Those who were at leisure to watch the coming shadow of the moon described its curved outline as distinctly visible on the plains. “A rounded ball of darkness with an orange-yellow border,” one called it. Those, again, who looked down on the bright clouds below say the shadow was preceded by a yellow fringe, casting a bright light over the clouds and passing into orange, pink, rose-red, and dark-red, in about twenty seconds. This beautiful effect was noticed by nearly all the amateur observers present, who had their attention at liberty, and was generally unseen by the professional ones, who were shut up in dark tents with photometers, or engaged otherwise than in admiring the glory of the spectacle as a spectacle merely. This strange light, forming a band of color about the shadow as seen from above, must have really covered ten miles or more in width, and have occupied a considerable fraction of a minute in passing over the heads of those below, to whom it probably constituted that lurid light on their landscape I have spoken of as so peculiar and “unnatural.” It seems to be due to the colored flames round the sun, which shine out when its brighter light is extinguished. I should add that on the summit of Pike’s Peak the corona did not entirely disappear at the instant the sun broke forth again, but that its outlying portions first went and then its brighter and inner ones, till our eager gaze, trying to follow it as long as possible, only after the lapse of some minutes saw the last of the wonderful thing disappear and “fade into the light of common day.”
FIG. 41.—SPECTROMETER SLIT AND SOLAR IMAGE. (FROM “THE SUN,” BY YOUNG.)
There have been other eclipses since; but, in spite of all, our knowledge of the corona remains very incomplete, and if the most learned in such matters were asked what it was, he could probably answer truthfully, “I don’t know.”
FIG. 42.—SLIT AND PROMINENCES.
(“THE SUN,” BY YOUNG.)
This will not be wondered at when it is considered that as total eclipses come, about every other year, and continue, one with another, hardly three minutes, an astronomer who should devote thirty years exclusively to the subject, never missing an eclipse in whatever quarter of the globe it occurred, would in that time have secured, in all, something like three-quarters of an hour for observation. Accordingly, what we know best about the corona is how it looks, what it is being still largely conjecture; and it is for this reason that I have thought the space devoted to it would be best used by giving the unscientific reader some idea of the visible phenomena as they present themselves to an eyewitness. Treatises like Lockyer’s “Solar Physics,” Proctor’s “The Sun,” Secchi’s “Le Soleil,” and Young’s “The Sun” (the latter is most recent), will give the reader who desires to learn more of the little that is known, the fuller information which this is not the place for; but it may be said very briefly that it is certain that the corona is at times of enormous extent (the whole length of the longer beam seen on Pike’s Peak must have been over fourteen million miles), that it almost certainly changes in its shape and dimensions from year to year (possibly much oftener, but this we cannot yet know), and that it shines partly by its own and partly by reflected light. When we come to ask whether it is a gas or not, the evidence is conflicting. The appearance of the green coronal line, and other testimony we have not alluded to, would make it seem almost certain that there must be a gas here of extreme tenuity, reaching the height of some hundred thousand miles, at the least; while yet the fact that such light bodies as comets have been known to pass through it, close to the sun, without suffering any visible retardation, such as would come even from a gas far lighter than hydrogen, appears to throw doubt on evidence otherwise strong. It is possible to conceive of the corona, and especially of the outer portion, as very largely made up of minute particles such as form the scattered dust of meteoric trains, and this seems to be the most probable constitution of its outlying parts. It is even possible to conceive that it is in some degree a subjective phenomenon, caused, as Professor Hastings has suggested, by diffraction upon the edge of the moon,—the moon, that is, not merely serving as a screen to the sun to reveal the corona, but partly making the corona by diffracting the light, somewhat as we see that the edge of any very distant object screening the sun is gilded by its beams. This effect may be seen when the sun rises or sets unusually clear, for objects on the horizon partly hiding it are then fringed for a moment with a line of light,—an appearance which has not escaped Shakspeare, where he says,—
“But when from under this terrestrial ball
He fires the tall tops of the eastern pines.”