[Domestic Manners of the Americans by Fanny Trollope]@TWC D-Link bookDomestic Manners of the Americans CHAPTER 29 7/20
Mr.Washington Irving and Mr.Cooper have so decidedly chosen another field, whereon to reap their laurels, that it is hardly necessary to name them here. I am not, of course, competent to form any opinion of their scientific works; but some papers which I read almost accidentally, appeared to me to be written with great clearness, and neatness of definition. It appears extraordinary that a people who loudly declare their respect for science, should be entirely without observatories. Neither at their seats of learning, nor in their cities, does any thing of the kind exist; nor did I in any direction hear of individuals, given to the study of astronomy. I had not the pleasure of making any acquaintance with Mr. Bowditch, of Boston, but I know that this gentleman ranks very high as a mathematician in the estimation of the scientific world of Europe. Jefferson's posthumous works were very generally circulated whilst I was in America.
They are a mighty mass of mischief.
He wrote with more perspicuity than he thought, and his hot-headed democracy has done a fearful injury to his country.
Hollow and unsound as his doctrines are, they are but too palatable to a people, each individual of whom would rather derive his importance from believing that none are above him, than from the consciousness that in his station he makes part of a noble whole. The social system of Mr.Jefferson, if carried into effect, would make of mankind an unamalgamated mass of grating atoms, where the darling "I'm as good as you," would soon take place of the law and the Gospel.
As it is, his principles, though happily not fully put in action, have yet produced most lamentable results.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|