Recreations in Astronomy - With Directions for Practical Experiments and Telescopic Work by Henry White Warren
page 94 of 249 (37%)
page 94 of 249 (37%)
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These hundreds of bodies fill the realm where they are with
inexhaustible variety. Beyond are vast spaces--cold, dark, void of matter, but full of power. Occasionally a little spark of light looms up rapidly into a world so huge that a thousand of our earths could not occupy its vast bulk. It swings its four or eight moons with perfect skill and infinite strength; but they go by and leave the silence unbroken, the darkness unlighted for years. Nevertheless, every part of space is full of power. Nowhere in its wide orbit can a world find a place; at no time in its eons of flight can it find an instant when the sun does not hold it in safety and life. _The Outlook from the Earth._ If we come in from our wanderings in space and take an outlook from the earth, we shall observe certain movements, easily interpreted now that we know the system, but nearly inexplicable to men who naturally supposed that the earth was the largest, most stable, and central body in the universe. We see, first of all, sun, moon, and stars rise in the east, mount the heavens, and set in the west. As I [Page 109] revolve in my pivoted study-chair, and see all sides of the room--library, maps, photographs, telescope, and windows--I have no suspicion that it is the room that whirls; but looking out of a car-window in a depot at another car, one cannot tell which is moving, whether it be his car or the other. In regard to the world, we have come to feel its whirl. We have noticed the pyramids of Egypt lifted to hide the sun; the mountains of Hymettus hurled down, so as to disclose the moon that was behind them to the watchers on the Acropolis; and the |
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