Chapter 222 220. Star Sea
"This Sir is really a weirdo."
On the fifty-eighth floor, Ron, who had just walked out of a room, muttered to Neville and Li beside him in a low voice.
"He doesn't look like a person who is short of money at all. Why does he come to the Norwegian Sea to suffer? Even if he really wants to study astronomy, the big deal is to move to Sweden or Finland, where he can see the same things as this starry sky?"
Neville shook his head and said.
"Everyone has different aspirations. It may be what Sir Stoke experienced when he was young that prompted him to live in seclusion here."
While they were talking, Li looked around suspiciously, and both Neville and Ron noticed his abnormal behavior.
"What are you looking for?"
"I always feel that someone is watching us." Li said with a frown.
His words made Ron tremble subconsciously. He didn't feel anything at first, but after what Li said, I don't know if it was a psychological effect, or it was only at this time that he realized it, and there was also a feeling that he was being watched by something all the time. Feel.
Neville patted the shoulders of both of them, motioning them to look in the direction of the corner of the stairs.
There was a black cat that looked exactly like the ones they had seen before.
It squatted in the shadow of the corner, looking at Neville and the three of them with those eyes that shone slightly in the dark.
Seeing the black cat, Ron breathed a sigh of relief.
He walked up to the black cat and watched him approach, but the black cat didn't leave, but kept staring at him like this.
"There are so many cats in this tower, and they are all pure black, they look like one."
As Ron spoke, he wanted to reach out and touch the head of the black cat that frightened him.
But the cat didn't seem to want his hand to touch itself, and jumped away from Ron's side, then ran down the stairs at a gallop.
Ron shrugged a little unclearly.
"It doesn't seem to like me."
"Let's go, let's continue to look up one more floor, and it will be lunch time soon."
Neville urged Ron, and the three continued to go up the stairs to the fifty-ninth floor.
There is still only one closed room here, and the door is unlocked like the other floors. They easily opened the door and walked in.
The room was pitch-black, unlike other rooms, which automatically lit up candlelight after entering. Even if all three of them walked in, it would still be dark.
"Why are there no lights here?"
"It may be that the Sir forgot when he was finishing this layer."
"It may also be that there is some hidden secret on this level, wait for me to draw out the wand."
Li was about to wave his wand, and when he used the Illuminating Charm, a faint spot of light suddenly lit up in the center of the originally dark room.
Suddenly, all the attention of Neville and the three of them was attracted by this light spot.
At the same time as the fireball appeared, countless light spots flickered around it.
The entire dark room seemed to contain a sea of stars, and light **** of different colors continuously appeared around them, and then began to rotate around the fireball in the middle according to a fixed orbit.
Around these spheres of light, which are obviously one size smaller than the fireball, smaller spheres of light gradually emerged, and these spheres of light began to revolve around them.
Neville's eyes reflected this gorgeous scene, he said in shock.
"This is. This is the solar system!"
Even Hogwarts in exile has never stopped teaching astronomy classes. They have already known the nine planets in the solar system (Pluto was eliminated in 2006 and became the eight planets) in the first grade, and even learned how to orbit The satellites of the planets.
So when they saw this galaxy, Neville and the others didn't feel strange.
Yet the evolution of the planets in the room did not stop.
After the entire solar system floated around them, together with the sun in the middle, the entire solar system began to shrink, and soon the galaxy became a sphere the size of the original sun.
Various other galaxies around them, the galaxies that Neville and the others learned or did not learn are constantly appearing, circling around them, as if they are in the sea of stars at this moment.
Not only Neville, Ron and Lee were also shocked by the scene in front of them speechless.
And at this moment, someone outside suddenly pushed the door open from the outside.
Sir Stoke, who had just come down from the top of the tower with Jon, stood in front of the door with a smile on his face, looking at the three children in the sea of stars.
He was not angry or blamed, but asked.
"Isn't it awesome?"
Li said excitedly: "This is simply great!"
Ron was fascinated: "I have never seen such a beautiful thing!"
“There is nothing in the world more fascinating than the starry sky above our heads.”
Sir Stoke looked at the stars floating in the darkness, a faint light lit up in his eyes, and fanaticism was clearly hidden under those plain eyes.
Jon stood by his side, and also looked at the stars in the room that were simulated on the ground. Regarding this amazing scene, he did not agree with or deny Sir Stoke's words.
He was surprised by the scenery in front of him, and even more surprised by Sir Stoke's courage.
This sea of stars, even if there is magic, cannot be created overnight, and besides the solar system, the positions and orbits of the planets in every other galaxy are not information that can be obtained casually.
Sir Stoke must have put a lot of effort into this room, and there is really no other better explanation than personal hobbies for spending so much energy to create such a room.
Astronomy is an important direction for wizards to understand magic and observe the world.
But developing in this direction is basically impossible to bring any substantial improvement to the wizards themselves, so although the astronomical knowledge in the magic world has been developing all the time, is there anyone who knows better than the Muggles who have already landed on the moon? More or two.
Because they have never left the earth and gone into space, not many wizards are actually too interested in the starry sky above their heads. Most of their research on the starry sky is related to divination.
Hope to discover the laws that affect people on land from the orbits of the planets, so as to make predictions.
Sir Kestock is obviously not a fortuneteller, he understands astronomy, more like he just likes it purely.
I like it to the point of obsession and even fanaticism.
(end of this chapter)