[Other Worlds by Garrett P. Serviss]@TWC D-Link book
Other Worlds

CHAPTER III
2/21

But the difference would amount only to an agreeable variation from accustomed conditions, and would not be productive of fundamental changes in the order of nature.
Being, like Mercury, nearer to the sun than the earth is, Venus also is visible to us only in the morning or the evening sky.

But her distance from the sun, slightly exceeding 67,000,000 miles, is nearly double that of Mercury, so that, when favorably situated, she becomes a very conspicuous object, and, instead of being known almost exclusively by astronomers, she is, perhaps, the most popular and most admired of all the members of the planetary system, especially when she appears in the charming role of the "evening star." As she emerges periodically from the blinding glare of the sun's immediate neighborhood and begins to soar, bright as an electric balloon, in the twilight, she commands all eyes and calls forth exclamations of astonishment and admiration by her singular beauty.

The intervals between her successive reappearances in the evening sky, measured by her synodic period of 584 days, are sufficiently long to give an element of surprise and novelty to every return of so dazzling a phenomenon.
Even the light of the full moon silvering the tree tops does not exercise greater enchantment over the mind of the contemplative observer.

In either of her roles, as morning or as evening star, Venus has no rival.

No fixed star can for an instant bear comparison with her.
What she lacks in vivacity of light--none of the planets twinkles, as do all of the true stars--is more than compensated by the imposing size of her gleaming disk and the striking beauty of her clear lamplike rays.
Her color is silvery or golden, according to the state of the atmosphere, while the distinction of her appearance in a dark sky is so great that no eye can resist its attraction, and I have known an unexpected glimpse of Venus to put an end to an animated conversation and distract, for a long time, the attention of a party of ladies and gentlemen from the social occupation that had brought them together.
As a telescopic object Venus is exceedingly attractive, even when considered merely from the point of view of simple beauty.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books