Among the Forces | Page 3

Henry White Warren
said that was what he was made for; he existed only to help
man. He said that he had made those great forests to grow for a
thousand years so as to be ready for man when he needed them, and
that he was now ready to help move them where they were wanted.
So he told the man who owned the forest that there was a great power,
which men called gravitation, that seemed to reside in the center of the
earth and every other world, but that it worked everywhere. It held the
stones down to the earth, made the rain fall, and water to run down hill;
and if the man would arrange a road, so that gravitation and the sun
could work together, the forest would soon be transported from the
mountains to the sea.
So the man made a trough a great many miles long, the two sides
coming together like a great letter V. Then the sun brought water from

the sea and kept the trough nearly full year after year. The man put into
it the lumber and logs from the great forests, and gravitation pulled the
lumber and water ever so swiftly, night and day, miles away to the sea.
How I have laughed as I have seen that perpetual stream of lumber and
timber pour out so far from where the sun grew them for man. For the
sun never ceased to supply the water, and gravitation never ceased to
pull.
This man who relentlessly cut down the great forests never said, "How
good the sun is!" nor, "How strong is gravitation!" but said continually,
"How smart I am!"

OLD SUN HELP
Holland is a land that is said to draw twenty feet of water. Its surface is
below sea level. Since 1440 they have been recovering land from the
sea. They have acquired 230,000 acres in all. Fifty years ago they diked
off 45,000 acres of an arm of the sea, called Haarlem Meer, that had an
average depth of twelve and three quarters feet of water, and proposed
to pump it out so as to have that much more fertile land. They wanted
to raise 35,000,000 tons of water a month a distance of ten feet, to get
through in time. Who could work the handle?
The sun would evaporate two inches a year, but that was too slow. So
they used the old force of the sun, reservoired in former ages. Coal is
condensed sunshine, still keeping all the old light and power. By a
suitable engine they lifted 112 tons ten feet at every stroke, and in 1848,
five years after they began to apply old sun force, 41,675 acres were
ready for sale and culture.
The water that accumulates now, from rain and infiltration, is lifted out
by the sun force as exhibited in wind on windmills. They groaningly
work while men sleep.
The Netherlandish engineers are now devising plans to pump out the
Zuyder Zee, an area of two thousand square miles. There is plenty of

power of every kind for anything, material, mental, spiritual. The
problem is the application of it. The thinker is king.
This is only one instance of numberless applications of old sun force.
In this country coal does more work than every man, woman, and child
in the whole land. It pumps out deep mines, hoists ore to the surface,
speeds a thousand trains, drives great ships, in face of waves and winds,
thousands of miles and faster than transcontinental trains. It digs, spins,
weaves, saws, planes, grinds, plows, reaps, and does everything it is
asked to do. It is a vast reservoir of force, for the accumulation of
which thousands of years were required.

MOON HELP
At Foo-Chow, China, there is a stone bridge, more than a mile long,
uniting the two parts of the city. It is not constructed with arches, but
piers are built up from the bottom of the river and great granite
stringers are laid horizontally from pier to pier. I measured some of
these great stone stringers, and found them to be three feet square and
forty-five feet long. They weigh over thirty tons each.
How could they be lifted, handled, and put in place over the water on
slender piers? How was it done? There was no Hercules to perform the
mighty labor, nor Amphion to lure them to their place with the music of
his golden lyre.
Tradition says that the Chinese, being astute astronomers, got the moon
to do the work. It was certainly very shrewd, if they did. Why not use
the moon for more than a lantern? Is it not a part of the "all things" over
which man was made to have dominion?
Well, the Chinese engineers brought
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