While reading a text book of chemistry, I came upon the statement,
"nitric acid acts upon copper." I was getting tired of reading such absurd
stuff and I determined to see what this meant. Copper was more or less familiar
to me, for copper cents were then in use. I had seen a bottle marked "nitric
acid" on a table in the doctors office where I was then 'doing time'! I did
not know its peculiarities, but I was getting on and likely to learn. The
spirit of adventure was upon me. Having nitric acid and copper, I had only to
learn what the words "act upon" meant. Then the statement "nitric acid acts
upon copper", would be something more than mere words. All was still. In the
interest of knowledge I was even willing to sacrifice one of the few copper
cents then in my possession. I put one of them on the table; opened the bottle
marked "nitric acid"; poured some of the liquid on the copper; and prepared to
make an observation. But what was this wonderful thing which I beheld? The
cent was already changed, and it was no small change either. A greenish blue
liquid foamed and fumed over the cent and over the table. The air in the
neighborhood of the performance became colored dark red. A great cloud arose:
This was disagreeable and suffocating--how should I stop this? I tried to get
rid of the objectionable mess by picking it up and throwing it out the window,
which I had meanwhile opened. I learned another fact--nitric acid not only acts
upon copper but it acts upon fingers. The pain led to another unpremeditated
experiment. I drew my fingers across my trousers and another fact was
discovered. Nitric acid acts upon trousers. Taking everything into
consideration, that was the most impressive experiment, and, relatively,
probably the most costly experiment I have ever performed. I tell of it even
now with interest. It was a revelation to me. It resulted in a desire on my
part to learn more about that remarkable kind of action. Plainly the only way
to learn about it was to see its results, to experiment, to work in a
laboratory.
-- Ira Remsen (1846-1927) |
Maintained by Daniel J. Berger |