“the Comet”

Authors

Date

1-25-1812

Newspaper

Vincennes Western Sun

Page and Column

Page 1, Column 2

Newspaper Location

Vincennes, Indiana

Serial Number

188

Abstract

Account of historic comets prior to the comet of 1811-1812. Comets were noted as being a cause of natural disasters or as a portent of change.

Transcript

From the New York Evening Post. THE COMET. All the world is busily talking about the Comet; all the newspapers are engaged with it, and all the astronomers are employed in gazing at it and committing their wonderful speculations to print, just to show they know very little about. Some authors inform it betokens great heat, others great cold, but almost all of them agree that it forebodes evil; excepting indeed one gentleman, (an author whose talents are highly extolled in one of our quarterly Reviews) who intimates that after the appearance of a certain Comet, it was observed that "ladies loved their lords" in a greater degree than usual: or to use the author's own words, mankind were more prolific." That our readers may have some idea what extraordinary events have been connected with comets therefore; sometimes the comet betokening the mischief, and sometimes the mischief betokening the comet; I have taken the trouble to copy the following historical accounts from the works of the ingenious and indefatigable complier. Mr. Noah Webster, who so gravely informs us he is not all credulous. "In 418 appeared a Comet, in 419 several cities of Asia were overcomed by an Earthquake, and in 420 there was an eruption of Mount Etna. There was also an inundation of the sea in Hampshire in England in 319. Famine and pestilence prevailed also in this period. A great storm of hail is also mentioned under the year 418, and deep snow. The great period of general pestilence commenced in the reign of Theodosius the younger, about the year 445 or a year or two earlier, about the year 445 or a year or two earlier. A Comet, in 442 ushered in a severe winter, in 443 the snow fell such a depth and continued so long in Illyricum that multitudes of women and children perished. The year preceding, the Huns had ravaged the country and destroyed the provision which added to the public calamities. An eruption of the sea in North and South Wales 441, preceded the first Comet, and second comet appeared in 444. In 415 severe famine and pestilence distressed Constantinople and pestilence appeared in all parts of the world. In 446, Sept. 17 occurred a tremendous earthquake which demolished the greatest part of the walls of Constantinople with fifty-seven towers. The shocks continued [unreadable] for six months, and extended to a great part of the globe, &c. In the 311 Olympiad which comprehends [unreadable text] In 480, or the following year, another Comet was visible; or probably two years later. In 484 a drought was more terrible and distressing-not a vine not an olive branch retained its verdure-the earth was pale and desolate, and the sun assumed a melancholy face. A comet is noted in 502 and a sever winter in 507, but I have no account of any public calamity attending these phenomena, except a pestilence among men and cattles in Scotland in 502. In 518, a Comet in Dardania-a series of earthquakes demolished twenty-four castles, divided mountains, and in one place opened a fissure of thirty places in length and twelve in breadth. In 539 appeared another Comet, and the famine now raged with double horror. It is recorded that many persons fed on human flesh. The bodies of the famished people became thin and pale; the skin was hardened and dry like leather and clave to the bones; the flesh assumed a dark appearance like charcoal; the countenance was senseless and stern, the bile redundant. Among these frightful effects of hunger, no pestilence appears-a circumstance that the philosopher should not pass unnoticed. The account which Baronius gives of this famine, is, perhaps, more philosophical and, deserves notice. He says the crops failed; corn ripened prematurely, and was thin; in some places it was not harvested, and that which was gathered, was deficient in nourishment. Those who subsisted upon it became pale and were afflicted with bile. The body lost its heat and vigour, the skin was dried, the countenance stupid, distorted and ghastly, the liver turned black. Many perished by hunger; many betook themselves to the fields to feed on vegetables, and being too feeble to pull them, layed down and gnawed them off with their teeth. In 538 a Comet appeared; a severe winter followed and universal plague, especially in Constantinople, where the living could not bury the dead. In 590 appeared a Comet; an inundation from deluges of rain, overspread Rome, covering the walls of the city, and lodging innumerable serpents on the plains. In 872 a Comet & a most excessive heat & drought which cut short the grain-In 874 appeared in France, myriads of grasshoppers or locusts of remarkable size with six feet and two teeth harder than stone. In 1240 a comet appeared in February and was visible for a month. Mortal diseases prevailed and authors relate that the fish on the English coast had a battle, in which eleven whales and a multitude of other fish were slain and cast ashore. In September 1686 was seen a comet. At Lille in France fell a storm of hail, the stones of which weighed a pound.-The above are cases where the comet first appeared and afterwards came the terrible effects, which then were easily traced by our learned author to their source; just as certain medical gentlemen among us, trace the yellow fever to certain other diseases as signs and precursors, taking good care always to wait to the appearance of the latter before they venture to foretell the certain consequences of the former. And as long as they confine themselves to this method of predicting what is about to happen after it has already happened, it is safe enough, although it is not easy to see what benefit can ever result from it, notwithstanding their assurances; even prejudice itself must allow that it certainly betokens far less still then to predict the event before it happens. But the following narrative presents us with a case, where one of these planet struck gentlemen actually made the attempt, which I publish that the world may see and judge from the result how much credit is due to those conceited philosophers, who, to show their superior skill and learning care not what uneasiness and groundless alarms they create. Judging from the experience of nearly 2000 years, we have [unreadable] as good as cause to afflict ourselves with forbodings of every evil from the appearance of the sun, or seven stars as from a comet. It is recorded that in the year 1712, Mr. Whitson having calculated the return of a Comet which made its appearance on Wednesday the 14th of October, at 5 minutes after 5 in the morning, gave notice to the public accordingly, with this terrifying addition, that a total dissolution of the world by fire was to take place on the Friday following. The reputation Mr. Whitson had long maintained in England, both as a divine and a philosopher, left little or no doubt with the populace of the truth of this prediction. Several ludicrous events now took place. A number of persons in and about London seized all the barges and posts they could lay hands on in the Thames, very rationally concluding that when the conflagration took place, there would be most safety on the water.-A gentleman who had neglected family prayer for better than five years, informed his wife that it was his determination to resume that laudable practice the same evening; but his wife having engaged a ball at her house, put it off until they saw whether the Comet appeared or not. The South Sea Stock soon fell to five per cent, and the India 11: and the Captain of a Dutch ship threw all his powder into the river that they might not be endangered. The next morning however, the Comet appeared according to the prediction, and at noon the belief was universal, that the day of judgment was at hand. About this time 123 clergymen were ferryed over to Lambeth, it was said to petition that a prayer might be penned and ordered, there being none in the church service on that occasion. Three maids of honor burnt their collection of novels and plays sent to buy each of them a Bible and Bishop Tayloers Holy Living and Dying. The run upon the Bank was so prodigious, that all hands were employed from morning till night in discounting notes and handing out specie. On Thursday, considerably more than 7,000 [unreadable text] were legally married, in the face of several congregations. And to crown the whole farce, Sir Gilbert Heathcote, at that time head director to the Bank issued orders to all the fire offices in London, requiring them to keep a good look out and have a particular eye upon the "Back of England." Thus ended the philosophers predictions, but from the chronicles of the times, we learn that poor Whitson was treated with open ridicule not only by the populace, but by all classes of people during his life afterwards; a fate he richly inerited.

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