[The Age of Invention by Holland Thompson]@TWC D-Link bookThe Age of Invention CHAPTER I 12/39
Experiments made by a little group of friends showed the effect of pointed bodies in drawing off electricity.
He decided that electricity was not the result of friction, but that the mysterious force was diffused through most substances, and that nature is always alert to restore its equilibrium. He developed the theory of positive and negative electricity, or plus and minus electrification.
The same letter tells of some of the tricks which the little group of experimenters were accustomed to play upon their wondering neighbors.
They set alcohol on fire, relighted candles just blown out, produced mimic flashes of lightning, gave shocks on touching or kissing, and caused an artificial spider to move mysteriously. Franklin carried on experiments with the Leyden jar, made an electrical battery, killed a fowl and roasted it upon a spit turned by electricity, sent a current through water and found it still able to ignite alcohol, ignited gunpowder, and charged glasses of wine so that the drinkers received shocks.
More important, perhaps, he began to develop the theory of the identity of lightning and electricity, and the possibility of protecting buildings by iron rods.
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