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FIG. 23.—CIRROUS CLOUD. (FROM A PHOTOGRAPH.)

Before we try to answer this question, let us remember that the astonishing rapidity with which these forms change, and still more the fact that they do not by any means always change by a bodily removal of one part from another, but by a dissolving away and a fading out into invisibility, like the melting of a cloud into thin air,—let us remember that all this assimilates them to something cloud-like and vaporous, rather than crystalline, and that, as we have here seen, we can ourselves pronounce from such results of recent observation that these are not lumps of scoriæ floating on the solar furnace (as some have thought them), and still less, literal crystals. We can see for ourselves, I believe, that so far there is no evidence here of any solid, or even liquid, but that the surface of the sun is purely vaporous. Fig.23 shows a cirrous cloud in our own atmosphere, caught for us by photography, and which the reader will find it interesting to compare with the apparently analogous solar cloud-forms.

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