Thursday, 23 June 2016

Scientific Elements in H.G Well's Work. (The Diamond Maker)

H.G Wells is known as the father of science fiction. He wrote many science fiction stories in his career by including many scientific processes in his stories. One of his science fiction stories is “The Diamond Maker” which is entirely based on the scientific process of making diamonds. Science fiction is a genre encompassing imaginative works that take place in this world or that of the author’s creation where anything is possible. The only rules are those set forth by the author. This field leads in exploring social perspectives, predictions of the future, and engage in adventures unbound into the richness of the human mind.
Diamonds are nature’s hardest substance, valued for their brilliance, lustre, and durability, but are rare and expensive to mine. Manmade diamonds provide a cheaper, more readily available solution. Science-fiction writer H. G. Wells described the concept of synthetic diamonds in his short story "The Diamond Maker," published in 1911.The story “The Diamond Maker”, a businessman meets a diamond maker, who is in a very shabby and deplorable condition. The diamond maker is an amateur chemist who performs chemical experiments in his small apartment during fifteen years of increasing poverty, during which he nearly starves to death and who visibly resembles the medieval “mad alchemist”. When he eventually succeeds in making diamonds, he gets into some trouble with the police, to the consequence that he is unable to sell the diamonds and thus benefit from his creation. The story introduces medieval alchemist as the miserable seeker but modify the plot in that they concede some experimental success in the making of diamond, gold and other jewels. These things had always been vital for striving for material goods, against which writers had been using their skills at any time and for literary means, including the alchemist figures.
The businessman suspected the diamond maker as fraudulent, that clearly depicts the influence of science and when the diamond maker shows him the brown stone same as the size of the narrator’s thumb, he is pretty much aware of the field of mineralogy“a year or so ago, I had occupied my leisure in taking a London science degree, so that I have a smattering of physics and mineralogy. The thing was not unlike an uncut diamond of the darker sort, though far too large, being almost as big as the top of my thumb. I took it, and saw it had the form of a regular octahedron, with the curved faces peculiar to the most precious of minerals. I took out my penknife and tried to scratch it--vainly. Leaning forward towards the gas-lamp, I tried the thing on my watch-glass, and scored a white line across that with the greatest ease.”
We see that the narrator is pretty much aware of the different types on minerals and their specificities “The thing might, after all, be merely a lump of that almost equally hard substance, corundum, with an accidental resemblance in shape to the diamond.”
H.G Well in this story “”The Diamond Maker” alludes to Moissan, a French Chemist, who discovered the rare mineral Moissanite (SIC), “I had heard something of Moissan, but I knew his artificial diamonds were very small”. Moissan heated charcoal (a form of carbon) and iron in a furnace until the iron melted; and then rapidly cooled, the iron would generate high pressure and transform the charcoal into diamonds. Others tried to repeat this experiment in later years, and very small diamonds were created; commercially successful production of synthetic diamonds was not achieved until the 1950s.
H.G Wells explained the method of making man-made diamond in this story "Diamonds are to be made by throwing carbon out of combination in a suitable flux and under a suitable pressure; the carbon crystallises out, not as black-lead or charcoal-powder, but as small diamonds. The Diamond maker further explains that, “You know time is an important element in crystallisation. If you hurry the process the crystals are small--it is only by prolonged standing that they grow to any size. I resolved to let this apparatus cool for two years, letting the temperature go down slowly during the time” and the diamond maker further explains the way of making diamonds and how he was ultimately successful “I let the fire out. I took my cylinder and unscrewed it while it was still so hot that it punished my hands, and I scraped out the crumbling lava-like mass with a chisel, and hammered it into a powder upon an iron plate. And I found three big diamonds and five small ones”.

Therefore, the above mentioned scientific instances from the story “The Diamond Maker” prove that H.G Wells was a science fiction shot story writer.

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