to the French Academy of Science, Monday last, and


which will appear to-morrow in tho Comptes Rendus. I took par-
ticular pains to write a condensed letter, giving tho most striking
f.u-t*, to tho perpetual Secretary, tho great Geologist, M. Elio de
Beaumont, who was very much interested in your experiments.
A copy was also presented to tho Academy, Bccqucrcl Father,
Dnchartro, and Barm tho editor of tho Practical Journal of Agri-
I,

culture, who will reprint it in that paper. At tho same time dif-
foront scientific and political papers will make somo mention of it.
I shall send next week the translation of my letter to tho excel-
lent English journal called Mature', so your experiments and namo

******
will bo, in short, spread through tho scientific world in Europe.

I remain, General, your most obedient servant,


ANDR& POEY.
54 Ruo Mazarin, Hotel Mazarin.

[XV.]
[From Rev. Henry A. Boardmin, Pastor Tenth Presbyterian CJiurch,
Philadelphia.]
MY DEAR GENERAL :

for your generous supply of tho Memoir, and not


;

less for tho very kind terms of your note.


" "
ynco before in our national history tho subject of Blue Light
Ia great commotion. Tiioro will bo a greater still before
and in a somewhat more beneficent direction. I heartily
vou on tho just f.imo which is already assured to you
a.-j tlio reward of
your great discovery.
1 shall
place tho pamphlets where t'.icy will by appreciated.
Very sincerely yours,
11. A. IJOA'RDMAN,
May 1st, 1S72. 1311 Spruce Street.

[XVI.]
[From the same.]

loll SPRUCE Sr., June 1st, 1S72.


II Y 1>K.UI flF.NERAT.:
tri a viro laudato," to bo praised by a man who is him-
self praised, the Latins used to think was a very nice
thing. So
35

I take great pleasure in enclosing a letter from the Rev. Dr.

Sprague, for forty years a pastor at Albany, one of the most ac-
complished and revered clergymen of our church or country, and
enjoying a high European reputation. You will see what estimate
he puts upon your great discovery, and bow ho prizes your
autograph. For I took the liberty of sending him your kind noto
to me, for his famous autographic collection the largest (somo
20f>,000 specimens, I believe,) and finest in America.
1 enclose, also, a noto from Mr. Alex. Brown, Nineteenth and

"Walnut, to whom I gave the Memoir. I know it will gratify you.


With sincere regard,
I am, dear General, yours,
II. A, BO A RDM AX.
design these two autographs for your collection, so you
will not return them.

[XVII]
[From Alexander Brown, Esq., Banker, &c.~\

PHILADELPHIA, May 30th, 1872.


HEV. H. A. BOARDMAN.
DEAR SIR : I thank you for the copy of Gen. Pleasonton's ad-
dress before the " Philadelphia Agricultural Society."
I have read it with great interest, and think that the successful
result of his experiments of the blue colour on animal and vegeta-
ble life must carry conviction to every mind.
Yery respectfully, yours,
ALEX. BROWN.

[XVIIL]
\From the Eev. Dr. W. B. Sprague, an eminent divine of Albany,
New York.']

FLUSHING, May 30, 1872.


MY DEAR DR. BOADMAN.
Since I wrote you yesterday, (I believe misdating my letter.)
I have read the pamphlet you kindly sent me, with astonishment
and admiration. I am not chemist enough to pronounce upon
every part of it, but it seems to mo that the man who could havo
written it is destined to be a groat benefactor to the world ; I do
not see why it should not mark the introduction of a new and
better era. I shall lay it away, with the author's autograph, as
containing everything concerning him that I should desire.
With much love, as ever, yours,
W. B. SPKAGUE.
36

[XIX.]
[From H. A. Boardman."}
1311 SPRUCE ST., Oct. 10th.
MY DEAR GENERAL:
Wo arc all prepared to testify that the blue glass grapes are in
of the very choicest. If there bo gainsayers
nizo, color :ind flavor
send them to us. Wo give you many thanks for so generous a
sample of your crop. And what bunches, too !

The fresh testimonies you recite are very remarkable a fur-


ther presage of the certain and early attention which will soon
be given to this whole subject, by men of science. I regret that I
am compelled to send this bare acknowledgment of your ex-
tremely interesting letter.
I am, very truly yours,
II. A. BOARDHAN.

[XX.]
Lieut. Col. Charles Manby, Royal Volunteer Engineer Staff'
Corps, England.]
GO WESTBOURNE TERRACE, HYDE PARK.
LONDON, March 23d, 1872.
MY DEAR GENERAL:
Pray accept my thanks for your kind letter of 5th inst., and for
x copies of your most interesting paper, which I shall dis-
tribute to the persons most capable of comprehending it, and of
repeating the experiments here.
I am
grieved to say that my dear old friend A. II., of
Copenhagen, for whom ventured to ask you. to send mo your
I
p:iper, h:is died in the interval, and ho never received your paper,
nor the copies of tho Comptes Rendus de V Academic de Sciences de
aingof thosubject, of which I procured him exomplaires.
ill, 1 hope, keep up his Horticultural Experiments and
when I next go to Denmark I will tell you whet her any experiments
:

your system. have many friends who will, 1


I

think, try the and if you desiro to make it known, scud


me some mor- ;iul they shall bo well
placed among influ-
ential ])<: I am a member of tho Horticultural and tho
Botai ictics of London, and in my capacity of Honorary

Secretary of tho Institution of Civil Engineers of England, I am


in communication with scientific men, so I can make your system
well known to everybody. It is most interesting as an investiga-
tion, and I will try and get it tried in every way.
*****
Bclicvo mo, my dear General, yours sincerely,
CHARLES MANBY.
37

[XXI.]
[From J. T. Alden, of Newport, Kentucky.']

NEWPORT, KENTUCKY, May 6th, 1872.

GENERAL A. PLEASONTON, PHILADELPHIA.


J.

DEAR SIR Your


: esteemed favor of 23d inst., with pamphlets, at
hand, for which please accept my sincere thanks.
I read your treatise with absorbing interest and satisfaction, and
was amazed at the wonderful discoveries evolved by your critical
observations and the scientific deductions and logical conclusions,
and still more astounded by their grand and overwhelming
demonstrations.
Your mind and vision have penetrated into the labyrinth of the
"imponderable" deep of nature, and eliminated from her secret
chambers great practical truths that hitherto have been buried
in an abyss too profound for even man's comprehension. My dear
sir, I do most sincerely congratulate you as the author of a dis-
covery ranking in great practical value with those of Morse,
Newton, Fulton and Watt. I cannot feel you will soon be
adequately rewarded, because truths like these are too abstruse for
immediate apprehension by the common mind. But time will
reduce your grand theory (no longer theory in your hands,) to
practice, and not until then will your great efforts be duly appre-
ciated.
I bow in deep grateful devotion to you, as the chosen instru-
ment of God in communicating this valuable knowledge to man-
kind ; and may it be your happiness, as of Morse, to see its adoption
by your fellow-creatures throughout the civilized world, as well as
like him to reap the full fruition of its honors and fruits. And if
you are not deluged with letters, I would like to ask if these
principles may be applied in a more humble way than your
demonstration exhibits? Can they be made subservient to the
production of early vegetables by the ordinary hot bed cultivation ?
Have you experimented " on this line," or has any one under your
instruction? If two or three weeks can be anticipated over the
hot bed culture now so common, it would equal 400 miles of lati-
tude in influence and results. On this point, if consistent with
your time and convenience, I should be highly gratified to hear
from you, stating any knowledge in your possession of results or
discoveries in this line of industries.
With considerations of profound respect, I am, dear sir,

Your obedient servant,


J. T. ALDEN.
I will confer with you touching the area of territory desired
hereafter.
38

[XXII.]

[From Dr. John


7
C.Brown, nte Professor of Botany in tfie South
African College, Cape Town, Cape of Good Hope, Africa.']

PHILADELPHIA, 3405 BARING STRFET, 1


16th October, 1873. j

SIR: I have tried to procure a copy of your valuable treatise


on blue light as an organic stimulant, but have failed. May 1 ask
you where I can procure a copy? May I ask if you have collected
any information on the climatic effects which have followed tho
extensive destruction of forests in America, and, if you can inform,
me where I may procure information on this pant? 1 have just
completed the tour of the foreat districts of central and northern
Europe, collecting information for the use of tho Government at
the Capo of Good Dope, and having come to tho Conference of tho
Evangelical Alliance, I am desirous of such information, and I
shall feel greatly obliged if )'ou can supply it. I leave for Pitts-

burgh on Monday. Address mo to the care of KEY. 0. EASTMAN,


311 West Twenty-Ninth Street, New York.
My permanent address is, REV. D. BROWN, Bcrwick-on-Twced,
England.
I am, sir, respectfully yours,
JOHN C. BROWN, LL. D., F. R. G. S., F. L. S., &c.
Late Professor of Botany in the South African College, Cape
Town.
To GENEBAL PLEASONTOH.
MY. (President and Gentlemen of the

(Philadelphia Society for Promoting Agriculture :

IT is now more than three years since I had the honour to


read before you my memoir " on the influence of the blue
colour of the sky in developing animal and vegetable life, as
illustrated by certain experiments I had instituted and
continued between the years 1861 and 1871."

The subject was so entirely novel, and the results of the ex-
periments were so surprising, that men were lost in amaze-
ment when they contemplated the facts as they were narrated,
and began to conjecture the bearing that these facts were
destined to have upon the comfort, the health and the
prosperity of mankind.

As a knowledge of the experiments and the conclusions


deduced from them became diffused, various criticisms appeared
in many journals, some of which were humorous, and intended
to be facetious; others treated the subject with grave dignity,
not knowing exactly what to make of it while others, again,
;

grasping it in its important relations, as by intuition, welcomed


it as a long step in advance in the knowledge of the great

truths in physics which mankind are so anxious to acquire.


All this was perfectly natural. The little knowledge which
men have has been acquired by great labour, industry, priva-
tion, and perhaps through a long course of arduous study.
They are, therefore, loath to abandon preconceived notions
upon any subject. It would be a loss of so much mental
capital. A new idea, therefore, upon any familiar subject
naturally excites doubt, and is met with disapproval until, by
a free and full discussion, its merits are understood, when, if it
is established by facts and conclusive reasoning upon them, it
is accepted as sound, though it may displace all preexisting
notions in opposition to it.

Such has been the history of the publication of my memoir,


and of the wonderful discovery that it describes. I proceed
now to communicate to you some facts in connection with this
subject, which are very curious, instructive and important.
It may be remembered that in the month of May, 1871, a
and neighbourhood, and
great hailstorm
visited this city
inflicted immense damage among gardens, green houses, &c.
Among the sufferers was Mir, Robert Buist, Sr., in his extensive
;ses, near Darby, in some of which nearly all of the
was broken. The damage was promptly repaired, and
the houses reglazed as before, with colourless glass. After
which, my memoir on the influence of the blue colour of the
sky, 5cc., which had been read before your society in the begin-
ning of May, of that year, was printed and published. It was
tht-n too late for Mr. Buist to introduce blue glass into his

forcing houses but fully informed of the results of my experi-


ments he adopted an expedient, which differing somewhat
from my experiments confirms the conclusions thereon to
which I had arrived, and which will prove a valuable addition
to our appliances in horticulture.

Mr. Buist had at this time a very large and valuable


collection ofgeraniums which had become diseased; some of
them had died, others were feeble, losing their leaves and
flowers, and others again, though blooming, were sensibly
e deprived of the brilliant tints of colour which char-
acterized their several varieties.

It occurred to Mr. Buist that if he should paint with a light blue


tin- inside surface of each
pane of glass in one of his
houses, leaving a margin of an inch and a quarter in width of
the glass in its uncoloured condition all around the painted
surface on each of the panes of glass, and then place his
sickly geranium plants in the house under this glass so
painted, the vigour of his plants might be restored.

The experiment was made, and was successful. The plants


had been placed in this house,
after they
r
they began to put forth new leaves, and
at the end i.f ten days their vigour wa- not merely restored, but
Mr. Bui-- .tnts he had thus treated were

althy and vi^onrous than ho had ever seen similar


plants of have been. Their colours were
,

not only restored but their tints were intensified.

During the summer of 1*71, Mr. Dreer, one of our most


. called my attention to another con-
y, which had just comu to his notice. It
;/.. :
3

A
professional gardener in Massachusetts (near Boston) had
been trying for several years to protect his young plants, as
they were germinating, from various minute insects which fed
upon them, sometimes as soon as they were formed. For this
purpose he adopted nearly every expedient of which he had
any knowledge, and even used the primary rays of sunlight
separately. Xothing succeeded, however, in these experiments
but the blue ray, which proved itself to be a perfect protec-
tion against the attacks of these insects. He made a small
triangular frame, similar in form to a soldier's tent, covered it
with blue gauze, such as ladies use for their veils. Having
prepared a piece of ground, he sowed his seed in it, and,
covering a portion of the ground thus prepared with his little
blue frame and gauze, he left the other parts exposed to the
attacks of the insects. His plants outside of this frame were
all eaten by the insects, as soon as they germinated, while
those under it escaped entirely from their depredations. This
experiment was tried many times, and always with similar
results.

This gardener had written an account of his experiments to


Mr. Dreer, and had forwarded to him one of his small blue
gauze frames, in order to its introduction here to the attention
of our gardeners. This was shown to me by Mr. Dreer, with
the gardener's account of his experiments with it.

The explanation of this phenomenon, I think, is this.


The sunlight negatively electrified in passing through the
meshes of the blue gauze of the frame, which is positively
electrified, excites an electro-magnetic current sufficiently
strong to destroy the feeble vitality of the eggs or of the insects
themselves, which are in the soil with the seed, leaving the
seed to germinate more rapidly under its influence. One
remarkable circumstance in these experiments was that the
combination of sunlight with blue light, while it destroyed
these noxious insects injurious to vegetation, at the same
time stimulated the development of the growth of the plants
it had preserved.

Having introduced blueglass into the windows of the sleep-


ing apartments of my servants in one of my country houses, it
was observed that large numbers of flies, that had previously
infested them, were dead soon after its introduction, on the
inside sills of the windows. This effect seemed to be pro-
duced by a like cause to that on the insects injurious to vege-
tation as described by the gardener of Massachusetts in his
experiments. Various experiments have been made in several
parts of this country as well as in Europe, with this associated
life according to my suggestions
light, in developing vegetable
and with results corresponding to those that I have obtained.
A lady of my acquaintance, residing in this city, informed me
that having some very choice and rare flowering plants in pots
in her pitting room, which were drooping and manifesting signs
of disease, she threw over them a blue gauze veil, such as
ladies wear, and exposed them to the sunlight, when she was
highly gratified to discover that in a very short time they were
fully restored to health and vigour.

A gentleman in "West Philadelphia having a large lemon


tree, which he prized highly, placed it in his hall near to the
vestibule door, the side fights of which were of glass of differ-
ent colours, blue and violet predominating; the sunlight
pas-ing through these side lights fell upon a portion of the
branches of this lemon tree great vigour was imparted thereby
;

to the vitality of these branches, which were filled with very


fine lemons, while the other branches of the tree that, did not
receive the light from these blue and violet panes of glass,
were small, feeble and apparently unhealthy, and were without
fruit.

It will be remembered
that during our late civil war,
when commercial intercourse between the Northern and
Southern States had ceased, the sale of early fruits and vegeta-
bles in the markets of the principal northern cities, was
monopolized by their producers in the states of New Jersey
and Delaware, and on the eastern shore of Maryland. This
valuable trade, and enriched many of those
in it. The price of land in these regions became
enhanced in value, and the people resident there enjoyed
On the restoration of peace all this was
changed; the people, along the Atlantic slope of Virginia,
and South Carolina and of a part of Georgia, at onco
i

;-"d upon the cultivation of fruits and


vegetables for tho
north'-rn ritie-^ and owing to their lower latitudes and earlier
;:iid
improved modes of cultivation, they have secured
their lost markets, and are now rapidly recovering from the
ts of' the w;ir. All this, of course, is a
corresponding loss
to the tanners of New .Jersey, Delaware and the eastern shore
<>f Maryland, ami lence th" value of farming lands
in thes- has been sensibly depreciated. A
large por-
tion of this trade can be recovered by the application of my
discovery to the cultivation of vegetables and fruits, and their
maturity can be hastened so as to equal that of those of the
Southern States herein referred to.

The early vegetables used in family are, for the most


my
part, started in pots under blue and plain glass, then trans-
planted into proper soil, and are ready for use several weeks
before I could otherwise obtain them. As an illustration, we
have been using on my
table since July 12th, of this year,
Stowell's evergreen sugar corn, grown in this way, while I am
informed that it is one of the latest in the season to mature;
it will 'be at least two weeks later than now, August 10th,
before any of it grown otherwise in the ordinary course of
growth will be ready for use.*

As it isonly the very early and very late vegetables and


fruits that remunerate the grower, while the abundance of
the regular crops reduces the prices oftentimes below cost,
it is truly the interest of all persons engaged in furnishing
such foods to mankind, to produce them and sell them when
the prices are highest, viz., at the beginning and end of their
seasons.

Cotton and tobacco, in the Middle States, can be raised and


matured according to this process, so as to avoid entirely the
September frosts, and to compete in yield and quality with
any of the cottons grown in the Southern States, unless it may
be the Sea Island cotton. I have myself raised and matured
cotton plants on my lawn in this city, year after year, which
produced as fine and large bolls as I have ever seen in Carolina
or Georgia, and this without the use of blue glass, and before
I had made my discovery of its wonderful influence on vegeta-
tion.

A machine has been invented and patented at Washington


City, by which a man, with it and a mule, can set out in a day
grooving cotton plants which would cover an immense area of
land. !Now if these plants are started according to my direc-
tions, under these glasses, and then transplanted into suitable
soil after the spring frosts are over, the heat and moisture
of the summer in the Middle States, which probably are in
excess of those of the Southern States at that season, will
rapidly ensure the maturity of the plants and crops can be thus
;

raised which will compete favorably with those of any other

* The above was written in 1874.


section of the country. This same principle of hastening the
maturity of plants, applies with still greater force to higher
latitudes where the seasons of growth are necessarily short.

It is estimated that people residing six or eight degrees of


latitude farther north than the present latitude of cultivation
of various plants, may he enabled to enjoy many plants and
fruits of which they are now deprived, by the introduction of
the process of development that I have herein sketched.

What boundless blessings may not be obtained in this man-


ner for the populations of Northern Germany, Southern Russia,
of Scandinavia, Northern China and even the Steppes of
Tartary, and some parts of Siberia which may be brought
within the influence of this wonderful power, and thus, by
increasing the comforts of life, hasten the progress of their
civilization. So much for vegetation and what may be done
with it. We will now invite your attention to the stimulating
influence exerted by this associated blue and sunlight upon
animal life.

Anesteemed friend of mine, of high character, Commodore


J. Goldsborough, of the United States Navy, having bean
11.

assigned to the command of one of our western naval stations


in the latter part of the year 1871, caused some experiments to
be made with the associated blue light of the firmament, and
sunlight, and subsequently addressed to me a letter, of which
the following is a copy, viz :

MOUND CITY, ILLINOIS, May 31st,


To GENERAL A. PLEASONTON, Philadelphia, Penn'a.
J.

N'ERAL :
Presuming that it would be agreeable to you to
learn the results of some experiments that I caused to be
made, after having read the pamphlet you did me the honor
to place in my hand, " On the Influence of the Blue Color of the
Sky, in Developing Animal and Vegetable Life," I proceed to
detail them to you The first experiment was made here by the
:

Surgeon of this station, who, having had every alternate pane


of uncoloured glass removed from each of two windows in his
parlour, and having substituted lor them corresponding panes
of blue glass, proceeded to place a number of plants and vines
of many varieties, in pots, in the room so as to receive the
associated light of the sun and the blue light of the firmament
upon them.
In a very short time the plants and vines began to manifest
the effects of the remarkable influences to which they had
been subjected. Their growth was rapid and extraordinary,
indicating unusual vigour, and increasing in the length of
their branches from an inch and a half to three inches, accord-
ing to their species, every twenty-four hours, as by measure-
ment.

The second experiment was made in a comparison of the


development of the newly hatched chickens of two broods of
the same variety. In each of these two broods were thirteen
chickens, all of which were hatched on the same day.

Comfortable but separate quarters near to each other were


assigned to the two broods, with their respective mothers, on
the lawn ; one of the coops, containing a hen and her brood,
was partly covered with blue and plain glass the other coop,
;

also containing a hen and her brood, did not differ from the
coops commonly used in this country.

The chickens of each brood were fed at the same times


and with equal quantities of similar food. Those under the blue
glass soon began to display the effects of the stimulating
influence of the associated blue and sunlight by their daily
almost visible growth, increase of strength and activity, far
exceeding in all these respects, the developments of the
chickens of the other brood which were exposed to the ordi-
nary atmospheric influences.

I will also relate to you what I imagine to be another re-


markable circumstance having relation to this subject.

On the 29th of January, 1872, the wife of one of the gentle-


men on the station gave birth prematurely to a very small
child, which weighed at the time only three and a half pounds.
It was very feeble, possessing apparently but little vitality.
It so happened that the windows of the room, in which it was
born and reared, were draped with blue curtains, through
which and the plain glass of the windows, the sunlight entered
the apartment. The lacteal system of the mother was greatly
excited, and secreted an excessive quantity of milk, while at
the same time the appetite of the child for food was greatly
increased, to such an extent indeed, that its mother, notwith-
standing the inordinate flow of her milk, at times found it
difficult to satisfy its hunger.
8

The child grew rapidly in health, strength and size; and on


the 29th of May, 1872, just four months after its birth, when I
saw it, before I left Mound City, it weighed twenty-two
pounds.

Whether this extraordinary result was the effect of the


associated blue and sunlight, passing through the curtains
and glass of the windows, or not, I do not profess to determine,
but I give you the facts of the case, wnich are in complete
harmony in their developments with the results of the experi-
ments on domestic animals that you yourself have made. With
great regard,
I remain, very truly, yours,

JOHN R. GOLDSBOROUGH.

It will be seen from this statement that this child had grown

eighteen pounds and a half in Jour months, or four and five-


eighth pounds per month, and considering its apparently
slight hold upon life, at its birth, we may unite with the
Commodore in believing it to be "a remarkable circumstance."

On the 15th February of this year, 1874, two newly born


lambs, one weighing three and a half pounds, the other weigh-
ing four pounds, were taken from their mothers and placed in
one of the pens on my farm fitted with blue and uncolourcd
they had not received any nourishment from their dams,
:

were fed alike, and without any design to increase largely


their Aveight, with skimmed cow's milk. When they were three
months old, they were weighed one of them weighed fifty-
one pounds, the other fifty-five pounds at two weeks old
their teeth were so much developed that they began to eat
hay.

Tin- flesh of lambs is deemed to be a delicacy. From this


experiment, would appear that in three months from birth
it
iambs ! tied forty-seven and a half and fifty-one

ly, which, at the market price of forty cents per


M in one case twenty dollars and forty cents,
and in the other twenty-two dollars, for the lambs weighing
vely fifty-one and fifty-five pounds.

animals for food have here a


.Hid inexpensive process by which their gains may
y increased.
A gentleman of my acquaintance having a canary bird that
had been a very fine singer, was surprised to discover that,
without any apparent cause, the bird had ceased to sing,
refused to eat, and evidently was in a declining state of health,
and it was feared that he would soon die. I recommended
the owner to try the effect of blue and sunlight upon the bird.
He consented. The cage was removed with the bird to the
bathroom of the owner's house, whose windows contained varie-
gated glass, blue and violet in excess. The cage, with its
occupant, was suspended so that the sunlight passing through
these lights might fall upon the cage. The bird began to
recover very soon, its appetite returned, and in a little while
its song, which its owner assured me, was sweeter, stronger
and more spirited then he had previously known it to be.

At the close of the late civil war in this country, I bought a


pair of mules that had been used in the military service of
the government. A little while after the purchase it was dis-
covered that one of them was completely deaf, having had his
hearing destroyed by the noise of heavy firing during the
battles in which he had been employed. Thereupon I directed
the teamster who had charge of him, to be particularly careful
in using him, and to treat him with great gentleness and kind-
ness on account of his infirmity. Two or three years after he
came into my possession, this mule was seized with acute
rheumatism of so violent a character that the poor animal
could not walk. Before this time he, with other animals, had
been removed to a new stable that I had built, in which he
was kept for several months without being used for work.
He gradually got better of his rheumatism, but his deafness
continued until this spring, when he recovered entirely both
from his deafness and rheumatism. Over each of the doors of
this stable I had caused to be placed a transom, with panes of
blue and colourless glass therein. The stall of this mule was
before a door with such a transom over it. When the
the sun arose in the morning, he cast his light through this
transom on the neck and top of the head of this mule. Before
he set in the afternoon he threw his light again upon the head
and neck of this mule, through the transom of another door
on the northwestern side of the stable; the effect of this light
upon the animal has been the cure of his rheumatism, and the
removal of his deafness. He is now as healthy and hearty a
mule as you will see anywhere. The removal of this deafness
was produced by an electro-magnetic current, evolved by the
10

two lights upon his auditory nerves and exciting them to


healthy action.
Those last two incidents just mentioned, serve to introduce
the subject of the Influence of the associated blue and sunlight
upon animal health and particularly upon Human Health.
It is known
that silk is one of the most important staple
products of Italy. It is also known that much of the high
s which tills
staple product bears in commerce, is due
to the difficulty experienced in hatching and rearing the silk
worms which produce the cocoons or balls on which they wind
the silk drawn from their bodies. To hatch the eggs of the
silk worm, an even temperature of a certain degree of heat is

indispensable, and great care in feeding and keeping them


clean is required after the worms are hatched.

An eminent Italian chemist, after the publication of the


of my experiments; with blue light, instituted some
'is

experiments in the rearing of the silk worms. He placed a


certain number of the eggs that produce the worms under
plain glass, of which, in the hatching and rearing, 50 per cent,
died. He then placed the same number of eggs under violet
of which only 10 per cent, perished.
. Had he used blue
in his experiments it is probable that the loss would have

nearly nominal. As the rearing of silk worms for the


pean factories has become an important industry in Cali-
fornia, we may expect great success will follow the efforts to
them, when the stimulating influence of blue light shall
; -plied properly.

AVhile we are considering this subject, it may be as well to


allude to the vitalizing influence of the associated blue and
sunlight of this discovery in the cure of human and other
animal diseases, and I may mention here a most extraordinary
in which its power was manifested.
In r
part of August, 1871, I chanced to visit aphysi-
:

cian of this city, of acquaintance,my whom


I found to be in
-s, and plunged in the lowest despondency.
On inquiring the cause, he t<>ld me. that he feared that he was
about to lose his wife, who was suffering from a complication
of di fiat wen- most painful and distressing, and which
had the skill of several of the most eminent physicians
bafili'd
ilso of others of equal distinction in New York. He
then stated that his wife was suffering great pains in the lower
11

part of her back, and in her head and neck, as also in her
lower limbs; that she could not sleep; that she had no appetite
for food and was rapidly wasting away in flesh; and that her secre-
"
tions were all abnormal. I said to him, Why don't you try
" "
blue light? to which he replied, I have thought of that, but
you know how it is with wives; they will frequently reject the
advice of a husband, while they would accept it if offered by
any one else. This has deterred me from recommending
blue light, but I think that if you should recommend it to her
she will adopt it, for she has great confidence in your judg-
ment." I told him that I would most certainly recommend it
to her. Accordingly we went up to her sitting room in the
second story of the main building, having a southern expo-
sure, the house being on the southern side of the street. We
found her seated at an open window, the thermometer up in
the nineties ; she was looking very miserable, greatly emaci-
ated, sallow in complexion, indicating extreme ill health, and
her voice very feeble. On inquiring of her relative to the
state of her health, she described it very much as her husband,
the doctor, had done. When I had put to her the same ques-
tion I had proposed to her husband, viz " Why don't you try
:

" " Oh !" she U


blue light ? replied, I have tried so many things,
and have had so many doctors that I am out of conceit of all
remedies; none of them have done me any good; I don't
believe that anything can relieve me." To which I remarked,
4t
Nonsense you have many years of life yet remaining, and if
!

you will try blue light you will live to enjoy them." To
which she answered, " Are you in earnest ? Do you really
" "
think that blue light would do me any good ? Certainly !"
I said, "I do, or I would not recommend it to you my expe-
;

rience with it fully justifies my opinion." She then said she


would try it, and asked me how it should be applied. I then
told her and her husband in what manner the application of
blue light in her case should be made, and how often and
when it should be repeated, and they both promised that the
trial with it should be made the next day.

Six days after this interview I received a note from the


doctor, asking me to send him some copies of my memoir on"
blue light, &c., which he wished to forward to some of his
distant friends, and at the close of it he had written " You
:

will be surprised to learn that since my wife has been under


the blue glass, her hair on the head has beguh to grow, not
merely longer, but in places on her head where there was
none new hair is coming out thick." This was certainly an
1-2

unexpected effect, but it displayed an evident action on the


skin, and so tar was encouraging. Two
days after the receipt
of this note I called to see the doctor, and while he was
me an account of the experiment with the blue light,
is wife entered the office, and coming to me, she said,
firing "
Oh,
general ! I am so much obliged to you for having recommended
to me that blue light!" "Ah!" said I, "is it doing you any
" " the
good ?" Yes," she said, greatest possible good. Do
you know that when I put my naked foot under the blue light,
"
limb cease ?" I inquired, Is that a fact ?"
in the
all my pains
She assured that it was, and then added, "
me maid tells My
me that rny hair is growing not merely longer on my head,
but in places there which were bald new hair is coming out
thick." She also said that the pains in her back were less,
and that there was a general improvement in the condition of
her health.
Three weeks afterwards, on visiting them, the doctor told
me that the arrangement of blue and sunlight had been a
complete success with his wife; that her pains had left her;
that she now slept well
, her appetite had returned, and that
;

she had already gained much flesh. His wife, a few moments
afterwards, in person, confirmed this statement of her husband,
and he added: "From my observation of the effects of this
associated blue and sunlight upon my wife, I regard it as the
greatest stimulant and most powerful tonic that I know of in
medicine. It will be invaluable in typhoid cases, cases of de-
bility, nervous depressions, and the like." It was at this time
that the, iirst symptoms in the improved condition of the health
of the Prince of Wales, who had been dangerously ill in Eng-
land, inounced, when the doctor added: "Xow, in this
case of the IVinec of Wales, could he have been submitted to
this treatment with the associated blue and sunlight baths,
his rec,, very would bo in one-tenth part of the time that it will
take under the usual treatment."
I introduce IPTC a copy of the letter that I received from
this physician, J) r ,S. W. It is as
.
IJeekwith, oil this subject.
follows, viz. :

" Ei,K<Turr\L Walnut street,


INSTITUTE, 1220
"
L'liiLAiuaiMiiA, Hi[>tcinl>(r 21, IsTl.
"To General A. J. Pleasonton.
SIR: -In
following on1 the suggestions from you
IY I)I:AK
at our late conversation concerning the application of the asso-
13

elated blue light of the sky and sunlight for the cure of debility
and nervous exhaustion, I have found some very singular
results.

" The application of your theory to the cultivation of plants


and the development of animal life, has been wonderfully suc-
cessful; but it will, in certain conditions of human suffering,
prove to be a far greater blessing to mankind, if judiciously
used. As ail illustration, I offer the following facts, viz :

" had been suffering from nervous irritation and


My wife
exhaustion, which resulted in severe neuralgic and rheumatic
pains, depriving her of sleep and appetite for food, and pro-
ducing in her great debility, accompanied by a wasting away
of her body, and changing the normal character of her secre-
tions.

" I had
prepared a window sash fitted with blue glass, which
was inserted in one half of one of the windows in her sitting-
room. The sash of the other half of the same window was
fitted with uncoloured glass, the window having a southern ex-
posure, and receiving, from ten and a half o'clock A. M. till
four o'clock P. M., the full blaze of the sun's light. The shut-
ters of the other window (there being two windows in the
room) were closed, excluding all light from it, and light was
also excluded from the upper sash of the first mentioned
window.

" This
arrangement I found to furnish too strong a blue light
for my wife's eyes; and, besides, it was not in accordance with
your instructions. So I introduced an equal number of panes
of clear glass and of blue glass into the sash, and then rny wife
exposed to the action of these associated lights those parts of
her person which were the subjects of her neuralgia. In three
minutes afterwards the pains were greatly subdued ; and in
ten minutes after having received the lights upon her person,
they almost entirely ceased for the time being, whether they
were in the head, limbs, feet, or spine. With each application
of the sun and blue light bath, relief was given immediately.
There is no doubt in my mind that in cases of exhaustion from
long-continued fevers and other debilitating causes, the appli-
cation of this principle that you have discovered will restore
the patients to health with a rapidity tenfold greater than can
be effected by any other treatment within my knowledge.
14

"
Congratulating you upon your grand discovery, as well in
science as in animal Hygiene,
"I
remain, very truly yours,
" 8. W. BECKWITH.

"P. S. From a close examination of the effects of these


associated lights of the sun and the firmament, I am of the
opinion that they furnish the greatest stimulant and the most
powerful tonic that I am acquainted with in medicine.
"
Very truly yours,
" S. W. BECKWITH."
About this time (September, 1871), one of my sons, about 22
years of age, a remarkably vigourous and muscular young man,
was afflicted with a severe attack of sciatica, or rheumatism of
the sciatic nerve, in his left hip and thigh, from which he had
been unable to obtain any relief, though the usual medical as
well as galvanic remedies had been applied. He had become
lame from it, and he suffered much pain in his attempts to
walk.

I advisedhim to try the associated sun and blue light, both


up>u naked spine and hip, which he did with such benefit
his
that at the end of three weeks after taking the first of these baths
of light, every symptom of the disorder disappeared, and he
has had no return of it since a period now of three years.

Some time since two of


my friends, Major Generals S
r
and 1) , nited States regular army, were on duty
of the l

in this city. On making them a visit at their official residence,


on fhf window-ledge as I entered the room, apiece of
blue glass of about the size of one of the panes of glass in the
window. After some conversation, General 1). said to me, "Did
you notice that piece of blue glass on our window-ledge?" I
aid, "I had observed it." "Do you know what it is there for?''
Mich I replied, that "I did not !" lie then said, "I will tell

you
S. and 1 have In
ring very much from rheumatism
in our fore-arms, from the elbow-joints to our fingers' ends;
sometimes our lingers were so rigid that we could not hold a
have tried almost every remedy that was ever heard
of for relief, but without avail; at last I said to S., suppose we
try 1' .hie glass to which he assented when I sent
for tl. d it on the window-ledge. When the sun
began about ten o'clock in the morning to throw its light
15

through the glass of the window, we took off our coats, rolled
up our shirtsleeves to the shoulders, and then held our naked
arms under the blue and sunlight in three days thereafter,
;

having taken each day one of these sun-baths for 30 minutes


on our arms, the pains in them ceased, and we have not had
any return of them since we are cured."
It is now more than two years since the date of my visit to
these officers. Two months ago General S. told me that he
had not had any return of the rheumatism, nor did he think
that General D. had had any General S. in the meantime had
been exposed to every vicissitude of climate, from the Atlantic
Ocean to Washington Territory, on the Pacific, and from the
49th degree of north latitude to the Gulf of Mexico, and General
D. was then stationed in the far i^orth.
In the beginning of March, 1873, I was called upon by Mr.
Henry H, Holloway, a very respectable gentleman, doing busi
ness in this city as a bookseller, who came to consult me on
the subject of his mother's illness, and to ask my opinion in
regard to the propriety of using blue and sunlight baths in
ber case. He stated that his mother had been confined to her
bed for more than two months, and that she was suffering ex-
cruciating pains in her head, spine and other parts of her body ;
that sbe could not bear to be moved in bed; that she could not
sleep, and having no appetite, she was rapidly wasting away
in flesh and strength ;
that her physician had not been able to
make any impression upon her malady, and that the family
were in despair lest she should die that its members had been
;

summoned to her bedside that afternoon to see her probably


for the last time, and if I thought that these blue and sunlight
baths would relieve his mother, he wished to have them tried.
From his account it was evident that her situation was criti-
cal, and that there was a serious disturbance of the electrical
equilibrium in ber system ; I told him very frankly that I
thought his mother could be greatly benefited by the use of the
said baths of light, and I informed him how and how often
these baths of light should be administered. He expressed
himself much gratified by my explanations and said, that he
would urge his mother and her physician to give them a fair
trial. I received from him subsequently a letter, of which the
following is a copy, viz :

"PHILADELPHIA, April 14th, 1873.


"To General A. J. Pleasonton.
"DEAR SIR :
Knowing that you have been assiduously inves-
16

tigating the curative properties of blue light (for human


diseases) for several years past, a feeling of gratitude prompts
me to take the liberty of communicating a few facts that may
be of some interest to you.
"About six weeks since I heard you explaining to an ac-
quaintance of yours, the way in which blue light should be
arranged in windows, so as to take sun-baths thereby. In
enumerating the classes of invalids that would be benefited
by such baths, you mentioned those afflicted with spiuous or
nervous diseases.
"I was an interested auditor for my mother, Margaret C.
;

Holloway, residing inChesterfield township, Burlington


county, New Jersey, had then been confined to her bed for
about two months, her entire nervous system being appar-
ently incurably affected. It was probably a regular consump-
tion of the nerves. She appeared to be wasting away very
rapidly, and we had but little, if any, hope of her recovery.

"At my request, after first obtaining the full consent of her-


self and the attending physician, blue window lights (pur-
d from French, Richards & Co., of this city,) were suita-
bly arranged in the west windows of her room, the east win-
dows being too much shaded by trees to admit the light pro-
perly. During the tirst week thereafter, the weather was so
unfavorable that only one sun-bath could be taken but the;

next week, three or four were taken on consecutive days.

"From the commencement of her sickness, she had not been


able to sit up more than a few minutes each day, just while
the nurse made the bed; but in a few days after the several
sun-baths were taken in succession, she surprised the entire
family by getting up and dressing herself while they were at
breakfast. She probably over-exerted herself as she was not
11 for two or three days thereafter. However, she con-
tinued to improve very rapidly, and has now almost or entirely
regained her usual health.
" 1
may just here state the most important perceptible effects
of the sun-bath.
" of the time of her illness, mother suffered
Durii
from ;n ; :>ain in the
upper part of the spine and in her
head, and the galvanic battery had been frequently and regu-
larly used in the hope of mitigating it. The sun-baths re-
lieved this pain very materially; and also induced a profuse
17

perspiration that relieved the interior organs from


their ob-
structions, and which relief medicines, as well as the galvanic
battory, had failed to produce.

" These are the


important facts in the case.

"The attending physician would probably maintain that the


remedial virtue was mainly or altogether in his medicines, but
the circumstances are such as to induce the belief that mother's
speedy recovery was in a great degree attributable to the cura-
tive properties of the blue glass, lam so fully convinced of
this that I shall hereafter use the glass in a similar way, in all
cases of protracted sickness in my own family, whenever prac-
ticable.
"Very respectfully yours, &c.,
"HENKY H. IIO.LLOWAY,
" No. 5 South Tenth
street, Philadelphia, Pa."

This lady soon afterwards recovered her usual good health,


and on its re-establishment, she made several visits to her sons

residing here. In two of these visits, I had the pleasure to


see her. In one of the interviews that I had with her, she
told me that for two years prior to the use of these baths of
light she had had no perceptible perspiration, but that after the
third of these light baths, a most copious perspiration broke
out all over her person, but particularly profuse on her neck
and shoulders, and that she had called her daughter to witness
it, who scraped it with her hands from her neck and shoulders as
a groom does from a horse that has been hard driven or ridden
in summer. She dates her recovery from the restoration of
her power to perspire, which she attributed to the effect of the
associated sun and blue lights.

I addressed a note to the attending physician in this case,


asking from him a statement of the case, with its diagnosis, &c.
From his reply I make the following extract, viz " Mrs. H.
:

had been sick some two or three weeks with excessive spinal
iritation amounting to partial paralysis of the right side, with
intense neuralgia from the occiput down to the foot, including
the right arm. This condition was greatly improved before
the blue glass was used. She was almost free from pain, but
nervous iritation remaining at this time I made use of the
galvanic battery, which she thought done her a great deal of
good. .
18

"I think it was some two or three days after that, the blue
light was used. She says that she took it about twelve times
altogether, from a quarter to a half hour each time.
" You can draw
your own conclusion, if there was any benefit
derived from blue light.

My dear sir, I would not have you imagine that I do not


have any faith in your theory, for I confidently believe that it
has a most powerful influence, both on the animal and vegeta-
ble kingdoms.

" I should some future period, to give it a fair trial ;


like, at
consequently, if it would not be encroaching too much on your
time, I should like very much to hear from you in regard to
your experience of its application and result, the manner and
mode by which it may be used, and should there be any
benefit derived by its use, I would most cheerfully transmit
that fact to you.
"
Respectfully yours,
" J. G. L. WHITEHEAD.
"
CROSSWICKS, April 8d, 1873."

I have introduced here the extract from the letter of Dr.


Whitehead merely to show the desperate condition of
his
patient, her agonizing suffering, and the well founded appre-
hensions of the patient's family that the situation of the
patient was extremely critical, and fully justified the use even
of experiment with a new practice, in the attempt to relieve
her. When they saw that the expedients resorted to during
her long sickness had failed to produce the desired results, Dr.
AVhitehead, himself, is stated by Mr. Ilolloway to have given
his full consent to have the experiment with the blue light
made in the case of Mrs. Ilolloway, she also desiring it, which
is conclusive that she had not been so much benefited
by his
treatment of her as to wish to continue it longer, and that he
vas in doubt as to its efficacy from the adoption of another

About this time, Mr.


II. II.
Ilolloway, the gentleman whose
moth above, being a great sufferer from rheu-
iveii

matism, from which he had been unable to obtain relief,


nirifd to try in his own person the
efficacy of the sun
ami blue light hath, and at'tT having tested it to his entire
n, addressed me a letter, as follows, viz:
19

"
PHILADELPHIA, October 17th, 1873.
" Gen. A. J. Pleasonton.
" DEAR SIR: In the spring of 1872, 1 was afflicted with the
rheumatism (sciatica,) for nearly two months, and I suffered
from a recurrence of the same, at intervals, until last spring.
At that time the surprising effect which your blue glass sun-
baths produced in restoring my mother to health (an account
of which I sent you a few months since,) induced me to try
the same for the rheumatism.
" I took three or four such baths of sun and blue
light, in
accordance with your directions, and have had no returns of
the rheumatism since, although six months have now elapsed;
and I have been much exposed in stormy weather. My limbs
have been a little stiff, but without pain, two or three times
during long continued storms, which was probably owing to
the mercury contained in the drugs taken by me, when first
attacked in 1872.

"I have deferred writing to you on the subject for several


months, so that sufficient time might elapse to be sure of the
permanence of the effect of the blue glass sunbaths.
"I am fully confident that a fair trial of said sunbaths will
seldom if ever fail to cure the rheumatism, and I wish that so
simple and inexpensive a curative agent may speedily become
popularized.
"Very respectfully,
"HENRY H. HOLLOWAY.
" No. 5 South 10th
street, Phila."

In the further consideration of this subject, I introduce here


Borne extracts from a letter received from Dr. Robert Rohland,
a distinguished physician residing in New York.

YORK, July 23th, 1873.


" General A. J. Pleasonton.
" SIR : McL. told me, three days since, that you had
Dr.
written to him about a new edition of your highly interesting
pamphlet on blue light that you were preparing, that would
contain additional results that you had obtained in your experi-
ments with blue light as a healing power. I can readily
believe in its efficacy, and I very much regret that I have been
unable to continue my own experiments in the same direction,
by which many new facts would have been developed in all
20

likelihood to the great benefit of suffering humanity. Bo tliat


as it may, you deserve the warmest thanks for having extended
your experiments so far, making the professional physicians to
feel ashamed that none of them thought it worth their while
to draw practical consequences from your experiments in the
development of animal and vegetable life. As the effect of
is identical with
blue light might be of interest
t
od-force' it
u to hear of some surprising phenomena produced on
sensitive persons in connection with blue light and corrobora-
'

ting the results of'od-force' and odified preparations.


'

" 1. Compare with your results of the blue light on the Alder-

ney bull calf the statement of Dr. Henry B. Ileind, page 36 of


my pamphlet on od--force,' case No. 17, and you will find the
'

similar surprising growth of babies, by using my od-magnetic '

sugar of milk.'
_. I exposed, about a year ago, a man suffering with severe
rheumatism to the. influence of the blue light through two
glass panes. He felt, after fifteen minutes, much relieved, and
could move about without pains, but
complained of a nasty
on his tongue. The same happened to a friend
who visited me during odo-magneli/ing sugar of milk, when
I placed his hand in the blue and violet rays of the prism.

"Dr. Hardis, assistant physician of Dr. E. B. Foote, has the


same metallic (copper) taste, whenever he takes some of my

odo-magnetic sugar of milk, on his tongue; also Dr. Fincke, a


highly educated and reliable physician in Brooklyn, who ex-
perimented a great deal with od-force produced by the blue
and violet rays of the prism, and who placed the hand of a
man within these rays, and the latter complained of having a
like verdigris on his tongue.

These examples show that the blue and violet light and the
od-force generated in this way are of an electric positive nature ;
and it is very much to be regretted that Professor Von Reichcn-
bach reversed the poles, and, in his works, calls this pole,
which is analogical in its effects to the positive pole of any elec-
'
tric 01 "-magnetic apparatus, the odic-negative one,'
:

by that uselessly an unavoidable confusion."


In the laiter part March, 1874, I received a letter from
!'

Meral Charles W. Sanford, late the commander of


national luard of the city of
<
York, of which the fol- New
lowing is a copy :
21

" 462 West Twenty-Second


"
street, \
NEW YORK, March 29th, 1874. /
"To Major- General Pleasonton,
" 918
Spruce street, Phila., Pa.
" GENERAL :Will you oblige me with a copy of your pam-
phlet upon the use of blue glass ? I had some time since an
opportunity to read it, and having an invalid daughter, her
physician was induced to try the experiment of having blue
glass inserted in her windows. She has been materially bene-
fited by its use, and I am anxious to investigate the subject.
" She has also a number of
plants in her sitting-room, which
have grown and nourished in an extraordinary manner under
its influence. I am, General, very respectfully,
" Your obedient servant,
"CHARLES W. SANFORD."
Extract from a letter of Dr. Robert Rohland, of New York,
received by me in June, 1874.

YORK, June 28, 1874.


"To General A. J. Pleasonton,
"
Philadelphia.
"SiR: ..... Several gentlemen have made some
experiments with blue light under my direction, with very
favourable results, especially Dr. L. Fisher, in a case of general
debility and exhaustion, and Dr. McLaury, in a case of very
troublesome tumor.
"
Very respectfully yours, truly,
"DR. ROBERT ROHLAND."
Extract from a letter of Dr. Wm. M. McLaury, of New
York, received by me in August, 1874.
" To General Phila.
Pleasonton,
" DEAR SIR Understanding through Dr. R. Rohland that
:

you are about to publish a new edition of your article on the


blue ray, with some additional matter, I suppose that you
would like to hear of my experience therewith.
"I
regret to state that my experience is as yet very limited,
but I have great hopes that by extensive experiments, with
careful observation, we will yet find it to be an important
agent in combating disease.
..... " In a
little girl, one month old, was found a
hard resisting tumour about the size of a robin's egg, in the
sub-maxillary region of the left side. I had it placed in such
a position thai tin rays of light through a blue glass should
1

impinge upon it one hour, at least, each day. This tumefac-


tion disappeared entirely within forty days.

" The child lias


developed astonishingly is now seven ;

months old is exceedingly bright and happy has not known


; ;

an hour's sickness or discomfort. Its peculiar freedom from


infantile ills I attribute, at least in some degree, to the influence
of the blue light.
" With great respect, yours,
WM. M. McL AURY.
" NEW YORK 1874."
CITY, August 20*/t,

Some time since, Mrs. C., the wife of Major-General C., a


distinguished officer of the United States regular army, told
me that one of her grandchildren, a little boy about eighteen
months old, had from his birth had so little use of his legs
that he could neither crawl nor walk, and was apparently so
enfeebled in those limbs that she began to fear that the child
was permanently paralyzed in them.

To obviate such an affliction, she requested the mother of


the child to send him, with his two young sisters, to play in
the entry of the second story of her house, where she hud
fitted up a window with blue and plain glass in equal propor-
tions. The children were accordingly brought there and were
allowed to play for several bourn in this large entry or hall

-
under the mixed sun and blue light. In a very few days, Mrs.
C told me that the child manifested great improvement
in the strength of its limbs, having learned to climb
by a
chair, to crawl and to walk, and that he was then as promising
a child as any one is likely to see.

In ie of the child, whose


premature birth occured
the naval station at Mound
City, in Illinois, Commodore
at

Gfaldsborough was informed by its mother, a short time since,


that it had continued to improve in health, si/e and
vigour,
iimodore had last seen it, and that it was then a
perfect specimen of infantile development.
f thischild, de-cribed b\- Commodore (Jolds-
borough, ifi a very remarkable one, for, having been prema-
turely bom. it
may be presumed that its organization was not
23

as completely developed us it would have been had it, fulfilled


the entire period of its gestation and consequently it would
seem that the association of the blue and sun light had re-
paired all the deficiencies in its organisms existing at its birth.

Wehave, in these instances that I have advanced, mani-


festations of the remarkable variety of powers as developed in
the several cases, all differing from each other in their various
disorders, and all having been restored to their normal condi-
tion of health and vigour ; and, in some instances, having had
that condition increased and intensified.

We have had moribund flowering plants, not only arrested


in their course of decay, but reinvigourated, and their beauti-
ful tints of colour greatly improved.
We
have had branches of a tropical fruit tree, that were
exposed to the action of blue light, made highly fruitful, while
others of the same tree, not similarly exposed, bore no fruit,
and were feeble and apparently unhealthy.

We have an immature infant child, defective in its develop-


ments at its birth, made perfect in its parts, and strengthened
so as to become a striking instance of infantile health, vigour
and beauty.
We have had in another infant child, only one month old,
an obstinate tumour to be absorbed, and a degree of bodily
vigour imparted to it that defied the attacks of all infantile
disorders after the tumour had disappeared.

We have had poultry of the same variety, hatched on the


same day, presenting such different stages of advanced
development, after the lapse of the same period of time, to
those of similar poultry reared in the common way, that
incredulity must yield to well established fact, and surprise
give way to conviction.

We
have had the vocal powers of a singing bird, that had
ceased to sing, again excited, and its musical tones again
poured forth with greater force, richness and beauty than it
had before ever displayed, to the delight of all who have heard
it.

The deaf has been made to hear in a domestic animal,


:

the mule, which for nearly ten years, and perhaps longer, had
heard not at all and the stifihess of his limbs with rheuma-
;
24

tism has given way to the natural elasticity of his normal


condition of health. Under this most potent influence, lambs
that may be used for the food and clothing of man, have been
so greatly developed in so short a time that we may reasona-
bly hope that the rearing of domestic animals for food may be
so largely extended and improved, that immense numbers of
mankind who, from the costliness of such food heretofore,
had never tasted it, may, in the near future, be no longer de-
prived of the use of this most stimulating and nourishing
article of flesh diet.

But the greatest value of this application of blue light, will


be found to be in its curative power in human and animal dis-
orders of health.

In the eases before quoted in the human family, rheumatism,


both chronic and acute, neuralgia, with its accompaniment of
partial paralysis and various other complications, torpor of the
lower extremities of a child, nearly amounting to paralysis,
yielded to the application of these vital forces of light.
all

May we not congratulate mankind on the blessings which this


discovery foreshadows ?
For cerebral disorders, from softening of the brain to con-
firmed insanity, I would
respectfully suggest to the medical pro-
fession full trials of the blue and sunlight baths, to be taken
by their patients at least once in every twenty-four hours on the
naked spine and back of the head. Should they succeed in
the disorders of the brain, we may, in the near
''ing
future, be relieved of the cost of building additional lunatic
asylums, and insanity may be classed as a curable disease.
While this edition was being put through the press, I
received the following communication and its enclosure from
rt Kohland, a distinguished scientist, resident in
York :

209 THIRD AVKNCK. Xi:w YORK. )

'
'J67A, 1874. j"

. A. .1. ox.
'/; Vuth my warmest thanks for your last kind
the pleasure to send you enclosed, at last,
1'r. Fisher's patient; and am still in hop.
nn>nth.
f
my highest respect, and allow me
if, your most obedient and irrateful,
DK. ROBERT KUI1LAXD.
25

Enclosed the above, was the following statement of the


in

lady who had been


placed under the influence of the associated
light of the sun and the blue light of the firmament, and the
blue rays eliminated from sun-light transmitted through blue
glass :

"At the request of my attending physician, Dr. Louis


Fisher, I will state, as bru-tlv as possible, the effects produced
upon me by the transmission of the sun's rays through blue
glass :

"
Having been an invalid for nearly three years, and for the
last half of that time confined entirely to my rooms on one
floor, I became so reduced by the long confinement, and my
nervous system seemed so completely broken down, that all
tonics lost their effects, sleep at nights could only be obtained
by the use of opiates, appetite, of course, there was none, and
scarcely a vestige of color remained, either in my lips, face or
hands as a last resort I was placed, about the 19th of Janu-
ary, 1874, under the influence of blue glass rays. Two large
panes of the glass, each 36 inches long by 16 inches wide, were
placed in the upper part of a sunny window in my parlour, a
window with a south exposure, and as the blue and sunlight
streamed into the room, I sat in it continuously I was also
advised by Dr. Fisher, to take a regular sun-bath of it; at
least to let the blue rays fall directly on the spine for about 20
or 30 minutes at a time, morning and afternoon but the ;

effects of it were too strong for me to bear; and as I was pro-


ressing very favorably by merely sitting in it in my ordinary
ress, that was considered sufficient.

"In two or three weeks the change began to be very percep-


tible. The colour began returning to my face, lips and hands,
my nights became better, my appetite more natural, and my
strength and vitality to return, while my whole nervous
system, was most decidedly strengthened and soothed.
" In about six
weeks, I was allowed to try going up and down
a few stairs at a time, being able to test in that way how the
strength was returning into my limbs, and by the middle of
April, when the spring was sufficiently advanced to make It
prudent for me to try walking out, I was able to do so.

" The experiment was made a peculiarly fair one by the


stoppage of all tonics, &c., as soon as the glass was placed in
the window, allowing me to depend solely on the efficacy of
the blue light."
26

A distinguished surgeon of this city, on being made


acquainted with the remarkable vivifying effects of this force,
in several of the cases mentioned herein, expressed to the
author, the opinion that the vitalizing influence of these asso-
ciated colours, would probably be found to eradicate scrofula,
and the terrible diseases which have produced it, from the
human system a result never yet attained by any medical
treatment now known.
If this opinion should prove to be well founded, why may
we not anticipate that tubercular consumption of the lungs
maybe arrested in its progress, its abscesses absorbed and dis-

persed by the purified blood taking up the purulent matter,


and either decomposing it, or eliminating it through the
various excreting channels of the body?*

If this last mentioned case had furnished the only example


of the restorative influence of blue light upon disordered health,
it should awaken in the medical profession, throughout the

world, a desire to investigate the causes and sources of that


force which had produced such marvelous effects.

Let us attempt a solution. The juxtaposition of plain


tmcoloured glass and blue glass in the passage of sunlight,
and the transmitted blue light of the firmament, and the
eliminated blue rays of the sun-light through them respectively,
evolves an electro-magnetic current, which imparts to vegeta-
ble or animal life subjected to it, an extraordinary impulse to
the developemcnt of their respective vigour and growth.
Thi-ir vitality is strengthened so as to resist disease, and to
throw it off in tin instances in which it had appeared before
>.-,.

having been subjected to its power.


* A friend of mini- luis sent me the following notice, viz:
I.; The author of "Life I'mler Class," sends to the
'. a letter giving some curious results of his experience in the
coloured 'Medium for the transmission of the sun's rays in the
of lung di-ea>e. 'I'ln- writer <>f the communication, being himself a
victim to \\eak :
al attention to the subject, from personal as well
a^ prote iunal interest. His attention was directed to the matter by an accident
in his own experience. Durim: the autumn of 1st ,;!, he was borne on "sick
1

from the army, and was in the habit of frequenting the photograph gallery
of a friend. Tl, com of the gallery was lighted by a skylight of litiht
>

ated of the same colour, lie. soon' noticed, that


r after ;m hour or two
passed in the gallery, and he was
firmly convinced that Ilie beneficial effect was largely due to bllle'light. After
the war, he II.-IMU a scries of experiments aiiioni: hi- patients by using blue
he liylit trom pure blue glass is not entirely agreeable to the eye, he
-
alternated the pane., lV jth clear glass. This was an Improvement, and he Went
on with his experiment until he attained the highest sanitary power in a purple
or light violet colour, the red, iu the stain. ng, making the light pleasant to bear.
27

The velocity of light on the earth's surface has been found


by Leon Foucault, by experiments most carefully conducted,
to be 298,000 kilometres or 186,000 miles per second of time
now of the seven primary rays of light, all of them excepting
the blue ray and possibly its compounds, purple, indigo and
violet, which perhaps are decomposed, and the blue ray
liberated, are suddenly arrested in their marvelously rapid
course, on coming in contractwith the blue glass. This sudden
impact of the intercepted rays on the outer surface of the blue
glass with this inconceivable speed, produces a large amount
of friction. Light, though imponderable, yet is material, since
according to the book of Genesis, God said, "Let light be made,
and it was made" and the movement of matter upon matter,
always produces friction. By friction electricity is evolved, and
when opposite electricities meet in conjunction, their conflict
according to the celebrated Danish philosopher, Oersted, develops
magnetism. The electricity produced by this friction is
negative, while the electrical condition of the glass is opposite,
or positive, and heat is therefore also evolved by their conjunc-
tion. This heat sufficiently expands the pores of the glass to
pass through it and then you have within the apartment, elec-
tricity, magnetism, light and heat all essential
elements]of vital
force. "Without light and heat, life cannot exist, and electricity
and magnetism are indispensable to its active vitality. This
current of electro-magnetism, when allowed to fall upon the
spinal column of an animal, is conducted by its nerves to the
brain, and thence is distributed over its whole nervous system,
imparting vigour to all the organs of the body, and stimu-
lating them into active exercise hence follows restoration to
:

health.

In the early part cf the summer of 1871, having caused to


be printed an edition of my memoir which, a short time before,
I had read before you, I distributed copies of it among literary
and scientific institutions, and to such persons of culture as
were likely to be interested in the investigation of the subjects
treated of in it. Having sent several copies to Washington
city, I received from my friends there suggestions to take out
Letters Patent from the Government of the United States for
my new discovery, which they deemed to be of the highest
importance. Accordingly, I made an application to the Com-
missioner of Patents for the issue of Letters Patent thereon.
When the application was received at the Patent Office, the
novelty of its character, and the wonderful results of the ex-
periments on which the application had been based, excited
28

the greatest surprise and interest among the officers of the


Bureau of Patents. The application was referred by the
Commissioner to the Examiner-in-chief of the class of Chemis-
try, who, utter a full examination of the whole subject, as I was
informed, reported favourably upon the application and recom-
mended the issue of Letters Patent. At this stage of the
proceeding, the Commissioner was visited by the Examiner-in-
chicf of the class of Agriculture, Professor I. Brainerd, of
Ohio, a very distinguished scientific gentleman, who suggested
to the Commissioner that the application had received a wrong
reference; that it should have been referred to him as it con-
cerned plants and animals, which were intimately associated
with the class of Agriculture under his charge. The Commis-
sioner replied, that it concerned, also, Chemistry; but if he,
Professor Brainerd, desired to investigate the subject, the
of the Letters Patent should be suspended till that oppor-
tunity was afforded him which was done. I was thereupon
informed of it, and that the Commissioner, in view of the
great importanee of the application, and of the novelty of the
principle- involved in it, was desirous, before proceeding
further in the issue of the Letters Patent, to send to my farm
in this vicinity. Professor Brainerd, who, with my permission,
would examine into the manner in which my experiments had
'ondueted, and particularly investigate the whole subject
of the application. On the receipt of this communication, I
wrote to the Commissioner of Patents, and informed him that
I would be very glad 10 receive Professor Brainerd, and to give
him every information and afford him every facility for making
hi- investigation in my power.
A few days thereafter, the Professor arrived at my house in
Spruce street; and, on presenting himself to me, he said:
must receive this visit of mine as a very high
i

compliment, sine.; the Commissioner of Patents, in extremely


-, ever sends any one from the office for information
in relation to an application fora Patent; for he
requires all
such information to lie brought to him. lie has, however, in
ted from his usual course, from the
great interest
:r alleged
discovery, and has scut me, therefore,
to make ;
j;ition. For myself, \vill say,
I

prejudice for or against the principles announced


>

tartling memoir, and I come to you to make a fair,


,d impartial examination of the whole matter. If
your averment.-. sustained after I shr.ll
;

.;,il l>e
examined the subject, I will report favourably upon your
29

application, and your Letters Patent will be issued forthwith.


Should however, have any doubts in the matter I will report
I,

against their issue, and you will not get your Patent." To
this I replied, "That the facts in the case must furnish their
own evidence, and I was perfectly satisfied to abide by his
j udgment thereon,
whatever it might be." We then proceeded
to my farm, where the professor remained three days, devoting
himself to a critical examination of the subjects committed to
him for investigation. On the afternoon of the third day we
visited the grapery, as he had often done before, where we
met three professors of colleges, who, attracted by the notices
of the experiments which they had seen in the newspapers,
had come to the farm to verify for themselves the statements
they had read. For purposes of ventilation in the grapery, I
had caused to be removed from immediately below the eaves
on the southeastern side thereof, for the whole length of the
house, two panes of glass in width; and in their places I had in-
troduced galvanized iron wire cloth, with meshes of about one
quarter of an inch square. The vines planted on the outside
border, and trained through terra-cotta pipes into the grapery,
along its walls of glass, and up to the ridge on the southeastern
side of the grapery had, when they reached this wire cloth,
in their growth on the inside, sent lateral branches through
its meshes into the outer air, which had grown to
varying
lengths often, twelve or fourteen feet on the outside of the
grapery. These lateral branches were covered with foliage
the inside branches from the same stems extending to the
ridge were likewise covered with the densest foliage; but the
difference between the inside and outside foliage was most
distinctly marked. The inside leaves, from the same roots
which furnished those on the outside, were fully six or eight
inches respectively in diameter, of the deepest green colour,
and so perfectly healthy that they seemed more like wax leaves
than natural ones, while those on the outside of the grapery,
though abundant, were not more than two inches in diameter,
of a pale, sickly, yellowish colour, indicating a feeble vitality.
I called the attention of Professor Brainerd and of the other
professors to this most marked difference in the respective
leaves inside and outside, and they all united in the opinion
that this example furnished the most conclusive illustration of
the influence of blue light on vegetation that could be produced
under any circumstances. Here were branches of vines from
the same roots, covered with foliage, deriving their nutriment
from the same sources, the outside leaves exposed to all the
influences of temperature, light, humidity or dryness of the
30

natural atmosphere, and yet, scarcely one-fourth of the size of


their relatives those on the inside ; and indicating an enfeebled
and transitory existence. "While the latter, revelling in the
stimulating forces of the combined sunlight and blue light of
the sky, had attained not merely size, but also an exuberance
of vigor which excited the greatest astonishment. Professor
Brainerd gathered some of the leaves from the outside and
inside branches of the same vines, which he took with him to
the Patent Office to be measured and photographed. The
other professors did likewise to exhibit to their respective
classes.

When Professor Brainerd had completed his examination,


and was prepared to return to Washington, he said to me,
"
General, everything that you have alleged on this subject of
blue light is coniirmed ;
am perfectly convinced of their
I

truth. On my return to Washington, I will make a most


favourable report on your application, and your Letters Patent
will be issued forthwith. I will now say to you, that before i
left Washington, the officers of the Patent Office discussed

among ourselves your application, and we came to the conclu-


sion, unanimously, that if my investigation should establish
the verity of your statements you have made the most import-
ant discovery of this century, transcending in importance even
that of Morse's Telegraph, which, at best, furnished only a
means of communication with distant places, while your dis-
covery could be brought home to every living object on the
planet. We further thought that your patent would be one
of the most valuable that had ever been issued in the United
States. I congratulate you upon your great discovery."
The 1'rofessor accordingly returned to Washington, made
hi- report, which, as he said it would be, was most, i'avourable;
ami Letten 1'atent for new process of accelerating the
my
growth of plants ami animals were issued to me on September
20th, ]871.

It is to Moses, the lawgiver, the great leader of the


ites in their Ivxodus from Egypt, in their passage across
tli'- K'-d Sea, and in their
subsequent residence in the desert,
that we are indebted for our knowledge of the plan of the
in the creation of the world. This narrative of
contained in the book of Genesis, has been received
.iristiaii and .lc\vi-h p.-op].-s, of all nations, as a faithful

iption of the revelation- claimed by Moses to have been


31

made to him by the Almighty himself. It is the foundation


of their religions the basis on which their spiritual faiths
rest.

Let us take up this book of Genesis, and endeavour to dis-


cover from it, illuminated by the developments of modem
science, what the prevailing idea of the creative mind may
have been in establishing the physical functions of the planet
on which we live.

In the first chapter of Genesis, we read the first four verses


as follows, viz :

"1. In the beginning God created heaven and earth.


" 2. And the earth was void and empty, and darkness was
upon the face of the deep, and the Spirit of God moved on
the waters.
" 3. And God said, Be light made and light was made.
:

"4. And God saw the light that it was good, and he divided
the light from the darkness."

From these verses, it would appear that the materials com-


posing this planet were created and assembled in darkness,
and that the first physical force made was light not heat,
not electricity, not magnetism but light, which we shall
endeavour to show is the almost omnipotent force, which
produces them all, and gives form and motion to our plane-
tary system. In the same chapter, in the 6th verse, we read,
" 6. And God said Let there be a firmament made amidst
;

the waters, and let it divide the waters from the waters."
And we
read as follows, viz:
in the 7th verse,
" 7. And God made a firmament, and divided the waters
that were under the firmament from those that were above
the firmament and it was so."

There is obscurity in this verse, since in the following verse,


the 8th, we read,
" 8. God called the firmament
Heaven, and the evening
and the morning were the second day." Now in the 1st verse
" In the God created heaven and
it is stated, beginning
earth;" heaven having precedence both as to time and place
in the creation. In the 8th verse, it would read as if there
were waters above the heaven, which were divided by the
32

firmament from those that were on the earth. may We


suppose, therefore, the word firmament, used in the 7th
verse, to mean the atmosphere, which was to hold in sus-
pension the waters contained in it as vapours, clouds, &c.,
thus separating them from the waters on the earth, as well as
the infinite spam above the atmosphere, now supposed to
contain the orbits of the fixed stars. In the 9th verse, the dry
land appears, and the waters under the heaven (probably
atmospnere) are gathered together and, in the 10th verse, are
called seas, and in the llth verse God said, " 11. Let the
earth bring forth the green herb, and such as may seed, and
the fruit tree yielding fruit after its kind which may have
seed in itself upon the earth, and it was done.
" 12. And the earth
brought forth the green herb, and
such as yicldeth SIMM! according to its kind, and the tree that
th fruit having seed, each one according to its kind, and
God saw that it was good."
"We hen observe, that so far as the order of developing
will 1

creation had gone, li^ht was, as yet, the only active force
which had been brought into existence, or as the verse
expressed it, and light was made." Of course, it must
'

have been made of the materials which composed it. There


were, at that period, no sun, no moon, and perhaps only the
fixed stars, which were to illuminate the heaven, that had
been created, and yet light, was made, and it was made of its
materials, and being made its attributes were at once called
" For the earth
into use. brought forth the green herb, and
8u. -h as yieldeth seed according to its kind, and the tree that
beareth fruit having seed, each one according to its kind."
No herb could have been green without light, and no tree
could have borne its fruit in darkness, nor could seed have
matured without light, and yet this light came neither
from the sun, nor the moon, modern spectroscopes to the con-
trary notwithstanding, for as yet neither the sun nor the moon
had been created.

Hence, we can understand that the Creator, in directing


first of all should be made, intended to constitute a
that light
Miperior to all other forces, for it is by light that they
developed, ;md made auxiliary to the great plan of
1

ion.

" 14. Ami find said, Let there be


lights made in the firma-
ment of he;. ven. to divide tli.' day and the night, and let them
be for signs and seasons and for days and jrears.
33

" 15. To shine in the firmament of heaven and to give


light upon the earth, and itwas so done.
"1(1. And (Joel made two groat lights, a greater light to
rule the day, and a lesser light to rule the night, and the stars.
" A.nd he set them
17. in the firmament of heaven to shine
upon the earth,
"
And to rule the day and the night, and to divide the
18.
light and the darkness, and God saw that it was
good."
It will be seen from these verses, that the
ruling intent of
the Creator was to furnish lif/ht, and not heat, to the world he
was bringing into existence to separate the day from the
night as signs and for seasons, and for days and years, to
shine in the firmament of heaven, and to give light upon the
earth.

These then are the varied functions to be performed by the


sun, moon, and stars, by the fiat of the Creator.
Much speculation has been evoked, in the inquiry for the
source of that light that was ordered to be made previous to
the making of the two great lights, the sun and moon, which
he set in the firmament of heaven to shine upon the earth.
The modern revelations of the telescope in disclosing the
character of the more distant fixed stars, the congregations of
stars in the " Milky Way," in the nebulae and cloudlets of
lights, furnish an answer to all such inquiries. The limited
vision of Moses, unassisted by the telescope, which, in his day,
had no existence, would not have permitted him to compre-
hend any revelation of the glories of the world of astronomy,
as known to us now; and hence, no such revelation was made
to him. He was only instructed partially on the subject of
our solar system, and the myriads of lights, lesser and greater
than any that our system contains, which were sendjng their
illumination over a boundless world, were entirely unimagiued
by him. But we can readily fancy with our increased know-
ledge of astronomy, whence this primeval light was drawn.
We may suppose that our solar system was the last created of
the various systems which stud the heavens with their brilliant
effulgence, and that the materials which compose it were
easily gathered from the mighty masses that illuminated the
firmament.
Our astronomers tell us of the infinite star depths, in which
aro assembled series of worlds without number, all circling
34

around their respective central orbs, and all moving with


inconceivable velocity towards some region of the firmament
so remote that our finite intellectual powers fail to conceive
of it, and that, in this grand movement of worlds, our diminu-
tive solar system has its allotted part and pursues its inevitable
destiny. Hence arises the reflection that when our system shall
approach the astronomical horizon of this mighty system of
worlds, and shall be descending below it, as our sun now does
below our own horizon, another solar system, transcending in
its glories
anything of which the human mind can conceive,
shall arise in the western firmament to take the place that had
been vacated by our own, and thus system after system shall
be circling in the great expanse of space, till time shall be no
more.
We must have a starting point in our discussion, and we
will begin with matter, out of which all things are made.
We define matter to be anything which moves, or is the
subject of motion. We prefer this definition before all others,
since it is entirely irrespective of human existence, and has no
reference to human impressions. Motion was produced long
before man, and will continue long after he has passed away.

When matter is said to be solid, liquid or gaseous, we


convey a very inadequate idea of its composition or of its
condition. The microscope, as its powers are being developed,
reveals to us forms and conditions of matter of which the most
fertile imagination could have had no previous conception.
So in the series of what is termed created matter, we have but
a very faint image of a few of the most obvious links in the
chain of its conditions, while we know and can know nothing
of its extreme terminations, its greatest density and most
minute tenuity. But \ve may conceive that whatever moves,
or e;m be, moved, must be matter according to this definition,
the imponderables, light, heat, electricity and magnetism, are
all material substances, so subtle and attenuated, however,
that human ingenuity has never been able to discover their
components, or to reduce them to standards of comparison by
which their powers might be measured. We might go
farther and assert that all human emotions as well as animal
instincts are likewise material, since our only cognizance of
them is made apparent to us through our senses, concerning
whose materiality there can be no question. Let it not be
supposed that this idea of material being is at all inconsistent
with an a.-pi ration lor a future life, since the resurrection of
35

the material body is as much a part of the Christian's creed as


is the hope of his immortality. Moses has told us for what
purposes the sun and moon and stars were created " to rule ;

the day and night, and to divide the light and the darkness,
and as signs, and for seasons, and for days and years." Now,
it a very remarkable thing, that Moses, who was born in
is

Gos'hen, a province of Egypt, who passed the first forty years


of his life in Egypt, which lies between north latitude 32 and
22, and 27 and 34 east longitude, the next forty years on
the borders of the Desert, and the last forty years thereof in the
wilderness with his people, should have omitted to assign to
the sun the heating qualities which our scientists declare it to
possess, if, in fact, the sun did possess such powers, and the
fact had been revealed to him by the Almighty.

Modern discoveries in science go to show that Moses was


right in his description of the functions of those luminaries.

We may imagine the astonishment, amounting almost to


incredulity, with which Moses received the revelation regard-
ing the attributes of the sun, moon and stars. Living in the
hot climate of Egypt, or of the Desert, whose " soil is fire, and
whose wind is flame," and termed " burning sands of the
Desert," from their great heat, to what other source could he
refer this terrible heat than to the sun. Yet the sun is de-
scribed to him as a great light, not a great furnace, not a great
source of heat, but simply as an illuminating power. hen W
traveling in the Desert, and overtaken by the burning Sirocco,
whose blast, like that from a fiery furnace, obscuring the light
of the sun by the clouds of burning sand which it had raised,
Moses might have, by a course of reasoning, traced a connection
between the raging tempest and the sands heated by the sun,
and thus have assigned to that luminary the heating power
claimed for its radiations. He might even have been familiar
with the tenets of the predecessors of Zoroaster, and of the
fire worshippers in Persia, who worshipped that great orb of

light as the source of earthly heat, but if so, he discarded


all such imaginings, and boldly declared
" that it is the
greater
of two lights, intended to separate the day from the night ; as
signs, and for seasons, and for days and years to shine in the
;

firmament of Heaven, and to give light upon the earth."

Light is the great source of terrestrial electricity, magnetism


and heat.
Whatever moves, or is the subject of motion, is matter.
36

"We cannot conceive of motion, without associating with the


idea an object to be moved. Ilence light, which moves with
a velocity of which we may speak, but which is not con-
ceivable by us, is composed of matter. When the Creator, in
his beneficence, first displayed the rainbow in the atmosphere,
lie taught mankind their first lesson in philosophical analysis.
lie thus showed that the white light of the sun was not a simple
substance, but that it was composed of seven primary rays,
which, by their combinations, produced all the varying tints or
Colours that are seen in nature, and yet how many myriads of
years have passed since this magnificent spectacle has been
exhibited to man before any one ventured to inquire into the
simple and beautiful lesson which it taught. Even yet, what
profound ignorance prevails everywhere in connection with
the influences which these elementary rays develop.

Light, which thrown upon the photosphere of the sun, from


the innumerable orbs that from their starry depths illuminate
the expanse of Heaven, is reflected to this planet with a
velocity of 186,000 miles per second of time, and requires about
8 16-o.3 minutes to reach the earth from the sun, ninety-two
millions of miles distant. Whatever maybe the composition
of the space intervening between the sun and the earth, out-
side of our atmosphere, as we are taught that nature abhors
a vacuum, it must be composed of something which is made of
matter. Give it its most attenuated form and call it ether, it
is still matter, and light, which is also composed of matter,
however subtle it may be, through it with this
passing
marvelous speed, must produce everywhere enormous friction.
Now whenever one body moves in, on, under, around, or through
another body in contact with it, such motion produces friction.
Friction, derived according to Webster, from the Latin/neo, to
rub, as \ve know evolves electricity, and it is this electricity and
.pi-dative magnetism, discovered by Oersted, the cele-
brated Danish naturalist, to be its constant accompaniment
when opposite electrical polarities are united, thus derived,
which form those tremendous forces of nature that produce
\vhere those changes in, on and about our planet, that
our observation at every instant. When, therefore, the
r, having assembled in their respective positions
after
the materials which compose the planetary and stellar worlds,
uttered the sublime words, ''Let Light be made," he called
into being a power which became the generator of all the
physical forces which control and regulate the world. Let us
for a moment imagine the radiant reflection of luminous matter
37

from every part of the photosphere of that great luminary, the


sun, which in its magnitude was intended to illumine and
vitalize all animated matter, as well as to give form and con-
sistency to whatever had been created, passing from every
point thereof with a velocity of 186,000 miles per second,
penetrating through planetary and stellar spaces which, how-
ever subtle and attenuated, must have offered some resistance
to the passage of this material light, producing everywhere in
its passage an enormous amount of friction, and with it elec-

tricity and magnetism. Electricity, by the junction of its


opposite polarities, evolves heat and also imparts to all sub-
stances that are capable of being invested with it, magnetism.
The sun, the planets, the stars and all the bodies that stud the
expanse of heaven, are doubtless all magnets, to which mag-
netism was imparted when the Creator uttered in heaven the
words without parallel in sublimity, " Let light be made."
This then is the origin of all the physical forces of the universe.
Let us consider for a moment the nature of heat, and it will be
apparent that terrestrial heat cannot be directly derived from
the sun.

The tendency of heat is always to ascend into the atmos-


phere, when it is derived from combustion on the surface of
the earth, or from radiation within it. The flame of a candle
is vertically upward, on every part of the earth's surface, when
the air is still. The effort of heat is to depart from its source
with a rapidity proportionate to the intensity of the combus-
tion. This is a repellent force at the same time from its
being associated with positive electricity, it is attracted to the
upper atmosphere by its negative electricity, always associated
with cold, which is opposed to positive electricity. The
diffusion of heat, laterally or downwards, is very inconsiderable,
as is constantly manifested in our rooms, where the fire in the
grate emits very little heat below the bottom of the grate, and
parts of the room distant from the fire are very imperfectly
heated by it. The sun in its daily course being above the
earth, if it had any calorific rays, could not send them to the
earth below it, through a space of ninety-two millions of miles,
which, according to calculations of Pouillet, has a temperature
of minus 142 degrees of Centigrade thermometer. We will
illustrate this by an example or two. During our late

unhappy sectional war, at the siege of Fort Sumter, in South


Carolina, General Gilmore's heavy guns threw their enormous
shells into the city of Charleston, four and a half miles distant.
While the expansion of the powder in thechamber of these
38

guns, in its combustion into gases, evolved a power which


throw those shells so great a distance, it was totally inadequate
to drive the heat disengaged in the conversion of the powder
into these propelling gases to a greater distance from the
muzzles of the guns than thirty feet. It ascended, instantl}*
on leaving the guns, into the upper atmosphere, attracted by an
opposite electricity. Any one familiar with the fire of artillery,
must have observed similar effects regarding the heat from the
discharge.

We will " Mount "Washington,


illustrate this by an example.
in the White Mountains, in New Hampshire,
is in north latitude

44 16' 25", andin west longitude from Greenwich 71 16'


2(1". Its elevation above tide water is 6,293 feet; and in
altitudeit is the second highest mountain northward of the
Gulf of Mexico, the highest mountain thereof being Clingmans
IVak, in the State of North Carolina which is 6,707 feet
above tide water.
" The limit of the
growth of trees on the north side of Mount
Washington is 4,150 feet above tide water. The climate of
Mount Washington corresponds with that of the middle of
about 70 of north latitude or 26 further north
;ilaud,
than New Hampshire. It is an arctic island (so to speak) in
the temperate zone, and, on account of its great elevation, it
exhibits also the condition of the atmosphere where the
ineivury does not rise above 24 inches in the barometer. For
peculiar interest, therefore, the Mount Washington (meteoro-
logical) station is not exceeded by any point within the arctic
circle."

It was onthis mountain that a party of scientific gentlemen


the winter of 1870 and 1871, amid great privations and
1

suH'cring, for the purpose of investigating the physieal con-


ditions of the atmosphere and mountain at that great elevation.
"Observation shows that the climate of any country becomes
colder proportion to the height of the land above the sea.
in
Thus tropical regions there may be an arctic climate at an
in
altitude of 12,000 or 15,000 feet."

The room inhabited by these gentlemen was in the south-


west corner of the railroad depot, about 20 feet long, 11 feet
wide and N fe-t high. It, was well protected from the outer
cold, was heated by two stoves, one an ordinary cook stove,
the other a Mairee parlor stove, prized for its marvelous heating
power. Their Journal reports as follows, viz:
39

"
February 4th, 1871, temperature at 7 o'clock, A. M., 33;
at 9 o'clock, P. M., 40. In the room the temperature was
-f-35 and sometimes +60. To do this, the stoves were kept
at a red heat. The thermometer hangs 5 feet from stoves, the
temperature 10 feet from the stoves at the floor was 12, in
other parts of the room the temperature was 65 midnight,
;

wind fully up to 100 miles per hour and northwest.


"
February 5th, some of the gusts of wind 110 miles per
hour; at 3 o'clock, A. M., temperature in the room 59,
barometer 22.810 inches, attached thermometer 62. Yester-
day, barometer 22.508 inches."
Now let us see what this means 5 feet from red hot stoves
:

the thermometer marked 60, 10 feet from the same stoves on


the floor the thermometer marked 12, being a loss of 48 in a
distance of 5 feet in length and 2 feet below the sources of
heat. Now at that rate of radiation of heat, how hot must the
1

sun be to transmit any degree of heat 92 millions of miles


through a temperature of 142 of centigrade to this planet,
and not merely to this earth in a column of heat of 8,000 miles in
diameter to envelope it, but also to diffuse its heat through an
ellipsoid of ether, whose circumference would be the orbit of
the earth around the sun ? But the actual loss of heat in its
descent to the earth (if that could be possible, which it cannot
be,) per foot would be immensely more than is stated above,'
as the heat would have to pass through space chilled to 142
of centigrade instead of in a room heated to -f-65 of Fahrenheit.
Again, in this latitude of 40 north, we have in our winters
falls of snow which lie upon the ground sometimes for weeks,
with the sun being unable to make any impression upon it
and when the snow does begin to melt, it commences with the
layer of snow in contact with the earth, and not with that on
the upper surface exposed to the sun. Our farmers all know
that when their fields in winter are covered with snow, their
growing crops under it are kept warm, though no ray of the
sun could reach them through the snow, and they anticipate
therefrom a large yield in the ensuing harvest. If terrestrial
heat is derived directly from the sun, how is this fact explained ?
A gentleman in the State of Maine, during the early part of
the last winter, when the ground at his residence was deeply
covered with snow in many places, made some experiments to
ascertain the temperature of the earth under the snow. He
found that the heat increased at the surface of the earth with
the depth of the snow above it. The following is the account,
7iz:
Experiments wore made in the winter of 1872-73, with a
view to ascertain how far the soil is protected from cold by
enow. For four successive days in winter, there being four
inches in depth of snow on the ground on a level, the average
temperature, immediately above the snow, was found to be
fourteen degrees of Fahrenheit's thermometer below zero ;

immediately beneath the snow in contact with the earth, it


was ten degrees above zero; being an increase of twenty-four
degrees of temperature, occasioned by a covering of the earth
with four inches of snow; and under a drift of snow two feet
deep the temperature was twenty-seven degrees above zero ;

making an increase of temperature at the earth's surface under


two feet of snow, of forty-one degrees of Fahrenheit over the
temperature of the air just above the upper surface of the snow.
No one can pretend that these variations of temperature were
derived from the sun. Let us attempt an explanation of this
phenomenon.
It is this. The radiation of heat from the interior of the
earth, positively electrified, meeting at the surface of the earth
with the snow in contact with it, negatively electrified, the
conjunction of these opposite polarities of electricity evolves
heat, melting the under layer of the snow, irrigating the plants
r it with water
moderately warm, and keeping the earth
from being frozen, so that in the spring following, when the
snow had disappeared, the plants were ready to receive the
stimulating influence of sunlight and the blue light of the sky,
of which they had been deprived during the winter.

Professor Tyndall, writing of what he calls solar radiation,


r did I suffer so much from solar heat, as when

rom the corridor to the rjrand , Mont Blanc


;'

on tin- l^lli of Auirust. lv~>7. Whilst sank up to the waist in


I

now, the sun darted its rays upon me with intolerable


nteriiig into the shade of the Duinc da <<
in-tantly changed, for the air was as cold as
not really much colder than the air traversed by
>lar rays, and 1 not from contact with warm air
1

the stroke of the sun's rays, which reached me after


lirough a medium as cold as ice."
It i- singular that to so learned and astute a scientist as Pro-
;!1, it did not occur that if his sensations, so dis-
from the heat, of the
not have walked through snow
1

t
deep, in such heat, without the snow becoming melted
41

by the same heat which oppressed him, and that he would


have been swept away by the torrent of water thus produced
by the melting of the snow by this great heat; but it does not
appear that the snow was at all affected by it, while the water
was drawn out of the Professor in profuse perspiration.
I venture upon an explanation. The heat from which the
Professor suffered came from his own body, and was derived
from electrical action of sunlight upon his dark woolen clothes,
warmed by the animal heat of his system. He was struggling
through deep snow in an atmosphere of icy coldness. The
natural heat of his body, ninety-eight degrees of temperature
of Fahrenheit, was greatly increased by the muscular efforts
he was making in his descent of the glacier. His woolen
clothes had become positively electrified by the heat of his
body. The strong sunlight or August having passed through
the cold, dry ether of planetary space and the upper atmos-
phere of the earth, by its friction with them was negatively
electrified, and falling upon his warm body and clothes, posi-
tively electrified, increased heat was evolved in and around
his person, and his sufferings were intensified. As soon as he
left the sunlight, his clothes, by induction, became negatively
electrified and the temperature of his body was soon lowered,
nnd his sufferings from heat ceased.

Again, there is no heat in the moon, which proves that the


moon has not an atmosphere, as it also proves that there is no
heat in the sun for if there was an atmosphere about the
;

moon the sun's light penetrating it and producing friction by


the contact with it would evolve electricity, which uniting
with the opposite electricity of the moon's atmosphere would
produce heat, but no such effect has been perceptible with the
most delicate instruments. Besides, if there was heat in the
rays of the sunlight, that heat would be reflected with that
lio;ht
O from the moon's surface to the earth, which we know ia
'

not the case.

Now, if the sun possessed heat, and could force it down-


wards to the earth, which, according to our knowledge of the
laws of heat, is impossible, we could have no clouds in our
atmosphere, as from the absorbing power of gases of heat the
clouds would be so expanded and attenuated by the absorbed
heat that they never could be formed.

The sun is a great magnet, as are all the planets of the solar
system, and it is by their magnetism and not by their weight
42

or gravitation that their motions in their respective orbits are


regulated by the greater magnetism of the sun. Now as mag-
netic attraction or repulsion varies inversely as the squares of
the distances, which relation has been heretofore attributed to
gravitation, it is not difficult to assign to magnetism, in its
attraction and repulsion, the forces which have heretofore kept
and now keep our solar system in its various motions, nor need
we hesitate to conceive that all the motions of infinite systems, of
suns and stars, of nebulre, and cometary and meteoric matter,
are in like manner regulated. The meteoric matter which
lias fallen to the earth, has been found, when examined, to be

highly magnetic.
If the sun is a magnet, there is only sufficient heat generated
in its interior by opposite electricities to cause its daily rota-
tion on its axis, and it cannot be an incandescent body, since
magnetism is destroyed by heat.
"Wherever there are differences of temperature, there are
opposite electricities one electricity being always associated
with what is called heat while the opposite electricity
accompanies cold. These terms of heat and cold are mere
expressions of relative differences in varied temperatures, with-
out regard to the intensity of either condition.
Professor Tyndall, in his book on " The Forms of Water in
Clouds and Rivers, Ice and Glaciers," has given what he con-
siders explanations of many physical phenomena connected
with his subjects, attributing to radiations of solar heat the
changes and transformations which lie describes. With great
deference to so learned and distinguished an authority, I take
-ion to offer other explanations of the causes of the
phenomena alluded to, which seem to me as being more in
\vith our
knowledge of general physics.
In his article on " Mountain Condensers," he says "Imagine
:

a southwest wind blowing across the Atlantic towards Ireland.


In its passage it charges itself with aqueous
vapour. In the
south of Ireland it encounters the mountains of Kerry the ;

highest of these is Magillicuddy's Ueeks, near Killarney. Now


the lowest stratum of this Atlantic wind is that which is most
fully charged with vapour. When it encounters the base of the
Kerry Mountains, it is tilted up and flows bodily over them.
Its load of vapour is therefore carried to a
height, it expands
on reaching the height, it is chilled in consequence of the
expansion, and comes down in copious showers of rain. From
43

this, in fact,arises the luxuriant vegetation of Killarney; to


this indeed, the lakes owe their water supply. The cold
crests of the mountain also aid in the work of condensation."

Let us examine this. The tilting up of the masses of cloud


on coming in contact with the face of the mountain is the
resultant of the impact of two forces, one being that of the
wind from the southwest with any given velocity from twenty
miles per hour to that of eighty or one hundred miles per hour ;

the other, the static force of the resistance of the mountain


itself; the diagonal of these two forces is the tilting up of the
cloud after impact. Now these two great masses of cloud and
mountain, oppositely electrified, when they come together in
contact produce great friction of their molecules, which friction
evolves positive electricity from the higher temperature of the
southwest wind this positive electricity thus evolved rushes
;

into conjunction with the opposite electricity of the atmosphere,


producing heat, which heat being absorbed by the air holding
the water in suspension communicates to it positive electricity,
and the air so electrified is attracted by the negative electricity
of the upper atmosphere, carrying it up and by expansion so
comminuting the particles of air that they can no longer con-
tain the globules of water they before held in suspension,
which latter thus released then begin, being attracted by the
positive electricity of the earth, to fall as rain oppositely
electrified, and it is, therefore, these electricities thus excited
with the heat which is evolved by their conjunction and the
rain charged with ammonia and carbonic acid gas which furnish
the stimulants to the remarkable vegetation of Killarney.
During the prevalence of these rain bearing clouds, driven
across the Atlantic by the southwest winds upon the above
mentioned mountains, the sun must be obscured by them,
and hence there can be no radiations of solar heat to expand
the air of the clouds after their impact with the mountains,
and they have been tilted up in their further progress over the
crests of the mountains.

A similar explanation covers the example the Professor gives


of a heavy fall of rain or snow in the Alps, while the sky is
clear and blue over the plains of Italy while the wind is blowing
over the plains to the
Alps. The warm wind, positively electrified
and holding water in suspension, coming in contact with the
negative electricity of the cold Alps, and producing friction
by the impact, evolving more positive electricity to combine
with the negative electricity of the atmosphere at that great
44

elevation, in and by it expands the air of


the heat,
the clouds so much can no longer hold the globules of
that it

water held by it in suspension. The heated and expanded air,


attracted to the higher atmosphere from its greater nega-
still
tive electricity, separatesfrom the water it before held, while
the water having lost its heat by the superior capacity of the
air to absorb it, becomes negatively electrified and is attracted
to the earth by its positive electricity hence the rain fall.

Professor Tyndall also states in the same work, that the "
unconfined air heated at the earth's surface, and ascending by
its lightness, must expand more and more, the higher it rises
in the atmosphere," and that the ascending "air is chilled by its
expansion. Indeed this chilling is one source of the coldness
of the higher atmospheric regions." It strikes me that this
explanation is not correct. In the first place the ascent of
heated air in the upper atmosphere has a limit boyond which
it cannot pass. Secondly, it ascends not by its lightness but
by the attraction of the negative electricity of the upper
atmosphere for the heated air, which is oppositely clectriiied.
In its upward course it loses its heat by radiation and with it
its positive electricity and by induction becomes negatively
electrified with the air whose altitude it has reached nor is
this chilling by expansion, as he terms it, one source of the
coldness of the upper atmosphere. That coldness associated
with negative electricity is derived from the ether in which
the atmosphere as well as the earth is continually revolving;
that ether has a temperature, according to Pouillet, cf 142
of Centigrade thermometer, and our upper atmosphere in
contact with this ether receives from it, by induction, both its
cold and its negative electricity, and the atmosphere itself i.s
kept in its place as an envelope of the earth by the positive
electricity of the earth and the opposite electricity of the upper
atmosphere. The snow line from the equator, (15,000 foet
above the equator to the 60 of north latitude, where it
\vith the earth,)
being the dividing line between these
opposing
>
electrieiti

The Professor gives nnother example of the air being chilled


" with a
ion, art follows, vi/ :
condensing syringe
air into an iron liox
furnished with a stop cock,
to which the svri; rewed. '!><> so till the density of the
air within the box is doubled or trebled. Immediately after
ion, both the box and the air within it are warm,
and can be proved to be .-o by a proper thermometer. Simply
45.

turn the cock and allow the compressed air to stream into the
atmosphere. The current, if allowed to strike a thermometer
visibly chills it, even the
hands feel the chill of the expanding
air."

IsTow for another explanation different from the Professor's.


The air in the iron hox had become heated by the friction of
it with the sides of the box ; that friction evolved positive
electricity associated with the heat on turning the cock and
;

allowing the heated air to escape into the atmosphere, the heat
and the positive electricity both left the escaping air with the
velocity of lightning, rushing into the oppositely electrified air
in the upper atmosphere, and the air that reached the ther-
mometer deprived of its heat reduced its temperature. There
is also an inconsistency in the explanation of the Professor
in producing heat by condensation in his iron box, while he
produces rain by the condensation of the clouds by cold in the
upper atmosphere. This reminds one of the fable of ^Esop,
in which a satyr invited into a husbandman's hut, blew upon
his hot broth as he said to cool it before eating it, and again
blew his breath upon his fingers to warm them on coming into
the house from the cold outside air. The husbandman turned
the satyr out of doors, as he could not comprehend how any
one could blow hot and cold from the same breath.

If compression of the atmosphere produces heat, condensa-


tion, which merely another form of expression for the same
is

thing, cannot produce cold. If cold condenses, why does it


not condense the air in the upper atmosphere where the
greatest cold prevails, and the air is very dry, rarefied and
attenuated? According to the theory of condensation by cold,
the air should be very much more dense at great elevations
above the earth, than it is at the surface of the ocean, but the
reverse is known to be the case. The higher in the atmos-
phere a balloon, inflated with hydrogen gas, ascends, the more
the gas becomes expanded by the rarefaction of the atmos-
phere, which shows that the cold of the upper atmoephere
cannot condense the gas in opposition to the expansive influ-
ence of the rarefied atmosphere at great elevations. Ice water
poured into a glass tumbler in the heat of summer, causes a
deposit of drops of water on the outside of the tumbler
resembling dew, which is the result of a conjunction of
opposite electricities, the glass and the air within and around
it being warm and positively electrified, while the ice water is

negatively electrified. Their conjunction evolves heat, which


46

is absorbed by the molecules of air, holding in suspension the


humidity of the atmosphere these molecules, so heated, ascend
;

immediately with inconceivable rapidity into the upper atmos-


phere, attracted by its opposite negative electricity, while the
globules of water thus released from their suspension in the
air on the outside of the glass, being now negatively electrified,
are attracted by the vitreous or positive electricity of the glass
tumbler and are deposited on it.
On the thirty-first day of March, A. D., 1872, I visited my
farm to give directions to apply heat to start the growth of the
vines in my grapery, at the commencement of the season.
The weather was very cold, patches of ice and snow lay in
places on the fields, which the sun, shining with great brilliancy
through a remarkably clear atmosphere, was unable to soften
or melt. No semblance of cloud or vapour was anywhere
visible. In the open air, protected from sunlight, the ther-
mometer (Fahrenheit's) marked 84 degrees, two degrees above
the freezing point of water. On entering the grapery, in which
then- had been no artificial heat from fuel of any kind for
the space of nearly a year, my son. and myself were astonished
at the great heat that there was within it. On examining the
thermometer which hung on one of the middle posts of the
grapery, completely sheltered from the sunlight, about four
feet from the floor, we were amazed to find that it marked one
hundred and ten degrees of Fahrenheit. Here was an increase
of seventy-six degrees of temperature over that of the outside
air, and produced by a film of glass not exceeding one-six-
teenth of an inch in thickness, but associated as blue and
plain glass. This extraordinary increase of temperature, mani-
the- supreme wisdom of the Creator in kindling this
1

the surface of the earth, where it was needed, by rays


t

of light passing through a denser medium than air, instead of


sending heat from the sun through ninety-two millions of
miles Oi ether at a temperature of 14:2 degrees of Centigrade
thermometer, in the passage through which so much of the
said heat would have been lost by radiation.

have had many occasions to observe since that date, that


I
during the passage of strong sunlight through the blue and
plain glass of the grapery, the temperature through the day,
within ti y, varied from one hundred degrees to one
i

hundred and fifteen degrees, while that without, according to


the seasons of t: .at the same times of the day would
range from thirty-two degrees upward to sixty degrees or
sixty-five d<
47

During the winter of 1871 and 1872, which, in this city, was
a very cold and rigourous one, two ladies of ray family
residing on the northern side of Spruce streets east of Broad
street, in this city, who, at my suggestion, had caused l>lue
glass to be placed in one of the windows of their dwelling,
associated with plain glass, informed me that they had
observed that when the sun shone through those associated
glasses in their window, the temperature of the room, though
in mid-winter, was so much increased that on many occasions
they had been obliged during sunlight to dispense entirely
with the fire which, ordinarily, they kept in their room, or
when the fire was suffered to remain, they found it necessary
to lower the upper sashes of their windows, which were
without the blue glass, in order to moderate the oppressive
heat.

These examples go to remark of a distinguished


illustrate the
German scientist, made mine after he had read
to a friend of
an account of my experiments with blue light on animal and
"
vegetable life. He said, that the discovery of this extraordinary
influence was destined to produce the most important and
beneficial results on the comfort and happiness of mankind,
throughout the civilized world. That fuel was everywhere
recognized as one of the most indispensable elements of social
and domestic economy. That it is, particularly in Europe,
very expensive from its scarcity, which is becoming greater
every year with its annual consumption, and in the northern
parts of Europe, furs, skins of animals and the down of
aquatic birds are extensively worn, sometimes with two or
three suits at once of clothing, in order to preserve the animal
heat of the body, owing to the great costliness of fuel and the
severity of the cold.
" That even in
England, apprehensions are being expressed of
an exhaustion of their coal mines in the not distant future.
iSTow since this wonderful discovery of General Pleasonton, of
the influence of the blue light of the sky in developing animal
and vegetable life, which is largely due to the heat and elec-
tricity developed by the passage of sunlight through these
associated blue and plain glasses, I am of the opinion that
during sunshine, for many hours in the day, by means of blue
and colourless glass arranged together in doors and windows
exposed to the sun, sufficient heat can be evolved to enable
families, and work people in factories, to dispense with a large
proportion of the fuel that they have heretofore been obliged
48

to use. Let us say that one-half of the fuel heretofore


required, can be saved by thus utilizing sunlight, and you will
begin to comprehend how vact will be the benefit derived to
mankind in the economy of fuel alone, by this discovery of
General Pleasonton."

I have said that while the rays of the sun's light were one
of the causes of terrestrial heat, yet there is no heat in them.
This can be proved by any one, in the following experiment,
viz: During winter, when the ground is covered with enow,
and the temperature of the open air is at zero of Fahrenheit's
thermometer, it will be found that the sun, however brightly
shining, cannot melt the snow or ice on which it may shine.
'Pake now a piece of black or brown silken or woolen cloth of
any form and of convenient size, and place it on the snow in
the shade where the sun does not reach it with his rays. The
snow will not be melted under this cloth, which will have the
same temperature as the snow; hence it is obvious that there
is no heat either in the sunlight which could not melt the

snow, nor in the coloured cloth whose temperature was the


same as the shaded snow on which it had been placed now ;

take up the cloth, and place it on the snow where the sun can,
shine upon it. Let us observe the effect of this new position ;
the rays of the sun moving with a velocity of 186,000 miles
per second are suddenly arrested by this cloth, which they
cannot penetrate. This sudden stoppage of velocity produces
friction, by the impact of the rays of light upon the cloth;
electricity is evolved by the friction, having a polarity opposed
to that of the cloth; instantly these opposite electricities rush
together, producing heat, warming the cloth and melting the
snow immediately under the cloth, by which the cloth begins
t<> sink below the level of the
snow, and it' it shall be allowed
to remain, it will melt the snow under it till the cloth shall
ipon the ground beneath, clear of the snow, and the sur-
rounding snow shall enclose the cloth, of its exact size and
form

From this experiment, we conclude that the heat which


melted the snow under the (doth was not derived from the sun
it, but that the electricity produced by the impact of the
sun's rays with the cloth oppositely electrified, through friction,
evolved the heat which melted the snow.

Now suppose that instead of a single piece of this cloth


having been placed upon the snow, you have put a series of pieces
49

of the same cloth upon the snow. The same principle applies
hut a dilt'erent action is observed. The cloth is a bad con-
ductor of heat as well as of electricity, consequently the heat
evolved by the conjunction of the opposite elect rieities produced
by the friction of the rays of sunlight by impact on the cloth
with the opposite electricity of the cloth, cannot descend
through the cloth to any depth, being contrary to the laws of
heat, but it immediately ascends into the atmosphere and
escapes, while the edges of the series of pieces of cloth in
contact with the snow become warmed by the conjunction of
the opposite electricities, produced by the friction of the rays
of light with the edges of the cloth and the cloth's electricity,
and soon melt the snow in contact with them, till the pieces of
cloth are left high and dry above the snow which surrounds
them.

Glaciers their Origin, Position, Duration, Changes and More-


ments. Much has been written on these subjects, and many
distinguished scientists have been greatly exercised to give a
satisfactory explanation of the phenomena they have witnessed
in connection with them.

It seems to me that glaciers are formed in the regions of

perpetual snow by the deposition of snow in the valleys of the


lofty mountains where they exist; clouds laden with vapour
when they reach the neighbourhood of the mountains whose
valleys are filled with glaciers, being positively electrified,
encounter the negative electricity of the higher atmosphere.
These opposite electricities meet in conjunction, heat is
evolved the air associated with water as vapour in the clouds
being thus heated, is rarefied and expanded to such an extent
that it can no longer retain its water, (while it ascends rapidly
into the upper atmosphere attracted by its negative electricity,)
which on being liberated from the air that held it as vapour is
converted by the surrounding low temperature of its great
altitude into flakes of snow, which having an opposite
magnetism to the earth are attracted downward to it, and are
at the same time repelled from the height where they are
formed by the opposite magnetism prevailing there. The
crystallization of these snow flakes is made in a vacuum,
produced by the escape of this heated and rarefied air, and by
absorbing the magnetism which is developed by the con-
junction of the opposite electricities of the clouds and the
atmosphere as they come together in contact, these magnetic
snow flakes transfer it to the earth to replace the magnetism,
50

which is constantly leaving the earth in evaporations to escape

into the upper atmosphere.

This, then, in all probability, is the origin of glaciers. The


successive snow falls in the upper valleys of these elevated
MS, by their magnetic attraction to the earth, serve to
park the snow, and to compress the lower portions of it into
ice of greater or less density, according to its elevation in the
atmosphere and the depth of the valleys in which the glaciers
are formed. The effect, therefore, is that the bottom of the
glacier is ice, while the upper part of it is snow, termed nev6.

Crevasses are fissures of various depths and widths in the


glacier, whose formation Professor Tyndall attributes to the
effect of the solar radiation of heat upon the glaciers. He says,
in his book on "The Forms of Water," &c., page 100, "first,
then, you are to know that the air of our atmosphere is hardly
heated at all by the rays of the sun, whether visible or invisible
;

the air is highly transparent to all kinds of rays, and it is only


the scanty fraction to which it is not transparent that expend
their force in warming it."

I have shown that heat ascends in our atmosphere by the


attraction of the positive electricity with which it is always
iated, by the negative electricity of the colder air in the
upper regions of the atmosphere, and by its repulsion from
the earth by its positive electricity it is, therefore, contrary
;

to the laws of heat that the sun should, can or could transmit
rays of Jictd downward to this planet, and as these heat rays
can not be so transmitted, they are therefore not present to be
absorbed by the snow of the glacier or on the mountains. On
its of the same book, he says:
" w- have
wrapped up our
chain and are turning homewards after a hard day's work
upon the Glacier du (ieant, when under our feet, as if coming
from the body of the glacier, an explosion is heard. Somewhat
!"d, we look inquiringly over the ice. The sound is
repeated, several shot- being fired in quick succession. They
i sometimes to our sometimes to our left, giving
right,
the impression that the glacier is breaking up, still nothing
is to

" We closely scan the ice, and after an hour's strict search
we discover the cause of the reports. They announce the
birth of a crevasse. Through a pool upon the glacier, we
notice air bubbles ascending, and find the bottom of the pool
51

crossed by a narrow crack, from which the bubbles is^ue.


Right and left from this pool, we trace the young fissure
through long distances. It is sometimes almost too feeble to
be seen, and at no place is it wide enough to admit a knife
blade.
" It
to believe that the formidable fissures, among
is difficult
which you and I have so often trodden with awe, should
commence in this small way. Such, however, is the case.
The great and gaping chasms on and above the icefalls of the
Qeant and the Talefre begin as narrow cracks, which open
gradually to crevasses. The crevasses are grandest on the
higher neves, where they sometimes appear as long yawning
fissures, and sometimes as chasms of irregular outline delicate
;

blue light shimmers from them, but this is gradually lost in the
darkness of their profounder portions.
" Over the
edges of the chasms, and mostly over the southern
edges, hang a coping of snow, and from this depend like
stalactites, rows of transparent icicles, ten, twenty, thirty feet
long. These pendent spears constitute one of the most beau-
tiful features of the higher crevasses. How are they produced ?
Evidently by the thawing of the snow. But why, when once
thawed, should the water freeze again to solid spears ?" Now
let us examine this if the supposed heat of the sun's rays,
:

could melt the snow at the southern edges of the crevasse,


why did not similar rays from the sun, conveying the like
temperature, melt the general surface of the glacier, and
produce thereby large pools of water on the surface of the
" that the
glacier? Particularly, as the Professor states, snow on
which the sunbeams fall, absorbs the solar heat, and on a
sunny day, you may see the summits of the high Alps glisten-
ing with the water of liquefaction. The air above, and around
the mountains may, at the same time, be many degrees below
the freezing point in temperature."

If the surface of the snow on the mountains was melted by


the solar heat, as the Professor supposes, what was there to
arrest the streams of water thus produced, and to prevent them
from flowing into the valleys occupied by the glaciers, and
converting the glaciers themselves into mountain torrents,
while at the same time the mountains were being denuded of
snow? But we know that such results have not been pro-
duced. Above the snow line the mountains are perpetually
covered with snow, and the glaciers have remained from a
remote antiquity to attest that the snow does not absorb
52

the heat of the sunbeams, for the simple reason that the sun-
beams in themselves do not bring any heat from the sun to
this planet.

In my early boyhood, I dwelt on the banks of the Potomac,


a river fancifully named by the Indians, before the advent of
the white man, "the river of swans," from the abundance of
that water fowl that frequented its waters. "Well do I
mber, lying awake on the eve of our several winter
holidays, when the river was deeply frozen, anticipating a day
of splendid skating on the morrow, to have been often startled
by the noise -of a great explosion of the ice on the river,
occasioned by the compression of the air beneath thf ice, as
the tide rising rapidly forced it upwards between the water
and the ice, till its accumulation and compression would over-
come ice, and a fissure would be opened
the resistance of the
in it
extending sometimes for miles, and liberating the pent
up air into the atmosphere. If the temperature of the night
air was below the freezing point of water, as the tide receded
the water which had filled the fissure, when the tide was full,
frozen into ice, and the track of the fissure could bo
marked on the next day by the film of thin ice that had been
formed in it, as the tide was receding the night before.
In this way, air holes, so dangerous to travelers and skaters
on the ice, are constantly formed on our rivers and streams,
subject to the flow of the tides, and in lakes and mountain
stn-ams, they are also formed by the currents of water flowing
downwards in a similar manner. In my later youth, I had
observed similar effects from similar causes, produced on the
ice of the river Hudson, at West Point. In short, fissures on
the surface of anything, whether on the surface of the earth by
volcanic eruptions in which lava, rocks, scoriae, mud, boiling
water, are thrown out from the interior, or by Ge
spouting their hot streams into the atmosphere, or the cracks
in the ground produced by long continued droughts, evapo-
rating the moisture contained in the soil, and even eruptive
-cs among mankind or other animals whether wild or

domestic, are all the results of interior forces, acting from the
rior to their respective surfaces.

explain the crevasse on the glacier. The snow


carry to the glacier large quantities of atmospheric air,
1
falls
which are confined between tin: glacier and the snow as it
falls; every fall of snow pn predecessors and the air
they contain closer together against the ice. filling its
I 53

vacancies with air. This column of air, thus pressed down


upon and into the ice, encounters the air which has been
enclosed between the bottom of the glacier and the earth on
which the glacier rests, this last mentioned air has been
warmed by the radiation of heat from the interior of the earth,
and has become positively electrified by it the contact of this
positively electrified air with the negatively electrified ice of
the bottom of the glacier, evolves more heat, which, melting
the lower stratum of ice of the glacier, constitutes the source
of the stream of water that flows from the glacier. Such is
the origin of the river Rhone.

This warm air, in its effort to rise through the glacier into
the upper atmosphere negatively electrified, meets in the
crevices everywhere abounding in the ice of the glacier, the
air which has been forced down by the snow falls, and which
last air is negatively electrified
;
the conjunction of these two
airs oppositely electrified evolves heat, which expanding the
air, displaces the ice of the glacier, forming channels for its
escape into the upper atmosphere, and when it reaches the
upper surface of the glacier, forces its way through it into the
atmosphere in that minute fissure, which Professor Tyndall
had such difficulty to discover. Again, this warm air as it
escaped into the atmosphere, melted the edges of the ice or
snow at the surface through which it passed, and through
which it was visible in the air bubbles Professor T. described.

The melting of the lower stratum of ice of the glacier in


contact with the earth produced by the heat evolved by the
conjunction of the positive electricity of the earth with the
negative electricity of the ice, is the cause of the subsidence of
the body of the glacier, and the declivity of the valley itself is
the cause of the glacier moving bodily downward in it. The
fractures, strains, torsions of certain portions of the glacier
are the results of the forces of expansion and contraction in
the interior of the glacier, produced by variations of its
interior temoerature as mentioned above.

In this country, the winter of the years 1874 and 1875 has
been an exceptional one. The cold has been of long, and
almost uninterrupted continuance, and of great severity.
The rivers in the Middle and Eastern States have been closed
with ice, which has been of great density and depth, extending
in some of their courses through the mountains even to the
beds of their streams. The frozen condition of the waters has
54

remained late in the spring season ; and from the accumu-


till
lation of mine-use masses of ice in certain portions of these
i

rivers, forming what were called ice-gorges, filling their entire


width for the distance of miles in length, the most serious
apprehensions were entertained of extraordinary damages to
towns and villages, railways and canals, in the valleys of these
rivers, that would be sustained by the sudden breaking up of
of ice from rain-storms, and the melting of the
snows on the mountains, which would produce the most
extensive and alarming inundations. These apprehensions
justified by the advanced spring season which usually,
by its increased temperature, terminates the rigours of winter.
To
obviate, if possible, these threatened dangers and cdami-
the sudden breaking up of the ice, various expedients
>y
resorted to, viz cutting channels through the ice below
:

the gorges, to liberate the water above, should it assume


alarming proportions; attempting to destroy the gorges them-
selves by the explosions of gunpowder, or of nitro-glycerine,
confined in chambers in the ice itself, and one very liberal
gentleman, evidently a believer in the theory that the sun is
an incandescent body and sends its heat bodily to our earth,
downwards, presented to the authorities of one of the towns
endangered by the ice-gorge in its neighbourhood, twenty-
eight barrels of Naphtha, to be burnt on the ice-gorge, under
the impression that the heat produced by their combustion,
would descend through the ice, and liquefy it into water. It
is scarcely necessary to add, that, when the experiment of
burning the Naphtha upon the ice-gorge was tried, the heat
evolved by its combustion immediately ascended into the
upper atmosphere, leaving the ice unaffected by the experi-
ment.

n\ a very interesting book entitled,


''
Mount
in Winter; or, the Kxpcr a Scientific Expedition upon
Mountain in Xe\v Hngland 1870-71," published
in I5jst')ii in 1*71, we make some extracts that seem to
;t connection with the subjects of which we are treating.

" Moo-ihiuke
Mountain, near Mount "Washington, is nearly
high, and lies within the arctic zone of
t

climate. It was on tins mountain that two scientific gentle-


men, viz., Me-^r~. A. F. ('lough and II. A. Kimball, deter-
two months, in the winter of the years 18G9 and
-

1870, in order to fit themselves the better for a winter residence


on Mount Washington, at a future day. They attempted the
ascent of the mountain on ISTovember 23d, 1860, but wore driven
back by the severity of the weather. On the 31st of December,
1869, the attempt was renewed under better auspices, and was
successful.

-About two months were spent by them on this summit.


So valuable were the experiences acquired, and so unusual
were the meteorological phenomena observed, that the Mount
"Washington phenomena, subsequently experienced, have not
equaled those upon Mount Moosilauke, and among them the
possibility of living on a mountain top during the winter, was
fully demonstrated.
" There mountain Xew
is scarcely a in England from which
the view is more extensive. Wr
c can see from it,
nearly the
whole of the State of New Hampshire, with its numerous
mountain peaks. Eastward is Mount Washington, in solemn
repose, its neighbouring peaks of immaculate whiteness
Mount Lafayette and its lines of white extending far down
into the evergreen forests. Southward is Lake Winnipiseogee,
with its numerous isles, glittering in the sunlight, like a gem
of the purest water. Westward is the whole State of Vermont,
and Ascutney, the most pointed of its mountains, is conspicu-
ous. Moosilauke is so much higher than the immediate
neighbouring peaks, that the whole country is spread out as a
grand intrusive raised map before the beholder.
" IS'o scene more
grand and beautiful ever greeted the eye
of man, than when, beyond the dark band of clouds just below
the summits of the Franconia and White mountains, appeared
those tints of rose and orange, lying along the horizon just
above the snow capped summit of Mount Washington, and
against a deep azure sky. From Moosilauke, you command
the whole panorama of the White Mountain range, and you
may see something of the effect witnessed among the Alps.
As the day dies, the lost shadows pass with strange rapidity
from peak to peak, vanishing from one height as they appear
on the next."

The following are extracts from their Journal, viz :

" On the 1st of January, 1870, the sun rose clear. We were
above the clouds, and a grander spectacle one does not often
behold. The clouds seemed to roll and surge like the billows
of the ocean. They were of every dark and of every brilliant hue ;
56

here they were resplendent with golden light, and there of


silvery brightness; here of rosy tints, there of sombre gray,
here of snowy whiteness, there of murky darkness, here
with the play of colours, and there, the lurid light
ashes deep down into the gulfs formed by the eddying mist.
forgeous
l>ut above these clouds, these flashes of light, this darkness,
all
rise in stately grandeur, the summits of Mount Washington,
sublime in its canopy of snow, and of Lafayette, with a few
peaks of lesser altitude, glittering in the bright, sunlight. As
the sun rises higher, the picture fades away, the whole country
is flooded with light.

" Did this


grandeur, this magnificence, this brilliant display
of lights, of shadows, and shades of these clouds, so resplen-
dent, so beautiful, portend a storm? In the evening the wind
changed to the southeast, and increased in velocity.
"At daylight on the 2d of January, 1370, it was snowing.
This soon changed to sleet, and then to rain, and at eight o'clock,
A. M.,the velocity of the wind was seventy miles per hour; at
twelve o'clock, noon, there was a perfect tempest. Although
the wind was so fearful, yet Mr. Clough was determined to know
the exact rate at which it was blowing. By clinging to the
rock, he succeeded in reaching a place where he could expose
the anemometer, and not be blown away himself. He found
the velocity of the wind to be ninety-seven and a half miles per
hour, the greatest velocity, until that time, ever recorded.
"When he reached the house, he was thoroughly saturated with
water, the wind having driven the rain through every garment,
although they were of the heaviest material, as though they
liad been made of the lightest fabric. During the, afternoon,
the rain and gale continued with unabated violence. The rain
riven through every crack and crevice of the house and
the floor of our room was flooded. 80 fierce was the draught
o r the stove, that the wind literally took away every spark of
fire, leaving only the half charred wood in the stove, and it was
with dillieiilty that wo succeeded m re-kindling it.
During the evening, the wind seemed to increase in fury, and
although the window was somewhat protected, yet nearly every
glass in it, that was exposed, was broken by the pressure of
lie, A- the lights were broken, the tire was again extin-
guished, and
even my hurricane lantern was Mown out as
as if the flame had been unprotected. * * * *
quickly
nine o'clock. 1*. M., there were occasional lulls in the
storm, and by midnight it had considerably abated.
57

"When it was clear, there was a strong temptation, notwith-


standing the cold, to be out of doors to watch the clouds, at
first of almost
fiery redness, then changing to gray and neutral
tints, until almost black, they seemed to gather around some
distant peak, or as a dark band, they lay between the Franco-
nia and White Mountains,
leaving only the snow-clad summits
above the dark border; or at sunset, when they lay in narrow
bands, or rose tinted clusters around the summit of Mount
~\\
asliington, while elsewhere they were those of leaden hue,
such as are seen only in winter. Often when the sky is par-
tially overcast,- through the intervening spaces of the clouds, we
see that intense blue sky, which is peculiar to high altitudes.
" On the 19th of
February, 1870, there were two currents of
air, the upper had its lowest stratum probably two thousand
feet below the summit. In the morning the upper current
was northwest, with a velocity of fifty miles per hour about
;

noon, the wind changed to the north and increased in velocity,


and at five o'clock, P. M., it had a velocity of seventy miles
per hour. At the foot of the mountain, nearly 5000 feet below
there was scarcely a perceptible breeze, yet up, a thousand feet,
there was a strong current from the southivest, and the clouds
seem to move almost as rapidly as those from the north, higher
up the mountain. On account of the velocity of the wind, and
the upward pressure of the currents below, the effect was
remarkable. The whole country, except the higher summits,
was covered with clouds, and these were moving at the rate,
probably, of more than sixty miles per hour, and everywhere
they were broken into seething, undulating masses, for as they
came near the mountains, in an instant, almost, they would be
lifted more than a thousand feet, to be carried over the
summits. As far as the eye could reach, embracing thousands
of square miles, was this rolling tumultuous mass of clouds.''

These gentlemen left the Moosilauke mountain on the last


day of February, A. D., 1870. It was extremely cold, wind 60
to 70 miles per hour, thermometer ranging from degrees to
17 degrees. The complete organization of the expedition to
pass the winter of the years 1870 and 1871, on Mount Wash-
ington, was as follows, viz :

C. H. Hitchcock, State Geologist, J. H. Huntington, in


charge of the Observatory upon the mountain. S. A. Kelson,
Observer.
A. F. Clough and H. A. Kimball, Photographers.
58

Theodore Smith, Observer and Telegrapher for the United


States Signal Service.
" Mount
Washington, in the White Mountains in New
Hampshire, in latitude 44 degrees 16 minutes 25 seconds north
is
and in longitude from Greenwich 71 degrees 16 minut*
ils west, or 1 degree minutes 43.99 seconds of longitude
east from Hanover in New Hampshire.

"Its elevation above tide water is 6,293 feet, and in altitude


the second highest mountain northward of the Gulf of
Mexico, the highest mountain thereof being Cliugman's Peak,
in the State of North Carolina, which is 6,707 feet above tide
water.
" The limit of the
growth of trees on the north side of
Mount Washington, is 4,150 feet above tide water.-
" The climate of Mount
Washington corresponds with that
of the middle of Greenland, about seventy degrees of north
latitude, or 26 further north than New Hampshire.

"It is an arctic island (so to speak) in the Temperate Zone,


and on account of its great elevation it exhibits also the con-
dition of the atmosphere, where the mercury does not rise
above 24 inches in the barometer. For peculiar interest
therefore, the Mount Washington Station is not exceeded by
any point within the arctic circle."
Professor Edward Tuckerman, of Amherst, Massachusetts,
in his admirable treatise upon "the Vegetation of the White
Mountains," marks out four regions: first, (he lower for cut, in
which are found the hard wood species of trees, the rock
maple, the beech, the white and yellow birches; with these
i'tt-n
large white pines, firs, white spruces, the aspen, the
witch hazel and the mountain ash.
" In the second
region, the upper forest consists mostly of
black spruce and fir, with occasional yellow and canoe birches,
Fra/er's balsam tir and a mountain ash; at 4,000 feet cf
altitude these trees are dwarfed but are very strong, and when
close together form a thicket almost impenetrable.
"
Among the plants of the third or *tff>-<ilphie region are the
mountain sandwort, the evergreen cowberry, the Labrador tea
and the mountain bilberry. This seems not to be well charac-
terized.
59

"The fourth and highest region is called alpine, and con-


tains many plants peculiar to Labrador and Greenland. There
are some fifty or sixty of these, and among them are as many
more lowland species which have emigrated to the summit
and manage to live there in favourable seasons, though of)
much dwarfed. The lichens are very conspicuous and beauti-
ful, one of a sulphur yellow colour is quite noticeable, and is a

good indication of the visitor's arrival in the Alpine District.


Another is the reindeer moss, a very common article of food
for the most useful animal to man in Lapland. The best
localities of these arctic plants are in the great gulfs or ravines
upon the east side of Mount Washington.
"As far as the upper limit of trees, boulders that have been
transported by the glacial drift from more northern summits
are common. They rapidly diminish in number and size upon
that point, and have not been seen far above the fourth water-
tank, or above an altitude of 5,800 feet.
" It is winter weather on Mount
"Washington in October.
Most of the necessary preparations having been made on
November 12th, 1870, Mr. Huntiugton promptly climbed
Mount Washington and commenced to take and record the
meteorological observations. The other members of the
party were delayed by various reasons but on the 30th of
November, 1870, four gentlemen of the party, viz Charles B.
:

Cheney, of Oxford, A. F. Clough, of Warren, C. F. Bracy, of


Warren, and Howard A. Kimball, of Concord, arrived at the
summit, and on the 4th of December, 1870, Sergeant Theodore
Smith, of the U. S. Signal Service, detailed as an observer,
joined the party.
" November was making its exit in what might be termed
a lovely winter day, and the prospect of so choice a time to
make our ascent, toilsome at best at this season, and very
hazardous except at special times in good weather, inspired us
with enthusiasm more and more increased as we approached
the final reach that stood in defiance of any aid that could be
rendered by the panting steeds that now bore us forward.
" At Marshfield weare three miles from the summit, and at
present travel over this distance must depend solely upon
all
human muscle and energy to achieve. At this point we
decided to make the ascent at once, though there were serious
misgivings on the part of some of us in view of the near
approach of night, which at this season, halt-fast two o'clock,
60

P. M., leaves a small margin of the day, at best for such a task
as stood before us. In ascending from this point we followed
the railroad track. We
were compelled to walk upon the ties
for the snow was several feet deep, with a sharp upward grade
in some places rising one foot in three, with the ties three feet
apart and loaded with ice and snow and built on trestle work
over gorges of some 25 or 30 feet in depth; the careless eager
stops of unbaffled enthusiasm, are soon compelled to give
place to great caution and the constant stress of nerve and
muscle. * * * * The end of the first mile carrying us
up to within one half mile of the limit of wood growth, found
us in tolerable condition, when a halt for breath and ob-
servations discovered to us an approaching storm lying on the
Green Mountains of Vermont. It would undoubtedly strike
us but we still hoped we might press on and reach the summit
first. The thought of being overtaken by a furious storm on
the wintry, shelterless cliifs of Mount Washington, with the
night about to enshroud us, was fearfully impressive, and
prompted us to our best endeavours. With all the effort we
could well muster, we had only advanced a half mile more,
carrying us fairly above the wooded region to the foot of
*
Jacob's Ladder,' when the storm struck us. There were
suddenly wrapped around us dense clouds of frozen vapour,
driven so furiously into our faces by the raging winds as to
threaten suffocation. The cheering repose of the elements
but a moment before, had now given place to what might well
be felt as the power and hoarse rage of a thousand furies, and
the shroud of darkness that was in a moment thrown over us
[ual to that of the moonless night. Compelled to
redoubled efforts to keep our feet and make proper advance,
we struggled with the tempest, though with such odds against
us that we were repeatedly slipping and getting painful
brui-es. Mr. Kimball finding himself too much exhausted to
continue th's struggle on the track, we all halted in brief con-
sultation during which Mr. dough ted that our only
hope consisted in pushing upward with all our might.
" Here nine separated, three of our party left the
., and Mr. Kimball
willingly left behind his hatririiire in order
itinue tin- ascent I'>y
thus leaving the track, we escaped
liability to falls and bruises, but found ourselves often get (ing
buried to our waist, in snow, and forced to exert our utmost
strength to drag our- ;t and advance. \Ve repeatedly
called to Mr. IJraoy, who had kept on the.track as we supposed,
but could get no answer. The roar of the tempest overcame
61

our utmost vocal efforts, and the clouds of frozen vapour that
lashed us so furiously as it hugged us in its chilling embrace,
was so douse that no object could be seen at a distance of ten
paces. Against such remorseless blasts no human being could
keep integrity of muscle and remain erect. We
could only
go on together a little way and then throw ourselves down for
a few moments to recover breath and strength. AYe had
many times repeated this, when Mr. Kimball became so utterly
exhausted as to make it impossible to take another step, lie
called to the others to leave and save themselves if possible.
The noble and emphatic never,' uttered by the manly Clough,
'

whose sturdy muscle was found ample to back his will, aroused
him to another effort.
..
The two stronger gentlemen, whose habits of life and
superior physical powers gave hope of deliverance for them-
selves, were both immovable in the determination that our
fate should be one, let that be what it must.

"The situation was one of most momentous peril, especially


as to Mr. Kimball, whose exhaustion was so extreme that he
was wholly indifferent to the fate that seem to impend, only
begging that he might be left to that sleep, from whose
embrace there was felt no power of resistance. Still there was
a listless drag onward mostly in the interests of his compan-
ions, and in obedience to their potent wills. After this sort
we struggled on a few rods at a time, falling together between
each effort to rest and gain new strength. At each halt
Messrs. Clough and Cheney used their best endeavours by
pounding and rubbing Mr. KimbalPs feet and limbs, and in
various other ways endeavoured to promote circulation and
prevent freezing. The last saving device was supplied by a
cord, which we chanced to have, and the end of this was made
a noose, which was placed in Mr. Kimball's hand, while the
other end was passed over the shoulder of Mr. Clough, who
tugged along in advance while Mr. Cheney helped at his side.
Most of the last mile was accomplished in this manner.
" With the wind at 70 miles
per hour and the thermometer
down to 7, as was found after arriving at the Observatory,
we came at length to 'Lizzie Bourne's Monument,' only
thirty rods from the Observatory. One of our party shouted
an exultant hurrah at the glad sight of this rude pile, which
was erected to commemorate the sad fate of one who
was overtaken by the darkness and bewildering fogs and
Then,' in the words of the
*
chills of a rude October night.
62

eloquent Starr King, 'was the time to feel the meaning of that
pile of stones, which tells where Miss Bourne, overtaken by
night and fog, and exhausted by cold, breathed out her life
into the bleak cloud.'

"It took more than a half hour's time to make this last
thirty rods. Even the stronger ones had become wearied by
their unusual exertions, and had not this been the case, their
progress would have been slow, for it was found absolutely
impossible to force on the one who had become unable to
regard his own peril more than a few feet at a time. He
would then sink down into a deep sleep, while the others
would employ the time in chafing his hands and feet, and
after a few moments manage to arouse him and make another
struggle onward.

"From Lizzie Bourne's Monument to the summit, Mr.


Kimball was mostly insensible to passing events, and only
awoke to clear consciousness, as from a dream, to find himself
in bed in a comfortable room in the Observatory building, safe
from the dreadful tempest, and owing his life to the unyield-
ing devotion of these brave men who scorned to save them-
selves at the expense of a comrade left to perish. Mr. Bracy,
who had got separated from us during our earlier struggles,
had got in about 7 o'clock, P. M., our own arrival being at
7 o'clock, P. M. He had kept on the track.
" Thus at least three hours of this ascent were made amid
the darkness of a moonless night in the howling tempest, the
horrors of which will be more readily appreciated when it is
remembered that a wind of 45 miles per hour blew down
buildings and uprooted trees in 2s"ew York City. Twenty-
five miles per hour added make a most fearful hurricane. We
were abundantly supplied with nourishment on our ascent,
chiefly in the form of a strong decoction of tea, of which we
ionally partook. This is found to be by tar the most
potent and effective stimulant that can be used in such con-
ditions of extreme exposure.

" Mr. Huntington, aroused by the arrival of Mr. Bracy, sallied


out with a lantern in search of us, but found his best exertions
of little avail, the storm being so fierce and thick, he could
neither make himself seen nor heard beyond a few paces, and
they were regarding us as probably lost, though they were pre-
paring for another efi'ort in our behalf, when we arrived.
63

"A sleepless night gave plaec at length to a


day thick and
stormy, and for several days the cloudsgathered densely
around us, and the storm continued to rage, during which we
were recovering from ' the wear and tear' of our adventures,
and recruiting for the work in store for us."

The railroad depot, in a part of which this party passed the


winter of 1871, was a wooden unfinished building, sixty feet
long by twenty-two feet wide and stands nearly north and
south. It has eleven feet posts and the elevation of the
ridge
pole is twenty-five feet, the roof of the usual form in ordinary
buildings. The apartment occupied by the party is situated
in the southwest corner of this building. It is a room about
twenty feet long, eleven feet wide and eight feet high. The
large part of the depot forms a sort of vestibule to this room,
and is wholly inclosed except at the easterly end of the
northern face, where the outer door is situated.

An extract from Mr. Kimball's diary, reads " December


:

5th, 1870. The day is beautiful, we are perfectly comfortable


outside without overcoats, and on the east side of the Observatory\
the frost is thawing quite rapidly. Thermometer 22 Fahrenheit."
Tow why, with the thermometer at 22, should the thawing
of the frost be confined to the east side of the Observatory, when
the sun was shining all around the building on the snow or
frost without thawing it elsewhere away from the building?
If the thawing was the result of the heat rays of the sun, so
improperly termed, why was not the thawing general all over
the summit of the mountain, instead of being confined to one
locality ?

The explanation, I think, is this, viz: the early morning


rays of sunlight being nearly horizontal, impinged with a
velocity of 186,000 miles per second perpendicularly on the
vertical wall of the Observatory, partly covered with frost
work ; great friction was produced by the impact and positive
electricity evolved ; this electricity rushing to the conjunction
or embrace of the negative electricity of the frost work, when
in contact with it developed heat which thawed the frost work
over the other parts of the summit of the mountain; these
morning rays of sunlight either passed horizontally or fell
upon them with such small angles of incidence, as to be wholly
reflected into the upper atmosphere.
" we have succeeded in
Mr. Kimball continues :
making some
64

very good (photographic) views, but not as largo a variety as


we intend to have before we complete our winter's work.
* * * "We have also made three negative* of clouds, which
were at least half a mile below us. They resemble the waves
on the ocean, only the cloud waves are in some places twenty
or thirty miles long. They pass over a range of mountains,
and take a long sweep across the valleys and then rise over
the mountains on the opposite; and as a general thing, after
passing over and coming down on the other side, they break
up in small clusters resembling, on a grand scale, the surf from
breaking waves. We have made some photographs of this.
* * * * A\\ these clouds move rapidly from the south-
west, probably at a velocity of forty miles an hour, while on
this summit, it blows generally from the northwest. We have
made a view which shows a small portion of a remarkable
cloud effect or phenomenon. It was like a parallel belt on
the distant horizon, whose circuit must have been more than
a thousand miles. It resembled the tire of an immense cart-
wheel, (we occupying the place for the hub,) which was beyond
and encircled all the lakes, mountains, &c. It was even
beyond Mount Katahdin at the south, its upper edge was
parallel with the point farthest north. At noon it appears to
be approaching us as a centre, and as it nears us, it breaks up
in magnificent great thunderheads, minus the thunder, all
this time our view is becoming more limited. * * * All
this time it was snowing below, but we knew nothing of it
until night. Our view of the surrounding mountains lasts
only a short time longer, for we see to the west thick heavy
clouds, marching upon us, and by 4 o'clock, we become
!y shrouded we cannot see Tip Top House from the
Observatory not many feet distant.
"December 12th, 1870. This morning the wind was south,
iiangcd to the northwest in the afternoon; at ten, A. M.,
there was a bow in the clouds, and at noon there were in ad-
dition three supernumerary bows which remained for an hour
and a half, and some of the time they were remarkably
distinct. Late in the afternoon the sky was intensely blue."

From their journal we make the following extracts, viz :

"licccmbor 21st, 1870. Messrs. Kimball and Thompson (a


took an observation from the roof of the Tip-Top
visitor,)
House; wind 00 miles per hour. They were out but live
minutes, yet their coats, caps and hair were covered with frost
65

and Mr. Thompson had slightly frozen a finger. Later, the


wind hud fallen to 30 miles JKT hoar, an no.v, eleven o'clock,
1

1*. M., it moderate for Mount Washington.


i.s

"1870, December 23d. A


cold morning, thermometer zero,
but we don't feel the cold as sensibly us in the lower
regions.

''December 24th. Yesterday afternoon and late at night a


4
snow bank' lay along the south; this forenoon, enow was
falling with a temperature of 13, at times during the day the
wind was as high as 70 miles an hour, consequently, we were
confined to the house. It is cold to-night, (now nine o'clock,
I'.
M.,) the thermometer 15, and only 42 in the room,
although we have two fires.

" December
25th. There were no clouds above or around
the summit. Below, and but a little lower than this peak, the
clouds were dense and covered an extensive tract of country.
Through the less dense portion of the lighter clouds the sun's
rays gave a peculiar rose tint, extremely beautiful in effect.
* * * * About ten A. M., Mr. K. and myself
o'clock,
went out for an observation. We had
the pleasure of witness-
ing the formation of several coronfe, sometimes single, but
oftener three; even on one occasion four distinct circles appear-
ing and disappearing so rapidly that it was impossible to more
than catch a glimpse of form and colour. It was a phenomenon
of rare beauty.

"December 29th, 1870. The wind has been increasing all


day. At7 o'clock, A. M., observations wind, 46 miles per
:

hour; at 2 o'clock, P. M., 57 miles; at 4 o'clock, P. M., 72


miles; at 7 o'clock, P. M., 46 miles; and at 9 o'clock, P. M.,
nearly calm a great change in 14 hours, especially in the
;

last two hours. Barometer has fallen rapidly all day.

"December The morning is calm, clear and


30th, 1870.
beautiful. what we have waited a month for. \Ye com-
It is
menced work making negatives at sunrise. In the morning
we made a few 8 by 10 negatives, but as we were making the
last of them the wind freshened up, and we could not make as
as we wished. * * * Before I close
many to-day's memo-
randa I must speak of the splendid view we had after the wind,
by blowing so fiercely, obliged us to quit work. could see We
distinctly hundreds of mountains, lakes, ponds, &c. Off to the
northeast in the distance one hundred and fifty miles distant
we see Mount Katahdin, the highest mountain in Maine, and
66

a the north we see mountains which apparently arc


little to
much farther away than Mount Katahdin, and must be in the
upper part of Maine, near Canada. We never before saw the
M nearly as plain as to-day; we could sec a
great distance
-i.' )lf to the southwest we could seeKearsarge mountain
<

and Monadnock, and over the (Jreen mountains, the .Adiron-


dack* and Lake Champlain, in northern New York, were
distinctly visible. About 2 o'clock, P. M., I noticed a longhazy
line over the ocean soon it crew larger and then I could see
;

it was and in an hour it was within 40 miles, and


nearing us,
we could see it as a vast sea of cumulus clouds. The wind was
increasing, and had changed from the east to the south, and it
carried the approaching clouds and storm to the north of us.
"We were thankful to see it go by without striking us, for it is
grand to behold but not desirable for a covering. To-night
we have' some of the effects of it in the wind, which, as F write,
is
blowing a most violent hurricane, making the Observatory
creak. Afew hours ago the wind was scarcely noticeable;
now its velocity is over eighty miles an hour, and for a wonder
it comes from the south, instead of northwest as usual, and as
a natural consequence it tears off all the loose ice and frost
from the Observatory. It seems as if we were at sea in a
severe gale, and broken ice and timbers were beating against
our ship, and at times our building shakes like, a vessel in a
storm. Contrary to what ordinary experience would seem to
tc;ich, the north side of the building is less exposed to the fury
of the element than any other." This is owing to its having
but one electricity.

Xo\v, does not the north wind, or the northwest wind,


why
produce, similar effects? The sun shines upon both winds
alike, and if it sends down heat to this planet, the northwest
wind should be as warm as the south wind, andshould tear off
the frost-work from buildings and rocks just as the south wind
docs. But no such effects are observed during the prcva-
ience of these northern winds on the contrary, it is only while
;

northern winds are blowing in winter that this frost-


work is formed.
The explanation I conceive to be this the southern winds
:

coming from u warm atmosphere are positively electrified,


and when they reach the frost, work on the buildings or rocks
oppositely electrified, their impact produces friefi.m, which
evolving more positive electricity, develops heat, hatdetaches
t

the frost work from its adhesions, breaks it into pieces, and
67

finally melts into water while other frost work protected


from the south wind remains firm and unaffected, the tem-
perature of the atmosphere being below the freezing point of
water. "A telegraphic wire connected the Observatory with
Marshfield, a distance of three miles, where it is joined with
the Western Union Company's line, at Littleton, twenty-three
miles farther. The wire has frequently been charged with
atmospheric electricity, especially in the afternoon of the 7th of
January, 1871, when, on account of the high tension of these
currents, it became utterly unmanageable. When the key
was opened, the flow of the current still continued, exhibiting
bright sparks, leaping from one platinum point to the other.
After dark, no auroral display could be seen. There is also a
wire connecting the summit with the Glen House, which is
detached from the poles and laid upon the ground during the
winter, to protect it from the violent winds prevailing at this
season. We had it attached to an instrument, and, although
no battery was used, we discovered that it was sometimes
charged with electric currents, which deflected the needle
considerably. The Glen wire was broken about a mile and
a half from the summit, and the one down the railway had
parted at about the same distance, thus making the phenomenon
quite remarkable.
"
1871, January 10th. After ten, A. M., the summit was free
from clouds, but below masses of clouds were driven along the
valleys and over the lower summits. The clouds about and
over gave grand effects of light and shade along the mountain
range they were particularly fine on Adams and Jefferson
and near the Glen. The snow is nearly all off' the houses and
the rocks a great change in three days' time. I cannot let
this day pass without a mention of the high temperature; at
one o'clock, P. M. it was 37. Like April it seemed, but
who knows what it will be to-morrow ?

"January 14th. Last night we saw a fine aurora, broken


arches with streamers never before was one apparently so
,

near; it certainly did look as though it was within reach.


"
January 16th. raining ; at eleven o'clock this fore-
Still

noon, Mr. out on a voyage of discovery, but it rained


8. started
so hard and the walking was so difficult that he soon came
back. * * * Mr. II. went down to the spring to-day and
brought up a pail of water. A
week ago this waa an arctic
region,now it is more like April in the valleys of ]STew
Hampshire.
68

"
January 17th. The wind was high during the night, say
eighty miles per hour at 7 o'clock, A. M., to-day, only 75 miles
;

per hour, strong enough however to compel Mr. II. to sit


while he measured the force of the wind that he might not
be blown over into Tuckerman's ravine. * * * * Has
blown stiffly all day, yet we have taken the air several times;
pleasant walks in the face of a fifty mile breeze. Perfectly
clear at sunset. Had one of the best views of the shadow of
Mount Washington on the sky yet obtained. The mountains
far and near look dull and gray now since the rains.

"
1871, January 19. Mr. H. railed us out, before sunrise, to
see the beauty of the morning; in truth it \vas wicked to miss
such a glorious view as we had. Perfectly clear, and nearly
calm. Never before have E seen the shadow of the mountain
so grand on llie western sky, never so charming the purple
tints at break of day. Never so impressive have been the
shaded outlines, the lights and shadows on the mountains and
in the valleys, as on ihis memorable morning. Sunset was
but the complement of the morning, and the evening is beau-
tiful as ever night can be, the stars shine with a light as soft
as June, all, all i? beautiful.

"
January 22, 1871. Having a gale to-day, and not only a high
wind but a temperature below any thing I have ever expe-
rienced before; now, at nine, P.M., 34 degrees inside the door;
at two, I'. M., wind 72 miles per hour. Professor II. measured
the velocity, he had to sit with a line around him, myself at
the other end indoors as an anchor; even then it was impos-
sible for him to keep his position. Temperature 31 degrees.
I put up a
pendulum, this morning, in our room, it is four feet
long, and the rod passes through a sheet of cardboard, on
which are marked the points of the compass. The oscillations,
when the wind blew in gusts, were in every direction, chang-
ing suddenly, and sometimes had a rotary motion. "When the
wind was steady, the oscillations were northwest and southeast.
"With two fires the room is cold to night.

"January 23, 1871. The wind raged all night. The house
rocked fearfully, towards morning the wind ceased, and all
day it h;. nearly calm. The temperature outside 43
degn-es. J'rofessor II. and myself Hat up all night to keep the
tires going The pendulum gave oscillations of an inch and a
half at times during the night. Temperature to-night at ten
o'clock 40 degrees; a changeable climate this.
GO

"January 31, 1871. The most glorious sunrise this winter.


To the castwas a sea of clouds broken and much lower than
usual. The protruding peaks resembled islands, more than
ever before over northern ISTew Hampshire and Maine, and
;

along the coast, the clouds were very dense, but their upper
surface, as the sun shone across them, was of dazzling bright-
ness, while singular forms of cirrus clouds overcast the sky.
Low in the west it was intensely black, and detached ma-sr-;
of clouds floated along the northern horizon. For an hour
after sunrise all these cloud forms were constantly changing
in colour purple and crimson, leaden hues and rose tints,
almost black and dazzling white.

"February 1,1871. Clouds on the summit till noon, when it


suddenly cleared up. Early in the forenoon, the wind was
fully 50 miles per hour, at noon it was nearly calm, and till
nine, P. M., not above 20 miles per hour. At nine, P. M.,the
thermometer indicated 16 degrees.

"From M., to sunset, there were the finest cloud dis-


3.30, P.
plays possible. Eastward, heavy masses of clouds, in color from
gray to an intense black. "Westward, detached cirro-stratus,
presenting every shade and colour along the northern horizon
;

a clear light rested; the west was burning bright in crimson,


purple, and gold, while far south, fading out toward the east
into gray, the colour was a delicate rose tint. Below, to the
west, far as we could see, the whole country was covered with
cloud. The icy peaks glow and glisten in the bright sunlight.
The transitions of shades and tints, the colours burning into
the radiant sunset, surpassing any thing we have seen yet for
a sunset scene, mark this as a day never to be forgotten as I
write, it seems like a dream.

"1871, February 2d. All day the wind has been light, and
itwas nearly calm this evening till half an hour since, when,
without any warning, (except the falling in the barometer,)
the gale began, not with a rising wind, but with a single blast
that shook the house to its foundations. * * *
ls"ow, at
11 o'clock, P. M., the wind has risen to the dignity of a gale.
The temperature 20 out of doors.

"Friday, February 3d. Well, it did blow last night, making


some of the time such a racket out-doors and in-doors too, for
that matter, that sleep was out of the question. The wind must
have been as high as 90 miles per hour during several of the
heaviest gusts. For a change to-day, we get the most severe
70

snow storm of the winter so far. The wind is northwest, the


point from which our storms and hurricanes come. At no
time has the temperature been higher than 5; it was 25 this
morning at 7 o'clock.

"Saturday, February 4th, 9 o'clock, P. M. The wind rising


toward morning has held its own all day, at no time being
below 75 miles, and since 8.30, acts as if it was ambitious to
attain the 90 miles per hour standard. At 7 o'clock, A. M.,
temperature o-'>; from 5 o'clock, P. M., to this last observa-
tion it has gradually worked down to 40. We have not
suffered from the cold simply because we have not exposed
ourselves to it. In the room at no time has tjie temperature
been lower than 34, and most of the time we have managed
to keep it up to about 60. To do this, we have the stoves at
a red heat; the thermometer hangs precisely five feet from
the stove; ten feet from the stove at the floor, to-day, the
temperature was only 12, at the same time was 65 in other
parts of the room. Midnight really there is quite a breeze
just now. Some of the gusts, from what we know of the
measured force, must be iully up to 100 miles per hour. In
fact it is a first-class hurricane. The wind is northwest, and
as the house is broadside to it, the full force is felt ;
at times
it seems as if every
thing was going to wreck. We go to the
door and look out; it is the most wo can do to step beyond,
;

with nothing for a hold fast, one would take passage on the
wings of the wind in the direction of Tuckerman's ravine.
However unwillingly one might go, such would be the result
if he should venture outside, so irresistible is the force of the
wind. What varied sound the wind has as it changes, now
howling, screeching, roaring as though the building was sur-
rounded by demoniac spirits, bent upon our destruction. We
shout -
the room to be heard. Xow it suddenly lulls,
and moaning and sighing it dies away; then quickly gathering
_cth, it blows as if it would hurl the house from the
summit. The timbers creak and groan and the windows
rattle; the walls bend inward; and as the wind lets go its hold,
;nd with a jerk that starts the joints again. The noise is
like rifle firing in fifty different directions, at the same moment
in the room a moment ago close by me .

here, leaning
against the wall, now in the outer room or up aloft, and out-
side as well. Then there, is the trembling and groaning of
the whole building, which is constant. Everything movable
:
the move, books drops from the shelves, we pick them
up, reph> only to do it again and again. The tempera-
ture is now 10.
71

"
Sunday, February 5th. From one to two o'clock, A. M., the
wind was higher than during the early part of the niirht.
Some of the gusts must have heen above 100, possibly 110
miles per hour. The tempest roared and thundc'ivd. It had
precisely the sound of the ocean waves In-caking on a rocky
shore, and the building had the motion of a ship scudding
before a gale. At 3 o'clock, A M., the temperature had
fallen to 59, and the barometer stood at 22.810, attached
thermometer 62. Barometer was lowest yesterday at 8 A. M .,
when it was 22.508, and attached thermometer 32. ]STow, 7 A.
M., the thermometer indicates 25, and the wind has fallen to
70 miles per hour. By accident, the spirit thermometer has not
yet been received. But this has been the only day when the
mercurial instrument has not been perfectly reliable. The
valleys are full of stratus clouds charged with frost as they
;

are, occasionally sweeping over the summit, they completely


cover one in a moment, hair, beard and clothing; when the
face is exposed it feels like the touch of hot iron. To breathe
this frosty air is very unpleasant. A
full inhalation induces a
severe coughing fit.

"
Monday, February 6th, 9 A. M. Talked over the events of
the past night at the breakfast table. * * * Of all the nights
since this party came here, the last exceeds every one. 9 P.
M. it has been a rough day, down in the world people would
;

say a severe one, so should we but for the recollection of last


night; our coal bin is under two feet of snow, and anywhere
in the room, that snow is six inches deep. The highest tem-
perature is to-day 12, and the lowest now, at 9 o'clock, P. M.,
is 2, a very acceptable change wind 50 miles in the fore-
noon, now 20 miles per hour, is good as a calm. It is clear,
and the moonlight is that of the mountain, seen only at this or
higher elevations.
"
Tuesday, February 7. A glorious sunrise a quite warm
;

day, and at sunset almost equal to that of the 1st; tempera-


ture at 2 o'clock, P. M., 62 in the sun; change of temperature
since Sunday of 121."

These sudden and great variations of temperature in the


same latitude elevation above the sea, and identical locality,
in short spaces of time, are strong evidences that the tempera-
ture of our atmosphere is exclusively to be attributed to
electrical causes within it, and not to any supposed rays of
heat emanating from the sun.
72

"Tuesday, February 7th. I have given some time this after-


oon to the study of cloud formations. >ays like this a'
I

rare that we improve every opportunity for investigation.


(iales, storms, hurricanes, all clear off with a north wind a
wind gentle and soft as the south wind of the lower regions.
How can this be explained? It is S. S. W. to-night and 2
miles per hour; a marked contrast to Sunday morning.'

Let us attempt an explanation of this phenomenon "When :

masses of clouds, freighted with moisture, and at different


elevations, approach each other, attracted by their opposite
electricities, heat is evolved by their conjunction. The watery
vapour constituting the clouds undergoes a radical change;
the atmospheric air, which holds the water in suspension,
absorbing the heat that is evolved by the conjunction of the
opposite electricities of the clouds in commixture, is so greatly
expanded and rarefied that its molecules can no longer sustain
the particles of water with which they had been associated ;

this attenuated air, thus heated, leaves the watery particles,


and being positively electrified, is attracted by the opposite
electricity of the higher atmosphere and ascends instantly into
it, while the water being negatively electrified is repelled from
the air above, and begins to fall in sheets, which soon separate
into drops, repelling each other, and carrying to the earth the
electricity in a latent form with which they were associated.
When the clouds have thus discharged all their water as hail,
snow or rain, to the earth, the atmosphere in which they
iloated becomes very dry and electrical. The north wind,
warmed by the heated air which has escaped from the clouds
when they met, is attracted to the spaces before occupied by
the clouds in the direction of the ocean and becomes the
gentle, balmy described by tie
air rvers, and as dry air
'ricity always opposed to that of moist air, the
north wind at Mount Washington always is attracted to the
Atla; .;ii tn the south of the mountain, and storms thus

terminate in that locality with a north wind.


" W lay, February 8th. Ten o'clock, P. M. There is

evidently a snow storm along ti the imrthern


.
<

within lifty miles of us. Thi- ild see the storm


moved ea-tward. It was cloudy and clear by turns on
the lower current ofcloiid rested at times
us. The valh-vs i-a>t were full, and the upper stratum
Mintry as far as eouM be seen. Wind
W., from -0 to 50 miles per hour. Temperature from
73

14, jit 7 o dock A. M., to 20 at -2 !'. M. Interesting


the progress of the storm and to sec- the lower current of cloud
driven by an easterly wind, running under the higher stratum
which of course is toward the northeast.

Let us here stop to admire the infinite wisdom of the


Creator, who, using the attractive forces of his electricities to
gather and collect the \vatery vapours of the atmosphere into
clouds, disperses them by the repellent forces of these same
and scatters in this way their manifold watery
electricities
blessings over greatly increased areas of the surface of the
earth.
"
Thursday, February 16th. A storm of snow and rain. It
rains here, with the thermometer at 22, as it did to-day, and
snows with it at 30, as might be expected. Why it should
rain at 22 is hard to explain. Wind steady; southwest
through the day; but, at 8.20 P. M., changed suddenly to
northwest in gusts, 60 to 80 miles per hour. Forgot to men-
tion last night, that at 6.30 P. M. I read from the 'Atlantic'
in the open air. Our days are about 46 minutes longer than
they are at the sea level."

The warm southwest wind explains the rain at 22, which


was probably the temperature outside of the column of warm
air brought up by the southwest wind.

Sunday, February 19th. A bright, sunny day, clear and


"
calm, yet the temperature was at no time higher than 8V
"Where was the sun's heat ?

Tuesday, February 21st. When S. left this morning the


"
thermometer read 4, and wind 20 miles per hour; at the
Gulf Tank it was so warm he had to lay aside overcoat and
gloves no wind there the
; ;
snow was melting and the water
running down the centre rail; quite a contrast to the summit,
he was 300
only one mile distant meteorologically speaking,
miles south of his mountain home, though in sight of it. We
took a walk. Fine weather for a change. Beautiful cloud
views this afternoon. Light fleecy clouds floating over Mount
Monroe. Dissolved before reaching Tuckermau's ravine. They
the prismatic colors
passed between us and the sun, showing ;

then as they rolled eastward, gradually faded out and changed


to a cold gray. The transitions of light and shade were inex-
pressibly beautiful, enough
to give sensations of pleasure to
the dullest observer, and drive an artist crazy with delight.
74

The buildings are cased in ice and frost work of most elegant
forms, resembling rocks, flowers, leaves, shells and the wings
of birds.'
" February 24th. From 9 o'clock A. M. to 3 P. M. the tem-

perature varied but a degree or two from 37 the barometer


;

steady.

"February 27th. This time we are favoured with a rain


storm, pouring when it was calm, and in driving sheets after
the wind rose to 84 miles per hour. At 9 A. M. it changed
to snow, and then, by turns, rain for a moment, then quickly
changing to snow, and suddenly rain again; but the snow
obtained the mastery.

"February 28. It cleared off early in the morning. "Wind


from 50 to 70 miles per hour. The mean temperature, zero.
" March3. Astorm seemed to be brewing last night at a
late hour, and early it came, a heavy rain storm. Towards
noon the wind rose, and at one P. M., it blew 9G miles per
hour. How the wind roared in the flue How the house
!

shook ! Had to shout across the room to be heard. It was


grand, however. From 4 o'clock P. M. the wind abated.
" March 23. At 9 P. M., snow squalls to the northeast, and
the clouds gradually settling in the valleys. * * * *
By
2 P. M. the mountain was in the clouds. They were at a
higher elevation than has generally been the case cirro
stratus; color gray; uniform in density nearly over the entire
* * * *
field of view. Evidently the lower current was
from the east, while the wind on the summit was west north-
* * * * r
p ne C 1 OUC1 9 passed over Mount Adams,
and later over the dividing ridge, between Mounts Washington
and Clay. They seemed to curve, as they passed over these
mountain top*, us though the upper currents of air conformed
to their irregularities of surfaee." [The mountains and the
clouds having the same electricities, which repelled each
other. The Author. ~]
" "Whon there are two strata of
clouds, they unite before the
enow or rain fulls, as a rule, though to-day the snow fell an
hour previous to the clouds settling on the mountains.

"April 1. To-day, G4 degrees in the sun, at 11 A. M.


Afterward;; cooler 15 degrees at 9 P. M. * * * * A
northeast win! to-night, seldom from that quarter.
* * * *
"April3. Sqph is the atmosphere here, that
although the thermometer, in the shade, marked 27 degr>
wore neither hat nor coat, and yet was warm enough.

"April 4. All the forenoon, till one P. M., the summit


was in a dense cloud. Suddenly it lifted, and then we had
the most gorgeous display of cloud-scenes we have yet wit-
nessed. Eastward, masses of cumuli rested over the vallrvs
and the mountains. not call them mountains of clouds ?
Why
Certainly. They rose far above our level, six thousand or
perhaps eight thousand feet higher than this peak. They con-
formed to the heights over which they lay, and eeemed to
envelop other mountains, nearly as lofty as their upper limits.
The illusion was perfect, and Mount Washington in compari-
son, was a diminutive spur, or outlying peak of this great
mountain range. * * * * The sun rises high, but we
know nothing of Spring. Trulyit is more like Winter than
some of the timein March. Then there was n,a snow. Now,
everywhere there are snow and ice.

"April 6. Aclear sunrise cold thermometer only 3


degrees, the wind 20 miles per hour, and the morning view,
that of December. Though clear, the sun gave little heat a
pale white light; the sky a light blue, and so clear, that it
seemed almost as though we could see beyond its bounds, or
through it into the regions of space.
" The rule holds no two days alike on
April 15. good ;

Mount Washington. Ten hours we had splendid cloud-effects


in every direction; cumuli north, in every form beautiful and
fantastic, and colors as though some radiant angel had thrown
aside his robe of light.
" To show the changes in temperature here, in a
April 28.
few feet of altitude, I note my trips down, to-day, and up as
well. Left the house at 4.30 P. M.; wind 30 miles an hour ;
at the Lizzie Bourne monument, 40 miles; at the Gulf House
ruins and below, 60 miles, thus reversing the order of things
in regard to wind. Thermometer on the summit 28; frost-
work forming some distance below the monument. At the
Gulf Tank, when the sun came out, as it did several times, the
ice on my cap would thaw completely; then, while the cloud
was passing, icicles two inches in length would form on the
visor. It was difficult to work or even stand against the wind
below the Gulf House ruino. Returning, the wind was not BO
violent.
76

"May 1. May Day, and still it is winter; every aspect is


that of mid-winter. The spring near the Observatory remains
frozen solid, and so we daily melt ice for use, and yet down
the mountain a half mile there is seldom a day when the
streams are not running.
" Another tough snow-storm * * * wind got
May 4. ;

up to 48 miles per hour and temperature down to 21.


" The storm
May
5. snowing in such a wintry way last
night turned to rain toward morning, and has been raining
all day.
* * * The wind was west here not higher than
five miles per hour yet in the valleys it must have been much
stronger, judging by the velocity of the clouds; besides, we
could hear distinctly its almost roar.
"
Monday, May 6. This morning clear, calm and warm.
The thermometer, at 8 o'clock A. M., indicated 85 in the
sun warmest morning this spring.
;

"
May 7. The barometer fell 50-100ths from last night at 9
o'clock to this morning at 7 o'clock. "Wind rising at 3 o'clock
A. M.; readied its highest velocity, 67 miles per hour, at 2
o'clock P. M. highest recorded for some time, quite strongly
* * *
reminding us of the winter months. Snowing all day.
At 5 o'clock P. M. the cloud passed off and we could see that
not the mountains alone, but the lower country as well was
'snow-bound.' At 9.40 P. M. snowing ac:ain. Temperature,
2 o'clock P. M., 21 highest for the day and 19 at 9
o'clock P. M.

"May 8. "We did have a rough night; called tne wind 80


miles per hour at midnight. Temperature at 7 A. M.. 15.
" Mountain peaks while as winter, but the valleys
May 9.
are hare. The frost work has seldom been more beautiful.
Measured some leathers to-day, on a Tall pole, at the Tip-Top
them ;;r> inches in length, and on a rock south
!'>und
of the house 49 incho in length and 15 iin-hes broad.
"
May llth. A wintry sky and winter scenery this morning.
The skva * *
pale blue and the sunshine that of December.
* *
Temperature 20 at 7 o'clock A. M,
"May 14th. The wind was high as ftO miles per hour, if not
higher, durinir theni<rht. All da y, as usual, it lias been cloudy
and frost work forming. Temperature at 7 A. M. was 11,
and highest for the dayat 9 P. M., 21; at no time the wind
77

lower than 46 miles per h<>ur. Mr. II. left at !" A. M. in the
face of a 48-mile gale and the temperature only 14 . I am
anxious for his safety, and shall ho till S. returns.
"The winter's work is done. Storms of unparalleled severity,
when, for days in succession, the summit \vas enveloped in
clouds, and the hurricanes lasted longer and were more vio-
lent than any yet recorded in the I'nitcd States, together with
very low temperatures, have heen a part of our experiences.
Just such an experience has seldom hefore hem the lot of
human beings. * * * And ours has heen the good for-
tune to witness some of the most magnificent winter scenery
upon which mortal eyes ever rested, scenerj of transcendent
7

grandeur and views surpassingly beautiful.

"There were days when the shifting views of each hour fur-
nished newr wonders and new beauties, in the play of sunlight
and changing cloud-forms, every hour a picture in itself and
perfect in details. Sunsets, too, when an ocean of cloud sur-
rounded this island-like summit, the only one of all the many
high peaks visible above the cloud billows, all else of earth
hidden from sight; there were times when this aerial sea was
burnished silver, smooth and calm, and times when its tossing
waves were tipped with crimson and golden fire. * * * *
Gone are the long days and longer nights, when the stoves
failed to comfortably warm the little room, though we kept
them at a red heat, and when the thermometer indicated 65
near the stove and 4 at the floor ten feet distant."

"We have presented these extracts from the published obseiv-


ations of the gentlemen who passed the winter of the years
1870-1871 on Mount Washington, to show the sudden and
great variations of temperature that occurred on the mountain
by day as well as by night, and that these variations could
not have resulted from solar radiations of heat, as sometimes
when the atmosphere was the clearest and freest from vapour,
and when the sun was shining with the greatest brilliancy,
the temperature on the mountain was lower than when these
conditions of the sun and atmosphere did not exist, and
further, when the sun had passed the vernal equinox, and
was approaching the summer solstice, the temperature on the
mountain, and the condition of its atmosphere, continued still
to be wintry, unaffected by the change in the position of the
sun, relatively to the angles of incidence of its rays.
"When we consider the altitude of Mount "Washington,
78

which only 6,293 feet above the sea level, or not much
is
more than one mile, we find that its projection above the
periphery of the earth would be about 1-8000 part of the
earth's diameter, a protuberance so slight as to be wholly
inappreciable at the sun's distance of 92,000,000 of miles from
it. What proportion of solar radiation of heat (if there is
such a thing,) could fall upon so microscopical a spot as
Mount Washington, cannot therefore readily be imagined.
.But when we contemplate the electrical forces of our planet
developed by sunlight, the radiation of interior terrestrial
heat into the atmosphere the movements of oppositely elec-
trified currents of air, and the commingling of tumultuous
musses of cumuli clouds, all evolving heat and changing with
great suddenness the temperature of various localities, we
begin to comprehend the plan of the Creator in furnishing
each planet with its own sources of heat, instead of attempting
to supply them with heat through almost interminable spaces,
from so distant an orb as the sun. To an observer outside of
our atmosphere, looking down upon our planet, he would see
sometimes masses of dense clouds, which, intercepting the
sunlight would cast dark shadows of various forms and sizes
proportional to the clouds which would form them on the
surface of the earth. The darkness of the shadow would be
in proportion to the depth and density of the clouds floating
between the sunlight and the earth. These shadows would
flit across our earth as rapidly as the clouds which had pro-
duced them, in great storms or hurricanes of perhaps 100
or more miles per hour. Now may not the sun spots which
have so much exercised our astronomers be produced in a
Rinilar way? Clouds or vapours of various luminosity being
interposed between the most luminous part of the sun's
envelope; and the gray atmosphere of the sun, would
upon the latter shadows so dark and so flitting as to resemble
:
hadows of clouds on our own planet, and the dispersion
of the clouds so making the shadows would account for the
rapid disappearance of the sun spots. The forms of the sun
spots would vary with the sinuosities and unevenness of the
surface of the gray envelope of the sun upon which these
shadows fell, and the continual interference of intense Jight
derived from other luminaries of the stellar world, with the
fainter light received from our planetary system, would greatly
increase the darkness of the shadows so produced.
Let us now consider the case of a total eclipse of the sun
by the moon. In the reports of observers, the following
79

appearances have been described : Solar prominences during


eclipses, red protuberances, red clouds, red flames, &c.

Oneobserver says " They form around the solar globe a


:

denticulated and continuous series of projections of very


curious appearance." Another observer says: "The promi-
nences were seen very distinctly, their colour was that of red
coral, slightly tinted with violet. They all appeared to be
adherent by their bases, and none of them floated detached at
a certain distance from the moon as was observed in the years
1851 and 1861.
" The
following facts may be considered tolerably certain :

" 1. The prominences (or protuberances) belong decidedly to


the sun.
" 2. The prominences
are of a gaseous nature, that is, they
are composed of an incandescent
gas, principally hydrogen gas,
but they contain doubtless other substances, perhaps sub-
stances that are unknown on the surface of our earth, at least
such would appear to be proved by the existence of a brilliant
line in the spectrum, near to the yellow line of sodium, but
not coinciding with the latter, and, moreover, most curious to
relate, it does not coincide with any dark ray of the solar
spectrum.
"3. The matter which forms the prominences is of very
great extent, w hether it spreads over the entire photosphere
r

or not ; it forms a continuous layer, the thickness of which is


estimated by Mr. Loeyer, at some 5,000 miles on an average,
and the prominences appear to be only portions of this layer
projected to a certain distance from it, sometimes detached
from it and floating above it. One of the great prominences
represented upwards of 100,000 miles in vertical height above
the photosphere.

"4. These stupendous accumulations of incandescent gas


undergo, in very short intervals of time, very great changes
in their form and size, which indicate that the layers of
gaseous matter of which they form part are in a state of con-
stant agitation, the cause of which is unknown, perhaps it is
the same that gives rise to the spots and faculae.
" It is
extremely probable that the the entire globe of the
sun has a very high temperature throughout its mass a tem-
perature whicb surpasses the melting (or boiling) points ot
80

most of the elementary substances of which spectral analysis


has revealed the existence in its atmosphere. At the sumo
time, it is evident that the various concentric layers of which
the solar globe may be supposed to be formed, exert one upon
the other considerable pressure, since we find that at the sur-
face itself, the intensity of gravitation is twenty-eight times as
as it is upon the earth's surface. This pressure may
iuder fusion to a certain extent, but not incandescence. But
fivut
we believe that the hypothesis of a liquid incandescence or
even a gaseous nucleus is more probable."
All such hypotheses are put at rest by the recognition of the
sun as a great magnet, since magnetism is destroyed by heat.
" The
prominences on the right, (western edge) appear like
a mass of snow-capped mountains, the bases of which rest on
the limb of the moon, and are lighted up by the rays of a
setting sun." (From M. Jausen's observations on the eclipse
of the sun from Aden to Malacca, August 18, 1868.)

1858, M. Liais found that the light of the sun's corona,


"In
isreally polarized, and at once concluded that the sun has an
atmosphere extending far beyond the Dhotosphere.
"During the short phase of total darkness, a luminous
corona makes its appearance, being generally of a silver
whiteness, but is sometimes coloured and surrounds com-
pletely the dark lirnb. Its apparent breadth is from one-fifth
to one-twelfth of the diameter of the moon, and from it, light
decreases gradually."
"We have here in the aspect of the clouds in sunshine, from
the summit of Mount Washington as they gather from the sea
or from the land, advancing, stationary, or retiring, the most
vivid descriptions of the varying brilliant tints arid gorgeous
groupings of colours, as the changing angles of incidence and
reflection met their sight, that it is possible to conceive. A\V,
who are familiar with the magnificent autumnal sunsets of
many parts of our country, may begin to imagine the
exquisite beauty of the scenes which these gentlemen have
witnessed. But the particular object we have in view in
calling your attention to it, is to trace the analogy of these
displays of colour, light and shade, with those described by
i
gating the physical condition of the sun.
We have the same tints, brilliant colours, neutral colours,
shades and shadows, in our planet as are described to be seen
in the sun similar disturbances in the vapour of both orbs.
81

Is it toomuch to imagine, tlioreforc, that if an observe/ could


be placed within telescopic range beyond our
atmosphere,
he might see in our atmosphere an exact imitation,
upon a
reduced scale however, of whatever has been exhibited by the
sun, as the disc of our planet would then display a rcfle
of the illumination of the whole stellar world? And what
more does the sun do ? He receives the light of the whole
stellar and planetary world, and reflects it again through
space, thus presenting to one orb, or set of orbs, the light he
has received from others, until throughout the great expanse,
light is diffused everywhere to shine in the firmament of heaven,
and give light upon the earth.

We have had exhibitedin this city, (Philadelphia,) a few


weeks by a distinguished artist, an oil painting of
since,
" Pike's
Peak," one of the grandest mountains of the Rocky
Mountain range. Its height is 14,216 feet above the sea level,
and on its very summit is a signal station and observatory of
the United States, erected in the year 1873. Its summit is
covered with snow to a descent of perhaps a thousand fec-t.
The painting, which represents a sunset scene, portrays the
snow-covered summit, illuminated all over by a brilliant red
tint, resembling red coral, and creating at first sight the im-
pression of a mountain on fire. The resemblance to the red
protuberances around the sun, during eclipses, as depicted in
photographs taken by the observers, is most striking. This
brilliant red coral colour pervades the whole surface of the
summit of the mountain that is covered with snow, and which
is seen through the red colour. Here we have an exact resem-
blance of one of the appearances of the sun, as displayed
during an eclipse, and yet there is no incandescent gas
covering "Pike's Peak" to produce this colour. On the con-
trary, the atmosphere around and above the mountain is
" Ex
wintry, with a temperature below freezing point pede
Herculem!" May we not infer from this illustration that there
is no incandescent
gas about the sun, and that the varied tints
and colours, however brilliant, and however resembling what
we suppose to be incandescent metallic vapours, are really only
manifestations of light in its protean displays, as fitful and
evanescent as we see it in our autumnal sunsets.

ISTow let us for amoment imagine that by the interposition


of the moon between the sun and the earth, each suffers an
eclipse from the other. Let us suppose that the snow-clad
mountains of our planet are bathed in sunlight, and that the
82

brilliant colours derived from that source, changing with the


angles of incidence and reflection, with which they encompass
these snow-clad peaks, become displayed beyond the periphery
of the moon, which has concealed a large part of the body of
the earth. J^ow, if an observer could be placed between the
moon and the sun, at the period of such an eclipse of the earth,
would he not witness displays of light and colour, greatly re-
sembling, if not identical, with those which would be seen by
another observer placed between the moon and the earth, as
he regarded the appearances about the sun ? AYhat then
would become of the terrific heat of the sun and its incandes-
cent gases ?
" In the
hypothesis of undulations, instead of supposing the
transport of a material agent to great distances, it is held that
the vibrations of luminous bodies are communicated to the
atoms of an all-pervading ethereal fluid. These vibrations,
propagated through this fluid, reach the organ of vision, which
in time transmits them to the optic nerve. In this bpothe-
ic nature and transmission of
I

light would be analagous


to the nature and transmission of sound, light being produced
by atomic, and sound by molecular vibrations." This idea
confines the action of light to animal vision.

In these cases there is no analogy, for sound has a very


limited range of action, with comparatively small velocity, and
is only of value to living beings. While light has scarcely a
limit as to distance in penetration, and a velocity inconceivably
great, and is indispensable to planetary existence.

Two persons hold a table-cloth, twenty-five feet long, by its


two ends, loosely in their hands
the actual distance
these persons in a straight line is twenty feet one of these
persons raises his arms, and, by a strong impulse, shakes the
cloth, while the other end is held by the other person firmly,
a wave of the cloth is formed, and runs through its entire
length, at the extremity of which it is lost. This is called
.
lation, or wave-making. The cloth rises and tails in the
which runs through twenty-five feet, its whole length.
.

traveled by the wave is twenty-live feet, being


five feet more than the distance between the two persons
holding the table-cloth. Should the table-cloth be stretched
to its full length, no wave could be produced.

Xo\v, let us apply this example to the sun and the earth.
The luminous ether, as the intervening space between these
83

two orbs is called, is ninety-two millions of miles in length ;


and, to admit of its undulation, must be very loose in its con-

sistency. We may safely infer that such undulations as would


be required for the transmission of light from the sun to the
earth, would increase the actual distance traveled by the light
in its undulations fully ten millions of miles, making the
traveled space between the sun and earth to be one hundred
and two millions of miles instead of ninety-two millions of
miles, the measured distance. Now, the greatest velocity
known is that of light* which is 186,000 miles per second.
"We do no injustice to Divine Wisdom when we suppose that
this extreme velocity has been imparted to light, in order that
it should
pass through space without interruption, and that it
should reach its destination in the shortest possible space of
time in other words, that it should go directly to its object in
right lines, without any deviation, up or down, or laterally,
which would only retard its progress. Hence we reject entirely
the undulatory theory of light, as enunciated at the present
time. If the laws of light are not comprehended by scientists,
it furnishes no excuse for resort to absurdities in the effort to

explain them. While light, in traversing inter-stellar and


inter-planetary spaces, is thought to be confined to rectilinear
directions, there is nothing incompatible with this idea when
it is
brought within the influences of our atmosphere, by which
its refrangibility, its reflection, its polarization, and its power
to develop electricity, magnetism, and heat are manifested,
and its more speedy diffusion through our atmosphere, by
these disturbing influences, may furnish a reason for its attri-
butes here, which would have no application in its passage
through inter-stellar or inter-planetary spaces.

"Light diminishes in force or intensity in proportion as it


recedes from its source. This diminution is in direct ratio to
the square of the distance. Thus, the quantities of light at dis-
tances 2, 3, 4, etc., will be 4, 9, 16, etc., times less than at dis-
tance 1. Light requires eight minutes thirteen seconds to
arrive from the sun to the earth. It travels 11J miles in L4> of
a second, or 186,000 miles per second. It travels always ia a
straight line.
"
Light added to light, by interference, produces darkness.
The movement of such rays neutralize each other, and the
light ceases to cast any lustre.

" Of the thousand


rays of variegated shade and refrangibility
* which 288.000 miles per second.
Excepting that of electricity, is
84

which compose colourless (or white) light, those only neutralize


each other which possess co-ordinate colour and refrangibility.
Thus a red ray cannot obliterate a green ray. Two white
lights cross each other at a given point, and one time the red
alone will disappear, and the point of intersection will
hecome green green being white minus red."
Let us see what can be made of the fragmentary knowledge
of liht that we have so far attained. The white liht of the
is composed of seven primary
rays, all differing in colour
from each other. The first analysis of this white sunlight was
displayed to mankind in the rainbow, whose magnificent
beauty was admired with stupid wonder, without the faintest
conception on the part of the beholder of what it meant.
After a lapse of ages of time, Sir Isaac Newton, with a glass
prism, separated the rays of a sunbeam, and developed the
primary colours which, in their association, had formed the
white light of the sun. He reunited these primary rays, and
thus, by synthesis as well as analysis, he proved the composite
character of sunlight.

Now, astronomers have shown that the planets and asteroids


of our planetary system each emit a colour peculiar to itself:
Mercury, a pale rosy light; Mars, a reddish tint; Venus, a silvery-
white colour, with occasional streaks of pale blue light; Jupiter
gives out a pale yellow light; Saturn, a pale bluish tint, while
its rings are gorgeous with a white, silvery colour; the Moon

gives out a yellowish hue Pallas shines with a yellowish light


; ;

Juno is a reddish star Vesta has a ruddy tinge, sometimes of


;

a pale yellowish hue the Earth emits a red colour.


;
" Another remarkable feature of these star
systems, and per-
haps the most brilliant and intrinsically beautiful phenomenon
of astronomy, is the resplendent and gemlike variety of colours
by which the binary, ternary and other multiple systems are
cnaracterized. Here all the colours and intermediate tints of
the spectrum are to be met with, manifested with the richest
intensity and the most vivid and distinctive strength and
fulness ef hue. Thus in 7-, Andromeda, we have a ternary
combination, the brighter star being a rich and full orange,
and the two fainter stars green. In a, Cassiopeia?, we havr a,
bright blue and a sea given star, ,9, Cyirni, is ;i pair of stars,
y.'llow and sapphire. Ceti, is a very fine orange star wiih a
,

* * *
blue companion.
"In a celebrated d uster of stars, near x of the Southern Cross,
there are about one hundred small stars of different colours,
from the various reds to all the tints of green, blue and bluish-
85

so crowded together, that they appear in the 1 .

telescopes like a piece of magnificent celcsrial jewelry, studi-d


and Hashing in the most superb splendour with the richest and
most brilliant gem-light." * These colours are primary.
"What becomes of all these primary rays of light unless th.-v
are used to compose the white light of our sun, and of all the
fixed stars or suns that illuminate the firmament? Whatever
sunlight, therefore, has fallen upon these planets has been de-
composed; six out of the seven primary rays thereof have been
absorbed for the use of the planet, and the remaining primary
has been emitted by the planet, and sent to the sun to
associate in his photosphere with the different primary rays
sent to him from other planets, to form anew the white sun-
light, which by him is to be diffused throughout the planetarv
and stellar world.
Now we must not suppose that the orbs composing our
diminutive solar system have furnished, or can furnish, to the
sun a sufficient quantity of their respective primary rays of
light to supply that luminary with the amount of elementary
light which it is his function to combine and to furnish to the
universe. We must remember that, from the great depths of
the infinite expanse, elementary light comes up from every
star, nebula, or meteor, seeking its complementary element in
the photosphere of the sun, there to be associated as white
light, and thence to be reflected from the gray covering of the
sun, as a mirror, to all the orbs of creation. This circulation
of light, this absorption by the stars and planets of such of the
primary rays of light as they need for their own support, and
the emission, severally, of their own peculiar rays, to be reas-
sembled again in the various photospheres of the infinite
number of suns that stud the firmament, and to be again dif-
fused, according to the plan of creation, in endless succession,
present an image of the wisdom, the beneficence and power of
the Creator, that fills the mind with awe, and teaches man the
utter insignificance of his being.
Our sun is simply a huge reflector of light. The gray
covering of his nucleus or body is represented in our mirrors
by the metallic covering which we place on the backs of our
glasses. These transparent glasses are typified by the trans-
lucent photosphere of the sun, and the associated primary
rays of light from every luminous object in the universe,
mingling together, and reflected from this gray covering of
the sun, furnish the white sunlight that illuminates the world.

*J. A. S. Rollwyn's Astronomy.


86

Heat destroys gravitation. Even our astronomers, in assert-


ing that the luminous matter in the photosphere of the sun is
shown by the spectroscope to be composed largely of incan-
descent metallic the bases of which are among the
heaviest matter in the crust of our earth, commit the incon-
sistency of supposing that these heavy incandescent metallic
vapours or gases are supported by a photosphere of much
greater specific gravity, as well ;

:y, than these heavy


3
themselves; otherwise these metallic gases could not
flat in the photosphere. Some of these astronomers go so for
as to suppose that the body or nucleus of the sun itself is
gaseus, and that the density of the sun is much less than
the densities of the incandescent metallic vapours which they
suppose to float in its photosphere. Now, if these incande-
metallic re heavier than the material composing the
sun itself, it is clear that the gravitation, according to Xewtou,
of these heavy metallic incandescent vapours is not towards the
centre of the sun and if not to him, where do they gravitate?
;

We know what the specific gravities or densities of many of


the metals on the surface of' the earth are, w hose incandescent
r

vapours, as revealed by the spectoscope, are supposed to exist


in the photosphere of the sun, and astronomers have calculated
that the attraction of gravitation to the sun in its photosphere
would be twenty-eight times as great as the gravitation in the
earth's atmosphere to the earth of bodies of similar weight.

If, therefore, we suppose that these metallic incandescent

vapours in the sun's photosphere to lie twenty-eight times


ier than they would be in the earth's atmosphere; and if

they never fall to the body of the sun. it must follow that
what is called gravitation in the photosphere df the sun can-
not exist, and the whole theory of Xewton, of centripetal and
centrifugal f.>r-es, l.as no substantial existence. We know
that in our own planet heat destroys gravitation, as the vol-
canic action in the interior of the earth, upheaving inlands,
mountain ranges, and even continents, abundantly Droves

The mean density of the earth is about five times greater


than that of water actually 5.44 times. Water, therefore,
on the surface of tin.; earth penetrates its crust till it
encounters the heat radiated from the interior of the earth,
where its further descent helmv the surfa--- 1, then it

is converted into steam by the heat it has absorbed, and it is


driven upwards into the atmosphere, heaving up the most
solid and heavy materials of the crust of the earth, that lie
87

above the direction it may take. This expansion of water


into steam by heat in the crust of the earth, produced by the
repellent affinity of the homogeneous electricity associated
with it, is one of the forces of volcanic action, which arc con-
tinually changing the forms of the outer surface of the earth's
crust. The density or specific gravity of the sun is O.L !:'.<> ;
~>

(or nearly one-fourth of that of the earth). In other words,


taken in equal volumes, the weight of the matter Which, com-
poses the sun is scarcely more than one-fourth of the weight
which composes our globe. Compared to water, the density
of the sun is 1.367; that of water being 1.

Now, if what our astronomers


tell us of the
inconceivably
high temperature of the sun be true, there can be no gravita-
tion towards its centre from its photosphere, its chromosphere,
or any of its possible envelopes, the heat expanding, rarefying
and driving off all such material substances. Heat disinteg-
rates solids, separates their molecules, destroys their densities,
and consequently is opposed to gravitation, which is the
attraction of densities. Alas for poor Sir Isaac Newton and
!

his grand theory of centripetal and centrifugal forces! ray A


of light passing through a narrow chiuli, and through a glass
prism, has done the business. The incandescent metallic
gases and the transcendent intense heat of the sun which has
vapourized these metals (the supposed discovery by the narrow
chink and the prism), have demolished Newton and his erratic
fancies. Sic transit gloria mundi!
"
According to Professor Tyndall, gravitation consists of an
attraction of every particle of matter for every other particle
planets and moons are supposed to be held in their orbits by
this attraction."
" The earth centre the bodies
is supposed to attract to its all

upon its by what Newton termed centripetal force, and


surface
when one of them falls, it is always towards the earth's centre.
This force said to be resident in all the bodies of nature.
is

upon the largest masses as well as upon


It exerts its influence
the most minute particles of matter. This it is which gives
harmony to the universe, and explains the formation of bodies
of all kinds."

Newton heldthat " Bodies exercise attraction in direct ratio


to their mass, and that this law was of universal application."

Let us examine this.


88

The circulation of the blood in animals is not affected by


gravitation, nor are any of the secretions of the animal body.
The development in growth of animals is upwards, opposed to
gravitation, and totally unaffected by gravitation. The move-
ments of animals in the performance of their varied functions
have no reference to gravitation. So also in the vegetable
world; the sap of plants rises from the roots, is distributed
through the branches, and enlarges their size irrespective of
gravitation ; the trunk of the tree ascends into the atmosphere
and extends its huge limbs laterally, as if gravitation had no
existence. The smoke from combustion, the exhalations from
the earth, and the evaporation of water, all of them material
substances, are in opposition to gravitation.

Light, electricity, magnetism and heat, the vital forces of


the universe, all treat gravitation with great contempt. The
atmosphere surrounds mid envelopes the earth. It has what
is called gravity or weight, but it is not subject to what is
called the law of gravitation, since when its lower strata.
become warmed, they ascend into the upper part of the atmos-
phere, and do not descend or fall to the earth, as having weight
they should do; thus a difference in the relative weights of the
same substance, in one condition or another, removes that
substance from the influence of gravitation. The vapours or
clouds in the atmosphere, which aiv heavier than air, float in
many directions, and do not fall to the earth. A
piece of iron
will float upon a fused mass of iron, instead of passing through
it to the bottom. The inertia of matter is opposed to gravita-
tion. Form, which is a force, and is the resultant of the force*
that have produced it, is antagonistic, to gravitation, which we
illustrate with this example: suppose we have a cube of soft
iron, weighing live pounds; let it be held by the hand over a,
pool of water; release it, from the hand, the iron falls directly
to the bottom of the pool; our philosophers would say it fell
ruvitation.

Xow, take that cube of iron, roll it out into a sheet of iron
nth of an inch in thickness, and again place it
the water horizontally; release your hold upon it; it .-inks
io the bottom of the
iiniii' pool. Philosophy says, by
gravitation. \^-<-\ .-r it, and holding its edge vertically over
the water, again withdraw your hand; it descends at on
bottom. Still by gravitation. Xow, again take it from
the pool, bejid r up some six inches around it, in the
form of a dish then place its bottom on the surface of the
;
80

water, release your liohl, and lo it does not sink to the bottom
!

of the pool, but it floats upon the surface of it It is no lo


!

drawn to the bottom of the pool by gravitation, although what


we call its weight is unchanged. It still weighs five pounds.
"Why does it not sink as before? It is arrested by its form,
which is antagonistic to what is called gravitation. Gravita-
tion, therefore, is not universal. It does not always attract
matter to matter, in proportion to its mass. "What then is
the repellent force which prevents this iron dish from sinking?
It is magnetism. The water is magnetic, a condition produced
by the electricity, whose opposite polarities in the oxygen and
hydrogen meeting in conjunction, converted those gases, by
the combustion of the hydrogen gas in the oxygen gas, into the
liquid state of water, and rendering the water at the same
time magnetic. The iron dish, in contact with the water by
its horizontal bottom, and
having vertical sides, became mag-
netic by induction from the water the water and the iron
presenting the same magnetic poles to each other, mutually
repelled each other, and the flotation of the iron dish was the
result.

Flotation, heretofore attributed to the lightness of the


floating body compared with the weight of the liquid in
which it floated, is due to magnetic repulsion, and not to
gravitation. Now let us look at the condition of this water
when has changed its character by crystalizing into flakes
it
of snow, of whatever diversity of form, or of hail, or of sur-
face or dense ice. These forms of water at temperatures below
32 of Fahrenheit, are all magnets, and their minutest atoms
are all magnets, also; each endowed with its two poles, one
at either extremity of the atom, and each with opposite attri-
butes.

The commerce of the world, therefore, is sustained on its


oceans by the repellent force of magnetism; while the mari-
ner directs his course over their trackless wastes, in darkness
and in storm, guided by that opposite quality of the magnet
which attracts it to the poles of the earth.

Now, when water, owing its form, whether liquid or frozen,


to magnetism, is exposed to heat, and converted into steam,
its magnetic qualities are driven off by the heat, and are re-

placed by electricity, which is the force that rends the strongest


fabrics of human skill to pieces, and scatters death and deso-
lation in every direction. The electricity of steam is of one
90

kind, and is repellent of itself; and its effort to escape from


itself and to unite with the opposite electricity of the atmos-
phere is so violent and so powerful that it furnishes to man
one of the greatest forces with which he is acquainted.
The forked flashes of lightning, seen above volcanoes in
eruption, are merely the results of the conjunction of the
positive electricity of the heated air, steam and lava thrown
out of the volcano by violent interior forces, with the negative
electricity of the atmosphere above and around the volcano.

Rotary motion of an object is antagonistic to magnetism,


by the production of friction with the atmosphere by the re-
volving object. This friction evolves electricity, which, uniting
with the opposite electricity of the revolving object, produces
heat. that expands and disintegrates its molecules, separating
them, and removing the magnetism.
As the heat of the sun (if it has any) cannot pass down-
wards through ninety-two millions of miles of ether with a
temperature of 14i> of centigrade thermometer, so the heat
radiated from the interior of the earth, or produced on its
surface, or, in its lower strata of atmosphere, cannot penetrate
up wards through the canopy of cold which surrounds the earth
at various altitudes from the snow line of 15.000 feet above the
equator, 6000 feet at 45 of north or south latitude, and at the
level of the earth at 60 of north latitude.

Let us admire the ineffable wisdom of the Creator who, by


a barrier of ice in the Arctic and Antarctic regions, confines
the internal heat between them and the equator, and the
superficial heat of the earth below the region of perpetual
snow in the atmosphere, for the uses intended by Him of the
planet and its productions

lieory of centripetal and centrifugal attractions


and repulsions is fallacious. There can be no rotation on the
centi- here or spheroid, though there, may be at the ex-
tremities of any of its diameters or axes. What is called cen-
trifugal f
Micrely the repulsion from the axis of rotation
and not from the centre. So centripetal foivo is merely axial
attraction. Any force is the resultant of the forces which
produce it. If there was, therefore, sueha force as centripetal
m a sphere or spheroid, the opposing forces acting from the
ends of the diameters would neutralize each other, and an im-
at would result at the centre, which heat would
91

destroy the very forces which had produced it, and would
prevent their continuance.
"When we consider the repellent forces of the interior of the
earth, such as heat and electricity, upheaving by volcanic
action immense masses of islands and continents, changing in
many places the configuration of the land and the sea, we
cannot for a moment accept the theory of centripetal attraction
or gravitation.

The mean density of the earth is said to be about five times


greater than that of water. If this be so, why does not this
great density or mass of matter bring down the clouds by
centripetal attraction or gravitation instantly to the earth ?
"Why does the atmosphere, still less dense than the clouds, re-
main above the earth, when according to the laws of gravita-
tion it should be precipitated upon it ? and why should the
upper strata of the atmosphere be more attenuated and thin
than the lower strata, which besides their own weight have the
additional weight of the upper strata upon them ?

There are no centripetal or centrifugal forces, as Newton


supposed. In the rapid rotation of a sphere or cylinder on its
axis, the outer surface, by its friction with the atmosphere,
evolves electricity, which, in conjunction with the electricity
of the atmosphere, produces heat, which insinuating itself
among the molecules of the rotating body, expands them and,
if the velocity of the rotation is sufficient, this heat loosens
th.eir mutual cohesion, and electricity being at the same time
imparted to these molecules associated with the heat, they are
attracted thereby to the opposite electricity of the atmosphere,
and the rotating body is separated into fragments with great
violence, as the molecules of the mass, having the same
electricity, repel each other while they are attracted to the
opposite electricity of the outer atmosphere.

This is the explanation of the bursting of millstones, grind-


stones and other revolving bodies at great speed, as well as of
meteors, shooting stars and comets, heretofore attributed to
centrifugal force. Now, what is there to attract at the centre
of anything or to repel therefrom. The centre is an imaginary
point, having neither length, breadth nor thickness, absolutely
without dimensions, and consequently without matter how
therefore can it be invested with force of any kind ?

There can be no rotation on the centre of any sphere,


92

cylinder, or cone, or other solid or hollow body, as the forces


requisite to produce the motion, would be antagonistic, and
would destroy it, as the attempt might be made conceive for
a moment, that while the earth is revolving on its axis from
west to east, you should apply an equal force to make it
revolve also from north to south, the rotation would then be
from northwest to southeast now apply equal intermediate
forces between northwest and west, and northwest and north,
and so on till you have equal forces for every degree of the
hemisphere, and equal opposite forces from the other hemi-
sphere. This would be equivalent to centripetal force or
attraction, and as these opposing forces would be equal, rota-
tion would cease, the body would remain at rest, and
centripetal force or attraction would not exist, consequently
there is neither centripetal nor centrifugal force, and we must
look therefore to other forces to explain the motions of the
planetary and stellar worlds.
to Oersted, the celebrated chemist and physicist of
It is
Denmark, that we owe the discovery that cui rents of electricity
passing over a conjunctive wire, from one pole of the Voltaic
pile to the opposite pole, produce magnetism. The meeting
of these opposite electricities, he has termed an "electrical con-
jl'"-'" I should prefer to call it an electrical embrace, as it
more resembles the ardour of lovers, in its attraction, than an
attack by force or violence. From his experiments he con-
cluded that the electric conflict is not inclosed in the conducting
wire, but that it has around it quite an extensive sphere of
activity, and that it, acts by a vortical or
whirling movement.

A few weeks alter the announcement of Oersted's disco 1

Ampere, by his experiments, discovered that two parallel con-


of a Voltaic pile, attract
junctive wires, from opposite poles
other, when electricity traverses them in the same direction ;
and that they repel ea<-h other it' the electric currents move in
of Ampt-re's lahours showed
oppo-ite dir> jiiel
;>rocal action of the elements of two currents is
d in conformity with the line which unites their cei
"ii the mutual inclination of these elements,

and that it vane- in intensity in the Inverse ratio of the squares


of tli- ,
Am|H-re final! d^-d in establishing
a conjunctive wire wound into a helix or spiral curved
y dose spin i-itive to the magnetic action
of the earth. For many weeks there was to be seen in his
cabinet a conjunctive wire of platina, whose position was
93

determined by the action of the terrestrial globe. Ampere,


by constructing a galvanic compass, bad shown that tin.- forces
which act in the magnetic needle are electric current <, and by
his learned calculations on the the reciprocal action of these
currents, he accounted for all the actions which the conjunctive
wire of the pile exerts, in the experiment of Oersted, on the
magnetic needle.
M. Arago. the eminent French astronomer, associated wit n
Ampere in some of his experiments, says: "I coiled coppe r
wire for a length of two inches, from right to left, into a helix
'>

then an equal length of wire in the same manner, from left


to right and lastly, a similar quantity again from right to left.
;

These three helices were separated from each other by recti-


linear portions of the same wire.

" One and the same of a suitable length and of


steel cylinder
rather more than .04 of an inch diameter, and enclosed in a
glass tube, was inserted in the three helices at once. The gal-
vanic current, in passing along the coils of these different
helices, magnetized the corresponding portions of the steel
cylinder, as if they had been detached and separate from each
other ; for I remarked that at one of the extremities there
was a north pole, at two inches distance a south pole, farther
on a second south pole followed by a north pole ; lastly, a
third north pole, and two inches farther on,' or at the other
extremity of the cylinder, a south pole." Thus, by this
method, the number of these intermediate poles, which physi-
cists have denominated consecutive points, could be multiplied
at pleasure. M. Arago also observed, that "if the intervals
comprised between the consecutive helices are small, the parts
of the steel wire or cylinder, corresponding to those intervals,
will themselves be magnetized as if the movement of rotation
impressed on the magnetic fluid, according to Ampere's idea,
by the influence of a helix, was continued beyond the extreme
spires of the coil.''

As the conjunction of opposite electricities, according to


these authorities, develops magnetism; and as tornadoes,
hurricanes, cyclones, and other atmospheric disturbances move
in spiral curves from their respective points of departure till
their terminations, and as, according to Ampere and Arago,
currents of electricity passed through spiral cylindrical coils
of wire develop magnetism, we see here the sources of the
.supply of magnetism to our planet, its atmosphere, and the
94

objects upon oi in them. This magnetism, so developed, is


absorbed by every object in nature. Being an imponderable,
its p: cannot always be discerned or detected; but it
resides in a latent form everywhere, till it is evolved. by the
opposite attraction or repulsion of some object approached to
it which is also magnetic.

In many parts of the world springs of water exist, in which


a great degree of magnetic power is manifested. In the state
of Michigan there are such springs, in which, if penknives, or
small pieces of iron, or steel, should be immersed for a few
minutes, they would become highly magnetic. These springs
are visited and bathed in every year by thousands of per
for the highly curative influences over diseases that they exert.

There is no magnetism in the earth under the equatorial


regions, owing to the heat of the interior of the central parts
of the planet, which destroys magnetism. This is proved by
the magnetic needle losing its dip under the equator. I think,
also, it will be shown that the magnetic needle has no dip over
the Gulf stream, as under that stream the interior heat of the
earth has a Hue extending far into the Arctic regions, through
which the (Jiilf stream is warmed, and magnetism in the
earth about the flue destroyed; the same will be found to he
true, also, of the Japanese current that runs through Behring's
strait to the Arctic regions; and of all other warm 'currents
of water in the oceans. The evaporation of the warm waters
of the Gulf stream and of the Japanese current develops
electricity, which, being positive as the waters thereof them-
selves also are, they are both attracted by the negative
tricity of the waters of the Arctic ocean ; and those currents flow
in that direction. It will be found that terrestrial magnetism
is irregularly distributed in the crust of the earth, and the

magnetism of the. Northern Hemisphere being attracted to


the S.>uth Pole, while that in the Southern Hemisphere being
attracted to the North Pole, these opposite attractions have
increased the equatorial diameter of the earth twenty-six
miles more than the polar diameter; and the earth's
under the equator having been thickened by the addition of
so much material taken from other parts of the sphere, it fol-
lows as highly probable that basins filled with seas have
;e
poles of the earth, and that oceanic currents
from the North and South Poles, respectively, are produced
by the rotation of the earth on its axis, throwing oif the sur-
plus of accumulated water at the poles, and thus the circula-
95

tion of water in oceans and seas is


produced, in spiral curves
from the polar basins.

Ihave^in the former editions of this work, sui^ostr.l that


the rotation of the earth on its axis is the result of electrical
forces within it, excited by the
juxtaposition of the materials
of various kinds forming its composition, and
having opposite
electrical polarities.
I have an illustration at hand to
prove
this. A neighbour of mine recently
erected in the rear of his house a one"-
storied dining-room, in which was a
chimney which projected some three feet
above the roof of the building which
was 12 feet above the ground on the top
of the chimney he placed a sheet-iron
cowl in the form of a truncated hollow
ellipsoid with spiral flanges from top to
bottom of the cowl. When there is no
fire in the chimney the cowl is at rest,
when a fire is kindled, as the air in the
chimney becomes heated and, accompanied by its positive
electricity, rises to the top, it meets with resistance in the
flanges of the cowl, which only begin to turn when the gather-
ing positive electricity of the warm air attracted by the greater
negative electricity of the outer atmosphere forces its way
through the openings and along the surface of the metalic
cowl and sets it in motion, and according as the combustion
is more active so is the rotation of the cowl on its axis the
more rapid, and the draught of the chimney is so increased
that finally the flanges of the cowl can no longer be distin-
guished in their rotation.
So in the interior of the earth the intense positive electricity
evolved there, in conjunction with the negative electricity
also there in great quantities, produces enormous heat, which
fusing metals and disengaging gases of great volume and
expansive power, forces them against the irregular surfaces of
the interior of the crust of the earth, and sets the ball in its
rotary motion on its axis.
Similar causes produce like effects in the interior of the sun
and of all the planets, giving them all the rotation on their

respective axes that we know they have. AYith the electricity


thus evolved and escaping as it is formed at their respective
96

poles, currents of magnetism are evolved at right angles to the


currents of electricity and cause the revolutions on their axes
to be from west to east.

There is no necessity, therefore, for our astronomers to


suppose that the Almighty has created the sun to be an
incandescent body, whose combustion is to be fed by half a
world to illuminate the remainder. The sun, in fact, is proba-
bly only a huge reflector or mirror, receiving the rays of light
from every orb, which rays themselves are of various tints, as
every planet and star has a colour -peculiar to itself, and the
groupings of these primary colours in the sun, and their re-
flections from him constitute the white light that we call sun-
light. This explanation is in harmony with our ideas of the
Divine economy, which never wastes any of its material. The
sun is a great magnet, and regulates and controls by magnet-
ism and not by gravitation all the planets of his system, which,
consequently, arc severally all magnets. The system is held
in its place and conforms in its movements by its magnetism
to the movements of all the orbs which exist in space.

As
these planets are all magnets, they can have no other
heat than their own internal heat, which is simply sufficient
to produce their respective rotations on their several axes, as
heat in intensity destroys magnetism.

The reversal of the tails of comets in their approach to the


sun and departure from him, is due to the attraction and
repulsion respectively of their magnetic poles by induction
from the greater magnetism of the sun itself.

Winds are simply currents of electrified air, repelled from


their points of departure by air similarly electrified, and
attracted in their various directions by air at rest or in motion,
as it may be, with opposite electricities. These repellent and
attractive electricities acting on a strong current of air, cause
it to be deflected from its rectilinear direction, and to assume
a spiral curve in its course, continually contracting towards
its centre, till the opposing olectrk-ities equalize each other,
when the electrical equilibrium is restored, and a calm ensues.
During the continuance of the movements of the oppositely
electrified currents of air in these spiral curves, magnetism is
developed, and this is the source ol' magnetism in the atmos-
phere.

Magnetism in the crust of the earth is likewise developed


97

there by the conj auction of opposite


electrical currents cir-
culating continually through it. This magnetism permeates
through its various molecules, supplying them with magnetic
attraction and repulsion, and thus matter, from its
suscepti-
bility of becoming magnetized, assumes the power of attrac-
tion attributed to gravitation.

Having thus shown the source from which atmospheric as


well as terrestrial magnetism is derived, we proceed to men-
tion some of its attributes.

The term magnetism, which is applied to the science that


modes and properties of a remarkable force
describes the pos-
sessing attractive and repellent qualities, is derived from a
magnetic iron ore, that was first noticed near Magnesia, and
hence was named by the ancient Greeks, Magnes. It had the
peculiar property of attracting iron. This force is not con-
fined to the mineral, but seems to pervade all nature. It is,
produced by the meeting of currents of opposite electricities
in the crust of the earth and in our atmosphere. Its existence
in the fixed stars, in the infinite number of orbs, in the firma-
ment, in the nebulae, comets, meteors, &c., may be attributed
to a similar origin. The primary rays of light from these
illuminated orbs, of greatly diversified colours, passing with
almost incredible velocity from them to our sun, through
interstellar and interplanetary spaces whose temperature is
inconceivably low, and consequently associated with negative
electricity, developing as they pass through this attenuated
ether, which fills these spaces, by friction therewith, negative
electricity, may be supposed to enter the photosphere of the
sun charged with negative electricity. This negative
electricity being homogeneous, of immense volume, and great
intensity, repels these commingled primary rays of light, by
reflection from the body of the sun on their impact with it,
with the enormous velocity which belongs to light. The
.mixture of these primary rays of various colours produces the
white light of the sun, or, as we call it, sunlight. This sun-
light, negatively electrified, driven with this immense speed
to the most distant orbs of creation, encounters in their atmos-
phere, when such exist, and by impact with the bodies of
these orbs themselves, which have each a greater density than
has the ether through which it had passed, great resistance.
This impact produces friction, and friction electricity.

The friction of matter having a temperature above 32 of


98

Fahrenheit evolves positive electricity, while that of matter


whose temperature is below 32 of Fahrenheit evolves neira-
tive electricity. When two blocks of ice are rubbed tog'
they adhere by their contiguous surfaces with a force greater
than that by which the molecules of either block of ice are
held together, and a fracture of the ice will occur anywhere
in the blocks before it will at their junction. A
notable
illustration of the friction of matter, below 32 of Fahrenheit,
producing cold and its associate negative electricity, is
furnished every day in the manufacture of iced creams and
juices of fruits. The cylinder containing the material to be
frozen is placed in another vessel, surrounded by a freezing
mixture of broken ice and common salt; by turning this
cylinder rapidly in this mixture friction is produced, which,
in abstracting the heat from the cream or juices of fruits to
be frozen, reduces their temperature, and the cold of the
freezing mixture, with its negative electricity, is transferred
to the cream or juices of fruits.

We may infer an analogy between the composition of these


distant orbs of the firmament and that of our own planet, nud
that an opposite electricity to that of sunlight exists in them.
The conjunction of these opposing electricities develops magnet-
ism, which at once seizes upon the matter of which such orbs are
composed and imparts to it the attractive and repellent qualities
that it possesses. The orb assumes the form of an oblate sj >heroid
or an ellipsoid, with its equatorial diameter longer than its polar
diameter, thickened at its equator and flattened at its poles.
This form imposes on it an elliptical orbit in which it revolves
around its local attraction. This form in the planets and pro-
bably the fixed stars, as in the earth, is derived from the
opposite attractions and repulsions of matter in their different
hemispheres that in their northern hemisphere being attracted
to the south pole, and that in the southern hemisphere being
oppositely attracted to the north pole and thus meeting at
their respective equators, where these opposite attractions
neutralize each other, they become thickened there at the
use of the matter at their poles respectively. The force
which drives the sunlight from our sun, after its reflection
from its body, is probably negative electricity, for we cannot
conceive of any other force adequate to produce such an effect.

It is this force of magnetism of which Newton in his day


had some slight knowledge, but not comprehending it as it
exists, he assigned such of its qualities as he had discovered
99

erroneously to matter, and gave it the name of gravitation, as


if a planet, if such could be made, of cotton,
rice, tol.
butter, cheese and molasses, would revolve upon its axis from
its own weight and travel in an orbit around the sun.

This force magnetises all things, imparting to them its at-


tractions and repulsions, and thus regulates and controls the
movements throughout the universe.
Let us notice some of the pecularities of this force. " Some
iron ores are natural magnets steel rods, straight, or curved
;

like horseshoes, to which magnetism has been imparted,


as also steel needles similarly treated, are artificial magnets.
The magnetic force is greatest at the ends of the rods or
needles, attracting there steel or iron filings, but diminishing
in power as the distance from the extremities is increased, and
ceasing altogether midway between their ends. The ex-
tremities of the rods or needles are called its poles ; midway
between them, where the force ceases, is called their magnetic
equator. A light needle magnetised, such as is used in the
mariner's compass, properly balanced and suspended by its
centre is called a magnetic needle. When not restrained it
ranges itself nearly parallel to a line joining the north and
south poles of the earth, one end of the needle pointing to the
north, the other end directed to the south pole. Turned from
its direction and then released, it resumes again its natural posi-
tion of pointing north and south. These ends or poles of a
magnet are respectively attached to the poles of the earth to
which they point, and are repelled from the opposite poles
reciprocally. In two magnets the corresponding poles, if ap-
proached to each other, would each repel the other and attract
the opposite pole of the other magnet." It is to this attribute
of the magnet that the earth owes its form of an oblate
spheroid. The earth being a magnet, the materials composing
its crust in the northern hemisphere have been attracted to-
wards the sonth pole, and the matter in the earth's crust in
the southern hemisphere, being also magnetic, have been at-
tracted towards the north pole. These forces being equal
and having ceased at the equator, the matters brought by them
respectively from their several hemispheres have been
accumulated and deposited in the equatorial regions of the
earth, which mass of matters has so much increased the
equatorial diameter of the earth that it exceeds the polar
diameter in length 26 miles. It is probable that the material
thus removed from the Doles of the earth to its equator, have
100

BO hollowed out the crust of the earth at the poles into basins
that seas have been formed in them, which have been filled
with water from the Pacific ocean through Behring's straits, and
Atlantic ocean by the Gulf Stream. As the planets are all
doubtless formed upon the same principle as those on which
the earth is established, and as we know that similar differ-
ences exist between the equatorial and polar diameters of
these orbs to the extent of 25 miles in Mars, 6000 miles in
Jupiter, and 7500 miles in Saturn, we may reasonably infer
that magnetic attraction and repulsion have increased their
equatorial diameters at the expense of their polar diameters
in the proportions mentioned, and that like the earth they are
all magnets, and owe their axial and orbitual rotations to

magnetism, and not to gravitation. In this increase of matter


in the equatorial regions of these planets of our system, we
have the most conclusive evidence that the attraction of mat-
ter in these orbs is to their respective equators, and not to their
respective centres as Newton supposed.
~W~hen we regard these immense differences in the equatorial
and polar diameters of the planets, Jupiter and Saturn that of
Jupiter being 6000 miles, and that of Saturn 7500 miles,
we begin to comprehend, in a slight degree, the idea of the
Creator in placing these planets at such immensely great
distances from the sun, while lie invests them with a magnet-
ism so transcendantly powerful in its attractions and repulsions,
that their revolutions around the sun are performed with a
marvelous certainty and exactitude. The law of magnetic
attraction and repulsion between objects being inversely as
the square of the distance, those distant orbs must have a
propelling or repellent power at their greatest distances from
the sun of almost infinite magnitude, to bring them within
the attractive power of the sun, so as to pass over such
immense spaces in their allotted times. It is the repellent
power of magnetism that returns them towards the sun.
" Similiar and contrary poles
polea of a magnet repel,
attract one another; magnetic poles always occur in pairs. If
a magnet be broken into many pieces, each fragment is found
to have its north and south poles.

"Magnetic attraction and repulsion vary inversely as the


square of the distance between the magnet and the body
attracted or repelled.
" If in two
magnets of equal strength, the north pole of one
101

of them be placed in contact with the south pole of the other


magnet, all attractive force will disappear. Remove the
contact, and the magnetic force is restored in each of the
magnets.
" If a
pole of a permanent magnet is placed near to the end
of a bar of soft iron, this bar will be magnetized by induction,
the end of the soft bar next to the pole of the magnet having
there an opposite pole to that of the magnets, while at the
other end of the iron bar will be found a contrary magnetic
pole. Magnetization by induction, may be effected through a
plate of glass, wood, metal, &c., without detriment. This
condition vanishes as soon as the magnet is withdrawn.

"Besides iron and steel, nickel, cobalt, manganese, chro-


mium, platinum, oxygen gas and many other substances, suffer
attraction by a magnet. Heat powerfully influences magnet-
ism. A magnet if heated to redness, loses all its magnetism,
and a red hot ball is not atttracted by a magnet.
"
Every magnetic substance has its limit of temperature ;
thus cobalt does not cease to be attracted at a white heat; iron
ceases to be attracted at a red heat; chromium just below a
red heat; nickel at 350 Fahrenheit; and manganese is not
attracted on a warm summer day. Hence it is probable that
certain substances which do not appear, under ordinary cir-
cumstances, to be attracted by a magnet would be attracted if
their temperature was reduced to a sufficiently low degree.

"A magnetic needle tends to set itself in a line with the


poles of the earth, and if moved from this position returns to
it, as if it was in the presence of
another magnet. This is due
to the magnetism of the earth in fact, the earth is a huge

magnet, the poles and equator of which do not coincide with


the geographical poles and equator.
" The magnetic meridian of a place is a vertical plane which
passes through the two poles of a horizontally suspended
magnetic needle at this place, and which being continued in
both directions will, of course, pass through the magnetic
poles of the earth. The magnetic meridian of a place will
not coincide with its geographical meridian, and the angle
formed by the two meridians is called the magnetic deviation,
variation or declination, at this place.
" The variation of the needle does not always remain the
same. In the year 1580 (the first year in which accurate
102

observations were made) the north end of the needle deviated


11 15' to the east of the true north in London. In 1(322 the
deviation was 6 cast of the north, and in 1GGO the magnetic
north pole coincided with the geographical north pole. In
1UH2 it hud passed to 6 west of north. In 17(>5 it was 20
west; and in 1818 it attained its maximum westerly deviation
24 41'. It is now returning to the north. In 1850 the
rly deviation was 22 30'; and in October, 1871, the de-
viation observed at the Kerr Observatory was 20 18' 7".
This is the secular variation of the magnetic needle. A
deli-

cately suspended magnet may be observed to undergo an


annual, daily, and even hourly variation.
"If a steel needle be accurately balanced about a horizontal*
centre, and be there magnetized, it will no longer be in hori-
zontal equilibrium. In London the north end of the needle
will dip down, forming an angle of more than 60, with a
horizontal plane. The angle which a magnetic needle,
capable of vertical movement, (dipping needle,} makes with a
horizontal plane is called the angle of inclination or dip. The
vertical plane in which the needle moves must coincide with
the magnetic meridian of the place.
" The If we
dip varies in different parts of the world.
a
convey dipping needle north of London the dip incre:
if, on the other hand, we go south of London the dip
diminishes; at the magnetic equator there is no dip, the
needle is perfectly horizontal; and south of the equator the
south pole of the needle begins to dip, and the dip incr
as we go further south. Thus the dip at Tern is 0, at Lima
10 30', at the Cape of Good Hope 34% and at Hudson's Bay
between 89 and
" The magnetic poles of the earth are those points on the
earth's surface at which a dipping needle assumes a vertical
The north magnetic pole was discovered by Sir
Son.
ames Ko<s, in 1830. It is situated in longitude 96 43' west,
latitude 79 north. The south magnetic pole, is as yet,
unknown.
"The magnetic equator of the earth is a line connecting all
"ii the earth's surface, at which here is no dip.
t

It is an irregular closed circular line cutting the terrestrial


equator at four points. The dip of a magnetic needle in
subject to both secular and periodic changes. Thus in 1~>76
C
it was 71 51' in London; a hundred years later, it was 73
103

30', and in 172-3, it reached a maximum of 74 1-'. In 1800,


it had decreased to 70 and in October 1871, the dip
-').V,

;ored at the Kew Observatory was 67 50' 3". The dip


also undergoes annual and daily diang>
" If a
horizontally suspended magnetic needle be moved
from its position of rest, it returns to it, passes it, and oscil-
luickwards and forwards across the final position of n-st
in the magnetic meridian of the place; in fact, it becoi,
horizontal pendulum oscillating under the influence of the
earth's magnetism. It haa been proved that the intensi
the earth's magnetism, at any two places, is proportional to
the square of the number of oscillations made by the same
magnetic needle at these places.
" Various
determinations of the intensity of the earth's
magnetism prove that the force increases as we pass from the
equator to the poles, as in an ordinary magnet. Thus if the
intensity at Peru be taken as unity, the intensity in London
will be represented by 1.369, and at Baffin's Bay by 1.707.

" All matteris affected by a powerful magnet, but while

many substances (iron, nickel, manganese, oxygen gas, &c.,)


are attracted, other substances (bismuth, copper, hydrogen,
&c.,) are repelled by both poles of the magnet.

" If a small bar of iron or other attracted


substance, be sus-
pended between the poles of a magnet, the bar will set itself
axially, that is with its length in a line joining the two poles.
If on the other band a bar of bismuth or other repelled sub-
stance be suspended in a like position, it will set itself equatori-
ally, that is at right angles to a line joining the poles of the
magnet, because as it is repelled by both poles, it will
endeavor to keep as far away from them as possible. Such
bodies are called dia-magnetic.

In Professor Tyndall's introduction to his " Researches on


Dia-Magnetism," writing of Professor Faraday, he states,
" That
having laid hold of the fact of repulsion, he immedi-
ately expanded and multiplied it. He subjected bodies of the
most various qualities to the action of his magnet mineral ;

aqueous solutions, glass,


salts, acids, alkalies, ethers, alcohols,
phosphorus, resins, oils, essences, vegetable and animal
tissues, and found them all amenable to magnetic influence.
Ko known solid or liquid proved insensible to the magnetic
power. When developed in sufficient strength, all the tissues
104

of the human body, the blood though it contains iron


included, were proved to be dia-magnetic, so that if you oould
suspend a man between the poles of a magnet, his extremities
would retreat from the poles, until his length became equato-
rial," that is to say, horizontally peroeudicular to the magnetic
meridian.

From the dip or inclination of the magnetic needle on


various parts of the earth's surface as magnetism is a dual
force we infer that one of its poles is attracted by the
magnetism existing in the upper atmosphere, while the other
is attracted to the magnetism in the crust of the earth
beneath. At Peru the dip is 0, owing probably to the
heat in the interior of the earth under Peru, which is
frequently manifested in the most violent earthquakes and
volcanic action, and heat we know destroys magnetism. As
the dip of the needle in either hemisphere increases from the
magnetic equator toward the poles, it is obvious that the
magnetism in the upper atmosphere, as well as in the crust of
the earth, also increases in a like proportion, attributable
doubtless to the increased cold, both of the upper atmosphere
and the crust of the earth in high latitude, and as negative
electricity and magnetism are both associated with extreme
cold, we find herein an explanation of the dip of the magnetic
needle.

In the attraction and repulsion of the magnetic needle,


horizontally, at the magnetic equator towards the north and
south poles of the earth, we have a dual horizontal force. In
the deviation of the needle east or west of north or south, we
another dual force acting horizontally. In the class of
subjects called dia-rnagnetic, which arrange themselves at right
angles to the magnetic meridian, or e<|uatorialiy as it is
terni"d, we have another dual force acting horizontally. In
tin- dip of the needle, which is nothing at the magnetic
equator, but whose angle with the horizon increasing there-
from as we advance towards either pole till it readies 90 or
a quadrant of a circle, we find another dual force with one
les in the frozen crust of the earth, while an opposite
ies is in the equally frozen regions of the arctic and
antarctic upper atmosphere of our pi;

These fop^s with electricity and heat, all developed by


light and controlled by the omniscient wisdom of the
Almighty, arc the powers which regulate the motions of our
planet and preserve it in its integrity.
105

We maywell dispense, therefore, with the whole theory of


centripetaland centrifugal forces, aud of the attraction of matter
by weight, which continually is being changed with the forms
and positions it assumes, the same substance being at one time
solid and fixed to the earth, then liquid and movable on ita
surface and again gaseous and floating in its atmosphere
above it.
In connection with this subject of magnetism, it is curious
to observe that in the animal and vegetable kingdoms the
forms of their productions all conform, in a greater or lesser
degree, to the typical forms of ellipsoids, or oblate spheroids,
as manifested in the planets. Examine the forms of our trees.
Vertical or horizontal sections, when they are in full leaf,
would disclose curved lines, which, if tangential to the ex-
tremities of their leafy branches, would represent the elements
of an ellipse in some cases elongated, in others approaching
nearly to the form of a circle. So with their leaves, however
long and narrow they may be, the elemental character of the
ellipse is apparent in them. The fruits they bear have all
similar characteristics. The apple, the peach, the pear, the
apricot, the nectarine, and indeed all the stone fruits, have
shapes corresponding nearly to the ellipsoid. The nut-bearing
trees, 'from the cocoa-nut through the walnuts, hickories,
pecan nuts, chestnuts and beeches, all produce fruits which,
in their outer forms, partake of the character of ellipsoids, or
oblate spheroids. The coffee berry, the olive, the fig, the date,
all correspond in their general forms to the same type. Among
what are called vegetables, from the enormous melon, in all
its varieties, through the pod-bearing plants, the cabbage, &c.,
the same type is visible. So in the roots and tubers; the
turnip is an oblate spheroid, the potato commonly an ellip-
soid, as are also the carrot and the parsnip. In the seeds of
the family of grapes, as well as in their leaves, the same forms
are found. The bunches of grapes, as well as their berries,
are all of the same characteristic form. Take even the grasses
in which may be included the cereals. Their long and nar-
row leaves are all elliptical in form, though they may, in some
cases, be pointed at their outer extremities. These long leaves
assume the form of a semi-ellipse, in their curvature from the
stem or branches, from which they grow, towards the ground.
So it is with the long blades of maize or Indian corn, the sugar
cane, and sorghum. The leaves, fruits and branches of trees,
for the most part, have an inclination towards the earth, and
are commonly pendant. Their tops are attracted upwards,
106

and are frequently vertical. Why do their branches extend


laterally and downwards, while their trunks and summits
ascend vertically in the atmosphere? And why do their
s and fruits
hang downwards? Is it not because of their
magnetic condition 't
Now, the leaves, fruits and branel
trees, which pursue horizontal, or slightly inclined directions,
uutv be supposed to be dia-magnetic, aud under the influence
of the horizontal currents of magnetism that set equatorially
to the magnetic meridian; while the trunks and summits, re-
pelled by the magnetism of the earth, are attracted by the op-
posite magnetism of the upper atmosphere, and rise vertically.
These two forces, varying in intensity, produce all the resultant
directions which their branches assume in their development.
Fruits of trees, being ellipsoidal in form, (which is the com-
mon form of simple magnets,) and generally pendant vertically,
when they fall to the ground are attracted there by the supe-
rior magnetism of the earth, and remain on it by the same
attraction, unless removed from it by a superior force.

If there is any truth in the story of Sir Isaac Newton hav-


ing been led to the adoption of his theory of gravitation, and
of centripetal and centrifugal forces, by tue sight of an apple
falling from its tree to the ground, it is to be lamented that he
did not investigate the force which expanded the seed, caused
itsgermination, pushed it from the soil, (where l.y gravitation
itshould have remained,) and directed its development up-
wards and laterally, forming its fruit-bud, blossom and fruit,
and holding the latter suspended in the air, unail'ected by rain,
hail or wind, till in its maturity, its growth completed, it fell
to the earth, by the attractive power of the same force which
had repelled itsparent tree from the soil. I Fad he done
so,
we might not now be compelled to begin anew the study of
terrestrial physics, after having abandoned the learned
specu
lations of this celebrated philosopher

Now, in the animal kingdom, we will begin with man, who,


we flatter ourselves, is the highest development of animal life.
As he stands erect upon his feet, if we suppose a vertical plane
to be passed through his person laterally, the curved line so
produced, tangential to his prominences, would be an ellipse.
The revolution of that ellipse, on its longer axis, would pro-
duce an ellipsoid. Now, that ellipsoid ie, during the life of
the man, a magnet, witli opposite .poles at its head and feet,
and various parts of his body are also separate magnets, but
in harmony with the chief magnet. His legs are a horse shoe
10T

magnet, with the poles in the feet, and the five toes on each
of his feet constitute, for each foot, four horse shoe mag-
nets. "When, from disordered health, the magnetism in either
leg is no longer produced, paralysis of that limb results, and
the contractile and expansive power of the muscles is no
longer acted upon by the electricity of the system. The anus
furnish another horse shoe magnet, and the five fingers of each
hand constitute, each, four horse shoe magnets, with the poles
at the extremities. The optic, nasal and auditory nerves, in
each pair respectively, constitute a horse shoe magnet. The
genital organs are each a separate, but very powerful magnet,
and are ellipsoids in form.
In quadrupeds, the fore legs are a horse shoe magnet, as also
are the hind legs. The split hoofs of the ruminants are also
horse shoe magnets ; so are the round hoofs of the horse, the
ass, the mule and the zebra, with their poles pointing to the
rear, instead of to the front. A
lateral horizontal section of a
quadruped through his head, neck and body, would develop
an elliptical curve. The jaws of animals are separate horse
shoe magnets. A serpent, which is also an ellipsoid, is a mag-
net, and when it is coiled, each of its coils preserves the ellip-
soidal form. The same type runs through the feathered tribes,
and the forms of the fishes everywhere partake, more or less,
of the elementary character of the ellipsoid.

In the investigation of this subject it will be found that the


attachment of animals to the earth, and their locomotion upon
it. are due to
magnetism, and not to gravitation. It will be
observed, that in all animals, their bodies, which are their
heaviest parts, are the farthest removed from the surface of
the earth, which could not be the case if they were held to the
earth by the attraction of their weight or gravity. As New-
ton's rule is that the attraction of gravitation is proportional to
the mass or weight, and, as the head, neck, body and thighs
are the heaviest parts of the animal, they should be nearest to
the earth, which it is known, they are not.

Now, why is this type so universal as well in planets as in


whatever that has upon them ? Is it not because of mag-
life

netism, that has developed this form and its modifications?


Does not the magnetism of the atmosphere control the move-
ments of birds by its attractions and repulsions; of the sea,
which is highly magnetic, those of the fishes and marine
animals which inhabit it; and of both the air and the land,
those of the animals who live upon the land, and of the plants
108

which are developed in its soil ? Magnetism, therefore, is an


element of life, in plants and animals, and is one of the motive
powers of planetary and stellar movements in the universe.
Let us now return to Moses and his book of Genesis. In
the 2d chapter and 7th verse, he says " And the Lord God
:

formed man of the slime of the earth, and breathed into his
face the breath of life; and man became a living soul." And
in the 21st verse, " Then the Lord God cast a deep sleep upon
Adam, and when he was fast asleep, ho took one of his ribs
and lillcd up flesh for it." And in the 22d verse, "And the
Lord God built the rib which he took from Adam into a
woman, and brought her to Adam." When we remember the
history of Moses, his birth of Israelitish parents, in the pro-
vince of Goshen, bordering on the Delta of the river Nile ;
the attempt of his mother to save him from the destruction
decreed by Pharaoh against all the male children of the Hebrews,
by placing him on the river Nile, in a water tight cradle made
of papyrus, among the water plants of that stream his dis-
;

covery by Pharaoh's daughter as she was proceeding to bathe


in the river near by; his delivery to his mother to be nursed
and reared, till he should be old enough to be educated as the
adopted son of the Princess, who had discovered him in the
river his education by the priests, who at that period, as a
;

class, were the most learned persons in Egypt; his subsequent


abandonment of the court of Pharaoh, and flight into the
desert, where he passed forty years of his life ;
his selection as
leader of his people in their flight from Egypt, and his resi-
dence among them for the last forty years of his life we are;

not surprised that so learned a man, of such varied experi-


ences, should have been chosen to conduct such a people as
raclitc-s out of bondage, to a land flowing with milk and

honey.
In the temples of Egypt, he had doubtless seen the priests
oftentimes engaged in making. tlioir idols out of the slime of
the river Nile. IVrhaps he himself may have assisted in llieir
manufacture. He must have had the history of his life im-
parted to him, and the oo/.e of the river on which his cradle
had rested mu-t have hem to him a familiar ohject. lie knew
the plastic, character of its slime, ho\v easily it could he made
'ime, any form. And he \vas probably acquainted with
the qualities of the various materials composing it, viz: the
carbonate of lime, from the bed of the river, the remains of
fish and reptiles, replete with phosphates, and the vegetable
109

matter, in almost every stage of decomposition. When, thcr<V


it was revealed to him by the
fore, Almighty that he had
formed man out of the slime of the earth, he could readily
understand tint Divine power could fashion a man out of such
materials, but the investing this man of flesh made of clay
with life, by simply breathing into his face, was such a mani-
festation of power as must have confounded all his reasoning
faculties.

Let us see if we can form any idea of how this vitalization


of the first man was effected. Remember that this is a reve-
lation of a physical fact, and in communicating it to mankind
through the medium of Moses, the Creator did not mean to
make any secret of it, but has left it to us to discover, if we
can, without discrediting the act, or disbelieving the revela-
tion. Let us suppose the first man to have been made out of
the materials mentioned. He is complete in all his organisms;
they are all prepared and ready to work as soon as vitality
shall be imparted to them. This is done by " breathing in his
face the breath of life," and "the man becomes a living soul."
Now, the first is, what is the breath of life ?
inquiry r
Accord-
ing to Moses, light had been created, the earth had received
its form, the three kingdoms, animal, vegetable and mineral,
were defined, and their functions were being performed, an
atmosphere existed, and we may suppose that 'it was consti-
tuted to fulfil all the conditions which appertain to it at the
present day. Its elements were the same then as now. Light,
which from the beginning had been passing through interstel-
lar and interplanetary spaces, with its inconceivable velocity,
had, on entering the denser medium of the atmosphere, pro-
duced enormous friction, by which electricity, and subse-
quently magnetism, had been evolved to perform the parts
assigned to them in the Divine economy. When Adam, there-
fore, was finished in his structural condition, and the blood
lay in his heart and lungs, arteries and veins, without motion,
but ready for use, all that was necessary was to fill his lungs
with atmospheric air, negatively electrified, and life at once
became established in his system. This was done by breath-
ing in his face the breath of life, that is to say atmospheric air,
which, conducted by the nostrils and the mouth through the
windpipe to the lungs, and through the eyes and ears to the
brain, and meeting there the blood oppositely electrified, the
conjunction of these opposite electricities produced heat, which,
consuming the carbon of the blood in the oxygen gas of the
Atmospheric air, formed carbonic acid gas, thus purifying the
110

blood of its carbon, imparting to it a boat of 100 of temperature,


positively electrified, and expelling from the lungs, through the
mouth and nostrils, the carbonic acid gas which has boon thus
formed. The blood, after having been thus purified, rushed
into the heart, driven by the positive electricity of the lungs,
and from the heart forced into the arteries, from which it was
distributed to all parts of the system for its renovation and
support. This arterial blood, starting from the heart with a
temperature of 100 F., rolls in the arteries, producing friction
and evolving electricity, supplying all the organs of the body
with various materials for their renovation and nutrition, and
developing magnetism, but losing more heat than it generates,
so that by the time this arterial blood has passed through the
capillaries, and has entered the veins to return to the heart, it has
lost two degrees of temperature, And it returns to the heart as
venous blood, with a temperature of 98 F. This loss of two
degrees of heat in traversing the body, changing the elec-
tricity of the blood, by induction, from being positive to being
:ive; in the heart it becomes again positive, and rushes
into the lungs to meet the negative electricity of the atmos-
pheric air, where the same process of burning the carbon of
the blood in the oxygen gas of the atmospheric air, purifying
the blood, driving O it back again
O into the heart and thence
the arteries throughout the system as before, and so
through
on while life exists in its normal condition. This is, probably,
the physical life of man, as described in the 2d chapter and 7th
of the book of Genesis and we find that electricity,
;

heat, and magnetism, are essential elements of it, and that


without them it cannot exist

Dr. Ure, in his celebrated experiment of conveying currents


of electricity along tbe spinal nerves of the recently executed
malefactor, (Mydcsdale, \vhile the body was still warm, though
life was extinct, prodm-cd a horrible caricature of the operations
of life,, by calling into violent contractions the muscles of the
All the expressions of rage, hatred, despair and horror
1
upon the features, producing so revolting a
scene that many spectators fainted at the sight. In like
manner muscular contractions and expansions of the limbs,
imitating the movements of actual life, were exhibited, to the
astonishment of beholders.
The ingenious physicist, Txittcr, of Munich, in "Bavaria, cele-
brated tor his experiments in galvanism, has, through them,
among other things, established the fact, that a constant de-
Ill

velopment of accompanies all the phenomena of


electricity
life. Now, as is developed by currents of electri-
magnetism
city, it follows, that in moving the legs of animals the expan-
sion and contraction of their muscles produce friction and
evolve an electricity opposed to that which has set them in
motion, and, at the same time, the conjunction of these oppo-
site electricities also develops magnetism, which at once is
acted upon by the superior magnetism of the earth, and hence
you have a leg lifted from the earth and another placed upon
it, by the force of magnetism, and
in locomotion, this is re-
peated and continued at the will of the animal.

The celebrated naturalist, Prof. Louis Agassi/, in his lectures


on Embryology, stated, that the beginning of animal life was in
an egg. Let us see if we can comprehend its transmutation into
life. The sexes are oppositely electrified. In the human race
the females, from the positive and persistent character of their
demands, may be termed positively electrified. The males,
from their habit of negation or denial of the wants of the
females, which is of too common occurrence, may be termed
negatively electrified. These opposing conditions create
sexual attraction; when a conjunction of these opposite elec-
tricities occurs in the act of coition, a certain degree of heat is
developed, and magnetism is also evolved the egg disengaged
from the ovarium is magnetized and positively electrified, and
through the Fallopian tubes, enlarged by the heat of the
coition, is carried into the uterus, prepared to receive it.
Thus, vitalized by the electricity and magnetism that have
been imparted to it, its own heat, and that of the uterus, in
which it is deposited, continue to preserve the life which has
thus been called into being. Such, also, is the commence-
ment of animal magnetism.
Du Bois Reymond "that the electrical current mani-
states
fests itself in different directions, in the limbs of different
animals, and with greater intensity in some animals than in
others. The electro-motive forces thus operating in the mus-
cles depend upon the opposite electrical [? magnetic] condi-
tions existing between their longitudinal and transverse sec-
tions." So, also, with, respect to the nervous system, he states
that the nerves are subject, in their sectional arrangements, to
the same law as the muscles. This must be understood, how
ever, with reference only to the exercise of their inherent elec-
tro-motive forces. In transmitting the muscular current the
nerves perform the part of inactive conductors. It is not in
the whole, or a large part of a muscle, that an electrical cur-
rent can alone be shown to exist, but that every particle, the
112

merest shred or fragment, even what may be considered


* *
microscopic, is equally obedient to electrical influence.
* *
Every movement, look or gesture, every sensation of
pain or pleasure, every emotion however transient,
and per-
haps every thought unexpressed, or word uttered, is most assur-
edly accompanied by the disturbance of electro-motive forces.
These, however, are so much more feeble than any with which
we have hitherto become acquainted, that in the healthiest and
most active, during a week, or perhaps a month, their cumu-
lative effects may not bo equal to those evolved by one smart
blow of the hand upon a table."

speculation has been evoked and various experiments


at differenttimes instituted, to discover and explain the cause
of the uniform normal heat of the body of a healthy adult per-
son, but heretofore with unsatisfactory results. Now, it seems
to me that the explanation is not a difficult one. It will be
admitted that the relative capacity of the lungs to furnish at-
mospheric air to oxidate the blood, and of the heart to supply
the proper quantity of blood to be so oxidated in the lungs, is
constant in a healthy adult. When, therefore, the lungs are
filled to their greatest capacity, with blood and atmospheric
air in diffusion through it, the meeting of the negative elec-
tricity of the air with the positive electricity of the blood in
the lungs, develops heat and magnetism, and the oxidated
blood becomes positively electrified the carbon of the blood
;

unites with a portion of the oxygen of the air in the lungs,


and becomes carbonic acid gas, also positively electrified.
This change also develops heat and magnetism, having been
produced by the meeting of opposite electricities; a portion of
the water of the blood, separated from it during these changes,
is taken up by the carbonic acid
gas; and the carbonic acid
gas and the oxidated blood, both being positively electrified,
n-]M-l each other the blood back to the heart, to be thence
distributed by the arteries through the system, while the car-
bonic acid gas, and the watery vapor it contains, are expired
from the lung.s through the mouth and nostrils into the atmos-
phere. This repulsion of the carbonic acid gas and watery
vapor from the lungs is obvious to every one. For who is
there that can hold his breath even for a single moment? A
greater power than man's will forces them from the lungs, and
that is the repellent power of positive electricity. The oxi-
dated blood is driven into the heart by this same repellent
force.

It is the electrical action, therefore, in the lungs of the at-


mospheric air and the blood intermingled in constant relative
113

quantities, that produces the uniform temperature, in all lati-


tudes, of 98 Fahrenheit in a healthy adult person.

Electricity is the cause of the fluidity of the Mood in the


veins and arteries. Venous blood taken from the veins, and
left to itself becomes solid, and separates into t\vo distinct

parts; the serum, or watery, being over and upon the clot or
coagulum. The serum is chiefly water,
holding albumen in
solution and the saltsof the blood. The clot contains fibrin
coloring matter, a little serum and a small quantity of salts.
Prick a finger with a needle, a small drop of blood exudes.
It is negatively electrified ; on being exposed to the air its nega-
tive electricity instantly unites with the positively electrified
air in contact with the warm surface of the finger, heat is
produced by their conjunction, the watery part of the serum
is
evaporated by the heat and the distributing electricities;
and the clot remains to cover the puncture made by the
needle, and to protect the blood in the vein from further
injury by the action of the air upon it. How many lives have
been saved after unconsciousness, from the loss of blood in
wounds, has seized upon the sufferer, by the escape of the
serum of the blood through evaporation from electricity, and
the deposit of the clot upon the lips of the wounds, closing
them and preventing the further flow of the blood through
them, and thus allowing nature to gather up its remaining
strength, and to restore the patient. How thankful we should
be to the Creator for this simple, wise and benevolent provi-
sion for our safety in the occurrence of blood-letting injuries !

An eminent surgeon of my acquaintance has informed me,


that, in cases of death produced by lightning, the blood re-
mains fluid in the veins for several days afterwards ; whereas,
in cases of death from disease, the blood coagulates soon after-
wards. He has known
a case in which the blood remained
fluid in the veins four days and several hours subsequent to
the death of the man by lightning. This goes to show that in
the absence of electricity from the blood, its flow in the arte-
ries and veins becomes retarded, and its coagulation, or even
thickening, would suddenly terminate the life of an animal in
which it had occurred. This, no doubt, is the cause of paralysis
and apoplexy. The treatment in such cases, therefore, should
be the introduction of the opposite electricity in the veins and
arteries to restore the electrical equilibrium and consequent
fluidity of the blood.

I have somewhere met with the following anecdote of the


late Emperor Nicholas I, of Russia, which, as it is pertinent to
the presentdiscussion, may be introduced here. It is as follows :
114

Some roars since a very distinguished, French actress, having


an engagement at the Imperial Theatre at St.
Petersburg]!,
arrived there at the beginning of winter. Soon after her ar-
rival, in company with a gentleman of her party, she proceeded
to the grounds of the Winter Palace tor walking exercise.
"Winter had arrived and the ground was covered with snow,
some of which had recently fallen. The air was calm and the
weather very cold.

In the course of their walk, their attention was attracted by


the appearance of a gentleman of very distinguished mien,
who was also walking, lie was very tall and remarkably
handsome, and was approaching them rapidly: very much im-
pressed by his appearance and manner, they were regarding
him very fixedly, when as he came near to them they saw him
take off from his hand a glove, and stooping low he grasped a
handful of the light and newly fallen enow. This strange
movement so fully occupied their attention, that they were
almost unaware of his having reached them, when, stopping
before the lady, he very abruptly clapped his hand filled with
snow upon her nose, and began to rub it vigorously, at the
same time saying to her in French; "Madame, your nose is
frozen!" Her attendant, astounded by what at first he thought
was intended as a great indignity to the lady, was about to re-
pent it, when he heard the explanation which accompanied it.
The Emperor Nicholas, for it was he, began to rub briskly the
nose and face of the lady with his hand filled with snow, to re-
store, by friction, the proper circulation of the blood, and thus
prevent the great injury to the lady's face which the loss of
her nose would occasion. He spoke encouragingly to her, and
calling an attendant he sent for his surgeon, and alter the cir-
culation of the blood in her face was re-established, she was re-
turned to her apartments, where she received every attention,
by the Kmperor's orders, and in a little while she was entirely
d. Now, why did the Emperor rub her nose and face
with snow; and why did he take off his glove from his hand
to perform that oflice ?

It has been long known, that frozen limbs can be restored


to their normal condition of healthy vigour by the application
of snow or pounded ice to the part ufi'ect.-d, when quickly
rubbed with the human band but it is not so well known why
;

such an effect is thus produced. Let us essay an explanation


of it. When a limb or member is frozen, the circulation of
the blood in it C nd the ble of the limb or member is
suspended; and unless its healthy action is speedily restored,
115

the part affected loses gangrene sets in, and ampu-


its vitality,
tation becomes necessary. The animal electricity that it con-
tained has disappeared. Xmv, the human hand has one kind
of electricity snow or ice 1ms tin opposite kind of
;
4

electricity.
"When these opposing elect ricities are brought together in con
tact by friction, as they were in this instance, heat and mair-
netism were evolved, which heat warmed and expanded the
frozen nose, and associated with the magnetism that had been
developed, excited an electrical current in the coagulated
blood in the veins of the nose and face, which then began to
flow in its natural course. When this friction is thus con-
tinued for a sufficient time, the health of the limb or member
is restored. Now if heat from combustion had been applied
in this case, instead of heat from electricity evolved
by fric-
tion, as above described, it would have resulted in the morti-
fication and loss of the lady's nose.

It has been abundantly shown, by experiments made


by
distinguished scientists, that, under the influence of weak cur-
rents of electricity, salts can be resolved into their component
elements. In this way a compound can be separated into its
constituent acid and base. It has also been shown, by Becquerel,
that if an acid and alkaline solution be so placed that their
union is effected through the parietes of an animal membrane,
or, indeed, of any other porous diaphragm, a current of elec-
tricity is evolved. This has been found to be true with all
acids and soluble bases. Now, Dr. Golding Bird asserts, that
" with the
exception of the stomach and coscum, the whole
extent of the mucous membrane, is bathed with an alkaline
mucous fluid, and the external covering of the body is as con-
stantly exhaling an acid fluid, except in the axillary and
pubic regions. The mass of the animal frame is thus placed
between two great envelopes, the one alkaline and the other
acid, meeting only at the mouth, nostrils and anus. Donne,
has shown that this arrangement is quite competent to the
evolution of electricity.
" The blood in a
healthy state, exerts a well marked alkaline
action on test paper but a piece of muscular flesh containing
a large proportion of alkaline blood, when it is cut into
Bmall pieces and digested in water, the infusion thus ob-
tained is actually acid to litmus paper. This curious circum-
stance is explained by the fact announced by Liebig, that,
although the blood in the vessels of the muscle is alkaline
from the tribnsic phosphate of soda, yet the proper fluids or
secretions of the tissues exterior to the capillaries are acid
116

from the presence of free phosphoric and lactic acids. Thus


in every mass of muscle, we have myriads of electric currents,
arising from the mutual reaction of an acid fluid exterior to
the vessels or their alkaline contents. It is thus very remark-
able, that a muscle should be an electrogenic apparatus, and
that we should have two sources of the electricity of the
muscles the effects of metamorphoses of effete fibres on the
one hand, and on the other the mutual reaction of two fluids
in different chemical conditions. The agency of a muscle
ingenerating electricity can no longer be denied.
" In the course of
twenty-four hours a considerable propor-
tion of watery vapour exhales from the surface of the body.
This has been differently estimated, and is liable to great va-
riations but from 30 to 48 ounces of water may thus be got
rid of from the system. The evaporation of this amount of
fluid is sufficient to disturb the electric equilibrium of the
body, and to evolve electricity of much higher tension than
that set free by chemical action. This evaporation may proba-
bly account for the traces of free electricity generally to be de-
tected in the body, by merely insulating a person and placing
him in contact with a condensing electrometer. Pfaff and
Ahrens generally found the electricity of the body thus ex-
amined to be positive, especially when the circulation had
been excited by partaking of alcoholic stimulants. Ilcmmer,
another observer, found that in 2422 experiments on himself,
his body was positively electric in 1252, negative in 771, and
neutral in 399. The causes of the variations in the character
of the electric conditions of the body, admit of ready ex-
planations in the varying composition of the perspired fluid.
For it' it contains, as it generally does, some free acid, it, by
its evaporation, would leave the body positively electric;
whilst it' it merely contains neutral salt, it would induce an
opposite condition. The accuracy of these statements can bo
easily verified by means of the electrometer."
" It is an established fact
that, independently of combustion,
chemical action or evaporation, the mero contact of heteroge-
neous organic matters ia competent to disturb electric equi-
librium."
" Whatever may be the influence of electricity as an agent
in exciting the function of digestion, it is now pretty distinctly
made out that the function of digestion in the stomach is an
action allied to simple solution, of which water a proper
temperature, [always associated with electricity] and a free
acid, the hydrochloric, phosphoric, or both, are the active
117

agents. "We possess sufficient evidence to induce us to regard


a current of electricity as the means by which the saline con-
stituents of the food are decomposed, and their constituent
acids, the real agents in digestion, set free in the stomach, the
soda of the decomposed salts being conveyed to the liver to
aid the metamorphosis and depuration of the portal blood, and
cause the separation of matter rich in carbon in the form of a
saline combination in the bile. It also appears, from various
experiments, that in all cases the secreted matters are always
in an opposite electric condition from that of the blood from
which they were generated."

Chemical action is merely a synonym for electrical action,


hence in all the functions of the animal body from its birth
till its dissolution, we may observe the influence of electrical

currents, the development of magnetism by the conjunction of


them, oppositely electrified, and the production of heat. In
the first inspiration of atmospheric air into the lungs where
it encounters the blood oppositely electrified, heat and
magnetism are evolved, and the purified blood has one elec-
tricity which repels itself into the heart, and thence by the
arteries through the system. When it reaches the capillaries
it has lost more than two degrees of its temperature, and being
forced through the capillaries into the veins as well by the
repulsion of the electricity of the arterial blood, as attracted by
the opposite electricity of the veins and the blood they contain,
the temperature is increased till it reaches 98 of Fahrenheit,
which it carries with it to the heart.
Muscular exercise actively employed by the contraction and
expansion of the muscles, and by their friction among them-
selves, develops large quantities of electricity, which requires
a corresponding quantity of the opposite electricity of the air
to neutralize it, hence the inspiration of atmospheric air into
the lungs becomes more rapid in proportion to the activity of
the exercise, great heat is developed in the body by the con-
junction of these opposite electricities, which expanding all
the tissues of the body, liberates the water contained in them
and in the viscera by exos mosis, which then exudes through
the pores of the skin, as perspiration, carrying off the surplus
electricity that has heen produced by the violence of the exer-
cise, and relieving the body from the further inconvenience of
its increased heat. This perspiration is acid in some parts of
the body and alkaline in other parts, and furnishes the most
immediate means of getting rid of the excessive free currents
of electricity of the body at all times.
118

During an attack of fever, while the patient is suffering


from the great interior heat of his body from disturbed elec-
trical action, why does ho continually ask for cold water? It
is because the cold water, oppositely electrified to the over-
heated organs and viscera of his body, is demanded by the
instinct of his nature, which requires it, so that the incr<
heat developed by the conjunction of these opposite electrici-
ties may still more expand the tissues and viscera and liberate
the water therefrom which, mixed with the water drank,
would carry off in perspiration the excess of electricity and
re the body to its normal condition. For this reason,
cold water in large quantities should always be prescribed in
cases of fever, to carry oil' the surplus electricity, by the
perspiration it induces, as well as to supply the material for
the very perspiration that it is intended it should produce.
Warm saline or acid baths, by expanding the pores of the
skin, and thus promoting perspiration, are natural remedies
in cases of fever or of violent inflammation. Perspiration,
therefore, alkaline or acid, is the remedy for excessive elec-
trization and just as the perspiration is either alkaline or
acid, in those places of the body where in its natural state it
should be the reverse, ought the physician to be able to diag-
nose the causes of this abnormal condition, and to restore the
electrical equilibrium in the system.

The sexes are oppositely electrified hence their mutual at-


traction for each other. Nowgive them the same electricities,
and mutual repulsion immediately results. Let us ponder
awhile on this subject. Every one must have observed in the
press of this country, almost daily, and in every part of it,
accounts of the most outrageous, cruel, and in some cases of
diabolical attacks of men upon women, and occasionally of
women upon men, generally when they bore toward each
other the relation of husband and wile. When they have been
iirst acquainted with each other, their electricities being oppo-
site, they were mutually attracted to each other, their acqiiaint-
grew into esteem, and ripened into affection and love,
and they became man and wife,. The animal system develops
electricity, magnetism and heat in its functional actions the
kind of electricity and magnetism art; dependent upon the
habits of life, the diet, the occupation and association oft he indi
vidual. When these are similar similar electric and magnetic
conditions of the body will result. It has been shown that the
;ive or masculine electricity of the man H reversed, and
p<
sitive like that of the woman under the excitement
of alcoholic stimulants in other words, for the time being,
119

the man becomes a woman, and is converted into the only


thing which the British Parliament, in all its great potentiality,
could not do, viz: make a man a woman, or a woman a man.
This, alcoholic stimulants have always done, and are now doing
every day. 'When this change in the condition of his electricity
had occurred, his attributes become feminine; he is irritable,
irrational, excitable by trivialities, and when opposed in his
opinions or conduct, becomes violent and outrageous, and if,
in this mood, he meets his wife, whose normal condition of
electricity is like his present condition, positive, they repel
each other, become mutually abusive, engage in conflict and
deadly strife, and the newspaper of the next day announces the
verdict of the coroner's jury on the case How many such in-
cidents are occurring daily in almost every part of our extended
country and who would expect to find the discovery of the
;

moving cause of all these terrible crimes in the perspiration of


the criminal? and yet science has shown that the metamor-
phosis of a man into a woman by changing the negative con-
dition of his electricity into the positive electricity of the
woman, with all its attributes, is disclosed by the character of
his perspiration, superinduced by the use of alcoholic stimu-
lants ! It is a very curious thing to note, that among the Per-
sians, one of the most ancient of peoples, the ordinary saluta-
tion on the meeting of friends, is, not as among the English,
" How do "
you do ? as if your life was one of incessant labor,
" "
or as among the French, Comment vous portez-vous ?"
"
How
do you carry yourself ? as if it w as a great exertion to move
r

"
at all but " How do you perspire ? In the lapse of ages, a
vast deal of knowledge useful to a people, is necessarily ac-
quired by their experience, personal as well as national. In
the hot and arid climate of Persia, the people suffer, and have
always suffered, greatly from fevers, eruptive diseases of the
skin,* as well as from those of a dysenteric and choleraic char-
acter. Their experience has taught them, in their diseases,
that the first relief from suffering that they felt, was ii^ the re-
turn of their perspiration to their skin, and as as that
lop^
could be maintained, just so long was tneir relief
perspiration
continued hence they came to regard it as synonymous with
a state of good health, and the salutation among friends on
meeting was introduced and became common among the
-
people.
Let no woman, hereafter, delude herself with the idea that
she can reform a man
addicted to the use of alcoholic stimu-
lants by marriage. it, she will
Should she attempt fall a
victim to the delusion, as many of her sex have done before
120

her, as she will find that her will is controlled by her normal
positive electricity, which is of the same character as that of the
man, her husband, and that, in spite of herself, the two will be
mutually repellent, and their association as man and wife will
be unhappy in the extreme.

Observe a drunken man with a male companion who is

sober; their electricities are opposite ; how loving the drunken


man is to his friend; he caresses him; locks his arm in that
of his companion hugs him in France he would kiss him
; ; ;

prattle to him with the simplicity of a child ; talks nonsense


with the incoherence of delirium and is as good humored
;

and amiable as possible. His wife appears on the scene his ;

manner changes instantly; she tells him he is wanted at home,


and asks him to accompany her there he replies, "you go to
;

don't you see I am with George," naming his companion.


.

The wife urges him to go home, and not expose himself in the
public streets in his condition. He is exasperated; their re-
pellent electricities are in action; they become angry; vio-
lence probably ensues, and the police interfere. Let no woman
ever venture to remonstrate with a drunken man ; her own
electrical condition forbids it such remonstrance irritates the
;

man, develops his anger, and leads to violence and when it


;

is remembered that women are particularly the objects of brutal


attack by drunken men, as is made manifest by the publication
in the daily press of the country, of crimes that have been
committed, it is obvious that their safety will be promoted by
their silence.

The remarkable variations in his own electrical condition,


reported by the observer, Ilemmer, as deduced from his experi-
ments upon his own body, go to show that every incident in
human life might be traced to its electrical condition; all the
>ns are excited by it, and are subdued by its reversal all ;

the emotions are necessary consequences of it, and it is not


probahly going too far to say that the intellectuality of man is
sly due to his electricity and magnetism.
\Yc have thus shown that from the impregnation of the ovum
of the warm-blooded animal, through its whole, existence, elec-
tricity, inagneiism, and heat, are the essential elements of its
vitality: and that starting from the first man, Adam, it was
not until the Creator had "breathed into his face tin- Im-atli
of life," or, as we interpret it, had hrought together the atmos-
pheric air and the blood in his lungs, oppositely electrified,
by breathing that atmospheric air into his face, t rough hia
mouth, nostrils, and eyes, and thus bringing it into contact
121

with the oppositely electrified blood, that life in Adam was


established, and the law of life made universal for all his
descendants.
It is curious to observe the marvelous provisions made by
the Creator to relieve the human animal from the excess of
electrical action in his system from whatever cause. The brain
being the most important of the organs, and contained in a
bony structure called the cranium, or skull, composed of several
parts united by serrated edges, and subject to a certain degree
of mobility at those edges, to protect the skull from fracture
by trivial, accidental blows, or pressure, is the first organ to be
relieved from increased heat in the blood which circulates
there. Perspiration first breaks out on the forehead, near the
temples; then at the uppermost suture, or serrated edge, on
the top of the skull then along the temples then behind the
; ;

ears, to relieve the cerebellum and the organs of hearing; then


above and below the eyes, for the relief of those organs; then
along the nose and corners of the mouth then under the jaws,
;

to relieve the glands of the mouth and throat the thorax, or ;

chest, where the greatest activity of the circulation of the


blood occurs, is relieved by the perspiration in the armpits,
under the shoulders while the abdominal region is protected
;

by its exudation in the loins and groins, and the pelvis and
hips have their guardian in the pubic region the upper leg in ;

the angle behind the knee, when it is bent the lower leg and
;

foot find their security in the perspiration that exudes between


the toes, as the lower arm and hand are protected by it, as it
escapes between the fingers and in the palm of the hand all
these salutary provisions are independent of the will of the
individual, and are so many safety valves for his preservation
from injury, in too many cases, from his own imprudence and
folly.
It is to the female of every species that the Creator has
confided the care and perservation of the young animal, as
well as the continuance of the species to which she may be-
long. We all know how powerful is the emotion of maternal
instinct ;
it needs no illustration.

Among all animals but man the season of reproduction is

dependent upon climatic influences upon the temperature of


the season, when the young animal is to be ushered into life,
and on the products of the earth necessary for the mother
during the period of its dependence upon her for sustenance
us well as for its own
support afterwards.
We will illustrate by a common example. We will suppose
122

that the season for reproduction with the domestic cow has
arrived; she is at pasture, and unconscious of the change in
her condition which is about to happen. Suddenly, there
begins to he given out from her body a strong effluvium it
surrounds her and accompanies her in every movement. It
fillsthe atmosphere near her wafted by the wind it is carried
to a great distance. Amile or more to the leeward of the
cow, a bull is feeding among a hundred cows, in the pasture
field: grazing quietly he is observed to turn his head towards
the direction from which the wind is coming. It marks the
first approach of the effluvium; he turns quickly around
towards the wind, raises his head high above his body and
draws a long inspiration of air. He recognizes the fragrance.
It is to him an invitation. lie sets out in a rapid walk in the
direction from which the wind is coming; then he quickens
his pace into a fast trot, and, as the welcome perfume increases
in strength, he breaks into a gallop, and then into a full
run. A
fence, a barrier, intervenes raising himself on his
;

hind heels he throws his forehand on the fence- and breaks it


to the ground. lienewing his speed he arrives in the field in
which the cow is quietly graxing among a thousand cows.
lie follows the fragrance directly to the object of his visit.
Now, what does this hastemean? "Why does he leave his own
pasture, a mile or more away, to rush with such speed to
other fields? Because a new life is to be developed, and the
indispensable elements of it are heat, electricity and mag-
netism. The exercise of his muscles in running has prod
friction, friction has developed electricity, positive, which de-
mands negative electricity from increased inspiration of the
atmosphere. His imagination has been excited by the pun-
gency <>f the grateful aroma he has breathed. lie arriv>
>w, draws a long inspiration, licks heron the neck with
uirh tongue, and upon her loins, and makes an effort, as
Jnp'r 1to have done to Kuropa. after crossing the Bos-

phorus. The cow recedes from him. and he is disappointed


she is not ready. Again and again he proffers his devotion
still rejected. The cow, in the meantime, recedes from him a
few ;
d begins again to graze. Kvery moment, liow-
her maturity of passion is approaching, the circulation
.

of her blood iic ''miniated by his proximity and the


odour given out. from his body. Eteat and electricity in her
body are developed by a quickened circulation, and when the
instinct of her nature has been fully aroused she communi-
cates to him, in a mysterious way, her readiness to receive, in
the language of tin- Latin po<-i, " '"rum ruentcm in Venrr
the elements of life are there, electricity, magnetism and }i<-at,
and at the end of the period of gestation, a new life is added
to the herd.

Among birds and poultry, the requisites for reproduction


are similar. In the poultry yard observe the gallant cock.
Scratching on the ground he finds a grain of corn, or perchance
an insect; he gives a chuckle and one of his hens approaches
to receive it. She picks it up, and comprehending the
generous motive of the gallant bird, she starts off in a run to
enjoy the gift. The cock pursues, and after a sharp and
quick race, in which friction, electricity, heat and magnetism
are developed in each of them, she suddenly stops, an embrace
follows, and an egg is impregnated, which in due time is
hatched into a chicken.

Sometimes, the cock pretending to have found some choice


morsel when in fact he has not, calls a hen, who on approach-
ing him discovers the cheat and starts from him on a run, to
be pursued by him as before, and with precisely a similar
result to the last mentioned. So that to be a gay deceiver of
the female is not confined to base man.

In the reproduction of all the varieties of animal life, from


the enormous whale to the firefly, which in the language of
Tom " her mate to her and from it to the
Moore, lights cell,"
tiniest insect, the likeconduct prevails, viz: the exercise of the
muscles producing friction, and evolving electricity, magnetism
and heat, to vitalize the ovum in its impregnation.

The whale requires three-quarters of an hour to be passed


in sportive dalliance around his mate, before a sufficient
degree of electricity, magnetism and heat can be attained to
impregnate the ovum of the female.
I have been credibly informed by a very intelligent man,
who was for many years engaged in the whale fishery in the
Southern Pacific ocean and Australian seas, that while cruis-
ing for whales off the coast of Australia the boats of his ship
pursued and captured a large sperm whale that made 90 bar-
rels of oil. That when first struck with the harpoou he went
down with great velocity, carrying with him an immense
length of " line, and that before he arose again to the surface
" to blow one hour and
twenty-three minutes by the ship's chro-
nometer had elapsed, which fact proves that it is not necessary
124

for a whale to come to the surface of the water at short


intervals of time to breathe, as naturalists suppose, as
from the lapse of time mentioned while he was under
the water he evidently had supplied himself with atmos-
pheric air for breathing purposes from the water, as it was
impossible that any pair of lungs could have inhaled and re-
tained sufficient air before he went down to sustain him for
BO long a time under water. The true explanation probably
is, that the whale came to the surface to blow oft', with his car-
bonic acid gas and watery vapour from his lungs, the
surplus electricity that had been evolved in his system by the
immense muscular action he had displayed in his descent
from, and subsequent ascent to the surface, as by no other
method could he have gotten rid of it.
Among terrestrial animals nothing is more common during
the heats of summer, when so much electricity is evolved
within them by their inspiration of air, the circulation of their
blood, their digestion, secretions and muscular action, than to
see them in herds standing in water up to or above their
knees to relieve themselves of their surplus electricity by the
conducting power of the water and thus to cool their bodies
whose heat must ascend into the air, and could not be con-
ducted to the earth while their electricity could, by the water
in which they stood, be rapidly conducted from their bodies
to the earth.

Such likewise the cause of the habit of wallowing in


is

muddy water of all the pachyderrnata, from the mammoth


through the elephant, rhinoceros, down to the common pig.
All fatty or oleaginous substances being anti-ffictional, as is
illustrated in every day life in the axles of our vehicles and in
machinery having any rotating :issociations, prevent the evolu-
tion of electricity, and consequently of heat. Ilencc some
extraordinary facts appear in the animal economy. It is
known that the whale, one of the varieties of the cet::
HILT from its teat which are external on,its body.
-5,

1, ly naturalists, with the mammalia, to


\\hich the huma! jjs.
The whale inspires atmos-
pheric air, when floating on the surface of the water, and also
it from the. water itself when swimming beneath its
surface. The whales, are warm
blooded, and the conjunction
of 1h<- negative elect ri'-ity of the atmospheric air they have
inspired, with the positive electricity of their blood, produces
heat. This heat and the electricity, which is
accompanying
125

derived from the friction of their blood in circulation, and of


their muscles in exercise while in motion, would all be rapidly
conducted from their bodies by the water of a lower tempera-
ture, in which it moves and lives, but for the great thickness
of the blubber or fat which encompasses them respectively,
and the immense quantity of oil contained in their skulls, that
are non-conductors of electricity, and serve to insulate it as it
is evolved. How then, in the rapid passage of a whale
through the water, is the enormous quantity of electricity
evolved by the friction of its organs, muscles and blood, in
their respective motions, to be got rid of since it cannot escape
from its body on account of the non-conducting power of the
robe of blubber which encloses it ? The whale, in breathing,
takes in a large quantity of water containing atmospheric air,
which air, having one electricity, is received into its respira-
tory system, where it meets with the blood oppositely electri-
fied. This blood it oxygenates, and by the positive electricity
of its lungs and heart, this blood, similarly electrified, is
driven through the arteries, to carry to every organ of its body
its renovating and vitalizing material. Changing the character
of its electricity by induction as it passes into the veins,
through the capillaries, it is taken back to the heart and
thence to the lungs by the attraction of the positive electricity
of those organs, to maintain the life of the animal, and this
process is continued during its existence, Now the air which
the whale has inspired, whether from the atmosphere directly,
or by abstraction from the water in which he lives, after it
has been used to oxidate his blood, is to be gotten rid of.
But how ? This air being warm carbonic acid gas, and asso-
ciated with watery vapour produced by the heat of opposite
electricities in converting the carbon of the blood into car-
bonic acid gas during the act of breathing, is positively elec-
trified, and is repelled from the lungs by their positive elec-
the atmosphere negatively electrified, through its
tricity, into
blow holes or spiracles, and thus the act of breathing among
animals is nothing more or less than the action of electricities
in their opposite condition of attraction and repulsion, when
associated with inspired and expired atmospheric air.
"
Professor Matteucci has incontestably proved, that currents
of electricity are always circulating in the animal frame, and
are not limited merely to cold blooded reptiles, but are
common to fishes, birds and mammalia." He has shown that a
" current of from the
positive electricity is always circulating
interior to the exterior of a muscle, and that muscular con-
126

tractions are developed in the animal machine by a fluid which


is conducted from the brain to the muscles."
The contraction of a muscle is produced by an electric cur-
rent of one kind. The extension of it is occasioned by
another current of opposite electricity. These alternate forces,
applied to the muscles of an animal, keep tin-in in healthy
exercise, and occasion all their movements, whether voluntary
as directed by the will, or involuntary as independent of it.
When a person, therefore, is immersed in water, particularly
in sea water, he is apt to be drowned ;
for the positive elec-
tricity which flows from the interior to the exterior of his
muscles, extending them, is carried off rapidly by the negative
electricity of the water in which he is immersed, leaving the
negative electricity flowing from the brain to the muscles, to
contract them in cramps, which he is not able to overcome, as
he has lost the power to extend his limbs by the escape of his
positive electricity into the water. This is the cause of the
frequent drowning of persons ;
even the best swimmers are
sometimes drowned from this cause. The Creator has pro-
vided a remedy against this loss of positive electricity in
aquatic birds; covered with down and outside feathers, they
secrete a certain oily matter with which these birds, punc-
turing with their bills the vesicles containing it on the surface
of their bodies, and filling their bills with it, anoint their
feathers, rendering them impenetrable by the water in which
they swim, and thus they retain not only their electricities
but also the necessary temperature of their bodies which the
union of these electricities in their bodies develops. The
w- iinen of the South Sea Islands, in the Pacific Ocean, having
taken the hint from these birds, without comprehending its
n, when they go to swim anoint their bodies with palm
oanut oil, and boldly plunge into the sea, swimming a
:>eyond the breakers which surround their island homes,
and taking with them a piece of board, stillicient to bear their
:t, on which they mount, and then standing on the
I on one foot, balancing their bodies upon it, they allow
the immense rollers from the ocean to bear them with great
rapidity to the breakers, where thrown from their boards by
the violence of their motion they swim to the shore, repeating
in this manner their sport for hours, defying cramps, pre-
serving their electricities, retaining the natural heat of their
bodies, and revelling in the joyous excitement of their dai
ous sports. This practice of the South Sea Island
paid, has been recently imitated by the Hnglish Captain Webb,
in his successful attempt to swim across the Straits of Dover,
127

ho having anointed his person before starting with the oil of


porpoises, which enabled him to retain his electricity and heat
in his body, and thus to accomplish his feat. Xo\v, in
of shipwreck, it is obvious that when people are thrown into
the water, no mere floating apparatus, called "Life Pre-
servers" are of any value to prevent the escape of the elec-
tricity and heat of the floating person but that he is liable to
;

be drowned in a very few minutes by the escape of those


elements of life from his body, notwithstanding he may con-
tinue to float for hours afterwards. The Esquimaux and
other Arctic tribes of people delight to eat oils, blubber, and
other fatty substances, having been taught by their instinct
that this fatty diet serves to retain within them the heat of
their bodies but how ? All fatty substances are anti-fric-
tional, and non-productive of electricity. The viscera and
tissues of these fat eating people become invested with fat,
retarding the evolution of electricity in their system, and by
thus diminishing their interior heat, preventing the secretion
of excessive perspiration, by which their electricity would be
carried off from their bodies, and the consequent reduction of
their temperature.

The people along the shores of the Mediterranean sea, in


the south of France, Spain and Portugal, delight also in oily
foods, as a preventive of the excessive secretion of perspiration,
without however understanding the rationale of their diet.
The first Napoleon, in a conversation with Corvisart, his
chief physician, said, that " he had no faith in the art of medi-
cine ; but that he placed a high value on surgery. Anatomy
had developed a knowledge of the human organization, and
post mortem dissections had displayed the effects of disease,
or of injuries to various parts of the human system, by which
the surgeon could profit, but that no such valuable aid was
offered to the physician, who had to grope his way as best he
could, in his attempts to discover the cause and the seat of the
disease, and then to adopt an experimental treatment to
remove it."
" Does
"But,'"' said Corvisart,
"
your Majesty never take medi-
" " When I am
cine ? No/' said Napoleon ; disordered, I
abstain from food, mount my horse, and ride rapidly sixty
miles on my return I bathe, sleep soundly, and the next day I
am well." The rationale of this treatment is as follows, viz:
The active exercise on horseback produced friction in many
of his muscles, which friction evolved positive electricity; this
required renewed inspiration of atmospheric air, negatively
128

electrified, to restore the electrical equilibrium ; the union of


these electricities developed heat and magnetism, which con-
ducted to the stomach and intestines served to digest the food
previously taken, and which, having remained undigested, had
occasioned his disorder. If any excess of electricity remained
in his system after his return to the palace, the warm bath
conducted it from him, and soothed him to sleep.

Solomon, the wisest of men, has left, as one of his legacies


"
to mankind, the maxim, spare the rod and spoil the child."
Now let us examine this. When children were misbehaved,
were destructive in their inclinations and conduct, rebellious
to authority, and were otherwise troublesome to parents or
others having the charge of them, Solomon, being a keen
observer of effects, recommended personal chastisement with
the rod, and naturally attributed their better deportment
after the punishment, to the fear of the child of its repetition,
and perhaps with greater severity. This was possibly a natural
conclusion on his part, at the age in which he lived, and may
be so considered even at the present time, but there is another
explanation, more philosophical and more scientific. It is as
follows, viz: "When people are in good health, they are usually
cheerful, in good humour with themselves, and amiable to
those around them; they do not think of or attempt to per-
petrate mischief to others, their electricities are in equilibrium,
and they deport themselves properly. Now let one or other
of their electricities be in excess, immediately their disposi-
tions become changed; no longer amiable, they see everything
and person through a disturbed medium; they become sullen,
cross, crabbed, quarrelsome and disagreeable; the least dis-
appointment ruffles them, and they proceed to behave ill.
Now with children, when the rod is applied vigorously to their
persons, the friction produced by the blows evolves electricity
of the kind necessary to restore the healthy electric equilibrium
of their bodies. When that is re-established there is an end
of the trouble; they become amiable and gentle. This salutary
method of correcting " les enfans terribles" has greatly fallen
into disuse in our times, from the overweening maternal in-
stinct of mammas, which is horrified by the cries of the suffering
little ones, and hence they decry against it.

This punishment is also well adapted to the adult human


animal, if we are to believe a statement recently made in some
of the London newspapers. It seems that the British Parlia-
ment, within a few years past, had re-established corporeal
punishment with the cat-o'-nine-tails at a whipping post for a
129

certain class of criminals, whoso crimes Lad become alarmingly


numerous. Since the re-introduction <>f the whipping
and its accompanying punishment, these cr'n.ics hav.- almost
(1 to exist Let other people pro tit by the example.

It is remarkable that three such eminent men as Solomon,


Nicholas F, of Knssia, and Xapoleou Bonaparte, should each
use in a different way the powers of electricity successfully,
and yet be ignorant of the powers they were developing.
Solomon by his rod correcting the wilful caprices of childhood,
Nicholas I, removing the effects of frost bites, and Napoleon
restoring himself to health, each by the evolution of electricity.
Let us turn now to the fourth class of vertebrate animals,
which as a general rule live in the water, and prominent in
this class are fishes. " A fish breathes by means of its gills,

extracting the air from the water in which it lives, and reject-
ing the w ater, which carries off whatever positive electricity
r

that may have been evolved by its muscles in its motions."


This leaves the fish in a condition of negative electricity, like
that of the water in which it lives, and having but one elec-
tricity, it is cold blooded warm blooded animals having their
blood warmed by the union or conjunction of opposite
" Fish are
electricities. nearly insensible to pain, from the
same* cause," as all pain in animals results from a disturbance
of the electrical equilibrium of their bodies. " The
tempera-
ture offish is only 2 \varmer than that of the water in which
they live. They have small brains in comparison to the size
of their bodies considerably smaller in proportion than they
are in birds or mammalia." This accounts for their insensi-
" but the nerves
bility to pain, communicating with the brain,
are as large in fish proportionately as in either birds or mam-
malia. The senses of sight and hearing are well developed
in fish, as are also those of smell and taste, particularly that
of smell, which chiefly guides them to their food. This sense
is very keen, more so than in many other animals, and thus it
is that strong smelling baits are so successful in fishing."

Fish are remarkably fecund. There is nothing in the


animal world that can be compared with them, unless it be
some species of insects. The codfish yields its eggs in
millions, from a sturgeon have been taken seven millions of
eggs, flounder produces 1.200,000, the sole 1,000,000, mackerel
500,000, and so on. These eggs, if they be not vivified by the
milt of the male fish, just rot away in the sea, and never come
to life at all, and are of no value except perhaps as food to
some minor animals of the deep.
130

It is now well known, that the impregnation of fish eggs is


a purely external act to their bodies, fish having no
organs
of generation. It is this wonderfully exceptional principle in
the life of fish, that has given rise to the art of pisciculture, e. '.

the impregnation, of the eggs of fish, forcibly exuded


artificial
from their bodies, which are brought into contact with the
milt of the male fish independent altogether of the animal.

The principle of fish life which brings the male and female
fish together at the period of spawning is unknown. Some
naturalists have supposed that the fish do not gather into
ehoals till they are about to perform the grandest action of
their nature, and that till then each animal lives a separate
and individual life; but this does not suggest the attraction
which brings them into this association.

I will venture upon an explanation. Their instinct teaches


them that their eggs, when ready to be discharged from their
bodies, must be deposited in warmer water than that in
which they habitually swim. Having but one electricity, the
negative, which is the same as that in which they live, no vivi-
fication of their eggs could take place if duly commingled
with the milt of the male fish in mid ocean, but attracted by
the warmer water of rivers at their sources, or in locjhs or
bays sheltered from the waves of the sea, where in their
shallows vegetable food is always growing at the bottom for
the support of the young fry, when they shall be hatched,
they hasten in immense shoals for mutual protection from
their enemies, to these lying-in places, where th- r roo

of the female, and the milt of the male are contiguously


deposited on the rocks or in the gravel at the bottom. The
ve electricity of the warm water derived from the fric-
tional action of sunlight upon the rocks and sand on the
ii of the shallow waters in which the eggs of the fish
Q deposited, as well as upon the eggs themselves

coining in contact with the negatively electrified eggs and


milt evolves heat, and with it magnetism, and in due time
.mug fry are fully developed, vivified by these elements
of life, breaking the outer membrane <>r shell of the eggs con-
taining them, already distended and thinned by the growth
of the embryo within, emerging into full life into the element
where they are to have their being. Of ;he hatching
of the eggs of fish is not uniform as to time in different species,
some requiring a longer period than others to attain the
maturity of their development.
Here we have a remarkable illustration of the production of
131

life by electricity and


magnetism, outside of the bodies of the
parent fish; while perhaps in almost every other class of an. mal
life it is developed within the
body of the female, after impreg-
nation by the male animal, showing most conclusively that these
imponderables are always present as well at the commence-
ment of life as during its continuance, while it has been
demonstrated time and again, that whatever decreases the vis
vitce of an animal diminishes also the evidence of the elec-

tricity within it, until after death it ceases altogether. Arc wo


not right, therefore, in concluding that electricity, magnetism,
and heat are, in certain relations to each other, elements of
every life ?

Oxygen gas a supporter of combustion, as it also is of life,


is
which in fact isone form, of combustion. It is negatively
electrified, and it is because it is so electrified that it supports
both life and combustion. Let us illustrate this. The atmos-
phere, composed of nitrogen and oxygen gases for the most
part, with a slight admixture of other gases and watery vapour,
which last contains a large portion of oxygen gas, is nega-
tively electrified. "Wood, coal, and vegetable substances, in a
dry state, are positively electrified. Now when we have on
our hearths wood as fuel, and from the condition of the wood
as well as that ol the atmosphere the combustion of the wood
is slow and sluggish, we apply a pair of bellows to hasten it
the common explanation of this use of the bellows is, that it
brings more oxygen gas into contact with the slightly kindled
wood than the atmosphere naturally furnishes, and hence the
combustion is quickened. This is true, but it also brings
associated with the oxygen gas its negative electricity, which
coming into union with the positive electricity of the fire and
the wood already slightly heated, produces increased heat,
which the additional oxygen gas thus supplied nourishes into
flame, and the fire is properly kindled. Potassium thrown
into a vessel of oxygen gas, bursts into the most brilliant
flame from the same cause, the potassium being positively
electrified in a high degree and so it is, but in a lesser degree,
with the other metalloids.

In regard to the non-producing and non-conducting powers


of electricity by fatty or oleaginous substances, a very remark-
able fact has been developed in relation to the human family.

It has for a long time been observed that in countries where


the sugar cane has been cultivated, and where sugar h.s boon
132

manufactured from its expressed juice, the negroes employed


in making it grow enormously fat from the unrestricted use of
the warm juice of the expressed cane during the process of
boiling. From this food, like the whale, they become sur-
rounded by an enyelop of fat, as do also the interior organs
of their bodies. This fat is anti-frictional and preyents the
evolution of electricity, which in the absence of the fat would
be developed. Hence these labourers could no longer be pro-
creatiye, and as their labour was yery exhausting, the neces-
sity for a new gang of labourers every four or five years be-
came established on sugar plantations. This fact, in sugar
producing countries, has kept alive and continued the n<
slave trade to this day and where it has been abolished and
the coolie trade substituted for it, the same results obtain.
]S"o women are sent to the plantations with the coolies, for
they become like negroes, virtually emasculated by the
absence of their electricity. So that we may attribute to the
loss of electricity in the producers of sugar the great obstacle
to the abolition of slavery for so long a time in the British
AVfst Indies, and at the present moment in the Spanish Islands,
in Brazil, and elsewhere as it exists.

The same deteriorating influences upontheir organization


from fatness, in other portions of the humanrace, appear in
various parts of the world, preventing the development of
their electricity and magnetism, by which their animal
functions are impaired, and their intellectual faculties greatly
weakened. The Esquimaux, Fins, Laps, and all inhabitants of
high northern climates, requiring a fatty and carbonaceous
loud, are examples of this character. The inference to be
drawn from this remarkable fact is that such persons as are
opposed to an it: population, and who resist the in-
{'

"
junction to the Patriarchs of going forth, multiplying and
replenishing the earth," should select for their companions in
lite the fattest persons of the opposite sex that they can find,
and they will be rewarded by an immense reduction in their
household and educational cxp< hen compared with
those of their neighbours who chance to be of a lean kind.

In connection with this subject of continuing a species of


animal, I may mention that in Europe, as well as in this
couir ;\v
mistaken notion exists as to the best age at
which young cattle should be propagated. The prevailing
idea is that heifers should not be allowed to bear their off-
spring before they are four years old, and in the state of Penn-
133

sylvania they are not taxable- before they have attained that
Xow, this is ;i fallacy, as have abundantly tested dur-
1

ing rlie last twenty years. I have thought that nature was the
best guide in sueh cases, and accordingly, as my animals: are
always well cared for, my heifers are sufficiently developed
and matured when nine months old to receive the masculine
impregnation, and to undergo, afterwards, a healthy gestation,
and to produce their young when about eighteen months old.
By my system of breeding, there is a saving in the expense of
supporting young heifers during two years and a half over the
common method. My herd of cows thus produced will com-
pare favorably in size, produce of milk, cream and butter, and
nealthfulness with any herd of similar numbers of cows in this
country. I do not remember to have had a sick cow or heifer
during the last twenty years. But I have exceeded even this
early propagation of their species. Last year a young heifer
of mine, only four months old, manifesting a desire for copu-
lation, was permitted to receive the male impregnation. IShe
duly conceived, and before she was fourteen months old she
bore a healthy male calf. The heifer herself, apparently, was
not incommoded by the event, and continued to enjoy excel-
lent health and some six weeks after the birth of her calf she
;

again received the male impregnation. This heifer was reared


under the stimulating influence of the associated blue and
plain glass, which had hastened its development three years
and a half. Xow, apply this discovery to the rearing of do-
mestic animals throughout the world, and begin to estimate
the benefit to mankind to be derived from the reduced ex-
penses in producing them and the great gain that will result
in increasing the number of animals to be raised in any given
period of time, and some faint idea may be formed of the great
value of this discovery in this single branch of human in-
dustry.

A wide-spread error in agriculture exists in Europe, as well


as in this country, and has even been maintained in books of
" that underneath
science. It is large trees vegetation droops
and languishes, even when the shade is not very intense.''
Some years ago I had occasion to plough up the sod which
covered a small orchard of apple and chestnut trees on my
farm. All the trees were old and large. I caused the field to
be well manured, even to the bottom of the trunks of all the
trees. When the ground was well broken up, I directed my
farmer to mark out drills for sugar beets, and to plant the seed
close up to the trunks of"all the trees. He looked at me with
lishment, and said :
Wliy, sir, plant so close to the trees ?
Kothing ever grows under the shade of tr- I replied
that I had heard such a statement before, but that I did not
think it to be well founded. I had seen too many weeds,
suckers and brambles growing luxuriantly under trees all
the country to attach any credence to it. "Do as I tell you ;

plant the seed close to the trees, and leave the result to take
care of itself." My farmer was so much astounded by what he
considered my foolish directions, that he went over to some
farmers who were planting their seed in neighbouring fields,
and told them of the absurd directions I had given him. In
the fulness of their neighbourly kindness, they came over to me.
" Your man
to enlighten me on the subject of farming. tells

us," said one of them to me, "that you have told him to plant
sugar beet seed close to the trunks of your big chestnut trees.
We have come over to tell you, what you may not know, that
no plant will grow under the shade of trees, and to dissuade,
you from attempting to make them grow there. We have
been farming 25 years, and our fathers before us all their lives,
and we have never heard of such a thing as planting for a
crop under the shade of trees. Pray don't try it." I thanked
them for their solicitude, but told them that " it was an experi-
ment; if it should fail, the loss of a few seed and a little labour
were all that would be involved in it and if it should succeed,
;

it would explode and banish a very mischievous and expensive

fallacy in agriculture; little harm was to be apprehended from


it." The farmer finding me determined, said, " You gentle-
men from the city, come into the country, buy land, >

expensive buildings, pun-base high priced stock of all kinds,


and every new fangled tool or labour saving machine that is
advertised, hire people and go to work, and think you are
farmers; but I have never known one of you 1o make even
his expenses out of his farming. You had all much better do
ur neighbours do than strike out into new paths.'
paid to him, "your rebuke is just, and what you say is no
doubt true; L acknowledge it to be, true in my case. 1 know
very little of anything, but I could not think for a moment of
taking up the time of my farming neighbours by asking them
Low to manage my farm; I must learn it as best, ran without
I

taxing their neighbourly kindness, and this experiment of


mine is one of my early lessons in farming." Finally, these
good people took their leave, and my beet seed Were planted
according to my directions. Iii due time they germinated,
185

and began to grow, and to tin- surprise of my fanner the


plants as they grew beeame stronger and larger at the 1'ottora
of the trunks of the largest trees than the other plants were
in the open spaces in other parts of the field. This dilferenee
continued to iner >n advanced, and when the
time had arrived for Catherine: them, the greatest ei>ntra-t
was perceptible hetween those that had grown under the
shade of the trees, even of the largest, and those which had
grown in the open sunlight.
At this time the same kind neighbours who had visited mo
in the previous spring to advise me against planting my seed
under the shade of the trees, were gathering their autumn
crops in the adjacent fields. I went over to them and asked
them if they would like to see my beet crop, and on their ex-
pressing a desire to see it, I invited them to accompany me,
and we proceeded to the field. On our way I asked them
where they thought the best beets would be found. " In the
"
open sunlight to be sure," was the answer ; nothing ever
grows under the shade of trees !" I made no reply, and soon
after we entered the field. As we passed along I was amused
at the astonishment depicted on their countenances as they
examined the beets in different parts of the field. Presently
one of them, nudging another, said in a low voice "
; George,
did you ever see any thing like that before ? why, there are no
beets in the sunlight, and the big ones are under the trees."
This was the fact; the plants in the sunlight were few, scat-
tered and spindling in their growth, having a long slender
*

taproot and were valueless for food, while there was a


luxuriant growth under the trees of large sized and excellent
quality. After examining attentively the whole field, and
declaring that they had never seen or heard of the like, and
would not have believed it had they not seen it themselves,
they came to me and asked me if I could explain so unheard
of a phenomenon. I replied, " you know 1 am from the city,
how then can I be expected to know anything about farming?
If you who have been farmers all your lives, and your fathers
before you the same, cannot explain this why should you ex-
pect me who have no experience in farming, being from the
city, to do it ? I know nothing about it, but I will tell you
what I think. I will illustrate my meaning by an example :
suppose you should take two men, both healthy, strong and
vigorous, and both very hungry one of them is six feet tall
and very broad and muscular the other man is five feet six
inches high, and also muscular. Suppose you place them at a
136

table and put before them food sufficient only for one man of
average size and strength, and tell thorn to eat, how much of
the food ; do you think the little man would get ?" " Well, I
great deal of it," said one of the men to which the
- not a
;

others assented. '"Xow, suppose you had put on the table enough
food for both, would they not rise from the table refreshed
and reinvigorated, and ready for their work?" I said to them.
"
Well, yes, I should think so;" was their answer. "Now,"
" the first
said I to them ; supposition illustrates your mode
of farming. You manure your land lightly, furnishing food
enough only for your crop, and nothing for your hungry trees,
if you should happen to have any upon your land. The
.
neglected and hungry, take all the food within reach of
their roots, and nothing grows, therefore, under their shade
hence your proverb that plants will not grow underneath the
shade of large trees even when it is not very intense. In
my experiment I had placed sufficient food before the
large trees, and the small plants. The tree digests its food,
and can take no more food at a given time than can any
animal, relatively consequently what is left over after feeding
the tree goes to feed the small plants and it also gets its fill
of nutrition, so that both thrive and grow healthfully. Now,
there is another reason why small plants should grow better
and faster under the shade of large trees than anywhere else,
and it is this. The dew late in the afternoon begins to settle
upon the leaves of plants under the shade of trees an hour or
more before it does out in the sunlight, and in the morning'
after the sun has risen, the shade of the trees protects the
plants under them from losing the dew upon them by evapora-
tion till ten o'clock, A. M. So that the plants under the
shade of the trees have the advantage of four or more hours
of moisture, in the dew that rests upon them, than other plants
in the sunlight which have no such protection and you know
that moisture is necessary to the growth of plants." They
thanked me for my explanation and went their way (on-
founded. Since then I have cultivated under very large trees
on my lawn, plants and flowers of many descriptions with [

and the cultivation has greatly beiietiied the ire.-s 1

then, I would recommend to all having trees on their

lawns to cultivate the soil at their ba^es in flowering plan'


they desire ornament-, or in vegetables if they need them for
Iders of small patches of land, this information
may prove to he of ..I eonvenience.

This little narrative brings me to the subject of the forma-


137

tion of dew, which I do not attribute to condensation of the


atmosphere holding it in suspension, but to the <

opposite cause, viz the expansion and rarefaction of tho


:

atmosphere by heat, its ascent upwards and its abandonment


of the water which it had previously held in suspension.

When, in the rotation of the earth upon its axis, any given
area of its surface is no longer illuminated by the sun's rays,
or, as incommon language, it is said, "It is sunset;" the rays
of sunlight do not illumine the atmosphere that is over such
an area of the earth's surface, and, as the night advances, that
atmosphere becomes colder and more magnetic with its
increase of cold by induction. Columns or volumes of this
cold air are then attracted to the earth by its opposite
magnetism, and descend towards it. At the same time the air
in contact with and just above the earth's surface, having been
heated during the day by the electricity evolved by sunlight,
and being positively electrified, ascends to meet the cold air
descending from above, negatively electrified and oppositely
magnetic; the conjunction of these opposite electricities
produces additional heat which so warms the air freighted
\pith moisture 'that is descending from above, that its expan-
sion and rarefaction will no longer admit of its holding in
suspension the watery vapour that it was bringing down with
it;
it consequently ascends alone, leaving the globules of water
which it contained to be carried to the earth by their magnet-
ism, and to insensibly settle upon the grass, leaves, earth, &c.,
and form what we call dew, hoar frost, &c according to the
-

temperature of the earth's surface at the time of such deposi-


tion. This occurs in a cloudless sky.

When the clouds are floating above us, there is no dew, not
because, as we have been taught, that the radiated heat from
the earth is reflected by the lower surface of tihe clouds to the
earth, thus keeping the air in contact with the earth too warm
to deposit its water as dew, as that is an absurdity, since heat
reaching the lower part of any gaseous or vapoury fluid, would
at once penetrate and permeate such gases, vapours or clouds
and expand, rarefy and disperse them but because the inter-
;

posing clouds would prevent the descent of the volumes of


cold air freighted with moisture above them to the earth
below, and consequently there could be no deposition of water
or dew from them. Cold does not condense the atmosphere,
for if it did the density of the air would be much greater in
winter than in summer, which we know is not the case. Be-
138

sides, the rarity and tenuity of the air at great elevations,


where extreme cold prevails perennially, contradicts this, as-
sumption. Nor has the air any -weight gravitation is sup-
posed to act only in one direction, viz: towards the centre of
the earth, while it is known that the air presses equally in all
directions, upwards from below, laterally and downward from
ahove, hence it cannot be acted upon by gravitation. The
barometric pressure of the atmosphere in its variations, is due
in all probability to magnetic attraction and repulsion between
the atmosphere and the earth. The same reasoning applies to
the waters of the oceans. They are fluids pressing like the air
in all directions, upwards from below, laterally and down-
wards, and rest upon the earth by the attraction of the earth's
magnetism, and not by gravitation, since their upward and
lateral pressures are antagonistic to the attraction of gravi-
tation. Every drop of water is a magnet. When the globules
are vertical their poles are at the foci of their forms, the
lower pole attracted by the magnetism of the air above
and its upper pole attracted towards the magnetism of the
earth below. These downward and upward attractions and
corresponding repulsions dislocate, from their great mobility,
other globules of the water, and force their polar magnetic
axis to be horizontal or dia-magnetic, and these pressures
everywhere varying intension, develop magnetic forces through-
out the mass of water, acting at every possible angle with each
other, and producing everywhere opposite resistances. These
magnetic changes induce electrical disturbances in the water,
resulting in the development of heat by friction and the con-
junction of opposite electricities, causing in all latitudes those
currents of evaporation associated with electricity, which we
find agglomerated in the atmosphere as masses of clouds, fogs,
mists, '&.(-. These masses of clouds acquiring their electricities
bv induction, become oppositely electrified according to their
elevation in the atmosphere' above the earth, and as they
approach each other in their movements, an electric, discharge
takes place, a decomposition of the watery vapour occurs, the
is burnt in the oxygen
hvdp gas of the decomposed
-

r, displaying
that bright yellow light peculiar to hydrogen,
in Hashes KO da/zling that if they were not so evanescent no
animal vision could supporttheir glare and then follow their zig-
ath in the atmosphere, as they are attracted by currents of
en in the air of varying conducting powers. The result is
trilled and magnetic, the globules of which repelling
each-other, and pressed upon in every direction by the magnetic
139

forces of the atmosphere, descend to the earth as ppheriral


drops to meet and mingle with the magnetism of the earth.
These drops of water are what we call rain.
If it were not for the upward pressure of the waters of the
ocean from their lowest depth, how long wolild the crust of
earth beneath them, (computed by physicists to be relatively to
the mass of the earth no thicker than an egg shell is when
compared to the mass of albumen that it contains,) be able to
sustain the pressure downwards of a mass of water from five
to ten miles in depth as it moves in its tides, its currents, and
the rotation of the earth upon its axis, and as it rolls in its orbit ?
"Would not the momentum of such a mass of waters thus put
in motion, in the course of time that has elapsed since they
were gathered in seas and oceans, wear away so much of the
earth's crust as to allow the waters to flood the interior fires
of the earth, and produce explosions that would shiver the
planet into thousands of fragments? And does not this
furnish another argument against the doctrine of gravitation ?
The same principle applies relative to the upward pressure of
the atmosphere. In the cases of the waters of the ocean and
the atmosphere both being fluids, differing however in their
tenuity, their molecules have great mobility among themselves
respectively, and from the irregular and unequal upward and
downward magnetic attractions and repulsions, these mole-
cules are displaced and turned aside, changing the directions
of their poles and their axes, and thus becoming dia-magnetic
or horizontally magnetic, creating thus the lateral pressures
existing both in the water and the atmosphere.

"When, from the mobility of the molecules in the crust of


the earth at the period of the planet being launched into
space in its rotary motion on its axes,
and its progressive-
motion in its orbit, the equatorial diameter was, by magnetic
attraction and repulsion, increased twenty-six miles more than
the polar diameter, the same influences repelled from tho
the respective opposite
poles respectively and attracted to
poles the waters in the arctic and
antarctic basins till they
met in the tropics.
The upward pressure of these waters, their polar currents
of cold water at great depths, and the rotation of the earth
on its axis from west to east, have united in forcing the
masses of oceanic waters to the westward till they impinged
action and
upon the eastern coasts of America and of Asia
140

re-action being equal ; these waters, after their impact with


these coasts and their contiguous islands, were reflected hack
again towards the western coasts of Europe and Africa, and
meeting midway in oceans, the succeeding waves of these
waters have risen above the general level of the oceans a few
feet, which has been called a tide, and which has been
attributed erroneously to the attraction of the sun and moon
instead of to the forces which I have mentioned above.

The impact of these waters in mid-ocean throws back to the


European and African waters, coming from thence and to
eastern American and Asiatic coasts, the waters attracted
there by the rotary motion of the earth on its axis and thua
they force back in all these continents the waters of the rivers
emptying themselves into the oceans, creating in them the
tides, the causes of which never before have been satisfactorily
explained. These tides, therefore, are the results of the
magnetic attraction and repulsion of the waters and the coasts
of the continents where they are seen and felt and are not
affected at all, either by sun or moon.

The currents of the Mediterranean sea the upper one


inwards isthe result of the pressure of the Atlantic ocean in
its reflux from the mid ocean impact of the oceanic waters,
the lower current running into the Atlantic ocean is pro-
duced by the upward pressure of the Mediterranean waters
and the magnetic attraction of the colder polar current at great
depth towards the equator.

The heat of the earth ascends perpendicularly to the hori-


zon. It cannot, therefore, be deflected to any considerable
extent in producing winds or currents of air. These result
from electrical and magnetic attractions and repulsions the
upward pressure of the air, which is nothing inure than tho
magnetic repulsion of it from the earth having their similar
-
(<'
magnetism adjacent, until by induction the polarity
of the air is
changed in the higher atmosphere, where, being
intensely cold, it is attenuated l>y the repellent qualities of its
homogeneous magnetism, and not by the low do^iv of its
temperature, which happens to be coincident with its mag-
netism, but is incapable of condensing the molecules of the
atmosphere.

When we remember the law of attraction and repulsion of


141

magnetism, viz: that it acts inversely as the square of the


distance, and that the earth, its oceans and its atmosphere, are
all
magnetic, and mutually attract and repel each other accord-
ing to this law which, by the way, is the same law that
Newton assigned to the gravity of matter and when we fur-
ther remember that they are all in continuity with each other,
we cannot fail to conceive
that thi.s planet has all the
forces within and around that are necessary for the per-
it
formance of all its functions without attributing them to the
actions of such distant orbs as the sun and the moon. If the
moon, as our astronomers assert, exerts a greater influence
upon the tides than does the sun, owing to the greater dis-
tance of the sun from the earth, by a parity of reasoning, how
much more influential must the earth itself be which is in
contact both with its waters and its atmosphere. All fluids
when acted upon by unequal forces assume a spiral course, as
witness the whirlwind in the atmosphere, and the whirlpool,
and eddying currents in the waters. The currents of the
oceans are spiral curves modified in their curvatures by the
fixed as well as movable obstacles they encounter in their
several courses.

When a wave at sea has reached its crest, why does it curl
over and break into spray, as it descends into the trough of
the sea ? If the moon lifts it up why does not the moon hold
it up ? When a wave breaks on the shore, why does it cling
to the earth, and recede in contact with it as the undertow, fre-
quently carrying with it to destruction the incautious or un-
skilful swimmer ? Why does not the moon keep this water
on the surface instead of suffering it, though it be warmer
than the water at greater depths, to seek its company
against an assumed law of physics, that the warmer fluid floats
upon the colder ?

Why, in the whirlpool, does the warm surface water rush


down its spiral coils to meet and mingle with the colder water
of the greater depths ? And why does this cold water ascend
in counter spirals to meet the descending warmer water?
This action is not caused by gravitation ; it is magnetic, and
so it is also in the whirlwind. The warm air of the lower
atmosphere, in contact with the earth, is taken up in its spiral
by the opposite magnetism of the upper air,
coils, attracted
which descends in opposite spiral coils to meet it in its ascent,
and together the column of whirling air, repelled from its
142

source and carried over the surface of the earth, hut in con-
tact with it, -with a resistless impetuosity, by the electrical
current which has developed the magnetism of the column,
devastates and destroys every obstacle that lies in its course,
tillthe magnetic equilibrium is again attained, when a calm
ensues. In these instances of the whirlpool and the whirl-
wind, the assumed law of gravitation is violated by the ascent
of the warm air into the colder upper atmosphere, as well as
by the descent of the warm surface water to the depths below;
thus proving that the motions of fluids, whether gaseous or
liquid, are controlled by magnetism.

A balloon charged with hydrogen gas, and released from its


fastening to the earth, ascends rapidly into the upper atmo-
ephere the region of intense cold, where, as we are taught in
the schools, it should be condensed, and the sides of tho
balloon should be loose and pressed inward by the condensing
power of the cold in that elevated region. According to the
doctrine of gravitation it has ascended because it was filled
with hydrogen gas the lightest substance in nature and
every light substance floats upon any other substance heavier
than itself.

Now, let us see what actually takes place in the balloon.

First, The hydrogen gas is positively electrified, and is at-


tracted to the upper atmosphere by its opposite electricity,
which is negative.

Second, The balloon itself is painted and varnished with


gums to retain the hydrogen gas, which pigments and varnish
are also positively electrified and assist in raising the balloon.

Tltird, The higher the balloon ascends tho greater is the at-
traction of the negative electricity of the upper air for it.

Presently a conjunction of these opposite electricities of tho


upper uir and the positively electrified gummed surface of the
balloon occurs, heat and magnetism are evolved, the canvas
of the balloon begins to expand, and within it the hydrogen
gas also expands to fill and to tighten the canvas. The at-
traction from without and the expansion of the hydrogen gas
within distend the canvas to its fullest extent. Should tho
ceronaut not at once open the safety valve of the balloon, and
liberate a portion of the hydrogen gas within it, these forces
would burst the canvas and precipitate the unlucky aeronaut
143

to the earth, a catastrophe which really happened in England


only a few days since.
The ascent of the balloon, the expansion of its canvas and
of the hydrogen gas within it instead of their condensation by
the extreme cold of the upper atmosphere, the
bursting of the
balloon all contradict the Newtonian theory.

"We will now explain why the temperature on the surface


of the earth is greater during summer, though the sun is
then at its greatest distance from the earth, than it is in
winter, when the distance between the earth and the sun is at
the least, being three millions of miles less than it was at the
summer solstice viz June 21st. On this day the rays o-
:

sunlight, vertical at the tropic ot Cancer, impinging through


the atmosphere upon the surface of the earth, with a velocity
of 186,000 miles per second, produce great friction. This
friction is the result of the impact of all the rays of sunlight
upon the earth's surface. This friction evolves more elec-
tricity in the contact than it does in winter, when the angle
of incidence of the rays of light is very much more acute,
and a large portion of the rays of light are at that time
reflected and refracted into planetary epace, without develop-
ing the electricity either in quantity or tension, which the
whole quantity of rays of light would do if they reached the
earth directly. Consequently as the electricity evolved is lesa
in winter, the heat which f hia electricity produces in conjunc-
tion with the opposite electricity of the earth's surface ia much
less, and the temperature is therefore lower in winter than in
summer.
Besides, the vertical impact of matter upon matter, as of light
upon the atmosphere, or upon the surface of the earth, is always
more violent, and produces more friction than its impact from an
acute angle, or as it iscalled a " glancing blow," would do,
hence more electricity results from the friction produced by
the vertical impact of light, than there would be from its im-
pact at an acute angle. The declination of the sun, therefore,
by constantly changing the angles of incidence of its light, as
it enters our atmosphere, and impinges upon the earth's sur-

face, is the cause of the changes of the terrestrial temperature


at the several seasons of the year. Hence the more vertical
the light, the more friction is developed in its impact with the
earth, and the more electricity thus evolved, and the moro
heat produced by the conjunction of the opposite electricities
from the light and earth.
144

At the height of five miles or more ahove the earth, when


masses of clouds oppositely electrified come together, great
heat is evolved by the union of these electricities, and with it
is also developed magnetism the air of the cloud thus heated
;

hecomes positively electrified, and greatly expanded by the


heat, it rushes upwards attracted by the negative electricity of
the atmosphere above it, abandoning the watery vapour it had
contained in suspension, and which absorbing the magnetism
developed by the union of the opposite electricities begins to
fall towards the earth, not by gravitation but by the magnetic

repulsion of the surrounding air, and the magnetic attraction


of the earth itself and the waters on its surface. At the same
time, whenthis conjunction of opposite electricities occurs,
much of the watery vapour that the clouds held in suspension
is decomposed by the superior attraction of the intense elec-

tricity for the hydrogen gas of the water, which is immediately


burnt in the oxygen gas that had been liberated by the
decomposition of the watery particles of the clouds in the first
place. This inflamed hydrogen burning with a yellow light,
rushes to embrace again its lover, oxygen gas, pursuing it in
those brilliantly illuminated zig-zag courses which we call
flashes of lightning.

Nowas these conjunctions of opposite electricities are suc-


cessive in a storm, we see the frequent flashes of lightning
and hear the rolling of the thunder, (which latter is merely
the noise of the explosions of oxygen and hydrogen gases,
when acted upon by a current of
electricity passing through
them,) as they dart or roll through' the atmosphere. The
water thus formed, starting in sheets or columns as it may be,
is at once disintegrated, by the repulsion of the magnetism
which it has absorbed, into atoms or globules, each of which
is a separate magnet. These are repelled by the magnetism
of the upper atmosphere, and are attracted by the opposite
magnetism of the earth and its waters, and continue to descend
towards the earth, but the molecules of atmospheric air are
also magnets, and repel and retard the descent of the ram
drops as they fall, and these forces continue to dimmish their
till, on approaching the earth, they are so comminuted,
,

that frequently thoy become absorbed by the atmosphere and


appear as mist and fog.

Now, if rain falls by gravitation, beginning,'at that great


height of five or more miles, to descend in the first second of
time 16.1 feet, in the next 32.2 feet, in third second 64.4 feet,
145

in the fourth second 9G.6 feet, increasing its velocity IH the


time of descent and the space through which it pa.-srd as the
square of the time, it would he found that its velocity and
momentum, when it reached the earth, would he so great as
to wash the soil iiito the seas, denuding mountains and dis-
integrating rocks, and destroying every living object on the
planet. We see on a email scale the devastating power of a
waterspout that breaks and discharges its contents when
traveling only a short distance above the earth. Besides it is
only necessary to see the retardatory effect of magnetism upon
the flakes of snow as they fall lazily to the earth, each crystal
of the snow flake, or frozen water, being acknowledged
magnet endowed with its full proportion of magnetic power.
These facts prove that neither the clouds that float in the
atmosphere nor the waters they contain, which have been
taken up by evaporation from the rivers, lakes and seas, and
which are again returned to them in rain, snow and hail, are
affected by the so-called laws of gravitation. Conceive for a
moment that the volume of water of the Niagara river which
passes over the falls, should, by gravitation, descend from a
height of two, three or five miles above the earth, the common
height of clouds; then imagine the destruction that would
follow such a descent; and yet water from clouds start in their
courses towards the earth in masses so great as to dwindle
in comparison the mighty stream of Niagara at the falls, and
jet only benefit results from the rainfall. Why, then, does
the water from the clouds not continue to fall, as it has started,
in these enormous masses? It is because the Creator lias
beneficently prcrvided against such a calamity by investing
water with magnetism, when its constituents, oxygen and
hydrogen gases, are combined by the passage of a current of
electricity through them, in the formation of water, and the
atoms or globules of water, being each magnetic, repel each
other, and are repelled from the upper atmosphere also
magnetic and are attracted to the earth by 'its opposite mag-
netism, allowing rain, snow and hail to fall gently and in
small particles to the earth. Hence the greater the height of
the clouds from which the rain falls, the smaller and more
attenuated will be the rain drops in arriving at the earth.
Mists and fogs, therefore, are as frequently the results of rain
falling from very high clouds, as they are from evaporation at
the surface of the earth or ocean.

Melted lead on the top of a shot tower is positively electri*


146

fied the air around it negatively electrified. The lead in


falling repels itself and is attracted by the opposite electricity
of the air, causing it to separate and to assume the spherical
form of shot on reaching the vessels to receive it at the bottom
of the tower. So that we may attribute the spherical or
spheroidal forms of rain drops, of meteors, and of the planets
themselves, to the forces of magnetism.
Let us take a cast iron spherical shot of the calibre of twenty-
four pounds, and heat it to a nearly white heat: then let us
select the lightest down from the common thistle that we cau
find; we will then shake some handfuls of it over the hot shot
at the distance of three feet above it. It will be found that
notwithstanding what is called the attraction of gravitation,
not only of the heavy shot but also of the still heavier earth
on which it is supported, the down will be carried upwards
into the atmosphere by the current of heated air radiated from
the hot surface of the shot, instead of falling either upon it or
on the earth immediately adjacent to it. If, therefore, this
d shot repels some of the lighest flocculent matter of which
\ve have any knowledge, and will not allow it to fall upon the
earth in opposition to the radiating power of its heat, what
becomes of the gravitation of the earth and of the other planets,
and of ccmetary matter, &c., to the sun, if this latter is an
incandescent body of a temperature so high that we cannot
really conceive of its actual intensity? If the lightest sub-
stance, so-called, cannot be attracted by it through such
radiation of its heat, how can it attract the heaviest
planets
'<
What also becomes of its magnetism in the presence
of such intensity of heat? It is evident that this great heat
could not co-exist with the magnetic forces of the sun, which
are thought to control the movements of our solar system.

Let us observe a boy on an August day, when the ther-


mometer indicates 08 of Fahrenheit, in a room with dosed
doors and window sashes admit no disturbing currents
of air, while he amuses himself with blowing soap bubbles
from the bowl of a clay pipe. When the bubble is formed,
and it is sufficiently thin, he throws it oil' from the bowl of
his pipe. The circumference of the bubble interrupted by the
bowl of the pipe, as soon us it is detached therefrom, closes
upon itself by magnetic attraction, and forms a nearly perfect
sphere, while it ax-ends rapidly towards the ceiling of the room.
Mark the play of iridescent colours on its surface ;is it rec<
the light from a window, just as the suu receives the separate
147

rays of light from the stars and reflects them to the earth. c.
Now why docs this huhble ascend in the atmosphere ? The
water and the sou]) of the bubble, as well as the component
parts of the soap are each heavier than the warm air of the
room. The gas that fills its interior, composed of vapour and
carbonic acid gas from the lungs of the boy, is also in its com-
ponents heavier than the same air, and is also probably of a
lower temperature than the air, which is 98 of Fahrenheit,
and yet the bubble, in defiance of the so-called laws of gravita-
tion, ascends to the ceiling, instead of descending to the floor.

what astronomers tell us is correct, the density of the sun


If
is about one-fourth of that of the earth, and cannot relatively
be so great, volume for volume, as that of this soap bubble.
Water is the standard measure of density; potash and soda in
salts, component parts of this soap bubble, have each a gr

density than water, while the oil associated with them in the
soapy water is perhaps less than that of water, while the
density of the soapy water is greater than that of the sun.
Now the earth, with all its power of alleged gravitation, could
not prevent this soap bubble from ascending in the air. Xow
why was this ? The globules of soapy water were held
together in the bubble by the viscous character of its oily par-
ticles, which having an opposite electric condition to that of
the water, attracted it to complete the circumference of the
bubble when it was detached from the bowl of the pipe, while
the magnetism of the whole bubble, repelled by that of the
earth, caused it to ascend into the upper air by the attraction
of the magnetism existing there.

Nowconceive of a soap bubble 1,400,000 times greater in


its dimensions than the earth, to be placed in one of the foci
of the earth's orbit, and then imagine it to exert its gravitating
power upon the earth, and estimate the result. If the earth
could not attract by gravitation this soap bubble in the room
referred to, what power would the big soap bubble have to
attract the earth by its gravitation, when their positions would
be reversed ?

The undulatory theory of lightis faulty in this, that every


wave requires a resisting medium to lift it above the common
level. In water, when any force disturbs its surface, the
inertia of the water, against which the surface water is driven,
offers a resistance by which the surface water is raised into a
wave, but in all such cases the velocity of the force is small ;
148

-when the velocity of the wind, for instance, is one hundred


and fifty miles per hour, it carries off the surface water into
spray, until sufficient time has elapsed to allow the inertia of
the mass of water to resist the impulse of the wind, when
waves are formed. Now if the ether of interplanetary and
interstellar spaces furnished sucli a medium of resistance it
would not admit of the passage of light through it, with its
inconceivable velocity of 186,000 miles per second. If the
ether itself was luminous, some force of very low velocity must
impinge upon it to make its undulations, and to be undula-
tions they must meet with resistance to become such ; besides
all undulations occur on the surfaces of fluids, and extend but
a short distance below the surfaces; but ether of space has no
dimensions, it is illimitable no one can say where is its
;

surface; neither words nor figures can define its depth, width
or height, and as all motions through it are of inconceivably
high velocities, it follows that there can be no undulations in
;hey are produced by low velocities.
on a bright July day, falling in its greatest in-
.light,
tensityupon the calm and placid surface of an expanse of water,
penetrates it and descends to very great depths below it,
without producing the slightest undulation on its surface, or
movement within its masses. Its velocity is so great that no
appreciable time is afforded for the disturbance of the inertia
of the water. So it is with the ether of interstellar and inter-
planetary space. Thin, subtle, and attenuated, as this ether
may be supposed to be, the velocity of light in passing through
it is so transcendently great that there is no time for the dis-
turbance of its inertia, and consequently its motion is instantly
absorbed by the mass of the ether, without producing any
undulation whatever. ]STow undulation is a superficial act.
There is no wave at sea of a greater depth below the surface
than forty feet; all below that depth is unaffected by what-
cause that may have produced the superficial wave.
The great Leviathan of the deep, ninety or one hundred
long and of other corresponding dimensions, plunges beneath
the surface of the ocean when struck by a harpoon, and with
inconceivable speed rushes into the depths below, yet h<- leaves
no wave, no ripple, to indicate the course he has taken, and
the whalemen in his pursuit have to scan the horizon in every
direction to ascertain the place, sometimes a great distance off,
where he has risen to the surface of the ocean to blow off his
-icity and carbonic acid gas generated in his
1

surpl
lungs. So it is with all the fishes and marine animals that
149

inhabit the great deep. Their motions, however plow or swift,


develop no undulations beneath the surface, and consequently
nono appear on the surface; there are, therefore, no undula-
tions below a depth of forty feet from the surface.

Geographers inform us that three-fourths of the outer crust


of the earth are covered by water, only one-fourth being drv
land. Of this fourth part but a small portion is habitable by
animals, and a still smaller part thereof is actually occupied
by them, while the waters of the earth are teeming everv-
where with animal life. Innumerable myriads of fishes, marine
animals, and sea monsters are known to exist beneath the
surface of these waters; their speed in pursuing or avoiding
each other, as they rush madly through them, should greatly
disturb their even surfaces, but whatever agitations may occur
in the depths of the ocean from these causes, no trace of them
ever is seen on its surface; there is no undulation from such
causes. "Why? The reason is obvious. Fluids press equally
in all directions. The inertia of the great mass of waters is
not to be disturbed by the passage of even innumerable
objects of small dimensions at whatever speed they may attain.
The same principle obtains in relation to the ether of planetary
space. This planet rolling in its orbit with a velocity of sixty-
eight thousand miles per hour, through this ether, does not
and cannot disturb the inertia of the whole ether of space; the
motion of the part displaced by the earth and its atmosphere
is absorbed at once by the whole mass, and its inertia remains
unaffected and so it is with all the planets, and even the sun
;

itself. The sun's motion in its orbit being 14,400 miles per
hour, the moon advancing in her orbit at the rate of 65,000
miles per hour, and so on with the rest of the planets, their
enormous velocities will not admit of the disturbance of the
inertia of the ether of space before the planet has left the ether
far behind through which it has passed. The retardation of
cometary matter in its course is not due to the resistance of the
ether through which it is passing, for if it was it would be
uniformly and continuously retarded in its whole course, and
not merely as it is approaching or leaving the neighborhood
of the sun, but it is owing to the magnetism of the sun and
the planets, as well as of the opposite magnetism of the ether
acting upon its own magnetism, that such variation in its
velocity has been observed. This reminds me, that
when a
is at its nearest to the sun, it is moving with its
planet point
greatest rapidity in its orbit and when at its remotest point
;

from the sun, it is proceeding at its slowest rate of speed in its


150

orbit; but yet the orbit tbrougbout its entire course is so


balanced that the rapidity is exactly proportional to the near-
so
ness, and the slowness to the distance in reference to each,
that equal areas of the space included in the orbit are described
by the planet in equal times, which is Kepler's celebrated
second law.

The friction of the atmosphere with the ether in its passage


through it evolves negative electricity, which is takenup by the
atmosphere by induction, and thus it becomes negatively electri-
fied. If the planets cannot, in their rotation around the sun and
on their respective axes, disturb the ether of space in its inertia,
how can it be supposed that rays of light passing through it
with its velocity of 186,000 miles per second, can cause it to
undulate ? Time is an element in the production of a wave,
and in tbe passage of light through ether there is not time
enough, to resist the passage of light, in order to produce it.

A musket ball with the initial velocity of 1500 feet per second,
when shot from a musket will perforate a door hanging on its
hinges without moving it, as there is not furnished sufficient
time to disturb its inertia before the ball had passed through
the door. So in like manner a tallow candle discharged from
a musket will pass through a door without disturbing its
position, while if it should be thrown from the hand against
the door at tho distance of ten feet from it, its momentum at
such low velocity would push the door back to its frame.

Rays of sunlight, in passing through the ether of space,


carry with them the negative electricity with which they were
repelled from the sun's photosphere, and continue to be
repelled by the negative electricity of the intensely cold
ether itself through whieh they are passing. Now intorjn.se
a glass prism to thopas.-age of a beam of this sunlight after
it has reaehed u^ on the surface of the earth. This white;
i of light idthen refracted and decomposed, and each colour
s the
prism, diverging not only from the original r;
white light of which they are the elements, hut also fro,;-/
ofliiT, as may be seen by observing the spectrum which they
form. This pj.oetrum exhibits these colours in the order of
their susceptibility of refraction, the red being refr;
and the violet most. From its appearance, Sir Jsaac
ton, who first analyzed it, thought that there were
actually seven primary or distinct colours in the composition
of light, but since his day investigation and analysis have
determined that there are but three primary colours, viz :
151

red, yellow and blue, and that the orange, green, indigo and
violet, result from a commingling of the primary colours in
different degrees of intensity, as they form the spectrum.
Now, let us sot.- wha' this refraction and decomposition
of light by the prism. The glass prism was positively electri-
fied when the sunbeam was thrown upon it; the op:
electricities of the light and the glas3 were brought into
contact heat and magnetism were evolved by their union
; ;

the glass was expanded by the heat, which was immediately


absorbed by the air the rays of light, changing their electri-
;

citiesby induction, become positively electrified and magnetic


and repel each other, forming Newton's seven primary rays,
according to the different degrees of positive electrization and
magnetization they have absorbed. This explanation will
also account for the invisible heat rays outside of the spectrum,
which by some philosophers have been erroneously supposed
to have come directly from the sun, associated with its light.
Again, let us take two pieces of flannel made of wool, of the
same texture and size let one of them be white flannel, the
;

other black flannel. Now white flannel has the same electri-
cal condition as white sunlight, that is, negative. It conse-
quently or repels the sunlight, according to electrical
reflects
laws. For this effect it is extensively used by the people of hot
countries for articles of outside clothing to keep them cool
during sunshine. Suppose we place these two pieces of
flannel, in the winter time, on the snow, one hundred feet
apart, the temperature of the air being at zero of Fahrenheit,
and the sun shining brilliantly through a clear atmosphere,
and let us watch the effect. In a little while it will be seen
that the piece of white flannel is frozen tight to the snow,
while the black flannel, having absorbed all the rays of the
sunlight from its opposite electrical condition, has become
heated by the development of the heat from the union of these
opposite electricites, and the snow has become melted under
the black flannel. This experiment proves that heat is the
result of the union of opposite electricities as in the associated
primary rays of light, for the material composing the two
pieces of flannel was similar, while the negatively electrified
white flannel repelled the negative white sunlight, absorbing
the cold of the snow beneath and becoming frozen to it, as
the positively electrified black flannel attracted the negatively
electrified white sunlight developing the heat which melted
the snow. Now as every object in nature has a colour of some
kind, when the sunlight falls upon it, we can understand
that the variations of temperature on the surface of the earth,
152

are the immediate results of electrical action upon it by the


rays of light as light and not by rays of heat from the sun.
"We have thus shown you, that from the attributes of heat,
it isphysically impossible for it to be transmitted to this or
any other planet from the sun through an almost infinite space
of ether at a temperature of 142 of centigrade thermometer.

"We have shown you that the negative electricity of our


atmosphere is derived by induction from this very cold e
in the rotation of the earth on its axis, and in its motions in
its orbit, carrying with it its atmosphere in its course.

"We have shown you that the atmosphere is held in its place
around the earth by its magnetism and dia-magnetism, which
have been developed by currents of opposite electricities in
conjunction, produced by the passage of rays of light through
the atmosphere, evolving by their friction with it electricity
of one kind, while the opposite kind of electricity has been
produced by the impact of rays of light upon the more solid
parts of the earth's crust and upon its waters as it developed
their evaporation.

"We have shown that the attraction of matter on or above the


earth, is through magnetism to the poles opposite respectively
to the hemispheres of the earth, that it is confined to the crust
of the earth, and that it is not the attraction of gravitation.

"We have shown that the upward pressure of all fluids, from
capillary attraction in tubes to the upward pressure of the
waters of the ocean that float the tonnage of the world, to that
of the atmosphere which holds it suspended above the surface
of the earth, is strictly magnetic. "We have shown that the
variations of the barometer at the level of the sea ar.
d by the varying weight of the atmosphere, but by
condition, as those of the thermometer are pro-
l>y currents of electricity, which permeate the glass
1

tubes that contain the thermometric fluid,

"We have shown that all terrestrial heat is derived from the
conjunction of opposite electricities, whether proceeding from
the combustion of inflammable substances, from friction, or
Irom the contact of currents of air or of gases oppositely elec-
tril;

We have shown that friction of substances of low tempera-


tures produces negative electricity, and increases the cold by
153

their union, illustratedby two blocks of ice nil,' -thcr


and uniting more firmly at their junction than in anv <

of their parts. And then we have shown that positive elec-


tricity is always associated with heat, and the opposite elec-
tricity with cold; that their conjunction produces heat or cold
according as one or the other of the electricities predominates
at the moment of their union; that magnetism is also evolved
by their conjunction, and that if much heat is developed, the
magnetism disappears and takes refuge in the nearest greater
cold; that magnetism is therefore the antagonist of heat, and
is found in its
greatest intensity in extreme cold, in the
highest part of the atmosphere, and in the Arctic and Antarc-
tic regions.

If the atomic theory be true, and the atoms of ether be


spheres or oblate spheroids, we may imagine that light passing
in rays
through the intensely cold ether, develops negative
electricity by its friction with the ether, and that this nega-
tive electricity resides in the interstitial spaces between the
atoms of the ether until attracted by positive electricity of
greater or lesser volume and tension, their conjunction would
produce magnetism which would find a habitat among these
interstitial spaces of the atoms of ether in the poles of the
atoms themselves.

From tne mobility of the particles of fluids, whether liquid


or gaseous, it appears that their tendency is to move in spiral
curves. In the currents of ocean, sea, lake or river waters,
the frequency of their curved direction is everywhere manifest,
any obstruction to the general direction of their currents,
whether superficial, or at varying depths below the surface, is
eufiicient to determine them into spiral curves of greater or
lesser curvatures. It would seem that this attribute of fluids
was intended by the Creator for the evolution of currents of
electricity by the friction of these particles of the inner curves
of the spirals, and of magnetism by the passage of this electri-
city along the spirals of the fluids themselves. This is an
origin of magnetism, as well in the waters as in the atmos-
phere. The great currents of the ocean, sweeping in curves
greater than a great circle of the earth itself, are only elements
of immense spirals. The circular motion of an infusion of
tea in a cup when stirred by a spoon to hasten the solution of
the accompanying sugar, is but an illustration of the same
principle, and so it is with gaseous fluids. The tiny whirlwind
that raises the dust in summer in our country roads, is but a
154

type of the currents of atmospheric air, from the gentle breeze


that fans us in the summer heats to the tornado, hurricane,
and mighty cyclone that desolate the oceans and islands in
intertropical regions. This form, therefore, in which these
fluids are continually moving, is among the means adopted by
the Creator to develop electricity, magnetism and heat, on
and above the surface of our planet.
" Let us for a moment consider the action of the two
great
currents of warm water on the opposite coasts of North
America. The Gulf Stream and the Japanese current through
P>chring's Straits to the Arctic Ocean. Let us consider the
Gulf Stream. On the Equator, in the Atlantic Ocean the
mean temperature of the surface of the sea, according to
Kaiutz, is 78.6, the average maximum in latitude 6 north is
80.3, the highest observed temperature in 3 1', north,
according to Kotzebue, 84.6, and the mean temperature of
the sea between the parallels of 3 north and 3 south, accord-
ing to Humboldt, was from 80.1 to 82.4. The mean tempera-
ture of the air in the equatorial belt of the Atlantic (
>

between 10 north and 10 south, according to Lentz, is 73.8.


Here you have the surface water of the ocean in the
Equatorial belt of the Atlantic Ocean hotter by 3.8 than air
just above it. NowT if these respective temperatures were
,

produced by emanations of heat from the sun, their condition


of temperature should be reversed, the capacity of the air to
absorb heat being so much greater than that of water. This
fact proves that, it is not solar heat that produces the tempera-
ture either in the air or water.
"In July, the course of the Gulf Stream, in latitude 38
north, shows the form of a tongue ot temperature! of 81.5,
'

(at some places even ,S4 was observed.) This hot stream pro-
J

itself as a double tongue, with a mean temperature of


from 77 to 81.5 of Fahrenheit, (20 to 1 of Reaumur,) to-
wards the north as far as the 40 of latitude, and towards
the east to the 43 of longitude west of Greenwich, that is,
far beyond Newfoundland. In January, the tongue of 77
of Fahrenheit, (iiO of Reaumur,) reaches to latitude 37 north
and longitude 7 (
30' west, ami at the place where the east
>

end of this tongue of 77 of Fahrenheit terminates in July,


we find in .January a temperature of Gi!.5 and 62.8 of Fah-
renheit, (14 ami i-V of Reaumur.)
" to the meridian of the eastern end of
Up Newfoundland,
the Gulf Stream proceeds first in an east northeast, ami then
in an east direction parallel to the American coast, with an
155

average temperature in July of 77 to 83.8 Fahn-ii/


to 23 Reaumur,) and in January, of 68 to 77 Falm-nla-it,
(16
to 23 Reaumur.) The highest temperature oft:
in Africa in the same parallel of latitude in January, is only
59.
"At Newfoundland, the Gulf Stream comes in violent colli-
sion with the Polar Stream of Labrador, which nearly at a
right angle sets against and penetrates into it like an immense
wedge. On the eastern side of the Grand Bank it is so
powerful that, according to the surface isotherms, it pene-
trates into the Gulf Stream from 150 to 200 miles southward
of its
general limits, and therefore entirely intersects the
surface waters of the easterly stream for that breadth, which
is the most important part of its course. The Gulf Stream,
300 miles northeast of Newfoundland bank, after having
passed beyond this polar current, is warmer than it is south of
it. The influence of the temperature of this polar steam is
less in January than in July. 380 miles eastward of Xewfound-
land, on the 50 of north latitude, the .Gulf Stream has a
surface temperature of 68 Fahrenheit in July, while in
January, the G-ulf Stream on the 50 degree of north latitude
has a temperature of 54.5 Fahrenheit; the thermometer
shows at the same time at Prague, or at Ratibor, (in SiK-sia.)
on the same parallel of latitude, temperatures of minus 24,
and sometimes still hnver ones. The isothermal line of 54.5
Fahrenheit, (10 of Reaumur,) runs up in July towards
Iceland and the Faroe Islands to the 61 of north latitude.
There it meets for the second time the polar stream which on
the east coast of Iceland again threatens to block up its way
and to destroy it. la Julv, temperatures were observed on
the north coast of Iceland of 45, 47 and 49.3, (by Lord
1

Dufferin, 46,) while oft the cast coast for six degrees of longi-
tude, none higher than from 40 to 42.6 were found.

"According to Irminger's data, and Lord Dufferin's observa-


tions, the Gulf Stream setting towards the north preponderates
in Julv on the north and west coasts of Iceland, but on the
east and south coasts the polar stream coming from the direc-
tion of Jan Mayeu.
" Between Iceland and the Faroe
Islands, the Gulf and polar
streams are contending against each other, and the result of
this struggle is a sea divided into a great number of hot and
cold bands, which fact is demonstrated clearly by Lord Duf-
ferin's cruise from Stornoway to Reikiavik in 1856, and fully
corroborated by Wallich in the Bull Dog Expedition of 1860.
156

" The fact that the two streams in their contest appear as
many bauds and strata alongside, over and beneath each other,
is proved iu>t only by the observations of the temperature of
the surface of the sea by Irminger and Dufr'erin, but also by
the researches of "Wallich in regard to the nature of the bot-
tom of the sea. The latter found there volcanic stones point-
ing as to their origin to Jan Mayen, and at other plan's
ophiocomte of two to five inches in length which could have
bee i carried there only by the warm Gulf Stream. Besides, the
drift ice penetrates here further to the south than anywhere
else east of Iceland. * * * * But here the Gulf Stream
comes away equally intact from its struggle with the polar
etream as at Newfoundland. We
now know its further
course in the summer from many direct observations as far
north as Spitzbergen and Nova Zembla,and beyond the 80 of
north latitude.
"The mild winter of the British Isles is well known. The
mean temperature for January in London is 37.4; at Edin-
burgh the same at Dublin 40.5. The further we go from
;

east to west or from south to north, or, in other words, the


nearer to the Gulf Stream, the higher we find the temperature.
At Unst, on one of the Shetland Islands, 560 miles north from
London, the mean temperature of the air in January is 40.3%
and that of the sea 45.5, (East Yell.) The warm current
of the sea is tempering the air. The lowest temperature
observed in London was 5, at Penzance on the west coast,
-jiM.l at Sandwick on the Orkney Islands +15.8, at Madrid
,

-f I.'..'> has been observed, and -f-27.5 at Algiers, which


provides Europe with cauliflowers in winter.
" On the morning of Feb. 8, 1870, the telegraph announced
the temperature at .Ratibor, (in Silesia,) to be 2">. 4, while

northwest of it, atBreslau, it was 13, at Berlin 0.4, at


-f 10.6, and at Christiansand, on the south of Norway, 8 of
latitude north of Ratibor, + 30.7. So high a temperature
would be impossible in Xorway if tho winds did not bring it
from the high temperature of the Gulf Stream to the westward.

"Many persons suppose because the summer in Iceland is


rough and cold that the winter must be dreadful in !H severity
Id,but exactly the contrary is the case. J)r. Ilend<
-.ihat 'I really shuddered at the thought of livingthrough
the winter in Iceland. How greatly was J astonished when I
found the temperature not only higher than in Denmark,.
157

where I had been during the


preceding winter, hut also that
the winter in Iceland was by no means mon than the
mildest winter which I hud ever known in Denmark and
Sweden.' Sheep and horses have to take care of themselves
during the entire year in Iceland; only cattle and the more
valuable saddle horses are led in the stable during winter.
How impossible would it be in Germany to leave any don.
animal in midwinter without shelter even for a i'ew'days onlv.
The near Reikiavik, in Iceland, are frozen in many
lakes
winters not more than two inches thick, very rarely to eigh-
teen inches. The lowest temperature of the air experienced
there during thirteen years was only 3.9.+
"It not to be wondered at that such is the case, because
is
the warm Gulf Stream provides Iceland with heat. Its mean
temperature there is, even in January, 34.7 above zero, and
the lowest temperature noted during twenty years was only 28.6.
Iceland is situated close to the Arctic circle, and in the lati-
tude of Siberia.
" "While on the western side
of the north Atlantic ocean, the
polar ice reaches down to latitude 36 north, (the parallel of
Gibraltar and Malta,) and the name Labrador is sufficient to
characterize the climatic qualities of all the land between 50
and 60 north, there exists on the east side of the ocean along the
Norwegian coast cultivated land up to 71 north, the northern-
most land of the world, in which, under the influence of the
Gulf Stream, agriculture is the main occupation of the inhabi-
tants. Wheat is grown up to Inderoen, in latitude 64 north ;
barley up to Alten,in 70 north, where sowing generally is done
between the 20th and 25th of June, yielding in the short space
of eight weeks, to the 20th or 30th of August, in the average
six or seven fold ; the potato yields at the same place on the
average seven or eight fold, in favourable seasons even twelve
to fifteen fold ; it thrives on the coast as far east as Yadso, on the
Russian boundary line. At Alten (70 north)relishable cauli-
flower is raised even in less favourable summers. Where
washed by the polar current, there are, as shown by the various
Franklin expeditions, under 70 north, but desolate ice deserts
without any cultivation. There is on the eastern side of the
ocean .the flourishing and busy little town of Hauimerfest,
where only once the temperature has been as low as +5 and
generally is not less than 9.5, while on the western side of
the ocean there are only the poor snow huts of the Esquimaux
in 70 north.
158

TVTiile Germany has to suffer the frigid air of 24, and


sometimes more intense cold iu winter, at that same time
Norway gathers a rich harvest under the Arctic circle, not
from its acres, but in the warm waters of the Gulf Stream, as
for instance at Ansvaer, in the direction of the vortex of the
Gulf Stream there the herring makes its appearance about the
;

10th day of December, remaining until the first days of Janu-


ary, and then about 10.000 people congregate, and haul about
200,000 tons of these fish of a value of more than one million
of dollars."
The warmer air of the land near large bodies of water,
whether of lakes, seas or oceans, is due to the difference of
temperatures between that of the atmosphere and that of the
waters, which being in contact at the surface develops one
kind of electricity, which meeting with the opposite electricity
of the air evolves -heat and renders the climate of such localities
mild, healthful and agreeable.
" East of the North Cape, distant from it about 120 nautical
miles at Vardoe, the temperature of January is -f-18.5 ;
while at St. Petersburg, 620 miles south of the former, it is
-j-15.1 ,
or 3.4 colder. But the most important fact, testify-
ing to the existence and the great volume of the Gulf Stream
at the North Cape, appears to me to be the temperature of the
sea at Fruholm, which in January is in the mean still +37.9.
Fruholm is on the same parallel ot latitude as Ust-Jansk, lati-
tude 70 55' north, in Siberia, and Point Barrow, in North
iea. The former has a mean temperature in January, of
38.6, the latter of 18.6. Me ran, in Tyrol, of world
wide celebrity, on account of its mild and temperate air,
r to the equator by 24 J, has in January a temperature
of the air of 31.8, Venice, 36.3, Vevay, 33.1, Paris
35.4, New York, 29.5, Washington, 31.5."
We will not pursue this subject of the surface temperature
of the Gulf Stream to its ultimate northern development, but
we will turn our attention to the temperature of the Gulf
in, at its various depths in its course, as well as of the
eea itself.
"North of the isothermal line of 39.4, (3.3 of Reaumur,)
toward the pole, the temperature generally increases with the
depth, while southward, toward the equator, it decreases.
There is, however, no uniformity in this, as Lieutenant
Kodgers, in ]*.").">, found in the Asiatic part of the Arctic Ocean
there is on the surface a warm current, with water of a low
159

specific gravity, beneath it a cold current, and then again a


warm current of heavier water, and all these strata running
in opposite directions.

" In
entering upon the question of temperature of sea water
at diU'erent depths, it must be borne in mind that water is
densest at a temperature of 39.2, and that it arranges itself
in the various depths according to the specific gravity in
strata, either above and beneath, or" alcngside each other.
From the place where the sea shows at the surface a tempera-
ture of 39.2, it will lose in temperature toward the pole,
while in general, it will gain with the increase of depth, but
toward the equator the temperature of the surface will increase
while it will decrease downward in proportion.
"
Parry, in latitude 57 51' north, longitude 41 05' west of
Greenwich, on June 13th, 1819, observed the sea to have a
temperature on .the surface of 40.5, and at a depth of 1410
feet, in the Gulf Stream, 130 nautical miles southeast of Cape
Farewell, a temperature of 39. 140 miles northeast of this
place, in latitude 59 35' north, longitude 38 5' west of

Greenwich, Captain Kundsen, on the 30th of June, 1859, found


the temperature of the surface 44.6, and at the depth of 1800
feet, 43.4, which corresponds with Parry's measurements.

" Wallick remarks that on the


parallel of latitude 63 north,
not far from the south coast of Iceland, the temperatures on the
surface, and at a depth of 600 feet, differ in the average not
more than 3.8, and that consequently the Gulf Stream does
not essentially lose in temperature to that depth.
" On Irminger's chart of the currents and ice drifts around
Iceland, there is, in Brede Bugt, (Broad Bay,) in latitude 65
17' north, longitude 23 25' west of Greenwich, a temperature
recorded of 46 at the surface, and of 45.5 at a depth of 300
feet, showing that the Gulf
Stream at this place in the vicinity
of the Polar Circle has lost in that depth only .5 of a degree
of temperature.
"
Scoresby remarks, that the temperature of the sea near
*

Spitzbergen is six or seven degrees warmer at the depth of


from 600 feet to 1200 feet than it is at the surface.'
" Fromthe results obtained by the British Sounding Expedi-
tion, from May 31st to September 7th, 1869, in the North
Atlantic Ocean, between the Faroe Islands and Spain, it
1GO

appears that the Gulf Stream has, between Ireland and Spain,
a depth of 900 fathoms or 5400 feet, and equally as much iu ar i

the Rockall rock, west of the Hebrides. Between Rockall


and the Faroe Islands, near the parallel of latitude 60 north,
it reaches to the bottom of the sea, which has a
depth there of
707 fathoms, or 4UOJ feet, and at that depth the Gulf Stream
has still a temperature of 41.5. It has also been found that
an Antarctic current of cold water, directly over the bottom of
the sea clear up to the Irish and Scottish coasts, exists, meeting
there an Arctic stream. In the notes of Professor Thomson,
the stratum at Rockall, from 900 to 1400 fathoms below the
surface, is designated as cold indraught, Arctic and Antarctic,
"
(temperature 39.2 to 37.4,) and the stratum between 900
and 2435 fathoms, between Ireland and Spain, as indraught "
of cold water, probably mainly Antarctic, (temperature 39.2
to 36.5.)
" It is demonstrated
by figures and facts, that the hot source
and core of the Gulf Stream extends from the straits of
Florida along the North American coast at all times, day and
night, in winter as in summer, even in January, with a
temperature of 77 and more, up to the 37 of north latitude,
while at the same time and in the same latitude in Tunis, in.
Africa, the temperature of the air is but 53.4. The Gulf
Stream transports and develops still in this latitude a higher
temperature than either water or air possesses in the Atlantic
ocean, even under the equator, on which neither in July nor
in January the temperature is ever as high as that of the Gulf
Stream in latitude 37 north.
'
Tnder the 37 and 38 of northern latitude, the hot core of
the Gulf Stream turns away from the American coast towards
the east beyond the meridian of Newfoundland and its bank
to 40 of longitude west of Greenwich, where it still possesses
a temperature in July of about 75, and in January of about
G6. From there it proceeds to the northeast, diffuses nearly
across the entire Atlantic, and surrounds the whole of Europe
to the Arctic region and the White Sea of Archangel, with a
broad and permanent warm water course, without which
England and Germany would be a second Labrador, and
Scandinavia and Russia a second Greenland, buried beneath
glaciers; whereas, in Fruholm, (71 6' north,) the sun does
not rise at all above the horizon during the entire month of
January, in a latitude in which, in Asia and America, the
mercury remains frozen for months there the Gulf Stream
1G1

preserves for the sea a temperature of 37.8. While the sun


in the short days of winter sends forth his rays of light and
warmth hut for :i few hours, and the influen-- latter i-

quickly losi again in the long nights, the Gulf Stream does
not cease, day or night, to be the source of warmth.

"The Gulf Stream carries more heat to the north than is


carried hy all the warm air currents from the entire periphery
of the equator towards the North Pole and towards the South
Pole. The southwest winds receive their high temperature
from the Gulf Stream, and only through the ocean not by the
winds can warmth be carried into latitudes as high as those
of the European coasts are.

"From the soundings obtained so far, the Gulf Stream must


be, up to the Arctic ocean, a deep and voluminous water
course. If it should not be so, the polar ice would reach also
the European coasts. In the Antarctic ocean the polar ice
drifts all around the globe as far at least as latitude 57 5'
south, in many places to 50 and 40, (latitudes corresponding
respectively to those of the British Channel and the Mediter-
ranean Sea,) on some even to 35, (corresponding to the
latitude of Morocco,) but not the smallest particle of northern
polar ice has ever reached even the northernmost cape of
Europe. The Gulf Stream in its course is more powerful and
steady than all the winds ; only the the polar ice and polar
currents in spring and summer exercise a great influence over
it. The polar stream presses at three places against it: first,
from the northwest, east of Newfoundland, then from the
northeast of Iceland; at both these places the polar stream is
buried and proceeds beneath the Gulf Stream, after having
pushed it off laterally to the southeast. But for the third
time, at Bear Island, the polar stream comes directly against
the Gulf Stream from the northeast, splits it into two or three
branches, and iu places even presses it beneath its own waters
at least in July. Under the lee of Spitsbergen, this latter
branch rises again and proceeds on the surface according to
Parry's observations to latitude 82 -J north. The main branch
east of Bear Island, has been traced by Dr. Bessels to latitude
76 8' north, where in August, 1869, it had still a temperature
of 41.2.
" The polar streams, in conformity with the general laws of
nature, are less powerful in winter than in the summer. The
polar ice does not drift as far southward ; it makes fast more
162

or less to the Arctic coasts and islands ;


in spring .and sum-
mer, on the contrary, it drifts along similar to the glacier
tongues, in Alpine mountains, or the ice in our rivers. The
Gulf Stream is in winter more powerful than in summer,
while the polar streams, so to say, set at rest in some measure,
withdraw their ice and concentrate it around the land. The
relations of the temperature of the Gulf Stream within them-
selves, are ahout the same in January as in July, the fluctu-
ation between its maximum and minimum
temperature, (July
and January, or August and February,) would be on the
average only about 9 of 'Fahrenheit, ( 4 of Keaumur.)
" What immense contrast to this extraordinary temperature
is offeredby the temperature of the air on the mainland!
From the sea and air isothermal line of 36.5 Fahrenheit,
(2 of Reaumur,) at Philadelphia, to Northumberland S<
with 40, the distance is 2280 miles nearly due north,
There is, therefore, in about each thirty miles a fall in temper-
ature of one degree, as you go north. From the same point
at Philadelphia to the Gulf Stream, east of Fruholm, on the
same isothermal line of 36.5 Fahrenheit, (or 2 of Reaumur,)
there are in the direction of the Gulf Stream, in an air line,
about 5400 miles, in which distance there is no fall at all in
the temperature of the Gulf Stream. There, one degree of fall
in each thirty miles; here, the same temperature along 5400
miles in a northeast direction. Such is the influence and
power of the Gulf Stream. In the latitude of Berlin, which
has a mean temperature ot the air in January of 28, the
Gulf Stream has 50 at the Faroe Islands it has still 42.1
;
but
;

in Jakutsk, in the latitude of the Faroes, the air is 40 below


zero, a difference of 82.1."
Scoresby remarks "In some situations near Spitzbergen,
:

the warm water not only occupies the lower and mid regions
of the sea, but also appears at the surface; in some instances,
even among ice, the temperature of the sea at the surface lias
as high as 30, or 38, when that of the air has been
several degrees below freezing. This circumstance, however,
has chiefly occurred near the meridians of 6 to 12 ea-
Greenwich, and we, find from observations that the sea freezes
less in these longitudes than in any other part of the Spitz-
bergen sea."
"
The hot source and core of tho Gulf Stream extends from
the straits of Florida, along tho Xorth American coast at all
times, day and night, iii winter and summer, even in January,
163

with a temperature of 77, and more, up to the 37 of north-


era latitude, while at the same time, and in the same latini'l.-,
in. Africa,
(Tunis,) the temperature of the air is but 5
The Gulf Stream transports and develops still, in this lati-
tude, a higher temperature than water and air possess in tho
Atlantic ocean, even under the equator, on which neither in
Julv nor in January, the temperature is ever as high a.s that
of the Gulf Stream, in latitude 37 north."*

Why is this? "We have shown that heat could not be


forced down by the sun along the line of the Gulf Stream, by
any power of which we have a notion. If this heat could bo
derived from the sun, it is clear that the temperature of the
ocean under the equator should be at least a- ^-ivat, if not
much greater, than it is in the straits of Florida^or up to the
37 of north latitude; but we know, experimentally, that this
is not the case, but that the heat is actually less either on land
or ocean under the equator, than it is in that portion of tho
Gulf Stream from the straits of Florida to the 37 of north
latitude. Therefore solar radiation of heat is out of the ques-
tion. JS~or could the great heat at the immense depths of the
Gulf Stream, penetrate thereto, even if it were possible for
heat to descend to our planet from the sun, for the tendency
of heat is everywhere to ascend into the atmosphere, and it
could not remain permanently at those depths in opposition
to that tendency. We
must therefore seek the cause of this
marvellous heat in the waters of the Gulf Stream, somewhere
else than in the sun.

We are told by our geologists that very great heat exists in


the interior of our earth and the existence of volcanoes in
many portions of the globe which are now active, as well as
those which have been quiet for a period of time unknown
to man, all attest the truth of their assertion. These volcanoes,
past and present, have subterranean and submarine communi-
cations with each other, which permeate large portions of the
interior of the earth and serve to transmit any excessive ac-
cumulation of heat from its immediate source to even the
most distant parts of the earth's interior, for radiation to the
surface of the earth. These communications are simply flues
for distributing the interior heat of the earth to its various parts.
The greatest heat is and always has been under the equator,
and these flues are for the most part submarine. If you will

* From Dr. A. Peterman's Essays on the Extension of the Gulf Stream.


164

take an atlas of physical geography and cast your eyes upon


the map showing the distribution of volcanoes and the regions
subject to earthquakes, you will discover that the southern part
of Mexico and the isthmus connecting the two Americas are
studded with volcanoes, while the Caribbean sea is filled with
them. These volcanoes are doubtless connected by flues which
are united into many proximate flues in the straits of Florida,
through which the surplus heat of tbe interior of the earth under
the American continent and a part of the Atlantic ocean and
the Gulf of Mexico is transmitted to the Arctic regions, warm-
ing the waters of the Gulf Stream, through its whole length,
and thus moderating the climates of tbe western parts of
Europe. Another system of volcanoes will be observed almost
on the same meridian, extending from Tristan d'Acunhain the
southern Atlantic ocean though Trinidad, St. Helena, Ascen-
sion, Cape Verd Islands, Canary Islands, A/ores, Iceland and
Jan Mayen, to the Arctic regions. These vol. Attest
a central heat, forcing a passage by the repellent affinity of
positive electricity with which it is associated in the direction
of the polar axis of the earth, to outlets at either pole.
When obstructions are met with in tbe passage of this heat
and electricity towards the poles in the interior of the eartli
volcanoes are formed, the superincumbent crust of the earth
is upheaved and a vertical flue or chimney instead of the origi-
nal horizontal or inclined flue is developed, and an eruption
of matter is thrown out to form an island, which in a series
of ages may become a continent.

These two systems of submarine flues carrying the heat of


the central portion of the interior of the earth under the
Atlantic ocean, a part of the American continent, the Carrib-
bean sea, Gulf of Mexico and the Antilles, meet under the
Atlantic ocean to the southeast of the island of Iceland, each
furnishing Us supply of heat to maintain the temperatu;
the Gulf Stream, as well in its greatest depths as on its
extended surface. As heat ascends from its source into the
atmosphere, it passes upwards from the bottom of the Gulf
Stream through it to its surface, associated with its positive
electricity, where it encounters the negative electricity of the
atmosphere, and by conjunction with it, increases the heat of
the air above the water, which air, thus warmed, attracted by the
colder air negatively electrified of tbe land that is nearest to it,
flowt in a steady wind towards it, ameliorating its climate and
promoting the health and happiness of its inhabitants.
1G5

All warm currents of \vater, wherever t'iry mav he situated,


have a similar origin in the heat developed in the interior of
the earth. The islands of the Pacific ocean may he all regarded
as volcanic. The western coasts of America from Cape Horn
to their northern limits, furnish a corresponding proportion of
volcanic action, and the warm Japanese current through
Behring's straits and along the coast of Asia, evinces a similar
origin in submarine flues conveying heated air under the
ocean to the Arctic regions on that side of the globe.
" The British
expeditions for deep soa soundings ascertained
the temperature of the water of the Gulf Stream, at a depth
of 6000 feet, (being more than one mile,) to be 38.1, and at
14, 610 feet, (being nearly three miles,) to be still 36.5. Com-
pared with this/ the deep sea temperature of the Gulf of
Arabia, and even of the water under the Equator, will be
found very low, sinking to 34 in general, the deep sea
;

temperature of the tropical oceans is lower than that of the


Horth American basin.
" In the northern Atlantic
ocean, between 50 and 60 of
latitude, there are certain bands of water of a high tern;
ture interposed between bauds of water of a lower tempertu re
" T/iese bands of a higher temperature are to be found, more or tess,
where a warm current and a cold current converge, as, for in.-

east of Iceland. The two principal bands alluded to by Admi-


ral Irmiuger, in his memoir, in about 60 of north latitude,
between the Shetland islands and Cape Farewell, are, doubt-
less, the two convex vertices of the Gulf Stream in that
region.
" The fact that the entire sea between Scotland and Iceland
consists of a great number of such warm and cold bands of
water, adjoining each other, is best proved by the cruise of
Lord Dufferiu, who, sailing from Stornoway, in the Hebrides,
to Reikiavik, between the 13th and 20th of June, 1856, oh
served the temperature of the surface of the sea every two
hours in all, ninety times and found it to change not less than
forty-four times, or, in the average, once in fourteen nautical
miles, the change fluctuating between 52.9 and 43 ; for the
most part, however, between 50 and 47.8; while on starting
from Stornoway, the temperature was observed to be 48, and
on arriving at Iceland again 48.
" There are bands where the water is of a
higher temperature
close to one where it is of a lower temperature, and such
1G6

are found on cadi passage across the Atlantic-, between


F;.irhill and Greenland. The diU'ercnce between the highest
.iid tlic lowest
temperatures of the sea observed on this line
of the Atlantic ocean is 10.8, up to 30 or 40 west: of Green-
wich to the west of this meridian, the temperature tell more
:

rapidly, the- more so the nearer to Greenland. The tempera-


ture of the warmest bands is defined frequently pretty sharply
against the waters which run through them. This high
temperature of the sea at its surface, extends 30 degrees of
longitude., or at least 900 nautical miles west of Fairhul.

"Fimllay mentions that the temperature at the depth of


1200 feet was found to he only f>.">, while on the surface of
the Gulf Stream it reached 77.4. In the Florida straits,
where the velocity of the Gulf Stream is greatest, the tem-
perature at 4800 feet was found to he only 88.1.
" The warm water of the Gulf Stream is not found at consider-
able depths, much of the heat of the lower strata escaping to
the surface. It is, besides, a fact, that this warm water is hut
little apt to mix with the adjoining sea-water.
'"'Above the broad Atlantic ocean, in high latitudes, in the
colder seasons there is a relatively high temperature, which by
the prevailing western and southwestern wimb is carried to
the coasts of Europe."
Let us now consider, some of the recogni/ed laws of
heat and electricity. It is known, that where two adjacent
diil'erent temperatures exist there electricity is evolved.
Now the waters of the Gulf Stream, the .Japanese current, and
of other I.imfl existing in the oceans and along coasts,

deriving their heat in the iirst place from the submarine tines

connecting subterranean and submarine volcanoes with the


Arctic and Antarctic regions, admit of the passage of this heat
through their globules to their upper surfaces, in conformity to
the attraction of heat from he surface of he cart h to he upper
1 t 1

atmosphere. This ascenl of heat from the bottom of these hot,


streams through their waters to the atmosphere, in connection
with the indraught of cold Arctic and Antarctic waters flowing
over the l>ot tom of the oceans, is the cause of the low tempera-
ture always found at such depths in those waters while in-
termediately from the bottom, of the ocean to the surface in
such hot currents of water, the temperature varies till it comes
nto contact with that of the atmosphere, and that of the ocean
water en< ing these hot currents of water through their
whole extent. The contact of these different temperatures
1G7

evolves electricity, which is positive where the high


ture of the water pervades its greater volumes, and
electricity where (lie cold Arctic and Antarctic waters exceed in
volume, below the surface, tlie waters of tlie liot stream. The
conjunction of these opposite electricities evolves heat, which
being absorbed hy the water where they meet serves to supply
a continuous source of heat to the farthest extremities of such
hot currents of water to the Polar regions and this is why
this great heat is maintained from its original source in the
Florida straits to the high latitude where it is observed. The
cause of the hot waters of the (Julf Stream not mixing readily
with the colder wafers of the Xorthern Atlantic ocean, will he
readily found in tlie junction of these opposite electricities, pro-
ducing heat where these hot ami-cold waters meet.
In ascending from the earth in a balloon, aeronauts have
discovered the same law to prevail among gaseous iluids as
among liquid fluids on the earth, a>:d that strata of heated air,
even at great elevations, are as it were sandwiched between
others of far lower temperature the contiguity of these strata
;

of warm and cold air develops heat and electricity as well as


magnetism in the atmosphere, as is done also in the waters of
the ocean by corresponding columns of warm and cold water
in juxtaposition. These attributes of fluids are, therefore,
among the great sources of the evolution of these impondera-
ble powers.

The cold Arctic and Antarctic currents of water, in motion


to the Equator from the poles while currents of warm water
from the tropics to the poles are moving beside them in a
directly opposite direction, are conclusive evidences that they
are impelled by magnetic attractions and repulsions in the
crust of the earth, and so it is also with the aerial currents of
the atmosphere. Those of a great elevation, having a very
low temperature, are attracted towards the Equator and down-
wards to the earth by its magnetism, while the warm equato-
rial currents, repelled from the earth by the same magnet-
ism which has attracted the cold upper current downward
towards it, ascend to the upper regions of the atmosphere
attracted by the opposite magnetism existing there, and in
both cases in opposition to the supposed law of gravitation, for
the air descending to the earth from the elevated regions of
the atmosphere is much thinner and more attenuated than the
air beneath, and the ascending warm, air is much denser than
the air of the regions that it seeks. The diagonal and spiral
168

motions of either the descending or the ascending currents of


the atmosphere arc produced by the magnetism of those portions
of the atmosphere, through which they are respectively
passing.

When our attention is directed to the fact of the Labrador


and Polar, or Arctic currents running towards the Equator,
while by their sides the Gulf Stream is running towards the
Arctic regions in an opposite direction and when it is dis-
;

covered by the deep sea soundings, that there are currents of


wat IT of varying temperatures at great depths which also run
side by side in opposite directions, at whatever depths, we are
forced to the conclusion that no conceivable system of gravita-
tion can bo devised to explain the anomaly. But if we apply
the law of development of heat and magnetism, by the con-
junction of opposite electricities, which are always associated
with differences of contiguous temperatures, the solution of
the phenomena referred to becomes comparatively easy. The
electro-magnetic condition of the warm water of the Gulf
Stream is repelled from the Equator, and attracted by the
opposite electro-magnetic condition of the waters and atmos-
phere about the North Pole, while the cold waters of the
Labrador and Arctic currents are repelled by the similar
electro-magnetism of the waters at their starting point, and
are attracted towards the Equator by the opposite electro-mag-
netism of the warm waters there. Similar causes produce
similar effects in the southern hemisphere, and similar electro-
magnetic forces dominate in the atmosphere all over the
planet. Hence we find there, horizontal winds blowing in
opposite directions, one above the other, and it is by this wise
arrangement of oppositely electrified currents of air that the
rainfall is scattered and distributed over vast areas of the
earth's surface!, modifying the temperatures and furnishing
to the parched and arid soil those supplies of water for irriga-
tion, so indispensable to the support of animal and vegetable
life upon it.

Tn the. year 1^28, I was detailed with two other officers of


the army, by the Secretary of War, to make a survey of the
mountainous region in the states of North and South Carolina,
Georgia, and Tennessee, lying between the head of navigation
on the Savannah river, at the eastern foot of the I;lue Uidgo
mountains, and the head of navigation on the Tcrne
river, on the western side of the same mountains. The object
1G9

of the survey was to ascertain the practicability of construct-


ing a navigable canal ou the mountains, to bring the produce
of northern Alabama and eastern Tennessee to Charleston,
in South Carolina, and Savannah, in Georgia, instead of
ing it to Mobile and New Orleans, and thus it was hoped by
tlie administration of the Government to reconcile the
people
of South Carolina and Georgia especially, to the policy of
having the internal improvements of the country to be made
by the Federal Government instead of by the State Govern-
ments.

Onreaching our destination, I was directed to run a line of


levels from the head waters of the Savannah river over the
mountains to those of the Tennessee river, a distance, if I
remember rightly, of some ninety miles. I had under my
command eleven men mountaineers stout, strong, active,
and hardy fellows. The other officers were employed in
prospecting for other routes across the mountains, at consid-
erable distances from that I was pursuing. The country was
then very thinly settled, and a portion of my route bordered
on the lands occupied by the Creek or Cherokee Indians, then
living in the state of Georgia. Of course, we had to carry all
our supplies with us, the country furnishing little or nothing.
"We were occupied on this duty some five months, from July
till December. Frost appeared in the latter part of Septem-
ber, on the parallel of latitude of Charleston, in South Caro-
lina, and thin ice was formed on the streams almost nightly
after October 15th. In the latter part of October my party
was benighted in the valley of the Little Tennessee river, far
away from any human habitation, on a narrow alluvial bottom,
overhung by a precipitous and lofty mountain. The man
detailed to bring to ua from the mountain ridge our supplies
for the day and night, had missed his way, and hud descended
to the river, at a place that we had left several miles behind
us. He had not observed our trail, and supposing that we
had not passed the spot which he had reached, he kindled a
fire, and remained there all night awaiting our arrival. After
sending men in every direction in search of him, who returned
without success, I began to make arrangements for the night.
The air was cold and humid, ice being formed of the thick-
ness of a quarter of an inch on the still waters of a portion of
the river, a heavy growth of timber in the valley of the river
where I had halted rendered the ground, as well as the air,
very damp. The men, like myself, were all dressed in light
170

summer clothing and


1

,fire, therefore, became a prime necessity,


but the question was, how to obtain it. At that period,
lucifer matches, if they had been invented, could not be
procured where we were. My arms and ammunition,
with the rest of our supplies, were with my wagon,
and where it was we had not been able to discover.
It occurred to me to procure fire by friction, for at that
day it was thought that heat was evolved by friction. So I
divided my ten men into five reliefs of two men each, and
directing some of them to gather the driest pieces of wood
they could find, I notched the pieces so as to make the
greatest rubbing surfaces possible in them, and then I set two
men at a time to rub the pieces of wood together. Having
some pieces of dry paper in my pockets, I hoped to be able to
kindle a fire w ith them, when sufficient heat should be
r

developed by the friction of the pieces of wood. The men


relieved each other every five minutes, after having rubbed the
pieces of wood together, vigourously and rapidly; the wood
became blackened, and much smoke was given out, but no
fire could be produced. The wood itself was not sufficiently
dry, and none more suitable could be procured. The evening
air was cold and damp and carried off as fast as it was evolved
the positive electricity which flowed from the friction pro-
duced on the wood by the active rubbing of the men. One of
the elements therefore to develop the heat, viz: the negative
i

'icily of the atmosphere that


\v<-
needed, was wanting.
After having kept these five reliefs of the men continually busy
in rubbing these pieces of wood for two consecutive hours,
i gave
up the effort in despair, and we submitted ourselves to
the circumstances of our situation, and passed a dismal night
of great suffering. Had the wood and the night air been dry,
we should have kindled a fire in fifteen minutes with such
an amount of fnotional electricity as was developed by the
rubbing of the wood by the men. The experiment satisfied
me that heat is only developed by the proper electrical condi-
tions and not by friction of itself. As it was, all the friction
we could produce did not prevent us from passing two
days and nights in these mountains without food or fire, the
r on the river, in its
tranquil parts, having been frozen at
night of the thickness of a quarter of a dollar or an English
shilling.

Every housewife in the country knows that if she suffers


the sunlight to fall upon the burning fuel on her hearth, the
171

combustion of the fuel will bo deadened by it, and if all


to continue long, will be extinguished.
it This is o\\i>
the de-oxydizing power of the b! ('the sunlight, which
separating the oxygen gas from the atmo>pherio air in the
chimney, prevents the combustion of the fuel from the
absence of oxygen gas. Whoever has seen one of our w
prairies on fire, must have observed, in the stillness of the
morning and in the bright sunshine, that the combustion
air
of the dry grass and herbage \vas slow, the flume la/ily < .

ing from one stalk to anothertill a <: nopy of smoke intercept-


ing the sunlight, allowed a current of air to be formed
beneath the smoke, which fanned the combustion into active
flame. These results were from the removal of the oxygen
gas from the air in the first place, by the blue ray of the sun-
light de-oxydi/ing it, and in the second part, obscuring the
sunlight by the canopy of smoke, which permitted the oxygen
gas in the atmosphere to be re-united to the air beneath it,
and to supply the oxygen gas to support anew the combustion
on the prairie.

It is therefore a mistake to suppose that friction produces


heat. Itevolves electricity, which, uniting with opposite-
electricity, develops sometimes heat and sometimes cold, as
one or other of the electricities is predominant in volume and
tension at their conjunction. This is illustrated by the
passage of sunlight through two adjacent panes of glass, one
being blue, the other colourless and transparent, at the same
angle of incidence. Glass is known to be a feeble conductor
of heat as well as of electricity, for -we i; s in our

windows to confine within our rooms the artificial heat pro-


duced within them during winter, and in northern reiriona
double sashes are used in the windows, the outer sash to
prevent the cold from penetrating through them, and the
inner sash to confine the warmer air within the rooms; arid in
electrical experiments, glass handles are used to insulate
currents of electricity intended to be passed from one pole of
the battery to the other.

when sunlight with its enormous velocity falls thus


upon two such adjacent panes of glass, it will be found that
the plain transparent glass is cold to the touch of the hand,
while the blue glass is hot when so touched. If friction pro-
duced heat, both of these surfaces should have the same tem-
perature, but such is not
the case. The reason is obvious.
The sunlight passes through the plain transparent glass, only
172

slightly retarded by its density, which is greater than that of


the atmosphere, but subject to its refraction while six of the
primary rays of the sunlight that impinges upon the blue
glass, are suddenly arrested by the impact with it, which
shatters the composite rays of indigo, violet and purple into
their component parts, and only admits of the passage of the
blue ray through it. This sudden stoppage of a velocity of
186,000 miles per second of six of these primary rays of sun-
light produces enormous friction, which evolves negative
electricity from these rays, which coming in contact with the
vitreous or positive electricity of the glass evolves heat, that
expanding the molecules of the glass allows the heat thus
developed and a current of electro-magnetism, produced at
the same time by this conjunction of opposite electricities, to
through the glass, and to produce the marvelous results
upon animal and vegetable life that we have announced.
This, then, is the theory that explains the almost magical
effects that are produced in life by the impact of sunlight upon
the adjacent surfaces of plain transparent glass and blue g

The facts are in such harmony with the explanation of


them, that as we cannot deny the facts we are bound to
accept the theory that elucidates them. This will relieve the
scientific mind that is always bothered to accept a new fact or
to comprehend a new theory.

Light is diffusible. This is apparent cvcrywhere.in our illu-


minations. It is also compressible, as illustrated by the con-
cm! ration of sunlight through a common lensor sun glass into
a focus, by which a boy lights his segar or inflames a squib of
gunpowder. This shows that rays of light move through
ether, and our atmosphere, Without touching each other, and
that when they are comprised together, us in this lens, their
incy produces friction, and this friction evctlvcs negative
electricity, which has caused their separation, which negative
electricity brought into contact with the vitreous or positive,
electricity of the glass of the len, develops heat of extraordi-
nary intfii.-ny. Now, \vhenwe come to apply theso attributes
of light to the physical condition of our planet, we are no t

nations of our temperature throughout


us, directly to the action of light upon the various
polid, liquid '-onstituents of the planet, which at
-
and in certain conditions are oppositely electri-
fied to the. rays of light.

There is no atmosphere about the moon and consequently


173

it has no heal", as the


rays oflight which fall upon tho moon's
surface being negatively elect rifled its they p ;i ^ through tho
cold ether of stellar and planetary space, ,ti n-a'-hiiiu; the
(

moon at a very small angle of incidence from, the sun, aj


Btantly reflected t'rom its surface upon the earth and into
space-. The moon itself being negatively electrified bv its con-
tact with this ether in its career r: its orhit, this
negatively
electrified condition of the moon's surface repels the r;:
light therefrom, and hastens their reflection. The rotation on
its axis is the effect of electrical forces in its
interior, and its
motion around the earth, and with it around the sun, results
from the magnetism contained within its crust, and in the
earth and its atmosphere, as well as in the planets, the sun
and the ether of space.
No one impulse could possibly send light from its various
sources in the firmament through space with its constant
velocity of 186,000 miles per second. It is impelled through
space with its own concomitant forces, as a rocket fired from
its stand is
continually driven forward hy the forces evolved
in the combustion of its composition, till it is extinguished.
So light is repelled from its sources in the firmament by its
negative electricity, and its velocity is maintained by the ;.

ance of the negative electricity of the ether through which it is


passing, continually driving it forward. This condition of
negative electricity in light being constant, and its velocity
uniform, its rate of speed is maintained till it enters our atmos-
phere, where it encounters electrical disturbances of opposite
as well as similar conditions, producing its refraction, its re-
flections, its polarization and its absorption. On reaching the
surface of the earth, which at every moment presents a new
portion to the action of light, all the phenomena of day,
twilight and night, of heat and cold, of dryness and moisture, of
atmospheric and climatic changes, are developed. Seasons suc-
ceed each other, according to the angles of incidence of the sun's
light. When it falls in the summer on certain parts of the earth
almost vertically, no rays of light are reflected from it, they
all imi-inge npon it with their inconceivable velocity, develop-

ing by their friction with the earth an opposite electricity to


their own and that of the atmosphere, whose union produces
tho heats -of s mmer. In winter, though the earth is three
millions of miles nearer the sun than it is in summer, yet the
angle of incidence of the sun's rays of light is so small
and
acute, that a large proportion of them are reflected into space
without producing the friction with the earth which is neces-
174

sary to evolve an opposite electricity and heat consequent


upon the union of the two electricities hence the temperature
:

of the winters in such parts of the earth's surface is low, and


cold prevails. The intermediate seasons make an average
between the extremes of summer and winter, from the cor-
responding angles of incidence of their light.
One of the most beautiful illustrations of the remarkable
power developed by the compressibility of light is furnished
in the celebrated exploits of Archimedes, the iSyracusan, the
most learned of the mathematicians of antiquity, in destroying
by means of reflecting mirrors the fleet of the Romans, who,
investing the city of Syracuse by land, were blockading its
port with a numerous fleet, which was preparing to batter the
sea walls of the city with battering rams and catapults.
Archimedes conceived the idea of destroying this fleet, which
was unapproachable by any adequatic force under the control
of the Syracusans, by concentrating upon it the light of the
sun, reflected from mirrors into foci, successively thrown
upon the several ships of the fleet, fit the distance of an
arrow's flight from the shore, or from 150 to 200 feet.
The two ancient authors who have furnished the clearest
account of this extraordinary feat in warfare, are Zonaras and
Txetzes, who each lived in the twelfth century of the Christian
era. The passage in the history of Zonaras does not enlighten
us in regard to the construction of the mirrors used by
Archimedes, it simply states the fact, and in another passage
the. same author
says, that under the empire of Anastasius, in
the year 514, A. D., Proclus with burning mirrors burnt and
de-lroyed the fleet of Yitalien, who was besieging Constanti-
nople, and he added, their invention was ancient, and that Dion
gave the honour of it to Archimedes, who had used it success-
fully against the Romans at the siege of Syracuse.
The historian Tzetzes, enters more fully into the description
of the mirrors used by Archimedes, which he said were com-
i of a c.-ntral hexagonal mirror, surrounded by others of
a smaller size, which by the aid of hinges and metallic plates,
could be so exposed to the sun, that its rays of light falling
upon them would be reflected and then concentrated into a
common focus, developing so great a heat that the nhi:
the Romans were burnt by it, even at the distance of an
arrow's flight.

Among the moderns, Kircher has written that Archimedes


had been able to burn, at a great distance, with plane mirrors,
175

rience Laving taught him that in assembling in (his


manner the images of the sun, a licat could be produced at a
oint where these images were united.

Mr. Du Fay, a member of the Royal Academy ices,


in a memoir printed in 1716, stated that the image of the sun,
reflected by a plane mirror more than 600 feet, upon a eon-
cave mirror with a diameter of 17 inches, burned intlamma-
ble substances at the focus of this concave mirror, lie more-
over added that some authors had suggested that a mirror,
with a very long focus, could be formed by using a large
number of small plane mirrors, which might be held in the
hands of as many persons, and so directed by them as to
throw, by reflection, all the images of the sun upon a given
point, thus developing great heat; but al the same time he
treated the story of Archimedes burning the Roman fleet at
Syracuse as the veriest fable, and worthy of all ridicule.

It is very singular that men will frequently believe state-


ments of the most improbable and even impossible character,
who, at the same time, will reject the best established historical
facts when they happen to be outside their circle of know-
ledge.
O Such has been the fate of the historv of the burning
*/

mirrors with which Archimedes destroyed the Roman fleet at


Syracuse. This fact, related by many historians, believed,
without question, during fifteen or sixteen centuries, was, in
the seventeenth century, not only disputed, but was treated
as a silly fable by many of the savans of that period. Even
the illustrious Des Cartes openly denied its possibility, and
we must acknowledge that with the then received opinions on
Dioptrics, Des Cartes was excusable for not believing the
mirrors of Archimedes ever to have existed.

This incredulity, on the part of many persons claiming to


be scientists, excited the interest of M. de Button, the cele-
brated naturalist, at the time the Intendant of the Jardin des
Plantes, at Paris. He determined to test the question practi-
cally, and for this purpose constructed a system of reflecting
plane mirrors, by which he attained complete success. He
began by measuring the loss of illuminating power in the
reflection of the sun's rays from metallic mirrors of the finest
polish, when compared with the loss so sustained by reflec-
tion from plane glass mirrors covered on their backs with tin
foil. It was found that the glass mirrors lost less light by
reflection than the metallic mirrors did, but that it required
two plane glass mirrors of the same dimensions to produce,
176

an illumination equal to that from the


at a given distance,
same unobstructed beam of sunlight passing into an obscure
room through an aperture in the window shutter, and conse-
quently, that the number of his glass mirrors should be largely
increased to produce any sensible effect on combustible sub-
s f ances. After studying his subject in its various relations to
the laws of light and heat, as then understood by scientific
men, M. de BufFon constructed his mirror of 168 pieces of
plane glass, covered on the back with tin foil, each piece being
six inches wide by eight inches long, separated from each
other by four lines, and mounted on a stand, which was sus-
ceptible of being moved in every direction; each of these
glasses had a separate setting, so that it could be separately
moved in every direction, independent of the movements of
the other glasses. It required about half an hour to adjust
the reflected images of the sun from these mirrors into a com-
mon focus. When the glasses were properly arranged, and
the focus adjusted, a board of beech wood covered with pitch,
was set on iire by 40 of these glasses at the distance of 66 feet;
with 98 glasses, a board covered with pitch and sulphur was
A
set on fire at the distai.ce of 120 feet. slight combustion wa3
produced on a board covered with wool cut very fine, by
employing 112 glasses, at the distance of 138 feet, with a very-
pale sun. At 150 feet of distance, a board covered with pitch
was made to smoke with 154 glasses, and it was thought that
itwould have been burnt if the sun had not become overcast
with clouds. With a still feebler sun, chips of pine wood
covered with pitch have been set on fire in one minute and a
half, at the same distance, with a like number of glasses.
With an unclouded sun, a pine board, covered with pitch, at
the same distance, has been quickly set on fire with 128
glasses, and the fire has caught the whole surface of the focus,
\\hichwas 16 inches in diameter, at that distance. Finally,
the focus having been shortened to the distance of 20 feet,
with 12 glasses the substances easily combustible were set
on tire. With 45 glasses a tin canister, weighing six pounds,
Las been quickly melted with 117 glasses. Thin scraps of
silver have been melted, and a sheet of iron has been made
red hot; and there was reason to believe that if all the glasses
of the mirror had been used, motals could have been as easily
melted at 50 feet distance as at 20 feet.
These experiments have been made with a sun of a spring
time, and without much power, having been enfeebled by
atmospheric vapours. If then, with these disadvantages, wood
177

could be burnt at 150 feet distant, we may well think, that


with a summer's sun, it could be readily 'burnt at 200 feet
distance, and with three similar mirrors" it could bo set on
lire at 400 feet distance. M. do Button thought that with
mirrors similar to his own, combustibles could not be inflamed
beyond a distance of 900 feet.
Let us
attempt an explanation of these phenomena. The
enormous velocity of rays of light in coming to our planet,
establishes the fact that they cannot touch each other in their
passage, since if they jostled each other their velocity would
be greatly diminished. Repelled from each other, therefore,
by their own negative electricity, as well as by that they have
received from the cold ether through which they have passed,
they are attracted to the glass of the mirrors and their metal-
lic backing, by the vitreous or
positive electricity of those sub-
Btances. On striking the glass, these rays produce friction,
which evolves positive electricity, the junction of these oppo-
site electricities evolves heat and
magnetism, the rays of heat
thus developed follow the same laws as do those of light, and
together, both are reflected from the mirrors and are directed
to the common focus, where their concentration sets on fire
combustible substances, and melts and vaporizes those of a
more obdurate and intractable character. The refraction and
reflection, as well as the polarization of light, are due to the
repellent affinity of electricity.

When we are told that on many parts of the earth's surface


mountains have been upheaved till their peaks and ridges, at
distances varying from 16,000 to 28,000 feet above the level of
the sea, appear to be covered with snow, which from year to
year, and from century to century, continues to cover them,
no matter in what latitudes they may exist, nor in what ecu-
sou of the year they may be examined, we naturally ask our-
selves, why is this? How does it happen, that these snow-
capped peaks and ridges, at such great elevations above tho
sea, far above the region of the atmosphere in which clouds
and vapours habitually love to roam as it were at will, bask-
ing in a resplendent and brilliant sunlight, receiving all the
supposed emanations of heat from the sun, that philosophers
of every age have innocently conjectured that that luminary,
like a human spendthrift, was lavishing upon infinite space,
in all directions, that a small portion of it might reach our
planet, should preserve their mantles of perpetual snow, in all
seasons, in all climatic changes that are occurring every
178

moment thousands of feet beneath them, and thus continue


delving, as it would seem, the mutability of all other earthly
things ? Some of our philosophers of the highest distinction,
have gone into the most elaborate calculations to show what
enormous columns of ice, of the greatest density, could be
melted by the heat of the sun, in its constant emanation, in
the smallest spaces of time, in the face of the fact that the
snow clad mountains, that happen to be the nearest to the
sun, have been from time immemorial, unaffected in the
slightest manner, by any heat derived from that great lumi-
nary. Let us attempt an explanation of this wonder. The
colour of snow is white. It has a low temperature. Its elec-
trical condition is negative, as is the white colour of sunlight,
as are the rays of sunlight which reach us through the i.
tively electrified ether of space, also intensely cold, and the
intensely cold upper strata of our atmosphere. As a conse-
quence, white sunlight, negatively electrified, falling upon the
white snow capped mountains, also negatively electrified, as
are also the strata of our atmosphere into which these moun-
tains lift their heads, these similar electricities repel each
other. The white sunlight is reflected into space from the
snow covered mountains, which remain undisturbed, and no
trace of the action of heat, as derived from the sun, is any-
where visible upon them.
If the sun is a great magnet, it must have its magnetic poles,
with their reciprocal attractions and repulsions. The plane of
the sun's equator is said to be neither perpendicular to nor
coincident with that of the ecliptic. Its magnetic poles may
therefore be differently situated in it to the positions occupied
in the earth by its magnetic poles. From the supposed enor-
mous volume and intensity of magnetism in and about the sun,
we may inter that the velocity of the planets and of cometary
matter in their respective pro'gress in their orbits, would be
cheeked when in their several perigees or nearest points to
the sun, from its great magnetic attraction, and that as they
ally receded therefrom, those velocities would be in-
-ed from the loss of the sun's attraction by increase of
distance from it, and the nearer approach to their apogees, or
greatest distance from the sun, where the SUU'B attraction
would be the least, and the opposite magnetic attraction of
the ether of space would be the greatest. If it were not -r 1

the interior forces of the planets, <fcc., causing their rotations


on theirB might suppose that their movements around
m might be stopped entirely, when tlr\v had .severally
reached their perigees by the magnetism of the sun.
179

TVlien two magnets of different magnetic- volumes ami in-


tensities are brought near each other with similar
towards eaeh other, the greater magnet will repel the l-sser :

if their opposite poles approach ea<-h other, the feebler will be


attracted by the stronger. Now the sun having much gr
magnetic power than the earth, when the latter is at its peri-
gee its velocity must be retarded by the greater attractive
magnetism of the sun, which would hold it fixed when in peri-
gee, but foe the rotation of the earth on its axis, driving it
forward, and that retardation or holding it back after it bad
passed its perigee w ould continue until the earth had receded
r

so far from its perigee as to have reached the attraction of the


opposite magnetism beyond its apogee.
The sun exhibits every characteristic and evidence of a body
enveloped in two atmospheres, so to state, the one in contact
with it being the region of white light, called the
photosphere,
and outside of that, a region in which coloured light is some-
times manifested, especially along the edges of the solar disc,
and which last region is called the chromosphere. The spots
on the sun are supposed to be holes of various forms and
dimensions in the region of white light, through which the
dark body of the sun itself has been seen. These spots or
holes are liable to variations, and are analogous to the spots
of sunlight on the surface of the earth, which are sometimes
seen to be surrounded by the shadows cast upon the earth
by the clouds above it. Kasmyth, in the year 1866, made the
discovery that the luminous portion of the sun's disc is not
composed of light of equal or homogeneous intensity, but
consists of a minutely divided series of luminous streaks,
which he described as like willow leaves, around which the
light is less intense, or rather the photosphere is more trans-
parent. These willow leaves appeared to cross each other in
all varieties of directions, and their average magnitude was
about one thousand miles long, by a hundred miles broad ;
other observers have preferred to describe these appearances
as " granulations," "rice grains," and "shingle beach," and
as having elliptical forms, and of much smaller proportions.

The moon, we know to be a reflector of light without the


emission of any accompanying heat. The picture of the face
of the moon exhibited to us, represents great irregularities in
its surface, depressions, as if they were craters of extinct vol-

canoes, and elevations of great altitude, conveying the idea of


volcanic mountains; but the general colour is that of a light
180

grey, not unlike to sheets of zinc, or tin foil, the latter of


which we use as backs or reflecting surfaces in our glass
mirrors.

If wethus get our nocturnal light from the moon, unac-


companied by heat, why should we insist upon violating the
well established laws of heat in its radiations, and declare the
sun to be an incandescent body, continually in active com-
bustion, requiring inconceivable masses of fuel of some kind
to maintain it, and surrounded on all sides by an immensity
of ethereal space of so low a temperature that any radiation
of heat from the sun must necessarily be absorbed and neu-
tralized as soon as it should leave the body of the sun ? We
therefore, for the reasons stated in this book, reject entirely
the theory of the incandescence of the sun, and of its lumi-
nous metallic vapours of great intensity of heat.

"We have shown in the body of this work, that the colored
lights constituting the primary rays of light, which aro
emitted from the various orbs of the firmament, negatively
electrified, and are propelled by the cold negatively electrified
ether through which they are continually passing to tho
sun, and through its transparent or translucent chromosphere
to the photosphere of the sun, are there commingled to
produce its white light, which then is repelled or reflected
from the grey " willow leaves," "granulations," " rice grains,'*
or whatever they may be, into ethereal space by the samo
negative electricity, which has been associated with them
throughout, a portion of which comes to us as the white light
of the sun.

This shows the synthesis or formation of the white light of


the sun, and that it is merely an association of tho primary
rays of light thrown together by electrical and magnetic
attractions and repulsions in the photosphere of the sun, and
so easily separable that the slightest change in the angle of
incidence of the white light of the sun, as it falls upon vapours,
clouds, or gases will excite their repellent affinities, and resolve
them into the varied and brilliant tints of primary and com-
posite colours, which everywhere in the temperate regions,
serve to excite our astonishment, wonder, and delight. These
changes need no accompaniment of heat, and us they are
without it, we return to the declaration of Moses, that " God
made two great lights, a greater light to rule the day, and a
lesser light to rule the night aud the stars.
181

"And he set them in the firmament of heaven to shine upon


the earth, and to rule the day and the night, und to divide the
light and the darkness ;
arid God saw that it was good."

Among the fallacies of seience, as taught in our schools, to


some of which I have alluded in this book, there is not one
more surprising than the statement made by our astronomers,
that the earth, the planets, and the sun itself continually
revolve on their respective axes, and in their orbits from west
to east. We are also told that these orbits are elliptical
curves which return into themselves. Now we will illustrate
this movement
by supposing that a man has started from San
Francisco, on the Pacific Ocean, to travel on the same parallel
of latitude from, west to east around the world. After he has
travelled one hundred and eighty degrees on this parallel of
latitude, he finds that he has reached the east cardinal point
from San Francisco, and if he should continue his journey, he
must travel westward, which course will bring him in time back
again to San Francisco. How is it possible, therefore, in a
curve which returns to itself to travel always in the same
direction ? There can be no fixed cardinal points in any solar
or stellar system which is always in motion. In regard to
the diminutive planet which we inhabit, the curvature or
annulus of magnetic poles, north and south, is sufficiently
stable tind fixed to furnish cardinal points of the compass to
regulate our journeyings upon it; but with planets, stars, and
suns, it is different. They have no fixed points in the celes-
tial sphere, of which we have or can have any knowledge, to
which the direction of their movements can be referred, and
it is
simply an absurdity to attempt to assimilate planetary
and stellar motions to those of mankind on our earth.

The planes of the orbits of the planets arc neither coincident


with, parallel, nor perpendicular to each other, but they are
supposed to intersect each other in such a manner that tho
sun shall always be in a focus, common to all of these ellipti-
cal orbits; consequently any perpendicular line or plane to
any one of these orbits, cannot be perpendicular to any other
of them; and hence, there can be no cardinal points common
to them all, and their motions cannot be from west to east.

My task is finished. "When, in the beginning of this cen-


tury, it was announced that the primary rays of light had dif-
ferent attributes, and among them, that the blue ray stimulated
vegetation in a remarkable degree, many persons on the con-
182

tinont of Europe, as well as in the British Isles, instituted


experiments, with a view to utilize these rays. Their experi-
ments were failures, as they were made with homogeneous
tinted glass, each of the primary rays having in this way heen
somewnere tested, but without satisfactory results. A know-
ledge of these failures induced me to examine the subject of
vegetable growth in its natural conditions. I soon discovered
that where vegetation was most luxuriant, and exuberant,
there the brilliant sunlight was always associated with the blue
light of the firmament. That during the torpor of winter, the
rays of sunlight fell upon the earth, owing to the declination
of the sim, at such acute angles of incidence, that many of
them were reflected into space without stimulating life on this
planet, while, at the same time, the blue colour of the sky was
intercepted from our vision by the watery vapours and clouds
that were constantly floating in the atmosphere. The absence,
therefore, of the blue colour of the sky, and many of the rays
of sunlight at this season, together with its low temperature,
convinced me that the Creator intended it to be a season of
rest for vegetable and animal life, a sort of Sabbath, in which
life, though existing in plants and animals, was reposing from
tivity, to be aroused into exercise
on the return of the
season of spring, when from the less declination of the sun,
more of its light would be thrown upon the earth, associ.
with the blue colour of the sky, then unmasked by the dis-
sipation of the clouds and watery vapours which had con-
cealed it during the winter just past. I said to myself, " here
is the secret of the failures of these European experiments
with the primary rays of light. I will follow the guidance of
the Creator in cultivating my vines. I will associate the sun-
light with the blue colour of the sky, intensifying the latter.
I will make a tropical climate and atmosphere in the temper-
ate zone," The results are before you. The reflections i
have made on this subject have induced my investigation into
the Physics of Nature. I have not been satisfied with what I
have been taught in the schools. Their explanations are not
consistent with the known or presumed facts. 1 have ven-

tured, therefore, to form my own conclusions, irrespective of


dogmas that have been thrust upon mankind for centuries.
I do not profe>s to teach any one, but as a human atom
among the masses of mankind, for whom all knowledge should
be disseminated, I venture to impart to the public the conclu-
sions to which I have arrived on these subjects, and that pub-
lic may attach to them whatever value they please.
APPENDIX TO PAETH.

P-]
A very remarkable confirmation of my theory of the forma-
tion of the equatorial diameter of the earth, as well as of those
of the other planets, by magnetic attraction and repulsion from
their respective poles, thus increasing those diameters in
various proportions over their several polar diameters, has
unexpectedly appeared in a paper read before the American
Academy of Sciences, at their meeting in this city held on
Thursday last, November 4th, 1875, and sent to it by Professor
Joseph Le Conte, of the University of California, a synopsis
of which was published in the supplement to the Public Ledger ,
of this city, on Saturday, November 6th, 1875. The paper was
entitled " On the Evidence of Horizontal Crushing in the
Formation of the Coast Range of Mountains in California,"
being the result of recent observations by the author. His
theory is, that mountains are formed wholly by a yielding of
the crust of the earth along certain lines to horizontal pres-
sure, not by bending into a convex arch filled and sustained
by a liquid beneath, but by a mashing together of the whole
crust with the formation of close folds and a thickening or
swelling upward of the squeezed mass. The author walked
slowly through the cut made by the Central Pacific Railroad,
from the plains adjoining the bay of San Francisco through
the Coast Ridge mountains to the San Joaquin plains, a dis-
tance of thirty miles. Both the sub-ranges into which the
range is divided are composed wholly of crumpled strata,
those of the western sub-range being crumpled in the most
extraordinary manner. The sub-range nearest the bay is ex-
ceedingly complex. From measurements of the angles of dip
the actual length of the folded strata is two and one-half
to three times the horizontal distance through the mountain.
There must have been fifteen to eighteen miles of original sea
bottom crushed into six miles, with a corresponding upswell-
ing of the whole mass.
183)
184

PL]
To anticipate inquiry and satisfy curiosity respecting the
history of the author of the experiments mentioned herein,
and of the book itself, his civil and military history is as fol-
lows, viz :

AUGUSTUS JAMES PLEASONTOST, horn in the city of


"Washington, in the District of Columbia, January 21st, A. D.
1808. He was the second son of Stephen Pleasonton, of the
state of Delaware, and Mary Hopkins, his wife, of the county
of Lancaster, state of Pennsylvania. His father, Stephen
Pleasonton, entered the service of the government of the
United States, in the State Department, in the year 1800, and
continued to serve it till his death, which occured in the year
1854, after a service of more than fifty years. He was Fifth
Auditor of the Treasury Department, Acting Commissioner
of the Revenue of the United States, and Chief of the Light
House Department, for many years. He was of Norman ex-
traction.
His wife was the third daughter of John Hopkins, a sub-
stantialfarmer of the county of Lancester, in the state of
Pennsylvania, who for very many years represented his county
in the Senate of Pennsylvania. Her ancestry was English.
Their son, Augustus, was appointed a Cadet of the United
States Military Academy at West Point, from the District of
Columbia, July 1st, A. D. 1822, continued as such till July 1st,
1826, when he was graduated and promoted in the army, to
Brevet Second Lieutenant of the Sixth Regment of Infantry
July 1st, 1826, Second Lieutenant Third Artillery June 1st,
1826. Transferred to First Artillery October 24th, 1826.
Augustus James Pleasonton served in garrison at Fortress
Monroe, Virginia, at the Artillery School of Practice in the
years 1826 and 1827, and on Topographical duty, from June
16th, 1827, till January 17th, 1828, and from June 14th, 1828
till June 30th, 1830.
Resigned his commission in the army
June 30th, 1830.
His CIVIL HISTORY. Counsellor at Law at Philadelphia,
Penn., since the year 1832. Brigade Major in Pennsylvania
Volume. -r Militia in the years 1833 and 1835, Colonel of
Volunteer Artillery, of Penn., from 1835 till 1845, being
severely wounded July 7th, 1844, with a musket ball in the
left groin, while commanding his regiment in a desperate con-
185

flict,with a formidable body of rioters, armed with muskets


and cannon, in Southwark, Philadelphia county, Penn. As-
sistant Adjutant General and Paymaster General of the state
of Pennsylvania from December llth, 1838 to October llth,
1839, during political disturbances at Harrisburg, Penn.
President of the Harrisburg, Portsmouth, Mountjoy and
Lancaster Railroad Company, of Pennsylvania, in the years
1839 and 1840.
His MILITARY HISTORY. Served during the Rebellion of
the seceding states from the year 1861 till 1866 as Brigadier
General of Pennsylvania Volunteer Militia. Appointed May
16th, 1861, under an act of the Legislature of the state ot
Pennsylvania, to organize and command a Volunteer Army
Corps of 10,000 men of Artillery, Infantry and Cavalry, as a
Home Guard for the defence of the city of Philadelphia,
Penn.
University of California
SOUTHERN REGIONAL LIBRARY FACILITY
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Parking Lot 17 Box 951388
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA 90095-1388
Return this material to the library from which it was borrowed.

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i

The influence of the blue


ray of the sunlight and of

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