118 FRAGMENTS OF SCIENCE. 



turbid water of the Visp. When kept still for a day or 

 so, the grosser matter sank, but the finer particles re- 

 mained suspended, and gave a distinctly blue tinge to 

 the water. The blueness of certain Alpine lakes has 

 been shown to be in part due to this cause. Professor 

 Eoscoe has noticed several striking cases of a similar 

 kind. In a very remarkable paper the late Principal 

 Forbes showed that steam issuing from the safety-valve 

 of a locomotive, when favourably observed, exhibits at 

 a certain stage of its condensation the colours of the 

 sky. It is blue by reflected light, and orange or red by 

 transmitted light. The same effect, as pointed out by 

 Goethe, is to some extent exhibited by peat-smoke. 

 More than ten years ago, I amused myself by observ- 

 ing, on a calm day at Killarney, the straight smoke- 

 columns rising from the cabin-chimneys. It was easy 

 to project the lower portion of a column against a dark 

 pine, and its upper portion against a bright cloud. The 

 smoke in the former case was blue, being seen mainly 

 by reflected light; in the latter case it was reddish, 

 being seen mainly by transmitted light. Such smoke 

 was not in exactly the condition to give us the glow 

 of the Alps, but it was a step in this direction. Briicke's 

 fine precipitate above referred to looks yellowish by 

 transmitted light; but, by duly strengthening the pre- 

 cipitate, you may render the white light of noon as 

 ruby-coloured as the sun, when seen through Liverpool 

 smoke, or upon Alpine horizons. I do not, however, 

 point to the gross smoke arising from coal as an illus- 

 tration of the action of small particles, because such 

 smoke soon absorbs and destroys the waves of blue, in- 

 stead of sending them to the eyes of the observer. 



These multifarious facts, and numberless others 

 which cannot now be referred to, are explained by 

 reference to the single principle, that, where the scat- 



