1 8 THEi, STORY OF THE PLANTS. 



up with two atoms of oxygen. It takes an amount 

 of sunlight, which we will call A, to unlock this 

 union, and separate the atoms. The oxygen goes 

 off free into the air, and the carbon remains in the 

 leaf as material for Duilding the plant up. Again, 

 the particle of water consists of two atoms of 

 hydrogen, closely locked up with one atom of 

 oxygen. It takes an amount of sunlight, which 

 we will call B, to unlock this union and separate 

 the atoms. The oxygen once more goes off free 

 into the air, and the hydrogen joins in a loose 

 union with the carbon already spoken of. Now, 

 burn the materials resulting from these two acts, 

 and what happens ? Tw^o atoms of oxygen once 

 more unite with the one atom of carbon, to form 

 a particle of carbonic acid ; one atom of oxygen 

 once more unites with the two atoms of hydrogen 

 to form a particle of water, and there is given out 

 in the act of union an amount of light and heat 

 exactly equal to the A and B originally locked up 

 in the act of separating them. 



I have now made it clear, I hope, what plant 

 life really is in its final essence. In nature at 

 large, the elements which chiefly compose it — 

 namely, carbon and hydrogen — exist only in very 

 close union w4th oxygen ; the plant is a machine 

 for separating these elements from oxygen under 

 the influence of sunlight, and building them up 

 into fresh forms, whose great peculiarity is that 

 they possess energy or dormant motion. 



Now the animal is the exact opposite of all 

 this. He is essentially a destroyer, as the plant 

 is a builder. The plant produces; the animal 

 consumes; the plant makes living matter, the 

 animal breaks it down again. He is, in fact, a 

 slow fire, where plant products like grasses, fruits. 



