A course of six lectures on the various forces of matter and their relations to each other / by Michael Faraday ; edited by William Crookes.
- Michael Faraday
- Date:
- 1860
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: A course of six lectures on the various forces of matter and their relations to each other / by Michael Faraday ; edited by William Crookes. Source: Wellcome Collection.
22/208 (page 10)
![water]. What a wonderful thing it is to see that it requires so much water as that [a half- pint vessel full] to fall towards the earth, com- pared with the little mass of substance I have here ! And again, if I take this metal [a bar of aluminium i^) about eight times the bulk of the platinum] we find the water will balance that as well as it did the platinum; so that we get even in the very outset, an example of what we want to understand by the words forces or 'powers. I have spoken of water, and first of all of its property of falling downwards:—you know very well how the oceans surround the globe — how they fall round the surface, giving roundness to it, clothing it like a garment; but, besides that, there are other properties of water. Here, for instance, is some quicklime, and if I add some water to it, you will find another power or property in the water. (4) It is now very hot, it is steaming up, and I could perhaps light phosphorus or a lucifer-match with it. Now, that could not happen -without a force in the water to produce the result; but that force is entirely distinct from its power of falling to the earth. Again, here is another substance [some anhydrous sulphate of copper (^)] which will il-](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21496006_0022.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)