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Grasping Mysteries Page 2
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Why had she ever thought these trees looked alike?
Beyond
BATH, ENGLAND, 1781
Most double stars are so far away that Caroline
can’t distinguish the distance between them.
But with a telescope, what first looked like one star
sometimes shows itself as two, orbiting each other!
William spots and Caroline records dozens
of double stars, enough to suggest that many stars
come in pairs and that stars do move. The sky
is not a flat field decorated with constellations,
but more like an ocean with depths.
One night William spots a glimmer never reported.
As nights and weeks pass, its motion
in relation to surroundings suggests it’s not a star.
He says, Comets flash in and out of sight,
but there’s no skirt of light trailing this orb.
Night after night, he tracks the way it comes and goes
from view, measures its distance from earth
until he’s certain he has found a planet never before seen.
Caroline works out equations that show
it may be twice as far from earth as Saturn.
If space holds room for another planet,
the universe must be like a blanket that keeps
unfolding, far larger than anyone thought.
Moving
Word of the new planet spreads with shock,
arguments, and finally joy. Learned men
from the Royal Astronomical Society visiting.
They ask William to come to London
to accept a gold medal. William wants to name
the planet in honor of King George III,
who sends congratulations and invites him to the palace.
When William returns, he tells Caroline
it was decided to keep to the tradition of taking
planets’ names from mythology.
Uranus honors the muse of astronomy. His Majesty
offered me a salary to continue my observations
and show the wonders above to royalty and their guests,
he says. We must move closer to Windsor Castle.
William rents a house with a leaky roof near a river
that seems to make him ill, though he rubs his face
and hands with onions to prevent night fever.
He and Caroline move again to a big house in Slough.
He shows her around the old stables, says, We can turn
these into workrooms to make telescopes to sell.
It’s awfully far from the village. As they walk into the house,
Caroline remembers the sound of her singing blending
with others, and may the good Lord forgive her,
applause, compliments, and making money.
The landlady said we might borrow a horse.
Caroline looks from the brother she loves
to the floors covered with dried and rotting leaves,
the windows blackened with soot. Housekeeping
looks endless, but she starts by sweeping ashes
from the hearth, taking flint from the tinderbox.
She strikes it on steel, fans the sparks.
Night Watches
Winter offers long nights with more time
to sweep the sky, moving the telescope like a broom
meant to gather every star. Standing on a platform
on a ladder by the tall telescope, William calls out numbers
to Caroline, who sits at a desk set on the ground below.
She tips a candle to melt ink in a bottle, writes down
distances and angles in relation to the North Pole.
Her toes feel frozen even padded
in fourteen pairs of stockings
under layers of flannel petticoats and wool skirts.
William won’t take his eyes off the sky,
so she feeds him brown bread and cheese.
Names
They aren’t as alone as she expected in the house far
from the main roads. Their landlady, a wealthy widow,
often walks over to talk about the prices of cotton,
candles, and tea, topics that seem to interest William
more than Caroline expected.
Gentlemen visit to discuss possible life on the moon
and admire the telescopes William is making.
Caroline sets scones and jam on the table.
Some gentlemen interrupt her. Others ignore her.
Her favorite visitor is Dr. Maskelyne
from the Royal Observatory, who keeps
close track of time as told by the stars and moon.
He and his wife let Caroline hold their baby as he talks
about women astronomers. Hypatia, Elizabeth Hevelius,
Maria Agnesi didn’t seek fame or fortune, but worked
from devotion to their fathers, brothers, or husbands.
I work out of duty too. Caroline clears dishes.
There’s so much in the sky. Is it so wrong to wish
for one small piece of her own? Or at least that William
would say, Caroline, take a turn looking up.
Sometimes she wishes he would raise his own teacup
to his mouth, butter his own toast.
The Mathematician
Most mornings Caroline makes coffee, stokes the fire,
stirs pudding. She brushes down the brown horse,
hitches on a bridle and saddle, and rides two miles
to the marketplace. Back home, she works on tables
and diagrams, adds to an old star atlas, interested
in what others overlooked. She measures star by star,
the way she knits stockings stitch by stitch;
maps the night sky, noting precise locations
of celestial objects, their size, brightness,
how they change, and the dates of discoveries.
She starts with one fact, lets math unlock more.
Her hand pivots as she follows the rotation of planets,
including Earth, whose movement creates the shadows
we call night and the brighter tilt of day. She teaches
herself calculus, which divides movement
into smaller and smaller steps, useful to fit
the sky’s great circles onto paper.
Mathematics reaches like a wand that sweeps stars
to her desk, where she unfolds the light.
Escaping from Darkness
SLOUGH, ENGLAND, 1786
William leaves to deliver a telescope
to a German university, which gives Caroline,
now thirty-six, more time with the sky.
In the yard, she hitches her skirt and petticoats
above her ankles and climbs the ladder by the tall telescope.
Her foot falls asleep. Her neck aches.
No one can count all that shimmers above,
but mathematics suggests the enormity
and whispers when and where to look
for something never before seen.
Stars make her feel both lost and found.
One night she sees a nebula, a milky cloud
that’s not on any charts. Another night
she spots brilliance that wasn’t there yesterday.
A comet splits the darkness, giving a glimpse
of the faraway, brushing gold behind.
Caroline writes down the comet’s location
and the time, calculates the differences between
the household clock and the celestial clock,
which reflects the four-minute switch in position
stars make each night.
Just before sunrise, birds chatter and chirp.
Caroline sings harmony as stars bow from sight.
Firsts
In the morning, Caroline addresses an envelope
to the secretary of the Roy
al Astronomical Society.
She dips the tip of a goose feather in ink:
As you are a friend of my brother’s, I venture
to trouble you with the hope that my observation has merit.
She notes the location of the comet in relation
to three numbered stars, writes that her brother
is out of the country. She wants to make it clear
that she wasn’t shirking sisterly duty
and also that she didn’t need his help. She concludes:
I am, Sir, your most humble servant, Caroline Herschel.
The letter becomes the first paper by a woman
to be read at the Royal Astronomical Society.
The letter about what will be called the first lady’s comet
is the core of the first report
by a woman published in a scientific journal.
Caroline riffles through the pages to see her name again.
She hums a tune no one has heard, imagining
a chorus thickening each note, and twirls.
Unseen
Another comet arcs through the black sky,
showering shine that disappears into darkness.
Caroline writes a note to Dr. Maskelyne
at the Royal Observatory, announcing her second comet.
Then she measures sugar to make gooseberry jam.
Not many days later, Caroline opens an envelope
edged with black and learns that her mother has died.
She cries because her mother never saw the sky
as she does: grand, friendly, wide as curiosity.
Because her mother never truly saw her daughter.
Alone
At fifty years old, William proposes to their landlady.
He tells Caroline, Mary and I will keep two houses.
I’ll come here to use the telescopes, and you can stay.
I’ll arrange to send you money each month.
Caroline doesn’t want to be beholden
or go back to washing clothes or even making hats.
She’s not a girl with her face half-covered with cloth,
more aware of what she’s hiding than what she wants to see.
It’s time I’m paid for my astronomical work, she says.
The king gives you a salary, William. I want one too.
The Beauty of Wages
King George III and Queen Charlotte are impressed
with the first lady’s comet.
They hope Caroline might find more such tributes
to the empire and agree to pay her for her work.
Caroline becomes the first woman given
a salary for scientific research. Shouldn’t bells ring,
trumpets blare, and dancers twirl in the street?
The world is quiet.
The Comet Hunter
Caroline moves her bed to a room over an old stable
by the house, spends almost every night on the flat roof.
Since she knows most of the intricate sky by heart,
she can swiftly notice unusual movement,
such as from a comet, which, coming from beyond,
gives clues about the depths of space.
Most nights Caroline sees nothing new.
Her long skirt billows in the wind. She sings to stay awake.
As she dips her pen in ink, her eyes adjust
from the dark sky to pale paper, because they must.
She won’t ever have an assistant.
She spots another comet! Then goes to bed,
curls up her legs, rests the side of her face on her hands
until pale morning comes. She writes a report
she sends to Dr. Maskelyne at the Royal Observatory.
A few days later, she breaks the sealing wax on an envelope.
Dear Miss Caroline: Congratulations on the sighting,
though I implore should you spot another,
please hasten with such news. As you know,
comets are named after those who first spot them,
which in fact means an astronomer whose claim
first reaches an official. I fear this comet
was first reported in France.
Next time, do not use the penny post.
The Aunt
Night ends day, each with a new chance to behold
what’s beyond. Stars keep Caroline company.
She discovers more comets, trailing
sprays of light, fading like memory at the edges.
Soon after she spots her fifth comet,
William and Mary welcome a son. Caroline loves
holding the small bundle of trust and curiosity.
She’s even happier watching John learn to crawl,
later hearing short questions roll from his mouth.
When John is three, she defends him to his parents
when he draws geometric shapes on walls and climbs
the scaffolding around the tall telescope his father built.
Soon she sets up games and experiments
with teacups, canister tops, and pepper shakers.
The little boy she affectionately calls Sir John
often plays near her feet while she adds stars
and nebulae to outdated almanacs.
John stacks books into towers, looks through
some for pictures of constellations. He pretends
he’s Capricorn the goat or Orion the hunter.
His favorite is Cancer the crab. Crooking his arms,
wiggling his spread fingers,
he exclaims, We’re going to the ocean!
Yes. Soon. In August. Caroline wasn’t invited
on this holiday. She kisses him. You’re beautiful and smart.
I know. The little boy returns to star charts,
which interest him more than words.
Jam
A JOURNEY FROM SLOUGH, ENGLAND, AUGUST 14, 1797
What shines beyond what can be seen?
On the flat roof, Caroline, who was first,
or once second, to spot seven comets,
now sees a bright blur that may be another.
She needs another night to be certain,
but the following evening, rain falls
onto the thatched roof, bringing out the scent of straw.
Shortly after midnight, the rain stops. She looks again.
Caroline hums “Hallelujah,” naps on the sofa
for an hour, then takes out her best parchment.
The post won’t come for hours.
She winds a scarf around her hat,
saddles the horse, and shouts, Run!
The horse gallops or trots over dirt roads
until stars fade, the sky turns paler,
and birds wheel over meadows. They pass men
loading baskets of cabbages or tins of milk onto wagons.
She stops by a well so the horse can drink,
then at an orchard, where farmers pick plums.
One agrees to sell her a hatful of cherries,
since she doesn’t have a basket or sack.
She eats them for breakfast, spitting out the pits.
By the time she reaches London, both she and the horse
are tired. But they’ve gone twenty miles
and can make it six more to Greenwich. She rides
over a curved bridge, looking down at washerwomen
wading in the river Thames. A grand clock tolls.
Then she’s back on a dirt road that winds through a forest.
Finally reaching a moat, Caroline tugs the reins.
As the big gate is drawn, ducks swarm and scuttle.
Caroline slides off the horse,
hugs his damp neck, asks a stable boy
to fetch a bucket of water. She knocks on the door.
Her hands shake as she tells Dr. Maskelyne the news.
You are my worthy sister in astronomy,
he exclaims, then invites her to share tea
 
; with his wife and their daughter, now nine years old.
Caroline wishes she’d saved some cherries.
Her legs are sore. She slips off her shoes
and puts a stockinged foot on the floppy-eared dog
dozing under the table. Could what women call “vain”
be what men call “pride”? She reaches
for another roll from a basket,
spreads it with a second spoonful of jam.
Her Book of Observations
When John is grown and studies the sky,
Caroline takes some time from her own research
to record his findings as she had for his father.
Later she encourages the young man in his choice
to study math in college,
then to marry a kind, curious woman
who’s quite dazzled by his aunt. The family sails
to southernmost Africa to see stars hidden
beyond the horizon, which John observes and records.
Caroline adds these findings to her charts,
which show 560 new fixed stars, hundreds of double stars
where there had been merely a dozen on old maps.
She creates the first catalog of dark nebulae,
which suggest that stars and the universe change.
What shines is born, transforms, and flickers out.
Where have the comets she first spotted gone?
She doesn’t need to know. Mystery is delicious.
Home
Caroline is hailed as the first woman to discover a comet,
the first woman to earn a salary for scientific research.
The Royal Astronomical Society praises her catalogs
of stars and nebulae and awards her a gold medal,
the first given to honor a woman’s work.
Now seventy-eight, Caroline still signs her letters:
Humbly, yours. She’s a sister, aunt, daughter,
assistant, and astronomer, who created
new ways to know the distances between stars.
A girl who was warned not to expect much
saw more of the universe than almost anyone before her.
Caroline Herschel makes the sky, vast as wonder, home.
MAKING CHANGE WITH CHARTS, PART I
FLORENCE