
BY - WILLIAM TYLER OLCOTT
INTRODUCTION.
SCHEME OF STUDY.
THE DIAGRAMS.
URSA MAJOR (er´sa mā´-jor)—THE GREAT BEAR. (Face North.)
URSA MINOR (er´-sa mi´-nor)—THE LITTLE BEAR. (Face North.)
GEMINI (jem´-i-ni)—THE TWINS. (Face West.)
AURIGA (â-ri´-ga)—THE CHARIOTEER. (Face Northwest.)
CANCER (kan´-ser)—THE CRAB. (Face West.)
HYDRA (hi´-dra)—THE SEA-SERPENT. (Face South and Southwest.)
A practical companion for anyone who wants to turn night‑time wandering into a confident star‑watching experience, this guide strips away complex theory and focuses on what you can see with the naked eye—or a modest opera‑glass. Organized by season, it walks you step‑by‑step through the familiar patterns of the northern sky, starting with the well‑known “Dipper” and the Pleiades, then leading you to each new constellation using simple directional cues and clear, hand‑drawn diagrams.
Fifty detailed illustrations show the heavens as they appear around 9 p.m. on a typical night for each season, helping you locate each group of stars in context. Magnitudes are marked using the familiar Harvard system, and even a few nebulae are highlighted for the curious observer. Whether you’re on a backyard patio in New England or a city rooftop, the book’s concise instructions let you identify the night’s stellar arrangements after just a few evenings of practice.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (122K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Audrey Longhurst, Christine D. and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2007-03-09
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1873–1936
Best remembered for helping everyday readers find their way around the night sky, this American amateur astronomer turned a lifelong passion into clear, welcoming books. His writing helped popularize stargazing in the early 20th century and inspired many beginners to look up.
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