<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>III</h2>
<h3>SOMETHING ABOUT EXPLOSIVE BALLOONS AND THE WONDERS OF HYDROGEN</h3>
<div class='cap'>ONE day the professor told me about some rainfall
experiments with balloons that he conducted years
ago for the government. There was a theory to be
tested that loud explosions at a height will make the
clouds pour down water, and some gentlemen in the
Department of Agriculture were anxious to set off as
loud an explosion as possible, say a thousand feet up
in the air. Professor Myers received this commission,
and proceeded at once to Washington with a gas-balloon
twelve feet in diameter.</div>
<p>"Don't you think that balloon is rather small?" asked
one of the gentlemen.</p>
<p>"No," said Myers; "I should call it rather large."</p>
<p>The other man shook his head. "I'm afraid it won't
make noise enough to test our theory."</p>
<p>"Well," said the professor (I can see his eyes twinkling),
"if this balloon doesn't make noise enough
we'll get a bigger one."</p>
<p>They took the balloon some miles out of Washington
(the professor insisted on this), filled it with a terribly
explosive mixture of oxygen and hydrogen, and
sent it up about a quarter of a mile, with an anchor-rope
holding it and a wire hanging down to a little
hand-dynamo or blasting-machine. As they made
ready to turn this dynamo, Professor Myers lay flat<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111"></SPAN></span>
on his back, eyes glued to the balloon, confident but
curious. The handle turned, a spark jumped at the
other end, and the ball of silk seemed to swell enormously
and then vanish with a flash of a thousand
shivers of silk. On this came the sound—a smashing
and tearing blast louder than any thunder-crash or roar
of cannon. It flattened men to the ground, killed hundreds
of little fish in a stream near by (bursting their
air-bladders), knocked over a bowling-alley like a house
of cards, frightened cattle, and brought down rain in
torrents within eight minutes. The Agricultural gentlemen
were more than satisfied, and adopted the professor's
system for extended rainfall experiments—only
these (for obvious reasons) were removed to the
lonely and arid plains of distant Texas.</p>
<p>"It wasn't much fun living down there," said the
professor; "but we got rain whenever we wanted it."</p>
<p>"What would happen," I inquired, "if a very large
balloon filled with this explosive mixture were set off
over a crowded city?"</p>
<p>The professor shook his head in his awed contemplation
of this possibility. "It would work fearful destruction.
If large enough (and there is no difficulty
in obtaining such a size), it would wipe out of existence
whole blocks of houses and the people in them. It
would destroy an army."</p>
<p>In the course of our talks I discovered a mystic side,
very unexpected, in the professor's nature. He used to
speak of hydrogen, for instance, with a certain almost
reverence, as if it were something endowed with life
and consciousness, a powerful spirit, one would say, not
merely a commonplace product of chemistry, a gas from
a retort.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illus27.jpg" width-obs="600" height-obs="388" alt="A BALLOON-PICNIC AT THE AËRONAUTS' HOME." title="" /> <span class="caption">A BALLOON-PICNIC AT THE AËRONAUTS' HOME.</span></div>
<p>"I have often wondered," he said one day, "as my
basket has swept me along, what there is in this silken<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113"></SPAN></span>
bag above me that lifts me thus over mountains and
cities. I look up into the balloon through the open
mouth, and I see nothing; I hear nothing; I smell nothing.
None of my senses answer any call; yet somehow,
strangely, in a way I can't explain, I <i>perceive</i> a
presence. It would not be at all the same to me were
the balloon filled with air, though it would be the same
to all my senses. Again and again I have noted this
thing, that hydrogen makes itself known to men when
they are near it."</p>
<p>He paused a moment as if to observe my attitude,
to see if it were one of scoffing. I made no remark, but
begged him to go on.</p>
<p>"After all," he continued, "even the books allow to
hydrogen properties that are very amazing. It is the
lightest of all things; it passes through and beyond all
things; it is the nearest approach we know of to absolute
nothing. Who can say that it is not related to the
land of nothing, to—" He hesitated.</p>
<p>"You mean?" said I.</p>
<p>"I don't know what I mean. I only wonder. Take
this case that happened at Ogdensburg, New York,
during an ascension we made there. We had filled the
balloon with hydrogen, and were just ready to start
when the valve-cords that hang down inside the bag
from the valve at the top became twisted and drew up
out of reach from the basket. In vain I tried to get
them free by poking at them with sticks and long-handled things;
the cords would not come down, and
of course no sane man would make an ascension with
his balloon-valve beyond control. There was nothing
for it but to get inside that great gas-bag and undo the
tangle with my hands. So I called fifteen or twenty
men to catch hold of the netting and pull the struggling
balloon down over me until I could reach the
cords. Then I—"<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Wait a minute," I interrupted. "Were you standing
inside the balloon so that you had to breathe hydrogen?"</p>
<p>The professor smiled. "I stood inside the balloon,
but I breathed nothing; I held my breath, which is
one of the things I have practised. Before I went inside
I told my wife to note the time by her watch, and
if I did not come out before one hundred and twenty
seconds had passed to have the men drag me out. You
see, I knew I could hold my breath one hundred and
twenty seconds, but no longer.</p>
<p>"Well, we carried out the plan, and I freed the cords
in less than my limit of time; then came the uncanny
part of it—at least, it seemed so to me. I had read
that hydrogen will not transmit sound, but had never
tested it. It is true I had at various times taken hydrogen
into my lungs, but never had I tried to speak in
hydrogen. Now was my chance, and, with all my remaining
breath I shouted as loud as I could inside that
balloon. Think of it; there were my wife and the men
a few feet distant, with only the thinnest tissue of
silk between us, and a gas that was like nothing. Yet
my cry, that would have reached perhaps half a mile
in air, could not penetrate that little void. To those
outside the balloon it was as if I had not opened my
lips. They heard nothing, not even a whisper. I believe
you might fire a cannon inside a bag of hydrogen,
and no faintest rustle of the discharge would reach
your ears. So, you see, a world of hydrogen would be
a voiceless world."</p>
<p>"Did you say you have breathed hydrogen?" I asked.</p>
<p>"Yes; I have breathed it up to the danger-point. I
know all the sensations. There is first a mild exhilaration,
then a sense of sickening and head-throbbing,
and finally a delicious languor that leads into stupor.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115"></SPAN></span>
When you get there it is time to stop. In making
ascensions we have to be very careful not to breathe
too much gas from the balloon-neck which hangs open
over the basket. More than one aëronaut has been
gradually overcome without realizing that he was in
danger."</p>
<p>The professor went on to tell of other singular things
about this subtle gas, notably that, speaking within
limits, the higher you want a balloon to rise, the <i>less</i>
hydrogen you must put in it. If you fill a balloon full
of hydrogen it will rise to no great height (and is very
apt to burst), since the gas has no space to expand in,
and the way to keep a balloon rising is to make it expand
more and more as it goes up, each foot of added
volume displacing a foot of the air-ocean and to that
extent adding buoyancy.</p>
<p>"General Hazen and I," said the professor, "once
planned that some day, when we got an appropriation,
we would go up in a balloon having a capacity of, say,
forty thousand cubic feet, but carrying at the ground
only ten thousand cubic feet of hydrogen—in other
words, in a shrunken, quarter-filled balloon. Of course
as we rose and the air became rarefied this hydrogen
would expand against the decreasing air-pressure, and
at a height of two miles our original ten thousand feet
of gas might have swelled to twenty thousand feet, at
five miles to thirty thousand feet, and so on. The last
ten thousand feet of expansion would have brought us
to no one knows what height, but certainly, we calculated,
to the greatest height ever reached by a balloonist."</p>
<p>He explained that the balloon record of seven miles
claimed for Glaischer and Coxwell, the English aëronauts,
is not reliable, since the barometer used in that
famous ascension (it was made at Wolverhampton,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116"></SPAN></span>
England, in 1862) could not register above five miles,
and what was accomplished beyond that height is matter
of pure conjecture and must be less than might be
done by the Hazen-Myers plan, since Glaischer's balloon
(by a serious oversight) was started on its flight
nearly full of hydrogen, instead of nearly empty.</p>
<p>"Oh," exclaimed the professor, with regretful look,
"why don't some of our very rich men think of these
things!"</p>
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