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Book of the Damned- Charles Fort
Chapter XXV
A FORMATION having the shape of a dirigible." It was reported from
Huntington, West Virginia (Scientific American, 115-241). Luminous
object that was seen July 19, 1916, at about eleven p.m. Observed
through "rather powerful field glasses," it looked to be about two
degrees long and half a degree wide. It gradually dimmed, disappeared,
reappeared, and then faded out of sight. Another person--as we say: it
would be too inconvenient to hold to our intermediatist
recognitions--another person who observed this phenomenon suggested to
the writer of the account that the object was a dirigible, but the
writer says that faint stars could be seen behind it. This would seem
really to oppose our notion of a dirigible visitor to this
earth--except for the inconclusiveness of all things in a mode of
seeming that is not final--or we suggest that behind some parts of the
object, thing, construction, faint stars were seen. We find a slight
discussion here. Prof. H. M. Russell thinks that the phenomenon was a
detached cloud of aurora borealis. Upon page 369 of this volume of the
Scientific American, another correlator suggests that it was a light
from a blast furnace--disregarding that, if there be blast furnaces in
or near Huntington, their reflections would be commonplaces there.
We now have several observations upon cylindrical-shaped bodies that
have appeared in this earth's atmosphere: cylindrical, but pointed at
both ends, or torpedo-shaped. Some of the accounts are not very
detailed, but out of the bits of description my own acceptance is that
super-geographical routes are traversed by torpedo-shaped
super-constructions that have occasionally visited, or that have
occasionally been driven into this earth's atmosphere. From data, the
acceptance is that upon entering this earth's atmosphere, these vessels
have been so racked that had they not sailed away, disintegration would
have occurred: that, before leaving this earth, they have, whether in
attempted communication or not, or in mere wantonness or not, dropped
objects, which did almost immediately violently disintegrate or
explode. Upon general principles we think that explosives have not been
purposely dropped, but that parts have been racked off, and have
fallen, exploding like the things called "ball lightning." May have
been objects of stone or metal with inscriptions upon them, for all we
know, at present. In all instances, estimates of dimensions are
valueless, but ratios of dimensions are more acceptable. A thing said
to have been six feet long may have been six hundred feet long: but
shape is not so subject to the illusion of distance.
Nature, 40-415:
That, Aug. 5, 1889, following a violent storm, an object that looked to
be about 15 inches long and 5 inches wide, fell, rather slowly, at East
Twickenham, England. It exploded. No substance from it was found.
L'Année Scientifique, 1864-54:
That, Oct. 10, 1864, M. Leverrier had sent to the Academy three letters
from witnesses of a long luminous body, tapering at both ends, that had
been seen in the sky.
In Thunder and Lightning, p. 87, Flammarion says that on Aug. 20, 1880,
during a rather violent storm, M. A. Trécul, of the French
Academy, saw a very brilliant yellowish-white body, apparently 35 to 40
centimeters long, and about 25 centimeters wide. Torpedo-shaped. Or a
cylindrical body, "with slightly conical ends." It dropped something,
and disappeared in the clouds. Whatever it may have been that was
dropped, it fell vertically, like a heavy object, and left a luminous
train. The scene of this occurrence may have been far from the
observer. No sound was heard. For M. Trécul's account, see
Comptes Rendus, 103-849.
Monthly Weather Review, 1907-310:
That, July 2, 1907, in the town of Burlington, Vermont, a terrific
explosion had been heard throughout the city. A ball of light, or a
luminous object, had been seen to fall from the sky--or from a
torpedo-shaped thing, or construction, in the sky. No one had seen this
thing that had exploded fall from a larger body that was in the
sky--but if we accept that at the same time there was a larger body in
the sky--
My own acceptance is that a dirigible in the sky, or a construction
that showed every sign of disrupting, had barely time to drop--whatever
it did drop--and to speed away to safety above.
The following story is told, in the Review, by Bishop John S. Michaud:
"I was standing on the corner of Church and College Streets, just in
front of the Howard Bank, and facing east, engaged in conversation with
Ex-Governor Woodbury and Mr. A. A. Buell, when, without the slightest
indication, or warning, we were startled by what sounded like a most
unusual and terrific explosion, evidently very nearby. Raising my eyes,
and looking eastward along College Street, I observed a torpedo-shaped
body, some 300 feet away, stationary in appearance, and suspended in
the air, about 50 feet above the tops of the buildings. In size it was
about 6 feet long by 8 inches in diameter, the shell, or covering,
having a dark appearance, with here and there tongues of fire issuing
from spots on the surface, resembling red-hot, unburnished copper.
Although stationary when first noticed, this object soon began to move,
rather slowly, and disappeared over Dolan Brothers' store, southward.
As it moved, the covering seemed rupturing in places, and through these
the intensely red flames issued."
Bishop Michaud attempts to correlate it with meteorological observations.
Because of the nearby view this is perhaps the most remarkable of the
new correlates, but the correlate now coming is extraordinary because
of the great number of recorded observations upon it. My own acceptance
is that, upon Nov. 17, 1882, a vast dirigible crossed England, but by
the definiteness-indefiniteness of all things quasi-real, some
observations upon it can be correlated with anything one pleases.
E. W. Maunder, invited by the Editors of the Observatory to write some
reminiscences for the 500th number of their magazine, gives one that he
says stands out (Observatory, 39-214). It is upon something that he
terms "a strange celestial visitor." Maunder was at the Royal
Observatory, Greenwich, Nov. 17, 1882, at night. There was an aurora,
without features of special interest. In the midst of the aurora, a
great circular disk of greenish light appeared and moved smoothly
across the sky. But the circularity was evidently the effect of
foreshortening. The thing passed above the moon, and was, by other
observers, described as "cigar-shaped," "like a torpedo," "a spindle,"
"a shuttle." The idea of foreshortening is not mine: Maunder says this.
He says: "Had the incident occurred a third of a century later, beyond
doubt everyone would have selected the same simile--it would have been
`just like a Zeppelin.'" The duration was about two minutes. Color said
to have been the same as that of the auroral glow in the north.
Nevertheless, Maunder says that this thing had no relation to auroral
phenomena. "It appeared to be a definite body." Motion too fast for a
cloud, but "nothing could well be more unlike the rush of a great
meteor." In the Philosophical Magazine, 5-15-318, J. Rand Capron, in a
lengthy paper, alludes throughout to this phenomenon as an "auroral
beam," but he lists many observations upon its "torpedo-shape," and one
observation upon a "dark nucleus" in it--host of most confusing
observations--estimates of heights between 40 and 200
miles--observations in Holland and Belgium. We are told that according
to Capron's spectroscopic observations the phenomenon was nothing but a
beam of auroral light. In the Observatory, 6-192, is Maunder's
contemporaneous account. He gives apparent approximate length and
breadth at twenty-seven degrees and three degrees and a half. He gives
other observations seeming to indicate structure--"remarkable dark
marking down the center."
In Nature, 27-84, Capron says that because of the moonlight he had been able to do little with the spectroscope.
Color white, but aurora rosy (Nature, 27-87).
Bright stars seen through it, but not at the zenith, where it looked
opaque. This is the only assertion of transparency (Nature, 27-87). Too
slow for a meteor, but too fast for a cloud (Nature, 27-86). "Surface
had a mottled appearance" (Nature, 27-87). "Very definite in form, like
a torpedo" (Nature, 27-100). "Probably a meteoric object" (Dr.
Groneman, Nature, 27-296). Technical demonstration by Dr. Groneman,
that it was a cloud of meteoric matter (Nature, 28-105). See Nature,
27-315, 338, 365, 388, 412, 434.
"Very little doubt it was an electric phenomenon" (Proctor, Knowledge, 2-419).
In the London Times, Nov. 20, 1882, the Editor says that he had
received a great number of letters upon this phenomenon. He publishes
two. One correspondent describes it as "well-defined and shaped like a
fish...extraordinary and alarming." The other correspondent writes of
it as "a most magnificent luminous mass, shaped somewhat like a
torpedo."
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