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Such are his words; and when we consider that each of these solar inhabitants was supposed to extend about two hundred by one thousand miles upon the surface of the fiery ocean, we may subscribe to Mr. Proctor’s comment, that “Milton’s picture of him who on the fires of hell ‘lay floating many a rood,’ seems tame and commonplace compared with Herschel’s conception of these floating monsters, the least covering a greater space than the British Islands.”


FIG. 14.—POLARIZING EYE-PIECE.

I hope I may not appear wanting in respect for Sir John Herschel—a man whose memory I reverence—in thus citing views which, if his honored life could have been prolonged, he would have abandoned. I do so because nothing else can so forcibly illustrate the field for wonder and wild conjecture solar physics presented even a few years ago; and its supposed connection with that “Vital Force,” which was till so lately accepted by physiology, serves as a kind of landmark on the way we have come.

This new science of ours, then, youthful as it is, has already had its age of fable.

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