Time and Tide: A Romance of the Moon

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Time and Tide: A Romance of the Moon by Sir Robert Stawell Ball, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Sir Robert Stawell Ball ISBN: 9781465608291
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Sir Robert Stawell Ball
ISBN: 9781465608291
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English
First, let us be fully aware of the extraordinary remoteness of that period of which our history treats. To attempt to define that period chronologically would be utterly futile. When we have stated that it is more ancient than almost any other period which we can discuss, we have expressed all that we are really entitled to say. Yet this conveys not a little. It directs us to look back through all the ages of modern human history, through the great days of ancient Greece and Rome, back through the times when Egypt and Assyria were names of renown, through the days when Nineveh and Babylon were mighty and populous cities in the zenith of their glory. Back earlier still to those more ancient nations of which we know hardly anything, and still earlier to the prehistoric man, of whom we know less; back, finally, to the days when man first trod on this planet, untold ages ago. Here is indeed a portentous retrospect from most points of view, but it is only the commencement of that which our subject suggests. For man is but the final product of the long anterior ages during which the development of life seems to have undergone an exceedingly gradual elevation. Our retrospect now takes its way along the vistas opened up by the geologists. We look through the protracted tertiary ages, when mighty animals, now generally extinct, roamed over the continents. Back still earlier through those wondrous secondary periods, where swamps or oceans often covered what is now dry land, and where mighty reptiles of uncouth forms stalked and crawled and swam through the old world and the new. Back still earlier through those vitally significant ages when the sunbeams were being garnered and laid aside for man's use in the great forests, which were afterwards preserved by being transformed into seams of coal. Back still earlier through endless thousands of years, when lustrous fishes abounded in the oceans; back again to those periods characterized by the lower types of life; and still earlier to that incredibly remote epoch when life itself began to dawn on our awakening globe. Even here the epoch of our present history can hardly be said to have been reached. We have to look through a long succession of ages still antecedent. The geologist, who has hitherto guided our view, cannot render us much further assistance; but the physicist is at hand—he teaches us that the warm globe on which life is beginning has passed in its previous stages through every phase of warmth, of fervour, of glowing heat, of incandescence, and of actual fusion; and thus at last our retrospect reaches to that particular period of our earth's past history which is specially illustrated by the modern doctrine of Time and Tide.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
First, let us be fully aware of the extraordinary remoteness of that period of which our history treats. To attempt to define that period chronologically would be utterly futile. When we have stated that it is more ancient than almost any other period which we can discuss, we have expressed all that we are really entitled to say. Yet this conveys not a little. It directs us to look back through all the ages of modern human history, through the great days of ancient Greece and Rome, back through the times when Egypt and Assyria were names of renown, through the days when Nineveh and Babylon were mighty and populous cities in the zenith of their glory. Back earlier still to those more ancient nations of which we know hardly anything, and still earlier to the prehistoric man, of whom we know less; back, finally, to the days when man first trod on this planet, untold ages ago. Here is indeed a portentous retrospect from most points of view, but it is only the commencement of that which our subject suggests. For man is but the final product of the long anterior ages during which the development of life seems to have undergone an exceedingly gradual elevation. Our retrospect now takes its way along the vistas opened up by the geologists. We look through the protracted tertiary ages, when mighty animals, now generally extinct, roamed over the continents. Back still earlier through those wondrous secondary periods, where swamps or oceans often covered what is now dry land, and where mighty reptiles of uncouth forms stalked and crawled and swam through the old world and the new. Back still earlier through those vitally significant ages when the sunbeams were being garnered and laid aside for man's use in the great forests, which were afterwards preserved by being transformed into seams of coal. Back still earlier through endless thousands of years, when lustrous fishes abounded in the oceans; back again to those periods characterized by the lower types of life; and still earlier to that incredibly remote epoch when life itself began to dawn on our awakening globe. Even here the epoch of our present history can hardly be said to have been reached. We have to look through a long succession of ages still antecedent. The geologist, who has hitherto guided our view, cannot render us much further assistance; but the physicist is at hand—he teaches us that the warm globe on which life is beginning has passed in its previous stages through every phase of warmth, of fervour, of glowing heat, of incandescence, and of actual fusion; and thus at last our retrospect reaches to that particular period of our earth's past history which is specially illustrated by the modern doctrine of Time and Tide.

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book Thoughts Out of Season (Complete) by Sir Robert Stawell Ball
Cover of the book Zenobia; or, the Fall of Palmyra by Sir Robert Stawell Ball
Cover of the book La Tosca: Drame en Cinq Actes by Sir Robert Stawell Ball
Cover of the book Endurance Test or, How Clear Grit Won The Day by Sir Robert Stawell Ball
Cover of the book The Natural Cure of Consumption, Constipation, Bright's Disease, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, How Sickness Originates and How to Prevent It: A Health Manual for the People by Sir Robert Stawell Ball
Cover of the book An Elementary Study of Chemistry by Sir Robert Stawell Ball
Cover of the book Aphorisms and Reflections From the Works of T. H. Huxley by Sir Robert Stawell Ball
Cover of the book Book-Plates by Sir Robert Stawell Ball
Cover of the book The Brigadier by Sir Robert Stawell Ball
Cover of the book The Sidereal Messenger of Galileo Galilei and a Part of the Preface to Kepler's Dioptrics Containing the Original Account of Galileo's Astronomical Discoveries by Sir Robert Stawell Ball
Cover of the book The Development of the European Nations, 1870-1914 by Sir Robert Stawell Ball
Cover of the book Myths and Legends of Our Own Land, v3 by Sir Robert Stawell Ball
Cover of the book Jewish Immigration to The United States From 1881 to 1910: Studies in History, Economics and Public Law, Vol. LIX, No. 4, 1914 by Sir Robert Stawell Ball
Cover of the book Wisdom of the Ages by Sir Robert Stawell Ball
Cover of the book An Account of the Campaign in the West Indies in the Year 1794 Under the Command of Their Excellencies Lieutenant General Sir Charles Grey, K.B., and Vice Admiral Sir John Jervis, K.B. by Sir Robert Stawell Ball
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy