470. Why is the primrose yellow?

Because, though it receives white light, it alters its vibrations to 44,000 in an inch, and 535,000,000,000,000 in a second, and this is the velocity of vibration which produces upon the eye a sensation of yellow.


"But if thine eye be evil, thy whole body shall be full of darkness. If therefore the light that is in thee be darkness, how great is that darkness."—Matt. v.


471. Why are there so many varieties of colour and tint in the various objects in nature?

Because every surface has a peculiar constitution, or atomic condition, by which the light falling upon it is influenced. In tropical climates, where the brightness of the sun is the most intense, there the colours of natural objects are the richest; the foliage is of the darkest green; the flowers and fruits present the brightest hues; and the plumage of the birds is of the most gaudy description. In the temperate climates these features are more subdued, still bearing relation to the degree of light. And at a certain depth of the ocean, where light penetrates only in a slight degree, the objects that abound are nearly colourless.

It has been held by many philosophers (and the theory is so far conclusive that it cannot be dispensed with) that there is an analogy between the vibratory causes of sound, and the vibratory causes of colour. Any one who has seen an Æolian harp, and listened to the wild notes of its music, will be aware that the wires of the harp are swept by accidental currents of air; that when those currents have been strong, the notes of the harp have been raised to the highest pitch, and as the intensity of the currents has fallen, the musical sounds have deepened and softened, until, with melodious sighing, they have died away. No finger has touched the strings; no musical genius has presided at the harp to wake its inspiring sounds; but the vibration imparted to the air, as it swept the wires, has alone produced the chromatic sounds that have charmed the listener. If, then, the varied vibrations of the air are capable of imparting dissimilar sensations of sounds to the ear, is it not only possible, but probable, that the different vibrations of light may impart the various sensations of colours to the eye?