loudly that we have, at last, found out the
 veritable and undeniable and final truth.
Monsieur Encke, on comparing the intervals
of time between several complete circuits
 of his comet and the sun, discovered that the
 length of the ellipse described by its orbit
 was shortened in a slow but regular manner;
 at every successive return, from eighteen
 hundred and nineteen to eighteen hundred
 and thirty-two, its actual position has been
 remarked to anticipate, ceaselessly and
uniformly, its calculated position by about two
 days; that is, its return happened two days
 sooner than it should have done according to
 the strictest calculations. Its orbit, therefore,
is diminishing; its mean distance from
 the sun is constantly decreasing, and it must
 finally fall into that luminary, were it not for
 the repulsion exercised by incandescent
surfaces, which repulsion will probably shoot it
 off again in the form of an excessively rarified
 vapour.
The perturbation experienced by the comet
 could only be attributed to the existence in
 the celestial space which it traverses of a
 highly-divided very subtle matter which
constantly impedes the rapidity of its progress.
 The resistance which this rare medium
 opposes to the progress of the comet, would
 also diminish its centrifugal tendency by the
 very act of diminishing its velocity, and
 would therefore increase the sun's power of
 drawing it towards itself.
From the ever-abbreviated course pursued
 by Encke's short-perioded comet, Arago
 argued that a new element ought
henceforward to be taken into consideration:
 namely, the resistance which an excessively
 rare gaseous substance which fills celestial
 space (and which it has been agreed to
denominate The Ether, and which, of course, is
 perfectly distinct from the ether of the
 chemists) offers to the passage of bodies
 which traverse it. This resistance produces
 no appreciable effect on the planets, on
account of their considerable density; but the
 comets being, for the most part, mere heaps
 of the lightest vapours, may be notably
retarded in their progress through space. To
 prove the justness of the distinction here
 made between dense and rare bodies, in
 respect to resistance, it is only necessary to
 compare the inequality of the distances
 traversed through the air by three balls of
 lead, of cork, and of eider-down, even in the
 case when projected from a gun-barrel by
 equal charges of powder they would have
 the same initial velocity.
In the last century, the presence of the
 ether in the midst of the celestial spaces was
 strongly suspected; at the present day, it is
 considered impossible to maintain the
Newtonian theory, that the heavenly bodies
 perform their orbits in the isolation of an
 enormous vacuum. Mr. Grove, in his able
 Correlation of Physical Forces, remarks
 that the tendency of matter to diffuse
 itself is so great, as to have given rise to
 the adage, Nature abhors a vacuum; and
 that the aphorism, which has been made the
 butt of a considerable amount of witticisms,
 nevertheless contains a profound truth,
precisely enunciated, although in a metaphorical
form.
We may now very naturally inquire,—
what, in short, is this wonderful ether ? Is
 it a fluid, transparent, impalpable body,
 which penetrates throughout and
 everywhere ? Is it composed of matter which is
 equally subtle and rarified at all the points
 which it occupies? Is it exactly the same in
 the neighbourhood of a voluminous planet as
 in the midst of an immense open space
 entirely empty of solid bodies ? In a word,
 does it differ essentially from the most rarified
 portion of the planetary atmospheres? All
 these points are open to controversy. In the
 opinion of learned men, whose expressed belief
 merits deference and attention, the ether
 differs only in its extreme subtilty, from the
 much more highly condensed matter which
 constitutes the atmospheres of the planets,—
a definition that has been ventured is, the
 ether is the simple of which atmospheres are
 the compound; in other words, atmospheric
 matter results from the condensation of a
 certain amount of etherial matter; or, finally,
 ether is the elementary matter of which all
 other things are formed.
This notion is not very far removed from
 that entertained by Mr. Grove, who believes
 that the ether possesses all the qualities of
 ordinary gross matter, and particularly the
 quality of weight. If this matter, on account
 of its extreme rarification, can only manifest
 the properties with which it is endowed on a
 scale of infinite minuteness,—on the other
 hand, at the surface of the earth it attains a
 degree of density which we are able to
measure by experiment. The ether, or the
 extremely rarified matter which fills the
interplanetary spaces, is thus believed to be an
 expansion of all or several of the atmospheres
 of the planets, or of their most volatile
elements, and would thus furnish the material
 necessary for the transmission of those
modifications of motion which we designate by the
 names of light, heat, and so forth. And it is
 held to be far from impossible that attenuated
 portions of these atmospheres, by gradual
 changes, may pass from one planet to
 another, thus forming a link of material
 communication between the distant monads
 of the universe.
The ether, then, is an imponderable, or
unweighable, or, rather, an unweighed fluid,
 endued with perfect elasticity. It fills not
 only the planetary spaces, but also the intervals
between the elementary molecules of
 solid bodies, and even the molecules
themselves, as those of the gases which are
 assumed to be hollow and spherical. In
 short, the ether pervades everything, and is
 everywhere; in the most elaborately-formed
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