The
eclipse of the sun, which you have requested me to describe, occurred in the
summer of 1806, on Monday, the 16th of June. Its greatest depth of shadow fell
upon the American continent, somewhere about the latitude of 42 deg. I was then
on a visit to my parents, at the home of my family, among the Highlands of Otsego,
in that part of the country where the eclipse was most impressive. My
recollections of the great event, and the incidents of the day, are as vivid as
if they had occurred but yesterday.
Lake Otsego, the headwaters of the Susquehanna,
lies as nearly as possible in latitude 42 deg. The village, which is the home
of my family, is beautifully situated at the foot of the lake, in a valley
lying between two nearly parallel ranges of heights, quite mountainous in
character. The Susquehanna, a clear and rapid stream, flowing from the
southeastern shore of the lake, is crossed by a high wooden bridge, which
divides the main street of the little town from the lawns and meadows on the
eastern bank of the river. Here were all the materials that could be desired, lake,
river, mountain, wood, and the dwellings of man, to give full effect to the
varied movement of light and shadow through that impressive day.
Throughout the belt of country to be darkened by
the eclipse, the whole population were in a state of almost anxious expectation
for weeks before the event. On the eve of the 16th of June, our family circle
could think or talk of little else. I had then a father and four brothers
living, and as we paced the broad hall of the house, or sat about the family
board, our conversation turned almost entirely upon the movements of planets
and comets, occultations and eclipses. We were all exulting in the feeling that
a grand and extraordinary spectacle awaited us -- a spectacle which millions
then living could never behold. There may have been a tinge of selfishness in
the feeling that we were thus favored beyond others, and yet, I think, the
emotion was too intellectual in its character to have been altogether unworthy.
Many were the prophecies regarding the weather,
the hopes and fears expressed by different individuals, on this important
point, as evening drew near. A passing cloud might veil the grand vision from
our sight; rain or mist would sadly impair the sublimity of the hour. I was not
myself among the desponding. The great barometer in the hall -- one of the very
few then found in the State, west of Albany -- was carefully consulted. It was
propitious. It gave promise of dry weather. Our last looks that night, before
sleep fell on us, were turned toward the starlit heavens.
And the first movement in the morning was to the
open window -- again to examine the sky. When I rose from my bed, in the early
morning, I found the heavens serene, and cloudless. Day had dawned, but the
shadows of night were still lingering over the valley. For a moment, my eye
rested on the familiar view -- the limpid lake, with its setting of luxuriant
woods and farms, its graceful bay and varied points, the hills where every
cliff and cave and glen had been trodden a thousand times by my boyish feet --
all this was dear to me as the face of a friend. And it appeared as if the
landscape, then lovely in summer beauty, were about to assume something of
dignity hitherto unknown -- were not the shadows of a grand eclipse to fall
upon every wave and branch within a few hours! There was one object in the
landscape which a stranger would probably have overlooked, or might perhaps
have called unsightly, but it was familiar to every eye in the village, and
endowed by our people with the honors of an ancient landmark -- the tall gray
trunk of a dead and branchless pine, which had been standing on the crest of
the eastern hill, at the time of the foundation of the village, and which was
still erect, though rocked since then by a thousand storms. To my childish
fancy, it had seemed an imaginary flag-staff, or, in rustic parlance, the
"liberty pole" of some former generation; but now, as I traced the
familiar line of the tall trunk, in its peculiar shade of silvery gray, it
became to the eye of the young sailor the mast of some phantom ship. I remember
greeting it with a smile, as this was the first glance of recognition given to
the old ruin of the forest since my return.
But an object of far higher interest suddenly
attracted my eye. I discovered a star -- a solitary star -- twinkling dimly in
a sky which had now changed its hue to a pale grayish twilight, while vivid
touches of coloring were beginning to flush the eastern sky. There was
absolutely no other object visible in the heavens -- cloud there was none, not
even the lightest vapor. That lonely star excited a vivid interest in my mind.
I continued at the window gazing, and losing myself in a sort of day-dream.
That star was a heavenly body, it was known to be a planet, and my mind was
filling itself with images of planets and suns. My brain was confusing itself
with vague ideas of magnitude and distance, and of the time required by light
to pierce the apparently illimitable void that lay between us -- of the beings
who might inhabit an orb like that, with life, feeling, spirit, and aspirations
like my own.
Soon the sun himself rose into view. I caught a
glimpse of fiery light glowing among the branches of the forest, on the eastern
mountain. I watched, as I had done a hundred times before, the flushing of the
skies, the gradual illuminations of the different hills, crowned with an
undulating and ragged outline of pines, nearly two hundred feet in height, the
golden light gliding silently down the breast of the western mountains, and
opening clearer views of grove and field, until lake, valley, and village lay
smiling in one cheerful glow of warm sunshine.
Our family party assembled early. We were soon
joined by friends and connections, all eager and excited, and each provided
with a colored glass for the occasion. By nine o'clock the cool air, which is
peculiar to the summer nights in the Highlands, had left us, and the heat of
midsummer filled the valley. The heavens were still absolutely cloudless, and a
more brilliant day never shone in our own bright climate. There was not a
breath of air, and we could see the rays of heat quivering here and there on
the smooth surface of the lake. There was every appearance of a hot and sultry
noontide.
We left the house, and passed beyond the grounds
into the broad and grassy street which lay between the gates and the lake. Here
there were no overhanging branches to obstruct the view; the heavens, the
wooded mountains, and the limpid sheet of water before us, were all distinctly
seen. As the hour for the eclipse drew near, our eagerness and excitement
increased to an almost boyish impatience. The elders of the party were
discussing the details of some previous eclipse: leaving them to revive their
recollections, I strolled away, glass in hand, through the principal streets of
the village. Scarce a dwelling, or a face, in the little town, that was not
familiar to me, and it gave additional zest to the pleasure of a holiday at
home, to meet one's townsfolk under the excitement of an approaching eclipse.
As yet there was no great agitation, although things wore a rather unusual
aspect for the busy hours of a summer's day. Many were busy with their usual
tasks, women and children were coming and going with pails of water, the broom
and the needle were not yet laid aside, the blacksmith's hammer and the
carpenter's plane were heard in passing their shops. Loaded teams, and
travellers in waggons, were moving through the streets; the usual quiet traffic
at the village counters had not yet ceased. A farm-waggon, heavily laden with hay,
was just crossing the bridge, coming in from the fields, the driver looking
drowsy with sleep, wholly unconscious of the movement in the heavens. The good
people in general, however, were on the alert; at every house some one seemed
to be watching, and many groups were passed, whose eager up-turned faces and
excited conversation spoke the liveliest interest. It was said, that there were
not wanting one or two philosophers of the skeptical school, among our people,
who did not choose to commit themselves to the belief in a total eclipse of the
sun -- simply because they had never seen one. Seeing is believing, we are
told, though the axiom admits of dispute. But what these worthy neighbors of
ours had not seen, no powers of reasoning, or fulness of evidence, could induce
them to credit. Here was the dignity of human reason! Here was private judgment
taking a high stand! Anxious to witness the conversion of one of these
worthies, with boyish love of fun I went in quest of him. He had left the
village, however, on business. But, true to his principles, before mounting his
horse that morning, he had declared to his wife that "he was not running
away from that eclipse;" nay, more, with noble candor, he averred that if
the eclipse did overtake him, in the course of his day's journey, "he
would not be above acknowledging it!" This was highly encouraging.
I had scarcely returned to the family party, left
on the watch, when one of my brothers, more vigilant, or with clearer sight
than his companions, exclaimed that he clearly saw a dark line, drawn on the
western margin of the sun's disc! All faces were instantly turned upwards, and
through the glasses we could indeed now see a dusky, but distinct object,
darkening the sun's light. An exclamation of delight, almost triumphant, burst
involuntarily from the lips of all. We were not to be disappointed, no cloud
was there to veil the grand spectacle; the vision, almost unearthly in its
sublime dignity, was about to be revealed to us. In an incredibly short time,
the oval formation of the moon was discerned. Another joyous burst of delight
followed, as one after another declared that he beheld with distinctness the
dark oval outline, drawn against the flood of golden light. Gradually, and at
first quite imperceptibly to our sight, that dark and mysterious sphere gained
upon the light, while a feeling of watchful stillness, verging upon reverence,
fell upon our excited spirits.
As yet there was no change perceptible in the
sunlight falling upon lake and mountain; the familiar scene wore its usual
smiling aspect, bright and glowing as on other days of June. The people,
however, were now crowding into the streets -- their usual labors were
abandoned -- forgotten for the moment -- and all faces were turned upward. So
little, however, was the change in the power of the light, that to a careless
observer it seemed more the gaze of faith, than positive perception, which
turned the faces of all upward. Gradually a fifth, and even a fourth, of the
sun's disc became obscured, and still the unguarded eye could not endure the
flood of light -- it was only with the colored glass that we could note the
progress of the phenomenon. The noon-day heat, however, began to lessen, and
something of the coolness of early morning returned to the valley.
I was looking upward, intently watching for the
first moment where the dark outline of the moon should be visible to the naked
eye, when an acquaintance passed. "Come with me!" he said quietly, at
the same moment drawing his arm within my own, and leading me away. He was a
man of few words, and there was an expression in his face which induced me to
accompany him without hesitation. He led me to the Court House, and from thence
into an adjoining building, and into a room then occupied by two persons. At a window,
looking upward at the heavens, stood a figure which instantly riveted my
attention. It was a man with haggard face, and fettered arms, a prisoner under
sentence of death. By his side was the jailor.
A painful tragedy had been recently enacted in our
little town. The schoolmaster of a small hamlet in the county had beaten a
child under his charge very severely -- and for a very trifling error. The
sufferer was a little girl, his own niece, and it was said that natural
infirmity had prevented the child from clearly pronouncing certain words which
her teacher required her to utter distinctly. To conquer what he considered the
obstinacy of the child, this man continued to beat her so severely that she
never recovered from the effects of the blows, and died some days after. The
wretched man was arrested, tried for murder, condemned, and sentenced to the
gallows. This was the first capital offence in Otsego County. It produced a
very deep impression. The general character of the schoolmaster had been, until
that evil hour, very good, in every way. He was deeply, and beyond all doubt
unfeignedly, penitent for the crime into which he had been led, more,
apparently, from false ideas of duty, than from natural severity of temper. He
had been entirely unaware of the great physical injury he was doing the child.
So great was his contrition, that public sympathy had been awakened in his
behalf, and powerful petitions had been sent to the Governor of the State, in
order to obtain a respite, if not a pardon. But the day named by the judge
arrived without a return of the courier. The Governor was at his country-house,
at least eighty miles beyond Albany. The petition had been kept to the last
moment, for additional signatures, and the eighty miles to be travelled by the
courier, after reaching Albany, had not been included in the calculation. No
despatch was received, and there was every appearance that there would be no
reprieve. The day arrived -- throngs of people from Chenango, and Unadilla, and
from the valley of the Mohawk, poured into the village, to witness the painful,
and as yet unknown, spectacle of a public execution. In looking down, from an
elevated position, upon the principal street of the village that day, it had
seemed to me paved with human faces. The hour struck, the prisoner was taken
from the jail, and, seated, as is usual, on his coffin, was carried to the
place of execution, placed between two ministers of the gospel. His look of
utter misery was beyond description. I have seen other offenders expiate for
their crimes with life, but never have I beheld such agony, such a clinging to
life, such mental horror at the nearness of death, as was betrayed by this
miserable man. When he approached the gallows, he rose from his seat, and
wringing his fettered hands, turned his back upon the fearful object, as if the
view were too frightful for endurance. The ministers of the gospel succeeded at
length in restoring him to a decent degree of composure. The last prayer was
offered, and his own fervent "Amen!" was still sounding, hoarse,
beseeching, and almost despairing, in the ears of the crowd, when the respite
made its tardy appearance. A short reprieve was granted, and the prisoner was
carried back to the miserable cell from which he had been drawn in the morning.
Such was the wretched man who had been brought
from his dungeon that morning, to behold the grand phenomenon of the eclipse.
During the twelve-month previous, he had seen the sun but once. The prisons of
those days were literally dungeons, cut off from the light of day. That
striking figure, the very picture of utter misery, his emotion, his
wretchedness, I can never forget. I can see him now, standing at the window,
pallid and emaciated by a year's confinement, stricken with grief, his cheeks
furrowed with constant weeping, his whole frame attesting the deep and ravaging
influences of conscious guilt and remorse. Here was a man drawn from the depths
of human misery, to be immediately confronted with the grandest natural
exhibition in which the Creator deigns to reveal his Omnipotence to our race.
The wretched criminal, a murderer in fact, though not in intention, seemed to
gaze upward at the awful spectacle, with an intentness and a distinctness of
mental vision far beyond our own, and purchased by an agony scarcely less
bitter than death. It seemed as if, for him, the curtain which veils the world
beyond the grave, had been lifted. He stood immovable as a statue, with
uplifted and manacled arms and clasped hands, the very image of impotent misery
and wretchedness. Perhaps human invention could not have conceived of a more
powerful moral accessory, to heighten the effect of the sublime movement of the
heavenly bodies, than this spectacle of penitent human guilt afforded. It was
an incident to stamp on the memory for life. It was a lesson not lost on me.
When I left the Court House, a sombre, yellowish,
unnatural coloring was shed over the country. A great change had taken place.
The trees on the distant heights had lost their verdure and their airy character;
they were taking the outline of dark pictures graven upon an unfamiliar sky.
The lake wore a lurid aspect, very unusual. All living creatures seemed thrown
into a state of agitation. The birds were fluttering to and fro, in great
excitement; they seemed to mistrust that this was not the gradual approach of
evening, and were undecided in their movements. Even the dogs -- honest
creatures -- became uneasy, and drew closer to their masters. The eager, joyous
look of interest and curiosity, which earlier in the morning had appeared in
almost every countenance, was now changed to an expression of wonder or anxiety
or thoughtfulness, according to the individual character.
Every house now gave up its tenants. As the light
failed more and more with every passing second, the children came flocking
about their mothers in terror. The women themselves were looking about uneasily
for their husbands. The American wife is more apt than any other to turn with
affectionate confidence to the stronger arm for support. The men were very
generally silent and grave. Many a laborer left his employment to be near his
wife and children, as the dimness and darkness increased.
I once more took my position beside my father and
my brothers, before the gates of our own grounds. The sun lay a little
obliquely to the south and east, in the most favorable position possible for
observation. I remember to have examined, in vain, the whole dusky canopy in
search of a single cloud. It was one of those entirely unclouded days, less
rare in America than in Europe. The steadily waning light, the gradual approach
of darkness, became the more impressive as we observed this absolutely
transparent state of the heavens. The birds, which a quarter of an hour earlier
had been fluttering about in great agitation, seemed now convinced that night
was at hand. Swallows were dimly seen dropping into the chimneys, the martins
returned to their little boxes, the pigeons flew home to their dove-cots, and
through the open door of a small barn we saw the fowls going to roost.
The usual flood of sunlight had now become so
much weakened, that we could look upward long, and steadily, without the least
pain. The sun appeared like a young moon of three or four days old, though of
course with a larger and more brilliant crescent. Looking westward a moment, a
spark appeared to glitter before my eye. For a second I believed it to be an
optical illusion, but in another instant I saw it plainly to be a star. One
after another they came into view, more rapidly than in the evening twilight,
until perhaps fifty stars appeared to us, in a broad, dark zone of the heavens,
crowning the pines on the western mountain. This wonderful vision of the stars,
during the noontide hours of day, filled the spirit with singular sensations.
Suddenly one of my brothers shouted aloud,
"The moon!" Quicker than thought, my eye turned eastward again, and
there floated the moon, distinctly apparent, to a degree that was almost
fearful. The spherical form, the character, the dignity, the substance of the
planet, were clearly revealed as I have never beheld them before, or since. It
looked grand, dark, majestic, and mighty, as it thus proved its power to rob us
entirely of the sun's rays. We are all but larger children. In daily life we
judge of objects by their outward aspect. We are accustomed to think of the
sun, and also of the moon, as sources of light, as etherial, almost spiritual,
in their essence. But the positive material nature of the moon was now revealed
to our senses, with a force of conviction, a clearness of perception, that
changed all our usual ideas in connection with the planet. This was no
interposition of vapor, no deceptive play of shadow; but a vast mass of obvious
matter had interposed between the sun above us and the earth on which we stood.
The passage of two ships at sea, sailing on opposite courses, is scarcely more
obvious than this movement of one world before another. Darkness like that of
early night now fell upon the village.
My thoughts turned to the sea. A sailor at heart,
already familiar with the face of the ocean, I seemed, in mental vision, to
behold the grandeur of that vast pall of supernatural shadow falling suddenly
upon the sea, during the brightest hour of the day. The play of light and shade
upon the billows, always full of interest, must at that hour have been indeed
sublime. And my fancy was busy with pictures of white-sailed schooners, and
brigs, and ships, gliding like winged spirits over the darkened waves.
I was recalled by a familiar and insignificant
incident, the dull tramp of hoofs on the village bridge. A few cows, believing
that night had overtaken them, were coming homeward from the wild open pastures
about the village. And no wonder the kindly creatures were deceived, the
darkness was now much deeper than the twilight which usually turns their faces
homeward; the dew was falling perceptibly, as much so as at any hour of the
previous night, and the coolness was so great that the thermometer must have
fallen many degrees from the great heat of the morning. The lake, the hills,
and the buildings of the little town were swallowed up in the darkness. The
absence of the usual lights in the dwellings rendered the obscurity still more
impressive. All labor had ceased, and the hushed voices of the people only broke
the absolute stillness by subdued whispering tones.
"Hist! The whippoorwill!" whispered a
friend near me; and at the same moment, as we listened in profound silence, we
distinctly heard from the eastern bank of the river the wild, plaintive note of
that solitary bird of night, slowly repeated at intervals. The song of the
summer birds, so full in June, had entirely ceased for the last half hour. A
bat came flitting about our heads. Many stars were now visible, though not in
sufficient number to lessen the darkness. At one point only in the far distant
northern horizon, something of the brightness of dawn appeared to linger.
At twelve minutes past eleven, the moon stood
revealed in its greatest distinctness -- a vast black orb, so nearly obscuring
the sun that the face of the great luminary was entirely and absolutely
darkened, though a corona of rays of light appeared beyond. The gloom of night
was upon us. A breathless intensity of interest was felt by all. There would
appear to be something instinctive in the feeling with which man gazes at all
phenomena in the heavens. The peaceful rainbow, the heavy clouds of a great
storm, the vivid flash of electricity, the falling meteor, the beautiful lights
of the aurora borealis, fickle as the play of fancy, -- these never fail to fix
the attention with something of a peculiar feeling, different in character from
that with which we observe any spectacle on the earth. Connected with all grand
movements in the skies there seems an instinctive sense of inquiry, of anxious
expectation; akin to awe, which may possibly be traced to the echoes of grand
Christian prophecies, whispering to our spirits, and endowing the physical
sight with some mysterious mental prescience. In looking back to that
impressive hour, such now seem to me the feelings of the youth making one of
that family group, all apparently impressed with a sensation of the deepest awe
-- I speak with certainty -- a clearer view than I had ever yet had of the
majesty of the Almighty, accompanied with a humiliating, and, I trust, a
profitable sense of my own utter insignificance. That movement of the moon,
that sublime voyage of the worlds, often recurs to my imagination, and even at
this distant day, as distinctly, as majestically, and nearly as fearfully, as it
was then beheld.
A group of silent, dusky forms stood near me; one
emotion appeared to govern all. My father stood immovable, some fifteen feet
from me, but I could not discern his features. Three minutes of darkness, all
but absolute, elapsed. They appeared strangely lengthened by the intensity of
feeling and the flood of overpowering thought which filled the mind.
Thus far the sensation created by this majestic
spectacle had been one of humiliation and awe. It seemed as if the great Father
of the Universe had visibly, and almost palpably, veiled his face in wrath.
But, appalling as the withdrawal of light had been, most glorious, most
sublime, was its restoration! The corona of light above the moon became
suddenly brighter, the heavens beyond were illuminated, the stars retired, and
light began to play along the ridges of the distant mountains. And then a flood
of grateful, cheering, consoling brightness fell into the valley, with a
sweetness and a power inconceivable to the mind, unless the eye has actually
beheld it. I can liken this sudden, joyous return of light, after the eclipse,
to nothing of the kind that is familiarly known. It was certainly nearest to
the change produced by the swift passage of the shadow of a very dark cloud,
but it was the effect of this instantaneous transition, multiplied more than a
thousand fold. It seemed to speak directly to our spirits, with full assurance
of protection, of gracious mercy, and of that Divine love which has produced
all the glorious combinations of matter for our enjoyment. It was not in the
least like the gradual dawning of day, or the actual rising of the sun. There
was no gradation in the change. It was sudden, amazing, like what the
imagination would teach us to expect of the advent of a heavenly vision. I know
that philosophically I am wrong; but, to me, it seemed that the rays might
actually be seen flowing through the darkness in torrents, till they had again
illuminated the forest, the mountains, the valley, and the lake with their
glowing, genial touch.
There was another grand movement, as the crescent
of the sun reappeared, and the moon was actually seen steering her course
through the void. Venus was still shining brilliantly.
This second passage of the moon lasted but a
moment, to the naked eye. As it ceased, my eye fell again on the scene around
me. The street, now as distinctly seen as ever, was filled with the population
of the village. Along the line of road stretching for a mile from the valley,
against the side of the mountain, were twenty waggons bearing travellers, or
teams from among the hills. All had stopped on their course, impelled,
apparently, by unconscious reverence, as much as by curiosity, while every face
was turned toward heaven, and every eye drank in the majesty of the sight.
Women stood in the open street, near me, with streaming eyes and clasped hands,
and sobs were audible in different directions. Even the educated and reflecting
men at my side continued silent in thought. Several minutes passed, before the
profound impressions of the spectacle allowed of speech. At such a moment the
spirit of man bows in humility before his Maker.
The changes of the unwonted light, through whose
gradations the full brilliancy of the day was restored, must have been very
similar to those by which it had been lost, but they were little noted. I
remember, however, marking the instant when I could first distinguish the
blades of grass at my feet -- and later again watching the shadows of the
leaves on the gravel walk. The white lilies in my mother's flower-garden were
observed by others among the first objects of the vegetation which could be
distinguished from the windows of the house. Every living creature was soon
rejoicing again in the blessed restoration of light after that frightful moment
of a night at noon-day.
Men who witness any extraordinary spectacle
together, are apt, in after-times, to find a pleasure in conversing on its
impressions. But I do not remember to have ever heard a single being freely
communicative on the subject of his individual feelings at the most solemn
moment of the eclipse. It would seem as if sensations were aroused too closely
connected with the constitution of the spirit to be irreverently and familiarly
discussed. I shall only say that I have passed a varied and eventful life, that
it has been my fortune to see earth, heavens, ocean, and man in most of their
aspects; but never have I beheld any spectacle which so plainly manifested the
majesty of the Creator, or so forcibly taught the lesson of humility to man as
a total eclipse of the sun.