The Cometby Cosmopolites A comet appearing in our
hemisphere having attracted the attention of the Literati
& the unlettered world has induced our subscriber to
send you the following remarks. It is progressing
somewhat towards the North Pole. At its first
appearance it was about 50 degrees distant there from, but
now it is only 40. A little more of approximation
towards that point will cause it to appear as one of the
stars of perpetual apparition. And this will be a mean to
undeceive the ignorant, who foolishly apprehend that there
are two harbingers of divine judgment, viz. one seen in
the morning, another in the evening. Those who are
satisfied that these globes called Comets, are parts of
our solar system, moving in their orbits by the same
general laws which govern the planets, need apprehend no
more danger there from than from a conjunction of the
planets. We would reckon him an imperfect mechanic
who so ordered his clock work that in its progression one
part therefore should dash against another, and so ruin
the compound fabric. The great Architect has defined
the path of the comets the same as that of the
planets. The Comet can no more deviate from its
described path to hurt our earth, than our earth,
unbalanced, can fly from its orbit and injure the Comet. |
How to cite this
article: Cosmopolites, "The Comet," Weekly Raleigh
Register, 18 Oct. 1811, p. 3, available at
http://history.hanover.edu/texts/1811. |