Abstract
ON reading Prof. Herschel's letter in NATURE for October 2 (p. 536), in which he so vividly describes the sunset of Sept. 20, I was so forcibly reminded by its similarity, especially with regard to the “diverging beams,” to one which I lately witnessed during an excursion to the White Mountains (New Hampshire), that I send you a short account of it. It occurred on the evening of September 9 while we were staying at Twin Mount House, at a short distance from which is an elevated wooden erection, commanding splendid views of the neighbourhood. We had been watching the shadows creeping over the hills, the evening light reflected on a bend in the river below, had seen the sun go down behind the soft gray outlines of Mount Agassiz, and revelled in the glorious tints, such as Prof. Herschel describes, when, on returning to the hotel and stepping out on the balcony to take a last look, we saw, from the point where the sun had lately disappeared and where the fiery glow still lingered, these remarkable “diverging rays,” so distinct in their character and so sombre in their dark (though slightly greenish) shadow-like hue—there were not many of them—that I involuntarily exclaimed that I had never seen anything like them before, and that surely the climate must have something to do with their striking appearance and unusual definition. I may mention that the day-glow was also conspicuous at times on that continent, notably at Quebec on August 25 last.
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BROWN, E. The Sky-Glows. Nature 30, 607 (1884). https://doi.org/10.1038/030607a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/030607a0
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