CHAPTER XIII.

FRICTIONAL ELECTRICITY.

Fig. 159.

Franklin and his kite.

Of all the agents with which man is acquainted, not one can afford a greater source of wonderment to the ignorant, of meditation to the learned, than the effects of that marvellous force pervading all matter called electricity. We look at matter endowed with life, and matter wanting this divine gift, with some degree of interest, depending on our various tastes and occupations; we know at a glance a bird, a beast, or a fish; we observe with pleasure and admiration the wonderful changes of nature, and know that a few seeds thrown into the broken clods and well-tilled earth may become either the waving, golden corn-field or in time may grow from the tender little shrub to the stately forest-tree; we know all these things because they belong to the visible world, and are continually passing before our eyes: but in looking at the visible, we must not forget and ignore the invisible. It may with truth be stated that the greatest powers of nature are all concealed, and if any truth would lead us from Nature to Nature's God, it is the fact that no visible, solid, tangible agent can work with so much force and power as invisible electricity. Many centuries passed away since the commencement of the Christian era, before the human mind was prepared to appreciate this great power of nature; other forces had claimed attention, and the difference in the presence or absence of two of the imponderable agents, heat and light, as derived from the sun, in the effects of the change of the seasons, and other common facts, had led philosophers to speculate early upon their nature; but electricity, from its peculiar properties, long escaped observation, and it was not until the beginning of the eighteenth century (about 1730) that any material facts had been discovered in this science, when Mr. Stephen Grey, a pensioner of the Charterhouse, discovered what he termed electrics and non-electrics, and also the use of insulating materials, such as silk, resin, glass, hair, &c.; and it is obvious that, until the latter fact was discovered, the science would remain in abeyance, because there would be no mode of preserving the electrical excitement in the absence of non-conductors of this force.

The year 1750 was remarkable for Volta's discoveries and Dr. Franklin's identification of the electricity of the machine with the stupendous effects of the thunderstorm. Sir Humphry Davy, in 1800, with his commanding genius, threw fresh light upon the already numerous electrical effects discovered. In 1821, Faraday commenced his studies in this branch of philosophy; which he has since so diligently followed up, that he has been for some years, and is still the first electrician of the age. From the commencement of the present century, discoveries have succeeded each other in regular order and with the most amazing results; and now electricity is regularly employed as a money-getting agent in the process of the electrotype and electro-silvering and gilding; also in the electric telegraph; and in a few years we may possibly see it commonly employed as a source of artificial light.

The nature of electricity, says Turner, like that of heat, is at present involved in obscurity. Both these principles, if really material, are so light, subtle, and diffuse, that it has hitherto been found impossible to recognise in them the ordinary characteristics of matter; and therefore electric phenomena may be referred, not to the agency of a specific substance, but to some property or state of common matter, just as sound and light are produced by a vibrating medium. But the effects of electricity are so similar to those of a mechanical agent, it appears so distinctly to emanate from substances which contain it in excess, and rends asunder all obstacles in its course so exactly like a body in rapid motion, that the impression of its existence as a distinct material substance sui generis forces itself irresistibly on the mind. All nations, accordingly, have spontaneously concurred in regarding electricity as a material principle; and scientific men give a preference to the same view, because it offers an easy explanation of phenomena, and suggests a natural language intelligible to all.

There are five well-ascertained sources of electricity, and three which are considered to be uncertain. The five sources are friction, chemical action, heat, magnetism, peculiar animal organisms. The three uncertain sources are contact, evaporation, and the solar rays.