The Reminiscences of an Astronomer |
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Page 28
... arrangement , a ratification was required on both sides . The doc- tor had to make the necessary household arrange- ments , and secure the consent of his wife . I had to ask the approval of my father , which I did by letter . Like ...
... arrangement , a ratification was required on both sides . The doc- tor had to make the necessary household arrange- ments , and secure the consent of his wife . I had to ask the approval of my father , which I did by letter . Like ...
Page 101
... arranged on strict plans , and done according to rule and discipline . Professor Yarnall , whose assistant I was , was an ex- tremely pleasant gentleman to be associated with . Although one of the most industrious workers at the ...
... arranged on strict plans , and done according to rule and discipline . Professor Yarnall , whose assistant I was , was an ex- tremely pleasant gentleman to be associated with . Although one of the most industrious workers at the ...
Page 102
... arranged to observe on the same nights ; but I soon found that there was no concerted plan between the two sets of observers . The instruments were old - fash- ioned ones , of which mine could determine only the right ascension of a ...
... arranged to observe on the same nights ; but I soon found that there was no concerted plan between the two sets of observers . The instruments were old - fash- ioned ones , of which mine could determine only the right ascension of a ...
Page 115
... arrangement he proposed . Accordingly , in forwarding my applica- tion , he asked that my order should be so worded as not to detach me from the observatory , but to add the duty I asked for to that which I was already performing . So ...
... arrangement he proposed . Accordingly , in forwarding my applica- tion , he asked that my order should be so worded as not to detach me from the observatory , but to add the duty I asked for to that which I was already performing . So ...
Page 118
... arrange the whole matter for him . This I did by going to the obser- vatory and frankly explaining the matter to Admi- ral Davis . Happily the latter was not a stickler for official forms , and was cast in too large a mould to take ...
... arrange the whole matter for him . This I did by going to the obser- vatory and frankly explaining the matter to Admi- ral Davis . Happily the latter was not a stickler for official forms , and was cast in too large a mould to take ...
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Common terms and phrases
academy Admiral afterward Alvan Clark appointed appropriation asked assistant astronomical became Benjamin Peirce Cambridge Charles Henry Davis Clark Coast Survey committee computations Congress course director doctor doubt early eclipse England Ephemeris fact Foshay Gilliss Greenwich Harvard Harvard Observatory Hilgard impression institution instruments interest Joseph Winlock learned letter Lick Observatory looked mathematical matter ment Moncton moon motion Nautical Almanac Navy necessary never night object glass observations Paris Observatory parties passed Peirce perhaps Phrenology planets position present President Professor Henry published Pulkova question refracting telescopes remark replied result scientific Secretary seemed seen Senate showed Simon Newcomb sion Smithsonian soon stars station Sudlersville superintendent supposed telescope thing thought tion told took tory transit of Venus Truman Henry Safford walk wanted Washington Winlock
Popular passages
Page 214 - States as may be designated, and the Academy shall, whenever called upon by any department of the Government, investigate, examine, experiment, and report upon any subject of science or art, the actual expense of such investigations, examinations, experiments, and reports to be paid from appropriations which may be made for the purpose, but the Academy shall receive no compensation whatever for any services to the Government of the United States.
Page 218 - ... to take into consideration the methods and expenses of conducting all surveys of a scientific character under the War or Interior Department, and the surveys of the Land Office, and to report to Congress as soon thereafter as may be practicable a plan for surveying and mapping the Territories of the United States on such general system as will, in their judgment, secure the best results at the least possible cost...
Page 3 - My mother was the most profoundly and sincerely religious woman with whom I was ever intimately acquainted, and my father always entertained and expressed the highest admiration for her mental gifts, to which he attributed whatever talents his children might have possessed.
Page 173 - I was doing this work, Paris was under the reign of the Commune and besieged by the national forces. The studies had to be made within hearing of the besieging guns...
Page 73 - Capella, which was now just rising a little to the east of north ; "there is the star setting." "No, it isn't," said I ; "there is the star we have been looking at, now quite inconspicuous near the meridian, and that star which you think is setting is really rising and will soon be higher up." A very little additional watching showed that no deviation of the general laws of Nature had occurred, but that the observers of previous nights had jumped at the conclusion that two objects, widely apart in...
Page 124 - ' fulmen 9 32 48 " is not only an interlineation, but is written in decidedly different ink from all the original MS. — an ink which has not faded so much as the other, and so has almost a blue tinge by contrast. That Littrow, in arraying his proofs of Hell's forgery, should have failed to dwell upon the obvious difference between this ink and that with which the alterations were made leads me to suspect a defect in his sense of...
Page 199 - The best blood of England flows in my veins; on my father's side I am a Northumberland, on my mother's I am related to kings, but this avails me not. My name shall live in the memory of man when the titles of the Northumberlands and the Percys are extinct and forgotten.
Page 372 - ... legerdemain A noted spiritualist had visited Washington during Mr. Lincoln's administration, and held several seances with the President himself. The latter was extremely desirous that Professor Henry should see the medium, and give his opinion as to how he performed his wonderful feats. Although Henry generally avoided all contact with such men, he consented to receive him at the Smithsonian Institution. Among the acts proposed was that of making sounds in various quarters of the room. This...
Page 91 - Congress and appointed in 1901 expressed its conclusion that the official head of the observatory should be an eminent astronomer appointed by the President by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, holding his place by a tenure at least as permanent as that of the Superintendent of the Coast Survey or the head of the Geological Survey, and not merely by a detail of two or three years