Page:Dante and the early astronomers (1913).djvu/38

 The other three "wandering stars "—or "planets,"¹ as they were named by the ancient Greeks—Mars, Jupiter and Saturn, are also often seen as morning or evening stars near the sun, but they do not always accompany him, like Venus and Mercury. They may be seen at any distance from him, even exactly opposite, so that they rise as he sets. They keep as strictly to the

Fig. 3. The Path of Mars among the Stars, 1909.

zodiac, however, and travel in it from west to east, in periods of approximately two, twelve, and thirty years respectively; and their paths are also complicated by oscillations. Periodically they slacken speed, stop, and go back a little distance among the stars, then they slacken, stop, and advance again. These changes are technically called direct motion, stations or stationary points, and retrograde motion.

It must have originally taken many years of patient