On this page
-
Text (1)
-
Untitled Article
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
in the first verse , and whose temporary submersion and temporary darkness are 'described in the second vetseV " - —pp . 21—26 . u The interpretation here proposed seems , moreover , to solve the difficulty which would otherwise attend the statement of the appearance
of light upon the first day , whilst the sun and moon and stars are not made to appear until the fourth . If we suppose all the heavenly bodied and the earth to have been created at the indefinitely distant time , designated by the word ' beginning / and that the darkness described on the
evening of the first day was a temporary darkness , produced by an accumulation of dense vapour- —an incipient dispersion of these vapours may have re-admitted light , to the earth upon the first day , whilst the existing cause of light was still obscured ; and the further purification of the atmosphere , upon the fourth day , may have caused the sun , and moon &nd stars to reappear in the firmament of heaven . "—pp . 29—3 () ,
Th £ whole of the preceding description is rich in scientific and ingenious speculation , taking that form of poetry which maybe called the mythological , and very beautifull y accords with a suggestion we lately received from listening to ah eloquent lecture on the' fcoetry and Poetical Character of the Bible / The
lecturer thought it by no means improbable that the Circumstance which produced by analogy , in the poet ' s mind , the description of the Creation , may have been the annual revival of Egypt from its submersion by the Nile . He pictured the waste Or waters , the gloomy , vast desolation during the flood ; the festival , when all the people went out in illuminated boats , and the country was covered with light ; the subsiding of the
waters , and the appearance of dry land ; the sudden spring of vegetation ; the birds and beasts and creeping things returning to their old haunts ; and , lastly , man resuming his usual place and occupations . Such a suggestion is equally poetical and ingenious , and the analogy is rendered more complete b y the supposition of Dr Buckland ( p . 32 ) as to the first verse . It may be satisfactory to the learned , in further support of this supposition , to be told that the wfcrds used in Gen . i . 7 and Gen . l * 16 ,
( tKat is to say with regard to the appearance of the earth and of the " . sun ) is asflk , " itoad ' e ; which does not imply " created " otit of ndthing ( as the word bara does ); so ^ that it may here be eftiployect to express a n ^ w aitangeriient of material that ^ xi ^ ted bWdre /^ . 'Sl T } ie discoveries bf science lead to the belief that there was a time when the materials of the e&rth were iti a fluid or perhaps even in a ^ efyttiair state , owing to intense heat : btiept ^ df of this id the fdhft pf the fcarth , which is just that wftioh a fluid mass ivould Assume fr 6 m revolution round its axis , the heat would radiate into « pac ^; theparticles of tn ^ tt ^ rw ^ old'then approximate atl « Ct ^ taH ^ e ; thus there \ vottld b ^ forfched I bIiell or crust , comp ^^ d of oxidated metal and metalloids , Woffitituting granitic rocks around an incandescent nucleus of melted
Untitled Article
272 Buckland ' $ Geology .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), May 1, 1837, page 272, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1831/page/17/
-