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He inspired Campbell with the most lively enthusiasm. “His simplicity,” he wrote, “his kindness, his anecdotes, his readiness to explain—and make perfectly conspicuous too—his own sublime conceptions of the universe, are indescribably charming. He is seventy-six, but fresh and stout; and there he sat, nearest the door at his friend’s house, alternately smiling at a joke, or contentedly sitting without share or notice in the conversation. Any train of conversation he follows implicitly; anything you ask, he labours with a sort of boyish earnestness to explain. Speaking of himself, he said, with a modesty of manner which quite overcame me, when taken together with the greatness of the assertion, ‘I have looked further into space than ever human being did before me; I have observed stars, of which the light, it can be proved, must take two millions of years to reach this earth.’ I really and unfeignedly felt at the moment as if I had been conversing with a supernatural intelligence. ‘Nay, more,’ said he, ‘if those distant bodies had ceased to exist two millions of years ago we should still see them, as the light would travel after the body was gone.’ These were Herschel’s words; and if you had heard him speak them, you would not think he was apt to tell more than the truth.”


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