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"I'll tell you," replied his father, "when we get to the top of the hill."
They reached the top of the hill soon after this, and sat down upon a smooth stone. There was a very wide prospect spread out before them,--fields, forests, hamlets, streams,--and here and there, scattered over the landscape, a little patch of snow. The sun was just up, and the whole scene was very bright and beautiful.
"Now, father," said Rollo, "tell me how you know that there is any wind at all."
"I did not say that there was any _wind_. I said _motion of the air_."
"Why, father," replied Rollo, "I thought that wind was motion of the air."
"So it is," said his father; "but all motion of the air is not wind.
Wind is a _current_ of air, that is, a _progressive_ motion;--and in fact, there is, this morning, a slight current from the westward."
"How can you tell, father?" asked Rollo.
"By the smokes from the chimneys; don't you see that they all lean a little from the west towards the east?"
"Not but a little, father;--and there's one, from that red house, which goes up exactly straight."
"Yes," said his father, "there is one; but, in general, the columns of smoke lean; which is proof that there is a gentle current of air to the eastward."
"_Westward_, you said, father," rejoined Rollo.
"Yes, _from_ the westward, but _to_ the eastward.
"That is what is called a progressive motion," continued Rollo's father; "that is, the whole body of air makes progress; it advances from west to east. But there is another kind of motion, called a _vibratory_ motion."
"What kind of a motion is that, father?" asked Rollo.
"It is a very hard kind to describe, at any rate," said his father. "It is a kind of quivering, which begins in one place and spreads in every direction. Don't you hear a kind of a thumping sound?"
"Yes," said Rollo, "a great way off; what is it?"
"Look over across the pond there," said his father; "don't you see that man cutting wood?"
"Yes," said Rollo; "that's what makes the noise.--No, father," he continued, after a moment's pause, "that's not it. Look, father, and you'll see that the thumping sound comes when his axe is lifted up."
They all looked, and found that it was as Rollo had said. The strokes of the axe kept time, pretty well, with the sound of blows, which they heard, only the sounds did not correspond with the descent of the axe.
When the axe appeared to strike the wood, they did not hear any sound, but they did hear one every time the axe was lifted up.
"So, you see," said Rollo, "it is not that man that we hear. There must be some other man cutting wood."
"We will wait a minute," said his father, "until he gets the log cut off, and then he will stop cutting; and we will see whether we cease to hear the sound."
So they sat still, and watched the man for a minute. Presently he stopped cutting,--and, to Rollo's great surprise, the sound stopped too.
"That's strange," said Rollo.
In a moment more, the man had rolled the log over, and commenced cutting upon the other side; and in an instant after he began to cut, Rollo began to hear the sound of strokes again.
"Yes," said Rollo, "it must be his cutting that we hear; but it is very strange that he makes a noise when he lifts up his axe, and no noise when it goes down."
"I'll tell you how it is," said his father. "He makes the noise when his axe goes down; but, then, it takes some little time for the sound to get here; and by the time the sound gets here, his axe is up."
"O," said Rollo, "is that it?"
"Yes," replied his father, "that is it."
Rollo watched the motion of the axe several minutes longer in silence, and then his attention was attracted by the singing of a bird upon a tree in his father's garden, at a short distance below him.
Pretty soon, however, his mother said that it was time for her to return; and they all, accordingly, arose from their seats, and rambled along together a short distance upon the brow of the hill, but towards home.
"Then the sound moves along through the air," said Rollo, "from the man to us."
"Yes," said his father; "that is, there is a vibratory motion of the air,--a kind of quivering,--which begins where the man is, and spreads all around in every direction, until it reaches us. But there is no _progressive_ motion; that is, none of the air itself, where the man is at work, leaves him, and comes to us."
"But, husband," said Rollo's mother, "I don't see how anything can come from where the man is, to us, unless it is the air itself."
"It is rather hard to understand," said his father. "But I can make an experiment with a string, when we get home, that will show you something about it."
They rambled about among the rocks for a short time longer, and then they descended by a steep and crooked path, in a different place from where they had ascended. When they had got nearly home, Rollo said that he would run forward and get his father's ball of twine and bring it out; and so have it all ready for the experiment.
Accordingly, when Rollo's father and mother arrived at the front door, they found Rollo ready there with a small ball of twine in his hand, about as large as an apple.
"Now, Rollo," said his father, "you may take hold of the end of the twine, and walk along out into the street, while I hold the ball, and let the string unwind."
Rollo did so. He drew out a long piece of twine, as long as the whole front of the house, and then he stopped to ask his father if that was enough.
"No," said his father; "walk along."
So Rollo walked on for some distance farther, until, at last, the ball was entirely unwound. Rollo had one end of it, and was standing at some distance down the road, while his father, with the other end, stood at the gate of the front yard. The middle of the string hung down pretty near to the ground.
"Draw tight, Rollo," said his father.
So Rollo pulled a little harder, and by that means drew the line straighter.
"Now," said his father, "walk along slowly."
So Rollo walked along, drawing the end of the line with him. His father followed with the other end. Thus they advanced several steps along the side of the road.
"There," said his father. "Stop. That, you see, was a _progressive_ motion."
"Yes, sir," replied Rollo.
"The whole string advanced along the road," added his father. "It made progress, and so it was a progressive motion. Now, fasten your end of the string, Rollo, to that tree directly behind you."
Rollo looked behind him, and saw that he was standing near a small maple-tree, which had been planted, a few years before, by the side of the road.
"Tie it right around the stem of the tree," said his father, "about as high as your shoulder."