قراءة كتاب Urania
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URANIA
CAMILLE FLAMMARION
DE BIELER, MYRBACH, AND GAMBARD
AUGUSTA RICE STETSON
ESTES AND LAURIAT
Publishers
By Estes & Lauriat.
John Wilson and Son, Cambridge.
CONTENTS.
Part First. | ||
THE HEAVENLY MUSE. | ||
Page | ||
I. | A Dream of Youth | 9 |
II. | Unknown Humanities | 18 |
III. | The Infinite Variety of Beings | 35 |
IV. | Eternity and the Infinite | 44 |
V. | The Light of the Past | 57 |
Part Second. | ||
GEORGE SPERO. | ||
I. | Life | 71 |
II. | The Apparition | 86 |
III. | "To be, or not to be?" | 101 |
IV. | Amor | 122 |
V. | The Aurora Borealis | 141 |
VI. | Eternal Progress | 152 |
Part Third. | ||
HEAVEN AND EARTH. | ||
I. | Telepathy | 161 |
II. | Iter Extaticum Cœleste | 207 |
III. | The Planet Mars | 227 |
IV. | The Fixed Point in the Universe | 257 |
V. | Ad Veritatem per Scientiam | 302 |
Part First.
—♦—
THE HEAVENLY MUSE.
I.
A DREAM OF YOUTH.
I WAS seventeen years old; her name was Urania.
Was Urania a fair, blue-eyed maiden, a dream of spring, an innocent but inquisitive daughter of Eve? No; she was simply, as in days of yore, that one of the nine Muses who presided over astronomy, and whose celestial glance inspired and directed the chorus of the spheres; she was the angelic idea which soars above terrestrial dulness. She had not the disturbing flesh, nor the heart whose palpitations are communicated at a distance, nor the gentle ardor of human life; but she existed nevertheless in a sort of ideal world,—lofty and always pure,—and yet she was human enough in name and form to produce a strong and deep impression upon an adolescent soul, to arouse in that soul an indefinite, indefinable feeling of admiration,—almost of love.
In his hours of solitude, and even through the intellectual labors