Reading the Weather

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Reading the Weather by Thomas Morris Longstreth, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Thomas Morris Longstreth ISBN: 9781465525703
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Thomas Morris Longstreth
ISBN: 9781465525703
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English
FORECAST Science is certainly coming into her own nowadays,—and into everybody else’s. Every activity of man and most of Nature’s have felt her quickening hand. Her eye is upon the rest. Drinking is going out because the drinker is inefficient. The fly is going out because he carries germs. And for everything that goes out something else comes in that makes people healthier and more comfortable, and, perhaps, wiser. One strange thing about this flood-tide of science is that it overwhelms the old, buttressed superstitions the easiest of all, once it really sets about it. For instance, nothing could have been better fortified for centuries than the fact that night air is injurious and should be shut out of house. Then, science turned its eye upon night air, found it a little cooler, a trifle moister, and somewhat cleaner than day air with the result that we all invite it indoors, now, and even go out to meet it. Once interested in the air, science soon began to take up that commonplace but baffling phase of it called the weather. Now, of all matters under the sun the weather was the deepest intrenched in superstition and hearsay. From the era of Noah it had been made the subject of more remarks unrelieved by common sense than any Other. It was at once the commonest topic for conversation and the rarest for thought. Considering the opportunities for study of the weather this conclusion, we must admit, is more surprising than complimentary to the human race. But it is so. The fact that science had to face was this: that the weather had been and remained a tremendous, dimly-recognized factor in our level of living. So talk about it all must. And science set about finding some easy fundamental truths to talk instead of the hereditary gossip about old-fashioned winters or the usual meaningless conversational coin. Two groups of men had always known a good deal about the weather from experience: the sailor had to know it to save his life, and the farmer had to cultivate a weather eye along with his early peas. But the ordinary business man (and wife), the town-dweller, and even the suburbanite knew so few of the proven facts that the weather from day to day, from hour to hour, was a continual puzzle to them. The rain not only fell upon the just and unjust but it fell unquestioned, or misunderstood
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
FORECAST Science is certainly coming into her own nowadays,—and into everybody else’s. Every activity of man and most of Nature’s have felt her quickening hand. Her eye is upon the rest. Drinking is going out because the drinker is inefficient. The fly is going out because he carries germs. And for everything that goes out something else comes in that makes people healthier and more comfortable, and, perhaps, wiser. One strange thing about this flood-tide of science is that it overwhelms the old, buttressed superstitions the easiest of all, once it really sets about it. For instance, nothing could have been better fortified for centuries than the fact that night air is injurious and should be shut out of house. Then, science turned its eye upon night air, found it a little cooler, a trifle moister, and somewhat cleaner than day air with the result that we all invite it indoors, now, and even go out to meet it. Once interested in the air, science soon began to take up that commonplace but baffling phase of it called the weather. Now, of all matters under the sun the weather was the deepest intrenched in superstition and hearsay. From the era of Noah it had been made the subject of more remarks unrelieved by common sense than any Other. It was at once the commonest topic for conversation and the rarest for thought. Considering the opportunities for study of the weather this conclusion, we must admit, is more surprising than complimentary to the human race. But it is so. The fact that science had to face was this: that the weather had been and remained a tremendous, dimly-recognized factor in our level of living. So talk about it all must. And science set about finding some easy fundamental truths to talk instead of the hereditary gossip about old-fashioned winters or the usual meaningless conversational coin. Two groups of men had always known a good deal about the weather from experience: the sailor had to know it to save his life, and the farmer had to cultivate a weather eye along with his early peas. But the ordinary business man (and wife), the town-dweller, and even the suburbanite knew so few of the proven facts that the weather from day to day, from hour to hour, was a continual puzzle to them. The rain not only fell upon the just and unjust but it fell unquestioned, or misunderstood

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book Isaac Bickerstaff by Thomas Morris Longstreth
Cover of the book The Boy Travellers in the Far East: Adventures of Two Youths in a Journey through Africa by Thomas Morris Longstreth
Cover of the book From Paris to Pekin over Siberian Snows: A Narrative of a Journey by Sledge over the Snows of European Russia and Siberia, by Caravan Through Mongolia, Across the Gobi Desert and the Great Wall, and by Mule Palanquin Through China to Pekin by Thomas Morris Longstreth
Cover of the book Secrets of the Bosphorus by Thomas Morris Longstreth
Cover of the book The Loves of Great Composers by Thomas Morris Longstreth
Cover of the book Notable Voyagers From Columbus to Nordenskiold by Thomas Morris Longstreth
Cover of the book Gleanings in Buddha-Fields Studies Of Hand And Soul In The Far East by Thomas Morris Longstreth
Cover of the book Sermons of a Buddhist Abbot by Thomas Morris Longstreth
Cover of the book Featherland: How the Birds Lived at Greenlawn by Thomas Morris Longstreth
Cover of the book Roman Legends: A Collection of the Fables and Folk-lore of Rome by Thomas Morris Longstreth
Cover of the book Courts and Criminals by Thomas Morris Longstreth
Cover of the book To Leeward by Thomas Morris Longstreth
Cover of the book The Animal Story Book by Thomas Morris Longstreth
Cover of the book The Spirit Proper to The Times: A Sermon Preached in King's Chapel, Boston, Sunday, May 12, 1861 by Thomas Morris Longstreth
Cover of the book Hamlet by Thomas Morris Longstreth
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy