|
|
We
find it hard to picture to ourselves the state of mind of a man
of older days who firmly believed that the Earth was the center
of the Universe, and that all the heavenly bodies revolved round
it. He could feel beneath his feet the writhings of the damned amid
the flames; very likely he had seen with his own eyes and smelt
with his own nostrils the sulphurous fumes of Hell escaping from
some fissure in the rocks.
Looking
upwards, he beheld the twelve spheres,first that of the elements,
comprising air and fire, then the sphere of the Moon, of Mercury,
of Venus, which Dante visited on Good Friday of the year 1300, then
those of the Sun, of Mars, of Jupiter, and of Saturn, then the incorruptible
firmament, wherein the stars hung fixed like so many lamps.
Imagination
carried his gaze further still, and his minds eye discerned
in a remoter distance the Ninth Heaven, whither the Saints were
translated to glory, the primum mobile or crystalline, and finally
the Empyrean, abode of the Blessed, to which, after death, two angels
robed in white (as he steadfastly hoped) would bear his soul, as
it were a little child, washed by baptism and perfumed with the
oil of the last sacraments.
In
those times God had no other children but mankind, and all His creation
was administered after a fashion at once puerile and poetical, like
the routine of a vast cathedral. Thus conceived, the Universe was
so simple that it was fully and adequately represented, with its
true shape and proper motion, in sundry great clocks compacted and
painted by the craftsmen of the Middle Ages.
We
are done now with the twelve spheres and the planets under which
men were born happy or unhappy, jovial or saturnine. The solid vault
of the firmament is cleft asunder. Our eyes and thoughts plunge
into the infinite abysses of the heavens. Beyond the planets, we
discover, instead of the Empyrean of the elect and the angels, a
hundred millions of suns rolling through space, escorted each by
its own procession of dim satellites, invisible to us. Amidst this
infinitude of systems our Sun is but a bubble of gas and the Earth
a drop of mud.
The
imagination is vexed and startled when the astronomers tell us that
the luminous ray which reaches us from the polestar has been half
a century on the road; and yet that noble star is our next neighbor,
and with Sirius and Arcturus, one of the least remote of the suns
that are sisters of our own. There are stars we still see in the
field of our telescopes which ceased to shine, it may be, three
thousand years ago.
Worlds
die,for are they not born? Birth and death are unceasingly
at work. Creation is never complete and perfect; it goes on for
ever under incessant changes and modifications. The stars go out,
but we cannot say if these daughters of light, when they die down
into darkness, do not enter on a new and fecund existence as planets,if
the planets themselves do not melt away and become stars again.
All we know is this; there is no more repose in the spaces of the
sky than on earth, and the same law of strife and struggle governs
the infinitude of the cosmic universe.
There
are stars that have gone out under our eyes, while others are even
now flickering like the dying flame of a taper. The heavens, which
men deemed incorruptible, know of no eternity but the eternal flux
of things.
That
organic life is diffused through all parts of the Universe can hardly
be doubted,unless indeed organic life is a mere accident,
an unhappy chance, a deplorable something that has inexplicably
arisen in the particular drop of mud inhabited by ourselves.
But
it is more natural to suppose that life has developed in the planets
of our solar system, the Earths sisters and like her, daughters
of the Sun, and that it arose there under conditions analogous in
the main to those in which it manifests itself with us,under
animal and vegetable forms. A meteoric stone has actually reached
us from the heavens containing carbon. To convince us in more gracious
fashion, the Angels that brought St. Dorothy garlands of flowers
from Paradise would have to come again with their celestial blossoms.
Mars to all appearance is habitable for living things of kinds comparable
to our terrestrial animals and plants. It seems likely that, being
habitable, it is inhabited. Rest assured, there too species is devouring
species, and individual individual, at this present moment.
The
uniformity of composition of the stars is now proved by spectrum
analysis. Hence we are bound to suppose that the same causes that
have produced life from the nebulous nucleus we call the Earth engender
it in all the others. When we say life, we mean the activity of
organized matter under the conditions in which we see it manifested
in our own world. But it is equally possible that life may be developed
in a totally different environment, at extremely high or extremely
low temperatures, and under forms unthinkable by us. It may even
be developed under an ethereal form, close beside us, in our atmosphere
and it is possible that in this way we are surrounded by angels,beings
we shall never know, because to know them implies a point of common
contact, a mutual relation, such as there can never be between them
and us.
Again,
it is possible that these millions of suns, along with thousands
of millions more we cannot see, make up altogether but a globule
of blood or lymph in the veins of an animal, of a minute insect,
hatched in a world of whose vastness we can frame no conception,
but which nevertheless would itself, in proportion to some other
world, be no more than a speck of dust.
Nor is there anything absurd in supposing that centuries of thought
and intelligence may live and die before us in the space of a minute
of time, in the confines of an atom of matter. In themselves things
are neither great nor small, and when we say the Universe is vast
we speak purely from a human standpoint. If it were suddenly reduced
to the dimensions a hazelnut, all things keeping their relative
proportions, we should know nothing of the change. The polestar,
included together with ourselves in the nut, would still take fifty
years to transmit its light to us as before.
And
the Earth, though grown smaller than an atom, would be watered with
tears and blood just as copiously as it is today. The wonder is,
not that the field of the stars is so vast, but that man has measured
it.
|
|
|