Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- THE REMINISCENCES OF AN ASTRONOMER
- I THE WORLD OF COLD AND DARKNESS
- II DR. FOSHAY
- III THE WORLD OF SWEETNESS AND LIGHT
- IV LIFE AND WORK AT AN OBSERVATORY
- V GREAT TELESCOPES AND THEIR WORK
- VI THE TRANSITS OF VENUS
- VII THE LICK OBSERVATORY
- VIII THE AUTHOR'S SCIENTIFIC WORK
- IX SCIENTIFIC WASHINGTON
- X SCIENTIFIC ENGLAND
- XI MEN AND THINGS IN EUROPE
- XII THE OLD AND THE NEW WASHINGTON
- XIII MISCELLANEA
- INDEX
I - THE WORLD OF COLD AND DARKNESS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2010
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- THE REMINISCENCES OF AN ASTRONOMER
- I THE WORLD OF COLD AND DARKNESS
- II DR. FOSHAY
- III THE WORLD OF SWEETNESS AND LIGHT
- IV LIFE AND WORK AT AN OBSERVATORY
- V GREAT TELESCOPES AND THEIR WORK
- VI THE TRANSITS OF VENUS
- VII THE LICK OBSERVATORY
- VIII THE AUTHOR'S SCIENTIFIC WORK
- IX SCIENTIFIC WASHINGTON
- X SCIENTIFIC ENGLAND
- XI MEN AND THINGS IN EUROPE
- XII THE OLD AND THE NEW WASHINGTON
- XIII MISCELLANEA
- INDEX
Summary
I date my birth into the world of sweetness and light on one frosty morning in January, 1857, when I took my seat between two well-known mathematicians, before a blazing fire in the office of the “Nautical Almanac” at Cambridge, Mass. I had come on from Washington, armed with letters from Professor Henry and Mr. Hilgard, to seek a trial as an astronomical computer. The men beside me were Professor Joseph Winlock, the superintendent, and Mr. John D. Runkle, the senior assistant in the office. I talked of my unsuccessful attempt to master the “Mécanique Céleste” of Laplace without other preparation than that afforded by the most meagre text-books of elementary mathematics of that period. Runkle spoke of the translator as “the Captain.” So familiar a designation of the great Bowditch — LL. D. and member of the Royal Societies of London, Edinburgh, and Dublin — quite shocked me.
I was then in my twenty-second year, but it was the first time I had ever seen any one who was familiar with the “Mécanique Céleste.” I looked with awe upon the assistants who filed in and out as upon men who had all the mysteries of gravitation and the celestial motions at their fingers' ends. I should not have been surprised to learn that even the Hibernian who fed the fire had imbibed so much of the spirit of the place as to admire the genius of Laplace and Lagrange.
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- The Reminiscences of an Astronomer , pp. 1 - 22Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1903