The Splendid Idle Forties Stories of Old California
CONTENTS THE PEARLS OF LORETO THE EARS OF TWENTY AMERICANS THE WASH-TUB MAIL THE CONQUEST OF DONA JACOBA A RAMBLE WITH EULOGIA THE ISLE OF SKULLS THE HEAD OF A PRIEST LA PERDIDA LUKARI'S STORY
The zeal with which he discharged his professorial duties was indeed
of the most unremitting character. He speedily drew such crowds to
listen to his discourses on Natural Philosophy that his lecture-room
was filled to overflowing. He also received many private pupils in
his house for special instruction. Every moment that could be spared
from these labours was devoted to his private study and to his
incessant experiments.
Like many another philosopher who has greatly extended our knowledge
of nature, Galileo had a remarkable aptitude for the invention of
instruments designed for philosophical research. To facilitate his
practical work, we find that in 1599 he had engaged a skilled workman
who was to live in his house, and thus be constantly at hand to try
the devices for ever springing from Galileo's fertile brain. Among
the earliest of his inventions appears to have been the thermometer,
which he constructed in 1602. No doubt this apparatus in its
primitive form differed in some respects from the contrivance we call
by the same name. Galileo at first employed water as the agent, by
the expansion of which the temperature was to be measured. He
afterwards saw the advantage of using spirits for the same purpose.
It was not until about half a century later that mercury came to be
recognised as the liquid most generally suitable for the thermometer.
The time was now approaching when Galileo was to make that mighty
step in the advancement of human knowledge which followed on the
application of the telescope to astronomy. As to how his idea of
CONTENTS THE PEARLS OF LORETO THE EARS OF TWENTY AMERICANS THE WASH-TUB MAIL THE CONQUEST OF DONA JACOBA A RAMBLE WITH EULOGIA THE ISLE OF SKULLS THE HEAD OF A PRIEST LA PERDIDA LUKARI'S STORY