IV.
THE SUN’S ENERGY (Continued).
If we paused on the words with which our last chapter closed, the reader might perhaps so far gather an impression that the whole all-important subject of the solar energy was involved in mystery and doubt. But if it be indeed a mystery when considered in its essence, so are all things; while regarded separately in any one of its terrestrial effects of magnetic or chemical action, or of light or heat, it may seem less so. Since there is not room to consider all these aspects, let us choose the last, and look at this energy in its familiar form of the heat by which we live.
We, the human race, are warming ourselves at this great fire which called our bodies into being, and when it goes out we shall go too. What is it? How long has it been? How long will it last? How shall we use it?
To look across the space of over ninety million miles, and to try to learn from that distance the nature of the solar heat, and how it is kept up, seemed to the astronomers of the last century a hopeless task. The difficulty was avoided rather than met by the doctrine that the sun was pure fire, and shone because “it was its nature to.” In the Middle Ages such an idea was universal; and along with it, and as a logical sequence of it, the belief was long prevalent that it was possible to make another such flame here, in the form of a lamp which should burn forever and radiate light endlessly without exhaustion. With the philosopher’s stone, which was to transmute lead into gold, this perpetual lamp formed a prime object of research for the alchemist and student of magic.
We recall the use which Scott has made of the belief in this product of “gramarye” in the “Lay of the Last Minstrel,” where it is sought to open the grave of the great wizard in Melrose Abbey. It is midnight when the stone which covers it is heaved away, and Michael’s undying lamp, buried with him long ago, shines out from the open tomb and illuminates the darkness of the chancel.
“I would you had been there to see
The light break forth so gloriously;
That lamp shall burn unquenchably
Until the eternal doom shall be,”