Read Ebook: Little Boy by Bixby Jerome Orban Paul Illustrator
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LECTURE I
PAGE
COPERNICUS AND THE MOTION OF THE EARTH 2
LECTURE II
TYCHO BRAH? AND THE EARLIEST OBSERVATORY 32
KEPLER AND THE LAWS OF PLANETARY MOTION 56
LECTURE IV
GALILEO AND THE INVENTION OF THE TELESCOPE 80
LECTURE V
GALILEO AND THE INQUISITION 108
LECTURE VI
DESCARTES AND HIS THEORY OF VORTICES 136
SIR ISAAC NEWTON 159
NEWTON AND THE LAW OF GRAVITATION 180
NEWTON'S "PRINCIPIA" 203
LECTURE X
ROEMER AND BRADLEY AND THE VELOCITY OF LIGHT 232
LAGRANGE AND LAPLACE--THE STABILITY OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM, AND THE NEBULAR HYPOTHESIS 254
THE DISCOVERY OF THE ASTEROIDS 294
BESSEL--THE DISTANCES OF THE STARS, AND THE DISCOVERY OF STELLAR PLANETS 304
THE DISCOVERY OF NEPTUNE 317
COMETS AND METEORS 331
THE TIDES 353
THE TIDES, AND PLANETARY EVOLUTION 379
FIG. PAGE
His home was the rubble of an apartment building just north of Columbus Circle, on Broadway. No one else lived there; only he knew the way through the broken corridors and fallen walls and piles of stone to his room on the seventh floor. Every day or so he went out into the park--to get food or anything at all he could get that he wanted. He was still looking for a gun. Food was the main thing, though; he had lots of cans up in his room, but he'd heard enough of the men's talk to know that it was wise to use them only when you didn't have anything else, and get what you could day by day.
And, of course, there was water--when it didn't rain or snow for a while, he had to get water from the lakes in the park.
That was hard sometimes. You could go two or three days without water, even if you went to one of the lakes and stayed hidden there all day, because it might be that long before a moment came when no one was near enough to kill you when you made your dash from the bushes and filled your pail and dashed back. There were more skeletons around the lakes than anyplace.
The dogs were coming up Central Park West. Their racket bounced off the broken buildings lining the street, and came down into the park, and even the squirrels and birds were quieter, as if not wanting to attract attention.
Steven froze by the bole of a tree, ready to climb if the dogs came over the wall at him. He'd done that once before. You climbed up and waited while the dogs danced red-eyed beneath you, until they heard or smelled someone else, and then they were off, bounding hungrily after the new quarry. They'd learned that men in trees just didn't come down.
The dogs passed the point in the park where Steven waited. He knew from the sound that they weren't after anybody--just prowling. The howls and snarls and scratchy sounds of nails on concrete faded slowly.
Steven didn't move until they were almost inaudible in the distance.
Then, when he did move, he took only one step--and froze again.
Someone was coming toward him.
Just a shadow of a motion, a whisper of sound, a breath--someone was coming along the path on the other side of the bushes.
Steven's lips curled back to reveal decayed teeth. He brought out his knife from his belt and stood utterly still, waiting for the steps to go on so he could trail along behind his quarry, off to one side, judging the other's stature from glimpses through the bushes, and ascertaining whether he was carrying anything worth killing him for.
But the footsteps didn't pass. They stopped on the other side of the bushes. Then leaves rustled as whoever it was bent to come through the bushes. Steven hugged his tree trunk, and saw a short thin figure coming toward him through the green leaves, a bent-over figure. He raised the knife, started to bring its point down in the short arc that would end in the back of the other's neck...
He dropped the knife.
Wide-eyed, not breathing, he stared at her.
Knife in hand, its point aimed at his belly, she stared back.
She was dressed in a man's trousers, torn off at the ankles, and a yellow blouse that might have belonged to her mother, and new-looking shoes she must have found, or killed for, only a week or so ago. Her face was as sunburned and dirty as his.
A squirrel chittered over their heads as they stared at each other.
Steven noted expertly that she seemed to be carrying no food and had no gun. No one with a gun would carry a drawn knife.
She still held the knife ready, though the point had drooped. She moistened her lips.
He wondered if she would attack. He obviously didn't have any food either, so maybe she wouldn't. But if she did--well, she was only a little larger than he was; he could probably kill her with her own knife, though he might even get his own knife from the ground before she got to him.
But he could still kill her if he had to.
She stirred, her eyes wide on his. She moved just an inch or so.
Steven crouched, almost too fast to see, and his knife was in his hand, ready from this position to get in under her stab and cut her belly open.
She made a strangled sound and shook her head.
Steven pulled his swing, without quite knowing why. He struck her knife out of her hand with his blade, and it went spinning into the leaves.
He took a step toward her, lips curled back.
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