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
gies , his faith in the consistency of creation ' s laws , and his consequent passion for simplicity , were all available as means of detecting error , and aids in the discovery of truth . And the excellence which these qualities enabled him to attain in his several pursuits , was of the same kind in all . In none did they
confer on him superlative merit ; in some , at least , they led him into great faults ; but in every one they fitted him to be the able and dauntless explorer , powerful to penetrate the terra incognita of mystery , and quick to return enriched with the spoils of fresh thought . Year after year he visited the temple of truth , and hung upon its walls some new exuviae ; and who can wonder
that his offerings , in their abundance , were more miscellaneous than rare ; that they consisted not always of the gold and the silver , which could be for ever deposited in the sacred treasury , but sometimes of the scattered arms and fragments of wreck which were of little worth but as trophies of victory . He was the ample collector of materials for discovery , rather than the
final discoverer himself ; a sign of approaching order rather than the producer of order himself We remember an amusing German play , designed as a satire upon the philosophy of Atheism , in which Adam walks across the stage , going to be created ; and , though a paradox , it may be said that truth , as it passed through Dr . Priestley ' s mind , was going to be created ; the requisite
elements were there ; the vital principle was stirring amid them , and producing the incipient types of structures that were yet to be ; but there was much that was unfit to undergo organization , much that could never be transmuted into forms of beauty , or filled with the inspiration of life ; and there must be other processes , before the mass emerges a graceful and a breathing frame .
The characteristic qualities of Dr . Priestley ' s understanding led him to prosecute , with the greatest ardour , those subjects of inquiry in which but little progress had been made . The earlier and less exact stage of a science , which promises a great affluence of new phenomena , and admits of only the lower degree of generalization , and prepares the approach to the establishment of
merely empirical laws , was that to which his powers were adapted . At a more advanced period of its history , when the field of observation is narrowed , and the demand for precise deduction increased , and where no appeal to fact can be of use , unless of the most refined and delicate kind , his faculties could have found no appropriate employment . In the age of Galileo he would probably have
gamed a reputation for discoveries in optics or astronomy : in our days he might have aided the progress of geology ; but in his own generation the former had passed , while the latter had not reached the point at which alone he was able to apply an effective stimulus . It may be doubted whether , if he were living now , he would not find chemistry in advance of bis peculiar genius ; whether its greatest discovery , the Jaw of definite proportions , which has emi-
Untitled Article
86 On the Life * Character * and Writing of Dr . Priestley
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Feb. 2, 1833, page 86, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2608/page/14/
-