FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   >>  
ET."' FOOTNOTES: [3] _Labour Stands on Golden Feet; or, the Life of a Foreign Workman_, &c. By Heinrich Zschokke. London: Groombridge. LORD ROSSE'S DISCOVERIES. As Professor Nichol very truly remarks, 'investigation regarding such aggregations is virtually a branch of atomic and molecular inquiry,' with stars in place of atoms, mighty spheres in place of 'dust,' 'the firmament above' instead of 'the firmament beneath.' In fact, the astronomer, in sweeping with his telescopic eye the 'blue depths of ether,' is, as it were, some Lilliputian inhabitant of an atom prying into the autumnal structure of some Brobdignagian world of saw-dust; organised into spiral and other elementary forms, of life, it may be, something like our own. The infinite height appears, in short, like the infinite depth, and we knowing not precisely where we stand between the two immensities of depth and height! The shapes evolved by the wonderful telescope of Lord Rosse are, many of them, absolutely fantastical; wonder and awe are mingled with almost ridiculous feelings in contemplating the strange apparitions--strange monstrosities we had almost called them--that are pictured on the background of the illustrations. One aggregation looms forth out of the darkness like the skeleton face of some tremendous mammoth, or other monstrous denizen of ancient times, with two small fiery eyes, however, gazing out of its great hollow orbits; another consists of a central nucleus, with arms of stars radiating forth in all directions, like a star-fish, or like the scattering fire-sparks of some pyrotechnic wheel revolving; a third resembles a great wisp of straw, or twist or coil of ropes; a fourth, a cork-screw, or other spiral, seen on end; a fifth, a crab; a sixth, a dumb-bell--many of them scroll or scrolls of some thin texture seen edgewise; and so on. It is even a suggestion of the author's, that some of the spiral and armed wheels may be revolving yet in the vast ocean of space in which they are engulfed. Thus has the telescope traced the 'binding' influences of the Pleiades, loosened the bands of 'Orion'--erst the chief _nebulous_ hazy wonders, once and for all revealing its separate stars: and thus, in brief, has this wondrous instrument 'unrolled the heavens as a scroll.' Yet even these astonishing results are as nothing to the fact, that those fantastic shapes which it has revealed in the depths of this _lambo_ of creation, are not sha
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   >>  



Top keywords:

spiral

 

shapes

 

firmament

 

revolving

 

scroll

 
infinite
 

height

 

depths

 

telescope

 

strange


ancient
 

hollow

 

denizen

 

gazing

 

fourth

 

orbits

 

consists

 
directions
 

radiating

 

pyrotechnic


scattering

 

nucleus

 

sparks

 

resembles

 

central

 

edgewise

 
revealing
 
separate
 

wondrous

 
wonders

nebulous

 

instrument

 

unrolled

 
fantastic
 

revealed

 

creation

 

heavens

 

astonishing

 
results
 

loosened


monstrous

 

texture

 

author

 

suggestion

 

scrolls

 

traced

 
binding
 
influences
 

Pleiades

 

engulfed