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stronomical Record〃 the memorandum; which you perhaps remember; of the observation; by Dr。 Zitta; of a new asteroid; with an enormous movement in declination。
III
FULFILMENT
Looking back upon it now; it seems inconceivable that we said as little to each other as we did; of this horrible catastrophe。 That night we did not pretend to sleep。 We sat in one of the deserted cabins; now talking fast; now sitting and brooding; without speaking; perhaps; for hours。 Riding back the next day to meet the women and children; we still brooded; or we discussed this 〃if;〃 that 〃if;〃 and yet others。 But after we had once opened it all to them;and when we had once answered the children's horribly naive questions as best we could;we very seldom spoke to each other of it again。 It was too hateful; all of it; to talk about。 I went round to Tom Coram's office one day; and told him all I knew。 He saw it was dreadful to me; and; with his eyes full; just squeezed my hand; and never said one word more。 We lay awake nights; pondering and wondering; but hardly ever did I to Haliburton or he to me explain our respective notions as they came and went。 I believe my general impression was that of which I have spoken; that they were all burned to death on the instant; as the little aerolite fused in its passage through our atmosphere。 I believe Haliburton's thought more often was that they were conscious of what had happened; and gasped out their lives in one or two breathless minutes;so horribly long!as they shot outside of our atmosphere。 But it was all too terrible for words。 And that which we could not but think upon; in those dreadful waking nights; we scarcely whispered even to our wives。
Of course I looked and he looked for the miserable thing。 But we looked in vain。 I returned to the few subscribers the money which I had scraped together towards whitewashing the moon;〃shrouding its guilty face with innocent white〃 indeed! But we agreed to spend the wretched trifle of the other money; left in the treasury after paying the last bills; for the largest Alvan Clark telescope that we could buy; and we were fortunate in obtaining cheap a second…hand one which came to the hammer when the property of the Shubael Academy was sold by the mortgagees。 But we had; of course; scarce a hint whatever as to where the miserable object was to be found。 All we could do was to carry the glass to No。 9; to train it there on the meridian of No。 9; and take turns every night in watching the field; in the hope that this child of sorrow might drift across it in its path of ruin。 But; though everything else seemed to drift by; from east to west; nothing came from south to north; as we expected。 For a whole month of spring; another of autumn; another of summer; and another of winter; did Haliburton and his wife and Polly and I glue our eyes to that eye…glass; from the twilight of evening to the twilight of morning; and the dead hulk never hove in sight。 Wherever else it was; it seemed not to be on that meridian; which was where it ought to be and was made to be! Had ever any dead mass of matter wrought such ruin to its makers; and; of its own stupid inertia; so falsified all the prophecies of its birth! Oh; the total depravity of things!
It was more than a year after the fatal night;if it all happened in the night; as I suppose;that; as I dreamily read through the 〃Astronomical Record〃 in the new reading…room of the College Library at Cambridge; I lighted on this scrap:
〃Professor Karl Zitta of Breslau writes to the Astronomische Nachrichten to claim the discovery of a new asteroid observed by him on the night of March 31st。
App。 A。 R。 App。 Decl。 Bresl。 M。 T。 h。 m。 s。 h。 m。 s。 @ ' 〃 Size。 March 31 12 53 51。9 15 39 52。32 …23 50 26。1 12。9 April 1 1 3 2。1 15 39 52。32 …23 9 1。9 12。9
He proposes for the asteroid the name of Phoebe。 Dr。 Zitta states that in the short period which he had for observing Phoebe; for an hour after midnight; her motion in R。 A。 seemed slight and her motion in declination very rapid。〃
After this; however; for months; nay even to this moment; nothing more was heard of Dr。 Zitta of Breslau。
But; one morning; before I was up; Haliburton came banging at my door on D Street。 The mood had taken him; as he returned from some private theatricals at Cambridge; to take the comfort of the new reading…room at night; and thus express in practice his gratitude to the overseers of the college for keeping it open through all the twenty…four hours。 Poor Haliburton; he did not sleep well in those times! Well; as he read away on the Astronomische Nachrichten itself; what should he find but this in German; which he copied for me; and then; all on foot in the rain and darkness; tramped over with; to South Boston:
〃The most enlightened head professor Dr。 Gmelin writes to the director of the Porpol Astronomik at St。 Petersburg; to claim the discovery of an asteroid in a very high southern latitude; of a wider inclination of the orbit; as will be noticed; than any asteroid yet observed。
〃Planet's apparent {alpha} 21^h。 20^m。 51^s。40。 Planet's apparent {delta}…39@ 31' 11〃。9。 Comparison star {alpha}。
〃Dr。 Gmelin publishes no separate second observation; but is confident that the declination is diminishing。 Dr。 Gmelin suggests for the name of this extra…zodiacal planet ‘Io;' as appropriate to its wanderings from the accustomed ways of planetary life; and trusts that the very distinguished Herr Peters; the godfather of so many planets; will relinquish this name; already claimed for the asteroid (85) observed by him; September 15; 1865。〃
I had run down stairs almost as I was; slippers and dressing…gown being the only claims I had on society。 But to me; as to Haliburton; this stuff about 〃extra… zodiacal wandering〃 blazed out upon the page; and though there was no evidence that the 〃most enlightened〃 Gmelin found anything the next night; yet; if his 〃diminishing〃 meant anything; there was; with Zitta's observation; whoever Zitta might be;something to start upon。 We rushed upon some old bound volumes of the Record and spotted the 〃enlightened Gmelin。〃 He was chief of a college at Taganrog; where perhaps they had a spyglass。 This gave us the parallax of his observation。 Breslau; of course; we knew; and so we could place Zitta's; and with these poor data I went to work to construct; if I could; an orbit for this Io…Phoebe mass of brick and mortar。 Haliburton; not strong in spherical trigonometry; looked out logarithms for me till breakfast; and; as soon as it would do; went over to Mrs。 Bowdoin; to borrow her telescope; ours being left at No。 9。
Mrs。 Bowdoin was kind; as she always was; and at noon Haliburton appeared in triumph with the boxes on P。 Nolan's job…wagon。 We always employ P。; in memory of dear old Phil。 We got the telescope rigged; and waited for night; only; alas! to be disappointed again。 Io had wandered somewhere else; and; with all our sweeping back and forth on the tentative curve I had laid out; Io would not appear。 We spent that night in vain。
But we were not going to give it up so。 Phoebe might have gone round