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"That often occurs," was the reply; "a volcanic wave results, and a volcano may thus rise from the ocean's depths."
"Is there any danger to the earth itself? May it not be riven into fragments from such a convulsion?" I hesitatingly questioned.
"No; while the configuration of continents is continually being altered, each disturbance must be practically superficial, and of limited area."
"But," I persisted, "the rigid, solid earth may be blown to fragments; in such convulsions a result like that seems not impossible."
"You argue from an erroneous hypothesis. The earth is neither rigid nor solid."
"True," I answered. "If it were solid I could not be a hundred miles beneath its surface in conversation with another being; but there can not be many such cavities as that which we are now traversing, and they can not surely extend entirely through its ma.s.s; the great weight of the superinc.u.mbent material would crush together the strongest materials, if a globe as large as our earth were extensively honeycombed in this manner."
"Quite the contrary," he replied; "and here let me, for the first time, enlighten you as to the interior structure of the terrestrial globe. The earth-forming principle consists of an invisible sphere of energy that, spinning through s.p.a.ce, supports the s.p.a.ce dust which collects on it, as dust on a bubble. By gradual acc.u.mulation of substance on that sphere a hollow ball has resulted, on the outer surface of which you have hitherto dwelt. The crust of the earth is comparatively thin, not more than eight hundred miles in average thickness, and is held in position by the central sphere of energy that now exists at a distance about seven hundred miles beneath the ocean level. The force inherent to this sphere manifests itself upon the matter which it supports on both sides, rendering matter the lighter the nearer it lies to the center sphere. In other words, let me say to you: The crust, or sh.e.l.l, which I have just described as being but about eight hundred miles in thickness, is firm and solid on both its convex and concave surface, but gradually loses in weight, whether we penetrate from the outer surface toward the center, or from any point of the inner surface towards the outside, until at the central sphere matter has no weight at all. Do you conceive my meaning?"
"Yes," I replied; "I understand you perfectly."
After a pause my pilot asked me abruptly:
"What do you most desire?"
The question caused my mind to revert instantly to my old home on the earth above me, and although I felt the hope of returning to it spring up in my heart, the force of habit caused me involuntarily to answer, "More light!"
"More light being your desire, you shall receive it."
Obedient to his touch, the bow of the boat turned from the gulf we had been considering towards the center of the lake; the responsive craft leaped forward, and in an instant the obsidian parapet disappeared behind us. On and over the trackless waste of gla.s.s-like water we sped, until the dead silence became painfully oppressive, and I asked:
"Whither are we bound?"
"Towards the east."
The well-timed answer raised my spirits; I thought again that in this man, despite his repulsive shape, I beheld a friend, a brother; suspicion vanished, and my courage rose. He touched the lever, and the craft, subject to his will, nearly rose from the water, and sped with amazing velocity, as was evident from the appearance of the luminous road behind us. So rapid was our flight that the wake of the boat seemed as if made of rigid parallel lines that disappeared in the distance, too quick for the eye to catch the tremor.
Continuing his conversation, my companion informed me that he had now directed the bark toward a point east of the spot where we struck the sh.o.r.e, after crossing the lake, in order that we might continue our journey downward, diagonally to the under surface of the earth crust.
"This recent digression from our journey proper," said he, "has been made to acquaint you with a subject, regarding which you have exhibited a curiosity, and about which you have heretofore been misinformed; now you understand more clearly part of the philosophy of volcanoes and earthquakes. You have yet much to learn in connection with allied phenomena, but this study of the crude exhibition of force-disturbed matter, the manipulation of which is familiar to man under the above names, is an introduction to the more wonderful study destined yet to be a part of your field, an investigation of quiescent matter, and pure motion."
"I can not comprehend you," I replied, "as I stated once before when you referred to what you designated as pure motion."
CHAPTER x.x.xII.
MATTER IS r.e.t.a.r.dED MOTION.
"It is possible--is it not?--for you to imagine a continuous volley of iron b.a.l.l.s pa.s.sing near you in one line, in a horizontal direction, with considerable velocity. Suppose that a pane of gla.s.s were to be gradually moved so that a corner of it would be struck by one of the b.a.l.l.s; then the entire sheet of gla.s.s would be shivered by the concussion, even though the bullet struck but a single spot of gla.s.s, the point of contact covering only a small area. Imagine now that the velocity of the volley of bullets be increased a thousand fold; then a plate of gla.s.s thrust into their track would be smoothly cut, as though with a file that would gnaw its way without producing a single radiating fracture. A person standing near the volley would now hear a deep purr or growling sound, caused by the friction between the bullets and the air. Increase gradually the rapidity of their motion, and this growl would become more acute, pa.s.sing from a deep, low murmur, into one less grave, and as the velocity increased, the tone would become sharper, and at last piercingly shrill. Increase now the rapidity of the train of bullets again, and again the notes would decrease in turn, pa.s.sing back again successively through the several keys that had preceded, and finally would reach the low growl which first struck the ear, and with a further increase of speed silence would ensue, silence evermore, regardless of increasing velocity.[10] From these hundreds of miles in a second at which the volley is now pa.s.sing, let the rapidity be augmented a thousand times, reaching in their flight into millions of miles each second, and to the eye, from the point where the sound disappeared, as the velocity increased, a dim redness would appear, a glow just perceptible, indicating to the sense of sight, by a continuous line, the track of the moving missiles. To all appearance, the line would be as uniform as an illuminated pencil mark, even though the several integral bullets of the trail might be separated one from another by miles of s.p.a.ce. Let a pane of gla.s.s now be thrust across their track, and from the point of contact a shower of sparks would fly, and the edges of gla.s.s close to either side of the orifice would be shown, on withdrawing the gla.s.s, to have been fused. Conceive now that the velocity of the bullets be doubled and trebled, again and again, the line of red light becomes brighter, then brilliant, and finally as the velocity increases, at a certain point pure white results, and to man's sense the trail would now be a continuous something, as solid as a bar of metal if at a white heat, and (even if the bullets were a thousand miles apart) man could not bring proof of their separate existence to his senses. That portion of a pane of gla.s.s or other substance, even steel or adamant, which should cross its track now would simply melt away, the portion excised and carried out of that pathway neither showing itself as scintillations, nor as fragments of matter. The solid would instantly liquefy, and would spread itself as a thin film over the surface of each ball of that white, hot ma.s.s of fleeing metal, now to all essential conditions as uniform as a bar of iron. Madly increase the velocity to millions upon millions of miles per second, and the heat will disappear gradually as did the sound, while the bright light will pa.s.s backward successively through the primary shades of color that are now known to man, beginning with violet, and ending with red, and as the red fades away the train of bullets will disappear to the sense of man.
Neither light nor sound now accompanies the volley, neither the human eye nor the human ear can perceive its presence. Drop a pane of gla.s.s or any other object edgewise through it, and it gives to the sense of man no evidence; the molecules of the gla.s.s separate from in front to close in from behind, and the moving train pa.s.ses through it as freely as light, leaving the surface of the gla.s.s unaffected."
[10] A scientific critic seems to think that the shrill cry would cease instantly and not gradually. However, science has been at fault more than once, and I do not care to take liberties with this statement.--J. U. L.
"Hold," I interrupted; "that would be as one quality of matter pa.s.sing through another quality of matter without disturbance to either, and it is a law in physics that two substances can not occupy the same s.p.a.ce at the same time."
"That law holds good as man understands the subject, but bullets are no longer matter. Motion of ma.s.s was first changed into motion of molecules, and motion of molecule became finally augmented into motion of free force ent.i.ties as the bullets disintegrated into molecular corpuscles, and then were dissociated, atoms resulting. At this last point the sense of vision, and of touch, ceased to be affected by that moving column (neither matter nor force), and at the next jump in velocity the atoms themselves disappeared, and free intangible motion resulted--nothing, vacancy.
"This result is the all-pervading spirit of s.p.a.ce (the ether of mankind), as solid as adamant and as mobile as vacuity. If you can reverse the order of this phenomenon, and imagine an irregular r.e.t.a.r.dation of the rapidity of such atomic motion, you can read the story of the formation of the material universe. Follow the chain backward, and with the decrease of velocity, motion becomes tangible matter again, and in accordance with conditions governing the change of motion into matter, from time to time the various elements successively appear. The planets may grow without and within, and ethereal s.p.a.ce can generate elemental dirt. If you can conceive of an intermediate condition whereby pure s.p.a.ce motion becomes partly tangible, and yet is not gross enough to be earthy matter, you can imagine how such forces as man is acquainted with, light, heat, electricity, magnetism, or gravity even are produced, for these are also disturbances in s.p.a.ce motion. It should be easily understood that, according to the same simple principle, other elements and unknown forces as well, now imperceptible to man's limited faculties, could be and are formed outside and inside his field of perception."
"I fear that I can not comprehend all this," I answered.
"So I feared, and perhaps I have given you this lesson too soon, although some time ago you asked me to teach you concerning the a.s.sertion that electricity, light, heat, magnetism, and gravity are disturbances, and you said, 'Disturbances of what?' Think the lesson over, and you will perceive that it is easy. Let us hope that the time will come when we will be able to glance beneath the rough, material, earth surface knowledge that man has acquired, and experience the mind expansion that leads to the blissful insight possessed by superior beings who do not have to contend with the rasping elements that encompa.s.s all who dwell upon the surface of the earth."
I pondered over these words, and a vague light, an undefined, inexpressible something that I could not put into words broke into my mind; I inferred that we were destined to meet with persons, or existences, possessed of new senses, of a mind development that man had not reached, and I was on the point of questioning my pilot when the motion of the boat was suspended, land appeared ahead, we drew up to it, and disembarked. Lifting the boat from the water my guide placed it on land at the edge of the motionless lake, and we resumed our journey. The scenery seemed but little changed from that of the latter part of our previous line of travel down the inclined plane of the opposite side of the lake that we had crossed. The direction was still downward after leaving the high ridge that bordered the edge of the lake, the floor of the cavern being usually smooth, although occasionally it was rough and covered with stony debris. The mysterious light grew perceptibly brighter as we progressed, the fog-like halo previously mentioned became less dense, and the ring of obscurity widened rapidly. I could distinctly perceive objects at a great distance. I turned to my companion to ask why this was, and he replied:
"Because we are leaving one of the undiscovered conditions of the upper atmosphere that disturbs the sunlight."
"Do you say that the atmosphere is composed of substances unknown to man?"
"Yes; several of them are gases, and others are qualities of s.p.a.ce condition, neither gas, liquid, nor solid.[11] One particularly interferes with light in its pa.s.sage. It is an ent.i.ty that is not moved by the motion of the air, and is unequally distributed over the earth's surface. As we ascend above the earth it decreases, so it does as we descend into it. It is not vapor of water, is neither smoke, nor a true gas, and is as yet sensible to man only by its power of modifying the intensity of light. It has no color, is chemically inactive, and yet modifies the sun's rays so as to blot objects from view at a comparatively small distance from a person on the face of the earth.
That this fact is known to man is evident from the knowledge he possesses of the difference in the power of his organs of vision at different parts of the earth. His sight is especially acute on the table lands of the Western Territories."
[11] This has since been partly supported by the discovery of the element Argon. However, the statement has been recorded many years. Miss Ella Burbige, stenographer, Newport, Ky., copied the original in 1887; Mr. S. D. Rouse, attorney, Covington, Ky., read it in 1889; Mr. Russell Errett, editor of the Christian Standard, in 1890, and Mr. H. C. Meader, President of the American Ticket Brokers' a.s.sociation, in 1892. It seems proper to make this explanation in order to absolve the author from any charge of plagiarism, for each of these persons will recall distinctly this improbable [then] a.s.sertion.--J. U. L.
"I have been told," I answered, "that vapor of water causes this obscuration, or absorption, of light."
"Vapor of water, unless in strata of different densities, is absolutely transparent, and presents no obstacle to the pa.s.sage of light," he said.
"When vapor obstructs light it is owing to impurities contained in it, to currents of varying densities, or wave motions, or to a mechanical mixture of condensed water and air, whereby mult.i.tudes of tiny globular water surfaces are produced. Pure vapor of water, free from motion, is pa.s.sive to the sunlight."
"I can scarcely believe that a substance such as you describe, or that any const.i.tuent of the air, can have escaped the perception of the chemist," I replied.
In, as I thought, a facetious manner he repeated after me the word "chemist," and continued:
"Have chemists detected the ether of Aristotle, that you have mentioned, and I have defined, which scientists nevertheless accept pervades all s.p.a.ce and every description of matter, and that I have told you is really matter itself changed into ultra atomic motion? Have chemists explained why one object is transparent, and another of equal weight and solidity is opaque? Have chemists told you why vermillion is red and indigo is blue (the statement that they respectively reflect these rays of light is not an explanation of the cause for such action)? Have chemists told you why the prism disarranges or distorts sunlight to produce the abnormal hues that men a.s.sume compose elementary rays of light? Have chemists explained anything concerning the why or wherefore of the attributes of matter, or force, or even proven that the so-called primary forms of matter, or elements, are not compounds? Upon the contrary, does not the evolution that results in the recorded discoveries of the chemist foretell, or at least indicate, the possible future of the art, and promise that surrounding mysteries are yet to be developed and expanded into open truths, thus elaborating hidden forces; and that other forms of matter and unseen force expressions, are destined to spring into existence as the sciences progress? The chemist of to-day is groping in darkness; he is a novice as compared with the elaborated chemist of the near future; the imperfectly seen of the present, the silent and unsuspected, will become distinctly visible in a time that is to come, and a brightening of the intellect by these successively upward steps, up stairs of science, will, if science serves herself best, broaden the mind and give power to the imagination, resulting finally in--"
He hesitated.
"Go on," I said.
"The pa.s.sage of mortal man, with the faculties of man intact, into communion with the spirit world."
CHAPTER x.x.xIII.
"A STUDY OF SCIENCE IS A STUDY OF G.o.d."--COMMUNING WITH ANGELS.
"This is incredible," I exclaimed.