Page:Dante and the early astronomers (1913).djvu/35

 recognized by noting at what points of the horizon he rises or sets at different times of the year; and the different heights to which he rises in the sky are most simply observed by marking the length of the shadow of some tree or pole at midday. Or if some rough kind of gnomon be made, even a flat piece of wood, laid on a sunny window-sill, with a long nail driven vertically into it, the movement and varying length of the shadow, from hour to hour, and from day to day, will make one realize vividly the diurnal and the seasonal movement of the sun. This device, in one form or another, was probably the first astronomical instrument invented, and by its means ancient astronomers in many lands solved important problems.

It is not necessary to explain that the daily apparent movements are caused in reality by the earth's rotation on her axis, and the yearly apparent movements by her revolution round the sun. These are the book-learned facts which for the most part obscure our perception of the very things on which they are based. I would ask the reader to do his best, for the moment, to forget them.

The movements of the moon among the stars are much more easily observed than those of the sun, since we can see the stars at the same time, and her revolution is much more rapid. She also is apparently carried round with the daily east to west movement, and she also has a west to east motion of her own, but so fast that it takes her round the star-sphere in one month, instead of one year. This revolution also takes place in the zodiac. She is first visible as a fine crescent, just following the sun, in the west, after he