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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69892 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69892)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Zetetic astronomy, by Samual Birley
-Rowbotham
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Zetetic astronomy
- Earth not a globe! An experimental inquiry into the true figure
- of the earth etc.
-
-Author: Samual Birley Rowbotham
-
-Release Date: January 28, 2023 [eBook #69892]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: deaurider, Harry Lamé and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The
- Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ZETETIC ASTRONOMY ***
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
- Texts printed in italics and blackletter have been transcribed
- between _underscores_ and ~tildes~ respectively. Small capitals have
- been replaced with ALL CAPITALS.
-
- More Transcriber’s Notes may be found at the end of this text.
-
-
-
-
- [_Entered at Stationer’s Hall._]
-
-
- ZETETIC ASTRONOMY.
-
- EARTH NOT A GLOBE!
-
- AN EXPERIMENTAL INQUIRY
- INTO THE
- TRUE FIGURE OF THE EARTH:
- PROVING IT A PLANE,
- WITHOUT AXIAL OR ORBITAL MOTION;
- AND THE
- ONLY MATERIAL WORLD
- IN
- THE UNIVERSE!
-
- BY “PARALLAX.”
-
- ~London:~
- SIMPKIN, MARSHALL, AND CO., STATIONERS’ HALL COURT.
- ~Bath:~
- S. HAYWARD, GREEN STREET.
- 1865.
-
- [_The Right of Translation is Reserved by the Author._]
-
-
- BATH:
- PRINTED BY S. HAYWARD, GREEN STREET.
-
-
-
-
-GENERAL CONTENTS.
-
-
- SECTION I.
- Introduction--Experiments proving the Earth to be a Plane.
-
- SECTION II.
- The Earth no Axial or Orbital Motion.
-
- SECTION III.
- The true distance of the Sun and Stars.
-
- SECTION IV.
- The Sun moves in a Circle over the Earth, concentric with the North
- Pole.
-
- SECTION V.
- Diameter of Sun’s path constantly changing.
-
- SECTION VI.
- Cause of Day and Night, Seasons, &c.
-
- SECTION VII.
- Cause of “Sun rise” and “Sun set.”
-
- SECTION VIII.
- Cause of Sun appearing larger when “Arising” and “Setting” than when
- on the Meridian.
-
- SECTION IX.
- Cause of Solar and Lunar Eclipses.
-
- SECTION X.
- Cause of Tides.
-
- SECTION XI.
- Constitution, Condition, and ultimate Destruction of the Earth by
- Fire.
-
- SECTION XII.
- Miscellanea--Moon’s Phases--Moon’s appearance--Planet Neptune--
- Pendulum Experiments as Proofs of Earth’s motion.
-
- SECTION XIII.
- Perspective on the Sea.
-
- SECTION XIV.
- General Summary--Application--“CUI BONO.”
-
-
-
-
-ZETETIC ASTRONOMY.
-
-
-The term “zetetic” is derived from the Greek verb _zeteo_; which
-means to search or examine--to proceed only by inquiry. None can
-doubt that by making special experiments and collecting manifest and
-undeniable facts, arranging them in logical order, and observing
-what is naturally and fairly deducible, the result will be far more
-consistent and satisfactory than by framing a theory or system and
-assuming the existence of causes for which there is no direct evidence,
-and which can only be admitted “for the sake of argument.” All theories
-are of this character--“supposing instead of inquiring, imagining
-systems instead of learning from observation and experience the true
-constitution of things. Speculative men, by the force of genius may
-invent systems that will perhaps be greatly admired for a time; these,
-however, are phantoms which the force of truth will sooner or later
-dispel; and while we are pleased with the deceit, true philosophy, with
-all the arts and improvements that depend upon it, suffers. The real
-state of things escapes our observation; or, if it presents itself
-to us, we are apt either to reject it wholly as fiction, or, by new
-efforts of a vain ingenuity to interweave it with our own conceits,
-and labour to make it tally with our favourite schemes. Thus, by
-blending together parts so ill-suited, the whole comes forth an absurd
-composition of truth and error. * * These have not done near so much
-harm as that pride and ambition which has led philosophers to think it
-beneath them to offer anything less to the world than a complete and
-finished system of nature; and, in order to obtain this at once, to
-take the liberty of inventing certain principles and hypotheses, from
-which they pretend to explain all her mysteries.”[1]
-
- [1] “An Account of Sir Isaac Newton’s Discoveries.” By Professor
- Maclaurin, M.A., F.R.S., of the Chair of Mathematics in the
- University of Edinburgh.
-
-Copernicus admitted, “It is not necessary that hypotheses should be
-true, or even probable; it is sufficient that they lead to results
-of calculation which agree with calculations. * * Neither let any
-one, so far as hypotheses are concerned, expect anything _certain_
-from astronomy; since that science can afford nothing of the kind;
-lest, in case he should adopt for truth things feigned for another
-purpose, he should leave this study more foolish than he came. * * The
-hypothesis of the terrestrial motion was _nothing but an hypothesis_,
-valuable only so far as it explained phenomena, and not considered
-with reference to absolute truth or falsehood.” The Newtonian and all
-other “systems of nature” are little better than the “hypothesis of
-the terrestrial motion” of Copernicus. The foundations or premises are
-always unproved; no proof is ever attempted; the necessity for it is
-denied; it is considered sufficient that the assumptions shall _seem_
-to explain the phenomena selected. In this way it is that one theory
-supplants another; that system gives way to system as one failure after
-another compels opinions to change. This will ever be so; there will
-always exist in the mind a degree of uncertainty; a disposition to look
-upon philosophy as a vain pretension; a something almost antagonistic
-to the highest aspirations in which humanity can indulge, unless the
-practice of theorising be given up, and the method of simple inquiry,
-the “zetetic” process be adopted. “Nature speaks to us in a peculiar
-language; in the language of phenomena, she answers at all times the
-questions which are put to her; and such questions are experiments.”[2]
-Not experiments only which corroborate what has previously been
-_assumed_ to be true; but experiments in every form bearing on the
-subject of inquiry, before a conclusion is drawn or premises affirmed.
-
- [2] “Liebig’s Agricultural Chemistry,” p. 39.
-
-We have an excellent example of zetetic reasoning in an arithmetical
-operation; more especially so in what is called the “Golden Rule,” or
-the “Rule-of-Three.” If one hundred weight of any article is worth a
-given sum, what will some other weight of that article be worth? The
-separate figures may be considered as the elements or facts of the
-inquiry; the placing and working of these as the logical arrangement;
-and the quotient or answer as the fair and natural deduction. Hence,
-in every zetetic process, the conclusion arrived at is essentially a
-quotient, which, if the details be correct, must, of necessity, be true
-beyond the reach or power of contradiction.
-
-In our courts of Justice we have also an example of the zetetic
-process. A prisoner is placed at the bar; evidence for and against
-him is advanced; it is carefully arranged and patiently considered;
-and only such a verdict given as could not in justice be avoided.
-Society would not tolerate any other procedure; it would brand with
-infamy whoever should assume a prisoner to be guilty, and prohibit all
-evidence but such as would corroborate the assumption. Yet such is the
-character of theoretical philosophy!
-
-The zetetic process is also the natural method of investigation; nature
-herself teaches it. Children invariably seek information by asking
-questions--by earnestly inquiring from those around them. Question
-after question in rapid and exciting succession will often proceed
-from a child, until the most profound in learning and philosophy will
-feel puzzled to reply. If then both nature and justice, as well as the
-common sense and practical experience of mankind demand, and will not
-be content with less or other than the zetetic process, why should it
-be ignored and violated by the learned in philosophy? Let the practice
-of theorising be cast aside as one fatal to the full development of
-truth; oppressive to the reasoning power; and in every sense inimical
-to the progress and permanent improvement of the human race.
-
-If then we adopt the zetetic process to ascertain the true figure
-and condition of the Earth, we shall find that instead of its being
-a globe, and moving in space, it is the directly contrary--A PLANE;
-without motion, and unaccompanied by anything in the Firmament
-analogous to itself.
-
-If the Earth is a globe, and 25,000 miles in circumference, the surface
-of all standing water must have a certain degree of convexity--every
-part must be an arc of a circle, curvating from the summit at the
-rate of 8 inches per mile multiplied by the square of the distance.
-That this may be sufficiently understood, the following quotation is
-given from the _Encyclopædia Britannica_, art. “Levelling.” “If a
-line which crosses the plumb-line at right angles be continued for
-any considerable length it will rise above the Earth’s surface (the
-Earth being globular); and this rising will be as the square of the
-distance to which the said right line is produced; that is to say, it
-is raised eight inches very nearly above the Earth’s surface at one
-mile’s distance; four times as much, or 32 inches, at the distance
-of two miles; nine times as much, or 72 inches, at the distance of
-three miles. This is owing to the globular figure of the Earth, and
-this rising is the difference between the true and apparent levels;
-the curve of the Earth being the true level, and the tangent to it
-the apparent level. So soon does the difference between the true and
-apparent levels become perceptible that it is necessary to make an
-allowance for it if the distance betwixt the two stations exceeds two
-chains.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 1.]
-
-Let B. D. be a small portion of the Earth’s circumference, whose centre
-of curvature is A. and consequently all the points of this arc will be
-on a level. But a tangent B. C. meeting the vertical line A. D. in C.
-will be the apparent level at the point B. and therefore D. C. is the
-difference between the apparent and the true level at the point B.
-
-The distance C. D. must be deducted from the observed height to have
-the true difference of level; or the differences between the distances
-of two points from the surface of the Earth or from the centre of
-curvature A. But we shall afterwards see how this correction may be
-avoided altogether in certain cases. To find an expression for C. D.
-we have Euclid, third book, 36 prop. which proves that B. C² = C. D.
-(2 _A D_ × _C D_); but since in all cases of levelling C. D. is
-exceedingly small compared with 2 A. D., we may safely neglect C. D²
-and then B C² = 2 A. D × C. D. or
-
- B. C²
- C. D = ------.
- 2 A. D
-
-Hence the depression of the true level is equal to the square of the
-distance divided by twice the radius of the curvature of the Earth.
-
-For example, taking a distance of four miles, the square of 4 = 16,
-and putting down twice the radius of the Earth’s curvature as in round
-figures about 8000 miles, we make the depression on four miles
-
- 16 16 × 1760 176 528
- = ---- of a mile = --------- yards = --- yards = --- feet,
- 8000 8000 50 50
-
-or rather better than 10¹⁄₂ feet.
-
-Or, if we take the mean radius of the Earth as the mean radius of its
-curvature, and consequently 2 A. D = 7,912 miles, then 5,280 feet being
-1 mile, we shall have C. D. the depression in inches
-
- 5280 × 12 × B C²
- = ---------------- = 8008 B. C² inches.
- 7912
-
-The preceding remarks suppose the visual ray C. B. to be a straight
-line, whereas on account of the unequal densities of the air at
-different distances from the Earth, the rays of light are incurvated
-by refraction. The effect of this is to lessen the difference between
-the true and apparent levels, but in such an extremely variable and
-uncertain manner that if any constant or fixed allowance is made for
-it in formulæ or tables, it will often lead to a greater error than
-what it was intended to obviate. For though the refraction may at a
-mean compensate for about a seventh of the curvature of the earth, it
-sometimes exceeds a fifth, and at other times does not amount to a
-fifteenth. We have, therefore, made no allowance for refraction in the
-foregone formulæ.”
-
-If the Earth is a globe, there cannot be a question that, however
-irregular the _land_ may be in form, the _water_ must have a convex
-surface. And as the difference between the true and apparent level, or
-the degree of curvature would be 8 inches in one mile, and in every
-succeeding mile 8 inches multiplied by the square of the distance,
-there can be no difficulty in detecting either its actual existence
-or proportion. Experiments made upon the sea have been objected to on
-account of its constantly-changing altitude; and the existence of banks
-and channels which produce a “a crowding” of the waters, currents, and
-other irregularities. Standing water has therefore been selected, and
-many important experiments have been made, the most simple of which
-is the following:--In the county of Cambridge there is an artificial
-river or canal, called the “Old Bedford.” It is upwards of twenty
-miles long, and passes in a straight line through that part of the
-fens called the “Bedford level” The water is nearly stationery--often
-entirely so, and throughout its entire length has no interruption from
-locks or water-gates; so that it is in every respect well adapted for
-ascertaining whether any and what amount of convexity really exists.
-A boat with a flag standing three feet above the water, was directed
-to sail from a place called “Welney Bridge,” to another place called
-“Welche’s Dam.” These two points are six statute miles apart. The
-observer, with a good telescope, was seated in the water as a bather
-(it being the summer season), with the eye not exceeding eight inches
-above the surface. The flag and the boat down to the water’s edge were
-clearly _visible throughout the whole distance!_ From this observation
-it was concluded that the water did not decline to any degree from the
-line of sight; whereas the water would be 6 feet higher in the centre
-of the arc of 6 miles extent than at the two places Welney Bridge and
-Welche’s Dam; but as the eye of the observer was only eight inches
-above the water, the highest point of the surface would be at one mile
-from the place of observation; below which point the surface of the
-water at the end of the remaining five miles would be 16 feet 8 inches
-(5² × 8 = 200 inches). This will be rendered clear by the following
-diagram:--
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 2.]
-
-Let A B represent the arc of water from Welney Bridge to Welche’s Dam,
-six miles in length; and A L the line of sight, which is now a tangent
-to the arc A B; the point of contact, T, is 1 mile from the eye of the
-observer at A; and from T to the boat at B is 5 miles; the square of 5
-miles multiplied by 8 inches is 200 inches, or, in other words, that
-the boat at B would have been 200 inches or above 16 feet below the
-surface of the water at T; and the flag on the boat, which was 3 feet
-high, would have been 13 feet below the line-of-sight, A T L!!
-
-From this experiment it follows that the surface of standing water is
-_not convex_, and therefore _that the Earth_ IS NOT A GLOBE! On the
-Contrary, this simple experiment is all-sufficient to prove that the
-surface of the water is parallel to the line-of-sight, and is therefore
-horizontal, and that the Earth _cannot_ be other than A PLANE! In
-diagram Figure 3 this is perfectly illustrated.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 3.]
-
-A B is the line-of-sight, and C D the surface of the water equidistant
-from or parallel to it throughout the whole distance observed.
-
-Although, on account of the variable state of the water, objections
-have been raised to experiments made upon the sea-shore to test the
-convexity of the flood or ebb-tide level, none can be urged against
-observations made from higher altitudes. For example,--the distance
-across the Irish Sea between Douglas Harbour, in the Isle of Man, and
-the Great Orm’s Head in North Wales is 60 miles. If the earth is a
-globe, the surface of the water would form an arc 60 miles in length,
-the centre of which would be 1,944 feet higher than the coast line
-at either end, so that an observer would be obliged to attain this
-altitude before he could see the Welsh coast from the Isle of Man: as
-shown in the diagram, Figure 4.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 4.]
-
-It is well known, however, that from an altitude not exceeding 100 feet
-the Great Orm’s Head is visible in clear weather from Douglas Harbour.
-The altitude of 100 feet could cause the line of sight to touch the
-horizon at the distance of nearly 13 miles; and from the horizon to
-Orm’s Head being 47 miles, the square of this number multiplied by 8
-inches gives 1472 feet as the distance which the Welsh coast line would
-be below the line of sight B C.--A representing the Great Orm’s Head,
-which, being 600 feet high, its summit would be 872 feet below the
-horizon.
-
-Many similar experiments have been made across St. George’s Channel,
-between points near Dublin and Holyhead, and always with results
-entirely incompatible with the doctrine of rotundity.
-
-Again, it is known that the horizon at sea, whatever distance it may
-extend to the right and left of the observer on land, always appears
-as a straight line. The following experiment has been tried in various
-parts of the country. At Brighton, on a rising ground near the race
-course, two poles were fixed in the earth six yards apart, and directly
-opposite the sea. Between these poles a line was tightly stretched
-parallel to the distant horizon. From the centre of the line the view
-embraced not less than 20 miles on each side, making a distance of 40
-miles. A vessel was observed sailing directly westwards; the line cut
-the rigging a little above the bulwarks, which it did for several hours
-or until the vessel had sailed the whole distance of 40 miles. This
-will be understood by reference to the diagram, Figure 5.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 5.]
-
-If the Earth were a globe, the appearance would be as represented in
-Figure 6.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 6.]
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 7.]
-
-The ship coming into view from the east would have to ascend an
-inclined plane for 20 miles until it arrived at the centre of the arc
-A B, whence it would have to descend for the same distance. The square
-of 20 miles multiplied by 8 inches gives 266 feet as the amount the
-vessel would be below the line C D at the beginning and at the end of
-the 40 miles.
-
-If we stand upon the deck of a ship, or mount to the mast head; or go
-to the top of a mountain, or ascend above the Earth in a balloon, and
-look over the sea, the surface appears as a vast inclined plane rising
-up until in the distance it intercepts the line of sight. If a good
-mirror be held in the opposite direction, the horizon will be reflected
-as a well-defined mark or line across the centre, as represented in
-diagram, Figure 7.
-
-Ascending or descending, the distant horizon does the same. It rises
-and falls with the observer, and is always on a level with his eye. If
-he takes a position where the water surrounds him--as at the mast-head
-of a ship out of sight of land, or on the summit of a small island
-far from the mainland, the surface of the sea appears to rise up on
-all sides equally and to surround him like the walls of an immense
-amphitheatre. He seems to be in the centre of a large concavity,
-the edges of which expand or contract as he takes a higher or lower
-position. This appearance is so well known to sea-going travellers that
-nothing more need be said in its support. But the appearance from a
-balloon is familiar only to a small number of observers, and therefore
-it will be useful to quote from those who have written upon the subject.
-
- “_The Apparent Concavity of the Earth as seen from a Balloon._--A
- perfectly-formed circle encompassed the visible planisphere beneath,
- or rather the concavo-sphere it might now be called, for I had
- attained a height from which the surface of the Earth assumed a
- regularly hollowed or concave appearance--an optical illusion
- which increases as you recede from it. At the greatest elevation I
- attained, which was about a mile-and-a-half, the appearance of the
- World around me assumed a shape or form like that which is made
- by placing two watch-glasses together by their edges, the balloon
- apparently in the central cavity all the time of its flight at that
- elevation.”--_Wise’s Aeronautics._
-
- “Another curious effect of the aerial ascent was, that the Earth,
- when we were at our greatest altitude, positively appeared _concave_,
- looking like a huge dark bowl, rather than the convex sphere such
- as we naturally expect to see it. * * * The horizon always appears
- to be on a level with our eye, and seems to rise as we rise, until
- at length the elevation of the circular boundary line of the sight
- becomes so marked that the Earth assumes the anomalous appearance as
- we have said of a _concave_ rather than a _convex_ body.”--_Mayhew’s
- Great World of London._
-
-Mr. Elliott, an American æronaut, in a letter giving an account of his
-ascension from Baltimore, thus speaks of the appearance of the Earth
-from a balloon:--
-
- “I don’t know that I ever hinted heretofore that the æronaut may
- well be the most sceptical man about the rotundity of the Earth.
- Philosophy imposes the truth upon us; but the view of the Earth
- from the elevation of a balloon is that of an immense terrestrial
- basin, the deeper part of which is that directly under one’s feet.
- As we ascend, the Earth beneath us seems to recede--actually to sink
- away--while the horizon gradually and gracefully lifts a diversified
- slope stretching away farther and farther to a line that, at the
- highest elevation, seems to close with the sky. Thus upon a clear
- day, the æronaut feels as if suspended at about an equal distance
- between the vast blue oceanic concave above, and the equally expanded
- terrestrial basin below.”
-
- “The chief peculiarity of the view from a balloon, at a considerable
- elevation, was the altitude of the horizon, which remained
- practically on a level with the eye at an elevation of two miles,
- causing the surface of the Earth to appear _concave_ instead of
- _convex_, and to recede during the rapid ascent, whilst the horizon
- and the balloon seemed to be stationary.”--_London Journal_, July 18,
- 1857.
-
-During the important balloon ascents recently made for scientific
-purposes by Mr. Coxwell and Mr. Glaisher, of the Royal Greenwich
-Observatory, the same phenomenon was observed--
-
- “The horizon always appeared on a level with the car.”--Vide
- “Glaisher’s Report.”
-
-The following diagram represents this appearance:--
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 8.]
-
-The surface of the earth C D appears to rise to the line-of-sight from
-the balloon, and “seems to close with the sky” at the points H H in
-the same manner that the ceiling and the floor of a long room, or the
-top and bottom of a tunnel appear to approach each other, and from the
-same cause, viz.: that they are _parallel to the line-of-sight, and
-therefore horizontal_.
-
-If the Earth’s surface were convex the observer, looking from a
-balloon, instead of seeing it gradually ascend to the level of the eye,
-would have to look downwards to the horizon H H, as represented in
-figure 9, and the amount of dip in the line-of-sight C H would be the
-greatest at the highest elevation.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 9.]
-
-Many more experiments have been made than are here described, but the
-selection now given is amply sufficient to prove that the surface of
-water is horizontal, and that the Earth, taken as a whole, its land and
-water together, is not a globe, has really no degree of sphericity; but
-is “to all intents and purposes” A PLANE!
-
-If we now consider the fact that when we travel by land or sea, and
-from any part of the known world, in a direction towards the North
-polar star, we shall arrive at one and the same point, we are forced
-to the conclusion that what has hitherto been called the North Polar
-region, is really THE CENTRE OF THE EARTH. That from this northern
-centre the land diverges and stretches out, of necessity, towards a
-circumference, which must now be called THE SOUTHERN REGION: which is
-a vast circle, and not a pole or centre. That there is ONE CENTRE--THE
-NORTH, and ONE CIRCUMFERENCE--THE SOUTH. This language will be better
-understood by reference to the diagram Figure 10.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 10.]
-
-N represents the northern centre; and S S S the southern
-circumference--both icy or frozen regions. That the south is an
-immense ring, or glacial boundary, is evident from the fact, that
-within the antarctic circle the most experienced, scientific, and
-daring navigators have failed in their attempts to sail, in a direct
-manner, completely round it. Lieut. Wilkes, of the American Navy, after
-great and prolonged efforts, and much confusion in his reckoning, and
-seeing no prospect of success, was obliged to give up his attempt and
-return to the north. This he acknowledged in a letter to Captain Sir
-James Clarke Ross, with whose intention to explore the south seas he
-had become acquainted, in which the following words occur: “I hope
-you intend to circumnavigate the antarctic circle. I made 70 degrees
-of it.” Captain Ross, however, was himself greatly confused in his
-attempts to navigate the southern region. In his account of the voyage
-he says, at page 96--“We found ourselves every day from 12 to 16 miles
-by observation in advance of our reckoning.” “By our observations
-we found ourselves 58 miles to the eastward of our reckoning in two
-days.” And in this and other ways all the great navigators have been
-frustrated in their efforts, and have been more or less confounded in
-their attempts to sail round the Earth upon or beyond the antarctic
-circle. But if the southern region is a pole or centre, like the
-north, there would be little difficulty in circumnavigating it, for
-the distance round would be comparatively small. When it is seen that
-the Earth is not a sphere, but a plane, having only one centre, the
-north; and that the south is the vast icy boundary of the world, the
-difficulties experienced by circumnavigators can be easily understood.
-
-Having given a surface or bird’s-eye view of the Earth, the following
-sectional representation will aid in completing the description.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 11.]
-
-E E represents the Earth; W W the “great deep,” or the waters which
-surround the land; N the northern centre; and S S sections of the
-southern ice. As the present description is purely zetetic, and as
-every fact must therefore have its fullest value assigned to it, and
-its consequences represented, a peculiarity must be pointed out in the
-foregoing diagram. It will be observed that from about the points E E
-the surface of the water rises towards the south S S. It is clearly
-ascertained that the altitude of the water in various parts of the
-world is much influenced by the pressure of the atmosphere--however
-this pressure is caused--and it is well known that the atmospheric
-pressure in the south is constantly less than it is in the north, and
-therefore the water in the southern region must always be considerably
-higher than it is in the northern. Hence the peculiarity referred to
-in the diagram. The following quotation from Sir James Ross’s voyages,
-p. 483, will corroborate the above statements:--“Our barometrical
-experiments appear to prove that a gradual diminution of atmospheric
-pressure occurs as we proceed southwards from the tropic of Capricorn.
-* * * It has hitherto been considered that the mean pressure of the
-atmosphere at the level of the sea was nearly the same in all parts of
-the world, as no material difference occurs between the equator and
-the highest northern latitudes. * * * The causes of the atmospheric
-pressure being so _very much less_ in the southern than in the northern
-hemispheres remains to be determined.”
-
-Thus, putting all theories aside, we have seen that direct experiment
-demonstrates the important truth, _that the Earth is an extended
-Plane_. Literally, “Stretched out upon the waters;” “Founded on the
-seas and established on the floods;” “Standing in the water and out
-of the water.” How far the southern icy region extends horizontally,
-or how deep the waters upon and in which the earth stands or is
-supported are questions which cannot yet be answered. In Zetetic
-philosophy the foundation must be well secured, progress must be made
-step by step, making good the ground as we proceed; and whenever a
-difficulty presents itself, or evidence fails to carry us farther,
-we must promptly and candidly acknowledge it, and prepare for future
-investigation; but never fill up the inquiry by theory and assumption.
-In the present instance there is no practical evidence as to the extent
-of the southern ice and the “great deep.” Who shall say whether the
-depth and extent of the “mighty waters” _have_ a limit, or constitute
-the “World without end?”
-
-Having advanced direct and special evidence that the surface of the
-earth is not convex, but, on the contrary, a vast and irregular plane,
-it now becomes important that the leading phenomena upon which the
-doctrine of rotundity has been founded should be carefully examined.
-First, it is contended that because the hull of an outward-bound vessel
-disappears before the mast head, the water is convex, and therefore the
-Earth is a globe. In this conclusion, however, there is an assumption
-involved, viz., that such a phenomenon _can only_ result from a convex
-surface. Inquiry will show that this is erroneous. If we select for
-observation a few miles of straight and level railway, we shall
-find that the rails, which are parallel, appear in the distance to
-approach each other. But the two rails which are nearest together do
-so more rapidly than those which are farthest asunder, as shown in the
-following diagram, Figure 12.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 12.]
-
-Let the observer stand at the point A, looking in the direction of the
-arrows; and the rails 1.2.3.4. will appear to join at the point B, but
-the rail 5.6 will appear to have converged only as far as C towards B.
-
-Again, let a train be watched from the point A in Figure 13.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 13.]
-
-The observer looking from A, with his eye midway between the bottom
-of the carriage and the rail, will see the diameter of the wheels
-gradually diminish as they recede. The lines 1.2 and 1.4 will appear to
-approach each other until at the point B they will come together, and
-the space, including the wheels, between the bottom of the carriage
-and the rail will there disappear. The floor of the carriage will seem
-to be sliding without wheels upon the rail 1.2; but the lines 5.6 and
-7.8 will yet have converged only to C and D.
-
-The same phenomenon may be observed with a long row of lamps, where the
-ground is a straight line throughout its entire length as represented
-in Figure 14.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 14.]
-
-The lines 1.2 and A D will converge at the point D and the pedestal of
-the lamp at D will seem to have disappeared, but the line 3.4, which
-represents the true altitude of the lamps, will only have converged to
-the point C.
-
-A narrow bank running along the side of a straight portion of railway,
-upon which poles are placed for supporting the wires of the electric
-telegraph will produce the same appearance, as shown in Figure 15.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 15.]
-
-The bank having the altitude 1.3 and 2.4 will, in the distance of two
-or three miles (according to its depth) disappear to the eye of an
-observer placed at Figure 1; and the telegraph pole at Figure 2 will
-seem not to stand upon a bank at all, but upon the actual railway. The
-line 3.4 will merge into the line 1.2 at the point B, while the line
-5.6 will only have descended to the position C.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 16.]
-
-Many other familiar instances could be given to show the true law of
-perspective; which is, that parallel lines appear in the distance
-to converge to one and the same datum line, but to reach it at
-different distances if themselves dissimilarly distant. This law being
-remembered, it is easy to understand how the hull of an outward-bound
-ship, although sailing upon a plane surface disappears before the
-mast-head. In Figure 16, let A B represent the surface of the water;
-C H the line of sight; and E D the altitude of the mast-head. Then,
-as A B and C H are nearer to each other than A B and E D, they will
-converge and appear to meet at the point H, which is the practical,
-or, as it would be better to call it, the _optical_ horizon. The hull
-of the vessel being contained within the lines A B and C H, must
-gradually diminish as these converge, until at H, or the horizon,
-it enters the vanishing point and disappears; but the mast-head
-represented by the line E D is still _above_ the horizon at H, and will
-require to sail more or less, according to its altitude, beyond the
-point H before it sinks to the line C H, or, in other words, before the
-lines A B and E D form the same angle as A B and C H.
-
-It will be evident also that should the elevation of the observer be
-greater than at C, the horizon or vanishing point would not be formed
-at H, but at a greater distance; and therefore the hull of the vessel
-would be longer visible. Or, if, when the hull has disappeared at H,
-the observer ascends from the elevation at C to a higher position
-nearer to E, it will again be seen. Thus all these phenomena which have
-so long been considered as proofs of the Earth’s rotundity are really
-optical sequences of the contrary doctrine. To argue that because the
-lower part of an outward-bound ship disappears before the highest the
-water must be round, is to _assume_ that a _round_ surface _only_
-can produce this effect! But it is now shown that a _plane_ surface
-_necessarily_ produces this effect; and therefore the assumption is
-not required, and the argument involved is fallacious!
-
-It may here be observed that no help can be given to this doctrine of
-rotundity by quoting the prevailing theory of perspective. The law
-represented in the foregoing diagrams is the “law of nature.” It may
-be seen in every layer of a long wall, in every hedge and bank of the
-roadside, and indeed in every direction where lines and objects run
-parallel to each other; but no illustration of the contrary perspective
-is ever to be seen! except in the distorted pictures, otherwise
-cleverly and beautifully drawn as they are, which abound in our public
-and private collections.
-
-The theory which affirms that parallel lines converge only to one and
-the same point upon the eye-line is an error. It is true only of lines
-equidistant from the eye-line. It is true that parallel lines converge
-to one and the same _eye-line_, but _meet it at different distances
-when more or less apart from each other_. This is the true law of
-perspective as shown by Nature herself; any other idea is fallacious
-and will deceive whoever may hold and apply it to practice.
-
-As it is of great importance that the difference should be clearly
-understood, the following diagram is given. Let E L (Figure 17)
-represent the eye-line and C the vanishing point of the lines, 1 C 2
-C; then the lines 3.4.5.6, although converging _somewhere_ to the line
-E L, will not do so to the point C, but 3 and 4 will proceed to D and 5
-and 6 to H. It is repeated, that lines _equidistant_ from the _datum_
-will converge on the _same point_ and at the _same distance_; but lines
-_not_ equidistant will converge on the same _datum_ but at _different
-distances_! A very good illustration of the difference is given in
-Figure 18. Theoretic perspective would bring the lines 1, 2, and 3 to
-the same _datum_ line E L and to the _same point_ A. But the true
-or natural law would bring the lines 2 and 3 to the point A because
-equidistant from the eye-line E L; but the line 1 being farther from
-E L than either 2 or 3, would be taken beyond the point A on towards C,
-until it formed the _same angle_ upon the line E L as 2 and 3 form at
-the point A.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 17.]
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 18.]
-
-The subject of perspective will not be rendered sufficiently clear
-unless an explanation be given of the cause and character of what is
-technically called the “vanishing point.” Why do objects, even when
-raised above the earth, vanish at a given distance? It is known,
-and can easily be proved by experiment, that “the range of the eye,
-or diameter of the field of vision is 110°; consequently this is
-the _largest_ angle under which an object can be seen. The range of
-vision is from 110° to 1°. * * The _smallest_ angle under which an
-object can be seen is upon an average for different sights the 60th
-part of a degree, or _one minute_ in space; so that when an object is
-removed from the eye 3000 times its own diameter, it will only just
-be distinguishable; consequently, the greatest distance at which we
-can behold an object, like a shilling, of an inch in diameter is 3000
-inches or 250 feet.”[3] It may, therefore, be very easily understood
-that a line passing over the hull of a ship, and continuing parallel
-to the surface of the water, must converge to the vanishing point at
-the distance of about 3000 times its own elevation; in other words,
-if the surface of the hull be 10 feet above the water it will vanish
-at 3,000 times 10 feet; or nearly six statute miles; but if the
-mast-head be 30 feet above the water, it will be visible for 90,000
-feet or over 17 miles; so that it could be seen upon the horizon for
-a distance of eleven miles _after the hull had entered the vanishing
-point_! Hence the phenomenon of a receding ship’s hull being the
-first to disappear, which has been so universally quoted and relied
-upon as proving the rotundity of the Earth is fairly and logically
-a proof of the very contrary! It has been misapplied in consequence
-of an erroneous view of the law of perspective, and the desire to
-support a theory. That it is valueless for such a purpose has already
-been shown; and that, even if there were no question of the Earth’s
-form involved, it could not arise from the convexity of the water, is
-proved by the following experiment:--Let an observer stand upon the
-sea-shore with the eye at an elevation of about six feet above the
-water, and watch a vessel until it is just “hull down.” If now a good
-telescope be applied the hull will be distinctly _restored to sight_!
-From which it must be concluded that it had disappeared through the
-influence of perspective, and not from having sunk behind the summit
-of a convex surface! Had it done so it would follow that the telescope
-had either carried the line-of-sight through the mass of water, or over
-its surface and down the other side! But the power of “looking round a
-corner” or penetrating a dense and extensive medium has never yet been
-attributed to such an instrument! If the elevation of the observer be
-much greater than six feet the distance at which the vanishing point is
-formed will be so great that the telescope may not have power enough to
-magnify or enlarge the angle constituting it; when the experiment would
-appear to fail. But the failure would only be apparent, for a telescope
-of sufficient power to magnify at the horizon or vanishing point would
-certainly restore the hull at the greater distance.
-
- [3] “Wonders of Science,” by Mayhew, p. 357.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 19.]
-
-An illustration or proof of the Earth’s rotundity is also supposed to
-be found in the fact that navigators by sailing due east or west return
-in the opposite direction. Here, again, a supposition is involved,
-viz., that upon a globe _only_ could this occur. But it is easy to
-prove that it could take place as perfectly upon a circular plane
-as upon a sphere. Let it first be clearly understood what is really
-meant by sailing _due east and west_. Practically it is sailing at
-right angles to north and south: this is determined ordinarily by the
-mariners’ compass, but more accurately by the meridian lines which
-converge to the northern centre of the Earth. Bearing this in mind,
-let N in Figure 19 represent the northern centre; and the lines N. S.
-the directions north and south. Then let the small arrow, Figure 1,
-represent a vessel on the meridian of Greenwich, with its head W. at
-right angles, or due west; and the stern E due east. It is evident that
-in passing to the position of the arrow, Figure 2, which is still
-due west or square to the meridian, the arc 1.2 must be described;
-and in sailing still farther under the same condition, the arcs 2.3,
-3.4, and 4.1 will be successively passed over until the meridian of
-Greenwich, Figure 1, is arrived at, which was the point of departure.
-Thus a mariner, by keeping the head of his vessel due west, or at right
-angles to the north and south, practically circumnavigates a plane
-surface; or, in other words, he describes a circle _upon a plane_,
-at a greater or lesser distance from the centre N, and being at all
-times square to the radii north and south, he is _compelled_ to do
-so--_because_ the earth is a plane, having a central region, towards
-which the compass and the meridian lines which guide him, converge. So
-far, then, from the fact of a vessel sailing due west coming home from
-the east, and _vice versa_, being a proof of the earth’s rotundity, it
-is simply a phenomenon, consistent with and dependent upon its being
-a plane! The subject may be perfectly illustrated by the following
-simple experiment:--Take a round table, fix a pin in the centre; to
-this attach a thread, and extend it to the edge. Call the centre the
-north and the circumference the south; then, at any distance between
-the centre and the circumference, a direction at right angles to the
-thread will be due east and west; and a small object, as a pencil,
-placed across or square to the thread, to represent a ship, may be
-carried completely round the table without its right-angled position
-being altered; or, the right-angled position firmly maintained, the
-vessel must of necessity describe a circle on being moved from right
-to left or left to right. Referring again to the diagram, Figure 19,
-the vessel may sail from the north towards the south, upon the meridian
-Figure 1, and there turning due west, may pass Cape Horn, represented
-by D, and continue its westerly course until it passes the point C, or
-the Cape of Good Hope, and again reaches the meridian, Figure 1, upon
-which it may return to the north. Those, then, who hold that the earth
-is a globe because it can be circumnavigated, have an argument which
-is logically incomplete and fallacious. This will be seen at once by
-putting it in the syllogistic form:--
-
- A globe _only_ can be circumnavigated:
-
- The Earth has been circumnavigated:
-
- Therefore the Earth is a globe.
-
-It has been shown that a _plane_ can be circumnavigated, and therefore
-the first or major proposition is false; and, being so, the conclusion
-is false. This portion of the subject furnishes a striking instance
-of the necessity of, at all times, proving a proposition by direct
-and immediate evidence, instead of quoting a natural phenomenon as a
-proof of what has previously been assumed. But a theory will not admit
-of this method, and therefore the zetetic process, or inquiry before
-conclusion, entirely eschewing assumption, is the only course which
-can lead to simple and unalterable truth. Whoever creates or upholds a
-theory, adopts a monster which will sooner or later betray and enslave
-him, or make him ridiculous in the eyes of practical observers.
-
-Closely following the subject of circumnavigation, the gain and loss
-of time discovered on sailing east and west is referred to as another
-proof of rotundity. But this illustration is equally fallacious with
-the last, and from the same cause, viz., the assumption that a _globe
-only_ could produce the effect observed. It will be seen, by reference
-to diagram, Figure 19, that the effect must take place equally upon a
-plane as upon a globe. Let the ship, W E, upon the meridian, Figure 1,
-at 12 at noon, begin to sail towards the position, Figure 2, which it
-will reach the next day at 12, or in 24 hours: the sun during the same
-24 hours will have returned only to Figure 1, and will require to move
-for another hour or more until it reaches the ship at Figure 2, making
-25 hours instead of 24, in which the sun would have returned to the
-ship, if it had remained at Figure 1. In this way, the sun is more and
-more behind the meridian time of the ship, as it proceeds day after day
-upon its westerly course, so that on completing the circumnavigation
-the ship’s time is a day later than the solar time, reckoning to and
-from the meridian of Greenwich. But the contrary follows if the ship
-sails from Figure 1 towards Figure 4, or the east, because it will meet
-the sun one hour earlier than the 24 hours which would be required for
-it to pass on to Figure 1. Hence, on completing the circle 1.4.3.2.1,
-the time at the ship would be one day in advance of the time at
-Greenwich, or the position Figure 1. Captain Sir J. C. Ross, at page
-132, vol. 2, says--“November 25, having by sailing to the eastward
-gained 12 hours, it became necessary, on crossing the 180th degree and
-entering upon west longitude, in order to have our time correspond with
-that of England, to have two days following of the same date, and by
-this means lose the time we had gained, and still were gaining, as we
-sailed to the eastward.”
-
-In further illustration of this matter, and to impress the mind of the
-readers with its importance as an evidence in support of the theory
-of the earth’s sphericity, several authors have given the following
-story:--Two brothers, twins, born within a few minutes of each other,
-and therefore of the same age, on growing to manhood went to sea. They
-both circumnavigated the earth, but in opposite directions; and when
-they again met, one was a day older than the other!
-
-Whatever truth there may be in this account, it is here shown to be no
-more favourable to the idea of rotundity than it is to the opposite
-fact that the earth is a plane; as both forms will permit of the same
-effect.
-
-Another phenomenon supposed to prove rotundity, is found in the fact
-that Polaris, or the north polar star, gradually sinks to the horizon
-as the mariner approaches the equator, on passing which it becomes
-invisible. First, it is an ordinary effect of perspective for an object
-to appear lower and lower as the observer recedes. Let any one try
-the experiment of looking at a lighthouse, church spire, monument,
-gas-lamp, or other elevated object, from the distance of a few yards,
-and notice the angle at which it is observed: on going farther away,
-the angle will diminish and the object appear lower, until, if the
-distance be sufficiently great, the line-of-sight to the object, and
-the apparently ascending surface of the Earth upon which it stands
-will converge to the angle which constitutes the vanishing point; at
-a single yard beyond which it will be invisible. This, then, is the
-necessary result of the everywhere visible law of perspective operating
-between the eye-line and the plane surface upon which the object
-stands; and has no relation whatever to rotundity.
-
-It is not denied that a similar depression of a distant object would
-take place upon a globe; it is simply contended that it would not occur
-upon a globe exclusively. But if the Earth is a sphere and the pole
-star hangs over the northern axis, it would be impossible to see it for
-a single degree beyond the equator, or 90 degrees from the pole. The
-line-of-sight would become a tangent to the sphere, and consequently
-several thousand miles out of and divergent from the direction of the
-pole-star. Many cases, however, are on record of the north polar star
-being visible far beyond the equator, as far even as the tropic of
-Capricorn. In the _Times_ newspaper of May 13, 1862, under the head of
-“Naval and Military Intelligence,” it is stated that Captain Wilkins
-distinctly saw the Southern Cross and the polar star at midnight in
-23·53 degrees of latitude, and longitude 35·46.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 20.]
-
-This would be utterly impossible if the Earth were a globe, as shown
-in the diagram, Figure 20. Let N represent the north pole, E E the
-equator, C C the tropic of Capricorn, and P the polar star. It will
-be evident that the line-of-sight C D being a tangent to the Earth
-beyond the equator E must diverge from the axis N and could not by any
-known possibility cause the star P to be visible to an observer at C.
-No matter how distant the star P, the line C D being divergent from
-the direction N P could never come in contact with it. The fact, then,
-that the polar star has often been seen from many degrees beyond the
-equator, is really an important argument against the doctrine of the
-Earth’s rotundity.
-
-It has been thought that because a pendulum vibrates more rapidly in
-the northern region than at the equator, the Earth is thereby proved to
-be a globe; and because the variation in the velocity is not exactly as
-it should be if all the surface of the Earth were equidistant from the
-centre, it has been concluded that the Earth is an oblate spheroid, or
-that its diameter is rather less through the poles than it is through
-the equator. The difference was calculated by Newton to be the 235th
-part of the whole diameter; or that the polar was to the equatorial
-diameter as 689 to 692. Huygens gave the proportion as 577 to 875 or
-a difference of about one-third of the whole diameter. Others have
-given still different proportions; but recently the difference of
-opinion has become so great that many have concluded that the Earth
-is really instead of oblate an _oblong_ spheroid. It is certain that
-the question when attempted to be answered by measuring arcs of the
-meridian, is less satisfactory than was expected. This will be evident
-from the following quotation from the account of the ordnance survey
-of Great Britain, which was conducted by the Duke of Richmond, Col.
-Mudge, General Roy, Mr. Dalby, and others, who measured base lines on
-Hounslow Heath and Salisbury Plain with glass rods and steel chains:
-“when these were connected by a chain of triangles and the length
-computed the result did not differ more than one inch from the actual
-measurements--a convincing proof of the accuracy with which all the
-operations had been conducted.
-
-The two stations, of Beachy Head in Sussex and Dunnose in the Isle of
-Wight, are visible from each other, and more than 64 miles asunder,
-nearly in a direction from east to west; their exact distance was found
-by the geodetical operations to be 339,397 feet (64 miles and 1477
-feet). The azimuth, or bearing of the line between them with respect
-to the meridian, and also the latitude of Beachy Head, were determined
-by astronomical observations. From these data the length of a degree
-perpendicular to the meridian was computed; and this, compared with the
-length of a meridional degree in the same latitude, gave the proportion
-of the polar to the equatorial axis. The result thus obtained, however,
-differed considerably from that obtained by meridional degrees. It
-has been found impossible to explain the want of agreement in a
-satisfactory way. * * By comparing the celestial with the terrestrial
-arcs, the length of degrees in various parallels was determined as in
-the following table:--
-
- Latitude of
- middle point. Fathoms.
- ° ′ ″
- Arbury Hill and Clifton 52 50 29·8 60,766
- Blenheim and Clifton 52 38 56·1 60,769
- Greenwich and Clifton 52 28 5·7 60,794
- Dunnose and Clifton 52 2 19·8 60,820
- Arbury Hill and Greenwich 51 51 4·1 60,849
- Dunnose and Arbury Hill 51 35 18·2 60,864
- Blenheim and Dunnose 51 13 18·2 60,890
- Dunnose and Greenwich 51 2 54·2 60,884
-
-This table presents a singular deviation from the common rule; for
-instead of the degrees _increasing_ as we proceed from north to south,
-they appear to _decrease_, as if the Earth were an _oblong_ instead
-of an _oblate_ spheroid. * * The measurements of small arcs of the
-meridian in other countries have presented similar instances.”[4]
-
- [4] Encyclopedia of Geography, by Hugh Murray and several Professors
- in the University of Edinburgh.
-
-A number of French Academicians who measured above three degrees of
-the meridian in Peru, gave as the result of their labours the first
-degree of the meridian from the equator as 56,653 toises; whilst
-another company of Academicians, who proceeded to Bothnia in Lapland,
-gave as the result of their calculation 57,422 toises for the length
-of a degree cutting the polar circle. But a more recent measurement
-made by the Swedish Astronomers in Bothnia shows the French to have
-been incorrect, having given the degree there 196 toises more than
-the true length. Other observations have been made, but as no two sets
-of experiments agree in result, it would be very unsatisfactory to
-conclude from them that the Earth is an oblate spheroid.
-
-Returning to the pendulum, it will be found to be equally
-unsatisfactory as a proof of this peculiar rotundity of the Earth. It
-is argued that as the length of a seconds pendulum at the equator is
-39,027 inches, and 39,197 inches at the north pole, that the Earth
-must be a globe, having a less diameter through its axis than through
-its equator. But this proceeds upon the _assumption_ that the Earth
-_is_ a globe having a “centre of attraction of gravitation,” towards
-which all bodies gravitate or fall; and as the pendulum is a falling
-body under certain restraint, the fact that it oscillates or falls
-more rapidly at the north than it does at the equator, is a proof that
-the north is nearer to the centre of attraction, or the centre of
-the Earth, than is the equatorial region; and, of course, if nearer,
-the radius must be shorter; and therefore the “Earth is a spheroid
-flattened at the poles.” This is very ingenious and very plausible,
-but, unfortunately for its character as an argument, the essential
-evidence is wanting that the Earth is a globe at all! whether oblate
-or oblong, or truly spherical, are questions logically misplaced.
-It should also be first proved that _no other_ cause could operate
-besides greater proximity to the centre of gravity, to produce the
-variable oscillations of a pendulum. This not being attempted, the
-whole subject must be condemned as logically insufficient, irregular,
-and worthless for its intended purpose. Many philosophers have ascribed
-the alterations in the oscillations of a pendulum to the diminished
-temperature of the northern centre. That the heat gradually and almost
-uniformly diminishes on passing from the equator to the north is well
-ascertained. “The mean annual temperature of the whole Earth at the
-level of the sea is 50° Fah. For different latitudes it is as under:--
-
- Degrees. Inches.
- Latitude (Equator) 0 84·2 Length of Pendulum 39,027
- „ „ 10 82·6 „ „ „
- „ „ 20 78·1 „ „ „
- „ „ 30 71·1 „ „ „
- „ „ 40 62·6 „ „ „
- „ (London) 50 53·6 „ „ 39,139
- „ „ 60 45·0 „ „ „
- „ „ 70 38·1 „ „ „
- „ „ 80 33·6 „ „ „
- „ (Pole) 90 00·0 „ „ 39,197[5]”
-
- [5] “Million of Facts,” by Sir Richard Phillips, p. 475.
-
-“All the solid bodies with which we are surrounded are constantly
-undergoing changes of bulk corresponding to the variations of
-temperature. * * The expansion and contraction of metals by heat and
-cold form subjects of serious and careful attention to chronometer
-makers, as will appear by the following statements:--The length of the
-pendulum vibrating seconds, in vacuo, in the latitude of London (51°
-31′ 8″ north), at the level of the sea, and at the temperature of 62°,
-has been ascertained with the greatest precision to be 39·13929 inches:
-now, as the metal of which it is composed is constantly subject to
-variation of temperature, it cannot but happen that its _length_ is
-constantly varying; and when it is further stated that if the “bob”
-be let down ¹⁄₁₀₀th of an inch, the clock will lose 10 seconds in 24
-hours; that the elongation of ¹⁄₁₀₀₀th of an inch will cause it to lose
-one second per day; and that a change of temperature equal to 30° Fah.
-will alter its length ¹⁄₅₀₀₀th part and occasion an error in the rate
-of going of 8 seconds per day, it will appear evident that some plan
-must be devised for obviating so serious an inconvenience.”[6]
-
- [6] “Noad’s Lectures on Chemistry,” p. 41.
-
-From these data it is readily seen that the variations in the rate
-of a pendulum as it is carried from the equator towards the north
-are sufficiently explained, without supposing that they arise from a
-peculiar spheroidal form of the Earth.
-
-Others have attributed the variable motions of the pendulum to
-increased density of the air on going northwards. That the condition
-of the air must have some influence in this respect will be seen
-from the following extract from experiments on pendulums by Dr.
-Derham, recorded in numbers 294 and 480 of the _Philosophical
-Transactions_:--“The arches of vibration _in vacuo_ were larger than
-in the open air, or in the receiver before it was exhausted; the
-enlargement or diminution of the arches of vibration were _constantly
-proportional_ to the _quantity of air_, or rarity, or density of it,
-which was left in the receiver of the air-pump. And as the _vibrations_
-were _longer_ or _shorter_, _so_ the _times_ were accordingly, viz.,
-two seconds in an hour when the vibrations were longest, and less and
-less as the air was re-admitted, and the vibrations shortened.”
-
-Thus there are two distinct and tangible causes which necessarily
-operate to produce the variable oscillations of a pendulum, without
-supposing any distortion in the supposed rotundity of the Earth. First,
-if the pendulum vibrates in the air, which is colder and therefore
-denser in the north than at the equator, it must be more or less
-resisted in its passage through it; and, secondly, if it vibrates _in
-vacuo_, the temperature being less, the length must be less, the arcs
-of vibration less, and the velocity greater. In going towards the
-equator, the temperature increases, the length becomes greater, the
-arcs increase, and the times of vibration diminish.
-
-Another argument for the globular form of the Earth is the
-following:--The degrees of longitude radiating from the north pole
-gradually increase in extent as they approach the equator; beyond which
-they again converge towards the south. To this it is replied that no
-actual measurement of a degree of longitude has ever been made south of
-the equator! If it be said that mariners have sailed round the world
-in the southern region and have _computed_ the length of the degrees,
-it is again replied that such evidence is unfavourable to the doctrine
-of rotundity. It will be seen from the following table of what the
-degrees of longitude would be if the earth were a globe of 25,000
-miles circumference, and comparing these with the results of practical
-navigation, that the diminution of degrees of longitude beyond the
-equator is purely imaginary.
-
-Latitudes at different longitudes:--
-
- Latitude 1 = 59·99 nautical miles.
- 10 = 59·09 „ „
- 20 = 56·38 „ „
- 30 = 51·96 „ „
- 34 = 49·74 (Cape Town)
- 40 = 45·96 „ „
- 45 = 42·45 (Port Jackson, Sydney)
- 50 = 38·57 „ „
- 56 = 33·55 (Cape Horn)
- 60 = 30·00 „ „
- 65 = 25·36 „ „
- 70 = 20·52 „ „
- 75 = 15·53 „ „
- 80 = 10·42 „ „
- 85 = 5·53 „ „
- 86 = 4·19 „ „
- 87 = 3·14 „ „
- 88 = 2·09 „ „
- 89 = 1·05 „ „
- 90 = 0·00 „ „
-
-According to the above table (which is copied from a large Mercator’s
-chart in the library of the Mechanics’ Institute, Royal Hill,
-Greenwich), the distance round the Earth at the Antarctic circle would
-only be about 9,000 miles. But practical navigators give the distance
-from the Cape of Good Hope to Port Jackson as 8,000 miles; from Port
-Jackson to Cape Horn as 8,000 miles; and from Cape Horn to the Cape
-of Good Hope, 6,000 miles, making together 22,000 miles. The average
-longitude of these places is 45°, at which parallel the circuit of
-the Earth, if it be a globe, should only be 14,282 miles. Here, then,
-is an error between the theory of rotundity and practical sailing of
-7,718 miles. But there are several statements made by Sir James Clarke
-Ross which tend to make the disparity even greater: at page 236, vol.
-2, of “South Sea Voyages,” it is said “From near Cape Horn to Port
-Philip (in Melbourne, Australia) the distance is 9,000 miles.” These
-two places are 143 degrees of longitude from each other. Therefore
-the whole extent of the Earth’s circumference is a mere arithmetical
-question. If 143 degrees make 9,000 miles, what will be the distance
-made by the whole 360 degrees into which the surface is divided? The
-answer is, 22,657 miles; or, 8,357 miles more than the theory of
-rotundity would permit. It must be borne in mind, however, that the
-above distances are nautical measure, which, reduced to statute miles,
-gives the actual distance round the Southern region at a given latitude
-as 26,433 statute miles; or nearly 1,500 miles more than the largest
-circumference ever assigned to the Earth at the equator.
-
-But actual measurement of a degree of longitude in Australia or some
-other land far south of the equator can alone place this matter beyond
-dispute. The problem to be solved might be given as the following:--A
-degree of longitude in England at the latitude of 50° N. is 38·57
-nautical or 45 statute miles; at the latitude of Port Jackson in
-Australia, which is 45° S., a degree of longitude, if the Earth is a
-globe, should be 42·45 nautical or 49·52 statute miles. But if the
-Earth is a plane, and the distances above referred to as given by
-nautical men are correct, a degree of longitude on the parallel of Port
-Jackson will be 69·44 statute miles, being a difference of 19·92 or
-nearly 20 statute miles. In other words, a degree of longitude along
-the southern part of Australia ought to be, _if the Earth is a plane_,
-nearly 20 miles greater than a degree of longitude on the southern
-coast of England. This is the point which has yet to be settled. The
-day is surely not far distant when the scientific world will demand
-that the question be decided by proper geodetical operations! And
-this not altogether for the sake of determining the true figure of
-the Earth, but also for the purpose of ascertaining, if possible, the
-cause of the many anomalies observed in navigating the southern region.
-These anomalies have led to the loss of many vessels and the sacrifice
-of a fearful amount of life and property. “In the southern hemisphere,
-navigators to India have often fancied themselves east of the Cape when
-still West, and have been driven ashore on the African coast, which
-according to their reckoning lay behind them. This misfortune happened
-to a fine frigate, the “Challenger,” in 1845.”[7] “Assuredly there are
-many shipwrecks from alleged errors in reckoning which _may_ arise
-from a somewhat false idea of the general form and measurement of the
-Earth’s surface. Such a subject, therefore, ought to be candidly and
-boldly discussed.”[8]
-
- [7] “Tour through Creation,” by the Rev. Thomas Milner, M.A.
-
- [8] “The Builder,” Sept. 20, 1862, in a “review” of a
- recently-published work on Astronomy.
-
-It is commonly believed that surveyors when laying out railways
-and canals, are obliged to allow 8 inches per mile for the Earth’s
-curvature; and that if this were not done in the latter case the water
-would not be stationary, but would flow on until at the end of one
-mile in each direction, although the canal should have the same depth
-throughout, the surface would stand 8 inches higher in the middle than
-at the ends. In other words, that the bottom of a canal in which the
-allowance of 8 inches per mile had not been made, would be a chord
-to the surface of the contained water, which would be an arc of a
-circle. To this it is replied, that both in regard to railways and
-canals, wherever an allowance has been attempted the work has not
-been satisfactory; and so irregular were the results in the earlier
-days of railway, canal, and other surveying, that, the most eminent
-engineers abandoned the practice of the old “forward levelling” and
-allowing for convexity; and adopted what is now called the “double
-sight” or “back-and-fore sight” method. It was considered that whether
-the surface were convex or horizontal, or whether the convexity were
-more or less than the supposed degree, would be of no consequence in
-practice if the spirit level or theodolite were employed to read both
-backwards and forwards; for whatever degree of convexity existed,
-one “sight” would compensate for the other; and if the surface were
-horizontal, the same mode of levelling would apply. So important did
-the ordnance department of the Government consider this matter, that it
-was deemed necessary to make the abandonment of all ideas of rotundity
-compulsory, and in a standing order (No. 6) of the House of Lords as to
-the preparation of sections for railways, &c., the following language
-is used, “That the section be drawn to the same _horizontal_ scale as
-the plan; and to a vertical scale of not less than one inch to every
-one hundred feet; and shall show the surface of the ground marked on
-the plan, the intended level of the proposed work, the height of every
-embankment, and the depth of every cutting; and a _datum_ HORIZONTAL
-LINE, which shall be _the same throughout the whole length of the
-work_, or any branch thereof respectively; and shall be referred to
-some fixed point stated in writing on the section, near some portion of
-such work; and in the case of a canal, cut, navigation, turnpike, or
-other carriage road, or railway, near either of the termini.” No. 44
-of the standing orders of the House of Commons is similar to the above
-order (No. 6) of the House of Lords.
-
-Thus it is evident that the doctrine of the Earth’s rotundity cannot
-be mixed up with the practical operations of civil engineers and
-surveyors, and to prevent the waste of time and the destruction of
-property which necessarily followed the doings of some who were
-determined to involve the convexity of the Earth’s surface in their
-calculations, the very Government of the country has been obliged to
-interfere! Every survey of this and other countries, whether ordnance
-or otherwise, is now carried out in connection with a horizontal datum,
-and therefore, as no other method proves satisfactory, it is virtually
-an admission by all the most practical scientific men of the day that
-the Earth _cannot be other than a plane_!
-
-An argument for the Earth’s convexity is thought by many to be found
-in the following facts:--“Fluid or semi-fluid substances in a state
-of motion invariably assume the globular form, as rain, hail, dew,
-mercury, and melted lead, which, poured from a great height becomes
-divided into spherical masses, as in the manufacture of small shot,
-&c.” “There is abundant evidence from geology that the Earth has been
-a fluid or semi-fluid mass, and it could not, therefore, continue in
-a state of motion through space without becoming spherical.” Without
-denying that the Earth has been, at some former period, in a pulpy or
-semi-fluid state, it is requisite to prove beyond all doubt that it
-has a motion upon axes and through space, or the conclusion that it
-is therefore spherical is premature and illogical. It will be shown
-in a subsequent part of this work, that such axial and orbital motion
-does not exist, and therefore any argument founded upon and including
-it as a fact is necessarily fallacious. In addition to this, it may
-be remarked that the tendency in falling fluids to become globular is
-owing to what has been called “attraction of cohesion” (not “attraction
-of gravitation”), which is very limited in its operation. It is
-confined to small quantities of matter. If, in the manufacture of
-small shot, the melted metal is allowed to fall in masses of several
-ounces or pounds, instead of being divided into particles weighing
-only a few grains, it will never take a spherical form, and shot of
-an inch in diameter could not be made by this process. Bullets of
-even half-an-inch diameter can only be made by casting the metal into
-spherical moulds. In tropical countries, the rain instead of falling in
-drops or small globules, often comes down in large irregular masses,
-which have no approximation whatever to sphericity. So that it is
-manifestly unjust to affirm of large masses of matter like the Earth
-that which only belongs to minute portions or a few grains in weight.
-The whole matter taken together entirely fails as an argument for the
-Earth’s rotundity.
-
-Those who hold that the Earth is a globe will often affirm, with
-visible enthusiasm, that in an eclipse of the Moon there is proof
-positive of rotundity. That the shadow of the Earth upon the Moon is
-always round; and that nothing but a globe could, in all positions,
-cast a circular shadow. Here again the essential requirements of an
-argument are wanting. It is _not proved_ that the Moon is eclipsed _by
-a shadow_. It is _not proved_ that the _Earth moves_ in an orbit, and
-therefore takes _different positions_. It is _not proved_ that the Moon
-receives her light from the Sun, and that therefore her surface is
-darkened by the Earth intercepting the Sun’s light. It will be shown
-in the proper place that the Earth has no motion in space or on axes;
-that it is not a shadow which eclipses the Moon; that the Moon is not
-a reflector of the Sun’s light, but is _self-luminous_; and therefore
-could not possibly be obscured by _a shadow_ from any object whatever.
-The subject is only introduced here because it forms one of the
-category of supposed evidences of the Earth’s rotundity. But to call
-that an argument where every necessary proposition is assumed, is to
-stultify both the judgment and the reasoning powers!
-
-Many place great reliance upon what is called the “spherical excess”
-observed in levelling, as a proof of the Earth’s rotundity. In
-Castle’s Treatise on Levelling it is stated that “the angles taken
-between any three points on the surface of the Earth by the theodolite,
-are, strictly speaking, spherical angles, and their sum must exceed 180
-degrees; and the lines bounding them are not the chords as they should
-be, but the tangents to the Earth. This excess is inappreciable in
-common cases, but in the larger triangles it becomes necessary to allow
-for it, and to diminish each of the angles of the observed triangle by
-one-third of the spherical excess. To calculate this excess, divide the
-area of the triangle in feet by the radius of the Earth in seconds and
-the quotient is the excess.”
-
-The following observation as made by surveyors, also bears upon the
-subject:--If a spirit-level or theodolite be “levelled,” and a given
-point be read upon a graduated staff at the distance of about or
-more than 100 chains, this point will have an altitude slightly in
-excess of the altitude of the cross-hair of the theodolite; and if the
-theodolite be removed to the position of the graduated staff and again
-levelled, and a backward sight taken to the distance of 100 chains,
-another excess of altitude will be observed; and this excess will
-go on increasing as often as the experiment or backward and forward
-observation is repeated. From this it is argued that the line of sight
-from the spirit-level or theodolite is a tangent, and that the surface
-of the Earth is therefore spherical.
-
-Of a similar character is the following observation:--If a theodolite
-or spirit-level be placed upon the sea-shore, and “levelled,” and
-directed towards the sea, the line of the horizon will be observed to
-be a given amount below the cross-hair of the instrument, to which a
-certain dip, or inclination from the level will have to be given to
-bring the cross-hair and the sea horizon together. It is concluded that
-as the sea horizon is always observed to be below the cross-hair of the
-“levelled” theodolite, the line of sight is a tangent, the surface of
-the water convex, and therefore the Earth is a globe.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 21.]
-
-The conclusion derived from the last three observations is exceedingly
-plausible, and would completely satisfy the minds of scientific men
-as to the Earth’s sphericity if a perfect explanation could not be
-given. The whole matter has been specially and carefully examined;
-and one very simple experiment will show that the effects observed do
-not arise from rotundity in the Earth’s surface, but from a certain
-peculiarity in the instruments employed. Take a convex lens or a
-magnifying glass and hold it over a straight line drawn across a
-sheet of paper. If the glass be so held that a part of the straight
-line can be seen _through_ it, and another part seen _outside_ it, a
-difference in the _direction_ of the line will be observed, as shown
-in the diagram Figure 21. Let A B C represent a straight line. If a
-lens is now held an inch, or more, according to its focal length,
-over the part of the line A B, and the slightest amount out of its
-centre, that part of the line A B which passes under the lens will
-be seen in the direction of the figures 1.2; but if the lens be now
-moved a little out of its central position in the opposite direction,
-the line B C will be observed at 3.4, or below B C. A lens is a
-magnifying glass because it _dilates_ or spreads out from its centre
-the objects observed through it Therefore whatever is magnified by it
-is seen a little out of its axis or centre. This is again necessitated
-by the fact that the axis or actual centre is always occupied by the
-cross-hair. Thus the line-of-sight in the theodolite or spirit-level
-not being axial or absolutely central, reads upon a graduated staff
-a position which is necessarily slightly divergent from the axis of
-vision; and this is the source of that “spherical excess” which has so
-long been considered by surveyors as an important proof of the Earth’s
-rotundity. In this instance, as, indeed, in all the others given as
-evidence that the Earth is a globe, the premises do not fully warrant
-the conclusion--which is premature,--drawn before the whole subject is
-fairly examined; and when other causes are amply sufficient to explain
-the effects observed.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION 2.
-
-THE EARTH NO AXIAL OR ORBITAL MOTION.
-
-
-If a ball be allowed to drop from the mast-head of a ship _at rest_, it
-will strike the deck at the foot of the mast. If the same experiment
-be tried with a ship _in motion_, the same result will be observed.
-Because, in the latter case, the ball is acted upon simultaneously by
-two forces at right angles to each other--one, the momentum given to it
-by the moving ship in the direction of its own motion, and the other
-the force of gravity, the direction of which is square to that of the
-momentum. The ball being acted upon by the two forces together will not
-go in the direction of either, but will take a diagonal course, as
-shown in the following diagram, Figure 22.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 22.]
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 23.]
-
-The ball passing from A to C by the force of gravity, and having at
-the moment of its liberation received a momentum from the ship in the
-direction A B, will by the conjoint action of the two forces, take the
-direction A D, falling at D, just as it would have fallen at C had the
-vessel remained at rest. In this way, it is contended by those who
-hold that the Earth is a moving sphere, a ball allowed to fall from
-the mouth of a deep mine reaches the bottom in an apparently vertical
-direction, the same as it would if the Earth were motionless. So far,
-there need be no discussion--the explanation is granted. But now let
-the experiment be modified in the following way:--Let the ball be
-thrown _upwards from_ the mast-head of a moving vessel; it will partake
-as before of two motions, the upward and the horizontal, and will take
-a diagonal course upwards and with the vessel until the two forces
-expend themselves, when it will begin to fall by the force of gravity
-only, and drop into the water far behind the ship, which is still
-moving horizontally. Diagram Figure 23 will illustrate this effect. The
-ball being thrown upwards in the direction A C, and the vessel moving
-from A to B, will cause it to pass in the direction A D, arriving at D
-when the vessel reaches B; the two forces having expended themselves
-when the ball arrives at D, it will begin to descend by the force of
-gravity in the direction D B H, but during its fall the vessel will
-have reached the position S, so that the ball will drop far behind
-it at the point H. To bring the ball from D to S _two forces_ would
-be required, as D H and D W; but as D W does not exist, the force of
-gravity operates _alone_, and the ball necessarily falls behind the
-vessel at a distance proportionate to the altitude attained at D, and
-the time occupied in falling from D to H.
-
-The same result will be observed on throwing a ball directly upwards
-from a railway carriage when in rapid motion, as shown in the following
-Figure 24. While the carriage or tender passes from A to B, the ball
-thrown from A to C will reach the position D, but while the ball then
-comes down by the force of gravity, _operating alone_, to the point H,
-the carriage will have advanced to W, so that the ball will always drop
-more or less behind the carriage, according to the force first given
-to it in the direction A C and the time occupied in ascending to D,
-and thence descending to H. It is therefore demanded that if the Earth
-had a motion upon axes from west to east, and a ball, instead of being
-dropped down a mine or allowed to fall from the mast head of a ship,
-be _shot upwards_ into the air; from the moment of its beginning to
-descend the surface of the Earth would turn from under its direction,
-and it would fall behind or to the west of its line of descent. On
-making the experiment _no such effect is observed_, and therefore the
-conclusion is unavoidable, that the Earth DOES NOT MOVE UPON AXES!
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 24.]
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 25.]
-
-The following experiment has been tried, with the object of obtaining
-definite results. If the Earth is a globe, having a circumference of
-25,000 miles at the equator, the circumference at the latitude of
-London (51°) will be about 16,000 statute miles; so that the motion of
-the Earth’s surface, if 25,000 miles in 24 hours at the equator, in
-England would be more than 700 feet per second. An air-gun was firmly
-fixed to a strong post, as shown at A in Figure 25, and carefully
-adjusted by a plumb-line, so that it was perfectly vertical. On
-discharging the gun, the ball ascended in the direction A C, and
-invariably (during several trials) descended within a few inches of
-the gun at A; twice it fell back upon the very mouth of the barrel.
-The average time that the ball was in the atmosphere was 16 seconds;
-and, as half the time would be required for the ascent and half for the
-descent, it is evident that if the Earth had a motion once round its
-axis in 24 hours, the ball would have passed in 8 seconds to the point
-D, while the air-gun would have reached the position B H. The ball
-then commencing its descent, requiring also 8 seconds, would in that
-time have fallen to the point H, while the Earth and the gun would
-have advanced as far as W. The time occupied being 8 seconds, and the
-Earth’s velocity being 700 feet per second, the progress of the Earth
-and the air-gun to W, in advance of the ball at H, would be 5,600 feet!
-In other words, in these experiments, the ball, which always fell back
-to the place of its detachment, should have fallen 5,600 feet, or
-considerably more than one statute mile to the west of the air-gun!
-Proving beyond all doubt that the supposed axial motion of the Earth
-DOES NOT EXIST!
-
-The same experiment ought to suffice as evidence against the
-assumed motion of the Earth in an orbit; for it is difficult, if
-not impossible, to understand how the behaviour of the ball thrown
-from a vertical air-gun should be other in relation to the Earth’s
-forward motion in space than it is in regard to its motion upon axes.
-Besides, if it is proved _not_ to move upon axes, the assumption
-that it moves in an orbit round the Sun is useless for theoretical
-purposes, and there is no necessity for either denying or in any
-way giving it farther consideration. But that no point may be taken
-without direct evidence, let the following experiment be tried:--Take
-two carefully-bored iron tubes, about two yards in length, and place
-them, one yard asunder, on the opposite sides of a wooden frame, or
-a solid block of wood or masonry; so adjust them that their axes of
-vision shall be perfectly parallel to each other, and direct them to
-the plane of some notable fixed star, a few seconds previous to its
-meridian time. Let an observer be stationed at each tube; and the
-moment the star appears in the first tube, let a knock or other signal
-be given, to be repeated by the observer at the second tube when he
-first sees the star. A distinct period of time will elapse between the
-signals given, showing that the same star is not visible at the same
-moment by two lines of sight parallel to each other and only one yard
-asunder. A slight inclination of the second tube towards the first
-would be required for the star to be seen at the same moment. If now
-the tubes be left in their position for six months, the same star will
-be visible at the same meridian time, without the slightest alteration
-being required in the direction of the tubes. From which result it
-is concluded that if the Earth had moved _a single yard_ in an orbit
-through space there would at least be the difference of time indicated
-by the signals, and the slight inclination of the tube which the
-difference in position of one yard required. But as no such difference
-in the direction of the tube is required, the conclusion is unavoidable
-that in six months a given meridian upon the Earth has not moved a
-single yard, and that therefore the Earth has not the slightest degree
-of orbital motion--or motion at right angles to the meridian of a given
-star! It will be useless to say in explanation that the stars are so
-infinitely distant that a difference in the angle of inclination of the
-tube in six months could not be expected, as it will be proved in a
-subsequent section that _all_ the stars are within a few thousand miles
-from the Earth’s surface!
-
-
-
-
-SECTION 3.
-
-THE TRUE DISTANCE OF THE SUN AND STARS.
-
-
-As it is now demonstrated that the Earth is a plane, the distance of
-the Sun and Stars may readily be measured by plane trigonometry. The
-base line in any operation being horizontal and always a carefully
-measured one, the process becomes exceedingly simple. Let the altitude
-of the Sun be taken on a given day at 12 o’clock at the high-water
-mark on the sea shore at Brighton, in Sussex; and at the same hour
-at the high-water mark of the River Thames, near London Bridge; the
-difference in the Sun’s altitude taken simultaneously from two stations
-upon the same meridian, and the distance between the stations, or the
-length of the base line ascertained, are all the elements required for
-calculating the exact distance of the Sun from London or Brighton;
-but as this distance is the hypothenuse of a triangle, whose base is
-the Earth’s surface, and vertical side the zenith distance of the
-Sun, it follows that the distance of the Sun from that part of Earth
-to which it is vertical is less than the distance from London. In the
-Diagram, Figure 26, let L B represent the base line from London to
-Brighton, a distance of 51 statute miles. The altitude at L and at B
-taken at the same moment of time will give the distance L S or B S.
-The angle of altitude at L or B, with the length of L S or B S, will
-then give the vertical distance of the Sun S from E, or the place which
-is immediately underneath it. This distance will be thus found to be
-considerably less than 4,000 miles.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 26.]
-
-The following are the particulars of an observation made, a few years
-ago, by the officers engaged in the Ordnance survey. Altitude of the
-Sun at London 55° 13′; altitude taken at the same time, on the grounds
-of a public school, at Ackworth, in Yorkshire, 53° 2′; the distance
-between the two places in a direct line, as measured by triangulation,
-is 151 statute miles. From these elements the true distance of the Sun
-may be readily computed; and proved to be under 4,000 miles!
-
-Since the above was written, an officer of the Royal Engineers, in the
-head-quarters of the Ordnance Survey, at Southampton, has furnished the
-following elements of observations recently made:--
-
- Southern Station, Sun’s altitude, 45°
- Northern ditto, „ „ 38°
- Distance between the two stations, 800 statute miles.
-
-The calculation made from these elements gives the same result, viz.,
-that the actual distance of the Sun from the Earth is less than 4,000
-miles.
-
-The same method of measuring distances applies equally to the Stars;
-and it is easy to demonstrate, beyond the possibility of doubt, so long
-as assumed premises are excluded, that all the visible objects in the
-firmament are contained within the distance of 6,000 miles!
-
-From these demonstrable distances it follows unavoidably that the
-_magnitude_ of the Sun, Moon, Stars, &c., is very small--much smaller
-than the Earth from which they are measured; and to which therefore
-they cannot possibly be other than secondary, and subservient.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION 4.
-
-THE SUN MOVES IN A CIRCLE OVER THE EARTH, CONCENTRIC WITH THE NORTH
-POLE.
-
-
-As the Earth has been shown to be fixed, the motion of the Sun is a
-visible reality; and if it be observed from any northern latitude, and
-for any period before and after the time of southing, or passing the
-meridian, it will be seen to describe an arc of a circle; an object
-moving in an arc cannot return to the centre of such arc without having
-completed a circle. This the Sun does visibly and daily. To place the
-matter beyond doubt, the observation of the Arctic navigators may be
-referred to. Captain Parry, and several of his officers, on ascending
-high land in the vicinity of the north pole, repeatedly saw, for 24
-hours together, the sun describing a circle upon the southern horizon.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION 5.
-
-THE DIAMETER OF THE SUN’S PATH IS CONSTANTLY CHANGING--DIMINISHING FROM
-DECEMBER 21ST TO JUNE 15TH, AND ENLARGING FROM JUNE TO DECEMBER.
-
-
-This is a matter of absolute certainty, proved by what is called, in
-technical language, the northern and southern declination, which is
-simply saying that the Sun’s path is nearest the north pole in summer,
-and farthest away from it in winter. This difference in position gives
-rise to the difference of altitude, as observed at various periods of
-the year, and which is shewn in the following table, given in “The
-Illustrated London Almanack,” for 1848, by Mr. Glaisher, of the Royal
-Observatory, Greenwich.
-
-“Sun’s altitude at the time of Southing, or being on the meridian:--
-
- Sun’s Time of Southing.
- altitude. M. S. (Common clock, or
- London mean time.)
- June 15 62° 0 4 before noon.
- „ 30 61²⁄₃° 3 18 afternoon.
- July 15 59²⁄₃° 5 38 „
- „ 31 56¹⁄₂° 6 4 „
- Aug. 15 52¹⁄₂° 0 11 „
- „ 31 47° 0 5 „
- Sep. 15 38²⁄₃° 4 58 before noon.
- „ 30 35¹⁄₂° 10 6 „
- Oct. 31 24° 16 14 „
- Nov. 30 17° 10 58 „
- Dec. 21 12° 0 27 „
- „ 31 15° 3 29 afternoon.
- Jan. 1 15¹⁄₂° 3 36 „
- „ 15 17° 9 33 „
- „ 31 21° 13 41 „
- Feb. 15 25° 14 28 „
- „ 29 30¹⁄₂° 12 43 „
- March 15 {On the Equator} 36° 9 2 „
- { at 6 a.m. } 38¹⁄₂° 0 0 „
- „ 21 42¹⁄₂° 4 10 before noon.
- April 15 48° 0 8 „
- „ 30 53° 2 58 „
- May 15 57° 3 54 „
- „ 31 60° 2 37 „
-
-In the following diagram (Fig. 27) A A A represent the Sun’s daily path
-on December 21st, and B B B the same on June 15th. N the North Pole, S
-the Sun, E Great Britain. The figures 1 2 3 the Arctic Circle, and 4 5
-6 the extent of sunlight. The arrows show the direction of the Sun’s
-motion.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 27.]
-
-
-
-
-SECTION 6.
-
-CAUSE OF DAY AND NIGHT, SEASONS, &c.
-
-
-The Sun S describes the circle A A A on the 21st December once in 24
-hours; hence in that period day and night occur to every part of the
-Earth, except within the Arctic circle. The light of the Sun gradually
-diminishing from S, to the Arctic circle 1 2 3, where it becomes
-twilight, does so according to the well-known law of radiation, equally
-in all directions--hence, the circle 4 5 6 represents the whole extent
-of the Sun’s light at any given time. The arc 4 E is the advancing or
-morning twilight, and 6 E the receding or evening twilight; to every
-place underneath a line drawn across the circle through S to N it is
-noonday. It will now be easily understood that as the Sun S moves in
-the direction of the arrows or from right to left, and completes the
-circle A A A in 24 hours, it will produce in that period morning,
-noon, evening, and night to all parts of the Earth in succession. On
-referring to the diagram, it will be seen that to England, E, the
-length of the day at this time of the year is the _shortest_, the
-amount of light being represented by the arc E E E; and also that
-the northern centre N remains in darkness during the whole daily
-revolution of the Sun, the light of which terminates at the Arctic
-circle 1 2 3. Thus, morning, noon, evening, midnight, the _shortest_
-days, or the Winter season, and the constant or six months’ darkness
-at the pole are all a part of one general phenomenon. As the Sun’s
-path begins now to diminish every day until in six months, or on the
-15th of June, it describes the circle B B B, it is evident that the
-same extent of sunlight will reach over or beyond the pole N, as shown
-in the following diagram (Fig. 28), when morning, noon, evening, and
-night will again occur as before; but the amount of light passing over
-England, represented by the arc E E E, is now much larger than when
-the Sun was upon the circle A A A, and represents the _longest_ days,
-or the _Summer_ season, and the constant, or six months’ light at the
-pole. Thus, day and night, long and short days, Winter and Summer, the
-long periods of alternate light and darkness at the pole, arise simply
-from the Sun’s position in relation to the north pole.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 28.]
-
-If the Earth is a globe, it is evident that Winter and Summer, and
-long and short days, will be of the same character and duration in
-corresponding latitudes, in the southern as in the northern hemisphere.
-But we find that in many respects there is a marked difference; for
-instance, in New Zealand, where the latitude is about the same as in
-England, a remarkable difference exists in the length of day and night.
-In the Cook’s Strait Almanack, for 1848, it is stated, “At Wellington,
-New Zealand, December 21, Sun rises 4h. 31m., and sets at 7h. 29m., the
-day being 14 hours 58 minutes. June 21st, Sun rises at 7h. 29m., and
-sets at 4h. 31m., the day being 9 hours and 2 minutes. In England the
-longest day is 16h. 34m., and the shortest day is 7h. 45m. Thus the
-_longest day_ in New Zealand is 1 hour and 36 minutes _shorter_ than
-the _longest day_ in England; and the _shortest day_ in New Zealand is
-1 hour and 17 minutes _longer_ than the shortest day in England.”
-
-In a recently published pamphlet, by W. Swainson, Esq., Attorney
-General, the following passage occurs:--“Compared with an English
-summer, that of Auckland is but little warmer, though much longer; but
-the nights in New Zealand are always cool and refreshing.... The days
-are _one hour shorter_ in the summer, and _one hour longer_ in the
-winter than in England! of _twilight_ there is _little_ or _none_.”
-
-From a work, also recently published, on New Zealand, by Arthur S.
-Thompson, M.D., the following sentences are quoted:--“The summer
-mornings, even in the warmest parts of the colony are sufficiently
-fresh to exhilarate without chilling; and the seasons glide
-imperceptibly into each other. The days are _an hour shorter_ at
-_each end_ of the day in summer, and an hour longer in winter than in
-England.”
-
-A letter from a correspondent in New Zealand, dated Nelson, September
-15, 1857, contains the subjoined passages:--“Even in summer people
-here have no notion of going without fires in the evening; but then,
-though the days are very warm and sunny, the nights are always cold.
-For seven months last summer we had not one day that the Sun did
-not shine as brilliantly as it does in England in the finest day in
-June; and though it has more power here, the heat is not nearly so
-oppressive.... But then there is not the twilight which you get in
-England. Here it is light till about eight o’clock; then, in a few
-minutes, it becomes too dark to see anything, and the change comes
-over in almost no time.” “Twilight lasts but a short time in so low
-a latitude as 28 degrees, and no sooner does the Sun peep above the
-horizon, than all the gorgeous parade by which he is preceded is shaken
-off, and he comes in upon us in the most abrupt and unceremonious way
-imaginable.”[9] These various peculiarities could not exist in the
-southern region if the Earth were spherical and moved upon axes, and
-in an orbit round the Sun. If the Sun is fixed, and the Earth revolves
-underneath it, the same phenomena should exist at the same distance on
-each side of the Equator. But such is not the case! What can operate
-to cause the twilight in New Zealand to be so much more sudden than it
-is in England? The southern “hemisphere” cannot revolve more rapidly
-than the northern! The distance round _a globe_ would be the same at
-50° south as at 50° north, and as the whole globe would revolve once in
-24 hours, the surface at the two places would move underneath the Sun
-with the same velocity, and the light would approach in the morning
-and recede in the evening in exactly the same manner; yet the _very
-contrary_ is the fact! The twilight in England in summer is slow and
-gradual, but in New Zealand it is rapid and abrupt; a difference which
-is altogether incompatible with the doctrine of the Earth’s rotundity.
-But, the Earth a plane, and it is a simple “matter of course.” Let E,
-in Figure 28, represent England, and W New Zealand; the radius N E and
-the consequent circle round N is much less than the radius N W and
-its consequent circle round the same point. But as the larger circle,
-radius N W is passed over by the sunlight in the same time (24 hours)
-as the smaller circle, radius N E, the velocity is proportionately
-greater. The velocity is the space passed over multiplied by the time
-in passing, and as the space over New Zealand is much greater than the
-space over England, the velocity of the Sun-light must be much greater,
-and its morning and evening twilight necessarily more “abrupt and
-unceremonious;” and _therefore_, it might be said with strictly logical
-accuracy, the Earth is a Plane, and cannot possibly be a Globe!
-
- [9] Captain Basil Hall, R.N., F.R.S.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION 7.
-
-CAUSE OF “SUNRISE” AND “SUNSET.”
-
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 29.]
-
-Although the Sun is at all times above and parallel to the Earth’s
-surface, he appears to ascend the firmament from morning until noon,
-and to descend and sink below the horizon at evening. This arises from
-a simple and everywhere visible law of perspective. A flock of birds,
-when passing over a flat or marshy country, always appears to descend
-as it recedes; and if the flock is extensive, the first bird appears
-lower, or nearer to the horizon than the last. When a balloon sails
-from an observer without increasing or decreasing its altitude, it
-appears gradually to approach the horizon. The farthest light in a row
-of lamps appears the lowest, although each one has the same altitude.
-Bearing these phenomena in mind, it will easily be seen how the Sun,
-although always parallel to the surface of the Earth, must appear to
-ascend when approaching, and descend after leaving the meridian or
-noon-day position. Let the line A B, Fig. 29, represent a portion
-of the Earth’s surface; C D of the Sun’s path, and H H, the line of
-sight. The surface of the Earth, A B, will appear to ascend from B to
-H, forming the horizon. When the Sun is traversing the line C D, in the
-direction of the arrows, he will appear to emerge from the horizon H,
-and to gradually ascend the line H D. When in the position 1, he will
-_appear_ to be at the point 2; and when at 3, the apparent position
-will be at 4; but when he arrives upon the meridian D, his apparent
-and actual, or noon-day position, will be the same. But now, from the
-point D, the Sun will appear to descend, as in Fig. 30, and when he
-has passed from D to 1, he will appear at 2, and when really at 3 will
-appear at 4; and thus continuing his course in the direction D C, he
-will reach the horizon at H, and disappear or “set” to the observer
-at H A. Thus “Sunrise” and “Sunset” are phenomena dependent entirely
-upon the fact that horizontal lines parallel to each other appear to
-approach or converge in the distance, the surface of the Earth being
-horizontal, and the line-of-sight of the observer and the Sun’s path
-being parallel with it, necessarily produce the observed phenomena.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 30.]
-
-
-
-
-SECTION 8.
-
-CAUSE OF SUN APPEARING LARGER WHEN RISING AND SETTING THAN WHEN ON THE
-MERIDIAN.
-
-
-It is well known that when a light of any kind shines through a
-dense medium it will appear larger than when seen through a lighter
-medium. This will be more remarkable when the medium holds aqueous
-particles in solution,--as in a damp or foggy atmosphere the light of
-a gas-lamp will seem greater at a given distance than it will under
-ordinary circumstances. In the diagram, Figure 30, it is evident that
-H D is less than H 1, H 3, or H 5. The latter (H 5) represents the
-greater amount of atmosphere which the Sun has to shine through when
-approaching the horizon; and as the air near the Earth is both more
-dense and more damp, or holds more watery particles in solution, the
-light of the Sun must be dilated or enlarged as well as modified in
-colour. But the enlarged appearance of the Sun when rising and setting
-is only an optical impression, as proved by actual measurement. “If
-the angle of the Sun or Moon be taken either with a tube or micrometer
-when they appear so large to the eye in the horizon, the measure is
-identical when they are in the meridian and appear to the eye and
-mind but half the size. The apparent distance of the horizon is three
-or four times greater than the zenith. Hence the mental mistake of
-horizontal size, for the angular dimensions are equal; the first 5° is
-apparently to the eye equal to 10° or 15° at 50° or 60° of elevation;
-and the first 15° fill a space to the eye equal to a third of the
-quadrant. This is evidently owing to the ‘habit of sight,’ for with an
-accurate instrument the measure of 5° near the horizon is equal to 5°
-in the zenith.”[10]
-
- [10] “Million of Facts,” by Sir Richard Philips, p. 537.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION 9.
-
-CAUSE OF SOLAR AND LUNAR ECLIPSES.
-
-
-An Eclipse of the Sun is caused simply by the Moon passing before it,
-or between it and the observer on the Earth. Of this no question has
-been raised. But that an Eclipse of the Moon arises from a shadow
-of the Earth is in every respect unsatisfactory. The Earth has been
-proved to have no motion, either upon axes or in an orbit round the
-Sun, and therefore it could never come between the Sun and the Moon.
-The Earth is proved to be a Plane, always underneath the Sun and Moon,
-and therefore to speak of its intercepting the light of the Sun and
-thus casting its own shadow upon the Moon, is to say that which is
-impossible. Besides this, cases are on record of the Sun and Eclipsed
-Moon being above the horizon together. “The full Moon has sometimes
-been seen above the horizon before the Sun was set. A remarkable
-instance of this kind was observed at Paris on the 19th of July, 1750,
-when the Moon appeared visibly Eclipsed while the Sun was distinctly
-to be seen above the horizon.”[11] “On the 20th of April, 1837, the
-Moon appeared to rise Eclipsed before the Sun had set. The same
-phenomenon was observed on the 20th of September, 1717.”[12] “In the
-lunar Eclipses of July 17, 1590; Nov. 3, 1648; June 16, 1666; and May
-26, 1668, the Moon rose Eclipsed whilst the Sun was still apparently
-above the horizon. Those _horizontal_ Eclipses were noticed as early
-as the time of Pliny.”[13] The Moon’s entire surface, or that portion
-presented to the Earth has also been distinctly seen during the whole
-time of a total Eclipse, a phenomenon utterly incompatible with the
-doctrine that the Earth’s shadow is the cause of it. “The Moon has
-sometimes shown during a total Eclispe with an almost unaccountable
-distinctness. On Dec. 22, 1703, the Moon, when totally immersed in
-the Earth’s shadow, was visible at Avignon by a ruddy light of such
-brilliancy that one might have imagined her body to be transparent, and
-to be enlightened from behind; and on March 19th, 1848, it is stated
-that so bright was the Moon’s surface during its total immersion, that
-many persons could not be persuaded that it was eclipsed. Mr. Forster,
-of Bruges, states, in an account of that eclipse, that the light and
-dark places on the moon’s surface could be almost as well made out as
-in an ordinary dull moonlight night.
-
- [11] “Astronomy and Astronomical Instruments,” p. 105, by Geo. G.
- Carey.
-
- [12] “McCulloch’s Geography,” p. 85.
-
- [13] “Illustrated London Almanack for 1864,” the astronomical part in
- which is by James Glaisher, Esq., of the Greenwich Observatory.
-
-“Sometimes, in a total lunar eclipse, the moon will appear quite
-obscure in some parts of its surface, and in other parts will exhibit
-a high degree of illumination. * * * To a certain extent I witnessed
-some of these phenomena during the merely partial eclipse of February
-7th, 1860. * * * I prepared, during the afternoon of February 6th for
-witnessing the eclipse, without any distinct expectation of seeing much
-worthy of note. I knew, however, that upwards of eight-tenths of the
-disc would be covered, and I was anxious to observe with what degree
-of distinctness the eclipsed portion could be viewed, partly as an
-interesting fact, and partly with a view of verifying or discovering
-the weak points of an engraving (in which I am concerned) of a lunar
-eclipse.
-
-“After seeing the increasing darkness of the penumbra softly merging
-into the true shadow at the commencement of the eclipse (about 1
-o’clock a.m., Greenwich time) I proceeded with pencil and paper,
-dimly lighted by a distant lamp, to note by name the different lunar
-mountains and plains (the so-called seas) over which the shadow
-passed. * * * During the first hour and ten minutes I had seen nothing
-unexpected. * * * I had repeatedly written down my observations of
-the remarkable clearness with which the moon’s eclipsed outline could
-be seen, both with the naked eye, and with the telescope; at 1 hour
-58 minutes, however, I suddenly noted the ruddy colour of a _portion_
-of the moon. I may as well give my notes in the original words, as
-copied next day in a more connected form:--1h. 58m., Greenwich time. I
-am suddenly struck by the fact that the whole of the western seas of
-the moon are showing through the shadow with singular sharpness, and
-that the whole region where they lie has assumed a decidedly reddish
-tinge, attaining its greatest brightness at a sort of temporary polar
-region, having ‘Endymion’ about the position of its imaginary pole. I
-particularly notice that the ‘Lake of Sleep’ has disappeared in this
-brightness, instead of standing out in a darker shade: and I notice
-that this so-called polar region is not parallel with the rim of the
-shadow, but rather west of it.--2h. 15m. Some clouds, though very thin
-and transparent, now intervene.--2h. 20m. The sky is now cleared, How
-extraordinary is the appearance of the Moon _Reddish_ is not the word
-to express it; it is red--red hot! I endeavour to think of various
-red objects with which to compare it, and nothing seems so like as a
-_red-hot penny_--a red-hot penny with a little _white_-hot piece at its
-lower edge, standing out against a dark-blue back ground; only it is
-evidently not a mere disc, but beautifully rounded by shading.
-
-“Such is its appearance with the naked eye: with the telescope its
-surface varies more in tint than with the naked eye, and is not of
-quite so bright a red as when thus viewed. The redness continues to be
-most perceptible at a distance from the shadow’s southern edge, and to
-be greatest about the region of ‘Endymion.’ The Hercynian mountains
-(north of Grimaldus) are, however, of rather a bright red, and
-Grimaldus shows well. Mare Crisium and the western seas are wonderfully
-distinct. Not a trace to be seen of Aristarchus or Plato.--2h. 27m.
-It is now nearly the middle of the eclipse. The red colour is very
-brilliant to the naked eye. * * * After this, I noticed a progressive
-change of tint in the Moon.--2h. 50m. The Moon does not seem to the
-naked eye of so bright a red as before; and again I am reminded by its
-tint of red-hot copper, or rather copper which has begun to cool. The
-whole of Grimaldi is now uncovered. Through the telescope I notice a
-decided grey shade at the lower part of the eclipsed portion, and the
-various small craters give it a stippled effect, like the old aqua-tint
-engravings. The upper part is reddish, but two graceful bluish curves,
-like horns, mark the form of the Hercynian mountains, and the bright
-region on the other limb of the Moon. These are visible also to the
-naked eye.
-
-“At 3h. 5m. the redness had almost disappeared; a very few minutes
-afterwards, no trace of it remained, and ere long clouds came on.
-I watched the Moon, however, occasionally gaining a glimpse of its
-disc, till a quarter to four o’clock, when, for the last time on that
-occasion, I saw it faintly appearing through the clouds, nearly a full
-Moon again; and then I took leave of it, feeling amply repaid for my
-vigil by the beautiful spectacle which I had seen.”[14]
-
- [14] The Hon. Mrs. Ward, Trimleston House, near Dublin, in
- “Recreative Science,” p. 281.
-
-Mr Walkey, who observed the lunar eclipse of March 19th, 1848, near
-Collumpton, says--“The appearances were as usual till 20 minutes
-past 9; at that period, and for the space of the next hour, instead
-of an eclipse, or the shadow (umbra) of the Earth being the cause
-of the total obscurity of the Moon, the whole phase of that body
-became very quickly and most beautifully _illuminated_; and assumed
-the appearance of the glowing heat of fire from the furnace, rather
-tinged with a _deep red_. * * * The whole disc of the Moon being as
-_perfect with light_ as if there had been _no eclipse whatever_! * *
-* The Moon positively gave _good light from its disc during the total
-eclipse_!”[15]
-
- [15] “Philosophical Magazine,” No. 220, for August, 1848.
-
-In the astronomical portion of the “Illustrated London Almanack
-for 1864,” by Mr. Glaisher, a beautiful tinted engraving is given
-representing the appearance of the Moon during the total eclipse
-of June 1, 1863, when all the light and dark places--the so-called
-mountains, seas, &c., were plainly visible. In the accompanying
-descriptive chapter, the following sentences occur:--“At the time
-of totality the Moon presented a soft woolly appearance, apparently
-more globular in form than when fully illuminated. Traces of the
-larger and brighter mountains were visible at the time of totality,
-and particularly the bright rays proceeding from Tycho, Kepler, and
-Aristarchus. * * * At first, when the obscured part was of small
-dimensions, it was of an iron grey tint, but as it approached totality,
-the reddish light became so apparent that it was remarked that the
-Moon ‘seemed to be on fire;’ and when the totality had commenced, it
-certainly looked like a fire smouldering in its ashes, and almost
-going out.”
-
-If then, the Sun and Moon have many times been seen above the horizon
-when the latter was eclipsed, how can it be said that the Earth’s
-shadow was the cause of a lunar eclipse, when the Earth was not between
-or in a line with the Sun and Moon? And how can the Moon’s non-luminous
-surface be distinctly visible and illuminated during the very totality
-of an eclipse, if all the light of the Sun is intercepted by the Earth?
-
-Again, if the Moon is a sphere, which it is declared to be, how can its
-surface _reflect_ the light of the Sun? If her surface was a mass of
-polished silver, it could not reflect from more than a mere point! Let
-a silvered glass ball or globe of considerable size be held before a
-lamp or fire of any magnitude, and it will be seen that instead of the
-whole surface reflecting light, there will be a very small portion only
-illuminated. But the Moon’s _whole surface_ is brilliantly illuminated!
-a condition or effect utterly impossible if it be spherical. The
-surface _might_ be _illuminated_ from the Sun, or any other source if
-opaque, instead of polished, like an ordinary silvered mirror, but it
-could not shine intensely from every part, and brightly illuminate the
-objects before it, as the Moon does so beautifully when full and in
-a clear firmament. If the Earth _were admitted_ to be globular, and
-to move, and to be capable of throwing a shadow by intercepting the
-light of the Sun, it would be impossible for a lunar eclipse to occur
-thereby, unless at the same time the Moon be proved to be non-luminous,
-and to shine only by reflection. But this is not proved; it is only
-assumed as an essential part of a theory. The _contrary_ is capable
-of proof, and proof beyond the power of doubt, viz., that the Moon
-is _self-luminous_, or shines with a light peculiar to herself, and
-therefore independently of the Sun. A reflector necessarily gives
-off what it receives. If a mass of red-hot metal be placed before a
-plane or concave surface, _heat_ will be reflected. If snow or ice
-be similarly placed, _cold_ will be reflected. If light, ordinary or
-coloured, be presented, the _same_ will be reflected. If sound of a
-given pitch be produced, the same pitch will be reflected. If the
-note A be sounded upon a musical instrument, a reflector would not
-return the note B or C, but the _same note_, altered only in degree or
-intensity, but not in “pitch.” A reflector receiving a red light would
-not return a blue or yellow light. A reflector collecting the cold from
-a mass of ice, would not throw off heat; nor the contrary. Nor could
-the Moon, if a reflector, radiate or throw down upon the Earth any
-other light than such as she receives from the Sun. No difference could
-exist in the quality or character of the light, and it could differ in
-no respect but the quantity or intensity.
-
-The light of the Sun and of the Moon are different in their general
-appearance--in the colour and action upon the eye.
-
-The Sun’s light is drying and preservative, or antiseptic. The Moon’s
-light is damp and putrefactive.
-
-The Sun’s rays will put out a common fire; the Moon’s light will
-increase the combustion. The light of the Sun falling upon certain
-chemical substances, produces a change of colour, as in photographic
-and other processes. The light of the Moon fails to produce the same
-effect. Dr. Lardner, at page 121 of his excellent work, “The Museum of
-Science,” says--“The most striking instance of the effect of certain
-rays of solar light in blackening a light-colored substance, is
-afforded by chloride of silver, which is a white substance, but which
-immediately becomes black when acted upon by the rays near the violet
-extremity of the spectrum. This substance, however, highly susceptible
-as it is of having its colour affected by light, is, nevertheless,
-found not to be changed in any sensible degree when exposed to the
-light of the Moon, even when that light is condensed by the most
-powerful burning lenses.”
-
-The Sun’s light when concentrated by a number of mirrors, or a large
-burning lens, produces a focus which is entirely non-luminous, but
-in which the heat is so great that metallic and alkaline substances
-are quickly fused; earthy and mineral compounds almost immediately
-vitrified; and all animal and vegetable structures in a few seconds
-burned up and destroyed. But the Moon’s light so concentrated produces
-a brilliant focus, so luminous that it is difficult to look upon it;
-and yet there is no increase of temperature! “If the most delicate
-thermometer be exposed to the full light of the Moon, shining with its
-greatest lustre, the mercury is not elevated a hair’s breadth, neither
-would it be if exposed in the focus of her rays concentrated by the
-most powerful lenses. This has been proved by actual experiment.”[16]
-“This question has been submitted to the test of direct experiment. * *
-* The bulb of a thermometer sufficiently sensitive to render apparent a
-change of temperature amounting to the thousandth part of a degree, was
-placed in the focus of a concave reflector of vast dimensions, which,
-being directed to the Moon, the lunar rays were collected with great
-power upon it. Not the slightest change, however, was produced in the
-thermometric column, proving that a concentration of rays sufficient to
-fuse gold, if they proceeded _from the Sun_, does not produce a change
-of temperature so great as the thousandth part of a degree, when they
-proceed _from the Moon_.”[17]
-
- [16] “All the Year Round,” by Dickens.
-
- [17] Dr. Lardner’s Museum of Science, p. 115.
-
-“The light of the Moon though concentrated by the most powerful burning
-glass, is incapable of raising the temperature of the most delicate
-thermometer. M. De La Hire collected the rays of the full Moon when
-on the meridian, by means of a burning glass thirty-five inches in
-diameter, and made them fall on the bulb of a delicate air-thermometer.
-_No effect was produced_, though the lunar rays by this glass were
-concentrated 300 times.” “Professor Forbes concentrated the Moon’s
-light by a lens thirty inches in diameter, its focal distance being
-about forty-one inches, and having a power of concentration exceeding
-6,000 times. The image of the Moon which was only eighteen hours past
-full, and less than two hours from the meridian, was brilliantly thrown
-by this lens on the extremity of a commodious thermo-pile. Although the
-observations were made in the most unexceptional manner, and (supposing
-that half the rays were reflected, dispersed, and absorbed) though the
-light of the Moon was concentrated _3000 times, not the slightest
-thermo-effect was produced_![18] In the “Lancet” (medical journal) for
-March 14th, 1856, particulars are given of several experiments, which
-proved that the Moon’s rays when concentrated actually _reduced_ the
-temperature upon a thermometer more than 8 degrees!
-
- [18] Dr. Noad’s Lectures on Chemistry, p. 334.
-
- “The cold chaste Moon, the Queen
- Of Heaven’s bright Isles;
- Who makes all beautiful
- On which she smiles:
- That wandering shrine of soft
- Yet _icy flame_,
- Which ever is transformed
- Yet still the same;
- And _warms not_ but _illumes_.”
-
- --SHELLEY.
-
-The “pale _cold_ Moon” is an expression not only beautiful poetically
-but evidently true philosophically.
-
-If, as we have now seen, the very nature of a reflector demands certain
-conditions and the Moon does not manifest these conditions, it must
-of necessity be concluded that the Moon is _not_ a _reflector_, but
-a _self-luminous body_. If self-luminous her surface could not be
-darkened or eclipsed by a shadow of the Earth--supposing such were
-thrown upon it. The luminosity instead of being diminished would be
-greater in proportion to the greater density or darkness of the
-shadow. As the light in a lantern shines most brightly in the darkest
-places, so would the Moon’s self-luminous surface be most intense in
-the deepest part of the Earth’s shadow. It is thus rendered undeniable
-that a Lunar Eclipse _does_ not and _could_ not arise from a shadow of
-the Earth! As a _Solar_ Eclipse occurs from the Moon passing over the
-Sun; so from the evidence it is clear that a Lunar Eclipse _can only_
-arise from a similar cause--a body semi-transparent and well-defined
-passing before the Moon, or between her surface and the observer on the
-surface of the Earth. That such a body exists is admitted by several
-distinguished astronomers. In the report of the Council of the Royal
-Astronomical Society for June, 1850, it is stated, “We may well doubt
-whether that body which we call the Moon is the _only satellite_ of
-the Earth.” In the report of the Academy of Sciences for October 12,
-1846, and again for August, 1847, the Director of one of the French
-Observatories gives a number of observations and calculations which
-have led him to conclude that “there is at least _one non-luminous
-body_ of considerable magnitude which is attached as a _satellite to
-this Earth_.”[19]
-
- [19] Referred to in Lardner’s “Museum of Science,” p. 159.
-
-Persons who are unacquainted with the methods of calculating Eclipses
-and other astronomical phenomena, are prone to look upon the
-correctness of these calculations as powerful arguments in favour of
-the doctrine of the Earth’s rotundity and the Newtonian philosophy
-generally. But this is erroneous. Whatever theory is adopted, or if
-all theories are discarded, the same results may follow, because the
-necessary data may be tabulated and employed independently of all
-theory, or may be mixed up with any, even the most opposite doctrines,
-or kept distinct from every system, just as the operator may decide.
-The tables of the Moon’s relative positions for almost any second of
-time are purely practical, the result of long continued observation,
-and may or may not be mixed up with hypothesis. In Smith’s “Rise and
-progress of Astronomy,” speaking of Ptolemy, who lived in the 2nd
-century of the Christian Era, it is said, “The (considered) defects of
-his system did not prevent him from calculating all the Eclipses that
-were to happen for 600 years to come.” Professor Partington, at page
-370 of his Lectures on Natural Philosophy, says, “The most ancient
-observations of which we are in possession, that are sufficiently
-accurate to be employed in astronomical calculations, are those made
-at Babylon about 719 before the Christian Era, of three Eclipses of
-the Moon. Ptolemy, who has transmitted them to us, employed them for
-determining the period of the Moon’s mean motion; and therefore had
-probably none more ancient on which he could depend. The Chaldeans,
-however, must have made a long series of observations before they could
-discover their “Saros” or lunar period of 6,585¹⁄₃ days, or about 18
-years; at which time, as they had learnt, the place of the Moon, her
-_node_ and _apogee_ return nearly to the same situation with respect
-to the Earth and the Sun, and, of course, a series of nearly similar
-Eclipses occur.”
-
-Sir Richard Phillips, in his “Million of Facts,” at page 388,
-says:--“The precision of astronomy arises, not from theories, but from
-prolonged observations, and the regularity of the motions, or the
-ascertained uniformity of their irregularities. Ephemerides of the
-planets’ places, of Eclipses, &c., have been published for above 300
-years, and were nearly as precise as at present.”
-
-“No particular theory is required to calculate Eclipses; and the
-calculations may be made with equal accuracy _independent of every
-theory_.”[20]
-
- [20] Somerville’s Physical Sciences, p. 46.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION 10.
-
-CAUSE OF TIDES.
-
-
-The doctrine of the Earth’s rotundity being fallacious, all ideas of
-“centre of attraction of gravitation,” “mutual attraction of Earth and
-Moon,” &c., &c., must be given up; and the cause of tides in the ocean
-must be sought for in another direction. It is certain that there is
-a constant pressure of the atmosphere upon the surface of the Earth
-and ocean. This is proved by ordinary barometrical observations, many
-Pneumatic experiments, and by the fact that during the most fearful
-storms at sea the surface only is disturbed; at the depth of a hundred
-feet the water is always calm--except in the path of well-marked
-currents and local submarine phenomena. The following quotations
-gathered from casual reading fully corroborate this statement. “It is
-amazing how superficial is the most terrible tempest. Divers assure
-us that in the greatest storms calm water is found at the depth of 90
-feet.”[21]
-
- [21] Chambers’s Journal, No. 100, p. 379.
-
-“This motion of the surface of the sea is not perceptible to a great
-depth. In the strongest gale it is supposed not to extend beyond
-72 feet below the surface; and at the depth of 90 feet the sea is
-perfectly still.”[22]
-
- [22] Penny Cyclopædia, Article Sea.
-
-“The people are under a great mistake who believe that the substance of
-the water moves to any considerable depth in a storm at sea. It is only
-the form or shadow which hurries along like a spirit, or like a thought
-over the countenance of the ‘great deep,’ at the rate of some forty
-miles an hour. Even when the ‘Flying Dutchman’ is abroad the great mass
-of water continues undisturbed and nearly motionless a few feet below
-the surface.”[23]
-
- [23] London Saturday Journal, August 8, 1840, p. 71.
-
-“The unabraded appearance of the shells brought up from great depths,
-and the almost total absence of the mixture of any _detritus_ from the
-sea, or foreign matter, suggest most forcibly the idea of _perfect
-repose_ at the bottom of the deep sea.”[24]
-
- [24] Physical Geography of the Sea, by Lieut. Maury, p. 265.
-
-Bearing this fact in mind, that there exists a continual pressure of
-the atmosphere upon the Earth, and associating it with the fact that
-the Earth is a vast plane “stretched out upon the waters,” and it will
-be seen that it must of necessity slightly fluctuate, or slowly rise
-and fall in the water. As by the action of the atmosphere the Earth
-is slowly depressed, the water moves towards the receding shores and
-produces the flood tide; and when by the reaction of the resisting
-oceanic medium the Earth gradually ascends the waters recede, and the
-ebb tide is produced. This is the _general_ cause of tides. Whatever
-peculiarities are observable they may be traced to the reaction of
-channels, bays, headlands, and other local causes.
-
-If a raft, or a ship, or any other structure floating upon water be
-carefully observed, it will be seen to have a gentle fluctuating
-motion. However calm the water and the atmosphere may be, this
-gradual rising and falling of the floating mass is always more or
-less observable. If vessels of different sizes are floating near each
-other they will be seen to fluctuate with different velocities, the
-largest and heaviest will move the least rapidly. This motion will be
-observable whether the vessels be held by their anchors, or moored to
-buoys, or freely floating in still water. A large and heavily laden
-vessel will make several fluctuations in a minute of time; the Earth
-once only in about twelve hours, because it is proportionately larger.
-
-To this simple condition of the Earth,--the action or pressure upon
-it of the atmosphere, and the reaction or resistance to it of the
-water, may be traced all the leading peculiarities of the tides.
-The simultaneous ebb and flow upon meridians 180° apart. The absence
-of high and low water in large inland seas and lakes; which being
-contained within and fluctuating with the Earth cannot therefore show
-a relative change in the altitude of the surface. The flux and reflux
-observed in several inland wells and basins though far from the sea,
-but being connected with it by subterranean passages, necessarily show
-a relative difference in the surface levels of the earth and water. And
-the regular ebb and flood of the water in the great Polar sea recently
-discovered by Dr. Kane, although it is separated from the great tidal
-current of the Atlantic Ocean by deep barriers of ice--as will be seen
-by the following quotation:--“Dr. Kane reported an open sea north of
-the parallel of 82°. To reach it his party crossed a barrier of ice
-80 or 100 miles broad. Before gaining this open water he found the
-thermometer to show the extreme temperature of -60°. Passing this
-ice-bound region by travelling North, he stood on the shores of an
-iceless sea extending in an unbroken sheet of water as far as the eye
-could reach towards the pole. Its waves were dashing on the beach with
-the swell of a boundless ocean. The tides ebbed and flowed in it, and I
-apprehend that the tidal wave from the Atlantic can no more pass under
-this icy barrier to be propagated in seas beyond than the vibrations
-of a musical string can pass with its notes a ‘fret’ upon which the
-musician has placed his finger. * * * These tides therefore must have
-been born in that cold sea, having their cradle about the North Pole;
-and we infer that most, if not all, the unexplored regions about the
-Pole are covered with deep water; for, were this unexpected area mostly
-land, or shallow water, it could not give birth to regular tides.”[25]
-
- [25] Physical Geography of the Sea, by Lieut. Maury, p. 176.
-
-That the Earth has a vibratory or tremulous motion, such as must
-necessarily belong to a floating and fluctuating structure, is
-abundantly proved by the experience of astronomers and surveyors.
-If a delicate spirit-level be firmly placed upon a rock or upon the
-most solid foundation which it is possible to construct, the very
-curious phenomenon will be observed of constant change in the position
-of the air-bubble. However carefully the “level” may be adjusted,
-and the instrument protected from the atmosphere, the “bubble”
-will not maintain its position many seconds together. A somewhat
-similar influence has been noticed in astronomical observatories,
-where instruments of the best construction and placed in the most
-approved positions cannot always be relied upon without occasional
-re-adjustment.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION 11.
-
-CONSTITUTION, CONDITION, AND ULTIMATE DESTRUCTION OF THE EARTH BY FIRE.
-
-
-Chemical analysis proves to us the important fact that the great
-bulk of the Earth--meaning thereby the _land_ as distinct from the
-waters--is composed of metallic oxides or metals in combination with
-oxygen. When means are adopted to remove the oxygen it is found that
-most of these metallic bases are highly combustible. The different
-degrees of affinity existing among the elements of the Earth, give rise
-to all the rocks, minerals, ores, deposits, and strata which constitute
-the material habitable world. The different specific gravities or
-relative densities which these substances are found to possess, and the
-numerous evidences which exist of their former plastic or semi-fluid
-condition, afford positive proof that from a once commingled or chaotic
-state regular but rapid precipitation, stratification, crystallization,
-and concretion successively occurred; and that in some way not yet
-clear to us sufficient chemical action was produced to ignite a great
-portion of the Earth, and to reduce it to a molten incandescent state,
-the volatile products of which being forcibly eliminated have broken
-up the stratified formations, and produced the irregular confused
-condition which we now observe. That such an incandescent molten
-state of a great portion of the lower parts of the Earth still exists
-is a matter of certainty; and there is evidence that the heat thus
-internally generated is gradually increasing.
-
-“The uppermost strata of the soil share in all the variations of
-temperature which depend upon the seasons; and this influence is
-exerted to a depth which, although it varies with the latitude, is
-never very great. Beyond this point the temperature rises in proportion
-as we descend to greater depths, and it has been shown, by numerous
-and often-repeated experiments, that the increase of temperature is
-on average one degree (Fahrenheit) for about every 545 feet. Hence it
-results that at a depth of about twelve miles from the surface, we
-should be on the verge of an incandescent mass.”[26]
-
- [26] Rambles of a Naturalist, by M. de Quatrefages.
-
-“So great is the heat within the Earth, that in Switzerland, and other
-countries where the springs of water are very deep, they bring to the
-surface the warm mineral waters so much used for baths and medicine for
-the sick; and it is said, that if you were to dig very deep down into
-the Earth, the temperature would increase at the rate of one degree
-of the thermometer for every 100 feet; so that, at the depth of 7000
-feet, or one mile and a half, all the water that you found would be
-boiling; and at the depth of about ten miles all the rocks would be
-melted. * * * A day will yet come when this earth will be burned up by
-the fire. There is fire, as you have heard, within it, ready to burst
-forth at any moment.”[27] “This earth, although covered all round with
-a solid crust, is all on fire within. Its interior is supposed to be a
-burning mass of melted, glowing metals, fiery gas, and boiling lava.
-* * * * * The solid crust which covers this inward fire is supposed
-not to be much more than from 9 to 12 miles in thickness. Whenever
-this crust breaks open, or is cleft in any place, there rush out lava,
-fire, melted rocks, fiery gases, and ashes, sometimes in such floods as
-to bury whole cities. From time to time we read of the earth quaking,
-trembling, and sometimes opening, and of mountains and small islands
-(which are mountains in the sea) being thrown up in a day.”[28]
-
- [27] “The World’s Birthday,” by Professor Gaussen, Geneva, p. 43.
-
- [28] “The World’s Birthday,” by Professor Gaussen, Geneva, p. 42.
-
-In a periodical called “Recreative Science,” at the end of an
-interesting article on volcanoes, &c., the following sentence
-occurs:--“The conclusion is therefore inevitable, that the general
-distribution all over the earth of volcanic vents, their similarity of
-action and products, their enormous power and seeming inexhaustibility,
-their extensiveness of action in their respective sites, the
-continuance of their energies during countless years, and the incessant
-burning day and night, from year to year, of such craters as Stromboli;
-and lastly, the apparent inefficiency of external circumstances in
-controlling their operations, eruptions happening beneath the sea as
-beneath the land, in the frigid as in the torrid zone, for these and
-many less striking phenomena, we must seek for some great and general
-cause, such only as the central heat of the earth affords us.”
-
-Sir Richard Phillips says, “at the depth of 50 feet (from the sea
-level) the temperature of the earth is the same winter and summer.”
-* * * “The deepest coal mine in England is at Killingworth, near
-Newcastle-upon-Tyne, and the mean annual temperature at 400 yards below
-the surface is 77°; and at 300 yards, 70°; while at the surface it is
-but 48°, being about one degree of increase for every 15 yards. Hence,
-at 3,300 yards, the heat would be equal to boiling water, taking 20
-yards to a degree. This explains the origin of hot springs. The heat of
-the Bath waters is 116°, hence they would appear to rise from a depth
-of 1,320 yards. By experiments made at the Observatory of Paris for
-ascertaining the increase of temperature from the surface of the earth
-towards the interior, 51 feet, or 17 yards, corresponds to the increase
-of one degree Fahrenheit’s thermometer. Hence, the temperature of
-boiling water would be at 8,212 feet, or about 1¹⁄₂ English miles under
-Paris.”
-
-Professor Silliman, of America, states “that in boring the Artesian
-wells in Paris, the temperature increased at the rate of 1 degree for
-every 50 feet downwards; and, reasoning from causes known to exist, the
-whole of the interior part of the earth, or, at least, a great part of
-it, is an ocean of melted rock agitated by violent winds.”
-
-Sir Charles Lyell, in his address to the British Association, assembled
-at Bath, September, 1864, speaking of hot springs generally, said “An
-increase of heat is always experienced as we descend into the interior
-of the earth. * * * The estimate deduced by Mr. Hopkins, from an
-accurate series of observations made in the Monkwearmouth shaft, near
-Durham, and in the Dukenfield shaft, near Manchester, each of them
-2,000 feet in depth. In these shafts the temperature was found to rise
-at the rate of 1° Fah. for every increase of depth of from 65 to 70
-feet.”
-
-“The observations made by M. Arago, in 1821, that the deepest Artesian
-wells are the warmest, threw great light on the origin of thermal
-springs, and on the establishment of the law, that terrestrial heat
-increases with increasing depth. It is a remarkable fact, which has
-but recently been noticed, that at the close of the third century St
-Patricius, probably Bishop of Partusa, was led to adopt very correct
-views regarding the phenomenon of the hot springs at Carthage. On being
-asked what was the cause of boiling water bursting from the earth,
-he replied, ‘Fire is nourished in the clouds, and in the interior of
-the earth, as Etna and other mountains near Naples may teach you.
-The subterranean waters rise as if through siphons. The cause of hot
-springs is this: waters which are more remote from the subterranean
-fire are colder, whilst those which rise nearer the fire, are heated
-by it, and bring with them to the surface which we inhabit, an
-insupportable degree of heat.’”[29]
-
- [29] “Humboldt’s Cosmos,” p. 220.
-
-The investigations which have been made, and the evidence which has
-been brought together, render it undeniable that the lower parts of the
-earth are on fire. Of the intensity of the combustion, no practical
-idea can be formed. It is fearful beyond comparison. The lava thrown
-out from a volcano in Mexico, “was so hot that it continued to smoke
-for twenty years; and after three years and a half, a piece of wood
-took fire in it, at a distance of five miles from the crater.” In
-various parts of the world, large islands have been thrown up from the
-sea, in a red-hot glowing condition, and so intensely heated, that
-after being forced through many fathoms of salt water, and standing
-in the midst of it, exposed to wind and rain for several months,
-they were not sufficiently cooled for persons to approach and stand
-upon them. “A notable fact is the force exerted in volcanic action,
-Cotopaxi, in 1738, threw its fiery rockets 3,000 feet above its crater,
-while in 1744 the blazing mass, struggling for an outlet, roared like
-a furnace, so that its awful voice was heard at a distance of more
-than six hundred miles. In 1797, the crater of Tunguragua, one of the
-great peaks of the Andes, flung out torrents of mud, which dammed up
-rivers, opened new lakes, and in valleys of a thousand feet wide made
-deposits six hundred feet deep. The stream from Vesuvius which, in
-1737, passed through Torre del Greco, contained thirty-three million
-cubic feet of solid matter; and, in 1794, when Torre del Greco was
-destroyed a second time, the mass of lava amounted to forty-five
-million cubic feet. In 1669 Etna poured forth a flood which covered 84
-square miles of surface, and measured nearly 100,000,000 cubic feet.
-On this occasion the sand and scoriæ formed the Monte Rossi, near
-Nicolosi, a cone two miles in circumference, and four hundred and fifty
-feet high. The stream thrown out by Etna, in 1819, was in motion, at
-the rate of a yard per day, for nine months after the eruption; and
-it is on record that the lavas of the same mountain, after a terrible
-eruption, were not thoroughly cooled and consolidated ten years after
-the event. In the eruption of Vesuvius, A.D. 79, the scoriæ and ashes
-vomited forth far exceeded the entire bulk of the mountain; while,
-in 1660, Etna disgorged more than twenty times its own mass. * * *
-Vesuvius has thrown its ashes as far as Constantinople, Syria, and
-Egypt; it hurled stones eight pounds in weight to Pompeii, a distance
-of six miles; while similar masses were tossed up 2,000 feet above
-its summit. Cotopaxi has projected a block one hundred cubic yards in
-volume a distance of nine miles, while Sumbawa, in 1815, during the
-most terrible eruption on record, sent its ashes as far as Java, a
-distance of three hundred miles. * * * In viewing these evidences of
-enormous power, we are forcibly struck with the similarity of action
-with which they have been associated; and, carrying our investigation
-a step further, the same similarity of the producing power is hinted
-at in the identity of the materials ejected. Thus, if we classify
-the characteristics of all recorded eruptions, we shall find that
-the phenomena are all reducible to upheavals of the earth, rumblings
-and explosions, ejections of carbonic acid, fiery torrents of lava,
-cinders, and mud, with accompanying thunder and lightning. The
-last-named phenomena are extrajudicial in character; they are merely
-the result of the atmospheric disturbance consequent on the escape of
-great heat from the earth, just as the burning of an American forest
-causes thunder and rain. The connection that apparently exists, too,
-between neighbouring craters is strongly confirmed by the fact that
-in every distinct volcanic locus but _one_ crater is usually active
-at a time. Since Vesuvius has resumed his activity, the numerous
-volcanic vents on the other side of the bay have sunk into comparative
-inactivity; for ancient writers, who are silent respecting the former,
-speak of the mephitic vapours of the Lake Avernus as destructive to
-animal existence, and in earlier days than these Homer pictures the
-Phlegrean Fields as the entrance to the infernal regions, placed at the
-limits of the habitable world, unenlightened by rising or setting sun,
-and enveloped in eternal gloom. * * * * The earth contains within it
-a mass of heated material; nay, it is a heated and incandescent body,
-habitable only because surrounded with a cool crust--the crust being
-to it a mere shell, within which the vast internal fires are securely
-inclosed: and yet not securely, perhaps, unless such vents existed as
-those to which we apply the term volcano. * * * * Every volcano is
-a safety-valve, ready to relieve the pressure from within when that
-pressure rises to a certain degree of intensity; or permanently serving
-for the escape of conflagrations, which, if not so provided with
-escape, might rend the habitable crust to pieces.”[30]
-
- [30] Recreative Science, p.p. 257 to 260.
-
-Thus it is certain, from the phenomena of earthquakes, submarine and
-inland volcanoes which exist in every part of the earth from the frozen
-to the tropical regions, hot and boiling springs, fountains of mud
-and steam, lakes of burning sulphur, jets and blasts of destructive
-gases, and the choke and fire damps of our coal mines, that at a few
-miles only below the surface of the earth there exists a vast region of
-combustion, the intensity and power of which are indescribable, and
-cannot be compared with anything within the range of human experience.
-
-As the earth is an extended plane resting in and upon the waters of
-the “great deep” it may fitly be compared to a large vessel or ship
-floating at anchor, with her “Hold” or lower compartments beneath the
-water-line filled with burning materials; and, from our knowledge of
-the nature and action of fire, it is difficult to understand in what
-way the combustion can be prevented from extending, when it is known
-to be surrounded with highly inflammable substances. Wherever a fire
-is surrounded with heterogeneous materials--some highly combustible
-and others partially and indirectly combustible--it is not possible
-for it to remain continually in the same condition nor to diminish in
-extent and intensity, it must increase and extend itself. That the fire
-in the earth is so surrounded with inflammable materials is matter of
-certainty; the millions of tons of coals, peat, turf, mineral oils,
-rock tar, pitch, asphalte, bitumen, petroleum, mineral naphtha, and
-numerous other hydro-carbons which exist in various parts of the earth,
-and much of these far down below the surface, prove this condition
-to exist. The products of volcanic action being chiefly carbon in
-combination with hydrogen and oxygen, prove also that these carbon
-compounds already exist in a state of combustion, and that as such
-immense quantities of the same fuel still exist, it is quite within
-the range of possibility that some of the lower strata of combustible
-matter may take fire and the action rapidly extend itself through
-the various and innumerable veins which ramify in every direction
-throughout the whole earth. Should such an action commence, knowing,
-as we do, that the rocks and minerals of the earth are but oxides of
-inflammable bases, and that the affinities of these bases are greatly
-weakened and almost suspended in the presence of highly heated carbon,
-we see clearly that such chemical action or fire would quickly extend
-and increase in intensity until the whole earth with everything
-entering into its composition, would rapidly decompose, volatilise, and
-burst into one vast indescribable, annihilating conflagration!
-
-
-
-
-SECTION 12.
-
-MISCELLANEA.
-
-
-MOON’S PHASES.--It has been shown that the Moon is not a reflector of
-the Sun’s light, but is self-luminous. That the luminosity is confined
-to one-half its surface is sufficiently shown by the fact that at “New
-Moon” the whole circle or outline of the Moon is often distinctly
-visible; but the darker outline is less, or the circle is smaller than
-the segment which is illuminated. From this it is easily seen that
-“New Moon,” “Full Moon,” and “Gibbous Moon” are but the different
-proportions of the illuminated surface which are presented to the
-observer on earth.
-
-MOON’S APPEARANCE.--Astronomers have indulged their imagination to
-such a degree that the Moon has been considered to be a solid, opaque,
-spherical world, having mountains, valleys, lakes, volcanic craters,
-and other conditions analogous to the surface of the earth. So far has
-this fancy been carried, that the whole visible disc has been mapped
-out, and special names given to its various peculiarities, as though
-they had been carefully observed and measured by a party of terrestrial
-ordnance surveyors. All this has been done in direct opposition to the
-fact that whoever looks, without previous bias, through a powerful
-telescope at the Moon’s surface, will be puzzled to say what it is
-really like, or how to compare it with anything known. The comparison
-which may be made, will depend greatly upon the state of mind of the
-observer. It is well known that persons looking at the rough bark of
-a tree, or at the irregular lines or veins in certain kinds of marble
-and stone, or gazing at the red embers in a dull fire, will, according
-to the degree of activity of the imagination, be able to see different
-forms, even the outlines of animals and human faces. It is in this way
-that persons may fancy that the Moon’s surface is broken up into hills
-and valleys and other arrangements such as are found on earth. But that
-anything really similar to the surface of our own world is anywhere
-visible upon the Moon is altogether fallacious. This is admitted by
-some of those who have written upon the subject “Some persons when
-they look into a telescope for the first time, having heard that
-mountains are to be seen, and discovering nothing but these (previously
-described) unmeaning figures, break off in disappointment, and have
-their faith in these things rather diminished than increased. I would
-advise, therefore, before the student takes even his _first view_ of
-the Moon through a telescope, to form as clear an idea as he can how
-mountains, and valleys, and caverns situated at such a distance _ought_
-to look, and by what marks they may be recognised. Let him seize, if
-possible, the most favourable periods (about the time of the first
-quarter), and previously _learn from drawings_ and explanations how to
-_interpret_ everything he sees.”[31] “Whenever we exhibit celestial
-objects to inexperienced observers it is usual to precede the view with
-good _drawings_ of the objects, accompanied by an explanation of what
-each appearance exhibited in the telescope _indicates_. The novice is
-told that mountains and valleys can be seen in the Moon by the aid
-of the telescope; but on looking he sees a confused mass of light
-and shade, and _nothing_ which _looks_ to him _like either mountains
-or valleys_! Had his attention been previously directed to a plain
-_drawing_ of the Moon, and each particular appearance _interpreted_ to
-him, he would then have looked through the telescope with intelligence
-and satisfaction!”[32] Thus it is admitted by those who teach that the
-Moon is a spherical world, having hills and dales like the earth, can
-only see such things in imagination. “Nothing but unmeaning figures”
-are really visible, and “the students break off in disappointment, and
-have their faith in such things rather diminished than increased,”
-“until they previously learn from _drawings_ and explanations how to
-_interpret_ everything seen.” But who _first made_ the drawings? Who
-_first interpreted_ the “unmeaning figures” and the “confused mass
-of light and shade?” Who first declared them to indicate mountains
-and valleys, and ventured to make drawings and give explanations and
-interpretations for the purpose of biasing the minds, and fixing or
-guiding the imaginations of subsequent observers? Whoever they were,
-they at least had “given the reins to Fancy,” and afterwards took
-upon themselves to dogmatise and teach their crude and unwarranted
-imaginings to succeeding investigators. And this is the kind of
-evidence and “reasoning” which is obtruded in our seats of learning,
-and spread out in the numerous works which are published for the
-edification of society!
-
- [31] “Mechanism of the Heavens,” by Denison Olmsted, LL.D., Professor
- of Natural Philosophy and Astronomy in Gale College, U.S.
-
- [32] Mitchell’s “Orbs of Heaven,” p. 232.
-
-THE PLANET NEPTUNE.--For some years the advocates of the earth’s
-rotundity, and of the Newtonian philosophy generally, were accustomed
-to refer with an air of pride and triumph to the discovery of a
-new planet, which was called Neptune, as an undeniable evidence of
-the truth of their system or theory. The existence of this luminary
-was said to have been predicated from calculation only, and for a
-considerable period before it had been seen by the telescope. It
-was urged that therefore the system which would permit of such a
-discovery must be true. But the whole matter subsequently proved to
-be unsatisfactory. That a proper conception may be formed of the
-actual value of the calculations and their supposed verification,
-the following account will be useful. “In the year 1781, on March
-13, Uranus was discovered by Sir William Herschel, who was examining
-some small stars near the feet of Gemini; and he observed one of them
-to have a sensible amount of diameter and less brightness than the
-others, and it was soon found to be a planet. It, however, had been
-seen before--first, by Flamstead, on December 23rd, 1690; and between
-this time and 1781 it had been observed 16 times by Flamstead, Bradley,
-Mayer, and Lemonnier; these astronomers had classed it as a star of the
-sixth magnitude. Between 1781 and 1820 it was of course very frequently
-observed; and it was hoped that at the latter time sufficient data
-existed to construct accurate tables of its motions. This task was
-undertaken by M. Bouvard, Member _de L’Academie des Sciences_, but he
-met with unforeseen difficulties. It was found utterly impossible to
-construct tables which would represent the 17 ancient observations,
-and at the same time the more numerous modern ones; and it was finally
-concluded that the ancient observations were erroneous, or that some
-strange and unknown action disturbed, or had disturbed, the planet;
-consequently M. Bouvard discarded entirely the old observations, and
-used only those taken between 1781 and 1820, in constructing the tables
-of Uranus. For some years past it has been found that the tables thus
-constructed do not agree any better with modern observations, than they
-do with the ancient observations; _consequently it was evident that
-the planet was under the influence of some unknown cause_. Several
-hypotheses have been suggested as to the nature of this cause; some
-persons talked of a resisting medium; others of a great satellite which
-might accompany Uranus; some even went so far as to suppose that the
-vast distance Uranus is from the Sun caused the law of gravitation to
-lose some of its force; others thought that the rapid flight of a comet
-had disturbed its regular movements; others thought of the existence of
-a planet beyond Uranus, whose disturbing force caused the anomalous
-motions of the planet; but no one did otherwise than follow the bent
-of his inclination, and did not support his assertion by any positive
-considerations.
-
-“Thus was the theory of Uranus surrounded with difficulties, when M.
-Le Verrier, an eminent French mathematician, undertook to investigate
-the irregularities in its motions. His first paper appeared on the
-10th November, 1845, and his second on June 1, 1846 (published in
-the Comptes Rendûs). In this second paper, after a most elaborate
-and careful investigation, he proves the utter incompatibility of
-any of the preceding hypotheses to account for the planet’s motions,
-except only that of the last one, viz., that of a new planet. He then
-successively proves that this planet cannot be situated either between
-the Sun and Saturn, or between Saturn and Uranus; but that it must be
-beyond Uranus. And in this paper he asks the following questions:--‘Is
-it possible that the irregularities of Uranus can be owing to the
-action of a planet situated in the ecliptic, at a distance of twice
-the mean distance of Uranus from the Sun? If so, where is it actually
-situated? What is its mass? What are the elements of the orbit it
-describes?”
-
-This was the problem he set himself to work upon, by the means of
-solving the inverse problem of the perturbations; for instead of
-having to measure the action of a determined planet, he had to deduce
-the elements of the orbit of the disturbing planet, and its place
-in the heavens from the recognised inequalities of Uranus. And this
-problem M. Le Verrier has successfully solved. In his second paper
-he deduces the place in the heavens that the body must be as 325° of
-helio-centric longitude. On the 31st August last he published his third
-paper. In this he has calculated that the period of the planet is 217
-years; and that it moves in an orbit at the distance of more than 3,000
-millions of miles from the Sun; that its mean longitude on January
-1st, 1847, will be 318° 17′; its true longitude 326° 32′; and that the
-longitude of its perihelion will be 284° 45′; that it will appear to
-have a diameter of 3¹⁄₄ seconds of arc as seen from the earth; and that
-it is now about 5° E. of _Delta Capricorni_.
-
-“These remarkable calculations have pointed out a position which has
-very nearly proved to be the true one.
-
-“On September 23, Dr. Galle at Berlin discovered a star of the eighth
-magnitude, which has proved to be the planet. Its place at the time was
-five degrees from _Delta Capricorni_. It was found to have a disc of 3
-seconds as predicted; and its longitude at the time differs less than a
-degree from the longitude computed from the above elements. Its daily
-motion, too, is found to agree very closely with the predicted; and,
-judging from this last circumstance, the planet’s distance, as stated
-above, must be nearly the truth.
-
-“Thus the result of these calculations was the discovery of a new
-planet in the place assigned to it by theory, whose mass, distance,
-position in the heavens, and orbit it describes round the Sun, were all
-approximately determined before the planet had ever been seen; and all
-agrees with observations, so far as can at present be determined. It is
-found to have a disc, and its diameter cannot be much less than 40,000
-miles, and may be more; its motions are very slow; it is at present in
-the constellation of Aquarius as indicated by theory; and it will be in
-the constellation of Capricornus all the year 1847. It may be readily
-seen in a telescope of moderate power.
-
-“Whatever view we take of this noble discovery it is most gratifying,
-whether at the addition of another planet to our list; whether at the
-proving the correctness of the theory of universal gravitation; or in
-what view soever, it must be considered as a splendid discovery, and
-the merit is chiefly due to theoretical astronomy. This discovery is
-perhaps the greatest triumph of astronomical science that has ever
-been recorded.”[33]
-
- [33] “Illustrated London Almanack for 1847.”
-
-If such things as criticism, experience, and comparative observation
-did not exist, the tone of exultation in which the above article
-indulges might be properly shared in by the astronomical student; but
-let the following extracts be carefully read, and it will be seen that
-such a tone was premature and unwarranted. “Paris, Sept. 15, 1848.
-The only sittings of the Academy of late in which there was anything
-worth recording, and even this was not of a practical character, were
-those of the 29th ult. and the 11th inst. On the former day M. Babinet
-made a communication respecting the planet Neptune, which has been
-generally called M. Le Verrier’s planet, the discovery of it having,
-as it was said, been made by him from theoretical deductions, which
-astonished and delighted the scientific public. What M. Le Verrier had
-inferred from the action on other planets of some body which ought to
-exist was verified, at least so it was thought at the time, by actual
-vision. Neptune was actually seen by other astronomers, and the honour
-of the theorist obtained additional luster. But it appears from a
-communication of M. Babinet that _this is not the planet_ of M. Le
-Verrier. He had placed his planet at a distance from the Sun equal to
-thirty-six times the limit of the terrestrial orbit; Neptune revolves
-at a distance equal to thirty times of these limits, which makes a
-difference of nearly _two hundred millions of leagues_! M. Le Verrier
-had assigned to his planet a body equal to thirty-eight times that of
-the earth; Neptune has only _one third_ of this volume! M. Le Verrier
-had stated the revolutions of his planet round the Sun to take place
-in two hundred and seventeen years; Neptune performs its revolutions
-in one hundred and sixty-six years! Thus then Neptune is not M. Le
-Verrier’s planet; and all his theory as regards that planet falls to
-the ground! M. Le Verrier may find another planet, but it will not
-answer the calculations which he had made for Neptune. In the sitting
-of the 14th, M. Le Verrier noticed the communication of M. Babinet, and
-to a great extent admitted his own error! He complained indeed that
-much of what he said was taken in too absolute a sense; but he evinces
-much more candour than might have been expected from a disappointed
-explorer. M. Le Verrier may console himself with the reflection that
-if he has not been so successful as he thought he had been, others
-might have been equally unsuccessful, and as he has still before him
-an immense field for the exercise of observation and calculation, we
-may hope that he will soon make some discovery which will remove the
-vexation of his present disappointment.”[34]
-
- [34] “Times” Newspaper, Monday, Sept. 18, 1848.
-
-“As the data of Le Verrier and Adams stand at present there is a
-discrepancy between the predicted and the true distance; and in some
-other elements of the planet. It remains, therefore, for these or
-future astronomers to reconcile theory with fact; or, perhaps, as
-in the case of Uranus, to make the new planet the means of leading
-to yet greater discoveries. It would appear, from the most recent
-observations, that the mass of Neptune, instead of being as at first
-stated one nine thousand three hundredth is only one twenty three
-thousandth that of the Sun; whilst its periodic time is now given
-with a greater probability at 166 years; and its mean distance from
-the Sun nearly thirty. Le Verrier gave the mean distance from the Sun
-thirty-six times that of the Earth; and the period of revolution 217
-years.[35]
-
- [35] “Cosmos,” by Humboldt, p. 75.
-
-“May 14, 1847. A Paper was read before the Royal Astronomical Society,
-by Professor Schumacher, ‘on the identity of the planet Neptune (M. Le
-Verrier’s) with a star observed by M. Lalande in May, 1795.’”[36]
-
- [36] “Report of Royal Astronomical Society,” for Feb. 11, 1848, No. 4,
- vol. 8.
-
-Such mistakes as the above ought at least to make the advocates of the
-Newtonian theory less positive, and more ready to acknowledge that at
-best their system is but hypothetical and must sooner or later give
-place to a philosophy the premises of which are demonstrable, and which
-is in all its details sequent and consistent.
-
-
-PENDULUM EXPERIMENTS AS PROOFS OF EARTH’S MOTION.
-
-In the early part of the year 1851, the scientific journals and nearly
-all the newspapers published in Great Britain and on the Continents of
-Europe and America were occupied in recording and discussing certain
-experiments with the pendulum, first made by M. Foucault, of Paris; and
-the public were startled by the announcement that the results furnished
-a practical proof of the Earth’s rotation.
-
-The subject was referred to in the _Literary Gazette_, in the following
-words:--“Everybody knows what is meant by a pendulum in its simplest
-form, a weight hanging by a thread to a fixed point. Such was the
-pendulum experimented upon long ago by Galileo, who discovered the
-well-known law of isochronous vibrations, applicable to the same. The
-subject has since received a thorough examination, as well theoretical
-as practical, from mathematicians and mechanicians; and yet, strange
-to say, the most remarkable feature of the phenomenon has remained
-unobserved and wholly unsuspected until within the last few weeks, when
-a young and promising French physicist, M. Foucault, who was induced by
-certain reflections to repeat Galileo’s experiments in the cellar of
-his mother’s house at Paris, succeeded in establishing the existence
-of a fact connected with it which gives an immediate and visible
-demonstration of the Earth’s rotation. Suppose the pendulum already
-described to be set moving in a vertical plane from north to south,
-the plane in which it vibrates, to ordinary observation, would appear
-to be stationary. M. Foucault, however, has succeeded in showing that
-this is not the case, but that the plane is itself slowly moving round
-the fixed point as a centre in a direction contrary to the Earth’s
-rotation, _i.e._, with the apparent heavens, from east to west. His
-experiments have since been repeated in the hall of the observatory,
-under the superintendence of M. Arago, and fully confirmed. If a
-pointer be attached to the weight of a pendulum suspended by a long and
-fine wire, capable of turning round in all directions, and nearly in
-contact with the floor of a room, the line which this pointer appears
-to trace on the ground, and which may easily be followed by a chalk
-mark, will be found to be slowly, but visibly, and constantly moving
-round, like the hand of a watch dial; and the least consideration will
-show that this ought to be the case, and will excite astonishment that
-so simple a consequence as this is, of the most elementary laws of
-Geometry and Mechanics, should so long have remained unobserved. * *
-* The subject has created a great sensation in the mathematical and
-physical circles of Paris. It is proposed to obtain permission from
-the Government to carry on further observations by means of a pendulum
-suspended from the dome of the Pantheon, length of suspension being
-a desideratum in order to make the result visible on a larger scale,
-and secure greater constancy and duration in the experiment. The time
-required for the performance of a complete revolution of the plane of
-vibration would be about 32 hours 8 minutes for the parallel of Paris;
-30 hours 40 minutes for that of London; and at 30 degrees from the
-equator exactly 48 hours. Certainly any one who should have proposed
-not many weeks back to prove the rotation of the Earth upon which we
-stand by means of direct experiment made upon its surface would have
-run the risk, with the mob of gentlemen who write upon mechanics, of
-being thought as mad as if he were to have proposed reviving Bishop
-Wilkins’s notable plan for going to the North American colonies in a
-few hours, by rising in a balloon from the Earth and gently floating
-in the air until the Earth, in its diurnal rotation, have turned the
-desired quarter towards the suspended æronaut, whereupon as gently to
-descend; so necessary and wholesome is it occasionally to reconsider
-the apparently simplest and best established conclusions of science.”
-
-The following is from the _Scotsman_, which has always been
-distinguished for the accuracy of its scientific papers. The article
-bears the initials “C. M.,” which will at once be recognised as those
-of Mr. Charles Maclaren, for many years the accomplished editor of
-that journal:--“The beautiful experiment contrived by M. Foucault
-to demonstrate the rotation of the globe, has deservedly excited
-universal interest. * * * A desire has always been felt that some
-method could be devised of rendering this rotation palpable to the
-senses. Even the illustrious Laplace participated in this feeling
-and has left it on record. ‘Although,’ he says, ‘the rotation of the
-Earth is now established with all the certainty which the physical
-sciences require, still a direct proof of that phenomenon ought to
-interest both geometricians and astronomers.’ No man ever knew the
-laws of the planetary motions better than Laplace, and before penning
-such a sentence, it is probable that he had turned the subject in his
-mind, and without discovering any process by which the object could be
-attained; but it does not follow that if he had applied the whole force
-of his genius to the task, he would not have succeeded. Be this as it
-may, here we have the problem solved by a man not probably possessing
-a tithe of his science or talent; and, what is very remarkable, after
-the discovery was made, it was found to be legitimately deducible
-from mathematical principles. * * * In this, as in many other cases,
-the _fact_ comes first, and takes us by surprise; after which we find
-that we had long been in possession of the principles from which it
-flowed, and that, with the clue we had in our hands, theory should
-have revealed the fact to us long before. M. Foucault’s communication
-describing his experiments is in the _Comptes Rendus_ of the Academy
-of Sciences, for 3rd February, 1851. His first experiments were made
-with a pendulum only two metres (6ft. 6¹⁄₄in.) in length, consisting
-of a steel wire from ⁶⁄₁₀ths to ¹¹⁄₁₀ths of a millimetre in diameter
-(the millimetre is the 25th part of an inch); to the lower end of
-which was attached a polished brass ball, weighing 5 kilogrammes, or
-11 English pounds. * * * A metallic point projecting below the ball,
-and so directed as if it formed a continuation of the suspension wire,
-served as an index to mark the change of position more precisely. The
-pendulum hung from a steel plate in such a manner as to move freely in
-any vertical plane. To start the oscillatory movement without giving
-the ball any bias, it was drawn to one side with a cord, which held
-the ball by a loop; the cord was then burned, after which the loop
-fell off, and the vibrations (generally limited to an arc of 15 or 20
-degrees) commenced. In one minute the ball had sensibly deviated from
-the original plane of vibration towards the observer’s left. Afterwards
-he experimented at the Observatory with a pendulum 11 metres (30 feet)
-long, and latterly at the Pantheon with one still longer. The advantage
-of a large pendulum, as compared with a small one, is, that a longer
-time elapses before it comes to a state of rest; for machinery cannot
-be employed here, as in a clock, to continue the motion. The pendulum
-is suspended over the centre of a circular table, whose circumference
-is divided into degrees and minutes. The vibrations are begun in the
-manner above described, and in a short time it is observed that the
-pendulum, instead of returning to the same point of the circle from
-which it started, has shifted to the left. If narrowly observed, the
-change in the plane of vibration (says M. Foucault) is perceptible
-in one minute, and in half an hour, “Il saute aux yeux,” it is quite
-palpable. At Paris the change exceeds 11 degrees in an hour. Thus,
-supposing the oscillations to commence in a plane directed south and
-north, in two hours the oscillations will point SSW. and NNE.; in four
-hours they will point SW. and NE.; and in eight hours the oscillations
-will point due east and west, or at right angles to their original
-direction. To a spectator the change seems to be in the pendulum,
-which, without any visible cause, has shifted round a quarter of a
-circle; but the real change is in the table, which, resting on the
-Earth, and accompanying it in its rotation, has performed a fourth (and
-something more) of its diurnal revolution.
-
-No one anticipated such a result; and the experiment has been received
-by some with incredulity, by all with wonderment; and one source of the
-incredulity arises from the difficulty of conceiving how, amidst the
-ten thousand experiments of which the pendulum has been the subject, so
-remarkable a fact could have escaped notice so long. Fully admitting
-that these experiments have generally been conducted with pendulums
-which had little freedom of motion horizontally, we still think odd
-that somebody did not stumble upon the curious fact.
-
-Though all the parts of the Earth complete their revolution in the
-same space of time, it is found that the rate of horizontal motion
-in Foucault’s pendulum varies with the latitude of the place where
-the experiment is made. At the pole, the pendulum would pass over 15
-degrees in an hour, like the Earth itself, and complete its circuit in
-24 hours. At Edinburgh, the pendulum would pass over 12¹⁄₂ degrees in
-an hour, and would complete its revolution in 29 hours 7 minutes. At
-Paris, the rate of motion is 11 degrees and 20 minutes per hour, and
-the revolution should be completed in 32 hours.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 31.]
-
-Let the above figure represent a portion of the Earth’s surface near
-the north pole N. Suppose the pendulum to be set in motion at _m_, so
-as to vibrate in the direction _x y_, which coincides with that of the
-meridian _m_ N or _m r_. The Earth in the meantime is pursuing its
-easterly course, and the meridian line _m_ N has come in six hours into
-the position _n_ N. It has been hitherto supposed that the pendulum
-would now vibrate in the new direction _n_ N, assumed by the meridian,
-but thanks to M. Foucault, we now know that this is a mistake. The
-pendulum will vibrate in a plane _x n y_, parallel to its original
-plane at _m_, as will be manifest if the plane of vibration points to
-some object in absolute space, such as a star. While the meridian line
-_m_ N will in the course of 24 hours range round the whole circle of
-the heavens, and point successively in the direction _n_ N, _o_ N, _p_
-N, _r_ N, _s_ N, _t_ N, and _u_ N, the pendulum’s plane of vibration
-_x y_, whether at _m_, at _n_, at _o_, at _p_, at _r_, at _s_, at _t_,
-or at _u_, will always be parallel to itself, pointing invariably to
-the same star, and were a circular table placed under the pendulum, its
-plane of vibration, while really stationary, would appear to perform a
-complete revolution.
-
-This stationary position of the plane of vibration at the pole seems
-to present little difficulty. We impress a peculiar motion on the
-pendulum in setting it a going. The Earth is at the same time carrying
-the pendulum eastward, but _at the pole_ the one motion will not
-interfere with the other. The only action of the Earth on the pendulum
-there is that of attracting it towards its own (the Earth’s) centre.
-But this attraction is exactly in the plane of vibration and merely
-tends to continue the oscillatory motion without disturbing it. It
-is otherwise if the experiment is made at some other point, say 20
-degrees distant from the pole. Supposing the vibrations to commence in
-the plane of the meridian, then as the tendency of the pendulum is to
-continue its vibrations in planes absolutely parallel to the original
-plane, it will be seen, if we trace both motions, that, while it is
-carried eastward with the Earth along a parallel of latitude, this
-tendency will operate to draw the plane of vibration away from a ‘great
-circle’ into a ‘small circle’ (that is, from a circle dividing the
-globe into two _equal_ parts, into one dividing it into two _unequal_
-parts). But the pendulum _must_ necessarily move in a ‘great circle,’
-and hence to counteract its tendency to deviate into a ‘small circle,’
-a correctory movement is constantly going on, to which the lengthening
-of the period necessary to complete a revolution must be ascribed. At
-Edinburgh the period is about 29 hours, at Paris 32, at Cairo 48, at
-Calcutta 63. At the Equator, the period stretches out to infinity. M.
-Foucault’s rule is, that the angular space passed over by the pendulum
-at any latitude in a given time, is equal to the angular motion of
-the Earth in the period, multiplied by the sine of the latitude.
-The angular motion of the Earth is 15 degrees per hour; and at the
-latitude of 30, for example, the sine being to radius as 500 to 1000,
-the angular motion of the pendulum will consequently be 7¹⁄₂ degrees per
-hour. It is, therefore, easily found. It follows that the motions of
-the pendulum may be employed in a rough way to indicate the latitude of
-a place.”[37]
-
- [37] Supplement of the _Manchester Examiner_, of May 24, 1851.
-
-Notwithstanding the apparent certainty of these pendulum experiments,
-and the supposed exactitude of the conclusions deducible therefrom,
-many of the same school of philosophy differed with each other,
-remained dissatisfied, and raised very serious objections both to the
-value of the experiments themselves, and to the supposed proof which
-they furnished of the Earth’s rotation. One writer in the _Times_
-newspaper of the period, who signs himself “B. A. C.,” says, “I have
-read the accounts of the Parisian experiment as they have appeared in
-many of our papers, and must confess that I still remain unconvinced
-of the reality of the phenomenon. It appears to me that, except at
-the pole where the point of suspension is immovable, no result can
-be obtained. In other cases the shifting of the direction of passage
-through the lowest point that takes place during an excursion of
-the pendulum, from that point in one direction and its return to it
-again, will be exactly compensated by the corresponding shifting in
-the contrary direction during the pendulum’s excursion on the opposite
-side. Take a particular case. Suppose the pendulum in any latitude to
-be set oscillating in the meridian plane, and to be started from the
-vertical towards the south. It is obvious that the wire by which it
-is suspended _does not continue to describe a plane_, but a species
-of conoidal surface; that when the pendulum has reached its extreme
-point its direction is to the south-west, and that as the tangent plane
-to the described surface through the point of suspension necessarily
-contains the normal to the Earth at the same point, the pendulum on
-its return passes through the same point in the direction north-east.
-Now, starting again from this point, we have exactly the circumstances
-of the last case, the primary plane being shifted slightly out of the
-meridian; when, therefore, the pendulum has reached its extreme point
-of excursion the direction of the wire is to the west of this plane,
-and when it returns to the vertical the direction of passage through
-the lowest point is as much to the west of this plane as it was in the
-former case to the west of the meridian plane; but since it is now
-moving from north to south instead of from south to north, as in the
-former case, its former deviation receives complete compensation, and
-the primary plane returns again to the meridian, when the whole process
-recurs.”
-
-In the _Liverpool Mercury_ of May 23, 1851, the following letter
-appeared:--“The supposed manifestation of the Rotation of the
-Earth.--The French, English, and European continental journals have
-given publicity to an experiment made in Paris with a pendulum; which
-experiment is said to have had the same results when made elsewhere.
-To the facts set forth no contradiction has been given, and it is
-therefore to be hoped that they are true. The correctness of the
-inferences drawn from the facts is another matter. The first position
-of these theorists is, that in a complete vacuum beyond the sphere of
-the Earth’s atmosphere, a pendulum will continue to oscillate in one
-and the same original plane. On that supposition their whole theory is
-founded. In making this supposition the fact is overlooked that there
-_is no vibratory motion_ unless through atmospheric resistance, or by
-force opposing impulse. Perpetual progress in rectilinear motion may be
-imagined, as in the corpuscular theory of light; circular motion may
-also be found in the planetary systems; and parabolic and hyperbolic
-motions in those of comets; but vibration is artificial and of limited
-duration. No body in nature returns the same road it went, unless
-artificially constrained to do so. The supposition of a permanent
-vibratory motion such as is presumed in the theory advanced, is
-_unfounded in fact_, and absurd in idea; and the whole affair of this
-proclaimed discovery falls to the ground. It is what the French call a
-‘mystification’--anglice a ‘humbug.’ Liverpool, 22nd May, 1851.”
-
- “T.”
-
-Another writer declared that he and others had made many experiments
-and had discovered that the plane of vibration had nothing whatever
-to do with the meridian longitude nor with the Earth’s motion, but
-followed the plane of the magnetic meridian.
-
-“A scientific gentleman in Dundee recently tried the pendulum
-experiment, and he says--‘that the pendulum is capable of showing the
-Earth’s motion I regard as a _gross delusion_; but that it tends to the
-_magnetic meridian_ I have found to be a fact.’”[38]
-
- [38] _Liverpool Journal_, May 17, 1851.
-
-In many cases the experiments have not shown a change at all in the
-plane of oscillation of the pendulum; in others the alteration in
-the plane of vibration has been in the _wrong direction_; and very
-often the _rate of variation_ has been altogether different to that
-which theory indicated. The following is a case in illustration:--“On
-Wednesday evening the Rev. H. H. Jones, F.R.A.S., exhibited the
-apparatus of Foucault to illustrate the diurnal rotation of the Earth,
-in the Library Hall of the Manchester Athenæum. The preparations
-were simple. A circle of chalk was drawn in the centre of the floor,
-immediately under the arched skylight. The circle was exactly 360
-inches in its circumference, every inch being intended to represent
-one degree. According to a calculation Mr. Jones had made, and which
-he produced at the Philosophical Society six weeks ago, the plane of
-oscillation of the pendulum would, at Manchester, diverge about one
-degree in five minutes, or perhaps a very little less. He therefore
-drew this circle exactly 360 inches round, and marked the inches on
-its circumference. The pendulum was hung from the skylight immediately
-over the centre of the circle, the point of suspension being 25 feet
-high. At that length of wire, it should require 2¹⁄₂ seconds to make
-each oscillation across the circle. The brazen ball, which at the end
-of a fine wire constituted the pendulum, was furnished with a point,
-to enable the spectator to observe the more easily its course. A long
-line was drawn through the diameter of the circle, due north and south,
-and the pendulum started so as to swing exactly along this line; to the
-westward of which, at intervals of three inches at the circumference,
-two other lines were drawn, passing through the centre. According
-to the theory, the pendulum should diverge from its original line
-towards the west, at the rate of one inch or degree in five minutes.
-This, however, Mr. Jones explained, was a perfection of accuracy only
-attainable in a vacuum, and rarely could be approached where the
-pendulum had to pass through an atmosphere subject to disturbances;
-besides, it was difficult to avoid giving it some slight lateral bias
-at starting. In order to obviate this as much as possible, the steel
-wire was as fine as would bear the weight, ¹⁄₃₀th of an inch thick;
-and the point of suspension was adjusted with delicate nicety. An iron
-bolt was screwed into the frame-work of the skylight; into it a brass
-nut was inserted--the wire passed through the nut (the hollow sides
-of which were bell-shaped, in order to give it fair play), and at the
-top the wire ended in a globular piece, there being also a fine screw
-to keep it from slipping. * * * The pendulum was gently drawn up to
-one side, at the southern end of the diametrical line, and attached
-by a thread to something near. When it hung quite still the thread was
-burnt asunder, and the pendulum began to oscillate to and fro across
-the circle. * * * Before it had been going on quite seven minutes,
-it had reached nearly the third degree towards the west, whereas it
-_ought_ to have occupied a quarter of an hour in getting thus far from
-its starting line, even making no allowance for the resistance of the
-atmosphere.”[39]
-
- [39] “Manchester Examiner” (Supplement), May 24, 1851.
-
-Besides the irregularities so often observed in the time and direction
-of the pendulum vibrations, and which are quite sufficient to render
-them worthless as evidence of the Earth’s motion, the use which
-the Newtonian astronomers made of the general fact that the plane
-of oscillation is variable, was most unfair and illogical. It was
-proclaimed to the world as a visible proof of the Earth’s diurnal
-motion; but the motion was _assumed to exist_, and then employed to
-explain the cause of the fact which was first called a proof of the
-thing assumed! A greater violation of the laws of investigation was
-never perpetrated! The whole subject as developed and applied by the
-theoretical philosophers is to the fullest degree unreasonable and
-absurd--not a “jot or tittle” better than the reasoning contained
-in the following letter:--“Sir,--Allow me to call your serious and
-polite attention to the extraordinary phenomenon, demonstrating the
-rotation of the Earth, which I at this present moment experience, and
-you yourself or anybody else, I have not the slightest doubt, would
-be satisfied of, under similar circumstances. Some sceptical and
-obstinate individuals may doubt that the Earth’s motion is visible,
-but I say from personal observation its a positive fact. I don’t
-care about latitude or longitude, or a vibratory pendulum revolving
-round the sine of a tangent on a spherical surface, nor axes, nor
-apsides, nor anything of the sort. That is all rubbish. All I know
-is, I see the ceiling of this coffee-room going round. I perceive
-this distinctly with the naked eye--only my sight has been sharpened
-by a slight stimulant. I write after my sixth go of brandy-and-water,
-whereof witness my hand,”--“Swiggins”--_Goose and Gridiron, May 5,
-1851._--“P.S. Why do two waiters come when I only call one?”[40]
-
- [40] “Punch,” May 10, 1851.
-
-The whole matter as handled by the astronomical theorists is fully
-deserving of the ridicule implied in the above quotation from _Punch_;
-but because great ingenuity has been shewn, and much thought and
-devotion manifested in connection with it, and the general public
-thereby greatly deceived, it is necessary that the subject should be
-fairly and seriously examined. What are the facts?
-
-First.--When a pendulum, constructed according to the plan of M.
-Foucault, is allowed to vibrate, its plane of vibration is often
-variable--_not always_. The variation when it _does_ occur, is _not
-uniform_--is not always the same in the same place; nor always the
-same either in its rate or velocity, or in its direction. It cannot
-therefore be taken as evidence; for that which is inconstant cannot be
-used in favour of or against any given proposition. It therefore _is
-not evidence and proves nothing_!
-
-Secondly.--If the plane of vibration _is_ observed to change, where
-is the connection between such change and the supposed motion of the
-Earth? What principle of reasoning guides the experimenter to the
-conclusion that it is the Earth which moves underneath the pendulum,
-and not the pendulum which moves over the Earth? What logical right or
-necessity forces one conclusion in preference to the other?
-
-Thirdly.--Why was not the peculiar arrangement of the point of
-suspension of the pendulum specially considered, in regard to its
-possible influence upon the plane of oscillation? Was it not known, or
-was it overlooked, or was it, in the climax of theoretical revelry,
-ignored that a “ball-and-socket” joint is one which facilitates
-_circular_ motion more readily than any other? and that a pendulum so
-suspended (as was M. Foucault’s), could not, after passing over one
-arc of vibration, return through the same arc without there being many
-chances to one that its globular point of suspension would slightly
-turn or twist in its bed, and therefore give to the return or backward
-oscillation a slight change of direction? Let the _immediate cause_ of
-the pendulum’s liability to change its plane of vibration be traced;
-and it will be found not to have the slightest connection with the
-motion or non-motion of the surface over which it vibrates.
-
-At a recent meeting of the French Academy of sciences, “M. Dehaut sent
-in a note, stating that M. Foucault (whose experiments on the pendulum
-effected a few years ago at the Pantheon, are of European notoriety) is
-not the first discoverer of the fact that the plane of oscillation of
-the free pendulum is invariable; but that the honour of the discovery
-is due to Poinsinet de Sivry, who, in 1782, stated, in a note to his
-translation of ‘Pliny,’ that a mariner’s compass might be constructed
-without a magnet, by making a pendulum and setting it in motion in a
-given direction; because, provided the motion were continually kept
-up, the pendulum would continue to oscillate in the same direction, no
-matter by how many points, or how often the ship might happen to change
-her course.”
-
-
-
-
-SECTION 13.
-
-PERSPECTIVE ON THE SEA.
-
-
-It has been shown (at pages 25 to 34) that the law of perspective, as
-commonly taught in our Schools of Art, is fallacious and contrary to
-everything seen in nature. If an object be held up in the air, and
-gradually carried away from an observer who maintains his position, it
-is true that all its parts will converge to one and the same point; but
-if the same object be placed upon the ground and similarly moved away
-from a fixed observer, the same predicate is false. In the first case
-the _centre_ of the object is the _datum_ to which every point of the
-exterior converges; but in the second case the _ground_ becomes the
-_datum_, in and towards which every part of the object converges in
-succession, beginning with the lowest, or that nearest to it.
-
-Instances:--A man with light trousers and black boots walking along a
-level path, will appear at a certain distance as though the boots had
-been removed, and the trousers brought in contact with the ground.
-
-A young girl, with short garments terminating ten or twelve inches
-above the feet, will, in walking forward, appear to sink towards the
-Earth, the space between which and the bottom of the clothes will
-appear to gradually diminish, and in the distance of half-a-mile
-the limbs, which were first seen for ten or twelve inches, will be
-invisible--the bottom of the garment will seem to touch the ground.
-
-A small dog running along will appear to gradually shorten by the legs,
-which, in less than half a mile, will be invisible, and the body appear
-to glide upon the earth.
-
-Horses and cattle moving away from a given point will seem to have lost
-their hoofs, and to be walking upon the outer bones of the limbs.
-
-Carriages similarly receding will seem to lose that portion of the
-rim of the wheels which touches the Earth; the axles will seem to get
-lower; and at the distance of a few miles, the body will appear to
-drag along in contact with the ground. This is very remarkable in the
-case of a railway carriage when moving away upon a straight and level
-portion of line several miles in length. These instances, which are
-but a few of what might be quoted, will be sufficient to prove, beyond
-the power of doubt or the necessity for controversy, that upon a plane
-or horizontal surface, the _lowest part_ of bodies receding from a
-given point of observation will disappear _before the higher_. This is
-precisely what is observed in the case of a ship at sea, when outward
-bound--the _lowest_ part--the hull, disappearing before the higher
-parts--the sails and mast head. Abstractedly, when the lowest part of
-a receding object thus disappears by entering the “vanishing point,”
-it could be seen again to any and every extent by a telescope, if the
-power were sufficient to magnify at the distance observed. This is to
-a great extent practicable upon smooth horizontal surfaces, as upon
-frozen lakes or canals; and upon long straight lines of railway. But
-the power of restoring such objects is greatly modified and diminished
-where the surface is undulating or otherwise moveable, as in large and
-level meadows, and pasture lands generally; in the vast prairies and
-grassy plains of America; and especially so upon the ocean, where the
-surface is always more or less in an undulating condition. In Holland
-and other level countries, persons have been seen in winter, skating
-upon the ice, at distances varying from ten to twenty miles. On some
-of the straight and “level” lines of railway which cross the prairies
-of America, the trains have been observed for more than twenty miles;
-but upon the sea the conditions are altered, and the hull of a receding
-vessel can only be seen for a few miles, and this will depend very
-greatly--the altitude of the observer being the same, upon the state of
-the water. When the surface is calm, the hull may be seen much farther
-than when it is rough and stormy; but under ordinary circumstances,
-when to the naked eye the hull has just become invisible, or is
-doubtfully visible, it may be seen again distinctly by the aid of a
-powerful telescope. Although abstractedly or mathematically there
-should be no limit to this power of restoring by a telescope a lost
-object upon a smooth horizontal surface, upon the sea this limit is
-soon observed; the water being variable in its degree of agitation, the
-limit of sight over its surface is equally variable, as shown by the
-following experiments:--In May, 1864, on several occasions when the
-water was unusually calm, from the landing stairs of the Victoria pier
-at Portsmouth, and from an elevation of 2 ft. 8 in. above the water,
-the greater part of the hull of the Nab Light-ship was, through a good
-telescope, distinctly visible; but on other experiments being made,
-when the water was less calm, no portion of it could be seen from the
-same elevation, notwithstanding that the most powerful telescopes were
-employed. At other times half the hull, and sometimes only the upper
-part of the bulwarks, were visible. If the hull had been invisible
-from the rotundity of the Earth, the following calculation will show
-that it should at all times have been 24 feet below the horizon:--The
-distance of the light-ship from the pier is 8 statute miles. The
-elevation of the observer being 32 inches above the water, would
-require 2 miles to be deducted as the distance of the supposed convex
-horizon; for the square of 2 multiplied by 8 inches (the fall in the
-first mile of the Earth’s curvation) equals 32 inches. This deducted
-from the 8 miles, will leave 6 miles as the distance from the horizon
-to the light ship. Hence 6² × 8 in. = 288 inches, or 24 feet. The top
-of the bulwarks, it was said, rose about 10 ft. above the water line;
-hence, deducting 10 from 24 feet, under all circumstances, even had the
-water been perfectly smooth and stationary, the top of the hull should
-have been 14 feet below the summit of the arc of water, or beneath
-the line of sight! This one fact is entirely fatal to the doctrine of
-the Earth’s rotundity. But such facts have been observed in various
-other places--the north-west light-ship in Liverpool Bay, and the
-light vessels of many other channels near the southern, eastern, and
-western shores of Great Britain. From the beach of Southsea Common,
-near Portsmouth, the observer lying down near the water, above the
-surface of which the eye was 2¹⁄₂ feet, and with a telescope looking
-across Spithead to the quarantine ship lying in the “Roads,” between
-Ryde and Cowes, in the Isle of Wight, a distance of 7 miles, the copper
-sheathing of that vessel was distinctly seen, the depth of which was
-about 2 feet. Making the usual calculation in accordance with the
-doctrine of the Earth’s convexity, it will be seen that an arc of water
-ought to have existed between the two points, the summit of which arc
-should have been 16 feet above the copper sheathing of the vessel!
-
-From an elevation of 2¹⁄₂ feet above the water opposite the Royal Yacht
-Club House, in West Cowes, Isle of Wight, the pile work and promenade
-of the pier at Stake’s Bay, near Gosport, and nearly opposite Osborne
-House, were easily distinguished through various telescopes: the
-distance is 7 miles, the altitude of the promenade 10 feet, and the
-usual calculation will show that this pier ought to have been many feet
-below the horizon!
-
-It is a well-known fact that the light of the Eddystone lighthouse is
-often plainly visible from the beach in Plymouth Sound; and sometimes,
-when the sea is very calm, persons can see it distinctly when sitting
-in ordinary rowing boats in that part of the Sound which will allow
-the line of sight to pass between Drake’s Island and the western end
-of the Breakwater. The distance is 14 statute miles. In a list of
-lighthouses in a work called “The Lighthouses of the World,” by A. G.
-Findlay, F.R.G.S., published in 1862, by Richard H. Lawrie, 53, Fleet
-Street, London, it is said, at page 28:--“In the Tables the height of
-the flame above the highest tide high water level is given, so that
-it is the _minimum_ range of the light; to this elevation 10 feet is
-added for the height of the deck of the ship above the sea. Besides
-the increased distance to which low water will cause the light to be
-seen, the effect of refraction will also sometimes increase their
-range.” In the “Tables” above referred to, at page 36 the Eddystone
-light is said to be visible 13 miles. But these 13 miles are nautical
-measure; and as 3 nautical miles equal 3¹⁄₂ statute miles, the distance
-at which the Eddystone light is visible is over 15 statute miles.
-Notwithstanding that the Eddystone light is actually visible at a
-distance of 15 statute miles, and admitted to be so both by the
-Admiralty authorities and by calculation according to the doctrine
-of rotundity, very often at the same distance, the lantern is not
-visible at an elevation of 4 feet from the water; showing that the
-law of perspective, previously referred to, is greatly influenced by
-the state of the surface of the water over which the line of sight
-is directed. A remarkable illustration of this influence is given in
-the _Western Daily Mercury_, published in Plymouth, of October 25,
-1864. Several discussions had previously taken place at the Plymouth
-Athenæum and the Devonport Mechanics’ Institute, on the true figure of
-the Earth; subsequent to which a committee was formed for the purpose
-of making experiments bearing on the question at issue. The names of
-the gentlemen as given in the above-named journal were “Parallax” (the
-author of this work), “Theta” (Mr. Henry, a teacher in Her Majesty’s
-Dock-yard, Devonport), and Messrs. Osborne, Richards, Rickard, Mogg,
-Evers, and Pearce, all of Plymouth. From the report published as above
-stated, the following quotation is made:--Observation 6th: “_On the
-beach, at 5 feet from the water level, the Eddystone was entirely out
-of sight_.”
-
-The matter may be summarized as follows:--At any time when the sea is
-calm and the weather clear, the Light of the Eddystone, which is 89
-feet above the foundation on the rock, may be distinctly seen from an
-elevation of 5 feet above the water level; according to the Admiralty
-directions, it “may be seen 13 nautical (or 15 statute) miles,”[41] or
-one mile still farther away than the position of the observers on the
-above-named occasion; and yet _on that occasion_, and at a distance of
-only 14 statute miles, notwithstanding that it was a very fine autumn
-day, and a clear back ground existed, not only was the lantern, which
-is 89 feet high, not visible, but the _top of the vane_, which is 100
-feet above the foundation was, as stated in the report, “_entirely out
-of sight_.”
-
- [41] “Lighthouses of the World,” p. 36.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 32.]
-
-That vessels and lighthouses are sometimes more distinctly seen than
-at others; and that the lower parts of such objects are sooner lost
-sight of when the sea is rough than when it is calm, are items in the
-experience of seafaring people as common as their knowledge of the
-changes in the weather; and prominence is only given here to the above
-case because it was verified by persons of different opinions upon the
-subject of the Earth’s form, and in the presence of several hundreds
-of the most learned and respectable inhabitants of Plymouth and the
-neighbourhood. The conclusion which such observations necessitate and
-force upon us is, that the law of perspective which is everywhere
-visible on land, is _modified_ when observed in connection with objects
-upon or near the sea. But _how_ modified? If the water of the ocean
-were frozen and at perfect rest, any object upon its surface would be
-seen as far as telescopic or magnifying power could be brought to bear
-upon it. But because this is not the case--because the water is always
-more or less in motion, not only of progression but of fluctuation,
-the swells and waves, into which the surface is broken operate to
-prevent the line of sight from passing parallel to the horizontal
-surface of the water. It has been shown at pages 16 to 20, and also
-at 25 to 33, that the surface of the Earth and Sea appears to rise up
-to the level, or altitude of the eye; and that at a certain distance
-the line of sight and the surface which is parallel to it appear to
-converge to a “vanishing point;” which point is “the horizon.” If this
-horizon, or vanishing point, were formed by the apparent junction of
-two _perfectly stationary_ parallel lines, it could be penetrated by a
-telescope of sufficient power to magnify at the distance; but because
-upon the sea the surface of the water is _not stationary_, the line of
-sight at the vanishing point becomes angular instead of parallel, and
-telescopic power is of little avail in restoring objects beyond this
-point. The following diagram will render this clear:--The horizontal
-line C D E and the line of sight A B are parallel to each other, and
-appear to meet at the vanishing point B. But at and about this point
-the line A B is intercepted by the undulating, or fluctuating surface
-of the water; the degree of which is variable, being sometimes very
-great and at others inconsiderable, and having to pass over the crest
-of the waves, as at H, is obliged to become A H, instead of A B, and
-will therefore fall upon a ship, lighthouse, or other object at the
-point S, or higher or lower as such objects are more or less beyond the
-point H.
-
-It is worthy of note that the waves at the point H, whatever their
-real magnitude may be, are _magnified_ and rendered more obstructive
-by the very instrument--the telescope--which is employed to make the
-objects beyond more plainly visible: and thus the phenomenon is often
-very strikingly observed--that while a powerful telescope will render
-the sails and rigging of a ship when beyond the point H, or the optical
-horizon, so distinct that the very ropes are easily distinguished, not
-the slightest portion of the hull can be seen. The “crested waters”
-form a barrier to the horizontal line-of-sight, as substantial as would
-the summit of an intervening rock or island.
-
-In the report which appeared in the _Western Daily Mercury_, of Oct.
-25, 1864, the following observations were also recorded:--“On the
-sea-front of the Camera house, and at an elevation of 110 feet from
-the mean level of the sea, a plane mirror was fixed, by the aid of a
-plumb-line, in a _true vertical position_. In this mirror the distant
-horizon was distinctly visible on a level with the eye of the observer.
-This was the simple fact, as observed by the several members of the
-committee which had been appointed. But some of the observers remarked
-that the line of the horizon in the mirror rose and fell with the
-eye, as also did every thing else which was reflected, and that this
-ought to be recorded as an _addendum_--granted. The surface of the sea
-appeared to regularly ascend from the base of the Hoe to the distant
-horizon. The horizon from the extreme east to the west, as far as the
-eye could see, was parallel to a horizontal line.”
-
-The following version was recorded in the same journal, of the same
-date, and was furnished by one of the committee who had manifested a
-very marked aversion to the doctrine that the surface of all water is
-horizontal:--“A vertical looking-glass was suspended from the Camera
-and the horizon seen in it, as well as various other objects reflected,
-rising and falling with the eye. The water was seen in the glass to
-ascend from the base of the Hoe to the horizon. The horizon appeared
-parallel to a horizontal line.”
-
-It will be observed that the two reports are substantially the same,
-and very strongly corroborate the remarks made at pages 15, 16, and
-17 of this work. Indeed no other report could have been given without
-the author’s becoming subject to the charge of glaring, obstinate, and
-wilful misrepresentation. What then has again been demonstrated? That
-the surface of all water _is horizontal_, and that, therefore, the
-Earth cannot possibly be anything other than a Plane. All appearances
-to the contrary have been shown to be purely optical and adventitious.
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 33.]
-
-[Illustration: FIG. 34.]
-
-Another proof that the surface of all water is horizontal and that
-therefore the Earth cannot be a globe is furnished by the following
-experiment, which was made in May, 1864, on the new pier at Southsea,
-near Portsmouth:--A telescope was fixed upon a stand and directed
-across the water at Spithead to the pier head at Ryde, in the Isle of
-Wight, as shown in the subjoined diagram. The line of sight crossed
-a certain part of the funnel of one of the regular steamers trading
-between Portsmouth and the Isle of Wight; and it was observed to cut
-or fall upon the same part during the whole of the passage to Ryde
-Pier, thus proving that the water between the two piers is horizontal,
-because it was parallel to the line of sight from the telescope fixed
-at Southsea. If the Earth were a globe the channel between Ryde and
-Southsea would be an arc of a circle, and as the distance across is
-4¹⁄₂ statute miles the centre of the arc would be 40 inches higher
-than the two sides; and the steamer would have ascended an inclined
-plane for 2¹⁄₄ miles, or to the centre of the channel, and afterwards
-descended for the same distance towards Ryde. This ascent and descent
-would have been marked by the line of sight falling 40 inches nearer
-to the deck of the steamer when on the centre of the arc of water, as
-represented in the following diagram; but as the line of sight did
-not cut the steamer lower down when in the centre of the channel, and
-no such ascent and descent was observed, it follows necessarily that
-the surface of the water between Southsea and the Isle of Wight is
-_not convex_, and therefore the Earth as a whole is _not a globe_. The
-evidence against the doctrine of the Earth’s rotundity is so clear
-and perfect, and so completely fulfils the conditions required in
-special and independent investigations, that it is impossible for
-any person who can put aside the bias of previous education to avoid
-the opposite conclusion that the _Earth is a plane_. This conclusion
-is greatly confirmed by the experience of mariners in regard to
-certain lighthouses. Where the light is fixed and very brilliant it
-can be seen at a distance, which the present doctrine of the Earth’s
-rotundity would render altogether impossible. For instance, at page 35
-of “Lighthouses of the World,” the Ryde Pier Light, erected in 1852,
-is described as a bright fixed light, 21 feet above high water, and
-visible from an altitude of 10 feet at the distance of 12 nautical or
-14 statute miles. The altitude of 10 feet would place the horizon at
-the distance of 4 statute miles from the observer. The square of the
-remaining 10 statute miles multiplied by 8 inches will give a fall or
-curvature downwards from the horizon of 66 feet. Deduct from this 21
-feet, the altitude of the light, and we have 45 feet as the amount
-which the light ought to be _below the horizon_!
-
-By the same authority, at page 39, the Bidston Hill Lighthouse, near
-Liverpool, is 228 feet above high water, one bright fixed light,
-visible 23 nautical or very nearly 27 statute miles. Deducting 4 miles
-for the height of the observer, squaring the remaining 23 miles and
-multiplying that product by 8 inches we have a downward curvature of
-352 feet; from this deduct the altitude of the light, 228 feet, and
-there remains 124 feet as the distance which the light should be _below
-the horizon_!
-
-Again, at page 40:--“The lower light on the ‘Calf of Man’ is 282
-feet above high water, and is visible 23 nautical miles.” The usual
-calculation will show that it ought to be 70 feet _below the horizon_!
-
-At page 41 the Cromer light is described as having an altitude of 274
-feet above high water, and is visible 23 nautical miles, whereas it
-ought to be at that distance 78 feet _below the horizon_!
-
-At page 9 it is said:--“The coal fire (which was once used) on
-the Spurn Point Lighthouse, at the mouth of the Humber, which was
-constructed on a good principle for burning, has been seen 30 miles
-off.” If the miles here given are nautical measure they would be equal
-to 35 statute miles. Deducting 4 miles as the usual amount for the
-distance of the horizon, there will remain 31 miles, which squared and
-multiplied by 8 inches will give 640 feet as the declination of the
-water from the horizon to the base of the Lighthouse, the altitude of
-which is given at page 42 as 93 feet above high water. This amount
-deducted from the above 640 feet will leave 547 feet as the distance
-which the Spurn Light ought to have been _below the horizon_!
-
-The two High Whitby Lights are 240 feet above high water (see page 42),
-and are visible 23 nautical miles at sea. The proper calculation will
-be 102 feet _below the horizon_!
-
-At page 43, it is said that the Lower Farne Island Light is visible for
-12 nautical or 14 statute miles, and the height above high water is 45
-feet. The usual calculation will show that this light ought to be 67
-feet _below the horizon_!
-
-The Hekkengen Light, on the west coast of Norway (see page 54), is 66
-feet above high water, and visible 16 statute miles. It ought to be
-sunk beneath the horizon 30 feet!
-
-The Trondhjem Light (see p. 55), on the Ringholm Rock, west coast of
-Norway, is 51 feet high, and is visible 16 statute miles; but ought to
-be 45 feet below the horizon!
-
-The Rondö Light, also on the west coast of Norway (see p. 55), is 161
-feet high, and is visible for 25 statute miles; the proper calculation
-will prove that it ought to be above 130 feet below the horizon!
-
-The Egerö Light, on west point of Island, south coast of Norway (see
-p. 56), and which is fitted up with the first order of the dioptric
-lights, is visible for 28 statute miles, and the altitude above high
-water is 154 feet; making the usual calculation we find this light
-ought to be depressed, or sunk, below the horizon 230 feet!
-
-The Dunkerque Light, on the north coast of France (see p. 71), is 194
-feet high, and visible 28 statute miles. The ordinary calculation will
-show that it ought to be 190 feet below the horizon!
-
-The Goulfar Bay Light, on the west coast of France, is said at page 77,
-to be visible 31 statute miles, and to have an altitude at high water
-of 276 feet, at the distance given it ought to be 210 feet below the
-horizon!
-
-At page 78, the Cordonan Light, on the River Gironde, west coast of
-France, is given as being visible 31 statute miles, and its altitude
-207 feet, which would give its depression below the horizon as nearly
-280 feet!
-
-The Light at Madras (p. 104), on the Esplanade, is 132 feet high, and
-visible 28 statute miles, whereas at that distance it ought to be
-beneath the horizon above 250 feet!
-
-The Port Nicholson Light, in New Zealand, erected in 1859 (p. 110), is
-visible 35 statute miles, the altitude is 420 feet above high water,
-and ought, if the water is convex, to be 220 feet below the horizon!
-
-The Light on Cape Bonavista, Newfoundland, is 150 feet above high
-water, and is visible 35 statute miles (p. 111), this will give on
-calculation for the Earth’s rotundity, 491 feet that the Light should
-be below the horizon!
-
-Many other cases could be given from the same work, shewing that the
-practical observations of mariners, engineers, and surveyors, entirely
-ignore the doctrine that the Earth is a globe. The following cases
-taken from miscellaneous sources will be interesting as bearing upon
-and leading to the same conclusion. In the _Illustrated London News_ of
-Oct. 20, 1849, an engraving is given of a new Lighthouse erected on the
-Irish coast, The accompanying descriptive matter contains the following
-sentence:--“Ballycotton Island rises 170 feet above the level of the
-sea; the height of the Lighthouse is 60 feet including the Lantern;
-giving the light an elevation of 230 feet, which is visible upwards of
-35 miles to sea.” If the 35 miles are nautical measure the distance in
-statute measure would be over 40 miles; and allowing the usual distance
-for the horizon, there would be 36 miles from thence to the Lighthouse.
-The square of 36 multiplied by 8 inches amounts to 864 feet; deduct the
-total altitude of the Lantern, 230 feet, and the remainder, 634 feet,
-is the distance which the Light of Ballycotton ought to be below the
-horizon!
-
-In the _Times_ newspaper of Monday, Oct. 16, 1854, in an account of her
-Majesty’s visit to Great Grimsby from Hull, the following paragraph
-occurs:--“Their attention was first naturally directed to a gigantic
-tower which rises from the centre pier to the height of 300 feet, and
-can be seen 60 miles out at sea.” The 60 miles if nautical, and this
-is always understood when referring to distances at sea, would make
-70 statute miles, to which the fall of 8 inches belongs, and as all
-observations at sea are considered to be made at an elevation of 10
-feet above the water, for which four miles must be deducted from the
-whole distance, 66 statute miles will remain, the square of which
-multiplied by 8 inches, gives a declination towards the tower of
-2,904 feet; deducting from this the altitude of the tower, 300 feet,
-we obtain the startling conclusion that the tower should be at the
-distance at which it is visible, (60 nautical miles,) more than 2,600
-feet _below the horizon_!
-
-The only modification which can be made or allowed in the preceding
-calculations is that for refraction, which is considered by surveyors
-generally to amount to about ¹⁄₁₂th of the altitude of the object
-observed. If we make this allowance it will reduce the various
-quotients by ¹⁄₁₂th, which is so little that the whole will be
-substantially the same. Take the last quotation as an instance--2,600
-feet divided by 12 gives 206, which deducted from 2,600 leaves 2,384 as
-the corrected amount for refraction.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION 14.
-
-GENERAL SUMMARY--APPLICATION--_CUI BONO?_
-
-
-In the preceding sections it has been shown that the Copernican, or
-Newtonian theory of Astronomy is “an absurd composition of truth and
-error;” and, as admitted by its founder, “not necessarily true or
-even probable,” and that instead of its being a general conclusion
-derived from known and admitted facts, it is a heterogeneous compound
-of assumed premises, isolated truths, and variable appearances in
-nature. Its advocates are challenged to show a single instance wherein
-a phenomenon is explained, a calculation made, or a conclusion
-advanced without the aid of an avowed or implied assumption! The
-very construction of a theory at all, and especially such as the
-Copernican, is a complete violation of that natural and legitimate mode
-of investigation to which the term _zetetic_ has been applied. The
-doctrine of the universality of gravitation is an assumption, made only
-in accordance with that “pride and ambition which has led philosophers
-to think it beneath them to offer anything less to the world than a
-complete and finished system of nature.” It was said, in effect, by
-Newton, and has ever since been insisted upon by his disciples--“Allow
-us, without proof, the existence of two universal forces--centrifugal
-and centripetal, or attraction and repulsion, and we will construct
-a system which shall explain all the leading mysteries of nature. An
-apple falling from a tree, or a stone rolling downwards, and a pail of
-water tied to a string set in rapid motion were assumed to be types of
-the relations existing among all the bodies in the universe. The moon
-was assumed to have a tendency to fall towards the Earth, and the Earth
-and Moon together towards the Sun. The same relation was assumed to
-exist between all the smaller and larger luminaries in the firmament;
-and it soon became necessary to extend this assumption to infinity. The
-universe was parcelled out into systems--co-existent and illimitable.
-Suns, Planets, Satellites, and Comets were assumed to exist, infinite
-in number and boundless in extent; and to enable the theorists to
-explain the alternating and constantly recurring phenomena which
-were everywhere observable, these numberless and for-ever-extending
-objects were assumed to be spheres. The Earth we inhabit was called a
-_planet_; and because it was thought to be reasonable that the luminous
-objects in the firmament which were called _planets_ were _spherical_
-and had _motion_, so it was only reasonable to suppose that as the
-Earth was a planet it must also be spherical and have motion--_ergo_,
-the Earth is a globe, and moves upon axes and in an orbit round the
-Sun! And as the Earth is a globe, and is inhabited, so again it is only
-reasonable to conclude that the planets are worlds like the Earth,
-and are inhabited by sentient beings! What reasoning! Assumption upon
-assumption, and the conclusion derived therefrom called a thing proved,
-to be employed as a truth to substantiate the first assumption! Such a
-“juggle and jumble” of fancies and falsehoods, extended and intensified
-as it is in theoretical astronomy, is calculated to make the
-unprejudiced inquirer revolt in horror from the terrible conjuration
-which has been practised upon him; to sternly resolve to resist its
-further progress; to endeavour to overthrow the entire edifice, and
-to bury in its ruins the false honours which have been associated
-with its fabricators, and which still attach to its devotees. For the
-learning, the patience, the perseverance, and devotion for which they
-have ever been examples, honour and applause need not be withheld;
-but their false reasoning, the advantages they have taken of the
-general ignorance of mankind in respect to astronomical subjects, and
-the unfounded theories they have advanced and defended, cannot but be
-regretted, and ought to be resisted. It has become a duty, paramount
-and imperative, to meet them in open, avowed, and unyielding rebellion;
-to declare that their unopposed reign of error and confusion is over;
-and that henceforth, like a falling dynasty, they must shrink and
-disappear, leaving the throne and the kingdom to those awakening
-intellects whose numbers are constantly increasing, and whose march is
-rapid and irresistible. The soldiers of truth and reason have drawn the
-sword, and ere another generation has been educated, will have forced
-the usurper to abdicate. The axe is lifted--it is falling, and in a
-very few years will have “cut the cumberer down.”
-
-The Earth a Globe, and it is necessarily demanded that it has a diurnal
-and an annual and various other motions; for a globular world without
-motion would be useless--day and night, winter and summer, the half
-year’s light and darkness at the “North Pole,” and other phenomena
-could not be explained by the supposition of rotundity without the
-assumption also of rapid and constant motion. Hence it is _assumed_
-that the Earth and Moon, and all the Planets and their Satellites
-move in relation to each other, and that the whole move together in
-different planes round the Sun. The Sun and its “system” of revolving
-bodies are now assumed to have a general and all-inclusive motion,
-in common with an endless series of other Suns and systems, around
-some other and “central Sun” which has been assumed to be the true
-axis and centre of the Universe! These assumed general motions
-with the particular and peculiar motions which are assigned to the
-various bodies in detail, together constitute a system so confused
-and complicated that it is almost impossible and always difficult of
-comprehension by the most active and devoted minds. The most simple
-and direct experiments, however, may be shown to prove that the Earth
-has no progressive motion whatever; and here again the advocates of
-this interminable and entangling arrangement are challenged to produce
-a single instance of so called proofs of these motions which does not
-involve an assumption--often a glaring falsehood--but always a point
-which is not, or cannot be demonstrated.
-
-The magnitudes, distances, velocities, and periodic times which these
-assumed motions eliminate, are all glaringly fictitious, because
-they are only such as a false theory creates a necessity for. It
-is geometrically demonstrable that all the visible luminaries in
-the firmament are within a distance of a few thousand miles, not
-more than the space which stretches between the North Pole and the
-Cape of Good Hope; and the principle of measurement--that of plane
-triangulation--which demonstrates this important fact, is one which no
-mathematician, demanding to be considered a master in the science, dare
-for a moment deny. All these luminaries then, and the Sun itself, being
-so near to us, cannot be other than very small as compared with the
-Earth we inhabit. They are all in motion over the Earth, which is alone
-immoveable, and therefore they cannot be anything more than secondary
-and subservient structures, ministering to this fixed material world,
-and to its inhabitants. This is a plain, simple, and in every respect
-demonstrable philosophy, agreeing with the evidence of our senses,
-borne out by every fairly instituted experiment, and never requiring
-a violation of those principles of investigation which the human mind
-has ever recognized, and depended upon in its every day life. The
-modern, or Newtonian Astronomy, has none of these characteristics. The
-whole system taken together constitutes a most monstrous absurdity. It
-is false in its foundation; irregular, unfair, and illogical in its
-details; and in its conclusions inconsistent and contradictory. Worse
-than all, it is a prolific source of irreligion and of atheism, of
-which its advocates are, practically, supporters! By defending a system
-which is directly opposite to that which is taught in connection with
-all religions, they lead the more critical and daring intellects to
-reject the scriptures altogether, to ignore the worship, and doubt and
-deny the existence of a Supreme Ruler of the world. Many of the primest
-minds are thus irreparably injured, robbed of those present pleasures,
-and that cheering hope of the future which the earnest christian
-devotee holds as of far greater value than all earthly wealth and
-grandeur; or than the mastery of all the philosophical complications
-which the human mind ever invented.
-
-The doctrine of the Earth’s rotundity and motion is now shown to be
-unconditionally false; and therefore the scriptures which assert the
-contrary, are, in their philosophical teachings at least, _literally
-true_. In practical science therefore, atheism and denial of scriptural
-authority have no foundation. If human theories are cast aside, and
-the facts of nature, and legitimate reasoning alone depended upon, it
-will be seen that religion and true philosophy are not antagonistic,
-and that the hopes which both encourage may be fully relied upon. To
-the religious mind this matter is most important, it is indeed no
-less than a sacred question, for it renders complete the evidence
-that the Jewish and Christian scriptures are true, and must have been
-communicated to mankind by an anterior and supernal Being. For if after
-so many ages of mental struggling, of speculation and trial, and change
-and counterchange, we have at length discovered that all astronomical
-theories are false, that the Earth is a plane, and motionless, and that
-the various luminaries above it are lights only and not worlds; and
-that these very doctrines have been taught and recorded in a work which
-has been handed down to us from the earliest times; from a time, in
-fact, when mankind could not have had sufficient experience to enable
-them to criticise and doubt, much less to invent, it follows that
-whoever dictated and caused such doctrines to be recorded and preserved
-to all future generations, must have been superhuman, omniscient, and,
-to the Earth and its inhabitants pre-existent.
-
-To the dogged Atheist, whose “mind is made up” not to enter into any
-further investigation, and not to admit of possible error in his past
-conclusions, this question is of no more account than it is to an Ox.
-He who cares not to re-examine from time to time his state of mind,
-and the result of his accumulated experience is in no single respect
-better than the lowest animal in creation. He may see nothing higher,
-more noble, more intelligent or beautiful than himself; and in this
-his pride, conceit, and vanity find an incarnation. To such a creature
-there is no God, for he is himself an equal with the highest being he
-has ever recognised! Such Atheism exists to an alarming extent among
-the philosophers of Europe and America; and it has been mainly fostered
-by the astronomical and geological theories of the day. Besides which,
-in consequence of the differences between the language of Scripture and
-the teachings of modern Astronomy, there is to be found in the very
-hearts of Christian and Jewish congregations a sort of “smouldering
-scepticism;” kind of faint suspicion which causes great numbers to
-manifest a cold and visible indifference to religious requirements.
-It is this which has led thousands to desert the cause of earnest,
-active Christianity, and which has forced the majority of those who
-still remain in the ranks of religion to declare “that the Scriptures
-were not intended to teach correctly other than moral and religious
-doctrines; that the references so often made to the physical world,
-and to natural phenomena generally, are given in language to suit
-the prevailing notions and the ignorance of the people.” A Christian
-philosopher who wrote almost a century ago in reference to remarks
-similar to the above, says, “Why should we suspect that Moses, Joshua,
-David, Solomon, and the later prophets and inspired writers have
-counterfeited their sentiments concerning the order of the universe,
-from pure complaisance, or being in any way obliged to dissemble with a
-view to gratify the prepossessions of the populace? These eminent men
-being kings, lawgivers, and generals themselves, or always privileged
-with access to the courts of sovereign princes, besides the reverence
-and awful dignity which the power of divination and working of miracles
-procured to them, had great worldly and spiritual authority....
-They had often in charge to command, suspend, revert, and otherwise
-interfere with the course and laws of nature, and were never daunted
-to speak out the truth before the most mighty potentates on earth,
-much less would they be overawed by the _vox populi_.” To say that
-the Scriptures were not intended to teach science truthfully, is in
-substance to declare that God himself has stated, and commissioned
-His prophets to teach things which are utterly false! Those Newtonian
-philosophers who still hold that the sacred volume is the Word of God,
-are thus placed in a fearful dilemma. How can the two systems, so
-directly opposite in character, be reconciled? Oil and water alone will
-not combine--mix them by violence as we may, they will again separate
-when allowed to rest. Call oil oil, and water water, and acknowledge
-them to be distinct in nature and value; but let no “hodge-podge” be
-attempted, and passed off as a genuine compound of oil and water.
-Call Scripture the Word of God--the Creator and Ruler of all things,
-and the Fountain of all Truth; and call the Newtonian or Copernican
-Astronomy the word and work of man, of man, too, in his vainest
-mood--so vain and conceited as not to be content with the direct and
-simple teachings of his Maker, but who must rise up in rebellion and
-conjure into existence a fanciful complicated fabric, which being
-insisted upon as true, creates and necessitates the dark and horrible
-interrogatives--Is God a deceiver? Has He spoken direct and unequivocal
-falsehood? Can we no longer indulge in the beautiful and consoling
-thought that God’s justice, and love, and truth are unchanging and
-reliable for ever? Let Christians--for Sceptics and Atheists may be
-left out of the question--to whatever division of the Church they
-belong, look at this matter calmly and earnestly. Let them determine
-to uproot the deception which has led them to think that they can
-altogether ignore the plainest astronomical teaching of Scripture, and
-endorse a system to which it is in every sense opposed. The following
-language is quoted as an instance of the manner in which the doctrine
-of the Earth’s rotundity and the plurality of worlds interferes with
-Scriptural teachings:--“The theory of original sin is confuted (by
-our astronomical and geological knowledge), and I cannot permit the
-belief, when I know that our world is but a mere speck, a perishable
-atom in the vast space of creation, that God should just select this
-little spot to descend upon and assume our form, and clothe Himself in
-our flesh, to become visible to human eyes, to the tiny beings of this
-comparatively insignificant world.... Thus millions of distant worlds,
-with the beings allotted to them, were to be extirpated and destroyed
-in consequence of the original sin of Adam. No sentiment of the human
-mind can surely be more derogatory to the Divine attributes of the
-Creator, nor more repugnant to the known economy of the celestial
-bodies. For in the first place, who is to say, among the infinity
-of worlds, whether Adam was the _only creature_ who was tempted by
-Satan and fell, and by his fall involved all the other worlds in his
-guilt.”[42]
-
- [42] Encyclopædia Londenensis, p. 457, vol. 2.
-
-The difficulty experienced by the author of the above remarks is
-clearly one which can no longer exist, when it is seen that the
-doctrine of a plurality of worlds is an impossibility. That it is an
-impossibility is shown by the fact that the Sun, Moon, and Stars are
-very small bodies, and very near to the earth; this fact is proved by
-actual non-theoretical measurement; this measurement is made on the
-principle of plane trigonometry: this principle of plane trigonometry
-is adopted because the Earth is a Plane; and all the base lines
-employed in the triangulation are horizontal. By the same practical
-method of reasoning, all the difficulties which, upon geological and
-astronomical grounds, have been raised to the literal teachings of the
-scriptures, may be completely destroyed. Instances:--The scriptures
-repeatedly declare that the Sun moves over the Earth--“His going forth
-is from the end of the heaven, and his circuit unto the ends of it.”
-“He ariseth and goeth down, and hasteth to his place whence he arose.”
-“The sun stood still in the midst of heaven.” “Great is the Earth, high
-is the heaven, swift is the Sun in his course.” In the religious poems
-of all ages the same fact is presented. Christians especially, of every
-denomination, are familiar with, and often read and sing with delight
-such poetry as the following:--
-
- “My God who makes the Sun to know
- His proper hour to rise,
- And to give light to all below
- Doth send him _round the skies_.”
-
- “When from the chambers of the east
- His _morning race_ begins,
- He never tires _nor stops to rest_,
- But round the world he shines.”
-
- “God of the morning, at whose voice,
- The cheerful sun makes haste to rise,
- And, like a giant, doth rejoice,
- To _run his journey through the skies_.”
-
- “He sends the sun _his circuit round_,
- To cheer the fruits and warm the ground.”
-
- “How fair has the day been!
- How bright was the Sun!
- How lovely and joyful
- The _course that he run_.”
-
-All the expressions of scripture are consistent with the fact of the
-Sun’s motion. They never declare anything to the contrary. Whenever
-they speak of the subject it is in the same manner. The direct evidence
-of our senses confirms it; and actual and special observations, as well
-as the most practical scientific experiments, declare the same thing.
-The progressive and concentric motion of the Sun over the Earth is in
-every sense demonstrable; yet the Newtonian astronomers insist upon
-it that the Sun does not really move, that it only _appears_ to move,
-and that this appearance arises from the motion of the Earth; that
-when, as the scriptures affirm, the “Sun stood still in the midst of
-heaven,” it was the _Earth_ which stood still and _not_ the Sun! that
-the scriptures therefore speak falsely, and the experiments of science,
-and the observations and applications of our senses are never to be
-relied upon. Whence comes this bold and arrogant denial of the value of
-our senses and judgement, and the authority of scripture? The Earth
-or the Sun moves. Our senses tell us, and the scriptures declare that
-the Earth is fixed and that it is the Sun which moves above and around
-it; but a _theory_, which is absolutely false in its groundwork, and
-ridiculously illogical in its details, demands that the Earth is round
-and moves upon axes, and in several other and various directions; and
-that these motions are _sufficient to account for_ certain phenomena
-without supposing that the Sun moves, _therefore_ the Sun is a fixed
-body, and his motion is _only apparent_! Such _reasoning_ is a disgrace
-to philosophy, and fearfully dangerous to the religious interests of
-humanity!
-
-Christian ministers and commentators find it a most unwelcome task
-when called upon to reconcile the plain and simple philosophy of the
-scriptures with the monstrous teachings of theoretical astronomy.
-Dr. Adam Clark, in a letter to the Rev. Thomas Roberts, of Bath,[43]
-speaking of the progress of his commentary, and of his endeavours
-to reconcile the statements of scripture with the modern astronomy,
-says: “Joshua’s Sun and Moon standing still, have kept me going for
-nearly three weeks! That one chapter has afforded me more vexation
-than anything I have ever met with; and even now I am but about half
-satisfied with my own solution of all the difficulties, though I am
-confident that I have removed mountains that were never touched before;
-shall I say that I am heartily weary of my work, so weary that I have
-a thousand times wished I had never written one page of it, and am
-repeatedly purposing to give it up.”
-
- [43] Life of Adam Clark, 8vo Edition.
-
-The Rev. John Wesley, in his journal, writes as follows:--“The more I
-consider them the more I doubt of all systems of astronomy. I doubt
-whether we can with certainty know either the distance or magnitude of
-any star in the firmament; else why do astronomers so immensely differ,
-even with regard to the distance of the Sun from the Earth? Some
-affirming it to be only three and others ninety millions of miles.”[44]
-
- [44] Extracts from works of Rev. J. Wesley, 3rd Edition, 1829.
- Published by Mason, London, p. 392, vol. 2.
-
-In vol. 3, page 203, the following entry occurs:--“January 1st,
-1765.--This week I wrote an answer to a warm letter published in the
-_London Magazine_, the author whereof is much displeased that I presume
-to doubt of the ‘modern astronomy.’ I cannot help it. Nay, the more
-I consider the more my doubts increase; so that at present I doubt
-whether any man on earth knows either the distance or magnitude, I
-will not say of a fixed Star, but Saturn or Jupiter--yea of the Sun or
-Moon.”
-
-In vol. 13, page 359, he says:--“And so the whole hypothesis of
-innumerable Suns and worlds moving round them vanishes into air.” And
-again at page 430 of same volume, the following words occur:--“The
-planets revolutions we are acquainted with, but who is able to this
-day, regularly to demonstrate either their magnitude or their distance?
-Unless he will prove, as is the usual way, the magnitude from the
-distance, and the distance from the magnitude. * * * Dr. Rogers has
-evidently demonstrated that no conjunction of the centrifugal and
-centripetal forces can possibly account for this, or even cause any
-body to move in an ellipsis.” There are several other incidental
-remarks to be found in his writings which shew that the Rev. John
-Wesley was well acquainted with the then modern astronomy; and that
-he saw clearly both its self-contradictory and its anti-scriptural
-character.
-
-It is a very popular idea among modern astronomers that the stellar
-universe is an endless congeries of systems, of Suns and attendant
-worlds peopled with sentient beings analogous in the purpose and
-destiny of their existence to the inhabitants of this earth. This
-doctrine of a plurality of worlds, although it conveys the most
-magnificent ideas of the universe, is purely fanciful, and may be
-compared to the “dreams of the alchemists” who laboured with unheard
-of enthusiasm to discover the “philosopher’s stone,” the _elixir vitæ_,
-and the “universal solvent.” However grand the first two projects
-might have been in their realisation, it is known that they were never
-developed in a practical sense, and the latter idea of a solvent which
-would dissolve everything was suddenly and unexpectedly destroyed by
-the few remarks of a simple but critical observer, who demanded to
-know what service a substance would be to them which would dissolve
-all things? What could they keep it in? for it would dissolve every
-vessel wherein they sought to preserve it! This idea of a plurality
-of worlds is but a natural and reasonable conclusion drawn from the
-doctrine of the Earth’s rotundity. But this doctrine being false its
-off shoot is equally so. The supposition that the heavenly bodies are
-Suns and inhabited worlds is demonstrably impossible in nature, and
-has no foundation whatever in Scripture. “In the beginning God created
-the Heaven and _the Earth_.” One Earth _only_ is created; and the fact
-is more especially described in Genesis, ch. i., v. 10. Where, instead
-of the word “Earth” meaning both land and water as together forming a
-globe, as it does in the Newtonian astronomy, only the _dry land_ was
-called _earth_,” and “the gathering together of the waters called He
-seas.” The Sun, Moon, and Stars are described as lights only and not
-worlds. A great number of passages might be quoted which prove that no
-other material world is ever in the slightest manner referred to by the
-sacred writers. The creation of the world; the origin of evil, and the
-fall of man; the plan of redemption by the death of Christ; the day
-of judgement, and the final consummation of all things are invariably
-associated with _this Earth alone_. The expression in Hebrews, ch. i.,
-v. 2, “by whom also he made the _worlds_,” and in Heb., ch. ii., v.
-3, “through faith we understand that the _worlds_ were framed,” are
-known to be a comparatively recent rendering from the original Greek
-documents. The word which has been translated _worlds_ is fully as
-capable of being rendered in the singular number as the plural; and
-previous to the introduction of the Copernican Astronomy was always
-translated “_the world_.” The Roman Catholic and the French Protestant
-Bibles still contain the singular number; and in a copy of an English
-Protestant Bible printed in the year 1608, the following translation is
-given:--“Through faith we understand that _the world_ was ordained.”
-So that either the plural expression “worlds” was used in later
-translations to accord with the astronomical notions then recently
-introduced, or it was meant to include the Earth and the spiritual
-world, as referred to in:--
-
-_Hebrews_ ii., 5--“For unto angels hath he not put into subjection _the
-world to come_.”
-
-_Ephesians_ i., 21--“Far above all principality and power, and might,
-and dominion, and every name that is named not only in _this world_,
-but also in _that which is to come_.”
-
-_Luke_ xviii., 29, 30--“There is no man that hath left house, or
-parents, or brethren, or wife, or children, for the kingdom of God’s
-sake, who shall not receive manifold more in this _present time_, and
-in _the world to come_ life everlasting.”
-
-_Matthew_ xii., 32--“Whosoever speaketh against the Holy Ghost, it
-shall not be forgiven him, neither in _this world_ neither in the
-_world to come_.”
-
-The Scriptures teach that in the day of the Lord “the Heavens shall
-pass away with a great noise, and the elements shall melt with fervent
-heat,” and the “stars of Heaven fall unto the Earth even as a fig tree
-casteth her untimely figs when shaken of a mighty wind.” The Newtonian
-system of astronomy declares that the stars and planets are mighty
-worlds--nearly all of them much larger than this Earth. The fixed
-stars are considered to be suns, equal to if not greater than our own
-sun, which is said to be above 800,000 miles in diameter. All this is
-proveably false, but to those who have been led to believe it, the
-difficult question arises,--“How can thousands of stars fall upon
-the Earth, which is many times less than any one of them?” How can
-the Earth with a supposed diameter of 8000 miles receive the numerous
-suns of the firmament many of which are said to be a million miles in
-diameter?
-
-These stars are assumed to have positions so far from the Earth that
-the distance is almost inexpressible; figures indeed may be arranged on
-paper but in reading them no practical idea is conveyed to the mind.
-Many of them are said to be so distant that should they fall with the
-velocity of light or above one hundred and sixty thousand miles in a
-second, or six hundred millions of miles per hour, they would require
-nearly two millions of years to reach the Earth! Sir William Herschel
-in a paper on “The power of telescopes to penetrate into space,”
-published in the _Philosophical Transactions_ for the year 1800,
-affirms, that with his powerful instruments he discovered brilliant
-luminaries so far from the Earth that the light from them “could not
-have been less than _one million nine hundred thousand years in its
-progress_.” Again the difficulty presents itself--“If the stars of
-Heaven begin to fall to-day, and with the greatest imaginable velocity,
-millions of years must elapse before they reach the Earth!” But the
-Scriptures declare that these changes shall occur suddenly--shall
-come, indeed, “as a thief in the night.”
-
-The same theory, with its false and inconceivable distances and
-magnitudes, operates to destroy all the ordinary, common sense, and
-scripturally authorised chronology. Christian and Jewish commentators,
-unless astronomically educated, hold and teach that the Earth, as well
-as the Sun, Moon, and Stars, were created about 4,000 years before the
-birth of Christ, or less than 6,000 years before the present time.
-But if many of these luminaries are so distant that their light would
-require above a million of years to reach us; and if, as we are taught,
-bodies are visible to us because of the light which they reflect or
-radiate, then their light _has_ reached us, because we have been able
-to see them, and therefore they must have been shining, and must have
-been created at least _one million nine hundred thousand years ago_!
-The chronology of the bible indicates that a period of six thousand
-years has not yet elapsed since “the Heavens and the Earth were
-finished, and _all_ the Host of them.”
-
-In the modern astronomy, Continents, Oceans, Seas, and Islands, are
-considered as together forming one vast Globe of 25,000 miles in
-circumference. This has been shown to be fallacious, and it is clearly
-contrary to the plain, literal teaching of the scriptures. In the first
-chapter of Genesis, we find the following language: “and God said let
-the waters under the heaven be gathered unto one place, and let the
-_dry land_ appear; and it was so. And God called the dry land _Earth_,
-and the gathering together of the waters called He Seas.” Here the
-Earth and Seas--Earth and the great body of waters, are described as
-two distinct and independent regions, and not as together forming one
-Globe which astronomers call “the Earth.” This description is confirmed
-by several other passages of scripture.
-
-2 _Peter_, iii., 5--“For this they willingly are ignorant of, that by
-the Word of God the Heavens were of old, and the Earth _standing out of
-the waters and in the waters_.”
-
-_Psalms_ cxxxvi., 6--“O give thanks to the Lord of Lords, that by
-wisdom made the heavens, and that _stretchet out the earth above the
-waters_.”
-
-_Psalms_ xxiv., 1, 2--“The earth is the Lord’s and the fulness thereof;
-the world and they that dwell therein: for he hath _founded it upon the
-seas, and established it upon the floods_.”
-
-_Hermes_ (New Testament Apocrypha)--“Who with the word of his strength
-fixed the heaven; and _founded the earth upon the waters_.”
-
-_Job_ xxvi., 7--“He stretcheth out the north over the empty place, and
-hangeth the Earth upon nothing.”
-
-Some think that the latter part of this verse, “hangeth the Earth upon
-nothing,” favours the idea that the Earth is a globe revolving in
-space without visible support; but Dr. Adam Clark, although himself a
-Newtonian philosopher, says, in his commentary upon this passage in
-Job, the literal translation is, “on the hollow or empty waste,” and
-he quotes a Chaldee version of the passage which runs as follows: “He
-layeth the Earth upon the waters nothing sustaining it.”
-
-It is not that He “hangeth the Earth upon nothing,” but “hangeth
-or layeth it upon the waters” which were empty or waste, and where
-before there was nothing. This is in strict accordance with the other
-expressions, that “the Earth was founded upon the waters,” &c., and
-also with the expression in Genesis, “that the face of the deep was
-covered only with darkness.”
-
-If the Earth were a globe, it is evident that everywhere the water of
-its surface, the seas, lakes, oceans, and rivers, must be sustained the
-land, the Earth must be under the water; but if the land and the waters
-are distinct, and the Earth is “founded upon the seas,” then everywhere
-the sea must sustain the land as it does a ship or any other floating
-mass, and there is water below the earth. In this particular as in all
-the others, the scriptures are beautifully sequential and consistent:--
-
-_Exodus_ xx, 4--“Thou shalt not make unto thee any likeness of anything
-in heaven above or in the Earth beneath, or in the _waters under the
-Earth_.”
-
-_Genesis_ xliv, 25--“The Almighty shall bless thee with the blessings
-of heaven above, and blessings of the _deep that lieth under_.”
-
-_Deut._ xxxiii, 13--“Blessed be his land, for the precious things of
-heaven; for the dew; and for the _deep which couched beneath_.”
-
-_Deut._ iv, 18--“Take ye therefore good heed unto yourselves, and make
-no similitude of anything on the Earth, or the likeness of anything
-that is in the _waters beneath the Earth_.”
-
-The same idea prevailed among the ancients generally. In Ovid’s
-Metamorphoses, Jupiter, in an assembly of the gods, is made to say, “I
-swear by the infernal _waves which glide under the Earth_.”
-
-If the earth is a distinct structure standing in and upon the waters
-of the “great deep,” it follows that, unless it can be shown that
-something else sustains the waters, that the depth is fathomless. As
-there is no evidence whatever of anything existing underneath the
-“great deep,” and as in many parts of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans
-no bottom has been found by the most scientific and efficient means
-which human ingenuity could invent, we are forced to the conclusion
-that the depth is boundless. This conclusion is again confirmed by the
-scriptures.
-
-_Jeremiah_ xxxi, 37--“Thus saith the Lord, which giveth the sun for a
-light by day, and the ordinances of the moon and of the stars for a
-light by night, which divideth the sea when the waves thereof roar, the
-Lord of Hosts is His name. If these ordinances depart from before me,
-saith the Lord, then the seed of Israel also shall cease from being a
-nation before me for ever. Thus saith the Lord: if heaven above can be
-measured, and the _foundations_ of the _Earth searched out beneath_, I
-will also cast off all the seed of Israel.”
-
-From the above it will be seen that God’s promises to his people could
-no more be broken than could the height of heaven, or the depths of the
-Earth’s foundations be searched out. The fathomless deep beneath--upon
-which the Earth is founded, and the infinitude of heaven above, are
-here given as emblems of the boundlessness of God’s power, and of
-the certainty that all his ordinances will be fulfilled. When God’s
-power can be limited, heaven above will no longer be infinite; and
-the mighty waters, the foundations of the earth may be fathomed. But
-the scriptures plainly teach us that the power and wisdom of God, the
-heights of Heaven, and the depths of the waters under the Earth are
-alike unfathomable; and no true philosophy ever avers, nor ever did nor
-ever can aver, a single fact to the contrary.
-
-In all the religions of the Earth the words “up” and “above” are
-associated with a region of peace and happiness. Heaven is always
-spoken of as _above_ the _Earth_. The scriptures invariable convey the
-same idea:--
-
-_Deut._ xxvi., 15--“Look _down_ from Thy holy habitation, from Heaven,
-and bless Thy people Israel.”
-
-_Exodus_ xix., 20--“And the Lord came _down_ upon Mount Sinai.”
-
-_Psalm_ cii., 19--“For he hath looked _down_ from the height of his
-sanctuary: from Heaven did the Lord behold the Earth.”
-
-_Isaiah_ lxiii., 15--“Look _down_ from Heaven, and behold from the
-habitation of Thy holiness and of Thy glory.”
-
-_Psalm_ ciii., 11--“For as the Heaven is high _above the Earth_.”
-
-2 _Kings_ ii., 11--“And Elijah went _up_ by a whirlwind into Heaven.”
-
-_Mark_ xvi., 10--“So then after the Lord had spoken unto them he was
-received _up into Heaven_.”
-
-_Luke_ xxiv., 51--“And it came to pass, while He blessed them, He was
-parted from them, and carried _up into Heaven_.”
-
-If the Earth is a globe revolving at the rate of above a thousand miles
-an hour all this language of scripture is necessarily fallacious. The
-terms “up” and “down,” and “above” and “below,” are words without
-meaning, at best are merely relative--indicative of no absolute
-or certain direction. That which is “up” at noon-day, is directly
-“down” at midnight. Heaven can only be spoken of as “above,” and the
-scriptures can only be read correctly for a single moment out of the
-twenty-four hours; for before the sentence “Heaven is high above the
-Earth” could be uttered, the speaker would be descending from the
-meridian where Heaven was above him, and his eye although unmoved would
-be fixed upon a point millions of miles away from his first position.
-Hence in all the ceremonials of religion, where the hands and eyes
-are raised upwards to Heaven, nay when Christ himself “lifted up his
-eyes to Heaven and said, Father, the hour is come,” his gaze would
-be sweeping along the firmament at rapidly varying angles, and with
-such incomprehensible velocity that a fixed point of observation, and
-a definite position, as indicating the seat or throne of “Him that
-sitteth in the Heavens” would be an impossibility.
-
-Again: the religious world have always believed and meditated upon the
-word “Heaven” as representing an infinite region of joy and safety,
-of rest and happiness unspeakable; as “the place of God’s residence,
-the dwelling place of angels and the blessed; the true palace of
-God, entirely separated from the impurities and imperfections, the
-alterations and changes of the lower world; where He reigns in eternal
-peace. * * It is the sacred mansion of light, and joy, and glory.[45]”
-But if there is a plurality of worlds, millions upon millions, nay,
-an “infinity of worlds,” if the universe is filled with innumerable
-systems of burning suns, and rapidly revolving planets, intermingled
-with rushing comets and whirling satellites, all dashing and sweeping
-through space in directions, and with velocities surpassing all human
-comprehension, and terrible even to contemplate, where is the place of
-rest and safety? Where is the true and unchangeable “palace of God?” In
-what direction is Heaven to be found? Where is the liberated human soul
-to find its home--its refuge from change and motion, from uncertainty
-and danger? Is it to wander for ever in a labyrinth of rolling worlds?
-To struggle for ever in a never ending maze of revolving suns and
-systems? To be never at rest, but for ever seeking to avoid some
-vortex of attraction--some whirlpool of gravitation? The belief in
-the existence of Heaven, as a region of peace and harmony “extending
-(above the Earth) through all extent,” and beyond the influence of
-natural laws and restless elements, is jeopardised, if not destroyed,
-by a false and usurping astronomy, which has no better foundation
-than human conceit and presumption. If this ill-founded, unsupported
-philosophy is admitted by the religious mind, it can no longer say
-that--
-
- “Far above the sun, and stars, and skies,
- In realms of endless light and love,
- My Father’s mansion lies.”
-
- [45] Cruden’s Concordance, article “Heaven.”
-
-The modern theoretical astronomy affirms that the Moon is a solid
-opaque, non-luminous body; that it is, in fact, nothing less than a
-material world. It has even been mapped out into continents, islands,
-seas, lakes, volcanoes, &c., &c. The nature of its atmosphere and
-character of its productions and possible inhabitants have been
-discussed with as much freedom as though our philosophers were quite as
-familiar with it as they are with the different objects and localities
-upon Earth. The light, too, with which the Moon so beautifully
-illuminates the firmament is declared to be only borrowed--to be
-only the light of the Sun intercepted and reflected upon the Earth.
-These doctrines are not only opposed by a formidable array of
-well-ascertained facts (as given in previous sections), but they are
-totally denied by the scriptures. The Sun and Moon and Stars are never
-referred to as worlds, but simply as _lights_ to rule alternately in
-the firmament.
-
-_Genesis_ i., 14, 16--“And God said let there be _lights_ in the
-firmament of the Heaven to divide the day from the night. * * * And God
-made two _great lights_--the greater light to rule the day, and the
-lesser light to rule the night.”
-
-_Psalm_ cxxxvi., 7, 9--“O give thanks to Him that made _great lights_:
-the Sun to rule by day, the Moon and Stars to rule by night.”
-
-_Jeremiah_, xxxi., 35--“The Sun is given for a light by day, and the
-ordinances of the Moon and of the Stars for a light by night.”
-
-_Ezekiel_, xxxii., 7, 8--“I will cover the Sun with a cloud; and the
-Moon shall not give _her light_.” “All the bright lights of Heaven will
-I make dark over thee.”
-
-_Psalm_ cxlviii., 3--“Praise him Sun and Moon, praise him all ye Stars
-of light.”
-
-_Isaiah_ xiii., 10--“The Sun shall be darkened in his going forth, and
-the Moon shall not cause _her_ light to shine.”
-
-_Matthew_ xxiv., 29--“Immediately after the tribulation of those days
-shall the Sun be darkened, and the Moon shall not give her light.”
-
-_Isaiah_ ix., 19, 20--“The Sun shall be no more thy light by day;
-neither for brightness shall the _Moon give light_ unto thee. * * Thy
-Sun shall no more go down; neither shall thy Moon withdraw itself.”
-
-_Psalm_ cxxxvi., 7 to 9--“To him that made great lights, the Sun to
-rule by day, the Moon and Stars to rule by night.”
-
-_Job_ xxv., 5--“Behold even to the Moon, and _it_ shineth not.”
-
-_Ecclesiastes_ xii., 2--“While the Sun, or the light, or the Moon, or
-the Stars be not darkened.”
-
-_Isaiah_ xxx., 26--“The light of the Moon shall be as the light of the
-Sun; and the light of the Sun shall be sevenfold.”
-
-_Deuteronomy_ xxxiii., 14--“And for the precious fruits brought forth
-by the Sun, and for the precious things put forth by the Moon.”
-
-In the very first of the passages above quoted the doctrine is
-enunciated that various distinct and independent _lights_ were created.
-But that two _great_ lights were specially called into existence for
-the purpose of ruling the day and the night. The Sun and the Moon are
-declared to be these great and alternately ruling lights. Nothing is
-here said, nor is it in any other part of scripture said, that the
-Sun is a great light, and that the Moon shines only by reflection.
-The Sun is called the “greater light to rule the day,” and the Moon
-the “lesser light to rule the night.” Although of these two “great
-lights” one is less than the other, each is declared to shine with
-its own light. Hence in Deuteronomy, c. 33, v. 14, it is affirmed that
-certain fruits are specially brought forth by the influence of the
-Sun’s light, and that certain other productions are “put forth by the
-Moon.” That the light of the sun is influential in encouraging the
-growth of certain natural products; and that the light of the Moon has
-a distinct influence in promoting the increase of certain other natural
-substances, is a matter well known to those who are familiar with
-horticultural and agricultural phenomena; and it is abundantly proved
-by chemical evidence that the two lights are distinct in character
-and in action upon various elements. This distinction is beautifully
-preserved throughout the sacred scriptures. In no single instance are
-the two lights confounded. On the contrary, in the New Testament, St.
-Paul affirms with authority, that “there is one glory of the Sun, and
-another glory of the Moon, and another glory of the Stars.”
-
-The same fact of the difference in the two lights, and their
-independence of each other is maintained in the scriptures to the last.
-“The Sun became black as sackcloth of hair, and the Moon became as
-blood.” If the Moon is only a reflector, the moment the Sun becomes
-black her surface will be blackened also, and not remain as blood,
-while the Sun is dark and black as sackcloth of hair!
-
-Again: the modern system of astronomy teaches that this earth cannot
-possibly receive light from the Stars, because of their supposed great
-distance from it: that the fixed Stars are only burning spheres, or
-Sun’s to their own systems of planets and satellites: and that their
-light terminates, or no longer produces an active luminosity at the
-distance of nearly two thousand millions of miles. Here again the
-scriptures affirm the contrary doctrine.
-
-_Genesis_ i., 16-17--“He made the Stars also; and God set them in the
-firmament _to give light upon the earth_.”
-
-_Isaiah_ xiii., 10--“For the Stars of Heaven and the constellations
-thereof shall not _give their light_.”
-
-_Ezekiel_ xxxii., 7--“I will cover the Heaven, and make the _Stars_
-thereof _dark_.”
-
-_Joel_ ii., 10--“The Sun and the Moon shall be dark, and the _Stars_
-shall withdraw _their shining_.”
-
-_Psalm_ cxlviii., 3--“Praise him Sun and Moon: promise him all ye
-_Stars of Light_.”
-
-_Jeremiah_ xxxi., 35--“Thus saith the Lord, which giveth the Sun for a
-light by day; and the ordinances of the Moon and of _the Stars_ for a
-_light by night_.”
-
-_Daniel_ xii., 3--“They that turn many to righteousness shall _shine_
-as the _Stars_ for ever and ever.”
-
-These quotations place it beyond doubt that the Stars were made
-expressly to shine in the firmament, and “to give light upon the
-Earth.” In addition to this language of scripture, we have the evidence
-of our own eyes that the Stars give abundant light. “What beautiful
-star-light!” is a common expression: and we all remember the difference
-between a dark and starless night, and one when the firmament is as it
-were studded with brilliant luminaries. Travellers inform us that in
-many parts of the world, where the sky is clear and free from clouds
-and vapours for weeks together, the Stars appear both larger and
-brighter than they do in England; and that their light is sufficiently
-intense to enable them to read and write, and to travel with safety
-through the most dangerous places.
-
-If it be true that the Stars and the Planets are not simply lights, as
-the scriptures affirm them to be, but magnificent worlds, for the most
-part much larger than this earth, then it is a very proper question
-to ask--“are they inhabited?” If the answer be in the affirmative, it
-is equally proper to inquire “have the first parents in each world
-been tempted?” If so, “have they fallen?” if so, “Have they required
-redemption?” And “have they been redeemed?” “Has each world had a
-separate Redeemer? or has Christ been the Redeemer for every world in
-the universe?” And if so, “did His suffering and crucifixion on this
-Earth suffice for the redemption of the fallen inhabitants of all other
-worlds? Or had He to suffer and die in each world successively? Did
-the fall of Adam in this world involve in his guilt the inhabitants of
-all other worlds? Or was the baneful influence of Satan confined to
-the first parents of this Earth? If so, why so? and if not, why not?
-But, and if, and why, and again--but it is useless thus to ponder! The
-Christian philosopher must be confounded! If his religion be to him a
-living reality, he will turn with loathing or spurn with indignation
-and disgust, as he would a poisonous reptile, a system of astronomy
-which creates in his mind so much confusion and uncertainty! But as the
-system which necessitates such doubts and difficulties has been shown
-to be purely theoretical; and to have not the slightest foundation in
-fact, the religious mind has really no cause for apprehension. Not a
-shadow of doubt remains that this World is the only one created; that
-the sacred Scriptures contain, in addition to religious and moral
-doctrines, a true and consistent philosophy; that they were written
-for the good of mankind, at the direct instigation of God himself;
-and that all their teachings and promises are truthful, consistent,
-and reliable. Whoever holds the contrary conclusion is the victim of
-an arrogant false astronomy, of an equally false and presumptuous
-geology, or a suicidal method of reasoning--a logic which never demands
-a proof of its premises, and which therefore leads to conclusions
-which are contrary to nature, to human experience, and to the direct
-teaching of God’s word, and therefore contrary to the deepest and
-most lasting interests of humanity. “God has spoken to man in two
-voices, the voice of inspiration and the voice of nature. By man’s
-ignorance they have been made to disagree; but the time will come, and
-cannot be far distant, when these two languages will strictly accord;
-when the science of nature will no longer contradict the science of
-scripture.”[46]
-
- [46] Professor Hunt.
-
-CUI BONO.--“Of all terrors to the generous soul, that _Cui bono_ is
-the one to be the most zealously avoided. Whether it be proposed to
-find the magnetic point, or a passage impossible to be utilised if
-discovered, or a race of men of no good to any human institution
-extant, and of no good to themselves; or to seek the Unicorn in
-Madagascar, and when we had found him not to be able to make use of
-him; or the great central plateau of Australia, where no one could
-live for centuries to come; or the great African lake, which, for all
-the good it would do us English folk might as well be in the Moon;
-or the source of the Nile, the triumphant discovery of which would
-neither lower the rents nor take off the taxes anywhere--whatever it
-is, the _Cui bono_ is always a weak and cowardly argument: essentially
-short-sighted too, seeing that, according to the law of the past, by
-which we may always safely predicate the future, so much falls into
-the hands of the seeker, for which he was not looking, and of which
-he never even knew the existence. The area of the possible is very
-wide still, and very insignificant and minute, the angle we have
-staked out and marked impossible. What do we know of the powers which
-nature has yet in reserve, of the secrets she has still untold, the
-wealth still concealed? Every day sees new discoveries in the sciences
-we can investigate at home. What, then, may not lie waiting for the
-explorers abroad? Weak and short-sighted commercially, the _cui bono_
-is worse than both, morally. When we remember the powerful manhood,
-the patience, unselfishness, courage, devotion, and nobleness of aim
-which must accompany a perilous enterprise, and which form so great an
-example, and so heart-stirring to the young and to the wavering, it is
-no return to barbaric indifference to life to say, better indeed a few
-deaths for even a commercially useless enterprise--better a few hearths
-made desolate, and a few wives and mothers left to bear their stately
-sorrow to the end of time, that the future may rejoice and be strong:
-better a thousand failures, and a thousand useless undertakings,
-than the loss of national manhood or the weakening of the national
-fibre. Quixotism is a folly when the energy which might have achieved
-conquests over misery and wrong, if rightfully applied, is wasted in
-fighting windmills; but to forego any great enterprise for fear of the
-dangers attending, or to check a grand endeavour by the _cui bono_ of
-ignorance and moral scepticism, is worse than a folly--it is baseness,
-and a cowardice.[47]”
-
- [47] _Daily News_ of April 5, 1865.
-
-The above quotation is an excellent general answer to all those who
-may, in reference to the subject of this work, or to anything which is
-not of immediate worldly interest, obtrude the _cui bono_? But as a
-special reply it may be claimed for the subject of these pages--
-
-First,--It is more edifying, more satisfactory, and in every sense far
-better that we should know the true and detect the false. Thereby the
-mind becomes fixed, established upon an eternal foundation, and no
-longer subject to those waverings and changes, those oscillations and
-fluctuations which are ever the result of falsehood. To know the truth
-and to embody it in our lives and purposes our progress must be safe
-and rapid, and almost unlimited in extent. None can say to what it may
-lead or where it may culminate. Who shall dare to set bounds to the
-capabilities of the mind, or to fix a limit to human progress? Whatever
-may be the destiny of the human race truth alone will help and secure
-its realisation.
-
-Second,--Having detected the fundamental falsehoods of modern
-astronomy, and discovered that the Earth is a plane, and motionless,
-and the only material world in existence, we are able to demonstrate
-the actual character of the Universe. In doing this we are enabled to
-prove that all the so-called arguments with which so many scientific
-but irreligious men have assailed the scriptures, are absolutely
-false; have no foundation except in their own astronomical and
-geological theories, which being demonstrably fallacious, they fall
-to the ground as valueless. They can no longer be wielded as weapons
-against religion. If used at all it can only be that their weakness
-and utter worthlessness will be exposed. Atheism and every other form
-of Infidelity are thus rendered helpless. Their sting is cut away,
-and their poison dissipated. The irreligious philosopher can no longer
-obtrude his theories as things proved wherewith to test the teachings
-of scripture. He must now himself be tested. He must be forced to
-demonstrate his premises, a thing which he has never yet attempted; and
-if he fails in this respect his impious vanity, self-conceit and utter
-disregard of justice, will become so clearly apparent that his presence
-in the ranks of science will no longer be tolerated. All theory must be
-put aside, and the questions at issue must be decided by independent
-and practical evidence. This has been done. The process--the _modus
-operandi_, and the conclusions derived therefrom have been given in
-the early sections of this work. They are entirely consonant with the
-teachings of scripture. The scriptures are therefore literally true,
-and must henceforth either alone or in conjunction with practical
-science be used as a standard by which to test the truth or falsehood
-of every system which does or may hereafter exist. Philosophy is no
-longer to be employed as a test of scriptural truth, but the scriptures
-may and ought to be the test of all philosophy. Not that they are to
-be used as a test of philosophy simply because they are _thought_ or
-_believed_ to be the word of God, but because their literal teachings
-in regard to science and natural phenomena, are demonstrably correct.
-It is quite as faulty and unjust for the religious devotee to urge
-the scriptures against the theories of the philosopher simply because
-he _believes_ them to be true, as it is for the philosopher to urge
-his theories against the scriptures only because he disbelieves the
-one and believes the other. The whole matter must be taken out of the
-region of belief and disbelief. The Christian will be strengthened
-and his mind more completely satisfied by having it in his power to
-demonstrate that the scriptures are philosophically true, than he could
-possibly be by the simple belief in their validity, unsupported by
-practical evidence. On the other hand the Atheist who is met by the
-Christian upon purely scientific grounds, and who is not belaboured
-with enunciations of what his antagonist believes, will be led to
-listen and to pay more regard and respect to the reasons advanced
-than he could possibly concede to the purely religious argument, or
-to an argument founded upon faith alone. If it can be shown to the
-atheistical philosopher that his astronomical and geological theories
-are fallacious, and that all the expressions in the scriptures which
-have reference to natural phenomena are literally true, he will of
-necessity be led to admit that, apart from all other considerations,
-if the _philosophy_ of the scriptures is demonstrably correct, then
-possibly their _spiritual_ and _moral_ teachings may also be true; and
-if so, they may and indeed must have had a divine origin; and if so
-they are truly the “word of God,” and after all, religion is a grand
-reality; and the theories which speculative adventurous philosophers
-have advanced are nothing better than treacherous quicksands into which
-many of the deepest thinkers have been engulphed and lost. By this
-process many highly intelligent minds have been led to desert the ranks
-of Atheism and to rejoin the army of Christian soldiers and devotees.
-Many have rejoiced almost beyond expression that the subject of the
-Earth’s true form and position in the universe had ever been brought
-under their notice; and doubtless great numbers will yet be induced to
-return to that allegiance which plain demonstrable truth demands and
-deserves. To induce numbers of earnest thinking human beings to leave
-the rebellious cause of Atheism and false philosophy; to return to a
-full recognition of the beauty and truthfulness of the scriptures, and
-to a participation in the joy and satisfaction which religion can alone
-supply, is a grand and cheering result, and one which furnishes the
-noblest possible answer to the ever ready “CUI BONO.”
-
-In addition to the numerous quotations which have been given from
-sacred scriptures, and proved to be true and consistent, it may be
-useful briefly to refer to the following difficulties which have been
-raised by the scientific objectors to scriptural authority:--“As the
-earth is a globe, and as all its vast collections of water--its oceans,
-lakes, &c., are sustained by the earthy crust beneath them, and as
-beneath this ‘crust of the earth’ everything is in a red-hot molten
-condition to what place could the excess of waters retire which are
-said in the scriptures to have overwhelmed the whole world? It could
-not sink into the centre of the earth, for the fire is there so intense
-that the whole would be rapidly volatilised, and driven away as vapour.
-It could not evaporate, for when the atmosphere is charged with watery
-vapour beyond a certain degree it begins to condense and throw back the
-water in the form of rain; so that the waters of the flood could not
-sink from the earth’s surface, nor remain in the atmosphere; therefore
-if the earth had ever been deluged at all, it would have remained so
-to this day. But as it is not universally flooded so it never could
-have been, and the account given in the scriptures is false.” All this
-specious reasoning is founded upon the assumption that the earth is
-a globe: this doctrine, however, being false, all the difficulties
-quickly vanish. The earth being “founded on the seas” would be as
-readily cleared of its superfluous water as would the deck of a ship
-on emerging from a storm. Or as a rock in the ocean would be cleared
-after the raging waves which for a time overwhelmed it had subsided.
-
-“Thou coveredst the Earth with the deep as with a garment; the waters
-stood above the mountains. At thy rebuke they fled; and at the voice
-of thy thunder they hasted away ... down by the valleys unto the place
-which thou hast founded for them.”[48]
-
- [48] Psalm civ.
-
-“Thou didst cleave the Earth with rivers; and the overflowing of the
-waters passed by; and the deep uttered his voice and lifted up his
-hands on high.”[49]
-
- [49] Hab. iii. 9-10.
-
-The surface of the Earth standing above the level of the surrounding
-seas, the waters of the flood would simply and naturally run down by
-the valleys and rivers into the “great deep,”--into which “the waters
-returned from off the earth continually ... until the tenth month, and
-on the first day of the month were the tops of the mountains seen.”[50]
-
- [50] Gen. viii. 2-5.
-
-Again; as the Earth is a Globe and in continual motion, how could
-Jesus on being “taken up into an exceedingly high mountain see all
-the kingdoms of the world, in a moment of time?” Or, when “He cometh
-with clouds and every eye shall see him,” how could it be possible,
-seeing that at least twenty-four hours would elapse before every
-part of the Earth would be turned to the same point? But it has been
-demonstrated that the Earth is a Plane and motionless, and that from a
-great eminence every part of its surface could be seen at once; and, at
-once--at the same moment, could every eye behold Him, when “coming in a
-cloud with power and great glory.”
-
-
- FINIS.
-
-
- S. HAYWARD, PRINTER, GREEN STREET, BATH.
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
- Inconsistent and unusual spelling, punctuation etc. have been
- retained; accents on (French) words have not been corrected. The
- inconsistent nesting and pairing of quote marks often makes it
- difficult to determine where a quote starts or ends.
-
- Page 20: ... as represented in figure 10 ... changed to ... as
- represented in figure 9 ....
-
- Page 13, A B is the line-of-sight, and C D the surface of the water
- ...: C nor D are depicted in the illustration.
-
- Page 27, Fig. 15 and accompanying text: the number 4 in the
- illustration appears to be misplaced.
-
- Page 77, “Sun’s altitude at the time of Southing ...: there is no
- closing quote mark.
-
- Page 142, 143 and Fig. 31: the lower case reference letters are
- present as upper case letters in the illustration.
-
- Page 193, ... only the dry land was called earth,” ...: the opening
- quote marks are missing.
-
- Page 198, ... stretchet out the earth above the waters ...: as
- printed in the source document; both "stretched" and "stretcheth"
- appear in other sources.
-
- Page 211, ... “did His suffering and crucifixion ...: the closing
- quote mark is lacking.
-
- Changes made:
-
- Footnotes and illustrations have been moved out of text paragraphs.
-
- Some obvious minor typographical and punctuation errors have been
- corrected silently.
-
- Terrestial has been changed to terrestrial (3x), trignometry to
- trigonometry (2x), incondescent to incandescent (3x).
-
- Illustration captions for Figs. 27, 28 and 31-34 have been added.
-
- Page 10: ... to lesson the difference ... changed to ... to lessen
- the difference ....
-
- Page 51: ... from Port Jackson to Cape Horn as 8.000 miles ...
- changed to ... from Port Jackson to Cape Horn as 8,000 miles ....
-
- Page 64-65: replicated text deleted.
-
- Page 133: exclamation mark inserted after Neptune has only _one
- third_ of this volume (as in surrounding text).
-
- Page 134: Professer Schumacher changed to Professor Schumacher.
-
- Page 139: M. Foucalt’s communication describing his experiments ...
- changed to M. Foucault’s communication describing his experiments ....
-
- Page 141: Ille sante aux yeux ... changed to Il saute aux yeux ....
-
- Page 171: ... south cost of Norway ... changed to ... south coast of
- Norway ...; The Troudhjem Light ... changed to The Trondhjem Light
- ...; Lower Farn Island Light changed to Lower Farne Island Light.
-
- Page 193: ... the heavenly bodies are Sun’s ... changed to ... the
- heavenly bodies are Suns ....
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Zetetic astronomy, by Samual Birley Rowbotham</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Zetetic astronomy</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>Earth not a globe! An experimental inquiry into the true figure of the earth etc.</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Samual Birley Rowbotham</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: January 28, 2023 [eBook #69892]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: deaurider, Harry Lamé and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ZETETIC ASTRONOMY ***</div>
-
-<div class="tnbox">
-
-<p class="noindent">Please see the <a href="#TN">Transcriber&#8217;s Notes</a> at the end of this text.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent blankbefore75">The cover image has been created for this e-text, and is in the public domain.</p>
-
-</div><!--tnbox-->
-
-<hr class="chap">
-
-<div class="container w35em x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Cover image">
-
-<hr class="chap">
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-
-<p class="highline15">[<i>Entered at Stationer’s Hall.</i>]</p>
-
-<hr class="short">
-
-<h1>ZETETIC ASTRONOMY.<br>
-<span class="fsize125 gesp1">EARTH NOT A GLOBE!</span></h1>
-
-<p class="highline25">AN EXPERIMENTAL INQUIRY<br>
-<span class="fsize70">INTO THE</span><br>
-<span class="fsize150">TRUE FIGURE OF THE EARTH:</span><br>
-<span class="fsize175 gesp2 ws2"><b>PROVING IT A PLANE,</b></span><br>
-<span class="fsize60">WITHOUT AXIAL OR ORBITAL MOTION;<br>
-AND THE</span><br>
-<span class="fsize200"><b>ONLY MATERIAL WORLD</b></span><br>
-<span class="fsize60">IN</span><br>
-<span class="fsize200"><b>THE UNIVERSE!</b></span></p>
-
-<hr class="short">
-
-<p class="highline2 fsize125">BY “PARALLAX.”</p>
-
-<p class="highline15 blankbefore2 gesp1"><span class="oldtype"><b>London:</b></span><br>
-<span class="fsize80">SIMPKIN, MARSHALL, AND CO., STATIONERS’ HALL COURT.</span><br>
-<span class="oldtype"><b>Bath:</b></span><br>
-<span class="fsize80">S. HAYWARD, GREEN STREET.</span><br>
-1865.<br>
-[<i>The Right of Translation is Reserved by the Author.</i>]</p>
-
-</div><!--title page-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<p class="center fsize80 blankbefore6 blankafter6 highline2">BATH:<br>
-PRINTED BY S. HAYWARD, GREEN STREET.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Pageiii">[iii]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">GENERAL CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<div class="toc">
-
-<p class="tocsec"><a href="#Sec1">SECTION I</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsectit">Introduction—Experiments proving the Earth to be a Plane.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsec"><a href="#Sec2">SECTION II</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsectit">The Earth no Axial or Orbital Motion.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsec"><a href="#Sec3">SECTION III</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsectit">The true distance of the Sun and Stars.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsec"><a href="#Sec4">SECTION IV</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsectit">The Sun moves in a Circle over the Earth, concentric with
-the North Pole.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsec"><a href="#Sec5">SECTION V</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsectit">Diameter of Sun’s path constantly changing.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsec"><a href="#Sec6">SECTION VI</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsectit">Cause of Day and Night, Seasons, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsec"><a href="#Sec7">SECTION VII</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsectit">Cause of “Sun rise” and “Sun set.”</p>
-
-<p class="tocsec"><a href="#Sec8">SECTION VIII</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsectit">Cause of Sun appearing larger when “Arising” and “Setting”
-than when on the Meridian.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsec"><a href="#Sec9">SECTION IX</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Pageiv">[iv]</span></p>
-
-<p class="tocsectit">Cause of Solar and Lunar Eclipses.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsec"><a href="#Sec10">SECTION X</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsectit">Cause of Tides.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsec"><a href="#Sec11">SECTION XI</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsectit">Constitution, Condition, and ultimate Destruction of the Earth
-by Fire.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsec"><a href="#Sec12">SECTION XII</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsectit">Miscellanea—Moon’s Phases—Moon’s appearance—Planet
-Neptune—Pendulum Experiments as Proofs of Earth’s motion.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsec"><a href="#Sec13">SECTION XIII</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsectit">Perspective on the Sea.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsec"><a href="#Sec14">SECTION XIV</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="tocsectit">General Summary—Application—“<span class="smcap">Cui Bono</span>.”</p>
-
-</div><!--toc-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page3">[3]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Sec1">ZETETIC ASTRONOMY.</h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="noindent">The term “zetetic” is derived from the Greek
-verb <i>zeteo</i>; which means to search or examine—to
-proceed only by inquiry. None can doubt
-that by making special experiments and collecting
-manifest and undeniable facts, arranging
-them in logical order, and observing what is
-naturally and fairly deducible, the result will be
-far more consistent and satisfactory than by
-framing a theory or system and assuming the
-existence of causes for which there is no direct
-evidence, and which can only be admitted “for
-the sake of argument.” All theories are of this
-character—“supposing instead of inquiring,
-imagining systems instead of learning from
-observation and experience the true constitution
-of things. Speculative men, by the force of genius
-may invent systems that will perhaps be greatly
-admired for a time; these, however, are phantoms
-which the force of truth will sooner or later
-dispel; and while we are pleased with the deceit,
-true philosophy, with all the arts and improvements
-that depend upon it, suffers. The real
-state of things escapes our observation; or, if it
-presents itself to us, we are apt either to reject it<span class="pagenum" id="Page4">[4]</span>
-wholly as fiction, or, by new efforts of a vain ingenuity
-to interweave it with our own conceits, and
-labour to make it tally with our favourite schemes.
-Thus, by blending together parts so ill-suited,
-the whole comes forth an absurd composition of
-truth and error. *&#160;* These have not done near
-so much harm as that pride and ambition which
-has led philosophers to think it beneath them to
-offer anything less to the world than a complete
-and finished system of nature; and, in order to
-obtain this at once, to take the liberty of inventing
-certain principles and hypotheses, from which
-they pretend to explain all her mysteries.”<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> “An Account of Sir Isaac Newton’s Discoveries.” By
-Professor Maclaurin, M.A., F.R.S., of the Chair of Mathematics
-in the University of Edinburgh.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Copernicus admitted, “It is not necessary that
-hypotheses should be true, or even probable; it
-is sufficient that they lead to results of calculation
-which agree with calculations. *&#160;* Neither
-let any one, so far as hypotheses are concerned,
-expect anything <i>certain</i> from astronomy; since
-that science can afford nothing of the kind;
-lest, in case he should adopt for truth things
-feigned for another purpose, he should leave this
-study more foolish than he came. *&#160;* The
-hypothesis of the terrestrial motion was <i>nothing
-but an hypothesis</i>, valuable only so far as it
-explained phenomena, and not considered with
-reference to absolute truth or falsehood.” The<span class="pagenum" id="Page5">[5]</span>
-Newtonian and all other “systems of nature”
-are little better than the “hypothesis of the
-terrestrial motion” of Copernicus. The foundations
-or premises are always unproved; no proof
-is ever attempted; the necessity for it is denied;
-it is considered sufficient that the assumptions
-shall <i>seem</i> to explain the phenomena selected.
-In this way it is that one theory supplants
-another; that system gives way to system as one
-failure after another compels opinions to change.
-This will ever be so; there will always exist in
-the mind a degree of uncertainty; a disposition
-to look upon philosophy as a vain pretension; a
-something almost antagonistic to the highest
-aspirations in which humanity can indulge, unless
-the practice of theorising be given up, and the
-method of simple inquiry, the “zetetic” process
-be adopted. “Nature speaks to us in a peculiar
-language; in the language of phenomena, she
-answers at all times the questions which are put
-to her; and such questions are experiments.”<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a>
-Not experiments only which corroborate what
-has previously been <i>assumed</i> to be true; but
-experiments in every form bearing on the subject
-of inquiry, before a conclusion is drawn or
-premises affirmed.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a> “Liebig’s Agricultural Chemistry,” p. 39.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>We have an excellent example of zetetic
-reasoning in an arithmetical operation; more<span class="pagenum" id="Page6">[6]</span>
-especially so in what is called the “Golden Rule,”
-or the “Rule-of-Three.” If one hundred weight of
-any article is worth a given sum, what will some
-other weight of that article be worth? The
-separate figures may be considered as the
-elements or facts of the inquiry; the placing and
-working of these as the logical arrangement;
-and the quotient or answer as the fair and natural
-deduction. Hence, in every zetetic process, the
-conclusion arrived at is essentially a quotient,
-which, if the details be correct, must, of necessity,
-be true beyond the reach or power of contradiction.</p>
-
-<p>In our courts of Justice we have also an
-example of the zetetic process. A prisoner is
-placed at the bar; evidence for and against him
-is advanced; it is carefully arranged and
-patiently considered; and only such a verdict
-given as could not in justice be avoided. Society
-would not tolerate any other procedure; it would
-brand with infamy whoever should assume a
-prisoner to be guilty, and prohibit all evidence
-but such as would corroborate the assumption.
-Yet such is the character of theoretical
-philosophy!</p>
-
-<p>The zetetic process is also the natural method
-of investigation; nature herself teaches it.
-Children invariably seek information by asking
-questions—by earnestly inquiring from those<span class="pagenum" id="Page7">[7]</span>
-around them. Question after question in rapid
-and exciting succession will often proceed from
-a child, until the most profound in learning and
-philosophy will feel puzzled to reply. If then
-both nature and justice, as well as the common
-sense and practical experience of mankind
-demand, and will not be content with less or
-other than the zetetic process, why should it be
-ignored and violated by the learned in philosophy?
-Let the practice of theorising be cast aside as one
-fatal to the full development of truth; oppressive
-to the reasoning power; and in every sense
-inimical to the progress and permanent improvement
-of the human race.</p>
-
-<p>If then we adopt the zetetic process to ascertain
-the true figure and condition of the Earth,
-we shall find that instead of its being a globe,
-and moving in space, it is the directly contrary—<span class="smcap">A
-Plane</span>; without motion, and unaccompanied
-by anything in the Firmament analogous to
-itself.</p>
-
-<p>If the Earth is a globe, and 25,000 miles in
-circumference, the surface of all standing water
-must have a certain degree of convexity—every
-part must be an arc of a circle, curvating from
-the summit at the rate of 8 inches per mile
-multiplied by the square of the distance. That
-this may be sufficiently understood, the following
-quotation is given from the <i>Encyclopædia<span class="pagenum" id="Page8">[8]</span>
-Britannica</i>, art. “Levelling.” “If a line which
-crosses the plumb-line at right angles be
-continued for any considerable length it will rise
-above the Earth’s surface (the Earth being
-globular); and this rising will be as the square
-of the distance to which the said right line is
-produced; that is to say, it is raised eight inches
-very nearly above the Earth’s surface at one
-mile’s distance; four times as much, or 32 inches,
-at the distance of two miles; nine times as
-much, or 72 inches, at the distance of three
-miles. This is owing to the globular figure of
-the Earth, and this rising is the difference
-between the true and apparent levels; the curve
-of the Earth being the true level, and the tangent
-to it the apparent level. So soon does the
-difference between the true and apparent levels
-become perceptible that it is necessary to make
-an allowance for it if the distance betwixt the
-two stations exceeds two chains.</p>
-
-<div class="container left" id="Fig01">
-
-<img src="images/fig01.png" alt="Diagram">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 1.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p class="noindent">Let B.&#160;D. be a small
-portion of the Earth’s
-circumference, whose
-centre of curvature is
-A. and consequently all
-the points of this arc
-will be on a level. But
-a tangent B.&#160;C. meeting
-the vertical line A.&#160;D. in C. will be the apparent<span class="pagenum" id="Page9">[9]</span>
-level at the point B. and therefore D.&#160;C. is the
-difference between the apparent and the true
-level at the point B.</p>
-
-<p>The distance C.&#160;D. must be deducted from the
-observed height to have the true difference of
-level; or the differences between the distances
-of two points from the surface of the Earth or
-from the centre of curvature A. But we shall
-afterwards see how this correction may be avoided
-altogether in certain cases. To find an expression
-for C.&#160;D. we have Euclid, third book, 36 prop.
-which proves that B.&#160;C² = C.&#160;D. (2 <i>A&#160;D</i> × <i>C&#160;D</i>);
-but since in all cases of levelling C.&#160;D. is exceedingly
-small compared with 2 A.&#160;D., we may
-safely neglect C.&#160;D² and then B&#160;C² = 2 A.&#160;D × C.&#160;D. or
-C.&#160;D = <span class="horsplit"><span class="top">B.&#160;C²</span>
-<span class="bot">2 A.&#160;D</span></span>.
-Hence the depression of
-the true level is equal to the square of the
-distance divided by twice the radius of the
-curvature of the Earth.</p>
-
-<p>For example, taking a distance of four miles,
-the square of 4 = 16, and putting down twice the
-radius of the Earth’s curvature as in round
-figures about 8000 miles, we make the depression
-on four miles = <span class="horsplit"><span class="top">16</span><span class="bot">8000</span></span>
-of a mile = <span class="horsplit"><span class="top">16 × 1760</span><span class="bot">8000</span></span>
-yards = <span class="horsplit"><span class="top">176</span><span class="bot">50</span></span>
-yards = <span class="horsplit"><span class="top">528</span><span class="bot">50</span></span>feet,
-or rather better than 10¹⁄₂ feet.</p>
-
-<p>Or, if we take the mean radius of the Earth as
-the mean radius of its curvature, and consequently
-2 A.&#160;D = 7,912 miles, then 5,280 feet
-being 1 mile, we shall have C.&#160;D. the depression
-in inches <span class="horsplit"><span class="top">5280 × 12 × B&#160;C²</span>
-<span class="bot">7912</span></span> = 8008 B.&#160;C² inches.
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page10">[10]</span></p>
-
-<p>The preceding remarks suppose the visual
-ray C.&#160;B. to be a straight line, whereas on
-account of the unequal densities of the air at
-different distances from the Earth, the rays of
-light are incurvated by refraction. The effect of
-this is to lessen the difference between the true
-and apparent levels, but in such an extremely
-variable and uncertain manner that if any constant
-or fixed allowance is made for it in formulæ
-or tables, it will often lead to a greater error than
-what it was intended to obviate. For though
-the refraction may at a mean compensate for
-about a seventh of the curvature of the earth, it
-sometimes exceeds a fifth, and at other times
-does not amount to a fifteenth. We have, therefore,
-made no allowance for refraction in the
-foregone formulæ.”</p>
-
-<p>If the Earth is a globe, there cannot be a
-question that, however irregular the <i>land</i> may
-be in form, the <i>water</i> must have a convex surface.
-And as the difference between the true and
-apparent level, or the degree of curvature would
-be 8 inches in one mile, and in every succeeding
-mile 8 inches multiplied by the square of the
-distance, there can be no difficulty in detecting
-either its actual existence or proportion. Experiments
-made upon the sea have been objected to on
-account of its constantly-changing altitude; and
-the existence of banks and channels which produce<span class="pagenum" id="Page11">[11]</span>
-a “a crowding” of the waters, currents, and
-other irregularities. Standing water has therefore
-been selected, and many important experiments
-have been made, the most simple of which is
-the following:—In the county of Cambridge
-there is an artificial river or canal, called the
-“Old Bedford.” It is upwards of twenty miles
-long, and passes in a straight line through that
-part of the fens called the “Bedford level” The
-water is nearly stationery—often entirely so, and
-throughout its entire length has no interruption
-from locks or water-gates; so that it is in every
-respect well adapted for ascertaining whether
-any and what amount of convexity really exists.
-A boat with a flag standing three feet above the
-water, was directed to sail from a place called
-“Welney Bridge,” to another place called
-“Welche’s Dam.” These two points are six
-statute miles apart. The observer, with a good
-telescope, was seated in the water as a bather (it
-being the summer season), with the eye not
-exceeding eight inches above the surface. The
-flag and the boat down to the water’s edge
-were clearly <i>visible throughout the whole distance!</i>
-From this observation it was concluded
-that the water did not decline to any degree
-from the line of sight; whereas the water would
-be 6 feet higher in the centre of the arc of 6
-miles extent than at the two places Welney<span class="pagenum" id="Page12">[12]</span>
-Bridge and Welche’s Dam; but as the eye of
-the observer was only eight inches above the
-water, the highest point of the surface would be
-at one mile from the place of observation; below
-which point the surface of the water at the end
-of the remaining five miles would be 16 feet 8
-inches (5² × 8 = 200 inches). This will be rendered
-clear by the following diagram:—</p>
-
-<div class="container" id="Fig02">
-
-<img src="images/fig02.png" alt="Boating experiment">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 2.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p class="noindent">Let A&#160;B represent the arc of water from Welney
-Bridge to Welche’s Dam, six miles in length;
-and A&#160;L the line of sight, which is now a
-tangent to the arc A&#160;B; the point of contact,
-T, is 1 mile from the eye of the observer at A;
-and from T to the boat at B is 5 miles; the
-square of 5 miles multiplied by 8 inches is 200
-inches, or, in other words, that the boat at B
-would have been 200 inches or above 16 feet
-below the surface of the water at T; and the
-flag on the boat, which was 3 feet high, would
-have been 13 feet below the line-of-sight, A&#160;T&#160;L!!</p>
-
-<p>From this experiment it follows that the
-surface of standing water is <i>not convex</i>, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page13">[13]</span>
-therefore <i>that the Earth</i> <span class="smcap">is not a Globe</span>! On
-the Contrary, this simple experiment is all-sufficient
-to prove that the surface of the water is
-parallel to the line-of-sight, and is therefore
-horizontal, and that the Earth <i>cannot</i> be other
-than <span class="smcap">a Plane</span>! In diagram <a href="#Fig03">Figure 3</a> this is
-perfectly illustrated.</p>
-
-<div class="container" id="Fig03">
-
-<img src="images/fig03.png" alt="Boating experiment">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 3.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p class="noindent">A&#160;B is the line-of-sight, and C&#160;D the surface
-of the water equidistant from or parallel to it
-throughout the whole distance observed.</p>
-
-<p>Although, on account of the variable state
-of the water, objections have been raised to
-experiments made upon the sea-shore to test the
-convexity of the flood or ebb-tide level, none
-can be urged against observations made from
-higher altitudes. For example,—the distance
-across the Irish Sea between Douglas Harbour,
-in the Isle of Man, and the Great Orm’s Head
-in North Wales is 60 miles. If the earth is a
-globe, the surface of the water would form an
-arc 60 miles in length, the centre of which would
-be 1,944 feet higher than the coast line at either
-end, so that an observer would be obliged to
-attain this altitude before he could see the Welsh<span class="pagenum" id="Page14">[14]</span>
-coast from the Isle of Man: as shown in the
-diagram, <a href="#Fig04">Figure 4</a>.</p>
-
-<div class="container" id="Fig04">
-
-<img src="images/fig04.png" alt="Irish Sea">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 4.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p>It is well known, however, that from an
-altitude not exceeding 100 feet the Great
-Orm’s Head is visible in clear weather from
-Douglas Harbour. The altitude of 100 feet
-could cause the line of sight to touch the
-horizon at the distance of nearly 13 miles; and
-from the horizon to Orm’s Head being 47 miles,
-the square of this number multiplied by 8 inches
-gives 1472 feet as the distance which the Welsh
-coast line would be below the line of sight
-B&#160;C.—A representing the Great Orm’s Head,
-which, being 600 feet high, its summit would
-be 872 feet below the horizon.</p>
-
-<p>Many similar experiments have been made
-across St. George’s Channel, between points
-near Dublin and Holyhead, and always with
-results entirely incompatible with the doctrine
-of rotundity.</p>
-
-<p>Again, it is known that the horizon at sea,
-whatever distance it may extend to the right<span class="pagenum" id="Page15">[15]</span>
-and left of the observer on land, always appears
-as a straight line. The following experiment
-has been tried in various parts of the country.
-At Brighton, on a rising ground near the race
-course, two poles were fixed in the earth six
-yards apart, and directly opposite the sea.
-Between these poles a line was tightly stretched
-parallel to the distant horizon. From the centre
-of the line the view embraced not less than 20
-miles on each side, making a distance of 40
-miles. A vessel was observed sailing directly
-westwards; the line cut the rigging a little above
-the bulwarks, which it did for several hours or
-until the vessel had sailed the whole distance of
-40 miles. This will be understood by reference
-to the diagram, <a href="#Fig05">Figure 5</a>.</p>
-
-<div class="container" id="Fig05">
-
-<img src="images/fig05.png" alt="Brighton experiment">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 5.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p>If the Earth were a globe, the appearance
-would be as represented in <a href="#Fig06">Figure 6</a>.</p>
-
-<div class="container" id="Fig06">
-
-<img src="images/fig06.png" alt="Brighton experiment">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 6.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page16">[16]</span></p>
-
-<div class="container right" id="Fig07">
-
-<img src="images/fig07.png" alt="Brighton experiment">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 7.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p>The ship coming into view from the east
-would have to ascend an inclined plane for 20
-miles until it arrived at the centre of the arc
-A&#160;B, whence it would have to descend for the
-same distance. The square of 20 miles multiplied
-by 8 inches gives 266 feet as the amount
-the vessel would be below the line C&#160;D at the
-beginning and at the end of the 40 miles.</p>
-
-<p>If we stand upon the deck of a ship, or mount
-to the mast head; or go to the top of a mountain,
-or ascend above the Earth in a balloon,
-and look over the sea, the surface appears as a
-vast inclined plane rising up until in the distance
-it intercepts the line of sight. If a good mirror
-be held in the opposite direction, the horizon
-will be reflected as a well-defined mark or line
-across the centre, as represented in diagram,
-<a href="#Fig07">Figure 7</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Ascending or descending, the distant horizon
-does the same. It rises and falls with the<span class="pagenum" id="Page17">[17]</span>
-observer, and is always on a level with his eye.
-If he takes a position where the water surrounds
-him—as at the mast-head of a ship out of sight
-of land, or on the summit of a small island far
-from the mainland, the surface of the sea appears
-to rise up on all sides equally and to surround
-him like the walls of an immense amphitheatre.
-He seems to be in the centre of a large concavity,
-the edges of which expand or contract as he
-takes a higher or lower position. This appearance
-is so well known to sea-going travellers
-that nothing more need be said in its support.
-But the appearance from a balloon is familiar
-only to a small number of observers, and therefore
-it will be useful to quote from those who
-have written upon the subject.</p>
-
-<div class="quote">
-
-<p>“<i>The Apparent Concavity of the Earth as seen from a
-Balloon.</i>—A perfectly-formed circle encompassed the visible
-planisphere beneath, or rather the concavo-sphere it might
-now be called, for I had attained a height from which the
-surface of the Earth assumed a regularly hollowed or concave
-appearance—an optical illusion which increases as you recede
-from it. At the greatest elevation I attained, which was about
-a mile-and-a-half, the appearance of the World around
-me assumed a shape or form like that which is made by placing
-two watch-glasses together by their edges, the balloon apparently
-in the central cavity all the time of its flight at that elevation.”—<i>Wise’s
-Aeronautics.</i></p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore75">“Another curious effect of the aerial ascent was, that the
-Earth, when we were at our greatest altitude, positively
-appeared <i>concave</i>, looking like a huge dark bowl, rather than<span class="pagenum" id="Page18">[18]</span>
-the convex sphere such as we naturally expect to see it. *&#160;*&#160;*
-The horizon always appears to be on a level with our eye, and
-seems to rise as we rise, until at length the elevation of
-the circular boundary line of the sight becomes so marked
-that the Earth assumes the anomalous appearance as we have
-said of a <i>concave</i> rather than a <i>convex</i> body.”—<i>Mayhew’s
-Great World of London.</i></p>
-
-</div><!--quote-->
-
-<p>Mr. Elliott, an American æronaut, in a letter
-giving an account of his ascension from Baltimore,
-thus speaks of the appearance of the Earth
-from a balloon:—</p>
-
-<div class="quote">
-
-<p>“I don’t know that I ever hinted heretofore that the æronaut
-may well be the most sceptical man about the rotundity of the
-Earth. Philosophy imposes the truth upon us; but the view
-of the Earth from the elevation of a balloon is that of an immense
-terrestrial basin, the deeper part of which is that directly
-under one’s feet. As we ascend, the Earth beneath us seems
-to recede—actually to sink away—while the horizon gradually
-and gracefully lifts a diversified slope stretching away farther
-and farther to a line that, at the highest elevation, seems to close
-with the sky. Thus upon a clear day, the æronaut feels as if
-suspended at about an equal distance between the vast blue
-oceanic concave above, and the equally expanded terrestrial
-basin below.”</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore75">“The chief peculiarity of the view from a balloon, at a
-considerable elevation, was the altitude of the horizon, which
-remained practically on a level with the eye at an elevation of
-two miles, causing the surface of the Earth to appear <i>concave</i>
-instead of <i>convex</i>, and to recede during the rapid ascent, whilst
-the horizon and the balloon seemed to be stationary.”—<i>London
-Journal</i>, July 18, 1857.</p>
-
-</div><!--quote-->
-
-<p>During the important balloon ascents recently
-made for scientific purposes by Mr. Coxwell and<span class="pagenum" id="Page19">[19]</span>
-Mr. Glaisher, of the Royal Greenwich Observatory,
-the same phenomenon was observed—</p>
-
-<div class="quote">
-
-<p>“The horizon always appeared on a level with the car.”—Vide
-“Glaisher’s Report.”</p>
-
-</div><!--quote-->
-
-<p>The following diagram represents this appearance:—</p>
-
-<div class="container" id="Fig08">
-
-<img src="images/fig08.png" alt="Balloon">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 8.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p class="noindent">The surface of the earth C&#160;D appears to rise to
-the line-of-sight from the balloon, and “seems to
-close with the sky” at the points H&#160;H in the
-same manner that the ceiling and the floor of a
-long room, or the top and bottom of a tunnel
-appear to approach each other, and from the
-same cause, viz.: that they are <i>parallel to the
-line-of-sight, and therefore horizontal</i>.</p>
-
-<p>If the Earth’s surface were convex the observer,
-looking from a balloon, instead of seeing it
-gradually ascend to the level of the eye, would<span class="pagenum" id="Page20">[20]</span>
-have to look downwards to the horizon H&#160;H, as
-represented in <a href="#Fig09">figure 9</a>, and the amount of dip
-in the line-of-sight C&#160;H would be the greatest
-at the highest elevation.</p>
-
-<div class="container" id="Fig09">
-
-<img src="images/fig09.png" alt="Balloon flight">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 9.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p>Many more experiments have been made than
-are here described, but the selection now given
-is amply sufficient to prove that the surface of
-water is horizontal, and that the Earth, taken as
-a whole, its land and water together, is not a
-globe, has really no degree of sphericity; but is
-“to all intents and purposes” <span class="smcapall">A PLANE</span>!</p>
-
-<p>If we now consider the fact that when we
-travel by land or sea, and from any part of the
-known world, in a direction towards the North
-polar star, we shall arrive at one and the same
-point, we are forced to the conclusion that what
-has hitherto been called the North Polar region,
-is really <span class="smcap">the Centre of the Earth</span>. That<span class="pagenum" id="Page21">[21]</span>
-from this northern centre the land diverges and
-stretches out, of necessity, towards a circumference,
-which must now be called <span class="smcap">the Southern
-Region</span>: which is a vast circle, and not a pole
-or centre. That there is <span class="smcap">One Centre</span>—<span class="smcap">the
-North</span>, and <span class="smcap">One Circumference</span>—<span class="smcap">the South</span>.
-This language will be better understood by
-reference to the diagram <a href="#Fig10">Figure 10</a>.</p>
-
-<div class="container w50em" id="Fig10">
-
-<img src="images/fig10.jpg" alt="Map of flat earth">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 10.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p class="noindent">N represents the northern centre; and S&#160;S&#160;S
-the southern circumference—both icy or frozen<span class="pagenum" id="Page22">[22]</span>
-regions. That the south is an immense ring, or
-glacial boundary, is evident from the fact, that
-within the antarctic circle the most experienced,
-scientific, and daring navigators have failed in
-their attempts to sail, in a direct manner, completely
-round it. Lieut. Wilkes, of the American
-Navy, after great and prolonged efforts, and
-much confusion in his reckoning, and seeing no
-prospect of success, was obliged to give up his
-attempt and return to the north. This he acknowledged
-in a letter to Captain Sir James Clarke
-Ross, with whose intention to explore the south
-seas he had become acquainted, in which the
-following words occur: “I hope you intend to
-circumnavigate the antarctic circle. I made 70
-degrees of it.” Captain Ross, however, was himself
-greatly confused in his attempts to navigate
-the southern region. In his account of the
-voyage he says, at page 96—“We found ourselves
-every day from 12 to 16 miles by observation
-in advance of our reckoning.” “By our
-observations we found ourselves 58 miles to the
-eastward of our reckoning in two days.” And
-in this and other ways all the great navigators
-have been frustrated in their efforts, and have
-been more or less confounded in their attempts
-to sail round the Earth upon or beyond the
-antarctic circle. But if the southern region is a
-pole or centre, like the north, there would be<span class="pagenum" id="Page23">[23]</span>
-little difficulty in circumnavigating it, for the
-distance round would be comparatively small.
-When it is seen that the Earth is not a sphere,
-but a plane, having only one centre, the north;
-and that the south is the vast icy boundary of
-the world, the difficulties experienced by circumnavigators
-can be easily understood.</p>
-
-<p>Having given a surface or bird’s-eye view of
-the Earth, the following sectional representation
-will aid in completing the description.</p>
-
-<div class="container" id="Fig11">
-
-<img src="images/fig11.png" alt="Section through earth">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 11.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p class="noindent">E&#160;E represents the Earth; W&#160;W the “great deep,”
-or the waters which surround the land; N the
-northern centre; and S&#160;S sections of the southern
-ice. As the present description is purely zetetic,
-and as every fact must therefore have its fullest
-value assigned to it, and its consequences represented,
-a peculiarity must be pointed out in the
-foregoing diagram. It will be observed that from
-about the points E&#160;E the surface of the water
-rises towards the south S&#160;S. It is clearly
-ascertained that the altitude of the water in
-various parts of the world is much influenced by
-the pressure of the atmosphere—however this<span class="pagenum" id="Page24">[24]</span>
-pressure is caused—and it is well known that
-the atmospheric pressure in the south is constantly
-less than it is in the north, and therefore
-the water in the southern region must always be
-considerably higher than it is in the northern.
-Hence the peculiarity referred to in the diagram.
-The following quotation from Sir James Ross’s
-voyages, p. 483, will corroborate the above statements:—“Our
-barometrical experiments appear
-to prove that a gradual diminution of atmospheric
-pressure occurs as we proceed southwards from
-the tropic of Capricorn. *&#160;*&#160;* It has
-hitherto been considered that the mean pressure
-of the atmosphere at the level of the sea was
-nearly the same in all parts of the world, as no
-material difference occurs between the equator
-and the highest northern latitudes. *&#160;*&#160;*
-The causes of the atmospheric pressure being so
-<i>very much less</i> in the southern than in the
-northern hemispheres remains to be determined.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus, putting all theories aside, we have seen
-that direct experiment demonstrates the important
-truth, <i>that the Earth is an extended
-Plane</i>. Literally, “Stretched out upon the
-waters;” “Founded on the seas and established
-on the floods;” “Standing in the water and out
-of the water.” How far the southern icy region
-extends horizontally, or how deep the waters
-upon and in which the earth stands or is<span class="pagenum" id="Page25">[25]</span>
-supported are questions which cannot yet be
-answered. In Zetetic philosophy the foundation
-must be well secured, progress must be made
-step by step, making good the ground as we
-proceed; and whenever a difficulty presents
-itself, or evidence fails to carry us farther, we
-must promptly and candidly acknowledge it,
-and prepare for future investigation; but never
-fill up the inquiry by theory and assumption.
-In the present instance there is no practical
-evidence as to the extent of the southern ice and
-the “great deep.” Who shall say whether the
-depth and extent of the “mighty waters” <i>have</i> a
-limit, or constitute the “World without end?”</p>
-
-<p>Having advanced direct and special evidence
-that the surface of the earth is not convex, but,
-on the contrary, a vast and irregular plane, it
-now becomes important that the leading phenomena
-upon which the doctrine of rotundity has
-been founded should be carefully examined.
-First, it is contended that because the hull of an
-outward-bound vessel disappears before the mast
-head, the water is convex, and therefore the
-Earth is a globe. In this conclusion, however,
-there is an assumption involved, viz., that such
-a phenomenon <i>can only</i> result from a convex
-surface. Inquiry will show that this is erroneous.
-If we select for observation a few miles of straight
-and level railway, we shall find that the rails,<span class="pagenum" id="Page26">[26]</span>
-which are parallel, appear in the distance to
-approach each other. But the two rails which
-are nearest together do so more rapidly than
-those which are farthest asunder, as shown in
-the following diagram, <a href="#Fig12">Figure 12</a>.</p>
-
-<div class="container" id="Fig12">
-
-<img src="images/fig12.png" alt="Railway perspective">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 12.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p class="noindent">Let the observer stand at the point A, looking
-in the direction of the arrows; and the rails
-1.2.3.4. will appear to join at the point B, but
-the rail 5.6 will appear to have converged only
-as far as C towards B.</p>
-
-<p>Again, let a train be watched from the point
-A in <a href="#Fig13">Figure 13</a>.</p>
-
-<div class="container" id="Fig13">
-
-<img src="images/fig13.png" alt="Railway perspective">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 13.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p class="noindent">The observer looking from A, with his eye midway
-between the bottom of the carriage and the
-rail, will see the diameter of the wheels gradually
-diminish as they recede. The lines 1.2 and 1.4
-will appear to approach each other until at the
-point B they will come together, and the space,<span class="pagenum" id="Page27">[27]</span>
-including the wheels, between the bottom of the
-carriage and the rail will there disappear. The
-floor of the carriage will seem to be sliding without
-wheels upon the rail 1.2; but the lines 5.6
-and 7.8 will yet have converged only to C
-and D.</p>
-
-<p>The same phenomenon may be observed with
-a long row of lamps, where the ground is a
-straight line throughout its entire length as
-represented in <a href="#Fig14">Figure 14</a>.</p>
-
-<div class="container" id="Fig14">
-
-<img src="images/fig14.png" alt="Street lamps perspective">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 14.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p class="noindent">The lines 1.2 and A&#160;D will converge at the
-point D and the pedestal of the lamp at D will
-seem to have disappeared, but the line 3.4,
-which represents the true altitude of the lamps,
-will only have converged to the point C.</p>
-
-<p>A narrow bank running along the side of a
-straight portion of railway, upon which poles are
-placed for supporting the wires of the electric
-telegraph will produce the same appearance, as
-shown in <a href="#Fig15">Figure 15</a>.</p>
-
-<div class="container" id="Fig15">
-
-<img src="images/fig15.png" alt="Railway perspective">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 15.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page28">[28]</span></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">The bank having the altitude 1.3 and 2.4 will,
-in the distance of two or three miles (according
-to its depth) disappear to the eye of an observer
-placed at Figure 1; and the telegraph pole at
-Figure 2 will seem not to stand upon a bank at
-all, but upon the actual railway. The line 3.4
-will merge into the line 1.2 at the point B, while
-the line 5.6 will only have descended to the
-position C.</p>
-
-<div class="container" id="Fig16">
-
-<img src="images/fig16.png" alt="Ship in perspective">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 16.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p>Many other familiar instances could be given
-to show the true law of perspective; which is, that
-parallel lines appear in the distance to converge
-to one and the same datum line, but to reach it
-at different distances if themselves dissimilarly
-distant. This law being remembered, it is easy
-to understand how the hull of an outward-bound
-ship, although sailing upon a plane surface disappears
-before the mast-head. In <a href="#Fig16">Figure 16</a>,
-let A&#160;B represent the surface of the water;
-C&#160;H the line of sight; and E&#160;D the altitude
-of the mast-head. Then, as A&#160;B and C&#160;H are
-nearer to each other than A&#160;B and E&#160;D, they
-will converge and appear to meet at the point<span class="pagenum" id="Page29">[29]</span>
-H, which is the practical, or, as it would be
-better to call it, the <i>optical</i> horizon. The hull
-of the vessel being contained within the lines
-A&#160;B and C&#160;H, must gradually diminish as these
-converge, until at H, or the horizon, it enters
-the vanishing point and disappears; but the
-mast-head represented by the line E&#160;D is still
-<i>above</i> the horizon at H, and will require to sail
-more or less, according to its altitude, beyond
-the point H before it sinks to the line C&#160;H, or,
-in other words, before the lines A&#160;B and E&#160;D
-form the same angle as A&#160;B and C&#160;H.</p>
-
-<p>It will be evident also that should the elevation
-of the observer be greater than at C, the
-horizon or vanishing point would not be formed
-at H, but at a greater distance; and therefore
-the hull of the vessel would be longer visible.
-Or, if, when the hull has disappeared at H,
-the observer ascends from the elevation at C
-to a higher position nearer to E, it will again
-be seen. Thus all these phenomena which
-have so long been considered as proofs of the
-Earth’s rotundity are really optical sequences of
-the contrary doctrine. To argue that because
-the lower part of an outward-bound ship disappears
-before the highest the water must be
-round, is to <i>assume</i> that a <i>round</i> surface <i>only</i>
-can produce this effect! But it is now shown
-that a <i>plane</i> surface <i>necessarily</i> produces this<span class="pagenum" id="Page30">[30]</span>
-effect; and therefore the assumption is not
-required, and the argument involved is fallacious!</p>
-
-<p>It may here be observed that no help can be
-given to this doctrine of rotundity by quoting
-the prevailing theory of perspective. The law
-represented in the foregoing diagrams is the
-“law of nature.” It may be seen in every layer
-of a long wall, in every hedge and bank of the
-roadside, and indeed in every direction where
-lines and objects run parallel to each other; but
-no illustration of the contrary perspective is ever
-to be seen! except in the distorted pictures,
-otherwise cleverly and beautifully drawn as they
-are, which abound in our public and private
-collections.</p>
-
-<p>The theory which affirms that parallel lines
-converge only to one and the same point upon
-the eye-line is an error. It is true only of lines
-equidistant from the eye-line. It is true that
-parallel lines converge to one and the same <i>eye-line</i>,
-but <i>meet it at different distances when
-more or less apart from each other</i>. This is the
-true law of perspective as shown by Nature
-herself; any other idea is fallacious and will
-deceive whoever may hold and apply it to
-practice.</p>
-
-<p>As it is of great importance that the difference
-should be clearly understood, the following<span class="pagenum" id="Page31">[31]</span>
-diagram is given. Let E&#160;L (<a href="#Fig17">Figure 17</a>) represent
-the eye-line and C the vanishing point of
-the lines, 1 C 2 C; then the lines 3.4.5.6, although
-converging <i>somewhere</i> to the line E&#160;L, will
-not do so to the point C, but 3 and 4 will
-proceed to D and 5 and 6 to H. It is repeated,
-that lines <i>equidistant</i> from the <i>datum</i> will converge
-on the <i>same point</i> and at the <i>same
-distance</i>; but lines <i>not</i> equidistant will converge
-on the same <i>datum</i> but at <i>different distances</i>!
-A very good illustration of the difference is given
-in <a href="#Fig18">Figure 18</a>. Theoretic perspective would bring
-the lines 1, 2, and 3 to the same <i>datum</i> line
-E&#160;L and to the <i>same point</i> A. But the true<span class="pagenum" id="Page32">[32]</span>
-or natural law would bring the lines 2 and 3 to
-the point A because equidistant from the eye-line
-E&#160;L; but the line 1 being farther from
-E&#160;L than either 2 or 3, would be taken beyond
-the point A on towards C, until it formed the
-<i>same angle</i> upon the line E&#160;L as 2 and 3 form
-at the point A.</p>
-
-<div class="container" id="Fig17">
-
-<img src="images/fig17.png" alt="Vanishing points">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 17.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<div class="container" id="Fig18">
-
-<img src="images/fig18.png" alt="Vanishing points">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 18.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p>The subject of perspective will not be rendered
-sufficiently clear unless an explanation be given
-of the cause and character of what is technically
-called the “vanishing point.” Why do objects,
-even when raised above the earth, vanish at a
-given distance? It is known, and can easily be
-proved by experiment, that “the range of the
-eye, or diameter of the field of vision is 110°;
-consequently this is the <i>largest</i> angle under
-which an object can be seen. The range of vision
-is from 110° to 1°. *&#160;* The <i>smallest</i> angle
-under which an object can be seen is upon an
-average for different sights the 60th part of a
-degree, or <i>one minute</i> in space; so that when an
-object is removed from the eye 3000 times its
-own diameter, it will only just be distinguishable;
-consequently, the greatest distance at which we
-can behold an object, like a shilling, of an inch
-in diameter is 3000 inches or 250 feet.”<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> It
-may, therefore, be very easily understood that a
-line passing over the hull of a ship, and continuing<span class="pagenum" id="Page33">[33]</span>
-parallel to the surface of the water,
-must converge to the vanishing point at the
-distance of about 3000 times its own elevation;
-in other words, if the surface of the hull be
-10 feet above the water it will vanish at
-3,000 times 10 feet; or nearly six statute
-miles; but if the mast-head be 30 feet above
-the water, it will be visible for 90,000 feet or
-over 17 miles; so that it could be seen upon
-the horizon for a distance of eleven miles <i>after
-the hull had entered the vanishing point</i>! Hence
-the phenomenon of a receding ship’s hull being
-the first to disappear, which has been so universally
-quoted and relied upon as proving the
-rotundity of the Earth is fairly and logically
-a proof of the very contrary! It has been misapplied
-in consequence of an erroneous view of
-the law of perspective, and the desire to support
-a theory. That it is valueless for such a purpose
-has already been shown; and that, even if there
-were no question of the Earth’s form involved,
-it could not arise from the convexity of the
-water, is proved by the following experiment:—Let
-an observer stand upon the sea-shore with
-the eye at an elevation of about six feet above
-the water, and watch a vessel until it is just
-“hull down.” If now a good telescope be applied
-the hull will be distinctly <i>restored to sight</i>!
-From which it must be concluded that it had<span class="pagenum" id="Page34">[34]</span>
-disappeared through the influence of perspective,
-and not from having sunk behind the summit
-of a convex surface! Had it done so it would
-follow that the telescope had either carried the
-line-of-sight through the mass of water, or over
-its surface and down the other side! But the
-power of “looking round a corner” or penetrating
-a dense and extensive medium has never yet
-been attributed to such an instrument! If the
-elevation of the observer be much greater than
-six feet the distance at which the vanishing point
-is formed will be so great that the telescope may
-not have power enough to magnify or enlarge
-the angle constituting it; when the experiment
-would appear to fail. But the failure would
-only be apparent, for a telescope of sufficient
-power to magnify at the horizon or vanishing
-point would certainly restore the hull at the
-greater distance.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[3]</a> “Wonders of Science,” by Mayhew, p. 357.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<div class="container w40em" id="Fig19">
-
-<img src="images/fig19.jpg" alt="Flat earth map">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 19.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p>An illustration or proof of the Earth’s
-rotundity is also supposed to be found in the
-fact that navigators by sailing due east or west
-return in the opposite direction. Here, again, a
-supposition is involved, viz., that upon a globe
-<i>only</i> could this occur. But it is easy to prove
-that it could take place as perfectly upon a
-circular plane as upon a sphere. Let it first be
-clearly understood what is really meant by
-sailing <i>due east and west</i>. Practically it is<span class="pagenum" id="Page35">[35]</span>
-sailing at right angles to north and south: this
-is determined ordinarily by the mariners’
-compass, but more accurately by the meridian
-lines which converge to the northern centre of
-the Earth. Bearing this in mind, let N
-in <a href="#Fig19">Figure 19</a> represent the northern centre;
-and the lines N.&#160;S. the directions north and
-south. Then let the small arrow, Figure 1,
-represent a vessel on the meridian of Greenwich,
-with its head W. at right angles, or due west;
-and the stern E due east. It is evident that in<span class="pagenum" id="Page36">[36]</span>
-passing to the position of the arrow, Figure 2,
-which is still due west or square to the meridian,
-the arc 1.2 must be described; and in sailing
-still farther under the same condition, the arcs
-2.3, 3.4, and 4.1 will be successively passed over
-until the meridian of Greenwich, Figure 1, is
-arrived at, which was the point of departure.
-Thus a mariner, by keeping the head of his
-vessel due west, or at right angles to the north
-and south, practically circumnavigates a plane
-surface; or, in other words, he describes a circle
-<i>upon a plane</i>, at a greater or lesser distance
-from the centre N, and being at all times square
-to the radii north and south, he is <i>compelled</i> to
-do so—<i>because</i> the earth is a plane, having a
-central region, towards which the compass and
-the meridian lines which guide him, converge.
-So far, then, from the fact of a vessel sailing due
-west coming home from the east, and <i>vice versa</i>,
-being a proof of the earth’s rotundity, it is simply
-a phenomenon, consistent with and dependent
-upon its being a plane! The subject may be
-perfectly illustrated by the following simple
-experiment:—Take a round table, fix a pin in
-the centre; to this attach a thread, and extend
-it to the edge. Call the centre the north and
-the circumference the south; then, at any
-distance between the centre and the circumference,
-a direction at right angles to the thread<span class="pagenum" id="Page37">[37]</span>
-will be due east and west; and a small object, as
-a pencil, placed across or square to the thread,
-to represent a ship, may be carried completely
-round the table without its right-angled position
-being altered; or, the right-angled position
-firmly maintained, the vessel must of necessity
-describe a circle on being moved from right to
-left or left to right. Referring again to the
-diagram, <a href="#Fig19">Figure 19</a>, the vessel may sail from the
-north towards the south, upon the meridian
-Figure 1, and there turning due west, may pass
-Cape Horn, represented by D, and continue its
-westerly course until it passes the point C, or
-the Cape of Good Hope, and again reaches the
-meridian, Figure 1, upon which it may return to
-the north. Those, then, who hold that the earth
-is a globe because it can be circumnavigated,
-have an argument which is logically incomplete
-and fallacious. This will be seen at once by
-putting it in the syllogistic form:—</p>
-
-<div class="syllogism">
-
-<p>A globe <i>only</i> can be circumnavigated:</p>
-
-<p>The Earth has been circumnavigated:</p>
-
-<p>Therefore the Earth is a globe.</p>
-
-</div><!--syllogism-->
-
-<p>It has been shown that a <i>plane</i> can be
-circumnavigated, and therefore the first or major
-proposition is false; and, being so, the conclusion
-is false. This portion of the subject furnishes a
-striking instance of the necessity of, at all times,<span class="pagenum" id="Page38">[38]</span>
-proving a proposition by direct and immediate
-evidence, instead of quoting a natural phenomenon
-as a proof of what has previously been
-assumed. But a theory will not admit of this
-method, and therefore the zetetic process, or
-inquiry before conclusion, entirely eschewing
-assumption, is the only course which can lead to
-simple and unalterable truth. Whoever creates
-or upholds a theory, adopts a monster which
-will sooner or later betray and enslave him, or
-make him ridiculous in the eyes of practical
-observers.</p>
-
-<p>Closely following the subject of circumnavigation,
-the gain and loss of time discovered on
-sailing east and west is referred to as another
-proof of rotundity. But this illustration is
-equally fallacious with the last, and from the
-same cause, viz., the assumption that a <i>globe
-only</i> could produce the effect observed. It will
-be seen, by reference to diagram, <a href="#Fig19">Figure 19</a>, that
-the effect must take place equally upon a plane
-as upon a globe. Let the ship, W&#160;E, upon the
-meridian, Figure 1, at 12 at noon, begin to sail
-towards the position, Figure 2, which it will
-reach the next day at 12, or in 24 hours: the sun
-during the same 24 hours will have returned
-only to Figure 1, and will require to move for
-another hour or more until it reaches the ship
-at Figure 2, making 25 hours instead of 24, in<span class="pagenum" id="Page39">[39]</span>
-which the sun would have returned to the ship,
-if it had remained at Figure 1. In this way, the
-sun is more and more behind the meridian time
-of the ship, as it proceeds day after day upon its
-westerly course, so that on completing the
-circumnavigation the ship’s time is a day later
-than the solar time, reckoning to and from the
-meridian of Greenwich. But the contrary follows
-if the ship sails from Figure 1 towards Figure 4,
-or the east, because it will meet the sun one
-hour earlier than the 24 hours which would be
-required for it to pass on to Figure 1. Hence,
-on completing the circle 1.4.3.2.1, the time at the
-ship would be one day in advance of the time at
-Greenwich, or the position Figure 1. Captain
-Sir J. C. Ross, at page 132, vol. 2, says—“November
-25, having by sailing to the eastward
-gained 12 hours, it became necessary, on
-crossing the 180th degree and entering upon
-west longitude, in order to have our time
-correspond with that of England, to have two
-days following of the same date, and by
-this means lose the time we had gained,
-and still were gaining, as we sailed to the
-eastward.”</p>
-
-<p>In further illustration of this matter, and to
-impress the mind of the readers with its importance
-as an evidence in support of the theory of<span class="pagenum" id="Page40">[40]</span>
-the earth’s sphericity, several authors have given
-the following story:—Two brothers, twins, born
-within a few minutes of each other, and therefore
-of the same age, on growing to manhood went
-to sea. They both circumnavigated the earth,
-but in opposite directions; and when they
-again met, one was a day older than the
-other!</p>
-
-<p>Whatever truth there may be in this account,
-it is here shown to be no more favourable to the
-idea of rotundity than it is to the opposite fact
-that the earth is a plane; as both forms will
-permit of the same effect.</p>
-
-<p>Another phenomenon supposed to prove rotundity,
-is found in the fact that Polaris, or the
-north polar star, gradually sinks to the horizon
-as the mariner approaches the equator, on
-passing which it becomes invisible. First, it is
-an ordinary effect of perspective for an object
-to appear lower and lower as the observer
-recedes. Let any one try the experiment of
-looking at a lighthouse, church spire, monument,
-gas-lamp, or other elevated object, from the
-distance of a few yards, and notice the angle at
-which it is observed: on going farther away, the
-angle will diminish and the object appear lower,
-until, if the distance be sufficiently great, the
-line-of-sight to the object, and the apparently<span class="pagenum" id="Page41">[41]</span>
-ascending surface of the Earth upon which it
-stands will converge to the angle which constitutes
-the vanishing point; at a single yard
-beyond which it will be invisible. This, then, is
-the necessary result of the everywhere visible
-law of perspective operating between the eye-line
-and the plane surface upon which the object
-stands; and has no relation whatever to rotundity.</p>
-
-<p>It is not denied that a similar depression of
-a distant object would take place upon a globe;
-it is simply contended that it would not occur
-upon a globe exclusively. But if the Earth is a
-sphere and the pole star hangs over the northern
-axis, it would be impossible to see it for a single
-degree beyond the equator, or 90 degrees from
-the pole. The line-of-sight would become a
-tangent to the sphere, and consequently several
-thousand miles out of and divergent from the
-direction of the pole-star. Many cases, however,
-are on record of the north polar star being
-visible far beyond the equator, as far even as the
-tropic of Capricorn. In the <i>Times</i> newspaper
-of May 13, 1862, under the head of “Naval and
-Military Intelligence,” it is stated that Captain
-Wilkins distinctly saw the Southern Cross and
-the polar star at midnight in 23·53 degrees
-of latitude, and longitude 35·46.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page42">[42]</span></p>
-
-<div class="container w40em" id="Fig20">
-
-<img src="images/fig20.jpg" alt="Earth as a globe">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 20.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p>This would be utterly impossible if the Earth
-were a globe, as shown in the diagram, <a href="#Fig20">Figure 20</a>.
-Let N represent the north pole, E&#160;E the equator,
-C&#160;C the tropic of Capricorn, and P the polar
-star. It will be evident that the line-of-sight
-C&#160;D being a tangent to the Earth beyond the
-equator E must diverge from the axis N and
-could not by any known possibility cause the
-star P to be visible to an observer at C. No
-matter how distant the star P, the line C&#160;D
-being divergent from the direction N&#160;P could
-never come in contact with it. The fact, then,
-that the polar star has often been seen from
-many degrees beyond the equator, is really an<span class="pagenum" id="Page43">[43]</span>
-important argument against the doctrine of the
-Earth’s rotundity.</p>
-
-<p>It has been thought that because a pendulum
-vibrates more rapidly in the northern region
-than at the equator, the Earth is thereby proved
-to be a globe; and because the variation in the
-velocity is not exactly as it should be if all the
-surface of the Earth were equidistant from the
-centre, it has been concluded that the Earth is
-an oblate spheroid, or that its diameter is rather
-less through the poles than it is through the
-equator. The difference was calculated by Newton
-to be the 235th part of the whole diameter;
-or that the polar was to the equatorial diameter
-as 689 to 692. Huygens gave the proportion as
-577 to 875 or a difference of about one-third of
-the whole diameter. Others have given still
-different proportions; but recently the difference
-of opinion has become so great that many have
-concluded that the Earth is really instead of
-oblate an <i>oblong</i> spheroid. It is certain that
-the question when attempted to be answered by
-measuring arcs of the meridian, is less satisfactory
-than was expected. This will be evident
-from the following quotation from the account
-of the ordnance survey of Great Britain, which
-was conducted by the Duke of Richmond, Col.
-Mudge, General Roy, Mr. Dalby, and others,<span class="pagenum" id="Page44">[44]</span>
-who measured base lines on Hounslow Heath
-and Salisbury Plain with glass rods and steel
-chains: “when these were connected by a chain
-of triangles and the length computed the result
-did not differ more than one inch from the
-actual measurements—a convincing proof of the
-accuracy with which all the operations had been
-conducted.</p>
-
-<p>The two stations, of Beachy Head in Sussex
-and Dunnose in the Isle of Wight, are visible
-from each other, and more than 64 miles
-asunder, nearly in a direction from east to west;
-their exact distance was found by the geodetical
-operations to be 339,397 feet (64 miles and 1477
-feet). The azimuth, or bearing of the line
-between them with respect to the meridian, and
-also the latitude of Beachy Head, were determined
-by astronomical observations. From
-these data the length of a degree perpendicular
-to the meridian was computed; and this, compared
-with the length of a meridional degree
-in the same latitude, gave the proportion of the
-polar to the equatorial axis. The result thus
-obtained, however, differed considerably from
-that obtained by meridional degrees. It has been
-found impossible to explain the want of agreement
-in a satisfactory way. *&#160;* By comparing
-the celestial with the terrestrial arcs, the length
-of degrees in various parallels was determined<span class="pagenum" id="Page45">[45]</span>
-as in the following table:—</p>
-
-<table class="standard">
-
-<tr>
-<th>&#160;</th>
-<th colspan="3">Latitude of<br>middle<br>point.</th>
-<th><span class="padl2 padr2">Fathoms.</span></th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th>&#160;</th>
-<th>°</th>
-<th>′</th>
-<th>″</th>
-<th>&#160;</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="text"><span class="padr4">Arbury Hill and Clifton</span></td>
-<td class="numbers">52</td>
-<td class="numbers">50</td>
-<td class="numbers">29·8</td>
-<td class="numbers">60,766</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="text"><span class="padr4">Blenheim and Clifton</span></td>
-<td class="numbers">52</td>
-<td class="numbers">38</td>
-<td class="numbers">56·1</td>
-<td class="numbers">60,769</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="text"><span class="padr4">Greenwich and Clifton</span></td>
-<td class="numbers">52</td>
-<td class="numbers">28</td>
-<td class="numbers">&#8199;5·7</td>
-<td class="numbers">60,794</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="text"><span class="padr4">Dunnose and Clifton</span></td>
-<td class="numbers">52</td>
-<td class="numbers">&#8199;2</td>
-<td class="numbers">19·8</td>
-<td class="numbers">60,820</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="text"><span class="padr4">Arbury Hill and Greenwich</span></td>
-<td class="numbers">51</td>
-<td class="numbers">51</td>
-<td class="numbers">&#8199;4·1</td>
-<td class="numbers">60,849</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="text"><span class="padr4">Dunnose and Arbury Hill</span></td>
-<td class="numbers">51</td>
-<td class="numbers">35</td>
-<td class="numbers">18·2</td>
-<td class="numbers">60,864</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="text"><span class="padr4">Blenheim and Dunnose</span></td>
-<td class="numbers">51</td>
-<td class="numbers">13</td>
-<td class="numbers">18·2</td>
-<td class="numbers">60,890</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="text"><span class="padr4">Dunnose and Greenwich</span></td>
-<td class="numbers">51</td>
-<td class="numbers">&#8199;2</td>
-<td class="numbers">54·2</td>
-<td class="numbers">60,884</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>This table presents a singular deviation from
-the common rule; for instead of the degrees
-<i>increasing</i> as we proceed from north to south,
-they appear to <i>decrease</i>, as if the Earth were an
-<i>oblong</i> instead of an <i>oblate</i> spheroid. *&#160;* The
-measurements of small arcs of the meridian in
-other countries have presented similar instances.”<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[4]</a> Encyclopedia of Geography, by Hugh Murray and
-several Professors in the University of Edinburgh.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>A number of French Academicians who
-measured above three degrees of the meridian
-in Peru, gave as the result of their labours the
-first degree of the meridian from the equator as
-56,653 toises; whilst another company of Academicians,
-who proceeded to Bothnia in Lapland,
-gave as the result of their calculation 57,422
-toises for the length of a degree cutting the
-polar circle. But a more recent measurement
-made by the Swedish Astronomers in Bothnia
-shows the French to have been incorrect, having<span class="pagenum" id="Page46">[46]</span>
-given the degree there 196 toises more than the
-true length. Other observations have been made,
-but as no two sets of experiments agree in result,
-it would be very unsatisfactory to conclude from
-them that the Earth is an oblate spheroid.</p>
-
-<p>Returning to the pendulum, it will be found
-to be equally unsatisfactory as a proof of this
-peculiar rotundity of the Earth. It is argued
-that as the length of a seconds pendulum at the
-equator is 39,027 inches, and 39,197 inches at
-the north pole, that the Earth must be a globe,
-having a less diameter through its axis than
-through its equator. But this proceeds upon
-the <i>assumption</i> that the Earth <i>is</i> a globe having
-a “centre of attraction of gravitation,” towards
-which all bodies gravitate or fall; and as the
-pendulum is a falling body under certain
-restraint, the fact that it oscillates or falls more
-rapidly at the north than it does at the equator,
-is a proof that the north is nearer to the centre
-of attraction, or the centre of the Earth, than is
-the equatorial region; and, of course, if nearer,
-the radius must be shorter; and therefore the
-“Earth is a spheroid flattened at the poles.”
-This is very ingenious and very plausible, but,
-unfortunately for its character as an argument,
-the essential evidence is wanting that the Earth
-is a globe at all! whether oblate or oblong, or
-truly spherical, are questions logically misplaced.<span class="pagenum" id="Page47">[47]</span>
-It should also be first proved that <i>no other</i>
-cause could operate besides greater proximity to
-the centre of gravity, to produce the variable
-oscillations of a pendulum. This not being
-attempted, the whole subject must be condemned
-as logically insufficient, irregular, and worthless
-for its intended purpose. Many philosophers
-have ascribed the alterations in the oscillations
-of a pendulum to the diminished temperature
-of the northern centre. That the heat gradually
-and almost uniformly diminishes on passing
-from the equator to the north is well ascertained.
-“The mean annual temperature of the whole
-Earth at the level of the sea is 50° Fah. For
-different latitudes it is as under:—</p>
-
-<table class="standard">
-
-<tr>
-<th colspan="3">&#160;</th>
-<th>Degrees.</th>
-<th colspan="3">&#160;</th>
-<th>Inches.</th>
-<th>&#160;</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="text">Latitude</td>
-<td class="text">(Equator)</td>
-<td class="numbers"><span class="padr2">&#8199;0</span></td>
-<td class="numbers">84·2</td>
-<td class="text">Length</td>
-<td class="text">of</td>
-<td class="text">Pendulum</td>
-<td class="numbers">39,027</td>
-<td rowspan="9">&#160;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="numbers"><span class="padr2">10</span></td>
-<td class="numbers">82·6</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td rowspan="9">&#160;</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="numbers"><span class="padr2">20</span></td>
-<td class="numbers">78·1</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="numbers"><span class="padr2">30</span></td>
-<td class="numbers">71·1</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="numbers"><span class="padr2">40</span></td>
-<td class="numbers">62·6</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="text">(London)</td>
-<td class="numbers"><span class="padr2">50</span></td>
-<td class="numbers">53·6</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="numbers">39,139</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="numbers"><span class="padr2">60</span></td>
-<td class="numbers">45·0</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="numbers"><span class="padr2">70</span></td>
-<td class="numbers">38·1</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="numbers"><span class="padr2">80</span></td>
-<td class="numbers">33·6</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="text">(Pole)</td>
-<td class="numbers"><span class="padr2">90</span></td>
-<td class="numbers">00·0</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="numbers">39,197</td>
-<td class="left"><span class="fn"><a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5"
-class="fnanchor">[5]</a><span class="fsize110">”</span></span></td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">[5]</a> “Million of Facts,” by Sir Richard Phillips, p. 475.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>“All the solid bodies with which we are
-surrounded are constantly undergoing changes
-of bulk corresponding to the variations of temperature.
-*&#160;* The expansion and contraction
-of metals by heat and cold form subjects of<span class="pagenum" id="Page48">[48]</span>
-serious and careful attention to chronometer
-makers, as will appear by the following statements:—The
-length of the pendulum vibrating
-seconds, in vacuo, in the latitude of London
-(51° 31′ 8″ north), at the level of the sea, and at
-the temperature of 62°, has been ascertained
-with the greatest precision to be 39·13929 inches:
-now, as the metal of which it is composed is
-constantly subject to variation of temperature, it
-cannot but happen that its <i>length</i> is constantly
-varying; and when it is further stated that if
-the “bob” be let down ¹⁄₁₀₀th of an inch, the
-clock will lose 10 seconds in 24 hours; that the
-elongation of ¹⁄₁₀₀₀th of an inch will cause it
-to lose one second per day; and that a change
-of temperature equal to 30° Fah. will alter its
-length ¹⁄₅₀₀₀th part and occasion an error in
-the rate of going of 8 seconds per day, it will
-appear evident that some plan must be devised
-for obviating so serious an inconvenience.”<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">[6]</a> “Noad’s Lectures on Chemistry,” p. 41.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>From these data it is readily seen that the
-variations in the rate of a pendulum as it is
-carried from the equator towards the north are
-sufficiently explained, without supposing that
-they arise from a peculiar spheroidal form of
-the Earth.</p>
-
-<p>Others have attributed the variable motions
-of the pendulum to increased density of the air<span class="pagenum" id="Page49">[49]</span>
-on going northwards. That the condition of the
-air must have some influence in this respect will
-be seen from the following extract from experiments
-on pendulums by Dr. Derham, recorded
-in numbers 294 and 480 of the <i>Philosophical
-Transactions</i>:—“The arches of vibration <i>in
-vacuo</i> were larger than in the open air, or in the
-receiver before it was exhausted; the enlargement
-or diminution of the arches of vibration
-were <i>constantly proportional</i> to the <i>quantity of
-air</i>, or rarity, or density of it, which was left in
-the receiver of the air-pump. And as the
-<i>vibrations</i> were <i>longer</i> or <i>shorter</i>, <i>so</i> the <i>times</i>
-were accordingly, viz., two seconds in an hour
-when the vibrations were longest, and less and
-less as the air was re-admitted, and the vibrations
-shortened.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus there are two distinct and tangible
-causes which necessarily operate to produce the
-variable oscillations of a pendulum, without
-supposing any distortion in the supposed
-rotundity of the Earth. First, if the pendulum
-vibrates in the air, which is colder and therefore
-denser in the north than at the equator, it must
-be more or less resisted in its passage through
-it; and, secondly, if it vibrates <i>in vacuo</i>, the
-temperature being less, the length must be less,
-the arcs of vibration less, and the velocity greater.
-In going towards the equator, the temperature<span class="pagenum" id="Page50">[50]</span>
-increases, the length becomes greater, the arcs
-increase, and the times of vibration diminish.</p>
-
-<p>Another argument for the globular form of
-the Earth is the following:—The degrees of
-longitude radiating from the north pole gradually
-increase in extent as they approach the equator;
-beyond which they again converge towards the
-south. To this it is replied that no actual
-measurement of a degree of longitude has ever
-been made south of the equator! If it be said
-that mariners have sailed round the world in the
-southern region and have <i>computed</i> the length
-of the degrees, it is again replied that such
-evidence is unfavourable to the doctrine of
-rotundity. It will be seen from the following
-table of what the degrees of longitude would be
-if the earth were a globe of 25,000 miles circumference,
-and comparing these with the results of
-practical navigation, that the diminution of
-degrees of longitude beyond the equator is
-purely imaginary.</p>
-
-<p>Latitudes at different longitudes:—</p>
-
-<table class="standard">
-
-<colgroup>
-<col span="4" class="wauto">
-<col span="2" class="w03em">
-<col class="wauto">
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="20" class="text">Latitude</td>
-<td class="numbers"> 1</td>
-<td class="center bot">=</td>
-<td class="numbers">59·99</td>
-<td class="text">nautical
-<td class="text">miles.</td>
-<td>&#160;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="numbers">10</td>
-<td class="center bot">=</td>
-<td class="numbers">59·09</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td>&#160;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="numbers">20</td>
-<td class="center bot">=</td>
-<td class="numbers">56·38</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td>&#160;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="numbers">30</td>
-<td class="center bot">=</td>
-<td class="numbers">51·96</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td>&#160;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="numbers">34</td>
-<td class="center bot">=</td>
-<td class="numbers">49·74</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="text">(Cape Town)</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="numbers">40</td>
-<td class="center bot">=</td>
-<td class="numbers">45·96</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td>&#160;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="numbers">45</td>
-<td class="center bot">=</td>
-<td class="numbers">42·45</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="text">(Port Jackson, Sydney)</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="numbers">50</td>
-<td class="center bot">=</td>
-<td class="numbers">38·57</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td>&#160;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="numbers">56</td>
-<td class="center bot">=</td>
-<td class="numbers">33·55</td>
-<td colspan="3" class="text">(Cape Horn)</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="numbers">60</td>
-<td class="center bot">=</td>
-<td class="numbers">30·00</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td>&#160;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="numbers"><span class="pagenum" id="Page51">[51]</span>65</td>
-<td class="center bot">=</td>
-<td class="numbers">25·36</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td>&#160;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="numbers">70</td>
-<td class="center bot">=</td>
-<td class="numbers">20·52</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td>&#160;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="numbers">75</td>
-<td class="center bot">=</td>
-<td class="numbers">15·53</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td>&#160;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="numbers">80</td>
-<td class="center bot">=</td>
-<td class="numbers">10·42</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td>&#160;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="numbers">85</td>
-<td class="center bot">=</td>
-<td class="numbers">&#8199;5·53</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td>&#160;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="numbers">86</td>
-<td class="center bot">=</td>
-<td class="numbers">&#8199;4·19</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td>&#160;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="numbers">87</td>
-<td class="center bot">=</td>
-<td class="numbers">&#8199;3·14</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td>&#160;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="numbers">88</td>
-<td class="center bot">=</td>
-<td class="numbers">&#8199;2·09</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td>&#160;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="numbers">89</td>
-<td class="center bot">=</td>
-<td class="numbers">&#8199;1·05</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td>&#160;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="numbers">90</td>
-<td class="center bot">=</td>
-<td class="numbers">&#8199;0·00</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td>&#160;</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>According to the above table (which is copied
-from a large Mercator’s chart in the library of
-the Mechanics’ Institute, Royal Hill, Greenwich),
-the distance round the Earth at the Antarctic
-circle would only be about 9,000 miles. But
-practical navigators give the distance from the
-Cape of Good Hope to Port Jackson as 8,000
-miles; from Port Jackson to Cape Horn as
-8,000 miles; and from Cape Horn to the Cape
-of Good Hope, 6,000 miles, making together
-22,000 miles. The average longitude of these
-places is 45°, at which parallel the circuit of the
-Earth, if it be a globe, should only be 14,282
-miles. Here, then, is an error between the
-theory of rotundity and practical sailing of 7,718
-miles. But there are several statements made
-by Sir James Clarke Ross which tend to make
-the disparity even greater: at page 236, vol. 2,
-of “South Sea Voyages,” it is said “From near
-Cape Horn to Port Philip (in Melbourne, Australia)
-the distance is 9,000 miles.” These two
-places are 143 degrees of longitude from each<span class="pagenum" id="Page52">[52]</span>
-other. Therefore the whole extent of the Earth’s
-circumference is a mere arithmetical question.
-If 143 degrees make 9,000 miles, what will be
-the distance made by the whole 360 degrees
-into which the surface is divided? The answer
-is, 22,657 miles; or, 8,357 miles more than the
-theory of rotundity would permit. It must be
-borne in mind, however, that the above distances
-are nautical measure, which, reduced to statute
-miles, gives the actual distance round the Southern
-region at a given latitude as 26,433 statute
-miles; or nearly 1,500 miles more than the
-largest circumference ever assigned to the Earth
-at the equator.</p>
-
-<p>But actual measurement of a degree of longitude
-in Australia or some other land far south
-of the equator can alone place this matter beyond
-dispute. The problem to be solved might be
-given as the following:—A degree of longitude
-in England at the latitude of 50° N. is 38·57
-nautical or 45 statute miles; at the latitude of
-Port Jackson in Australia, which is 45° S., a
-degree of longitude, if the Earth is a globe,
-should be 42·45 nautical or 49·52 statute miles.
-But if the Earth is a plane, and the distances
-above referred to as given by nautical men are
-correct, a degree of longitude on the parallel of
-Port Jackson will be 69·44 statute miles, being
-a difference of 19·92 or nearly 20 statute miles.<span class="pagenum" id="Page53">[53]</span>
-In other words, a degree of longitude along the
-southern part of Australia ought to be, <i>if the
-Earth is a plane</i>, nearly 20 miles greater than
-a degree of longitude on the southern coast of
-England. This is the point which has yet to be
-settled. The day is surely not far distant when
-the scientific world will demand that the question
-be decided by proper geodetical operations!
-And this not altogether for the sake of determining
-the true figure of the Earth, but also for
-the purpose of ascertaining, if possible, the cause
-of the many anomalies observed in navigating
-the southern region. These anomalies have led
-to the loss of many vessels and the sacrifice of
-a fearful amount of life and property. “In the
-southern hemisphere, navigators to India have
-often fancied themselves east of the Cape when
-still West, and have been driven ashore on the
-African coast, which according to their reckoning
-lay behind them. This misfortune happened to
-a fine frigate, the “Challenger,” in 1845.”<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a>
-“Assuredly there are many shipwrecks from
-alleged errors in reckoning which <i>may</i> arise
-from a somewhat false idea of the general form
-and measurement of the Earth’s surface. Such
-a subject, therefore, ought to be candidly and
-boldly discussed.”<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">[7]</a> “Tour through Creation,” by the Rev. Thomas
-Milner, M.A.</p>
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">[8]</a> “The Builder,” Sept. 20, 1862, in a “review” of a
-recently-published work on Astronomy.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page54">[54]</span></p>
-
-<p>It is commonly believed that surveyors when
-laying out railways and canals, are obliged to
-allow 8 inches per mile for the Earth’s curvature;
-and that if this were not done in the latter case
-the water would not be stationary, but would
-flow on until at the end of one mile in each
-direction, although the canal should have the
-same depth throughout, the surface would stand
-8 inches higher in the middle than at the ends.
-In other words, that the bottom of a canal in
-which the allowance of 8 inches per mile had
-not been made, would be a chord to the surface
-of the contained water, which would be an arc
-of a circle. To this it is replied, that both in
-regard to railways and canals, wherever an
-allowance has been attempted the work has not
-been satisfactory; and so irregular were the results
-in the earlier days of railway, canal, and other
-surveying, that, the most eminent engineers
-abandoned the practice of the old “forward
-levelling” and allowing for convexity; and
-adopted what is now called the “double sight”
-or “back-and-fore sight” method. It was considered
-that whether the surface were convex or
-horizontal, or whether the convexity were more
-or less than the supposed degree, would be of no
-consequence in practice if the spirit level or
-theodolite were employed to read both backwards
-and forwards; for whatever degree of convexity<span class="pagenum" id="Page55">[55]</span>
-existed, one “sight” would compensate for the
-other; and if the surface were horizontal, the
-same mode of levelling would apply. So important
-did the ordnance department of the Government
-consider this matter, that it was deemed
-necessary to make the abandonment of all ideas
-of rotundity compulsory, and in a standing order
-(No. 6) of the House of Lords as to the preparation
-of sections for railways, &amp;c., the following
-language is used, “That the section be drawn to
-the same <i>horizontal</i> scale as the plan; and
-to a vertical scale of not less than one inch
-to every one hundred feet; and shall show the
-surface of the ground marked on the plan, the
-intended level of the proposed work, the height
-of every embankment, and the depth of every
-cutting; and a <i>datum</i> <span class="smcapall">HORIZONTAL LINE</span>, which
-shall be <i>the same throughout the whole length
-of the work</i>, or any branch thereof respectively;
-and shall be referred to some fixed point stated
-in writing on the section, near some portion of
-such work; and in the case of a canal, cut, navigation,
-turnpike, or other carriage road, or
-railway, near either of the termini.” No. 44 of
-the standing orders of the House of Commons is
-similar to the above order (No. 6) of the House
-of Lords.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it is evident that the doctrine of the
-Earth’s rotundity cannot be mixed up with the<span class="pagenum" id="Page56">[56]</span>
-practical operations of civil engineers and
-surveyors, and to prevent the waste of time and
-the destruction of property which necessarily
-followed the doings of some who were determined
-to involve the convexity of the Earth’s
-surface in their calculations, the very Government
-of the country has been obliged to interfere!
-Every survey of this and other countries, whether
-ordnance or otherwise, is now carried out in
-connection with a horizontal datum, and therefore,
-as no other method proves satisfactory, it
-is virtually an admission by all the most practical
-scientific men of the day that the Earth <i>cannot
-be other than a plane</i>!</p>
-
-<p>An argument for the Earth’s convexity is
-thought by many to be found in the following
-facts:—“Fluid or semi-fluid substances in a
-state of motion invariably assume the globular
-form, as rain, hail, dew, mercury, and melted
-lead, which, poured from a great height becomes
-divided into spherical masses, as in the manufacture
-of small shot, &amp;c.” “There is abundant
-evidence from geology that the Earth has been
-a fluid or semi-fluid mass, and it could not,
-therefore, continue in a state of motion through
-space without becoming spherical.” Without
-denying that the Earth has been, at some former
-period, in a pulpy or semi-fluid state, it is
-requisite to prove beyond all doubt that it has a<span class="pagenum" id="Page57">[57]</span>
-motion upon axes and through space, or the
-conclusion that it is therefore spherical is
-premature and illogical. It will be shown in a
-subsequent part of this work, that such axial
-and orbital motion does not exist, and therefore
-any argument founded upon and including it as
-a fact is necessarily fallacious. In addition to
-this, it may be remarked that the tendency in
-falling fluids to become globular is owing to
-what has been called “attraction of cohesion”
-(not “attraction of gravitation”), which is very
-limited in its operation. It is confined to small
-quantities of matter. If, in the manufacture of
-small shot, the melted metal is allowed to fall in
-masses of several ounces or pounds, instead of
-being divided into particles weighing only a few
-grains, it will never take a spherical form, and
-shot of an inch in diameter could not be made
-by this process. Bullets of even half-an-inch
-diameter can only be made by casting the metal
-into spherical moulds. In tropical countries, the
-rain instead of falling in drops or small globules,
-often comes down in large irregular masses,
-which have no approximation whatever to
-sphericity. So that it is manifestly unjust to
-affirm of large masses of matter like the Earth
-that which only belongs to minute portions or a
-few grains in weight. The whole matter taken
-together entirely fails as an argument for the
-Earth’s rotundity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page58">[58]</span></p>
-
-<p>Those who hold that the Earth is a globe
-will often affirm, with visible enthusiasm, that in
-an eclipse of the Moon there is proof positive of
-rotundity. That the shadow of the Earth upon
-the Moon is always round; and that nothing
-but a globe could, in all positions, cast a circular
-shadow. Here again the essential requirements
-of an argument are wanting. It is <i>not proved</i>
-that the Moon is eclipsed <i>by a shadow</i>. It is
-<i>not proved</i> that the <i>Earth moves</i> in an orbit,
-and therefore takes <i>different positions</i>. It is <i>not
-proved</i> that the Moon receives her light from
-the Sun, and that therefore her surface is
-darkened by the Earth intercepting the Sun’s
-light. It will be shown in the proper place that
-the Earth has no motion in space or on axes;
-that it is not a shadow which eclipses the Moon;
-that the Moon is not a reflector of the Sun’s light,
-but is <i>self-luminous</i>; and therefore could not
-possibly be obscured by <i>a shadow</i> from any
-object whatever. The subject is only introduced
-here because it forms one of the category of
-supposed evidences of the Earth’s rotundity.
-But to call that an argument where every
-necessary proposition is assumed, is to stultify
-both the judgment and the reasoning powers!</p>
-
-<p>Many place great reliance upon what is called
-the “spherical excess” observed in levelling, as
-a proof of the Earth’s rotundity. In Castle’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page59">[59]</span>
-Treatise on Levelling it is stated that “the angles
-taken between any three points on the surface
-of the Earth by the theodolite, are, strictly
-speaking, spherical angles, and their sum must
-exceed 180 degrees; and the lines bounding
-them are not the chords as they should be, but
-the tangents to the Earth. This excess is
-inappreciable in common cases, but in the larger
-triangles it becomes necessary to allow for it, and
-to diminish each of the angles of the observed
-triangle by one-third of the spherical excess.
-To calculate this excess, divide the area of the
-triangle in feet by the radius of the Earth in
-seconds and the quotient is the excess.”</p>
-
-<p>The following observation as made by surveyors,
-also bears upon the subject:—If a spirit-level
-or theodolite be “levelled,” and a given point
-be read upon a graduated staff at the distance of
-about or more than 100 chains, this point will
-have an altitude slightly in excess of the altitude
-of the cross-hair of the theodolite; and if the
-theodolite be removed to the position of the
-graduated staff and again levelled, and a backward
-sight taken to the distance of 100 chains,
-another excess of altitude will be observed; and
-this excess will go on increasing as often as the
-experiment or backward and forward observation
-is repeated. From this it is argued that
-the line of sight from the spirit-level or<span class="pagenum" id="Page60">[60]</span>
-theodolite is a tangent, and that the surface of
-the Earth is therefore spherical.</p>
-
-<p>Of a similar character is the following
-observation:—If a theodolite or spirit-level be
-placed upon the sea-shore, and “levelled,” and
-directed towards the sea, the line of the horizon
-will be observed to be a given amount below the
-cross-hair of the instrument, to which a certain
-dip, or inclination from the level will have to be
-given to bring the cross-hair and the sea horizon
-together. It is concluded that as the sea horizon
-is always observed to be below the cross-hair of
-the “levelled” theodolite, the line of sight is a
-tangent, the surface of the water convex, and
-therefore the Earth is a globe.</p>
-
-<div class="container" id="Fig21">
-
-<img src="images/fig21.png" alt="Magnifying glass">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 21.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p>The conclusion derived from the last three
-observations is exceedingly plausible, and would
-completely satisfy the minds of scientific men as
-to the Earth’s sphericity if a perfect explanation
-could not be given. The whole matter has been
-specially and carefully examined; and one very
-simple experiment will show that the effects
-observed do not arise from rotundity in the
-Earth’s surface, but from a certain peculiarity in
-the instruments employed. Take a convex
-lens or a magnifying glass and hold it over
-a straight line drawn across a sheet of paper.
-If the glass be so held that a part of the straight
-line can be seen <i>through</i> it, and another part seen<span class="pagenum" id="Page61">[61]</span>
-<i>outside</i> it, a difference in the <i>direction</i> of the line
-will be observed, as shown in the diagram <a href="#Fig21">Figure
-21</a>. Let A&#160;B&#160;C represent a straight line. If a
-lens is now held an inch, or more, according to
-its focal length, over the part of the line A&#160;B,
-and the slightest amount out of its centre, that
-part of the line A&#160;B which passes under the lens
-will be seen in the direction of the figures 1.2;
-but if the lens be now moved a little out of its
-central position in the opposite direction, the
-line B&#160;C will be observed at 3.4, or below B&#160;C.
-A lens is a magnifying glass because it <i>dilates</i>
-or spreads out from its centre the objects
-observed through it Therefore whatever is
-magnified by it is seen a little out of its axis or
-centre. This is again necessitated by the fact
-that the axis or actual centre is always occupied
-by the cross-hair. Thus the line-of-sight in the
-theodolite or spirit-level not being axial or<span class="pagenum" id="Page62">[62]</span>
-absolutely central, reads upon a graduated staff
-a position which is necessarily slightly divergent
-from the axis of vision; and this is the source
-of that “spherical excess” which has so long
-been considered by surveyors as an important
-proof of the Earth’s rotundity. In this instance,
-as, indeed, in all the others given as evidence
-that the Earth is a globe, the premises do not
-fully warrant the conclusion—which is premature,—drawn
-before the whole subject is fairly
-examined; and when other causes are amply
-sufficient to explain the effects observed.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page63">[63]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Sec2"><span class="secno">SECTION 2.</span><br>
-<span class="chaptitle">THE EARTH NO AXIAL OR ORBITAL
-MOTION.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="noindent">If a ball be allowed to drop from the mast-head
-of a ship <i>at rest</i>, it will strike the deck at the
-foot of the mast. If the same experiment be
-tried with a ship <i>in motion</i>, the same result will
-be observed. Because, in the latter case, the
-ball is acted upon simultaneously by two forces at
-right angles to each other—one, the momentum
-given to it by the moving ship in the direction
-of its own motion, and the other the force of
-gravity, the direction of which is square to that
-of the momentum. The ball being acted upon
-by the two forces together will not go in the
-direction of either, but will take a diagonal<span class="pagenum" id="Page64">[64]</span>
-course, as shown in the following diagram,
-<a href="#Fig22">Figure 22</a>.</p>
-
-<div class="container w30em" id="Fig22">
-
-<img src="images/fig22.png" alt="Ball on ship">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 22.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<div class="container w45em" id="Fig23">
-
-<img src="images/fig23.png" alt="Ball on ship">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 23.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p>The ball passing from A to C by the force
-of gravity, and having at the moment of
-its liberation received a momentum from the
-ship in the direction A&#160;B, will by the conjoint
-action of the two forces, take the direction A&#160;D,
-falling at D, just as it would have fallen at C
-had the vessel remained at rest. In this way, it
-is contended by those who hold that the Earth
-is a moving sphere, a ball allowed to fall from
-the mouth of a deep mine reaches the bottom in
-an apparently vertical direction, the same as it
-would if the Earth were motionless. So far,
-there need be no discussion—the explanation is
-granted. But now let the experiment be
-modified in the following way:—Let the ball be
-thrown <i>upwards from</i> the mast-head of a
-moving vessel; it will partake as before of two<span class="pagenum" id="Page65">[65]</span>
-motions, the upward and the horizontal, and
-will take a diagonal course upwards and with the
-vessel until the two forces expend themselves,
-when it will begin to fall by the force of gravity
-only, and drop into the water far behind the
-ship, which is still moving horizontally.
-Diagram <a href="#Fig23">Figure 23</a> will illustrate this effect.
-The ball being thrown upwards in the direction
-A&#160;C, and the vessel moving from A to B, will
-cause it to pass in the direction A&#160;D, arriving at
-D when the vessel reaches B; the two forces<span class="pagenum" id="Page66">[66]</span>
-having expended themselves when the ball
-arrives at D, it will begin to descend by the
-force of gravity in the direction D&#160;B&#160;H, but
-during its fall the vessel will have reached the
-position S, so that the ball will drop far behind
-it at the point H. To bring the ball from D to
-S <i>two forces</i> would be required, as D&#160;H and
-D&#160;W; but as D&#160;W does not exist, the force of
-gravity operates <i>alone</i>, and the ball necessarily
-falls behind the vessel at a distance proportionate
-to the altitude attained at D, and the time
-occupied in falling from D to H.</p>
-
-<p>The same result will be observed on throwing
-a ball directly upwards from a railway carriage
-when in rapid motion, as shown in the following
-<a href="#Fig24">Figure 24</a>. While the carriage or tender passes
-from A to B, the ball thrown from A to C will
-reach the position D, but while the ball then<span class="pagenum" id="Page67">[67]</span>
-comes down by the force of gravity, <i>operating
-alone</i>, to the point H, the carriage will have
-advanced to W, so that the ball will always drop
-more or less behind the carriage, according to
-the force first given to it in the direction A&#160;C
-and the time occupied in ascending to D, and
-thence descending to H. It is therefore demanded
-that if the Earth had a motion upon
-axes from west to east, and a ball, instead of
-being dropped down a mine or allowed to fall
-from the mast head of a ship, be <i>shot upwards</i>
-into the air; from the moment of its beginning
-to descend the surface of the Earth would turn
-from under its direction, and it would fall behind
-or to the west of its line of descent. On making
-the experiment <i>no such effect is observed</i>, and
-therefore the conclusion is unavoidable, that the
-Earth <span class="smcapall">DOES NOT MOVE UPON AXES</span>!</p>
-
-<div class="container" id="Fig24">
-
-<img src="images/fig24.png" alt="Ball on train">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 24.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<div class="container w40em" id="Fig25">
-
-<img src="images/fig25.png" alt="Gun shot">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 25.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p>The following experiment has been tried, with
-the object of obtaining definite results. If the
-Earth is a globe, having a circumference of 25,000
-miles at the equator, the circumference at the
-latitude of London (51°) will be about 16,000
-statute miles; so that the motion of the Earth’s
-surface, if 25,000 miles in 24 hours at the
-equator, in England would be more than 700 feet
-per second. An air-gun was firmly fixed to a
-strong post, as shown at A in <a href="#Fig25">Figure 25</a>, and
-carefully adjusted by a plumb-line, so that it was<span class="pagenum" id="Page68">[68]</span>
-perfectly vertical. On discharging the gun, the
-ball ascended in the direction A&#160;C, and invariably
-(during several trials) descended within a few
-inches of the gun at A; twice it fell back upon
-the very mouth of the barrel. The average
-time that the ball was in the atmosphere was 16
-seconds; and, as half the time would be required
-for the ascent and half for the descent, it is
-evident that if the Earth had a motion once
-round its axis in 24 hours, the ball would have
-passed in 8 seconds to the point D, while the
-air-gun would have reached the position B&#160;H.
-The ball then commencing its descent, requiring
-also 8 seconds, would in that time have fallen to
-the point H, while the Earth and the gun would<span class="pagenum" id="Page69">[69]</span>
-have advanced as far as W. The time occupied
-being 8 seconds, and the Earth’s velocity being
-700 feet per second, the progress of the Earth
-and the air-gun to W, in advance of the ball at
-H, would be 5,600 feet! In other words, in
-these experiments, the ball, which always fell
-back to the place of its detachment, should have
-fallen 5,600 feet, or considerably more than one
-statute mile to the west of the air-gun! Proving
-beyond all doubt that the supposed axial motion
-of the Earth <span class="smcapall">DOES NOT EXIST</span>!</p>
-
-<p>The same experiment ought to suffice as
-evidence against the assumed motion of the
-Earth in an orbit; for it is difficult, if not
-impossible, to understand how the behaviour of
-the ball thrown from a vertical air-gun should
-be other in relation to the Earth’s forward
-motion in space than it is in regard to its
-motion upon axes. Besides, if it is proved <i>not</i>
-to move upon axes, the assumption that it
-moves in an orbit round the Sun is useless for
-theoretical purposes, and there is no necessity
-for either denying or in any way giving it
-farther consideration. But that no point may be
-taken without direct evidence, let the following
-experiment be tried:—Take two carefully-bored
-iron tubes, about two yards in length, and place
-them, one yard asunder, on the opposite sides of
-a wooden frame, or a solid block of wood or<span class="pagenum" id="Page70">[70]</span>
-masonry; so adjust them that their axes of vision
-shall be perfectly parallel to each other, and direct
-them to the plane of some notable fixed star, a
-few seconds previous to its meridian time. Let
-an observer be stationed at each tube; and the
-moment the star appears in the first tube, let a
-knock or other signal be given, to be repeated
-by the observer at the second tube when he first
-sees the star. A distinct period of time will
-elapse between the signals given, showing that
-the same star is not visible at the same moment
-by two lines of sight parallel to each other and
-only one yard asunder. A slight inclination of
-the second tube towards the first would be
-required for the star to be seen at the same
-moment. If now the tubes be left in their
-position for six months, the same star will be
-visible at the same meridian time, without the
-slightest alteration being required in the direction
-of the tubes. From which result it is
-concluded that if the Earth had moved <i>a single
-yard</i> in an orbit through space there would at
-least be the difference of time indicated by the
-signals, and the slight inclination of the tube
-which the difference in position of one yard
-required. But as no such difference in the
-direction of the tube is required, the conclusion
-is unavoidable that in six months a given
-meridian upon the Earth has not moved a single<span class="pagenum" id="Page71">[71]</span>
-yard, and that therefore the Earth has not the
-slightest degree of orbital motion—or motion
-at right angles to the meridian of a given star!
-It will be useless to say in explanation that the
-stars are so infinitely distant that a difference in
-the angle of inclination of the tube in six
-months could not be expected, as it will be
-proved in a subsequent section that <i>all</i> the stars
-are within a few thousand miles from the Earth’s
-surface!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page72">[72]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Sec3"><span class="secno">SECTION 3.</span><br>
-<span class="chaptitle">THE TRUE DISTANCE OF THE
-SUN AND STARS.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="noindent">As it is now demonstrated that the Earth is a
-plane, the distance of the Sun and Stars may
-readily be measured by plane trigonometry.
-The base line in any operation being horizontal
-and always a carefully measured one, the process
-becomes exceedingly simple. Let the altitude
-of the Sun be taken on a given day at 12 o’clock
-at the high-water mark on the sea shore at
-Brighton, in Sussex; and at the same hour at
-the high-water mark of the River Thames, near
-London Bridge; the difference in the Sun’s
-altitude taken simultaneously from two stations
-upon the same meridian, and the distance
-between the stations, or the length of the base
-line ascertained, are all the elements required
-for calculating the exact distance of the Sun<span class="pagenum" id="Page73">[73]</span>
-from London or Brighton; but as this distance
-is the hypothenuse of a triangle, whose base is
-the Earth’s surface, and vertical side the zenith
-distance of the Sun, it follows that the distance
-of the Sun from that part of Earth to which it is
-vertical is less than the distance from London.
-In the Diagram, <a href="#Fig26">Figure 26</a>, let L&#160;B represent
-the base line from London to Brighton, a
-distance of 51 statute miles. The altitude at L
-and at B taken at the same moment of time will
-give the distance L&#160;S or B&#160;S. The angle of
-altitude at L or B, with the length of L&#160;S or B&#160;S,
-will then give the vertical distance of the Sun S
-from E, or the place which is immediately
-underneath it. This distance will be thus found
-to be considerably less than 4,000 miles.</p>
-
-<div class="container" id="Fig26">
-
-<img src="images/fig26.png" alt="Height of sun">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 26.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p>The following are the particulars of an
-observation made, a few years ago, by the officers
-engaged in the Ordnance survey. Altitude of
-the Sun at London 55° 13′; altitude taken at<span class="pagenum" id="Page74">[74]</span>
-the same time, on the grounds of a public school,
-at Ackworth, in Yorkshire, 53° 2′; the distance
-between the two places in a direct line, as
-measured by triangulation, is 151 statute miles.
-From these elements the true distance of the
-Sun may be readily computed; and proved to
-be under 4,000 miles!</p>
-
-<p>Since the above was written, an officer of the
-Royal Engineers, in the head-quarters of the
-Ordnance Survey, at Southampton, has furnished
-the following elements of observations recently
-made:—</p>
-
-<table class="standard">
-
-<colgroup>
-<col class="w05em">
-<col span="5" class="wauto">
-<col class="w05em">
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2">&#160;</td>
-<td class="text">Southern</td>
-<td class="text">Station,</td>
-<td class="text">Sun’s</td>
-<td class="text">altitude,</td>
-<td class="numbers">45°</td>
-<td rowspan="2">&#160;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="text">Northern</td>
-<td class="center">ditto,</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="numbers">38°</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="7" class="center">Distance between the two stations, 800 statute miles.</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>The calculation made from these elements gives
-the same result, viz., that the actual distance of
-the Sun from the Earth is less than 4,000 miles.</p>
-
-<p>The same method of measuring distances
-applies equally to the Stars; and it is easy to
-demonstrate, beyond the possibility of doubt, so
-long as assumed premises are excluded, that all
-the visible objects in the firmament are contained
-within the distance of 6,000 miles!</p>
-
-<p>From these demonstrable distances it follows
-unavoidably that the <i>magnitude</i> of the Sun,
-Moon, Stars, &amp;c., is very small—much smaller
-than the Earth from which they are measured;
-and to which therefore they cannot possibly be
-other than secondary, and subservient.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page75">[75]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Sec4"><span class="secno">SECTION 4.</span><br>
-<span class="chaptitle">THE SUN MOVES IN A CIRCLE OVER
-THE EARTH, CONCENTRIC WITH
-THE NORTH POLE.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="noindent">As the Earth has been shown to be fixed, the
-motion of the Sun is a visible reality; and if it
-be observed from any northern latitude, and for
-any period before and after the time of southing,
-or passing the meridian, it will be seen to
-describe an arc of a circle; an object moving in
-an arc cannot return to the centre of such arc
-without having completed a circle. This the
-Sun does visibly and daily. To place the matter
-beyond doubt, the observation of the Arctic
-navigators may be referred to. Captain Parry,
-and several of his officers, on ascending high
-land in the vicinity of the north pole, repeatedly
-saw, for 24 hours together, the sun describing a
-circle upon the southern horizon.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page76">[76]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Sec5"><span class="secno">SECTION 5.</span><br>
-<span class="chaptitle">THE DIAMETER OF THE SUN’S
-PATH IS CONSTANTLY CHANGING—DIMINISHING
-FROM DECEMBER
-21<span class="smcapall">ST</span> TO JUNE 15<span class="smcapall">TH</span>, AND ENLARGING
-FROM JUNE TO DECEMBER.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="noindent">This is a matter of absolute certainty, proved by
-what is called, in technical language, the northern
-and southern declination, which is simply saying
-that the Sun’s path is nearest the north pole in
-summer, and farthest away from it in winter.
-This difference in position gives rise to the
-difference of altitude, as observed at various
-periods of the year, and which is shewn in the
-following table, given in “The Illustrated London
-Almanack,” for 1848, by Mr. Glaisher, of the
-Royal Observatory, Greenwich.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page77">[77]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Sun’s altitude at the time of Southing, or
-being on the meridian:—</p>
-
-<table class="sunaltitude">
-
-<tr>
-<th colspan="5">&#160;</th>
-<th class="padr4">Sun’s<br>altitude.</th>
-<th colspan="3">Time of Southing.</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<th colspan="6">&#160;</th>
-<th><span class="fsize80">M.</span></th>
-<th><span class="fsize80">S.</span></th>
-<th><span class="fsize80">(Common clock, or<br>London mean time.)</span></th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="text">June</td>
-<td class="number">15</td>
-<td rowspan="17" colspan="3">&#160;</td>
-<td class="angle">62°</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;0</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;4</td>
-<td class="text">before noon.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="number">30</td>
-<td class="angle">61²⁄₃°</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;3</td>
-<td class="number">18</td>
-<td class="text">afternoon.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="text">July</td>
-<td class="number">15</td>
-<td class="angle">59²⁄₃°</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;5</td>
-<td class="number">38</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="number">31</td>
-<td class="angle">56¹⁄₂°</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;6</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;4</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="text">Aug.</td>
-<td class="number">15</td>
-<td class="angle">52¹⁄₂°</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;0</td>
-<td class="number">11</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="number">31</td>
-<td class="angle">47°</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;0</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;5</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="text">Sep.</td>
-<td class="number">15</td>
-<td class="angle">38²⁄₃°</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;4</td>
-<td class="number">58</td>
-<td class="text">before noon.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="number">30</td>
-<td class="angle">35¹⁄₂°</td>
-<td class="number">10</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;6</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="text">Oct.</td>
-<td class="number">31</td>
-<td class="angle">24°</td>
-<td class="number">16</td>
-<td class="number">14</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="text">Nov.</td>
-<td class="number">30</td>
-<td class="angle">17°</td>
-<td class="number">10</td>
-<td class="number">58</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="text">Dec.</td>
-<td class="number">21</td>
-<td class="angle">12°</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;0</td>
-<td class="number">27</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="number">31</td>
-<td class="angle">15°</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;3</td>
-<td class="number">29</td>
-<td class="text">afternoon.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="text">Jan.</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;1</td>
-<td class="angle">15¹⁄₂°</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;3</td>
-<td class="number">36</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="number">15</td>
-<td class="angle">17°</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;9</td>
-<td class="number">33</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="number">31</td>
-<td class="angle">21°</td>
-<td class="number">13</td>
-<td class="number">41</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="text">Feb.</td>
-<td class="number">15</td>
-<td class="angle">25°</td>
-<td class="number">14</td>
-<td class="number">28</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="number">29</td>
-<td class="angle">30¹⁄₂°</td>
-<td class="number">12</td>
-<td class="number">43</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="2" class="text">March</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="number">15
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace"><span class="fsize200">{</span></td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="center">On the Equator<br>at 6 a.m.</td>
-<td rowspan="2" class="brace"><span class="fsize200">}</span></td>
-<td class="angle">36°</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;9</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;2</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="angle">38¹⁄₂°</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;0</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;0</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="number">21</td>
-<td rowspan="5" colspan="3">&#160;</td>
-<td class="angle">42¹⁄₂°</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;4</td>
-<td class="number">10</td>
-<td class="text">before noon.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="text">April</td>
-<td class="number">15</td>
-<td class="angle">48°</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;0</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;8</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="number">30</td>
-<td class="angle">53°</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;2</td>
-<td class="number">58</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="text">May</td>
-<td class="number">15</td>
-<td class="angle">57°</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;3</td>
-<td class="number">54</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-<td class="number">31</td>
-<td class="angle">60°</td>
-<td class="number">&#8199;2</td>
-<td class="number">37</td>
-<td class="center">„</td>
-</tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<p>In the following diagram (<a href="#Fig27">Fig. 27</a>) A&#160;A&#160;A
-represent the Sun’s daily path on December
-21st, and B&#160;B&#160;B the same on June 15th. N the
-North Pole, S the Sun, E Great Britain. The
-figures 1 2 3 the Arctic Circle, and 4 5 6 the<span class="pagenum" id="Page78">[78]</span>
-extent of sunlight. The arrows show the
-direction of the Sun’s motion.</p>
-
-<div class="container w40em" id="Fig27">
-
-<img src="images/fig27.jpg" alt="Map of flat world">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 27.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page79">[79]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Sec6"><span class="secno">SECTION 6.</span><br>
-<span class="chaptitle">CAUSE OF DAY AND NIGHT,
-SEASONS, &amp;c.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="noindent">The Sun S describes the circle A&#160;A&#160;A on the
-21st December once in 24 hours; hence in that
-period day and night occur to every part of the
-Earth, except within the Arctic circle. The light
-of the Sun gradually diminishing from S, to the
-Arctic circle 1 2 3, where it becomes twilight,
-does so according to the well-known law of
-radiation, equally in all directions—hence, the
-circle 4 5 6 represents the whole extent of the
-Sun’s light at any given time. The arc 4 E is
-the advancing or morning twilight, and 6 E the
-receding or evening twilight; to every place
-underneath a line drawn across the circle through
-S to N it is noonday. It will now be easily
-understood that as the Sun S moves in the
-direction of the arrows or from right to left, and
-completes the circle A&#160;A&#160;A in 24 hours, it will
-produce in that period morning, noon, evening,
-and night to all parts of the Earth in succession.
-On referring to the diagram, it will be seen that
-to England, E, the length of the day at this time
-of the year is the <i>shortest</i>, the amount of light
-being represented by the arc E&#160;E&#160;E; and also
-that the northern centre N remains in darkness<span class="pagenum" id="Page80">[80]</span>
-during the whole daily revolution of the Sun, the
-light of which terminates at the Arctic circle
-1 2 3. Thus, morning, noon, evening, midnight,
-the <i>shortest</i> days, or the Winter season, and the
-constant or six months’ darkness at the pole are
-all a part of one general phenomenon. As the
-Sun’s path begins now to diminish every day
-until in six months, or on the 15th of June,
-it describes the circle B&#160;B&#160;B, it is evident that
-the same extent of sunlight will reach over or
-beyond the pole N, as shown in the following
-diagram (<a href="#Fig28">Fig. 28</a>), when morning, noon, evening,
-and night will again occur as before; but the<span class="pagenum" id="Page81">[81]</span>
-amount of light passing over England, represented
-by the arc E&#160;E&#160;E, is now much larger than when
-the Sun was upon the circle A&#160;A&#160;A, and represents
-the <i>longest</i> days, or the <i>Summer</i> season,
-and the constant, or six months’ light at the
-pole. Thus, day and night, long and short days,
-Winter and Summer, the long periods of alternate
-light and darkness at the pole, arise simply from
-the Sun’s position in relation to the north pole.</p>
-
-<div class="container w40em" id="Fig28">
-
-<img src="images/fig28.jpg" alt="Map of flat world">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 28.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p>If the Earth is a globe, it is evident that
-Winter and Summer, and long and short days,
-will be of the same character and duration in
-corresponding latitudes, in the southern as in
-the northern hemisphere. But we find that in
-many respects there is a marked difference; for
-instance, in New Zealand, where the latitude is
-about the same as in England, a remarkable
-difference exists in the length of day and
-night. In the Cook’s Strait Almanack, for 1848,
-it is stated, “At Wellington, New Zealand,
-December 21, Sun rises 4h. 31m., and sets at
-7h. 29m., the day being 14 hours 58 minutes.
-June 21st, Sun rises at 7h. 29m., and sets at
-4h. 31m., the day being 9 hours and 2 minutes.
-In England the longest day is 16h. 34m., and
-the shortest day is 7h. 45m. Thus the <i>longest
-day</i> in New Zealand is 1 hour and 36 minutes
-<i>shorter</i> than the <i>longest day</i> in England; and
-the <i>shortest day</i> in New Zealand is 1 hour and<span class="pagenum" id="Page82">[82]</span>
-17 minutes <i>longer</i> than the shortest day in
-England.”</p>
-
-<p>In a recently published pamphlet, by W.
-Swainson, Esq., Attorney General, the following
-passage occurs:—“Compared with an English
-summer, that of Auckland is but little warmer,
-though much longer; but the nights in New
-Zealand are always cool and refreshing....
-The days are <i>one hour shorter</i> in the
-summer, and <i>one hour longer</i> in the winter than
-in England! of <i>twilight</i> there is <i>little</i> or <i>none</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>From a work, also recently published, on New
-Zealand, by Arthur S. Thompson, M.D., the
-following sentences are quoted:—“The summer
-mornings, even in the warmest parts of the
-colony are sufficiently fresh to exhilarate without
-chilling; and the seasons glide imperceptibly
-into each other. The days are <i>an hour shorter</i>
-at <i>each end</i> of the day in summer, and an hour
-longer in winter than in England.”</p>
-
-<p>A letter from a correspondent in New Zealand,
-dated Nelson, September 15, 1857, contains the
-subjoined passages:—“Even in summer people
-here have no notion of going without fires in the
-evening; but then, though the days are very
-warm and sunny, the nights are always cold.
-For seven months last summer we had not one
-day that the Sun did not shine as brilliantly as it
-does in England in the finest day in June; and<span class="pagenum" id="Page83">[83]</span>
-though it has more power here, the heat is not
-nearly so oppressive.... But then there is
-not the twilight which you get in England. Here
-it is light till about eight o’clock; then, in a few
-minutes, it becomes too dark to see anything,
-and the change comes over in almost no time.”
-“Twilight lasts but a short time in so low a
-latitude as 28 degrees, and no sooner does the
-Sun peep above the horizon, than all the
-gorgeous parade by which he is preceded is
-shaken off, and he comes in upon us in the most
-abrupt and unceremonious way imaginable.”<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a>
-These various peculiarities could not exist in the
-southern region if the Earth were spherical and
-moved upon axes, and in an orbit round the
-Sun. If the Sun is fixed, and the Earth revolves
-underneath it, the same phenomena should exist
-at the same distance on each side of the Equator.
-But such is not the case! What can operate to
-cause the twilight in New Zealand to be so much
-more sudden than it is in England? The
-southern “hemisphere” cannot revolve more
-rapidly than the northern! The distance round
-<i>a globe</i> would be the same at 50° south as at
-50° north, and as the whole globe would revolve
-once in 24 hours, the surface at the two places
-would move underneath the Sun with the same
-velocity, and the light would approach in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page84">[84]</span>
-morning and recede in the evening in exactly the
-same manner; yet the <i>very contrary</i> is the fact!
-The twilight in England in summer is slow and
-gradual, but in New Zealand it is rapid and
-abrupt; a difference which is altogether incompatible
-with the doctrine of the Earth’s rotundity.
-But, the Earth a plane, and it is a simple
-“matter of course.” Let E, in <a href="#Fig28">Figure 28</a>,
-represent England, and W New Zealand; the
-radius N&#160;E and the consequent circle round N
-is much less than the radius N&#160;W and its
-consequent circle round the same point. But as
-the larger circle, radius N&#160;W is passed over by
-the sunlight in the same time (24 hours) as the
-smaller circle, radius N&#160;E, the velocity is
-proportionately greater. The velocity is the
-space passed over multiplied by the time in
-passing, and as the space over New Zealand is
-much greater than the space over England, the
-velocity of the Sun-light must be much greater,
-and its morning and evening twilight necessarily
-more “abrupt and unceremonious;” and <i>therefore</i>,
-it might be said with strictly logical
-accuracy, the Earth is a Plane, and cannot
-possibly be a Globe!</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">[9]</a> Captain Basil Hall, R.N., F.R.S.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page85">[85]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Sec7"><span class="secno">SECTION 7.</span><br>
-<span class="chaptitle">CAUSE OF “SUNRISE” AND “SUNSET.”</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<div class="container" id="Fig29">
-
-<img src="images/fig29.png" alt="Sunrise">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 29.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p class="noindent">Although the Sun is at all times above and
-parallel to the Earth’s surface, he appears to
-ascend the firmament from morning until noon,
-and to descend and sink below the horizon at
-evening. This arises from a simple and everywhere
-visible law of perspective. A flock of
-birds, when passing over a flat or marshy
-country, always appears to descend as it recedes;
-and if the flock is extensive, the first bird
-appears lower, or nearer to the horizon than the
-last. When a balloon sails from an observer
-without increasing or decreasing its altitude, it
-appears gradually to approach the horizon. The
-farthest light in a row of lamps appears the
-lowest, although each one has the same altitude.
-Bearing these phenomena in mind, it will easily
-be seen how the Sun, although always parallel to
-the surface of the Earth, must appear to ascend
-when approaching, and descend after leaving the
-meridian or noon-day position. Let the line<span class="pagenum" id="Page86">[86]</span>
-A&#160;B, <a href="#Fig29">Fig. 29</a>, represent a portion of the Earth’s
-surface; C&#160;D of the Sun’s path, and H&#160;H, the
-line of sight. The surface of the Earth, A&#160;B,
-will appear to ascend from B to H, forming the
-horizon. When the Sun is traversing the line C&#160;D,
-in the direction of the arrows, he will appear to
-emerge from the horizon H, and to gradually
-ascend the line H&#160;D. When in the position 1,
-he will <i>appear</i> to be at the point 2; and when at
-3, the apparent position will be at 4; but when
-he arrives upon the meridian D, his apparent
-and actual, or noon-day position, will be the
-same. But now, from the point D, the Sun will
-appear to descend, as in <a href="#Fig30">Fig. 30</a>, and when he
-has passed from D to 1, he will appear at 2, and
-when really at 3 will appear at 4; and thus<span class="pagenum" id="Page87">[87]</span>
-continuing his course in the direction D&#160;C, he
-will reach the horizon at H, and disappear or
-“set” to the observer at H&#160;A. Thus “Sunrise”
-and “Sunset” are phenomena dependent entirely
-upon the fact that horizontal lines parallel to
-each other appear to approach or converge in
-the distance, the surface of the Earth being
-horizontal, and the line-of-sight of the observer
-and the Sun’s path being parallel with it,
-necessarily produce the observed phenomena.</p>
-
-<div class="container" id="Fig30">
-
-<img src="images/fig30.png" alt="Sunset">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 30.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page88">[88]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Sec8"><span class="secno">SECTION 8.</span><br>
-<span class="chaptitle">CAUSE OF SUN APPEARING
-LARGER WHEN RISING AND SETTING
-THAN WHEN ON THE MERIDIAN.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="noindent">It is well known that when a light of any kind
-shines through a dense medium it will appear
-larger than when seen through a lighter medium.
-This will be more remarkable when the medium
-holds aqueous particles in solution,—as in a
-damp or foggy atmosphere the light of a gas-lamp
-will seem greater at a given distance than
-it will under ordinary circumstances. In the
-diagram, <a href="#Fig30">Figure 30</a>, it is evident that H&#160;D is
-less than H 1, H 3, or H 5. The latter (H 5)
-represents the greater amount of atmosphere
-which the Sun has to shine through when
-approaching the horizon; and as the air near
-the Earth is both more dense and more damp,
-or holds more watery particles in solution, the
-light of the Sun must be dilated or enlarged as
-well as modified in colour. But the enlarged<span class="pagenum" id="Page89">[89]</span>
-appearance of the Sun when rising and setting
-is only an optical impression, as proved by
-actual measurement. “If the angle of the
-Sun or Moon be taken either with a tube or
-micrometer when they appear so large to the eye
-in the horizon, the measure is identical when
-they are in the meridian and appear to the eye
-and mind but half the size. The apparent
-distance of the horizon is three or four times
-greater than the zenith. Hence the mental
-mistake of horizontal size, for the angular
-dimensions are equal; the first 5° is apparently
-to the eye equal to 10° or 15° at 50° or 60° of
-elevation; and the first 15° fill a space to the
-eye equal to a third of the quadrant. This is
-evidently owing to the ‘habit of sight,’ for with
-an accurate instrument the measure of 5° near
-the horizon is equal to 5° in the zenith.”<a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">[10]</a> “Million of Facts,” by Sir Richard Philips, p. 537.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page90">[90]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Sec9"><span class="secno">SECTION 9.</span><br>
-<span class="chaptitle">CAUSE OF SOLAR AND LUNAR
-ECLIPSES.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="noindent">An Eclipse of the Sun is caused simply by the
-Moon passing before it, or between it and the
-observer on the Earth. Of this no question has
-been raised. But that an Eclipse of the Moon
-arises from a shadow of the Earth is in every
-respect unsatisfactory. The Earth has been
-proved to have no motion, either upon axes or
-in an orbit round the Sun, and therefore it could
-never come between the Sun and the Moon.
-The Earth is proved to be a Plane, always underneath
-the Sun and Moon, and therefore to speak
-of its intercepting the light of the Sun and thus
-casting its own shadow upon the Moon, is to say
-that which is impossible. Besides this, cases are
-on record of the Sun and Eclipsed Moon being
-above the horizon together. “The full Moon
-has sometimes been seen above the horizon
-before the Sun was set. A remarkable instance
-of this kind was observed at Paris on the 19th of<span class="pagenum" id="Page91">[91]</span>
-July, 1750, when the Moon appeared visibly
-Eclipsed while the Sun was distinctly to be seen
-above the horizon.”<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> “On the 20th of April,
-1837, the Moon appeared to rise Eclipsed before
-the Sun had set. The same phenomenon was
-observed on the 20th of September, 1717.”<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a>
-“In the lunar Eclipses of July 17, 1590; Nov.
-3, 1648; June 16, 1666; and May 26, 1668, the
-Moon rose Eclipsed whilst the Sun was still
-apparently above the horizon. Those <i>horizontal</i>
-Eclipses were noticed as early as the time of
-Pliny.”<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> The Moon’s entire surface, or that
-portion presented to the Earth has also been
-distinctly seen during the whole time of a total
-Eclipse, a phenomenon utterly incompatible with
-the doctrine that the Earth’s shadow is the cause
-of it. “The Moon has sometimes shown during
-a total Eclispe with an almost unaccountable
-distinctness. On Dec. 22, 1703, the Moon, when
-totally immersed in the Earth’s shadow, was
-visible at Avignon by a ruddy light of such
-brilliancy that one might have imagined her
-body to be transparent, and to be enlightened
-from behind; and on March 19th, 1848, it is<span class="pagenum" id="Page92">[92]</span>
-stated that so bright was the Moon’s surface
-during its total immersion, that many persons
-could not be persuaded that it was eclipsed.
-Mr. Forster, of Bruges, states, in an account of
-that eclipse, that the light and dark places on
-the moon’s surface could be almost as well made
-out as in an ordinary dull moonlight night.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">[11]</a> “Astronomy and Astronomical Instruments,” p. 105, by
-Geo. G. Carey.</p>
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">[12]</a> “McCulloch’s Geography,” p. 85.</p>
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">[13]</a> “Illustrated London Almanack for 1864,” the astronomical
-part in which is by James Glaisher, Esq., of the
-Greenwich Observatory.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>“Sometimes, in a total lunar eclipse, the
-moon will appear quite obscure in some parts of
-its surface, and in other parts will exhibit a high
-degree of illumination. *&#160;*&#160;* To a certain
-extent I witnessed some of these phenomena
-during the merely partial eclipse of February
-7th, 1860. *&#160;*&#160;* I prepared, during the
-afternoon of February 6th for witnessing the
-eclipse, without any distinct expectation of seeing
-much worthy of note. I knew, however, that
-upwards of eight-tenths of the disc would be
-covered, and I was anxious to observe with what
-degree of distinctness the eclipsed portion could
-be viewed, partly as an interesting fact, and
-partly with a view of verifying or discovering the
-weak points of an engraving (in which I am
-concerned) of a lunar eclipse.</p>
-
-<p>“After seeing the increasing darkness of the
-penumbra softly merging into the true shadow
-at the commencement of the eclipse (about 1
-o’clock a.m., Greenwich time) I proceeded with
-pencil and paper, dimly lighted by a distant lamp,<span class="pagenum" id="Page93">[93]</span>
-to note by name the different lunar mountains
-and plains (the so-called seas) over which the
-shadow passed. *&#160;*&#160;* During the first hour
-and ten minutes I had seen nothing unexpected.
-*&#160;*&#160;* I had repeatedly written down my
-observations of the remarkable clearness with
-which the moon’s eclipsed outline could be seen,
-both with the naked eye, and with the telescope;
-at 1 hour 58 minutes, however, I suddenly
-noted the ruddy colour of a <i>portion</i> of the moon.
-I may as well give my notes in the original
-words, as copied next day in a more connected
-form:—1h. 58m., Greenwich time. I am suddenly
-struck by the fact that the whole of the
-western seas of the moon are showing through
-the shadow with singular sharpness, and that the
-whole region where they lie has assumed a
-decidedly reddish tinge, attaining its greatest
-brightness at a sort of temporary polar region,
-having ‘Endymion’ about the position of its
-imaginary pole. I particularly notice that the
-‘Lake of Sleep’ has disappeared in this brightness,
-instead of standing out in a darker shade:
-and I notice that this so-called polar region is
-not parallel with the rim of the shadow, but
-rather west of it.—2h. 15m. Some clouds,
-though very thin and transparent, now intervene.—2h.
-20m. The sky is now cleared, How
-extraordinary is the appearance of the Moon<span class="pagenum" id="Page94">[94]</span>
-<i>Reddish</i> is not the word to express it; it is red—red
-hot! I endeavour to think of various red
-objects with which to compare it, and nothing
-seems so like as a <i>red-hot penny</i>—a red-hot
-penny with a little <i>white</i>-hot piece at its lower
-edge, standing out against a dark-blue back
-ground; only it is evidently not a mere disc, but
-beautifully rounded by shading.</p>
-
-<p>“Such is its appearance with the naked eye:
-with the telescope its surface varies more in tint
-than with the naked eye, and is not of quite so
-bright a red as when thus viewed. The redness
-continues to be most perceptible at a distance
-from the shadow’s southern edge, and to be
-greatest about the region of ‘Endymion.’ The
-Hercynian mountains (north of Grimaldus) are,
-however, of rather a bright red, and Grimaldus
-shows well. Mare Crisium and the western seas
-are wonderfully distinct. Not a trace to be seen
-of Aristarchus or Plato.—2h. 27m. It is now
-nearly the middle of the eclipse. The red colour
-is very brilliant to the naked eye. *&#160;*&#160;*
-After this, I noticed a progressive change of tint
-in the Moon.—2h. 50m. The Moon does not
-seem to the naked eye of so bright a red as
-before; and again I am reminded by its tint of
-red-hot copper, or rather copper which has
-begun to cool. The whole of Grimaldi is now
-uncovered. Through the telescope I notice a<span class="pagenum" id="Page95">[95]</span>
-decided grey shade at the lower part of the
-eclipsed portion, and the various small craters
-give it a stippled effect, like the old aqua-tint
-engravings. The upper part is reddish, but two
-graceful bluish curves, like horns, mark the form
-of the Hercynian mountains, and the bright
-region on the other limb of the Moon. These
-are visible also to the naked eye.</p>
-
-<p>“At 3h. 5m. the redness had almost disappeared;
-a very few minutes afterwards, no
-trace of it remained, and ere long clouds came
-on. I watched the Moon, however, occasionally
-gaining a glimpse of its disc, till a quarter to
-four o’clock, when, for the last time on that
-occasion, I saw it faintly appearing through the
-clouds, nearly a full Moon again; and then I
-took leave of it, feeling amply repaid for my
-vigil by the beautiful spectacle which I had
-seen.”<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">[14]</a> The Hon. Mrs. Ward, Trimleston House, near Dublin,
-in “Recreative Science,” p. 281.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Mr Walkey, who observed the lunar eclipse
-of March 19th, 1848, near Collumpton, says—“The
-appearances were as usual till 20 minutes
-past 9; at that period, and for the space of the
-next hour, instead of an eclipse, or the shadow
-(umbra) of the Earth being the cause of the total
-obscurity of the Moon, the whole phase of that
-body became very quickly and most beautifully<span class="pagenum" id="Page96">[96]</span>
-<i>illuminated</i>; and assumed the appearance of
-the glowing heat of fire from the furnace, rather
-tinged with a <i>deep red</i>. *&#160;*&#160;* The whole
-disc of the Moon being as <i>perfect with light</i> as
-if there had been <i>no eclipse whatever</i>! *&#160;*&#160;*
-The Moon positively gave <i>good light from its
-disc during the total eclipse</i>!”<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">[15]</a> “Philosophical Magazine,” No. 220, for August, 1848.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>In the astronomical portion of the “Illustrated
-London Almanack for 1864,” by Mr. Glaisher, a
-beautiful tinted engraving is given representing
-the appearance of the Moon during the total
-eclipse of June 1, 1863, when all the light and
-dark places—the so-called mountains, seas, &amp;c.,
-were plainly visible. In the accompanying
-descriptive chapter, the following sentences
-occur:—“At the time of totality the Moon
-presented a soft woolly appearance, apparently
-more globular in form than when fully illuminated.
-Traces of the larger and brighter
-mountains were visible at the time of totality,
-and particularly the bright rays proceeding from
-Tycho, Kepler, and Aristarchus. *&#160;*&#160;* At
-first, when the obscured part was of small
-dimensions, it was of an iron grey tint, but as it
-approached totality, the reddish light became so
-apparent that it was remarked that the Moon
-‘seemed to be on fire;’ and when the totality
-had commenced, it certainly looked like a fire<span class="pagenum" id="Page97">[97]</span>
-smouldering in its ashes, and almost going
-out.”</p>
-
-<p>If then, the Sun and Moon have many times
-been seen above the horizon when the latter was
-eclipsed, how can it be said that the Earth’s
-shadow was the cause of a lunar eclipse, when the
-Earth was not between or in a line with the Sun
-and Moon? And how can the Moon’s non-luminous
-surface be distinctly visible and illuminated
-during the very totality of an eclipse, if
-all the light of the Sun is intercepted by the
-Earth?</p>
-
-<p>Again, if the Moon is a sphere, which it is
-declared to be, how can its surface <i>reflect</i> the
-light of the Sun? If her surface was a mass of
-polished silver, it could not reflect from more
-than a mere point! Let a silvered glass ball or
-globe of considerable size be held before a lamp
-or fire of any magnitude, and it will be seen that
-instead of the whole surface reflecting light,
-there will be a very small portion only
-illuminated. But the Moon’s <i>whole surface</i> is
-brilliantly illuminated! a condition or effect
-utterly impossible if it be spherical. The surface
-<i>might</i> be <i>illuminated</i> from the Sun, or any
-other source if opaque, instead of polished, like
-an ordinary silvered mirror, but it could not
-shine intensely from every part, and brightly
-illuminate the objects before it, as the Moon<span class="pagenum" id="Page98">[98]</span>
-does so beautifully when full and in a clear
-firmament. If the Earth <i>were admitted</i> to be
-globular, and to move, and to be capable of
-throwing a shadow by intercepting the light of
-the Sun, it would be impossible for a lunar
-eclipse to occur thereby, unless at the same time
-the Moon be proved to be non-luminous, and to
-shine only by reflection. But this is not proved;
-it is only assumed as an essential part of a
-theory. The <i>contrary</i> is capable of proof, and
-proof beyond the power of doubt, viz., that the
-Moon is <i>self-luminous</i>, or shines with a light
-peculiar to herself, and therefore independently
-of the Sun. A reflector necessarily gives off
-what it receives. If a mass of red-hot metal be
-placed before a plane or concave surface, <i>heat</i>
-will be reflected. If snow or ice be similarly
-placed, <i>cold</i> will be reflected. If light, ordinary
-or coloured, be presented, the <i>same</i> will be
-reflected. If sound of a given pitch be produced,
-the same pitch will be reflected. If the note A
-be sounded upon a musical instrument, a
-reflector would not return the note B or C, but
-the <i>same note</i>, altered only in degree or intensity,
-but not in “pitch.” A reflector receiving a red
-light would not return a blue or yellow light. A
-reflector collecting the cold from a mass of ice,
-would not throw off heat; nor the contrary.
-Nor could the Moon, if a reflector, radiate or<span class="pagenum" id="Page99">[99]</span>
-throw down upon the Earth any other light
-than such as she receives from the Sun. No
-difference could exist in the quality or character
-of the light, and it could differ in no respect but
-the quantity or intensity.</p>
-
-<p>The light of the Sun and of the Moon are
-different in their general appearance—in the
-colour and action upon the eye.</p>
-
-<p>The Sun’s light is drying and preservative, or
-antiseptic. The Moon’s light is damp and
-putrefactive.</p>
-
-<p>The Sun’s rays will put out a common fire;
-the Moon’s light will increase the combustion.
-The light of the Sun falling upon certain
-chemical substances, produces a change of
-colour, as in photographic and other processes.
-The light of the Moon fails to produce the same
-effect. Dr. Lardner, at page 121 of his excellent
-work, “The Museum of Science,” says—“The
-most striking instance of the effect of certain
-rays of solar light in blackening a light-colored
-substance, is afforded by chloride of silver,
-which is a white substance, but which immediately
-becomes black when acted upon by the
-rays near the violet extremity of the spectrum.
-This substance, however, highly susceptible as it
-is of having its colour affected by light, is,
-nevertheless, found not to be changed in any
-sensible degree when exposed to the light of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page100">[100]</span>
-Moon, even when that light is condensed by the
-most powerful burning lenses.”</p>
-
-<p>The Sun’s light when concentrated by a number
-of mirrors, or a large burning lens, produces
-a focus which is entirely non-luminous, but in
-which the heat is so great that metallic and
-alkaline substances are quickly fused; earthy
-and mineral compounds almost immediately
-vitrified; and all animal and vegetable structures
-in a few seconds burned up and destroyed.
-But the Moon’s light so concentrated produces a
-brilliant focus, so luminous that it is difficult to
-look upon it; and yet there is no increase of
-temperature! “If the most delicate thermometer
-be exposed to the full light of the Moon, shining
-with its greatest lustre, the mercury is not elevated
-a hair’s breadth, neither would it be if
-exposed in the focus of her rays concentrated by
-the most powerful lenses. This has been proved
-by actual experiment.”<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> “This question has
-been submitted to the test of direct experiment.
-*&#160;*&#160;* The bulb of a thermometer sufficiently
-sensitive to render apparent a change of temperature
-amounting to the thousandth part of a
-degree, was placed in the focus of a concave
-reflector of vast dimensions, which, being directed
-to the Moon, the lunar rays were collected with
-great power upon it. Not the slightest change,<span class="pagenum" id="Page101">[101]</span>
-however, was produced in the thermometric
-column, proving that a concentration of rays
-sufficient to fuse gold, if they proceeded <i>from the
-Sun</i>, does not produce a change of temperature
-so great as the thousandth part of a degree, when
-they proceed <i>from the Moon</i>.”<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">[16]</a> “All the Year Round,” by Dickens.</p>
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="label">[17]</a> Dr. Lardner’s Museum of Science, p. 115.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>“The light of the Moon though concentrated
-by the most powerful burning glass, is incapable
-of raising the temperature of the most delicate
-thermometer. M. De La Hire collected the rays
-of the full Moon when on the meridian, by
-means of a burning glass thirty-five inches in
-diameter, and made them fall on the bulb of a
-delicate air-thermometer. <i>No effect was produced</i>,
-though the lunar rays by this glass were
-concentrated 300 times.” “Professor Forbes
-concentrated the Moon’s light by a lens thirty
-inches in diameter, its focal distance being about
-forty-one inches, and having a power of concentration
-exceeding 6,000 times. The image of
-the Moon which was only eighteen hours past
-full, and less than two hours from the meridian,
-was brilliantly thrown by this lens on the extremity
-of a commodious thermo-pile. Although
-the observations were made in the most unexceptional
-manner, and (supposing that half the
-rays were reflected, dispersed, and absorbed)
-though the light of the Moon was concentrated<span class="pagenum" id="Page102">[102]</span>
-<i>3000 times, not the slightest thermo-effect was
-produced</i>!<a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> In the “Lancet” (medical journal)
-for March 14th, 1856, particulars are given of
-several experiments, which proved that the
-Moon’s rays when concentrated actually <i>reduced</i>
-the temperature upon a thermometer more than
-8 degrees!</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_18" href="#FNanchor_18" class="label">[18]</a> Dr. Noad’s Lectures on Chemistry, p. 334.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent00">“The cold chaste Moon, the Queen</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of Heaven’s bright Isles;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Who makes all beautiful</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">On which she smiles:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That wandering shrine of soft</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Yet <i>icy flame</i>,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Which ever is transformed</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Yet still the same;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And <i>warms not</i> but <i>illumes</i>.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="poemcredit">—<span class="smcap">Shelley.</span></p>
-
-<p>The “pale <i>cold</i> Moon” is an expression not
-only beautiful poetically but evidently true
-philosophically.</p>
-
-<p>If, as we have now seen, the very nature
-of a reflector demands certain conditions and
-the Moon does not manifest these conditions,
-it must of necessity be concluded that the
-Moon is <i>not</i> a <i>reflector</i>, but a <i>self-luminous
-body</i>. If self-luminous her surface could not be
-darkened or eclipsed by a shadow of the Earth—supposing
-such were thrown upon it. The
-luminosity instead of being diminished would be
-greater in proportion to the greater density or<span class="pagenum" id="Page103">[103]</span>
-darkness of the shadow. As the light in a
-lantern shines most brightly in the darkest
-places, so would the Moon’s self-luminous surface
-be most intense in the deepest part of the Earth’s
-shadow. It is thus rendered undeniable that a
-Lunar Eclipse <i>does</i> not and <i>could</i> not arise from
-a shadow of the Earth! As a <i>Solar</i> Eclipse
-occurs from the Moon passing over the Sun; so
-from the evidence it is clear that a Lunar Eclipse
-<i>can only</i> arise from a similar cause—a body
-semi-transparent and well-defined passing before
-the Moon, or between her surface and the
-observer on the surface of the Earth. That such
-a body exists is admitted by several distinguished
-astronomers. In the report of the Council of
-the Royal Astronomical Society for June, 1850,
-it is stated, “We may well doubt whether that
-body which we call the Moon is the <i>only
-satellite</i> of the Earth.” In the report of the
-Academy of Sciences for October 12, 1846, and
-again for August, 1847, the Director of one of
-the French Observatories gives a number of
-observations and calculations which have led
-him to conclude that “there is at least <i>one non-luminous
-body</i> of considerable magnitude which
-is attached as a <i>satellite to this Earth</i>.”<a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_19" href="#FNanchor_19" class="label">[19]</a> Referred to in Lardner’s “Museum of Science,” p. 159.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Persons who are unacquainted with the
-methods of calculating Eclipses and other<span class="pagenum" id="Page104">[104]</span>
-astronomical phenomena, are prone to look
-upon the correctness of these calculations as
-powerful arguments in favour of the doctrine of
-the Earth’s rotundity and the Newtonian philosophy
-generally. But this is erroneous. Whatever
-theory is adopted, or if all theories are
-discarded, the same results may follow, because
-the necessary data may be tabulated and employed
-independently of all theory, or may be
-mixed up with any, even the most opposite
-doctrines, or kept distinct from every system,
-just as the operator may decide. The tables of
-the Moon’s relative positions for almost any
-second of time are purely practical, the result of
-long continued observation, and may or may not
-be mixed up with hypothesis. In Smith’s
-“Rise and progress of Astronomy,” speaking of
-Ptolemy, who lived in the 2nd century of the
-Christian Era, it is said, “The (considered)
-defects of his system did not prevent him from
-calculating all the Eclipses that were to happen
-for 600 years to come.” Professor Partington, at
-page 370 of his Lectures on Natural Philosophy,
-says, “The most ancient observations of which
-we are in possession, that are sufficiently accurate
-to be employed in astronomical calculations, are
-those made at Babylon about 719 before the
-Christian Era, of three Eclipses of the Moon.
-Ptolemy, who has transmitted them to us,<span class="pagenum" id="Page105">[105]</span>
-employed them for determining the period of
-the Moon’s mean motion; and therefore had
-probably none more ancient on which he could
-depend. The Chaldeans, however, must have
-made a long series of observations before they
-could discover their “Saros” or lunar period of
-6,585¹⁄₃ days, or about 18 years; at which time,
-as they had learnt, the place of the Moon, her
-<i>node</i> and <i>apogee</i> return nearly to the same
-situation with respect to the Earth and the Sun,
-and, of course, a series of nearly similar Eclipses
-occur.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Richard Phillips, in his “Million of Facts,”
-at page 388, says:—“The precision of astronomy
-arises, not from theories, but from prolonged
-observations, and the regularity of the motions,
-or the ascertained uniformity of their irregularities.
-Ephemerides of the planets’ places, of
-Eclipses, &amp;c., have been published for above 300
-years, and were nearly as precise as at present.”</p>
-
-<p>“No particular theory is required to calculate
-Eclipses; and the calculations may be made
-with equal accuracy <i>independent of every
-theory</i>.”<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_20" href="#FNanchor_20" class="label">[20]</a> Somerville’s Physical Sciences, p. 46.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page106">[106]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Sec10"><span class="secno">SECTION 10.</span><br>
-<span class="chaptitle">CAUSE OF TIDES.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="noindent">The doctrine of the Earth’s rotundity being
-fallacious, all ideas of “centre of attraction of
-gravitation,” “mutual attraction of Earth and
-Moon,” &amp;c., &amp;c., must be given up; and the
-cause of tides in the ocean must be sought for
-in another direction. It is certain that there is a
-constant pressure of the atmosphere upon the
-surface of the Earth and ocean. This is proved
-by ordinary barometrical observations, many
-Pneumatic experiments, and by the fact that
-during the most fearful storms at sea the surface
-only is disturbed; at the depth of a hundred
-feet the water is always calm—except in the path
-of well-marked currents and local submarine
-phenomena. The following quotations gathered
-from casual reading fully corroborate this statement.
-“It is amazing how superficial is the
-most terrible tempest. Divers assure us that
-in the greatest storms calm water is found at the
-depth of 90 feet.”<a id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_21" href="#FNanchor_21" class="label">[21]</a> Chambers’s Journal, No. 100, p. 379.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>“This motion of the surface of the sea is not
-perceptible to a great depth. In the strongest<span class="pagenum" id="Page107">[107]</span>
-gale it is supposed not to extend beyond 72 feet
-below the surface; and at the depth of 90 feet
-the sea is perfectly still.”<a id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_22" href="#FNanchor_22" class="label">[22]</a> Penny Cyclopædia, Article Sea.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>“The people are under a great mistake who
-believe that the substance of the water moves to
-any considerable depth in a storm at sea. It is
-only the form or shadow which hurries along
-like a spirit, or like a thought over the countenance
-of the ‘great deep,’ at the rate of some
-forty miles an hour. Even when the ‘Flying
-Dutchman’ is abroad the great mass of water
-continues undisturbed and nearly motionless a
-few feet below the surface.”<a id="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_23" href="#FNanchor_23" class="label">[23]</a> London Saturday Journal, August 8, 1840, p. 71.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>“The unabraded appearance of the shells
-brought up from great depths, and the almost
-total absence of the mixture of any <i>detritus</i> from
-the sea, or foreign matter, suggest most forcibly
-the idea of <i>perfect repose</i> at the bottom of the
-deep sea.”<a id="FNanchor_24" href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_24" href="#FNanchor_24" class="label">[24]</a> Physical Geography of the Sea, by Lieut. Maury, p. 265.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Bearing this fact in mind, that there exists a
-continual pressure of the atmosphere upon the
-Earth, and associating it with the fact that the
-Earth is a vast plane “stretched out upon the
-waters,” and it will be seen that it must of
-necessity slightly fluctuate, or slowly rise and
-fall in the water. As by the action of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page108">[108]</span>
-atmosphere the Earth is slowly depressed, the
-water moves towards the receding shores and
-produces the flood tide; and when by the
-reaction of the resisting oceanic medium the
-Earth gradually ascends the waters recede, and
-the ebb tide is produced. This is the <i>general</i>
-cause of tides. Whatever peculiarities are
-observable they may be traced to the reaction of
-channels, bays, headlands, and other local causes.</p>
-
-<p>If a raft, or a ship, or any other structure
-floating upon water be carefully observed, it will
-be seen to have a gentle fluctuating motion.
-However calm the water and the atmosphere
-may be, this gradual rising and falling of the
-floating mass is always more or less observable.
-If vessels of different sizes are floating near each
-other they will be seen to fluctuate with different
-velocities, the largest and heaviest will move the
-least rapidly. This motion will be observable
-whether the vessels be held by their anchors, or
-moored to buoys, or freely floating in still water.
-A large and heavily laden vessel will make
-several fluctuations in a minute of time; the
-Earth once only in about twelve hours, because
-it is proportionately larger.</p>
-
-<p>To this simple condition of the Earth,—the
-action or pressure upon it of the atmosphere,
-and the reaction or resistance to it of the water,
-may be traced all the leading peculiarities of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page109">[109]</span>
-tides. The simultaneous ebb and flow upon
-meridians 180° apart. The absence of high and
-low water in large inland seas and lakes; which
-being contained within and fluctuating with the
-Earth cannot therefore show a relative change in
-the altitude of the surface. The flux and reflux
-observed in several inland wells and basins
-though far from the sea, but being connected
-with it by subterranean passages, necessarily
-show a relative difference in the surface levels of
-the earth and water. And the regular ebb and
-flood of the water in the great Polar sea recently
-discovered by Dr. Kane, although it is separated
-from the great tidal current of the Atlantic
-Ocean by deep barriers of ice—as will be seen by
-the following quotation:—“Dr. Kane reported
-an open sea north of the parallel of 82°. To
-reach it his party crossed a barrier of ice 80 or
-100 miles broad. Before gaining this open
-water he found the thermometer to show the
-extreme temperature of -60°. Passing this ice-bound
-region by travelling North, he stood on
-the shores of an iceless sea extending in an
-unbroken sheet of water as far as the eye could
-reach towards the pole. Its waves were dashing
-on the beach with the swell of a boundless ocean.
-The tides ebbed and flowed in it, and I apprehend
-that the tidal wave from the Atlantic can
-no more pass under this icy barrier to be propagated<span class="pagenum" id="Page110">[110]</span>
-in seas beyond than the vibrations of a
-musical string can pass with its notes a ‘fret’
-upon which the musician has placed his finger.
-*&#160;*&#160;* These tides therefore must have been
-born in that cold sea, having their cradle about
-the North Pole; and we infer that most, if not
-all, the unexplored regions about the Pole are
-covered with deep water; for, were this unexpected
-area mostly land, or shallow water, it
-could not give birth to regular tides.”<a id="FNanchor_25" href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_25" href="#FNanchor_25" class="label">[25]</a> Physical Geography of the Sea, by Lieut. Maury, p. 176.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>That the Earth has a vibratory or tremulous
-motion, such as must necessarily belong to a
-floating and fluctuating structure, is abundantly
-proved by the experience of astronomers and
-surveyors. If a delicate spirit-level be firmly
-placed upon a rock or upon the most solid
-foundation which it is possible to construct, the
-very curious phenomenon will be observed of
-constant change in the position of the air-bubble.
-However carefully the “level” may be adjusted,
-and the instrument protected from the atmosphere,
-the “bubble” will not maintain its position
-many seconds together. A somewhat similar
-influence has been noticed in astronomical
-observatories, where instruments of the best construction
-and placed in the most approved
-positions cannot always be relied upon without
-occasional re-adjustment.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page111">[111]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Sec11"><span class="secno">SECTION 11.</span><br>
-<span class="chaptitle">CONSTITUTION, CONDITION,
-AND ULTIMATE DESTRUCTION OF THE
-EARTH BY FIRE.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="noindent">Chemical analysis proves to us the important
-fact that the great bulk of the Earth—meaning
-thereby the <i>land</i> as distinct from the waters—is
-composed of metallic oxides or metals in combination
-with oxygen. When means are adopted
-to remove the oxygen it is found that most of
-these metallic bases are highly combustible.
-The different degrees of affinity existing among
-the elements of the Earth, give rise to all the
-rocks, minerals, ores, deposits, and strata which
-constitute the material habitable world. The
-different specific gravities or relative densities
-which these substances are found to possess, and
-the numerous evidences which exist of their
-former plastic or semi-fluid condition, afford
-positive proof that from a once commingled or
-chaotic state regular but rapid precipitation,
-stratification, crystallization, and concretion successively<span class="pagenum" id="Page112">[112]</span>
-occurred; and that in some way not yet
-clear to us sufficient chemical action was produced
-to ignite a great portion of the Earth, and
-to reduce it to a molten incandescent state, the
-volatile products of which being forcibly eliminated
-have broken up the stratified formations,
-and produced the irregular confused condition
-which we now observe. That such an incandescent
-molten state of a great portion of the
-lower parts of the Earth still exists is a matter
-of certainty; and there is evidence that the heat
-thus internally generated is gradually increasing.</p>
-
-<p>“The uppermost strata of the soil share in all
-the variations of temperature which depend upon
-the seasons; and this influence is exerted to a
-depth which, although it varies with the latitude,
-is never very great. Beyond this point the
-temperature rises in proportion as we descend to
-greater depths, and it has been shown, by
-numerous and often-repeated experiments, that
-the increase of temperature is on average one
-degree (Fahrenheit) for about every 545 feet.
-Hence it results that at a depth of about twelve
-miles from the surface, we should be on the
-verge of an incandescent mass.”<a id="FNanchor_26" href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_26" href="#FNanchor_26" class="label">[26]</a> Rambles of a Naturalist, by M. de Quatrefages.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>“So great is the heat within the Earth, that
-in Switzerland, and other countries where the
-springs of water are very deep, they bring to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page113">[113]</span>
-surface the warm mineral waters so much used
-for baths and medicine for the sick; and it is
-said, that if you were to dig very deep down into
-the Earth, the temperature would increase at the
-rate of one degree of the thermometer for every
-100 feet; so that, at the depth of 7000 feet, or
-one mile and a half, all the water that you found
-would be boiling; and at the depth of about ten
-miles all the rocks would be melted. *&#160;*&#160;*
-A day will yet come when this earth will be
-burned up by the fire. There is fire, as you
-have heard, within it, ready to burst forth at any
-moment.”<a id="FNanchor_27" href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> “This earth, although covered all
-round with a solid crust, is all on fire
-within. Its interior is supposed to be a
-burning mass of melted, glowing metals, fiery
-gas, and boiling lava. *&#160;*&#160;*&#160;*&#160;* The
-solid crust which covers this inward fire
-is supposed not to be much more than
-from 9 to 12 miles in thickness. Whenever
-this crust breaks open, or is cleft in
-any place, there rush out lava, fire, melted
-rocks, fiery gases, and ashes, sometimes in such
-floods as to bury whole cities. From time to
-time we read of the earth quaking, trembling,
-and sometimes opening, and of mountains and
-small islands (which are mountains in the sea)<span class="pagenum" id="Page114">[114]</span>
-being thrown up in a day.”<a id="FNanchor_28" href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_27" href="#FNanchor_27" class="label">[27]</a> “The World’s Birthday,” by Professor Gaussen, Geneva,
-p. 43.</p>
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_28" href="#FNanchor_28" class="label">[28]</a> “The World’s Birthday,” by Professor Gaussen, Geneva,
-p. 42.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>In a periodical called “Recreative Science,”
-at the end of an interesting article on volcanoes,
-&amp;c., the following sentence occurs:—“The
-conclusion is therefore inevitable, that the
-general distribution all over the earth of volcanic
-vents, their similarity of action and products, their
-enormous power and seeming inexhaustibility,
-their extensiveness of action in their respective
-sites, the continuance of their energies during
-countless years, and the incessant burning day
-and night, from year to year, of such craters as
-Stromboli; and lastly, the apparent inefficiency
-of external circumstances in controlling their
-operations, eruptions happening beneath the sea
-as beneath the land, in the frigid as in the torrid
-zone, for these and many less striking phenomena,
-we must seek for some great and general
-cause, such only as the central heat of the earth
-affords us.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Richard Phillips says, “at the depth of 50
-feet (from the sea level) the temperature of the
-earth is the same winter and summer.” *&#160;*&#160;*
-“The deepest coal mine in England is at Killingworth,
-near Newcastle-upon-Tyne, and the
-mean annual temperature at 400 yards below
-the surface is 77°; and at 300 yards, 70°; while<span class="pagenum" id="Page115">[115]</span>
-at the surface it is but 48°, being about one
-degree of increase for every 15 yards. Hence,
-at 3,300 yards, the heat would be equal to boiling
-water, taking 20 yards to a degree. This explains
-the origin of hot springs. The heat of the Bath
-waters is 116°, hence they would appear to rise
-from a depth of 1,320 yards. By experiments
-made at the Observatory of Paris for ascertaining
-the increase of temperature from the surface of
-the earth towards the interior, 51 feet, or 17
-yards, corresponds to the increase of one degree
-Fahrenheit’s thermometer. Hence, the temperature
-of boiling water would be at 8,212 feet,
-or about 1¹⁄₂ English miles under Paris.”</p>
-
-<p>Professor Silliman, of America, states “that
-in boring the Artesian wells in Paris, the
-temperature increased at the rate of 1 degree for
-every 50 feet downwards; and, reasoning from
-causes known to exist, the whole of the interior
-part of the earth, or, at least, a great part of it, is
-an ocean of melted rock agitated by violent
-winds.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Charles Lyell, in his address to the British
-Association, assembled at Bath, September, 1864,
-speaking of hot springs generally, said “An
-increase of heat is always experienced as we
-descend into the interior of the earth. *&#160;*&#160;*
-The estimate deduced by Mr. Hopkins, from an
-accurate series of observations made in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page116">[116]</span>
-Monkwearmouth shaft, near Durham, and in the
-Dukenfield shaft, near Manchester, each of
-them 2,000 feet in depth. In these shafts the
-temperature was found to rise at the rate of 1°
-Fah. for every increase of depth of from 65 to 70
-feet.”</p>
-
-<p>“The observations made by M. Arago, in
-1821, that the deepest Artesian wells are the
-warmest, threw great light on the origin of
-thermal springs, and on the establishment of the
-law, that terrestrial heat increases with increasing
-depth. It is a remarkable fact, which has but
-recently been noticed, that at the close of the third
-century St Patricius, probably Bishop of Partusa,
-was led to adopt very correct views regarding
-the phenomenon of the hot springs at Carthage.
-On being asked what was the cause of boiling
-water bursting from the earth, he replied, ‘Fire
-is nourished in the clouds, and in the interior of
-the earth, as Etna and other mountains near
-Naples may teach you. The subterranean
-waters rise as if through siphons. The cause of
-hot springs is this: waters which are more
-remote from the subterranean fire are colder,
-whilst those which rise nearer the fire, are
-heated by it, and bring with them to the surface
-which we inhabit, an insupportable degree of
-heat.’”<a id="FNanchor_29" href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_29" href="#FNanchor_29" class="label">[29]</a> “Humboldt’s Cosmos,” p. 220.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page117">[117]</span></p>
-
-<p>The investigations which have been made,
-and the evidence which has been brought
-together, render it undeniable that the lower
-parts of the earth are on fire. Of the intensity
-of the combustion, no practical idea can be
-formed. It is fearful beyond comparison. The
-lava thrown out from a volcano in Mexico, “was
-so hot that it continued to smoke for twenty
-years; and after three years and a half, a piece
-of wood took fire in it, at a distance of five miles
-from the crater.” In various parts of the world,
-large islands have been thrown up from the sea,
-in a red-hot glowing condition, and so intensely
-heated, that after being forced through many
-fathoms of salt water, and standing in the midst
-of it, exposed to wind and rain for several
-months, they were not sufficiently cooled for
-persons to approach and stand upon them. “A
-notable fact is the force exerted in volcanic
-action, Cotopaxi, in 1738, threw its fiery rockets
-3,000 feet above its crater, while in 1744 the
-blazing mass, struggling for an outlet, roared
-like a furnace, so that its awful voice was heard
-at a distance of more than six hundred miles.
-In 1797, the crater of Tunguragua, one of the
-great peaks of the Andes, flung out torrents of
-mud, which dammed up rivers, opened new
-lakes, and in valleys of a thousand feet wide
-made deposits six hundred feet deep. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page118">[118]</span>
-stream from Vesuvius which, in 1737, passed
-through Torre del Greco, contained thirty-three
-million cubic feet of solid matter; and, in 1794,
-when Torre del Greco was destroyed a second
-time, the mass of lava amounted to forty-five
-million cubic feet. In 1669 Etna poured forth a
-flood which covered 84 square miles of surface,
-and measured nearly 100,000,000 cubic feet.
-On this occasion the sand and scoriæ formed the
-Monte Rossi, near Nicolosi, a cone two miles in
-circumference, and four hundred and fifty feet high.
-The stream thrown out by Etna, in 1819, was in
-motion, at the rate of a yard per day, for nine
-months after the eruption; and it is on record
-that the lavas of the same mountain, after a
-terrible eruption, were not thoroughly cooled
-and consolidated ten years after the event. In
-the eruption of Vesuvius, A.D. 79, the scoriæ
-and ashes vomited forth far exceeded the entire
-bulk of the mountain; while, in 1660, Etna
-disgorged more than twenty times its own mass.
-*&#160;*&#160;* Vesuvius has thrown its ashes as far
-as Constantinople, Syria, and Egypt; it hurled
-stones eight pounds in weight to Pompeii, a
-distance of six miles; while similar masses were
-tossed up 2,000 feet above its summit. Cotopaxi
-has projected a block one hundred cubic yards
-in volume a distance of nine miles, while Sumbawa,
-in 1815, during the most terrible eruption<span class="pagenum" id="Page119">[119]</span>
-on record, sent its ashes as far as Java, a distance
-of three hundred miles. *&#160;*&#160;* In viewing
-these evidences of enormous power, we are
-forcibly struck with the similarity of action with
-which they have been associated; and, carrying
-our investigation a step further, the same
-similarity of the producing power is hinted at
-in the identity of the materials ejected. Thus,
-if we classify the characteristics of all recorded
-eruptions, we shall find that the phenomena are
-all reducible to upheavals of the earth, rumblings
-and explosions, ejections of carbonic acid, fiery
-torrents of lava, cinders, and mud, with accompanying
-thunder and lightning. The last-named
-phenomena are extrajudicial in character;
-they are merely the result of the atmospheric
-disturbance consequent on the escape of great
-heat from the earth, just as the burning of an
-American forest causes thunder and rain. The
-connection that apparently exists, too, between
-neighbouring craters is strongly confirmed by
-the fact that in every distinct volcanic locus but
-<i>one</i> crater is usually active at a time. Since
-Vesuvius has resumed his activity, the numerous
-volcanic vents on the other side of the bay have
-sunk into comparative inactivity; for ancient
-writers, who are silent respecting the former,
-speak of the mephitic vapours of the Lake
-Avernus as destructive to animal existence, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page120">[120]</span>
-in earlier days than these Homer pictures the
-Phlegrean Fields as the entrance to the infernal
-regions, placed at the limits of the habitable
-world, unenlightened by rising or setting sun,
-and enveloped in eternal gloom. *&#160;*&#160;*&#160;*
-The earth contains within it a mass of heated
-material; nay, it is a heated and incandescent
-body, habitable only because surrounded with a
-cool crust—the crust being to it a mere shell,
-within which the vast internal fires are securely
-inclosed: and yet not securely, perhaps, unless
-such vents existed as those to which we apply
-the term volcano. *&#160;*&#160;*&#160;* Every volcano
-is a safety-valve, ready to relieve the pressure
-from within when that pressure rises to a certain
-degree of intensity; or permanently serving for
-the escape of conflagrations, which, if not so provided
-with escape, might rend the habitable
-crust to pieces.”<a id="FNanchor_30" href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_30" href="#FNanchor_30" class="label">[30]</a> Recreative Science, p.p. 257 to 260.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Thus it is certain, from the phenomena of
-earthquakes, submarine and inland volcanoes
-which exist in every part of the earth from the
-frozen to the tropical regions, hot and boiling
-springs, fountains of mud and steam, lakes of
-burning sulphur, jets and blasts of destructive
-gases, and the choke and fire damps of our coal
-mines, that at a few miles only below the surface
-of the earth there exists a vast region of combustion,<span class="pagenum" id="Page121">[121]</span>
-the intensity and power of which are
-indescribable, and cannot be compared with
-anything within the range of human experience.</p>
-
-<p>As the earth is an extended plane resting in
-and upon the waters of the “great deep” it may
-fitly be compared to a large vessel or ship
-floating at anchor, with her “Hold” or lower
-compartments beneath the water-line filled with
-burning materials; and, from our knowledge of
-the nature and action of fire, it is difficult to
-understand in what way the combustion can be
-prevented from extending, when it is known to
-be surrounded with highly inflammable substances.
-Wherever a fire is surrounded with
-heterogeneous materials—some highly combustible
-and others partially and indirectly
-combustible—it is not possible for it to remain
-continually in the same condition nor to
-diminish in extent and intensity, it must increase
-and extend itself. That the fire in the earth is
-so surrounded with inflammable materials is
-matter of certainty; the millions of tons of coals,
-peat, turf, mineral oils, rock tar, pitch, asphalte,
-bitumen, petroleum, mineral naphtha, and numerous
-other hydro-carbons which exist in
-various parts of the earth, and much of these
-far down below the surface, prove this condition
-to exist. The products of volcanic action being
-chiefly carbon in combination with hydrogen<span class="pagenum" id="Page122">[122]</span>
-and oxygen, prove also that these carbon compounds
-already exist in a state of combustion,
-and that as such immense quantities of the same
-fuel still exist, it is quite within the range of
-possibility that some of the lower strata of combustible
-matter may take fire and the action
-rapidly extend itself through the various and
-innumerable veins which ramify in every direction
-throughout the whole earth. Should such
-an action commence, knowing, as we do, that
-the rocks and minerals of the earth are but
-oxides of inflammable bases, and that the
-affinities of these bases are greatly weakened and
-almost suspended in the presence of highly
-heated carbon, we see clearly that such chemical
-action or fire would quickly extend and increase
-in intensity until the whole earth with everything
-entering into its composition, would rapidly
-decompose, volatilise, and burst into one vast
-indescribable, annihilating conflagration!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page123">[123]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Sec12"><span class="secno">SECTION 12.</span><br>
-<span class="chaptitle">MISCELLANEA.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Moon’s Phases.</span>—It has been shown that the
-Moon is not a reflector of the Sun’s light, but is
-self-luminous. That the luminosity is confined
-to one-half its surface is sufficiently shown by
-the fact that at “New Moon” the whole circle or
-outline of the Moon is often distinctly visible;
-but the darker outline is less, or the circle is
-smaller than the segment which is illuminated.
-From this it is easily seen that “New Moon,”
-“Full Moon,” and “Gibbous Moon” are but the
-different proportions of the illuminated surface
-which are presented to the observer on earth.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Moon’s Appearance.</span>—Astronomers have indulged
-their imagination to such a degree that
-the Moon has been considered to be a solid,
-opaque, spherical world, having mountains,
-valleys, lakes, volcanic craters, and other conditions
-analogous to the surface of the earth. So
-far has this fancy been carried, that the whole
-visible disc has been mapped out, and special
-names given to its various peculiarities, as<span class="pagenum" id="Page124">[124]</span>
-though they had been carefully observed and
-measured by a party of terrestrial ordnance
-surveyors. All this has been done in direct
-opposition to the fact that whoever looks, without
-previous bias, through a powerful telescope at
-the Moon’s surface, will be puzzled to say what
-it is really like, or how to compare it with anything
-known. The comparison which may be
-made, will depend greatly upon the state of
-mind of the observer. It is well known that
-persons looking at the rough bark of a tree, or
-at the irregular lines or veins in certain kinds
-of marble and stone, or gazing at the red
-embers in a dull fire, will, according to the
-degree of activity of the imagination, be able
-to see different forms, even the outlines of
-animals and human faces. It is in this way
-that persons may fancy that the Moon’s surface
-is broken up into hills and valleys and
-other arrangements such as are found on
-earth. But that anything really similar to the
-surface of our own world is anywhere visible
-upon the Moon is altogether fallacious. This is
-admitted by some of those who have written
-upon the subject “Some persons when they
-look into a telescope for the first time,
-having heard that mountains are to be seen,
-and discovering nothing but these (previously
-described) unmeaning figures, break off in<span class="pagenum" id="Page125">[125]</span>
-disappointment, and have their faith in these
-things rather diminished than increased. I
-would advise, therefore, before the student takes
-even his <i>first view</i> of the Moon through a
-telescope, to form as clear an idea as he can how
-mountains, and valleys, and caverns situated at
-such a distance <i>ought</i> to look, and by what
-marks they may be recognised. Let him seize,
-if possible, the most favourable periods (about
-the time of the first quarter), and previously
-<i>learn from drawings</i> and explanations how to
-<i>interpret</i> everything he sees.”<a id="FNanchor_31" href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a> “Whenever
-we exhibit celestial objects to inexperienced
-observers it is usual to precede the view with
-good <i>drawings</i> of the objects, accompanied by
-an explanation of what each appearance exhibited
-in the telescope <i>indicates</i>. The novice is told
-that mountains and valleys can be seen in the
-Moon by the aid of the telescope; but on looking
-he sees a confused mass of light and shade, and
-<i>nothing</i> which <i>looks</i> to him <i>like either mountains
-or valleys</i>! Had his attention been previously
-directed to a plain <i>drawing</i> of the Moon, and
-each particular appearance <i>interpreted</i> to him,
-he would then have looked through the telescope
-with intelligence and satisfaction!”<a id="FNanchor_32" href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a>
-Thus it is<span class="pagenum" id="Page126">[126]</span>
-admitted by those who teach that the Moon is a
-spherical world, having hills and dales like the
-earth, can only see such things in imagination.
-“Nothing but unmeaning figures” are really
-visible, and “the students break off in disappointment,
-and have their faith in such things
-rather diminished than increased,” “until they
-previously learn from <i>drawings</i> and explanations
-how to <i>interpret</i> everything seen.” But who
-<i>first made</i> the drawings? Who <i>first interpreted</i>
-the “unmeaning figures” and the “confused
-mass of light and shade?” Who first declared
-them to indicate mountains and valleys, and
-ventured to make drawings and give explanations
-and interpretations for the purpose of biasing
-the minds, and fixing or guiding the imaginations
-of subsequent observers? Whoever they
-were, they at least had “given the reins to
-Fancy,” and afterwards took upon themselves to
-dogmatise and teach their crude and unwarranted
-imaginings to succeeding investigators. And this
-is the kind of evidence and “reasoning” which
-is obtruded in our seats of learning, and spread
-out in the numerous works which are published
-for the edification of society!</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_31" href="#FNanchor_31" class="label">[31]</a> “Mechanism of the Heavens,” by Denison Olmsted,
-LL.D., Professor of Natural Philosophy and Astronomy in Gale
-College, U.S.</p>
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_32" href="#FNanchor_32" class="label">[32]</a> Mitchell’s “Orbs of Heaven,” p. 232.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The Planet Neptune.</span>—For some years the
-advocates of the earth’s rotundity, and of the
-Newtonian philosophy generally, were accustomed
-to refer with an air of pride and triumph<span class="pagenum" id="Page127">[127]</span>
-to the discovery of a new planet, which was
-called Neptune, as an undeniable evidence of
-the truth of their system or theory. The
-existence of this luminary was said to have been
-predicated from calculation only, and for a
-considerable period before it had been seen by
-the telescope. It was urged that therefore the
-system which would permit of such a discovery
-must be true. But the whole matter subsequently
-proved to be unsatisfactory. That a proper
-conception may be formed of the actual value of
-the calculations and their supposed verification,
-the following account will be useful. “In the year
-1781, on March 13, Uranus was discovered by
-Sir William Herschel, who was examining some
-small stars near the feet of Gemini; and he
-observed one of them to have a sensible amount
-of diameter and less brightness than the others,
-and it was soon found to be a planet. It,
-however, had been seen before—first, by Flamstead,
-on December 23rd, 1690; and between
-this time and 1781 it had been observed 16
-times by Flamstead, Bradley, Mayer, and
-Lemonnier; these astronomers had classed it
-as a star of the sixth magnitude. Between 1781
-and 1820 it was of course very frequently
-observed; and it was hoped that at the latter
-time sufficient data existed to construct accurate
-tables of its motions. This task was undertaken<span class="pagenum" id="Page128">[128]</span>
-by M. Bouvard, Member <i>de L’Academie des
-Sciences</i>, but he met with unforeseen difficulties.
-It was found utterly impossible to construct
-tables which would represent the 17 ancient
-observations, and at the same time the more
-numerous modern ones; and it was finally
-concluded that the ancient observations were
-erroneous, or that some strange and unknown
-action disturbed, or had disturbed, the planet;
-consequently M. Bouvard discarded entirely the
-old observations, and used only those taken
-between 1781 and 1820, in constructing the
-tables of Uranus. For some years past it has
-been found that the tables thus constructed do
-not agree any better with modern observations,
-than they do with the ancient observations;
-<i>consequently it was evident that the planet was
-under the influence of some unknown cause</i>.
-Several hypotheses have been suggested as to
-the nature of this cause; some persons talked of
-a resisting medium; others of a great satellite
-which might accompany Uranus; some even
-went so far as to suppose that the vast distance
-Uranus is from the Sun caused the law of
-gravitation to lose some of its force; others
-thought that the rapid flight of a comet had
-disturbed its regular movements; others thought
-of the existence of a planet beyond Uranus,
-whose disturbing force caused the anomalous<span class="pagenum" id="Page129">[129]</span>
-motions of the planet; but no one did otherwise
-than follow the bent of his inclination, and did
-not support his assertion by any positive
-considerations.</p>
-
-<p>“Thus was the theory of Uranus surrounded
-with difficulties, when M. Le Verrier, an eminent
-French mathematician, undertook to investigate
-the irregularities in its motions. His first paper
-appeared on the 10th November, 1845, and his
-second on June 1, 1846 (published in the
-Comptes Rendûs). In this second paper, after
-a most elaborate and careful investigation, he
-proves the utter incompatibility of any of the
-preceding hypotheses to account for the planet’s
-motions, except only that of the last one, viz.,
-that of a new planet. He then successively
-proves that this planet cannot be situated either
-between the Sun and Saturn, or between Saturn
-and Uranus; but that it must be beyond
-Uranus. And in this paper he asks the following
-questions:—‘Is it possible that the irregularities
-of Uranus can be owing to the action of a planet
-situated in the ecliptic, at a distance of twice the
-mean distance of Uranus from the Sun? If so,
-where is it actually situated? What is its mass?
-What are the elements of the orbit it describes?”</p>
-
-<p>This was the problem he set himself to work
-upon, by the means of solving the inverse
-problem of the perturbations; for instead of<span class="pagenum" id="Page130">[130]</span>
-having to measure the action of a determined
-planet, he had to deduce the elements of the
-orbit of the disturbing planet, and its place in
-the heavens from the recognised inequalities of
-Uranus. And this problem M. Le Verrier has
-successfully solved. In his second paper he
-deduces the place in the heavens that the body
-must be as 325° of helio-centric longitude. On
-the 31st August last he published his third
-paper. In this he has calculated that the period
-of the planet is 217 years; and that it moves in
-an orbit at the distance of more than 3,000
-millions of miles from the Sun; that its mean
-longitude on January 1st, 1847, will be 318° 17′;
-its true longitude 326° 32′; and that the
-longitude of its perihelion will be 284° 45′; that
-it will appear to have a diameter of 3¹⁄₄ seconds
-of arc as seen from the earth; and that it is
-now about 5° E. of <i>Delta Capricorni</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“These remarkable calculations have pointed
-out a position which has very nearly proved to
-be the true one.</p>
-
-<p>“On September 23, Dr. Galle at Berlin discovered
-a star of the eighth magnitude, which
-has proved to be the planet. Its place at the
-time was five degrees from <i>Delta Capricorni</i>.
-It was found to have a disc of 3 seconds as
-predicted; and its longitude at the time differs
-less than a degree from the longitude computed<span class="pagenum" id="Page131">[131]</span>
-from the above elements. Its daily motion, too,
-is found to agree very closely with the predicted;
-and, judging from this last circumstance, the
-planet’s distance, as stated above, must be nearly
-the truth.</p>
-
-<p>“Thus the result of these calculations was the
-discovery of a new planet in the place assigned
-to it by theory, whose mass, distance, position
-in the heavens, and orbit it describes round the
-Sun, were all approximately determined before
-the planet had ever been seen; and all agrees
-with observations, so far as can at present be
-determined. It is found to have a disc, and its
-diameter cannot be much less than 40,000 miles,
-and may be more; its motions are very slow; it
-is at present in the constellation of Aquarius as
-indicated by theory; and it will be in the
-constellation of Capricornus all the year 1847.
-It may be readily seen in a telescope of
-moderate power.</p>
-
-<p>“Whatever view we take of this noble discovery
-it is most gratifying, whether at the
-addition of another planet to our list; whether
-at the proving the correctness of the theory of
-universal gravitation; or in what view soever, it
-must be considered as a splendid discovery, and
-the merit is chiefly due to theoretical astronomy.
-This discovery is perhaps the greatest triumph<span class="pagenum" id="Page132">[132]</span>
-of astronomical science that has ever been
-recorded.”<a id="FNanchor_33" href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_33" href="#FNanchor_33" class="label">[33]</a> “Illustrated London Almanack for 1847.”</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>If such things as criticism, experience, and
-comparative observation did not exist, the tone
-of exultation in which the above article indulges
-might be properly shared in by the astronomical
-student; but let the following extracts be carefully
-read, and it will be seen that such a tone
-was premature and unwarranted. “Paris, Sept.
-15, 1848. The only sittings of the Academy of
-late in which there was anything worth recording,
-and even this was not of a practical character, were
-those of the 29th ult. and the 11th inst. On the
-former day M. Babinet made a communication
-respecting the planet Neptune, which has been
-generally called M. Le Verrier’s planet, the
-discovery of it having, as it was said, been made
-by him from theoretical deductions, which
-astonished and delighted the scientific public.
-What M. Le Verrier had inferred from the
-action on other planets of some body which
-ought to exist was verified, at least so it was
-thought at the time, by actual vision. Neptune
-was actually seen by other astronomers, and the
-honour of the theorist obtained additional luster.
-But it appears from a communication of M.
-Babinet that <i>this is not the planet</i> of M. Le
-Verrier. He had placed his planet at a distance<span class="pagenum" id="Page133">[133]</span>
-from the Sun equal to thirty-six times the limit
-of the terrestrial orbit; Neptune revolves at a
-distance equal to thirty times of these limits,
-which makes a difference of nearly <i>two hundred
-millions of leagues</i>! M. Le Verrier had
-assigned to his planet a body equal to thirty-eight
-times that of the earth; Neptune has only
-<i>one third</i> of this volume! M. Le Verrier had
-stated the revolutions of his planet round the
-Sun to take place in two hundred and seventeen
-years; Neptune performs its revolutions in
-one hundred and sixty-six years! Thus then
-Neptune is not M. Le Verrier’s planet; and
-all his theory as regards that planet falls to
-the ground! M. Le Verrier may find another
-planet, but it will not answer the calculations
-which he had made for Neptune. In the
-sitting of the 14th, M. Le Verrier noticed the
-communication of M. Babinet, and to a great
-extent admitted his own error! He complained
-indeed that much of what he said was taken in
-too absolute a sense; but he evinces much more
-candour than might have been expected from a
-disappointed explorer. M. Le Verrier may
-console himself with the reflection that if he has
-not been so successful as he thought he had been,
-others might have been equally unsuccessful, and
-as he has still before him an immense field for
-the exercise of observation and calculation, we<span class="pagenum" id="Page134">[134]</span>
-may hope that he will soon make some discovery
-which will remove the vexation of his present
-disappointment.”<a id="FNanchor_34" href="#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_34" href="#FNanchor_34" class="label">[34]</a> “Times” Newspaper, Monday, Sept. 18, 1848.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>“As the data of Le Verrier and Adams stand
-at present there is a discrepancy between the
-predicted and the true distance; and in some
-other elements of the planet. It remains, therefore,
-for these or future astronomers to reconcile
-theory with fact; or, perhaps, as in the case of
-Uranus, to make the new planet the means of
-leading to yet greater discoveries. It would
-appear, from the most recent observations, that
-the mass of Neptune, instead of being as at first
-stated one nine thousand three hundredth is
-only one twenty three thousandth that of the
-Sun; whilst its periodic time is now given with
-a greater probability at 166 years; and its mean
-distance from the Sun nearly thirty. Le Verrier
-gave the mean distance from the Sun thirty-six
-times that of the Earth; and the period of
-revolution 217 years.<a id="FNanchor_35" href="#Footnote_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_35" href="#FNanchor_35" class="label">[35]</a> “Cosmos,” by Humboldt, p. 75.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>“May 14, 1847. A Paper was read before the
-Royal Astronomical Society, by Professor Schumacher,
-‘on the identity of the planet Neptune
-(M. Le Verrier’s) with a star observed by M.
-Lalande in May, 1795.’”<a id="FNanchor_36" href="#Footnote_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_36" href="#FNanchor_36" class="label">[36]</a> “Report of Royal Astronomical Society,” for Feb. 11,
-1848, No. 4, vol. 8.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page135">[135]</span></p>
-
-<p>Such mistakes as the above ought at least to
-make the advocates of the Newtonian theory less
-positive, and more ready to acknowledge that at
-best their system is but hypothetical and must
-sooner or later give place to a philosophy the
-premises of which are demonstrable, and which
-is in all its details sequent and consistent.</p>
-
-<h3>PENDULUM EXPERIMENTS AS PROOFS
-OF EARTH’S MOTION.</h3>
-
-<p class="noindent">In the early part of the year 1851, the scientific
-journals and nearly all the newspapers published
-in Great Britain and on the Continents of Europe
-and America were occupied in recording and
-discussing certain experiments with the pendulum,
-first made by M. Foucault, of Paris; and
-the public were startled by the announcement
-that the results furnished a practical proof of the
-Earth’s rotation.</p>
-
-<p>The subject was referred to in the <i>Literary
-Gazette</i>, in the following words:—“Everybody
-knows what is meant by a pendulum in its
-simplest form, a weight hanging by a thread to
-a fixed point. Such was the pendulum experimented
-upon long ago by Galileo, who discovered
-the well-known law of isochronous vibrations,
-applicable to the same. The subject has since<span class="pagenum" id="Page136">[136]</span>
-received a thorough examination, as well theoretical
-as practical, from mathematicians and
-mechanicians; and yet, strange to say, the most
-remarkable feature of the phenomenon has
-remained unobserved and wholly unsuspected
-until within the last few weeks, when a young
-and promising French physicist, M. Foucault,
-who was induced by certain reflections to repeat
-Galileo’s experiments in the cellar of his mother’s
-house at Paris, succeeded in establishing the
-existence of a fact connected with it which gives
-an immediate and visible demonstration of the
-Earth’s rotation. Suppose the pendulum already
-described to be set moving in a vertical plane
-from north to south, the plane in which it
-vibrates, to ordinary observation, would appear
-to be stationary. M. Foucault, however, has
-succeeded in showing that this is not the case,
-but that the plane is itself slowly moving round
-the fixed point as a centre in a direction contrary
-to the Earth’s rotation, <i>i.e.</i>, with the apparent
-heavens, from east to west. His experiments
-have since been repeated in the hall of the
-observatory, under the superintendence of M.
-Arago, and fully confirmed. If a pointer be
-attached to the weight of a pendulum suspended
-by a long and fine wire, capable of turning
-round in all directions, and nearly in contact
-with the floor of a room, the line which this<span class="pagenum" id="Page137">[137]</span>
-pointer appears to trace on the ground, and
-which may easily be followed by a chalk mark,
-will be found to be slowly, but visibly, and
-constantly moving round, like the hand of a
-watch dial; and the least consideration will show
-that this ought to be the case, and will excite
-astonishment that so simple a consequence as
-this is, of the most elementary laws of Geometry
-and Mechanics, should so long have remained
-unobserved. *&#160;*&#160;* The subject has created a
-great sensation in the mathematical and physical
-circles of Paris. It is proposed to obtain permission
-from the Government to carry on further
-observations by means of a pendulum suspended
-from the dome of the Pantheon, length of
-suspension being a desideratum in order to make
-the result visible on a larger scale, and secure
-greater constancy and duration in the experiment.
-The time required for the performance
-of a complete revolution of the plane of vibration
-would be about 32 hours 8 minutes for the
-parallel of Paris; 30 hours 40 minutes for that
-of London; and at 30 degrees from the equator
-exactly 48 hours. Certainly any one who should
-have proposed not many weeks back to prove
-the rotation of the Earth upon which we stand
-by means of direct experiment made upon its
-surface would have run the risk, with the mob of
-gentlemen who write upon mechanics, of being<span class="pagenum" id="Page138">[138]</span>
-thought as mad as if he were to have proposed
-reviving Bishop Wilkins’s notable plan for going
-to the North American colonies in a few hours,
-by rising in a balloon from the Earth and gently
-floating in the air until the Earth, in its diurnal
-rotation, have turned the desired quarter towards
-the suspended æronaut, whereupon as gently to
-descend; so necessary and wholesome is it
-occasionally to reconsider the apparently simplest
-and best established conclusions of science.”</p>
-
-<p>The following is from the <i>Scotsman</i>, which
-has always been distinguished for the accuracy
-of its scientific papers. The article bears the
-initials “C. M.,” which will at once be recognised
-as those of Mr. Charles Maclaren, for many years
-the accomplished editor of that journal:—“The
-beautiful experiment contrived by M. Foucault to
-demonstrate the rotation of the globe, has
-deservedly excited universal interest. *&#160;*&#160;*
-A desire has always been felt that some method
-could be devised of rendering this rotation
-palpable to the senses. Even the illustrious
-Laplace participated in this feeling and has left
-it on record. ‘Although,’ he says, ‘the rotation
-of the Earth is now established with all the
-certainty which the physical sciences require,
-still a direct proof of that phenomenon ought to
-interest both geometricians and astronomers.’
-No man ever knew the laws of the planetary<span class="pagenum" id="Page139">[139]</span>
-motions better than Laplace, and before penning
-such a sentence, it is probable that he had
-turned the subject in his mind, and without
-discovering any process by which the object
-could be attained; but it does not follow that
-if he had applied the whole force of his genius
-to the task, he would not have succeeded. Be
-this as it may, here we have the problem solved
-by a man not probably possessing a tithe of his
-science or talent; and, what is very remarkable,
-after the discovery was made, it was found to be
-legitimately deducible from mathematical principles.
-*&#160;*&#160;* In this, as in many other
-cases, the <i>fact</i> comes first, and takes us by
-surprise; after which we find that we had long
-been in possession of the principles from which
-it flowed, and that, with the clue we had in our
-hands, theory should have revealed the fact to
-us long before. M. Foucault’s communication
-describing his experiments is in the <i>Comptes
-Rendus</i> of the Academy of Sciences, for 3rd
-February, 1851. His first experiments were
-made with a pendulum only two metres
-(6ft. 6¹⁄₄in.) in length, consisting of a steel wire
-from ⁶⁄₁₀ths to ¹¹⁄₁₀ths of a millimetre in
-diameter (the millimetre is the 25th part of an
-inch); to the lower end of which was attached
-a polished brass ball, weighing 5 kilogrammes,
-or 11 English pounds. *&#160;*&#160;* A metallic<span class="pagenum" id="Page140">[140]</span>
-point projecting below the ball, and so directed
-as if it formed a continuation of the suspension
-wire, served as an index to mark the change of
-position more precisely. The pendulum hung
-from a steel plate in such a manner as to move
-freely in any vertical plane. To start the
-oscillatory movement without giving the ball
-any bias, it was drawn to one side with a cord,
-which held the ball by a loop; the cord was
-then burned, after which the loop fell off, and
-the vibrations (generally limited to an arc of
-15 or 20 degrees) commenced. In one minute
-the ball had sensibly deviated from the original
-plane of vibration towards the observer’s left.
-Afterwards he experimented at the Observatory
-with a pendulum 11 metres (30 feet) long, and
-latterly at the Pantheon with one still longer.
-The advantage of a large pendulum, as compared
-with a small one, is, that a longer time elapses
-before it comes to a state of rest; for machinery
-cannot be employed here, as in a clock, to
-continue the motion. The pendulum is suspended
-over the centre of a circular table, whose
-circumference is divided into degrees and
-minutes. The vibrations are begun in the
-manner above described, and in a short time it
-is observed that the pendulum, instead of
-returning to the same point of the circle from
-which it started, has shifted to the left. If<span class="pagenum" id="Page141">[141]</span>
-narrowly observed, the change in the plane of
-vibration (says M. Foucault) is perceptible in
-one minute, and in half an hour, “Il saute
-aux yeux,” it is quite palpable. At Paris the
-change exceeds 11 degrees in an hour. Thus,
-supposing the oscillations to commence in a
-plane directed south and north, in two hours
-the oscillations will point SSW. and NNE.; in
-four hours they will point SW. and NE.; and in
-eight hours the oscillations will point due east
-and west, or at right angles to their original
-direction. To a spectator the change seems to
-be in the pendulum, which, without any visible
-cause, has shifted round a quarter of a circle;
-but the real change is in the table, which, resting
-on the Earth, and accompanying it in its
-rotation, has performed a fourth (and something
-more) of its diurnal revolution.</p>
-
-<p>No one anticipated such a result; and the
-experiment has been received by some with
-incredulity, by all with wonderment; and one
-source of the incredulity arises from the difficulty
-of conceiving how, amidst the ten thousand
-experiments of which the pendulum has been
-the subject, so remarkable a fact could have
-escaped notice so long. Fully admitting that
-these experiments have generally been conducted
-with pendulums which had little freedom of
-motion horizontally, we still think odd that<span class="pagenum" id="Page142">[142]</span>
-somebody did not stumble upon the curious fact.</p>
-
-<p>Though all the parts of the Earth complete
-their revolution in the same space of time, it is
-found that the rate of horizontal motion in
-Foucault’s pendulum varies with the latitude of
-the place where the experiment is made. At the
-pole, the pendulum would pass over 15 degrees
-in an hour, like the Earth itself, and complete
-its circuit in 24 hours. At Edinburgh, the
-pendulum would pass over 12¹⁄₂ degrees in an
-hour, and would complete its revolution in 29
-hours 7 minutes. At Paris, the rate of motion
-is 11 degrees and 20 minutes per hour, and the
-revolution should be completed in 32 hours.</p>
-
-<div class="container w40em" id="Fig31">
-
-<img src="images/fig31.png" alt="Schematic representation of surface">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 31.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page143">[143]</span></p>
-
-<p>Let the above figure represent a portion of
-the Earth’s surface near the north pole N.
-Suppose the pendulum to be set in motion at <i>m</i>,
-so as to vibrate in the direction <i>x y</i>, which
-coincides with that of the meridian <i>m</i> N or <i>m r</i>.
-The Earth in the meantime is pursuing its
-easterly course, and the meridian line <i>m</i> N has
-come in six hours into the position <i>n</i> N. It has
-been hitherto supposed that the pendulum
-would now vibrate in the new direction <i>n</i> N,
-assumed by the meridian, but thanks to M.
-Foucault, we now know that this is a mistake.
-The pendulum will vibrate in a plane <i>x n y</i>,
-parallel to its original plane at <i>m</i>, as will be
-manifest if the plane of vibration points to some
-object in absolute space, such as a star. While
-the meridian line <i>m</i> N will in the course of 24
-hours range round the whole circle of the heavens,
-and point successively in the direction <i>n</i> N, <i>o</i> N,
-<i>p</i> N, <i>r</i> N, <i>s</i> N, <i>t</i> N, and <i>u</i> N, the pendulum’s
-plane of vibration <i>x y</i>, whether at <i>m</i>, at <i>n</i>, at <i>o</i>,
-at <i>p</i>, at <i>r</i>, at <i>s</i>, at <i>t</i>, or at <i>u</i>, will always be
-parallel to itself, pointing invariably to the same
-star, and were a circular table placed under the
-pendulum, its plane of vibration, while really
-stationary, would appear to perform a complete
-revolution.</p>
-
-<p>This stationary position of the plane of
-vibration at the pole seems to present little<span class="pagenum" id="Page144">[144]</span>
-difficulty. We impress a peculiar motion on the
-pendulum in setting it a going. The Earth is
-at the same time carrying the pendulum
-eastward, but <i>at the pole</i> the one motion will not
-interfere with the other. The only action of the
-Earth on the pendulum there is that of attracting
-it towards its own (the Earth’s) centre. But
-this attraction is exactly in the plane of vibration
-and merely tends to continue the oscillatory
-motion without disturbing it. It is otherwise if
-the experiment is made at some other point, say
-20 degrees distant from the pole. Supposing
-the vibrations to commence in the plane of the
-meridian, then as the tendency of the pendulum
-is to continue its vibrations in planes absolutely
-parallel to the original plane, it will be seen, if
-we trace both motions, that, while it is carried
-eastward with the Earth along a parallel of
-latitude, this tendency will operate to draw the
-plane of vibration away from a ‘great circle’
-into a ‘small circle’ (that is, from a circle
-dividing the globe into two <i>equal</i> parts, into one
-dividing it into two <i>unequal</i> parts). But the
-pendulum <i>must</i> necessarily move in a ‘great
-circle,’ and hence to counteract its tendency to
-deviate into a ‘small circle,’ a correctory movement
-is constantly going on, to which the
-lengthening of the period necessary to complete
-a revolution must be ascribed. At Edinburgh<span class="pagenum" id="Page145">[145]</span>
-the period is about 29 hours, at Paris 32, at
-Cairo 48, at Calcutta 63. At the Equator, the
-period stretches out to infinity. M. Foucault’s
-rule is, that the angular space passed over by
-the pendulum at any latitude in a given time, is
-equal to the angular motion of the Earth in the
-period, multiplied by the sine of the latitude.
-The angular motion of the Earth is 15 degrees
-per hour; and at the latitude of 30, for example,
-the sine being to radius as 500 to 1000, the
-angular motion of the pendulum will consequently
-be 7¹⁄₂ degrees per hour. It is, therefore,
-easily found. It follows that the motions of the
-pendulum may be employed in a rough way to
-indicate the latitude of a place.”<a id="FNanchor_37" href="#Footnote_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_37" href="#FNanchor_37" class="label">[37]</a>
-Supplement of the <i>Manchester Examiner</i>, of May 24, 1851.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Notwithstanding the apparent certainty of
-these pendulum experiments, and the supposed
-exactitude of the conclusions deducible therefrom,
-many of the same school of philosophy
-differed with each other, remained dissatisfied,
-and raised very serious objections both to the
-value of the experiments themselves, and to the
-supposed proof which they furnished of the
-Earth’s rotation. One writer in the <i>Times</i>
-newspaper of the period, who signs himself
-“B. A. C.,” says, “I have read the accounts of
-the Parisian experiment as they have appeared
-in many of our papers, and must confess that I<span class="pagenum" id="Page146">[146]</span>
-still remain unconvinced of the reality of the
-phenomenon. It appears to me that, except at
-the pole where the point of suspension is immovable,
-no result can be obtained. In other
-cases the shifting of the direction of passage
-through the lowest point that takes place during
-an excursion of the pendulum, from that point
-in one direction and its return to it again, will
-be exactly compensated by the corresponding
-shifting in the contrary direction during the
-pendulum’s excursion on the opposite side.
-Take a particular case. Suppose the pendulum
-in any latitude to be set oscillating in the
-meridian plane, and to be started from the
-vertical towards the south. It is obvious that
-the wire by which it is suspended <i>does not
-continue to describe a plane</i>, but a species of
-conoidal surface; that when the pendulum has
-reached its extreme point its direction is to the
-south-west, and that as the tangent plane to the
-described surface through the point of suspension
-necessarily contains the normal to the Earth at
-the same point, the pendulum on its return
-passes through the same point in the direction
-north-east. Now, starting again from this point,
-we have exactly the circumstances of the last
-case, the primary plane being shifted slightly out
-of the meridian; when, therefore, the pendulum
-has reached its extreme point of excursion the<span class="pagenum" id="Page147">[147]</span>
-direction of the wire is to the west of this plane,
-and when it returns to the vertical the direction
-of passage through the lowest point is as much
-to the west of this plane as it was in the former
-case to the west of the meridian plane; but
-since it is now moving from north to south
-instead of from south to north, as in the former
-case, its former deviation receives complete
-compensation, and the primary plane returns
-again to the meridian, when the whole process
-recurs.”</p>
-
-<p>In the <i>Liverpool Mercury</i> of May 23, 1851,
-the following letter appeared:—“The supposed
-manifestation of the Rotation of the Earth.—The
-French, English, and European continental
-journals have given publicity to an experiment
-made in Paris with a pendulum; which experiment
-is said to have had the same results when
-made elsewhere. To the facts set forth no
-contradiction has been given, and it is therefore
-to be hoped that they are true. The correctness
-of the inferences drawn from the facts is another
-matter. The first position of these theorists is,
-that in a complete vacuum beyond the sphere of
-the Earth’s atmosphere, a pendulum will continue
-to oscillate in one and the same original
-plane. On that supposition their whole theory
-is founded. In making this supposition the fact
-is overlooked that there <i>is no vibratory motion</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page148">[148]</span>
-unless through atmospheric resistance, or by
-force opposing impulse. Perpetual progress in
-rectilinear motion may be imagined, as in the
-corpuscular theory of light; circular motion may
-also be found in the planetary systems; and
-parabolic and hyperbolic motions in those of
-comets; but vibration is artificial and of limited
-duration. No body in nature returns the same
-road it went, unless artificially constrained to do
-so. The supposition of a permanent vibratory
-motion such as is presumed in the theory
-advanced, is <i>unfounded in fact</i>, and absurd in
-idea; and the whole affair of this proclaimed
-discovery falls to the ground. It is what the
-French call a ‘mystification’—anglice a ‘humbug.’
-Liverpool, 22nd May, 1851.”
-<span class="righttext"><span class="padr4">“T.”</span></span></p>
-
-<p>Another writer declared that he and others
-had made many experiments and had discovered
-that the plane of vibration had nothing whatever
-to do with the meridian longitude nor with
-the Earth’s motion, but followed the plane of the
-magnetic meridian.</p>
-
-<p>“A scientific gentleman in Dundee recently
-tried the pendulum experiment, and he says—‘that
-the pendulum is capable of showing the
-Earth’s motion I regard as a <i>gross delusion</i>; but
-that it tends to the <i>magnetic meridian</i> I have
-found to be a fact.’”<a id="FNanchor_38" href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_38" href="#FNanchor_38" class="label">[38]</a> <i>Liverpool Journal</i>, May 17, 1851.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page149">[149]</span></p>
-
-<p>In many cases the experiments have not shown
-a change at all in the plane of oscillation of the
-pendulum; in others the alteration in the plane
-of vibration has been in the <i>wrong direction</i>;
-and very often the <i>rate of variation</i> has been
-altogether different to that which theory indicated.
-The following is a case in illustration:—“On
-Wednesday evening the Rev. H. H. Jones,
-F.R.A.S., exhibited the apparatus of Foucault to
-illustrate the diurnal rotation of the Earth, in
-the Library Hall of the Manchester Athenæum.
-The preparations were simple. A circle of chalk
-was drawn in the centre of the floor, immediately
-under the arched skylight. The circle was
-exactly 360 inches in its circumference, every
-inch being intended to represent one degree.
-According to a calculation Mr. Jones had made,
-and which he produced at the Philosophical
-Society six weeks ago, the plane of oscillation of
-the pendulum would, at Manchester, diverge
-about one degree in five minutes, or perhaps a
-very little less. He therefore drew this circle
-exactly 360 inches round, and marked the inches
-on its circumference. The pendulum was hung
-from the skylight immediately over the centre of
-the circle, the point of suspension being 25 feet
-high. At that length of wire, it should require
-2¹⁄₂ seconds to make each oscillation across the
-circle. The brazen ball, which at the end of a<span class="pagenum" id="Page150">[150]</span>
-fine wire constituted the pendulum, was furnished
-with a point, to enable the spectator to observe
-the more easily its course. A long line was drawn
-through the diameter of the circle, due north and
-south, and the pendulum started so as to swing
-exactly along this line; to the westward of which,
-at intervals of three inches at the circumference,
-two other lines were drawn, passing through the
-centre. According to the theory, the pendulum
-should diverge from its original line towards the
-west, at the rate of one inch or degree in five
-minutes. This, however, Mr. Jones explained,
-was a perfection of accuracy only attainable in a
-vacuum, and rarely could be approached where
-the pendulum had to pass through an atmosphere
-subject to disturbances; besides, it was difficult to
-avoid giving it some slight lateral bias at starting.
-In order to obviate this as much as possible,
-the steel wire was as fine as would bear the
-weight, ¹⁄₃₀th of an inch thick; and the point
-of suspension was adjusted with delicate nicety.
-An iron bolt was screwed into the frame-work of
-the skylight; into it a brass nut was inserted—the
-wire passed through the nut (the hollow sides
-of which were bell-shaped, in order to give it fair
-play), and at the top the wire ended in a globular
-piece, there being also a fine screw to keep it
-from slipping. *&#160;*&#160;* The pendulum was
-gently drawn up to one side, at the southern end<span class="pagenum" id="Page151">[151]</span>
-of the diametrical line, and attached by a thread
-to something near. When it hung quite still
-the thread was burnt asunder, and the pendulum
-began to oscillate to and fro across the circle.
-*&#160;*&#160;* Before it had been going on quite
-seven minutes, it had reached nearly the third
-degree towards the west, whereas it <i>ought</i> to have
-occupied a quarter of an hour in getting thus far
-from its starting line, even making no allowance
-for the resistance of the atmosphere.”<a id="FNanchor_39" href="#Footnote_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_39" href="#FNanchor_39" class="label">[39]</a> “Manchester Examiner” (Supplement), May 24, 1851.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Besides the irregularities so often observed in
-the time and direction of the pendulum vibrations,
-and which are quite sufficient to render them
-worthless as evidence of the Earth’s motion, the
-use which the Newtonian astronomers made of
-the general fact that the plane of oscillation is
-variable, was most unfair and illogical. It was
-proclaimed to the world as a visible proof of the
-Earth’s diurnal motion; but the motion was
-<i>assumed to exist</i>, and then employed to explain
-the cause of the fact which was first called a
-proof of the thing assumed! A greater violation
-of the laws of investigation was never perpetrated!
-The whole subject as developed and applied
-by the theoretical philosophers is to the fullest
-degree unreasonable and absurd—not a “jot or
-tittle” better than the reasoning contained in the
-following letter:—“Sir,—Allow me to call your<span class="pagenum" id="Page152">[152]</span>
-serious and polite attention to the extraordinary
-phenomenon, demonstrating the rotation of the
-Earth, which I at this present moment experience,
-and you yourself or anybody else, I have not the
-slightest doubt, would be satisfied of, under
-similar circumstances. Some sceptical and
-obstinate individuals may doubt that the Earth’s
-motion is visible, but I say from personal observation
-its a positive fact. I don’t care about
-latitude or longitude, or a vibratory pendulum
-revolving round the sine of a tangent on a
-spherical surface, nor axes, nor apsides, nor
-anything of the sort. That is all rubbish. All
-I know is, I see the ceiling of this coffee-room
-going round. I perceive this distinctly with the
-naked eye—only my sight has been sharpened
-by a slight stimulant. I write after my sixth
-go of brandy-and-water, whereof witness my
-hand,”—“Swiggins”—<i>Goose and Gridiron, May
-5, 1851.</i>—“P.S. Why do two waiters come when
-I only call one?”<a id="FNanchor_40" href="#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_40" href="#FNanchor_40" class="label">[40]</a> “Punch,” May 10, 1851.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The whole matter as handled by the astronomical
-theorists is fully deserving of the ridicule
-implied in the above quotation from <i>Punch</i>; but
-because great ingenuity has been shewn, and
-much thought and devotion manifested in connection
-with it, and the general public thereby
-greatly deceived, it is necessary that the subject<span class="pagenum" id="Page153">[153]</span>
-should be fairly and seriously examined. What
-are the facts?</p>
-
-<p>First.—When a pendulum, constructed according
-to the plan of M. Foucault, is allowed to
-vibrate, its plane of vibration is often variable—<i>not
-always</i>. The variation when it <i>does</i> occur,
-is <i>not uniform</i>—is not always the same in the
-same place; nor always the same either in its
-rate or velocity, or in its direction. It cannot
-therefore be taken as evidence; for that which is
-inconstant cannot be used in favour of or
-against any given proposition. It therefore <i>is
-not evidence and proves nothing</i>!</p>
-
-<p>Secondly.—If the plane of vibration <i>is</i> observed
-to change, where is the connection between such
-change and the supposed motion of the Earth?
-What principle of reasoning guides the experimenter
-to the conclusion that it is the Earth
-which moves underneath the pendulum, and not
-the pendulum which moves over the Earth?
-What logical right or necessity forces one conclusion
-in preference to the other?</p>
-
-<p>Thirdly.—Why was not the peculiar arrangement
-of the point of suspension of the pendulum
-specially considered, in regard to its possible
-influence upon the plane of oscillation? Was it
-not known, or was it overlooked, or was it, in the
-climax of theoretical revelry, ignored that a “ball-and-socket”
-joint is one which facilitates <i>circular</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page154">[154]</span>
-motion more readily than any other? and that a
-pendulum so suspended (as was M. Foucault’s),
-could not, after passing over one arc of vibration,
-return through the same arc without there being
-many chances to one that its globular point of
-suspension would slightly turn or twist in its bed,
-and therefore give to the return or backward
-oscillation a slight change of direction? Let the
-<i>immediate cause</i> of the pendulum’s liability to
-change its plane of vibration be traced; and it
-will be found not to have the slightest connection
-with the motion or non-motion of the surface
-over which it vibrates.</p>
-
-<p>At a recent meeting of the French Academy
-of sciences, “M. Dehaut sent in a note, stating
-that M. Foucault (whose experiments on the
-pendulum effected a few years ago at the
-Pantheon, are of European notoriety) is not the
-first discoverer of the fact that the plane of
-oscillation of the free pendulum is invariable;
-but that the honour of the discovery is due to
-Poinsinet de Sivry, who, in 1782, stated, in a
-note to his translation of ‘Pliny,’ that a mariner’s
-compass might be constructed without a magnet,
-by making a pendulum and setting it in motion
-in a given direction; because, provided the
-motion were continually kept up, the pendulum
-would continue to oscillate in the same direction,
-no matter by how many points, or how often the
-ship might happen to change her course.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page155">[155]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Sec13"><span class="secno">SECTION 13.</span><br>
-<span class="chaptitle">PERSPECTIVE ON THE SEA.</span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="noindent">It has been shown (at <a href="#Page25">pages 25</a> to <a href="#Page34">34</a>) that the
-law of perspective, as commonly taught in our
-Schools of Art, is fallacious and contrary to
-everything seen in nature. If an object be held
-up in the air, and gradually carried away from
-an observer who maintains his position, it is
-true that all its parts will converge to one and
-the same point; but if the same object be placed
-upon the ground and similarly moved away from
-a fixed observer, the same predicate is false. In
-the first case the <i>centre</i> of the object is the
-<i>datum</i> to which every point of the exterior
-converges; but in the second case the <i>ground</i>
-becomes the <i>datum</i>, in and towards which every
-part of the object converges in succession,
-beginning with the lowest, or that nearest to it.</p>
-
-<p>Instances:—A man with light trousers and
-black boots walking along a level path, will
-appear at a certain distance as though the boots
-had been removed, and the trousers brought in
-contact with the ground.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page156">[156]</span></p>
-
-<p>A young girl, with short garments terminating
-ten or twelve inches above the feet, will, in
-walking forward, appear to sink towards the
-Earth, the space between which and the bottom
-of the clothes will appear to gradually diminish,
-and in the distance of half-a-mile the limbs,
-which were first seen for ten or twelve inches,
-will be invisible—the bottom of the garment will
-seem to touch the ground.</p>
-
-<p>A small dog running along will appear to
-gradually shorten by the legs, which, in less
-than half a mile, will be invisible, and the body
-appear to glide upon the earth.</p>
-
-<p>Horses and cattle moving away from a given
-point will seem to have lost their hoofs, and to
-be walking upon the outer bones of the limbs.</p>
-
-<p>Carriages similarly receding will seem to lose
-that portion of the rim of the wheels which
-touches the Earth; the axles will seem to get
-lower; and at the distance of a few miles, the
-body will appear to drag along in contact with
-the ground. This is very remarkable in the case
-of a railway carriage when moving away upon a
-straight and level portion of line several miles
-in length. These instances, which are but a few
-of what might be quoted, will be sufficient to
-prove, beyond the power of doubt or the necessity
-for controversy, that upon a plane or horizontal
-surface, the <i>lowest part</i> of bodies receding from<span class="pagenum" id="Page157">[157]</span>
-a given point of observation will disappear <i>before
-the higher</i>. This is precisely what is observed
-in the case of a ship at sea, when outward bound—the
-<i>lowest</i> part—the hull, disappearing before
-the higher parts—the sails and mast head.
-Abstractedly, when the lowest part of a receding
-object thus disappears by entering the “vanishing
-point,” it could be seen again to any and
-every extent by a telescope, if the power were
-sufficient to magnify at the distance observed.
-This is to a great extent practicable upon smooth
-horizontal surfaces, as upon frozen lakes or
-canals; and upon long straight lines of railway.
-But the power of restoring such objects is greatly
-modified and diminished where the surface is
-undulating or otherwise moveable, as in large
-and level meadows, and pasture lands generally;
-in the vast prairies and grassy plains of America;
-and especially so upon the ocean, where the
-surface is always more or less in an undulating
-condition. In Holland and other level countries,
-persons have been seen in winter, skating upon
-the ice, at distances varying from ten to twenty
-miles. On some of the straight and “level”
-lines of railway which cross the prairies of
-America, the trains have been observed for more
-than twenty miles; but upon the sea the conditions
-are altered, and the hull of a receding
-vessel can only be seen for a few miles, and this<span class="pagenum" id="Page158">[158]</span>
-will depend very greatly—the altitude of the
-observer being the same, upon the state of the
-water. When the surface is calm, the hull may
-be seen much farther than when it is rough and
-stormy; but under ordinary circumstances, when
-to the naked eye the hull has just become
-invisible, or is doubtfully visible, it may be seen
-again distinctly by the aid of a powerful telescope.
-Although abstractedly or mathematically there
-should be no limit to this power of restoring by
-a telescope a lost object upon a smooth horizontal
-surface, upon the sea this limit is soon
-observed; the water being variable in its degree
-of agitation, the limit of sight over its surface is
-equally variable, as shown by the following
-experiments:—In May, 1864, on several occasions
-when the water was unusually calm, from the
-landing stairs of the Victoria pier at Portsmouth,
-and from an elevation of 2 ft. 8 in. above the
-water, the greater part of the hull of the Nab
-Light-ship was, through a good telescope, distinctly
-visible; but on other experiments being
-made, when the water was less calm, no portion
-of it could be seen from the same elevation,
-notwithstanding that the most powerful telescopes
-were employed. At other times half the hull, and
-sometimes only the upper part of the bulwarks,
-were visible. If the hull had been invisible
-from the rotundity of the Earth, the following<span class="pagenum" id="Page159">[159]</span>
-calculation will show that it should at all times
-have been 24 feet below the horizon:—The
-distance of the light-ship from the pier is 8
-statute miles. The elevation of the observer
-being 32 inches above the water, would require
-2 miles to be deducted as the distance of the
-supposed convex horizon; for the square of 2
-multiplied by 8 inches (the fall in the first mile
-of the Earth’s curvation) equals 32 inches. This
-deducted from the 8 miles, will leave 6 miles as
-the distance from the horizon to the light ship.
-Hence 6² × 8 in. = 288 inches, or 24 feet. The
-top of the bulwarks, it was said, rose about 10 ft.
-above the water line; hence, deducting 10 from
-24 feet, under all circumstances, even had the
-water been perfectly smooth and stationary, the
-top of the hull should have been 14 feet below
-the summit of the arc of water, or beneath the
-line of sight! This one fact is entirely fatal to
-the doctrine of the Earth’s rotundity. But such
-facts have been observed in various other places—the
-north-west light-ship in Liverpool Bay,
-and the light vessels of many other channels
-near the southern, eastern, and western shores
-of Great Britain. From the beach of Southsea
-Common, near Portsmouth, the observer lying
-down near the water, above the surface of which
-the eye was 2¹⁄₂ feet, and with a telescope looking
-across Spithead to the quarantine ship lying in<span class="pagenum" id="Page160">[160]</span>
-the “Roads,” between Ryde and Cowes, in the
-Isle of Wight, a distance of 7 miles, the copper
-sheathing of that vessel was distinctly seen, the
-depth of which was about 2 feet. Making the
-usual calculation in accordance with the doctrine
-of the Earth’s convexity, it will be seen that an
-arc of water ought to have existed between
-the two points, the summit of which arc should
-have been 16 feet above the copper sheathing of
-the vessel!</p>
-
-<p>From an elevation of 2¹⁄₂ feet above the water
-opposite the Royal Yacht Club House, in West
-Cowes, Isle of Wight, the pile work and
-promenade of the pier at Stake’s Bay, near
-Gosport, and nearly opposite Osborne House, were
-easily distinguished through various telescopes:
-the distance is 7 miles, the altitude of the
-promenade 10 feet, and the usual calculation
-will show that this pier ought to have been many
-feet below the horizon!</p>
-
-<p>It is a well-known fact that the light of the
-Eddystone lighthouse is often plainly visible from
-the beach in Plymouth Sound; and sometimes,
-when the sea is very calm, persons can see it
-distinctly when sitting in ordinary rowing boats
-in that part of the Sound which will allow the
-line of sight to pass between Drake’s Island and
-the western end of the Breakwater. The distance
-is 14 statute miles. In a list of lighthouses in a<span class="pagenum" id="Page161">[161]</span>
-work called “The Lighthouses of the World,”
-by A. G. Findlay, F.R.G.S., published in 1862, by
-Richard H. Lawrie, 53, Fleet Street, London, it
-is said, at page 28:—“In the Tables the height
-of the flame above the highest tide high water
-level is given, so that it is the <i>minimum</i> range
-of the light; to this elevation 10 feet is added
-for the height of the deck of the ship above the
-sea. Besides the increased distance to which
-low water will cause the light to be seen, the
-effect of refraction will also sometimes increase
-their range.” In the “Tables” above referred
-to, at page 36 the Eddystone light is said to
-be visible 13 miles. But these 13 miles are
-nautical measure; and as 3 nautical miles equal
-3¹⁄₂ statute miles, the distance at which the
-Eddystone light is visible is over 15 statute
-miles. Notwithstanding that the Eddystone
-light is actually visible at a distance of 15
-statute miles, and admitted to be so both by the
-Admiralty authorities and by calculation according
-to the doctrine of rotundity, very often at
-the same distance, the lantern is not visible
-at an elevation of 4 feet from the water; showing
-that the law of perspective, previously referred
-to, is greatly influenced by the state of the
-surface of the water over which the line of sight
-is directed. A remarkable illustration of this
-influence is given in the <i>Western Daily Mercury</i>,<span class="pagenum" id="Page162">[162]</span>
-published in Plymouth, of October 25, 1864.
-Several discussions had previously taken place
-at the Plymouth Athenæum and the Devonport
-Mechanics’ Institute, on the true figure of the
-Earth; subsequent to which a committee was
-formed for the purpose of making experiments
-bearing on the question at issue. The names of the
-gentlemen as given in the above-named journal
-were “Parallax” (the author of this work),
-“Theta” (Mr. Henry, a teacher in Her Majesty’s
-Dock-yard, Devonport), and Messrs. Osborne,
-Richards, Rickard, Mogg, Evers, and Pearce, all
-of Plymouth. From the report published as
-above stated, the following quotation is made:—Observation
-6th: “<i>On the beach, at 5 feet from
-the water level, the Eddystone was entirely out
-of sight</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>The matter may be summarized as follows:—At
-any time when the sea is calm and the
-weather clear, the Light of the Eddystone, which
-is 89 feet above the foundation on the rock,
-may be distinctly seen from an elevation of 5
-feet above the water level; according to the
-Admiralty directions, it “may be seen 13 nautical
-(or 15 statute) miles,”<a id="FNanchor_41" href="#Footnote_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> or one mile still farther
-away than the position of the observers on the
-above-named occasion; and yet <i>on that occasion</i>,
-and at a distance of only 14 statute miles, notwithstanding<span class="pagenum" id="Page163">[163]</span>
-that it was a very fine autumn day,
-and a clear back ground existed, not only was
-the lantern, which is 89 feet high, not visible,
-but the <i>top of the vane</i>, which is 100 feet above
-the foundation was, as stated in the report,
-“<i>entirely out of sight</i>.”</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_41" href="#FNanchor_41" class="label">[41]</a> “Lighthouses of the World,” p. 36.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<div class="container" id="Fig32">
-
-<img src="images/fig32.png" alt="Lighthouse">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 32.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p>That vessels and lighthouses are sometimes
-more distinctly seen than at others; and that
-the lower parts of such objects are sooner lost
-sight of when the sea is rough than when it is
-calm, are items in the experience of seafaring
-people as common as their knowledge of the
-changes in the weather; and prominence is only
-given here to the above case because it was
-verified by persons of different opinions upon
-the subject of the Earth’s form, and in the
-presence of several hundreds of the most learned
-and respectable inhabitants of Plymouth and
-the neighbourhood. The conclusion which such
-observations necessitate and force upon us is,
-that the law of perspective which is everywhere
-visible on land, is <i>modified</i> when observed in
-connection with objects upon or near the sea.
-But <i>how</i> modified? If the water of the ocean
-were frozen and at perfect rest, any object upon
-its surface would be seen as far as telescopic or
-magnifying power could be brought to bear
-upon it. But because this is not the case—because
-the water is always more or less in<span class="pagenum" id="Page164">[164]</span>
-motion, not only of progression but of fluctuation,
-the swells and waves, into which the surface
-is broken operate to prevent the line of sight
-from passing parallel to the horizontal surface of
-the water. It has been shown at pages 16 to
-20, and also at 25 to 33, that the surface of the
-Earth and Sea appears to rise up to the level, or
-altitude of the eye; and that at a certain distance
-the line of sight and the surface which is
-parallel to it appear to converge to a “vanishing
-point;” which point is “the horizon.” If this
-horizon, or vanishing point, were formed by the
-apparent junction of two <i>perfectly stationary</i>
-parallel lines, it could be penetrated by a telescope
-of sufficient power to magnify at the distance;
-but because upon the sea the surface of
-the water is <i>not stationary</i>, the line of sight at
-the vanishing point becomes angular instead of
-parallel, and telescopic power is of little avail in
-restoring objects beyond this point. The following
-diagram will render this clear:—The horizontal
-line C&#160;D&#160;E and the line of sight A&#160;B are
-parallel to each other, and appear to meet at the
-vanishing point B. But at and about this point<span class="pagenum" id="Page165">[165]</span>
-the line A&#160;B is intercepted by the undulating,
-or fluctuating surface of the water; the degree of
-which is variable, being sometimes very great and
-at others inconsiderable, and having to pass over
-the crest of the waves, as at H, is obliged to
-become A&#160;H, instead of A&#160;B, and will therefore
-fall upon a ship, lighthouse, or other object at
-the point S, or higher or lower as such objects
-are more or less beyond the point H.</p>
-
-<p>It is worthy of note that the waves at the
-point H, whatever their real magnitude may be,
-are <i>magnified</i> and rendered more obstructive
-by the very instrument—the telescope—which
-is employed to make the objects beyond more
-plainly visible: and thus the phenomenon is often
-very strikingly observed—that while a powerful
-telescope will render the sails and rigging of a
-ship when beyond the point H, or the optical
-horizon, so distinct that the very ropes are easily
-distinguished, not the slightest portion of the
-hull can be seen. The “crested waters” form a
-barrier to the horizontal line-of-sight, as substantial
-as would the summit of an intervening rock
-or island.</p>
-
-<p>In the report which appeared in the <i>Western
-Daily Mercury</i>, of Oct. 25, 1864, the following
-observations were also recorded:—“On the sea-front
-of the Camera house, and at an elevation
-of 110 feet from the mean level of the sea, a<span class="pagenum" id="Page166">[166]</span>
-plane mirror was fixed, by the aid of a plumb-line,
-in a <i>true vertical position</i>. In this mirror
-the distant horizon was distinctly visible on a
-level with the eye of the observer. This was the
-simple fact, as observed by the several members
-of the committee which had been appointed.
-But some of the observers remarked that the
-line of the horizon in the mirror rose and fell
-with the eye, as also did every thing else which
-was reflected, and that this ought to be recorded
-as an <i>addendum</i>—granted. The surface of the
-sea appeared to regularly ascend from the base
-of the Hoe to the distant horizon. The horizon
-from the extreme east to the west, as far as the
-eye could see, was parallel to a horizontal line.”</p>
-
-<p>The following version was recorded in the
-same journal, of the same date, and was furnished
-by one of the committee who had manifested a
-very marked aversion to the doctrine that the
-surface of all water is horizontal:—“A vertical
-looking-glass was suspended from the Camera
-and the horizon seen in it, as well as various
-other objects reflected, rising and falling with
-the eye. The water was seen in the glass to
-ascend from the base of the Hoe to the horizon.
-The horizon appeared parallel to a horizontal
-line.”</p>
-
-<p>It will be observed that the two reports are
-substantially the same, and very strongly corroborate<span class="pagenum" id="Page167">[167]</span>
-the remarks made at <a href="#Page15">pages 15</a>, <a href="#Page16">16</a>, and
-<a href="#Page17">17</a> of this work. Indeed no other report could
-have been given without the author’s becoming
-subject to the charge of glaring, obstinate, and
-wilful misrepresentation. What then has again
-been demonstrated? That the surface of all
-water <i>is horizontal</i>, and that, therefore, the
-Earth cannot possibly be anything other than a
-Plane. All appearances to the contrary have
-been shown to be purely optical and adventitious.</p>
-
-<div class="container" id="Fig33">
-
-<img src="images/fig33.png" alt="Horizontal sea">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 33.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<div class="container" id="Fig34">
-
-<img src="images/fig34.png" alt="Curved sea">
-
-<p class="caption">FIG. 34.</p>
-
-</div><!--container-->
-
-<p>Another proof that the surface of all water is
-horizontal and that therefore the Earth cannot
-be a globe is furnished by the following experiment,
-which was made in May, 1864, on the new
-pier at Southsea, near Portsmouth:—A telescope
-was fixed upon a stand and directed across the
-water at Spithead to the pier head at Ryde, in
-the Isle of Wight, as shown in the subjoined
-diagram. The line of sight crossed a certain
-part of the funnel of one of the regular steamers
-trading between Portsmouth and the Isle of
-Wight; and it was observed to cut or fall upon
-the same part during the whole of the passage to
-Ryde Pier, thus proving that the water between<span class="pagenum" id="Page168">[168]</span>
-the two piers is horizontal, because it was parallel
-to the line of sight from the telescope fixed at
-Southsea. If the Earth were a globe the channel
-between Ryde and Southsea would be an arc of
-a circle, and as the distance across is 4¹⁄₂ statute
-miles the centre of the arc would be 40 inches
-higher than the two sides; and the steamer
-would have ascended an inclined plane for 2¹⁄₄
-miles, or to the centre of the channel, and afterwards
-descended for the same distance towards
-Ryde. This ascent and descent would have been
-marked by the line of sight falling 40 inches
-nearer to the deck of the steamer when on the
-centre of the arc of water, as represented in the
-following diagram; but as the line of sight did
-not cut the steamer lower down when in the
-centre of the channel, and no such ascent and
-descent was observed, it follows necessarily that
-the surface of the water between Southsea and
-the Isle of Wight is <i>not convex</i>, and therefore
-the Earth as a whole is <i>not a globe</i>. The
-evidence against the doctrine of the Earth’s
-rotundity is so clear and perfect, and so completely
-fulfils the conditions required in special<span class="pagenum" id="Page169">[169]</span>
-and independent investigations, that it is impossible
-for any person who can put aside the
-bias of previous education to avoid the opposite
-conclusion that the <i>Earth is a plane</i>. This conclusion
-is greatly confirmed by the experience of
-mariners in regard to certain lighthouses. Where
-the light is fixed and very brilliant it can be
-seen at a distance, which the present doctrine of
-the Earth’s rotundity would render altogether
-impossible. For instance, at page 35 of “Lighthouses
-of the World,” the Ryde Pier Light,
-erected in 1852, is described as a bright fixed
-light, 21 feet above high water, and visible from
-an altitude of 10 feet at the distance of 12
-nautical or 14 statute miles. The altitude of 10
-feet would place the horizon at the distance of 4
-statute miles from the observer. The square of
-the remaining 10 statute miles multiplied by
-8 inches will give a fall or curvature downwards
-from the horizon of 66 feet. Deduct from this
-21 feet, the altitude of the light, and we have 45
-feet as the amount which the light ought to be
-<i>below the horizon</i>!</p>
-
-<p>By the same authority, at page 39, the Bidston
-Hill Lighthouse, near Liverpool, is 228 feet
-above high water, one bright fixed light, visible
-23 nautical or very nearly 27 statute miles.
-Deducting 4 miles for the height of the observer,
-squaring the remaining 23 miles and multiplying<span class="pagenum" id="Page170">[170]</span>
-that product by 8 inches we have a downward
-curvature of 352 feet; from this deduct the
-altitude of the light, 228 feet, and there remains
-124 feet as the distance which the light should
-be <i>below the horizon</i>!</p>
-
-<p>Again, at page 40:—“The lower light on the
-‘Calf of Man’ is 282 feet above high water, and
-is visible 23 nautical miles.” The usual calculation
-will show that it ought to be 70 feet <i>below
-the horizon</i>!</p>
-
-<p>At page 41 the Cromer light is described as
-having an altitude of 274 feet above high water,
-and is visible 23 nautical miles, whereas it ought
-to be at that distance 78 feet <i>below the horizon</i>!</p>
-
-<p>At page 9 it is said:—“The coal fire (which
-was once used) on the Spurn Point Lighthouse,
-at the mouth of the Humber, which was constructed
-on a good principle for burning, has
-been seen 30 miles off.” If the miles here given
-are nautical measure they would be equal to 35
-statute miles. Deducting 4 miles as the usual
-amount for the distance of the horizon, there
-will remain 31 miles, which squared and
-multiplied by 8 inches will give 640 feet as the
-declination of the water from the horizon to the
-base of the Lighthouse, the altitude of which is
-given at page 42 as 93 feet above high water.
-This amount deducted from the above 640 feet
-will leave 547 feet as the distance which the<span class="pagenum" id="Page171">[171]</span>
-Spurn Light ought to have been <i>below the
-horizon</i>!</p>
-
-<p>The two High Whitby Lights are 240 feet
-above high water (see page 42), and are visible
-23 nautical miles at sea. The proper calculation
-will be 102 feet <i>below the horizon</i>!</p>
-
-<p>At page 43, it is said that the Lower Farne
-Island Light is visible for 12 nautical or 14
-statute miles, and the height above high water
-is 45 feet. The usual calculation will show that
-this light ought to be 67 feet <i>below the horizon</i>!</p>
-
-<p>The Hekkengen Light, on the west coast of
-Norway (see page 54), is 66 feet above high
-water, and visible 16 statute miles. It ought to
-be sunk beneath the horizon 30 feet!</p>
-
-<p>The Trondhjem Light (see p. 55), on the
-Ringholm Rock, west coast of Norway, is 51 feet
-high, and is visible 16 statute miles; but ought
-to be 45 feet below the horizon!</p>
-
-<p>The Rondö Light, also on the west coast of
-Norway (see p. 55), is 161 feet high, and is
-visible for 25 statute miles; the proper calculation
-will prove that it ought to be above 130
-feet below the horizon!</p>
-
-<p>The Egerö Light, on west point of Island,
-south coast of Norway (see p. 56), and which is
-fitted up with the first order of the dioptric
-lights, is visible for 28 statute miles, and the
-altitude above high water is 154 feet; making<span class="pagenum" id="Page172">[172]</span>
-the usual calculation we find this light ought to
-be depressed, or sunk, below the horizon 230
-feet!</p>
-
-<p>The Dunkerque Light, on the north coast of
-France (see p. 71), is 194 feet high, and visible
-28 statute miles. The ordinary calculation will
-show that it ought to be 190 feet below the
-horizon!</p>
-
-<p>The Goulfar Bay Light, on the west coast of
-France, is said at page 77, to be visible 31
-statute miles, and to have an altitude at high
-water of 276 feet, at the distance given it ought
-to be 210 feet below the horizon!</p>
-
-<p>At page 78, the Cordonan Light, on the River
-Gironde, west coast of France, is given as being
-visible 31 statute miles, and its altitude 207 feet,
-which would give its depression below the horizon
-as nearly 280 feet!</p>
-
-<p>The Light at Madras (p. 104), on the Esplanade,
-is 132 feet high, and visible 28 statute
-miles, whereas at that distance it ought to be
-beneath the horizon above 250 feet!</p>
-
-<p>The Port Nicholson Light, in New Zealand,
-erected in 1859 (p. 110), is visible 35 statute
-miles, the altitude is 420 feet above high water,
-and ought, if the water is convex, to be 220 feet
-below the horizon!</p>
-
-<p>The Light on Cape Bonavista, Newfoundland,
-is 150 feet above high water, and is visible 35<span class="pagenum" id="Page173">[173]</span>
-statute miles (p. 111), this will give on calculation
-for the Earth’s rotundity, 491 feet that the
-Light should be below the horizon!</p>
-
-<p>Many other cases could be given from the
-same work, shewing that the practical observations
-of mariners, engineers, and surveyors,
-entirely ignore the doctrine that the Earth is a
-globe. The following cases taken from miscellaneous
-sources will be interesting as bearing
-upon and leading to the same conclusion. In
-the <i>Illustrated London News</i> of Oct. 20, 1849,
-an engraving is given of a new Lighthouse
-erected on the Irish coast, The accompanying
-descriptive matter contains the following sentence:—“Ballycotton
-Island rises 170 feet above
-the level of the sea; the height of the Lighthouse
-is 60 feet including the Lantern; giving
-the light an elevation of 230 feet, which is
-visible upwards of 35 miles to sea.” If the 35
-miles are nautical measure the distance in statute
-measure would be over 40 miles; and allowing
-the usual distance for the horizon, there would
-be 36 miles from thence to the Lighthouse.
-The square of 36 multiplied by 8 inches amounts
-to 864 feet; deduct the total altitude of the
-Lantern, 230 feet, and the remainder, 634 feet,
-is the distance which the Light of Ballycotton
-ought to be below the horizon!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page174">[174]</span></p>
-
-<p>In the <i>Times</i> newspaper of Monday, Oct. 16,
-1854, in an account of her Majesty’s visit to Great
-Grimsby from Hull, the following paragraph
-occurs:—“Their attention was first naturally
-directed to a gigantic tower which rises from the
-centre pier to the height of 300 feet, and can be
-seen 60 miles out at sea.” The 60 miles if
-nautical, and this is always understood when
-referring to distances at sea, would make 70
-statute miles, to which the fall of 8 inches
-belongs, and as all observations at sea are considered
-to be made at an elevation of 10 feet
-above the water, for which four miles must be
-deducted from the whole distance, 66 statute
-miles will remain, the square of which multiplied
-by 8 inches, gives a declination towards the
-tower of 2,904 feet; deducting from this the
-altitude of the tower, 300 feet, we obtain
-the startling conclusion that the tower should
-be at the distance at which it is visible, (60
-nautical miles,) more than 2,600 feet <i>below the
-horizon</i>!</p>
-
-<p>The only modification which can be made or
-allowed in the preceding calculations is that for
-refraction, which is considered by surveyors
-generally to amount to about ¹⁄₁₂th of the
-altitude of the object observed. If we make this
-allowance it will reduce the various quotients
-by ¹⁄₁₂th, which is so little that the whole will<span class="pagenum" id="Page175">[175]</span>
-be substantially the same. Take the last
-quotation as an instance—2,600 feet divided
-by 12 gives 206, which deducted from 2,600
-leaves 2,384 as the corrected amount for
-refraction.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page176">[176]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Sec14"><span class="secno">SECTION 14.</span><br>
-<span class="chaptitle">GENERAL SUMMARY—APPLICATION—<i>CUI
-BONO?</i></span></h2>
-
-</div><!--chapter-->
-
-<p class="noindent">In the preceding sections it has been shown
-that the Copernican, or Newtonian theory of
-Astronomy is “an absurd composition of truth
-and error;” and, as admitted by its founder,
-“not necessarily true or even probable,” and
-that instead of its being a general conclusion
-derived from known and admitted facts, it is a
-heterogeneous compound of assumed premises,
-isolated truths, and variable appearances in
-nature. Its advocates are challenged to show a
-single instance wherein a phenomenon is explained,
-a calculation made, or a conclusion
-advanced without the aid of an avowed or
-implied assumption! The very construction
-of a theory at all, and especially such as the
-Copernican, is a complete violation of that
-natural and legitimate mode of investigation
-to which the term <i>zetetic</i> has been applied.
-The doctrine of the universality of gravitation
-is an assumption, made only in accordance<span class="pagenum" id="Page177">[177]</span>
-with that “pride and ambition which has
-led philosophers to think it beneath them to
-offer anything less to the world than a complete
-and finished system of nature.” It was
-said, in effect, by Newton, and has ever since
-been insisted upon by his disciples—“Allow us,
-without proof, the existence of two universal
-forces—centrifugal and centripetal, or attraction
-and repulsion, and we will construct a system
-which shall explain all the leading mysteries of
-nature. An apple falling from a tree, or a stone
-rolling downwards, and a pail of water tied to a
-string set in rapid motion were assumed to be
-types of the relations existing among all the
-bodies in the universe. The moon was assumed
-to have a tendency to fall towards the Earth, and
-the Earth and Moon together towards the Sun.
-The same relation was assumed to exist between
-all the smaller and larger luminaries in the
-firmament; and it soon became necessary to
-extend this assumption to infinity. The universe
-was parcelled out into systems—co-existent and
-illimitable. Suns, Planets, Satellites, and Comets
-were assumed to exist, infinite in number and
-boundless in extent; and to enable the theorists
-to explain the alternating and constantly recurring
-phenomena which were everywhere observable,
-these numberless and for-ever-extending
-objects were assumed to be spheres. The Earth<span class="pagenum" id="Page178">[178]</span>
-we inhabit was called a <i>planet</i>; and because it
-was thought to be reasonable that the luminous
-objects in the firmament which were called
-<i>planets</i> were <i>spherical</i> and had <i>motion</i>, so it was
-only reasonable to suppose that as the Earth was
-a planet it must also be spherical and have
-motion—<i>ergo</i>, the Earth is a globe, and moves
-upon axes and in an orbit round the Sun! And
-as the Earth is a globe, and is inhabited, so again
-it is only reasonable to conclude that the planets
-are worlds like the Earth, and are inhabited by
-sentient beings! What reasoning! Assumption
-upon assumption, and the conclusion derived
-therefrom called a thing proved, to be employed
-as a truth to substantiate the first assumption!
-Such a “juggle and jumble” of fancies and falsehoods,
-extended and intensified as it is in
-theoretical astronomy, is calculated to make the
-unprejudiced inquirer revolt in horror from the
-terrible conjuration which has been practised
-upon him; to sternly resolve to resist its further
-progress; to endeavour to overthrow the entire
-edifice, and to bury in its ruins the false honours
-which have been associated with its fabricators,
-and which still attach to its devotees. For
-the learning, the patience, the perseverance, and
-devotion for which they have ever been examples,
-honour and applause need not be withheld; but
-their false reasoning, the advantages they have<span class="pagenum" id="Page179">[179]</span>
-taken of the general ignorance of mankind in respect
-to astronomical subjects, and the unfounded
-theories they have advanced and defended, cannot
-but be regretted, and ought to be resisted.
-It has become a duty, paramount and imperative,
-to meet them in open, avowed, and
-unyielding rebellion; to declare that their unopposed
-reign of error and confusion is over;
-and that henceforth, like a falling dynasty, they
-must shrink and disappear, leaving the throne
-and the kingdom to those awakening intellects
-whose numbers are constantly increasing, and
-whose march is rapid and irresistible. The
-soldiers of truth and reason have drawn the
-sword, and ere another generation has been
-educated, will have forced the usurper to abdicate.
-The axe is lifted—it is falling, and in a
-very few years will have “cut the cumberer
-down.”</p>
-
-<p>The Earth a Globe, and it is necessarily
-demanded that it has a diurnal and an annual
-and various other motions; for a globular world
-without motion would be useless—day and night,
-winter and summer, the half year’s light and
-darkness at the “North Pole,” and other phenomena
-could not be explained by the supposition
-of rotundity without the assumption also of
-rapid and constant motion. Hence it is <i>assumed</i>
-that the Earth and Moon, and all the Planets<span class="pagenum" id="Page180">[180]</span>
-and their Satellites move in relation to each
-other, and that the whole move together in different
-planes round the Sun. The Sun and its
-“system” of revolving bodies are now assumed
-to have a general and all-inclusive motion, in
-common with an endless series of other Suns
-and systems, around some other and “central
-Sun” which has been assumed to be the true
-axis and centre of the Universe! These assumed
-general motions with the particular and peculiar
-motions which are assigned to the various bodies
-in detail, together constitute a system so confused
-and complicated that it is almost impossible and
-always difficult of comprehension by the most
-active and devoted minds. The most simple
-and direct experiments, however, may be shown
-to prove that the Earth has no progressive
-motion whatever; and here again the advocates
-of this interminable and entangling arrangement
-are challenged to produce a single instance of so
-called proofs of these motions which does not
-involve an assumption—often a glaring falsehood—but
-always a point which is not, or cannot
-be demonstrated.</p>
-
-<p>The magnitudes, distances, velocities, and
-periodic times which these assumed motions
-eliminate, are all glaringly fictitious, because
-they are only such as a false theory creates a
-necessity for. It is geometrically demonstrable<span class="pagenum" id="Page181">[181]</span>
-that all the visible luminaries in the firmament
-are within a distance of a few thousand miles,
-not more than the space which stretches between
-the North Pole and the Cape of Good Hope;
-and the principle of measurement—that of plane
-triangulation—which demonstrates this important
-fact, is one which no mathematician, demanding
-to be considered a master in the science, dare
-for a moment deny. All these luminaries then,
-and the Sun itself, being so near to us, cannot
-be other than very small as compared with the
-Earth we inhabit. They are all in motion over
-the Earth, which is alone immoveable, and
-therefore they cannot be anything more than
-secondary and subservient structures, ministering
-to this fixed material world, and to its inhabitants.
-This is a plain, simple, and in every
-respect demonstrable philosophy, agreeing with
-the evidence of our senses, borne out by every
-fairly instituted experiment, and never requiring
-a violation of those principles of investigation
-which the human mind has ever recognized,
-and depended upon in its every day life. The
-modern, or Newtonian Astronomy, has none of
-these characteristics. The whole system taken
-together constitutes a most monstrous absurdity.
-It is false in its foundation; irregular, unfair,
-and illogical in its details; and in its conclusions
-inconsistent and contradictory. Worse than all,<span class="pagenum" id="Page182">[182]</span>
-it is a prolific source of irreligion and of atheism,
-of which its advocates are, practically, supporters!
-By defending a system which is directly opposite
-to that which is taught in connection with all
-religions, they lead the more critical and daring
-intellects to reject the scriptures altogether, to
-ignore the worship, and doubt and deny the
-existence of a Supreme Ruler of the world. Many
-of the primest minds are thus irreparably injured,
-robbed of those present pleasures, and that cheering
-hope of the future which the earnest christian
-devotee holds as of far greater value than all
-earthly wealth and grandeur; or than the mastery
-of all the philosophical complications which the
-human mind ever invented.</p>
-
-<p>The doctrine of the Earth’s rotundity and
-motion is now shown to be unconditionally false;
-and therefore the scriptures which assert the
-contrary, are, in their philosophical teachings at
-least, <i>literally true</i>. In practical science therefore,
-atheism and denial of scriptural authority have
-no foundation. If human theories are cast aside,
-and the facts of nature, and legitimate reasoning
-alone depended upon, it will be seen that religion
-and true philosophy are not antagonistic, and
-that the hopes which both encourage may be
-fully relied upon. To the religious mind this
-matter is most important, it is indeed no less
-than a sacred question, for it renders complete<span class="pagenum" id="Page183">[183]</span>
-the evidence that the Jewish and Christian scriptures
-are true, and must have been communicated
-to mankind by an anterior and supernal Being.
-For if after so many ages of mental struggling,
-of speculation and trial, and change and counterchange,
-we have at length discovered that all
-astronomical theories are false, that the Earth
-is a plane, and motionless, and that the various
-luminaries above it are lights only and not
-worlds; and that these very doctrines have been
-taught and recorded in a work which has been
-handed down to us from the earliest times; from
-a time, in fact, when mankind could not have
-had sufficient experience to enable them to
-criticise and doubt, much less to invent, it
-follows that whoever dictated and caused such
-doctrines to be recorded and preserved to all
-future generations, must have been superhuman,
-omniscient, and, to the Earth and its inhabitants
-pre-existent.</p>
-
-<p>To the dogged Atheist, whose “mind is made
-up” not to enter into any further investigation,
-and not to admit of possible error in his past
-conclusions, this question is of no more account
-than it is to an Ox. He who cares not to re-examine
-from time to time his state of mind,
-and the result of his accumulated experience is
-in no single respect better than the lowest
-animal in creation. He may see nothing higher,<span class="pagenum" id="Page184">[184]</span>
-more noble, more intelligent or beautiful than
-himself; and in this his pride, conceit, and
-vanity find an incarnation. To such a creature
-there is no God, for he is himself an equal with
-the highest being he has ever recognised! Such
-Atheism exists to an alarming extent among the
-philosophers of Europe and America; and it has
-been mainly fostered by the astronomical and
-geological theories of the day. Besides which,
-in consequence of the differences between the
-language of Scripture and the teachings of
-modern Astronomy, there is to be found in the
-very hearts of Christian and Jewish congregations
-a sort of “smouldering scepticism;” kind of
-faint suspicion which causes great numbers to
-manifest a cold and visible indifference to
-religious requirements. It is this which has led
-thousands to desert the cause of earnest, active
-Christianity, and which has forced the majority
-of those who still remain in the ranks of religion
-to declare “that the Scriptures were not intended
-to teach correctly other than moral and religious
-doctrines; that the references so often made to
-the physical world, and to natural phenomena
-generally, are given in language to suit the prevailing
-notions and the ignorance of the people.”
-A Christian philosopher who wrote almost a
-century ago in reference to remarks similar to
-the above, says, “Why should we suspect that<span class="pagenum" id="Page185">[185]</span>
-Moses, Joshua, David, Solomon, and the later
-prophets and inspired writers have counterfeited
-their sentiments concerning the order of the
-universe, from pure complaisance, or being in
-any way obliged to dissemble with a view to
-gratify the prepossessions of the populace? These
-eminent men being kings, lawgivers, and generals
-themselves, or always privileged with access to
-the courts of sovereign princes, besides the
-reverence and awful dignity which the power of
-divination and working of miracles procured to
-them, had great worldly and spiritual authority....
-They had often in charge to command,
-suspend, revert, and otherwise interfere with the
-course and laws of nature, and were never
-daunted to speak out the truth before the most
-mighty potentates on earth, much less would
-they be overawed by the <i>vox populi</i>.” To say
-that the Scriptures were not intended to teach
-science truthfully, is in substance to declare that
-God himself has stated, and commissioned His
-prophets to teach things which are utterly false!
-Those Newtonian philosophers who still hold
-that the sacred volume is the Word of God, are
-thus placed in a fearful dilemma. How can the
-two systems, so directly opposite in character,
-be reconciled? Oil and water alone will not
-combine—mix them by violence as we may, they
-will again separate when allowed to rest. Call<span class="pagenum" id="Page186">[186]</span>
-oil oil, and water water, and acknowledge them
-to be distinct in nature and value; but let no
-“hodge-podge” be attempted, and passed off as
-a genuine compound of oil and water. Call
-Scripture the Word of God—the Creator and
-Ruler of all things, and the Fountain of all
-Truth; and call the Newtonian or Copernican
-Astronomy the word and work of man, of man,
-too, in his vainest mood—so vain and conceited
-as not to be content with the direct and simple
-teachings of his Maker, but who must rise up in
-rebellion and conjure into existence a fanciful
-complicated fabric, which being insisted upon as
-true, creates and necessitates the dark and
-horrible interrogatives—Is God a deceiver? Has
-He spoken direct and unequivocal falsehood?
-Can we no longer indulge in the beautiful and
-consoling thought that God’s justice, and love,
-and truth are unchanging and reliable for ever?
-Let Christians—for Sceptics and Atheists may
-be left out of the question—to whatever division
-of the Church they belong, look at this matter
-calmly and earnestly. Let them determine to
-uproot the deception which has led them to
-think that they can altogether ignore the plainest
-astronomical teaching of Scripture, and endorse
-a system to which it is in every sense opposed.
-The following language is quoted as an instance
-of the manner in which the doctrine of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page187">[187]</span>
-Earth’s rotundity and the plurality of worlds
-interferes with Scriptural teachings:—“The
-theory of original sin is confuted (by our astronomical
-and geological knowledge), and I cannot
-permit the belief, when I know that our world is
-but a mere speck, a perishable atom in the vast
-space of creation, that God should just select
-this little spot to descend upon and assume our
-form, and clothe Himself in our flesh, to become
-visible to human eyes, to the tiny beings of this
-comparatively insignificant world....
-Thus millions of distant worlds, with the beings
-allotted to them, were to be extirpated and
-destroyed in consequence of the original sin of
-Adam. No sentiment of the human mind can
-surely be more derogatory to the Divine attributes
-of the Creator, nor more repugnant to the
-known economy of the celestial bodies. For in
-the first place, who is to say, among the infinity
-of worlds, whether Adam was the <i>only creature</i>
-who was tempted by Satan and fell, and by his
-fall involved all the other worlds in his guilt.”<a id="FNanchor_42" href="#Footnote_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_42" href="#FNanchor_42" class="label">[42]</a> Encyclopædia Londenensis, p. 457, vol. 2.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The difficulty experienced by the author of
-the above remarks is clearly one which can no
-longer exist, when it is seen that the doctrine
-of a plurality of worlds is an impossibility. That
-it is an impossibility is shown by the fact that
-the Sun, Moon, and Stars are very small bodies,<span class="pagenum" id="Page188">[188]</span>
-and very near to the earth; this fact is proved
-by actual non-theoretical measurement; this
-measurement is made on the principle of plane
-trigonometry: this principle of plane trigonometry
-is adopted because the Earth is a Plane; and all
-the base lines employed in the triangulation are
-horizontal. By the same practical method of
-reasoning, all the difficulties which, upon geological
-and astronomical grounds, have been raised
-to the literal teachings of the scriptures, may be
-completely destroyed. Instances:—The scriptures
-repeatedly declare that the Sun moves
-over the Earth—“His going forth is from the
-end of the heaven, and his circuit unto the ends
-of it.” “He ariseth and goeth down, and hasteth
-to his place whence he arose.” “The sun stood
-still in the midst of heaven.” “Great is the
-Earth, high is the heaven, swift is the Sun in his
-course.” In the religious poems of all ages the
-same fact is presented. Christians especially,
-of every denomination, are familiar with, and
-often read and sing with delight such poetry as
-the following:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent00">“My God who makes the Sun to know</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">His proper hour to rise,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And to give light to all below</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Doth send him <i>round the skies</i>.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent00">“When from the chambers of the east</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">His <i>morning race</i> begins,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">He never tires <i>nor stops to rest</i>,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But round the world he shines.”</div><span class="pagenum" id="Page189">[189]</span>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent00">“God of the morning, at whose voice,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The cheerful sun makes haste to rise,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And, like a giant, doth rejoice,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To <i>run his journey through the skies</i>.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent00">“He sends the sun <i>his circuit round</i>,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To cheer the fruits and warm the ground.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent00">“How fair has the day been!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">How bright was the Sun!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">How lovely and joyful</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The <i>course that he run</i>.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>All the expressions of scripture are consistent
-with the fact of the Sun’s motion. They never
-declare anything to the contrary. Whenever
-they speak of the subject it is in the same manner.
-The direct evidence of our senses confirms it; and
-actual and special observations, as well as the most
-practical scientific experiments, declare the same
-thing. The progressive and concentric motion
-of the Sun over the Earth is in every sense
-demonstrable; yet the Newtonian astronomers
-insist upon it that the Sun does not really move,
-that it only <i>appears</i> to move, and that this
-appearance arises from the motion of the Earth;
-that when, as the scriptures affirm, the “Sun
-stood still in the midst of heaven,” it was the
-<i>Earth</i> which stood still and <i>not</i> the Sun! that
-the scriptures therefore speak falsely, and the
-experiments of science, and the observations and
-applications of our senses are never to be relied
-upon. Whence comes this bold and arrogant
-denial of the value of our senses and judgement,<span class="pagenum" id="Page190">[190]</span>
-and the authority of scripture? The Earth or
-the Sun moves. Our senses tell us, and the
-scriptures declare that the Earth is fixed and
-that it is the Sun which moves above and around
-it; but a <i>theory</i>, which is absolutely false in its
-groundwork, and ridiculously illogical in its
-details, demands that the Earth is round and
-moves upon axes, and in several other and
-various directions; and that these motions are
-<i>sufficient to account for</i> certain phenomena without
-supposing that the Sun moves, <i>therefore</i> the
-Sun is a fixed body, and his motion is <i>only
-apparent</i>! Such <i>reasoning</i> is a disgrace to
-philosophy, and fearfully dangerous to the
-religious interests of humanity!</p>
-
-<p>Christian ministers and commentators find it a
-most unwelcome task when called upon to reconcile
-the plain and simple philosophy of the scriptures
-with the monstrous teachings of theoretical
-astronomy. Dr. Adam Clark, in a letter to the
-Rev. Thomas Roberts, of Bath,<a id="FNanchor_43" href="#Footnote_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a> speaking of the
-progress of his commentary, and of his endeavours
-to reconcile the statements of scripture
-with the modern astronomy, says: “Joshua’s
-Sun and Moon standing still, have kept me
-going for nearly three weeks! That one chapter
-has afforded me more vexation than anything I
-have ever met with; and even now I am but<span class="pagenum" id="Page191">[191]</span>
-about half satisfied with my own solution of all
-the difficulties, though I am confident that I
-have removed mountains that were never touched
-before; shall I say that I am heartily weary of
-my work, so weary that I have a thousand times
-wished I had never written one page of it, and
-am repeatedly purposing to give it up.”</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_43" href="#FNanchor_43" class="label">[43]</a> Life of Adam Clark, 8vo Edition.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The Rev. John Wesley, in his journal, writes
-as follows:—“The more I consider them the
-more I doubt of all systems of astronomy. I doubt
-whether we can with certainty know either the
-distance or magnitude of any star in the firmament;
-else why do astronomers so immensely
-differ, even with regard to the distance of the
-Sun from the Earth? Some affirming it to be
-only three and others ninety millions of miles.”<a id="FNanchor_44" href="#Footnote_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_44" href="#FNanchor_44" class="label">[44]</a> Extracts from works of Rev. J. Wesley, 3rd Edition, 1829.
-Published by Mason, London, p. 392, vol. 2.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>In vol. 3, page 203, the following entry
-occurs:—“January 1st, 1765.—This week I
-wrote an answer to a warm letter published in
-the <i>London Magazine</i>, the author whereof is
-much displeased that I presume to doubt of the
-‘modern astronomy.’ I cannot help it. Nay,
-the more I consider the more my doubts increase;
-so that at present I doubt whether any man on
-earth knows either the distance or magnitude, I
-will not say of a fixed Star, but Saturn or Jupiter—yea
-of the Sun or Moon.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page192">[192]</span></p>
-
-<p>In vol. 13, page 359, he says:—“And so the
-whole hypothesis of innumerable Suns and worlds
-moving round them vanishes into air.” And
-again at page 430 of same volume, the following
-words occur:—“The planets revolutions we are
-acquainted with, but who is able to this day,
-regularly to demonstrate either their magnitude
-or their distance? Unless he will prove, as is
-the usual way, the magnitude from the distance,
-and the distance from the magnitude. *&#160;*&#160;*
-Dr. Rogers has evidently demonstrated that no
-conjunction of the centrifugal and centripetal
-forces can possibly account for this, or even cause
-any body to move in an ellipsis.” There are
-several other incidental remarks to be found in
-his writings which shew that the Rev. John
-Wesley was well acquainted with the then modern
-astronomy; and that he saw clearly both its
-self-contradictory and its anti-scriptural character.</p>
-
-<p>It is a very popular idea among modern
-astronomers that the stellar universe is an endless
-congeries of systems, of Suns and attendant
-worlds peopled with sentient beings analogous in
-the purpose and destiny of their existence to the
-inhabitants of this earth. This doctrine of a
-plurality of worlds, although it conveys the most
-magnificent ideas of the universe, is purely
-fanciful, and may be compared to the “dreams
-of the alchemists” who laboured with unheard<span class="pagenum" id="Page193">[193]</span>
-of enthusiasm to discover the “philosopher’s
-stone,” the <i>elixir vitæ</i>, and the “universal
-solvent.” However grand the first two projects
-might have been in their realisation, it is known
-that they were never developed in a practical
-sense, and the latter idea of a solvent which
-would dissolve everything was suddenly and
-unexpectedly destroyed by the few remarks of a
-simple but critical observer, who demanded to
-know what service a substance would be to them
-which would dissolve all things? What could
-they keep it in? for it would dissolve every vessel
-wherein they sought to preserve it! This idea
-of a plurality of worlds is but a natural and
-reasonable conclusion drawn from the doctrine
-of the Earth’s rotundity. But this doctrine being
-false its off shoot is equally so. The supposition
-that the heavenly bodies are Suns and
-inhabited worlds is demonstrably impossible in
-nature, and has no foundation whatever in
-Scripture. “In the beginning God created the
-Heaven and <i>the Earth</i>.” One Earth <i>only</i> is
-created; and the fact is more especially described
-in Genesis, ch. i., v. 10. Where, instead of the
-word “Earth” meaning both land and water as
-together forming a globe, as it does in the
-Newtonian astronomy, only the <i>dry land</i> was
-called <i>earth</i>,” and “the gathering together of the
-waters called He seas.” The Sun, Moon, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page194">[194]</span>
-Stars are described as lights only and not worlds.
-A great number of passages might be quoted
-which prove that no other material world is
-ever in the slightest manner referred to by the
-sacred writers. The creation of the world; the
-origin of evil, and the fall of man; the plan of
-redemption by the death of Christ; the day of
-judgement, and the final consummation of all
-things are invariably associated with <i>this Earth
-alone</i>. The expression in Hebrews, ch. i., v. 2,
-“by whom also he made the <i>worlds</i>,” and in
-Heb., ch. ii., v. 3, “through faith we understand
-that the <i>worlds</i> were framed,” are known to be a
-comparatively recent rendering from the original
-Greek documents. The word which has been
-translated <i>worlds</i> is fully as capable of being
-rendered in the singular number as the plural;
-and previous to the introduction of the Copernican
-Astronomy was always translated “<i>the world</i>.”
-The Roman Catholic and the French Protestant
-Bibles still contain the singular number; and in
-a copy of an English Protestant Bible printed in
-the year 1608, the following translation is
-given:—“Through faith we understand that <i>the
-world</i> was ordained.” So that either the plural
-expression “worlds” was used in later translations
-to accord with the astronomical notions then
-recently introduced, or it was meant to include
-the Earth and the spiritual world, as referred to
-in:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page195">[195]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Hebrews</i> ii., 5—“For unto angels hath he not
-put into subjection <i>the world to come</i>.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Ephesians</i> i., 21—“Far above all principality
-and power, and might, and dominion, and every
-name that is named not only in <i>this world</i>, but
-also in <i>that which is to come</i>.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Luke</i> xviii., 29, 30—“There is no man that
-hath left house, or parents, or brethren, or wife,
-or children, for the kingdom of God’s sake, who
-shall not receive manifold more in this <i>present
-time</i>, and in <i>the world to come</i> life everlasting.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Matthew</i> xii., 32—“Whosoever speaketh
-against the Holy Ghost, it shall not be forgiven
-him, neither in <i>this world</i> neither in the <i>world
-to come</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>The Scriptures teach that in the day of the
-Lord “the Heavens shall pass away with a great
-noise, and the elements shall melt with fervent
-heat,” and the “stars of Heaven fall unto the Earth
-even as a fig tree casteth her untimely figs when
-shaken of a mighty wind.” The Newtonian
-system of astronomy declares that the stars and
-planets are mighty worlds—nearly all of them
-much larger than this Earth. The fixed stars
-are considered to be suns, equal to if not greater
-than our own sun, which is said to be above
-800,000 miles in diameter. All this is proveably
-false, but to those who have been led to believe
-it, the difficult question arises,—“How can<span class="pagenum" id="Page196">[196]</span>
-thousands of stars fall upon the Earth, which is
-many times less than any one of them?” How
-can the Earth with a supposed diameter of 8000
-miles receive the numerous suns of the firmament
-many of which are said to be a million miles in
-diameter?</p>
-
-<p>These stars are assumed to have positions so
-far from the Earth that the distance is almost
-inexpressible; figures indeed may be arranged
-on paper but in reading them no practical idea
-is conveyed to the mind. Many of them are
-said to be so distant that should they fall
-with the velocity of light or above one hundred
-and sixty thousand miles in a second, or six
-hundred millions of miles per hour, they would
-require nearly two millions of years to reach the
-Earth! Sir William Herschel in a paper on
-“The power of telescopes to penetrate into
-space,” published in the <i>Philosophical Transactions</i>
-for the year 1800, affirms, that with his
-powerful instruments he discovered brilliant
-luminaries so far from the Earth that the light
-from them “could not have been less than <i>one
-million nine hundred thousand years in its
-progress</i>.” Again the difficulty presents itself—“If
-the stars of Heaven begin to fall to-day, and
-with the greatest imaginable velocity, millions of
-years must elapse before they reach the Earth!”
-But the Scriptures declare that these changes<span class="pagenum" id="Page197">[197]</span>
-shall occur suddenly—shall come, indeed, “as
-a thief in the night.”</p>
-
-<p>The same theory, with its false and inconceivable
-distances and magnitudes, operates to destroy
-all the ordinary, common sense, and scripturally
-authorised chronology. Christian and Jewish
-commentators, unless astronomically educated,
-hold and teach that the Earth, as well as the Sun,
-Moon, and Stars, were created about 4,000 years
-before the birth of Christ, or less than 6,000 years
-before the present time. But if many of these
-luminaries are so distant that their light would
-require above a million of years to reach us;
-and if, as we are taught, bodies are visible to us
-because of the light which they reflect or radiate,
-then their light <i>has</i> reached us, because we have
-been able to see them, and therefore they must
-have been shining, and must have been created at
-least <i>one million nine hundred thousand years
-ago</i>! The chronology of the bible indicates that
-a period of six thousand years has not yet elapsed
-since “the Heavens and the Earth were finished,
-and <i>all</i> the Host of them.”</p>
-
-<p>In the modern astronomy, Continents, Oceans,
-Seas, and Islands, are considered as together
-forming one vast Globe of 25,000 miles in circumference.
-This has been shown to be fallacious,
-and it is clearly contrary to the plain, literal
-teaching of the scriptures. In the first chapter<span class="pagenum" id="Page198">[198]</span>
-of Genesis, we find the following language: “and
-God said let the waters under the heaven be
-gathered unto one place, and let the <i>dry land</i>
-appear; and it was so. And God called the dry
-land <i>Earth</i>, and the gathering together of the
-waters called He Seas.” Here the Earth and
-Seas—Earth and the great body of waters, are
-described as two distinct and independent regions,
-and not as together forming one Globe
-which astronomers call “the Earth.” This description
-is confirmed by several other passages
-of scripture.</p>
-
-<p>2 <i>Peter</i>, iii., 5—“For this they willingly are
-ignorant of, that by the Word of God the
-Heavens were of old, and the Earth <i>standing
-out of the waters and in the waters</i>.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Psalms</i> cxxxvi., 6—“O give thanks to the Lord
-of Lords, that by wisdom made the heavens, and
-that <i>stretchet out the earth above the waters</i>.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Psalms</i> xxiv., 1, 2—“The earth is the Lord’s
-and the fulness thereof; the world and they that
-dwell therein: for he hath <i>founded it upon the
-seas, and established it upon the floods</i>.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Hermes</i> (New Testament Apocrypha)—“Who
-with the word of his strength fixed the heaven;
-and <i>founded the earth upon the waters</i>.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Job</i> xxvi., 7—“He stretcheth out the north
-over the empty place, and hangeth the Earth
-upon nothing.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page199">[199]</span></p>
-
-<p>Some think that the latter part of this verse,
-“hangeth the Earth upon nothing,” favours the
-idea that the Earth is a globe revolving in space
-without visible support; but Dr. Adam Clark,
-although himself a Newtonian philosopher, says,
-in his commentary upon this passage in Job, the
-literal translation is, “on the hollow or empty
-waste,” and he quotes a Chaldee version of the
-passage which runs as follows: “He layeth the
-Earth upon the waters nothing sustaining it.”</p>
-
-<p>It is not that He “hangeth the Earth upon
-nothing,” but “hangeth or layeth it upon the
-waters” which were empty or waste, and where
-before there was nothing. This is in strict accordance
-with the other expressions, that “the
-Earth was founded upon the waters,” &amp;c., and
-also with the expression in Genesis, “that the face
-of the deep was covered only with darkness.”</p>
-
-<p>If the Earth were a globe, it is evident that
-everywhere the water of its surface, the seas,
-lakes, oceans, and rivers, must be sustained
-the land, the Earth must be under the water;
-but if the land and the waters are distinct, and
-the Earth is “founded upon the seas,” then
-everywhere the sea must sustain the land as it
-does a ship or any other floating mass, and there
-is water below the earth. In this particular as
-in all the others, the scriptures are beautifully
-sequential and consistent:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page200">[200]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Exodus</i> xx, 4—“Thou shalt not make unto
-thee any likeness of anything in heaven above or
-in the Earth beneath, or in the <i>waters under
-the Earth</i>.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Genesis</i> xliv, 25—“The Almighty shall bless
-thee with the blessings of heaven above, and
-blessings of the <i>deep that lieth under</i>.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Deut.</i> xxxiii, 13—“Blessed be his land, for
-the precious things of heaven; for the dew; and
-for the <i>deep which couched beneath</i>.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Deut.</i> iv, 18—“Take ye therefore good heed
-unto yourselves, and make no similitude of anything
-on the Earth, or the likeness of anything
-that is in the <i>waters beneath the Earth</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>The same idea prevailed among the ancients
-generally. In Ovid’s Metamorphoses, Jupiter, in
-an assembly of the gods, is made to say, “I swear
-by the infernal <i>waves which glide under the
-Earth</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>If the earth is a distinct structure standing in
-and upon the waters of the “great deep,” it
-follows that, unless it can be shown that something
-else sustains the waters, that the depth is
-fathomless. As there is no evidence whatever of
-anything existing underneath the “great deep,”
-and as in many parts of the Atlantic and Pacific
-Oceans no bottom has been found by the most
-scientific and efficient means which human
-ingenuity could invent, we are forced to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page201">[201]</span>
-conclusion that the depth is boundless. This
-conclusion is again confirmed by the scriptures.</p>
-
-<p><i>Jeremiah</i> xxxi, 37—“Thus saith the Lord,
-which giveth the sun for a light by day, and the
-ordinances of the moon and of the stars for a
-light by night, which divideth the sea when the
-waves thereof roar, the Lord of Hosts is His
-name. If these ordinances depart from before
-me, saith the Lord, then the seed of Israel also
-shall cease from being a nation before me for
-ever. Thus saith the Lord: if heaven above can
-be measured, and the <i>foundations</i> of the <i>Earth
-searched out beneath</i>, I will also cast off all the
-seed of Israel.”</p>
-
-<p>From the above it will be seen that God’s
-promises to his people could no more be broken
-than could the height of heaven, or the depths
-of the Earth’s foundations be searched out. The
-fathomless deep beneath—upon which the
-Earth is founded, and the infinitude of heaven
-above, are here given as emblems of the boundlessness
-of God’s power, and of the certainty that
-all his ordinances will be fulfilled. When God’s
-power can be limited, heaven above will no
-longer be infinite; and the mighty waters, the
-foundations of the earth may be fathomed. But
-the scriptures plainly teach us that the power
-and wisdom of God, the heights of Heaven, and
-the depths of the waters under the Earth are<span class="pagenum" id="Page202">[202]</span>
-alike unfathomable; and no true philosophy
-ever avers, nor ever did nor ever can aver, a
-single fact to the contrary.</p>
-
-<p>In all the religions of the Earth the words
-“up” and “above” are associated with a region
-of peace and happiness. Heaven is always
-spoken of as <i>above</i> the <i>Earth</i>. The scriptures
-invariable convey the same idea:—</p>
-
-<p><i>Deut.</i> xxvi., 15—“Look <i>down</i> from Thy holy
-habitation, from Heaven, and bless Thy people
-Israel.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Exodus</i> xix., 20—“And the Lord came <i>down</i>
-upon Mount Sinai.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Psalm</i> cii., 19—“For he hath looked <i>down</i>
-from the height of his sanctuary: from Heaven
-did the Lord behold the Earth.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Isaiah</i> lxiii., 15—“Look <i>down</i> from Heaven,
-and behold from the habitation of Thy holiness
-and of Thy glory.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Psalm</i> ciii., 11—“For as the Heaven is high
-<i>above the Earth</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>2 <i>Kings</i> ii., 11—“And Elijah went <i>up</i> by a
-whirlwind into Heaven.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Mark</i> xvi., 10—“So then after the Lord had
-spoken unto them he was received <i>up into
-Heaven</i>.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Luke</i> xxiv., 51—“And it came to pass, while
-He blessed them, He was parted from them, and
-carried <i>up into Heaven</i>.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page203">[203]</span></p>
-
-<p>If the Earth is a globe revolving at the rate of
-above a thousand miles an hour all this language
-of scripture is necessarily fallacious. The terms
-“up” and “down,” and “above” and “below,”
-are words without meaning, at best are merely
-relative—indicative of no absolute or certain
-direction. That which is “up” at noon-day, is
-directly “down” at midnight. Heaven can only
-be spoken of as “above,” and the scriptures can
-only be read correctly for a single moment out
-of the twenty-four hours; for before the sentence
-“Heaven is high above the Earth” could be
-uttered, the speaker would be descending from
-the meridian where Heaven was above him, and
-his eye although unmoved would be fixed upon
-a point millions of miles away from his first
-position. Hence in all the ceremonials of
-religion, where the hands and eyes are raised
-upwards to Heaven, nay when Christ himself
-“lifted up his eyes to Heaven and said, Father,
-the hour is come,” his gaze would be sweeping
-along the firmament at rapidly varying angles,
-and with such incomprehensible velocity that a
-fixed point of observation, and a definite position,
-as indicating the seat or throne of “Him that
-sitteth in the Heavens” would be an impossibility.</p>
-
-<p>Again: the religious world have always believed
-and meditated upon the word “Heaven” as representing
-an infinite region of joy and safety, of<span class="pagenum" id="Page204">[204]</span>
-rest and happiness unspeakable; as “the place of
-God’s residence, the dwelling place of angels and
-the blessed; the true palace of God, entirely
-separated from the impurities and imperfections,
-the alterations and changes of the lower world;
-where He reigns in eternal peace. *&#160;* It is
-the sacred mansion of light, and joy, and glory.<a id="FNanchor_45" href="#Footnote_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a>”
-But if there is a plurality of worlds, millions
-upon millions, nay, an “infinity of worlds,” if
-the universe is filled with innumerable systems
-of burning suns, and rapidly revolving planets,
-intermingled with rushing comets and whirling
-satellites, all dashing and sweeping through
-space in directions, and with velocities surpassing
-all human comprehension, and terrible even
-to contemplate, where is the place of rest and
-safety? Where is the true and unchangeable
-“palace of God?” In what direction is Heaven
-to be found? Where is the liberated human
-soul to find its home—its refuge from change
-and motion, from uncertainty and danger? Is
-it to wander for ever in a labyrinth of rolling
-worlds? To struggle for ever in a never ending
-maze of revolving suns and systems? To be
-never at rest, but for ever seeking to avoid
-some vortex of attraction—some whirlpool of
-gravitation? The belief in the existence of
-Heaven, as a region of peace and harmony<span class="pagenum" id="Page205">[205]</span>
-“extending (above the Earth) through all extent,”
-and beyond the influence of natural laws
-and restless elements, is jeopardised, if not
-destroyed, by a false and usurping astronomy,
-which has no better foundation than human
-conceit and presumption. If this ill-founded,
-unsupported philosophy is admitted by the religious
-mind, it can no longer say that—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent00">“Far above the sun, and stars, and skies,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In realms of endless light and love,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">My Father’s mansion lies.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_45" href="#FNanchor_45" class="label">[45]</a> Cruden’s Concordance, article “Heaven.”</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The modern theoretical astronomy affirms that
-the Moon is a solid opaque, non-luminous body;
-that it is, in fact, nothing less than a material
-world. It has even been mapped out into continents,
-islands, seas, lakes, volcanoes, &amp;c., &amp;c.
-The nature of its atmosphere and character of
-its productions and possible inhabitants have
-been discussed with as much freedom as though
-our philosophers were quite as familiar with it
-as they are with the different objects and localities
-upon Earth. The light, too, with which the
-Moon so beautifully illuminates the firmament
-is declared to be only borrowed—to be only the
-light of the Sun intercepted and reflected upon
-the Earth. These doctrines are not only opposed
-by a formidable array of well-ascertained facts
-(as given in previous sections), but they are
-totally denied by the scriptures. The Sun and<span class="pagenum" id="Page206">[206]</span>
-Moon and Stars are never referred to as worlds,
-but simply as <i>lights</i> to rule alternately in the
-firmament.</p>
-
-<p><i>Genesis</i> i., 14, 16—“And God said let there
-be <i>lights</i> in the firmament of the Heaven to
-divide the day from the night. *&#160;*&#160;* And
-God made two <i>great lights</i>—the greater light to
-rule the day, and the lesser light to rule the
-night.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Psalm</i> cxxxvi., 7, 9—“O give thanks to Him
-that made <i>great lights</i>: the Sun to rule by day,
-the Moon and Stars to rule by night.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Jeremiah</i>, xxxi., 35—“The Sun is given for a
-light by day, and the ordinances of the Moon
-and of the Stars for a light by night.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Ezekiel</i>, xxxii., 7, 8—“I will cover the Sun with
-a cloud; and the Moon shall not give <i>her light</i>.”
-“All the bright lights of Heaven will I make
-dark over thee.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Psalm</i> cxlviii., 3—“Praise him Sun and Moon,
-praise him all ye Stars of light.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Isaiah</i> xiii., 10—“The Sun shall be darkened
-in his going forth, and the Moon shall not cause
-<i>her</i> light to shine.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Matthew</i> xxiv., 29—“Immediately after the
-tribulation of those days shall the Sun be darkened,
-and the Moon shall not give her light.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Isaiah</i> ix., 19, 20—“The Sun shall be no more
-thy light by day; neither for brightness shall<span class="pagenum" id="Page207">[207]</span>
-the <i>Moon give light</i> unto thee. *&#160;* Thy Sun
-shall no more go down; neither shall thy Moon
-withdraw itself.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Psalm</i> cxxxvi., 7 to 9—“To him that made
-great lights, the Sun to rule by day, the Moon
-and Stars to rule by night.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Job</i> xxv., 5—“Behold even to the Moon, and
-<i>it</i> shineth not.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Ecclesiastes</i> xii., 2—“While the Sun, or the
-light, or the Moon, or the Stars be not darkened.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Isaiah</i> xxx., 26—“The light of the Moon
-shall be as the light of the Sun; and the light of
-the Sun shall be sevenfold.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Deuteronomy</i> xxxiii., 14—“And for the precious
-fruits brought forth by the Sun, and for
-the precious things put forth by the Moon.”</p>
-
-<p>In the very first of the passages above quoted
-the doctrine is enunciated that various distinct
-and independent <i>lights</i> were created. But that two
-<i>great</i> lights were specially called into existence
-for the purpose of ruling the day and the night.
-The Sun and the Moon are declared to be these
-great and alternately ruling lights. Nothing is
-here said, nor is it in any other part of scripture
-said, that the Sun is a great light, and that
-the Moon shines only by reflection. The Sun is
-called the “greater light to rule the day,” and
-the Moon the “lesser light to rule the night.”
-Although of these two “great lights” one is<span class="pagenum" id="Page208">[208]</span>
-less than the other, each is declared to shine
-with its own light. Hence in Deuteronomy,
-c. 33, v. 14, it is affirmed that certain fruits are
-specially brought forth by the influence of the
-Sun’s light, and that certain other productions
-are “put forth by the Moon.” That the light of
-the sun is influential in encouraging the growth
-of certain natural products; and that the light
-of the Moon has a distinct influence in promoting
-the increase of certain other natural substances,
-is a matter well known to those who are familiar
-with horticultural and agricultural phenomena;
-and it is abundantly proved by chemical evidence
-that the two lights are distinct in character
-and in action upon various elements. This
-distinction is beautifully preserved throughout
-the sacred scriptures. In no single instance are
-the two lights confounded. On the contrary, in
-the New Testament, St. Paul affirms with authority,
-that “there is one glory of the Sun, and
-another glory of the Moon, and another glory of
-the Stars.”</p>
-
-<p>The same fact of the difference in the two
-lights, and their independence of each other is
-maintained in the scriptures to the last. “The
-Sun became black as sackcloth of hair, and the
-Moon became as blood.” If the Moon is only a
-reflector, the moment the Sun becomes black
-her surface will be blackened also, and not remain<span class="pagenum" id="Page209">[209]</span>
-as blood, while the Sun is dark and black as
-sackcloth of hair!</p>
-
-<p>Again: the modern system of astronomy
-teaches that this earth cannot possibly receive
-light from the Stars, because of their supposed
-great distance from it: that the fixed Stars are
-only burning spheres, or Sun’s to their own
-systems of planets and satellites: and that their
-light terminates, or no longer produces an active
-luminosity at the distance of nearly two thousand
-millions of miles. Here again the scriptures
-affirm the contrary doctrine.</p>
-
-<p><i>Genesis</i> i., 16-17—“He made the Stars also;
-and God set them in the firmament <i>to give light
-upon the earth</i>.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Isaiah</i> xiii., 10—“For the Stars of Heaven and
-the constellations thereof shall not <i>give their
-light</i>.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Ezekiel</i> xxxii., 7—“I will cover the Heaven,
-and make the <i>Stars</i> thereof <i>dark</i>.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Joel</i> ii., 10—“The Sun and the Moon shall be
-dark, and the <i>Stars</i> shall withdraw <i>their shining</i>.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Psalm</i> cxlviii., 3—“Praise him Sun and
-Moon: promise him all ye <i>Stars of Light</i>.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Jeremiah</i> xxxi., 35—“Thus saith the Lord,
-which giveth the Sun for a light by day; and
-the ordinances of the Moon and of <i>the Stars</i> for
-a <i>light by night</i>.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page210">[210]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Daniel</i> xii., 3—“They that turn many to
-righteousness shall <i>shine</i> as the <i>Stars</i> for ever
-and ever.”</p>
-
-<p>These quotations place it beyond doubt that
-the Stars were made expressly to shine in the
-firmament, and “to give light upon the Earth.”
-In addition to this language of scripture, we
-have the evidence of our own eyes that the Stars
-give abundant light. “What beautiful star-light!”
-is a common expression: and we all
-remember the difference between a dark and
-starless night, and one when the firmament is as
-it were studded with brilliant luminaries. Travellers
-inform us that in many parts of the
-world, where the sky is clear and free from
-clouds and vapours for weeks together, the Stars
-appear both larger and brighter than they do
-in England; and that their light is sufficiently
-intense to enable them to read and write, and
-to travel with safety through the most dangerous
-places.</p>
-
-<p>If it be true that the Stars and the Planets are
-not simply lights, as the scriptures affirm them
-to be, but magnificent worlds, for the most part
-much larger than this earth, then it is a very
-proper question to ask—“are they inhabited?”
-If the answer be in the affirmative, it is equally
-proper to inquire “have the first parents in
-each world been tempted?” If so, “have they<span class="pagenum" id="Page211">[211]</span>
-fallen?” if so, “Have they required redemption?”
-And “have they been redeemed?” “Has
-each world had a separate Redeemer? or has
-Christ been the Redeemer for every world in the
-universe?” And if so, “did His suffering and
-crucifixion on this Earth suffice for the redemption
-of the fallen inhabitants of all other worlds?
-Or had He to suffer and die in each world successively?
-Did the fall of Adam in this world
-involve in his guilt the inhabitants of all other
-worlds? Or was the baneful influence of Satan
-confined to the first parents of this Earth? If
-so, why so? and if not, why not? But, and if,
-and why, and again—but it is useless thus to
-ponder! The Christian philosopher must be
-confounded! If his religion be to him a living
-reality, he will turn with loathing or spurn with
-indignation and disgust, as he would a poisonous
-reptile, a system of astronomy which creates in
-his mind so much confusion and uncertainty!
-But as the system which necessitates such doubts
-and difficulties has been shown to be purely
-theoretical; and to have not the slightest foundation
-in fact, the religious mind has really no
-cause for apprehension. Not a shadow of doubt
-remains that this World is the only one created;
-that the sacred Scriptures contain, in addition
-to religious and moral doctrines, a true and consistent
-philosophy; that they were written for<span class="pagenum" id="Page212">[212]</span>
-the good of mankind, at the direct instigation of
-God himself; and that all their teachings and
-promises are truthful, consistent, and reliable.
-Whoever holds the contrary conclusion is the
-victim of an arrogant false astronomy, of an
-equally false and presumptuous geology, or a
-suicidal method of reasoning—a logic which
-never demands a proof of its premises, and
-which therefore leads to conclusions which are
-contrary to nature, to human experience, and to
-the direct teaching of God’s word, and therefore
-contrary to the deepest and most lasting interests
-of humanity. “God has spoken to man in two
-voices, the voice of inspiration and the voice of
-nature. By man’s ignorance they have been
-made to disagree; but the time will come, and
-cannot be far distant, when these two languages
-will strictly accord; when the science of nature
-will no longer contradict the science of scripture.”<a id="FNanchor_46" href="#Footnote_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_46" href="#FNanchor_46" class="label">[46]</a> Professor Hunt.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Cui Bono.</span>—“Of all terrors to the generous
-soul, that <i>Cui bono</i> is the one to be the most
-zealously avoided. Whether it be proposed to
-find the magnetic point, or a passage impossible
-to be utilised if discovered, or a race of men of
-no good to any human institution extant, and of
-no good to themselves; or to seek the Unicorn
-in Madagascar, and when we had found him not<span class="pagenum" id="Page213">[213]</span>
-to be able to make use of him; or the great
-central plateau of Australia, where no one could
-live for centuries to come; or the great African
-lake, which, for all the good it would do us
-English folk might as well be in the Moon; or
-the source of the Nile, the triumphant discovery
-of which would neither lower the rents nor take
-off the taxes anywhere—whatever it is, the <i>Cui
-bono</i> is always a weak and cowardly argument:
-essentially short-sighted too, seeing that, according
-to the law of the past, by which we may
-always safely predicate the future, so much falls
-into the hands of the seeker, for which he was
-not looking, and of which he never even knew
-the existence. The area of the possible is very
-wide still, and very insignificant and minute, the
-angle we have staked out and marked impossible.
-What do we know of the powers which
-nature has yet in reserve, of the secrets she has
-still untold, the wealth still concealed? Every
-day sees new discoveries in the sciences we can
-investigate at home. What, then, may not lie
-waiting for the explorers abroad? Weak and
-short-sighted commercially, the <i>cui bono</i> is worse
-than both, morally. When we remember the
-powerful manhood, the patience, unselfishness,
-courage, devotion, and nobleness of aim which
-must accompany a perilous enterprise, and which
-form so great an example, and so heart-stirring<span class="pagenum" id="Page214">[214]</span>
-to the young and to the wavering, it is no return
-to barbaric indifference to life to say, better
-indeed a few deaths for even a commercially
-useless enterprise—better a few hearths made
-desolate, and a few wives and mothers left to
-bear their stately sorrow to the end of time,
-that the future may rejoice and be strong:
-better a thousand failures, and a thousand
-useless undertakings, than the loss of national
-manhood or the weakening of the national fibre.
-Quixotism is a folly when the energy which
-might have achieved conquests over misery and
-wrong, if rightfully applied, is wasted in fighting
-windmills; but to forego any great enterprise for
-fear of the dangers attending, or to check a
-grand endeavour by the <i>cui bono</i> of ignorance
-and moral scepticism, is worse than a folly—it
-is baseness, and a cowardice.<a id="FNanchor_47" href="#Footnote_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a>”</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_47" href="#FNanchor_47" class="label">[47]</a> <i>Daily News</i> of April 5, 1865.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The above quotation is an excellent general
-answer to all those who may, in reference to the
-subject of this work, or to anything which is not
-of immediate worldly interest, obtrude the <i>cui
-bono</i>? But as a special reply it may be claimed
-for the subject of these pages—</p>
-
-<p>First,—It is more edifying, more satisfactory,
-and in every sense far better that we should
-know the true and detect the false. Thereby the
-mind becomes fixed, established upon an eternal<span class="pagenum" id="Page215">[215]</span>
-foundation, and no longer subject to those
-waverings and changes, those oscillations and
-fluctuations which are ever the result of falsehood.
-To know the truth and to embody it in our lives
-and purposes our progress must be safe and
-rapid, and almost unlimited in extent. None
-can say to what it may lead or where it may
-culminate. Who shall dare to set bounds to the
-capabilities of the mind, or to fix a limit to
-human progress? Whatever may be the destiny
-of the human race truth alone will help and
-secure its realisation.</p>
-
-<p>Second,—Having detected the fundamental
-falsehoods of modern astronomy, and discovered
-that the Earth is a plane, and motionless, and
-the only material world in existence, we are able
-to demonstrate the actual character of the
-Universe. In doing this we are enabled to prove
-that all the so-called arguments with which so
-many scientific but irreligious men have assailed
-the scriptures, are absolutely false; have no
-foundation except in their own astronomical and
-geological theories, which being demonstrably
-fallacious, they fall to the ground as valueless.
-They can no longer be wielded as weapons against
-religion. If used at all it can only be that their
-weakness and utter worthlessness will be exposed.
-Atheism and every other form of Infidelity are
-thus rendered helpless. Their sting is cut away,<span class="pagenum" id="Page216">[216]</span>
-and their poison dissipated. The irreligious
-philosopher can no longer obtrude his theories
-as things proved wherewith to test the teachings
-of scripture. He must now himself be tested.
-He must be forced to demonstrate his premises,
-a thing which he has never yet attempted; and
-if he fails in this respect his impious vanity,
-self-conceit and utter disregard of justice, will
-become so clearly apparent that his presence in
-the ranks of science will no longer be tolerated.
-All theory must be put aside, and the questions
-at issue must be decided by independent and
-practical evidence. This has been done. The
-process—the <i>modus operandi</i>, and the conclusions
-derived therefrom have been given in the
-early sections of this work. They are entirely
-consonant with the teachings of scripture. The
-scriptures are therefore literally true, and must
-henceforth either alone or in conjunction with
-practical science be used as a standard by which
-to test the truth or falsehood of every system
-which does or may hereafter exist. Philosophy
-is no longer to be employed as a test of scriptural
-truth, but the scriptures may and ought to be
-the test of all philosophy. Not that they are to
-be used as a test of philosophy simply because
-they are <i>thought</i> or <i>believed</i> to be the word of
-God, but because their literal teachings in regard
-to science and natural phenomena, are demonstrably<span class="pagenum" id="Page217">[217]</span>
-correct. It is quite as faulty and unjust
-for the religious devotee to urge the scriptures
-against the theories of the philosopher simply
-because he <i>believes</i> them to be true, as it is for
-the philosopher to urge his theories against the
-scriptures only because he disbelieves the one
-and believes the other. The whole matter must
-be taken out of the region of belief and disbelief.
-The Christian will be strengthened and his mind
-more completely satisfied by having it in his
-power to demonstrate that the scriptures are
-philosophically true, than he could possibly be
-by the simple belief in their validity, unsupported
-by practical evidence. On the other hand
-the Atheist who is met by the Christian upon
-purely scientific grounds, and who is not
-belaboured with enunciations of what his antagonist
-believes, will be led to listen and to pay
-more regard and respect to the reasons advanced
-than he could possibly concede to the purely
-religious argument, or to an argument founded
-upon faith alone. If it can be shown to the
-atheistical philosopher that his astronomical and
-geological theories are fallacious, and that all the
-expressions in the scriptures which have reference
-to natural phenomena are literally true, he will
-of necessity be led to admit that, apart from all
-other considerations, if the <i>philosophy</i> of the
-scriptures is demonstrably correct, then possibly<span class="pagenum" id="Page218">[218]</span>
-their <i>spiritual</i> and <i>moral</i> teachings may also
-be true; and if so, they may and indeed must
-have had a divine origin; and if so they are
-truly the “word of God,” and after all, religion is
-a grand reality; and the theories which speculative
-adventurous philosophers have advanced
-are nothing better than treacherous quicksands
-into which many of the deepest thinkers have
-been engulphed and lost. By this process many
-highly intelligent minds have been led to desert
-the ranks of Atheism and to rejoin the army of
-Christian soldiers and devotees. Many have
-rejoiced almost beyond expression that the subject
-of the Earth’s true form and position in the
-universe had ever been brought under their
-notice; and doubtless great numbers will yet be
-induced to return to that allegiance which plain
-demonstrable truth demands and deserves. To
-induce numbers of earnest thinking human beings
-to leave the rebellious cause of Atheism and false
-philosophy; to return to a full recognition of
-the beauty and truthfulness of the scriptures,
-and to a participation in the joy and satisfaction
-which religion can alone supply, is a grand and
-cheering result, and one which furnishes the
-noblest possible answer to the ever ready “<span class="smcap">Cui
-Bono</span>.”</p>
-
-<p>In addition to the numerous quotations which
-have been given from sacred scriptures, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page219">[219]</span>
-proved to be true and consistent, it may be
-useful briefly to refer to the following difficulties
-which have been raised by the scientific objectors
-to scriptural authority:—“As the earth is a
-globe, and as all its vast collections of water—its
-oceans, lakes, &amp;c., are sustained by the earthy
-crust beneath them, and as beneath this ‘crust
-of the earth’ everything is in a red-hot molten
-condition to what place could the excess of
-waters retire which are said in the scriptures to
-have overwhelmed the whole world? It could
-not sink into the centre of the earth, for the fire
-is there so intense that the whole would be
-rapidly volatilised, and driven away as vapour.
-It could not evaporate, for when the atmosphere
-is charged with watery vapour beyond a certain
-degree it begins to condense and throw back the
-water in the form of rain; so that the waters of
-the flood could not sink from the earth’s surface,
-nor remain in the atmosphere; therefore if the
-earth had ever been deluged at all, it would
-have remained so to this day. But as it is not
-universally flooded so it never could have been,
-and the account given in the scriptures is false.”
-All this specious reasoning is founded upon the
-assumption that the earth is a globe: this
-doctrine, however, being false, all the difficulties
-quickly vanish. The earth being “founded on
-the seas” would be as readily cleared of its superfluous<span class="pagenum" id="Page220">[220]</span>
-water as would the deck of a ship on
-emerging from a storm. Or as a rock in the
-ocean would be cleared after the raging waves
-which for a time overwhelmed it had subsided.</p>
-
-<p>“Thou coveredst the Earth with the deep
-as with a garment; the waters stood above the
-mountains. At thy rebuke they fled; and at
-the voice of thy thunder they hasted away ...
-down by the valleys unto the place which thou
-hast founded for them.”<a id="FNanchor_48" href="#Footnote_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_48" href="#FNanchor_48" class="label">[48]</a> Psalm civ.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>“Thou didst cleave the Earth with rivers;
-and the overflowing of the waters passed by;
-and the deep uttered his voice and lifted up his
-hands on high.”<a id="FNanchor_49" href="#Footnote_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_49" href="#FNanchor_49" class="label">[49]</a> Hab. iii. 9-10.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>The surface of the Earth standing above the
-level of the surrounding seas, the waters of the
-flood would simply and naturally run down by
-the valleys and rivers into the “great deep,”—into
-which “the waters returned from off the
-earth continually ... until the tenth month,
-and on the first day of the month were the tops
-of the mountains seen.”<a id="FNanchor_50" href="#Footnote_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_50" href="#FNanchor_50" class="label">[50]</a> Gen. viii. 2-5.</p>
-
-</div><!--footnote-->
-
-<p>Again; as the Earth is a Globe and in continual
-motion, how could Jesus on being “taken
-up into an exceedingly high mountain see all
-the kingdoms of the world, in a moment of
-time?” Or, when “He cometh with clouds and
-every eye shall see him,” how could it be possible,<span class="pagenum" id="Page221">[221]</span>
-seeing that at least twenty-four hours would
-elapse before every part of the Earth would be
-turned to the same point? But it has been
-demonstrated that the Earth is a Plane and
-motionless, and that from a great eminence
-every part of its surface could be seen at once;
-and, at once—at the same moment, could every
-eye behold Him, when “coming in a cloud with
-power and great glory.”</p>
-
-
-<p class="center highline6">FINIS.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center fsize80"><span class="padl6 padr6 bt">S. HAYWARD, PRINTER, GREEN STREET, BATH.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="full">
-
-<div class="tnbot" id="TN">
-
-<h2>Transcriber&#8217;s Notes</h2>
-
-<p>Inconsistent and unusual spelling, punctuation etc. have been retained; accents on (French) words have not been
-corrected. The inconsistent nesting and pairing of quote marks often makes it difficult to determine where a
-quote starts or ends.</p>
-
-<p>Page 20: ... as represented in figure 10 ... changed to ... as represented in figure 9 ....
-
-<p>Page 13, A B is the line-of-sight, and C D the surface of the water ...: C nor D are depicted in the illustration.</p>
-
-<p>Page 27, Fig. 15 and accompanying text: the number 4 in the illustration appears to be misplaced.</p>
-
-<p>Page 77, “Sun’s altitude at the time of Southing ...: there is no closing quote mark.</p>
-
-<p>Page 142, 143 and Fig. 31: the lower case reference letters are present as upper case letters in the illustration.</p>
-
-<p>Page 193, ... only the dry land was called earth,” ...: the opening quote marks are missing.</p>
-
-<p>Page 198, ... stretchet out the earth above the waters ...: as printed in the source document; both
-"stretched" and "stretcheth" appear in other sources.</p>
-
-<p>Page 211, ... “did His suffering and crucifixion ...: the closing quote mark is lacking.</p>
-
-<p class="blankbefore75">Changes made:</p>
-
-<p>Footnotes and illustrations have been moved out of text paragraphs.</p>
-
-<p>Some obvious minor typographical and punctuation errors have been corrected silently.</p>
-
-<p>Terrestial has been changed to terrestrial (3x), trignometry to trigonometry (2x), incondescent to incandescent
-(3x).</p>
-
-<p>Illustration captions for Figs. 27, 28 and 31-34 have been added.</p>
-
-<p>Page 10: ... to lesson the difference ... changed to ... to lessen the difference ....</p>
-
-<p>Page 51: ... from Port Jackson to Cape Horn as 8.000 miles ... changed to ...
-from Port Jackson to Cape Horn as 8,000 miles ....</p>
-
-<p>Page 64-65: replicated text deleted.</p>
-
-<p>Page 133: exclamation mark inserted after Neptune has only <i>one third</i> of this volume (as in surrounding text).</p>
-
-<p>Page 134: Professer Schumacher changed to Professor Schumacher.</p>
-
-<p>Page 139: M. Foucalt’s communication describing his experiments ... changed
-to M. Foucault’s communication describing his experiments ....</p>
-
-<p>Page 141: Ille sante aux yeux ... changed to Il saute aux yeux ....</p>
-
-<p>Page 171: ... south cost of Norway ... changed to ... south coast of Norway ...;
-The Troudhjem Light ... changed to The Trondhjem Light ...; Lower Farn Island Light changed to Lower Farne
-Island Light.</p>
-
-<p>Page 193: ... the heavenly bodies are Sun’s ... changed to ... the heavenly bodies are Suns ....</p>
-
-</div><!--tnbot-->
-
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