Summary
These are restless days in which everyone travels who can. The more fortunate of us may have travelled outside Europe to other continents—perhaps even round the world—and seen strange sights and scenery on our travels. And now we are starting out to take the longest journey in the whole universe. We shall travelor pretend to travel—so far through space that our earth will look like less than the tiniest of motes in a sunbeam, and so far through time that the whole of human history will shrink to a tick of the clock, and a man's whole life to something less than the twinkling of an eye.
As we travel through space, we shall try to draw a picture of the universe as it now is—vast spaces of unthinkable extent and terrifying desolation, redeemed from utter emptiness only at rare intervals by small particles of cold lifeless matter, and at still rarer intervals by those vivid balls of flaming gas we call stars. Most of these stars are solitary wanderers through space, although here and there we may perhaps find a star giving warmth and light to a family of encircling planets. Yet few of these are at all likely to resemble our own earth; the majority will be so different that we shall hardly be able to describe their scenery, or imagine their physical condition.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Through Space and Time , pp. 1 - 47Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1934