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Watchers of the Sky eBook

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Alfred Noyes

Picard in France—­all glory to her name
Who is herself a light among all lands—­
Had measured earth’s diameter once more
With exquisite precision. 
                          To the throng,
Those few corrected ciphers, his results,
Were less than nothing; yet they changed the world. 
For Newton seized them and, with trembling hands,
Began to work his problem out anew. 
Then, then, as on the page those figures turned
To hieroglyphs of heaven, and he beheld
The moving moon, with awful cadences
Falling into the path his law ordained,
Even to the foot and second, his hand shook
And dropped the pencil. 
                        “Work it out for me,”
He cried to those around him; for the weight
Of that celestial music overwhelmed him;
And, on his page, those burning hieroglyphs
Were Thrones and Principalities and Powers... 
For far beyond, immeasurably far
Beyond our sun, he saw that river of suns
We call the Milky Way, that glittering host
Powdering the night, each grain of solar blaze
Divided from its neighbour by a gulf
Too wide for thought to measure; each a sun
Huger than ours, with its own fleet of worlds,
Visible and invisible.  Those bright throngs
That seemed dispersed like a defeated host
Through blindly wandering skies, now, at the word
Of one great dreamer, height o’er height revealed
Hints of a vaster order, and moved on
In boundless intricacies of harmony
Around one centre, deeper than all suns,
The burning throne of God.

V

He could not sleep.  That intellect, whose wings
Dared the cold ultimate heights of Space and Time
Sank, like a wounded eagle, with dazed eyes
Back, headlong through the clouds to throb on earth. 
What shaft had pierced him?  That which also pierced
His great forebears—­the hate of little men. 
They flocked around him, and they flung their dust
Into the sensitive eyes and laughed to see
How dust could blind them. 
                           If one prickling grain
Could so put out his vision and so torment
That delicate brain, what weakness!  How the mind
That seemed to dwarf us, dwindles!  Is he mad? 
So buzzed the fools, whose ponderous mental wheels
Nor dust, nor grit, nor stones, nor rocks could irk
Even for an instant. 
                     Newton could not sleep,
But all that careful malice could design
Was blindly fostered by well-meaning folly,
And great sane folk like Mr.

Samuel Pepys
Canvassed his weakness and slept sound all night. 
For little Samuel with his rosy face
Came chirping into a coffee-house one day
Like a plump robin, “Sir, the unhappy state
Of Mr. Isaac Newton grieves me much. 
Last week I had a letter from him, filled
With strange complainings, very curious hints,
Such as, I grieve to say, are common signs

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Watchers of the Sky from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.

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