162 
HAROLD’S DISCUSSIONS. 
the most interesting constellations in the heavens, 
known by the name of Taurus, or the Bull. He is 
represented as plunging toward another beautiful 
cluster, Orion. In the head of Taurus is the attrac¬ 
tive V-shaped cluster of five stars, called the Hyades 
Fig. 81. — Equatorial constellations. (Third group.) 
—Eain-makers.” The Pleiades, mentioned in Job 
xxxviii, 31, is a group of six or seven visible stars in 
the shoulder of Taurus. A bright star in one of the 
horns marks the foot of Auriga. Tennyson, in speak¬ 
ing of this star-cluster in Locksley Hall, says; 
