Page:Dante and the early astronomers (1913).djvu/32

 We can plot the stars on a globe, and draw an equator on it, which will everywhere be at an equal distance from the poles, and we may add other circles, as on a terrestrial globe: then the position of each star can be referred to these circles as towns on earth are found by latitude and longitude, and the path of any moving body, such as a comet, may be traced.

The stars fade out when the sun rises, but he too sweeps across the sky as though carried round by the same sphere, and he sets like them, in the west. Has he a fixed place on the sphere, keeping always the same position relatively to the stars? No, for in the place where he has just set we do not always see the same stars. Night after night those which were clear in the western sky as soon as it was dark enough to see them, grow closer to him, till at last they are lost in his twilight beams. Thus the sun, though sharing in the daily east to west movement, has a slow movement of his own on the sky-sphere, slipping back from west to east, until in a year he has accomplished the whole round, and sets again among the same stars.

Moreover, this peculiar movement of the sun is not a mere lagging behind the stars, for his west to east motion is combined with a north and south motion. If we note the star-groups which are just behind him when he sets (or just before him when he rises), we shall find that they form a great circle round the globe, half of which lies north and half south of the celestial equator. The Greeks named this circle the Zodiac, or "Path of the Animals," because the star-groups forming it were mostly called by the names of animals (the Ram, Lion, Fishes, etc.). When the sun is in the most northerly part of the zodiac it is summer in the