The artificial light in Mizora puzzled
me longest to understand. When I first noticed
it, it appeared to me to have no apparent source.
At the touch of a delicate hand, it blazed forth like
a star in the center of the ceiling. It diffused
a soft and pleasing brilliancy that lent a charm to
everything it revealed. It was a dreamy daylight,
and was produced by electricity.
In large halls, like a theatre or
opera house, the light fell in a soft and penetrating
radiance from the center of the dome. Its source
was not visible to either audience or actresses, and,
in consequence, occasioned no discomfort to the eyes.
The light that illuminated the stage was similarly
arranged. The footlights were not visible.
They were in the rear of the stage. The light
came upward like the rays of the setting sun, revealing
the setting of the stage with vivid distinctness.
I can best describe the effect of this singular arrangement
by calling attention to the appearance of the sun
when declining behind a small elevation. How
sharply every object is outlined before it? How
soft and delicate is the light in which everything
is bathed? Every cloud that floats has all of
its fleecy loveliness limned with a radiant clearness.
I was very desirous to know how this
singular effect was produced, and at my request was
taken to the stage. An opening in the back part
of it was covered with pink colored glass. Powerful
electric lights from below the stage were reflected
through this glass upon it. The glass was highly
refractive and so perfectly translucent, I at first
thought there was none there, and when I stood upon
its edge, and looked down into a fiery gulf below,
I instinctively thought of the “Lost People,”
who are said to wander amid torturing yet unconsumable
flames. But, happily, the ones I gazed upon were
harmless ones.
The street lights of Mizora were at
a considerable elevation from the ground. They
were in, or over, the center of the street, and of
such diffuse brilliancy as to render the city almost
as light as day. They were in the form of immense
globes of soft, white fire, and during the six months
that answered to the Mizora night, were kept constantly
burning. It was during this period that the Aurora
Borealis shone with such marvelous brilliancy.
Generally, its display was heralded
by an arc of delicate green-tinted light, that spanned
the heavens. The green tint deepened into emerald,
assuming a delicate rose hue as it faded upward into
rays that diverged from the top until the whole resembled
a gigantic crown. Every ray became a panorama
of gorgeous colors, resembling tiny sparks, moving
hither and thither with inconceivable swiftness.
Sometimes a veil of mist of delicate green hue depended
from the base of the crown, and swayed gently back
and forth. As soon as the swaying motion commenced,
the most gorgeous colors were revealed. Myriads
of sparks, no larger than snow-flakes, swarmed across
the delicate green curtain in every conceivable color
and shade, but always of that vapory, vivid softness
that is indescribable. The dancing colors resembled
gems encased in a film of mist.
One display that I witnessed I shall
attempt to describe. The arc of delicate green
appeared first, and shot upward diverging rays of all
the warm, rich hues of red. They formed a vast
crown, outlined with a delicate halo of fire.
A veil of misty green fluttered down from its base,
and, instantly, tiny crowns, composed of every brilliant
color, with a tracery of fire defining every separate
one, began to chase one another back and forth with
bewildering rapidity. As the veil swayed to and
fro, it seemed to shake the crowns into skeins of fire,
each thread strung with countless minute globes of
every conceivable color and hue. Those fiery
threads, aerial as thistle down, wove themselves in
and out in a tangled mass of gorgeous beauty.
Suddenly the beads of color fell in a shower of gems,
topaz and emerald, ruby and sapphire, amethyst and
pearly crystals of dew. I looked upward, where
the rays of variegated colors were sweeping the zenith,
and high above the first crown was a second more vivid
still. Myriads of rainbows, the colors broad and
intense, fluttered from its base, the whole outlined
by a halo of fire. It rolled together in a huge
scroll, and, in an instant, fell apart a shower of
flakes, minute as snow, but of all the gorgeous, dazzling
hues of earth and sky combined. They disappeared
in the mystery of space to instantly form into a fluttering,
waving banner of delicate green mist and vanish;
only to repeat itself.
The display of the Aurora Borealis
was always an exhibition of astonishing rapidity of
motion of intense colors. The most glorious sunset where
the vapory billows of the sky have caught the bloom
of the dying Autumn cannot rival it.
All the precious gems of earth appear to have dissolved
into mist, to join in a wild and aerial dance.
The people of Mizora attributed it entirely to electricity.
Although the sun never rose or set
in Mizora, yet for six months in a year, that country
had the heart of a voluptuous summer. It beat
with a strong, warm pulse of life through all nature.
The orchards budded and bloomed, and mellowed into
perfect fruition their luscious globes. The fields
laughed in the warm, rich light, and smiled on the
harvest. I could feel my own blood bound as with
a new lease of life at the first breath of spring.
The winters of Mizora had clouds and
rain and sleet and snow, and sometimes, especially
near the circular sea, the fury of an Arctic snow
storm; but so well prepared were they that it became
an amusement. Looking into the chaos of snow
flakes, driven hither and thither by fierce winds,
the pedestrians in the street presented no painful
contrast to the luxury of your own room, with its balmy
breath and cheerful flowers. You saw none but
what were thoroughly clad, and you knew that they
were hurrying to homes that were bright and attractive,
if not as elegant as yours; where loving welcomes were
sure to greet them and happiness would sit with them
at the feast; for the heart that is pure has always
a kingly guest for its company.
A wonderful discovery that the people
of Mizora had made was the power to annihilate space
as an impediment to conversation. They claimed
that the atmosphere had regular currents of electricity
that were accurately known to them. They talked
to them by means of simply constructed instruments,
and the voice would be as audible and as easily recognized
at three thousand miles distant as at only three feet.
Stations were built similar to our telegraph offices,
but on high elevations. I understood that they
could not be used upon the surface. Every private
and public house, however, had communication with the
general office, and could converse with friends at
a distance whenever desirable. Public speakers
made constant use of it, but in connection with another
extraordinary apparatus which I regret my inability
to perfectly describe.
I saw it first from the dress circle
of a theater. It occupied the whole rear of the
stage, and from where I sat, looked like a solid wall
of polished metal. But it had a wonderful function,
for immediately in front of it, moving, speaking and
gesturing, was the figure of a popular public lecturer,
so life-like in appearance that I could scarcely be
convinced that it was only a reflection. Yet such
it was, and the original was addressing an audience
in person more than a thousand miles distant.
It was no common thing for a lecturer
to address a dozen or more audiences at the same time,
scattered over an area of thousands of miles, and
every one listening to and observing what appeared
to be the real speaker. In fact, public speakers
in Mizora never traveled on pure professional business.
It was not necessary. They prepared a room in
their own dwelling with the needful apparatus, and
at the time specified delivered a lecture in twenty
different cities.
I was so interested in this very remarkable
invention that I made vigorous mental exertions to
comprehend it sufficiently to explain its mechanism
and philosophical principles intelligently; but I can
only say that it was one of the wonders those people
produced with electricity. The mechanism was
simple, but the science of its construction and workings
I could not comprehend. The grasp of my mind was
not broad enough. The instrument that transmitted
the voice was entirely separate.
I must not neglect to mention that
all kinds of public entertainments, such as operas,
concerts and dramas, could be and were repeated to
audiences at a distance from where the real transaction
was taking place. I attended a number of operas
that were only the reflex of others that were being
presented to audiences far distant.
These repetitions were always marvels
of accuracy of vividness.
Small reflecting apparatus were to
be found in every dwelling and business house.
It is hardly necessary to state that letter-writing
was an unknown accomplishment in Mizora. The
person who desired to converse with another, no matter
how far distant, placed herself in communication with
her two instruments and signaled. Her friend appeared
upon the polished metal surface like the figure in
a mirror, and spoke to her audibly, and looked at
her with all the naturalness of reality.
I have frequently witnessed such interviews
between Wauna and her mother, when we were visiting
distant cities. It was certainly a more satisfactory
way of communicating than by letter. The small
apparatus used by private families and business houses
were not like those used in public halls and theaters.
In the former, the reflection was exactly similar
to the image of a mirror; in the latter, the figure
was projected upon the stage. It required more
complicated machinery to produce, and was not practicable
for small families or business houses. I now
learned that on my arrival in Mizora I had been taken
to one of the largest apparatus and put in communication
with it. I was informed by Wauna that I had been
exhibited to every college and school in the country
by reflex representation. She said that she and
her mother had seen me distinctly and heard my voice.
The latter had been so uncongenial in accent and tone
that she had hesitated about becoming my instructor
on that account. It was my evident appreciation
of my deficiencies as compared to them that had enlisted
her sympathy.
Now, in my own country, my voice had
attracted attention by its smoothness and modulation,
and I was greatly surprised to hear Wauna speak of
its unmusical tone as really annoying. But then
in Mizora there are no voices but what are sweet enough
to charm the birds.
In the journeys that Wauna and I took
during the college vacation, we were constantly meeting
strangers, but they never appeared the least surprised
at my dark hair and eyes, which were such a contrast
to all the other hair and eyes to be met with in Mizora,
that I greatly wondered at it until I learned of the
power of the reflector. I requested permission
to examine one of the large ones used in a theater,
and it was granted me. Wauna accompanied me and
signaled to a friend of hers. As if by magic
a form appeared and moved across the stage. It
bowed to me, smiled and motioned with its hand, to
all appearances a material body. I asked Wauna
to approach it, which she did, and passed her hand
through it. There was nothing that resisted her
touch, yet I plainly saw the figure, and recognized
it as the perfect representation of a friend of Wauna’s,
an actress residing in a distant city. When I
ascended the stage, the figure vanished, and I understood
that it could be visible only at a certain distance
from the reflector.
In traveling great distances, or even
short ones where great speed was desired, the Mizoraens
used air ships; but only for the transportation of
passengers and the very lightest of freight. Heavy
articles could not be as conveniently carried by them
as by railroads. Their railroads were constructed
and conducted on a system so perfect that accidents
were never known. Every engineer had an electric
signal attached to the engine, that could signal a
train three miles distant.
The motive power for nearly all engines
was compressed air. Electricity, which was recognized
by Mizora scientists as a force of great intensity,
was rarely used as a propelling power on railroads.
Its use was attended by possible danger, but compressed
air was not. Electricity produced the heat that
supplied the air ships and railroads with that very
necessary comfort. In case there should be an
accident, as a collision, or thrown from the track,
heat could not be a source of danger when furnished
by electricity. But I never heard of a railroad
accident during the whole fifteen years that I spent
in Mizora.
Air-ships, however, were not exempt
from danger, although the precautions against it were
ingenious and carefully observed. The Mizora
people could tell the approach of a storm, and the
exact time it would arrive. They had signal stations
established for the purpose, all over the country.
But, though they were skilled mechanics,
and far in advance of my own world, and the limits
of my comprehension in their scientific discoveries
and appliances, they had not yet discovered the means
of subduing the elements, or driving unharmed through
their fury. When nature became convulsed with
passion, they guarded themselves against it, but did
not endeavor to thwart it.
Their air-ships were covered, and
furnished with luxurious seats. The whole upper
part of the car was composed of very thin glass.
They traveled with, to me, astonishing rapidity.
Towns and cities flew away beneath us like birds upon
the wing. I grew frightened and apprehensive,
but Wauna chatted away with her friends with the most
charming unconcern.
I was looking down, when I perceived,
by the increasing size of objects below, that we were
descending. The conductor entered almost immediately,
and announced that we were going down to escape an
approaching storm. A signal had been received
and the ship was at once lowered.
I felt intensely relieved to step
again on solid earth, and hoped I might escape another
trial of the upper regions. But after waiting
until the storm was over we again entered the ship.
I was ashamed to refuse when everyone else showed
no fear.
In waiting for the storm to pass we
were delayed so long that our journey could have been
performed almost as speedily by rail. I wondered
why they had not invented some means by which they
could drive through a tempest in perfect safety.
As usual, I addressed my inquiries to Wauna.
She answered:
“So frail a thing as an air-ship
must necessarily be, when compared with the strength
of a storm, is like a leaf in the wind. We have
not yet discovered, and we have but little expectation
of discovering, any means by which we can defy the
storms that rage in the upper deeps.
“The electricity that we use
for heat is also a source of danger during a storm.
Our policy is to evade a peril we cannot control or
destroy. Hence, when we receive a signal that
a storm is approaching we get out of its way.
Our railroad carriages, having no danger to fear from
them, ride right through the storm.”
The people of Mizora, I perceived,
possessed a remarkable acuteness of vision. They
could see the odor emanating from flowers and fruit.
They described it to me as resembling attenuated mist.
They also named other colors in the solar spectrum
than those known to me. When I first heard them
speak of them, I thought it a freak of the imagination;
but I afterward noticed artists, and persons who had
a special taste for colors, always detected them with
greater readiness. The presence of these new
colors were apparent to all with whom I spoke upon
the subject. When I mentioned my own inability
to discern them, Wauna said that it was owning to
my inferior mental development.
“A child,” she said, “if
you will observe, is first attracted by red, the most
glaring color known. The untutored mind will invariably
select the gaudiest colors for personal adornment.
It is the gentle, refined taste of civilization that
chooses the softened hues and colors.”
“But you, as a nation, are remarkable
for rich warm colors in your houses and often in your
dress,” I said.
“But they are never glaring,”
she replied. “If you will notice, the most
intense colors are always so arranged as to present
a halo, instead of sharply defined brilliancy.
If a gorgeous color is worn as a dress, it will be
covered with filmy lace. You have spoken of the
splendor of the Aurora Borealis. It is nature’s
most gorgeous robe, and intense as the primal colors
are, they are never glaring. They glow in a film
of vapor. We have made them our study. Art,
with us, has never attempted to supercede nature.”
The sense of smell was also exceedingly
sensitive with the Mizora people. They detected
odors so refined that I was not aware of them.
I have often seen a chemist take a bottle of perfumery
and name its ingredients from the sense of smell only.
No one appeared surprised at the bluntness of my senses.
When I spoke of this Wauna tried to explain it.
“We are a more delicately organized
race of beings than you are. Our intellects,
and even sense that we possess, is of a higher and
finer development. We have some senses that you
do not possess, and are unable to comprehend their
exquisite delicacy. One of them I shall endeavor
to explain to you by describing it as impression.
We possess it in a highly refined state, both mentally
and physically. Our sensitiveness to changes
of temperature, I have noticed, is more marked than
yours. It is acute with all of my people.
For this reason, although we are free from disease,
our bodies could not sustain, as readily as yours could,
a sudden and severe shock to their normal temperature,
such as a marked change in the atmosphere would occasion.
We are, therefore, extremely careful to be always
appropriately clothed. That is a physical impression.
It is possessed by you also, but more obtusely.
“Our sensitiveness to mental
pleasure and pain you would pronounce morbid on account
of its intensity. The happiness we enjoy in the
society of those who are congenial, or near and dear
to us through family ties, is inconceivable to you.
The touch of my mother’s hand carries a thrill
of rapture with it.
“We feel, intuitively, the happiness
or disappointment of those we are with. Our own
hopes impress us with their fulfillment or frustration,
before we know what will actually occur. This
feeling is entirely mental, but it is evidence of
a highly refined mentality. We could not be happy
unless surrounded, as we are, by cultivated and elegant
pleasures. They are real necessities to us.
“Our appreciation of music,
I notice, has a more exquisite delicacy than yours.
You desire music, but it is the simpler operas that
delight you most. Those fine and delicate harmonies
that we so intensely enjoy, you appear incapable of
appreciating.”
I have previously spoken of their
elegance in dress, and their fondness for luxury and
magnificence. On occasions of great ceremony their
dresses were furnished with very long trains.
The only prominent difference that I saw in their
state dresses, and the rare and costly ones I had
seen in my own and other countries, was in the waist.
As the women of Mizora admired a large waist, their
dresses were generally loose and flowing. Ingenuity,
however, had fashioned them into graceful and becoming
outlines. On occasions of great state and publicity,
comfortably fitting girdles confined the dress at the
waist.
I attended the Inaugural of a Professor
of Natural History in the National College. The
one who had succeeded to this honor was widely celebrated
for her erudition. It was known that the ceremony
would be a grand affair, and thousands attended it.
I there witnessed another of these
marvelous achievements in science that were constantly
surprising me in Mizora. The inauguration took
place in a large hall, the largest I had ever seen.
It would accommodate two hundred thousand people,
and was filled to repletion. I was seated far
back in the audience, and being a little short-sighted
anyway, I expected to be disappointed both in seeing
and hearing the ceremonies. What was my astonishment
then, when they began, to discover that I could see
distinctly every object upon the stage, and hear with
perfect accuracy every word that was uttered.
Upon expressing myself to Wauna as
being greatly pleased that my eyesight and hearing
had improved so wonderfully and unexpectedly, she
laughed merrily, and asked me if I had noticed a curious
looking band of polished steel that curved outward
from the proscenium, and encircled its entire front?
I had noticed it, but supposed it to be connected with
some different arrangement they might have made concerning
the footlights. Wauna informed me that I owed
my improved hearing to that.
“But my eyesight,” I asked,
“how do you account for its unusual penetrativeness?”
“Have you ever noticed some
seasons of the year display a noticeably marked transparency
of the atmosphere that revealed objects at great distances
with unusual clearness? Well, we possess a knowledge
of air that enables us to qualify it with that peculiar
magnifying condition. On occasions like this
we make use of it. This hall was built after the
discovery, and was specially prepared for its use.
It is seldom employed in smaller halls.”
Just then a little flutter of interest
upon the stage attracted my attention, and I saw the
candidate for the professorship entering, accompanied
by the Faculty of the National College.
She wore a sea-green velvet robe with
a voluminous train. The bottom of the dress was
adorned with a wreath or band of water lilies, embroidered
in seed pearls. A white lace overdress of filmiest
texture fell over the velvet, almost touching the
wreath of lilies, and looked as though it was made
of sea foam. A girdle of large pink pearls confined
the robe at the waist. Natural flowers were on
her bosom and in her hair.
The stage was superbly decorated with
flowers and shells. A large chair, constructed
of beautiful shells and cushioned with green velvet,
rested upon a dais of coral. It was the chair
of honor. Behind it was a curtain of sea-moss.
I afterward learned that the moss was attached to a
film of glass too delicate to detect without handling.
In the midst of these charming surroundings
stood the applicant for honor. Her deep blue
eyes glowed with the joy of triumph. On the delicate
cheek and lip burned the carmine hue of perfect health.
The golden hair even seemed to have caught a brighter
lustre in its coiled masses. The uplifted hand
and arm no marble goddess could have matched, for
this had the color and charm of life. As she stood
revealed by the strong light that fell around her,
every feature ennobled with the glory of intellect,
she appeared to me a creature of unearthly loveliness,
as something divine.
I spoke to Wauna of the rare beauty
and elegance of her dress.
“She looks like a fabled Naiad
just risen from the deep,” was my criticism
on her.
“Her dress,” answered
Wauna, “is intended to be emblematical of Nature.
The sea-green robe, the water lilies of pearls, the
foamy lace are all from Nature’s Cradle of Life.”
“How poetical!” I exclaimed.
But then Mizora is full of that charming
skill that blends into perfect harmony the beautiful
and useful in life.