<?xml version="1.0" encoding='utf-8'?>
<!DOCTYPE wml PUBLIC "-//WAPFORUM//DTD WML 1.1//EN" "http://www.wapforum.org/DTD/wml_1.1.xml">
<wml>
<card id="card1" title="Planetarium - Page 10 - Wikipedia">
<p>
<a accesskey="1" href="page.php?w=planetarium&amp;p=9">1.Previous</a><br />
<a accesskey="3" href="page.php?w=planetarium&amp;p=11">3.Next</a>
</p>
<p>Walker's son describes this "Elaborate Machine" as "twenty feet high, and twenty-seven in diameter: it stands vertically before the spectators, and its globes are so large, that they are distinctly seen in the most distant parts of the Theatre. Every Planet and Satellite seems suspended in space, without any support; performing their annual and diurnal revolutions without any apparent cause". Other lecturers promoted their own devices: R E Lloyd advertised his Dioastrodoxon, or Grand Transparent Orrery, and by 1825 William Kitchener was offering</p><p>
<a accesskey="1" href="page.php?w=planetarium&amp;p=9">1.Previous</a><br />
<a accesskey="3" href="page.php?w=planetarium&amp;p=11">3.Next</a>
</p>

<do type="prev" label="Search">
        <go href="search.wml"/>
</do>

</card>
</wml>
