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The Atmosphere
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CHAPTER LIII
THE ATMOSPHERE
[244]
F you pass your hand quickly before your face, you feel a
breath blow on your cheeks. This breath is air. In repose it
makes no impression on us; put in motion by the hand, it
reveals its presence by a light shock that produces an
impression of freshness. But the shock from the air is not
always, like this, a simple caress. It can become very
brutal. A violent wind, which sometimes uproots trees and
overthrows buildings, is still air in motion, air that flows
from one country to another like a stream of water. Air is
invisible, because it is transparent and almost colorless.
But if it forms a very thick layer through which one can
look, its feeble coloring becomes perceptible. Seen in small
quantities, water appears equally colorless; seen in a deep
layer, as in the sea, in a lake, or in a river, it is blue
or green. It is the same with air: in thin strata it seems
deprived of color; in a layer several leagues in thickness,
it is blue. A distant landscape appears to us bluish,
because the thick bed of intervening air imparts to it its
own color.
"Now air forms all around the earth an envelope fifteen
leagues thick. It is the aërial sea or atmosphere, in which
the clouds swim. Its soft blue tint causes the sky's color.
It is in fact the atmosphere
[245] that produces the appearance of
a celestial vault.
"Do you know, my children, what is the use of this
aërial sea at the bottom of which we live as fish live
in water?"
"Not very well," Jules replied.
"Without this ocean of air life would be impossible, plant
life as well as animal. Listen. Chief of those imperious
needs to which we are subjected are those of eating,
drinking, and sleeping. As long as hunger is only its
diminutive, appetite, that savory seasoning of the grossest
viands; as long as thirst is only that nascent dryness of
the mouth that gives so great a charm to a glass of cold
water; as long as sleepiness is nothing more than that
gentle lassitude that makes us desire the night's rest, so
long is it the attraction of pleasure rather than the rude
prick of pain that urges the satisfaction of these
primordial needs. But if their satisfaction is too
long delayed, they impose themselves as inexorable masters
and command by torture. Who can think without terror of the
agonies of hunger and thirst! Hunger! Ah! you do not know
what it is, my children, and God preserve you from ever
knowing it! Hunger! If you could have any idea of its
tortures, your heart would be oppressed at the thought of
the unhappy ones who experience it. Ah! my dear children,
always help those that are hungry; help them, and give,
give; you will never do a nobler deed in this world. Giving
to the poor is lending to the Lord."
Claire had put her hand before her eyes to hide a tear of
emotion. She had observed a flash on her
[246] uncle's face that
spoke from the depth of his heart. After a moment's pause
Uncle Paul continued:
"There is, however, a need before which hunger and thirst,
however violent they may be, are mute; a need always
springing up afresh and never satisfied, which continually
makes itself felt, awake or asleep, night or day, every
hour, every moment. It is the need of air. Air is so
necessary to life that it has not been given us to regulate
its use, as we do with eating and drinking, so as to guard
us from the fatal consequences that the slightest
forgetfulness would cause. It is, as it were, without
consciousness or volition on our part that the air enters
our body to perform its wonderful part. We live on air more
than anything else; ordinary nourishment comes second. The
need of food is only felt at rather long intervals; the need
of air is felt without ceasing, always imperious, always
inexorable."
"And yet, Uncle," said Jules, "I have never thought of
feeding myself with air. It is the first time I ever heard
that air is so necessary for us."
"You have not given it a thought, because all that is done
for you; but try a moment to prevent air entering into your
body: close the ways to it, the nose and mouth, and you
will see!"
Jules did as his uncle told him, shut his mouth and pinched
his nose with his fingers. At the end of a moment, his face
red and puffed up, the little boy was obliged to put an end
to his experiment.
"It is impossible to keep it up, Uncle; it
suffo- [247] cates a person and makes him feel as if he should certainly die if
it kept on a little longer."
"Well, I hope you are convinced of the necessity of air in
order to live. All animals, from the tiniest mite, hardly
visible, to the giants of creation, are in the same
condition as you: on air, first of all, their life depends.
Even those that live in the water, fish and others, are no
exception to this rule. They can live only in water into
which air infiltrates and dissolves. When you are older you
shall see a striking experiment which proves how
indispensable to life is the presence of air. You put a bird
under a glass dome, shut tight everywhere; then with a kind
of pump the air is drawn out. As it is withdrawn from the
inside of the glass cage, the bird staggers, struggles a
moment in an anguish horrible to see, and falls dead."
"It must take a lot of air," was Emile's comment, "to supply
the needs of all the people and animals in the world. There
are so many!"
"Yes, indeed; a great quantity is needed. One man needs
nearly 6000 liters of air an hour. But the atmosphere is so
vast that there is plenty of air for all. I will try
to make you understand it.
"Air is one of the most subtle of substances; a liter of it
weighs only one gram and three decigrams. That is very
little: the same volume of water weighs 1000 grams; that is
to say, 769 times as much. However, such is the enormous
extent of the atmosphere that the weight of all the air
composing it outstrips your utmost powers of imagination. If
it
[248] were possible to put all the air of the atmosphere into
one of the pans of an immense pair of scales, what weight
do you think it would be necessary to put into the other
part to make it equal the air? Don't be afraid of
exaggerating; you can pile up thousands on thousands of
kilograms; if air is very light, the aërial sea is very
vast."
"Let us put on a few millions of kilograms," suggested
Claire.
"That is a mere trifle," her uncle replied.
"Let us multiply
it by ten, by a hundred."
"It is not enough, the pan would not be raised. But let me
tell you the answer, for in this calculation numerical terms
would fail you. For the great weight I am supposing, the
heaviest counter-weights would be insignificant. New ones
must be invented. Imagine, then, a copper cube, a kilometer
in each dimension; this metallic die, measuring a quarter of
a league on its edge, shall be our unit of weight. It
represents nine thousand millions of kilograms. Well, to
balance the weight of the atmosphere, it would be necessary
to put into the other pan 585,000 of these cubes!"
"Is it possible!" Claire exclaimed.
"I told you so! Imagination vainly seeks to picture the
stupendous mass of the layer of air wound like a scarf by
the Creator around the earth. Now do you know what
relation it bears to the terrestrial globe—this ocean of
air having a weight represented by half a million of copper
cubes a quarter of a league each way? Scarcely what the
imperceptible velvety down of a peach is to the peach
itself.
[249] What, then, are we, materially, we poor beings of a
day, who move about at the bottom of this atmospheric sea!
But how great we are through thought, which makes game of
weighing the atmosphere and the earth itself! In vain does
the material universe overwhelm us with its immensity; the
mind is superior to it, because it alone knows itself, and
it alone, by a sublime privilege, has knowledge of its
divine author."
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