As impositions are often attempted, by soliciting patronage for publications of little value, we felt the importance of obtaining, in behalf of our work, the approbation of competent judges—The public will admit that it has been obtained; and the professional gentlemen who have favoured us with it in the most obliging and disinterested manner, will excuse our offering them this public tender of our grateful acknowledgments.
With these remarks we commit our little work to the candour of the public, conscious of having assiduously laboured to furnish a book which, though it appeared to us to be much wanted, had not yet been written or compiled. Our views will be fully answered, if it shall be found well adapted to assist youth in their academical and philosophical studies, and at the same time, to afford amusement to men of learning, and some useful information to gentlemen of leisure.
INTRODUCTION.
SECTION I.
Electricity as known among the Ancients.
In examining the progress of almost any branch of human knowledge, curiosity must meet with many repulses. By the time the attention of society is attracted to the accumulation of detached truths, which compose a science, it is often impossible to retrace its history. The real origin of most discoveries is obscured by antiquity, their authors have already sunk into oblivion, and important improvements are ascribed to different inventors.
Electricity is however oppressed by few of these difficulties. With the exception of some small discoveries mentioned by ancient authors, this science derives its origin and all its improvements from the two last centuries. Neither is the historian perplexed in giving every invention to its proper author. Those who cultivated this science were commonly men of talents and condition; they pursued it with ability and perseverance; and either themselves published the result of their observations, or deposited them in those literary institutions which they found established in their country. The historian of electricity, therefore, with no extraordinary exertion of industry or talent, may fully collect and accurately arrange the materials of his work.
On the subject of electricity nothing earlier is on record than the observation of Thales, that yellow amber, when rubbed, has the property of attracting light bodies.—So struck was he with this property of amber, that he imagined it was animated.
Thales, the contemporary of Pythagoras, was born at Miletus, a city of Ionia, about six hundred years before Christ. Like all the Grecian sages, he travelled into Egypt; lived in that country a number of years; contracted friendships with the priests, then the depositories of science; and became deeply skilled in all their mysteries and learning. Returning to his own country, stored with the knowledge of the East, he was ranked as the first of the seven wise men of Greece, and became the founder of the Ionic school, as Pythagoras did of the Italic.
It may deserve remark that the same philosopher who is recorded to have observed the first phenomenon in electricity, is also said to have discovered the cause of thunder and lightning. We shall give to the curious, the remarkable passage containing this account, as we find it in Apuleius, a learned and eloquent writer of the second century, while he is rapidly enumerating the discoveries of Thales.