The Project Gutenberg EBook of Watchers of the Sky, by Alfred Noyes 
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**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts** 
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Title: Watchers of the Sky 
Author: Alfred Noyes 
Release Date: September, 2004 [EBook #6574]
[Yes, we are more 
than one year ahead of schedule]
[This file was first posted on 
December 28, 2002] 
Edition: 10 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ASCII 
0. START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WATCHERS
OF THE SKY *** 
Produced by Beth L. Constantine, Juliet Sutherland, Charles Franks and 
the Online Distributed Proofreading Team. 
THE TORCH-BEARERS 
WATCHERS OF THE SKY 
BY 
ALFRED NOYES 
PREFATORY NOTE 
This volume, while it is complete in itself, is also the first of a trilogy, 
the scope of which is suggested in the prologue. The story of scientific 
discovery has its own epic unity--a unity of purpose and endeavour--the 
single torch passing from hand to hand through the centuries; and the 
great moments of science when, after long labour, the pioneers saw 
their accumulated facts falling into a significant order--sometimes in 
the form of a law that revolutionised the whole world of thought--have 
an intense human interest, and belong essentially to the creative 
imagination of poetry. It is with these moments that my poem is chiefly 
concerned, not with any impossible attempt to cover the whole field or 
to make a new poetic system, after the Lucretian model, out of modern 
science. 
The theme has been in my mind for a good many years; and the first 
volume, dealing with the "Watchers of the Sky," began to take definite 
shape during what was to me an unforgettable experience--the night I 
was privileged to spend on a summit of the Sierra Madre Mountains, 
when the first trial was made of the new 100-inch telescope. The 
prologue to this volume attempts to give a picture of that night, and to 
elucidate my own purpose. 
The first tale in this volume plunges into the middle of things, with the 
revolution brought about by Copernicus; but, within the tale, partly by 
means of an incidental lyric, there is an attempt to give a bird's-eye
view of what had gone before. The torch then passes to Tycho Brahe, 
who, driven into exile with his tables of the stars, at the very point of 
death hands them over to a young man named Kepler. Kepler, with 
their help, arrives at his own great laws, and corresponds with 
Galileo--the intensely human drama of whose life I have endeavoured 
to depict with more historical accuracy than can be attributed to much 
of the poetic literature that has gathered around his name. Too many 
writers have succumbed to the temptation of the cry, "e pur si muove!" 
It is, of course, rejected by every reliable historian, and was first 
attributed to Galileo a hundred years after his death. M. Ponsard, in his 
play on the subject, succumbed to the extent of making his final scene 
end with Galileo "frappant du pied la terre," and crying, "pourtant elle 
tourne." Galileo's recantation was a far more subtle and tragically 
complicated affair than that. Even Landor succumbed to the easy 
method of making him display his entirely legendary scars to Milton. If 
these familiar pictures are not to be found in my poem, it may be well 
for me to assure the hasty reader that it is because I have endeavoured 
to present a more just picture. I have tried to suggest the complications 
of motive in this section by a series of letters passing between the 
characters chiefly concerned. There was, of course, a certain poetic 
significance in the legend of "e pur si muove"; and this significance I 
have endeavoured to retain without violating historical truth. 
In the year of Galileo's death Newton was born, and the subsequent 
sections carry the story on to the modern observatory again. The form I 
have adopted is a development from that of an earlier book, "Tales of 
the Mermaid Tavern" where certain poets and
discoverers of another 
kind were brought together round a central    
    
		
	
	
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