"Omnes res oreatse sunt divinfB sapientia; et potentiiTi', testes, divitio; felicitatis 

 humanaj :^ex harum usu bonitas Creatoris ; ex pulcbritudine sapientia Domini ; 

 ex oeconomia in conservatione, proportione, renovatione, j)otentia majestatis 

 elucet. Eai-Lim itaque indagatio ab hominibus sibi relictis semper astimata ; 

 a vere eruditis et sapientibus semper exculta ; male doctis et barbaris semper 

 inimica fuit." — Link^us. 



"Quel que soit le principe de la vie animale, il ne faut qu'ouvrir les yeux pour 

 voir qu'elle est le chef-d'eeuvre de la Toute-puissance, et le but auqiiel se rappor- 

 tent toutes ses operations." — Bruckner, Theorie du Si/steme Animal, Leyden> 

 1767. 



Tlie sylvan powers 



Obey our summons ; from their deepest dells 



The Dryads come, and throw their garlands wild 



And odorous branches at our feet ; the Nymphs 



That press with nimble step the moimtain-thynie 



And purple heath-flower come not empty-handed, 



But scatter round ten thousand forms minute 



Of velvet moss or lichen, torn from rock 



Or rifted oak or cavern deep : the Naiads too 



Quit their loved native stream, from whose smooth face 



They crop the lily, and each sedge and rush 



That drinks the rippling tide: the frozen poles, 



Where peril waits the bold adventurer's tread, 



The burning sands of Borneo and Cayenne, 



All, all to us unlock their secret stores 



And pay their cheerful tribute. 



J. Taylok, Norwich, 181S, 



