paint-brush
SCENES ON THE PLANETSby@serviss

SCENES ON THE PLANETS

by Garrett P. Serviss18mMarch 25th, 2023
Read on Terminal Reader
Read this story w/o Javascript
tldt arrow

Too Long; Didn't Read

"These starry globes far surpassed the earth in grandeur, and the latter looked so diminutive that our empire, which appeared only as a point on its surface, awoke my pity."—Cicero, The Dream of Scipio. Although amateurs have played a conspicuous part in telescopic discovery among the heavenly bodies, yet every owner of a small telescope should not expect to attach his name to a star. But he certainly can do something perhaps more useful to himself and his friends; he can follow the discoveries that others, with better appliances and opportunities, have made, and can thus impart to those discoveries that sense of reality which only comes from seeing things with one's own eyes. There are hundreds of things continually referred to in books and writings on astronomy which have but a misty and uncertain significance for the mere reader, but which he can easily verify for himself with the aid of a telescope of four or five inches aperture, and which, when actually confronted by the senses, assume a meaning, a beauty, and an importance that would otherwise entirely have escaped him. Henceforth every allusion to the objects he has seen is eloquent with intelligence and suggestion.
featured image - SCENES ON THE PLANETS
Garrett P. Serviss HackerNoon profile picture
Garrett P. Serviss

Garrett P. Serviss

@serviss

I look to the stars and see our future.

L O A D I N G
. . . comments & more!

About Author

Garrett P. Serviss HackerNoon profile picture
Garrett P. Serviss@serviss
I look to the stars and see our future.

TOPICS

THIS ARTICLE WAS FEATURED IN...

Permanent on Arweave
Read on Terminal Reader
Read this story in a terminal
 Terminal
Read this story w/o Javascript
Read this story w/o Javascript
 Lite