Simon Newcomb Quotes (37 Quotes)


    My first undertaking in the way of scientific experiment was in the field of economics and psychology.

    In 1860 a total eclipse of the sun was visible in British America.

    On the retirement of Admiral Sands in 1874, Admiral Davis returned to the observatory, and continued in charge until his death in February, 1877.

    Quite likely the twentieth century is destined to see the natural forces which will enable us to fly from continent to continent with a speed far exceeding that of a bird.

    The time was not yet ripe for the growth of mathematical science among us, and any development that might have taken place in that direction was rudely stopped by the civil war.


    Flight by machines heavier than air is unpractical and insignificant, if not utterly impossible.

    What we now call school training, the pursuit of fixed studies at stated hours under the constant guidance of a teacher, I could scarcely be said to have enjoyed.

    In 1858 I received the degree of D. S. from the Lawrence Scientific School, and thereafter remained on the rolls of the university as a resident graduate.

    I was taught the alphabet by my aunts before I was four years old, and I was reading the Bible in class and beginning geography when I was six.

    When about fifteen I once made a great scandal by taking out my knife in prayer meeting and assaulting a young man who, while I was kneeling down during the prayer, stood above me and squeezed my neck.

    One hardly knows where, in the history of science, to look for an important movement that had its effective start in so pure and simple an accident as that which led to the building of the great Washington telescope, and went on to the discovery of the satellites of Mars.

    We are probably nearing the limit of all we can know about astronomy.

    In the summer of 1851, when I had passed the age of sixteen, we lived in a little school district a mile or two from the town of Yarmouth, N. S.

    If my impressions are correct, our educational planing mill cuts down all the knots of genius, and reduces the best of the men who go through it to much the same standard.

    My father was the most rational and the most dispassionate of men.

    The beginning of 1856 found me teaching in the family of a planter named Bryan, residing in Prince George County, Md., some fifteen or twenty miles from Washington.

    Astronomers are greatly disappointed when, having traveled halfway around the world to see an eclipse, clouds prevent a sight of it; and yet a sense of relief accompanies the disappointment.

    A few years later the Naval Academy was founded at Annapolis, and a similar course was pursued to provide it with a corps of instructors.

    I had not yet gotten into the world of light. But I felt as one who, standing outside, could knock against the wall and hear an answering knock from within.

    As the existence of a corps of professors of mathematics is peculiar to our navy, as well as an apparent, perhaps a real, anomaly, some account of it may be of interest.

    The reports of the eclipse parties not only described the scientific observations in great detail, but also the travels and experiences, and were sometimes marked by a piquancy not common in official documents.

    James Edward Oliver might have been one of the great mathematicians of his time had he not been absolutely wanting in the power of continuous work.

    My father followed, during most of his life, the precarious occupation of a country school teacher.

    Aerial flight is one of that class of problems with which men will never have to cope.

    As years passed away I have formed the habit of looking back upon that former self as upon another person, the remembrance of whose emotions has been a solace in adversity and added zest to the enjoyment of prosperity.

    I finally reached the conclusion that mathematics was the study I was best fitted to follow, though I did not clearly see in what way I should turn the subject to account.

    A suggestion had been made to me looking toward a professorship in some Western college, but after due consideration, I declined to consider the matter.

    So far as the economic condition of society and the general mode of living and thinking were concerned, I might claim to have lived in the time of the American Revolution.

    Until I was four years old I lived in the house of my paternal grandfather, about two miles from the pretty little village of Wallace, at the mouth of the river of that name.

    In October, 1865, occurred what was, in my eyes, the greatest event in the history of the observatory. The new transit circle arrived from Berlin in its boxes.

    In 1854 I availed myself of my summer vacation to pay my first visit to the national capital, little dreaming that it would ever be my home.

    The demonstration that no possible combination of known substances, known forms of machinery and known forms of force, can be united in a practical machine by which men shall fly along distances through the air, seems to the writer as complete as it is possible for the demonstration to be.

    Though born in Nova Scotia, I am of almost pure New England descent.

    In the latter part of 1869 I had carried forward the work with the transit circle as far as it could be profitably pursued under existing conditions.

    The result was that, if it happened to clear off after a cloudy evening, I frequently arose from my bed at any hour of the night or morning and walked two miles to the observatory to make some observation included in the programme.

    Whenever a total eclipse of the sun was visible in an accessible region parties were sent out to observe it.

    The great fire practically put an end to the activity of the Chicago Observatory and forced its director to pursue his work in other fields.


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