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Professor Wallace in Reply to the Remarks of B. 103 
a integrals, so much cultivated at present. Tn np. 
ducted them to their discoveries. In writing to venue 
Wallis advises him not to frosted: them, and not to destroy 
the Bridge after passing the Rive 
Those however who have sseniped these germs and 
caused them to bring forth such abundant fruit, have ex- 
hibited no less genius, noris their merit in any “degree i in- 
ferior. They overcame the obstacles which prevented 
their predecessors from advancing. They Bae made new 
and extensive inroads into science They no longer con- 
fined it to the earth, they extended it to the ii ; and 
every phenomenon observed in the unive rse, was submit- 
ted to the power of their calculus, and its particular cause, 
and the laws which govern it distinctly pointed out. So 
that while nature is interrogated by observations and ex- 
periments, the language in which she now seems most dis- 
tinctly to answer us, is that of the Modern Analysis. 
ese remarks coming so late after Mr. B’s. have been 
in eee ton. must lose much, if mex the whole of their 
interest. I could not however have fo1 
er, as, from some cause or another, eeevely a week or 
two past, that the subscribers here received both the num- 
bers of the Journal, in which my communication and Mr. 
Be remarks are inserted. This being the case, I hope, 
r. Editor, you willdo me the justice to lose no time in 
publishing the above. 
J. WALLACE, 
