button to main menu  Otley's Guide 1823 (5th edn 1834)

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Page 169:-
candles at noon-day, while the country enjoys the brilliant light of an unclouded sun.
It has been a matter of surprise to some, that a cloud should seem to remain stationary upon the summit of a high mountain, when the air was moving at a brisk rate. The warm air of a valley being impelled up the inclined plane of a mountain side, into a colder region, is not able to support the same quantity of vapour; and a cloud is formed in consequence: and although the individual particles of which it is composed, are continually moving forward with the wind; yet by a perpetual accession of vapour on one side, and dispersion on the other, the cloud may continue to occupy the same place, and appear to a distant observer as stationary; although its component parts are successively changed: and in this manner may the materials of a cloud be transported invisibly from the summit of one mountain to that of another.
When a dense cloud settles upon a mountain, the wind frequently blows from it on one side with an increased momentum, while on the opposite side its motion is retarded; and a shower commencing on the hills, is generally preceded in its course by a squall - the air, displaced by the falling rain, making its escape along the vallies where it meets with the least resistance.
By the unequal distribution of vapour in the atmosphere, the visual rays passing through it suffer a variable degree of refraction; on which account it
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