free hosting   image hosting   hosting reseller   online album   e-shop   famous people 
Free Website Templates
Free Installer

Galleporto Bavicarius Directory 17
Page 03

After the Galleporto Bavicarius moments everything else pales.

Galleporto Bavicarius

Galleporto Bavicarius Home

Galleporto Bavicarius Sitemap

Galleporto Bavicarius Dir 01

Galleporto Bavicarius Dir 02

Galleporto Bavicarius Dir 03

Galleporto Bavicarius Dir 04

Galleporto Bavicarius Dir 05

Galleporto Bavicarius Dir 06

Galleporto Bavicarius Dir 07

Galleporto Bavicarius Dir 08

Galleporto Bavicarius Dir 09

Galleporto Bavicarius Dir 10

Galleporto Bavicarius Dir 11

Galleporto Bavicarius Dir 12

Galleporto Bavicarius Dir 13

Galleporto Bavicarius Dir 14

Galleporto Bavicarius Dir 15

Galleporto Bavicarius Dir 16

Galleporto Bavicarius Dir 17

Galleporto Bavicarius Dir 18

Galleporto Bavicarius Dir 19

Galleporto Bavicarius Dir 20

Galleporto Bavicarius Directory 17
Page 03

The moon is so very much nearer to us than any other heavenly body that we have a remarkable knowledge of it. In Fig. 14 you have a photograph, taken in one of our largest telescopes, of part of its surface. In a sense such a telescope brings the moon to within about fifty miles of us. We should see a city like London as a dark, sprawling blotch on the globe. We could just detect a Zeppelin or a Diplodocus as a moving speck against the surface. But we find none of these things. It is true that a few astronomers believe that they see signs of some sort of feeble life or movement on the moon. Professor Pickering thinks that he can trace some volcanic activity. He believes that there are areas of vegetation, probably of a low order, and that the soil of the moon may retain a certain amount of water in it. He speaks of a very thin atmosphere, and of occasional light falls of snow. He has succeeded in persuading some careful observers that there probably are slight changes of some kind taking place on the moon.

Others, as the rabbits, field-mice, and squirrels, are more or less active and forage freely on whatever they can find, eating many things which in summer they would spurn with scorn. To this class belongs that intelligent but injurious animal the musquash or muskrat. Those which inhabit the rivers and larger streams live in burrows dug deep beneath the banks, but those inhabiting sluggish streams and ponds usually construct a conical winter house about three feet in diameter and from two to three feet in height. These houses are made of coarse grasses, rushes, branches of shrubs, and small pieces of driftwood, closely cemented together with stiff, clayey mud. The top of the house usually projects two feet or more above the water, and when sun-dried is so strong as to easily sustain the weight of a man. The walls are generally about six inches in thickness and are very difficult to pull to pieces. Within is a single circular chamber with a shelf or floor of mud, sticks, leaves and grass, ingeniously supported on coarse sticks stuck endwise into the mud after the manner of piles. In the centre of this floor is an opening, from which six or eight diverging paths lead to the open water without, so that the little artisan has many avenues of escape in case of danger. These houses are often repaired and used for several winters in succession, but are vacated on the approach of spring. During the summer the muskrat is, in the main, a herbivorous animal, but in winter necessity develops its carnivorous propensities and it feeds then mainly upon the mussels and crayfish which it can dig from the bottom of the pond or stream in which its house is built.

Thus Rome was a city supported, in a great measure, by the fruits of its conquests, that is, in a certain sense, by plunder. It was a vast community most efficiently and admirably organized for this purpose; and yet it would not be perfectly just to designate the people simply as a band of robbers. They rendered, in some sense, an equivalent for what they took, in establishing and enforcing a certain organization of society throughout the world, and in preserving a sort of public order and peace. They built cities, they constructed aqueducts and roads; they formed harbors, and protected them by piers and by castles; they protected commerce, and cultivated the arts, and encouraged literature, and enforced a general quiet and peace among mankind, allowing of no violence or war except what they themselves created. Thus they _governed_ the world, and they felt, as all governors of mankind always do, fully entitled to supply themselves with the comforts and conveniences of life, in consideration of the service which they thus rendered.


[ Sec 17 Page 01 ] [ Sec 17 Page 02 ] [ Sec 17 Page 03 ] [ Sec 17 Page 04 ] [ Sec 17 Page 05 ]
[ Sec 17 Page 06 ] [ Sec 17 Page 07 ] [ Sec 17 Page 08 ] [ Sec 17 Page 09 ] [ Sec 17 Page 10 ]


This page is Copyright © Galleporto Bavicarius and all rights are reserved. Please don't copy without proper authorization. References to other Web sites are not endorsements. Galleporto Bavicarius makes no promises, warranties, guarantees, or assurances regarding or concerning the quality or content of other sites that Galleporto has extended the courtesy of links toward. Links are only provided as a courtesy and do not designate any relationship between Galleporto and other sites.