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He soon succeeded in evoking striking effects – light and heat, and also mechanical – along the path of electricity passing invisibly through the tube later named after him. Thus he proved for the first time visibly, so to say, the double nature – material and supermaterial – of electricity. What Crookes himself thought about these discoveries in the realm of the cathode rays we may judge from the title, ‘Radiant Matter’, or ‘The Fourth State of Matter’, which he gave to his first publication about them. And so he was only being consistent when, in his lectures before the Royal Institution in London, and the British Association in Sheffield in 1879, after showing to an amazed scientific audience the newly discovered properties of electricity, he came to the climax of his exposition by saying: ‘We have seen that in some of its properties Radiant Matter is as material as this table, whilst in other properties it almost assumes the character of Radiant Energy. We have actually touched here the borderland where Matter and Force seem to merge into one another, the shadowy realm between Known and Unknown, which for me has always had peculiar temptations.’ And in boldly prophetic words, which time has partly justified, he added, ‘I venture to think that the greatest scientific problems of the future will find their solution in this Borderland, and even beyond; here, it seems to me, lie Ultimate Realities, subtle, far-reaching, wonderful.’