Created by: abbeygrech
Number of Blossarys: 7
The three right-hand stars of Cetus point down to a bright star - below Aquarius and not far above the horizon - called Fomalhaut, in the constellation of Piscis Australis.
A short distance below the Crown a little triangle of stars will be seen, from which a long line of stars curves downwards in a rough semicircle in the direction of Altair.
The four bright stars at the four corners are Orion's shoulders and limbs; three little stars above the shoulders, his head; and three bright stars in the center, his Belt or girdle.
A line drawn from Aldebaran between the horns of the Bull, leads to two bright stars belonging to the constellation of Gemini. The uper one is called Castor, and the lower one, the righter of the ...
In this constellation there are two very bright stars. The brighter, a reddish star called Aldebaran, is the Bull's eye, and is low down among a V-shaped cluster of little stars called the Hyades.
Between Vega and the foot of Cygnus cross are two third magnitude stars; these, with Vega, are the brightest stars in Lyra, the Lyre.
Curving around from Capella toward Cassiopeia, is a bright streak of stars which form part of the constellation of Perseus.