write the summary of these lines
Answers
Scene 1. "Galileo Galilei, a teacher of mathematics at Padua, sets out to prove Copernicus's new cosmogony." It is the year 1609, and Galileo Galilei is in the process of proving, "The sun is still, the earth is on the move." The first scene takes place in Galileo's "rather wretched study in Padua." The housekeeper's son, Andrea, brings Galileo some milk and a roll.
Galileo tells him to put the milk on the table and not to touch any of his books, while Andrea tells Galileo that the milkman will make a circle around their house if they don't pay the bill. Galileo quizzes Andrea about physics and astronomy, before showing him an armillary sphere, a "contraption to show how the planets move around the earth, according to our forefathers."
Galileo explains to Andrea that for many years everyone has believed that the earth is stationary and the planets and stars revolve around it, when in actuality, the earth is moving around the sun. Eventually, he posits, "The heavens, it turns out, are empty" and that the news that the earth is moving will affect the marketplace and change the way people think about their place in the world. "The universe has lost its centre overnight, and woken up to find it has countless centres. So that each one can now be seen as the centre, or none at all. Suddenly there is a lot of room," he tells Andrea.
Galileo asks Andrea if he understands what he has told him about Copernicus, and Andrea admits that he has not, as it is complicated, and he is only 10 years old. Galileo tells him, "Getting people to understand it is the reason why I go on working and buying expensive books instead of paying the milkman." Andrea is unconvinced by Galileo's theory, suggesting that they see the sun move everyday. Galileo demonstrates how the earth is actually the entity that is moving by placing Andrea in a chair and moving it.
Explanation:
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Answer:
Gail, O gaily we glide and we sing,
We bear her along like a pearl on a string"
The palanquin bearers carry the bride gaily, even when they glide high grounds. They are not burdened and so they proceed with their singing. They say that the bride is carried like a pearl on a string. She is as precious as a pearl.