and eventually the Moon will completely
pass away from off the Sun, and the Sun once again will exhibit a
perfect circle of light.
Whilst there is so much to look for and look at and think about, one
thing must be sought for instantly after totality, or it will be gone
for ever, and that is the Moon's shadow on the Earth. We have already
seen in the last chapter the startling rapidity and solemnity with
which the shadow seems to rush forward to the observer from the horizon
on the western side of the Meridian. Passing over him, or even, so to
speak, through him, it travels onwards in an easterly direction and very
soon vanishes. Its visibility at all depends a good deal upon whether
the observer, who is looking for it, is sufficiently raised above the
adjacent country to be able to command at least a mile or two of ground.
If he is in a hollow, he will have but little chance of seeing the
shadow at all: on the other hand, if he is on the top of a considerable
hill (or high up on the side of a hill), commanding the horizon for a
distance of 10 or 20 miles, he will have a fair chance of seeing the
shadow. Sir G. B. Airy states, in 1851, "My eye was caught by a
duskiness in the S.E., and I immediately perceived that it was the
Eclipse-shadow in the air, travelling away in the direction of the
shadow's path. For at least six seconds, this shadow remained in sight,
far more conspicuous to the eye than I had anticipated. I was once
caught in a very violent hail and thunder-storm on the Table-land of the
County of Sutherland called the "Moin," and I at length saw the storm
travel away over the North Sea; and this view of the receding
Eclipse-shadow, though by no means so dark, reminded me strongly of the
receding storm. In ten or twelve seconds all appearance of the shadow
had passed away."
Perhaps this may be a convenient place to make a note of what seems to
be a fact, partly established at any rate, even if not wholly
established, namely--that there seems some connection between eclipses
of the Sun and Earthquakes. A German physicist named Ginzel[18] has
found a score of coincidences between solar eclipses and earthquakes in
California in the years between 1850 and 1888 inclusive. Of course there
were eclipses without earthquakes and earthquakes without eclipses, but
twenty coincidences in thirty-eight years seems suggestive of something.
FOOTNOTES:
[Footnote 18: _Himmel und Erde_, vol. ii. pp. 255, 309; 18
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