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ried; nevertheless, one ray of the noonday sun effaces them. Thus the imagination paints every thing beautiful to us; but every thing which it represents as attractive in the possession of the goods of this world, is but a beautiful image which shall disappear in the light of reason. The importance of this lesson of wisdom was worth the trouble of stopping for a while, at the little phenomenon which furnishes it."

TWELFTH WEEK-THURSDAY.

VII. FROST-BENEFICENT CONTRIVANCES RELATIVE TO SNOW.

As the influence of cold is felt in the air, as well as on the surface of the earth, and indeed becomes more intense, in proportion to the elevation, it must affect the moisture which floats in the atmosphere. The rain-drops must freeze, and, when frozen, must be precipitated to the ground. Now, were this process to take place in the same manner as it occurs on the face of a lake or pond, and were the water in the clouds to be converted into solid lumps of ice, the most unhappy consequences would ensue, as may be inferred from the damage occasioned by a hail-storm,—an occurrence which sometimes but rarely happens, as if to call our attention to the beneficent provision by which this calamity is usually obviated. The fruits of the earth would be destroyed; or, if the season of fruits was past, at least the branches and embryo buds of plants and trees would be shattered ; birds on the wing, or on the perch, would be struck to the ground, stunned and dying; the more tender quadrupeds would receive their death-blow; and even the hardy races of animals, and man himself, would not escape material injury. None of these consequences, however, actually take place, because the frozen rain-drops descend, not in the form of ice, or even usually in the

less destructive form of hail, but on the downy wings of virgin snow.

Let us consider, then, the properties of snow, and we shall not fail to admire the wisdom of the provision. The vapour floating in the atmosphere is arrested by the cold, and is frozen; but, instead of running together, as might be expected, into solid masses, it unites with the nitrous particles, also to be found mingled with the air, and, forming a compound crystal, shoots out into beautiful feathery flakes. Whoever will take the trouble to examine one of these flakes with the aid of a microscope, cannot fail to admire the elegance and skill of its structure. He will observe many little sparkling crosses or darts radiating from a point, and branching off and meet ing in all directions, so as to form hexagonal lines of much beauty, wrought apparently with the nicest art, and wonderfully fitted for passing, with a buoyant and flickering motion, through the air, so as to drop, without disturbance, on the ground, spreading a coat of dazzling whiteness, profusely, but gently, over bush and brake, lawn and mountain. It has been found by experiment, that snow is twenty-four times lighter than water, and that it fills up ten or twelve times more space, at the moment of falling, than the water produced from it when melted." This is an admirable contrivance, to prevent, or at least to modify, what would otherwise prove a great evil.

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Another useful property of snow has been noticed by many writers, and is verified by yearly experience. Being a very imperfect conductor of heat, it does not readily descend below the freezing point, and thus tempers the rigour of the season. Under its white covering, the earth remains of a moderate and equal temperature, and the bulbs and roots of plants are preserved from the ungenial influence of a severe sky. In consequence of the same slowness in the conduction of heat, the Arctic traveller can sleep, without much inconvenience, on his

* Sturm's Reflections, January 26.

bed of snow, which is warm compared with the atmosphere he breathes; and, for the same reason, the snowformed hut affords the Esquimaux no unpleasant abode.*

Nor must we forget to remark, with reference to the effects of snow on the soil, that the nitrous particles which it contains, are said to be of a fertilizing quality, and, as it gradually melts, these particles penetrate the earth, being carried to the roots of the plants, mingled with the water into which it is converted. Assuming the accuracy of this latter observation, we shall find abundant cause for admiring an arrangement, which, in various ways, converts an apparent curse into a blessing, changing that which seems to be an aggravation of this inclement season, and a source of sterility, into a protection from the cold, and a means of future fruitfulness.

But there is yet another arrangement, in reference to this subject, which must not be overlooked. When the weather changes, which it sometimes does very suddenly, the greatest inconveniences, and even calamities, would ensue, were the effect of this change to operate, as might, without experience, be expected, in producing an instantaneous conversion of the snow into water. If the frost were as quickly expelled from water as from the air, the moment that the temperature rose above 32°, the snow would become liquid as by magic, the ice would vanish like a dream from river and lake, and the rigid earth would, on the higher grounds, be in an instant converted into a swamp, and in the valleys would be overflowed, and swept away by mountain torrents. very peculiar and remarkable property prevents these disastrous effects. In the act of dissolving, the water absorbs a quantity of heat, and retains it in a latent state; and, on this account, the melting process cannot take place till a sufficient quantity has been absorbed. This necessarily causes the process to be slow; and days, and even weeks, may pass away, after the thaw has begun, before the ice entirely disappears from our ponds, or the * Whewell's Bridgewater Treatise, p. 90.

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snow from our hills. The advantageous consequences of this retardation, are too obvious to require further illustration; but it is of importance to remark, that it is effected, not as a result of an ordinary and general law, but rather by what has been justly called the apparent violation of a law. A sudden stand, as it were, is made in the progress of the change. The alteration of temperature, instead of producing its ordinary effects, becomes, all at once, apparently feeble and languid in its operations; the heat, as it is applied, disappears, and its dissolving power is restrained within such bounds, as to render the process comparatively innoxious.

A similar effect is produced in the boiling of water. At the boiling point, as well as at the thawing point, a sudden stoppage takes place, and the heat applied becomes latent, so as to preserve the water at that point, till it is gradually carried off in the form of steam. It is this property which renders water so useful in the various operations of the kitchen and the manufactory. If the whole volume of the water we employ were to be instantly converted into steam, when it arrived at the boiling point, which would certainly be the case, were it not for the peculiar property of which we are speaking, how much would be detracted from the usefulness of this most useful element !

Here, then, we have a wonderful modification of a general law, the beneficial nature of which is as manifest as the property itself is remarkable. Can we do otherwise than attribute it to the contrivance of an intelligent Creator?

The striking appearance of a landscape covered with new-fallen snow, and the effects produced on the lower animals by its fall, are thus graphically described by the poet of the Seasons:

"The cherished fields

Put on their winter robe of purest white.

"Tis brightness all; save where the new snow melts
Along the mazy current. Low the woods

Bow their hoar heads; and, ere the languid sun,
Faint from the west, emits his evening ray,
Earth's universal face, deep hid and chill
Is one wild-dazzling waste, that buries wide
The works of man. Drooping, the labourer-ox
Stands covered o'er with snow, and then demands
The fruit of all his toils. The fowls of heaven,
Tamed by the cruel season, crowd around
The winnowing store, and claim the little boon
Which Providence assigns them. One alone,
The red breast, sacred to the household gods,
Wisely regardful of the embroiling sky,
In joyless fields and thorny thickets, leaves
His shivering mates, and pays to trusted man
His annual visit. Half afraid, he first

Against the window beats; then brisk alights
On the warm hearth; then, hopping o'er the floor,
Eyes all the smiling family askance,

And picks, and starts, and wonders where he is ;

Till, more familiar grown, the table crumbs
Attract his slender feet. The foodless wilds
Pour forth their brown inhabitants. The hare,
Though timorous of heart, and hard beset

By death in various forms,-dark snares, and dogs,
And more unpitying men,-the garden seeks,
Urged on by fearless want. The bleating kind
Eye the bleak heaven, and next the glistening earth,
With looks of dumb despair; then, sad, dispersed,
Dig for the withered herb through heaps of snow."

TWELFTH WEEK-FRIDAY..

SAGACITY AND FIDELITY OF THE DOG IN SNOW.

I WELL remember with what delight I listened to an interesting conversation, which, while yet a schoolboy, I enjoyed an opportunity of hearing in my father's manse,*

* Lochrutton in Galloway.

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