A History of Electricity - Park Benjamin PDF
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HISTORY OF ELECTRICITY
BY
NEW YORK
JOHN WILEY & SONS
53 East Tenth Street
1898
COPYRIGHT, 1895.
BY PARK BENJAMIN
PREFACE.
207110
4 PREFACE.
may be safely said, that we know more about its laws and
their consequences than we do about those which deter-
mine the fall of a stone to the ground.
I end which has been more of pleasure than
this essay
of toil
fully conscious of the errors and inconsistencies
which must be in it. At every turn there have been tan-
gled skeins to unravel, whereof the true clews have, no
doubt, often been missed diverging roads, where one
;
CHAPTER II.
CHAPTER III.
CHAPTER IV.
The Dark Ages and the rise of Scholasticism 86
First distinction between magnetic and electric effects drawn by St.
Augustine 87
Patristic references to the lodestone and amber 90
Old medical uses of the lodestone 93
Claudian's Idyl 93
The Fables of the Magnetic Rocks 96
Ancient Arab navigation 102
The Compass not used in early voyages on the Indian Ocean .... 103
Nor by the Spanish Saracens ic8
Nor on Spanish ships until 1403 in
CHAPTER V.
The Northmen and their early voyages 112
Physical science among the Anglo-Saxons 115
The Norman invasion and the poem of William Appulus of Amalfi . 116
Scholastic philosophy 118
Alexander Neckam 120
His treatise de Natura Rerum 122
The doctrine of similitudes , . . . .
124
And of virtues 125
Applied to the lodestone 127
The first European description of the Mariner's Compass 129
And the remarkable magnetic discoveries preceding 131
The Compass points 133
Gottlaud, the great nautical rendezvous 134
Wisbuy and its laws 135
The Finns and Lapps 137
Their sorcery and relationship to Chinese 139
And possible ancient knowledge of Compass 141
The garlic myth 142
The punishment for tampering with the Compass 144
The Compass possibly of Finn origin and emanating from Wisbuy .
145
CHAPTER VI.
Thirteenth century thought 148
William the Clerk on the Compass 149
The Bible of Guyot de Provins 152
viii CONTENTS.
PAGE
And other mediaeval referring to magnetic polarity
poems 154
The spurious treatise of Aristotle 157
Mediaeval lodestoue myths and fables 159
Roger Bacon and his discoveries 160
Ancient conceptions of the universe 163
CHAPTER VII.
Peter Peregrinus 165
His perpetual motion 167
His marvelous magnetic discoveries 169
His development of the Mariner's Compass 184
Flavio Gioja and his Compass card 187
Plagiarists of Peregrinus 191
CHAPTER VIII.
The revival of literature in Europe 193
Henry the Navigator and Portuguese voyages 194
Christopher Columbus and his magnetic discoveries 196
Attempts to account for Compass variation by the Magnetic Rocks . 202
The voyages of Vasco da Gama and Magellan 205
Peregrinus' disclosure of the magnetic field of force 207
Hartmann partly recognizes Dip of the Compass needle 209
Norman's discovery and explanation of Dip 211
Magnetic deceptions of the period 219
Paracelsus and his magnetic nostrums 220
CHAPTER IX.
Fra Paolo (Pietro Sarpi) 224
His treatises on the magnet .
225
Cesare observes magnetism by earth's induction 227
The Jesuits dispute Sarpi's discoveries 228
John Baptista Porta 230
His Society 231
His relations to Sarpi 232
His treatise on natural magic and the magnetic discoveries therein
recorded 234
And especially the magnetic field of force 235
And telegraphic communication by magnets 239
Jerome Fracastorio 241
Jerome Cardan 243
And his differentiation of magnetic and amber effects 249
The physicians as physicists 255
CHAPTER X.
William Gilbert 258
The object of his work 268
CONTENTS. IX
PAGE
His errors 274
His mode of thought 275
His Terrella and his magnetic theories 277
His magnetic discoveries 288
The inception of his study of electricity 294
The discovery of the Electrics 299
Gilbert's electrical experiments 303
His electrical theory ^ 307
His electrical discoveries recapitulated 313
CHAPTER XL
Gilbert's treatises 315
Francis Bacon and his suppression of Gilbert's later work 318
Bacon's criticisms on Gilbert *
321
Bacon's studies in magnetism and electricity 324
CHAPTER XII.
CHAPTER XIII.
The founding of the English Royal Society 404
Science at the Court of Charles II 406
Robert Boyle 414
His philosophy 416
His electrical discoveries 420
Physical observations in America, and Madam Sewall's sparkling
skirt 425
Robert Hooke 426
Isaac Newton and
the reduction of electricity under the reign of law. 435
Halley's magnetic theories 447
OF THE
UNIVERSITY
OF
INTRODUCTION.
the clouds ;
beheld
grow from
it the feeble amber-soul into
the mighty thunderbolt watched it until the whole uni-
;
globes that any longer command us, but only man not ;
ds)
16 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
1
The ancient Greek poets called the sun rp^xrop and Homer repeatedly
so terms it (Iliad. Z/ 513: T/ 398). "Electron" is used very indefi-
nitely by the Greek classic writers and in fact has no permanent gender,
though commonly neuter. See Rossignol : Les Me"taux Dans 1'Anti-
quite", 345. Paris, 1863.
1
Odyssey. Hesiod : Scutum Herculis.
!
^
TRADITIONS OF THE AMBER. 17
"
subsequently became called after him, the Magnes
Stone," or "Magnet." This legend, in various forms,
retained its vitality up to comparatively recent times. As
masses of magnetite were discovered in various parts of the
world, the stories of attractive power became greatly
its
aOs, sp. gr. 5.2, contain2 72.41 per cent, of iron. Osborn:
Metallurgy of Iron and Steel.
20 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
to the stone and in this way perceived its attraction.
Iron, however, is never found in a metallic state in
this infinitesimal
nature, except in meteorites. Excluding
supply, the metal is obtained from its ores, by means
so
usually involving the development of intense heat,
that to devise modes of attaining the necessary tempera-
tures, let alone the even more complex
mental work
of contriving apparatus and processes for separating the
metal, requires advanced powers of observation and inven-
tion. Hence modern ethnological and geological author-
1
ities unite with Lucretius and other ancient writers in
affirming that the Age of Iron has always followed that
of brass or bronze. So far, therefore, as establishing the
1
De Natura Rerum, v.
THE IRON AGE. 21
1
Prescott :
History of the Conquest of Mexico. 1865, i., 139, and works
there cited.
Lyell, Sir C. : The Geological Evidences of the Antiquity of Man.
London, 1873, 8.
3
Rossignol, cit. sup., refers to the Scholiast of Apollonius of Rhodes on
the Phoronid, an ancient and fragmentary poem which he considers as
old as the works of Hesiod and Homer. This, concerning the Idean
Dactyls, says, "they first found in the mountain forests the art of the
ANCIENT IRON WORKERS. 23
cunning Vulcan, the black iron, carried it to the fire and produced won-
derful work."
24 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
Oeneus of Eurip-
apparently that made in the fragmentary
ides, which Suidas
1
quotes, and which distinctly refers to
from the original stone. Now, this is like the Muse who
first gives to men inspiration herself, and from those in-
'Suidas : Lex. Graec. et. Lat. post T. Gaisford, Halle, 1853, 658.
gains support from the fact that the ^olians and lonians,
infounding new towns, were accustomed to adopt for them
1
local designations. It is this second Magnesia which is
most reasonably supposed to have given its name to the
magnet, because of the large deposits of magnetic ore,
similar to that found at Elba, which still exist in its
vicinity and which were probably the ancient source of
supply. The town itself was destroyed by an earthquake
in the time of Tiberius.
If this emigration of the Magnetes ever occurred, it
happened before 700 B. C., and possibly before 1000 B. C.,
the latter being generally regarded as the period when the
colonizing movement of the ancient tribes ended but, ;
1
not occur at allin the old empire, but only in the new.
2
Rawlinson, on the other hand, while conceding the
strength of the theory that iron was first introduced into
Egypt by the Ptolemies, notes that some implements of
the metal have been found in the tombs, with nothing
about them indicative of their belonging to a late period ;
try for the Greeks who had recently settled there, reported
that the Egyptians of a far distant period called the mag-
net the "bone of Horus," and the iron the "bone of Ty-
phon." But Manetho' s work, when Plutarch wrote about
it, was six centuries old and existed only in the form of
It has been
suggested that such iron as has been found
in Egypt, and referred to Pharaonic
times, may have been
1
Lepsius Die Metalle in den Aegyptischen Inschriften, 1872, 105, 114.
:
2
Hist, of Anc. Egypt, i., 505.
8
Rawlinson, cit. sup., ii 6, 8. Cox History of Greece,
, :
i., 614, Appen-
dix D, wherein Manetho's chronology is
fully discussed.
ANCIENT MAGNETIC KNOWLEDGE. 29
edge with them. That they were familiar with the metal,
at the period of Moses, and hence at about 1,500 years B.
C., and possibly had known of it then for a long time, is
shown by the mention of Tubal Cain, u an instructor of
1
quainted with iron, but that they were equally well aware
magnet and its attractive force. The famous Rabbi
of the
Mosheh ben Maimon (Maimonides), who wrote at the end 2
3
34 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
he conceived to be water probably, says Aristotle, deriv-
ing his opinion from observing that the
nutriment of all
things is moist, and that even actual heat is therefrom
Scaliger,
1
as usual, savagely, "I am able to prove, by
many arguments, were concocted by the Greeks, in whom
the will or faculty for lying never failed."
Let me now recapitulate. We have found lack of evi-
dence to prove that the Egyptians, at the time of Thales,
were cognizant of the magnet. Therefore it may be
assumed that Thales did not acquire whatever knowledge
he may have had concerning this substance from Egypt-
ian sources. We have also found that the working of iron
mines in Phrygia was of great antiquity, that magnetite
ore existed there and in Lydia, and probably was abund-
antly disseminated through Asia Minor. So also it appears
that the magnet was exhibited as a part of the Samothra-
cian mysteries, which were also of extremely ancient
origin. It is not unreasonable, therefore, to conclude that
Thales' knowledge of the magnet was home knowledge,
and that his doctrine of the soul inherent therein, was
intended to be in direct contrast with the prevailing
theories fostered by the priests of the Cabiric mysteries,
namely, that the stone was supernaturally influenced.
If the tradition of the Syrian women is older than the
time of Thales, it may be presumed that the amber attrac-
tion was not unfamiliar to him; otherwise I have encoun-
tered no direct evidence of earlier knowledge of it than
exists in the Timseus of Plato, and Plato lived nearly two
centuries after Thales.
The explanation given by Plato excludes all idea of at-
traction. "Moreover," says the philosopher, "as to the
flowing water, the fall of the thunderbolt, and the marvels
that are observed about the attraction of amber and the
Heraclean stone in none of these cases is there any attrac-
;
1
Ep., 306. See also Blount : Censura Celebriorum Authorum. Geneva,
1710, 158.
PRE-SOCRATIC PHILOSOPHY. 37
1
Plato Timaeus, 80. Cicero refers to this in the De Natura Deorum,
:
and so does Timaeus of Locri, reputed to have been Plato's teacher, but
whose sole extant work is probably an abridgment of the Platonic Dia-
logues. (Timaeus Locrensis, ed. Serrani, p. 102. See, also, Smith:
Dict'y of Greek and Roman Antiquities, art. Timaeus.)
2
Grote : Aristotle. London, 1872; Vol. II., chap. XL, p. 154.
38 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
Where then does first explicit proof of the amber phenom-
enon, in fact, exist?
quality."
It is a significant circumstance that there no sugges-
is
1 2
Exodus xxxiii. 17-20. Ezek. xxviii. 13.
3
Pliny lib. xxxvii.
:
Marbodeus, Archbishop of Remies, has
c. 13.
but says nothing about its attraction when heated. De Boot (Gem. et
many kinds of coal and other fossil deposits which not only old writers
but even modern commentators constantly confuse. Theophrastus
speaks of a material which is plainly anthracite coal, and Pliny (xxxvi.
18), of the Gagates, his description of which answers generally to that
of jet; but neither author mentions any phenomenon similar to that of
the amber as pertaining to it. Later writers apply the word "gagates"
to almost any black bituminous material, though they commonly mean
"
"jet by the term. Leonardus regards the gagate as another species of
amber "black amber" in contradistinction to yellow, and he describes
it as "black,
light, dry and lucid, not transparent, and if put into fire
has, as it were, the smell of pitch. Being heated with rubbing it attracts
straws and chaff." Marbodeus gives almost the same account and states
that it is found in
Britain, where it is still obtained in the tertiary clays
along the Yorkshire coast. This unfortunate confusion of yellow amber
and jet, probably first due to Leonardus, has rendered it
impossible to
tell, from the references to amber attraction by the writers of the six-
teenth and even of the seventeenth
century, which substance is meant.
THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
44
in the world's intel-
Mythology, the controlling factor
lectual progress, had given way to philosophy, and now
5
In Protreptico, 15 ; time, circa 192 A, D.
46 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
exist ill the Serapeum; and that there were, in fact, two
such different things Ruffinus and others assert.
1
:
Aquil. lib., vi. Histor., c.22; time, circa. 390 A. D. S.
Prosperus : De Praedicatione, 3, c. 38 ; time, circa 446 A. D.
2
Beda. de Sept. Mirac.
: Mundi ; time, circa 703 A. D.
8
Lib. De Spectaculis, time, circa 78 A. D.
*Cassiodor. Variat Lib., i, Ep. 45; time, circa 500 A. D.
:
r%
19, p. 209-211.)
1
Azuni : Dissertation sur la Boussole, Paris, 1810, p. 27.
2
Lucretius De Natura Rerum,
: Book 6. Translated by H. A. J.
Munro. Cambridge, 1866.
48 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
the same. Hence, as iron that has been brought into con-
tact with the lodestone (as was the case with the Samo-
thracian rings) very readily becomes magnetized by
induction from the stone, it is evident that there was a
possibility of two rings having become magnetized in this
way, being accidentally approximated with their like poles
facing one another, and under conditions when one or the
other of them might be free to move under the repulsive
force. Whatever may have been observed as to this at an
earlier time is not known but an unmistakable
; and, prob-
ably, the first recorded recognition of the phenomenon ap-
pears in the poem of Lucretius.
THE GERM OF THE ELECTRIC MOTOR. 49
"
Sometimes, too," he says, "it happens that the nature
of iron is repelled from this stone, being in the habit of
it in turns."
flying from and following
The allusion is now, not to the current which flows
of the stone upon
through the rings, but to the influence
the iron, merely placed in its neighborhood or, as we
now say, in its "field offeree" and not in contact with it.
as first to pre-
He describing the turning of the ring, so
is
sent one pole to the lodestone and then the other, for a
has its poles located diametrically opposite
ring usually
each other. If the ring were supported so that its poles
could be thus alternately presented to one and the same
pole of the lodestone, then,
whenever the ring pole was of
the same name as that of the lodestone [as north pole to
north or south pole to south pole], the ring would be
pole,
repelled, and would swing away from the lodestone but ;
even regard this as the advent into the world of the con-
version of the energy of electricity into mechanical motion,
and the germ of the electric motor.
Lucretius says, further, that he has seen the Samothra-
cian rings "jump up" when the magnet stone had been
"placed under." It is unquestionably true that in a sus-
pended chain of rings, as he describes, the pole at the bot-
tom of the lowest ring would be of the same name as that
of the pole of the supporting lodestone say, north. If
50 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
a second lodestone were
now, the same or north pole of
to the lower part of that last ring, then that
brought up
ring would be repelled and "jump up "exactly as Lu-
cretius says.
Even more remarkable than this is his statement that
u will rave within brass basins" when the
iron filings
stone is placed beneath. This was the first perception of
the field of force about a magnet by noting not merely the
effect of attraction or repulsion exerted upon the pole
its
fifty years later and who applies it also to the amber attrac-
tion. He says, "that amber attracts none of those things
that are brought to it, any more than the lodestone. That
stone emits a matter which reflects the circumambient air
and thereby forms a void.That expelled air puts in mo-
tion the air before it, which making a circle returns to the
void space, driving before it towards the lodestone, the
iron which it meets in its way." He then proposes a
1
Pliny: lib. xxxvi. 25.
52 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
bodies outwardly projected from the attracting body com-
bining with and bringing back the body attracted. That
seems to have convinced the Greeks and Romans then,
and the rest of the world for the ensuing two thousand
years, that the amber and the magnet were interrelated ;
or, at all events, that they
both attracted for exactly the
same reason, and therefore nothing was to be gained by
looking into the subject further. As for the Egyptians, it
is doubtful whether they ever brought amber into exten-
'
l
Lib., vii., de Coinp. Med. Time, circa 200 A. D.
'Lib. de Simp. Med. See for this and preceding reference, Aldro-
vandus, Musaeum Metallicum, Bologna, 1648, p. 415.
CHAPTER III.
1
Gray History of Etruria,
:
I, 173.
2
W. Cook An :
Inquiry into the Patriarchal and Druidical Religion.
London, 1874. Cook's argument is upheld by Salverte: Philosophy of
Magic (trans, by Thomson), N. Y., 1847, vol. II.
8
Odyssey, viii, 610.
ANCIENT VOYAGES TO OPHIR. 55
1
Purchas, his Pilgrims, i, \ 8.
2
Bruce Travels in India. Book Chap. IV.
:
II.,
3
Venanson : De 1'Invention de la Boussole
Nautiqtie, Naples, 1808.
4
Huet : Des Navigations de Solomon, c. 8, 3.
56 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
larger, better built and more sea- worthy than the vessels
of the Babylonians and Assyrians. Voyages in the Indian
Ocean in search of new markets then became longer, and
finally the southern shores of Shantung (East China) were
reached in about 675 B. C. 1
There is no trustworthy evidence, however, that the
Phoenicians, despite their skill as iron workers, had any
knowledge of the directive property of the magnet. Their
most ancient book, written by Sanconiathon, u the phil-
osopher of Tyre," deals with the progress of the human
mind and the discoveries made by man, and, in accounting
for these last, says that "it was the God Otiranos who
devised Betulae, contriving stones that moved as having
life." On this passage the theory that the betulae must
have been the lodestone has frequently been based, and
Sir William Betham asserts unequivocally, though none
the less inconsequently, that this statement is quite suffi-
cient to prove the acquaintance of the Phoenicians with
the compass. 2 On the other hand, it has been elaborately
demonstrated by one author that the betulae were not ani-
mated stones at all, but merely stones figuratively so con-
3
sidered, or, in other words, idols; while other writers
1
De Lacotiperie : Western Origin of Early Chinese Civilization, Lcn-
don, 1894.
2
Sir W. Betham :
Etruria-Celtica, London, 1842, II., 8, et seq.
8
Fourmont : Reflexions sur les Anciens Peuples, Paris, 1747.
THE PLACING OF THE GREAT PYRAMID. 57
1
Ennemoser :
History of Magic, II., 27.
2
Gliddon : Otia ^gyptiaca, London, 1849.
58 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
1
C. Piazzi Smyth : Our Inheritance in the Great Pyramid, 3rd Ed.,
Loud., 1877, 67.
2
It has been argued that the
Egyptian bda-n-pe, celestial iron, signifies
magnetic iron and that the expression res-mehit-ba, south-north iron,
:
1
Sir W. Betham :
Etruria-Celtica, cit. sup.
'Dennis : The Cities and Cemeteries of Etruria, London, 1878. II.,
105.
THE NOMAD RACES. 61
tion, the excess again migrated and the process was re-
peated. In this way the Mongolic hordes originally con-
quered China and penetrated to Moscow and Poland. In
this way, the dynasty of the Great Mogul was founded in
pal literati, had put out his own eyes and feigned idiocy in
order to escape death. A few years later it was claimed
that a number of books had been found in pulling down a
former abode of Confucius, and on this alleged discovery
1
some of the existing Chinese classics are based. At the
present time, if the latter were destroyed, scores of Chinese
scholars could undoubtedly be found capable of reproduc-
ing them verbatim from memory; but the fact that the
version of the Shoo-king repeated by Fuh-sang was con-
sidered far inferior to that of the supposed old book, dis-
covered as before mentioned, seems to indicate that the
extraordinary education, which the Middle Kingdom now
requires of its people as a condition precedent to social
and honors, did not, in those ancient days, reach
official its
"Thoung Kian Kang Mou, imperial edition of 1707, fol. 22. Quoted
by Klaproth: 1'Invention de la Boussole. Paris, 1834, 72.
Also, Kou tin tchou, quoted by Biot. Comptes Rendus, vol. xix., 823.
*Arriot: Abrege" Chron de 1'Hist. Univ. de 1'Empire Chin., vol. 13.
Memoirs concerning the Chinese, p. 234, No. 3. Martini Historia Sinica,
:
106.
68 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
fullof devils; while, in another, Hoang-ti gains his victory
by the aid of arms obtained from a celestial virgin, and
only by that means overthrows Khiang, who "had the
n l
wings and body of a beast.
The tribes which began the settlement of China are
believed to have maintained a jade traffic with western
Asia, the trade route of which was also a channel for the
trans-continental flow of intelligence. This commerce,
which had gradually decreased, appears to have revived
after the conquest of the country in uoo B. C., and the
establishment of a new dynasty therein by the Tchoii, an
energetic and powerful race of Kirghiz. origin, which had
occupied for centuries the territory bounding China on
the northwest. Not only did new learning
arrive through
the increased traffic, but the Tchoii themselves had prob-
ably already acquired much astronomical and astrological
lore from Khorasmia, where a focus of such knowledge
had been established by a branch of the Aryan race in
about 1304 B. C. 2
An
interval of fifteen centuries separates the legend of
Hoang-ti from the one next in chronological order, wherein
a supposed reference to the magnet is contained, and which
according to one Chinese authority ascribes knowledge of
polarity to Tchoii-Kung, the founder of the Tchoii dy-
nasty, who is supposed to have obtained it from the sources
above mentioned. 3 A later and more complete version is
found in an historical memoir 4 written in the first half of
the second century of our era, a production which is, in
fact, an attempt to collect such fragments of ancient annals
as were believed to have survived the wholesale burning of
a thousand years before. It does not appear that this work
,
cit. snp., 102.
2
De Lacouperie, cit. sup.
3
De
Lacouperie, cit. sup., noting an amplified version of the lost 5 6th
chapter of Shoo King, written by Kwei Kuh tze in 4th century B. C.
*
The Szu Ki or Historic Memoirs of Szu ma thsian quoted in Thoung
Kian Rang Mou, Ed. of 1701, vol. I, fol. 9. Reproduced by Klaproth,
cit. sup., 79.
THE LEGEND OF THE AMBASSADORS. 69
*Ki kin chu, written by Tsui-p'au during the Tsin dynasty. Jour. N.
C. Branch, Roy. As. Soc., n. s., xi., 123.
70 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
that
u the officers who accompanied the ambassadors to
their country then returned. They came back in the same
carnages in a direction opposite to that which they
pointed, and occupied a year as the journey out had done.
The axles and protruding axle-ends were originally of
iron, which was completely rusted away when they re-
turned. The chariots were entrusted to officers to be kept
for use of the envoys of subject states located at a dis-
tance." This was written centuries after the events de-
scribed, and is probably wholly imaginary.
But in the Shoo-king itself, in the account given of the
funeral of the King of Chow, which occurred at about the
same time (1102 B. C.), there is described the placing of
the royal vehicles about the palace and "the great or
pearly carriage is to be on the visitors' or western stairs
facing the south: the succeeding or golden carriage on the
eastern stairs facing the south" and so on for the cate-
gory of chariots, each successive one being made of less
valuable material, and the last being of wood. It will be
noted here, that the chariots were merely placed or in-
stalled so as to face the south, and the south in China has
1
Dissertation sur la Boussole, cit. sup. I^egge (Chinese Classics,
Shoo-king, Vol. III., 535-7) rejects both the Hoang-ti and the ambassa-
dors' legends.
2
Biot:
Comptes Rendus, cit. sup. Klaproth, contra, says that the
earliestwork containing a like reference dates only from the fourth
century A. D., and that merely fragments of it have come down.
3
De Lacouperie, cit. sup.
72 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
origin.
*De Lacouperie: cit. sup., noting the Tsin Kung Koh Ki of the 4th
century. See also note 2, page 76.
2
Thsa-chi, book 24, cit. by Biot.
76 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
Almost exactly the same recital appears in a medical
1
Pen thsao yan i, quoted by Klaproth, 68.
2
Trans. Asiat. Soc. of Japan, 1880, viii. 475. Jour. North China Branch
Roy. As. Soc., New Ser., xi., 123. Shanghae, 1877.
ANCIENT CHINESE NAVIGATION. 77
pursuits never
either attain that point, or else, if the
Chinese be taken as typical, require a greater time for de-
velopment than included at present within historical
is
limits. The
Chinese, moreover, have been united for ages
in one inflexible system of manners, letters and polity, and
have dwelt upon land capable of supporting them; so that
there has been little natural inducement to them to enter
into communication with the rest of the world. The bor-
dering nations were, for centuries, far lower in the scale
of civilization, and could offer nothing to barter but
raw materials, of which China had either an abundant
natural supply, or for which she had no use. True, navi-
gation of the great rivers which irrigated the country be-
1
The eyes on the bows of Chinese junks(also present on modern Dutch
boats) are said to have been copied from ancient Phrenician vessels.
Perrot-Chipiez, Hist, de 1'Art, iii., 517.
78 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
navigation ;
while the Chinese ships, to the sailors of the
western world, have always seemed the very opposite of
what sea-going vessels should be. The huge junks, with
bulging hulls and high sterns, were modeled after popular
notions of sea monsters, the teeth and eyes of which were
depicted on the bows, and the fins imitated in the shapes
of the sails. The typhoons upset them
or drove them upon
the reefs, or blew them out to sea. Yet, with
helplessly far
singular ingenuity, their builders constructed them with
double skins and with water-tight compartments, long be-
fore the sea-kings of the west dreamed of such safeguards.
The early voyages of the Chinese were merely coasting
trips made by the river boats, which crawled timorously
along the shore. No sea-going ships were built until 139
B. C. At the time of the Christian era, the Chinese knew
scarcely anything of the nearest islands to the eastward,
and in the ad century it is doubtful whether they ever
sailedbeyond the extreme point of the Shantung penin-
sula. At this time a fifteen ton boat was considered
enormous. In the 3d century some desultory traffic was
carried on with Japan, but after that period the extension
of sea commerce was slow. At the beginning of the 5th
century Java had not been reached, and not until fifty
years later did Chinese junks venture as far as Ceylon and
the Persian Gulf. 1
All this is doubly significant as show-
1
De Lacouperie, cit. sup.
ANCIENT CHINESE ASTRONOMY. 79
get it
originally from India. They knew of it as early as
250 A. D., but then only used it in fire-crackers. No evi-
dence exists of its use as an agent of warfare earlier than
the middle of the I2th century, nor did the Chinese know
anything of its propulsive effects until the reign of Yung
1
Heronis Alexandrium :
Spiritalium Liber, Urbini, 1575, s. 29, xxi.
1
For other Patristic writers referring to this same delusion see Euge-
nius: Opusculorum, P. ii., xxviii.
Also Aldhelm :
Aenigmata. Lib. de Septenario et de metris 8. De
maguete ferrifero.
ST. AUGUSTINE ON THE MAGNET. 89
yet work, and which we cannot bring under the very eyes
of men, skeptics keep demanding that we shall explain
these by reason, and because we cannot do so, inasmuch
as they are above human comprehension, they say that
we are speaking falsely."
l
St. Gregorius Nyssenus also describes the communica-
tion of the magnetic virtue from one piece of iron to an-
other with simple accuracy, but in most of the Patristic
writings which refer to it the phenomenon is dealt with as
illustrative of the attraction of the soul to Deity, of Divine
control, or of the permeation of the Holy Spirit.
"For although God appeared to material things," says
Tertullian, "yet He did not injure them because of grace,
2
and approached, but did not become of them, like the mag-
net to iron. " "If the magnet and amber have the strength
3
to draw rings and reeds and chaff," says St. Jerome, "how
much the more irresistibly can the Lord of all created
things draw unto Himself that which He desires." St.
1
Hist. Eccles., lib. ii., 294.
2
Draper : Int. Dev. of Europe, i.. 320.
8
Lib. 5, c., 100. *Lib. Sim. Med., ix.
CLAUDIAN'S IDYL. 93
time, and who, though far less known than the preceding
philosopher, nevertheless invented the distillation of sea-
water, and suggested that the same process might be ap-
plied to wine.
1
He said that the attraction of magnet and
of amber is inexplicable, in which he agreed with the
Chinese philosopher Kouopho but to him is appar-
;
ently due the credit of having evolved the theory that the
magnet actually eats and feeds on iron, a notion which
lasted some twelve hundred
years, and was very prevalent
in the i6th century. Marcellus Empiricus, 2 physician to
Theodosius the Great, wrote that the magnet both at-
tracted and repelled iron, the last property being termed
by him antiphyson. This, however, was in the 4th
century A. D., and hence long after Lucretius and Plu-
tarch had referred to the same phenomenon.
From the grave homilies of Jerome or the sombre lines
3
of Lucretius to the gay and voluptuous idyl of Claudian
is a far cry; but the subject which could inspire the saint
which even the greatest of its poets has not disdained to use.
With Roman Empire the com-
the decadence of the
mentator waxed more and more in strength, and original
thought became correspondingly enfeebled. Men forgot
or feared to consult nature, to seek for new truths, to do
what the great discoverers of other times had done; they
were content to consult libraries, to study and defend old
opinions, to talk of what great geniuses had said.
1
Thus
no new gold was mined, but the supply on hand was
beaten to the last degree of tenuity or twisted into a
myriad of forms. The three things which blocked progress
were the overshadowing claims of religion to the sole
domination of the reflecting mind, the prevalence of the
Platonic doctrine that all science may be evolved by the
use of the reason, and the disposition to dispute about
terms, or to seek new facts by new and subtle collocations
of words in the endeavor to read nature through books.
From these there became evolved first, a blind faith in
the supernatural, and in its constant intervention in the
physical world; second, an imagination capable of conceiv-
ing such interference as occurring under any and all cir-
cumstances, and as being the one and the sole explanation
for everything that was in the least respect phenomenal;
his gods that they invaded every motive and act of his
life, was a freshness, a fragrance, a childlike
at least there
1
In some editions called Agib, the third calendar.
THE MAGNETIC MOUNTAINS. 97
almost close to they fell asunder, and all the nails and
it
*Lane: The Thousand and One Nights. Lond., 1859, 161. This col-
lection was first made known in Europe about the end of the I7th cen-
tury by Galland, from a manuscript brought from Syria dated 1584. The
stories probably date from about the middle of the isth century.
2
Geography, lib. vii., c. 2.
7
98 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
of the earth now begin. In a treatise attributed to St.
Ambrose, a Theban story-teller recounts exactly the same
1
1
De Moribus Brachmannorum. Ed. Bissaeus. L/ond.. 1665, p. 59.
2
Thou King Pen Thsao., cit. by Klaproth (cit. sup.), p. 117.
3
"Then from the wall, the Scylding warder, who had charge of the
cliff, beheld them carrying over the gunwale their bright shields, their
2
Taisuier : De Nat. Magnet, 1562.
8
Lane (cit. sup.), says that the Arab author El-Kazweenee (in Ajaib el-
Makhlookat) in his account of minerals, places the mine of lodestone on
the shore of the Indian Sea, and reports that if the ships which navigate
this sea approach the mine or contain anything of iron it flies from them
like a bird, and adheres to the mountain for which reason it is the
;
sight of shore.
quality that it was liable to split or crack like earthenware,
so that nails, even if they had been available, could not be
driven into it. The planks, after being bored, were
fastened to the stem and stern posts by wooden pins, and
were then bound together with ropes made from the
fibrous husk of the cocoanut, the cocoa fiber or coir of the
2
present time. Marco Polo, after describing these boats,
that
u are of the worst kind and
says they dangerous for
navigation, exposing the merchants and others who make
use of them to great hazards." Being unfit to venture
upon the open sea, these vessels were of necessity kept near
land. Hence they were constantly exposed to danger from
reefs and shoals, and especially from such currents as the
Arabian Nights story-teller mentions, w hich swept them 7
J
The Three Voyages of Vasco da Gama. Hakluyt. Soc. London, 1869,
240.
2
Travels of Marco Polo. London, 1854, 20-21.
'See Thevet: Cosmog. Univ., p. 445. Azuni Dissert, sur
: la Boussole
(cit. sup.)
EARLY ARAB NAVIGATION. 103
Arab travelers found their way into China long before any
Europeans did so; and it is said that the knowledge of silk
was by this means brought to the western world during the
latter period of the Abbasides, and fully five hundred years
2
before Marco Polo's famous voyage. The discovery of
ancient Chinese oil bottles, bearing on them quotations
from the Chinese poets, in Egypt and Asia Minor, is
considered proof of commercial connection between the
3
Arabs and Chinese, prior to the middle of the I3th century.
And the known fact that Arabian vessels did constantly
sail from the Persian Gulf to the Chinese coast, has been
the largest ships, encountered did not exceed 200 tons bur-
den and were of very weak construction, adds that "no
one ever navigates these seas with the compass, but with
certain quadrants of wood, which appears to be very diffi-
cult, principally when the weather is foggy and the stars
cannot be seen." Contrariwise it is asserted that the
Arabs, at the time of da Gama, were instructed in so many
of the arts of navigation that they did not yield much to
the Portugese mariners in the science and practice of mari-
time matters. 2
It is obvious that even up to the end of the i5tli century
a decided doubt exists as to the use of the compass by any
Arab or Indian navigators. Nor can anything be inferred
in their favor, even if it be conceded that the Chinese ves-
selswere employing it on the Indian Ocean. The Chinese
are not a communicative people, and, whether as a marine
or a land device, the magnetic needle has always been re-
Travels, 31.
3
Barrow, cit. sup.
106 THE INTELLECTUAL RISK IN ELECTRICITY.
1
Dixon :
Migration of Birds. London, 1892. Simcox : Prim. Civiliza-
tion, cit. sup.
THE ARABS AND THE COMPASS. 107
introduction.
Our
present inquiry, however, is to determine what, if
anything, the Spanish Moors contributed to the science,
the development of which we are studying; and to this I
now address myself.
By the middle of the eighth century, the Arabs through-
out their whole empire, from Syria to the Atlantic, had
begun to turn from the study of the Koran to that of
science and profane literature. They went to the Greeks
for their philosophy, and translated into Arabic the works
of Aristotle and Plato, Euclid, Apollonius, Ptolemy,
Hippocrates and Galen, undefiled by the distortions of
the Christian revisers, and untrammeled by the theological
dicta of any religious system. The syllogism of the
Stagirite commended itself to the subtle Saracen intellect,
and the disputations of the shady walks of Athens, long
since silenced, became again heard in the schools which
flanked the mosques from one end of the Mediterranean to
the other.
In Spain the awakening was even more thorough, and
the progress more swift; for the men of action outstripped
the men of thought. Cordova produced her unrivaled
leather, and pointed to a paved street ten miles long and
brilliantly lighted at night. Toledo brought forth her
sword-blades, which still laugh the modern armorers' art
to scorn. The Arabic numeral, arithmetic, algebra and
chemistry came into the world. Rice and sugar and
cotton and spinach and saffron and nearly every fine
garden and orchard fruit followed the conquerors from the
east. The vineyards of Xeres and Malaga then first
yielded their famous wines. Art took on new and fas-
THE ARABS AND THE COMPASS. 109
1
Capmany : Memorias Historicas Sobre la Marina, Commercio, etc.
Madrid, 1792.
CHAPTER V.
the Saxons, and the Swedes worried the Finns, and the
Norwegians came upon any and all of them and conse-
;
l
L,andnamabok: i., c. 2, \ 7. Wheaton: History of Northmen, London,
1831. Mallet: Northern Antiquities, 188.
This use of crows or ravens for finding the way at sea is believed to
have been common among the Northmen, and there may have been a
particular variety of these birds trained for the purpose and consecrated
thereto by religious rites which fell into disuse on the introduction of
Christianity; a probability strengthened by the fact that the raven was
the bird of Odin, the raven god, Hrafnagud, as he is called in the Scald
poetry.
The Icelandic saga was written in the nth century, and hence its di-
rect reference to the non-use of the magnet at an earlier period has been
undoubted knowledge of the compass at the date of the
cited to establish
work. The however, was left uncompleted by its original author,
latter,
and it was glossed by many writers up to the time of Hauk, the son of
Enland, who entirely re-made it in the I4th century so that the refer-
ence belongs to that date and not to a period three centuries earlier.
See Klaproth, L,' Invention de la Boussole, cit. sup.
2
Flateyjarb6k, i., 429; Du Chaillu :
Viking Age, cit. sup., 18.
8
114 TH E INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
1
still was the first journey of Bjarni to America, and as to
this the Saga says that ''after three days' sailing, land
was out of sight and the fair winds ceased and northern
winds with fog blew continually, so that, for many days,
they did not know in what direction they were sailing"
a statement which completely negatives the presence of
the compass, even without the aid of the ensuing descrip-
tion of how the ships afterwards sailed in sight of the
shore.
We have now to turn to the Anglo-Saxons. A century
and a half after the pirate ships of Hengist had appeared
off Thanet, the "strangers from Rome," sent by Gregory
the Great, marched into Canterbury with censers burning,
the silver cross borne aloft, and chanting the solemn litany
of the Church: so returned into England the Latin tongue,
and with it Christianity. In the reign of Aelfred came
peace, long enough for the establishment of order and the
beginning of the teaching of the people. Of all the great
things which Aelfred did, the most significant with respect
to our present research, are the opening of channels of
1
Harrison, W. : A Description of England. Lond., 1577. Book in.,
c. 12.
2
Aldhelm: Lib de Septenario et de Metris. Ep. viii. De Magnete
Ferrifero.
3
Wright, T.: Popular Treatises on Science during the Middle Ages.
London, 1841.
Il6 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
sonal contest with the Devil, his neighbors threw him into
a pond to determine whether he was, in fact, a wizard or
not; and when Ailmer of Malmesbury, having invested
himself with a pair of wings, jumped from a steeple and
broke his legs, they ascribed his failure to evil influences
with which he had paltered, and not, as he insisted, to his
1
1
William Appulus (apud Muratori, v.) lib, iii., 267.
2
Gibbon The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire,
: c. Ivi.
3
Hallam : Literature of Europe, Part I , c. i., \ 10.
Il8 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
1
Alexander Neckam, lib. ii. London, 1863, quoting MSS.
Wright, T.
James Wright's Latin text of Neckam's treatise and his
Coll., vii. 34.
biographical introduction thereto, have been followed in the present
chapter.
ALEXANDER NECKAM. 121
persisted even in the Royal Society at the end of the I7th cen-
tury. Phil. Trans., No. 137, p. 927, vol. xii., 1677-8.
ALEXANDER NECKAM. 123
land; the dog which manages the sails of a boat which its
master steers ;
the wren which hides under the eagle's
wing and when the eagle rises in the air above all other
birds, slips out and flutters over him and so wins the con-
*Cap. xcviii.
124 TH 3 INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
1
tion and its needs. This was practically giving to the
nature-soul of the ancient Greeks a selective capacity.
In the 9th and loth centuries the Arabs applied the same
doctrine to the magnet. Serapion says that a solvent
medicine, when it reaches the stomach, then draws with
an attractive virtue the humor suitable to itself, but it is
1
Martin : Obs'ns and Theories of the Ancients on Magnetic Attractions
and Repulsions. See also Atti dell' Accademia Pont, de Nuovi Liucei,
T. xviii., 1864-5.
2
Steinschneider : Intorno ad alcuni passi di Opere del Medio Evo rela-
tivi alia calamita. Rome, 1868.
8
Lib. Practicae, lib. ii. c., 53.
*The Adventures of Hadji Baba. Ed. by J. Morier, N. Y., 1855, p. 98.
ALEXANDER NECKAM. 135
1
navem habet etiam acum jaculo sup-
''Qui ergo tnunitam vult habere
positam. Rotabitur enim et circumvolvetur acus, donee cuspis acus
respiciat orientem; sicque comprehendunt quo tendere debeant nautae
cum Cynosura latet in aeris turbatione; quamvis ad occasum numquam
tendat, propter circuli brevitatem." Wright, T. A Volume of Vocabu-
:
ii.
p. 41. D'Avezac points out that the statement in the original that the
needle directs itself to the East is evidently an error, and translates the
somewhat ambiguous clause with reference to the Little Bear as given
above. In this Bertelli concurs, but dissents from D' Avezac's rendering of
" " " " and
suppositam as if it were superpositam consequent translation
of "acum jaculo suppositam " as " a needle mounted on a pivot." It is
thought that Bertelli is right, on the principle that no physical discovery
ought to be ante-dated merely by a possible change in the signification
of words. The burden of proof is on D'Avezac not only to demonstrate
that his rendering is reasonable, but also from other sources to show
that a pivoted compass was known at or about Neckam's time; and this
he fails to do.
9
130 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
formation afforded by the early writers, whose works ap-
peared shortly after Neckatn's treatises.
The needle was not in constant use, as
it is now, on a
and as this has always been found true of his species since
time whereof the memory of man runneth not to the con-
trary, there is no reason to believe that the mariners who
took their liberty in the streets of Wisbuy differed mate-
rially in modes of thought and action from those who
congregate to-day in the great maritime ports of the world.
Jack came ashore, and probably spent his hard-earned
" beach
wages and fought the combers" and the "rock
" and became the
scorpions prey of the crimps of Wisbuy
and the terror of its police, just as he does now at Gibral-
tar,or Liverpool, or Hong Kong; while the owners and
the masters and the average adjusters and the sea-lawyers
wrangled over questions of jettison and demurrage and
collision with the same fervor that brings them nowadays
into the Admiralty Courts. The consequence was that
two sets of locally-devised laws came into existence, ad-
ministered by the consulate courts or authorities of the
city the one known as the Ordinances of Wisbuy, con-
136 THK INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
1
Olans Magnus, cit. sup., says "The laws for sea affairs and the de-
:
cisions of all controversies severally, far and wide, as far as the pillars of
Hercules and the utmost Scythian Sea, are fetched from thence, and are
observed being given, that all things may be done in a due tranquillity
;
the wind by sticking his knife into the mast is firmly believed by the old
man-of-war's man. Whether any possible connection exists between the
insertion of the knife for this purpose, and the savage Norse punishment
also involving driving the knife into the mast, noted hereafter as a
pen-
alty for tampering with the compass, may interest those curious in in-
vestigating such matters.
140 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
mer solstice, and the last two the same at the winter solstice.
3
This region coincides closely with that in which Bailly conceived a
prehistoric people of high civilization to have arisen and from which it
migrated. (Lettres sur 1'Origine des Sciences. Paris, 1777.) See also
Ency. Brit., 7th ed.
142 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
the ship, and of all the lives she carries, directly depends.
Even a slight error in its indication may lead the vessel
far out of her course or into fatal perils. That this must
have been perceived by the first sailors who used it, is
iron wire heated red hot and quenched in the juice of the
1
Magia Naturalia, 1589, Lib. vii., c. 48.
2
Ross :
Arcana, 192.
3
De Subtilitate, lib. vii., 474.
*
Numerous theories have been evolved to explain the origin of this
fiction. The most ingenious is that noted by Bertelli in his Memoirs of
Peregrinus (Mem. ii., p. 39). He says that the passage in Pliny's Nat.
" Ferrum ad se trahente
History, magnete lapide et alio (theamede)
rtirsus abigente a sese," is given in some codices so that "alio" reads
"
allio," thus transforming "other" into "garlic." This hypothesis re-
lieves Pliny of responsibility for the error, and places it upon some un-
known transcriber.
5
Initia Doctrinse Physicse. Wittenberg, 1575, 221.
6
Pseudodoxia Epidemica, ii., iii.
144 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
t
CHAPTER VI.
THE
thirteenth century found ecclesiastical authority
sovereign in every department of thought. It was an
offence against religion, as well as against reason, to reject
the truth and the truth, it was insisted, was in the dogmas
;
Jal :
Arche"ologie Navale. Paris, 1840, 208. De la Rue Essais Hist,
:
stir les Bardes, les Jongleurs et les Trouveres. Caen, 1834. Wright :
1
The free translation is the author's. Wright, T.: Biog. Brit, cit. sup.
2
Author's translation. Bulletin du Bibliophile, cit. sup.
WILLIAM THE CLERK. 151
a
The Lateran Council of 1215. See Lea: History of the Inquisition',
cit. infra.
152 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
"Thy ministers rob here and murder there,
And o'er thy sheep a wolf has shepherd's care,"
1203 and 1208, and it brings all sorts and conditions of men
under the lash, beginning with monarchs and ending with
u
theologues, priests and physicians."
The second book is devoted to the clergy, and opens
with a criticism of the Pope himself. It might well be
supposed that such startling audacity would have brought
the earthly pilgrimage of the writer to an abrupt conclu-
sion but Guyot was speaking only the popular thought,
;
Wolfart, J. F.: Des Guiot von Provins bis jetzt bekannten Dichtim-
1
Guyot's poem has been so frequently published during the last cen-
tury that its bibliography is now A carefully f dited
quite voluminous.
154 TH E INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
text appears in Wol fart's work (cit. sup.),and in Fabliaux et Contes des
Poetes Franois des xi., xii., xiii., xiv. and xvme siecles. Nouv. ed.
Paris, 1808, pp. 327-8. Bertelli, in his Memoria sopra P. Peregrinus, 59,
gives the poem, and a partial bibliography in a foot-note. An English
translation of it appears in Lorimer's Essay on Magnetism. London,
1795-
1
Historiae Hierosolimitanae, cap. 89.
THE MAGNETIC FIELD OF FORCE. 155
'
1
Author's translation. Nannucci: Man. della Lett. Florence, 1856,
8 r. Bertelli: Mem. sopra Peregrinus, 35.
'Colliget, V.
8
In Phys., VII., lect. 3. See, also, Albertus Magnus :
Phys., lib. VIII.,
tract. 2.
'Riccioli :
Geograph. and Hydrograph., lib. x., cap. 18.
2
Torfaeus: Hist. Norweg., lib. iv., 345.
158 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
held to the point which respects the north the iron will
turn to the north; which is untrue, for the pole of the
pole will turn to the south, and not to the north. But the
substance of what is said, whether right or wrong, is of
much less moment than the historical fact that here prob-
ably began that complex tangle of relations between the
poles of the lodestone, the poles of the needle magnetized
from by induction, the poles of the heavens, and, later,
it
4
the poles of the earth, in which the philosophers of the
1 6th century were even more hopelessly enmeshed than
having a north and south polarity. The end which points to the north
magnetic pole of the earth is, of course, south in polarity, although it is
often marked N, and spoken of as the north pole of the needle. French
writers frequently omit the inversion, and designate by north end of the
needle that which in fact points southerly. Maxwell proposed the
terms "positive" or "austral" magnetism to indicate that of the north
end of the magnet, and ''negative" or "boreal" magnetism that of the
south end. So also it has been suggested to speak of the poles alter-
as
" red " and " common to call
nately blue." gradually becoming
It is
the extremity of the needle which turns to the north the "north seek-
ing" or "marked" end.
LODESTONE SUPERSTITIONS. 159
2
Lewes: Hist, of Philosophy. London, 1867, ii. 77.
ROGER BACON. l6l
not only this, but also that this revolving motion was
seemingly about an axis, the intersection of which with
the celestial vault marked the places of the poles of the
universe. The conception of such poles was of still more
ancient date. The story of Creation, deciphered from the
broken and scattered remains of Assyrian and Babylonian
tablets, recounts how "Maidtik embellished the heavens,
prepared places for the great gods, made the stars, set the
Zodiac * * * and fixed the poles." This carries the idea
of these points back fully to 3,000 B. C. ;
but it probably
had its rise very much earlier in prehistoric times. The
Kushite-Semite race, who were the first imperial rulers of
the primeval world, called themselves "sons of the pole,"
and substituted, for the reckoning of time by the Pleiades,
one founded on so purely a physical motion of the heavenly
pole, that they conceived the heavens to move about it
with friction a fact which they deemed proved by the ap-
;
(165)
l66 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
Claud. Ep. xxi. In Sphaerum Archim., Sext. Empiric, adv. Math. ix.
15. Lactantius: Div. Inst., ii. 5. Ov.: Fast vi. 277. Smith: Diet, of Gr.
and Rom. Biog. and Myth. i. 2711.
PETER PEREGRINUS. 167
and then fell all of the old theory which began with the
"theamedes," and ended with the supposed power of the
magnet to repel as well as to attract iron. Two
stones
he says, are to be prepared, and the poles determined
and marked by cuts. One stone is to be placed in a
cup, and floated as before. The other stone is to be held
in the hand. Then, "if the north part of the stone, which
you hold, be brought to the south part of the stone floating
in the vessel, the floating stone will follow the stone you
Peregrinus does not lay down the further law, that like
magnetic poles repel for,
; singularly enough, he does not
recognize any actual repulsion occurring between these
poles of like name, but assumes that the stone merely
turns itself around so that the law already stated may
come into play that so that unlike poles may attract
is,
one another. Finally, he attacks the theory that the iron
is the natural affinity of the magnet, and that the magnet
will attract iron rather than another magnet. Here he
finds further support in the doctrine of similitudes, which,
174 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
aswe have seen, was so generally prevalent. The magnet,
he thought, attracted the magnet more powerfully than
the iron because the magnet was like the magnet; and he
uses the same illustration given by Neckam the attrac-
tion of scammony for bile.
The more one reads of this remarkable letter, the more
evident becomes the conflict in the mind of Peregrinus
between the conclusions drawn from experiment, and
those deduced from existing theories and speculations. It
is also curious to note how much further he had extricated
cutting, and two of the four poles which the two frag-
ments possessed have seemingly vanished. That is the
first announcement of the persistence of polarity in the
1
In the printed copy of Peregrinus' letter which the British Museum
possesses, Dr.John Dee, Queen Elizabeth's favorite astrologer, has cov-
ered the pages relating to them with underscorings and diagrams, as if
he regarded that part of the work as the most important of all.
THE SOURCE OF MAGNETIC VIRTUE. 177
the north and south line, he moves this bar until the
shadows of the pins coincide with the longitudinal axis
of the bar; and simply notes the angle between the final
direction of the bar and the north and south line marked
on the edge of his bowl. To do this he has to hold the
bowl steady with one hand, as he describes, and move
the bar around its center with the other. Then, of course,
he has only to read on his scale the angle between the bar
and the north and south line, and he has the solar azi-
muth. In a similar way he can find the direction of the
1
From Bertelli, cit. sup.
PEREGRINUS' COMPASS. l8l
PEREGRINUS' COMPASS.
posed within the ring, with its end close to the teeth.
The magnet was fixed. The description of the operation
isunintelligible, but presumably Peregrinus expected that
the magnet would draw the prominent portion of each
tooth to itself, and then the momentum of the wheel would
184 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
carry the tooth beyond the magnet, and then the magnet
would attract the protruding portion of the next succes-
sive tooth,which he probably imagined would be brought
nearer to than would the rapidly-retreating face of the
it
magnet.
He invented the first mariner's compass which could be
constantly used to steer by as we steer by it now, instead
of being employed merely to indicate the diiection of the
Pole star the first compass having a fiducial or "lubber's"
;
1
The Opus Mr jus was not published until 1733, nor the Opus Minus
and Opus Tertium until 1859, and not a single doctor of the thirteenth
and fourteenth centuries mentions Bacon either for blame or praise.
Charles, E.: Roger Bacon, sa vie, etc. Paris, 1861, p. 31.
FLAVIO GIOJA. 187
from 1318, and hence it has been supposed that both the
star and the pivoted needle were invented by Mediter-
ranean rather than by northern mariners, at some period
between the time of Peregrinus' letter and the above-
named year.
The suggestion that any part of the compass is of Italian
origin recalls at once the man whom the world, for scores
of years, believed to be the inventor of the entire instru-
ment, and whom many modern encyclopaedists, and Italian
writers generally, still delight as such to honor. Flavio
Gioja,
1
or Giri, or Gira (for the name is in doubt), lived
phor.
1
Raymond Lully, metaphysician and monk, entangles
*De Contemplatione. Capmany : Memories Historias Sobre la Mar-
ina. Madrid, 1792, I, 73.
THE COMPASS CARD. 191
1
Canto XII., v. 28.
2
Da
Buti, Francesco: Comment. Sopra la Div. Commedia. Pisa, 1862.
3
Treatise on the Astrolabe. Ed. Skeat. Early Eng. Hist. Soc. Lon-
don, 1872.
THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
Peregrinus and Peter Adsiger were found in the text-books and histories,
and so appear even up to to-day. But the name " Adsiger " was simply
a translator's blunder, and is a part of the Latin dedication of the letter
which Peter writes to Sigerus (Ad Sigerum). On such small errors as
this, fame too often depends.
Some question has been raised as to whether certain of Peregrinus'
discoveries were not earlier made by Dr. Jean de St. Amand, who was a
celebrated physician and a canon of the cathedral church of Tournay.
He lived "after the year 1261," but just when is not known. He seems
to have been merely a copyist who restates Peregrinus' conclusions in
an obscure way.
CHAPTER VIII.
1
Major, R. H., F. S. A.: Select Letters of Columbus. Hakluyt Soc.,
London, 1870. Introduct., p. xlvii. Humboldt: Ex. Critique. Vol. i.,
pp. 64, 70.
196 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
1
True, much has been written (See Libri: Hist, des Sci. Math, en Italic.
Paris, 1830, vol. ii., 71. Formaleoni: Saggio Sulla Nautica Antica del
Veneziaui. Venice, 1783, 51-2. Humboldt: Cosmos, v. Irving: Life of
Columbus) concerning an old chart made in 1436 by Andrea Blanco, and
now in the Library of St. Mark in Venice, upon which appears a figure
supposed to represent the points of the compass with a correction for
variation. This, however, Bertelli (Sulla Epistola di P. Peregrine.
Rome, 1868, niem. iii., 77.), has investigated and finds no suggestion of
variation present the correction simply being that necessary to apply to
the courses of a ship sailing on rhumbs of the compass (as N. E., N. W.)
to keep clear of the loxodromic curve, or endless spiral due to the cur-
vature angle between the earth and the meridian, which would never
lead to any determined point. I shall not take
space here to repeat Ber-
telli's demonstration of this
error; while the other anticipations upon
which he comments are merely inferences which he
easily disproves.
198 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
1
The sun's true amplitude is the number of degrees that the sun rises
or sets to the northward or southward of the east or west points of the
horizon. As the sun has no variation, by means of such an observation
the variation between the true north and the magnetic north as indicated
by the compass can be determined.
Hist. del S. D. Fernando Colombo * * * dei fatti del 1'Ammiraglio D.
a
would point east, with another west, and so on; and in fact
he says that those who rub the needles cover the stone
with a cloth so that the north part only is exposed, and
the needle being touched with this possesses the virtue of
1
ing these hundred leagues from the said islands, the needle
of the compass, which hitherto had turned toward the
northeast, tivrned a full quarter of the wind to the north-
west, and this took place from the time when we reached
2
that line."
He even drew a deduction from his observations which
is curious, and characteristic of both the man and the
time :
ing the variation of the circle which the North star de-
scribed with its satellites."
The denial of credit to Columbus for the actual discov-
.
Critique de 1'Hist. de la Ge"og., vol. iii., p 44-48. Cosmos,
i., 169-197; v., 49-60.
2
He Columbus "had the great merit of
also says (Cosmos, v. 54) that
Thus, in
May, 1496, when the Genoese and the Flem-
ish compasses on the ships of Columbus were found to
disagree, one varying to the northwest and the other in-
dicating the star, Columbus himself concludes the reason
to be the difference in the magnets with which the needles
were rubbed. In such rudely constructed instruments as
then existed, it was equally possible to have assigned the
errors to difference in shape of the needles, or weakness
of magnetization, while it is not at all unlikely that both
their form and treatment resulted in the production of con-
1
Humholdt: Cosmos. Lond. 1872, vol. v., 56.
2
Poeti del Primo Secolo della lingua Ital. Florence, 1816.
8
Lea: Hist, of Inquisition, vol. iii., 444.
204 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
1
Ill Jerome Fracastorio questioned the existence
1546,
of the polar mountains, and says that Bishop Oviedo, hav-
ing made diligent inquiry "about that part of Sannatia
now called Moscovia," could find no such elevations.
Olaus Magnus, 2 who lived in the North, however, not
only affirms the existence of the mountains, but directly
avers that the "compass follows them in direction." He
also finds an island near the Arctic circle where the
needle becomes demagnetized.
If the magnetic mountains of the North governed the
1
De Sympathia Opera, Venice, 1555, 103.
;
2
de Gent. Sept. Rome, 1555, lib., ii., c. xxxvi.
Hist,
3
Op. Mathematica. Venice, 1575.
4
Breve Compendia- de la Sphera: The Arts of Navigation, trans, by R.
Eden. London, 1561.
PORTUGUESE VOYAGES. 205
cumnavigated.
Thus the first practical application of electricity to
human use for of electricity it must be remembered
magnetism is but one form had resulted in the greatest
of human achievements. And
the consequences who
shall measure even the most immediate of them? The
whole commercial condition of civilization profoundly
changed ;
new political questions engendered, to precipi-
tate new conflicts amid the clashing interests of the
nations ;
new interminglings of races ;
new issues of re-
all, making them all possible, lay the slender bit of mag-
netized iron, quivering on its pivot yet always looking to
the far north.
the needle does not stand any longer balanced, but inclines
downwardly about nine degrees more or less. I have not
been able to demonstrate to his Majesty the cause of this
phenomenon." This was the first announcement, after
'4
2IO THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
1
dip, is easily accounted for by the fact that his needle was
arranged on a vertical, instead of a horizontal pivot and ;
2
hence was impeded in inclining.
ii. Also, Volpicelli : Intorno alle prime scoperte della propriety che
appartengono al magnete, Atti dell. Accad. Pontif. de' Nuovi Lincei,
Vol. XXX., 8 March, 1866.
ROBERT NORMAN. 211
The man who gave to the world the first correct knowl-
edge and who is most commonly credited with the dis-
covery of the dip is Robert Norman, an instrument maker
of Bristol, England, who, in 1576, announced his achieve-
ment in a little treatise called the "Newe Attractive." 2
THE
MAGNES OR I.OADSTONE'8 CHALLENGE.
Give place ye glittering sparks,
ye glimmering Diamonds bright,
Ye Rubies red, ye Saphires brave,
wherein ye most delight.
In breefe yee stones euricht,
and burnisht all with gold,
Set forth in Lapidaries shops,
for Jewels to be sold.
Give place, give place I say,
your beautie, gleame, and glee,
Is all the vertue for the which
man puts it, "that if the compasse or needle shew not the
pole, the fault is in placing the wiers
on the flie, and not
in any propertie it hath to vary."
All of these earlier theorists he thinks went "farre wide
from the Attractive point," and the reason they did so is
their ignorance of a "certaine Declining propertie under
the Horizon, lately found in the needle." This is his dis-
covery, which he describes in the following terms "Hav- :
that all the world turns to his lady because of her beauty,
even as the needle to the lodestone, and the complaint
1
The foregoing extracts are from the Paramirum of Paracelsus. See
his Life by Mr. Franz Hartmann London, 1887, pp. 138-431).
'
v
CHAPTER IX.
AMONG men of the past, whose true greatness the
the
world is now tardily appreciating, stands Pietro
only
Sarpi, better known by his monastic name of Fra Paolo,
1
Sarpi, 1760. Giovini: Vita, etc., Brussels, 1836. Micanzio: Vita, etc.,
Verona, 1750. Fabronio: Vitae Italorum, 'Pisa, 1798, xvii.
(224)
FRA PAOLO. 225
I
228 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
down and the iron sent to a blacksmith to be straightened,
and while it lay in the smithy, Cesare, by chance, noticed
that it possessed attractive properties. By an odd co-
incidence the church was dedicated to St. Augustine so ;
that one might almost fancy that the influence of the Saint
whose discoveries concerning the magnet have already
been noted, was somehow still potent to lead others in the
same path. The circumstance puzzled the philosophers
greatly for how, they asked, could iron which is a metal
;
1
Philosophia Magnetica. Ferrara, 1629, lib. i., c. xvi.
2
Mem. sopra Peregrinus, 24.
230 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
ple. Nor did this relation cease even after great honors
Tiraboschi: Storia della Lett. Ital. Firenze, 1810, vol. vii., 495.
PORTA AND SARPI. 233
stand that the Pole sends its force to the Circumference. And as the
light of a Candle is spread everyway, and enlightens the Chamber; and
the farther it is off from it, the weaker it shines, and at too great a dis-
tance is lost; and the neerer it is, the more cleerly it illuminates: so the
force flies forth at that point and the neerer
;
the more forcibly it
it is,
attracts and the further off, the more and if it be set too far
;
faintly :
off, it vanisheth quite, and doth nothing. Wherefore for that we shall
say of it, and mark it for, we shall call the length of its force the com-
pass of its Virtues." Note passim the old use of the English word
"compass" for "sphere."
236 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
virtue, this iron will attract another iron, and the one so
attracted willdraw another, and thus you may see a chain
of needles or rings in the air hanging." (The Samothra-
cian rings, with the upper one not in contact with the
lodestone but magnetized therefrom by induction.) "But
while the chain exists, if you gradually remove the magnet
for a short distance, the last ring falls, and then the next,
and so on in succession all fall, and thus you see the stone
is able to cause its virtue in the iron without contact."
It is curious to note how this led Porta into a false con-
clusion. He supposed that the sphere of virtue around the
" To a
friend, that is at a far distance from us, fast shut
up in prison, we may relate our minds; which I do not
doubt may be done by two Mariner's compasses having the
alphabet writ about them."
So came into the world the fancy which finds its modern
embodiment in the great wire cobweb which envelops the
earth and brings all people into converse, as it were face to
so, by rays from the Bear that is, the North star or Arctic
u lodestoiie attracts iron because of a
pole and the superior
grade in the properties of the Bear." Following the pre-
vailing notions, he would naturally have accounted for the
attractive quality ofamber in the same way; for, as I have
stated, no one had drawn any distinction between the effects
of the stone and the resin. But it is significant to note
that Ficino does not do this, because he has clearly found
out that, while the magnet attracts iron and points to the
North pole and hence is controlled by the latter, amber
does not attract iron but chaff, and does not point to the
North pole at all. Yet because iron, under a supposed
control, attracts, so some must likewise be assumed
control
for amber, because itan attractive quality, although
also has
of a different character. Therefore he triumphantly con-
cludes that it is not the Arctic pole, but the Antarctic
pole which influences the resin and the argument stands
forth in symmetrical perfection; the lodestone is a thing,
which is caused to attract iron by the Arctic pole the :
1
Hier. Fracastorii, Veronensis: Opera Omnia. Venice, 1555. Lib.
de Sympathia et Antipathia.
2
Biographic Universelle, Art. Fracastorio. La Grande Encyclopedic,
Paris, 1893, Vol. 17.
JEROME CARDAN. 243
healing art.
There have been numerous later editions. The first French translation
is dated 1556, and this I have used.
JEROME CARDAN. 247
2
Agricola: De la Natura de le Cose Fossili. Venice, 1544. lib. iv.
248 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
portance lies in the fact that, good or bad, it was the first
supposed impaired He
its force. knew that the power
could not thus be cut off.
This having been said in the sixteenth century and not
in the nineteenth, the necessity obtruded itself of reconcil-
2
Meryon The History of Medicine, London,
: 1861.
THE PHYSICIANS AS DISCOVERERS. 255
college in London.
The rise in electricityhad slowly taken place throughout
all Europe, indeed, the world, and therein many na-
all
(258)
WILLIAM GILBERT. 259
and no doubt upon this ground, that they find that medi-
ocrity and excellency in their art maketh no difference in
profit or reputation towards their fortune; for the weak-
ness of patients, and sweetness of life, and nature of hope,
maketh men depend upon physicians with all their de-
fects." But the official honors which Gilbert received
included all which his profession could give; and, as none
of the foregoing influences, however much they
might
have conduced to his material support, imply the Presi-
dency of the Royal College of Physicians, and the ex
officio status of professional primacy, it may safely be con-
1
Bacon: Advt. of Learning, b. ii., c. x., 2.
26o THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
2
The University of Cambridge Mullinger. Cambridge, 1884. v. ii.,
:
1
T. Allen: A New History of London, 1883, iii., 573.
264 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
was the first association of its kind in England, and the
Chamberlain, who
2
among the students is attested by John
who "
lived with Gilbert and speaks of the town as empty
as if it were dead vacation, nobody at the Doctor's."
Later, when
Gilbert was called to Whitehall, Chamberlain
the U I doubt
predicts disbanding of the society, saying
our college will be dissolved and some of us sent to seeke
our fortune;" and still later, after Gilbert's departure, "the
covie now dispersed," he chronicles somewhat ruefully,
is
1
The title in full is as follows :
1
Fuller: Worthies of England, 16. Morhof: Polyhist. Lit. Lubeck,
1732, Vol. II., 3d ed., 409-
THE COPERNICAN DOCTRINE. 267
men who had sunk the Danish harriers, and who longed
to voyage to Virginia and the strange lands of the New
World, and perchance to find fortune in some gold-logged
galleon on the Spanish Main.
Errors likely to wreck ships, made when the eyes of all
Englishmen were turned to the sea, were likely to prove
doubly harmful, especially as there was nowhere the cor-
rect knowledge necessary to recognize their fallacy, or
even to prevent people presumably expert in such matters
from endorsing them as truths. Edward Wright, in his
prefatory address to Gilbert's treatise, although looking
askance at the magnetic theory of the earth's rotation,
u not see
(nevertheless he does why it should not meet
with indulgence ") grows eloquent over Gilbert's mistaken
idea that the dip of the magnetized needle "differs in the
ratio of the latitude of each region," and that hence, the
GILBERT'S
glory and drawing followers and disciples he took the right course."
Advt. of Learning, B. 2, c. viii., 2. Bacon himself did the same.
GILBERT AND HIS PREDECESSORS. 28 1
axe were living, cutting would be its soul the Matter would be the lens
;
is not now
thinking of a geometrical problem." Aris., De Anima, II, i.,
p. 412, a. 27.
J
St. Thomas Aq.: Sum Theol., I, q. 61.
284 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
he says, neither is it generated thereby through sympathy,
or influence, or other occult qualities: neither is it drawn
from any special star; but the earth has its own proper
magnetic vigor or Form, just as sun and moon have theirs.
Consequently, as a fragment of the sun would arrange
itself under solar laws to conform to the shape and ver-
"
with magnetism. Magnetic bodies,'* he says, "can
restore soundness (when not totally lost) to magnetic bod-
ies, and can give to some greater powers than they origi-
man is directed to place himself facing the north, and to hammer the hot
iron so that it will expand or elongate in a northerly direction.
THE ORB OF VIRTUE. 291
source, and all things which come of the earth return to it.
proceeding from the amber and the other from the magnet,
which is the true Form effused by primordial terrene Mat-
ter? Which the true effused Form of the earth? How is
time in the world's history, but for the first time by the
methods which he had brought into use in finding out the
laws of the lodestone methods which ultimately led, not
:
rub the diamond itself not to rub iron with the diamond
and the attraction thus produced could not be explained
away by inconsequent suggestions that Porta had been mis-
led by a similarity in names, and had confused adamas, the
diamond, with adamas, the lodestone. Besides, however
much Gilbert might flout Cardan, or refute Porta, there re-
mained the clear statement of Fracastorio, whom he knew
to be neither a charlatan nor a mere transcriber, but, on the
contrary, a philosopher of commanding eminence and fame.
In the end Gilbert probably rubbed some of his seventy-
five diamonds and found Cardan and Fracastorio to be
The
great point gained was not perception of the fact
that something else beside amber would attract in the
same way, but the proof of it. The immediately following
questions were: are there any other substances having this
same capability? If so, how many? Are they so few that
the behavior of can be lightly explained away as a
all
lusus natures, and the general hypothesis so saved? Are
they so numerous and of such importance that another
theory, not inconsistent with the first, may be predicated,
which by satisfying the peculiar
will subsist concurrently
all ages, had supposed locked in the amber along with the
terminology.
1
Further on I have noted the origin of other similarly derived words
such as "electrical," etc.
GILBERT'S ELECTROSCOPE. 303
GILBERT'S ELECTROSCOPE. 1
1
From the first edition of Gilbert's treatise De Magnete.
304 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
sky clear and the wind in the east, and that on overcast
days when the breeze is southerly the indications of the
quivering versorium are not to be trusted.
The unexpected revelation of so many substances par-
taking of the amber property made it plain that the field
upon which Gilbert was how entering was wholly new and
untrodden. That he had reached its border through the
<
20
306 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
here a man at the end of the sixteenth century under-
is
powers. Thus
the electric differs entirely from the magnet,
which attracts through any obstacle. Barriers such as the
foregoing therefore act physically to stop the progress of
the material electric effluvium, while they are perfectly
transparent to the immaterial, effused, magnetic Form. In
order to produce this effluvium, the heat generated in the
body itself, not heat contributed by other bodies, must act;
and a gentle and rapid friction must be used, not force
applied violently and recklessly, to cause the finest efflu-
vium to arise from a subtle solution of moisture an ex-
ceedingly attenuated humor, much more rarefied than the
ambient air. To explain how such a humor could be ob-
tained from so dense a body as the diamond, he instances
odoriferous substances which exhale fragrance for cen-
turies; having in mind, perhaps, the still-persistent odor
1
See Spectator, No. 56, May 4, 1711, for this same comparison. Addi-
son describes Albertus Magnus as placing the lodestone on glowing coals
and perceiving " a certain blue vapor to arise from it which he believed
might be the substantial Form: that is, in our West Indian phrase, the
soul of the lodestone. ' '
THE ELECTRIC EFFLUVIUM. 309
clearly the body would begin to move a little after the be-
ginning of the application of the electric. But and here
is the first statement of that marvelous speed of transmis-
1
Ridley: Magneticall Animadversions, London, 1617.
(315)
31 6 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
2
*Nat. Hist., cent, x, 904, et seq. Nov. Org., B. ii, 37.
8
De Augmentis, B. iii, iv.
4
Des. Globi Intellect. Nov. Organum, B. ii, 35.
6
6
De Fluxu et Refluxu Maris. Nov. Org., B. ii, 48.
BACON AND GILBERT. 323
revolve upon poles, but that they direct and turn them-
selves upon poles ... so that the direction and verticity
of the poles in rigid bodies is the same thing as revolving
upon the poles in fluid," which may be left without fur-
ther comment than that the most determined advocate
of the Chancellor will probably find in it no higher evi-
J
De Aug., B. iii, c. iv.
2
De Fluxu et Refluxu Maris.
324 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
1
Nichol: Francis Bacon, his life and his philosophy. Edinburgh,
1889, ii., 181.
BACON'S INFLUENCE ON ELECTRICAL PROGRESS. 331
circle than the best draftsman can without it, and which is
1
Erdmann, History of Philosophy, London, 1890.
2
Brougham, Address on Unveiling of Newton's Statue, 1855.
CHAPTER XII.
THERE no period in the annals of England which is
is
Official statutes declared that Bachelors and Masters of Arts who did
1
not faithfully follow Aristotle were liable to a fine of five shillings for
every point of divergence or for every fault committed against the Or-
ganon. Bruno wittily called Oxford "the widow of sound learning."
Lewes: Biog. Hist, of Philosophy. New York, 1857.
334 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
all his authority in the state, could never raise any college
l
of Solomon but in a romance." Such were the times dur-
ing which the announcement of the electrical discoveries
of Gilbert appeared.
As a Copernican, Gilbert, in his own country, had few
co-believers; and as he had not merely linked his physical
researches to the heliocentric doctrine, but had sought to
substantiate the latter by them, it followed for this reason
that his entire work stood discredited in the eyes of Eng-
lish scholars generally.. But even if he had not adhered
to the new theory, it may well be doubted whether there
was sufficient knowledge of physical science existing in
England to secure for his magnetic and electric discoveries
even a superficial understanding by the learned classes.
So far as written records prove, there were but two men in
the kingdom, both his personal friends, who, had any
special attainments in matters magnetical. These were
Edward Wright 2 and William Barlowe, 3 and even their
interest in the subject was mainly utilitarian, and depended
upon the belief that Gilbert had discovered some new nav-
igating instruments and simpler methods than were in ex-
istence for finding a ship's position at sea.
Gilbert had no practical knowledge of navigation, and
his sea voyaging had begun and ended with the crossing
of the English Channel when he made his continental
tour. Wright, on the other hand, was probably the most
skillful seamathematician in all England. He had made
long voyages, even to South America. He had plotted
new charts and corrected old ones, and had even become
involved in a dispute with the famous Gerhard Mercator,
wherein he claimed the maps, made on what is now known
as Mercator' s projection, to have been of his own first de-
vising. He had invented new methods of solar observa-
1
Sprat: Hist. Roy. Soc. London, 1667.
2
Bibliographica Philosophica.
8
Wood: Athenae Oxonienses, 1813; Biograph. Britann.; LeNeve: Fasti.
Eccl. Anglia. Ed. Hardy; Stephen: Dicty. Nat. Biog. N. Y., 1885.
336 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
was not, it would have been to the last degree impolitic for
him to have rushed into an endorsement of a work wherein
the proscribed theory was so strenuously maintained. Be-
sides, in 1605 came Bacon's earliest fling at Gilbert the
first English criticism of the De from an eminent
Magnete
source and that
had a deterrent influence upon him
this
22
338 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
which Barlowe records, for they augment but little the facts
already known. Nor does his brief reference to electric
phenomena add anything, except the word "electrical,"
to^the language. In fact, he translates Gilbert's "elec-
trica," as "electricall bodies," and not "electrics;" and
speaks of "electricall attraction," which he says is in "in-
finite other things both naturale and compound" besides
those noted by Gilbert. But he gives no additional names
of electrics, nor, despite his alleged extension of Gilbert's
observations, has he the slightest notion of electrical re-
pulsion or conduction.
Barlowe' s assertion that his thunder had been stolen,
provoked from Ridley a prompt and caustic reply under
the title of Magneticall Animadversions, in which 1
Ridley
avers that there is not a fact in Barlowe's treatise that was
not well known long before his first
manuscript was given
1
Cit. sup.
340 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
to Challoner, and that what Barlowe had not purloined
from Gilbert he had filched from him. But Barlowe is
still eager for the fray.
"Except this Ridley had ploughed with my Heifer hee
had not known my Riddle," he rejoins / after assert-
ing that Ridley had surreptitiously obtained a manuscript
copy of his book, and identifying with careful precision
much of his stolen property in Ridley's pages. And then,
after sating himself with verbal scarification of Ridley, he
2
was the sneering epigram written by John Owen.
1
Nelli : Vita e Commercio Letterario di G. Galilei, Lausanne, 1793, i,
407.
2
Opere de G. Galilei, Florence, 1851.
3
Griselini: Vita de Fr a Paolo Sarpi, Lausanne, 1760. Giovini :
Ibid.,
Brussels, 1836. Fabronio : Vitse Italorum, Pisa, 1798, xvii.
*Garbio: Annali di Serviti, Lucca, 1721, vii. Micanzio: Vita de F. P.
Sarpi, Verona, 1750.
5
Robertson: Fra Paolo Sarpi, London, 1893.
6
Hallam: Lit. Europe, London, 1864, iii, 333.
UNIVERSITY J
^ OF JJ
"
Galileo made many experiments upon the magnet, and both he and
his favorite pupil, Sagredus, were moved to meditate thereon
through
having received Gilbert's book." Nelli: Vita, etc., di G. Galileo. Lau-
sanne, 1793, i., 103.
2
Celeste: The Private Life of Galileo. Phila., 1879.
*
Galileo: Systema Cosmicum, in quo Dialogis, iv.. etc. Ed. Leyden,
1641, Dialog, iii., p. 296.
4
Opere di G. Galileo. Florence, 1851.
THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
GAUGED
unrecognized.
Cabseus, while admitting the accuracy of Gilbert's ex-
perimental work and of the physical distinctions which
Gilbert points out between the amber and the lodestone,
refuses to accept either Gilbert's theory of electric effluvia
or his general dictum of the attractive quality of bodies
concreted from humor. "His words," says Cabseus, "are
put together with ornate elegance, but I do not see that
they explain any mode of attraction. Plenty of things
which are hard and yet are concreted of humor have no
attraction, and many things attract which do not appear
to be concreted of humor." Floating bodies do not attract
by humor, but through "gravity and levity." If wet
bodies do adhere, that is due to agglutinating action of the
interposed liquid. Cabseus is not here attacking Gilbert's
theories merely from a spirit of opposition. He has found
some strange facts, and Gilbert's effluvium notion refuses
to be squared with them. He does not understand these
THE DISCOVERY OF ELECTRICAL REPULSION. 351
depicts them. But there were two brushes; and that was
'
PICTURE OF THE MAGNETIC SPECTRUM. 1
1
From his Philosophia Magnetica, 1629.
23
354 TH E INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
the earth is a great magnet, while stoutly averring that it
1
Lewes: The Biog. Histy. of Phily., N. Y., 1857, Vol. II, 1445.
2
Mahaffy: Des Cartes, Edin. and Lon., 1880.
3
Des Cartes: Principia Philosophise (ultima editio), Amsterdam, 1692,
Parts 3 and 4.
358 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
DESCARTES. 1
Amsterdam, 1692.
DESCARTES' THEORY OF MAGNETISM. 359
hand, like poles are opposed, the spirals from one magnet
cannot enter the conduits of the other, and the spirals
force the stones apart.
Iron is adapted to become magnetic because it has con-
duits suitable to receive the spirals; but it is not normally
1
Boyle's works. London, 1744, v. 405. Kircher's genesis of the solan
goose is classic. The eggs, he says, are laid in the Arctic regions; they
mix with the sea and render it " eggified." Drops of sea water dash on
the trees near the shore, and the
specific egginess of the sea, the natural
vegetation of the tree, and the influence of the sun, unite in hatching the
goose.
366 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
and which ends with the happy union of the magnet and
armature.
Every Man
*
in his Humor. Act III., Sc. 2.
24
370 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
"You draw me, you hard hearted adamant,
But yet you draw not iron, for my heart
Is true as steel: Leave you your power to draw,
And I shall have no power to follow you." l
2
append the following
1 :
Would to heaven
In wreak of my misfortune Iwere turn'd
To some fair nymph, that set upon
The deepest whirlpit of the rav'nous seas,
My adamantine eyes might headlong hale
This iron world to me and drown it all.
Shakespeare (Troilus and Cressida. Act III., Sc. 2,) uses the similt
"as true as iron to adamant," which may refer either to attraction
directive tendency.
THE ROSICRUCIANS. 371
(i
We
have our philosophical persons to make modern and
1
familiar things supernatural and causeless."
1
All's Well that Ends Well. Act II., Sc. 3.
2
Burton: Anatomy of Melancholy, Part 2, 2, Mem. 3.
8
Ibid., Part 2, \ 3, Mem. i.
exalted Imagination?"
Of course, there were people the anatomists especially
who were not quite satisfied with such evidence, and
demanded more and physical explanations. But
definite
Van Helmont was ready with the retort irrelevant, which
in one form or another is still the most serviceable reply in
the dialectic armament of the "magneto-therapist."
"Go to, I beseech thee !" he says haughtily. "Does
1
Charleton :
Supra, p. 13.
2
This story is evidently the basis of M. Edmond About's novel, The
Nose of a Notary. See, also, Tatler, Dec. 7, 1710, No. 260.
3
The bodily humor of Paracelsus, see p. 222.
VAN HELMONT. 375
but none the less left the world in his sixty-seventh year.
The Rosicrucian delusions regarding the magnet were
taught in England by Dr. Robert Fludd ("a Torrent of
Sympathetick Knowledge," says Charleton) who began to
practice medicine in London by virtue of a degree from
Oxford in 1605. They made headway why not, since
after all they were in full accordance with so deep-rooted
a national superstition as that the King's touch would
cure scrofula? Why not, in a country rapidly nearing the
vortex of Civil War, under conditions when differences in
theology and politics made a man's neighbors his foes, and
every man's sword his best friend? What were all the
the other the Nature of Mail's Soule is looked into in way of discovery
of the Immortality of Reasonable Soules. Paris, 1644.
378 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
When cold polar atoms and dry equatorial atoms meet
they conglomerate, sink to earth and form stone, which
retains the original north and south flowing tendency of
the atoms, and hence is magnetic. Then follows an at-
Paris' Pharmacologia, 23, 24. Mill: System of Logic, Vol. ii., 402.
382 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
1
Porta: Magia Nat., 1589, Book vii. Natural Magic (Eng. Tran.).
1658, Book vii, p. 190.
EARLY IDEAS ON MAGNETIC INTERCOMMUNICATION. 383
25
386 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
tion at the corresponding letter in the arm of the other
person.
1
Van Helmont's story of the artificial nose belongs
to the same category.
the other would stand like Hercules' pillars, and (if the
earth stand still) have surely no motion at all. Now, as it
isnot possible that any body should have no boundaries or
sphere of its activity, so it is improbable it should effect
that at a distance which nearer at hand it cannot at all
perform."
That gave its quietus to Porta's ingenious conjecture,
but still not to the idea which was the life and soul of it.
"Now, though this desirable effect possibly may not yet
answer the expectation of inquisitive experiment," says
u
Glanvil twenty years later, yet 'tis no despicable item
that by some other such way of magnetick efficiency it
may hereafter with success be attempted ... to confer at
the distance of the Indies by sympathetic contrivances may
be as usual to future times as to us in a literary correspond-
ence."
l
And
again and again in after years this persistent,
all-pervading world-notion, which, perhaps, begins with
u
the Scriptural, Canst thou send lightnings that they
may go and say unto thee, here we are," reappeared.
u
Whatever the way or the manner or the means of it may
2
be," says Beal, writing to Boyle in 1670, in words which
sound like those of a seer, "we
are sure that we have a
perception at great distance, and otherwise than by our
known senses, and sometimes a secret anticipation of
things future, which cannot be without correspondence
with some causative. Whether aerial, more refinedly ethe-
real, intelligent or astral, whether by any one or other, or
all of these strange expedients, we are sure of the great
and strange effects; and when we see how quickly the
sunbeams do pass to the borders of this vertex, we may
well imagine that our spirits may hold an intercourse at
1
Glanvil: Scepsis Scientifica. Lond., 1665, chaps, xix. and xxi.
2
Boyle: Works, cit. sup.
388 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
From
OTTO VON GUERICKE. 389
intrinsically a bigmagnet.
There is, however, still another virtue, but which is of
higher import than all of the others. Von Guericke goes
back to Aristarchus, and says that he, believing the earth
to be animate, revised the opinion of those who thought that
it had both an attractive and a "This,"
repelling faculty.
says von Guericke, "appears harmonious with reason,
394 TH INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
sive virtue. Cabaeus had seen the chaff leap back from
the electric, but he had not interpreted the phenomenon
itself, although he had tried to concoct a theory in con-
1
Reproduced in reduced fac simile from von Guericke's Experimenta
Nova Magdeburgica. On the right appears the first electrical machine ;
on the left, the sulphur globe on the end of the staff held by the figure
is represented as repelling the floating feather (a).
THE DISCOVERY OF ELECTRICAL CONDUCTION. 399
1
Bacon: Nat. Hist. Cent., x.,.No. 993.
26
402 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
and expelled others from it, and hence had both the con-
servative and expulsive virtues. It had also the sound-
ing, lighting and heating (by friction) virtues, but not the
turning and directing virtues. But in that it had the
conservative and expulsive virtues it was like the earth.
It was an electric instead of a magnetic terrella showing
that our globe is not a mass of primordial terrene Matter
drawing things to itself while directing its own axis by
its inherent magnetic quality, but a great electric mass
repeter et de tacher de les porter plus loin. Mem. de 1'Acad. Roy. des
Sci., 1733, 25.
CHAPTER XIII.
THE
Invisible College in England continued to hold its
meetings in Oxford and in Gresham College, but in 1659,
upon the fall of Richard Cromwell, the members were
scattered, and their gathering-place converted into bar-
racks. The advent of King Charles, however, gave them
new courage; and in 1660, twenty-one persons, including,
among others, Sir Kenehn Digby, Dr. Wilkins and Mr.
John Evelyn, regularly organized themselves into a society
for thepromotion of all kinds of experimental philosophy.
1
(404)
GRANDAMICUS AND POWER. 405
1
Pepys' Diary, May 30, 1667. See also Evelyn's Diary, same year.
2
Phil. Trans., 1673, No. 96, p. 6078.
3
Thorpe: Essays on Hist. Chemistry. London, 1894 (Robert Boyle).
408 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
in sucli full, clear and exact terms that any person skilled
in the art to which it nearest relates shall be able to under-
stand it and put
it in practice. In a word, the Royal Society
completely revolutionized didactic and technical writing
and the mode of expressing scientific thought, and thereby
did enough, had it immediately afterwards gone out of
existence, to earn for itself the perpetual gratitude of man-
kind.
Yet the glowing language of the ode which Cowley ad-
dresses to the young Society, in which he compares it to
Gideon's band picked out by divine design to do "noble
wonders," and predicts its discovery of "New Scenes of
Heaven" and "Crowds of Golden Worlds on High," not
to mention numerous new countries on earth, by no means
commanded universal assent. In fact, the poet especially
desires that
gas volume and pressure, which has ever since borne his
name. He was the first scientific chemist 2 the first to
teach that chemistry was independent of other arts and
not a mere adjunct; and the publication of his Skeptical
Chemist, in 1661, marked the overthrow of both the
Aristotelian and the Paracelsan doctrines of the elements.
With him began the new era in scientific research, when
its highest aim became the simple advancement of natural
3
knowledge.
4
In Boyle's treatise
touching the spring of the air (i659\
we find him experimenting upon the lodestone and observ-
ing that a vacuum does not prevent the passage of its
1
Schott: Mag'ae Universalis, Naturae et Artis, Pars III. et IV. Her-
bipolis. 1658.
2
And the object of Sir Boyle Roche's famous Hibernicism "The father
of modern chemistry and cousin to the Earl of Cork! "
3
Roscoe & Schorlemmer Treatise on Chemistry. New York,
:
1883,
i., 10.
magnetically.
His subsequent experiments, such as cooling and ham-
mering iron rods held north and south, are all old, and
are interesting simply as leading him to the more definite
dictum that "the change in magnetism communicated to
iron may be produced in good part by mechanical opera-
1
tions procuring some change in the texture in the iron."
He is not in nearly so much doubt, however, concerning
the mechanical production of electricity. 2 Here he has
1
Boyle Experiments and Notes about the Mechanical Production of
:
1 *
Worship. Science of History.
ROBERT HOOKE. 427
1
See Waller: The Posthumous Works of Robert Hooke. London,
1705. Durham: Phil. Bxp'ts.and Obs'ns. of the late Dr. R. Hooke. Lon-
don, 1726. Bib. Britaunica, article, Hooke. Also Hooke's papers in
'nil. Trans.
428 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
trive when a child; he stopped contriving when old,
little
Q)
Thus both had observed, and others were now observing,
the two ends, so to speak, of what happened, the inherent
attractive power of the magnet or electric at one extremity
and the movement of the attracted body at the other.
Still another fact isalso perceived, namely, that around
the electric there is a certain space or field in which light
bodies are either attracted or repelled, and similarly that
around the magnet there is also a certain space or field
within which iron is attracted, like effects not appearing
upon bodies located outside of these fields. That the
power of magnet and electric is inherent to and resides in
the substance of each, is commonly believed. How that
power became exerted was, as we have seen, the subject
of many speculations, all of which, generically considered,
ACTION AT A DISTANCE. 435
Newton says that the earth draws the moon and the moon
the earth.
"The
earth," continues Gilbert, "has more effect be-
cause of its superior mass." "The motion which the
moon receives from the earth bears to the motion which
the earth- receives* from the moon
the same proportion as
the mass of the earth bears to the mass of the moon," says
Newton, with mathematical brevity.
1
Gilbert: Physiologia Nova. Amsterdam, 1651.
Bishop Wilkins, writing in 1638, says:
"This great Globe of Earth and Water hath been proved by many
Observations to participate of Magnetical Properties. And as the Load-
stone does cast forth its own Vigour round about its Body, in a Magnet-
ical Compass, so likewise does our Earth. The difference is, that it is
another kind of Affection which causes the Union betwixt the Iron and
Loadstone from that which makes Bodies move unto the Earth. The
former is some kind of nearness and similitude in their Natures, for
which Philosophy, as yet, has not found a particular Name. The latter
does not arise from that peculiar Quality whereby the Earth is properly
distinguish'd from the other Elements, which is its Condensity. Of
which the more any thing does participate, by so much the stronger will
be the desire of union to it. So Gold and other Metals which are most
close in their Composition are likewise most swift in their Motion of
Descent." The Discovery of a New World.
THE THEORIES OF ISAAC NEWTON. 437
And thus both Gilbert and Newton agree that earth and
moon attract one another, and in proportion to the quan-
tity of matter in each. So much for similarities which
are certainly striking enough.
But Gilbert regarded the earth as emitting a magnetic
virtue, and the moon (which he does not suppose to be a
magnet) also as emitting a virtue, but of a different nature.
Here Newton differs and moves ahead. The attractive
power in the members of the solar system, he declares, is
no different, but of the same nature in all, for it acts in
each in the same proportion to the distance and in the
same manner upon every particle of matter.
Not even is this power new or unfamiliar. It is "one
no different from that existing on earth which we call
gravity." With what was then called gravity, Gilbert
was well acquainted, for he tells how the earth not only
attracts magnetic bodies but also "all others in which the
absent by reason of material."
u And -
primary force is
J
Principia, B. III., Prop xxxvii.
2
Paradise Lost, Book III.
ISAAC NEWTON. 439
adopt the latter conception, we may determine the law of the action, but
we can go no further in speaking on its cause. If, on the other hand,
we adopt the conception of action through a medium, we are led to in-
quire into the nature of that action in each part of the medium. . . .
into regular curved lines from pole to pole, but that their
at it; for bodies further off are not attracted by the magnet so much as by
the iron plate." Principia, b. iii., prop, xxiii. Bence Jones: Life and
Letters of Faraday. London, 1870, ii., 279.
1
Faraday: Observations on the Magnetic Force. Proc. R. Inst., Jan.
21, 1853. Expl. Researches, vol. iii., 506.
2
Bence Jones: Life and Letters of Faraday, London, 1870, vol. ii, 484.
444 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
1
Bence Jones: Mrs. Somerville to Faraday, ii, 424.
2
Ibid.: The Life and Letters of Faraday, London, 1870, vol. ii, 404.
'Newton: Optics. Qy. 22.
NEWTON'S ELECTRICAL EXPERIMENTS. 445
29
CHAPTER XIV.
FOUR years after the foundation of the English Royal
Society, Colbert, the astute and far-seeing minister of
Louis XIV, perceived in the gatherings of philosophers
which were still held at the houses of Thevenot and others,
the possible nucleus of a great national institution, capa-
ble of advancing science and the industries of France.
The Royal Academy of Sciences was therefore duly estab-
lished by royal command in 1666, and with princely gen-
'Mem. de 1'Acad. Roy. des Sciences. Paris, 1730, vol. x., p. 556.
454 TH ^ INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
But the years went by, and if the discoveries were made
nobody mentioned them, and the strange light which
Picard had seen in the barometer was as little remembered
as the glow which Guericke had obtained years before
from his sulphur ball.
There had been known, since the beginning of the
century, a mineral, sometimes termed the Bologna stone,
sometimes the Bononian stone, from the place of its dis-
covery, which would become luminous in the dark. It had
1
The u so
light, still purple, great that large print,
is
ing in the days of good Queen Anne, and showing all these
marvelous things to the Royal Society, which had done
more to overthrow superstition and especially belief in
witchcraft and sorcery in England than perhaps any other
of the great civilizing forces. Conceive of Scotch James
hearing with complacency of a man who makes spots of
light appear under his fingers as he touches a glass bottle;
who says, u Nay, while my hand continued upon the
glass the glass being in motion if any person approached
his fingers toward any part of it in the same horizontal
plane with my hand, a light would be seen to stick to 'em at
the distance of about an inch or thereabouts without their
touching the glass at all." A light, a corpse-light, cling-
ing to the very hands of the foolhardy wretch who ven-
tured near the infernal apparatus of this prince of wizards,
might well be the royal conclusion, followed by a dispo-
sition of Mr. Hauksbee which would have left the world
sistance.
"
The belief that all these effects are governed by law is
" the
uppermost in his mind, and so he says that, effluvia,
how subtle soever they can be imagined to be, are yet body
and matter, and must therefore be liable to the common
laws of bodies, which is to be resisted in some proportion to
the strength and density of the medium. At once he seeks
' '
against paper, and saw the sheet ''become lurid like a glow
l
worm."
2
In 1708, Wall, who evidently disagreed with
Dr.
Hauksbee's conclusions as to the electric nature of the
barometer light, evolved a hypothesis concerning the
amber about as odd as that which Father Grandamicus
had proposed to account for the earth's rotation. Gran-
damicus said that the earth does not rotate because it is a
magnet, and Wall asserts that the amber attracts, not be-
cause of its electrical quality, but because it is "a natural
phosphorus, a mineral oleosum coagulated with a mineral
acid of spirit of salt." Wall, however, attains immortality
neither for his theories nor for his experiments, but for
an expression. Hauksbee, long before, had heard the
crackles and had likened the
fires in his glass globe to
1
Gray's papers are as follows: Phil. Trans., 1720, vol. 31, p. 104; 1731,
vol. 37, p. 18; 1732, vol. 37, pp. 285, 397; 1735, vol. 39, pp. 16, 166; 1736,
vol. 39, p. 400.
472 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
A fine laboratory fitted with delicate and costly appar-
atus, skilled workmen at one's call, and unlimited capital
to draw upon, did not fall to the lot of the electrical dis-
coverer of Gray's time. There were no electrical shares
quoted on the world's exchanges in those days, and what-
ever the magnetizers may have gained, no one had ever
made a penny out of electricity, or even perceived channels
whereby profitably to lead other people to lose pounds.
Therefore, no one supplied Gray with means pecuniary or
otherwise for the prosecution of his work. But that did
not trouble him. There were his fishing-rods and his
canes, the kitchen poker and cabbages and pieces of brick;
hemp twine was cheap, and by getting along with these he
could economize sufficiently to acquire the more expensive
part of his apparatus, a little silk and a few glass tubes.
If a suspended boy was wanted, no doubt there were
gauzes and the virtue went through black or red with equal
facility. He had been misled by the dressing which the
makers had put in the ribbons to give them body: that was
all the color exerted no influence.
Perhaps this left him in something of a questioning
attitude toward Gray's other conclusions, for he begins to
inal tube.
This was Dufay's most important discovery. "I cannot
" he
doubt, says, "that glass and crystal operate in exactly
the opposite way to gum-copal and amber so that a leaf;
'glass and copal are the two substances which have led
me to the discovery of the two different electricities."
Thus Dufay had found that all bodies may become elec-*
trie either by direct communication or by induction; that
the so-called electrics are the least suitable to convey the
virtue; that the electric light may appear as fire or burning
sparks, and that there are two different kinds of electricity,
of which one attracts bodies repelled by the other; and
that bodies, if similarly charged, repel, while attracting if
dissimilarly electrified. These are only his more important
conclusions; others, although ingenious and original, re-
late to details which need not be entered into here.
In December, 1733, Dufay wrote a brief synopsis 1 of the
long memoirs which he had already published in the
annals of the French Academy, and sent it to the Duke
of Richmond and Lenox for presentation to the Royal
Society and (with characteristic diplomacy) to Mr. Gray,
"who works on this subject with so much application and
success, and to whom I acknowledge myself indebted for
the discoveries I have made, as well as for those I may
possibly make hereafter, since it is from his writings that
I took the resolution of
applying myself to this kind of ex-
" Whether in all the history of discovery there
periments.
exists a more handsome recognition than this of the work
'Phil. Trans., No. 431, p. 258, 1733.
486 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
of a prior student may well be doubted. It is a custom
which nowadays in the struggle for profit is too often for-
gotten. At all events Gray's heart was won. He ceremon-
iously salutes Monsieur Dufay and felicitates himself that
his experiments should have been confirmed by so judicious
a philosopher; and, no doubt, in the quietude of his little
chamber u
atGrey Friars, wonders if it is really poor
brother" Gray, with his experiments with the tea-kettle
and the pint-pot and the fishing-poles and threads, who is
receiving these compliments from the distinguished French
scientist through the Royal Society and his Grace of
Richmond.
But he was invigorated much invigorated. And be-
sides, what Dufay had said about the burning sparks
piqued his curiosity immensely. Out came the poker and
the tongs, and the fire shovel, too, this time, to be hung
up on silk threads and the crackling sparks produced, of
which last a small boy was made to suffer the pain, even
through his stockings. The next victim was a large
white rooster, replaced by a sirloin of beef, and finally an
iron rod astonished him beyond measure by exhibiting the
u
true brush discharge, rays of light diverging from the
point," and hissing. Pewter plates, iron balls, dishes of
water, were all pressed into service. The flames were real,
and they burned and crackled and exploded. " The effects
at present," says Gray, "are but in minimis, but in time
there may be found out a Way to collect a greater Quan-
tity of it, and consequently to increase the force of this
Electric Fire, which by several of these experiments (si
licet maguis componere parva) seems to be of the same
Nature with that of Thunder and Lightning."
From that time on, Gray and Dufay maintained com-
munication with a degree of friendliness which leads Fon-
tenelle to wish that it might always typify the intercourse
of the two great nations to which they severally belonged,
and to add, with pardonable exaggeration, that "they en-
lightened and animated one another, and together made
GRAY AND DUFAY. 487
ing from the end of a metal rod would have upon it. Ac-
cordingly he brought to the rod a spoonful of previously-
warmed sulphuric ether, which instantly, to the amazement
of the entire assembly, burst into flame. There could now
be no doubt that the electric spark and fire were the same.
The resulting notion that the human body might thus be a
miniature volcano created a profound impression, and pop-
ular excitement over the subject increased. Lectures on
electricitywere in great demand; exhibitions of electrical
phenomena drew large audiences; even at the didactic
discourses at the colleges the populace flocked to the halls
and crowded the students out of their seats.
Daniel Gralath, writing at the time, records electrical
experiments as in progress in the palaces of kings and
princes and in the castles of the great. Meanwhile lyii-
dolfF continued his work, and ignited alcohol and turpen-
tine in the same way, and is said even to have drawn the
the discharge from the rod. Thus he made the first step
toward the electric fuse, now a necessity in every mine,
every quarry, every fort and every war-ship.
1
Hist, de 1'Acad. Roy. des Sciences et Belles Lettres. Berlin, 1746 and
1750.
32
498 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
Ill fact, with Bose the language of ordinary narrative
1
Phil. Trans., No. 476, p. 419, 1745.
.500 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
it in a curious way.
these flings did His name was Johann
Gottlob Kriiger, of Halle, a doctor and professor of philos-
phy and medicine; and his medium, an address delivered
in the fall of 1743, to his students who had asked him
to explain his views concerning possible utilizations of
some practical use, it is certain, that none has been found for
it Theology or Jurisprudence, and therefore where else
in
can the use be than in Medicine?"
Here begin the modern efforts to apply electricity to the
curing of human ills. Not magnetism, for that, as we have
seen, was used therapeutically at periods of remote anti-
quity; but with Kriiger apparently starts the idea that
electricity can be beneficially employed^in the healing art.
It was one fraught with especial difficulties at the time,
because of the imperfection of the electrical machine,
which was then nothing more than a globe, or possibly
two or three globes, of glass, seldom provided with Bose's
prime conductor, and excited by the contact of the opera-
tor's dry palm. Nevertheless, Kriiger urges his students
to investigate. He has heard it rumored that certain elec-
trified bodies will not decay because they attract only
movement. "
Later, he devoted himself entirely to evolving new elec-
trical theories. He
imagined a subtle electric matter forc-
u "
ing way through bodies to which it is proper, and in
its
dents of electricity were some who did not look with favor
upon the universal effort directed to the production of
more and more powerful discharges. A maximum sooner
or later must be reached possible improvements in ma-
chines must terminate some time and then what? There
was nothing to show that the shocks which shook every
joint in a man's body were capable of any effects, different
in kind, from those which he could easily bear. More-
over, the electrical action came and went like tl e light-
ning quicker than in the twinkling of an eye. Nothing
could be more fugitive, nothing less utilizable, than force
exerted under such conditions as this. Could it be im-
prisoned? Who would dare suggest the possibility? Who
would risk the ridicule sure to follow the conception that
the subtle electrical matter which, whether identified with
the Newtonian ether or not, the philosophers agreed to be
capable of penetrating all substances, could in some bonds
be "cabined, cribbed, confined?'* Even if one could im-
prison it, how was an explosive emanation, shooting in
right lines in all directions and never moving continuously
in a definite path, to be caught? The attempt would be
as idle as trying to box a sunbeam in a soap bubble.
It being now, perhaps, sufficiently clear that not only
did the knowledge of the time offer no way of practically
confining or accumulating electricity, but that, on the con-
trary, the idea thereof would have been scouted on all
sides as contrary to every respectable hypothesis and hence
33
514 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
be known, is now
be told. Meanwhile the Dantzic
to
Leyden professor.
Jean Antoine Nollet was an abbe of the ancien regime,
not even ordained a priest, but assuming a minor order,
and with it the ecclesiastical garb and name of abbe, as
many another brilliant man had done, not for the sake of
the vocation, but for social distinction and security of posi-
1
Nouv. Biographic Generate, 37.
ABBE; NOLLET. 517
1
Reproduced in fac simile from the frontispiece of Nollet's Essai sur
des corps. Paris, 1746. The boy is suspended on silk lines
re"lectricite*
and electrified by the excited glass tube held by the lecturer, so that his
hand attracts bits of loose foil on the table below.
THE LEYDEN JAR. 519
nalistic enterprise of that sort had not yet reached the Con-
stand on the floor, and must either hold the jar in one hand
and excite sparks with the other, or he may place the jar
on a piece of metal on a table, and touch the metal with
his hand, bringing a finger of the other hand to the wire.
Of course this experiment is the same as that of Von
Kleist, and goes further, for it eliminates the necessity of
supporting the vessel in the hand, while making it clear
that the seat of the effect is not in the body, as Von Kleist
J
Mem. de 1'Acad. Roy. des Sciences, 1746.
522 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
was called, and to this day bears the name of the L,eyden
jar.
To return now to the Dantzic Society, or rather to
Daniel Gralath, who was at work in its behalf. In Feb-
ruary of 1746, Von Kleist sent a final epistle, which seems
to have clarified matters; so that ten days later, Gralath
definitely finds that the jar must be held in one hand and
its wire touched with the other, and ascribes the long de-
ing at the conclusion that with the rod distant half an inch
from the scale-pan, the ratio of attractive force, when the
electric machine was at maximum distance from the appa-
complete, the discharge runs off from the point of the wire
as a brush of blue flame."
Watson now, as the result of all his observations, pro-
p. 695, where there is added to his paper of Februry 6, 1746, "A Sequel
to the Experiments and Observations," etc., read October 30, 1746. The
principal papers were separately published. Experiments and Observa-
tions, 3d Ed., London, 1746. Sequel to Experiments and Observations,
2d Ed,, London, 1746 An acccount of the experiments
: made by some
gentlemen of the Royal Society, etc. London, 1748.
534 TH E INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
hereafter.
The physical advance accomplished may now be noted.
Van Musschenbroeck had found, and Watson had likewise
recently re-verified the fact, that the thinner the glass of
the jar the stronger the shock. Watson alone had found
that the greater the area of the conductors in contact with
the glass, again the stronger the shock. Two of the three
conditions upon which depend the capacity of a condenser
had thus been discovered namely, the thinness of the
:
" This
circuit, where the non-electrics (conducting sub-
stances), which happen to be between the outside of the
vial and its hook, conduct electricity equally well, is
John Bigelow, in his fine edition of Franklin's Works, N Y., 1889. Par-
ton's Life and Times of Franklin, New York, 1864, has a chapter (vol.
i, c. ix.) devoted to "Franklin and Electricity," but the errors in it are
same.
The
staid people of Philadelphia, however, do not flock
to Franklin's house to listen to his theories, but to witness
his experiments; and, indeed, he and his colleagues are
as alive to the marvelous aspect of it all as Bose himself.
The electrical fire leaps "like lightning," writes Franklin,
around the gilt ornaments on china plates, or on the sides
of books, or around the mirror and picture frames. Philip
Sing contrives little pasteboard wheels which are driven
like wind-mills when brought near the rubbed tube.
Franklin lights candles just blown out, by drawing a spark
FRANKLIN'S LEYDEN JAR EXPERIMENTS. 545
speed.
Next having one's discoveries prematurely made by
to
apparatus left.
give and receive to and from the several parts of the glass:
that is, to give on one side and take away from the other,"
and he compares the metal coatings to the "armature of a
lodestone to unite the force of the several parts."
The road was now clear to the construction of the
battery. It was made of eleven large plates of sash glass
armed with thin leaden plates, with the giving side of one
pane connected to the receiving side of the other, but pro-
vided with a contrivance
u to
bring the giving sides after
charging into contact with one long w ire and the receivers
7
with another, which two long wires would give the force
of all the plates of glass at once through the body of any
1
FRANKLIN'S ILLUSTRATIONS OF HIS EXPERIMENTS.
1
Reproduced in reduced fac simile from the folding plate in Franklin's
Jew Experiments and Observations on Electricity made at Philadelphia
36
562 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
in America Part I., 2nd ed. London, 1754. This picture became the
frontispiece in the later editions of the work. Figs. I, II, III, IV, and
V, are described in Franklin's letter to Collinson, dated July 28, 1747;
Fig. VI in letter IV to Collinson, and Figs. VII, VIII, IX and X, in the
"Opinions and Conjectures" sent Collinson in 1750. Fig. I represents
a Leyden bottle (r) which whenever touched by the finger attracts the
thread (b) suspended from the wire (a). Fig. II shows a suspended cork
(c) vibrating between the wires (?) (e), one of which enters the bottle
and the other is connected to a ring of lead upon which the bottle stands.
In Fig. Ill, the bottle rests on wax and is discharged by electrically con-
necting the interior and exterior by means of the wire (h] held in a
sealing wax handle (g). Fig. IV represents a bottle surrounded by a
ring of lead (i) connected by a conductor with the knob () on the in-
serted wire such a bottle says Franklin, ''cannot be electrified; the
equilibrium is never destroyed." In Fig. V, the jar rests on a book
having a gilded design on its cover; a wire (m) touches the gilding and
may be brought into contact with the knob of the bottle. "Instantly,''
''
says Franklin, there is a strong spark and stroke and the whole line of
gold which completes the communication between the top and bottom
of the bottle will appear a vivid flame, like the sharpest lightning."
Fig. VI is intended to show that particles at the surface of water are
less stronglyheld by cohesion than others in the body of the fluid, and
hence when the water is electrified are more easily repelled and thrown
off. Fig. VII illustrates Franklin's description of the partition of a
charge or "electrical atmosphere" from a Leyden jar to two suspended
"apples or two balls of wood" and between the objects themselves.
Fig. VIII is in illustration of Franklin's supposition that "electrified
bodies discharge their atmospheres upon electrified bodies, more easily
and at a greater distance from their angles and points than from their
smooth sides." Fig. IX is the first representation of the lightning rod.
" electrical fish " a
Fig. Xrepresents Franklin's piece of Dutch metal,
cut in the shape shown, which flies to the prime conductor of the electric
machine and keeps "a continued shaking of its tail like a fish so that it
seems animated."
ANCIENT SUPERSTITIONS ABOUT LIGHTNING. 563
152. "Fulinineo periit imitator fulniiuis ictu." Ovid: Met., xiv., 617, 618.
THUNDER AND LIGHTNING. 567
camp, and Fynes Morison sees the same fires on the staves
of Montjoy's horsemen at the siege of Kinsale, in 1601 f the
ancient Romans and the modern Scot being as ignorant,
one as the other, that electricity had anything to do with
the strange appearance. It is hardly credible that the
3
Quest. Nat., i.
*
De Bello Af., 6.
5 6
Hist., c. ii. Phil. Trans., Vol. 48, 754.
7
Arago: Eloge Hist, de Alex. Volta, Acad. desSci., 26 July, 1831.
568 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
"
Sir you for that hat
shall I say to . . it is proof
" 5
Against thunder and enchantment
2
Lear, Act Julius Caesar, Act
1
King iii., Sc. 4. i., Sc. 2.
-Coriolanus, Act
3
Tempest, Act i., Sc. 2. v., Sc. 3.
5
Cynthia's Revels.
57P THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
and afterwards the seeker for such allusions will find a
harvest of them which space does not permit me to gather
here.
See also British Magazine, Oct., 1746, 300; London Magazine, Nov.,
1746, 573. Essai sur la Cause de 1'Elec. (Trans, of 2d Ed., with supple-
ment), Paris, 1748.
572 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
It is needless to discuss Freke's supposition, because,
almost immediately following him, came Winkler, with a 1
1
Winkler: Die Starke der Electrischen Kraft des Wassers in Glaserueii
Gefassen, etc. Leipsic, 3746, c. x. (Preface dated Sept. 6, 1746.)
NOLLET ON LIGHTNING. 573
ill
sulphurous, mercurial and nitrous vapors, the particles
of which, rising and falling, are continually rubbing
against one another. The rubbing of the sulphurous
particles generates electric matter, which may lie quiet
until some chance shock develops the conditions for dis-
worth investigating.
Such, in brief, were the conditions which existed when
FRANKLIN ON LIGHTNING. 575
1
Pennsylvania Gazette.
576 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
" fluid
Electrical agrees with lightning in these particu-
lars: Giving light. 2. Color of the light. 3. Crooked
i.
higher than the needle, will not attract the scale and re-
ceive the needle will get it and convey it away
its fire, for
U
say," he declares, "if these things are so, may not
I
the rod is electrified, will strike from the rod to the wire,
and not affect him."
When Collinson received that paper, he recognized at
once that here was no ordinary discovery, and that how-
ever ingenious or interesting Franklin's ideas may hitherto
have been concerning the nature of the electric fire, the
behavior of jars and such matters, this announcement re-
duced every past item of electrical knowledge to compara-
THE PUBLICATION OF FRANKLIN'S LETTERS. 583
tive insignificance. For not only was this the first great
utilization of everything that had been learned from the
rubbed amber and its posterity, but the importance of it
as a safeguard to life and property was inestimable.
Hitherto the Royal Society had not been unfavorably
disposed to Franklin, and even Watson, in appropriating
his honors, did so in a considerate and even laudatory
1
Nevertheless a brisf notice of Franklin's electrified cloud theory
found place in the transactions very shortly afterwards, through a report
on it by Dr. William Stukely, who had heard the first letter to Collinsou
publicly read at some gathering. Phil. Trans., 496, 601.
584 THE INTELLECTUAL RISE IN ELECTRICITY.
he saw no reason why he should not issue it as a separate
publication price two shillings and six pence; especially
as no outlay on his part was required, and all the revenue
was to come solely to him. Thus the collection came to
be published in 1751.
Meanwhile Franklin was pursuing the even tenor of his
way, and not only all the Philadelphians, but the people
of far-distant Boston and New York and Charles Town
were manifesting increased interest in his astonishing
proceedings. Cadwallader Golden, in New York, had
opened correspondence with him and had become prac-
tically his disciple; so had James Bowdoin, in Boston,
afterwards Governor of the colony. If his house had
hitherto been a rendezvous for all the sight-seers in Phila-
delphia, it was now more attractive than ever. He killed
turkeys with the discharge from large Leyden jars, and
once, by accident, in the same way, nearly killed himself.
To Golden he writes that he has "melted brass pins and
needles, inverted the poles of the magnetic needle, given
a magnetism and polarity to needles that had none, and
fireddry gunpowder by the electric spark." He dwells
upon the powerful effects of the L,eyden jar battery, and
adds: "So we are got beyond the skill of Rabelais' devils
of two years old, who . had only learned to thunder
. .
saw any advantage after the fifth day, when the patients
"became discouraged, went home, and time re-
in a short
lapsed." In
fact, Franklin is not disposed to accord to his
shocks even the first small improvement which appeared ;
cinating.
The summer came a bad season for electrical experi-
menting, as he was well aware. He would put it all aside
until the old interest should revive with different condi-
when the news came from across the sea that the ex-
tions,
periment had been tried! Tried by the first philosophers
in France under the auspices of the French King himself.
Tried with magnificent and unquestionable success, and
that all Europe was ringing with it.
He needed all his philosophy now.
How had they done it?
tangle the kite from its cords and tail, and get it in posi-
tion for ascent, the thunder mutters nearer, and the rain
begins to patter upon the grass. A swishing blast comes
over the meadows, the kite feels it and rises swiftly,
swooping this way and that as the air-currents catch it.
The rain now falls heavily, and the mist begins to close in.
There is a friendly shed at hand, and Franklin, drenched,
takes refuge under it. The kite, heavy with water, is sail-
ing sluggishly, except when the gusts set it
moving in
spirals.
A
huge low-lying black cloud traveling over him sud-
denly shoots forth forked flame, and a crash of thunder
shakes the very earth. The pour is now in sheets; again
the blaze, again the rattling explosion. The kite is mov-
ing upward, for Franklin is quickly unwinding the cord.
It is soaring straight into the black mass, from which the
flashes are now rapidly coming, and in which it soon
becomes invisible.
little crack, a little spark the same little crack and the
same little spark which he had taken a hundred times
from his glass tube and the great discovery is complete,
hisname immortal.
As the kite dashes throughthe masses of vapor hurrying
over him, he touches the key, and again and again the
conquered lightning returns, as it were, a caress even
submitting to be caged in the Leyden jar like the common
electricity from his rubbed globe.
And, as the storm abates, the thunder dies away on the
horizon, the clouds sweep off toward their ancient enemies,
the mountains, and the kite moves lazily in the blue ;
"Vivos voco,
Mortuos plango,
' '
Fulgurafrango,
1
Faradav.
THE LESSON. 595
(597)
598 INDEX.
Clerk's poem on, 150 ; Wisbuy Digby, 378; magnetic theory, 359;
origin of, 146. mag. theory compared with that
Condenser, Franklin's plate, 556. of Plutarch, 51; method compared
Conduction, electric discovered by with that of Bacon, 356; on elec-
Guericke, 399; magnetic, Gilbert on mag. spectrum, 362;
trics, 364;
on, 289. theory abandoned in France, 510;
Conductor, Desaguiliers proposes theory compared with that of Lu-
name, 488; magnetic, first sug- cretius, 48; vortex theory of, 357.
gestion of, 47; prime, inv'd by De Subtilitate, Cardan's work, 246.
Bose, 496; or non-electric, 482. Diamond, alleged attraction of, by
Constantine, law of, concerning iron, 281; alleged magnetism of,
lightning, 566. 238; alleged screening effect, 88.
Convection, electrical, 545. Diaz, Bartholomew, voyage of, 205.
Copernican theory, 267. Digby, Sir Kenelm, 376; elec. the-
Copernicus, Nicolas, 267. ories of, 378; replies to Browne,
Cornier shocked by lightning, 588. 380.
Corrichterus, his mag. unguent, 37. Digges, Madam, her sparkling frock,
Corybantes, 23. 425.
Cowley, poem on R. Society, 413. Digges, Sir Dudley, 339.
Creagus, 159. Digges, William, letter concerning
Creation, prehistoric account of, 164. Mrs. Sewall, 425.
Crows, as guides at sea, 113. Diocles, 41.
Ctesias, suggestion of lightning pro- Diogenes Laertius, 34.
tection, 565. Dionysius, 59.
INDEX. 601
Dioscorides on magnet, 92 ;
on gravity, 439; atmospheric, De-
ligurius, 42. saguiliers theory of, 489; Frank-
Dioscuri, the, 23. lin's theory of, 576; beginning of
Dip of magnetic needle, 209, 210; modern, 299; Boyle on mech'l
Affaitatus' supposed disc'y of, production of, 418; Digby on,
21 1 Gilbert on, 213; Hartmanu's
; 378; dual nature of, found by
disc'y of, 209 Norman's disc'y
; Dufay, 484; and by Kinnersley,
of, 215, 217. 586.
Drebbel, Cornelius Van, 44, 192. First application to medicine,
Dufay, Charles Francois. 478; broad 501-2; first attempt to measure,
view of elec'y, 487; discovers vit- 523; first book on, in English,
reous and resinous elec'y, 484; 420; first distinguished from mag-
electrifies himself, 483; electrifies netism by St. Augustine, 89; first
metals, 479 ; exp'ts on colored notice of, by R. Society, 402; first
objects, 481; on distribution of use of word, 373.
charge, 483; no distinction be- Gordon kills animals by, 507;
tween electrics and non-electrics, Franklin's theory of, 643; Ger-
479; sends letter to R. Society, mans regard as fire, 492; Greene's
485; recognition of Gray's work, poetical references to, 369; Hau-
485; tribute to Gray, 487; uses sen's theory of, 494; Jonson's ref-
solid insulators, 482 verifies ;
erence to, 368; new theories of, in
Gray's exp'ts on conduction, 479. 1747, 5531 Quelmalz, theory of,
Du Tour on Nollet's theory, 554. 503; resinous and vitreous, dis-
covered by Dufay, 484; s'Grave-
E. sande's definition of, 488; speed
Earth, field of force of, Gilbert on, of, Lemonnier's attempt to meas-
292; magnetism induced by, 227; ure, 532;Watson's attempt, 551;
return circuit disc'd by Watson, Winkler's attempt, 506; Watson's
550. theories of, 507, 534.
Eclipse at time of Thales, 34. Electrics, and non-electrics, Dufay
Effluvium, electric, Cabseus on, 351; on, 479; Bacon on, 325; become
Gilbert on, 308; magnetic, 292. non-conductors, 482; Boyle's ad-
Egypt, absence of Science in an- ditions to, list of, 419; Eoyle ob-
cient, 31; iron in, 28, 58; lack of serves mutual attraction of elec-
amber in ancient, 52; mag. sus- tric and rubber, 418; Browne's
pension in, 45 ; opening of, to exp'ts on, 381; Cabaeus' additions
commerce, 30; religion of ancient, to list of, 350; Descartes on, 364;
31; vending machines in ancient, Gassendi on attraction of, 418; Gil-
87. bert's list of, 299; Gilbert on
Egyptians, ancient, ignorance of nature of, 307; mutual attraction
\nagnet of, 27; alleged knowledge of, obs'd by Acad. del Cimento,
of compass by, 57; voyages of, 58. 433; naming of, 302; per se, 488.
Electorius, 42. Electrida, 17.
Electrical, first use of word, 339. Electrides, 16, 17.
Electric and magnetic motion com- Electro-magnetism, word coined
pared, 311; attraction, theories of, by Kircher, 365.
307; attraction, Gilbert on, 308; j
Electrometer, first use of word, 524.
bell, inv'd by Gordon, 506; light, j
Electron, 16.
see Light, electric; Machine, Gor- Electrum, in Egypt, 52; lake, 17.
don's, 506 Hauksbee's, 461
; ;
i
Elicott, John, elec. theory of, 554.
Guericke's, 395 Winkler's, 506
; ; Elizabeth, Queen, learning in time
Motor, Gordon's, 507. o f 33 2 -334; legacy to Gilbert 265.
,
mans regard elec'y as, 492. Germany, physical science in, 490,
Flesh magnet, the, 159. 492.
Fludd, Dr. Robert, 375. Gibbon on Mahomet's coffin, 46.
Fluid theory of elec'y, Franklin's, Gilbert, William, 258; amber at-
544- traction of water, 310; amber
Form, Aristotelian, 276, 282, 419. questions, 295; and Aristotle, 270,
Fountain, Desaguiliers' electrified, 275; and Barlowe, 340; and Guer-
489. icke, their mag. theories com-
Fracastorio, Jerome, amber theory pared, 393; and Kouopho, 311;
of, 241; Gilbert's attitude toward, attitude to predecessors, 279; au-
280; on mag. rocks, 204. thorities quoted by, 2^0.
INDEX. 603
Gilbert (continued.) rella of, 277; terrestrial attraction
Compared by Bacon to Xeno- of moon, 292; theory of elec. at^
phanes, 328; comparison of the traction, 308; theories, cosmical,
poles, 277; conception of gravity, 269, 294; theories compared with
437; condemns mag. fallacies, those of Peregrinus, 278; con-
281; continued as court physician demned by Kircher, 366.
by James I., 315; copied by Van Gioja, Flavio, 187.
Helmout, 373; correlation of elec. Glanvil, encyclopaedia of, 160; tele-
with other motions, 309; correla- graphic predictions, 387.
tion of gravity and magnetism, Gnomes
of Middle Ages, 25.
293; cosmical philosophy, 269; Goddard, Jonathan, 404.
cosmical system, 294; cosmical Goose, Kircher's genesis of solan,
theory accepted by Kepler, 354; 365-
cosmical theory compared with Gordon, Andrew, elec. inventions,
Newton's, 435, 438; criticised by 506 et seq.
Bacon, 321-322-327; death and Gottland, 134.
burial place, 315; declares earth Gralath, Daniel, exp'ts on Leyden
a magnet, 276; De Magnete, his jar and elec. measuring inst's,
treatise, 260; De Magnete rec'd 522 et seq.
in Italy, 343; De Mundo Novo, Grandamicus, mag. theory of earth,
his treatise, 260, 316, 318; dis- 405-
coveries recapitulated, 312-313. Graunt, John, refused admission to
Education of, 259; elec. effect R. Society, 409.
of atmospheric conditions noted, Gravity, and magnetism, Gilbert
305; elec. and mag. motions com- on, 293 ;
Newton co-ordinates
pared, 311; electroscope, 303; em- elec'y and mag'n with, 442.
bellishments in De Magnete, 268; Gray, Stephen, 470; and Dufay, 486;
errors as to variation, 273; fail- Dufay's tribute to, 487; his friends,
ures in observation, 312; field of Godfrey and Wheler, 473; exp'ts
force discussed, 272, 291; form on brush discharge, 486; on charge
and matter theory, 276; free phil- resident on surface, 476; on con-
osophizing of, 310; generation of duction, 474; on elec. induction,
lodestone, 287; inductive method 477; on glass tube, 472; on hair,
of, prior to Bacon, 330; influence etc., 471; on similarity of elec.
of Aristotle on, 282; insulation, discharge to thunder and light-
308-310; list of electrics, 299; list ning, 486; planetary theory and
of non-electrics, 305. death, 487.
Magnetic discoveries of, 288; Greeks, amber in literature of, 16;
magnetic repulsion, 285; mag- amber trade of, 16; compass at-
netic theory of, 276; disputed by tributed to, 54; emigration to
Boyle, 417; Matter and Form, Egypt, 30; iron working of, 23;
284; Meteorologia of, 329; methods nature worship of, 31.
of thought of, 266; ''nature'' dis- Greene, Robert, literary references
cussed, 285; nature of electric, to mag'n and elec'y, 369.
307; negative conclusions regard- Grote, on philosophy of Aristotle,
ing elec'y, 306; nomenclature, 39; of Thales, 37.
301; orb of virtue, 272; compared Grummert, utilization of elec. light,
with obs'ns of Porta and Pere- 5c8.
grinus, 351; Owen's epigram on, Guericke, Otto von, 388; and Gil-
341; predecessors referred to, 287; bert compared, 393; believes earth
portraits and works, 260; post- to be animate, 393; discovers dis-
humous volume, 316, 318; pro- charging effect of points, 398;
posed addition to De Magnete, elec. conduction, ,"99; elec. light,
316; referred to by Bacon, 318; 402; sound due to electrification,
residence and society, 263; rela- 402; elec. repulsion obs'd by, 397;
tions to Queen Elizabeth, 262, elec. terrella of, 395; forgotten in
264; relations to Sarpi, 344. i8th cent'y, 491; hypothesis of
Scaliger's criticism, 341; ter- virtues, 392 ;
invents air-pump,
604 INDEX.
H. I.
Hair, elec. attraction of, obs'd by Iceland, discovery of, 113.
Boyle, 422. Ida, Mt., mag. legend of, 19.
Hakewill, 384. Idean Dactyls, 22.
Hale, Lord, on hydrostatics, 406. Ignition, electric, 496, 507, 508.
Halley, Dr.
Edmund, 447. Inclination of compass, 210.
Hammering, magnetization by, 290. Induction, electric, Gray's exp'ts
Hartmann, disc'y of dip, 209. on, 477; Hauksbee's exp'ts on,
Harpaga, 17. 467; magnetic, Descartes on, 361;
Hauksbee, Francis, 457 ;
electric Norman on, 219; of earth, 227;
machine, 461; exp'ts on elec. in- Peregriuus on, 176; St. Augustine
duction, 467; on elec. light, 460; on, 87.
on lines of force, 467; on lumi- Inductive method, beginning of, 38;
nous fountain, 459. compared with deductive, 356;
Hausen, Christian August, 493. Gilbert's use of before Bacon, 330;
Healing by first intention, Browne Nichol's definition of, 330.
on, 381. Innocent, Bishop, 566.
Heat defined as mode of motion, by Insulation, first use of term, 482;
Bacon, Boyle, Locke and Hooke, Gilbert on, 308.
417; destruction of magnetization Insulators, solid, used by Dufay,
by, 227, 237. 482.
Hebrews, iron working by, 29. Inunction, 130.
Heliades, legend of, 16. Invisible College, 404.
Helmont, John Baptist Van, 372. Ion of Plato, 24.
Henry, Prince, the Navigator, 194. lolinus on lychnites, 42.
Heraclea, 27. Iron, acquired magnetism of, 289;
Heraclean stone, 24, 27. age, 12, 20, 21 Aztec and Peruvian
;
Greek mystery of, 22; Israelite medical uses of the, 255; myths
use of, 29; Lady, in Jonson's play, of the, 219; Paracelsus' curative
use of, 222; Patristic writings on,
368; legend of disc'y of, 19; nature
of, 19; Patristic writings refer to, 90; Peregrinus on selection of,
90; polarity of, 127; prehistoric 169; on testing, 170; on finding
knowledge of, 20, 63, 83; repulsion poles, 170; Porta on measuring
by, 49; rings as amulets, 25; St. strength of, 238; prehistoric
Augustine on, 87. knowledge of, 83; Roger Bacon
Lor De, exp'ts on lightning, 588- on, 161; so called by Euripides,
589- 24; St. Augustine on, 87; wor-
Louis XIV., endows Royal Acad- shipped by Chinese, 80.
tribe of, 26.
emy, 450 physical science at Magnetes,
;
Lucera, siege of, 165. Rocks, 313; legends of, 367; Fra-
castorio on, 204; Livio Sanuto on,
Lucian, amber mentioned by, 16.
Lucretius, on Bronze age, 20; mag. 204; Maurolycus on, 204; Oviedo
theory of, 48; on derivation of on, 204; Ptolemy on, 203; satura-
word "magnet," 25; on filings in tion, 290; spectrum, Cabaeus on,
mag. field, 50; on jumping rings, 353; Descartes on, 362; Wren on,
49; on mag. field, 48; on "Nature 412; statesman, Digges so-called,
of Things," 47; on Samothracian 339; synonymous with Herculean,
rings, 24; on vibrating armature, 27.
49- Magnetical Animadversions, Rid-
Ludolff, ignites spirits by elec'y, ley's, 339.
496; shows mercury light to be Magnetism, and electricity linked
electric, 497. by Newton with gravity, 4-9;
Lully, Raymond, 190. animal, 372; at end of 1 7th cent'y,
Lychinus, 42. 448; by earth induction, 289; Des-
Lychnites, 42. cartes on, 361; destruction of, by
INDEX. 607
Pyramid, iron in great, 28; orienta- Sarpi, Fra Paolo, 224; and Porta,
tion of, 57. 232; writes to Galileo about Gil-
bert, 343.
Q- Saturation, magnetic, 290.
Sauveur, invents gambling system',
Quakers, refuse to defend Phila,
451-
546.
relations to Gil- Scaliger, on Laertms, 35; on Gil-
Queen Elizabeth, bert, 341.
bert, 262-4.
Schilling, J. J., exp'ts of, 491.
Quelmalz, elec. theory of, 503.
Scholastic philosophy, 118.
Schott, Gasper, describes Guericke 's
R. air-pump, 414.
Races, peculiarities of, 61. Schwenter, Daniel, compass tele-
Reaumur, Musschenbrceck's letter
graph, 382.
to, 517. Sellers, produces artificial magnets,
Repulsion, electric, obs'd by Cabaeus, 446.
351; Guericke on, 397; laws of, Semites, characteristics of, 61.
485; magnetic, 48, 51, 285. Septuagint, ligure disc'd in, 42.
Resinous electricity, Dufay on, 484. in
Serapis, magnetic suspension
Resistance, 363. temple of, 45, 92.
Respective point, Norman's, 216. Series, connection of elec. gener-
Rhea, 22. ators in, 557.
Rhodes, mag. suspension at, 46. Sewall, Madam, sparkling frock of,
Ridley, Mark, 338. 425-
Ridotti, Italian, 342. S'Gravesande, W. J., 488, 516.
Rings, Samothracian, see Samothra- Shakespeare, William, on nature
cian rings. of lightning, 569; on St. Elmo's
Roberval, 378. fire, 568; references to magnetism,
Rocks, magnetic, 96. 370.
Rolli, on spontaneous combustion, Shoo King, the, 66.
503, 504- Short circuiting, Descartes on, 361.
Rose of the winds, 60, 187, 188, 191. Siderites, 25.
Rosicrucians, the, 371. Silk, filament suspension, 312; Gil-
Royal Academy of Sciences, foun- bert's use of, for insulation, 308;
dation of, 450; reorganized by de
Gray's use of, for insulation, 475.
Pon char train, 452. Silver, attraction of, by lodestone,
Royal Society, Berlin, founded by 281.
Frederick I., 490. Similitudes, Neckam on, 123.
Royal Society, English, early exp'ts Simpson, Dr., on elec. sparkling,
of, 410; first notice of elec'y, 402. 503.
foundation of, 406; influence on
Sing, Philip, 540-544.
newphil'y, 409; insists on original Siphon recorder, principle of, sug-
research, 411; its opponents, 413; gested, 499.
rejects Franklin's papers, 583; Societies, learned, in France, 378;
repeats Newton's exp'ts, 445. names of Italian, 232.
Ruffinus, on magnet, 92; magnetic Society, English Scientific in 1660,
suspension, 45. 404; Royal See Royal Society.
Runes, Finn, 138. Socrates, philosophy in time of, 37.
Rupert, Prince, inventions of, 406. Solomon, voyages of, 55.
Somers, Lord, 463.
S. Sorcery, Finn, 138.
Sagredo, Gian Francesco, 342-343; So-soung on mag. rocks, 98.
observes time changes in varia- Soul in lodestone, Thales on, 33.
tion, 367. Sound due to electrification, 402.
Samothrace, Cabiri in, 23. South-pointing carts See Carts,
Samothracian rings, 23, 47, 87. south-pointing.
Sanconiathon, 56. Spain, compass in mediaeval, in;
Saracens in Spain, 108. in time of Saracens, 107.
39
6io INDEX.
Spark, electric, discovered, 431, 494. Browne's exp'ts on, 386; mag. de-
Sparkling phenomena of human scribed by Strada, 383; by Addi-
body and apparel, 503, 504. son, Akenside, Cabaeus, Galileo,
Speaking trumpet, inv'n of, 430. Hakewill, 384, 385; disputed by
Spence, Dr., elec. exp'ts of, 538. de Boodt, 383; predictions of, by
Spider, Franklin's elec., 545. Bealand Glanvil, 387; Schwenter's
Spindle, ancient use of amber as, 18. compass, 382.
Spontaneous combustion, 503. Temple, alleged lightning protec-
Sprat, T. on learning in Elizabethan
,
tion of, 564.
age, 334; on Royal Society exp'ts, Terrella, Gilbert's lodestone, 277;
412. Guericke's elec., 395 ;
sent to
St. Aldhelm on magnet, 115. Pepys, 407.
St. Amand, discoveries of, 192. Tertullian on magnet, 90.
St. Ambrose on attraction, 90; mag. Thales of Miletus, 32; contrasted
mountains, 98. with Hero, 44; Grote on phil'y of,
St. Augustine on mag. attraction, 37; L,aertiuson, 34; Theophrastus
87; on mag. suspension, 45; dis- differs from, 41.
tinguishes between mag. and elec. Theamedes, 5 i.
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