Abstract
As I do not think it necessary to preface four short papers on the shapes of leaves with a formal treatise on pbysiological botany, I am not careful to answer Mr. Bower in this matter. The word hydrocarbons was used deliberately, because the important point to notice is this—that the plant consists in the main of relatively deoxidised materials. From the point of view of energy, with which one has to deal mainly in treating of functious of leaves, that fact is of capital importance. I can conscientiously inform Mr. Bower that I was aware of the chemical constitution of proteids, and of the part which they bear in life generally; but I do not see what harm can be done to anybody by such a confessedly rough statement as that which he criticies. If we must always step aside to say all that we know about any subject whenever we have to deal with it, exposition of new matter becomes impossible. May I call Mr. Bower's attention to tbe further fact that in the same paper I spoke of the plant catching “fragments of carbon,” meaning thereby not free carbon, but carbon in the form of carbonic acid, even though it be merely reduced from carboa dioxide to carbon oxide. It seems to me that such roughly accurate language is permissible in popular writing, where one's main object is to insist only on the general principle involved. It is the carbon that the leaf wants, not the oxygen; it is the carbon and the hydrogen that it deals with, not the nitrogen, which is but the instrument for dealing with them; and the two other elements may therefore be safely neglected. Or must we drag in sulphur, and potassium, and calcium, and all the rest as well?
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