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Faraday published papers in the 'Philosophical Transactions' on
'new compounds of carbon and hydrogen,' and on 'sulphonaphthalic acid.'
In the former of these papers he announced the discovery of Benzol,
which, in the hands of modern chemists, has become the foundation of
our splendid aniline dyes. But he swerved incessantly from chemistry
into physics; and in 1826 we find him engaged in investigating the
limits of vaporization, and showing, by exceedingly strong and
apparently conclusive arguments, that even in the case of mercury
such a limit exists; much more he conceived it to be certain that
our atmosphere does not contain the vapour of the fixed constituents
of the earth's crust. This question, I may say, is likely to remain
an open one. Dr. Rankine, for example, has lately drawn attention
to the odour of certain metals; whence comes this odour, if it be
not from the vapour of the metal?
In 1825 Faraday became a member of a committee, to which Sir John
Herschel and Mr. Dollond also belonged, appointed by the Royal Society
to examine, and if possible improve, the manufacture of glass for
optical purposes. Their experiments continued till 1829, when the
account of them constituted the subject of a 'Bakerian Lecture.'
This lectureship, founded in 1774 by Henry Baker, Esq., of the
Strand, London, provides that every year a lecture shall be given
before the Royal Society, the sum of four pounds being paid to the
lecturer. The Bakerian Lecture, however, has long since passed from
the region of pay to that of honour, papers of mark only being
chosen for it by the council of the Society. Faraday's first
Bakerian Lecture, 'On the Manufacture of Glass for Optical Purposes,'
was delivered at the close of 1829. It is a most elaborate and
conscientious description of processes, precautions, and results:
the details were so exact and so minute, and the paper consequently
so long, that three successive sittings of the Royal Society were
taken up by the delivery of the lecture.[3] This glass did not turn
out to be of important practical use, but it happened afterwards to
be the foundation of two of Faraday's greatest discoveries.[4]
The experiments here referred to were commenced at the Falcon Glass
Works, on the premises of Messrs. Green and Pellatt, but Faraday
could not conveniently attend to them there. In 1827, therefore,
a furnace was erected in the yard of the Royal Institution; and it
was at this time, and with a view of assisting him at the furnace,
that Faraday engaged Sergeant Anderson, of the Royal Artillery,
the respectable, truthful, and altogether trustworthy man whose
appearance here is so fresh in our memories. Anderson continued to
be the reverential helper of Faraday and the faithful servant of
this Institution for nearly forty years.[5]
In 1831 Faraday published a paper, 'On a peculiar class of Optical
Deceptions,' to which I believe the beautiful optical toy called the
Chromatrope owes its origin. In the same year he published a paper
on Vibrating Surfaces, in which he solved an acoustical problem
which, though of extreme simplicity when solved, appears to have
baffled many eminent men. The problem was to account for the fact
that light bodies, such as the seed of lycopodium, collected at the
vibrating parts of sounding plates, while sand ran to the nodal
lines. Faraday showed that the light bodies were entangled in the
little whirlwinds formed in the air over the places of vibration,
and through which the heavier sand was readily projected. Faraday's
resources as an experimentalist were so wonderful, and his delight
in experiment was so great, that he sometimes almost ran into excess
in this direction. I have heard him say that this paper on
vibrating surfaces was too heavily laden with experiments.
Footnotes to Chapter 2
[1] The reader's attention is directed to the concluding paragraph
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