54 BIOGRAPHIES OF SCIENTIFIC MEN 



1. Diaries from 1752. 



2. Several commonplace books containing notes. 



3. Register of philosophical experiments and hints for 



new ones. 



4. Sermons, prayers, etc. 



5. Notes and a paraphrase on the whole of the New 



Testament excepting Revelation. 



6. A new translation of the Psalms. 



7. Memoirs of his own life, to be published after his 



death. 



8. Illustration of Hartley's doctrine of Association 



of Ideas, and further observations on the human 



mind. 



Concerning the Priestley riots Gillray 1 produced an 

 etching in which Priestley was grossly lampooned. The 

 sympathy of Priestley and his friends for the French 

 Revolutionists became their greatest crime in the eyes of 

 their enemies, and the dinner on 14th July was ostensibly 

 made the occasion of the anti- Jacobin outbreak. " By 

 far the greatest crime of all which Dr Priestley and the 

 ' Socinians' had committed," says Mr Dent, " was that of 

 sympathizing with the lovers of freedom who had just 

 succeeded in overturning the throne of Louis XVI. in 

 France. This sympathy Gillray, the caricaturist, turned 

 to account in a bitterly hostile and infamously libellous 



1 James Gillray (1757-1815) went mad in 1811 chiefly through in- 

 temperance, and only had a few subsequent intervals of sanity. 



