EMILY.
Does not some of the gas escape between the bladder and the pipe?
MRS. B.
No, they are perfectly air tight; we shall succeed presently, I dare say.
CAROLINE.
Now a bubble ascends; it moves with the rapidity of a balloon. How beautifully it refracts the light!
EMILY.
It has burst against the ceiling—you succeed now wonderfully; but why do they all ascend and burst against the ceiling?
MRS. B.
Hydrogen gas is so much lighter than atmospherical air, that it ascends rapidly with its very light envelope, which is burst by the force with which it strikes the ceiling.