Tales about the sun, moon, and stars |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 33
Page x
... given notices of less or greater length . I. Later and fuller accounts of the extraordinary telescopic appearances of Halley's Comet , as seen in the years 1835 and 1836 , in Europe , and at the Cape of Good Hope , appear in this ...
... given notices of less or greater length . I. Later and fuller accounts of the extraordinary telescopic appearances of Halley's Comet , as seen in the years 1835 and 1836 , in Europe , and at the Cape of Good Hope , appear in this ...
Page xi
... given in this impression . 66 IV . Reports of Observations of the " November Aster- oids , " or Shooting or Falling Stars , as seen in Europe on the night of the 13th of November , 1836 , are added to what has been stated in the first ...
... given in this impression . 66 IV . Reports of Observations of the " November Aster- oids , " or Shooting or Falling Stars , as seen in Europe on the night of the 13th of November , 1836 , are added to what has been stated in the first ...
Page xii
... given a full account of Lord Rosse's celebrated Telescopes , and remarked in some degree on New Discoveries in the Heavens . To admit the introduction of these new materials into the volume , besides an extension of the number of its ...
... given a full account of Lord Rosse's celebrated Telescopes , and remarked in some degree on New Discoveries in the Heavens . To admit the introduction of these new materials into the volume , besides an extension of the number of its ...
Page 13
... given to the moon ? Give three reasons why we contemplate the moon with admiration . CHAPTER V. PARLEY TELLS STILL MORE OF THE MOON . TELESCOPIC APPEARANCES IN THE MOON . ANCIENT ACQUAINTANCE WITH THE MOON . ANCIENT AND MODERN QUESTIONS ...
... given to the moon ? Give three reasons why we contemplate the moon with admiration . CHAPTER V. PARLEY TELLS STILL MORE OF THE MOON . TELESCOPIC APPEARANCES IN THE MOON . ANCIENT ACQUAINTANCE WITH THE MOON . ANCIENT AND MODERN QUESTIONS ...
Page 19
... given of the mountain- scenery in the moon ? Does Sir David Brewster seem to support , at least partially , the older opinion , as to the great height of the mountains in the moon ? 5. How does Sir John Herschel describe rocks ...
... given of the mountain- scenery in the moon ? Does Sir David Brewster seem to support , at least partially , the older opinion , as to the great height of the mountains in the moon ? 5. How does Sir John Herschel describe rocks ...
Contents
1 | |
9 | |
23 | |
29 | |
36 | |
41 | |
44 | |
53 | |
151 | |
170 | |
176 | |
187 | |
199 | |
207 | |
209 | |
220 | |
61 | |
68 | |
71 | |
75 | |
119 | |
126 | |
132 | |
133 | |
140 | |
148 | |
231 | |
237 | |
245 | |
253 | |
258 | |
266 | |
274 | |
280 | |
290 | |
Common terms and phrases
annular eclipse Arago astro astronomers atmosphere axis balloon beautiful Boötes bright called Canis Minor cause centre Cepheus changes CHAPTER clusters of stars colour comet constellations diameter digits discoveries distance earth figure fixed stars full moon globe Harvest Moons heaven heavenly bodies horizon hour hundred Hunter's Moon imagined Jupiter light and heat little readers look luminous clouds magnitude Mercury Milky millions of miles minutes moon's moonlight motion mountains move round naked eye nearer nebules night observed opening orbit PARLEY PARLEY TELLS Perseus pole primary planets QUESTIONS represented revolving round rising round the earth round the sun seen shallow shooting or falling side Sir John Herschel Sir William Herschel Solar System sometimes space sphere sun and moon sun shines sun's disc supposed surface telescope things thousand miles tion told total eclipse turn round Uranus Ursa Major visible whole zenith zodiac Zodiacal Light
Popular passages
Page 132 - It is a time-piece that advances very regularly near four minutes a day, and no other group of stars exhibits, to the naked eye, an observation of time so easily made. How often have we heard our guides exclaim in the savannahs of Venezuela, or in the desert extending from Lima to Truxillo, ' Midnight is past, the Cross begins to bend...
Page 17 - ... a degree of brightness about as strong as that with which such a coal would be seen to glow in faint daylight.
Page ix - Seized in thought, On Fancy's wild and roving wing I sail, From the green borders of the peopled earth, And the pale moon, her duteous, fair attendant ; From solitary Mars ; from the vast orb Of Jupiter, whose huge gigantic bulk Dances in ether like the lightest leaf...
Page 128 - Orpheus with his lute made trees, And the mountain tops that freeze, Bow themselves when he did sing ; To his music plants and flowers Ever sprung, as sun and showers There had made a lasting spring.
Page 266 - The telescope rests on a universal joint, placed on masonry, about 6 feet below the ground, and is elevated or depressed by a chain and windlass; and, although it weighs about 15 tons, the instrument is raised by two men with great facility. Of course, it is counterpoised in every direction. " The observer, when at work, stands in one of four galleries, the three highest of which are drawn out from the western wall...
Page 13 - ... below, seem to bid defiance to the laws of gravitation. Around the base of these frightful eminences, are strewed numerous loose and unconnected fragments, which time seems to have detached from their parent mass ; and when we examine the rents and ravines which accompany the over-hanging cliffs, we expect every moment that they are to be torn from their base, and that the process of destructive separation which we had only contemplated in its effects, is about to be exhibited before us in tremendous...
Page 251 - Centauri and the Cross ; while to the north it fades away pale and dim, and is in comparison hardly traceable. I think it is impossible to view this splendid zone, with the astonishingly rich and...
Page 251 - ... almost vacant parts of its general mass, and that eccentrically, so as to be much nearer to the parts about the Cross than to that diametrically opposed to it.
Page 132 - The two great stars which mark the summit and the foot of the cross, having nearly the same right ascension, it follows hence, that the constellation is almost perpendicular, at the moment when it passes the meridian. This circumstance is known to every nation that lives beyond the tropics, or in the southern hemisphere.
Page 133 - Lataniers, conversed together for the last time ; and where the old man, at the sight of the Southern Cross, warns them that it is time to separate !"— DE HUMBOLDT'S Travels.