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Cowan, James

"Daybreak; a Romance of an Old World"

They do not strike the earth in large
numbers, but still we have a record of a shower of meteoric stones which
devastated a whole village. I suppose all parts of your globe are by this
time well populated, and how can you be entirely free from trouble when
you are living in constant danger of the downfall of these great masses of
rock?"
"But we don't have meteorites now," replied Thorwald.
"Oh, you don't?"
"No, they ceased falling long ago. Mars is going slow enough for the
present."
"Very kind of them, I am sure, to stop when you didn't need them any
longer," said the doctor; "and I suppose you have some plausible reason to
give for their disappearance."
"Yes, we believe that the interplanetary space was well filled with these
small bodies, circling around the sun, and when their multitudinous and
eccentric orbits intercepted the orbits of the planets, they came within
the attraction of these larger masses. Mars has merely, in the course of
time, cleared for itself a broad path in its yearly journey and is now
encountering no more straggling fragments.


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