Читать книгу The Herschels and Modern Astronomy онлайн

40 страница из 49

“Well, but Herschel has been in town,” he wrote from Chelsea College, December 10th, 1798, “for short spurts and back again, two or three times, and I have had him here two whole days. I read to him the first five books without any one objection.” And again; “He came, and his good wife accompanied him, and I read four and a-half books; and on parting, still more humble than before, or still more amiable, he thanked me for the instruction and entertainment I had given him. What say you to that? Can anything be grander?”

In spite of his “aversion,” Herschel had once, and once only, wooed the coy muse himself. The first evening paper that appeared in England, May 3rd, 1788, contained some introductory quatrains by him. An excuse for this unwonted outburst may be found in the circumstance that the sheet in which they were printed bore the name of The Star. They began with the interrogation:

“What Star art thou, about to gleam

In Novelty’s bright hemisphere?”

and continued:

“A Planet wilt thou roll sublime,


Правообладателям