Page:White - The natural history of Selborne, and the naturalist's calendar, 1879.djvu/264

This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
242
NATURAL HISTORY OF SELBORNE.

setting, towards the object westward, till, in a few nights, it would set quite behind it, and so by degrees, to the west of it: for when the sun comes near the summer solstice, the whole disc of it would at first set behind the object; after a time the northern limb would first appear, and so every night gradually more, till at length the whole diameter would set northward of it for about three nights; but on the middle night of the three, sensibly more remote than the former or following. When beginning its recess from the summer tropic, it would continue more and more to be hidden every night, till at length it would descend quite behind the object again; and so nightly more and more to the westward.



LETTER XLV.

"——Mugire videbis
Sub bedibus terrain, et descendere montibus ornos."

Selborne

When I was a boy I used to read, with astonishment and implicit assent, accounts in "Baker's Chronicle" of walking hills and travelling mountains. John Philips, in his "Cyder," alludes to the credit that was given to such stories with a delicate but quaint vein of humour peculiar to the author of the "Splendid Shilling."


"I nor advise, nor reprehend the choice
Of Marcely Hill; the apple no where finds
A kinder mould; yet 'tis unsafe to trust
Deceitful ground; who knows but that once more
This mount may journey, and his present site
Forsaken, to thy neighbour's bounds transfer
Thy goodly plants, affording matter strange
For law debates?"

But, when I came to consider better, I began to suspect that though our hills may never have journeyed far, yet that the ends oi many of them have slipped and fallen away at distant periods,