<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<p class="half-title">LIGHT SCIENCE.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p class="center spaced xs">
LONDON: PRINTED BY<br/>
SPOTTISWOODE AND CO., NEW-STREET SQUARE<br/>
AND PARLIAMENT STREET<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<h1> LIGHT SCIENCE FOR<br/> LEISURE HOURS.</h1>
<p class="center">A SERIES OF FAMILIAR ESSAYS<br/>
<small>ON</small><br/>
SCIENTIFIC SUBJECTS, NATURAL PHENOMENA, &c.</p>
<p class="center spaced"><small>BY</small><br/>
<big>RICHARD A. PROCTOR</big>,<br/>
<span class="xs">
AUTHOR OF ‘THE SUN’ ‘OTHER WORLDS THAN OURS’ ‘SATURN’ ETC.</span></p>
<div class="poetry-container xs"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">‘I bear you witness as ye bear to me,</div>
<div class="verse indent2">Time, day, night, sun, stars, life, death, air, sea, earth.’</div>
<div class="verse indent24"><cite>Swinburne.</cite></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class="center spaced"><i>NEW EDITION.</i></p>
<p class="center">LONDON:<br/>
LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.<br/>
1886.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[Pg v]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2 class="nobreak" id="PREFACE">PREFACE<br/> <small>TO</small><br/> <small>THE FIFTH EDITION.</small></h2></div>
<p>In preparing this edition, only those passages which
have been shown by recent researches to be erroneous
have been removed. It has not been thought necessary,
or even desirable, to modify the wording of Essays
(by changes of tense or otherwise) in such a way that,
as thus modified, the Essays might have appeared in
1884. In many cases this would have been altogether
misleading, whereas, with the dates prefixed to the
several Essays, no misconceptions can arise.</p>
<p class="psig">
<span class="smcap">Richard A. Proctor.</span><br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_vi">vi</span></p>
<h2 class="nobreak" id="PREFACE_TO_SECOND_EDITION"><i>PREFACE TO SECOND EDITION.</i></h2></div>
<p>This edition has been carefully revised, and, in parts,
considerably modified. Thus the Essay on Britain’s
Coal Cellars has been added, and two Essays on Government
Aid to Science have been removed. I may mention
that my views on the subject of the last-named
Essays have changed altogether since those Essays were
written—certain circumstances which have come under
my observation having convinced me that more mischief
than advantage would result from any wide scheme for
securing Government aid for scientific researches.</p>
<p class="psig">
<span class="smcap">Richard A. Proctor.</span><br/></p>
<blockquote>
<p><span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>January 1873</i>.</p>
</blockquote>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">vii</span></p>
<h2 class="nobreak" id="PREFACE_TO_FIRST_EDITION"><i>PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION.</i></h2></div>
<p>In preparing these Essays, my chief object has been
to present scientific truths in a light and readable
form—clearly and simply, but with an exact adherence
to the facts as I see them. I have followed—here and
always—the rule of trying to explain my meaning
precisely as I should wish others to explain, to myself,
matters with which I was unfamiliar. Hence
I have avoided that excessive simplicity which some
seem to consider absolutely essential in scientific essays
intended for general perusal, but which is often even
more perplexing than a too technical style. The chief
rule I have followed, in order to make my descriptions
clear, has been to endeavour to make each sentence
bear one meaning, and one only. Speaking as a
reader, and especially as a reader of scientific books, I
venture to express an earnest wish that this simple
rule were never infringed, even to meet the requirements
of style.</p>
<p>It will hardly be necessary to mention that several
of the shorter Essays are rather intended to amuse
than to instruct.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">viii</span></p>
<p>The Essay on the influence which marriage has
been supposed to exert on the death-rate is the one
referred to by Mr. Darwin at page 176 (vol. i.) of his
‘Descent of Man.’</p>
<p class="psig">
<span class="smcap">Richard A. Proctor.</span><br/></p>
<blockquote>
<p><span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>May</i> 1871.</p>
</blockquote>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">ix</span></p>
<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS.</h2></div>
<div class="center">
<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
<tr>
<td></td>
<td align="right"><small>PAGE</small></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Strange Discoveries respecting the Aurora</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_1">1</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Earth a Magnet</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_14">14</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Our Chief Time-piece losing Time</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_30">30</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Encke the Astronomer</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_46">46</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Venus on the Sun’s Face</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_49">49</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Britain’s Coal Cellars</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_72">72</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Secret of the North Pole</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_97">97</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Is the Gulf Stream a Myth?</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_114">114</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Floods in Switzerland</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_133">133</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">A Great Tidal Wave</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_138">138</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Deep-Sea Dredgings</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_142">142</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Tunnel through Mont Cenis</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_148">148</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Tornadoes</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_153">153</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Vesuvius</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_167">167</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Earthquake in Peru</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_189">189</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Greatest Sea-Wave ever known</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_194">194</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Usefulness of Earthquakes</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_211">211</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Forcing Power of Rain</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_225">225</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">A Shower of Snow-Crystals</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_230">230</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_x">x</span>
<span class="smcap">Long Shots</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_233">233</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Influence of Marriage on the Death-Rate</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_238">238</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Topographical Survey of India</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_244">244</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">A Ship attacked by a Sword-fish</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_256">256</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Safety-lamp</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_259">259</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Dust we have to Breathe</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_265">265</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Photographic Ghosts</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_267">267</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Oxford and Cambridge Rowing Styles</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_269">269</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Betting on Horse Races: or, the State of the Odds</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_274">274</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">Squaring the Circle</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_288">288</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left"><span class="smcap">A New Theory of Achilles’ Shield</span></td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#Page_297">297</SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table></div>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">1</span></p>
<p class="half-title">LIGHT SCIENCE
FOR LEISURE HOURS.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_h_rule_1.jpg" alt="――――――――――" /></div>
<h2 class="nobreak" id="STRANGE_DISCOVERIES_RESPECTING"><i>STRANGE DISCOVERIES RESPECTING THE AURORA.</i></h2></div>
<p>The brilliant streamers of coloured light which wave
at certain seasons over the heavens have long since
been recognised as among the most singular and impressive
of all the phenomena which the skies present
to our view. There is something surpassingly beautiful
in the appearance of the true ‘auroral curtain.’ Fringed
with coloured streamers, it waves to and fro as though
shaken by some unseen hand. Then from end to end
there pass a succession of undulations, the folds of
the curtain interwrapping and forming a series of
graceful curves. Suddenly, and as by magic, there
succeeds a perfect stillness, as though the unseen
power which had been displaying the varied beauties
of the auroral curtain were resting for a moment. But
even while the motion of the curtain is stilled we see
its light mysteriously waxing and waning. Then, as
we gaze, fresh waves of disturbance traverse the magic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">2</span>
canopy. Startling coruscations add splendour to the
scene, while the noble span of the auroral arch, from
which the waving curtain seems to depend, gives a
grandeur to the spectacle which no words can adequately
describe. Gradually, however, the celestial
fires which have illuminated the gorgeous arch seem
to die out. The luminous zone breaks up. The scene
of the display becomes covered with scattered streaks
and patches of ashen grey light, which hang like
clouds over the northern heavens. Then these in
turn disappear, and nothing remains of the brilliant
spectacle but a dark smoke-like segment on the
horizon.</p>
<p>Such is the aurora as seen in arctic or antarctic
regions, where the phenomenon appears in its fullest
beauty. Even in our own latitudes, however, strikingly
beautiful auroral displays may sometimes be
witnessed. Yet those who have seen the spectacle
presented near the true home of the aurora, recognise
in other auroras a want of the fulness and splendour of
colour which form the most striking features of the
arctic and antarctic auroral curtains.</p>
<p>Physicists long since recognised in the aurora a
phenomenon of more than local, of more even than
terrestrial, significance. They learned to associate it
with relations which affect the whole planetary scheme.
Let us inquire how this had come about.</p>
<p>So long as men merely studied the appearances presented
by the aurora, so long, in fact, as they merely
regarded the phenomenon as a local display, they could<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">3</span>
form no adequate conception of its importance. The
circumstance which first revealed something of the
true character of the aurora was one which seemed to
promise little.</p>
<p>Arago was engaged in watching from day to day,
and from year to year, the vibrations of the magnetic
needle in the Paris Observatory. He traced the slow
progress of the needle to its extreme westerly variation,
and watched its course as it began to retrace its way
towards the true north. He discovered the minute
vibration which the needle makes each day across its
mean position. He noticed that this vibration is
variable in extent, and so he was led to watch it more
closely. Thus he had occasion to observe more attentively
than had yet been done the sudden irregularities
which occasionally characterise the daily movements
of the needle.</p>
<p>All this seems to have nothing to do with the
auroral streamers; but we now reach the important
discovery which rewarded Arago’s patient watchfulness.</p>
<p>In January 1819 he published a statement to the
effect that the sudden changes of the magnetic needle
are often associated with the occurrence of an aurora.
I give the statement in his own words, as translated
by General Sabine:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">4</span>—‘Auroras ought to be placed in
the first rank among the causes which sometimes disturb
the regular march of the diurnal changes of the
magnetic needle. These do not, even in summer,
exceed a quarter of a degree, but when an aurora
appears, the magnetic needle is often seen to move
in a few instants over several degrees.’ ‘During an
aurora,‘ he adds, ‘one often sees in the northern
region of the heavens luminous streamers of different
colours shoot from all points of the horizon. The
point in the sky to which these streamers converge
is precisely the point to which a magnetised needle
suspended by its centre of gravity directs itself....
It has, moreover, been shown that the concentric
circular segments, almost similar in form to the rainbow,
which are usually seen previous to the appearance
of the luminous streamers, have their two extremities
resting on two parts of the horizon which are equally
distant from the direction towards which the needle
turns; and the summit of each arc lies exactly in that
direction. <em>From all this, it appears, incontestably, that
there is an intimate connection between the causes of
auroras and those of terrestrial magnetism.</em>’</p>
<p>This strange hypothesis was, at first, much opposed
by scientific men. Amongst others, the late Sir David
Brewster pointed out a variety of objections, some of
which appeared at first sight of great force. Thus,
he remarked that magnetic disturbances of the most
remarkable character have often been observed when
no aurora has been visible; and he noticed certain
peculiarities in the auroras observed near the polar
regions, which did not seem to accord with Arago’s
view.</p>
<p>But gradually it was found that physicists had mistaken
the character of the auroral display. It appeared<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">5</span>
that the magnetic needle not only swayed responsively
to auroras observable in the immediate neighbourhood,
but to auroras in progress hundreds or even thousands
of miles away. Nay, as inquiry progressed, it was
discovered that the needles in our northern observatories
are swayed by influences associated even with the
occurrence of auroras around the southern polar regions.</p>
<p>In fact, not only have the difficulties pointed out
(very properly, it need hardly be remarked) by Sir
David Brewster been wholly removed; but it has
been found that a much closer bond of sympathy
exists between the magnetised needle and the auroral
streamers than even Arago had supposed. It is not
merely the case that while an auroral display is in
progress the needle is subject to unusual disturbance,
but the movements of the needle are actually synchronous
with the waving movements of the mysterious
streamers. An aurora may be in progress in the north
of Europe, or even in Asia or America, and as the
coloured banners wave to and fro, the tiny needle,
watched by patient observers at Greenwich or Paris,
will respond to every phase of the display.</p>
<p>And I may notice in passing that two very interesting
conclusions follow from this peculiarity. First, every
magnetic needle over the whole earth must be simultaneously
disturbed; and secondly, the auroral streamers
which wave across the skies of one country must move
synchronously with those which are visible in the skies
of another country, even though thousands of miles
may separate the two regions.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">6</span></p>
<p>But I must pass on to consider further the circumstances
which give interest and significance to the
strange discovery which is the subject of this paper.</p>
<p>Could we only associate auroras with terrestrial magnetism,
we should still have done much to enhance the
interest which the beautiful phenomenon is calculated
to excite. But when once this association has been
established, others of even greater interest are brought
into recognition. For terrestrial magnetism has been
clearly shown to be influenced directly by the action
of the sun. The needle in its daily vibration follows
the sun, not indeed through a complete revolution, but
as far as the influence of other forces will permit.
This has been abundantly confirmed, and is a fact of
extreme importance in the theory of terrestrial magnetism.
Wherever the sun may be, either on the visible
heavens or on that half of the celestial sphere which
is at the moment beneath the horizon, the end of the
needle nearest to the sun makes an effort (so to speak)
to point more directly towards the great ruling centre
of the planetary scheme. Seeing, then, that the daily
vibration of the needle is thus caused, we recognise the
fact that the disturbances of the daily vibration may be
referred to some peculiarity of the solar action.</p>
<p>It was not, therefore, so surprising as many have
supposed, that the increase and diminution of these
disturbances, in a period of about eleven years, should
be found to correspond with the increase and diminution
of the number of solar spots in a period of equal
length.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">7</span></p>
<p>We already begin to see, then, that auroras are
associated in some mysterious way with the action of
the solar rays. The phenomenon which had been looked
on for so many ages as a mere spectacle, caused perhaps
by some process in the upper regions of the air, of a
simply local character, has been brought into the range
of planetary phenomena. As surely as the brilliant
planets which deck the nocturnal skies are illuminated
by the same orb which gives us our days and seasons,
so they are subject to the same mysterious influence
which causes the northern banners to wave resplendently
over the star-lit depths of heaven. Nay, it is
even probable that every flicker and coruscation of
our auroral displays corresponds with similar manifestations
upon every planet which travels round the sun.
It becomes, then, a question of exceeding interest to
inquire what is the nature of the mysterious apparition
which from time to time illuminates our skies.
We have learnt something of the laws according to
which the aurora appears; but what is its true nature?
What sort of light is that which illuminates the
heavens? Is there some process of combustion going
on in the upper regions of our atmosphere? Or are
the auroral streamers electric or phosphorescent? Or,
lastly, is the light simply solar light reflected from
some substance which exists at an enormous elevation
above the earth?</p>
<p>All these views have from time to time found supporters
among scientific men. It need hardly be said
that what we now know of the association between<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">8</span>
auroral action and some form of solar disturbance, would
at once enable us to reject some of these hypotheses.
But we need not discuss the subject from this point of
view, because a mode of research has recently been
rendered available which at once answers our inquiries
as to the general character of any kind of light. I
proceed to consider the application of this method to
the light from the auroral streamers.</p>
<p>The spectroscope, or, as we may term the instrument,
the ‘light-sifter,’ tells us of what nature an object
which is a source of light may be. If the object is a
luminous solid or liquid, the instrument converts its
light into a rainbow-coloured streak. If the object is
a luminous vapour, its light is converted into a few
bright lines. And lastly, if the object is a luminous solid
or liquid shining through any vapours, the rainbow-coloured
streak again makes its appearance, but it is
now crossed by dark lines, corresponding to the vapours
which surround the object and absorb a portion of its
light.</p>
<p>But I must not omit to notice two circumstances
which render the interpretation of a spectrum somewhat
less simple than it would otherwise be.</p>
<p>In the first place, if an object is shining by reflected
light its spectrum is precisely similar to that of the
object whose light illuminates it. Thus we cannot
pronounce positively as to the nature of an object
merely from the appearance of its spectrum, unless we
are quite certain that the object is self-luminous. For
example, we observe the solar spectrum to be a rain<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">9</span>bow-coloured
streak crossed by a multitude of dark
lines, and we conclude accordingly that the sun is an
incandescent globe shining through a complex vaporous
atmosphere. We feel no doubt on this point, because
we are absolutely certain that the sun is self-luminous.
Again, we observe the spectrum of the moon to be
exactly similar to the solar spectrum, only, of course,
much less brilliant. And here also we feel no doubt
in interpreting the result. We know, certainly, that
the moon is not self-luminous, and therefore we conclude
with the utmost certainty that the light we
receive from her is simply reflected solar light. So far
all is clear. But now take the case of an object like
a comet, which may or may not be self-luminous. If
we find that a comet’s spectrum resembles the sun’s—and
this is not altogether a hypothetical case, for a
portion of the light of every comet yet examined does
in reality give a rainbow-coloured streak resembling
the solar spectrum—we cannot form, in that case, any
such positive conclusion. The comet may be a self-luminous
body; but, on the other hand, its light may
be due merely to the reflection of the solar beams.
Accordingly, the spectroscopist always accompanies the
record of such an observation with an expression of
doubt as to the real nature of the object which is the
source of light.</p>
<p>Secondly, when an electric spark flashes through any
vapour, its light gives a spectrum which indicates the
nature, not only of the vapour through which the spark
has passed, but of the substances between which the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">10</span>
spark has travelled. Thus, if we cause an electric flash
to pass between iron points through common air, we
see in the spectrum the numerous bright lines which
form the spectrum of iron, and in addition we see the
bright lines belonging to the gases which form our
atmosphere.</p>
<p>Both the considerations above discussed are of the
utmost importance in studying the subject of the auroral
light as analysed by the spectroscope, because there are
many difficulties in forming a general opinion as to the
nature of the auroral light, while there are circumstances
which would lead us to anticipate that the light
is electric.</p>
<p>I notice also in passing that we owe to the Swedish
physicist Ångström a large share of the researches on
which the above results respecting the spectrum of the
electric spark are founded. The reader will presently
see why I have brought Ångström’s name prominently
forward in connection with the interesting branch of
spectroscopic analysis just referred to. If the discovery
we are approaching had been effected by a tyro in the
use of the spectroscope, doubts might very reasonably
have been entertained respecting the exactness of the
observations on which the discovery rests.</p>
<p>It was suggested many years ago, long indeed before
the true powers of spectroscopic analysis had been
revealed, that perhaps if the light of the aurora were
analysed by the prism, evidence could be obtained of
its electric nature. The eminent meteorologist Dové
remarked, for instance, that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">11</span> ‘the peculiarities presented
by the electric light are so marked that it appears easy
to decide definitely by prismatic analysis whether the
light of the aurora is or is not electric.’ Singularly
enough, however, the first proof that the auroral light
is of an electric nature was derived from a very different
mode of inquiry. Dr. Robinson, of Armagh, discovered
in 1858 (a year before Kirchhoff’s recognition of the
powers of spectroscopic analysis) that the light of the
aurora possesses in a peculiar degree a property termed
fluorescence, which is a recognised and characteristic
property of the light produced by electrical discharges.
‘These effects,’ he remarks of the appearances presented
by the auroral light under the tests he applied,
‘were so strong in relation to the actual intensity of the
light, that they appear to afford an additional evidence
of the electric origin of the phenomenon.’</p>
<p>Passing over this ingenious application of one of the
most singular and interesting properties of light, we find
that the earliest determination of the real nature of
the auroral light—or rather of its spectrum—was that
effected by Ångström. This observer took advantage
of the occurrence of a brilliant aurora in the winter
of 1867-68 to analyse the spectrum of the coloured
streamers. <em>A single bright line only was seen!</em> Otto
Struve, an eminent Russian astronomer, shortly afterwards
made confirmatory observations. At the meeting
of the Royal Astronomical Society in June, 1868,
Mr. Huggins thus described Struve’s results:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">12</span>—‘In a
letter, M. Otto Struve has informed me that he has
had two good opportunities of observing the spectrum
of the aurora borealis. The spectrum consists of one
line, and the light is therefore monochromatic. The
line falls near the margin of the yellow and green portions
of the spectrum.... This shows that the monochromatic
light is greenish, which surprised me; but
General Sabine tells me that in his polar expeditions he
has frequently seen the aurora tinged with green, and
this appearance corresponds with the position of the line
seen by M. Struve.’</p>
<p>The general import of this observation there is no
mistaking. It teaches us that the light of the aurora
is due to luminous vapour, and we may conclude, with
every appearance of probability, that the luminosity
of the vapour is due to the passage of electric discharges
through it. It is, however, possible that the
position of the bright line may be due to the character
of the particles between which the discharges take
place.</p>
<p>But the view we are to take must depend upon the
position of the line. Here a difficulty presents itself.
There is no known terrestrial element whose spectrum
has a bright line precisely in the position of the line
in the auroral spectrum. And mere proximity has no
significance whatever in spectroscopic analysis. Two
elements differing as much from each other in character
as iron and hydrogen may have lines so closely approximating
in position that only the most powerful
spectroscope can indicate the difference. So that when
Ångström remarks that the bright line he has seen lies
slightly to the left of a well-known group of lines be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">13</span>longing
to the metal calcium (the principal ingredient
of common chalk), we are by no means to infer that he
supposes the substance which causes the presence of
the bright line has any resemblance to that element.
Until we can find an element which has a bright line in
its spectrum absolutely coincident with the bright line
detected by Ångström in the spectrum of the aurora,<SPAN name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</SPAN>
all speculation as to the real nature of the vapour in
which the auroral electric discharge takes place, or of
the substances between which the spark travels, is
altogether precluded.</p>
<p>It was supposed after the total solar eclipse of 1869
that the spectrum of the sun’s corona exhibited the
same bright lines as the aurora. But recent observations
show that the coincidence is not so close as had
been supposed, and, in fact, there is no evidence to
show that the lines are the same.</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From <cite>Fraser’s Magazine</cite>, February 1870.)</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">14</span></p>
<h2 id="THE_EARTH_A_MAGNET"><i>THE EARTH A MAGNET.</i></h2>
<p>There is a very prevalent but erroneous opinion that
the magnetic needle points to the north. I remember
well how I discovered in my boyhood that the needle
does <em>not</em> point to the north, for the discovery was impressed
upon me in a very unpleasant manner. I
had purchased a pocket-compass, and was very anxious—not,
indeed, to test the instrument, since I placed
implicit reliance upon its indications—but to make use
of it as a guide across unknown regions. Not many
miles from where I lived lay Cobham Wood, no very
extensive forest certainly, but large enough to lose
oneself in. Thither, accordingly, I proceeded with
three schoolfellows. When we had lost ourselves, we
gleefully called the compass into action, and made from
the wood in a direction which we supposed would lead
us home. We travelled on with full confidence in our
pocket guide; at each turning we consulted it in an
artistic manner, carefully poising it and waiting till its
vibrations ceased. But when we had travelled some
two or three miles without seeing any house or road
that we recognised, matters assumed a less cheerful
aspect. We were unwilling to compromise our dignity
as ‘explorers’ by asking the way—a proceeding which
no precedent in the history of our favourite travellers
allowed us to think of. But evening came on, and with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">15</span>
it a summer thunder-storm. We were getting thoroughly
tired out, and the <i lang="la">hæc olim meminisse juvabit</i> with
which we had been comforting ourselves began to lose
its force. When at length we yielded, we learned that
we had gone many miles out of our road, and we did
not reach home till several hours after dark. Also the
offending compass was confiscated by justly indignant
parents, so that for a long while the cause of our
troubles was a mystery to us. In reality, instead of
pointing due north, the compass pointed more than 20°
towards the west, or nearly to the quarter called by
sailors north-north-west. No wonder, therefore, that
we went astray when we followed a guide so untrustworthy.</p>
<p>The peculiarity that the magnet needle does not, in
general, point to the north, is the first of a series of
peculiarities which I now propose briefly to describe.
The irregularity is called by sailors the needle’s <em>variation</em>,
but the term more commonly used by scientific
men is the <em>declination</em> of the needle. It was probably
discovered a long time ago, for 800 years before our
era the Chinese applied the magnet’s directive force
to guide them in journeying over the great Asiatic
plains, and they must soon have detected so marked a
peculiarity. Instead of a ship’s compass, they made
use of a magnetic car, on the front of which a floating
needle carried a small figure, whose outstretched arm
pointed southwards. We have no record, however, of
their discovery of the declination, and know only that
they were acquainted with it in the twelfth century.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">16</span>
The declination was discovered, independently, by
European observers in the thirteenth century.</p>
<p>As we travel from place to place, the declination of
the needle is found to vary. Christopher Columbus
was the first to detect this. He discovered it on the
13th of September, 1492, during his first voyage, and
when he was six hundred miles from Ferro, the most
westerly of the Canary Islands. He found that the
declination, which was towards the east in Europe,
passed to the west, and increased continually as he
travelled westwards.</p>
<p>But here we see the first trace of a yet more singular
peculiarity. I have said that at present the declination
is towards the west in Europe. In Columbus’s
time it was towards the east. Thus we learn that the
declination varies with the progress of time, as well as
with change of place.</p>
<p>The genius of modern science is a weighing and a
measuring one. Men are not satisfied nowadays with
knowing that a peculiarity exists; they seek to determine
its extent, how far it is variable—whether from
time to time or from place to place, and so on. Now
the results of such inquiries applied to the magnetic
declination have proved exceedingly interesting.</p>
<p>We find, first, that the world may be divided into
two unequal portions, over one of which the needle has
a westerly, and over the other an easterly, declination.
Along the boundary line, of course, the needle points
due north. England is situated in the region of
westerly magnets. This region includes all Europe,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">17</span>
except the north-eastern parts of Russia; Turkey,
Arabia, and the whole of Africa; the greater part of
the Indian Ocean, and the western parts of Australia;
nearly the whole of the Atlantic Ocean; Greenland,
the eastern parts of Canada, and a small slice from the
north-eastern part of Brazil. All these form one region
of westerly declination; but, singularly enough, there
lies in the very heart of the remaining and larger region
of easterly magnets an oval space of a contrary character.
This space includes the Japanese Islands, Manchouria,
and the eastern parts of China. It is very noteworthy
also, that in the westerly region the declination is much
greater than in the easterly. Over the whole of Asia,
for instance, the needle points almost due north. On
the contrary, in the north of Greenland and of Baffin’s
Bay, the magnetic needle points due west; while still
further to the north (a little westerly), we find the
needle pointing with its north end directly towards the
south.</p>
<p>In the presence of these peculiarities, it would be
pleasant to speculate. We might imagine the existence
of powerfully magnetic <em>veins</em> in the earth’s solid mass,
coercing the magnetic needle from a full obedience to
the true polar summons. Or the comparative effects
of oceans and of continents might be called into play.
But unfortunately for all this, we have to reconcile
views founded on <em>fixed</em> relations presented by the earth
with the process of <em>change</em> indicated above. Let us
consider the declination in England alone.</p>
<p>In the fifteenth century there was an easterly decli<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">18</span>nation.
This gradually diminished, so that in about
the year 1657 the needle pointed due north. After
this the needle pointed towards the west, and continually
more and more, so that scientific men, having
had experience only of a continual shifting of the
needle in one direction, began to form the opinion that
this change would continue, so that the needle would
pass, through north-west and west, to the south. In
fact, it was imagined that the motion of the needle
would resemble that of the hands of a watch, only in
a reversed direction. But before long observant men
detected a gradual diminution in the needle’s westerly
motion. Arago, the distinguished French astronomer
and physicist, was the first (I believe) to point out
that ‘the progressive movement of the magnetic needle
towards the west appeared to have become continually
slower of late years’ (he wrote in 1814), ‘which seemed
to indicate that after some little time longer it might
become retrograde.’ Three years later, namely, on the
10th of February, 1817, Arago asserted definitively
that the retrograde movement of the magnetic needle
had commenced to be perceptible. Colonel Beaufoy
at first oppugned Arago’s conclusion, for he found from
observations made in London, during the years 1817-1819,
that the westerly motion still continued. But
he had omitted to take notice of the circumstance,
that London and Paris are two different places. A
few years later the retrograde motion became perceptible
at London also, and it has now been established
by the observations of forty years. It appears, from a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">19</span>
careful comparison of Beaufoy’s observations, that the
needle reached the limit of its western digression (at
Greenwich) in March 1819, at which time the declination
was very nearly 25°. In Paris, on the contrary,
the needle had reached its greatest western digression
(about 22½°) in 1814. It is rather singular that
although at Paris the retrograde motion thus presented
itself five years earlier than in London, the needle
pointed due north at Paris six years later than in
London, viz., in 1663. Perhaps the greater amplitude
of the needle’s London digression may explain this
peculiarity.</p>
<p>‘It was already sufficiently difficult,’ says Arago,
‘to imagine what could be the kind of change in the
constitution of the globe which could act during one
hundred and fifty-three years in gradually transferring
the direction of the magnetic needle from due north to
23° west of north. We see that it is now necessary
to explain, moreover, how it has happened that this
gradual change has ceased, and has given place to a
return towards the preceding state of the globe.‘ ‘How
is it,’ he pertinently asks, ‘that the directive action of
the globe, which clearly must result from the action of
molecules of which the globe is composed, can be thus
variable, while the number, position, and temperature
of these molecules, and, as far as we know, all their
other physical properties, remain constant?’</p>
<p>But we have considered only a single region of the
earth’s surface. Arago’s opinion will seem still juster
when we examine the change which has taken place<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">20</span>
in what we may term the ‘magnetic aspect’ of the
whole globe. The line which separates the region of
westerly magnets from the region of easterly magnets
now runs, as we have said, across Canada and eastern
Brazil in one hemisphere, and across Russia, Asiatic
Turkey, the Indian Ocean, and West Australia in the
other, besides having an outlying oval to the east
of the Asiatic continent. These lines have swept
round a part of the globe’s circuit in a most singular
manner since 1600. They have varied alike in direction
and complexity. The Siberian oval, now distinct,
was in 1787 merely a loop of the eastern line of no
declination. The oval appears now to be continually
diminishing, and will one day probably disappear.</p>
<p>We find here presented to us a phenomenon as
mysterious, as astonishing, and as worthy of careful
study as any embraced in the wide domains of science.
But other peculiarities await our notice.</p>
<p>If a magnetic needle of suitable length be carefully
poised on a fine point,—or better, be suspended from a
silk thread without torsion,—it will be found to exhibit
each day two small but clearly perceptible oscillations.
M. Arago, from a careful series of observations, deduced
the following results:—</p>
<p>At about eleven at night, the north end of the needle
begins to move from west to east, and having reached
its greatest easterly excursion at about a quarter-past
eight in the morning, returns towards the west to attain
its greatest westerly excursion at a quarter-past one.
It then moves again to the east, and having reached its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">21</span>
greatest easterly excursion at half-past eight in the
evening, returns to the west, and attains its greatest
westerly excursion at eleven, as at starting.</p>
<p>Of course, these excursions take place on either side
of the mean position of the needle, and as the excursions
are small, never exceeding the fifth part of a degree,
while the mean position of the needle lies some 20° to
the west of north, it is clear that the excursions are
only nominally eastern and western, the needle pointing
throughout, far to the west.</p>
<p>Now, if we remember that the north end of the
needle is that farthest from the sun, it will be easy to
trace in M. Arago’s results a sort of effort on the part
of the needle to turn towards the sun—not merely
when that luminary is above the horizon, but during
his nocturnal path also.</p>
<p>We are prepared, therefore, to expect that a variation
having an annual period, shall appear, on a close
observation of our suspended needle. Such a variation
has been long since recognised. It is found that in the
summer of both hemispheres, the daily variation is
exaggerated, while in winter it is diminished.</p>
<p>But besides the divergence of a magnetised needle
from the north pole, there is a divergence from the
horizontal position which must now claim our attention.
If a non-magnetic needle be carefully suspended
so as to rest horizontally, and be then magnetised, it
will be found no longer to preserve that position. The
northern end <em>dips</em> very sensibly. This happens in our
hemisphere. In the southern, it is the southern end<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">22</span>
which dips. It is clear, therefore, that if we travel
from one hemisphere to the other we must find the
northern dip of the needle gradually diminishing, till at
some point near the equator the needle is horizontal;
and as we pass thence to southern regions, a gradually
increasing southern inclination is presented. This has
been found to be the case, and the position of the line
along which there is no inclination (called the <em>magnetic
equator</em>) has been traced around the globe. It is not
coincident with the earth’s equator, but crosses that
circle at an angle of twelve degrees, passing from north
to south of the equator in long. 3° west of Greenwich,
and from south to north in long. 187° east of Greenwich.
The form of the line is not exactly that of a
great circle, but presents here and there (and especially
where it crosses the Atlantic) perceptible excursions
from such a figure.</p>
<p>At two points on the earth’s globe the needle will
rest in a vertical position. These are the magnetic
poles of the earth. The northern magnetic pole was
reached by Sir J. G. Ross, and lies in 70° N. lat. and
263° E. long., that is, to the north of the American
continent, and not very far from Boothia Gulf. One
of the objects with which Ross set out on his celebrated
expedition to the Antarctic Seas was the discovery, if
possible, of the southern magnetic pole. In this he
was not successful. Twice he was in hopes of attaining
his object, but each time he was stopped by a barrier
of land. He approached so near, however, to the pole,
that the needle was inclined at an angle of nearly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">23</span>
ninety degrees to the horizon, and he was able to
assign to the southern pole a position in 75° S. lat.,
154° E. long. It is not probable, we should imagine,
that either pole is fixed, since we shall now see that the
inclination, like the declination of the magnetic needle,
is variable from time to time, as well as from place to
place; and in particular, the magnetic equator is apparently
subjected to a slow but uniform process of change.</p>
<p>Arago tells us that the inclination of the needle at
Paris has been observed to diminish year by year since
1671. At that time the inclination was no less than
75°; in other words, the needle was inclined only 15°
to the vertical. In 1791 the inclination was less than
71°. In 1831 it was less than 68°. In like manner,
the inclination at London has been observed to diminish,
from 72° in 1786 to 70° in 1804, and thence to 68° at
the present time.</p>
<p>It might be anticipated from such changes as these
that the magnetic equator would be found to be changing
in position. Nay, we can even guess in which
way it must be changing. For since the inclination is
diminishing at London and Paris, the magnetic equator
must be approaching these places, and this (in the
present position of the curve) can only happen by a
gradual shifting of the magnetic equator from east to
west along the true equator. This motion has been
found to be really taking place. It is supposed that
the movement is accompanied by a change of form,
but more observations are necessary to establish this
interesting point.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">24</span></p>
<p>Can it be doubted that while these changes are
taking place, the magnetic poles also are slowly shifting
round the true pole? Must not the northern pole, for
instance, be further from Paris now that the needle is
inclined more than 23° from the vertical, than in 1671,
when the inclination was only 15°? It appears obvious
that this must be so, and we deduce the interesting
conclusion that each of the magnetic poles is rotating
around the earth’s axis.</p>
<p>But there is another peculiarity of the needle which
is as noteworthy as any of those I have mentioned.
I refer to the intensity of the magnetic action—the
energy with which the needle seeks its position of rest.
This is not only variable from place to place, but from
time to time, and is further subject to sudden changes
of a very singular character.</p>
<p>It might be expected that where the dip is greater,
the directive energy of the magnet would be proportionately
great. And this is found to be approximately
the case. Accordingly, the magnetic equator is very
nearly coincident with the ‘equator of least intensity,’
but not exactly. As we approach the magnetic poles
we find a more considerable divergence, so that instead
of there being a northern pole of greatest intensity
nearly coincident with the northern magnetic pole,
which we have seen lies to the north of the American
continent, there are <em>two</em> northern poles, one in Siberia
nearly at the point where the river Lena crosses the
Arctic circle, the other not so far to the north—only
a few degrees north, in fact, of Lake Superior. In<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">25</span>
the south, in like manner, there are also two poles,
one on the Antarctic circle, about 130° E. long., in
Adélie Land, the other not yet precisely determined,
but supposed to lie on about the 240th degree of
longitude, and south of the Antarctic circle. Singularly
enough, there is a line of lower intensity running right
round the earth along the valleys of the two great
oceans, ‘passing through Behring’s Straits and bisecting
the Pacific, on one side of the globe, and passing out of
the Arctic Sea by Spitsbergen and down the Atlantic,
on the other.’</p>
<p>Colonel Sabine discovered that the intensity of the
magnetic action varies during the course of the year.
It is greatest in December and January <em>in both hemispheres</em>.
If the intensity had been greatest in winter,
one would have been disposed to have assigned seasonal
variation of temperature as the cause of the change.
But as the epoch is the same for both hemispheres, we
must seek another cause. Is there any astronomical
element which seems to correspond with the law discovered
by Sabine? There is one very important
element. The position of the perihelion of the earth’s
orbit is such that the earth is nearest to the sun on
about the 31st of December or the 1st of January.
There seems nothing rashly speculative, then, in concluding
that the sun exercises a magnetic influence on
the earth, varying according to the distance of the earth
from the sun. Nay, Sabine’s results seem to point very
distinctly to the law of variation. For, although the
number of observations is not as yet very great and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">26</span>
the extreme delicacy of the variation renders the determination
of its amount very difficult, enough has been
done to show that in all probability the sun’s influence
varies according to the same law as gravity—that is,
inversely as the square of the distance.</p>
<p>That the sun, the source of light and heat, and the
great gravitating centre of the solar system, should
exercise a magnetic influence upon the earth, and that
this influence should vary according to the same law as
gravity, or as the distribution of light and heat, will
not appear perhaps very surprising. But the discovery
by Sabine that <em>the moon</em> exercises a distinctly
traceable effect upon the magnetic needle seems to me
a very remarkable one. We receive very little light
from the moon, much less (in comparison with the
sun’s light) than most persons would suppose, and we
get absolutely no perceptible heat from her. Therefore
it would seem rather to the influence of mass and
proximity that the magnetic disturbances caused by the
moon must be ascribed. But if the moon exercises
an influence in this way, why should not the planets?
We shall see that there is evidence of some such influence
being exerted by these bodies.</p>
<p>More mysterious, if possible, than any of the facts
I have discussed is the phenomenon of <em>magnetic storms</em>.
The needle has been exhibiting for several weeks the
most perfect uniformity of oscillation. Day after day,
the careful microscopic observation of the needle’s
progress has revealed a steady swaying to and fro,
such as may be seen in the masts of a stately ship at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">27</span>
anchor on the scarce-heaving breast of ocean. Suddenly
a change is noted; irregular jerking movements are
perceptible, totally distinct from the regular periodic
oscillations. A magnetic storm is in progress. But
where is the centre of disturbance, and what are the
limits of the storm? The answer is remarkable. If
the jerking movements observed in places spread over
very large regions of the earth—and in some well-authenticated
cases over the whole earth—be compared
with the local time, it is found that (allowance being
made for difference of longitude) <em>they occur precisely
at the same instant</em>. The magnetic vibrations thrill in
one moment through the whole frame of our earth!</p>
<p>But a very singular circumstance is observed to
characterise these magnetic storms. They are nearly
always observed to be accompanied by the exhibition
of the aurora in high latitudes, northern and southern.
Probably they never happen without such a display,
but numbers of auroras escape our notice. The converse
proposition, however, <em>has</em> been established as an
universal one. No great display of the aurora ever
occurs without a strongly marked magnetic storm.</p>
<p>Magnetic storms sometimes last for several hours or
even days.</p>
<p>Remembering the influence which the sun has been
found to exercise upon the magnetic needle, the question
will naturally arise, Has the sun anything to do
with magnetic storms? We have clear evidence that
he has.</p>
<p>On the 1st of September, 1859, Messrs. Carrington<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">28</span>
and Hodgson were observing the sun, one at Oxford
and the other in London. Their scrutiny was directed
to certain large spots which, at that time, marked the
sun’s face. Suddenly a bright light was seen by each
observer to break out on the sun’s surface, and to
travel, slowly in appearance, but in reality at the rate
of about 7,000 miles in a minute, across a part of the
solar disc. Now it was found afterwards that the self-registering
magnetic instruments at Kew had made at
that very instant a strongly marked jerk. We learned,
also, that at that moment a magnetic storm prevailed
at the West Indies, in South America, and in Australia.
The signalmen in the telegraph stations at Washington
and Philadelphia received strong electric shocks; the
pen of Bain’s telegraph was followed by a flame of fire;
and in Norway the telegraphic machinery was set on
fire. At night great auroras were seen in both hemispheres.
It is impossible not to connect these startling
magnetic indications with the remarkable appearance
observed upon the sun’s disc.</p>
<p>But there is other evidence. Magnetic storms
prevail more commonly in some years than in others.
In those years in which they occur most frequently, it
is found that the ordinary oscillations of the magnetic
needle are more extensive than usual. Now when these
peculiarities had been noticed for many years, it was
found that there was an alternate and systematic
increase and diminution in the intensity of magnetic
action, and that the period of the variation was about
eleven years. But at the same time, a diligent observer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">29</span>
had been recording the appearance of the sun’s face
from day to day and from year to year. He had found
that the solar spots are in some years more freely displayed
than in others. And he had determined the
period in which the spots are successively presented
with maximum frequency to be about eleven years.
On a comparison of the two sets of observations, it was
found (and has now been placed beyond a doubt by
many years of continued observation) that magnetic
perturbations are most energetic when the sun is most
spotted, and <i lang="la">vice versâ</i>.</p>
<p>For so remarkable a phenomenon as this, none but
a cosmical cause can suffice. We can neither say
that the spots cause the magnetic storms nor that the
magnetic storms cause the spots. We must seek for
a cause producing at once both sets of phenomena.
There is as yet no certainty in this matter, but it
seems as if philosophers would soon be able to trace
in the disturbing action of the planets upon the solar
atmosphere the cause as well of the marked period of
eleven years as of other less distinctly marked periods
which a diligent observation of solar phenomena is
beginning to educe.</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From the <cite>Cornhill Magazine</cite>, June 1868.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">30</span></p>
<h2 id="OUR_CHIEF_TIME-PIECE_LOSING_TIME"><i>OUR CHIEF TIME-PIECE LOSING TIME.</i></h2>
<p>A distinguished French astronomer, author of one of
the most fascinating works on popular astronomy that
has hitherto appeared, remarks that a man would be
looked upon as a maniac who should speak of the
influence of Jupiter’s moons upon the cotton trade.
Yet, as he proceeds to show, there is an easily traced
connection between the ideas which appear at first sight
so incongruous. The link is found in the determination
of celestial longitude.</p>
<p>Similarly, we should be disposed to wonder at an
astronomer who, regarding thoughtfully the stately
motion of the sidereal system, as exhibited on a magnified,
and, therefore, appreciable scale by a powerful
telescope, should speak of the connection between this
movement and the intrinsic worth of a sovereign. The
natural thought with most men would be that ‘too
much learning’ had made the astronomer mad. Yet,
when we come to inquire closely into the question of
a sovereign’s intrinsic value, we find ourselves led to
the diurnal motion of the stars, and that by no very
intricate path. For, What is a sovereign? A coin
containing so many grains of gold mixed with so many
grains of alloy. A grain, we know, is the weight of
such and such a volume of a certain standard
substance—that is, so many cubic inches, or parts of a
cubic inch, of that substance. But what is an inch?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">31</span>
It is determined, we find, as a certain fraction of the
length of a pendulum vibrating seconds in the latitude
of London. A second, we know, is a certain portion of
a mean solar day, and is practically determined by a
reference to what is called a sidereal day—the interval,
namely, between the successive passages by the same
star of the celestial meridian of any fixed place. This
interval is assumed to be constant, and it has, indeed,
been described as the ‘one constant element’ known to
astronomers.</p>
<p>We find, then, that there is a connection, and a
very important connection, between the motion of
the stars and our measures, not merely of value, but
of weight, length, volume, and time. In fact, our
whole system of weights and measures is founded on
the apparent diurnal motion of the sidereal system,
that is, on the real diurnal rotation of the earth.
We may look on the meridian-plane in which the
great transit-telescope of the Greenwich Observatory
is made to swing, as the gigantic hand of a mighty
dial, a hand which, extending outwards among the
stars, traces out for us, by its motion among them,
the exact progress of time, and so gives us the means
of weighing, measuring, and valuing terrestrial objects
with an exactitude which is at present <em>beyond</em> our
wants.</p>
<p>The earth, then, is our ‘chief time-piece,’ and it is
of the correctness of this giant clock that I am now to
speak.</p>
<p>But how can we test a time-piece whose motions<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">32</span>
we select to regulate every other time-piece? If a
man sets his watch every morning by the clock at
Westminster, it is clearly impossible for him to test
the accuracy of that clock by the motions of his
watch. It would, indeed, be possible to detect any
gross change of rate; but for the purpose of illustration
I assume, what is indeed the case, that the
clock is very accurate, and therefore that minute
errors only are to be looked for even in long intervals
of time. And just as the watch set by a clock cannot
be made use of to test the clock for small errors, so
our best time-pieces cannot be employed to detect slow
variations, if any such exist, in the earth’s rotation-period.</p>
<p>Sir William Herschel, who early saw the importance
of the subject, suggested another method. Some of
the planets rotate in such a manner, and bear such
distinct marks upon their surface, that it is possible, by
a series of observations extending over a long interval
of time, to determine the length of their rotation-period
within a second or two. Supposing their rotation
uniform, we at once obtain an accurate measure of
time. Supposing their rotation <em>not</em> uniform, we obtain—(1)
a hint of the kind of change we are looking
for; and (2), by the comparison of two or more
planets, the means of guessing how the variation is to
be distributed between the observed planets and our
earth.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, it turned out that Jupiter, one of
the planets from which Herschel expected most, does<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">33</span>
<em>not</em> afford us exact information-his real surface being
always veiled by his dense and vapour-laden atmosphere.
Saturn, Venus, and Mercury are similarly
circumstanced, and are in other respects unfavourable
objects for this sort of observation. Mars only, of all
the planets, is really available. Distinctly marked (in
telescopes of sufficient power) with continents and
oceans, which are rarely concealed by vapours, this
planet is in other respects fortunately situated. For it
is certain that whatever variations may be taking place
in planetary rotations must be due to external agencies.
Now, Saturn and Jupiter have their satellites to influence
(perhaps appreciably in long intervals of time)
their rotation-movements. Venus and Mercury are
near the sun, and are therefore in this respect worse
off than the earth, whose rotation is in question. Mars,
on the other hand, farther removed than we are from
the sun, having also no moon, and being of small dimensions
(a very important point, be it observed, since the
tidal action of the sun depends on the dimensions of a
planet), is likely to have a rotation-period all but absolutely
constant.</p>
<p>Herschel was rather unfortunate in his observations
of Mars. Having obtained a rough approximation
from Mars’ rotation in an interval of two days—this
rough approximation being, as it chanced, only
thirty-seven seconds in excess of the true period, he
proceeded to take three intervals of one month each.
This should have given a much better value; but, as
it happened, the mean of the values he obtained was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">34</span>
forty-six seconds too great. He then took a period
of two years, and being misled by the erroneous
values he had already obtained, he <em>missed one rotation</em>,
getting a value two minutes too great. Thirty
years ago, two German astronomers, Beer and Madler,
tried the same problem, and taking a period of
seven years, obtained a value which exceeds the
true value by only one second. Another German,
Kaiser, by combining more observations, obtained a
value which is within one-fifteenth of a second of
the true value. But a comparison of observations
extending over 200 years has enabled me to obtain
a value which I consider to lie within one-hundredth
part of a second of the truth. This value
for Mars’ rotation-period is 24 hours 37 minutes 22·73
seconds.</p>
<p>Here, then, we have a result so accurate, that <em>at
some future time</em> it may serve to test the earth’s
rotation-period. We have compared the rotation-rate
of our test-planet with the earth’s rate during the past
200 years; and therefore, if the earth’s rate vary by
more than one-hundredth of a second in the next
two or three hundred years, we shall—or rather our
descendants will—begin to have some notion of the
change at the end of that time.</p>
<p>But in the meantime, mankind being impatient,
and not willing to leave to a distant posterity any question
which can possibly be answered <em>now</em>, astronomers
have looked around them for information available at
once on this interesting point. The search has not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span>
been in vain. In fact, we are able to announce, with
an approach to positiveness, that our great terrestrial
time-piece is actually <em>losing time</em>.</p>
<p>In our moon we have a neighbour which has long
been in the habit of answering truthfully questions
addressed to her by astronomers. Of old, she told
Newton about gravitation, and when he doubted,
and urged opposing evidence offered—as men in his
time supposed—by the earth, she set him on the
right track, so that when in due time the evidence
offered by the earth was corrected, Newton was prepared
at once to accept and propound the noble theory
which rendered his name illustrious. Again, men
wished to learn the true shape of the earth, and went
hither and thither measuring its globe; but the moon,
meanwhile, told the astronomer who remained at
home a truer tale. They sought to learn the earth’s
distance from the sun, and from this and that point
they turned their telescopes on Venus in transit; but
the moon set them nearer the truth, and that not by
a few miles, but by 2,000,000 miles or more. We
shall see that she has had something to say about our
great terrestrial time-piece.</p>
<p>One of the great charms of the science of astronomy
is, that it enables men to <em>predict</em>. At such and such
an hour, the astronomer is able to say, a celestial body
will occupy such and such a point on the celestial
sphere. You direct a telescope towards the point
named, and lo! at the given instant, the promised orb
sweeps across the field of view. Each year there is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">36</span>
issued a thick octavo volume crowded with such predictions,
three or four years in advance of the events
predicted; and these predictions are accepted with as
little doubt by astronomers as if they were the records
of past events.</p>
<p>But astronomers are not only able to predict—they
can also trace back the paths of the celestial bodies,
and say: ‘At such and such a long-past epoch, a given
star or planet occupied such and such a position upon
the celestial sphere.’ But how are they to verify such
a statement? It is clear that, in general, they cannot
do so. Those who are able to appreciate (or better,
to make use of) the predictions of astronomy, will,
indeed, very readily accord a full measure of confidence
to calculations of past events. They know
that astronomy is justly named the most exact of
the sciences, and they can see that there is nothing,
in the nature of things, to render retrospection more
difficult than prevision. But there are hundreds who
have no such experience of the exactness of modern
astronomical methods—who have, on the contrary, a
vague notion that modern astronomy is merely the
successor of systems now exploded; perhaps even that
it may one day have to make way in its turn for new
methods. And if all other men were willing to accept
the calculations of astronomers respecting long-past
events, astronomers themselves would be less easily
satisfied. Long experience has taught them that the
detection of error is the most fruitful source of knowledge;
therefore, wherever such a course is possible,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">37</span>
they always gladly submit their calculations to the test
of observation.</p>
<p>Now, looking backward into the far past, it is only
here and there that we see records which afford means
of comparison with modern calculations. The planets
had swept on in their courses for ages with none to
note them. Gradually, observant men began to notice
and record the more remarkable phenomena. But such
records, made with very insufficient instrumental means,
had in general but little actual value: it has been
found easy to confirm them without any special regard
to accuracy of calculation.</p>
<p>There is one class of phenomena, however, which
no inaccuracy of observation can very greatly affect. A
total eclipse of the sun is an occurrence so remarkable,
that (1) it can hardly take place without being recorded,
and (2) a very rough record will suffice to determine
the particular eclipse referred to. Long intervals elapse
between successive total eclipses visible at the same
place on the earth’s surface, and even partial eclipses
of noteworthy extent occur but seldom at any assigned
place. Very early, therefore, in the history of modern
astronomy, the suggestion was made, that eclipses
recorded by ancient historians should be calculated
retrospectively. An unexpected result rewarded the
undertaking. It was found that ancient eclipses could
not be fairly accounted for without assigning a slower
motion to the moon in long-past ages than she has
at present!</p>
<p>Here was a difficulty which long puzzled mathematicians.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">38</span>
One after another was foiled by it. Halley,
an English mathematician, had detected the difficulty,
but no English mathematician was able to grapple
with it. Contented with Newton’s fame, they had
suffered their Continental rivals to shoot far ahead
in the course he had pointed out. But the best Continental
mathematicians were defeated. In papers of
acknowledged merit, adorned by a variety of new processes,
and showing a deep insight into the question at
issue, they yet arrived, one and all, at the same conclusion—failure.</p>
<p>Ninety years elapsed before the true explanation
was offered by the great mathematician Laplace. A
full exposition of his views would be out of place in
such a paper as the present, but, briefly, they amount
to this:—</p>
<p>The moon travels in her orbit, swayed chiefly by the
earth’s attraction. But the sun, though greatly more
distant, yet, owing to the immensity of his mass, plays an
important part in guiding our satellite. His influence
tends to relieve the moon, in part, from the earth’s
sway. Thus she travels in a wider orbit, and with a
slower motion, than she would have but for the sun’s
influence. Now the earth is not at all times equally
distant from the sun, and his influence upon the moon
is accordingly variable. In winter, when the earth is
nearest to the sun, his influence is greatest. The
lunar month, accordingly (though the difference is
very slight), is longer in winter than in summer.
This variation had long been recognised as the moo<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">39</span>n’s
‘annual equation;’ but Laplace was the first to point
out that the variation is itself slowly varying. The
earth’s orbit is slowly changing in shape—becoming
more and more nearly circular year by year. As the
greater axis of her orbit is unchanging, it is clear that
the actual extent of the orbit is slowly increasing.
Thus, the moon is slightly released from the sun’s influence
year by year, and so brought more and more
under the earth’s influence. She travels, therefore,
continually faster and faster, though the change is
indeed but a very minute one;—only to be detected
in long intervals of time. Also the moon’s <em>acceleration</em>,
as the change is termed, is only temporary, and
will in due time be replaced by an equally gradual
retardation.</p>
<p>When Laplace had calculated the extent of the
change due to the cause he had detected, and when it
was found that ancient eclipses were now satisfactorily
accounted for, it may well be believed that there was
triumph in the mathematical camp. But this was not
all. Other mathematicians attacked the same problem,
and their results agreed so closely that all were convinced
that the difficulty was thoroughly vanquished.</p>
<p>A very noteworthy result followed from Laplace’s
calculations. Amongst other solutions which had been
suggested, was the supposition (supported by no less
an authority than Sir Isaac Newton, who lived to see
the commencement of the long conflict maintained by
mathematicians with this difficulty), that it is not the
moon travelling more quickly, but our earth rotating<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">40</span>
more slowly, which causes the observed discrepancy.
Now it resulted from Laplace’s labours—as he was the
first to announce—that the period of the earth’s rotation
has not varied by one-tenth of a second per century in
the last two thousand years.</p>
<p>The question thus satisfactorily settled, as was supposed,
was shelved for more than a quarter of a century.
The result, also, which seemed to flow from the discussion—the
constancy of the earth’s rotation-movement—was
accepted; and, as we have seen, our national system
of measures was founded upon the assumed constancy
of the day’s duration.</p>
<p>But mathematicians were premature in their rejoicings.
The question has been brought, by the labours
of Professor Adams—co-discoverer with Leverrier of
the distant Neptune—almost exactly to the point
which it occupied a century ago. We are face to
face with the very difficulties—somewhat modified in
extent, but not in character—which puzzled Halley,
Euler, and Lagrange. It would be an injustice to
the memory of Laplace to say that his labours were
thrown away. The explanation offered by him is
indeed a just one. But it is insufficient. Properly estimated
it removes only half the difficulty which had
perplexed mathematicians. It would be quite impossible
to present in brief space, and in form suited to
these pages, the views propounded by Adams. What,
for instance, would most of our readers learn if we
were to tell them that, ‘when the variability of the
eccentricity is taken into account, in integrating the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">41</span>
differential equations involved in the problem of the
lunar motions—that is, when the eccentricity is made
a function of the time—non-periodic or secular terms
appear in the expression for the moon’s mean motion’—and
so on? Let it suffice to say that Laplace had
considered only the work of the sun in diminishing
the earth’s <em>pull</em> on the moon, supposing that the slow
variation in the sun’s <em>direct</em> influence on the moon’s
motion in her orbit must be self-compensatory in long
intervals of time. Adams has shown, on the contrary,
that when this variation is closely examined, no such
compensation is found to take place; and that the effect
of this want of compensation is to diminish by more
than one-half the effects due to the slow variation
examined by Laplace.</p>
<p>These views gave rise at first to considerable
controversy. Pontécoulant characterised Adams’s processes
as ‘analytical conjuring-tricks,’ and Leverrier
stood up gallantly in defence of Laplace. The contest
swayed hither and thither for a while, but gradually
the press of new arrivals on Adams’s side began to
prevail. One by one his antagonists gave way; new
processes have confirmed his results, figure for figure;
and no doubt now exists, in the mind of any astronomer
competent to judge, of the correctness of Adams’s views.</p>
<p>But, side by side with this inquiry, another had
been in progress. A crowd of diligent labourers had
been searching with close and rigid scrutiny into the
circumstances attending ancient eclipses. A new light
had been thrown upon this subject by the labours of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">42</span>
modern travellers and historians. One remarkable
instance of this may be cited. Mr. Layard has identified
the site of Larissa with the modern Nimroud.
Now, Xenophon relates that when Larissa was besieged
by the Persians, an eclipse of the sun took place, so
remarkable in its effects (and therefore undoubtedly
total), that the Median defenders of the town threw
down their arms, and the city was accordingly captured.
And Hansen has shown that a certain estimate
of the moon’s motion makes the eclipse which occurred
on August 15, 310 <span class="smcap">B.C.</span>, not only <em>total</em>, but <em>central</em> at
Nimroud. Some other remarkable eclipses—as the
celebrated sunset eclipse (total) at Rome, 399 <span class="smcap">B.C.</span>;
the eclipse which enveloped the fleet of Agathocles as he
escaped from Syracuse; the famous eclipse of Thales,
which interrupted a battle between the Medes and
Lydians; and even the partial eclipse which (possibly)
caused the ‘going back of the shadow upon the dial of
Ahaz’—have all been accounted for satisfactorily by
Hansen’s estimate of the moon’s motion: so also have
nineteen lunar eclipses recorded in the Almagest.</p>
<p>This estimate of Hansen’s, which accounts so satisfactorily
for solar and lunar eclipses, makes the moon’s
rate of motion increase more than twice as fast as it
should do according to the calculations of Adams.
But before our readers run away with the notion that
astronomers have here gone quite astray, it will be
well to present, in a simple manner, the extreme
minuteness of the discrepancy about which all the coil
has been made.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">43</span></p>
<p>Suppose that, just in front of our moon, a false moon
exactly equal to ours in size and appearance (see <i>note</i>
at the end of this paper) were to set off with a motion
corresponding to the present motion of the moon, save
only in one respect—namely, that the false moon’s
motion should not be subject to the change we are
considering, termed <em>the acceleration</em>. Then one hundred
years would elapse before our moon would fairly begin
to show in advance. She would, in that time, have
brought only one one-hundred-and-fiftieth part of her
breadth from behind the false moon. At the end of
another century she would have gained four times as
much; at the end of a third, nine times as much: and
so on. She would not fairly have cleared her own
breadth in less than twelve hundred years. But the
<em>whole</em> of this gain, minute as it is, is not left unaccounted
for by our modern astronomical theories. <em>Half</em> the gain
is explained, the other half remains to be interpreted;
in other words, <em>the moon travels further by about half
her own breadth in twelve centuries than she should
do according to the lunar theory</em>.</p>
<p>But in this difficulty, small as it seems, we are not
left wholly without resource. We are not only able
to say that the discrepancy is probably due to a gradual
retardation of the earth’s rotation-movement, but we are
able to place our finger on a very sufficient cause for
such a retardation. One of the most firmly established
principles of modern science is this—that where <em>work
is done</em>, force is, in some way or other, expended. The
<em>doing of work</em> may show itself in a variety of ways<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">44</span>—
in the generation of heat, in the production of light,
in the raising of weights, and so on; but in every case
an equivalent force must be expended. If the brakes
are applied to a train in motion, intense heat is generated
in the substance of the brake. Now, the force
employed by the brakesman is <em>not</em> equivalent to the
heat generated. Where, then, is the balance of force
expended? We all know that the train’s motion is
retarded, and this loss of motion represents the requisite
expenditure of force. Now, is there any process in
nature resembling, in however remote a degree, the
application of a brake to check the earth’s rotation?
There is. The tidal wave, which sweeps, twice a day,
round the earth, travels in a direction contrary to the
earth’s motion of rotation. That this wave ‘does work,’
no one can doubt who has watched its effects. The
mere rise and fall in open ocean may not be strikingly
indicative of ‘work done;’ but when we see the
behaviour of the tidal wave in narrow channels, when
we see heavily-laden ships swept steadily up our tidal
rivers, we cannot but recognise the expenditure of force.
Now, where does this force come from? Motion being
the great ‘force-measurer,’ what motion <em>suffers</em> that the
tides may <em>work</em>? We may securely reply, that the
only motion which <em>can</em> supply the requisite force is the
earth’s motion of rotation. Therefore, it is no mere
fancy, but a matter of absolute certainty, that, though
slowly, still very surely, our terrestrial globe is losing
its rotation-movement.</p>
<p>Considered as a time-piece, what are the eart<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">45</span>h’s
errors? Suppose, for a moment, that the earth was
<em>timed</em> and <em>rated</em> two thousand years ago, how much
has she <em>lost</em>, and what is her ‘rate-error?’ She has
lost in that interval nearly one hour and a quarter, and
she is losing now at the rate of one second in twelve
weeks. In other words, the length of a day is now
more by about one eighty-fourth part of a second than
it was two thousand years ago. At this rate of change,
our day would merge into a lunar month in the course
of thirty-six thousand millions of years. But after a
while, the change will take place more slowly, and some
trillion or so of years will elapse before the full change
is effected.</p>
<p>Distant, however, as is the epoch at which the
changes we have been considering will become effective,
the subject appears to us to have an interest apart
from the mere speculative consideration of the future
physical condition of our globe. Instead of the recurrence
of ever-varying, closely intermingled cycles of
fluctuation, we see, now for the first time, the evidence
of cosmical decay—a decay which, in its slow progress,
may be but the preparation for renewed genesis—but
still, a decay which, so far as the races at present subsisting
upon the earth are concerned, must be looked
upon as finally and completely destructive.<SPAN name="FNanchor_2_2" href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">2</SPAN></p>
<p class="psigs">
(From <cite>Chambers’s Journal</cite>, October 12, 1867.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">46</span></p>
<h2 id="ENCKE_THE_ASTRONOMER"><i>ENCKE THE ASTRONOMER.</i></h2>
<p>The years which have passed since Encke died have
witnessed notable changes in the aspect of the science
he loved so well. But we must look back over more
than half a century, if we would form an estimate of
the position of astronomy when Encke’s most notable
work was achieved. At Seeberge, under Lindenau,
Encke had been perfecting himself in the higher<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">47</span>
branches of mathematical calculation. He took the
difficult work of determining the orbital motions of
newly-discovered comets under his special charge, and
Dr. Bruhns tells us that every comet which was detected
during Encke’s stay at Seeberge was subjected to rigid
scrutiny by the indefatigable mathematician. Before
long a discovery of the utmost importance rewarded his
persevering labours. Pons had detected on November
26, 1818, a comet of no very brilliant aspect, which
was watched first at Marseilles, and then at Mannheim,
until December 29. Encke next took up the work,
and tracked the comet until January 12. Combining
the observations made between December 22 and
January 12, he assigned to the body a parabolic orbit.
But he was not satisfied with the accordance between
this path and the observed motions of the body. When
he attempted to account for the motions of the comet
by means of an orbit of comparatively short period, he
was struck by the resemblance between the path thus
deduced and that of Comet I, 1805. Gradually the
idea dawned upon him that a new era was opening for
science. Hitherto the only periodical comets which had
been discovered except Lexell’s—the ‘lost comet’—had
travelled in orbits extending far out into space
beyond the paths of the most distant known planets.
But now Encke saw reason to believe that he had
to deal with a comet travelling within the orbit of
Jupiter. On February 5, he wrote to the eminent
mathematician Gauss, pointing out the results of his
inquiries, and saying that he only waited for the en<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">48</span>couragement
and authority of his former teacher to
prosecute his researches to the end towards which they
already seemed to point. Gauss, in reply, not only
encouraged Encke to proceed, but counselled him as
to the course he should pursue. The result we all
know. Encke showed conclusively that the newly-discovered
comet travels in a path of short period, and
that it had already made its appearance several times
in our neighbourhood.</p>
<p>From the date of this discovery, Encke took high
rank among the astronomers of Europe. His subsequent
labours by no means fell short of the promise
which this, his first notable achievement, had afforded.
If he effected less as an astronomical observer than
many of his contemporaries, he was surpassed by few
as a manipulator of those abstruse formulæ by which
the planetary perturbations are calculated. It was to
the confidence engendered by this skill that we owe his
celebrated discovery of the acceleration of the motion
of the comet mentioned above. Assured that he had
rightly estimated the disturbances to which the comet
is subjected, he was able to pronounce confidently that
some cause continually (though all but imperceptibly)
impedes the passage of this body through space, and so—by
one of those strange relations which the student
of astronomy is familiar with—the continually retarded
comet travels ever more swiftly along a continually
diminishing orbit.</p>
<p>Bruhns’ Life of Encke is well worth reading, not
only by those who are interested in Encke’s fame and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">49</span>
work as an astronomer, but by the general reader. Encke
the man is presented to our view, as well as Encke the
astronomer. With loving pains the pupil of the great
astronomer handles the theme he has selected. The
boyhood of Encke, his studies, his soldier life in the
great uprising against Napoleon in 1813, and his work
at the Seeberge Observatory; his labours on comets
and asteroids; his investigations of the transits of 1761
and 1769; his life as an academician, and as director of
an important observatory; his orations at festival and
funeral; and lastly, his illness and death, are described
in these pages by one who held Encke in grateful
remembrance as ‘teacher and master,’ and as a
‘fatherly friend.’</p>
<p>Not the least interesting feature of the work is the
correspondence introduced into its pages. We find
Encke in communication with Humboldt, with Bessel
and Struve, with Hansen, Olbers, and Argelander;
with a host, in fine, of living as well as of departed
men of science.</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From <cite>Nature</cite>, March 10, 1870.)</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 id="VENUS_ON_THE_SUNS_FACE"><i>VENUS ON THE SUN’S FACE.</i></h2>
<p>More than a century ago scientific men were looking
forward with eager interest to the passage of the
planet Venus across the sun’s face in 1769. The
Royal Society judged the approaching event to be of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">50</span>
such extreme importance to the science of astronomy
that they presented a memorial to King George III.,
requesting that a vessel might be fitted out, at Government
expense, to convey skilful observers to one of the
stations which had been judged suitable for observing
the phenomenon. The petition was complied with, and
after some difficulty as to the choice of a leader, the
good ship ‘Endeavour,’ of 370 tons, was placed under
the command of Captain Cook. The astronomical work
entrusted to the expedition was completely successful;
and thus it was held that England had satisfactorily
discharged her part of the work of utilising the rare
phenomenon known as a transit of Venus.</p>
<p>A century passed, and science was again awaiting
with interest the approach of one of these transits. But
now her demands were enlarged. It was not one ship that
was asked for, but the full cost and charge of several
expeditions. And this time, also, science had been
more careful in taking time by the forelock. The first
hints of her requirements were heard some fourteen
years ago, when the Astronomer-Royal began that process
of laborious inquiry which a question of this sort
necessarily demands. Gradually, her hints became
more and more plain-spoken; insomuch that Airy—her
mouthpiece in this case—stated definitely in 1868
what he thought science had a right to claim from
England in this matter. When the claim came before
our Government, it was met with a liberality which was
a pleasing surprise after some former placid references
of scientific people to their own devices. The sum<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">51</span>
of ten thousand five hundred pounds was granted to
meet the cost of several important and well-appointed
expeditions; and further material aid was derived from
the various Government observatories.</p>
<p>And now let us inquire why so much interest is
attached to a phenomenon which appears, at first sight,
to be so insignificant. Transits, eclipses, and other
phenomena of that nature are continually occurring,
without any particular interest being attached to them.
The telescopist may see half-a-dozen such phenomena
in the course of a night or two, by simply watching
the satellites of Jupiter, or the passage of our moon
over the stars. Even the great eclipse of 1868 did
not attract so much interest as the transit of Venus;
yet that eclipse had not been equalled in importance
by any which has occurred in historic times, and
hundreds of years must pass before such another
happens, whereas transits of Venus are far from being
so uncommon.</p>
<p>The fact is, that Venus gives us the best means we
have of mastering a problem which is one of the most
important within the whole range of the science of
astronomy. I use the term important, of course, with
reference to the scientific significance and interest
of the problem. Practically, it matters little to us
whether the sun is a million of miles or a thousand
millions of miles from us. The subject must in any
case be looked upon as an extra-parochial one. But
science does occasionally attach immense interest to
extra-parochial subjects. And this is neither unwise<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">52</span>
nor unreasonable, since we find implanted in our very
nature—and not merely in the nature of scientific
men—a quality which causes us to take interest in a
variety of matters that do not in the least concern our
personal interests. Nor is this quality, rightly considered,
one of the least noble characteristics of the
human race.</p>
<p>That the determination of the sun’s distance is important,
in an astronomical sense, will be seen at once
when it is remembered that the ideas we form of the
dimensions of the solar system are wholly dependent on
our estimate of the sun’s distance. Nor can we gauge
the celestial depths with any feeling of assurance, unless
we know the true length of that which is our sole
measuring-rod. It is, in fact, our basis of measurement
for the whole visible universe. In some respects, even
if we knew the sun’s distance exactly, it would still be
an unsatisfactory gauge for the stellar depths. But that
is the misfortune, not the fault, of the astronomer, who
must be content to use the measuring-rod which nature
gives him. All he can do is to find out as nearly as
possible its true length.</p>
<p>When we come to consider how the astronomer is
to determine this very element—the sun’s distance—we
find that he is hampered with a difficulty of precisely
the same character.</p>
<p>The sun being an inaccessible object, the astronomer
can apply no other methods to determine its distance—directly—than
those which a surveyor would use
in determining the distance of an inaccessible castle, or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">53</span>
rock, or tree, or the like. We shall see presently that
the ingenuity of astronomers has, in fact, suggested
some other indirect methods. But clearly the most
satisfactory estimate we can have of the sun’s distance
is one founded on such simple notions and involving in
the main such processes of calculation as we have to
deal with in ordinary surveying.</p>
<p>There is, in this respect, no mystery about the
solution of the famous problem. Unfortunately, there
is enormous difficulty.</p>
<p>When a surveyor has to determine the distance of an
inaccessible object, he proceeds in the following manner.
He first very carefully measures a base-line of convenient
length. Then from either end of the base-line
he takes the bearing of the inaccessible object—that is,
he observes the direction in which it lies. It is clear
that, if he were now to draw a figure on paper, laying
down the base-line to some convenient scale, and drawing
lines from its ends in directions corresponding to
the bearings of the observed object, these lines would
indicate, by their intersection, the true relative position
of the object. In practice, the mathematician does not
trust to so rough a method as construction, but applies
processes of calculation.</p>
<p>Now, it is clear that in this plan everything depends
on the base-line. It must not be too short in comparison
with the distance of the inaccessible object; for then, if
we make the least error in observing the bearings of the
object, we get an important error in the resulting determination
of the distances. The reader can easily<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span>
convince himself of this by drawing an illustrative case
or two on paper.</p>
<p>The astronomer has to take his base-line for determining
the sun’s distance, upon our earth, which is
quite a tiny speck in comparison with the vast distance
which separates us from the sun. It had been found
difficult enough to determine the moon’s distance with
such a short base-line to work from. But the moon is
only about a quarter of a million of miles from us, while
the sun is more than ninety millions of miles off. Thus
the problem was made several hundred times more
difficult—or, to speak more correctly, it was rendered
simply insoluble unless the astronomer could devise
some mode of observing which should vastly enhance
the power of his instruments.</p>
<p>For let us consider an illustrative case. Suppose
there was a steeple five miles off, and we had a base-line
only two feet long. That would correspond as
nearly as possible to the case the astronomer has to deal
with. Now, what change of direction could be observed
in the steeple by merely shifting the eye along a line of
two feet? There is a ready way of answering. Invert
the matter. Consider what a line of two feet long
would look like if viewed from a distance of five miles.
Would its length be appreciable, to say nothing of its
being measurable? Yet it is just such a problem as the
measurement of that line which the astronomer would
have to solve.</p>
<p>But even this is not all. In our illustration only
one observer is concerned, and he would be able to use<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">55</span>
one set of instruments. Suppose, however, that from
one end of the two-feet line an observer using one set
of instruments took the bearings of the steeple; and
that, half a year after, another observer brought another
set of instruments and took the bearing of the steeple
from the other end of the two-feet line, is it not obvious
how enormously the uncertainty of the result would
be increased by such an arrangement as this? One
observer would have his own peculiar powers of observation,
his own peculiar weaknesses: the other would
have different peculiarities. One set of instruments
would be characterised by its own faults or merits, so
would the other. One series of observations would be
made in summer, with all the disturbing effects due to
heat; the other would be made in winter, with all the
disturbing effects due to cold.</p>
<p>The observation of the sun is characterised by all
these difficulties. Limited to the base-lines he can
measure on earth, the astronomer must set one observer
in one hemisphere, another in the other. Each observer
must have his own set of instruments; and every observation
which one has made in summer will have to be
compared with an observation which the other has made
in winter.</p>
<p>Thus we can understand that astronomers should
have failed totally when they attempted to determine
the sun’s distance without aid from the other celestial
bodies.</p>
<p>It may seem at first sight as though nothing the
other celestial bodies could tell the astronomer would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">56</span>
be of the least use to him, since these bodies are for the
most part farther off than the sun, and even those which,
approach nearest to us are still far beyond the limits of
distance within which the simple plan followed by surveyors
could be of any service. And besides, it might
be supposed that information about the distance of one
celestial body could be of no particular service towards
the determination of the distance of another.</p>
<p>But two things aid the astronomer at this point.
First of all, he has discovered the law which associates
together the distances of all the planets from the sun;
so that if he can determine the distance of any one
planet, he learns immediately the distances of all. Secondly,
the planets in their motion travel occasionally
into such positions that they become mighty indices,
tracing out on a natural dial-plate the significant lesson
from which the astronomer hopes to learn so much. To
take an instance from the motions of another planet
than the one we are dealing with. Mars comes sometimes
so near the earth that the distance separating us
from him is little more than one-third of that which
separates us from the sun. Suppose that, at such a
time, he is seen quite close to a fixed star. That star
gives the astronomer powerful aid in determining the
planet’s distance. For, to observers in some parts of
the earth, the planet will seem nearer to the star than
he will to observers elsewhere. A careful comparison
of the effects thus exhibited will give significant evidence
respecting the distance of Mars. And we see
that the star has served as a fixed mark upon the vast<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">57</span>
natural dial of the heavens, just as the division-marks
on a clock-face serve to indicate the position of the
hands.</p>
<p>Now we can at once see why Venus holds so important
a position in this sort of inquiry. Venus is
our nearest neighbour among the planets. She comes
several millions of miles nearer to us than Mars, our
next neighbour on the other side. That is the primary
reason of her being so much considered by astronomers.
But there is another of equal importance. Venus
travels nearer than our earth to the sun. And thus
there are occasions when she gets directly between the
earth and the sun. At those times she is seen upon
his face, and his face serves as a dial-plate by which to
measure her movements. When an observer at one
part of the earth sees her on one part of the sun’s face,
another observer at some other part of the earth will
see her on another, and the difference of position, if
accurately measured, would at once indicate the sun’s
distance. As a matter of fact, other modes of reading
off the indications of the great dial-plate have to be
adopted. Before proceeding to consider those modes,
however, we must deal with one or two facts about
Venus’s movements which largely affect the question
at issue.</p>
<p>Let us first see what we gain by considering the
distance of Venus rather than that of the sun.</p>
<p>At the time of a transit Venus is of course on a line
between the earth and the sun, and she is at somewhat
less than a third of the sun’s distance from us. Thus<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">58</span>
whatever effect an observer’s change of place would
produce upon the sun would be more than trebled in
the case of Venus. But it must not be forgotten that
we are to judge the motions of Venus by means of the
dial-plate formed by the solar disc, and that dial-plate
is itself shifted as the observer shifts his place. Venus
is shifted three times as much, it is true; but it is only
the balance of change that our astronomer can recognise.
That balance is, of course, rather more than twice
as great as the sun’s change of place.</p>
<p>So far, then, we have not gained much, since it has
been already mentioned that the sun’s change of place
is not measurable by any process of observation astronomers
can apply.</p>
<p>It is to the fact that we have the sun’s disc, whereby
to measure the change, that we chiefly trust; and
even that would be insufficient were it not for the fact
that Venus is not at rest, but travels athwart the great
solar dial-plate. We are thus enabled to make a time
measurement take the place of a measurement of space.
If an observer in one place sees Venus cross the sun’s
face at a certain distance from the centre, while an
observer at another place sees her follow a path slightly
farther from the centre, the transit clearly seems
longer to the former observer than to the latter.</p>
<p>This artifice of exchanging a measurement of time
for one of space—or <i lang="la">vice versâ</i>—is a very common one
among astronomers. It was Edmund Halley, the friend
and pupil of Sir Isaac Newton, who suggested its application
in the way above described. It will be noticed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">59</span>
that what is required for the successful application of
the method is that one set of observers should be as far
to the north as possible, another as far to the south,
so that the path of Venus may be shifted as much as
possible. Clearly the northern observers will see her
path shifted as much to the south as it can possibly be,
while the southern observers will see the path shifted as
far as possible towards the north.</p>
<p>One thing, however, is to be remembered. A transit
lasts several hours, and our observers must be so
placed that the sun will not set during these hours.
This consideration sometimes involves a difficulty.
For our earth does not supply observing room all
over her surface, and the region where observation
would be most serviceable may be covered by a widely-extended
ocean. Then again, the observing parties
are being rapidly swayed round by the rotating earth
and it is often difficult to fix on a spot which may not,
through this cause, be shifted from a favourable position
at the beginning of the transit to an unfavourable one
at the end.</p>
<p>Without entering on all the points of difficulty involved
by such considerations as these, I may simply
indicate the fact that the astronomer has a problem of
considerable complexity to solve in applying Halley’s
method of observation to a transit of Venus.</p>
<p>It was long since pointed out by the French astronomer
Delisle that the subject may be attacked another
way—that, in fact, instead of noticing how much longer
the transit lasts in some places than in others, the astro<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">60</span>nomer
may inquire how much earlier it begins or ends
in some places than in others.</p>
<p>Here is another artifice, extremely simple in principle,
though not altogether so simple in its application.
My readers must bear with me while I briefly describe
the qualities of this second method, because
in reality the whole question of the transit, and all the
points which have to be attended to in the equipment
and placing of the various observing parties, depend
on these preliminary matters. Without attending to
them—or at least to such primary points as I shall
select—it would be impossible to form a clear conception
of the circumstances with which astronomers
have to deal. There is, however, no real difficulty
about this part of the subject, and I shall only ask
of the reader to give his attention to it for a very brief
space of time.</p>
<p>Suppose the whole of that hemisphere of the earth
on which the sun is shining when the transit is about
to begin were covered with observers waiting for the
event. As Venus sweeps rapidly onwards to the
critical part of her path, it is clear that some of these
observers will get an earlier view of the commencement
of the transit than others will; just as at a boat-race,
persons variously placed round a projecting corner of
the course see the leading boat come into view at
different times. Some one observer on the outer rim
of the hemisphere would be absolutely the first to see
the transit begin. Then rapidly other observers would
see the phenomenon; and in the course of a few minutes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span>
some one observer on the outer rim of the hemisphere—almost
exactly opposite the first—would be absolutely
the last to see the transit begin. From that time the
transit would be seen by all for several hours—I
neglect the earth’s rotation, for the moment—but the
end of the transit, like the beginning, would not be seen
simultaneously by the observers. First one would see
it, then in succession the rest, and last of all an observer
almost exactly opposite the first.</p>
<p>Now, here we have had to consider four observers
who occupy exceptional positions. There is (1) the
observer who sees the transit begin earliest, (2) the one
who sees it begin latest, (3) the one who sees it end
earliest, and (4) the one who sees it end latest. Let
us consider the first two only. Suppose these two
observers afterwards compared notes, and found out
what was the exact difference of time between their
respective observations. Is it not clear that the result
would at once afford the means of determining the
sun’s distance? It would be the simplest of all possible
astronomical problems to determine over what proportion
of her orbit Venus passed in the interval of
time which elapsed between these observations; and
the observers would now have learned that that portion
of Venus’s orbit is so many miles long, for they know
what distance separated them, and it would be easy to
calculate how much less that portion of Venus’s orbit is.
Thus they would learn what the length of her whole
orbit is, thence her distance from the sun, and thence
the sun’s distance from us.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">62</span></p>
<p>The two observers who saw the transit end earliest
and latest could do the like.</p>
<p>Speaking generally, and neglecting all the complexities
which delight the soul of the astronomer, this
is Delisle’s method of utilising a transit. It has obviously
one serious disadvantage as compared with the
other. An observer at one side of the earth has to
bring his observations into comparison with those made
by an observer at the other side of the earth. Each
uses the local time of the place at which he observes,
and it has been calculated that for the result to be of
value there must not be an error of a single second in
their estimates of local time. Now, does the reader
appreciate the full force of this proviso? Each observer
must know so certainly in what exact longitude he is,
that his estimate of the time when true noon occurs
shall not be one second wrong! This is all satisfactory
enough in places where there are regular observatories.
But matters are changed when we are dealing with such
places as Woahoo, Kerguelen Land, Chatham Island,
and the wilds of Siberia.</p>
<p>In the transit<SPAN name="FNanchor_3_3" href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">3</SPAN> of 1874 there are many such
difficulties to be encountered. In fact, it is almost impossible
to conceive a transit the circumstances of which
are more inconvenient. On the other hand, however,
the transit is of such a nature that if once the pre<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">63</span>liminary
difficulties are overcome, we can hope more
from its indications than from those of any other
transit which will happen in the course of the next few
centuries.</p>
<p>The transit will begin earliest for observers in the
neighbourhood of the Sandwich Islands, latest for
observers near Crozet Island, far to the south-east of
the Cape of Good Hope. It ends earliest for observers
far to the south-west of Cape Horn, latest for
observers in the north-eastern part of European Russia.
Thus we see that, so far as the application of our
second method is concerned, the suitable spots are not
situated in the most inviting regions of the earth’s
surface. As the transit happens on December 8, 1874,
the principal northern stations will be very bleak
abodes for the observers. The southern stations are
in yet more dreary regions,—notwithstanding the fact
that the transit occurs during the summer of the
southern hemisphere.</p>
<p>For the application of Halley’s method we require
stations where the whole transit will be visible; and as
the days are very short at the northern stations in
December, it is as respects these that we encounter
most difficulty. However, it has been found that
many places in Northern China, Japan, Eastern Siberia,
and Manchouria are suitable for the purpose. The
best southern stations for this method lie unfortunately
on the unexplored Antarctic continent and the islands
adjacent to it; but Crozet Island, Kerguelen Land, and
some other places more easy of access than the Antarctic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">64</span>
continent, will serve very well. Indeed, England has
so many stations to occupy elsewhere that it is doubtful
whether she will care to undertake the dangerous and
difficult task of exploring the Antarctic wastes to secure
the best southern stations. The work may fairly be
left to other nations, and doubtless will be efficiently
carried out.</p>
<p>What England will actually undertake has not yet
been fully decided upon. We may be quite certain
that she will send out a party to Woahoo or Hawaii to
observe the accelerated commencement of the transit.
She will also send observers to watch the retarded
commencement, but whether to Crozet Island, Kerguelen
Land, Mauritius, or Rodriguez is uncertain.
Possibly two parties will be sent out for this purpose,
and most likely Rodriguez and Mauritius will be the
places selected. It had been thought until lately that
the sun would be too low at some of the places when
the transit begins, but a more exact calculation of the
circumstances of the transit has shown this to be a
mistake. Both Crozet Island and Kerguelen Land are
very likely to be enveloped in heavy mists when the
transit begins—that is, soon after sunrise—hence the
choice of Mauritius and Rodriguez as the most suitable
station.</p>
<p>England will also be called on to take an important
part in observing the accelerated end of the transit.
A party will probably be sent to Chatham Island or
Campbell Island, not far from New Zealand. It had
been thought that at the former island the sun would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">65</span>
be too low; but here, again, a more exact consideration
of the circumstances of the transit has led astronomers
to the conclusion that the sun will be quite high enough
at this station.</p>
<p>The Russian observers are principally concerned with
the observation of the retarded end of the transit, nearly
all the best stations lying in Siberia. But there are
several stations in British India where this phase can
be very usefully observed; and doubtless the skilful
astronomers and mathematicians who are taking part
in the survey of India will be invited—as at the time
of the great eclipse—to give their services in the cause
of science. Alexandria, also, though inferior to several
of the Indian stations, will probably be visited by an
observing party from England.</p>
<p>It will be seen that England will thus be called
on to supply about half-a-dozen expeditions to view the
transit. All of these will be sent out in pursuance of
Delisle’s mode of utilising a transit, so that, for reasons
already referred to, it will be necessary that they
should be provided with instruments of the utmost
delicacy, and very carefully constructed.<SPAN name="FNanchor_4_4" href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">4</SPAN> They will
have to remain at their several stations for a long time
before the transit takes place—several months, at least—so
that they may accurately determine the latitude of
the temporary observatories they will erect. This is a
work requiring skilled observers and recondite processes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">66</span>
of calculation. Hence it is that the cost of sending out
these observing parties is so considerable.</p>
<p>The only English party which will apply Halley’s
method of observation is the one which will be stationed
at Mauritius, under Lord Lindsay. This part of their
work will be comparatively easy, the method only
requiring that the duration of the transit should be
carefully timed. In fact, one of the great advantages
of Halley’s method is the smallness of the expense it
involves. A party might land the day before the
transit, and sail away the day after, with results at least
as trustworthy as those which a party applying Delisle’s
method could obtain after several months of hard work.
It is to this, rather than any other cause, that the small
expense of the observations made in 1769 is to be
referred. And doubtless had it been decided by our
astronomical authorities to apply Halley’s method solely
or principally, the expense of the transit-observations
would have been materially lessened. There would,
however, have been a risk of failure through the occurrence
of bad weather at the critical stations; whereas
now—as other nations will doubtless avail themselves
of Halley’s method—the chance that the transit-observations
will fail through meteorological causes is very
largely diminished. Science will owe much to the
generosity of England in this respect.</p>
<p>It is, indeed, only recently that the possibility of
applying Halley’s method has been recognised. It
had been thought that the method must fail totally in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">67</span>
1874. But on a more careful examination of the
circumstances of the transit, a French astronomer,
M. Puiseux, was enabled to announce that this is not
the case. Almost simultaneously I published calculations
pointing to a similar result; but having carried
the processes a few steps further than M. Puiseux,
I was able to show that Halley’s method is not only
available in 1874, but is the more powerful method of
the two.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, there is an element of doubt in the
inquiry, of which no amount of care on the part of our
observers and mathematicians will enable them to get
rid. I refer to the behaviour of Venus herself. It
is to the peculiarity we are now to consider that the
<i lang="la">quasi</i>-failure of the observations made in 1769 must be
attributed. It is true that Mr. Stone, the first-assistant
at the Greenwich Observatory, has managed to
remove the greater part of the doubts which clouded the
results of those observations. But not even his skill
and patience can serve to remove the blot which a
century of doubt has seemed to throw upon the most
exact of the sciences. We shall now show how much
of the blame of that unfortunate century of doubt is to
be ascribed to Venus.</p>
<p>At a transit, astronomers confine their attention to
one particular phase—the moment, namely, when Venus
just seems to lie wholly within the outline of the sun’s
disc. This at least was what Halley and Delisle both
suggested as desirable. Unfortunately, Venus had not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">68</span>
been consulted, and when the time of the transit came
she declined to enter upon or leave the sun’s face in
the manner suggested by the astronomers. Consider,
for example, her conduct when entering on the sun’s
face:—</p>
<p>At first, as the black disc of the planet gradually
notched the edge of the sun’s disc, all seemed going on
well. But when somewhat more than half of the
planet was on the sun’s face, it began to be noticed
that Venus was losing her rotundity of figure. She
became gradually more and more pear-shaped, until at
last she looked very much like a peg-top touching with
its point the edge of the sun’s disc. Then suddenly—‘as
by a lightning flash,’ said one observer—the top
lost its peg, and then gradually Venus recovered her
figure, and the transit proceeded without further change
on her part until the time came for her to leave the
sun’s face, when similar peculiarities took place in a
reversed order.</p>
<p>Here was a serious difficulty indeed. For when
was the moment of true contact? Was it when the
peg-top figure seemed just to touch the edge of the
sun? This seemed unlikely, because a moment after
the planet was seen well removed from the sun’s edge.
Was it when the rotund part of the planet belonged to
a figure which would have touched the sun’s edge if
the rotundity had been perfect elsewhere? This,
again, seemed unlikely, because at this moment the
black band connecting Venus and the sun was quite<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">69</span>
wide. And, besides, if this were the true moment of
contact, what eye could be trusted to determine the
occurrence of a relation so peculiar? Yet the interval
between this phase and the final or peg-top phase
lasted several seconds—as many as twenty-two in one
instance in 1769—and the whole success of the observation
depended on exactness within three or four seconds
at the outside.</p>
<p>We know that Venus will act in precisely the same
manner in 1874. If we had been induced to hope
that improvements in our telescopes would diminish
the peculiarity, the observations of the transit of
Mercury, in November 1868, would have sufficed to
destroy that hope, for even with the all but perfect
instruments of the Greenwich Observatory, Mercury
assumed the peg-top disguise in the most unpleasing
manner.</p>
<p>It may be asked, then, What do astronomers propose
to do in 1874 to prevent Venus from misleading them
again as she did in 1769? Much has already been
done towards this end. Mr. Stone undertook a series
of careful researches to determine the law according to
which Venus may be expected to behave, or to misbehave
herself; and the result is, that he has been able
to tell the observers exactly what they will have to
look for, and exactly what it is most important that
they should record. In 1769, observers recorded their
observations in such doubtful terms, owing to their
ignorance of the real significance of the peculiarities
they witnessed, that the mathematicians who had to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">70</span>
make use of those observations were misled. <i lang="la">Hinc
illæ lacrymæ.</i> Hence it is that an undeserved reproach
has fallen upon the ‘exact science.’</p>
<p>The amount of the error resulting from the misinterpretation
of the observations made in 1769 was,
however, very small indeed, when its true character is
considered. It is, indeed, easy to make the error seem
enormous. The sun’s distance came out some four
millions of miles too large, and that seems no trifling
error. Then, again, the resulting estimate of the distance
of Neptune came out more than a hundred million
miles too great; while even this enormous error was as
nothing when compared with that which resulted when
the distances of the fixed stars were considered.</p>
<p>But this is an altogether erroneous mode of estimating
the effect of the error. It would be as absurd
to count up the number of hairs’ breadth by which the
geographer’s estimates of the length and breadth of
England may be in error. In all such matters it is
relative and not absolute error we have to consider.
A microscopist would have made a bad mistake who
should over-estimate the length of a fly’s proboscis by
a single hair’s breadth; but the astronomer had made
a wonderfully successful measurement of the sun’s
distance who deduced it within three or four millions
of miles of the true value. For it is readily calculable
that the error in the estimated relative bearing of the
sun as seen from opposite sides of the earth corresponds
to the angle which a hair’s breadth subtends when seen
from a distance of 125 feet.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">71</span></p>
<p>The error was first detected when other modes of
determining the sun’s distance were applied by the
skilful astronomers and physicists of our own day. We
have no space to describe as fully as they deserve the
ingenious processes by which the great problem has been
attacked without aid from Venus. Indeed, we can but
barely mention the principles on which those methods
depend. But to the reader who takes interest in astronomy,
we can recommend no subject as better worth
studying than the masterly researches of Foucault,
Leverrier, and Hansen upon the problem of the sun’s
distance.</p>
<p>The problem has been attacked in four several
ways. First, the tremendous velocity of light has been
measured by an ingenious arrangement of revolving
mirrors; the result combined with the known time
occupied by light in travelling across the earth’s orbit
immediately gives the sun’s distance. Secondly, a
certain irregularity in the moon’s motion, due to the
fact that she is most disturbed by the sun when
traversing that half of her path which is nearest to
him, was pressed into the service with similar results.
Thirdly, an irregularity in the earth’s motion, due to
the fact that she circles around the common centre of
gravity of her own mass and the moon’s, was made
a means of attacking the problem. Lastly, Mars, a
planet which, as we have already mentioned, approaches
us almost as nearly as Venus, was found an efficient
ally.</p>
<p>The result of calculations founded on these methods<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">72</span>
showed that the sun’s distance, instead of being about
95,000,000 miles, is little more than 91,500,000 miles.
And recently a re-examination of the observations
made upon Venus in 1769 led Mr. Stone to believe
that they point to a similar result.</p>
<p>Doubtless, however, we must wait for the transit of
Venus in 1874 before forming a final decision as to
the estimate of the sun’s distance which is to take its
place in popular works on astronomy during the next
century or so. Nothing but an unlooked-for combination
of unfavourable circumstances can cause the
failure of our hopes. Certainly, if we should fail in
obtaining satisfactory results in 1874, the world will
not say that the generosity of the English Government
has been in fault, since it would be difficult to find a
parallel in the history of modern science to the munificence
of the grant which has been made this year for
expeditions to observe a phenomenon whose interest
and importance are purely scientific.</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From <cite>St. Paul’s</cite>, October 1869.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 id="BRITAINS_COAL_CELLARS"><i>BRITAIN’S COAL CELLARS.</i></h2>
<p>It would have been deemed a strange thought in the
days of the Tudors to suggest that England’s greatness
would one day depend,—or seem to depend,—on her
stores of coal, a mineral then regarded as only an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">73</span>
unpleasant rival of the wood-log for household fires.
When Shakespeare put into the mouth of Faulconbridge
the words—</p>
<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">This England never did, nor never shall,</div>
<div class="verse">Lie at the proud foot of a conqueror,</div>
<div class="verse">But when it first did help to wound itself,</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>he would have thought it a singular proviso that
England should be watchful of her coal stores if she
would preserve her position among the nations. And
yet there is a closer connection between the present
greatness of Britain and the mighty coal cellars underlying
certain British counties than we are commonly
prepared to acknowledge. Saxon steadiness and Norman
energy have doubtless played their part in placing
Britain in the position she now holds; but whatever
may have been the case in past ages of our history, it is
certain that at present there is much truth in Liebig’s
assertion that England’s power is in her coal. The
time may come again, as the time has been, when we
shall be less dependent on our coal stores,—when
bituminous bankruptcy will not be equivalent to national
bankruptcy; but if all our coal mines were at this
moment rendered unworkable, the power of England
would receive a shock from which it would be ages in
recovering.</p>
<p>I have quoted an assertion made many years since
by Baron Liebig. The assertion was accompanied by
another not less striking. ‘Civilisation,’ he said, ‘is
the economy of power; and English power is coal.’ It is
on this text that I propose now to comment. There has<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">74</span>
recently been issued a Blue Book, bearing in the most
important manner on the subject of England’s coal-supply.
For five years fifteen eminent Commissioners
have been engaged in examining the available evidence
respecting the stores of coal contained in the various
coal-fields of Great Britain. Their inquiries were commenced
soon after the time when the fears of the country
on this subject were first seriously awakened; and were
directed specially to ascertain how far those fears were
justified by the real circumstances of the case. It will
be well to compare the various opinions which were
expressed before the inquiries were commenced, with
the results which have now been obtained.</p>
<p>In the first place it should be noticed that the
subject had attracted the attention of men of science
many years ago. Some forty years<SPAN name="FNanchor_5_5" href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">5</SPAN> have passed since<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">75</span>
Dr. Buckland, in one of the Bridgewater Treatises,
pointed to the necessity for a careful examination of
our coal stores, lest England should drift unawares into
what he called ‘bituminous bankruptcy.’ At that
time the quantity of coal raised annually in England
amounted to but about forty millions of tons. Ten
years later the annual yield had risen to about fifty
millions of tons; and then another warning voice was
raised by Dr. Arnold. Ten more years passed, and the
annual yield had increased to 83,635,214 tons, when
Mr. Hull made the startling announcement that our
coal stores would last us but about two centuries, unless
some means were adopted to check the lavish expenditure
of our black diamonds.</p>
<p>But it was undoubtedly the address of Sir W. Armstrong
to the British Association, in 1863, which first
roused the attention of the country to the importance
of the subject. ‘The greatness of England,’ he said,
‘depends much upon the superiority of her coal, in
cheapness and quality, over that of other nations. But
we have already drawn from our choicest mines a far
larger quantity of coal than has been raised in all other
parts of the world put together; and the time is not
remote when we shall have to encounter the disadvantages
of increased cost of working and diminished
value of produce.’ Then he summed up the state of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">76</span>
the case as he viewed it. ‘The entire quantity of
available coal existing in these islands has been calculated
to amount to 80,000 millions of tons, which, at
the present rate of consumption, would be exhausted
in 930 years; but with a continued yearly increase of
2¾ millions of tons would only last 212 years.’</p>
<p>Other statements were not wanting, however, which
presented matters in a more favourable light. Mr.
Hussey Vivian, M.P., expressed the opinion that South
Wales alone could supply all England with coals for
500 years. Mr. R. C. Taylor, of the Geological Society,
said that our coal stores would suffice for 1,700 years.
And there were some who adopted a yet more sanguine
view of our position.</p>
<p>On the other hand, Mr. Edward Hull, of the
Geological Survey, calculated that with an increase of
but one million and a half of tons per annum—considerably
less than even the average increase for the
preceding decade<SPAN name="FNanchor_6_6" href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">6</SPAN>—our coals would last us but a little
more than 300 years. Mr. Stanley Jevons, in his
masterly treatise on ‘The Coal Question,’ adopted a
mode of considering the increase, which has led to an
even more unpleasant conclusion than any hitherto
obtained. He observed that the quantity of coal raised
in successive years is not merely increasing, but the
amount of increase is itself increasing. ‘We, of course,
regard not,’ he said, ‘the average annual arithmetical<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">77</span>
increase of coal consumption between 1854 and 1863,
which is 2,403,424 tons, but the average rate per cent.
of increase, which is found by computation to be 3·26
per cent.’ That is to say, for every hundred tons of
coal consumed in one year, 103¼ tons, or thereabouts,
would be consumed in the next—taking one year
with another. Without entering into technicalities, or
niceties of calculation, it is easy to show the difference
between this view of the matter and a view founded
only on the average increase during so many years.
Consider 10,000 tons of coal sold in one year, then Mr.
Stanley Jevons points out that instead of that amount,
10,326 would be sold in the next; and so far we may
suppose that the other view would agree with his. But
in the next, or third year (always remembering, however,
that we must take one year with another), the
increase of 326 tons would not be merely doubled,
according to Mr. Stanley Jevons; that is, the consumption
would not be only 10,652 tons:—the 10,000
of the second year would be replaced by 10,326 tons
in the third year, and the remaining 326 would be
increased by 3¼ tons for each hundred, or by rather
more than 10½ tons; so that in all there would be
10,662¼ tons, instead of 10,652. Now the difference
in this third year seems small, though when it is applied
to about nine thousand times 10,000 tons it is by
no means small, amounting in fact to 95,000 tons; but
when the principle is extended to sequent years its
effects assume paramount importance. The small
increase is as the small increase of a farthing for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">78</span>
second horseshoe-nail in the well-known problem.
The effects, after a few years have passed, correspond
to the thousands of pounds by which the last shoe-nails
of that problem increase the cost of the horse. As Mr.
Leonard Lemoran points out in the paper mentioned
in the above note, if the assumed rate per cent. of
increase continue, ‘we should draw in the year 1900
from our rocks more than 300 millions of tons, and
in 1950 more than 2,000 millions.<SPAN name="FNanchor_7_7" href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">7</SPAN> About 300,000
miners are now (1866) employed in raising rather more
than 92 millions of tons of coals; therefore more than
eight million miners would be necessary to raise the
quantity estimated as the produce of 1950. One-third
of the present population of Great Britain would be
coal miners.’ Or as Mr. Jevons himself sums up our
future, ‘If our consumption of coal continue to multiply
for 110 years at the same rate as hitherto, the total
amount of coal consumed in the interval would be
100,000 millions of tons.’ Now as Mr. Hull estimated
the available coal in Great Britain, within a depth of
4,000 feet, at 83,000 millions of tons, it followed that,
adopting Mr. Jevons’s mode of calculation, a century
would exhaust<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">79</span> ‘all the coal in our present workings, as
well as all the coal seams which may be found at a depth
of 1,500 feet below the deepest working in the kingdom.’
It should be added, however, that Mr. Stanley Jevons
mentioned 200,000 millions of tons as the probable
limit of the coal supplies of Great Britain.</p>
<p>The opinion of Mr. Jevons respecting the probable
rate of increase of our consumption was not accepted
by the generality of those who examined the subject
in 1865 and 1866. There were some, indeed, who
considered that the assumption was ‘absurd in every
point of view.’ In one sense, indeed, Mr. Jevons himself
would have been ready to admit that his estimates
would not be justified by the result. The observed
rate of increase could not possibly be maintained
beyond a certain epoch, simply because there would
not be enough men to work the coal mines to the extent
required. But, regarding the increase as indicating
the requirements of the kingdom, it would matter
little whether the necessary supply failed for want of
coal or for want of the means of raising the coal. In
other words, removing the question from the arena of
geological dispute, and considering only the requirements
of the country, we should have this disagreeable
conclusion forced upon us, if Mr. Jevons’s estimate is
just, that England will not be able, a century, or even
half a century hence, to get as many coals from her
subterranean cellars as she will then require. She may
have the coals, but she will not have men enough to
bring them to bank.</p>
<p>It is, perhaps, in this aspect, that the question
assumes its chief interest for us. Rightly understood,
the statements of Mr. Jevons were of vital importance;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">80</span>
so important, indeed, that the nation might have looked
forward to the results of the Commission much as a
patient would await the physician’s report of the result
of a stethoscopic examination. The power of the nation
residing—for the nonce at least—in her coal, the enforced
consumption of coal at a rate which cannot be
maintained (from whatever cause), means to all intents
and purposes the decline and approaching demise of
England’s power as a nation. Furthermore, apart from
all inquiries such as the Commissioners undertook to
make, the mere statement of the successive annual
yields was to be looked upon as of vital interest, precisely
as the progressive waste of a consumptive patient’s
strength and substance suggests even more serious
apprehensions than the opinion of the physician.</p>
<p>I have said that many eminent authorities held
that the rate of increase assumed by Mr. Jevons would
not actually prevail. But some went farther, and questioned
whether the average annual arithmetical increase
of the lately passed years would continue even for the
next few years after the publication of Mr. Jevons’s
work. ‘Such a continued increase as that, which has
taken place during the last five years,’ wrote an excellent
practical authority, ‘cannot continue for the next
ten years,’—far less, therefore, that increasing rate of
increase which Mr. Jevons had assumed. The same
writer went farther even than this. For, after pointing
out that the exportation of coal would probably be soon
reduced, rather than undergo, as during the past, a
steady increase, he added that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">81</span> ‘on every side there
were evidences of the most decided character, warranting
the supposition that the annual exhaustion of our
coal fields would not at any period much exceed the
hundred million tons which it had nearly reached’ (in
1866).</p>
<p>One of the most interesting questions, then, which
the Commissioners were called upon to decide was,
whether, at least during the period of their labours, the
anticipations of Mr. Jevons would be fulfilled or not.
It is easy to compare his anticipations with those above
quoted; or rather, it is easy to determine whether
Mr. Jevons’s theory of an increasing increase, or the
theory of a uniform average increase, accords best with
the experience of the last five years. To make the comparison
fairly we must adopt the figures on which his
own estimate was founded. We have seen that he rejected
the annual increase of 2,403,424 deduced from
the records of the nine preceding years, and adopted
instead an increase of 3¼ per cent. year by year, taking
one year with another. His own calculations gave for
this year 1871 a consumption of 118 millions of tons,—an
enormous increase on the annual consumption when
he wrote. According to the view he rejected, the consumption
for the year 1871 is easily computed, though
slightly different results will be obtained, according to
the year we choose to count from. The annual increase
above mentioned gives an increase of 24,034,240 tons
in ten years, and if we add this amount to the consumption
in 1861 (83,635,214 tons) we obtain for the year
1871 a consumption of 107,669,454 tons. On the other<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">82</span>
hand, if we add eight years’ increase to the consumption
of 1863 (88,292,515 tons), we obtain 107,519,907 tons.<SPAN name="FNanchor_8_8" href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">8</SPAN>
It will be seen that there is an important difference
between the consumption for 1871, as estimated according
to Mr. Jevons’s view, and according to the average
rate of increase in the nine preceding years. As the
matter stood in 1865, the great question concerning
the consumption of the year 1871 would have been,—whether
it would be nearer 118 millions, the estimate
of Mr. Jevons; or to 107½ millions, the estimate, according
to the annual rate of increase; or, lastly, to a number
of tons, not much, if at all, exceeding 100 millions?</p>
<p>The answer of the Commissioners comes in no doubtful
terms. Judging from the consumption during the
four years ending in 1870, the estimated consumption
for the year 1872 is no less than 115 millions, an
amount approaching Mr. Jevons’s estimate much more
nearly than could be desired. Indeed, if we consider
the imperfect nature of the statistics on which he
founded his calculations, the agreement between his
estimate and the observed result must be regarded as
surprisingly close. Remembering the conclusion to
which Mr. Jevons came with respect to the period for
which our coal stores would last, and noticing the close
agreement thus far between his anticipations and the
result, we can well understand the warning tone of
the report issued by the Commissioners.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">83</span> ‘Every hypothesis,’
they say, ‘must be speculative, but it is certain
that if the present rate of increase in the consumption
of coal be indefinitely continued, even in an approximate
degree, the progress towards the exhaustion of
our coal will be very rapid.’ Let it be remembered
that the Commission was issued at the instance of those
who took the more sanguine view, and that it included
within its ranks such eminent authorities as Sir William
Armstrong, Sir Robert Murchison, Professor Ramsay,
Mr. John Hunt, and others of like experience in the
subject under inquiry.</p>
<p>If, in the next place, we compare Mr. Jevons’s estimate
of the quantity of coal available for use with the
result obtained by the Commissioners, we find little to
restore our confidence in the extent of time during
which our coal stores may be expected to last. We have
seen that 200,000 millions of tons had been supposed
to be available; but the Commissioners find that ‘we
now have an aggregate of 146,480 millions of tons, which
may be reasonably expected to be available for use.’
Again, it had been supposed that our coal mines could
be worked to a depth of 4,000 feet, or to an even greater
depth. ‘The difficulties in the way of deep mining,’
wrote Mr. Lemoran in 1866,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">84</span> ‘are mere questions of cost.
It is important to notice that the assumption of 4,000
feet as the greatest depth to which coal can be worked,
on account of the increase of temperature, is purely
voluntary. The increase has been calculated at a rate
for which there is no authority; and while we are saying
our coal-beds cannot be worked below 4,000 feet, a
colliery in Belgium has nearly approached that depth, and
no inconvenience is experienced by the miners.’ But
the Commissioners state that at a depth of only 2,419
feet in the Rosebridge mine (the deepest in England),
the temperature is 94 degrees of Fahrenheit, or within
four degrees of blood heat. ‘The depth at which the
temperature of the earth would amount to blood heat,’
they add, ‘is about 3,000 feet.’ They express a belief
that by the ‘long wall system’ of working (a system
as yet seldom adopted in the chief northern mines) it
will be possible to reach a depth of 3,420 feet before this
heat is attained; but it is by no means certain that this
will prove to be the case.</p>
<p>On the other hand, it will be well to regard the
more promising aspect of the question.</p>
<p>We must not forget, in the first place, that in all
matters of statistical research there is room for misapprehension
unless careful attention be paid, not
merely to the observed facts, but to the circumstances
with which those facts are more or less intimately associated.
If we consider, for example, the progress of the
consumption of our coal during the past fifteen years, we
find that a law of increase exists, which is, as we have
seen, easily expressed, and which, after being tested
by a process resembling prediction, has been singularly
confirmed by the result. But if we inquire into the
various causes of the great increase in the consumption
of coals, we find that while those causes have been
increasing in activity—so to speak—to a degree quite
sufficient to explain the observed consumption, they are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">85</span>
yet such as in their very nature must needs be unable
to pass beyond a certain range of increase. Thus the
population of Great Britain has been steadily increasing,
and at present the annual increase is itself increasing.
Then the amount of coal used in inland communication
is increasing, not only on account of the gradual extension
of the railway network, but also on account of the
increase of population, of commerce, and so on. Again,
our commerce with other countries has increased with
great rapidity since the year 1860, when the French
treaty came into operation, and it will continue to increase
with the increase of our population, of our means
of communication within our own country as well as
with foreign countries, and so on. But all these causes
of increase are now growing in activity at a rate which
must inevitably diminish. Our population cannot
increase beyond a certain extent, because the extent
of the country will suffice for but a certain number of
inhabitants. If emigration do not prevent increase
beyond that number, other causes will, or else a much
more serious evil than the exhaustion of all our coal
stores awaits the country. Again, the requirements of
inland communication will before long be so far met
that no such rapid extension as is now in progress will
be called for. After convenient communication has
been established between all parts of the country—whether
the process require the formation of new
lines or of new services—no important increase can
be required. As regards our commerce, its increase
depends necessarily on the increase at present going<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">86</span>
on in the requirements of the country. Year by year
Britain has a larger population, and the average
requirements of each member of the population are
also increasing. But we have seen that the increase
of her population is necessarily limited; and although
the increase of the requirements of her people may not
be (strictly speaking) limited, yet it is manifest that,
inasmuch as that increase depends on causes which are
themselves approaching a limit, its rate must, after a
time, continually diminish. Let it be understood that,
when I speak of the requirements of the population,
I do not mean only what they must obtain from other
countries. The commerce of a country is the expression
of the activity with which the nation is ‘earning
its living,’ so to speak, and in a given population there
is a limit to what is necessary for this purpose, precisely
as there is a limit to the sum which an individual
person in any given state of life requires for the maintenance
of a given family. Indeed, although such
comparisons are not always safe, we may in this case
compare what may be called the commercial requirements
of the nation with the requirements of the head
of the family,—a merchant suppose. There are no
limits to the degree of wealth which a merchant may
<em>desire</em> to gain, but unquestionably there are limits to the
income necessary to maintain his house and family and
mercantile position. Supposing he were extending his
gains far beyond his actual requirements, it would by
no means imply his approaching ruin that there was
a demonstrable limit to this extension. And in like<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">87</span>
manner, it would seem that, apart from the limits set
by nature to the extension of our population, it need
by no means be assumed that if our commerce showed
signs of approaching a limit, the downfall of England’s
power would be at hand.</p>
<p>In fact, we cannot accept Mr. Jevons’s figures for
distant epochs without first inquiring whether it is
likely that at those epochs the circumstances on which
the consumption of our coal depends will be correspondingly
changed. Supposing that 120 millions of tons of
coals suffice for the requirements of our present population,
we can scarcely believe that 1,440 millions will be
needed in 1950, unless we suppose that the population
of Britain will be twelve times greater than at present;
or that the population will be even greater than this,
since the consumption of coal upon our railways could
scarcely be expected to increase in proportion to the
population. Now no one believes that Britain will
number 300 millions of inhabitants in 1950, or in 2950;
the country could not maintain half that number, even
though all her available stores of coal and iron, and
other sources of commercial wealth were increased a
hundredfold.</p>
<p>It is a mistake, indeed, to extend the results of statistical
research very far beyond the time to which the
facts and figures belong. It would be easy to multiply
instances of the incorrectness of such a process. To
take a single case.—When cholera has been extending
its ravages in this country, the statistics of mortality
from that cause, if studied with reference to four or five<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">88</span>
successive weeks, have indicated a law of increase,
which is very readily expressed so as to accord with
the mortality during those weeks, and perhaps two or
three following weeks. But if such a law were extended
indefinitely it might be found to imply nothing
short of the complete desolation of the country by
cholera, within the space of a few months. Thus, if the
deaths (from cholera) in five successive weeks were 20,
27, 35, 47, and 63,—numbers corresponding with the
general characteristics of cholera mortality in the earlier
stages of a visitation,—the weekly mortality a year
later, estimated according to the observed percentage
of increase, would be more than 173 millions! Now
this method of estimation, though leading to this preposterous
conclusion as respects a more distant epoch,
would probably lead to tolerably correct results for the
next week or two after that in which 63 persons died,—the
estimated numbers being 84 and 110 for the next
two weeks respectively.</p>
<p>It seems to me, therefore, that we are not justified,
by the observed seeming fulfilment of Mr. Jevons’s
anticipations, in concluding that a hundred years hence
the consumption of coals will be 2,000 millions of tons,
or that the total consumption during the next 110 years
will be 100,000 millions of tons. We might almost as
safely infer that because a growing lad requires such
and such an increase of food year by year, the grown
man will need a similar rate of increase, and the
septuagenarian require so many tons and hogsheads
of solid and liquid food <i lang="la">per diem</i>.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">89</span></p>
<p>At present it does not seem possible to arrive at any
definite conclusions respecting the probable consumption
of coal in years to come. The range of observation is
not sufficiently extended. It seems clear, indeed, that
the epoch is not near at hand when the present law of
increase will be modified. This is shown by the agreement
of the observed results during the past five years
with the anticipations of Mr. Jevons. It would be
altogether unsafe to predict that the yearly consumption
will not rise to 150 or 200 or even 250 millions of tons
per annum, or to point to any definite stage at which
the present increasing rate of increase will be changed
first into uniform (or arithmetical) increase, and thence
into a decreasing rate of increase. But it appears to
me that no question can exist that these changes <em>will</em>
take place. We might even go farther, and regard it
as all but certain that the time will come when there
will be no annual increase. Nay, unless the history of
this country is to differ from the history of all other
nations which have attained to great power, the time
might be expected to arrive when there will be, year by
year, a slow diminution in the commercial activity of
Britain, and a corresponding diminution in the exhaustion
of her coal stores. There is room for an amazing
increase in Britain’s power and greatness, room also for
an unprecedented continuance of these attributes, while
yet the coal stores of the country remain well supplied.</p>
<p>Let us conceive, for instance, that the greatest annual
consumption of coal during the future years of England’s
existence as a great nation, should be set at three<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">90</span>
times her present annual consumption, or at 350
millions of tons. Few will regard this as an unduly
low estimate when they remember that it is exceedingly
unlikely that the present population of Britain will ever
be tripled, and that a triple population could be commercially
far more active (in relation to its numbers)
than the present population, with no greater consumption
of coal per head. Now, to begin with, if this enormous
annual consumption began immediately, we should yet
(with Mr. Jevons’s assumption as to the quantity of
available coal) have 570 years’ lease of power instead
of 110. But, as a matter of fact, so soon as we have
recognised the principle that there is a limit to the
increase of annual consumption, we are compelled to
believe that that limit will be approached by a much
gentler gradient, so to speak, than the same consumption
as attained on Mr. Jevons’s assumption. According
to his view, in fact, an annual consumption of 350
millions of tons per annum will be attained early in the
twentieth century; but according to the theory which
sets such a consumption as the highest ever to be
attained, we should place its attainment several hundreds
of years later. This is a vague statement, I
admit, but the very fact on which I am mainly insisting
is this, that the evidence at present in our hands is
insufficient as a basis of exact calculation. Now, if we
set 500 years hence as the time when the annual consumption
of coal will have reached the above enormous
amount, we should set the total consumption during
those centuries at about one-half that due to an annual<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">91</span>
consumption of 350 millions of tons. In that case there
would still remain coal enough to supply the country
for 320 years at the same tremendous rate. In all,
on these suppositions, 820 years would be provided for.
These would be years of commercial activity far exceeding
that of our own day—in fact, they would be
years during which Britain would be accumulating
wealth at a rate so enormous that at the end of the
era she would be not wholly unprovided with the means
of supporting her existence as a nation, apart from all
reference to her mineral stores. It is, indeed, utterly
inconceivable, I think, that Great Britain and her
people will ever be <em>able</em> to progress at the rate implied
by these suggestions. To conceive of Great Britain as
arriving at ruin within a thousand years by the over-rapid
exhaustion of her coal stores, is, in fact, equivalent
to supposing that she will attain in the interval to a
wholly unprecedented—I had almost said a wholly
incredible—degree of wealth and power.</p>
<p>As regards the evidence which has been adduced
respecting the extent of the available coal supply, it is
to be remarked that, on the whole, the result cannot be
regarded as unfavourable. The more sanguine views
entertained five or six years ago have not, indeed,,
been fully justified. Yet our coal supply has been
shown to be enormous, even when considered with
reference to the continually increasing exhaustion.</p>
<p>But it must be admitted that the question of the
depth to which our coal mines may be conveniently or
even possibly worked, has an unpleasantly doubtful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">92</span>
aspect. Of the stores which the Commissioners regard
as available a vast proportion must be mined out from
depths far exceeding any which have been at present
reached in England. It is not as yet clear how far the
increase of depth will add to the cost and risk of
working; nor do I propose to discuss a subject which
can only be adequately dealt with by those who possess
practical knowledge of the details of colliery-working.
I will content myself by quoting some remarks on the
subject, in an inaugural address delivered by Mr.
George Elliot (one of the Royal Commissioners) before
the North of England Institute of Mining Engineers
in 1868. ‘The great depth,’ he remarked, ‘at which
many of our pits are worked, and the vast extent of
their lateral ramifications, make it more than ever
necessary that we should secure the best mode of
rendering the supply of pure air certain, regular, and
safe. It is maintained that ventilating by machinery
ensures these desiderata; that the nicety with which
mechanical appliances may be regulated, the delicate
adjustment of power of which they are capable, and the
complete safety with which they may be worked, place
them far before the system they are intended to supersede.
The extent of our coal supply will be materially
increased by the improvement of which this is a
type.... It is probable that the ordinary means
of ventilation—whether by furnace or fan—may be
aided by a change in the force or agency employed for
the purposes of haulage and other independent work.
As an instance of my meaning, I may mention that the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">93</span>
apparatus which I have introduced in South Wales,
and which, by means of compressed air used as a
motive power instead of steam, draws trams and pumps
water with complete success, is found to generate ice in
an atmosphere which is naturally hot and oppressive.
The mechanical usefulness of these new air-engines
seems capable of indefinite extension; while, as their
cooling properties form a collateral advantage arising
out of their use, it is at least possible that they may
prove valuable auxiliaries to the more regular means of
ventilation in extending the security and promoting the
healthfulness of our mines. <em>The difficulties of ventilation
once surmounted, the extent of coal at our disposal
is incalculably increased.</em>‘</p>
<p>In the address just quoted there are some striking
suggestions as to the possibility of working those coal
fields which extend below the sea on our east and west
coasts, especially in the counties of Durham, Northumberland,
and Cumberland. Mr. Elliot remarks that
‘for all practical purposes these fields are as entirely
within the reach of the mining engineer as the ordinary
workings out of which coal is hewed.’ It is known that
in many districts the coal strata extend ten or twelve
miles beyond the shore; and Mr. Elliot believes that by
sinking ventilating shafts in the German Ocean the coal
below may be safely worked. The idea seems somewhat
daring; yet, after the feats of engineering which have
been achieved in our day, there seems no valid reason
for doubting that at least when the pressure of a failing
coal supply begins to be felt, the means will be found<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">94</span>
for rendering these immense submarine coal stores
available. As to the difficulty of transport, Mr. Elliot
remarks that, according to his estimates, ‘transport
would neither be more costly nor more laborious than
it has been in days gone by to convey coal the same
distance after it was brought to the surface inland.’
The enormous importance of the subject is shown by
the fact that ‘out of the minerals obtainable in Durham
alone, one-third,’ Mr. Elliot tells us, ‘may be held to
lie under the sea, and that all coalfields having a similar
inclination of strata, and bordering on the ocean, will
be similarly enlarged. This at once disposes,’ he adds,
‘of some of the fears expressed as to the duration of
our coal supply; and while I am quite aware that these
theories may be challenged, they are not put forward
without due deliberation, and I am content to stake my
professional reputation on their practicability.’</p>
<p>With regard to the future of this country, it appears
to me that little anxiety need be entertained. Apart
from the considerations I have urged, which seem to
indicate that our consumption cannot long increase at
the same rate as at present, it seems not unreasonable to
anticipate that within the next few decades science will
find the means of economising our coals in more ways
than one. It does not indeed appear likely that any
form of fuel will ever take the place of coal; but a
portion of the work now derived from the consumption
of coal may be expected to be derived in future years
from some of the other substances now coming into use.
It may be hoped, also, that science may suggest means<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">95</span>
for bringing coals to the surface with less waste, and even
at less cost, than at present. And in other ways the
process of exhaustion may be more or less effectively
checked.</p>
<p>But while we may thus look somewhat confidently
forward, as I judge, to the future of our country, serious
questions are suggested as to the future of the human
race. The period during which a nation flourishes, long
as it seems by comparison with the life of man, yet sinks
into insignificance when compared with the period during
which civilised men will bear sway upon the earth. The
thousands of years during which the coal stores of the
earth may be expected to last will pass away, and then
the descendants of those now living on the earth will
have to trust to other force-supplies than those which we
are now using so lavishly. It may seem fanciful to look
so far forward, and yet by comparison with the periods
which the astronomer deals with in considering the
future of our earth, thousands of years are as nothing.
As I have said elsewhere, ‘those thousands of years
will pass as surely as the thousands which have already
passed, and the wants entailed by wastefulness in our
day will then be felt, and none the less that for so many
years there had been no failure in the supplies contained
within the great subterranean storehouse.’ It behoves
us to consider thoughtfully the wants even of those
distant eras. If the greatest good for the greatest
number is to be regarded as the true rule for the conduct
of intelligent beings, then unquestionably mere
distance in point of time should not prevent us from an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">96</span>ticipating
the requirements of those remote descendants
of ours. We should regard the consciousness of this
duty and its performance as signs by which the superiority
of our own over less civilised times is partly
manifested. As man is in dignity higher than non-intelligent
animals, in that he alone provides of his own
forethought for the wants of his children, so our generation
would be raised in dignity above preceding generations
if it took intelligent charge of the wants of its
remote descendants. We ourselves are now employing
stores of force laid up for us by the unconscious processes
of Nature in long past ages. As Professor
Tyndall has finely said, we are utilising the Sun of
the Carboniferous Epoch. The light ‘which streamed
earthwards from the sun’ was stored up for us by the
unconscious activity of ‘organisms which living took
into them the solar light, and by the consumption of
its energy incessantly generated chemical forces.’ The
vegetable world of that old epoch ‘constituted the
reservoir in which the fugitive solar rays were fixed,
suitably deposited, and rendered ready for useful application.’
What the vegetable world did for us unconsciously
during the Carboniferous Epoch, the scientific
world of our epoch must do for our remote descendants.
While we are consuming the stores of force laid up in
past ages for our benefit, we must invent the means for
obtaining directly from the solar rays fresh and inexhaustible
supplies of motive energy.</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From the <cite>St. Paul’s Magazine</cite>, November 1871.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">97</span></p>
<h2 id="THE_SECRET_OF_THE_NORTH_POLE"><i>THE SECRET OF THE NORTH POLE.</i></h2>
<p>If an astronomer upon some distant planet has ever
thought the tiny orb we inhabit worthy of telescopic
study, there can be little doubt that the snowy regions
which surround the arctic and antarctic poles must have
attracted a large share of his attention. Waxing and
waning with the passing seasons, those two white patches
afford significant information respecting the circumstances
of our planet’s constitution. They mark the
direction of the imaginary axial line upon which the
planet rotates; so that we can imagine that an astronomer
on Mars or Venus would judge from their position
how it fares with terrestrial creatures. There may,
indeed, be Martial Whewells who laugh to scorn the
notion that a globe so inconveniently circumstanced as
ours can be inhabited, and are ready to show that, if
there were living beings here, they must be quickly
destroyed by excessive heat. On the other hand, there
are possibly sceptics on Venus also who smile at the
vanity of those who can conceive a frozen world, such
as this our outer planet, to be inhabited by any sort of
living creature. But we doubt not that the more
advanced thinkers both in Mars and Venus are ready to
admit that, though we must necessarily be far inferior
beings to themselves, we yet manage to ‘live and move
and have our being’ on this ill-conditioned globe of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">98</span>
ours. And these, observing the earth’s polar snow-caps,
must be led to several important conclusions respecting
physical relations here.</p>
<p>It is, indeed, rather a singular fact to contemplate,
that ex-terrestrial observers, such as these, may know
much more than we ourselves do respecting those
mysterious regions which lie close around the two poles.
Their eyes may have rested on spots which, with all our
endeavours, we have hitherto failed to reach. Whether,
as some have thought, the arctic pole is in summer
surrounded by a wide and tide-swayed ocean; whether
there lies around the antarctic pole a wide continent
bespread with volcanic mountains larger and more
energetic than the two burning cones which Ross found
on the outskirts of this desolate region; or whether
the habitudes prevailing near either pole are wholly different
from those suggested by geographers and voyagers—such
questions as these might possibly, be resolved
at once, could our astronomers take their stand on some
neighbouring planet, and direct the searching power of
their telescopes upon this terrestrial orb. For this is
one of those cases referred to by Humboldt, when he
said that there are circumstances under which man is
able to learn more respecting objects millions of miles
away from him than respecting the very globe which he
inhabits.</p>
<p>If we take a terrestrial globe, and examine the actual
region near the North Pole which has as yet remained
unvisited by man, it will be found to be far smaller than
many imagine. In nearly all maps the requirements<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">99</span>
of charting result in a considerable exaggeration of
the polar regions. This is the case in the ordinary
‘maps of the two hemispheres’ which are to be
found in all atlases. And it is, of course, the case
to a much more remarkable extent in what is termed
Mercator’s projection. In a Mercator’s chart we see
Greenland, for example, exaggerated into a continent
fully as large as South America, or to seven or eight
times its real dimensions.</p>
<p>There are three principal directions in which explorers
have attempted to approach the North Pole.
The first is that by way of the sea which lies between
Greenland and Spitzbergen. I include under this
head Sir Edward Parry’s attempt to reach the pole by
crossing the ice-fields which lie to the north of Spitzbergen.
The second is that by way of the straits
which lie to the west of Greenland. The third is that
pursued by Russian explorers who have attempted to
cross the frozen seas which surround the northern shores
of Siberia.</p>
<p>In considering the limits of the unknown north-polar
regions, we shall also have to take into account the
voyages which have been made around the northern
shores of the American continent in the search for
a ‘north-west passage.’ The explorers who set out
upon this search found themselves gradually forced to
seek higher and higher latitudes in order to find a
way round the complicated barriers presented by the
ice-bound straits and islands which lie to the north
of the American continent. And it may be noticed in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">100</span>
passing, as a remarkable and unforeseen circumstance,
that the farther north the voyagers went the less severe
was the cold they had to encounter. We shall see that
this circumstance has an important bearing on the considerations
I shall presently have to deal with.</p>
<p>One other circumstance respecting the search for the
north-west passage, though not connected very closely
with my subject, is so singular and so little known that
I feel tempted to make mention of it at this point.
The notion with which the seekers after a north-west
passage set out was simply this, that the easiest way of
reaching China and the East Indies was to pursue a
course resembling as near as possible that on which
Columbus had set out—if only it should appear that
no impassable barriers rendered such a course impracticable.
They quickly found that the American continent
presents an unbroken line of land from high
northern latitudes far away towards the antarctic seas.
But it is a circumstance worth noticing, that if the
American continents had no existence, the direct
westerly course pursued by Columbus was not only not
the nearest way to the East Indian Archipelago, but
was one of the longest routes which could possibly have
been selected. Surprising as it may seem at first sight,
a voyager from Spain for China and the East Indies
ought, if he sought the absolutely shortest path, to set
out on an almost direct northerly route! He would
pass close by Ireland and Iceland, and onwards past
the North Pole into the Pacific. This is what is
called the great-circle route; and if it were only<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">101</span>
practicable one, would shorten the journey to China by
many hundreds of miles.</p>
<p>Let us return, however, to the consideration of the
information which arctic voyagers have brought us
concerning the north-polar regions.</p>
<p>The most laborious researches in arctic seas are
those which have been carried out by the searchers after
a north-west passage. I shall therefore first consider
the limits of the unknown region in this direction.
Afterwards we can examine the results of those voyages
which have been undertaken with the express purpose
of reaching the North Pole along the three principal
routes already mentioned.</p>
<p>If we examine a map of North America constructed
in recent times, we shall find that between Greenland
and Canada an immense extent of coast-line has been
charted. A vast archipelago covers this part of the
northern world. Or, if the strangely-complicated coastlines
which have been laid down really belong to but a
small number of islands, the figures of those must be
of the most fantastic kind. Towards the north-west,
however, we find several islands whose outlines have
been entirely ascertained. Thus we have in succession
North Devon Island, Cornwallis Island, Melville Island,
and Port Patrick Island, all lying north of the seventy-fifth
parallel of latitude. But we are not to suppose
that these islands limit the extent of our seamen’s
researches in this direction. Far to the northward of
Wellington Channel, Captain de Haven saw, in 1852,
the signs of an open sea—in other words, he saw,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">102</span>
beyond the ice-fields, what arctic seamen call a ‘water
sky.’ In 1855 Captain Penny sailed upon this open
sea; but how far it extends towards the North Pole has
not yet been ascertained.</p>
<p>It must not be forgotten that the north-west passage
has been shown to be a reality, by means of voyages
from the Pacific as well as from the Atlantic. No arctic
voyager, however, has yet succeeded in passing from
one ocean to the other. Nor is it likely now that any
voyager will pursue his way along a path so beset by
dangers as that which is called the north-west passage.
Long before the problem had been solved, it had become
well known that no profit could be expected to
accrue to trade from the discovery of a passage along
the perilous straits and the ice-encumbered seas which,
lie to the north of the American continent. But Sir
Edward Parry having traced out a passage as far as
Melville Island, it seemed to the bold spirit of our arctic
explorers that it might be possible, by sailing through
Behring’s Straits, to trace out a connection between
the arctic seas on that side and the regions reached by
Parry. Accordingly, M’Clure, in 1850, sailed in the
‘Investigator,’ and passing eastward, after traversing
Behring’s Straits, reached Baring’s Land, and eventually
identified this land as a portion of Banks’ Land, seen by
Parry to the southward of Melville Island.</p>
<p>It will thus be seen that the unexplored parts of the
arctic regions are limited in this direction by sufficiently
high latitudes.</p>
<p>Turn we next to the explorations which Russian<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">103</span>
voyagers have made to the northward of Siberia. It
must be noticed, in the first place, that the coast of
Siberia runs much farther northward than that of the
American continent. So that on this side, independently
of sea explorations, the unknown arctic regions
are limited within very high latitudes. But attempts
have been made to push much farther north from these
shores. In every case, however, the voyagers have
found that the ice-fields, over which they hoped to make
their way, have become gradually less and less firm,
until at length no doubt could remain that there lay
an open sea beyond them. How far that sea may
extend is a part of the secret of the North Pole; but we
may assume that it is no narrow sea, since otherwise
there can be little doubt that the ice-fields which
surround the shores of Northern Siberia would extend
unbroken to the farther shores of what we should thus
have to recognise as a strait. The thinning-off of these
ice-fields, observed by Baron Wrangel and his companions,
affords, indeed, most remarkable and significant
testimony respecting the nature of the sea which lies
beyond. This I shall presently have to exhibit more
at length; in the meantime I need only remark that
scarcely any doubt can exist that the sea thus discovered
extends northwards to at least the eightieth parallel of
latitude.</p>
<p>We may say, then, that from Wellington Channel,
northward of the American continent, right round
towards the west, up to the neighbourhood of Spitzbergen,
very little doubt exists as to the general<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">104</span>
characteristics of the arctic regions, save only as respects
those unexplored parts which lie within ten or twelve
degrees of the North Pole. The reader will see
presently why I am so careful to exhibit the limited
extent of the unexplored arctic regions in this direction.
The guess we shall form as to the true nature of the
north-polar secret will depend almost entirely on this
consideration.</p>
<p>I turn now to those two paths along which arctic
exploration, properly so termed, has been most successfully
pursued.</p>
<p>It is chiefly to the expeditions of Drs. Kane and
Hayes that we owe the important knowledge we have
respecting the northerly portions of the straits which
lie to the west of Greenland. Each of these explorers
succeeded in reaching the shores of an open sea lying
to the north-east of Kennedy Channel, the extreme
northerly limit of those straits. Hayes, who had
accompanied Kane in the voyage of 1854-5, succeeded
in reaching a somewhat higher latitude in sledges drawn
by Esquimaux dogs. But both expeditions agree in
showing that the shores of Greenland trend off suddenly
towards the east at a point within some nine degrees of
the North Pole. On the other hand, the prolongation
of the opposite shore of Kennedy Channel was found
to extend northwards as far as the eye could reach.
Within the angle thus formed there was an open sea
‘rolling,’ says Captain Maury, ‘with the swell of a
boundless ocean.’</p>
<p>But a circumstance was noticed respecting this sea<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">105</span>
which was very significant. The tides ebbed and
flowed in it. Only one fact we know of—a fact to
be presently discussed—throws so much light on the
question we are considering as this circumstance does.
Let us consider a little whence these tidal waves can
have come.</p>
<p>The narrow straits between Greenland on the one
side, and Ellesmere Land and Grinnell Land on the
other, are completely ice-bound. We cannot suppose
that the tidal wave could have found its way beneath
such a barrier as this. ‘I apprehend,’ says Captain
Maury, ‘that the tidal wave from the Atlantic can
no more pass under this icy barrier, to be propagated
in the seas beyond, than the vibrations of a musical
string can pass with its notes a fret on which the
musician has placed his finger.’</p>
<p>Are we to suppose, then, that the tidal waves were
formed in the very sea in which they were seen
by Kane and Hayes? This is Captain Maury’s
opinion:—‘These tides,’ says he, ‘must have been
born in that cold sea, having their cradle about the
North Pole.’</p>
<p>But if we carefully consider the theory of the tides,
this opinion seems inadmissible. Every consideration
on which that theory is founded is opposed to
the assumption that the moon could by any possibility
raise tides in an arctic basin of limited extent.
It would be out of place to examine at length the
principle on which the formation of tides depends. It
will be sufficient for our purposes to remark that it is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">106</span>
not to the mere strength of the moon’s ‘pull’ upon
the waters of any ocean that the tidal wave owes its
origin, but to the difference of the forces by which the
various parts of that ocean are attracted. The whole
of an ocean cannot be raised at once by the moon; but
if one part is attracted more than another, a wave is
formed. That this may happen, the ocean must be one
of wide extent. In the vast seas which surround the
Southern Pole there is room for an immensely powerful
‘drag,’ so to speak; for always there will be one part of
these seas much nearer to the moon than the rest, and
so there will be an appreciable difference of pull upon
that part.</p>
<p>The reader will now see why I have been so
careful to ascertain the limits of the supposed north-polar
ocean, in which, according to Captain Maury,
tidal waves are generated. To accord with his views,
this ocean must be surrounded on all sides by impassable
barriers either of land or ice. These barriers,
then, must lie to the northward of the regions yet
explored, for there is open sea communicating with
the Pacific all round the north of Asia and America.
It only requires a moment’s inspection of a terrestrial
globe to see how small a space is thus left for Captain
Maury’s land-locked ocean. I have purposely left
out of consideration, as yet, the advances made by
arctic voyagers in the direction of the sea which
lies between Greenland and Spitzbergen. We shall
presently see that on this side the imaginary land-locked
ocean must be more limited than towards the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">107</span>
shores of Asia or America. As it is, however, it
remains clear, that if there were any ocean communicating
with the spot reached by Dr. Kane, but
separated from all communication—by open water—either
with the Atlantic or with the Pacific, that
ocean would be so limited in extent that the moon’s
attraction could exert no more effective influence upon
its waters than upon the waters of the Mediterranean—where,
as we know, no tides are generated. This,
then, would be a tideless ocean, and we must look
elsewhere for an explanation of the tidal waves seen by
Dr. Kane.</p>
<p>We thus seem to have <i lang="la">primâ facie</i> evidence that
the sea reached by Kane communicates either with
the Pacific or with the Atlantic, or—which is the most
probable view—with both those oceans. When we
consider the voyages which have been made towards
the North Pole along the northerly prolongation of
the Atlantic Ocean, we find very strong evidence in
favour of the view that there is open-water communication
in this direction, not only with the spot reached
by Kane, but with a region very much nearer to the
North Pole.</p>
<p>So far back as 1607, Hudson had penetrated within
eight and a half degrees (or about 600 miles) of the
North Pole on this route. When we consider the
clumsy build and the poor sailing qualities of the
ships of Hudson’s day, we cannot but feel that so
successful a journey marks this route as one of the
most promising ever tried. Hudson was not turned<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">108</span>
back by impassable barriers of land or ice, but by
the serious dangers to which the floating masses of ice
and the gradually thickening ice-fields exposed his
weak and ill-manned vessel. Since his time, others
have sailed upon the same track, and hitherto with
no better success. It was reserved to the Swedish
expedition of 1868 to gain the highest latitudes ever
reached in a ship in this direction. The steamship
‘Sofia,’ in which this successful voyage was made,
was strongly built of Swedish iron, and originally
intended for winter voyages in the Baltic. Owing to
a number of delays, it was not until September 16
that the ‘Sofia’ reached the most northerly part of
her journey. This was a point some fifteen miles
nearer the North Pole than Hudson had reached.
To the north there still lay broken ice, but packed so
thickly that not even a boat could pass through it.
So late in the season, it would have been unsafe
to wait for a change of weather and a consequent
breaking-up of the ice. Already the temperature had
sunk sixteen degrees below the freezing-point; and
the enterprising voyagers had no choice but to return.
They made, indeed, another push for the north a
fortnight later, but only to meet with a fresh repulse.
An ice-block with which they came into collision
opened a large leak in the vessel’s side; and when
after great exertions they reached the land, the water
already stood two feet over the cabin floor. In the
course of these attempts, the depths of the Atlantic
were sounded, and two interesting facts were revealed.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">109</span>
The first was that the island of Spitzbergen is connected
with Scandinavia by a submarine bank; the
second was the circumstance that to the north and west
of Spitzbergen the Atlantic is more than two miles
deep!</p>
<p>We come now to the most conclusive evidence
yet afforded of the extension of the Atlantic Ocean
towards the immediate neighbourhood of the North
Pole. Singularly enough, this evidence is associated
not with a sea-voyage, nor with a voyage across ice
to the borders of some northern sea, but with a journey
during which the voyagers were throughout surrounded
as far as the eye could reach by apparently fixed ice-fields.</p>
<p>In 1827 Sir Edward Parry was commissioned by
the English Government to attempt to reach the
North Pole. A large reward was promised in case
he succeeded, or even if he could get within five
degrees of the North Pole. The plan which he
adopted seemed promising. Starting from a port in
Spitzbergen, he proposed to travel as far northward
as possible in sea-boats, and then, landing upon the
ice, to prosecute his voyage by means of sledges.
Few narratives of arctic travel are more interesting
than that which Parry has left of this famous ‘boat-and-sledge’
expedition. The voyagers were terribly
harassed by the difficulties of the way; and after a
time, that most trying of all arctic experiences, the
bitterly cold wind which comes from out the dreadful
north, was added to their trials. Yet still they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">110</span>
plodded steadily onwards, tracking their way over
hundreds of miles of ice with the confident expectation
of at least attaining to the eighty-fifth parallel, if not
to the Pole itself.</p>
<p>But a most grievous disappointment was in store
for them. Parry began to notice that the astronomical
observations, by which in favourable weather he estimated
the amount of their northerly progress, showed
a want of correspondence with the actual rate at
which they were travelling. At first he could hardly
believe that there was not some mistake; but at
length the unpleasant conviction was forced upon him
that the whole ice-field over which he and his companions
had been toiling so painfully was setting
steadily southwards before the wind. Each day the
extent of this set became greater and greater, until at
length they were actually carried as fast towards the
south as they could travel northwards.</p>
<p>Parry deemed it useless to continue the struggle.
There were certainly two chances in his favour. It
was possible that the north wind might cease to blow,
and it was also possible that the limit of the ice might
soon be reached, and that his boats might travel easily
northward upon the open sea beyond. But he had
to consider the exhausted state of his men, and the
great additional danger to which they were subjected
by the movable nature of the ice-fields. If the ice
should break up, or if heavy and long-continued
southerly winds should blow, they might have found it
very difficult to regain their port of refuge in Spitz<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">111</span>bergen
before winter set in or their stores were
exhausted. Besides, there were no signs of water in
the direction they had been taking. The water-sky
of arctic regions can be recognised by the experienced
seamen long before the open sea itself is visible. On
every side, however, there were the signs of widely-extended
ice-fields. It seemed, therefore, hopeless to
persevere, and Parry decided on returning with all
possible speed to the haven of refuge prepared for the
party in Spitzbergen. He had succeeded in reaching
the highest northern latitudes ever yet attained by
man. (A somewhat higher latitude has since been
reached by Captain Nares’s expedition.)</p>
<p>The most remarkable feature of this expedition,
however, is not the high latitude which the party
attained, but the strange circumstance which led to
their discomfiture. What opinion are we to form of
an ocean at once wide and deep enough to float an
ice-field which must have been thirty or forty thousand
square miles in extent? Parry had travelled
upwards of three hundred miles across the field, and
we may fairly suppose that he might have travelled
forty or fifty miles farther without reaching open
water; also that the field extended fully fifty miles on
each side of Parry’s northerly track. That the whole
of so enormous a field should have floated freely before
the arctic winds is indeed an astonishing circumstance.
On every side of this floating ice-island there must
have been seas comparatively free from ice; and could
a stout ship have forced its way through these seas, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">112</span>
latitudes to which it could have reached would have
been far higher than those to which Parry’s party was
able to attain. For a moment’s consideration will
show that the part of the great ice-field where Parry
was compelled to turn back must have been floating
in far higher latitudes when he first set out. He
reckoned that he had lost more than a hundred miles
through the southerly motion of the ice-field, and by
this amount, of course, the point he reached had been
nearer the Pole. It is not assuming too much to
say that a ship which could have forced its way round
the great floating ice-field would certainly have been
able to get within four degrees of the Pole. It seems to
us highly probable that she would even have been able
to sail upon open water to and beyond the Pole itself.</p>
<p>And when we remember the direction in which
Dr. Kane saw an open sea—namely, towards the very
region where Parry’s ice—ship had floated a quarter of
a century before—it seems reasonable to conclude that
there is open water communication between the seas
which lie to the north of Spitzbergen and those which
lave the north-western shores of Greenland. If this
be so, we at once obtain an explanation of the tidal
waves which Kane watched day after day in 1855.
These had no doubt swept along the valley of the
Atlantic, and thence around the northern coast of
Greenland. It follows that, densely as the ice may
be packed at times in the seas by which Hudson,
Scoresby, and other captains have attempted to reach
the North Pole, the frozen masses must in reality be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">113</span>
floating freely, and there must therefore exist channels
through which an adventurous seaman might manage
to penetrate the dangerous barriers surrounding the
polar ocean.</p>
<p>In such an expedition, chance unfortunately plays
a large part. Whalers tell us that there is great uncertainty
as to the winds which may blow during
an arctic summer. The icebergs may be crowded by
easterly winds upon the shores of Greenland, or by
westerly winds upon the shores of Spitzbergen, or,
lastly, the central passage may be the most encumbered,
through the effects of winds blowing now from
the east and now from the west. Thus the arctic
voyager has not merely to take his chance as to the
route along which he shall adventure northwards, but
often, after forcing his way successfully for a considerable
distance, he finds the ice-fields suddenly closing
in upon him on every side, and threatening to crush
his ship into fragments. The irresistible power with
which, under such circumstances, the masses of ice
bear down upon the stoutest ship, has been evidenced
again and again; though, fortunately, it not unfrequently
happens that some irregularity along one side
or the other of the closing channel serves as a sort of
natural dock, within which the vessel may remain in
comparative safety until a change of wind sets her free.
Instances have been known in which a ship has had so
narrow an escape in this way, and has been subjected
to such an enormous pressure, that when the channel
was opened out again, the impress of the ship’s side has<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">114</span>
been seen distinctly marked upon the massive blocks of
ice which have pressed against her.</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From the <cite>St. Paul’s Magazine</cite>, June 1869.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 id="IS_THE_GULF_STREAM_A_MYTH"><i>IS THE GULF STREAM A MYTH.</i></h2>
<p>The Gulf Stream has recently attracted a large share
of the attention of our men of science. The strange
weather which we experienced last winter (see date of
essay) has had something to do with this. The influence
of the Gulf Stream upon our climate, and the
special influence which it is assumed to exercise in mitigating
the severity of our winters, have been so long
recognised that meteorologists began to inquire what
changes could be supposed to have taken place in the
great current to account for so remarkable a winter as
the last. But it happened also that at a meeting of the
Royal Geographical Society early in the present year
the very existence of the Gulf Stream was called in
question, just when meteorologists were disposed to
assign to it effects of unusual importance. And in
the course of the discussion whether there is in truth
a Gulf Stream—or rather whether our shores are
visited by a current which merits such a name—a
variety of interesting facts were adduced, which were
either before unknown or had attracted little attention.
As at a recent meeting of the same society these doubts
have been renewed, I propose to examine briefly, in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">115</span>
the first place, a few of the considerations which have
been urged against the existence of a current from the
Gulf of Mexico to the neighbourhood of our shores;
and then, having rehabilitated the reputation of this
celebrated ocean river—as I believe I shall be able
to do—I shall proceed to give a brief sketch of the
processes by which the current-system of the North
Atlantic is set and maintained in motion.</p>
<p>In reality the Gulf Stream is only a part of a system
of oceanic circulation; but in dealing with the
arguments which have been urged against its very
existence, we may confine our attention to the fact
that, according to the views which had been accepted
for more than a century, there is a stream of water
which, running out of the Gulf Stream through the
Narrows of Bemini, flows along the shores of the
United States to Newfoundland, and thence right
across the Atlantic to the shores of Great Britain. It
is this last fact which is now called in question. The
existence of a current as far as the neighbourhood of
Newfoundland is conceded, but the fact that the stream
flows onward to our shores is denied.</p>
<p>The point on which most stress is placed is the
shallowness of the passage called the ‘Bemini Narrows,’
through which it is assumed that the whole of the Gulf
current must pass. This passage has a width of about
forty miles, and a depth of little more than six hundred
yards. The current which flows through it is perhaps
little more than thirty miles in width, and a quarter of
a mile in depth. It is asked with some appearance of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">116</span>
reason, how this narrow current can be looked upon as
the parent of that wide stream which is supposed to
traverse the Atlantic with a mean width of some five
or six hundred miles. Indeed, a much greater width
has been assigned to it, though on mistaken grounds;
for it has been remarked that since waifs and strays
from the tropics are found upon the shores of Portugal,
as well as upon those of Greenland, we must ascribe
to the current a span equal to the enormous space
separating these places. But the circumstance here
dwelt upon can clearly be explained in another way.
We know that of two pieces of wood thrown into the
Thames at Richmond, one might be picked up at
Putney, and the other at Gravesend. Yet we do not
conclude that the width of the Thames is equal to the
distance separating Putney from Gravesend. And
doubtless the tropical waifs which have been picked up
on the shores of Greenland and of Portugal have found
their way thither by circuitous courses, and not by
direct transmission along opposite edges of the great
Gulf current.</p>
<p>But certainly the difficulty associated with the narrowness
of the Bemini current is one deserving of
careful attention. Are we free to identify a current
six hundred miles in width with one which is but thirty
miles wide, and not very deep? An increase of width
certainly not less than thirtyfold would appear to correspond
to a proportionate diminution of depth. And
remembering that it is only near the middle of the
Narrows that the Gulf Stream has a depth of four<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">117</span>
hundred yards, we could scarcely assign to the wide
current in the mid-Atlantic a greater depth than ten
or twelve yards. This depth seems altogether out of
proportion to the enormous lateral extension of the
current.</p>
<p>But besides that even this consideration would not
suffice to disprove the existence of a current in the
mid-Atlantic, an important circumstance remains to be
mentioned. The current in the Narrows flows with
great velocity,—certainly not less than four or five miles
an hour. As the current grows wider it flows more
sedately; and opposite Cape Hatteras its velocity is
already reduced to little more than three miles an hour.
In the mid-Atlantic the current may be assumed to
flow at a rate little exceeding a mile per hour, at the
outside. Here, then, we have a circumstance which
suffices to remove a large part of the difficulty arising
from the narrowness of the Bemini current, and we can
at once increase our estimate of the depth of the mid-Atlantic
current fivefold.</p>
<p>But this is not all. It has long been understood
that the current which passes out through the Narrows
of Bemini corresponds to the portion of the great
equatorial current which passes into the Gulf of Mexico
between the West Indian Islands. We cannot doubt
that the barrier formed by those islands serves to
divert a large portion of the equatorial current. The
portion thus diverted finds its way, we may assume,
along the outside of the West Indian Archipelago,
and thus joins the other portion—which has in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">118</span>
meantime made the circuit of the Gulf—as it issues
from the Bemini Straits. All the maps in which the
Atlantic currents are depicted present precisely such
an outside current as I have here spoken of, and
most of them assign to it a width exceeding that of
the Bemini current. Indeed, were it not for the doubts
which the recent discussions have thrown upon all the
currents charted by seamen, I should have been content
to point to this outside current as shown in the
maps. As it is, I have thought is necessary to show
that such a current must necessarily have an existence,
since we cannot lose sight of the influence of the West
Indian Isles in partially damming up the passage along
which the equatorial current would otherwise find its
way into the Gulf of Mexico. Whatever portion of
the great current is thus diverted must find a passage
elsewhere, and no passage exists for it save along the
outside of the West Indian Isles.</p>
<p>The possibility that the wide current which has
been assumed to traverse the mid-Atlantic may be associated
with the waters which flow from the Gulf of
Mexico, either through the Narrows or round the outside
of the barrier formed by the West Indies, has
thus been satisfactorily established. But we now have
to consider difficulties which have been supposed to
encounter our current on its passage from the Gulf to
the mid-Atlantic.</p>
<p>Northwards, along the shores of the United States,
the current has been traced by the singular blueness
of its waters until it has reached the neighbourhood<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">119</span>
of Newfoundland. Over a part of this course, indeed,
the waters of the current are of indigo blue, and so
clearly marked that their line of junction with the
ordinary sea-water can be traced by the eye. ‘Often,’
says Captain Maury, ‘one half of a vessel may be
perceived floating in Gulf Stream water, while the
other half is in common water of the sea—so sharp
is the line, and such the want of affinity between the
waters, and such, too, the reluctance, so to speak, on the
part of those of the Gulf Stream, to mingle with the
littoral waters of the sea.’</p>
<p>But it is now denied that there is any current
beyond the neighbourhood of Newfoundland—or that
the warm temperature, which has characterised the
waters of the current up to this point, can be detected
farther out.</p>
<p>It is first noticed that, as the Gulf current must
reach the neighbourhood of Newfoundland with a
north-easterly motion, and, if it ever reached the shores
of the British Isles, would have to travel thither with
an almost due easterly motion, there is a change of
direction to be accounted for. This, however, is an
old, and I had supposed exploded, fallacy. The
course of the Gulf Stream from the Bemini Straits to
the British Isles corresponds exactly with that which is
due to the combined effects of the motion of the water
and that of the earth upon its axis. Florida being much
nearer than Ireland to the equator, has a much more
rapid easterly motion. Therefore, as the current gets
farther and farther north, the effect of the easterly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">120</span>
motion thus imparted to it begins to show itself more
and more, until the current is gradually changed from a
north-easterly to an almost easterly stream. The process
is the exact converse of that by which the air-currents
from the north gradually change into the north-westerly
trade-winds as they get farther south.</p>
<p>But it is further remarked that as the current passes
out beyond the shelter of Newfoundland, it is impinged
upon by those cold currents from the arctic seas which
are known to be continually flowing out of Baffin’s Bay
and down the eastern shores of Greenland; and it is contended
that these currents suffice, not merely to break
up the Gulf current, but so to cool its waters that these
could produce no effect upon the climate of Great Britain
if they ever reached its neighbourhood.</p>
<p>Here, again, I must remark that we are dealing
with no new discovery. Captain Maury has already
remarked upon this peculiarity. ‘At the very season
of the year,’ he says, ‘when the Gulf Stream is rushing
in greatest volume through the Straits of Florida,
and hastening to the north with the greatest rapidity,
there is a cold stream from Baffin’s Bay, Labrador,
and the coasts of the north, running south with equal
velocity.... One part of it underruns the Gulf
Stream, as is shown by the icebergs, which are carried
in a direction tending across its course.’ There can be
no doubt, in fact, that this last circumstance indicates
the manner in which the main contest between the two
currents is settled. A portion of the arctic current finds
its way between the Gulf Stream and the continent of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">121</span>
America; and this portion, though narrow, has a very
remarkable effect in increasing the coldness of the
American winters. But the main part, (heavier, by
reason of its coldness, than the surrounding water,) sinks
beneath the surface. And the well-known fact mentioned
by Maury, that icebergs have been seen stemming
the Gulf Stream, suffices to show how comparatively
shallow that current is at this distance from its source,
and thus aids to remove a difficulty which we have
already had occasion to deal with.</p>
<p>Doubtless the cooling influence of the arctic currents
is appreciable; but it would be a mistake to suppose
that this influence can suffice to deprive the Gulf
current of its distinctive warmth. If all the effect of
the cold current were operative on the Gulf Stream
alone we might suppose that, despite the enormous
quantity of comparatively warm water which is continually
being carried northwards, the current would be
reduced to the temperature of the surrounding water.
But this is not so. The arctic current not only cools
the Gulf current, but the surrounding water also—possibly
to a greater extent, for it is commonly supposed
that a bed of ordinary sea-water separates the
two main currents from each other. Thus the characteristic
difference of temperature remains unaffected.
But in reality we may assume that the cooling effect
actually exercised by the arctic current upon the
neighbouring sea is altogether disproportionate to the
immense amount of heat continually being carried
northwards by the Gulf Stream. It is astonishing how<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">122</span>
unreadily two sea-currents exchange their temperatures—to
use a somewhat inexact mode of expression. The
very fact that the littoral current of the United States
is so cold—a fact thoroughly established—shows how
little warmth this current has drawn from the neighbouring
seas. Another fact, mentioned by Captain
Maury, bears in a very interesting manner upon this
peculiarity. He says: ‘If any vessel will take up her
position a little to the northward of Bermuda, and
steering thence for the capes of Virginia, will try the
water-thermometer all the way at short intervals, she
will find its reading to be now higher, now lower; and
the observer will discover that he has been crossing
streak after streak of warm and cool water in regular
alternations.’ Each portion maintains its own temperature,
even in the case of such warm streaks as these,
all belonging to one current.</p>
<p>Similar considerations dispose of the arguments
which have been founded on the temperature of the
sea-bottom. It has been proved that the living creatures
which people the lower depths of the sea exist under
circumstances which evidence a perfect uniformity of
temperature; and arguments on the subject of the
Gulf Stream have been derived from the evidence of
what is termed a minimum thermometer—that is, a
thermometer which will indicate the lowest temperature
it has been exposed to—let down into the depths of
the sea. All such arguments, whether adduced against
or in favour of the Gulf Stream theory, must be held,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">123</span>
to be futile, since the thermometer in its descent may
pass through several submarine currents of different
temperature.</p>
<p>Lastly, an argument has been urged against the
warming effects of the Gulf Stream upon our climate
which requires to be considered with some attention.
It is urged that the warmth derived from so shallow a
current as the Gulf Stream must be, by the time it has
reached our shores, could not provide an amount of
heat sufficient to affect our climate to any appreciable
extent. The mere neighbourhood of this water at a
temperature slightly higher than that due to the
latitude could not, it is urged, affect the temperature
of the inland counties at all.</p>
<p>This argument is founded on a misapprehension of
the beautiful arrangement by which Nature carries heat
from one region to distribute it over another. Over
the surface of the whole current the process of evaporation
is going on at a greater rate than over the
neighbouring seas, because the waters of the current
are warmer than those which surround them. The
vapour thus rising above the Gulf Stream is presently
wafted by the south-westerly winds to our shores and
over our whole land. But as it thus reaches a region
of comparative cold, the vapour is condensed—that is,
turned into fog, or mist, or cloud, according to circumstances.
It is during this change that it gives out the
heat it has brought with it from the Gulf Stream.
For precisely as the evaporation of water is a process<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">124</span>
requiring heat, the change of vapour into water—whether
in the form of fog, mist, cloud, or rain—is a
process in which heat is given out. Thus it is that
the south-westerly wind, the commonest wind we have,
brings clouds and fogs and rain to us from the Gulf
Stream, and with them brings the Gulf Stream
warmth.</p>
<p>Why the south-westerly winds should be so common,
and how it is that over the Gulf Stream there is a sort
of air-channel along which winds come to us as if by
their natural pathway, are matters inquired into farther
on (see p. 164). The subject is full of interest, but
need not here detain us.</p>
<p>It would seem that a mechanism involving the motion
of such enormous masses of water as the current-system
of the Atlantic should depend on the operation
of very evident laws. Yet a variety of contradictory
hypotheses have been put forward from time to time respecting
this system of circulation, and even now the
scientific world is divided between two opposing theories.</p>
<p>Of old the Mississippi River was supposed to be the
parent of the Gulf Stream. It was noticed that the
current flows at about the same rate as the Mississippi,
and this fact was considered sufficient to support the
strange theory that a river can give birth to an ocean-current.</p>
<p>It was easy, however, to overthrow this theory.
Captain Livingston showed that the volume of water
which is poured out of the Gulf of Mexico in the form
of an ocean stream is more than a thousand times<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">125</span>
greater than the volume poured into the Gulf by the
Mississippi River.</p>
<p>Having overthrown this old theory of the Gulf
Stream, Captain Livingston attempted to set up one
which is equally unfounded. He ascribed the current
to the sun’s apparent yearly motion and the influence
thus exerted on the waters of the Atlantic. A sort of
yearly tide is conceived, according to this theory, to be
the true parent of the Gulf current. It need hardly
be said, however, that a phenomenon which remains
without change through the winter and summer seasons
cannot possibly be referred to the operation of such a
cause as a yearly tide.</p>
<p>It is to Dr. Franklin that we owe the first theory of
the Gulf Stream which has met with general acceptance.
He held that the Gulf Stream is formed by the outflow
of waters which have been forced into the Caribbean
Sea by the trade-winds; so that the pressure of these
winds on the Atlantic Ocean forms, according to Dr.
Franklin, the true motive power of the Gulf Stream
machinery. According to Maury, this theory has
‘come to be the most generally received opinion in the
mind of seafaring people.’ It supplies a moving force
of undoubted efficiency. We know that as the trade-winds
travel towards the equator they lose their
westerly motion. It is reasonable to suppose that this
is caused by friction against the surface of the ocean,
to which, therefore, a corresponding westerly motion
must have been imparted.</p>
<p>There is a simplicity about Franklin’s theory which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">126</span>
commends it favourably to consideration. But when
we examine it somewhat more closely, several very
decided flaws present themselves to our attention.</p>
<p>Consider, in the first place, the enormous mass of
water moved by the supposed agency of the winds.
Air has a weight—volume for volume—which is less
than one eight-hundredth part of that of water. So
that, to create a water-current, an air-current more
than eight hundred times as large and of equal velocity
must expend the whole of its motion. Now the trade-winds
are gentle winds, their velocity scarcely exceeding
in general that of the more swiftly-moving portions
of the Gulf Stream. But even assigning to them a
velocity four times as great, we still want an air-current
two hundred times as large as the water-current. And
the former must give up the whole of its motion, which,
in the case of so elastic a substance as air, would hardly
happen, the upper air being unlikely to be much affected
by the motion of the lower.</p>
<p>But this is far from being all. If the trade-winds
blew throughout the year, we might be disposed to
recognise their influence upon the Gulf Stream as a
paramount, if not the sole one. But this is not the
case. Captain Maury states that, ‘With the view of
ascertaining the average number of days during the
year that the north-east trade-winds of the Atlantic
operate upon the currents between twenty-five degrees
north latitude and the equator, log-books containing no
less than 380,284 observations on the force and direction
of the wind in that ocean were examined. The data<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">127</span>
thus afforded were carefully compared and discussed.
The results show that within these latitudes—and on
the average—the wind from the north-east is in excess
of the winds from the south-west only 111 days out of
the 365. Now, can the north-east trades,‘ he pertinently
asks, ‘by blowing for less than one-third of the time,
cause the Gulf Stream to run all the time, and without
varying its velocity either to their force or to their
prevalence?’</p>
<p>And besides this, we have to consider that no part
of the Gulf Stream flows strictly before the trade-winds.
Where the current flows most rapidly, namely,
in the Narrows of Bemini, it sets against the wind, and
for hundreds of miles after it enters the Atlantic ‘it
runs,’ says Maury, ‘right in the “wind’s eye.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">128</span>”‘ It
must be remembered that a current of air directed
with considerable force against the surface of still
water has not the power of generating a current which
can force its way far through the resisting fluid. If
this were so, we might understand how the current,
originating in sub-tropical regions, could force its way
onward after the moving force had ceased to act upon
it, and even carry its waters right against the wind,
after leaving the Gulf of Mexico. But experience
is wholly opposed to this view. The most energetic
currents are quickly dispersed when they reach a
wide expanse of still water. For example, the
Niagara below the falls is an immense and rapid
river. Yet when it reaches Lake Ontario, ‘instead of
preserving its character as a distinct and well-defined
stream for several hundred miles, it spreads itself out,
and its waters are immediately lost in those of the
lake.’ Here, again, the question asked by Maury
bears pertinently on the subject we are considering.
‘Why,’ he says, ‘should not the Gulf Stream do the
same? It gradually enlarges itself, it is true; but,
instead of mingling with the ocean by broad spreading,
as the immense rivers descending into the northern
lakes do, its waters, like a stream of oil in the ocean,
preserve a distinctive character for more than three
thousand miles.’</p>
<p>The only other theory which has been considered in
recent times to account satisfactorily for all the features
of the Gulf Stream mechanism was put forward, we
believe, by Captain Maury. In this theory, the motive
power of the whole system of oceanic circulation
is held to be the action of the sun’s heat upon
the waters of the sea. We recognise two contrary
effects as the immediate results of the sun’s action. In
the first place, by warming the equatorial waters,
it tends to make them lighter; in the second place,
by causing evaporation, it renders them salter, and so
tends to make them heavier. We have to inquire
which form of action is most effective. The inquiry
would be somewhat difficult, if we had not the evidence
of the sea itself to supply an answer. For it is an inquiry
to which ordinary experimental processes would
not be applicable. We must accept the fact that the
heated water from the equatorial seas actually does
float upon the cooler portions of the Atlantic, as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">129</span>
evidence that the action of the sun results in making
the water lighter.</p>
<p>Now, Maury says that the water thus lightened
must flow over and form a surface-current towards the
Poles; while the cold and heavy water from the polar
seas, as soon as it reaches the temperate zone, must
sink and form a submarine current. He recognises in
these facts the mainspring of the whole system of
oceanic circulation. If a long trough be divided into
two compartments, and we fill one with oil and the
other with water, and then remove the dividing plate,
we shall see the oil rushing over the water at one end
of the trough, and the water rushing under the oil at
the other. And if we further conceive that oil is continually
being added at that end of the trough originally
filled with oil, while water is continually added
at the other, it is clear that the system of currents
would continue in action: that is, there would be a
continual flow of oil in one direction along the surface
of the water, and of water in the contrary direction
underneath the oil.</p>
<p>But Sir John Herschel maintains that no such effects
as Maury describes could follow the action of the sun’s
heat upon the equatorial waters. He argues thus:
Granting that these waters become lighter and expand
in volume, yet they can only move upwards, downwards,
or sideways. There can be nothing to cause
either of the two first forms of motion; and as for
motion sideways, it can only result from the gradual
slope caused by the bulging of the equatorial waters.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">130</span>
He proceeds to show that this slope is so slight that
we cannot look upon it as competent to form any
sensible current from the equatorial towards the polar
seas. And even if it could, he says, the water thus
flowing off would have an eastward instead of a
westward motion, precisely as the counter-trade-winds,
blowing from equatorial to polar regions, have an eastward
motion.</p>
<p>It is singular how completely the supporter of each
rival view has succeeded in overthrowing the arguments
of his opponent. Certainly Maury has shown
with complete success that the inconstant trade-winds
cannot account for the constant Gulf current, which
does not even flow before them, but, in places, exactly
against their force. And the reasoning of Sir John
Herschel seems equally cogent, for certainly the flow
of water from equatorial towards polar regions ought
from the first to have an eastward, instead of a westward
motion; whereas the equatorial current, of which
the Gulf Stream is but the continuation, flows from
east to west, right across the Atlantic.</p>
<p>Equally strange is it to find that each of these
eminent men, having read the arguments of the other,
reasserts, but does not effectually defend, his own
theory, and repeats with even more damaging effect
his arguments against the rival view.</p>
<p>Yet one or other theory must at least point to the
true view, for the Atlantic is subject to no other agencies
which can for a moment be held to account for a
phenomenon of such magnitude as the Gulf Stream.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">131</span></p>
<p>It appears to me, that on a close examination of the
Gulf Stream mechanism, the true mainspring of its
motion can be recognised. Compelled to reject the
theory that the trade-winds generate the equatorial
current westward, let us consider whether Herschel’s
arguments against the ‘heat theory’ may not suggest a
hint for our guidance. He points out that an overflow
from the equator polewards would result in an eastward,
and not in a westward, current. This is true. It is
equally true that a flow of water towards the equator
would result in a westward current. But no such flow
is observed. Is it possible that there may be such a
flow, but that it takes place in a hidden manner?
Clearly there may be. Submarine currents towards
the equator would have precisely the kind of motion we
require, and if any cause drew them to the surface near
the equator, they would account in full for the great
equatorial westward current.</p>
<p>At this point we begin to see that an important
circumstance has been lost sight of in dealing with the
heat theory. The action of the sun on the surface-water
of the equatorial Atlantic has only been considered
with reference to its warming effects. But we
must not forget that this action has drying effects also.
It evaporates enormous quantities of water, and we
have to inquire whence the water comes by which the
sea-level is maintained. A surface flow from the sub-tropical
seas would suffice for this purpose, but no such
flow is observed. Whence, then, can the water come
but from below? Thus we recognise the fact that a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">132</span>
process resembling suction is continually taking place
over the whole area of the equatorial Atlantic, the
agent being the intense heat of the tropical sun. No
one can doubt that this agent is one of adequate power.
Indeed, the winds, conceived by Franklin to be the
primary cause of the Atlantic currents, are in reality
due to the merest fraction of the energy inherent in
the sun’s heat.</p>
<p>We have other evidence that the indraught is from
below in the comparative coldness of the equatorial
current. The Gulf Stream is warm by comparison
with the surrounding waters, but the equatorial current
is cooler than the tropical seas. According to Professor
Ansted, the southern portion of the equatorial current,
as it flows past Brazil, ‘is everywhere a cold current,
generally from four to six degrees below the adjacent
ocean.’</p>
<p>If we here recognise the mainspring of the Gulf
Stream mechanism, or rather of the whole system of
oceanic circulation-for the movements observed in the
Atlantic have their exact counterpart in the Pacific—we
shall have no difficulty in accounting for all the
motions which that mechanism exhibits. We need no
longer look upon the Gulf Stream as the rebound of the
equatorial current from the shores of North America.
Knowing that there is an underflow towards the
equator, we see that there must be a surface-flow
towards the Poles. And this flow must as inevitably
result in an easterly motion as the underflow towards
the equator results in a westerly motion. We have,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">133</span>
indeed, the phenomena of the trades and counter-trades
exhibited in water-currents instead of air-currents.</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From the <cite>St. Paul’s Magazine</cite>, September 1869.)<SPAN name="FNanchor_9_9" href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">9</SPAN><br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 id="FLOODS_IN_SWITZERLAND"><i>FLOODS IN SWITZERLAND.</i></h2>
<p>Recently (see date of essay) we have witnessed a succession
of remarkable evidences of Nature’s destructive
powers. The fires of Vesuvius, the earth-throes of the
sub-equatorial Andes, and the submarine disturbance
which has shaken Hawaii, have presented to us the
various forms of destructive action which the earth’s,
subterranean forces can assume. In the disastrous
floods which have recently visited the Alpine cantons of
Switzerland, we have evidence of the fact that natural
forces which we are in the habit of regarding as beneficent
and restorative may exhibit themselves as agents
of the most widespread destruction. I have pointed
out elsewhere (see p. 226) how enormous is the amount
of power of which the rain-cloud is the representative;
and in doing so I have endeavoured to exhibit the
contrast between the steady action of the falling shower
and the energy of the processes of which rain is in
reality the equivalent. But in the floods which have
lately ravaged Switzerland we see the same facts illustrated,
not by numerical calculations or by the results<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">134</span>
of philosophical experiments, but in action, and that
action taking place on the most widely extended scale.
The whole of the south-eastern, or, as it may be termed,
the Alpine half of Switzerland, has suffered from these
floods. If a line be drawn from the Lake of Constance,
in the north-east of Switzerland, to the Col de Balme, in
the south-west, it will divide Switzerland into two nearly
equal portions, and scarcely a canton within the eastern
of these divisions has escaped without great damage.</p>
<p>The cantons which have suffered most terribly
are those of Tessin, Grisons, and St. Gall. The St.
Gothard, Splugen, and St. Bernhardin routes have
been rendered impassable. Twenty-seven lives were
lost in the St. Gothard Pass, besides horses and
waggons full of merchandise. It is stated that on the
three routes upwards of eighty persons perished. In
the village of Loderio alone, no less than fifty deaths
occurred. So terrible a flood has not taken place since
the year 1834. Nor have the cantons of Uri and
Valais escaped. From Unterwalden we hear that the
heavy rains which took place a fortnight ago have
carried away several large bridges, and many of the
rivers continue still very swollen. I have already
described how enormous the material losses are which
have been caused by these floods. Many places are
under water; others in ruins or absolutely destroyed.
In Tessin alone the damage is estimated at forty thousand
pounds sterling.</p>
<p>A country like Switzerland must always be liable to
the occurrence, from time to time, of catastrophes of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">135</span>
this sort. Or rather, perhaps, we should draw a distinction
between the two divisions of Switzerland
referred to above. Of these the one may be termed
the mountain half, and the other the lake half of the
country. It is the former portion of the country which
is principally subject to the dynamical action of water.
A long-continued and heavy rainfall over the higher
lands cannot fail to produce a variety of remarkable
effects, where the arrangement of mountains and passes,
hills, valleys, and ravines is so complicated. There are
places where a large volume of water can accumulate
until the barriers which have opposed its passage to the
plains burst under its increasing weight; and then
follow those destructive rushes of water which sweep
away whole villages at once. It is, in fact, the capacity
of the Swiss mountain region for damming up water,
far more than any other circumstance, which renders
the Swiss floods so destructive.</p>
<p>And then it must be remembered that there are at
all times suspended over the plains and valleys which
lie beneath the Alpine ranges enormous masses of
water in the form of snow and ice. Although in general
these suffer no changes but those due to the partial
melting which takes place in summer, and the renewed
accumulation which takes place in winter, yet when
heavy rains fall upon the less elevated portions of the
Alpine snow, they not only melt that snow much more
rapidly than the summer sun would do, but they wash
down large masses, which add largely to the destructive
power of the descending waters.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">136</span></p>
<p>The most destructive floods which have occurred in
Switzerland have usually been those which take place
in early summer. The floods which inundated the
plains of Martigny in 1818 were a remarkable instance
of the effects which result from the natural damming
up of large volumes of water in the upper parts of
the Alpine hill-country. The whole of the valley of
Bagnes, one of the largest of the lateral branches of the
main valley of the Rhone above Geneva, was converted
into a lake, in the spring of 1818, by the damming up
of a narrow pass into which avalanches of snow and
ice had been precipitated from a lofty glacier overhanging
the bed of the river Dranse. The ice barrier
enclosed a lake no less than half a league in length
and an eighth of a mile wide, and in places two hundred
feet deep. The inhabitants of the neighbouring villages
were terrified by the danger which was to be apprehended
from the bursting of the barrier. They cut
a gallery seven hundred feet long through the ice,
while the waters had as yet risen to but a moderate
height; and when the waters began to flow through
this channel, its course was deepened by the melting of
the ice, and at length nearly half the contents of the
lake were safely carried off. It was hoped that the
process would continue, and the country be saved from
the danger which had been so long impending over it.
But as the heat of the weather increased, the central
part of the barrier slowly melted away, until it became
too weak to bear the enormous weight of water which
was pressing against it. At length it gave way, so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">137</span>
suddenly and completely that all the water which remained
in the lake rushed out in half an hour. The
downward passage of the water illustrated, in a very
remarkable way, the fact that the chief mischief of
floods is occasioned where water is checked in its outflow.
For it is related that, ‘in the course of their
descent the waters encountered several narrow gorges,
and at each of these they rose to a great height,
and then burst with new violence into the next basin,
sweeping along forests, houses, bridges, and cultivated
land.’ Along the greater part of its course the flood
resembled rather a moving mass of rock and mud than
a stream of water. Enormous masses of granite were
torn out of the sides of the valleys and whirled for
hundreds of yards along the course of the flood. M.
Escher relates that one of the fragments thus swept
along was no less than sixty yards in circumference.
At first the water rushed onwards at a rate of more
than a mile in three minutes, and the whole distance
(forty-five miles) which separates the valley of Bagnes
from the Lake of Geneva was traversed in little more
than six hours. The bodies of persons who had been
drowned in Martigny were found floating on the
farther side of the lake of Geneva, near Vevey.
Thousands of trees were torn up by the roots, and the
ruins of buildings which had been overthrown by the
flood were carried down beyond Martigny. In fact,
the flood at this point was so high that some of the
houses in Martigny were filled with mud up to the
second storey<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">138</span>.‘ Beyond Martigny the flood did but
little damage, as it here expanded over the plain, and
was reduced both in depth and velocity.</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From the <cite>Daily News</cite> for October 20, 1868.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 id="A_GREAT_TIDAL_WAVE"><i>A GREAT TIDAL WAVE.</i></h2>
<p>During the last few days anxious questionings have
been heard respecting the next spring tides. A certain
naval officer, who conceives that he can trace in the
relative positions of the sun and moon the secret of
every important change of weather, has described in
the columns of a contemporary the threatening significance
of the approaching conjunction of the sun and
moon. He predicts violent atmospheric disturbances;
though in another place he tells us merely that the
conjunction is to cause ‘unsettled weather,’ a state of
matters to which we in England have become tolerably
well accustomed.</p>
<p>But people are asking what is the actual relation
which is to bring about such terrible events. The
matter is very simple. On October 5, the moon will
be new—in other words, if it were not for the brightness
of the sun, we should see the moon close by that
luminary on the heavens. Thus the sun and moon
will pull with combined effect upon the waters of the
earth, and so cause what are called spring tides. This,
of course, happens at the time of every new moon,
but sometimes the moon exerts a more effective pull<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">139</span>
than at other times; and the same happens also in the
case of the sun; and on October 5, it happens that
both the sun and the moon will give a particularly
vigorous haul upon the earth’s waters. As regards
the sun, there is nothing unusual. Every October his
pull on the ocean is much the same as in preceding
Octobers. But October is a month of high solar tides—and
for these reasons:—In September, as everyone
knows, the sun crosses the equinoctial; and, other
things being equal, it would be when on the equinoctial
that his power to raise a tidal wave would be greatest.
But other things are not equal; for the sun is not
always at the same distance from the earth. He is
nearest in January; so that he would exert more
power in that month than in any other, if his force
depended solely on distance. As matters actually
stand, it will be obvious that at some time between
September and January the sun’s tidal power would
have a maximum value. Thus it is that October is a
month of high solar tidal waves.</p>
<p>But it is the lunar wave which will be most effectively
strengthened at the next spring tide. If we could
watch the lunar tidal wave alone (instead of always
finding it combined with the solar wave) we should
find it gradually increasing, and then gradually diminishing,
in a period of about a lunar month. And we
should find that it was always largest when the moon
looked largest, and <i lang="la">vice versâ</i>. In other words, when
the moon is in perigee the lunar wave is largest. But
then there is another consideration. The lunar wave<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">140</span>
would vary according to the moon’s proximity to the
equinoctial; and (other things being equal) would be
largest when the moon is exactly opposite the earth’s
equator. If the two effects are combined, that is, if the
moon happens to be in perigee and on the equinoctial
at the same time, then of course we get the largest
lunar tidal wave we can possibly have.</p>
<p>Now this ‘largest lunar wave’ occurs at somewhat
long intervals, because the relation on which it depends
is one which is, so to speak, exceptional. Still the relation
does recur, and with a certain degree of regularity.
When it happens, however, it by no means follows that
we have a very high tide; because it may occur when
the tides are near ‘neap’; in other words, when the
sun and moon exert opposing effects. The largest
lunar wave cannot stand the drain which the solar
wave exerts upon it at the time of neap tides. Nor
would the large lunar tidal wave produce an exceptionally
high tide, even though it were not the
time of ‘neap,’ or were tolerably near the time of
‘spring’ tides. Only when it happens that a large
lunar wave combines fully with the solar wave, do we
get very high tides. And when, in addition to this
relation, we have the solar wave nearly at a maximum,
we get the highest of all possible tides. This is what
will happen, or all but happen, on October 5 next.
The combination of circumstances is almost the most
effective that can possibly exist.</p>
<p>But, after all, high tides depend very importantly
on other considerations than astronomical ones. Most<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">141</span>
of us remember how a predicted high tide some two
years ago turned out to be a very moderate, or, if we
may use the expression, a very ‘one-horse’ affair indeed,
because the winds had not been consulted, and exerted
their influence against the astronomers. A long
succession of winds blowing off-shore would reduce a
spring tide to a height scarcely exceeding the ordinary
neap. On the other hand, if we should have a long
succession of westerly winds from the Atlantic before
the approaching high tide, it is certain that a large
amount of mischief may be done in some of our riverside
regions.<SPAN name="FNanchor_10_10" href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">10</SPAN></p>
<p>As for the predicted weather changes, they may be
regarded as mere moonshine. A number of predictions,
founded on the motions of the sun and moon, have
found a place during many months past in the columns
of a contemporary; but there has been no greater
agreement between these predictions and the weather
actually experienced than anyone could trace between
Old Moore’s weather prophecies and recorded weather
changes. In other words, there have been certain
accordances which would be very remarkable indeed
if they did not happen to be associated with as many
equally remarkable discordances. Random predictions
would be quite as satisfactory.</p>
<p>A very amusing misprint has found its way into
many newspapers in connection with the coming tide.
It is interesting as serving to show how little is really
known by the general public about some of the simplest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">142</span>
scientific matters. The original statement announced
that the sun would not be in perihelion by so many
seconds of semi-diameter, in itself a very incorrect mode
of expression. Still it was clear that what was meant
was, that the earth would be so far from the
place of nearest approach to the sun that the latter
would not look as large as it possibly can look,
by so many seconds of semi-diameter. In many papers,
however, we read that the ‘sun will not be in perihelion
by so many seconds of mean chronometer!’ Who first
devised this marvellous reading is unknown.</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From the <cite>Daily News</cite> for September 27, 1869.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 id="DEEP-SEA_DREDGINGS"><i>DEEP-SEA DREDGINGS.</i></h2>
<p>Men have ever been strangely charmed by the unknown
and the seemingly inaccessible. The astronomer
exhibits the influence of this charm as he
constructs larger and larger telescopes, that he may
penetrate more and more deeply beyond the veil which
conceals the greater part of the universe from the
unaided eye. The geologist, seeking to piece together
the fragmentary records of the past which the earth’s
surface presents to him, is equally influenced by the
charm of mystery and difficulty. And the microscopist
who tries to force from nature the secret of the infinitely
little, is led on by the same strange desire to discover<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">143</span>
just those matters which nature has been most careful
to conceal from us.</p>
<p>The energy with which in recent times men have
sought to master the problem of deep-sea sounding
and deep-sea dredging is, perhaps, one of the most
striking instances ever afforded of the charm which the
unknown possesses for mankind. Not long ago, one of
the most eminent geographers of the sea spoke regretfully
about the small knowledge men have obtained of
the depths of ocean. ‘Greater difficulties,’ he remarked,
‘than any presented by the problem of deep-sea research
have been overcome in other branches of physical inquiry.
Astronomers have measured the volumes and
weighed the masses of the most distant planets, and
increased thereby the stock of human knowledge. Is
it creditable to the age that the depths of the sea
should remain in the category of unsolved problems?
that its “ooze and bottom” should be a sealed volume,
rich with ancient and eloquent legends and suggestive
of many an instructive lesson that might be useful and
profitable to man?‘</p>
<p>Since that time, however, deep-sea dredging has
gradually become more and more thoroughly understood
and mastered. When the telegraphic cable
which had lain so many months at the bottom of
the Atlantic was hauled on board the ‘Great Eastern’
from enormous depths, men were surprised and almost
startled by the narrative. The appearance of the
ooze-covered cable as it was slowly raised towards the
surface, and the strange thrill which ran through those<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">144</span>
who saw it and remembered through what mysterious
depths it had twice passed; its breaking away almost
from the very hands of those who sought to draw it on
board; and the successful renewal of the attempt to
recover the cable,—all these things were heard of as
one listens to a half-incredible tale. Yet when that
work was accomplished deep-sea dredging had already
been some time a science, and many things had been
achieved by its professors which presented, in reality,
greater practical difficulties than the recovery of the
Atlantic Cable.</p>
<p>Recently, however, deep-sea researches have been
carried on with results which are even more sensational,
so to speak, than the grappling feat which so surprised
us. Seas so deep that many of the loftiest summits of
the Alps might be completely buried beneath them
have been explored. Dredges weighing with their load
of mud nearly half a ton have been hauled up without
a hitch from depths of some 14,000 feet. But not merely
has comparatively rough work of this sort been achieved,
but by a variety of ingenious contrivances men of
science have been able to measure the temperature of
the sea at depths where the pressure is so enormous as
to be equivalent to a weight of more than 430 tons on
every square foot of surface.</p>
<p>The results of these researches are even more remarkable
and surprising, however, than the means by
which they have been obtained. Sir Charles Lyell has
fairly spoken of them as so astonishing ‘that they have
to the geologist almost a revolutionary character.’ Let
us consider a few of them.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">145</span></p>
<p>No light can be supposed to penetrate to the enormous
depth just spoken of. Therefore, how certainly
we might conclude that there can be no life there. If,
instead of dealing with the habitability of planets,
Whewell, in his ‘Plurality of Worlds,’ had been considering
the question whether at depths of two or three
miles living creatures could subsist, how convincingly
would he have proved the absurdity of such a supposition.
Intense cold, perfect darkness, and a persistent
pressure of two or three tons to the square inch,—such,
he might have argued, are the conditions under
which life exists, if at all, in those dismal depths.
And even if he had been disposed to concede the bare
possibility that life of some sort may be found there,
then certainly, he would have urged, some new sense
must replace sight—the creatures in these depths can
assuredly have no eyes, or only rudimentary ones.</p>
<p>But the recent deep-sea dredgings have proved that
not only does life exist in the very deepest parts
of the Atlantic, but that the beings which live and
move and have their being beneath three miles of
water have eyes which the ablest naturalists pronounce
to be perfectly developed. Light, then, of
some sort must exist in those abysms, though whether
the home of the deep-sea animals be phosphorescent,
as Sir Charles Lyell suggests, or whether light reaches
these creatures in some other way, we have no present
means of determining.</p>
<p>If there is one theory which geologists have thought
more justly founded than all others, it is the view that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">146</span>
the various strata of the earth were formed at different
times. A chalk district, for example, lying side by
side with a sandstone district, has been referred to a
totally different era. Whether the chalk was formed
first, or whether the sandstone existed before the minute
races came into being which formed the cretaceous
stratum, might be a question. But no doubt existed
in the minds of geologists that each formation belonged
to a distinct period. Now, however, Dr. Carpenter
and Professor Thomson may fairly say, ‘We have
changed all this.’ It has been found that at points
of the sea-bottom only eight or ten miles apart, there
may be in progress the formation of a cretaceous
deposit and of a sandstone region, each with its own
proper fauna. ‘Wherever similar conditions are found
upon the dry land of the present day,’ remarks Dr.
Carpenter, ‘it has been supposed that the formation of
chalk and the formation of sandstone must have been
separated from each other by long periods, and the
discovery that they may actually co-exist upon adjacent
surfaces has done no less than strike at the very
root of the customary assumptions with regard to
geological time.’<SPAN name="FNanchor_11_11" href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">11</SPAN></p>
<p>Even more interesting, perhaps, to many, are the
results which have been obtained respecting the varying
temperatures of deep-sea regions. The peculiarity just
considered is, indeed, a consequence of such varia<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">147</span>tions;
but the fact itself is at least as interesting as
the consequences which flow from it. It throws light
on the long-standing controversy respecting the oceanic
circulation. It has been found that the depths of the
equatorial and tropical seas are colder than those of the
North Atlantic. In the tropics the deep-sea temperature
is considerably below the freezing-point of fresh
water; in the deepest part of the Bay of Biscay the
temperature is several degrees above the freezing-point.
Thus one learns that the greater part of the water
which lies deep below the surface of the equatorial and
tropical seas comes from the Antarctic regions, though
undoubtedly there are certain relatively narrow
currents which carry the waters of the Arctic seas
to the tropics. The great point to notice is that the
water under the equatorial seas must really have
travelled from polar regions. A cold of 30 degrees
can be explained in no other way. We see at once,
therefore, the explanation of those westerly equatorial
currents which have been so long a subject of contest.
Sir John Herschel failed to prove that they are due
to the trade winds, but Maury failed equally to prove
that they are due to the great warmth and consequent
buoyancy of the equatorial waters. In fact, while
Maury showed very convincingly that the great system
of oceanic circulation is carried on <em>despite</em> the winds,
Herschel proved in an equally convincing manner that
the overflow conceived by Maury should result in an
easterly instead of a westerly current. Recently the
theory was put forward that the continual process of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">148</span>
evaporation going on in the equatorial regions leads to
an indraught of cold water in bottom-currents from the
polar seas. Such currents coming <em>towards</em> the equator,
that is, travelling from latitudes where the earth’s eastwardly
motion is less to latitudes where that motion
is greater, would lag behind, that is, would have a
westwardly motion. It seems now placed beyond a
doubt that this is the true explanation of the equatorial
ocean-currents.</p>
<p>Such are a few, and but a few, among the many
interesting results which have followed from the recent
researches of Dr. Carpenter and Professor Thomson into
the hitherto little-known depths of the great sea.</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From the <cite>Spectator</cite>, December 4, 1869.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 id="THE_TUNNEL_THROUGH_MONT_CENIS"><i>THE TUNNEL THROUGH MONT CENIS.</i></h2>
<p>Men flash their messages across mighty continents and
beneath the bosom of the wide Atlantic; they weigh
the distant planets, and analyse sun and stars; they
span Niagara with a railway bridge, and pierce the
Alps with a railway tunnel: yet the poet of the age in
which all these things are done or doing sings, ‘We
men are a puny race.’ And certainly, the great works
which belong to man as a race can no more be held to
evidence the importance of the individual man than the
vast coral reefs and atolls of the Pacific can be held
to evidence the working power of the individual coral<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">149</span>
polype. But if man, standing alone, is weak, man
working according to the law assigned to his race from
the beginning—that is, in fellowship with his kind—is
verily a being of power.</p>
<p>Perhaps no work ever undertaken by man strikes
one as more daring than the attempt to pierce the
Alps with a tunnel. Nature seems to have upreared
these mighty barriers as if with the design of showing
man how weak he is in her presence. Even the armies
of Hannibal and Napoleon seemed all but powerless in
the face of these vast natural fastnesses. Compelled
to creep slowly and cautiously along the difficult and
narrow ways which alone were open to them, decimated
by the chilling blasts which swept the face of the
rugged mountain-range, and dreading at every moment
the pitiless swoop of the avalanche, the French and
Carthaginian troops exhibited little of the pomp and
dignity which we are apt to associate with the operations
of warlike armies. Had the denizen of some
other planet been able to watch their progress, he
might indeed have said ‘these men are a puny race.’
In <em>this</em> only, that <em>they succeeded</em>, did the troops of
Hannibal and Napoleon assert the dignity of the
human race. Grand as was the aspect of nature, and
mean as was that of man during the progress of the
contest, it was nature that was conquered, man that
overcame.</p>
<p>And now man has entered on a new conflict with
nature in the gloomy fastnesses of the Alps. The barrier
which he had scaled of old he has now undertaken to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">150</span>
pierce. And the wwww—bold and daring as it seemed—is
three parts finished. (See date of article.)</p>
<p>The Mont Cenis tunnel was sanctioned by the Sardinian
Government in 1857, and arrangements were
made for fixing the perforating machinery in the years
1858 and 1859. But the work was not actually commenced
until November 1860. The tunnel—which
will be fully seven and a half miles in length—was to
be completed in twenty-five years. The entrance to
the tunnel on the side of France is near the little village
of Fourneau, and lies 3,946 feet above the level of the
sea. The entrance on the side of Italy is in a deep-valley
at Bardonèche, and lies 4,380 feet above the sea
level. Thus there is a difference of level of 434 feet.
But the tunnel will actually rise 445 feet above the
level of the French end, attaining this height at a distance
of about four miles from that extremity; in the
remaining three and three-quarter miles there will be
a fall of only ten feet, so that this part of the line will
be practically level.</p>
<p>The rocks through which the excavations have been
made have been for the most part very difficult to work.
Those who imagine that the great mass of our mountain
ranges consists of such granite as is made use of in
our buildings, and is uniform in texture and hardness,
greatly underrate the difficulties with which the engineers
of this gigantic work have had to contend. A
large part of the rock consists of a crystallised calcareous
schist, much broken and contorted; and through this
rock run in every direction large masses of pure quartz.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">151</span>
It will be conceived how difficult the work has been of
piercing through so diversified a substance as this. The
perforating machines are calculated to work best when
the resistance is uniform; and it has often happened
that the unequal resistance offered to the perforators
has resulted in injury to the chisels. But before the
work of perforating began, enormous difficulties had to
be contended with. It will be understood that, in a
tunnel of such vast length, it was absolutely necessary
that the perforating processes carried on from the two
ends should be directed with the most perfect accuracy.
It has often happened in short tunnels that a want of
perfect coincidence has existed between the two halves
of the work, and the tunnellers from one end have
sometimes altogether failed to meet those from the
other. In a short tunnel this want of coincidence
is not very important, because the two interior ends of
the tunnellings cannot in any case be far removed from
each other. But in the case of the Mont Cenis tunnel
any inaccuracy in the direction of the two tunnellings
would have been fatal to the success of the work, since
when the two ought to meet it might be found that they
were laterally separated by two or three hundred yards.
Hence it was necessary before the work began to survey
the intermediate country, so as to ascertain with
the most perfect accuracy the bearings of one end of
the tunnel from the other. ‘It was necessary,’ says
the narrative of these initial labours, ‘to prepare accurate
plans and sections for the determination of the
levels, to fix the axis of the tunnel, and to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">152</span> “set it out”
on the mountain top; to erect observatories and
guiding signals, solid, substantial, and true.’ When
we remember the nature of the passes over the Cenis,
we can conceive the difficulty of setting out a line of
this sort over the Alpine range. The necessity of continually
climbing over rocks, ravines, and precipices
in passing from station to station involved difficulties
which, great as they were, were as nothing when
compared with the difficulties resulting from the bitter
weather experienced on those rugged mountain heights.
The tempests which sweep the Alpine passes—the
ever-recurring storms of rain, sleet, and driving snow,
are trying to the ordinary traveller. It will be understood,
therefore, how terribly they must have interfered
with the delicate processes involved in surveying. It
often happened that for days together no work of any
sort could be done owing to the impossibility of using
levels and theodolites when exposed to the stormy
weather and bitter cold of these lofty passes. At
length, however, the work was completed, and that
with such success that the greatest deviation from
exactitude was less than a single foot for the whole
length of seven and a half miles.</p>
<p>Equally remarkable and extensive were the labours
connected with the preparatory works. New and solid
roads, bridges, canals, magazines, workshops, forges,
furnaces, and machinery had to be constructed; residences
had to be built for the men, and offices for the
engineers; in fact, at each extremity of the tunnel a
complete establishment had to be formed. Those who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">153</span>
have traversed Mont Cenis since the works began have
been perplexed by the strange appearance and character
of the machinery and establishments to be seen at
Modane and Fourneau. The mass of pipes and tubes,
tanks, reservoirs, and machinery, which would be marvellous
anywhere, has a still stranger look in a wild and
rugged Alpine pass.</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From the <i>Daily News</i>, 1869.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 id="TORNADOES"><i>TORNADOES.</i></h2>
<p>The inhabitants of the earth are subjected to agencies
which—beneficial doubtless in the long run, perhaps
necessary to the very existence of terrestrial races—appear,
at first sight, energetically destructive. Such
are—in order of destructiveness—the hurricane, the
earthquake, the volcano, and the thunderstorm. When
we read of earthquakes such as those which overthrew
Lisbon, Callao, and Riobamba, and learn that one
hundred thousand persons fell victims in the great
Sicilian earthquake in 1693, and probably three hundred
thousand in the two earthquakes which assailed
Antioch in the years 526 and 612, we are disposed to
assign at once to this devastating phenomenon the foremost
place among the agents of destruction. But this
judgment must be reversed when we consider that earthquakes—though
so fearfully and suddenly destructive
both to life and property—yet occur but seldom com<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">154</span>pared
with wind-storms, while the effects of a real
hurricane are scarcely less destructive than those of
the sharpest shocks of earthquakes. After ordinary
storms, long miles of the sea-coast are strewn with the
wrecks of many once gallant ships, and with the bodies
of their hapless crews. In the spring of 1866 there
might be seen at a single view from the heights near
Plymouth twenty-two shipwrecked vessels, and this
after a storm which, though severe, was but trifling
compared with the hurricanes which sweep over the
torrid zones, and thence—scarcely diminished in force—as
far north sometimes as our own latitudes. It was in
such a hurricane that the ‘Royal Charter’ was wrecked,
and hundreds of stout ships with her. In the great
hurricane of 1780, which commenced at Barbadoes
and swept across the whole breadth of the North
Atlantic, fifty sails were driven ashore at the Bermudas,
two line-of-battle ships went down at sea, and upwards
of twenty thousand persons lost their lives on the
land. So tremendous was the force of this hurricane
(Captain Maury tells us) that ‘the bark was blown
from the trees, and the fruits of the earth destroyed;
the very bottom and depths of the sea were uprooted—forts
and castles were washed away, and their great
guns carried in the air like chaff; houses were razed;
ships wrecked; and the bodies of men and beasts
lifted up in the air and dashed to pieces in the storm’—an
account, however, which (though doubtless
faithfully rendered by Maury from the authorities he
consulted) must perhaps be accepted <i lang="la">cum grano</i>, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">155</span>
especially with reference to the great guns carried
in the air ‘like chaff.’<SPAN name="FNanchor_12_12" href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">12</SPAN> (If so, it ‘blew great guns,’
indeed.)</p>
<p>In the gale of August, 1782, all the trophies of
Lord Rodney’s victory, except the ‘Ardent,’ were destroyed,
two British ships-of-the-line foundered at sea,
numbers of merchantmen under Admiral Graves’ convoy
were wrecked, and at sea alone three thousand
lives were lost.</p>
<p>But quite recently a storm far more destructive
than these swept over the Bay of Bengal. Most of my
readers doubtless remember the great gale of October
1864, in which all the ships in harbour at Calcutta
were swept from their anchorage, and driven one upon
another in inextricable confusion. Fearful as was the
loss of life and property in Calcutta harbour, the
destruction on land was greater. A vast wave swept
for miles over the surrounding country, embankments
were destroyed, and whole villages, with their inhabitants,
were swept away. Fifty thousand souls, it is
believed, perished in this fearful hurricane.</p>
<p>The gale which has just ravaged the Gulf of Mexico
adds another to the long list of disastrous hurricanes.
As I write, the effects produced by this tornado are
beginning to be made known. Already its destructiveness
has become but too certainly evidenced.</p>
<p>The laws which appear to regulate the generation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">156</span>
and the progress of cyclonic storms are well worthy of
careful study.</p>
<p>The regions chiefly infested by hurricanes are the
West Indies, the southern parts of the Indian Ocean,
the Bay of Bengal, and the China Seas. Each region
has its special hurricane season.</p>
<p>In the West Indies, cyclones occur principally in
August and September, when the south-east monsoons
are at their height. At the same season the African
south-westerly monsoons are blowing. Accordingly
there are two sets of winds, both blowing heavily and
steadily from the Atlantic, disturbing the atmospheric
equilibrium, and thus in all probability generating
the great West Indian hurricanes. The storms thus
arising show their force first at a distance of about six
or seven hundred miles from the equator, and far to
the east of the region in which they attain their
greatest fury. They sweep with a north-westerly
course to the Gulf of Mexico, pass thence northwards,
and so to the north-east, sweeping in a wide curve
(resembling the letter ∪ placed thus ⊂) around the
West Indian seas, and thence travelling across the
Atlantic, generally expending their fury before they
reach the shores of Western Europe. This course is
the storm-track (or storm-⊂ as I shall call it). Of
the behaviour of the winds as they traverse this track,
I shall have to speak when I come to consider the
peculiarity from which these storms derive their names
of ‘cyclones’ and tornadoes.</p>
<p>The hurricanes of the Indian Ocean occur at the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">157</span>
‘changing of the monsoons.’ ‘During the interregnum,‘
writes Maury, ‘the fiends of the storm hold
their terrific sway.’ Becalmed often for a day or two,
seamen hear moaning sounds in the air, forewarning
them of the coming storm. Then, suddenly, the winds
break loose from the forces which have for a while controlled
them, and ‘seem to rage with a fury that would
break up the fountains of the deep.’</p>
<p>In the North Indian seas hurricanes rage at the
same season as in the West Indies.</p>
<p>In the China seas occur those fearful gales known
among sailors as ‘typhoons’ or ‘white squalls.’ These
take place at the changing of the monsoons. Generated,
like the West Indian hurricanes, at a distance of some
ten or twelve degrees from the equator, typhoons sweep—in
a curve similar to that followed by the Atlantic
storms—around the East Indian Archipelago, and the
shores of China, to the Japanese Islands.</p>
<p>There occur land-storms, also, of a cyclonic character
in the valley of the Mississippi. ‘I have often observed
the paths of such storms,’ says Maury, ‘through
the forests of the Mississippi. There the track of
these tornadoes is called a “wind-road,” because they
make an avenue through the wood straight along, and
as clear of trees as if the old denizens of the forest
had been cleared with an axe. I have seen trees three
or four feet in diameter torn up by the roots, and the
top, with its limbs, lying next the hole whence the
root came<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">158</span>.‘ Another writer, who was an eye-witness
to the progress of one of these American land-storms,
thus speaks of its destructive effects. ‘I saw, to my
great astonishment, that the noblest trees of the forest
were falling into pieces. A mass of branches, twigs,
foliage, and dust moved through the air, whirled
onward like a cloud of feathers, and passing, disclosed
a wide space filled with broken trees, naked stumps,
and heaps of shapeless ruins, which marked the path of
the tempest.’</p>
<p>If it appeared, on a careful comparison of observations
made in different places, that these winds swept
directly along those tracks which they appear to follow,
a comparatively simple problem would be presented to
the meteorologist. But this is not found to be the
case. At one part of a hurricane’s course the storm
appears to be travelling with fearful fury along the true
storm-⊂; at another less furiously directed across the
storm-track; at another, but with yet diminished force,
though still fiercely, in a direction exactly opposite to
that of the storm-track.</p>
<p>All these motions appear to be fairly accounted for
by the theory that the true path of the storm is a
spiral—or rather, that while the centre of disturbance
continually travels onwards in a widely extended
curve, the storm-wind sweeps continually around the
centre of disturbance, as a whirlpool around its
vortex.</p>
<p>And here a remarkable circumstance attracts our
notice, the consideration of which points to the mode
in which cyclones may be conceived to be generated.
It is found, by a careful study of different observations<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">159</span>
made upon the same storm, that cyclones in the
northern hemisphere <em>invariably</em> sweep round the onward
travelling vortex of disturbance in <em>one</em> direction,
and southern cyclones in the contrary direction. If
we place a watch, face upwards, upon one of the
northern cyclone regions in a Mercator’s chart, then
the motion of the hands is <em>contrary</em> to the direction
in which the cyclone whirls; when the watch is
shifted to a southern cyclone region, the motion of
the hands is in the same direction as the cyclone
motion. This peculiarity is converted into the following
rule-of-thumb for sailors who encounter a cyclone,
and seek to escape from the region of fiercest storm:—<em>Facing
the wind, the centre or vortex of the storm lies
to the right in the northern, to the left in the southern
hemisphere</em>. Safety lies in flying from the centre in
every case save one—that is, when the sailor lies in
the direct track of the advancing vortex. In this
case, to fly from the centre would be to keep in the
storm-track; the proper course for the sailor when
thus situated is to steer for the calmer side of the
storm-track. This is always the outside of the ⊃, as
will appear from a moment’s consideration of the spiral
curve traced out by a cyclone. Thus, if the seaman
<em>scud before the wind</em>—in all other cases a dangerous
expedient in a cyclone<SPAN name="FNanchor_13_13" href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">13</SPAN>—he will probably escape unscathed.
There is, however, this danger, that the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">160</span>
storm-track may extend to or even slightly overlap the
land, in which case scudding before the gale would bring
the ship upon a lee-shore. And in this way many gallant
ships have, doubtless, suffered wreck.</p>
<p>The danger of the sailor is obviously greater, however,
when he is overtaken by the storm on the inner
side of the storm-⊂. Here he has to encounter the
double force of the cyclonic whirl and of the advancing
storm-system, instead of the difference of the two
motions, as on the outer side of the storm-track. His
chance of escape will depend on his distance from the
central path of the cyclone. If near to this, it is equally
dangerous for him to attempt to scud to the safer side
of the track, or to beat against the wind by the shorter
course, which would lead him out of the storm-⊂ on its
inner side. It has been shown by Colonel Sir W. Reid
that this is the quarter in which vessels have been most
frequently lost.</p>
<p>But even the danger of this most dangerous quarter
admits of degrees. It is greatest where the storm is
sweeping round the most curved part of its track,
which happens in about latitude twenty-five or thirty
degrees. In this case a ship may pass twice through
the vortex of the storm. Here hurricanes have worked
their most destructive effects. And hence it is that
sailors dread, most of all, that part of the Atlantic
near Florida and the Bahamas, and the region of
the Indian Ocean which lies south of Bourbon and
Mauritius.</p>
<p>To show how important it is that captains should<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">161</span>
understand the theory of cyclones in both hemispheres,
we shall here relate the manner in which Captain J. V.
Hall escaped from a typhoon of the China seas. About
noon, when three days out from Macao, Captain Hall
saw ‘a most wild and uncommon-looking halo round
the sun.’ On the afternoon of the next day, the barometer
had commenced to fall rapidly; and though, as
yet, the weather was fine, orders were at once given to
prepare for a heavy gale. Towards evening a bank of
cloud was seen in the south-east, but when night closed
the weather was still calm and the water smooth, though
the sky looked wild and a scud was coming on from
the north-east. ‘I was much interested,’ says Captain
Hall, ‘in watching for the commencement of the gale,
which I now felt sure was coming. That bank to the
south-east was the meteor (cyclone) approaching us, the
north-east scud, the outer north-west portion of it; and
when at night a strong gale came on about north, or
north-north-west, I felt certain we were on its western
and south-western verge. It rapidly increased in
violence; but I was pleased to see the wind veering to
the north-west, as it convinced me that I had put the
ship on the right track—namely, on the starboard tack,
standing, of course, to the south-west. From ten <span class="smcap">A.M.</span>
to three <span class="smcap">P.M.</span> it blew with great violence, but the ship
being well prepared, rode comparatively easy. The
barometer was now very low, the centre of the storm
passing to the northward of us, to which we might have
been very near had we in the first place put the ship on
the larboard tack.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">162</span></p>
<p>But the most remarkable point of Captain Hall’s
account remains to be mentioned. He had gone out of
his course to avoid the storm, but when the wind fell to
a moderate gale he thought it a pity to lie so far from
his proper course, and made sail to the north-west. ‘In
less than two hours the barometer again began to fall
and the storm to rage in heavy gusts.’ He bore again
to the south-east, and the weather rapidly improved.
There can be little doubt that but for Captain Hall’s
knowledge of the law of cyclones, his ship and crew
would have been placed in serious jeopardy, since in the
heart of a Chinese typhoon a ship has been known to be
thrown on her beam-ends when not showing a yard of
canvas.</p>
<p>If we consider the regions in which cyclones appear,
the paths they follow, and the direction in which they
whirl, we shall be able to form an opinion as to their
origin. In the open Pacific Ocean (as its name, indeed,
implies) storms are uncommon; they are infrequent
also in the South Atlantic and South Indian Oceans.
Around Cape Horn and the Cape of Good Hope heavy
storms prevail, but they are not cyclonic, nor are they
equal in fury and frequency, Maury tells us, to the true
tornado. Along the equator, and for several degrees
on either side of it, cyclones are also unknown. If we
turn to a map in which ocean-currents are laid down,
we shall see that in every ‘cyclone region’ there
is a strongly marked current, and that each current
follows closely the track which I have denominated the
storm-⊂. In the North Atlantic we have the great Gulf<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">163</span>
Stream, which sweeps from equatorial regions into the
Gulf of Mexico, and thence across the Atlantic to
the shores of Western Europe. In the South Indian
Ocean there is the ‘south equatorial current,’ which
sweeps past Mauritius and Bourbon, and thence
returns towards the east. In the Chinese Sea there
is the north equatorial current, which sweeps round
the East Indian Archipelago, and then merges into
the Japanese current. There is also the current in
the Bay of Bengal, flowing through the region in
which, as we have seen, cyclones are commonly met
with. There are other sea-currents besides these
which yet breed no cyclones. But I may notice two
peculiarities in the currents I have named. They all
flow from equatorial to temperate regions, and,
secondly, they are all ‘horse-shoe currents.’ So far as
I am aware, there is but one other current which presents
both these peculiarities—namely, the great
Australian current between New Zealand and the
eastern shores of Australia. I have not yet met with
any record of cyclones occurring over the Australian
current, but heavy storms are known to prevail in that
region, and I believe that when these storms have
been studied as closely as the storms in better-known
regions, they will be found to present the true cyclonic
character.</p>
<p>Now, if we inquire why an ocean current travelling
from the equator should be a ‘storm-breeder,’ we shall
find a ready answer. Such a current, carrying the
warmth of intertropical regions to the temperate zones,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">164</span>
produces, in the first place, by the mere difference of
temperature, important atmospheric disturbances. The
difference is so great, that Franklin suggested the use
of the thermometer in the North Atlantic Ocean as a
ready means of determining the longitude, since the
position of the Gulf Stream at any given season is
almost constant.</p>
<p>But the warmth of the stream itself is not the only
cause of atmospheric disturbance. Over the warm
water vapour is continually rising; and, as it rises, is
continually condensed (like the steam from a locomotive)
by the colder air round. ‘An observer on
the moon,’ says Captain Maury, ‘would, on a winter’s
day, be able to trace out by the mist in the air the
path of the Gulf Stream through the sea.’ But what
must happen when vapour is condensed? We know
that to turn water into vapour is a process requiring—that
is, <em>using up</em>—a large amount of heat; and, conversely,
the return of vapour to the state of water <em>sets
free</em> an equivalent quantity of heat. The amount of
heat thus set free over the Gulf Stream is thousands
of times greater than that which would be generated
by the whole coal supply annually raised in Great
Britain. Here, then, we have an efficient cause for
the wildest hurricanes. For, along the whole of the
Gulf Stream, from Bemini to the Grand Banks, there
is a channel of heated—that is, <em>rarefied air</em>. Into
this channel, the denser atmosphere on both sides is
continually pouring, with greater or less strength.
When a storm begins in the Atlantic, it always makes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">165</span>
for this channel, ‘and, reaching it, turns and follows it
in its course, sometimes entirely across the Atlantic.’
‘The southern points of America and Africa have won
for themselves,’ says Maury, ‘the name of “the stormy
capes,” but there is not a storm-find in the wide
ocean can out-top that which rages along the Atlantic
coasts of North America. The China seas and the
North Pacific may vie in the fury of their gales with
this part of the Atlantic, but Cape Horn and the Cape
of Good Hope cannot equal them, certainly in frequency,
nor do I believe, in fury.’ We read of a
West Indian storm so violent, that ‘it forced the Gulf
Stream back to its sources, and piled up the water to
a height of thirty feet in the Gulf of Mexico. The
ship “Ledbury Snow” attempted to ride out the
storm. When it abated she found herself high up on
the dry land, and discovered that she had let go her
anchor among the tree-tops on Elliot’s Key<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">166</span>.‘</p>
<p>By a like reasoning, we can account for the cyclonic
storms prevailing in the North Pacific Ocean. Nor
do the tornadoes which rage in parts of the United
States present any serious difficulty. The region
along which these storms travel is the valley of the
great Mississippi. This river at certain seasons is
considerably warmer than the surrounding lands.
From its surface, also, aqueous vapour is continually
being raised. When the surrounding air is colder,
this vapour is presently condensed, generating in the
change a vast amount of heat. We have thus a channel
of rarefied air over the Mississippi valley, and this
channel becomes a storm-track, like the corresponding
channels over the warm ocean-currents. The extreme
violence of land-storms is probably due to the narrowness
of the track within which they are compelled to
travel. For it has been noticed that the fury of a
sea-cyclone increases as the range of the ‘whirl’
diminishes, and <i lang="la">vice versâ</i>.</p>
<p>There seems, however, no special reason why cyclones
should follow the storm-⊂ in one direction
rather than in the other. We must, to understand
this, recall the fact that under the torrid zones the
conditions necessary for the generation of storms prevail
far more intensely than in temperate regions. Thus
the probability is far greater that cyclones should be
generated at the tropical than at the temperate end of
the storm-⊂. Still, it is worthy of notice, that in the
land-locked North Pacific Ocean, true typhoons <em>have</em>
been noticed to follow the storm-track in a direction
contrary to that commonly noticed.</p>
<p>The direction in which a true tornado <em>whirls</em> is
<em>invariably</em> that I have mentioned. The explanation
of this peculiarity would occupy more space than
I can here afford. Those readers who may wish
to understand the origin of the law of cyclonic rotation
should study Herschel’s interesting work on
Meteorology.</p>
<p>The suddenness with which a true tornado works
destruction was strikingly exemplified in the wreck of
the steamship ‘San Francisco.’ She was assailed by
an extra-tropical tornado when about 300 miles from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">167</span>
Sandy Hook, on December 24, 1853. In a few
moments she was a complete wreck! The wide range
of a tornado’s destructiveness is shown by this, that
Colonel Reid tells us of one along whose track no less
than 110 ships were wrecked, crippled, or dismasted.</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From <cite>Temple Bar</cite>, December 1867.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 id="VESUVIUS"><i>VESUVIUS.</i></h2>
<p>The numerous and violent eruptions from Mount
Vesuvius during the two last centuries seem to afford
an answer to those who think there are traces of a
gradually diminishing activity in the earth’s internal
forces. That such a diminution is taking place, we
may admit; but that its rate of progress is perceptible—that
we can point to a time within the historical
epoch, nay, even within the limits of geological evidence,
at which the earth’s internal forces were <em>certainly</em>
more active than they are at the present time—may,
I think, be denied absolutely.</p>
<p>When the science of geology was but young, and
its professors sought to compress within a few years
(at the outside) a series of events which (we now
know) must have occupied many centuries, there was
room, indeed, for the supposition that modern volcanic
eruptions, as compared with ancient outbursts, are but
as the efforts of children compared with the work
of giants. And accordingly, we find a distinguished<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">168</span>
French geologist writing, even so late as 1829, that
in ancient times ‘tous les phénomènes géologiques
se passaient dans des dimensions <em>centuples</em> de celles
qu’ils présentent aujourd’hui.’ But now we have such
certain evidence of the enormous length of the intervals
within which volcanic regions assumed their present
appearance—we have such satisfactory means of determining
which of the events occurring within those
intervals were or were not contemporary—that we are
safe from the error of assuming that Nature at a single
effort fashioned widely extended districts just as we
now see them. And accordingly, we have the evidence
of the distinguished geologist, Sir Charles Lyell, that
there is no volcanic mass ‘of ancient date, distinctly
referable to a single eruption, which can even <em>rival</em> in
volume the matter poured out from Skaptâr Jokul in
1783.’</p>
<p>In the volcanic region of which Vesuvius or Somma
is the principal vent, we have a remarkable instance of
the deceptive nature of that state of rest into which
some of the principal volcanoes frequently fall for
many centuries together. For how many centuries
before the Christian era Vesuvius had been at rest is
not known; but this is certain, that from the landing
of the first Greek colony in Southern Italy, Vesuvius
gave no signs of internal activity. It was recognised
by Strabo as a volcanic mountain, but Pliny did not
include it in the list of active volcanoes. In those
days, the mountain presented a very different appearance
from that which it now exhibits. In place of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">169</span>
two peaks now seen, there was a single, somewhat
flattish summit, on which a slight depression marked
the place of an ancient crater. The fertile slopes of
the mountain were covered with well-cultivated fields,
and the thriving cities Herculaneum, Pompeii, and
Stabiæ stood near the base of the sleeping mountain.
So little did any thought of danger suggest itself in
those times, that the bands of slaves, murderers, and
pirates which flocked to the standards of Spartacus
found a refuge, to the number of many thousands,
within the very crater itself.</p>
<p>But though Vesuvius was at rest, the region of
which Vesuvius is the main vent was far from being
so. The island of Pithecusa (the modern Ischia) was
shaken by frequent and terrible convulsions. It is
even related that Prochyta (the modern Procida) was
rent from Pithecusa in the course of a tremendous
upheaval, though Pliny derives the name Prochyta
(or ‘poured forth’) from the supposed fact of this
island having been poured forth by an eruption from
Ischia. Far more probably, Prochyta was formed
independently by submarine eruptions, as the volcanic
islands near Santorin have been produced in more
recent times.</p>
<p>So fierce were the eruptions from Pithecusa, that
several Greek colonies which attempted to settle on
this island were compelled to leave it. About 380
years before the Christian era, colonists under King
Hiero of Syracuse, who had built a fortress on
Pithecusa, were driven away by an eruption. Nor<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">170</span>
were eruptions the sole cause of danger. Poisonous
vapours, such as are emitted by volcanic craters after
eruption, appear to have exhaled, at times, from extensive
tracts on Pithecusa, and thus to have rendered
the island uninhabitable.</p>
<p>Still nearer to Vesuvius lay the celebrated Lake
Avernus. The name Avernus is said to be a corruption
of the Greek word <i lang="he">Aornos</i>, signifying ‘without
birds,’ the poisonous exhalations from the waters of
the lake destroying all birds which attempted to fly over
its surface. Doubt has been thrown on the destructive
properties assigned by the ancients to the vapours
ascending from Avernus. The lake is now a healthy
and agreeable neighbourhood, frequented, says Humboldt,
by many kinds of birds, which suffer no injury
whatever even when they skim the very surface of the
water. Yet there can be little doubt that Avernus
hides the outlet of an extinct volcano; and long after
this volcano had become inactive, the lake which concealed
its site ‘may have deserved the appellation of
“atri janua Ditis,” emitting, perhaps, gases as destructive
of animal life as those suffocating vapours
given out by Lake Quilotoa, in Quito, in 1797, by
which whole herds of cattle were killed on its shores,
or as those deleterious emanations which annihilated
all the cattle in the island of Lancerote, one of the
Canaries, in 1730.‘</p>
<p>While Ischia was in full activity, not only was
Vesuvius quiescent, but even Etna seemed to be
gradually expiring, so that Seneca ranks this volcano<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">171</span>
among the number of nearly extinguished craters. At
a later epoch, Ælian asserted that the mountain itself
was sinking, so that seamen lost sight of the summit at
a less distance across the seas than of old. Yet within
the last two hundred years there have been eruptions
from Etna rivalling, if not surpassing, in intensity the
convulsions recorded by ancient historians.</p>
<p>I shall not here attempt to show that Vesuvius and
Etna belong to the same volcanic system, though there
is reason not only for supposing this to be the case, but
for the belief that all the subterranean regions whose
effects have been shown from time to time over the
district extending from the Canaries and Azores, across
the whole of the Mediterranean, and into Syria itself,
belong to but one great centre of internal action. But
it is quite certain that Ischia and Vesuvius are outlets
from a single source.</p>
<p>While Vesuvius was dormant, resigning for a while
its pretensions to be the principal vent of the great
Neapolitan volcanic system, Ischia, we have seen, was
rent by frequent convulsions. But the time was approaching
when Vesuvius was to resume its natural
functions, and with all the more energy that they had
been for a while suspended.</p>
<p>In the year 63 (after Christ) there occurred a violent
convulsion of the earth around Vesuvius, during which
much injury was done to neighbouring cities, and
many lives were lost. From this period shocks of
earthquake were felt from time to time for sixteen
years. These grew gradually more and more violent,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">172</span>
until it began to be evident that the volcanic fires were
about to return to their main vent. The obstruction
which had so long impeded the exit of the confined
matter was not, however, readily removed, and it was
only in August in the year 79, after numerous and
violent internal throes, that the superincumbent mass
was at length hurled forth. Rocks and cinders, lava,
sand, and scoriæ, were propelled from the crater, and
spread many miles on every side of Vesuvius.</p>
<p>We have an interesting account of the great eruption
which followed in a letter from the younger Pliny to
the younger Tacitus. The latter had asked for an
account of the death of the elder Pliny, who lost
his life in his eagerness to obtain a near view of the
dreadful phenomenon. ‘He was at that time,’ says
his nephew, ‘with the fleet under his command at
Misenum. On August 24, about one in the afternoon,
my mother desired him to observe a cloud of very
extraordinary size and shape. He had just returned
from taking the benefit of the sun, and, after bathing
himself in cold water, and taking a slight repast, had
retired to his study. He arose at once, and went out
upon a height whence he might more distinctly view
this strange phenomenon. It was not at this distance
discernible from what mountain the cloud issued, but
it was found afterwards that it came from Vesuvius.
I cannot give a more exact description of its figure
than by comparing it to that of a pine-tree, for it shot
up to a great height in the form of a trunk, which
extended itself at the top into a sort of branches;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">173</span>
occasioned, I suppose, either by a sudden gust of air
which impelled it, whose force decreased as it advanced
upwards, or else the cloud itself, being pressed back
by its own weight, expanded in this manner. The
cloud appeared sometimes bright, at others dark and
spotted, as it was more or less impregnated with earth
and cinders.’</p>
<p>These extraordinary appearances attracted the curiosity
of the elder Pliny. He ordered a small vessel
to be prepared, and started to seek a nearer view of
the burning mountain. His nephew declined to accompany
him, being engaged with his studies. As
Pliny left the house, he received a note from a lady
whose house, being at the foot of Vesuvius, was in
imminent danger of destruction. He set out, accordingly,
with the design of rendering her assistance, and
also of assisting others, ‘for the villas stood extremely
thick upon that lovely coast.’ He ordered the galleys
to be put to sea, and steered directly to the point of
danger, so cool in the midst of the turmoil around ‘as
to be able to make and dictate observations upon the
motions and figures of that dreadful scene.’ As he
approached Vesuvius, cinders, pumice-stones, and black
fragments of burning rock, fell on and around the
ships. ‘They were in danger, too, of running aground,
owing to the sudden retreat of the sea; vast fragments,
also, rolled down from the mountain and
obstructed all the shore.’ The pilot advising retreat,
Pliny made the noble answer, ‘Fortune befriends the
brave,’ and bade him press onwards to Stabiæ. Here<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">174</span>
he found his friend Pomponianus in great consternation,
already prepared for embarking and waiting only
for a change in the wind. Exhorting Pomponianus to
be of good courage, Pliny quietly ordered baths to be
prepared; and ‘having bathed, sat down to supper
with great cheerfulness, or at least (which is equally
heroic) with all the appearance of it.’ Assuring his
friend that the flames which appeared in several places
were merely burning villages, Pliny presently retired
to rest, and ‘being pretty fat,’ says his nephew, ‘and
breathing hard, those who attended without actually
heard him snore.’ But it became necessary to awaken
him, for the court which led to his room was now
almost filled with stones and ashes. He got up and
joined the rest of the company, who were consulting
on the propriety of leaving the house, now shaken
from side to side by frequent concussions. They
decided on seeking the fields for safety: and fastening
pillows on their heads, to protect them from falling
stones, they advanced in the midst of an obscurity
greater than that of the darkest night-though beyond
the limits of the great cloud it was already broad day.
When they reached the shore, they found the waves
running too high to suffer them safely to venture to
put out to sea. Pliny<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">175</span> ‘having drunk a draught or
two of cold water, lay down on a cloth that was spread
out for him; but at this moment the flames and
sulphurous vapours dispersed the rest of the company,
and obliged him to rise. Assisted by two of his
servants, he got upon his feet, but instantly fell down
dead; suffocated, I suppose,’ says his nephew, ‘by some
gross and noxious vapour, for he always had weak lungs
and suffered from a difficulty of breathing.’ His body
was not found until the third day after his death, when
for the first time it was light enough to search for him.
He was found as he had fallen, ‘and looking more like
a man asleep than dead.’</p>
<p>But even at Misenum there was danger, though
Vesuvius is distant no less than fourteen miles. The
earth was shaken with repeated and violent shocks,
‘insomuch,’ says the younger Pliny, ‘that they threatened
our complete destruction.’ When morning came,
the light was faint and glimmering; the buildings
around seemed tottering to their fall, and, standing on
the open ground, the chariots which Pliny had ordered
were so agitated backwards and forwards that it was
impossible to keep them steady, even by supporting
them with large stones. The sea was rolled back upon
itself, and many marine animals were left dry upon the
shore. On the side of Vesuvius, a black and ominous
cloud, bursting with sulphurous vapours, darted out
long trains of fire, resembling flashes of lightning, but
much larger. Presently the great cloud spread over
Misenum and the island of Capreæ. Ashes fell around
the fugitives. On every side<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">176</span> ‘nothing was to be heard
but the shrieks of women and children, and the cries
of men: some were calling for their children, others
for their parents, others for their husbands, and only
distinguishing each other by their voices: one was
lamenting his own fate, another that of his family;
some wished to die, that they might escape the dreadful
fear of death; but the greater part imagined that the
last and eternal night was come, which was to destroy
the gods and the world together.’ At length a light
appeared, which was not, however, the day, but the
forerunner of an outburst of flames. These presently
disappeared, and again a thick darkness spread over the
scene. Ashes fell heavily upon the fugitives, so that
they were in danger of being crushed and buried in the
thick layer rapidly covering the whole country. Many
hours passed before the dreadful darkness began slowly
to be dissipated. When at length day returned, and
the sun was seen faintly shining through the overhanging
canopy of ashes, ‘every object seemed changed,
being covered over with white ashes as with a deep
snow.’</p>
<p>It is most remarkable that Pliny makes no mention
in his letter of the destruction of the two populous
and important cities, Pompeii and Herculaneum. We
have seen that at Stabiæ a shower of ashes fell so
heavily that several days before the end of the eruption
the court leading to the elder Pliny’s room was beginning
to be filled up; and when the eruption ceased,
Stabiæ was completely overwhelmed. Far more
sudden, however, was the destruction of Pompeii and
Herculaneum.</p>
<p>It would seem that the two cities were first shaken
violently by the throes of the disturbed mountain.
The signs of such a catastrophe have been very commonly
assigned to the earthquake which happened in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">177</span>
63, but it seems far more likely that most of them
belong to the days immediately preceding the great
outburst in 79. ‘In Pompeii,’ says Sir Charles Lyell,
‘both public and private buildings bear testimony to
the catastrophe. The walls are rent, and in many
places traversed by fissures still open.’ It is probable
that the inhabitants were driven by these anticipatory
throes to fly from the doomed towns. For though
Dion Cassius relates that ‘two entire cities, Herculaneum
and Pompeii, were buried under showers of
ashes, while all the people were sitting in the theatre,’
yet ‘the examination of the two cities enables us to
prove,’ says Sir Charles, ‘that none of the people were
destroyed in the theatre, and, indeed, that there were
very few of the inhabitants who did not escape from
both cities. Yet,’ he adds, ‘some lives were lost, and
there was ample foundation for the tale in all its most
essential particulars.’</p>
<p>We may note here, in passing, that the account of
the eruption given by Dion Cassius, who wrote a
century and a half after the catastrophe, is sufficient
to prove how terrible an impression had been made
upon the inhabitants of Campania, from whose descendants
he in all probability obtained the materials of
his narrative. He writes that, ‘during the eruption,
a multitude of men of superhuman stature, resembling
giants, appeared, sometimes on the mountain, and
sometimes in the environs; that stones and smoke
were thrown out, the sun was hidden, and then the
giants seemed to rise again, while the sounds of trum<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">178</span>pets
were heard’—with much other matter of a similar
sort.</p>
<p>In the great eruption of 79, Vesuvius poured forth
lapilli, sand, cinders, and fragments of old lava, but no
new lava flowed from the crater. Nor does it appear
that any lava-stream was ejected during the six eruptions
which took place during the following ten centuries.
In the year 1036, for the first time, Vesuvius
was observed to pour forth a stream of molten lava.
Thirteen years later, another eruption took place;
then ninety years passed without disturbance, and
after that a long pause of 168 years. During this
interval, however, the volcanic system, of which
Vesuvius is the main but not the only vent, had been
disturbed twice. For it is related that in 1198 the
Solfatara Lake crater was in eruption: and in 1302,
Ischia, dormant for at least 1,400 years, showed signs
of new activity. For more than a year earthquakes
had convulsed this island from time to time, and at
length the disturbed region was relieved by the outburst
of a lava-stream from a new vent on the south-east
of Ischia. The lava-stream flowed right down to
the sea, a distance of two miles. For two months, this
dreadful outburst continued to rage; many houses
were destroyed; and although the inhabitants of Ischia
were not completely expelled, as happened of old
with the Greek colonists, yet a partial emigration took
place.</p>
<p>The next eruption of Vesuvius occurred in 1306;
and then three centuries and a quarter passed during<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">179</span>
which only one eruption, and that an unimportant one
(in 1500), took place. ‘It was remarked,’ says Sir
Charles Lyell, ‘that throughout this long interval of
rest, Etna was in a state of unusual activity, so as
to lend countenance to the idea that the great Sicilian
volcano may sometimes serve as a channel of discharge
to elastic fluids and lava that would otherwise rise to
the vents in Campania.’</p>
<p>Nor was the abnormal activity of Etna the only sign
that the quiescence of Vesuvius was not to be looked
upon as any evidence of declining energy in the volcanic
system. In 1538 a new mountain was suddenly
thrown up in the Phlegræan Fields—a district including
within its bounds Pozzuoli, Lake Avernus, and the
Solfatara. The new mountain was thrown up near the
shores of the Bay of Baiæ. It is 440 feet above the level
of the bay, and its base is about a mile and a half in
circumference. The depth of the crater is 421 feet, so
that its bottom is only six yards above the level of the
bay. The spot on which the mountain was thrown up
was formerly occupied by the Lucrine Lake; but the
outburst filled up the greater part of the lake, leaving
only a small and shallow pool.</p>
<p>The accounts which have reached us of the formation
of this new mountain are not without interest. Falconi,
who wrote in 1538, mentions that several earthquakes
took place during the two years preceding the outburst,
and above twenty shocks on the day and night before
the eruption. ‘The eruption began on September 29,
1538. It was on a Sunday, about one o’clock in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">180</span>
night, when flames of fire were seen between the hot-baths
and Tripergola. In a short time the fire increased
to such a degree that it burst open the earth
in this place, and threw up a quantity of ashes and
pumice-stones, mixed with water, which covered the
whole country. The next morning the poor inhabitants
of Pozzuoli quitted their habitations in terror, covered
with the muddy and black shower, which continued the
whole day in that country—flying from death, but with
death painted in their countenances. Some with their
children in their arms, some with sacks full of their
goods; others leading an ass, loaded with their frightened
family, towards Naples.... The sea had retired on
the side of Baiæ, abandoning a considerable tract; and
the shore appeared almost entirely dry, from the quantity
of ashes and broken pumice-stones thrown up by
the eruption<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">181</span>.‘</p>
<p>Pietro Giacomo di Toledo gives us some account of
the phenomena which preceded the eruption: ‘That
plain which lies between Lake Avernus, the Monte
Barbaro, and the sea, was raised a little, and many
cracks were made in it, from some of which water
issued; at the same time the sea immediately adjoining
the plain dried up about two hundred paces, so that the
fish were left on the sand, a prey to the inhabitants of
Pozzuoli. At last, on September 29, about two o’clock
in the night, the earth opened near the lake, and
discovered a horrid mouth, from which were furiously
vomited smoke, fire, stones, and mud composed of
ashes, making at the time of the opening a noise like
the loudest thunder. The stones which followed were
by the flames converted to pumice, and some of these
were <em>larger than an ox</em>. The stones went about as high
as a cross-bow will carry, and then fell down sometimes
on the edge, and sometimes into the mouth itself. The
mud was of the colour of ashes, and at first very liquid,
then by degrees less so; and in such quantities that in
less than twelve hours, with the help of the above-mentioned
stones, a mountain was raised of a thousand
paces in height. Not only Pozzuoli and the neighbouring
country were full of this mud, but the city of Naples
also; so that many of its palaces were defaced by it.
This eruption lasted two nights and two days without
intermission, though not always with the same force;
the third day the eruption ceased, and I went up with
many people to the top of the new hill, and saw down
into its mouth, which was a round cavity about a
quarter of a mile in circumference, in the middle of
which the stones which had fallen were boiling up just
as a cauldron of water boils on the fire. The fourth
day it began to throw up again, and the seventh day
much more, but still with less violence than the first
night. At this time many persons who were on the
hill were knocked down by the stones and killed, or
smothered with the smoke.’</p>
<p>And now, for nearly a century, the whole district
continued in repose. Nearly five centuries had passed
since there had been any violent eruption of Vesuvius
itself; and the crater seemed gradually assuming the
condition of an extinct volcano. The interior of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">182</span>
crater is described by Bracini, who visited Vesuvius
shortly before the eruption of 1631, in terms that
would have fairly represented its condition before the
eruption of 79:—‘The crater was five miles in circumference,
and about a thousand paces deep; its
sides were covered with brushwood, and at the bottom
there was a plain on which cattle grazed. In the
woody parts, wild boars frequently harboured. In
one part of the plain, covered with ashes, were three
small pools, one filled with hot and bitter water,
another salter than the sea, and a third hot, but tasteless.’
But in December, 1631, the mountain blew
away the covering of rock and cinders which supported
these woods and pastures. Seven streams of
lava poured from the crater, causing a fearful destruction
of life and property. Resina, built over
the site of Herculaneum, was entirely consumed by a
raging lava-stream. Heavy showers of rain, generated
by the steam evolved during the eruption, caused in
their turn an amount of destruction scarcely less important
than that resulting from the lava-streams.
For, falling upon the cone, and sweeping thence large
masses of ashes and volcanic dust, these showers produced
destructive streams of mud, consistent enough to
merit the name of ‘aqueous lava’ commonly assigned
to it.</p>
<p>An interval of thirty-five years passed before the
next eruption. But since 1666 there has been a continual
series of eruptions, so that the mountain has
scarcely ever been at rest for more than ten years<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">183</span>
together. Occasionally there have been two eruptions
within a few months; and it is well worthy of remark
that, during the three centuries which have elapsed
since the formation of Monte Nuovo, there has been
no volcanic disturbance in any part of the Neapolitan
volcanic district save in Vesuvius alone. Of old, as
Brieslak well remarks, there had been irregular disturbances
in some part of the Bay of Naples once in
every two hundred years:—the eruption of Solfatara
in the twelfth century, that of Ischia in the fourteenth,
and that of Monte Nuovo in the sixteenth; but ‘the
eighteenth has formed an exception to the rule.’ It
seems clear that the constant series of eruptions from
Vesuvius during the past two hundred years has sufficed
to relieve the volcanic district of which Vesuvius is the
principal vent.</p>
<p>Of the eruptions which have disturbed Vesuvius
during the last two centuries, those of 1779, 1793, and
1822, are in some respects the most remarkable.</p>
<p>Sir William Hamilton has given a very interesting
account of the eruption of 1779. Passing over those
points in which this eruption resembled others, we
may note its more remarkable features. Sir William
Hamilton says, that in this eruption molten lava was
thrown up in magnificent jets to the height of at least
10,000 feet. Masses of stones and scoriæ were to be
seen propelled along by these lava jets. Vesuvius
seemed to be surmounted by an enormous column of
fire. Some of the jets were directed by the wind
towards Ottajano; others fell on the cone of Vesuvius,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">184</span>
on the outer circular mountain Somma, and on the
valley between. Falling, still red-hot and liquid, they
covered a district more than two miles and a half wide
with a mass of fire. The whole space above this
district, to the height of 10,000 feet, was filled also
with the falling and rising lava streams; so that there
was continually present a body of fire covering the
extensive space I have mentioned, and extending
nearly two miles high. The heat of this enormous
fire-column was distinctly perceptible at a distance of
at least six miles on every side.</p>
<p>The eruption of 1793 presented a different aspect.
Dr. Clarke tells us that millions of red-hot stones were
propelled into the air to at least half the height of the
cone itself; then turning, they fell all around in noble
curves. They covered nearly half the cone of Vesuvius
with fire. Huge masses of white smoke were vomited
forth by the disturbed mountain, and formed themselves,
at a height of many thousands of feet above
the crater, into a huge, ever-moving canopy, through
which, from time to time, were hurled pitch-black jets
of volcanic dust, and dense vapours, mixed with cascades
of red-hot rocks and scoriæ. The rain which fell
from the cloud-canopy was scalding hot.</p>
<p>Dr. Clarke was able to compare the different appearances
presented by the lava where it burst from the
very mouth of the crater, and lower down when it had
approached the plain. As it rushed forth from its imprisonment,
it streamed, a liquid, white, and brilliantly
pure river, which burned for itself a smooth channel<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">185</span>
through a great arched chasm in the side of the mountain.
It flowed with the clearness of ‘honey in regular
channels, cut finer than art can imitate, and glowing
with all the splendour of the sun. Sir William
Hamilton had conceived,’ adds Dr. Clarke, ‘that
stones thrown upon a current of lava would produce
no impression. I was soon convinced of the contrary.
Light bodies, indeed, of five, ten, and fifteen pounds’
weight, made little or no impression, even at the
source; but bodies of sixty, seventy, and eighty
pounds were seen to form a kind of bed on the surface
of the lava, and float away with it. A stone of three
hundredweight, that had been thrown out by the crater,
lay near the source of the current of lava. I raised it
up on one end, and then let it fall in upon the liquid
lava, when it gradually sank beneath the surface and
disappeared. If I wished to describe the manner in
which it acted upon the lava, I should say that it was
like a loaf of bread thrown into a bowl of very thick
honey, which gradually involves itself in the heavy
liquid and then slowly sinks to the bottom.</p>
<p>But as the lava flowed down the mountain slopes
it lost its brilliant whiteness; a crust began to form
upon the surface of the still molten lava, and this
crust broke into innumerable fragments of porous
matter called scoriæ. Underneath this crust—across
which Dr. Clarke and his companions were able to
pass without other injury than the singeing of their
boots—the liquid lava still continued to force its way
onward and downward past all obstacles. On its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">186</span>
arrival at the bottom of the mountain, says Dr. Clarke,
‘the whole current,’ encumbered with huge masses
of scoriæ, ‘resembled nothing so much as a heap of
unconnected cinders from an iron foundry,’ ‘rolling
slowly along,‘ he says in another place, ‘and falling
with a rattling noise over one another.’</p>
<p>After the eruption described by Dr. Clarke, the
great crater gradually filled up. Lava boiled up from
below, and small craters, which formed themselves
over the bottom and sides of the great one, poured
forth lava loaded with scoriæ. Thus, up to October
1822, there was to be seen, in place of a regular
crateriform opening, a rough and uneven surface,
scored by huge fissures, whence vapour was continually
being poured, so as to form clouds above the hideous
heap of ruins. But the great eruption of 1822 not
only flung forth all the mass which had accumulated
within the crater, but wholly changed the appearance
of the cone. An immense abyss was formed, three-quarters
of a mile across, and extending 2,000 feet
downwards into the very heart of Vesuvius. Had the
lips of the crater remained unchanged, indeed, the
depth of this great gulf would have been far greater.
But so terrific was the force of the explosion that the
whole of the upper part of the cone was carried clean
away, and the mountain reduced in height by nearly a
full fifth of its original dimensions. From the time of
its formation the chasm gradually filled up; so that,
when Mr. Scrope saw it soon after the eruption, its
depth was reduced by more than 1,000 feet.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">187</span></p>
<p>Of late, Vesuvius has been as busy as ever. In
1833 and 1834 there were eruptions; and in 1856
another great outburst took place. Then, for three
weeks together, lava streamed down the mountain
slopes. A river of molten lava swept away the village
of Cercolo, and ran nearly to the sea at Ponte Maddaloni.
There were then formed ten small craters within
the great one. But these have now united (see date
of article), and pressure from beneath has formed a vast
cone where they had been. The cone has risen above
the rim of the crater, from which torrents of lava are
poured forth. At first the lava formed a lake of fire,
but the seething mass found an outlet, and poured in a
wide stream towards Ottajano. Masses of red-hot
stone and rock are hurled forth, and a vast canopy of
white vapour hangs over Vesuvius, forming at night,
when illuminated by the raging mass below, a glory of
resplendent flame around the summit of the mountain.</p>
<p>It may seem strange that the neighbourhood of so
dangerous a mountain should be inhabited by races free
to choose more peaceful districts. Yet, though Herculaneum,
Pompeii, and Stabiæ lie buried beneath the lava
and ashes thrown forth by Vesuvius, Portici and Resina,
Torre del Greco and Torre dell’ Annunziata have taken
their place; and a large population, cheerful and prosperous,
flourishes around the disturbed mountain, and
over the district of which it is the somewhat untrustworthy
safety-valve.</p>
<p>It has, indeed, been well pointed out by Sir Charles
Lyell that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">188</span> ‘the general tendency of subterranean movements,
when their effects are considered for a sufficient
lapse of ages, is eminently beneficial, and that they
constitute an essential part of that mechanism by which
the integrity of the habitable surface is preserved. Why
the working of this same machinery should be attended
with so much evil, is a mystery far beyond the reach of
our philosophy, and must probably remain so until we
are permitted to investigate, not our planet alone and
its inhabitants, but other parts of the moral and material
universe with which they may be connected. Could
our survey embrace other worlds, and the events, not
of a few centuries only, but of periods as indefinite as
those with which geology renders us familiar, some
apparent contradictions might be reconciled, and some
difficulties would doubtless be cleared up. But even
then, as our capacities are finite, while the scheme of
the universe must be infinite, both in time and space, it
is presumptuous to suppose that all sources of doubt and
perplexity would ever be removed. On the contrary,
they might, perhaps, go on augmenting in number
although our confidence in the wisdom of the plan of
nature might increase at the same time; for it has been
justly said’ (by Sir Humphry Davy) ‘that the greater
the circle of light, the greater the boundary of darkness
by which it is surrounded.’</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From the <cite>Cornhill Magazine</cite>, March 1868.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">189</span></p>
<h2 id="THE_EARTHQUAKE_IN_PERU"><i>THE EARTHQUAKE IN PERU.</i></h2>
<p>The intelligence published last Saturday (see date of
article) is sufficient to prove that the great earthquake
which has devastated Peru fully equalled, if it did not
surpass, the most terrible catastrophes which have ever
befallen that country. It presents, too, all the features
which have hitherto characterised earthquakes in this
neighbourhood. These are well worthy of careful study,
and appear to have an important bearing on the modern
theory of earthquakes.</p>
<p>It has been commonly held that the seat of disturbance
in the earthquakes which have shaken the country
west of the Andes has lain always at some point or
other beneath that range of mountains. The fact that
several large volcanoes are found in the Cordilleras has
seemed confirmatory of this view. The account we
have also of the great earthquake at Riobamba in 1797,
seems only explicable by supposing that the seat of
disturbance lay almost immediately beneath that city.
The inhabitants were flung vertically upwards into the
air, and to such a height that Humboldt found the
skeletons of many of them on the summit of the hill La
Culca, on the farther side of the small river on which
Riobamba is built. The ruins of many houses were also
flung to the same spot. Here, therefore, was evidence
of that vertical (or, as Humboldt expresses it, explosive)<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">190</span>
force which is only to be looked for immediately above
the centre of concussion.</p>
<p>Yet the consideration of the evidence afforded by
the news just published seems at first sight somewhat
opposed to this view, and to point rather to a
seat of disturbance lying considerably to the west of
the Peruvian shores. ‘At Chala,’ says our informant,
‘the sea receded, and a wave rose fifty feet, and returned,
spreading into the town, a distance of about
a thousand feet. Three successive times everything
within range was swept away, followed by twelve
shocks of earthquake, lasting from three seconds to
two minutes.’ The arrival of great sea-waves before
the land-shocks were felt, seems decisively to indicate
that the seat of disturbance lay beneath the ocean,
and not beneath the land. I am disposed to believe,
however, that in the confusion of mind naturally
resulting from the occurrence of so terrible a catastrophe,
the sequence of events may not have been
very closely attended to, for in other places the arrival
of the great sea-wave is distinctly described as following
the occurrence of the earth-shock. At Arica, for
example, a considerable interval would seem to have
elapsed before the terrible sea-wave, which has always
characterised Peruvian earthquakes, poured in upon
the town. The agent of the Pacific Steam Navigation
Company, whose house had been destroyed by the
earth-shock, saw the great sea-wave while he was
flying towards the hills. He writes:—’While passing
towards the hills, with the earth shaking, a great cry<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">191</span>
went up to heaven. The sea had retired. On clearing
the town, I looked back and saw that the vessels were
being carried irresistibly seawards. In a few minutes
the sea stopped, and then arose a mighty wave fifty feet
high, and came in with a fearful rush, carrying everything
before it in terrible majesty. The whole of the
shipping came back, speeding towards inevitable doom.
In a few minutes all was completed—every vessel was
either on shore or bottom upwards.’ This, then, was
undoubtedly the great sea-wave, as compared with the
minor waves of disturbance which characterise all earthquakes
near the shores of the ocean.</p>
<p>One remarkable feature in this terrible earthquake
is the enormous range of country affected by it. From
Quito southwards as far as Iquique—or, in other words,
for a distance considerably exceeding a full third part
of the whole length of the South American Andes—the
shock was felt with the most terrible distinctness. We
have yet to learn how much farther to the north and
south, and how far inland on the eastern slopes of the
Andes, the shock was experienced. But there can be
little doubt that the disturbed country was equal to at
least a fourth of Europe.</p>
<p>The portion of the Andes thus disturbed seems to
be distinct from the part to which the great Chilian
earthquakes belong. The difference in character between
the Peruvian and Chilian earthquakes is a
singular and interesting phenomenon. The difference
corresponds to a feature long since pointed out by Sir
Charles Lyell,—the alternation, on a grand scale, of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">192</span>
districts of active with those of extinct volcanoes. It
is said that in Chili a year scarcely ever passes without
shocks of earthquake being felt; in certain regions,
not even a month. A similar persistence of earthquake-disturbance
characterises Peru. Yet, although both
districts are shaken in this manner, there seems to be
distinct evidence of alternating disturbance as respects
the occurrence of great earthquakes. Thus in 1797
took place the terrible earthquake of Riobamba.
Then, thirty years later, a series of great earthquakes
shook Chili, permanently elevating the whole line of
coast to the height of several feet. Now, again, after
another interval of about thirty years, the Andes are
disturbed by a great earthquake, and this time it
is the Peruvian Andes which experience the shock.
Between Chili and Peru there is a space upwards of
five hundred miles long, in which no volcanic action
has been observed. Singularly enough, this very portion
of the Andes, to which one would imagine the
Peruvians and Chilians would fly as to a region of
safety, is the part most thinly inhabited, insomuch that,
as Von Buch observes, it is in some places entirely
deserted.</p>
<p>Near Quito the trembling of the earth is almost
incessant, according to M. Boussingault. He considers
that the frequency of the movement is due rather to
the continual falling in of masses of rock which have
been fractured in recent earthquakes, than to the persistence
of subterranean action. He adds that the
height of several mountains in the Andes has diminished<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">193</span>
in modern times. He refers, doubtless, to the Peruvian
and Columbian Andes, and not to the Chilian. In the
latter portion of the range there must be a continual
increase of height, since each earthquake in Chili has
produced a perceptible recession of the sea. Darwin,
indeed, relates that near Valparaiso he saw beds of seashells
belonging to recent species at a height of about
a quarter of a mile above the present sea-level; and he
concluded that the land had been raised to this height
by a series of such small elevations as were observed to
have taken place during the earthquakes of 1822, 1835,
and 1837. That a contrary process should be going on
in Peru, confirms the idea that a sort of undulatory or
balancing motion is taking place—one long stretch of
the Cordilleras rising while another is sinking. A
tradition prevails among the Indians of Lican that the
mountain called L’Altar, or Cassac Urcu—which means
‘the chief’—was once the highest of the sub-equatorial
Andes, being higher even than Chimborazo; but, adds
the tradition, in the reign of Quainia Abomatha, before
the discovery of America, a prodigious eruption took
place, which lasted no less than eight years, and brought
down the summit of the mountain. M. Boussingault
states that the fragments of trachyte which once
formed the summit of this celebrated mountain are
now spread over the plain. At present Cotopaxi is the
loftiest volcano of the Cordilleras, its height being no
less than 18,858 feet. No mountain has ever been the
seat of such terrible and destructive eruptions as those
which have burst forth from Cotopaxi. The intensity<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">194</span>
of the heat which prevails during eruption will be
readily gathered from the circumstance that in
January 1803 the enormous bed of snow which usually
covers the cone of the volcano was dissolved in a single
night.</p>
<p>It would seem that the Mexican volcanoes also
belong to the same region of disturbance. Near the
Isthmus of Panama the great Cordillera of the Andes
is reduced to the height of about 800 feet, and beyond
begins the continuation of the volcanic chain
in Central America and Mexico. Nor are the volcanoes
of the West Indian or Caribbee Islands wholly disconnected
with the region of disturbance in Southern
America. And it is rather singular that even the
earthquakes which have occurred in the valley of the
Mississippi seem to be connected with the West Indian
and South American volcanic region. The violent
earthquakes which took place at New Madrid in 1812
occurred at exactly the same time as the earthquake
of Paranas, ‘so that it is possible,’ says Sir Charles
Lyell, ‘that these two points are part of one volcanic
region.’</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From the <cite>Daily News</cite>, September 18, 1868.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 id="THE_GREATEST_SEA-WAVE_EVER_KNOWN"><i>THE GREATEST SEA-WAVE EVER KNOWN.</i></h2>
<p>On August 13, 1868, one of the most terrible calamities
which has ever visited a people befell the unfortunate
inhabitants of Peru. In that land earthquakes
are nearly as common as rain-storms are with us;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">195</span>
and shocks by which whole cities are changed into a
heap of ruins are by no means infrequent. Yet even
in Peru, ‘the land of earthquakes,’ as Humboldt has
termed it, no such catastrophe as that of August 1868
had occurred within the memory of man. It was not
one city which was laid in ruins, but a whole empire.
Those who perished were counted by tens of thousands,
while the property destroyed by the earthquake was
valued at millions of pounds sterling.</p>
<p>Although so many months have passed since this
terrible calamity took place, scientific men have been
busily engaged until quite recently in endeavouring to
ascertain the real significance of the various events
which were observed during and after the occurrence
of the earthquake. The geographers of Germany have
taken a special interest in interpreting the evidence
afforded by this great manifestation of nature’s powers.
Two papers have been written recently on the great
earthquake of August 13, 1868, one by Professor Von
Hochstetter, the other by Herr Von Tschudi, which
present an interesting account of the various effects,
by land and by sea, which resulted from the tremendous
upheaving force to which the western flanks
of the Peruvian Andes were subjected on that day.
The effects on land, although surprising and terrible,
yet only differ in degree from those which have been
observed in other earthquakes. But the progress
of the great sea-wave which was generated by the
upheaval of the Peruvian shores and propagated over
the whole of the Pacific Ocean differs altogether from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">196</span>
any earthquake-phenomena before observed. Other
earthquakes have indeed been followed by oceanic
disturbances; but these have been accompanied by
terrestrial motions, so as to suggest the idea that they
had been caused by the motion of the sea-bottom, or
of the neighbouring land. In no instance has it ever
before been known that a well-marked wave of enormous
proportions should have been propagated over
the largest ocean-tract on our globe, by an earth-shock
whose direct action was limited to a relatively
small region, and that region not situated in the
centre, but on one side of the wide area traversed by
the wave.</p>
<p>I propose to give a brief sketch of the history of
this enormous sea-wave. In the first place, however,
it may be well to remind the reader of a few of the
more prominent features of the great shock to which
this wave owed its origin.</p>
<p>It was at Arequipa, at the foot of the lofty volcanic
mountain Misti, that the most terrible effects of the
great earthquake were experienced. Within historic
times Misti has poured forth no lava-streams; but that
the volcano is not extinct is clearly shown by the
fact that in 1542 an enormous mass of dust and ashes
was vomited forth from its crater. On August 13,
1868, Misti showed no signs of being disturbed. So
far as their volcanic neighbour was concerned, the
44,000 inhabitants of Arequipa had no reason to anticipate
the catastrophe which presently befell them.
At five minutes past five an earthquake shock was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">197</span>
experienced, which, though severe, seems to have
worked little mischief. Half a minute later, however,
a terrible noise was heard beneath the earth; a second
shock more violent than the first was felt; and then
began the swaying motion, gradually increasing in intensity.
In the course of the first minute this motion
had become so violent that the inhabitants ran in
terror out of their houses into the streets and squares.
In the next two minutes the swaying movement had
so increased that the more lightly-built houses were
cast to the ground, and the flying people could scarcely
keep their feet. ‘And now,’ says Von Tschudi,
‘there followed during two or three minutes a terrible
scene. The swaying motion which had hitherto prevailed
changed into fierce vertical upheaval. The
subterranean roaring increased in the most terrifying
manner: then were heard the heart-piercing shrieks
of the wretched people, the bursting of walls, the
crashing fall of houses and churches, while over all
rolled thick clouds of a yellowish-black dust, which,
had they been poured forth many minutes longer,
would have suffocated thousands.’ Although the shock
had lasted but a few minutes, the whole town was destroyed.
Not one building remained uninjured, and
there were few which did not lie in shapeless heaps of
ruins.</p>
<p>At Tacna and Arica, the earth-shock was less
severe, but strange and terrible phenomena followed
it. At the former place a circumstance occurred, the
cause and nature of which yet remain a mystery.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">198</span>
About three hours after the earthquake—in other
words, at about eight o’clock in the evening—an intensely
brilliant light made its appearance above the
neighbouring mountains. It lasted for fully half an
hour, and has been ascribed to the eruption of some as
yet unknown volcano.</p>
<p>At Arica the sea-wave produced even more destructive
effects than had been caused by the earthquake.
About twenty minutes after the first earth-shock,
the sea was seen to retire, as if about to leave
the shores wholly dry; but presently its waters returned
with tremendous force. A mighty wave, whose
length seemed immeasurable, was seen advancing like
a dark wall upon the unfortunate town, a large part
of which was overwhelmed by it. Two ships, the
Peruvian corvette ‘America’ and the United States
‘double-ender’ ‘Watertree,‘ were carried nearly half a
mile to the north of Arica, beyond the railroad which
runs to Tacna, and there left stranded high and dry.
This enormous wave was considered by the English
vice-consul at Arica to have been fully fifty feet in
height.</p>
<p>At Chala, three such waves swept in after the first
shocks of earthquake. They overflowed nearly the
whole of the town, the sea passing more than half a
mile beyond its usual limits.</p>
<p>At Islay and Iquique similar phenomena were manifested.
At the former town the sea flowed in no less
than five times, and each time with greater force.
Afterwards the motion gradually diminished, but even<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">199</span>
an hour and a half after the commencement of this
strange disturbance, the waves still ran forty feet
above the ordinary level. At Iquique, the people
beheld the inrushing wave whilst it was still a great
way off. A dark blue mass of water, some fifty feet
in height, was seen sweeping in upon the town with
inconceivable rapidity. An island lying before the
harbour was completely submerged by the great wave,
which still came rushing on, black with the mud and
slime it had swept from the sea-bottom. Those who
witnessed its progress from the upper balconies of their
houses, and presently saw its black mass rushing close
beneath their feet, looked on their safety as a miracle.
Many buildings were indeed washed away, and in the
low-lying parts of the town there was a terrible loss
of life. After passing far inland the wave slowly returned
seawards, and strangely enough, the sea, which
elsewhere heaved and tossed for hours after the
first great wave had swept over it, here came soon to
rest.</p>
<p>At Callao a yet more singular instance was afforded
of the effect which circumstances may have upon the
motion of the sea after a great earthquake has disturbed
it. In former earthquakes Callao has suffered
terribly from the effects of the great sea-wave. In
fact, on two occasions the whole town has been destroyed,
and nearly all its inhabitants have been
drowned, through the inrush of precisely such waves
as flowed into the ports of Arica and Chala. But upon
this occasion the centre of subterranean disturbance<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">200</span>
must have been so situated that either the wave was
diverted from Callao, or more probably two waves
reached Callao from different sources and at different
times, so that the two undulations partly counteracted
each other. Certain it is that, although the water
retreated strangely from the coast near Callao, insomuch
that a wide tract of the sea-bottom was uncovered,
there was no inrushing wave comparable with
those described above. The sea afterwards rose and
fell in an irregular manner, a circumstance confirming
the supposition that the disturbance was caused by two
distinct oscillations. Six hours after the occurrence of
the earth-shock, the double oscillations seem for a while
to have worked themselves into unison, for at this
time three considerable waves rolled in upon the town.
But clearly these waves must not be compared with
those which in other instances had made their appearance
within half an hour of the earth-throes. There
is little reason to doubt that if the separate oscillations
had reinforced each other earlier, Callao would have
been completely destroyed. As it was, a considerable
amount of mischief was effected; but the motion of the
sea presently became irregular again, and so continued
until the morning of August 14th, when it began to ebb
with some regularity. But during the 14th there were
occasional renewals of the irregular motion, and several
days elapsed before the regular ebb and flow of the sea
were resumed.</p>
<p>Such were among the phenomena presented in the
region where the earthquake itself was felt. It will<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">201</span>
be seen at once that within this region, or rather
along that portion of the sea-coast which falls within
the central region of disturbance, the true character of
the sea-wave generated by the earthquake could not
be recognised. If a rock fall from a lofty cliff into a
comparatively shallow sea, the water around the place
where the rock has fallen is disturbed in an irregular
manner. The sea seems at one place to leap up and
down; elsewhere one wave seems to beat against
another, and the sharpest eye can detect no law in the
motion of the seething waters. But presently, outside
the scene of disturbance, a circular wave is seen to
form, and if the motion of this wave be watched, it is
seen to present the most striking contrast to the
turmoil and confusion at its centre. It sweeps onwards
and outwards in a regular undulation. Gradually it
loses its circular figure (unless the sea-bottom happens
to be unusually level), showing that although its
motion is everywhere regular, it is not everywhere
equally swift. A wave of this sort, though incomparably
vaster, swept swiftly away on every side from
the scene of the great earthquake near the Peruvian
Andes. It has been calculated that the width of
this wave varied from one million to five million feet,
or roughly, from 200 to 1,000 miles, while, when in
mid-Pacific, the length of the wave, measured along
its summit in a widely-curved path from one side to
another of the great ocean, cannot have been less than
8,000 miles.</p>
<p>We cannot tell how deep-seated was the centre of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">202</span>
subterranean action; but there can be no doubt it was
very deep indeed, because otherwise the shock felt in
towns separated from each other by hundreds of miles
could not have been so nearly contemporaneous.
Therefore the portion of the earth’s crust upheaved
must have been enormous, for the length of the
region where the direct effects of the earthquake were
perceived is estimated by Professor Von Hochstetter at
no less than 240 miles. The breadth of the region is
unknown, because on one side the slope of the Andes
and on the other the ocean concealed the motion of the
earth’s crust.</p>
<p>The great ocean wave swept, as I have said, in all
directions around the scene of the earth-throe. Over
a large part of its course its passage was unnoted,
because in the open sea the effects even of so vast an
undulation could not be perceived. A ship would
slowly rise as the crest of the great wave passed under
her, and then as slowly sink again. This may seem
strange, at first sight, when it is remembered that in
reality the great sea-wave we are considering swept at
the rate of three or four hundred sea-miles an hour
over the larger part of the Pacific. But when the
true character of ocean-waves is understood, when it is
remembered that there is no transference of the water
itself at this enormous rate, but simply a transmission
of motion (precisely as when in a high wind waves
sweep rapidly over a corn-field, while yet each cornstalk
remains fixed in the ground), it will be seen
that the effects of the great sea-wave could only be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">203</span>
perceived near the shore. Even there, as we shall
presently see, there was much to convey the impression
that the land itself was rising and falling rather than
that the deep was moved. But among the hundreds
of ships which were sailing upon the Pacific when its
length and breadth were traversed by the great sea-wave,
there was not one in which any unusual motion
was perceived.</p>
<p>In somewhat less than three hours after the occurrence
of the earthquake, the ocean-wave inundated the
port of Coquimbo, on the Chilian seaboard, some 800
miles from Arica. An hour or so later it had reached
Constitucion, 450 miles farther south; and here for
some three hours the sea rose and fell with strange
violence. Farther south, along the shore of Chili,
even to the island of Chiloe, the shore-wave travelled,
though with continually diminishing force, owing doubtless
to the resistance which the irregularities of the
shore opposed to its progress.</p>
<p>The northerly shore-wave seems to have been more
considerable; and a moment’s study of a chart of
the two Americas will show that this circumstance
is highly significant. When we remember that the
principal effects of the land-shock were experienced
within that angle which the Peruvian Andes form
with the long north-and-south line of the Chilian and
Bolivian Andes, we see at once that, had the centre of
the subterranean action been near the scene where the
most destructive effects were perceived, no sea-wave,
or but a small one, could have been sent towards the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">204</span>
shores of North America. The projecting shores of
northern Peru and Ecuador could not have failed to
divert the sea-wave towards the west; and though a
reflected wave might have reached California, it would
only have been after a considerable interval of time,
and with dimensions much less than those of the sea-wave
which travelled southwards. When we see that,
on the contrary, a wave of even greater proportions
travelled towards the shores of North America, we
seem forced to the conclusion that the centre of the
subterranean action must have been so far to the west
that the sea-wave generated by it had a free course to
the shores of California.</p>
<p>Be this as it may, there can be no doubt that the
wave which swept the shores of Southern California,
rising upwards of sixty feet above the ordinary sea-level,
was absolutely the most imposing of all the indirect
effects of the great earthquake. When we consider that
even in San Pedro Bay, fully five thousand miles from
the centre of disturbance, a wave twice the height of an
ordinary house rolled in with unspeakable violence only
a few hours after the occurrence of the earth-throe, we
are most strikingly impressed with the tremendous
energy of the earth’s movement.</p>
<p>Turning to the open ocean, let us track the great
wave on its course past the multitudinous islands which
dot the surface of the great Pacific.</p>
<p>The inhabitants of the Sandwich Islands, which lie
about 6,300 miles from Arica, might have imagined
themselves safe from any effects which could be produced<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">205</span>
by an earthquake taking place so far away from
them. But on the night between August 13 and 14,
the sea around this island-group rose in a surprising
manner, insomuch that many thought the islands were
sinking and would shortly subside altogether beneath
the waves. Some of the smaller islands, indeed, were
for a time completely submerged. Before long, however,
the sea fell again, and as it did so the observers
‘found it impossible to resist the impression that the
islands were rising bodily out of the water.’ For no
less than three days this strange oscillation of the sea
continued to be experienced, the most remarkable ebbs
and floods being noticed at Honolulu, on the island of
Woahoo.</p>
<p>But the sea-wave swept onwards far beyond these
islands.</p>
<p>At Yokohama, in Japan, more than 10,500 miles
from Arica, an enormous wave poured in on August 14,
but at what hour we have no satisfactory record. So
far as distance is concerned, this wave affords most
surprising evidence of the stupendous nature of the
disturbance to which the waters of the Pacific Ocean
had been subjected. The whole circumference of the
earth is but 25,000 miles, so that this wave had
travelled over a distance considerably greater than
two-fifths of the earth’s circumference. A distance
which the swiftest of our ships could not traverse in
less than five or six weeks had been swept over by
this enormous undulation in the course of a few
hours.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">206</span></p>
<p>More complete details reach us from the Southern
Pacific.</p>
<p>Shortly before midnight the Marquesas Isles and
the low-lying Tuamotu group were visited by the
great wave, and some of these islands were completely
submerged by it. The lonely Opara Isle, where the
steamers which run between Panama and New Zealand
have their coaling station, was visited at about half-past
eleven in the evening by a billow which swept away
a portion of the coal depôt. Afterwards great waves
came rolling in at intervals of about twenty minutes,
and several days elapsed before the sea resumed its
ordinary ebb and flow.</p>
<p>It was not until about half-past two on the morning
of August 14, that the Samoa Isles (sometimes called
the Navigator Islands) were visited by the great wave.
The watchmen startled the inhabitants from their
sleep by the cry that the sea was about to overwhelm
them; and already, when the terrified people rushed
from their houses, the sea was found to have risen far
above the highest watermark. But it presently began
to sink again, and then commenced a series of oscillations,
which lasted for several days and were of a very
remarkable nature. Once in every quarter of an hour
the sea rose and fell, but it was noticed that it rose
twice as rapidly as it sank. This peculiarity is well
worth remarking. The eminent physicist Mallet
speaks thus (I follow Lyell’s quotation) about the
waves which traverse an open sea:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">207</span> ‘The great sea-wave,
advancing at the rate of several miles in a
minute, consists, in the deep ocean, of a long low
swell of enormous volume, having an equal slope
before and behind, and that so gentle that it might
pass under a ship without being noticed. But when it
reaches the edge of soundings its front slope becomes
short and steep, while its rear slope is long and gentle.’
On the shores visited by such a wave, the sea would
appear to rise more rapidly than it sank. We have
seen that this happened on the shores of the Samoan
group, and therefore the way in which the sea rose
and fell on the days following the great earthquake
gave significant evidence of the nature of the sea-bottom
in the neighbourhood of these islands. As
the change of the great wave’s figure could not have
been quickly communicated, we may conclude with
certainty that the Samoan Islands are the summits of
lofty mountains, whose sloping sides extend far towards
the east.</p>
<p>This conclusion affords interesting evidence of the
necessity of observing even the seemingly trifling
details of important phenomena.</p>
<p>The wave which visited the New Zealand Isles was
altogether different in character, affording a noteworthy
illustration of another remark of Mallet’s. He
says that where the sea-bottom slopes in such a way
that there is water of some depth close in-shore, the
great wave may roll in and do little damage; and we
have seen that so it happened in the case of the
Samoan Islands. But he adds, that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">208</span> ‘where the shore
is shelving, there will be first a retreat of the water,
and then the wave will break upon the beach and roll
far in upon the land.’ This is precisely what happened
when the great wave reached the eastern shores of
New Zealand, which are known to shelve down to
very shallow water, continuing far away to sea towards
the east:—</p>
<p>At about half-past three on the morning of August 14
the water began to retreat in a singular manner from
the Port of Lyttelton, on the eastern shores of the
southernmost of the New Zealand Islands. At length
the whole port was left entirely dry, and so remained
for about twenty minutes. Then the water was seen
returning like a wall of foam ten or twelve feet in
height, which rushed with a tremendous noise upon
the port and town. Towards five o’clock the water
again retired, very slowly as before, not reaching its
lowest ebb until six. An hour later, a second huge
wave inundated the port. Four times the sea retired
and returned with great power at intervals of about
two hours. Afterwards the oscillation of the water was
less considerable, but it had not wholly ceased until
August 17, and only on the 18th did the regular ebb
and flow of the tide recommence.</p>
<p>Around the Samoan group the water rose and fell
once in every fifteen minutes, while on the shores of
New Zealand each oscillation lasted no less than two
hours. Doubtless the different depths of water, the
irregular conformation of the island groups, and other
like circumstances, were principally concerned in producing
these singular variations. Yet they do not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">209</span>
seem fully sufficient to account for so wide a range of
difference. Possibly a cause yet unnoticed may have
had something to do with the peculiarity. In waves
of such enormous extent, it would be quite impossible
to determine whether the course of the wave-motion
was directed full upon a line of shore or more or less
obliquely. It is clear that in the former case the waves
would seem to follow each other more swiftly than in
the latter, even though there were no difference in their
velocity.</p>
<p>Far on beyond the shores of New Zealand the great
wave coursed, reaching at length the coast of Australia.
At dawn of August 14, Moreton Bay was visited by
five well-marked waves. At Newcastle, on the Hunter
River, the sea rose and fell several times in a remarkable
manner, the oscillatory motion commencing at
half-past six in the morning. But the most significant
evidence of the extent to which the sea-wave travelled
in this direction was afforded at Port Fairy, Belfast,
South Victoria. Here the oscillation of the water was
distinctly perceived at midday on August 14; and yet,
to reach this point, the sea-wave must not only have
travelled on a circuitous course nearly equal in length
to half the circumference of the earth, but must have
passed through Bass’s Straits, between Australia and
Van Diemen’s Land, and so have lost a considerable
portion of its force and dimensions.</p>
<p>When we remember that had not the effects of the
earth-shock been limited by the shores of South America,
a wave of disturbance equal in extent to that which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">210</span>
travelled westward would have swept towards the
east, we see that the force of the shock was sufficient
to have disturbed the waters of an ocean covering the
whole surface of the earth. For the sea-waves which
reached Yokohama in one direction and Port Fairy in
another had each traversed a distance nearly equal to
half the earth’s circumference; so that if the surface
of the earth were all sea, waves setting out in opposite
directions from the centre of disturbance would have
met each other at the antipodes of their starting-point.</p>
<p>It is impossible to contemplate the effects which
followed the great earthquake—the passage of a sea-wave
of enormous volume over fully one-third of the
earth’s surface, and the force with which, at the
farthermost limits of its range, the wave rolled in upon
shores more than 10,000 miles from its starting-place—without
feeling that those geologists are right who
deny that the subterranean forces of the earth are
diminishing in intensity. It may be difficult, perhaps,
to look on the effects which are ascribed to ancient
earth-throes without imagining for a while that the
power of modern earthquakes is altogether less. But
when we consider fairly the share which time had in
those ancient processes of change, when we see that
while mountain ranges were being upheaved or valleys
depressed to their present position, race after race and
type after type appeared on the earth, and lived out
the long lives which belong to races and to types, we
are recalled to the remembrance of the great work<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">211</span>
which the earth’s subterranean forces are still engaged
upon. Even now continents are being slowly depressed
or upheaved, even now mountain ranges are
being raised to a new level, table-lands are in process
of formation, and great valleys are being gradually
scooped out. It may need an occasional outburst
such as the earthquake of August 1868 to remind us
that great forces are at work beneath the earth’s
surface. But, in reality, the signs of change have
long been noted. Old shore-lines shift their place,
old soundings vary; the sea advances in one place and
retires in another; on every side Nature’s plastic hand
is at work modelling and remodelling the earth, in
order that it may always be a fit abode for those who
are to dwell upon it.</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From <cite>Fraser’s Magazine</cite>, July 1870.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 id="THE_USEFULNESS_OF_EARTHQUAKES"><i>THE USEFULNESS OF EARTHQUAKES.</i></h2>
<p>We have lately had fearful evidence of the energy
of the earth’s internal forces. A vibration which,
when considered with reference to the dimensions
of the earth’s globe, may be spoken of as an indefinitely
minute quivering limited to an insignificant
area, has sufficed to destroy the cities and villages
of whole provinces, to cause the death of thousands
of human beings, and to effect a destruction of
property which must be estimated by millions of pounds
sterling. Such a catastrophe as this serves indeed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">212</span>
to show how poor and weak a creature man is in
presence of the grand workings of Nature. The mere
throes which accompany her unseen subterranean
efforts suffice to crumble man’s strongest buildings in
a moment into dust, while the unfortunate inhabitants
are either crushed to death among the ruins, or forced
to remain shuddering spectators of the destruction of
their homes.</p>
<p>At first sight it may seem paradoxical to assert that
earthquakes, fearfully destructive as they have so often
proved, are yet essentially preservative and restorative
phenomena; yet this is strictly the case. Had no
earthquakes taken place in old times, man would not
now be living on the face of the earth; if no earthquakes
were to take place in future, the term of man’s
existence would be limited within a range of time far
less than that to which it seems likely, in all probability,
to be extended.</p>
<p>If the solid substance of the earth formed a perfect
sphere in ante-geologic times—that is, in ages preceding
those to which our present geologic studies
extend—there can be no doubt that there was then
no visible land above the surface of the water; the
ocean must have formed a uniformly deep covering to
the submerged surface of the solid globe. In this
state of things, nothing but the earth’s subterranean
forces could tend to the production of continents
and islands. Let me be understood. I am not referring
to the possibility or impossibility that lands
and seas should suddenly have assumed their present<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">213</span>
figure without convulsion of any sort; this <em>might</em> have
happened, since the Creator of all things can doubtless
modify all things according to His will; I merely
say that, assuming that in the beginning, as now, He
permitted all things to work according to the laws
He has appointed, then, undoubtedly, the submerged
earth must have risen above the sea by the action of
those very forms of force which produce the earthquake
in our own times.</p>
<p>However this may be, it is quite certain that when
once continents and lands had been formed, there
immediately began a struggle between destructive
and restorative (rather, perhaps, than preservative)
forces.</p>
<p>The great enemy of the land is water, and water
works the destruction of the land in two principal
ways.</p>
<p>In the first place the sea tends to destroy the land
by beating on its shores, and thus continually washing
it away. It may seem at first sight that this process
must necessarily be a slow one; in fact, many may
be disposed to say that it is certainly a slow process,
since we see that it does not alter the forms of continents
and islands perceptibly in long intervals of time. But,
as a matter of fact, we have never had an opportunity
of estimating the full effects of this cause, since its
action is continually being checked by the restorative
forces we shall presently have to consider. Were it
not thus checked, there can be little doubt that its
effects would be cumulative; for the longer the process<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">214</span>
continued—that is, the more the land was beaten away—the
higher would the sea rise, and the greater power
would it have to effect the destruction of the remaining
land.</p>
<p>I proceed to give a few instances of the sea’s power
of effecting the rapid destruction of the land when
nothing happens to interfere with the local action—premising,
that this effect is altogether insignificant in
comparison with that which would take place, even in
that particular spot, if the sea’s action were <em>everywhere</em>
left unchecked.</p>
<p>The Shetland Isles are composed of substances
which seem, of all others, best fitted to resist the
disintegrating forces of the sea—namely, granite,
gneiss, mica-slate, serpentine, greenstone, and many
other forms of rock: yet, exposed as these islands
are to the uncontrolled violence of the Atlantic Ocean,
they are undergoing a process of destruction which,
even within historical times, has produced very noteworthy
changes. ‘Steep cliffs are hollowed out,’ says
Sir Charles Lyell, ‘into deep caves and lofty arches;
and almost every promontory ends in a cluster of
rocks imitating the forms of columns, pinnacles, and
obelisks.’ Speaking of one of the islands of this
group, Dr. Hibbert says:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">215</span> ‘The isle of Stennes presents
a scene of unequalled desolation. In stormy
winters, large blocks of stone are overturned, or are
removed from their native beds, and hurried to a
distance almost incredible. In the winter of 1802, a
tabular mass, eight feet two inches by seven feet, and
five feet one inch thick, was dislodged from its bed,
and carried to a distance of from eighty to ninety
feet. In other parts of the Shetland Isles, where the
sea has encountered less solid materials, the work of
destruction has proceeded yet more effectively. In
Roeness, for example, the sea has wrought its way
so fiercely that a large cavernous aperture 250 feet
long has been hollowed out. But the most sublime
scene,’ says Dr. Hibbert, ‘is where a mural pile of
porphyry, escaping the process of disintegration that
is devastating the coast, appears to have been left as
a sort of rampart against the inroads of the ocean.
The Atlantic, when provoked by wintry gales, batters
against it with all the force of real artillery; and the
waves, in their repeated assaults, have at length forced
for themselves an entrance. This breach, named the
Grind of the Navir, is widened every winter by the
overwhelming surge that, finding a passage through
it, separates large stones from its sides, and forces
them to a distance of no less than 180 feet. In two
or three spots, the fragments which have been detached
are brought together in immense heaps, that appear
as an accumulation of cubical masses, the product of
some quarry.’</p>
<p>Let us next turn to a portion of the coast-line of
Great Britain which is neither defended, on the one
hand, by barriers of rock, nor attacked, on the other,
by the full fury of the Atlantic currents. Along the
whole coast of Yorkshire we find evidences of a continual
process of dilapidation. Between the projecting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">216</span>
headland of Flamborough and Spurn Point (the coast
of Holderness) the waste is particularly rapid. Many
spots, which are now mere sandbanks, are marked in the
old maps of Yorkshire as the sites of ancient towns and
villages. Speaking of Hyde (one of these), Pennant says:
‘Only the tradition is left of this town.’ Owthorne
and its church have been for the most part destroyed, as
also Auburn, Hartburn, and Kilnsea. Mr. Phillips, in
his ‘Geology of Yorkshire,’ states that not unreasonable
fears are entertained that, at some future time,
Spurn Point itself will become an island, or be wholly
washed away, and then the ocean, entering into the
estuary of the Humber, will cause great devastation.
Pennant states that ‘several places, once towns of note
upon the Humber, are now only recorded in history;
and Ravensperg was at one time a rival of Hull, and
a port so very considerable in 1332, that Edward
Baliol and the confederate English barons sailed from
hence to invade Scotland; and Henry IV., in 1399,
made choice of this port to land at, to effect the deposal
of Richard II.; yet the whole of this has since been
devoured by the merciless ocean; extensive sands, dry
at low water, are to be seen in their stead.’ The same
writer also describes Spurn Point as shaped like a
sickle, and the land to the north, he says, was ‘perpetually
preyed on by the fury of the German Sea,
which devours whole acres at a time.’</p>
<p>The decay of the shores of Norfolk and Suffolk
is also remarkably rapid. Sir Charles Lyell relates
some facts which throw an interesting light on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">217</span>
ravages which the sea commits upon the land here.
It was computed that when a certain inn was built at
Sherringham, seventy years would pass before the sea
could reach the spot: ‘the mean loss of land being
calculated from previous observations to be somewhat
less than one yard annually.’ But no allowance had
been made for the fact that the ground sloped <em>from</em> the
sea. In consequence of this peculiarity, the waste became
greater and greater every year as the cliff grew
lower. ‘Between the years 1824 and 1829, no less
than seventeen yards were swept away;’ and when Sir
Charles Lyell saw the place, only a small garden was
left between the building and the sea. I need hardly
add that all vestiges of the inn have long since
disappeared. Lyell also relates that, in 1829, there
was a depth of water sufficient to float a frigate at a
point where, less than half a century before, there stood
a cliff fifty feet high with houses upon it.</p>
<p>I have selected these portions of the coast of
Great Britain, not because the destruction of our shores
is greater here than elsewhere, but as serving to illustrate
processes of waste and demolition which are going
on around all the shores, not merely of Great Britain,
but of every country on the face of the earth. Here
and there, as I have said, there are instances in which
a contrary process seems to be in action. Low-lying
banks and shoals are formed—sometimes along stretches
of coast extending for a considerable distance. But
when we consider these formations closely, we find
that they rather afford evidence of the energy of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">218</span>
destructive forces to which the land is subject than
promise to make up for the land which has been swept
away. In the first place, every part of these banks
consists of the debris of other coasts. Now we cannot
doubt that of earth which is washed away from our
shores, by far the larger part finds its way to the bottom
of the deep seas; a small proportion only can be brought
(by some peculiarity in the distribution of ocean-currents,
or in the progress of the tidal wave) to aid in
the formation of shoals and banks. The larger, therefore,
such shoals and banks may be, the larger must
be the amount of land which has been washed away
never to reappear. And although banks and shoals
of this sort grow year by year larger and larger, yet
(unless added to artificially) they continue always
either beneath the surface of the water in the case of
shoals, or but very slightly raised above the surface.
Now, if we suppose the destruction of land to proceed
unchecked, it is manifest that at some period, however
remote, the formation of shoals and banks must come
to an end, owing to the continual diminution of the
land from the demolition of which they derive their
substance. In the meantime, the bed of the sea
would be continually filling up, the level of the sea
would be continually rising, and thus the banks would
be either wholly submerged through the effect of this
cause alone, or they would have so slight an elevation
above the sea-level that they would offer little resistance
to the destructive effects of the sea, which would
then have no other land to act upon.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">219</span></p>
<p>But we have yet to consider the second principal
cause of the wasting away of the land. The cause we
have just been dealing with acts upon the shores or
outlines of islands and continents; the one we have now
to consider acts upon their interior. Many, perhaps,
would hardly suppose that the fall of rain upon
the land could have any appreciable influence in the
demolition of continents; but, as a matter of fact, there
are few causes to which geologists attribute more
importance. The very fact that enormous deltas have
been formed at the mouths of many rivers—in other
words, the actual growth of continents through the effects
of rainfall—is a proof how largely this cause must tend to
destroy and disintegrate the interiors of our continents.
Dwelling on this point, Sir Charles Lyell presents the
following remarkable illustration: ‘During a tour in
Spain,’ he writes,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">220</span> ‘I was surprised to see a district of
gently undulating ground in Catalonia, consisting of
red and grey sandstone, and in some parts of red marl,
almost entirely denuded of herbage; while the roots of
the pines, holm oaks, and some other trees, were half
exposed, as if the soil had been washed away by a
flood. Such is the state of the forests, for example,
between Oristo and Vich, and near San Lorenzo. But
being overtaken by a violent thunderstorm in the month
of August, I saw the whole surface, even the highest
levels of some flat-topped hills, streaming with mud,
while on every declivity the devastation of torrents
was terrific. The peculiarities in the physiognomy of
the district were at once explained; and I was taught
that, in speculating on the greater effects which the
direct action of rain may once have produced on
the surface of certain parts of England, we need not
revert to periods when the heat of the climate was
tropical.’</p>
<p>Combining the effects of the sea’s action upon the
shores of continents, and of the action of rain upon their
interior, and remembering that unless the process of
demolition were checked in some way, each cause would
act from year to year with new force—one through the
effects of the gradual rise of the sea-bed, and the other
through the effects of the gradual increase of the
surface of ocean exposed to the vaporising action of
the sun, which increase would necessarily increase the
quantity of rain yearly precipitated on the land—we
see the justice of the opinion expressed by Sir John
Herschel, that, ‘had the primeval world been constructed
as it now exists, time enough has elapsed, and
force enough directed to that end has been in activity,
<em>to have long ago destroyed every vestige of land</em>.’</p>
<p>We see, then, the necessity that exists for the action
of some restorative or preservative force sufficient to
counteract the effects of the continuous processes of
destruction indicated above. If we consider, we shall
see that the destructive forces owe their efficiency
to their levelling action, that is, to their influence
in reducing the solid part of the earth to the figure
of a perfect sphere; therefore the form of force which
is required to counteract them is one that shall tend
to produce irregularities in the surface-contour of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">221</span>
the earth. And it will be remarked, that although
<em>upheaval</em> is the process which appears at first sight to
be the only effectual remedy to the levelling action of
rains and ocean-currents, yet the forcible depression of
the earth’s surface may prove in many instances yet
more effective, since it may serve to reduce the sea-level
in other places.</p>
<p>Now, the earth’s subterranean forces serve to produce
the very effects which are required in order to
counteract the continual disintegration of the shores
and interior parts of continents. In the first place,
their action is not distributed with any approach to
uniformity over different parts of the earth’s crust, and
therefore the figure they tend to give to the surface of
that crust is not that of a perfect sphere. This, of
itself, secures the uprising of some parts of the solid
earth above the sea-level. But this is not all. On a
comparison of the various effects due to the action of
subterranean forces, it has been found that the forces
of upheaval act (on the whole) more powerfully under
continents, and especially under the shore-lines of continents,
while the forces of depression act most powerfully
(on the whole) under the bed of the ocean. It need
hardly be said that whenever the earth is upheaved in one
part, it must be depressed somewhere else. Not necessarily
at the same instant, it should be remarked. The
process of upheaval may be either momentarily accompanied
by a corresponding process of depression, or the
latter process may take place by a gradual action of
the elastic powers of the earth’s crust; but, in one way<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">222</span>
or the other, the balance between upheaval and depression
must be restored. Hence, if it can be shown that
for the most part the forces of upheaval act underneath
the land, it follows—though we may not be able to recognise
the fact by obvious visible signs—that processes of
depression are taking place underneath the ocean. Now,
active volcanoes mark the centre of a district of upheaval,
and most volcanoes are near the sea, as if (though,
of course, this is not the true explanation) Nature had
provided against the inroads of the ocean by seating the
earth’s upheaving forces just where they are most wanted.</p>
<p>Even in earthquake districts which have no active
vent, the same law is found to prevail. It is supposed
by the most eminent seismologists that earthquake regions
around a volcano, and earthquake regions apparently
disconnected from any outlet, differ only in this
respect, that in the one case the subterranean forces
have had sufficient power to produce the phenomena of
eruption, while in the other they have not. ‘In earthquakes,’
says Humboldt, ‘we have evidence of a volcano-producing
force; but such a force, as universally
diffused as the internal heat of the globe, and proclaiming
itself everywhere, rarely acts with sufficient energy
to produce actual eruptive phenomena; and when it
does so, it is only in isolated and particular places.’</p>
<p>Of the influence of the earth’s subterranean forces
in altering the level of land, I might quote many remarkable
instances, but considerations of space compel
me to confine myself to two or three. The slow processes
of upheaval or depression may, perhaps, seem<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">223</span>
less immediately referable to subterranean action than
those which are produced during the progress of an
actual earthquake. I pass over, therefore, such phenomena
as the gradual uprising of Sweden, the slow
sinking of Greenland, and (still proceeding westward)
the gradual uprising of Nova Scotia and the shores of
Hudson’s Bay. Remarkable and suggestive as these
phenomena really are, and indisputable as the evidence
is on which they rest, they will probably seem much
less striking to the reader than those which I am now
about to quote.</p>
<p>On the 19th of November, 1822, a widely felt and
destructive earthquake was experienced in Chili. On
the next day, it was noticed for the first time that a
broad line of sea-coast had been deserted by the sea
for more than one hundred miles. A large part of this
tract was covered by shell-fish, which soon died, and
exhaled the most offensive effluvia. Between the old
low-water mark and the new one, the fishermen found
burrowing shells, which they had formerly had to search
for amidst the surf. Rocks some way out to sea
which had formerly been covered, were now dry at half
ebb-tide.</p>
<p>Careful measurements showed that the rise of the
land was greater at some distance inshore than along
the beach. The watercourse of a mill about a mile
inland from the sea had gained a fall of fourteen inches
in little more than a hundred yards. At Valparaiso,
the rise was three feet; at Quintero, four feet.</p>
<p>In February 1835, and in November 1837, a large<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">224</span>
tract of Chili was similarly shaken, a permanent rise
of two feet following the former earthquake, and a rise
of eight feet the latter.</p>
<p>The earthquake which took place at Cutch in 1819
is perhaps in some respects yet more remarkable. In
this instance, phenomena of subsidence, as well as phenomena
of upheaval, were witnessed. The estuary of
the Indus, which had long been closed to navigation—being,
in fact, only a foot deep at ebb-tide, and never
more than six feet at flood—was deepened in parts to
more than eighteen feet at low water. The fort and
village of Sindree were submerged, only the tops of
houses and walls being visible above the water. But
although this earthquake seemed thus to have a land-destroying,
instead of a land-creating effect, yet the
instances of upheaval were, even in this case, far more
remarkable than those of depression. ‘Immediately
after the shock,’ says Sir Charles Lyell, ‘the inhabitants
of Sindree saw at a distance of five miles and a
half from their village a long elevated mound, where
previously there had been a low and perfectly level
plain. To this uplifted tract they gave the name of
Ulla-Bund, or the “Mound of God,” to distinguish it
from several artificial dams previously thrown across
the eastern arm of the Indus. It has been ascertained,’
he adds, ‘that this new-raised country is upwards of
fifty miles in length from east to west, running parallel
to the line of subsidence which caused the grounds
around Sindree to be flooded. The breadth of the elevation
is conjectured to be in some parts sixteen miles,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">225</span>
and its greatest ascertained height above the original
level of the delta is ten feet—an elevation which appears
to the eye to be very uniform throughout.‘</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From <cite>Chambers’s Journal</cite>, November 7, 1868.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 id="THE_FORCING_POWER_OF_RAIN"><i>THE FORCING POWER OF RAIN.</i></h2>
<p>There is an old proverb which implies that England
need never fear drought; and we have had clear evidence
this year (1868) that an exceptionally dry summer
is not necessarily followed by a bad harvest. But I
believe that when a balance is carefully struck between
the good and the evil effects resulting from excessive
drought in England, it will be found that the latter
largely prevail. In fact, it is only necessary to observe
the effects which have followed the recent wet weather
to recognise the fact that rain has a forcing power,
the very diminished supply of which at the due season
cannot fail to have seriously injurious effects. In
various parts of England we see evidences of the action
of such a power during the present autumn in the
blossoming of trees, in the flowering of primroses and
other spring plants, in rich growths of fungi, and in
various other ways. It cannot be doubted that there
is here a comparative waste of powers which, expended
in due season, would have produced valuable
results.</p>
<p>The modern theories of the correlation of force
suffice to show how enormous a loss a country suffers<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">226</span>
when there is a failure in the supply of rain, or when
that supply comes out of its due season. When we
consider rain in connection with the causes to which
it is due, we begin to recognise the enormous amount
of power of which the ordinary rainfall of a country is
the representative; and we can well understand how it
is that ‘the clouds drop fatness on the earth.’</p>
<p>The sun’s heat is, of course, the main agent—we
may almost say the only agent—in supplying the rainfall
of a country. The process of evaporation carried
on over large portions of the ocean’s surface is continually
storing up enormous masses of water in the
form of invisible aqueous vapour, ready to be transformed
into cloud, then wafted for hundreds of miles
across seas and continents, to be finally precipitated
over this or that country, according to the conditions
which determine the downfall of rain. These processes
do not appear, at first sight, indicative of any very
great expenditure of force, yet in reality the force-equivalent
of the rain-supply of England alone for a
single year is something positively startling. It has
been calculated that the amount of heat required to
evaporate a quantity of water which would cover an area
of 100 square miles to a depth of one inch would be equal
to the heat which would be produced by the combustion
of half a million tons of coals. The amount of force of
which this consumption of heat would be the equivalent
corresponds to that which would be required to
raise a weight of upwards of one thousand millions of
tons to a height of one mile. Now, when we remember<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">227</span>
that the area of Great Britain and Ireland is about
120,000 square miles, and that the annual rainfall
averages about 25 inches, we see that the force-equivalent
of the rainfall is enormous. All the coal
which could be raised from our English coal mines in
hundreds of years would not give out heat enough
to produce England’s rain-supply for a single year.
When to this consideration we add the circumstance
that the force of rain produces bad as well as good
effects—the former when the rain falls at undue
seasons or in an irregular manner, the latter only
when the rainfall is distributed in the usual manner
among the seasons—we see that an important loss
accrues to a country in such exceptional years as the
present.</p>
<p>There are few subjects more interesting than those
depending on the correlation of physical forces; and
we may add that there are few the study of which
bears more largely on questions of agricultural and
commercial economy. It is only of late years that the
silent forces of nature—forces continually in action,
but which are too apt to pass unnoticed and unrecognised—have
taken their due place in scientific inquiry.
Strangely enough, the subject has been found to have
at once a most practical bearing on business relations,
and an aspect more strikingly poetical than any other
subject, perhaps, which men of science have ever taken
in hand to investigate. We see the ordinary processes
of Nature, as they are termed, taking their place in
the workshop of modern wealth, and at the same time<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">228</span>
exhibited in a hundred striking and interesting physical
relations. What, for instance, can be stranger or more
poetical than the contrast which Professor Tyndall has
instituted between that old friend of the agriculturist—the
wintry snow-flake—and the wild scenery of the
Alps? ‘I have seen,’ he says, ‘the wild stone-avalanches
of the Alps, which smoke and thunder down
the declivities with a vehemence almost sufficient
to stun the observer. I have also seen snow-flakes
descending so softly as not to hurt the fragile spangles
of which they were composed; yet to produce from
aqueous vapour a quantity which a child could carry
of that tender material demands an exertion of energy
competent to gather up the shattered blocks of the
largest stone-avalanche I have ever seen, and pitch
them to twice the height from which they fell.’</p>
<p>I may point out in this place the important connection
which exists between the rainfall of a country
and the amount of forest land. I notice that in
parts of America attention is being paid—with markedly
good results—to the influence of forests in encouraging
rainfall. We have here an instance in which
cause and effect are interchangeable. Rain encourages
the growth of an abundant vegetation, and abundant
vegetation in turn tends to produce a state of the superincumbent
atmosphere which encourages the precipitation
of rain. The consequence is, that it is very
necessary to check, before it is too late, the processes
which lead to the gradual destruction of forests. If
these processes are continued until the climate has<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">229</span>
become excessively dry, it is almost impossible to
remedy the mischief, simply because the want of
moisture is destructive to the trees which may be
planted to encourage rainfall. Thus there are few
processes more difficult (as has been found by experience
in parts of Spain and elsewhere) than the change
of an arid region into a vegetation-covered district. In
fact, if the region is one of great extent, the attempt to
effect such a change is a perfectly hopeless one. On the
other hand, the contrary process—that is, the attempt
to change a climate which is too moist into one of less
humidity—is in general not attended with much difficulty.
A judicious system of clearing nearly always
leads to the desired result.</p>
<p>The dryness of the past year has not been due to
the want of moisture in the air, nor to the exceptionally
unclouded condition of our skies. I believe that, on
the whole, the skies have been rather more cloudy
than usual this year. The fact that so little dew has
fallen is a sufficient proof that the nights have been on
the whole more cloudy than usual, since, as is well
known, the presence of clouds, by checking the radiation
of the earth’s heat, prevents (or at least diminishes)
the formation of dew. The fact would seem to be that
the westerly and south-westerly winds which usually
blow over England during a considerable part of the
year, bringing with them large quantities of aqueous
vapour from above the great Gulf Stream, have this
year blown somewhat higher than usual. Why this
should be it is not very easy to say. The height of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">230</span>
the vapour-laden winds is usually supposed to depend
on the heat of the weather. In summer, for instance,
the clouds range higher, and therefore travel farther
inland before they fall in rain. In winter, on the contrary,
they travel low, and hence the rain falls more
freely in the western than in the eastern counties
during winter. A similar relation prevails in the
Scandinavian peninsula—Norway receiving more rain
in winter than in summer, while Sweden receives more
rain in summer than in winter. But this summer the
rain-clouds have blown so much higher than usual
as to pass beyond England altogether. Possibly we
may find an explanation in the fact that before reaching
our shores at all the clouds were relieved by heavy
rainfalls—probably due to some exceptional electrical
relations—over parts of the Atlantic Ocean. It is
stated that the steam-ships from America this summer
were, in many instances, drenched by heavy showers
until they neared the coasts of England.</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From the <cite>Daily News</cite>, October 5, 1868.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 id="A_SHOWER_OF_SNOW-CRYSTALS"><i>A SHOWER OF SNOW-CRYSTALS.</i></h2>
<p>Yesterday morning a remarkably fine fall of snow-stars
took place over many parts of London. The
crystals were larger and more perfectly formed than
is commonly the case in our latitudes, where the conditions
requisite for the formation of these beautiful
objects are less perfectly fulfilled than in more northerly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">231</span>
regions. Many forms were to be noticed which the
researches of Scoresby, Glaisher, and Lowe have shown
to be somewhat uncommon.</p>
<p>Some of my readers will perhaps be surprised to
learn that no less than 1,000 different kinds of snow-crystals
have been noticed by the observers named
above, and that a large proportion of them have been
figured and described. The patterns are of wonderful
beauty. A strange circumstance connected with these
objects is the fact that for the most part they are found,
on a close examination, to be formed of minute
coloured crystals—some red, some green, others blue
or purple. In fact, all the colours of the rainbow are
to be seen in the delicate tracery of these fine hexagonal
stars. So that in the perfect whiteness of the
driven snow we have an illustration of the well-known
fact that the colours of the rainbow combine to form
the purest white. For the common snow-flake is formed
of a large number of such tiny crystals as were falling
yesterday; though their beauty is destroyed in the
snow-flake, through the effects of collision and partial
melting. It may not be very commonly known that
ordinary ice, also, is composed of a combination of
crystals presenting all the regularity of formation seen
in the snow-crystals. This would scarcely be believed
by anyone who examined a rough mass of ice taken
from the surface of a frozen lake. Yet, if a slice be
cut from the mass and placed in the sun’s light, or
before a fire, the beautiful phenomena called ice-flowers
make their appearance.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">232</span> ‘A fairy seems to have
breathed upon the ice, and caused transparent flowers
of exquisite beauty suddenly to blossom in myriads
within it.’</p>
<p>When we remember that the enormous icebergs of
the Arctic and Antarctic seas, the snow-caps which
crown the Alps and Andes and Himalayas, and the
glaciers which urge their way with resistless force down
the mountain valleys, are all made up of these delicate
and beautiful snow-flowers, we are struck with the
force of the strange contrasts which Nature presents to
our contemplation. We may say of the snow-crystals
what Tennyson said of the small sea-shell. Each snow-star
is</p>
<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">Frail, but a work divine</div>
<div class="verse">Made so fairily well,</div>
<div class="verse">So exquisitely minute,</div>
<div class="verse">A miracle of design.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>Yet—massed together with all the prodigality of
Nature’s unsparing hand—they crown the everlasting
hills; or, falling in avalanche and glacier, overwhelm the
stoutest works of man; or, in vast islands of floating
ice, show themselves to be</p>
<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">Of force to withstand, year upon year, the shock</div>
<div class="verse">Of cataract seas that snap the three-decker’s oaken spine.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class="psigs">
(From the <cite>Daily News</cite>, March 11, 1869.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">233</span></p>
<h2 id="LONG_SHOTS"><i>LONG SHOTS.</i></h2>
<p>Our artillerists have paid more attention of late years
to the destructive properties of various forms of cannon
than to the question of range. It was different when
first the rifling of cannon was under discussion. Then
the subject which was most attentively considered
(after accuracy of fire) was the range which might
possibly be attained by various improvements in the
structure of rifled cannon. Many of my readers
will remember how, soon after the construction of
Armstrong guns had been commenced in the Government
factories, a story was spread abroad of the
wonderful practice which had been made with this gun
at a range of seven miles. At that tremendous range,
a shot had been fired into the middle of a flock of
geese, according to one version of the story; but this
was presently improved upon, and we were told that a
bird had been singled out of the flock by the artillerists
and successfully ‘potted.’ Many believed this little
narrative; though some few, influenced perhaps by the
consideration that a flock of geese would not be visible
at a distance of seven miles, were obstinately incredulous.
Presently it turned out that the Armstrong
gun was incapable of throwing a shot to a
distance of seven miles; so that a certain air of
improbability has since attached to the narrative.
Still there were not wanting those who referred to
‘Queen Anne’s pocket-pistol’—the cannon which was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">234</span>
able to throw shot across the Straits of Dover; and
in the fulness of their faith in that mythical piece
of ordnance, they refused to believe that the skill of
modern artillerists was unequal to the construction
of cannon even more effective.</p>
<p>If there are any who still believe in the powers
ascribed to the far-famed ‘pocket-pistol,’ they will find
their confidence in modern artillery largely shaken by
the announcement that it is considered a great matter
that one of Whitworth’s cannon should have thrown
a shot to a distance of very nearly six miles and a half.
Not only is this so, however, but it is well known that
no piece of ordnance has ever flung a projectile to so
great a distance since first fire-arms were invented;
and it may be safely predicted that men will never be
able to construct a cannon which—as far as range is
concerned—will do much better than this one of
Mr. Whitworth’s. The greatest range which had ever
before been attained fell somewhat short of six miles.
The 7-inch steel gun contrived by Mr. Lynall Thomas
had flung a projectile weighing 175 lbs. to a distance
of 10,075 yards; and, according to General Lefroy’s
‘Handbook of Artillery,’ that was the greatest range
ever recorded. But Mr. Whitworth’s cannon has thrown
a shot more than 1,000 yards farther.</p>
<p>Very few have any idea of the difficulties which
oppose themselves to the attainment of a great range
in artillery practice. It may seem, at first sight, the
simplest possible matter to obtain an increase of
range. Let the gun be made but strong enough to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">235</span>
bear a sufficient charge, and range seems to be merely
a question of the quantity of powder made use of. But
in reality the matter is much more complicated. The
artillerist has to contrive that the whole of the powder
made use of shall be burned before the shot leaves the
cannon, and yet that the charge shall not explode so
rapidly as to burst the cannon. If he used some forms
of powder, very useful for special purposes, half the
charge would be blown out without doing its share of
work. On the other hand, there are some combustibles
(as gun-cotton and the nitrates) which burn so fast
that the gun would be likely to burst before the shot
could be expelled. Then, again, the shot must fit so
closely that there shall be no windage, and yet not so
closely as to resist too much the action of the exploding
powder. Again, there is the form of the shot to be
considered. A sphere is not the solid which passes
most readily through a resisting medium like the air;
and yet, other projectiles, which are best so long as
they maintain a certain position, meet with a greater
resistance when once they begin to move unsteadily.
The conoid used in ordinary rifle practice, for example,
passes much more freely through the air, point first,
than an ordinary spherical bullet; but if the point did
not travel first, as would happen but for the rifling,
or even if the conoidal bullet ‘swayed about’ on its
course, it would meet with more resistance than a
spherical bullet. Hence the question of ‘fast or slow
rifling’ has to be considered. ‘Fast rifling’ gives the
greater spin, but causes more resistance to the exit of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">236</span>
the shot from the barrel; with ‘slow-rifling,’ these conditions
are reversed.</p>
<p>And then the common notion is that a cannon-ball
travels in the curve called a parabola, and that artillerists
have nothing to do but to calculate all about
this parabola, and to deduce the range from the initial
velocity according to some simple principles depending
on the properties of the curve. All this is founded on
a complete misapprehension of the true difficulties in
the way of the problem. Only projectiles thrown with
small velocity from the earth travel in parabolic paths.
A cannon-ball follows a wholly different kind of curve.
The resistance of the air, which seems to most persons
a wholly insignificant item in the inquiry, is so enormous
in the case of a cannon-ball as to become by far the
most important difficulty in the way of the practical
artillerist. When a 250-lb. shot is hurled with such
force from a gun as to cover a range of six miles, the
resistance of the air is about forty times the weight of
the ball—that is, is equivalent to a weight of upwards
of four tons. The range in such a case as this is but a
small fraction of that which would be given by the
ordinary parabolic theory.</p>
<p>As regards artillery practice in war, there are other
difficulties in the attainment of a very extended range.
Cannon meant for battering down forts cannot possibly
be used in the same way that Whitworth’s was used
at Shoeburyness. If the shot flung from this gun at
an elevation of thirty-three degrees could have been
watched, it would have been found that it fell to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">237</span>
earth at a much greater angle—that is, much more
nearly in a perpendicular direction. On the ordinary
parabolic theory, of course, the angle of fall would be
the same as the angle of elevation, but under actual
circumstances there is an important difference. If forts
are to be battered down, however, it will not serve that
they should be struck from above; our artillerists must
perforce keep to the old method of pounding away at
the face of the forts they attack. Therefore, an elevation
which is all very well for mortars—that is, when
the question merely is of flinging a bomb into a town
or fortress—is utterly unsuited for ordinary artillery.
With an elevation of ten degrees, Whitworth’s cannon
scarcely projected the 250-lb. shot to a distance of three
miles.</p>
<p>The progress of the modern science of gunnery
certainly tends to increase the distance at which armies
will engage each other. With field artillery flinging
shot to a distance of two or three miles, and riflemen
able to make tolerably sure practice at a distance of
three-quarters of a mile, we are not likely often to hear
of hand-to-hand conflicts in future warfare. The use
of breech-loaders will also tend to the same effect.
Hitherto we have scarcely had experience of the results
which these changes are to produce on modern
warfare. At Sadowa breech-loaders did not encounter
breech-loaders, and it was easy for the victors in that
battle to come to close quarters with their enemies.
But in a battle where both sides are armed with
breech-loaders, we shall probably see another sort of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">238</span>
affair altogether. The bayonet will be an almost useless
addition to the soldier’s arms; a charge of cavalry upon
well-armed infantry will be almost as hopeless as the
famous Balaclava charge; and the artillery on either
side will have to play a game at long bowls. I venture
to anticipate that the first great European war will
introduce a total change into the whole system of warlike
manœuvres.<SPAN name="FNanchor_14_14" href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">14</SPAN></p>
<p class="psigs">
(From the <cite>Daily News</cite>, November 1868.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 id="INFLUENCE_OF_MARRIAGE_ON_THE_DEATH-RATE"><i>INFLUENCE OF MARRIAGE ON THE DEATH-RATE.</i></h2>
<p>The Royal Commission on the Law of Marriage has
attracted attention to many singular and instructive
results of modern statistical inquiry. Not the least
important of these is the apparent influence of marriage
on the death-rate. For several years it has been
noticed by statisticians that the death-rate of unmarried
men is considerably higher than the death-rate of
married men and widowers. I believe that Dr. Stark,
Registrar-General for Scotland, was one of the first
to call attention to this peculiarity, as evidenced by
the results of two years’ returns for Scotland. But
the law has since been confirmed by a far wider range
of statistical inquiry. The relative proportion between
the death-rates of the married and of the unmarried is
not absolutely uniform in different countries, but it is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">239</span>
fairly enough represented by the following table, which
exhibits the mortality per thousand of married and
unmarried men in Scotland:—</p>
<div class="center">
<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
<tr><th>Ages.</th><th>Husbands and Widowers.</th><th>Unmarried.</th></tr>
<tr><td>20 to 25</td><td> 6·26</td><td> 12·31</td></tr>
<tr><td>25 to 80</td><td> 8·23</td><td> 14·94</td></tr>
<tr><td>30 to 35</td><td> 8·65</td><td> 15·94</td></tr>
<tr><td>35 to 40</td><td> 11·67</td><td> 16·02</td></tr>
<tr><td>40 to 45</td><td> 14·07</td><td> 18·35</td></tr>
<tr><td>45 to 50</td><td> 17·04</td><td> 21·18</td></tr>
<tr><td>50 to 55</td><td> 19·54</td><td> 26·34</td></tr>
<tr><td>55 to 60</td><td> 26·14</td><td> 28·54</td></tr>
<tr><td>60 to 65</td><td> 35·63</td><td> 44·54</td></tr>
<tr><td>65 to 70</td><td> 52·93</td><td> 60·21</td></tr>
<tr><td>70 to 75</td><td> 81·56</td><td>102·71</td></tr>
<tr><td>75 to 80</td><td>117·85</td><td>143·94</td></tr>
<tr><td>80 to 85</td><td>173·88</td><td>195·40</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>From this table we are to understand that out
of one hundred thousand married persons (including
widowers) from 20 to 25 years old, 626 die in the
course of each year; while out of a similar number
of unmarried persons, between the same ages, no less
than 1,231 die in each year. And in like manner all
the other lines of the table are to be interpreted.</p>
<p>Commenting on the evidence supplied by the above
figures, Dr. Stark stated that ‘bachelorhood is more
destructive to life than the most unwholesome trades,
or than residence in an unwholesome house or district,
where there has never been the most distant attempt
at sanitary improvement of any kind.’ And this view
has been very generally accepted, not only by the public,
but by professed statisticians. Yet, as a matter of fact,
I believe that no such inferences can legitimately be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">240</span>
drawn from the above table. Dr. Stark appears to
me to have fallen into the mistake, which M. Quetelet
tells us is so common, of trying to make his statistics
carry more weight than they are capable of bearing.
It is important that the matter should be put in a
just light, for the Royal Commission on the Law of
Marriage has revealed no more striking fact than that
of the prevalence of immature marriages, and such
reasoning as Dr. Stark’s certainly cannot tend to discourage
these unwise alliances. If death strikes down
in five years only half as many of those who are married
as of those who are unmarried between the ages of
20 and 25 (as appears from the above table), and if the
proportion of deaths between the two classes goes on
continually diminishing in each successive lustre (as is
also shown by the above table), it seems reasonable to
infer that the death-rate would be even more strikingly
disproportionate for persons between the ages of fifteen
and twenty than for persons between the ages of
twenty and twenty-five. I believe, indeed, that if
Dr. Stark had extended his table to include the former
ages, the result would have been such as I have
indicated. Yet few will suppose that very youthful
marriages can exercise so singularly beneficial an
effect.</p>
<p>To many Dr. Stark’s conclusion may appear to be a
natural and obvious <i lang="la">sequitur</i> from the evidence upon
which it is founded. Admitting the facts—and I see
no reason for doubting them—it may appear at first
sight that we are bound to accept the conclusion that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">241</span>
matrimony is favourable to longevity. Yet the consideration
of a few parallel cases will suffice to show
how small a foundation the figures I have quoted
supply for such a conclusion. What would be thought,
for example, of any of the following inferences?—Among
hot-house plants there is observed a greater
variety and brilliance of colour than among those which
are kept in the open air; therefore the housing of plants
conduces to the splendour of their colouring. Or
again: The average height of Life Guardsmen is
greater than that of the rest of the male population;
therefore to be a Life Guardsman conduces to tallness
of stature. Or to take an example still more closely
illustrative of Dr. Stark’s reasoning: The average
longevity of noblemen exceeds that of untitled persons;
therefore to have a title is conducive to longevity; or
borrowing his words, to remain without a title ‘is more
destructive to life than the most unwholesome trades,
or than residence in an unwholesome house or district,
where there has never been the most distant attempt
at sanitary improvement of any kind.’</p>
<p>We know that the inference is absurd in each of the
above instances, and we are able at once to show where
the flaw in the reasoning lies. We know that splendid
flowers are more commonly selected for housing, and
that Life Guardsmen are chosen for their tallness, so
that we are prevented from falling into the mistake of
ascribing splendour of colour in the one instance, or
tallness in the other, to the influence of causes which
have nothing whatever to do with those attributes;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">242</span>
nor is anyone likely to ascribe the longevity of our
nobility to the possession of a title. Yet there is
nothing in any one of the above inferences which is in
reality more unsound than Dr. Stark’s inference from
the mortality bills, when the latter are considered
with due reference to the principles of interpretation
which statisticians are bound to follow.</p>
<p>The fact is, that in dealing with statistics the utmost
care is required in order that our inferences may not be
pushed beyond the evidence afforded by our facts. In
the present instance, we have simply to deal with the
fact that the death-rate of unmarried men is higher
than the death-rate of married men and widowers.
From this fact we cannot reason as Dr. Stark has done
to a <em>simple</em> conclusion. All that we can do is to show
that one of <em>three</em> conclusions must be adopted:—Either
matrimony is favourable (directly or indirectly) to
longevity, in a degree sufficient wholly to account for
the observed peculiarity; or a principle of selection—the
effect of which is such as, on the whole, to fill the
ranks of married men from among the healthier and
stronger portion of the community—operates in a
sufficient degree to account wholly for the observed
death-rates; or lastly, the observed death-rates are
due to the combination, in some unknown proportion,
of the two causes just mentioned.</p>
<p>No reasonable doubt can exist, as it seems to me,
that the third is the true conclusion to be drawn from
the evidence supplied by the mortality bills. Unfortunately,
the conclusion thus deduced is almost valueless,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">243</span>
because we are left wholly in doubt as to the proportion
which subsists between the effects to be ascribed
to the two causes thus shown to be in operation.</p>
<p>It scarcely required the evidence of statistics to
prove that each cause must operate to some extent.</p>
<p>It is perfectly obvious, on the one hand, that
although hundreds of men who would be held by
insurance companies to be ‘bad lives’ may contract
marriage, yet on the whole a principle of selection is in
operation which must tend to bring the healthier portion
of the male community into the ranks of the married,
and to leave the unhealthier in the state of bachelorhood.
A little consideration will show also that, on the
whole, the members of the less healthy trades, very poor
persons, habitual drunkards, and others whose prospects
of long life are unfavourable, must (on the average of
a large number) be more likely to remain unmarried
than those more favourably situated. Another fact
drawn from the Registrar-General’s return suffices to
prove the influence of poverty on the marriage-rate.
I refer to the fact that marriages are invariably
more numerous in seasons of prosperity than at other
times. Improvident marriages are undoubtedly numerous,
but prosperity and adversity <em>have</em> their influence,
and that influence not unimportant, on the marriage
returns.</p>
<p>On the other hand, it is perfectly obvious that
the life of a married man is likely to be more favourable
to longevity than that of a bachelor. The mere
fact that a man has a wife and family depending upon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">244</span>
him will suffice to render him more careful of his
health, less ready to undertake dangerous employments,
and so on; and there are other reasons which will occur
to everyone for considering the life of a married man
better (in the sense of the insurance companies) than
that of a bachelor. In fact, while we are compelled
to reject Dr. Stark’s statement that ‘bachelorhood is
more destructive to life than the most unwholesome
trades, or than residence in an unwholesome house or
district, where there has never been the most distant
attempt at sanitary improvement of any kind,’ we may
safely accept his opinion that statistics ‘prove the truth
of one of the first natural laws revealed to man—“It is
not good that man should live alone.”’</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From the <cite>Daily News</cite>, October 17, 1868.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 id="THE_TOPOGRAPHICAL_SURVEY_OF_INDIA"><i>THE TOPOGRAPHICAL SURVEY OF INDIA.</i></h2>
<p>At the close of the war with Tippoo Sahib, Major
Lambton planned the triangulation of the country
lying between Madras and the Malabar coast, a district
which had been roughly surveyed, during the progress
of the war, by Colonel Mackenzie. The Duke of
Wellington gave his approval to the project, and his
brother, the Governor-General of India, and Lord Clive
(son of the great Clive), Governor of Madras, used
their influence to aid Major Lambton in carrying out
his design. The only astronomical instrument made<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">245</span>
use of by the first survey party was one of Ramsden’s
zenith-sectors, which Lord Macartney had placed in the
hands of Dinwiddie, the astronomer, for sale. A steel
chain, which had been sent with Lord Macartney’s
embassy to the Emperor of China and refused, was the
only apparatus available for measuring.</p>
<p>Thus began the great Trigonometrical Survey of
India, a work whose importance it is hardly possible
to over-estimate. Conducted successively by Colonel
Lambton, Sir George Everest, Sir Andrew Waugh,
and Lieut.-Col. Walker (the present superintendent),
the trigonometrical survey has been prosecuted with a
skill and accuracy which renders it fairly comparable
with the best work of European surveyors. But to
complete in this style the survey of the whole of India
would be the work of several centuries. The trigonometrical
survey of Great Britain and Ireland has been
already more than a century in progress, and is still
unfinished. It can, therefore, be imagined that the
survey of India—nearly ten times the size of the
British Isles, and presenting difficulties a hundredfold
greater than those which the surveyor in England has
to encounter—is not a work which can be quickly
completed.</p>
<p>But the growing demands of the public service have
rendered it imperatively necessary that India should be
rapidly and completely surveyed. This necessity led
to the commencement of the Topographical Survey of
India, a work which has been pushed forward at a surprising
rate during the past few years. My readers<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">246</span>
may form some idea of the energy with which the survey
is in progress, from the fact that Colonel Thuillier’s
Report for the season 1866-67 announces the charting
of an area half as large as Scotland, and the preparatory
triangulation of an additional area nearly half as
large as England.</p>
<p>In a period of thirty years, with but few surveying
parties at first, and a slow increase in their number, an
area of 160,000 square miles has been completed and
mapped by the topographical department. The revenue
surveyors have also supplied good maps (on a similar
scale) of 364,000 square miles of country during the
twenty years ending in 1866. Combining these results,
we have an area of 524,000 square miles, or upwards of
four times that of Great Britain and Ireland. For all
this enormous area the surveyors have the records in a
methodical and systematic form, fit for incorporation in
the atlas of India. Nor does this estimate include the
older revenue surveys of the North-western Provinces
which, for want of proper supervision in former years,
were never regularly reduced. The records of these
surveys were destroyed in the Mutiny—chiefly in
Hazaumbaugh and the south-western frontier Agency.
The whole of these districts remain to be gone over in
a style very superior to that of the last survey.</p>
<p>The extent of the country which has been charted
may lead to the impression that the survey is little more
than a hasty reconnaissance. This, however, is very far
indeed from being the case. The preliminary triangulation,
which is the basis of the topographical survey, is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">247</span>
conducted with extreme care. In the present Report,
for instance, we find that the discrepancies between the
common sides of the triangles-in other words, the
discrepancies between the results obtained by different
observers-are in some cases less than one-tenth of an
inch per mile; in others they are from one inch to a
foot per mile; and in the survey of the Cossyah and
Garrow Hills, where observations had to be taken to
large objects, such as trees, rocks, &c., with no defined
points for guidance, the results differ by as much as
twenty-six inches per mile. These discrepancies must
not only be regarded as insignificant in themselves, but
must appear yet more trifling when it is remembered
that they are not cumulative, inasmuch as the preliminary
triangulation is itself dependent on the great
trigonometrical survey.</p>
<p>Let us understand clearly what are the various forms
of survey which are or have been in progress in India.
There are three forms to be considered:—(1) The Great
Trigonometrical Surveys; (2) The Revenue Surveys;
and (3) the Topographical Surveys.</p>
<p>Great trigonometrical operations are extended in
a straight course from one measured base to another.
Every precaution which modern skill and science can
suggest is taken in the measurement of each base-line,
and in the various processes by which the survey is
extended from one base-line to the other. The accuracy
with which work of this sort is conducted may be
estimated from the following instance. During the
progress of the Ordnance Survey of Great Britain and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">248</span>
Ireland, a base-line nearly eight miles long was measured
near Lough Foyle, in Ireland, and another nearly seven
miles long on Salisbury Plain. Trigonometrical operations
were then extended from Lough Foyle to Salisbury
Plain, a distance of about 340 miles; and the Salisbury
base-line was calculated from the observations made
over this long arc. <em>The difference between the measured
and calculated values of the base-line was less than five
inches!</em> As we have stated, the trigonometrical survey
of India will bear comparison with the best work of our
surveyors in England.</p>
<p>A revenue survey is prosecuted for the definition of
the boundaries of estates and properties. The operations
of such a survey are therefore carried on conformably
to those boundaries.</p>
<p>The topographical survey of a country is defined by
Sir A. Scott Waugh to imply ‘the measurement and
delineation of the natural features of a country, and the
works of man thereon, with the object of producing a
complete and sufficiently accurate map. Being free
from the trammels of boundaries of properties, the
principal lines of operations must conform to the features
of the country, and objects to be surveyed.’</p>
<p>The only safe basis for the topographical survey of
a country is a system of accurate triangulation. And
where the extent of country to be surveyed is large,
there will always be a great risk of the accumulation of
error in the triangulation itself; which must, therefore,
be made to depend on the accurate results obtained by
the great trigonometrical operations. In order to secure<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">249</span>
this result, fixed stations are established in the vicinity
of the great trigonometrical series. Where this plan
cannot be adopted, a network of large symmetrical
triangles is thrown over the district to be surveyed, or
boundary series of triangles are carried along the outline
of the district or along convenient internal lines. The
former of these methods is applicable to a hilly district,
the latter to a flat country.</p>
<p>When the district to be surveyed has been triangulated,
the work of filling-in the topographical details is
commenced. Each triangle being of moderate extent,
with sides from three to five miles in length, and the
angular points being determined, as we have seen, with
great exactness, it is evident that no considerable error
can occur in filling-in the details. Hence, methods can
be adopted in the final topographical work which would
not be suitable for triangulation. The triangles can
either be ‘measured up,’ or the observer may traverse
from trigonometrical point to point, taking offsets and
intersections; or, lastly, he may make use of the plane
table. The two first methods require little comment;
but the principle of plane-tabling enters so largely into
Indian surveying, that this notice would be incomplete
without a brief account of this simple and beautiful
method.</p>
<p>The plane-table is a flat board turning on a vertical
pivot. It bears the chart on which the observer
is planning the country. Suppose, now, that two points
<span class="smcap">A</span> and <span class="smcap">B</span> are determined, and that we require to mark
in the position of a third point <span class="smcap">C</span>:—It is clear that if we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">250</span>
observed with a theodolite the angles <span class="smcap">A B C</span> and <span class="smcap">B A C</span>,
we might lay these down on the chart with a protractor,
and so the position of <span class="smcap">C</span> would be determined, with
an accuracy proportioned to the care with which the
observations were made and the corresponding constructions
applied to the chart. But in ‘plane-tabling’
a more direct plan is adopted. A ruler bearing sights,
resembling those of a rifle, is so applied that the edge
passing through the point <span class="smcap">A</span> on the chart (the observer
being situated at the real station <span class="smcap">A</span>) passes through the
point <span class="smcap">B</span> on the chart, the line of sight passing through
the real station <span class="smcap">B</span>. The table being fixed in the position
thus obtained, the ruler is next directed so that its edge
passes through <span class="smcap">A</span>, while the line of sight points to <span class="smcap">C</span>. A
line is now ruled with a pencil through <span class="smcap">A</span> towards <span class="smcap">C</span>. In
a similar manner, the table having been removed to the
station <span class="smcap">B</span>, a pencil line is drawn through the point <span class="smcap">B</span>
on the chart towards <span class="smcap">C</span>. The two lines thus drawn
determine by their intersection the place of <span class="smcap">C</span> on the
chart.</p>
<p>The above is only one instance of the modes in which
a plane-table can be applied; there are several others.
Usually the magnetic compass is employed to fix the
position of the table in accordance with the true bearing
of the cardinal points. Also the bearings of several
points are taken around each station; and thus a variety
of tests of the correctness of the work become applicable.
Into such details as these I need not here enter.
It is sufficient that my readers should have been
enabled to recognise the simple principles on which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">251</span>
plane-tabling depends, and the accuracy with which
(when suitable precautions are taken) it can be applied
as a method of observation subsidiary to the ordinary
trigonometrical processes.</p>
<p>‘A hilly country,’ says Sir A. Waugh, ‘offers the
fairest field for the practice of plane-table surveys,
and the more rugged the surface the greater will be
the relative advantages and facilities this system possesses
over the methods of actual measurement. On
the other hand, in flat lands the plane-table works at
a disadvantage, while the traverse system is facilitated.
Consequently, in such tracts, the relative economy of
the two systems does not offer so great a contrast as
in the former. In closely wooded or jungly tracts, all
kinds of survey operations are prosecuted at a disadvantage;
but in such localities, the commanding points
must be previously cleared for trigonometrical operations,
which facilitates the use of the table.’</p>
<p>In whatever way the topographical details have
been filled in, a rigorous system of check must be
applied to the work. The system adopted is that of
running lines across ground that has been surveyed.
This is done by the head of the party or by the
chief assistant-surveyor. A sufficient number of
points are obtained in this way for comparison with
the work of the detail surveyors; and when the discrepancies
exceed certain limits, the work in which
they appear is rejected. Owing to the extremely
unhealthy, jungly, and rugged nature of the ground
in which nearly all the Indian surveys have been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">252</span>
progressing, it has not always been found practicable
to check by regularly chained lines. There are, however,
other modes of testing plane-table surveys, and
as these entail less labour and expense in hilly and
jungly tracts, and are quite as effective if thoroughly
carried out, they have been adopted generally, while
the measured routes or check-lines have only been
pursued under more favourable conditions. Colonel
Thuillier states that ‘the inspection of the work of
every detailed surveyor in the field has been rigorously
enforced, and the work of the field season is not
considered satisfactory or complete unless this duty has
been attended to.’</p>
<p>The rules laid down to insure accuracy in the
survey are—first, that the greatest possible number
of fixed points should be determined by regular triangulation;
secondly, that the greatest possible number
of plane-table fixings should be made use of
within each triangle; and lastly, that eye-sketching
should be reduced to a minimum. If these rules are
well attended to, the surveyor can always rely on the
value of the work performed by his subordinates.
But all these conditions cannot be secured in many
parts of the ground allotted to the several topographical
parties owing to the quantity of forest land and the
extremely rugged nature of the country. Hence arises
the necessity for test-lines to verify the details, or
for some vigorous system of check; and this is
more especially the case where native assistants are
employed.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">253</span></p>
<p>So soon as the country has been accurately planned,
the configuration of the ground has to be sketched
up. This process is the end and aim of all the preceding
work.</p>
<p>The first point attended to is the arterial system,
or water drainage, constituting the outfall of the
country; whence are deduced the lines of greatest
depression of the ground. Next the watersheds or
ridges of hills are traced in, giving the highest level.
Lastly, the minor or subordinate features are drawn
in with the utmost precision attainable. ‘The outlines
of table-land should be well defined,’ says Sir A.
Waugh, ‘and ranges of hills portrayed with fidelity,
carefully representing the watersheds or <i lang="la">divortia
aquarum</i>, the spurs, peaks, depressions or saddles,
isthmuses or connecting-links of separate ranges, and
other ramifications. The depressed points and isthmuses
are particularly valuable, as being either the sites
of ordinary passes or points which new roads should
conform to.’</p>
<p>And here we must draw a distinction between
survey and reconnaissance. It is absolutely necessary
in making a survey that the outlines of ground as
defined by ridges, water-courses, and feet of hills
should be rigorously fixed by actual observation and
careful measurement. In reconnoitring, more is trusted
to the eye.</p>
<p>The scale of the Indian topographical survey is
that of one inch per mile; the scale of half an inch
per mile being only resorted to in very densely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">254</span>
wooded or jungly country, containing a few inhabitants
and little cultivated, or where the climate is so dangerous
that it is desirable to accelerate the progress of
the survey.</p>
<p>On the scale of one inch per mile the practised
draughtsman can survey about five square miles of
average country per day. In intricate ground, intersected
by ravines or covered by hills of irregular
formation, the work proceeds much more slowly; on
the other hand, in open and nearly level country, or
where the hills have simple outlines, the work will
cost less and proceed more rapidly. On the scale of
one inch per mile all natural features (such as ravines
or watercourses) more than a quarter of a mile in
length can be clearly represented. Villages, towns,
and cities can be shown, with their principal streets
and roads, and the outlines of fortifications. The
general figure and extent of cultivated, waste, and
forest lands can be delineated with more or less precision,
according to their extent. Irrigated rice-lands
should be distinctly indicated, since they generally
exhibit the contour of the ground.</p>
<p>The relative heights of hills and depths of valleys
should be determined during the course of a topographical
survey. These vertical elements of a survey
can be ascertained by trigonometrical or by barometrical
observations, or by a combination of both
methods. ‘The barometer,’ says Sir A. Waugh, ‘is
more especially useful for determining the level of
low spots from which the principal trigonometrical<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">255</span>
stations are invisible. In using this instrument, however,
in combination with the other operations, the
relative differences of heights are to be considered the
quantities sought, so that all the results may be referable
to the original trigonometrical station. The height
above the sea-level of all points coming under any of
the following heads is especially to be determined, for
the purpose of illustrating the physical relief of the
country:—</p>
<p>‘1st. The peaks and highest points of ranges.</p>
<p>‘2nd. All obligatory points required for engineering
works, such as roads, drainage, and irrigation, viz.:—the
highest points or necks of valleys; the lowest
depressions or passes in ranges; the junctions of rivers,
and <i lang="fr">débouchements</i> of rivers from ranges; the height of
inundation-level, at moderate intervals of about three
miles apart.</p>
<p>‘3rd. Principal towns or places of note.’</p>
<p>Of the various methods employed to indicate the
steepness of slope, that of eye-contouring seems alone
to merit special comment. In true contouring, regular
horizontal lines, at fixed vertical intervals, are traced
over a country, and plotted on to the maps. This is an
expensive and tedious process, whereas eye-contouring
is easy, light, and effective. On this system all that is
necessary is that the surveyor should consider what
routes persons moving horizontally would pursue. He
draws lines on his chart approximating as closely as
possible to these imaginary lines. It is evident that
when lines are thus drawn for different vertical eleva<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">256</span>tions,
the resulting shading will be dark or light,
according as the slope is steep or gentle. This method
of shading affords scope as well for surveying skill as
for draughtsmanship.</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From <cite>Once a Week</cite>, May 1, 1869.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 id="A_SHIP_ATTACKED_BY_A_SWORD-FISH"><i>A SHIP ATTACKED BY A SWORD-FISH.</i></h2>
<p>I have always been puzzled to imagine how the
‘nine-and-twenty knights of fame,’ described in the
‘Lay of the Last Minstrel,’ managed to ‘drink the red
wine through the helmet barr’d.’ But in nature we
meet with animals which seem almost as inconveniently
armed as those chosen knights, who</p>
<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">. . . quitted not their armour bright,</div>
<div class="verse">Neither by day nor yet by night.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>Amongst such animals the sword-fish must be recognised
as one of the most uncomfortably-armed creatures
in existence. The shark has to turn on his back
before he can eat, and the attitude scarcely seems suggestive
of a comfortable meal. But the sword-fish can
hardly even by that arrangement get his awkwardly
projecting snout out of the way. Yet doubtless this
feature, which seems so inconvenient, is of great value
to Xiphias. In some way as yet unknown it enables
him to get his living. Whether he first kills some one
of his neighbours with this instrument, and then eats
him at his leisure, or whether he plunges it deep into<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">257</span>
the larger sort of fish, and attaching himself to them
in this way, sucks nutriment from them while they are
yet alive, is not known to naturalists. Certainly, he is
fond of attacking whales, but this may result not so
much from gastronomic tastes as from a natural antipathy—envy,
perhaps, at their superior bulk. Unfortunately
for himself, Xiphias, though cold-blooded,
seems a somewhat warm-tempered animal; and, when
he is angered, he makes a bull-like rush upon his foe,
without always examining with due care whether he is
likely to take anything by his motion. And when he
happens to select for attack a stalwart ship, and to
plunge his horny beak through thirteen or fourteen
inches of planking, with perhaps a stout copper
sheathing outside it, he is apt to find some little difficulty
in retreating. The affair usually ends by his
leaving his sword embedded in the side of the ship. In
fact, no instance has ever been recorded of a sword-fish
recovering his weapon (if I may use the expression)
after making a lunge of this sort. Last Wednesday
the Court of Common Pleas—rather a strange place,
by-the-bye, for inquiring into the natural history of
fishes—was engaged for several hours in trying to
determine under what circumstances a sword-fish
might be able to escape scot-free after thrusting his
snout into the side of a ship, The gallant ship
‘Dreadnought,’ thoroughly repaired, and classed A 1
at Lloyd’s, had been insured for 3,000<i>l.</i> against all the
risks of the seas. She sailed on March 10, 1864, from
Colombo, for London. Three days later, the crew,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">258</span>
while fishing, hooked a sword-fish. Xiphias, however,
broke the line, and a few moments after leaped half
out of the water, with the object, it would seem, of
taking a look at his persecutor, the ‘Dreadnought.’
Probably he satisfied himself that the enemy was some
abnormally large cetacean, which it was his natural
duty to attack forthwith. Be this as it may, the attack
was made, and at four o’clock the next morning the
captain was awakened with the unwelcome intelligence
that the ship had sprung a leak. She was taken back
to Colombo, and thence to Cochin, where she was hove
down. Near the keel was found a round hole, an inch
in diameter, running completely through the copper
sheathing and planking.</p>
<p>As attacks by sword-fish are included among sea
risks, the insurance company was willing to pay the
damages claimed by the owners of the ship, if only it
could be proved that the hole had really been made by
a sword-fish. No instance had ever been recorded in
which a sword-fish had been able to withdraw his
sword after attacking a ship. A defence was founded
on the possibility that the hole had been made in some
other way. Professor Owen and Mr. Frank Buckland
gave their evidence; but neither of them could state
quite positively whether a sword-fish which had passed
its beak through three inches of stout planking could
withdraw without the loss of its sword. Mr. Buckland
said that fish have no power of ‘backing,’ and expressed
his belief that he could hold a sword-fish by the beak;
but then he admitted that the fish had considerable<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">259</span>
lateral power, and might so ‘wriggle its sword out of a
hole.’ And so the insurance company will have to pay
nearly six hundred pounds because an ill-tempered
fish objected to be hooked, and took its revenge by
running full tilt against copper sheathing and oak
planking.</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From the <cite>Daily News</cite>, December 11, 1868.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 id="THE_SAFETY-LAMP"><i>THE SAFETY-LAMP.</i></h2>
<p>As recent colliery explosions have attracted a considerable
amount of attention to the principle of the
safety-lamp, and questions have arisen respecting the
extent of the immunity which the action of this lamp
secures to the miner, it may be well for me briefly to
point out the true qualities of the lamp.</p>
<p>In the Davy lamp a common oil-light is surrounded
by a cylinder of wire-gauze. When the air around
the lamp is pure the flame burns as usual, and the
only effect of the gauze is somewhat to diminish the
amount of light given out by the lamp. But so
soon as the air becomes loaded with the carburetted
hydrogen gas generated in the coal-strata, a change
takes place. The flame grows larger and less luminous.
The reason of the change is this:—The flame
is no longer fed by the oxygen of the air, but is
surrounded by an atmosphere which is partly inflammable;
and the inflammable part of the gas, so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">260</span>
fast as it passes within the wire cylinder, is ignited and
burns within the gauze. Thus the light now given out
by the lamp is no longer that of the comparatively
brilliant oil flame, but is the light resulting from the
combustion of carburetted hydrogen, or ‘fire damp,’
as it is called; and every student of chemistry is
aware that the flame of this gas has very little illuminating
power.</p>
<p>So soon as the miner sees the flame thus enlarged
and altered in appearance he should retire. But it is
not true that explosion would necessarily follow if
he did not do so. The danger is great because the
flame within the lamp is in direct contact with the
gauze, and if there is any defect in the wire-work,
the heat may make for itself an opening which—though
small—would yet suffice to enable the flame
within the lamp to ignite the gas outside. So long,
however, as the wire-gauze continues perfect, even
though it become red-hot, there will be no explosion.
No authority is required to establish this point, which
has been proved again and again by experiment; but
I quote Professor Tyndall’s words on the subject to
remove some doubts which have been entertained on
the matter. ‘Although a continuous explosive atmosphere,’
he says,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">261</span> ‘may extend from the air outside
through the meshes of the gauze to the flame within,
ignition is not propagated across the gauze. The
lamp may be filled with an almost lightless flame;
still explosion does not occur. A defect in the gauze,
the destruction of the wire at any point by oxidation
hastened by the flame playing against it, would cause
explosion;’ and so on. It need hardly be said, however,
that, imprudent as miners have often been,
no miner would remain where his lamp burned with
the enlarged flame indicative of the presence of
fire-damp. The lamp should also be at once
extinguished.</p>
<p>But here we touch on a danger which undoubtedly
exists, and—so far as has yet been seen—cannot be
guarded against by any amount of caution. Supposing
the miner sought to extinguish the lamp by blowing it
out, an explosion would almost certainly ensue, since
the flame can be forced mechanically through the
meshes, though it will not pass through them when it
is burning in the ordinary way. Now of course no
miner who had been properly instructed in the use
of the safety-lamp would commit such a mistake as
this. But it happens, unfortunately, that sometimes
the fire-damp itself forces the flame of the lamp through
the meshes. The gas frequently issues with great
force from cavities in the coal (in which it has been
pent up), when the pick of the miner breaks an opening
for it. In these circumstances an explosion is inevitable,
if the issuing stream of gas happen to be directed full
upon the lamp. Fortunately, however, this is a contingency
which does not often arise. It is one of those
risks of coal-mining which seem absolutely unavoidable
by any amount of care or caution. It would be well if
it were only such risks as these that the miner had to
face.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">262</span></p>
<p>Another peculiarity sometimes noticed when there
is a discharge of fire-damp is worth mentioning. It
happens, occasionally, that the light will be put out
owing to the absolute exclusion of air from the lamp.
This, however, can only happen when the gas issues
in so large a volume that the atmosphere of the pit
becomes irrespirable.</p>
<p>With the exception of the one risk which we have
pointed out above, the Davy lamp may be said to be
absolutely safe. It is necessary, however, that caution
and intelligence should be exhibited in its use. On
this point Professor Tyndall remarks that unfortunately
the requisite intelligence is not often possessed
nor the requisite caution exercised by the miner, ‘and
the consequence is that even with the safety-lamp,
explosions still occur.’ And he suggests that it would
be well to exhibit to the miner in a series of experiments
the properties of the valuable instrument which
has been devised for his security. ‘Mere advice will
not enforce caution,’ he says; ‘but let the miner have
the physical image of what he is to expect clearly and
vividly before his mind, and he will find it a restraining
and monitory influence long after the effect of cautioning
words has passed away.’</p>
<p>A few words on the history of the invention may
be acceptable. Early in the present century a series of
terrible catastrophes in coal mines had excited the
sympathy of enlightened and humane persons throughout
the country. In the year 1813, a society was
formed at Sunderland to prevent accidents in coal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">263</span>
mines or at least to diminish their frequency, and
prizes were offered for the discovery of new methods
of lighting and ventilating mines. Dr. William Reid
Clanny, of Bishopwearmouth, presented to this society
a lamp which burnt without explosion in an atmosphere
heavily loaded with fire-damp; for which invention
the Society of Arts awarded him a gold
medal. The Rev. Dr. Gray called the attention of
Sir Humphry Davy to the subject, and that eminent
chemist visited the coal mines in 1815 with the object
of determining what form of lamp would be best
suited to meet the requirements of the coal miners.
He invented two forms of lamp before discovering the
principle on which the present safety-lamps are constructed.
This principle—the property, namely, that
flame will not pass through small apertures—had
been, we believe, discovered by Stephenson, the celebrated
engineer, some time before; and a somewhat
angry controversy took place respecting Davy’s claim
to the honour of having invented the safety-lamp.
It seems admitted, however, by universal consent, that
Davy’s discovery of the property above referred to was
made independently, and also that he was the first
to suggest the idea of using wire-gauze in place of
perforated tin.</p>
<p>In comparing the present frequency of colliery
explosions with what took place before the invention
of the safety-lamp, we must take into consideration
the enormous increase in the coal trade since the
introduction of steam machinery. The number of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">264</span>
miners now engaged in our coal mines is far in excess
of the number employed at the beginning of the present
century. Thus accidents in the present day are at once
more common on account of the increased rapidity with
which the mines are worked, and when they occur there
are more sufferers; so that the frequency of colliery
explosions in the opening years of the present century
and the number of deaths resulting from them, are in
reality much more significant than they seem to be
at first sight. But even independently of this consideration,
the record of the colliery accidents which
took place at that time is sufficiently startling. Seventy-two
persons were killed in a colliery at North Biddick
at the commencement of the present century. Two
explosions in 1805, at Hepburn and Oxclose, left no
less than forty-three widows and 151 children unprovided
for. In 1808, ninety persons were killed
in a coal-pit at Lumley. On May 24, 1812, ninety-one
persons were killed by an explosion at Felling
Colliery, near Gateshead. And many more such
accidents might readily be enumerated.</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From the <cite>Daily News</cite>, December 4, 1868.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">265</span></p>
<h2 id="THE_DUST_WE_HAVE_TO_BREATHE"><i>THE DUST WE HAVE TO BREATHE.</i></h2>
<p>A microscopist, Mr. Dancer, F.R.A.S., has been examining
the dust of our cities. The results are not
pleasing. We had always recognised city dust as a
nuisance, and had supposed that it derived the peculiar
grittiness and flintiness of its structure from the constant
macadamizing of city roads. But it now appears
that the effects produced by dust, when, as is usual, it
finds its way to our eyes, our nostrils, and our throats,
are as nothing compared with the mischief it is calculated
to produce in a more subtle manner. In every
specimen examined by Mr. Dancer animal life was
abundant. But the amount of ‘molecular activity’—such
is the euphuism under which what is exceedingly
disagreeable to contemplate is spoken about—is variable
according to the height at which the dust is
collected. And of all heights which these molecular
wretches could select for the display of their activity,
the height of five feet is that which has been found to
be the favourite. Just at the average height of the
foot-passenger’s mouth these moving organisms are
always waiting to be devoured and to make us ill.
And this is not all. As if animal abominations were
insufficient, a large proportion of vegetable matter
also disports itself in the light dust of our streets.
The observations show that in thoroughfares where
there are many animals engaged in the traffic, the
greater part of the vegetable matter thus floating about<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">266</span>
‘consists of what has passed through the stomachs
of animals,’ or has suffered decomposition in some way
or other. This unpleasing matter, like the ‘molecular
activity,’ floats about at a height of five feet, or thereabouts.</p>
<p>After this, one begins to recognise the manner in
which some diseases propagate themselves. What had
been mysterious in the history of plagues and pestilences
seems to receive at least a partial solution.
Take cholera, for example. It has been shown by the
clearest and most positive evidence that this disease is
not propagated in any way save one—that is, by the
actual swallowing of the cholera poison. In Professor
Thudichum’s masterly paper on the subject in the
‘Monthly Microscopical Journal,’ it is stated that
doctors have inhaled a full breathing from a person in
the last stage of this terrible malady without any evil
effects. Yet the minutest atom of the cholera poison
received into the stomach will cause an attack of
cholera. A small quantity of this matter drying on the
floor of the patient’s room, and afterwards caused to
float about in the form of dust, would suffice to prostrate
a houseful of people. We can understand, then, how
matter might be flung into the streets, and, after
drying, its dust be wafted through a whole district,
causing the death of hundreds. One of the lessons to be
learned from these interesting researches of Mr. Dancer
is clearly this, that the watering-cart should be regarded
as one of the most important of our hygienic
institutions. Supplemented by careful scavengering, it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">267</span>
might be effective in dispossessing many a terrible
malady which now holds sway from time to time over
our towns.</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From the <cite>Daily News</cite>, March 6, 1869.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 id="PHOTOGRAPHIC_GHOSTS"><i>PHOTOGRAPHIC GHOSTS.</i></h2>
<p>On the outskirts of the ever-widening circle lighted up
by science there is always a border-land wherein superstition
holds sway. ‘The arts and sciences may drive
away the vulgar hobgoblin of darker days; but they
bring with them new sources of illusion. The ghosts of
old could only gibber; the spirits of our day can read
and write, and play on divers musical instruments, and
quote Shakespeare and Milton. It is not, therefore,
altogether surprising to learn that they can take photographs
also. You go to have your photograph taken,
we will suppose, desiring only to see your own features
depicted in the <i lang="fr">carte</i>; and lo! the spirits have been at
work, and a photographic phantom makes its appearance
beside you. It is true this phantom is of a hazy
and dubious aspect: the ‘dull mechanic ghost’ is indistinct,
and may be taken for anyone. Still, it is not
difficult for the eye of fancy to trace in it the lineaments
of some departed friend, who, it is to be assumed,
has come to be photographed along with you. In fact,
photography, according to the spiritualist, resembles
what Byron called—</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">268</span></p>
<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
<div class="verse indent8">The lightning of the mind,</div>
<div class="verse">Which out of things familiar, undesigned,</div>
<div class="verse">When least we deem of such, calls up to view</div>
<div class="verse">The spectres whom no exorcism can bind.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>The phenomena of spiritual photography were first
observed some years since, and a set of carte photographs
were sent from America to Dr. Walker, of
Edinburgh, in which photographic phantoms were very
obviously, however indistinctly, discernible. More recently
an English photographer noticed a yet stranger
circumstance, though he was too sensible to seek for a
supernatural interpretation of it. When he took a
photograph with a particular lens, there could be seen
not only the usual portrait of the sitter, but at some
little distance a faint ‘double,’ exactly resembling the
principal image. Superstitious minds might find this
result even more distressing than the phantom photographic
friend. To be visited by the departed through
the medium of a lens, is at least not more unpleasing
than to hold converse with spirits through an ordinary
‘rapping’ medium. But the appearance of a ‘double,’
or ‘fetch,’ has ever been held by the learned in ghostly
lore to signify approaching death.</p>
<p>Fortunately both one and the other appearance can
be very easily accounted for without calling in the aid
of the supernatural. At a recent meeting of the Photographical
Society it was shown that an image may
often be so deeply impressed on the glass that the subsequent
cleaning of the plate, even with strong acids,
will not completely remove the picture. When the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">269</span>
plate is used for receiving another picture, the original
image makes its reappearance, and as it is too faint to
be recognisable, a highly susceptible imagination may
readily transform it into the image of a departed friend.
The ‘double’ is generated by the well-known property
of double refraction, obtained by a lens under certain
circumstances of unequal pressure, or sometimes by
inequalities in the process of annealing. So vanish two
ghosts which might have been more or less troublesome
to those who are ready to see the supernatural
in commonplace phenomena. Will the time ever come
when no more such phantoms will remain to be
exorcised?</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From the <cite>Daily News</cite>, March 2, 1869.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 id="THE_OXFORD_AND_CAMBRIDGE_ROWING_STYLES"><i>THE OXFORD AND CAMBRIDGE ROWING STYLES.</i></h2>
<p>Whatever opinion we may have of the result of the
approaching contest (1869), there can be no doubt
that this year, as in former years, there is a striking
dissimilarity between the rowing styles of the dark
blue and the light blue oarsmen. This dissimilarity
makes itself obvious whether we compare the two
boats as seen from the side, or when the line of sight
is directed along the length of either. Perhaps it is
in the latter aspect that an unpractised eye will most
readily detect the difference I am speaking of.
Watch the Cambridge boat approaching you from
some distance, or receding, and you will notice in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">270</span>
rise and fall of the oars, as so seen, the following
peculiarities—a long stay of the oar in the water, a
quick rise from and return to the water, the oars
remaining out of the water for the briefest possible
interval of time. In the case of the Oxford boat
quite a different appearance is presented—there is a
short stay in the water, a sharp rise from and return
to it, and between these the oars appear to hang over
the water for a perceptible interval. It is, however,
when the boats are seen from the side that the
meaning of these peculiarities is detected, and also
that the fundamental distinction between the two
styles is made apparent to the experienced eye. In
the Cambridge boat we recognise the long stroke and
‘lightning feather’ inculcated in the old treatises on
rowing: in the Oxford boat we see these conditions
reversed, and in their place the ‘waiting feather’ and
lightning stroke. By the ‘waiting feather’ I do
not refer to what is commonly understood by slow
feathering, but to a momentary pause (scarcely to be
detected when the crew is rowing hard) before the
simultaneous dash of the oars upon the first grip of
the stroke.<SPAN name="FNanchor_15_15" href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">15</SPAN> And observing more closely—which, by
the way, is no easy matter—as either boat dashes
swiftly past, we detect the distinctive peculiarities of
‘work’ by which the two styles are severally arrived
at. In the Cambridge crew we see the first part of
the stroke done with the shoulders—precisely accord<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">271</span>ing
to the old-fashioned models—the arms straight
until the body has fallen back to an almost upright
position; then comes the sharp drop back of the
shoulders beyond the perpendicular, the arms simultaneously
doing their work, so that as the swing back
is finished, the backs of the hands just touch the ribs
in feathering. All these things are quite in accordance
with what used to be considered the perfection of
rowing; and, indeed, this style of rowing has some important
good qualities and a very handsome appearance.
The lightning feather, also, which follows the long
sweeping stroke, is theoretically perfect. Now, in
the case of the Oxford crew, we observe a style which
at first sight seems less excellent. As soon as the
oars are dashed down and catch their first hold of
the water, the arms as well as the shoulders of each
oarsman are at work.<SPAN name="FNanchor_16_16" href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">16</SPAN> The result is, that when the
back has reached an upright position, the arms have
already reached the chest, and the stroke is finished.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">272</span>
Thus the Oxford stroke takes a perceptibly shorter
time than the Cambridge stroke; it is also, necessarily,
somewhat shorter in the water. One would, therefore,
say it must be less effective. Especially would an
unpractised observer form this opinion, because the
Oxford stroke seems to be much shorter in range than
it is in reality. <em>There</em> we have the secret of its
efficiency. It is actually as long as the Cambridge
stroke, but is taken in a perceptibly shorter time.
What does this mean but that the oar is taken more
sharply, and, therefore, much more effectively, through
the water?</p>
<p>Much more effectively so far as the actual conditions
of the contest are concerned. The modern
racing outrigger requires a sharp impulse, because it
will take almost any speed we can apply to it. It
will also retain that speed between the strokes, a
consideration of great importance. The old-fashioned
racing-eights required to be continually under propulsion.
The lightning-feather was a necessity in
their case, for between every stroke the boat would
lag terribly with a slow-feathering crew. I do not
say, of course, that the speed of a light outrigged
craft does not diminish between the strokes. Anyone
who has watched a closely contested bumping-race,
and noticed the way in which the sharply cut
bow of the pursuing boat draws up to the rudder of
the other as by a succession of impulses, although
either boat seen alone would seem to sweep on with
almost uniform speed, will know that the motion of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">273</span>
the lightest boat is not strictly uniform. But there
is an immense difference between the almost imperceptible
loss of way of a modern eight and the dead
‘lag’ in the old-fashioned craft. And hence we get
the following important consideration. Whereas with
the old boats it was useless for a crew to attempt to
give a very quick motion to their boat by a sharp,
sudden ‘lift,’ this plan is calculated to be, of all others,
the most effective with the modern racing-eight.</p>
<p>It may seem, at first sight, that, after all, the result
of the Cambridge style should be as effective as
that of the other. If arms and shoulders do their
work in both crews with equal energy—which we may
assume to be the case—and if the number of strokes
per minute is equal, the actual propulsive energy
ought to be equal likewise. A little consideration
will show that this is a fallacy. If two men pull at
a weight together they will move it farther with a
given expenditure of energy than if first one and
then the other apply his strength to the work. And
what is more to the purpose, they will be able to
move it faster. So shoulders and arms working simultaneously
will give a greater propulsive power than
when working separately, even though in the latter
case each works with its fullest energy. And not
only so, but by the simultaneous use of arms and
shoulders, that sharpness of motion can alone be
given which is essential to the propulsion of a modern
racing-boat.</p>
<p>I have said that the two crews are severally<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">274</span>
rowing in the style which has lately been peculiar to
their respective Universities. But the Cambridge crew
is rowing in that form of the Cambridge style which
brings it nearest to the requirements of modern
racing. The faults of the style are subdued, so to
speak, and its best qualities brought out effectively.
In one or two of the long series of defeats lately
sustained by Cambridge the reverse has been the case.
At present, too, there is a certain roughness about
the Oxford crew which encourages the hopes of the
light blue supporters. But it must be admitted that
this roughness is rather apparent than real, great as
it seems, and it will doubtless disappear before the day
of encounter. I venture to predict that the ‘time’
of the approaching race, taken in conjunction with the
state of the tide, will show the present crews to be at
least equal to the average.<SPAN name="FNanchor_17_17" href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">17</SPAN></p>
<p class="psigs">
(From the <cite>Daily News</cite>, April 1869.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 id="BETTING_ON_HORSE_RACES_OR_THE_STATE"><i>BETTING ON HORSE RACES: OR, THE STATE OF THE ODDS.</i></h2>
<p>There appears every day in the newspapers an account
of the betting on the principal forthcoming races.
The betting on such races as the Two Thousand
Guineas, the Derby, and the Oaks, often begins more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">275</span>
than a year before the races are run; and during the
interval, the odds laid against the different horses engaged
in them vary repeatedly, in accordance with
the reported progress of the animals in their training,
or with what is learned respecting the intentions
of their owners. Many who do not bet themselves,
find an interest in watching the varying fortunes
of the horses which are held by the initiated to be
leading favourites, or to fall into the second rank, or
merely to have an outside chance of success. It is
amusing to notice, too, how frequently the final state
of the odds is falsified by the event; how some ‘rank
outsider’ will run into the first place, while the leading
favourites are not even ‘placed.’</p>
<p>It is in reality a simple matter to understand the
betting on races (or contests of any kind), yet it is
astonishing how seldom those who do not actually bet
upon races have any inkling of the meaning of those
mysterious columns which indicate the opinion of the
betting world respecting the probable results of approaching
contests, equine or otherwise.</p>
<p>Let us take a few simple cases of ‘odds,’ to begin
with; and, having mastered the elements of our subject,
proceed to see how cases of greater complexity are to be
dealt with.</p>
<p>Suppose the newspapers inform us that the betting
is 2 to 1 against a certain horse for such and such a
race, what inference are we to deduce? To learn
this let us conceive a case in which the <em>true</em> odds
against a certain event are as 2 to 1. Suppose there<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">276</span>
are three balls in a bag, one being white, the others
black. Then, if we draw a ball at random, it is clear
that we are twice as likely to draw a black as to draw
a white ball. This is technically expressed by saying
that the odds are 2 to 1 <em>against</em> drawing a white ball;
or 2 to 1 <em>on</em> (that is, in favour of) drawing a black
ball. This being understood, it follows that, when the
odds are said to be 2 to 1 against a certain horse, we
are to infer that, in the opinion of those who have
studied the performance of the horse, and compared
it with that of the other horses engaged in the race,
his chance of winning is equivalent to the chance of
drawing one particular ball out of a bag of three
balls.</p>
<p>Observe how this result is obtained: the odds are 2
to 1, and the chance of the horse is as that of drawing
one ball out of a bag of three—three being the sum of
the two numbers 2 and 1. This is the method followed
in all such cases. Thus, if the odds against a horse
are 7 to 1, we infer that the <em>cognoscenti</em> consider his
chance equal to that of drawing one particular ball out
of a bag of <em>eight</em>.</p>
<p>A similar treatment applies when the odds are not
given as so many to <em>one</em>. Thus, if the odds against a
horse are as 5 to 2, we infer that the horse’s chance
is equal to that of drawing a white ball out of a bag
containing five black and two white balls—or seven
in all.</p>
<p>We must notice also that the number of balls may
be increased to any extent, provided the proportion<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">277</span>
between the total number and the number of a specified
colour remains unchanged. Thus, if the odds are 5 to 1
against a horse, his chance is assumed to be equivalent
to that of drawing <em>one</em> white ball out of a bag containing
six balls, only one of which is white; <em>or</em> to that of
drawing a white ball out of a bag containing sixty balls,
of which ten are white-and so on. This is a very
important principle, as we shall now see.</p>
<p>Suppose there are two horses (amongst others)
engaged in a race, and that the odds are 2 to 1 against
one, and 4 to 1 against the other-what are the odds
that one of the two horses will win the race? This
case will doubtless remind my readers of an amusing
sketch by Leech, called—if I remember rightly—‘Signs
of the Commission.’ Three or four undergraduates
are at a ‘wine,’ discussing matters equine.
One propounds to his neighbour the following question:
I say, Charley, if the odds are 2 to 1 against
<em>Rataplan</em>, and 4 to 1 against <em>Quick March</em>, what’s the
betting about the pair?’—‘Don’t know, I’m sure,’
replies Charley; ‘but I’ll give you 6 to 1 against
them.’ The absurdity of the reply is, of course, very
obvious; we see at once that the odds cannot be
heavier against a pair of horses than against either
singly. Still, there are many who would not find it
easy to give a correct reply to the question. What
has been said above, however, will enable us at once
to determine the just odds in this or any similar case.
Thus-the odds against one horse being 2 to 1, his
chance of winning is equal to that of drawing one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">278</span>
white ball out of a bag of <em>three</em>, one only of which is
white. In like manner, the chance of the second horse
is equal to that of drawing one white ball out of a bag
of <em>five</em>, one only of which is white. Now we have to
find a number which is a multiple of both the numbers
three and five. Fifteen is such a number. The chance
of the first horse, modified according to the principle
explained above, is equal to that of drawing a white
ball out of a bag of fifteen of which <em>five</em> are white. In
like manner, the chance of the second is equal to that
of drawing a white ball out of a bag of fifteen of which
<em>three</em> are white. Therefore the chance that <em>one of
the two</em> will win is equal to that of drawing a white
ball out of a bag of fifteen balls of which <em>eight</em>
(<em>five</em> added to <em>three</em>) are white. There remain <em>seven</em>
black balls, and therefore the odds are 8 to 7 <em>on</em> the
pair.</p>
<p>To impress the method of treating such cases on the
mind of the reader, let us take the betting about three
horses—say 3 to 1, 7 to 2, and 9 to 1 <em>against</em> the three
horses respectively. Then their respective chances
are equal to the chance of drawing (1) one white ball
out of <em>four</em>, one only of which is white; (2) a white
ball out of <em>nine</em>, of which two only are white; and (3)
one white ball out of <em>ten</em>, one only of which is white.
The least number which contains four, nine, and ten is
180; and the above chances, modified according to the
principle explained above, become equal to the chance of
drawing a white ball out of a bag containing 180 balls,
when 45, 40, and 18 (respectively) are white. There<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">279</span>fore,
the chance that one of the three will win is equal
to that of drawing a white ball out of a bag containing
180 balls, of which 103 (the sum of 45, 40, and 18)
are white. Therefore, the odds are 103 to 77 <em>on</em> the
three.</p>
<p>One does not hear in practice of such odds as 103
to 77. But betting-men (whether or not they apply
just principles of computation to such questions, is
unknown to me) manage to run very near the truth.
For instance, in such a case as the above, the odds on
the three would probably be given as 4 to 3—that is,
instead of 103 to 77 (or 412 to 308), the published odds
would be equivalent to 412 to 309.</p>
<p>And here a certain nicety in betting has to be mentioned.
In running the eye down the list of odds, one
will often meet such expressions as 10 to 1 against
such a horse <em>offered</em>, or 10 to 1 <em>wanted</em>. Now, the
odds of 10 to 1 <em>taken</em> may be understood to imply that
the horse’s chance is equivalent to that of drawing a
certain ball out of a bag of eleven. But if the odds
are offered and not taken, we cannot infer this. The
offering of the odds implies that the horse’s chance is
<em>not better</em> than that above mentioned, but the fact that
they are not taken implies that the horse’s chance is
<em>not so good</em>. If no higher odds are offered against the
horse, we may infer that his chance is <em>very little worse</em>
than that mentioned above. Similarly, if the odds of
10 to 1 are <em>asked for</em>, we infer that the horse’s chance
is <em>not worse</em> than that of drawing one ball out of eleven;
if the odds are not obtained, we infer that his chance is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">280</span>
<em>better</em>; and if no lower odds are asked for, we infer
that his chance is <em>very little better</em>.</p>
<p>Thus, there might be <em>three</em> horses (A, B, and C)
against whom the nominal odds were 10 to 1, and yet
these horses might not be equally good favourites,
because the odds might not be taken, or might be
asked for in vain. We might accordingly find three
such horses arranged thus:—</p>
<div class="center">
<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
<tr><td></td><th align="left"> Odds.</th></tr>
<tr><td align="left">A</td><td align="left">10 to 1 (wanted).</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">B</td><td align="left">10 to 1 (taken).</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">C</td><td align="left">10 to 1 (offered).</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>Or these different stages might mark the upward or
downward progress of the same horse in the betting.
In fact, there are yet more delicate gradations, marked
by such expressions respecting certain odds, as—<em>offered
freely</em>, <em>offered</em>, <em>offered and taken</em> (meaning that
some offers only have been accepted), <em>taken</em>, <em>taken and
wanted</em>, <em>wanted</em>, and so on.</p>
<p>As an illustration of some of the principles I have
been considering, let us take from the day’s paper,<SPAN name="FNanchor_18_18" href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">18</SPAN>
the state of the odds respecting the ‘Two Thousand
Guineas.’ It is presented in the following form:—</p>
<p class="center">
TWO THOUSAND GUINEAS.</p>
<div class="center">
<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
<tr><td align="right">7 to</td><td align="right">2 against</td><td align="left"><i>Rosicrucian</i> (off.).</td></tr>
<tr><td align="right">6 to</td><td align="right">1 against</td><td align="left"><i>Pace</i> (off.; 7 to 1 w.).</td></tr>
<tr><td align="right">10 to</td><td align="right">1 against</td><td align="left"><i>Green Sleeve</i> (off.).</td></tr>
<tr><td align="right">100 to</td><td align="right">7 against</td><td align="left"><i>Blue Gown</i> (off.).</td></tr>
<tr><td align="right">180 to</td><td align="right">80 against</td><td align="left">Sir J. Hawley’s lot (t.).</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">281</span></p>
<p>This table is interpreted thus: bettors are willing to
lay the same odds against <i>Rosicrucian</i> as would be the
true mathematical odds against drawing a white ball
out of a bag containing two white and seven black
balls; but no one is willing to back the horse at this
rate; on the other hand, higher odds are not offered
against him. Hence it is presumable that his chance
is somewhat less than that above indicated. Again,
bettors are willing to lay the same odds against <i>Pace</i>
as might fairly be laid against drawing one white ball
out of a bag of seven, one only of which is white; but
backers of the horse consider that they ought to get
the same odds as might be fairly laid against drawing
the white ball when an additional black ball had been
put into the bag. As respects <i>Green Sleeve</i> and <i>Blue
Gown</i>, bettors are willing to lay the odds which there
would be, respectively, against drawing a white ball
out of a bag containing—(1) eleven balls, one only of
which is white, and (2) one hundred and seven balls,
seven only of which are white. Now, the three horses,
<i>Rosicrucian</i>, <i>Green Sleeve</i>, and <i>Blue Gown</i>, all belong
to Sir Joseph Hawley, so that the odds about the
three are referred to in the last statement of the list
just given. And since none of the offers against the
three horses have been taken, we may expect the odds
actually taken about ‘Sir Joseph Hawley’s lot’ to be
more favourable than those obtained by summing up
the three former in the manner we have already
examined. It will be found that the resulting odds
(offered) against Sir J. Hawley’s lot—estimated in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">282</span>
this way—should be, as nearly as possible, 132 to 80.
We find, however, that the odds <em>taken</em> are 180 to 80.
Hence, we learn that the offers against some or all of
the three horses are considerably short of what backers
require; or else that some person has been induced
to offer far heavier odds against Sir J. Hawley’s lot
than are justified by the fair odds against his horses,
severally.</p>
<p>I have heard it asked why a horse is said to be a
favourite, though the odds may be against him. This
is very easily explained. Let us take as an illustration
the case of a race in which four horses are engaged to
run. If all these horses had an equal chance of winning,
it is very clear that the case would correspond to
that of a bag containing four balls of different colours;
since, in this case, we should have an equal chance of
drawing a ball of any assigned colour. Now, the odds
against drawing a particular ball would clearly be 3 to
1. This, then, should be the betting against each of
the three horses. If any one of the horses has less
odds offered against him, he is <em>a favourite</em>. There may
be more than one of the four horses thus distinguished;
and, in that case, the horse against which the least odds
are offered is <em>the first favourite</em>. Let us suppose there
are two favourites, and that the odds against the
leading favourite are 3 to 2, those against the other
2 to 1, and those against the best non-favourite 4 to 1;
and let us compare the chances of the four horses. I
have not named any odds against the fourth, because,
if the odds against all the horses but one are given, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">283</span>
just odds against that one are determinable, as we shall
see immediately. The chance of the leading favourite
corresponds to the chance of drawing a ball out of a
bag in which are three black and two white balls, <em>five</em>
in all; that of the next to the chance of drawing a ball
out of a bag in which are two black and one white ball,
<em>three</em> in all; that of the third, to the chance of drawing
a ball out of a bag in which are four black balls and
one white one, <em>five</em> in all. We take, then, the least
number containing both five and three—that is, <em>fifteen</em>;
and then the number of white balls, corresponding to
the chances of the three horses, are respectively six,
five, and three, or fourteen in all; leaving only <em>one</em> to
represent the chance of the fourth horse (against which
the odds are therefore 14 to 1). Hence the chances of
the four horses are respectively as the numbers <em>six</em>, <em>five</em>,
<em>three</em> and <em>one</em>.</p>
<p>I have spoken above of the published odds. The
statements made in the daily papers commonly refer to
wagers actually made, and therefore the uninitiated
might suppose that everyone who tried would be able
to obtain the same odds. This is not the case. The
wagers which are laid between practised betting-men
afford very little indication of the prices which would
be forced (so to speak) upon an inexperienced bettor.
Book-makers—that is, men who make a series of bets
upon several or all of the horses engaged in a race—naturally
seek to give less favourable terms than the
known chances of the different horses engaged would
suffice to warrant. As they cannot offer such terms to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">284</span>
the initiated, they offer them-and in general success—fully—to
the inexperienced.</p>
<p>It is often said that a man may so lay his wagers
about a race as to make sure of gaining money whichever
horse wins the race. This is not strictly the case.
It is of course possible to make sure of winning if the
bettor can only get persons to lay or take the <em>odds he
requires to the amount he requires</em>. But this is precisely
the problem which would remain insoluble if all
bettors were equally experienced.</p>
<p>Suppose, for instance, that there are three horses
engaged in a race with equal chances of success. It is
readily shown that the odds are 2 to 1 against each.
But if a bettor can get a person to take even betting
against the first horse (A), a second person to do the
like about the second horse (B), and a third to do the
like about the third horse (C), and if all these bets are
made to the same amount—say 1000<i>l.</i>—then, inasmuch
as only one horse can win, the bettor loses 1000<i>l.</i>
on that horse (say A), and gains the same sum
on each of the two horses B and C. Thus, on the
whole, he gains 1000<i>l.</i>, the sum laid out against each
horse.</p>
<p>If the layer of the odds had laid the true odds to
the same amount on each horse, he would neither have
gained nor lost. Suppose, for instance, that he laid
1000<i>l.</i> to 500<i>l.</i> against each horse, and A won; then
he would have to pay 1000<i>l.</i> to the backer of A, and to
receive 500<i>l.</i> from each of the backers of B and C.
In like manner, a person who had backed each horse<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">285</span>
to the same extent would neither lose nor gain by the
event. Nor would a backer or layer who had wagered
<em>different</em> sums <em>necessarily</em> gain or lose by the race; he
would gain or lose <em>according to the event</em>. This will at
once be seen, on trial.</p>
<p>Let us next take the case of horses with unequal
prospects of success—for instance, take the case of the
four horses considered above, against which the odds
were respectively 3 to 2, 2 to 1, 4 to 1, and 14 to 1.
Here, suppose the same sum laid against each, and for
convenience let this sum be 84<i>l.</i> (because 84 contains
the numbers 3, 2, 4, and 14). The layer of the odds
wagers 84<i>l.</i> to 56<i>l.</i> against the leading favourite, 84<i>l.</i> to
42<i>l.</i> against the second horse, 84<i>l.</i> to 21<i>l.</i> against the
third, and 84<i>l.</i> to 6<i>l.</i> against the fourth. Whichever
horse wins, the layer has to pay 84<i>l.</i>; but if the
favourite wins, he receives only 42<i>l.</i> on one horse, 21<i>l.</i>
on another, and 6<i>l.</i> on the third—that is 69<i>l.</i> in all, so
that he loses 15<i>l.</i>; if the second horse wins, he has to
receive 56<i>l.</i>, 21<i>l.</i>, and 6<i>l.</i>—or 83<i>l.</i> in all, so that he loses
1<i>l.</i>; if the third horse wins, he receives 56<i>l.</i>, 42<i>l.</i>, and
6<i>l.</i>—or 104<i>l.</i> in all, and thus gains 20<i>l.</i>; and lastly, if
the fourth horse wins, he has to receive 56<i>l.</i>, 42<i>l.</i>, and
2l<i>l.</i>—or 119<i>l.</i> in all, so that he gains 35<i>l.</i> He clearly
risks much less than he has a chance (however small)
of gaining. It is also clear that in all such cases the
worst event for the layer of the odds is, that the
favourite should win. Accordingly, as professional
book-makers are nearly always layers of odds, one
often finds the success of a favourite spoken of in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">286</span>
papers as a ‘great blow for the book-makers,’ while the
success of a rank outsider will be described as ‘a misfortune
to backers.’</p>
<p>But there is another circumstance which tends to
make the success of a favourite a blow to layers of the
odds and <i lang="la">vice versâ</i>. In the case we have supposed,
the money actually pending about the four horses
(that is, the sum of the amount laid <em>for</em> and <em>against</em>
them) was 140<i>l.</i> as respects the favourite, 126<i>l.</i> as
respects the second, 105<i>l.</i> as respects the third, and
90<i>l.</i> as respects the fourth. But as a matter of fact
the amounts pending about the favourites bear always
a much greater proportion than the above to the
amounts pending about outsiders. It is easy to see the
effect of this. Suppose, for instance, that instead of
the sums 84<i>l.</i> to 56<i>l.</i>, 84<i>l.</i> to 42<i>l.</i>, 84<i>l.</i> to 21<i>l.</i>, and 84<i>l.</i>
to 6<i>l.</i>, a book-maker had laid 8400<i>l.</i> to 5600<i>l.</i>, 840<i>l.</i> to
420<i>l.</i>, 84<i>l.</i> to 21<i>l.</i>, and 14<i>l.</i> to 1<i>l.</i>, respectively—then
it will easily be seen that he would lose 7958<i>l.</i> by
the success of the favourite; whereas he would gain
4782<i>l.</i> by the success of the second horse, 5937<i>l.</i> by
that of the third, and 6027<i>l.</i> by that of the fourth.
I have taken this as an extreme case; as a general
rule, there is not so great a disparity as has been here
assumed between the sums pending on favourites and
outsiders.</p>
<p>Finally, it may be asked whether, in the case of
horses having unequal chances, it is possible that wagers
can be so proportioned (just odds being given and
taken), that, as in the former case, a person backing or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">287</span>
laying against all the four shall neither gain nor lose.
It is so. All that is necessary is, that the sum actually
pending about each horse shall be the same. Thus, in
the preceding case, if the wagers 9<i>l.</i> to 6<i>l.</i>, 10<i>l.</i> to 5<i>l.</i>,
12<i>l.</i> to 3<i>l.</i>, and 14<i>l.</i> to 1<i>l.</i>, are either laid or taken by
the same person, he will neither gain nor lose by the
event, whatever it may be. And therefore, if unfair
odds are laid or taken about all the horses, in such a
manner that the amounts pending on the several horses
are equal (or nearly so), the unfair bettor must win by
the result. Say, for instance, that instead of the above
odds, he lays 8<i>l.</i> to 6<i>l.</i>, 9<i>l.</i> to 5<i>l.</i>, 11<i>l.</i> to 3<i>l.</i> and 13<i>l.</i> to
1<i>l.</i>, against the four horses respectively; it will be found
that he <i>must</i> win 1<i>l.</i> Or if he <i>takes</i> the odds 18<i>l.</i> to
11<i>l.</i>, 20<i>l.</i> to 9<i>l.</i>, 24<i>l.</i> to 5<i>l.</i>, and 28<i>l.</i> to 1<i>l.</i> (the just
odds being 18<i>l.</i> to 12<i>l.</i>, 20<i>l.</i> to 10<i>l.</i>, 24<i>l.</i> to 6<i>l.</i>, and 28<i>l.</i>
to 2<i>l.</i> respectively), he will win 1<i>l.</i> by the race. So
that, by giving or taking such odds to a sufficiently
great amount, a bettor would be certain of pocketing
a large sum, whatever the event of a given race
might be.</p>
<p>In every instance, a man who bets on a race <em>must
risk his money</em>, unless he can succeed in taking unfair
advantages over those with whom he bets. My readers
will conceive how small must be the chance that an
unpractised bettor will gain anything but dearly-bought
experience by speculating on horse-races. I would
recommend those who are tempted to hold another
opinion to follow the plan suggested by Thackeray in
a similar case—to take <em>a good look</em> at professional and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">288</span>
practised betting-men, and to decide ‘which of those
men they are most likely to get the better of’ in turf
transactions.</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From <cite>Chambers’s Journal</cite>, July 1869.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2 id="SQUARING_THE_CIRCLE"><i>SQUARING THE CIRCLE.</i></h2>
<p>There must be a singular charm about insoluble
problems, since there are never wanting persons who
are willing to attack them. I doubt not that at
this moment there are persons who are devoting their
energies to Squaring the Circle, in the full belief that
important advantages would accrue to science—and
possibly a considerable pecuniary profit to themselves—if
they could succeed in solving it. Quite recently,
applications have been made to the Paris
Academy of Sciences, to ascertain what was the
amount which that body was authorised to pay over
to anyone who should square the circle. So seriously,
indeed, was the secretary annoyed by applications of
this sort, that it was found necessary to announce
in the daily journals that not only was the Academy
not authorised to pay any sum at all, but that it
had determined never to give the least attention to
those who fancied they had mastered the famous
problem.</p>
<p>It is a singular circumstance that people have even
attacked the problem without knowing exactly what<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">289</span>
its nature is. One ingenious workman, to whom the
difficulty had been propounded, actually set to work to
invent an arrangement for measuring the circumference
of the circle; and was perfectly satisfied that he had
thus solved a problem which had mastered all the
mathematicians of ancient and modern times. That
we may not fall into a similar error, let us clearly
understand what it is that is required for the solution
of the problem of ‘squaring the circle.’</p>
<p>To begin with, we must note that the term ‘squaring
the circle’ is rather a misnomer; because the true
problem to be solved is the determination of the
length of a circle’s circumference when the diameter
is known. Of course, the solution of this problem,
or, as it is termed, the <em>rectification</em> of the circle, involves
the solution of the other, or the <em>quadrature</em>, of
the circle. But it is well to keep the simpler issue
before us.</p>
<p>Many have supposed that there exists some exact
relation between the circumference and the diameter of
the circle, and that the problem to be solved is the
determination of this relation. Suppose, for example,
that the approximate relation discovered by Archimedes
(who found, that if a circle’s diameter is represented
by <em>seven</em>, the circumference may be almost
exactly represented by <em>twenty-two</em>) were strictly correct,
and that Archimedes had proved it to be so;
then, according to this view, he would have solved the
great problem; and it is to determine a relation of
some such sort that many persons have set themselves.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">290</span>
Now, undoubtedly, if any relation of this sort could be
established, the problem would be solved; but as a
matter of fact no such relation exists, and the solution
of the problem does not require that there should
be any relation of the sort. For example, we do not
look on the determination of the diagonal of a square
(whose side is known) as an insoluble, or as otherwise
than a very simple problem. Yet in this case no
exact relation exists. We cannot possibly express
both the side and the diagonal of a square in whole
numbers, no matter what unit of measurement we
adopt: or, to put the matter in another way, we
cannot possibly divide both the side and the diagonal
into equal parts (which shall be the same along each),
no matter how small we take the parts. If we divide
the side into 1,000 parts, there will be 1,414 such
parts, <em>and a piece over</em> in the diagonal; if we divide
the side into 10,000 parts, there will be 14,142, and
still a little piece over, in the diagonal; and so on for
ever. Similarly, the mere fact that no exact relation
exists between the diameter and the circumference of
a circle is no bar whatever to the solution of the great
problem.</p>
<p>Before leaving this part of the subject, however,
I may mention a relation which is very easily remembered,
and is very nearly exact—much more so,
at any rate, than that of Archimedes. Write down
the numbers 113,355, that is, the first three odd
numbers each repeated twice over. Then separate the
six numbers into two sets of three, thus,—113) 355,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">291</span>
and proceed with the division thus indicated. The
result, 3·1415929 ..., expresses the circumference
of a circle whose diameter is 1, correctly to
the sixth decimal place, the true relation being
3·14159265.</p>
<p>Again, many people imagine that mathematicians
are still in a state of uncertainty as to the relation
which exists between the circumference and the
diameter of the circle. If this were so, scientific
societies might well hold out a reward to anyone who
could enlighten them; for the determination of this
relation (with satisfactory exactitude) may be held
to lie at the foundation of the whole of our modern
system of mathematics. I need hardly say that no
doubt whatever rests on the matter. A hundred
different methods are known to mathematicians by
which the circumference may be calculated from the
diameter with any required degree of exactness. Here
is a simple one, for example:—Take any number of
the fractions formed by putting <em>one</em> as a numerator
over the successive odd numbers. Add together the
alternate ones beginning with the first, which, of
course, is unity. Add together the remainder. Subtract
the second sum from the first. The remainder
will express the circumference (the diameter being
taken as unity) to any required degree of exactness.
We have merely to take enough fractions. The
process would, of course, be a very laborious one,
if great exactness were required, and as a matter of
fact mathematicians have made use of much more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">292</span>
convenient methods for determining the required relation:
but the method is strictly exact.</p>
<p>The largest circle we have much to do with in
scientific questions is the earth’s equator. As a matter
of curiosity, we may inquire what the circumference
of the earth’s orbit is; but as we are far from being
sure of the exact length of the radius of that orbit
(that is, of the earth’s distance from the sun), it is
clear that we do not need a very exact relation
between the circumference and the diameter in dealing
with that enormous circle. Confining ourselves,
therefore, to the circle of the earth’s equator, let us
see what exactness we seem to require. We will
suppose for a moment that it is possible to measure
round the earth’s equator without losing count of a
single yard, and that we want to gather from our
estimate what the diameter of this great circle may
be. This seems, indeed, the only use to which, in
this case, we can put our knowledge of the relation
we are dealing with. We have then a circle some
twenty-five thousand miles round, and each mile
contains one thousand seven hundred and sixty yards:
or in all there are some forty-four million yards in the
circumference, and therefore (roughly) some fourteen
million yards in the diameter of this great circle.
Hence, if our relation is correct within a fourteen-millionth
part of the diameter, or a forty-four millionth
part of the circumference, we are safe from any error
exceeding a yard. All we want, then, is that the
number expressing the circumference (the diameter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">293</span>
being unity) should be true to the eighth decimal
place, as quoted above (p. 291, l. 5).</p>
<p>But as I have said, mathematicians have not been
content with a computation of this sort. They have
calculated the number not to the <em>eighth</em>, but to the
<em>six hundred and twentieth</em> decimal place. Now, if we
remember that each new decimal makes the result ten
times more exact, we shall begin to see what a waste
of time there has been in this tremendous calculation.
We all remember the story of the horse which had
twenty-four nails in its shoes, and was valued at the
sum obtained by adding together a farthing for the
first nail, a halfpenny for the next, a penny for
the next, and so on, doubling twenty-four times.
The result was counted by thousands of pounds. The
old miser who paid at a similar rate for a grave
eighteen feet deep (doubling for each foot), killed
himself when he heard the total. But now consider
the effect of multiplying by ten, six hundred and
twenty times. A fraction, with that enormous number
for denominator, and unity for numerator, expresses
the minuteness of the error which would result if
the ‘long value’ of the circumference were made
use of. Let an illustration show the force of
this:—</p>
<p>It has been estimated that light, which could eight
times circle the earth in a second, takes 50,000 years
in reaching us from the faintest stars seen in Lord
Rosse’s giant reflector. Suppose we knew the exact
length of the tremendous line which extends from the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">294</span>
earth to such a star, and wanted, for some inconceivable
purpose, to know the length of the circumference
of a circle, of which that line was the radius.
The value deduced from the above-mentioned calculation
of the relation between the circumference and
the diameter would differ from the truth by a length
which would be imperceptible under the most powerful
microscope ever yet constructed. Nay, the radius
we have conceived, enormous as it is, might be increased
a million-fold, or a million times a million-fold,
with the same result. And the area of the circle
formed with this increased radius would be determinable
with so much accuracy, that the error, if
presented in the form of a minute square, would be
utterly imperceptible under a microscope a million
times more powerful than the best ever yet constructed
by man.</p>
<p>Not only has the length of the circumference been
calculated once in this unnecessarily exact manner,
but a second calculator has gone over the work independently.
The two results are of course identical
figure for figure.</p>
<p>It will be asked then, what <em>is</em> the problem about
which so great a work has been made? The problem
is, in fact, utterly insignificant; its only interest lies
in the fact that it is insoluble—a property which it
shares along with many other problems, as the trisection
of an angle, the duplication of a cube, and
so on.</p>
<p>The problem is simply this: <em>Having given the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">295</span>
diameter of a circle, to determine, by a geometrical
construction, in which only straight lines and circles
shall be made use of, the side of a square, equal in area
to the circle</em>. As I have said, the problem is solved,
if, by a construction of the kind described, we can
determine the length of the circumference; because
then the rectangle under half this length and the
radius is equal in area to the circle, and it is a
simple problem to describe a square equal to a given
rectangle.</p>
<p>To illustrate the kind of construction required, I
give an approximate solution which is remarkably
simple, and, so far as I am aware, not generally
known. Describe a square about the given circle,
touching it at the ends of two diameters, AOB, COB,
at right angles to each other, and join CA; let COAE
be one of the quarters of the circumscribing square,
and from E draw EG, cutting off from AO a fourth
part AG of its length, and from AC the portion AH.
Then three sides of the circumscribing square together
with AH are very nearly equal to the circumference
of the circle. The difference is so small, that in a
circle two feet in diameter, it would be less than the
two-hundredth part of an inch. If this construction
were exact, the great problem would have been
solved.</p>
<p>One point, however, must be noted; the circle is
of all curved lines the easiest to draw by mechanical
means. But there are others which can be so drawn.
And if such curves as these be admitted as available,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">296</span>
the problem of the quadrature of the circle can be
readily solved. There is a curve, for instance, invented
by Dinostratus, which can readily be described mechanically,
and has been called the quadratrix of Dinostratus,
because it has the property of thus solving the
problem we are dealing with.</p>
<p>As such curves can be described with quite as
much accuracy as the circle—for, be it remembered,
an absolutely perfect circle has never yet been drawn—we
see that it is only the limitations which geometers
have themselves invented that give this problem its
difficulty. Its solution has, as I have said, no value;
and no mathematician would ever think of wasting a
moment over the problem—for this reason, simply, that
it has long since been demonstrated to be insoluble by
simple geometrical methods. So that, when a man says
he has squared the circle (and many will say so, if one
will only give them a hearing), he shows that either he
wholly misunderstands the nature of the problem, or
that his ignorance of mathematics has led him to
mistake a faulty for a true solution.</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From <cite>Chambers’s Journal</cite>, January 16, 1869.)<br/></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">297</span></p>
<h2 id="A_NEW_THEORY_OF_ACHILLES_SHIELD"><i>A NEW THEORY OF ACHILLES’ SHIELD.</i></h2>
<p>A distinguished classical authority has remarked
that the description of Achilles’ shield occupies an
anomalous position in Homer’s ‘Iliad.’ On the one
hand, it is easy to show that the poem—for the
description may be looked on as a complete poem—is
out of place in the ‘Iliad;’ on the other, it is no less
easy to show that Homer has carefully led up to the
description of the shield by a series of introductory
events.</p>
<p>I propose to examine, briefly, the evidence on each
of these points, and then to exhibit a theory respecting
the shield which may appear <em>bizarre</em> enough on a first
view, but which seems to me to be supported by satisfactory
evidence.</p>
<p>An argument commonly urged against the genuineness
of the ‘Shield of Achilles’ is founded on the
length and laboured character of the description. Even
Grote, whose theory is that Homer’s original poem was
not an <i>Iliad</i>, but an <i>Achilleis</i>, has admitted the force
of this argument. He finds clear evidence that from
Book II. to Book XX. Homer has been husbanding his
resources for the more effective description of the final
conflict. He therefore concedes the possibility that the
‘Shield of Achilles’ may be an interpolation—perhaps
the work of another hand.</p>
<p>It appears to me, however, that the mere length of
the description is no argument against the genuineness<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">298</span>
of the passage. Events have, indeed, been hastening to
a crisis up to the end of Book XVII., and the action
is checked in a marked manner by the ‘Oplopœia’ in
Book XVIII. Yet it is quite in Homer’s manner to
introduce, between two series of important events, an
interval of comparative inaction, or at least of events
wholly different in character from those of either series.
We have a marked instance of this in Books IX. and
X. Here the appeal to Achilles and the night-adventure
of Diomed and Ulysses are interposed between the
first victory of the Trojans and the great struggle in
which Patroclus is slain, and Agamemnon, Ulysses,
Diomed, Machaon, and Eurypylus wounded.<SPAN name="FNanchor_19_19" href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">19</SPAN> In fact,
one cannot doubt that in such an arrangement Homer
exhibits admirable taste and judgment. The contrast
between action and inaction, or between the confused
tumult of a heady conflict and the subtle advance of the
two Greek heroes, is conceived in the true poetic spirit.
The dignity and importance of the action, and the
interest of the interposed events, are alike enhanced.
Indeed, there is scarcely a noted author whose works do
not afford instances of corresponding contrasts. How
skilfully, for example, has Shakespeare interposed the
‘bald, disjointed chat’ of the sleepy porter between the
conscience-wrought horror of Duncan’s murderers and
the ‘horror, horror, horror’ which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">299</span> ‘tongue nor heart
could not conceive nor name’ of his faithful followers.
Nor will the reader need to be reminded of the frequent
and effective use of the contrast between the humorous
and the pathetic by others.</p>
<p>The laboured character of the description of the
shield is an argument—though not, perhaps, a very
striking one—for the independent origin of the poem.</p>
<p>But the arguments on which I am disposed to lay
most stress lie nearer the surface.</p>
<p>Scarcely anyone, I think, can have read the description
of the shield without a feeling of wonder that
Homer should describe the shield of a mortal hero as
adorned with so many and such important objects. We
find the sun and moon, the constellations, the waves of
ocean, and a variety of other objects, better suited to
adorn the temple of a great deity than the shield of a
warrior, however noble and heroic. The objects depicted
even on the Ægis of Zeus are much less important.
There is certainly no trace in the ‘Iliad’ of a
wish on Homer’s part to raise the dignity of mortal
heroes at the expense of Zeus, yet the Ægis is thus
succinctly described:—</p>
<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">Fring’d round with ever-fighting snakes, though it was drawn to life,</div>
<div class="verse">The miseries and deaths of fight; in it frown’d bloody Strife,</div>
<div class="verse">In it shone sacred Fortitude, in it fell Pursuit flew,</div>
<div class="verse">In it the monster Gorgon’s head, in which held out to view</div>
<div class="verse">Were all the dire ostents of Jove.—<cite>Chapman’s</cite> Translation.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>Five lines here, as in the original, suffice for the
description of Jove’s Ægis, while one hundred and
thirty lines are employed in the description of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">300</span>
celestial and terrestrial objects depicted on the shield of
Achilles.</p>
<p>Another circumstance attracts notice in the description
of Achilles’ armour—the disproportionate importance
attached to the shield. Undoubtedly, the shield
was that portion of a hero’s armour which admitted of
the freest application of artistic skill. Yet this consideration
is not sufficient to account for the fact, that
while so many lines are given to the shield, the helmet,
corselet, and greaves are disposed of in four.</p>
<p>But the argument on which I am inclined to lay
most stress is the occurrence <em>elsewhere</em> of a description
which is undoubtedly only another version of the
‘Shield of Achilles.’ The ‘Shield of Hercules’
occurs in a poem ascribed to Hesiod. But whatever
opinion may be formed respecting the authorship of
the description, there can be no doubt that it is not
Hesiod’s work. It exhibits no trace of his dry, didactic,
somewhat heavy style. Elton ascribes the ‘Shield
of Hercules’ to an imitator of Homer, and in support
of this view points out those respects in which the
poem resembles, and those in which it is inferior to, the
‘Shield of Achilles.’ The two descriptions are, however,
absolutely identical in many places; and this would
certainly not have happened if one had been an honest
imitation of the other. And those parts of the ‘Shield
of Hercules,’ which have no counterparts in the ‘Shield
of Achilles,’ are too well conceived and expressed to
be ascribed to a very inferior poet—a poet so inferior
as to be reduced to the necessity of simply reproducing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">301</span>
Homer’s words in other parts of the poem. Those
parts which admit of comparison—where, for instance,
the same objects are described, but in different terms—are
certainly inferior in the ‘Shield of Hercules.’ The
description is injured by the addition of unnecessary
or inharmonious details. Elton speaks, accordingly,
of these portions as if they were expansions of the
corresponding parts of the ‘Shield of Achilles.’ This
appears to me a mistake. It seems far more likely that
both descriptions are by the same poet. It is not necessary
for the support of my theory that this poet should
be Homer, but I think both descriptions show undoubted
traces of his handiwork. Indeed, all known imitations
of Homer are so easily recognisable as the work of
inferior poets, that I should have thought no doubt
could exist on this point, but for the attention which
the German theory respecting the ‘Iliad’ has received.
Assigning both poems to Homer, the ‘Shield of Hercules’
may be regarded, not as an expansion (in parts)
of the ‘Shield of Achilles,’ but as an earlier work of
Homer’s, improved and pruned by his maturer judgment,
when he desired to fit it into the plan of the ‘Iliad.’ Or
rather, each poem may be looked on as an abridgment
(the ‘Shield of Hercules’ the earlier) of an independent
work on a subject presently to be mentioned.</p>
<p>It is next to be shown that in the events preceding
the ‘Oplopœia,’ there is a preparation for the introduction
of a separate poem.</p>
<p>In the first place, every reader of Homer is familiar
with the fact that the poet constantly makes use, when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">302</span>
occasion serves, of expressions, sentences, often even
of complete passages, which have been already applied
in a corresponding, or occasionally even in a wholly
different relation. The same epithets are repeatedly
applied to the same deity or hero. A long message is
delivered in the very words which have been already
used by the sender of the message. In one well-known
instance (in Book II.), not only is a message delivered
thus, but the person who has received it repeats it to
others in precisely the same terms. In the combat
between Hector and Ajax (Book VI.), the flight of
Ajax’s spear and the movement by which Hector avoids
the missile, are described in six lines, differing only as
to proper names from those which had been already
used in describing the encounter between Paris and
Menelaus (Book III.).</p>
<p>This peculiarity would be a decided blemish in a
written poem. Tennyson, indeed, occasionally copies
Homer’s manner—for instance, in ‘Enid,’ he twice
repeats the line—</p>
<p class="center">
As careful robins eye the delver’s toil;—</p>
<p>but with a good taste which prevents the repetition
from becoming offensive. The fact is, that the peculiarity
marks Homer as the <em>singer</em>, not the <em>writer</em>,
of poetry. I would not be understood as accepting
the theory, according to which the ‘Iliad’ is a mere
string of ballads. I imagine that no one who justly
appreciates that noble poem would be willing to
countenance such a theory. But that the whole poem<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">303</span>
was sung by Homer at those prolonged festivals which
formed a characteristic peculiarity of Achaian manners
seems shown, not only by what we learn respecting
the later ‘rhapsodists,’ but by the internal evidence of
the poem itself.<SPAN name="FNanchor_20_20" href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">20</SPAN></p>
<p>Homer, reciting a long and elaborate poem of his
own composition, occasionally varying the order of
events, or adding new episodes, extemporized as the
song proceeded, would exhibit the peculiarity invariably
observed in the ‘improvisatore,’ of using, more than
once, expressions, sentences, or passages which happened
to be conveniently applicable. The art of extemporizing
depends on the capacity for composing
fresh matter while the tongue is engaged in the recital
of matter already composed. Anyone who has
watched a clever improvisatore cannot fail to have
noticed that, though gesture is aptly wedded to words,
the thoughts are elsewhere. In the case, therefore,
of an improvisatore, or even of a rhapsodist reciting
from memory, the occasional recurrence of a well-worn
form of words serves as a relief to the strained
invention or memory.</p>
<p>We have reason then for supposing that if Homer
had, in his earlier days, composed a poem which was
applicable, with slight alterations, to the story of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">304</span>
‘Iliad,’ he would endeavour, by a suitable arrangement
of the plan of his narrative, to introduce the lines
whose recital had long since become familiar to him.</p>
<p>Evidence of design in the introduction of the ‘Shield
of Achilles’ certainly does not seem wanting.</p>
<p>It is by no means necessary to the plot of the ‘Iliad’
that Achilles should lose the celestial armour given
to Peleus as a dowry with Thetis. On the contrary,
Homer has gone out of his way to render the labours
of Vulcan necessary. Patroclus has to be so ingeniously
disposed of, that while the armour he had worn is
seized by Hector, his body is rescued, as are also the
horses and chariot of Achilles.</p>
<p>We have the additional improbability that the armour
of the great Achilles should fit the inferior warriors
Patroclus and Hector. Indeed, that the armour should
fit Hector, or rather that Hector should fit the armour,
the aid of Zeus and Ares has to be called in—</p>
<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">To this Jove’s sable brows did bow; and he made fit his limbs</div>
<div class="verse">To those great arms, to fill which up the war-god enter’d him</div>
<div class="verse">Austere and terrible, his joints and every part extends</div>
<div class="verse">With strength and fortitude.—<cite>Chapman’s</cite> Translation.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>It is clear that the narrative would not have been
impaired in any way, while its probability and consistency
would have been increased, if Patroclus had
fought in his own armour. The death of Patroclus
would in any case have been a cause sufficient to
arouse the wrath of Achilles against Hector—though
certainly the hero’s grief for his armour is nearly as
poignant as his sorrow for his friend.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">305</span></p>
<p>It appears probable, then, that the description of
Achilles’ Shield is an interpolation—the poet’s own
work, however, and brought in by him in the only way
he found available. The description clearly refers to
the same object which is described (here, also, only in
part) in the ‘Shield of Hercules.’ The original description,
doubtless, included all that is found in both
‘shields,’ and probably much more.</p>
<p>What, then, was the object to which the original
description applied? An object, I should think, far
more important than a warrior’s shield. I imagine
that anyone who should read the description without
being aware of its accepted interpretation, would consider
that the poet was dealing with an important series
of religious sculptures, possibly that he was describing
the dome of a temple adorned with celestial and terrestrial
symbols.</p>
<p>In Egypt there are temples of a vast antiquity,
having a dome, on which a zodiac—or, more correctly,
a celestial hemisphere—is sculptured with constellation-figures.
And we now learn, from ancient Babylonian
and Assyrian sculptures, that these Egyptian zodiacs
are in all probability merely copies (more or less
perfect) of yet more ancient Chaldæan zodiacs. One
of these Babylonian sculptures is figured in Rawlinson’s
‘Ancient Monarchies.’ It seems probable that
in a country where Sabæanism, or star-worship, was
the prevailing form of religion, yet more imposing
proportions would be given to such zodiacs than in
Egypt.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">306</span></p>
<p>My theory, then, respecting the shield of Achilles is
this—</p>
<p>I conceive that Homer, in his eastern travels, visited
imposing temples devoted to astronomical observation
and star-worship; and that nearly every line in both
‘shields’ is borrowed from a poem in which he described
a temple of this sort, its domed zodiac, and those illustrations
of the labours of different seasons and of
military or judicial procedures which the astrological
proclivities of star-worshippers led them to associate
with the different constellations.</p>
<p>I think there are arguments of some force to be
urged in support of this theory, fanciful as it may seem
at a first view.</p>
<p>In the first place, it is necessary that the constellations
recognised in Homer’s time (not necessarily, or
probably, <em>by</em> Homer) should be distinguished from later
inventions.</p>
<p>Aratus, writing long after Homer’s date, mentions
forty-five constellations. These were probably derived,
without exception, from the globe of Eudoxus.
Remembering the tendency which astronomers have
shown, in all ages, to add to the list of constellations,
we may assume that in Homer’s time the number
was smaller. Probably there were some fifteen
northern and ten southern constellations, besides the
twelve zodiacal signs. The smaller constellations
mentioned by Aratus doubtless formed parts of larger
figures. Anyone who studies the heavens will recognise
the fact that the larger constellations have been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">307</span>
robbed of their just proportions to form the smaller
asterisms. Corona Borealis was the right arm of Bootes,
Ursa Minor was a wing of Draco (now wingless, and no
longer a dragon), and so on.</p>
<p>Secondly, it is necessary that the actual appearance
of the heavens, with reference to the position of the
pole in Homer’s time should be indicated. For my
present purpose, it is not necessary that we should know
the exact date at which the most ancient of the zodiac-temples
were constructed (or to which they were made
to correspond). There are good reasons, though this
is not the proper place for dwelling upon them, for
supposing that the great epoch of reference amongst
ancient astronomers preceded the Christian era by
about 2200 years. Be this as it may, any epoch
between the date named and the probable date at
which Homer flourished—say nine or ten centuries
before the Christian era—will serve equally well for
my present purpose. Now if the effects of equinoctial
precession be traced back to such a date, we
are led to notice two singular and not uninteresting
circumstances. First, the pole of the heavens fell in
the central part of the great constellation Draco; and,
secondly, the equator fell along the length of the great
sea-serpent Hydra, in one part of its course, and elsewhere
to the north of all the ancient aquatic constellations,<SPAN name="FNanchor_21_21" href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">21</SPAN>
save that one-half of the northernmost fish
(of the zodiac pair) lay north of the equator. Thus,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">308</span>
if a celestial sphere were constructed with the equator
in a horizontal position, the Dragon would be at the
summit, Hydra would be extended horizontally along
the equator—but with his head and neck reared above
that circle—and Argo, Cetus, Capricornus, Piscis
Australis, and Pisces—save one-half of the northernmost—would
lie <em>below</em> the equator. It may also be
mentioned that all the bird-constellations were then,
as now, clustered together not far from the equator—Cygnus
(the farthest from the equator) being ten
degrees or so nearer to that circle than at present.</p>
<p>Now let us turn to the two ‘shields,’ and see whether
there is anything to connect them with zodiac-temples,
or to remind us of the relations exhibited above. To
commence with the ‘Shield of Achilles,’ the opening
lines inform us that the shield showed—</p>
<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">The starry lights that heav’n’s high convex crown’d,</div>
<div class="verse">The Pleiads, Hyads, with the northern team,</div>
<div class="verse">And great Orion’s more refulgent beam.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>And here, in Achilles’ shield, the list of constellations
closes; but it is remarkable that in the ‘Shield of
Hercules,’ while the above lines are wanting, we find
lines which clearly point to other constellations. Remembering
what has just been stated about Draco,
it seems at the least a singular coincidence that we
should find the centre or boss of the shield occupied
by a dragon:—</p>
<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">The scaly horror of a dragon, coil’d</div>
<div class="verse">Full in the central field, unspeakable,</div>
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">309</span>
<div class="verse">With eyes oblique retorted, that aslant</div>
<div class="verse">Shot gleaming flame.<SPAN name="FNanchor_22_22" href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">22</SPAN>—<cite>Elton’s</cite> Translation.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>We seem, also, to find a reference to the above-named
relations of the aquatic constellations, and specially to
the constellation Pisces:—</p>
<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
<div class="verse indent24">In the midst,</div>
<div class="verse">Full many dolphins chased the fry, and show’d</div>
<div class="verse">As though they swam the waters, to and fro</div>
<div class="verse">Darting tumultuous: two<SPAN name="FNanchor_23_23" href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">23</SPAN> of silver scale</div>
<div class="verse">Panting above the wave.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>For we learn from both ‘shields’ that the waves of
ocean were figured in a position corresponding with
the above-mentioned position of the celestial equator,
beneath which—that is, <em>in the ocean</em>, on our assumption—the
aquatic constellations were figured. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">310</span>
description of the ocean in the ‘Shield of Hercules’
contains also some lines, in which we seem to see a
reference to the bird-constellations close above the
equator:—</p>
<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">Rounding the utmost verge the ocean flow’d</div>
<div class="verse">As in full swell of waters, and the shield</div>
<div class="verse">All variegated with whole circle bound.</div>
<div class="verse">Swans of high-hovering wing there clamour’d shrill,</div>
<div class="verse">Who also skimm’d the breasted surge with plume</div>
<div class="verse">Innumerous; near them fishes midst the waves</div>
<div class="verse">Frolick’d in wanton bounds.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>In the ‘Shield of Achilles’ no mention is made of
Perseus, but in the ‘Shield of Hercules’ this well-known
constellation seems described in the lines—</p>
<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">There was the knight of fair-hair’d Danae born,</div>
<div class="verse">Perseus; nor yet the buckler with his feet</div>
<div class="verse">Touch’d nor yet distant hover’d, strange to see,</div>
<div class="verse">For nowhere on the surface of the shield</div>
<div class="verse">He rested; so the crippled artist-god</div>
<div class="verse">Illustrious fram’d him with his hands in gold.</div>
<div class="verse">Bound to his feet were sandals wing’d; a sword</div>
<div class="verse">Of brass, with hilt of sable ebony,</div>
<div class="verse">Hung round him from the shoulders by a thong.</div>
<div class="verse">. . . . . . . . The visage grim</div>
<div class="verse">Of monstrous Gorgon all his back o’erspread;</div>
<div class="verse">. . . . . . . . the dreadful helm</div>
<div class="verse">Of Pluto clasp’d the temples of the prince.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>I think that one may recognise a reference to the
twins Castor and Pollux (the wrestler and boxer of
mythology) in the words—</p>
<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
<div class="verse indent12">But in another part</div>
<div class="verse">Were men who wrestled, or in gymnic fight</div>
<div class="verse">Wielded the cestus.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>Orion is not mentioned by name in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">311</span> ‘Shield of
Hercules,’ as in the other; but Orion, Lepus, and the
two dogs seem referred to:—</p>
<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
<div class="verse indent10">Elsewhere men of chase</div>
<div class="verse">Were taking the fleet hares; two keen-toothed dogs</div>
<div class="verse">Hounded beside; these ardent in pursuit,</div>
<div class="verse">Those with like ardour doubling in their flight.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>In each ‘shield’ we find a reference to the operations
of the year—hunting and pasturing, sowing, ploughing,
and harvesting. It is hardly necessary to point
out the connection between these operations and
astronomical relations. That this connection was fully
recognised in ancient times is shown in the ‘Works and
Days’ of Hesiod. We find also in Egyptian zodiacs
clear evidence that these operations, as well as astronomical
symbols or constellations, were pictured in
sculptured domes.</p>
<p>The judicial, military, and other proceedings described
in the ‘Shield of Achilles’ were also supposed
by the ancients to have been influenced by the courses
of the stars.</p>
<p>If there were no evidence that ancient celestial
spheres presented the constellations above referred to, I
might be disposed to attach less weight to the coincidences
here presented; but the ‘Phenomena’ of Aratus
affords sufficient testimony on this point. In the first
place, that work is of great antiquity, since Aratus
flourished two centuries and a half before the Christian
era; but it is well known that Aratus did not describe
the results of his own observations. The positions of
the constellations, as recorded by him, accord neither<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">312</span>
with the date at which he wrote nor with the latitude
in which he lived. It is generally assumed—chiefly
on the authority of Hipparchus—that Aratus borrowed
his knowledge of astronomy from the sphere of
Eudoxus; but we must go much farther back even
than the date of Eudoxus, before we can find any
correspondence between the appearance of the heavens
and the description given by Aratus. Thus we may
very fairly assume that the <em>origin</em> of the constellations
(as distinguished from their association with certain
circles of the celestial sphere) may be placed at a date
preceding, perhaps by many generations, that at which
Homer flourished.</p>
<p>Indeed, there have not been wanting those who find
in the ancient constellations the record of the early
history of man. According to their views, Orion is
Nimrod—the ‘Giant,’ as the Arabic name of the constellation
implies—the mighty hunter, as the dogs and
hare beside him signify. The Centaur bearing a
victim towards the altar is Noah; Argo, the stern of a
ship, is the ark, as of old it might be seen on Mount
Ararat. Corvus is the crow sent forth by Noah, and
the bird is placed on Hydra’s back to show that there
was no land on which it could set its foot. The figure
now called Hercules, but of old Engonasin, or the
kneeler, and described by Aratus as ‘a man doomed
to labour,’ is Adam. His left foot treads on the
dragon’s head, in token of the saying, ‘It shall bruise
thy head; ‘and Serpentarius, or the serpent-bearer, is
the promised seed.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">313</span></p>
<p>Of course, if we accept these views, we have no
difficulty in understanding that a poet so ancient as
Homer should refer to the constellations which still
appear upon celestial spheres. And, in any case, the
mere question of antiquity presents, as we have already
shown, little difficulty.</p>
<p>But there is one difficulty, a notice of which must
close this paper, already carried far beyond the limits
I had proposed to myself:—It may be thought remarkable
that heroes of Greek mythology, as Perseus
and Orion, should be placed by Homer, or even by
Aratus, in spheres which are undoubtedly of eastern
origin.</p>
<p>Now it may be remarked, first, of Homer, that many
acute critics consider the whole story of the ‘Iliad’ to
be, in reality, merely an adaptation of an eastern narrative
to Greek scenes and names. It is pointed out,
that, whereas the Catalogue in Book II. reckons upwards
of 100,000 men, only 10,000 fought at Marathon;
and, whereas there are counted no less than
1,200 ships in the Catalogue, there were but 271 at
Artemisium, and at Salamis but 378. However this
may be, we have the distinct evidence of Herodotus
that the Greek mythology was derived originally from
foreign sources. He says, ‘All the names of the gods
in Greece were brought from Egypt,’ an opinion in
which Diodorus and other eminent authorities concur.
But it is the opinion of acute modern critics that we
must go beyond Egyptian—to Assyrian, or Indian,
perhaps even to Hebrew sources—for the origin of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">314</span>
Greek mythology. Layard has ascribed to Niebuhr the
following significant remarks: ‘There is a want in
Grecian art which neither I, nor any man now alive,
can supply. There is not enough in Egypt to account
for the peculiar art and the peculiar mythology which
we find in Greece. That the Egyptians did not
originate it I am convinced, though neither I, nor any
man now alive, can say who were the originators.
But the time will come when, on the borders of the
Tigris and Euphrates, those who come after me will
live to see the origin of Grecian art and Grecian
mythology.’</p>
<p class="psigs">
(From <cite>The Student</cite>, June 1868.)<br/></p>
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<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_1_1" href="#FNanchor_1_1" class="label">1</SPAN> Other green lines have since been discovered in the auroral
spectrum; and occasionally a red line is seen.</p>
</div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_2_2" href="#FNanchor_2_2" class="label">2</SPAN>
In the <i>Quarterly Journal of Science</i> for October 1866, a more
detailed but somewhat less popular account of the subject of the
above paper is presented. A few months earlier, a skilfully-written
paper on the same subject, from the pen of Mr. J. M. Wilson, of
Rugby, had appeared in the <i>Eagle</i>, a magazine written by and for<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">members of St. John’s College, Cambridge. Although my paper in</span><br/>
the <i>Quarterly Journal of Science</i> was written quite independently of
Mr. Wilson’s (which, however, I had read), yet it chanced that in
describing the same mathematical relations, and the same sequence
of events, I here and there used language closely resembling his.
I fear this led for a while to some misconception; but I was fortunately
able to show in Mr. De la Rue’s address to the Astronomical
Society, on the same subject, passages yet more strikingly resembling
some in Mr. Wilson’s paper (written subsequently and quite
independently). The fact would seem to be that if two persons
describe exactly the same events, and deal with exactly the same
mathematical relations, it is almost certain that in more than one
passage they will use somewhat similar expressions.</p>
<p>I was actually indebted to Mr. Wilson’s paper for one illustration,
however,—that derived from the movements of a supposed artificial
moon; and I think that had his paper appeared in a magazine
printed for general circulation, I should have referred to it. As it
was, this seemed useless so far as the readers of the <i>Quarterly
Journal of Science</i> were concerned. The circumstances of the case
were, indeed, far from calling for a reference; while I had in a
sense made the illustration my own by detecting an important miscalculation
in the original (the amount of advance being either
doubled or halved—I forget which). Had I referred to Mr. Wilson’s
paper, I must needs have mentioned this mistake; and it would have
appeared as though I had had no other purpose in making the reference.</p>
<p>I mention these matters to explain what I fear my esteemed
fellow-collegian was disposed at the time to regard as either a wrong
or a slight. Nothing was further from my intention than either.</p>
</div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_3_3" href="#FNanchor_3_3" class="label">3</SPAN>
The reader will remember the time at which the essay appeared.
For several reasons it seems well to leave the essay unaltered. In
the second series of Light Science a later stage is presented, and
the account is carried up to the present date in my work on <i>The
Transits of Venus</i>.</p>
</div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_4_4" href="#FNanchor_4_4" class="label">4</SPAN>
It is held to be of the utmost importance that all the observing
parties should use similar telescopes.</p>
</div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_5_5" href="#FNanchor_5_5" class="label">5</SPAN>
So far back as 1789, John Williams, in his <i>Natural History of
the Mineral Kingdom</i>, discussed the question of the ‘Limited Quantity
of Coal in Great Britain.’ The following extracts are taken
from an excellent paper on the exhaustion of our coal in the <i>Popular
Science Review</i> for July 1866, by Mr. Lemoran, Colliery Viewer. ‘I
have no doubt,’ says Williams, ‘that the generality of the inhabitants
of Great Britain believe that our coal mines are inexhaustible; and
the general conduct of the nation, so far as relates to this subject,
seems to imply that this is held as an established fact. If it was
not a generally received opinion, would the rage for exporting coals
be allowed to go on without limitation or remorse? But it is full
time that the public were undeceived in a matter which so nearly
concerns the welfare of this flourishing island.... When our coal
mines are exhausted, the prosperity and glory of this flourishing and
fortunate island are at an end. Our cities and great towns must
then become ruinous heaps for want of fuel, and our mines and
manufactories must fail from the same cause, and then, consequently,
our commerce must vanish. In short, the commerce, wealth, importance,
glory, and happiness of Great Britain will decay and
gradually dwindle away to nothing, in proportion as our coal and
other mines fail.’ Mr. Williams also solves in a very summary
manner the problem of England’s fate after her coal stores shall be
exhausted. ‘The future inhabitants of this island must live,’ says
he, ‘like its first inhabitants, by fishing and hunting.’</p>
</div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_6_6" href="#FNanchor_6_6" class="label">6</SPAN>
In 1854, the yield was 64,661,401 tons; in 1864, the yield was
92,787,873: the average increase per annum was, therefore, no less
than 2,812,647 tons.</p>
</div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_7_7" href="#FNanchor_7_7" class="label">7</SPAN>
I have obtained a somewhat different result from a computation
I have just gone through. I make the consumption 291 millions in
1900, and 1,446 millions in 1950. Mr. Lemoran seems to have taken
the percentage at 3½ instead of 3¼. It is worth noticing how seriously
a small change in the percentage affects the result; the consumption
in 1950 becoming 1,760 millions of tons, instead of 1,446 millions.</p>
</div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_8_8" href="#FNanchor_8_8" class="label">8</SPAN>
The year 1863 was the last whose statistics were available for
Mr. Jevons’s purpose; and estimating from either 1860 or 1862 would
give a result smaller than either of the above. Indeed, the consumption
was less in 1862 than in 1861.</p>
</div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_9_9" href="#FNanchor_9_9" class="label">9</SPAN>
See ‘Light Science’ (second series) for a discussion of later
researches.</p>
</div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_10_10" href="#FNanchor_10_10" class="label">10</SPAN>
The wave did little mischief, the winds being easterly.</p>
</div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_11_11" href="#FNanchor_11_11" class="label">11</SPAN>
This opinion Dr. Carpenter has since somewhat modified. It
will be remembered, of course, that the evidence derived from the
nature of superposed strata is in no way affected by what is shown
above to hold with adjacent deposits.</p>
</div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_12_12" href="#FNanchor_12_12" class="label">12</SPAN>
I remember to have read that in this hurricane guns which had
long lain under water were washed up like mere drift upon the
beach. Perhaps this circumstance grew gradually into the incredible
story above recorded.</p>
</div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_13_13" href="#FNanchor_13_13" class="label">13</SPAN>
A ship by scudding before the gale may—if the captain is not
familiar with the laws of cyclones—go <i>round and round</i> without
escaping. The ship ‘Charles Heddle’ did this in the East Indies,
going round no less than <i>five times</i>.</p>
</div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_14_14" href="#FNanchor_14_14" class="label">14</SPAN>
The reader need hardly be reminded of the complete fulfilment
of this anticipation, during the war between France and Germany.</p>
</div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_15_15" href="#FNanchor_15_15" class="label">15</SPAN>
The grip is never properly caught without the pause; but anything
beyond a momentary pause is a bad fault in style.</p>
</div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_16_16" href="#FNanchor_16_16" class="label">16</SPAN>
I write this with full knowledge that many Oxford men deny
the fact. I have rowed behind Cambridge, Oxford, and London
strokes, and have several times taken the place (number 2 thwart)
of a London waterman in a four (‘stroked’ by John Mackinney)
training for the Thames Regatta. So that I have had ample opportunities
for comparing different rowing styles; and I am satisfied
that the main defect of the real Cambridge style was (and perhaps
is) an <i>exaggeration</i> of the sound rule that a boat should be propelled
rather by the body than by the arms. The very swing in a Cambridge
boat shows that this must be so. On the other hand, the
Thames watermen do too much arm-work; and hence seem to
double a little over their oars. I once rowed with some Cambridge
friends from London nearly to Oxford and back, taking a Thames
waterman as ‘help.’ We set him, at first, for our strokesman, but
we soon had to make him row <i>bow</i>, for we could none of us stand his
gripping, arm-working style.</p>
</div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_17_17" href="#FNanchor_17_17" class="label">17</SPAN>
The race (that of 1869) was one of the best ever rowed, and
the time of the winners (Oxford) better than in any former race.</p>
</div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_18_18" href="#FNanchor_18_18" class="label">18</SPAN>
This article was written early in March 1868.</p>
</div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_19_19" href="#FNanchor_19_19" class="label">19</SPAN>
Another well-known instance, where ‘Patroclus, sent in hot
haste for news by a man of the most fiery impatience, is button-held
by Nestor, and though he has no time to sit down, yet is
obliged to endure a speech of 152 lines,’ is accounted for by Gladstone
in a different manner.</p>
</div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_20_20" href="#FNanchor_20_20" class="label">20</SPAN>
Besides Homer’s reference, both in the ‘Iliad’ and ‘Odyssey,’
to poetic recitations at festivals, there is the well-known invocation
in Book II. To what purpose would the mere writer of poetry pray
for an increase of his physical powers? Nothing could be more
proper, says Gladstone, if Homer were about to recite; nothing less
proper if he were engaged on a written poem.</p>
</div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_21_21" href="#FNanchor_21_21" class="label">21</SPAN>
We may exclude Delphinus as probably later than Homer’s
time, though mentioned by Aratus.</p>
</div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_22_22" href="#FNanchor_22_22" class="label">22</SPAN>
Compare the description of the constellation Draco by
Aratus:—</p>
<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">Swol’n is his neck—eyes charg’d with sparkling fire</div>
<div class="verse">His crested head illume. As if in ire</div>
<div class="verse">To Helice he turns his foaming jaw</div>
<div class="verse">And darts his tongue, barb’d with a blazing star.</div>
<div class="verse indent24">—<i>Lamb’s</i> Translation.</div>
</div></div>
</div></div>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_23_23" href="#FNanchor_23_23" class="label">23</SPAN>
It is scarcely necessary to remark that, no importance is to be
attached to the numerical relations in this and other passages. In
the original work describing a zodiac-dome, the exact number of
constellations representing fishes, dogs, or the like, would of course
be mentioned; but any changes necessary to Homer’s purpose in
describing a shield would unhesitatingly have been introduced by
him subsequently. It is singular, however, that we should have
here, and in the passage quoted farther on as referring to Orion and
the Dogs, the number <i>two</i> specially mentioned. The latter instance
is the more remarkable inasmuch as the mention of men and hares
would lead one to expect that more than two dogs would be
introduced. I would suggest as a sufficient reason for this peculiarity
that the verbal alterations necessary to pluralise some of the
objects in the dome would be more easily effected than those
necessary to undualise others.</p>
</div>
</div>
<hr class="tb" />
<div class="transnote">
<h3>Transcriber's Notes</h3>
<p>Obvious typographical errors have been silently corrected. Variations
in hyphenation and all other spelling and
punctuation remain unchanged.</p>
</div>
<SPAN name="endofbook"></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />