MISCELLANEOUS WORKS OF YOUNG. 329 
In 1821, Champollion denied altogether the existence of 
an alphabetic element among the hieroglyphics. But in the 
following year he adopted the whole of Young’s principles, 
and applied them with one modification only. The analogy 
of certain marks in the Chinese hieroglyphics, to signify 
proper names, the principle that the phonetic power of the 
symbol is derived from the initial letter or syllable of the 
name of the object which it represents in the Egyptian lan- 
guage, are among the chief of those which he borrows with- 
out acknowledgment, or claims without regard to their prior 
announcement by Young. “ It would be difficult,” says Dr. 
Peacock, “to point out in the history of literature a more 
flagrant example of disingenuous suppression of the real facts 
bearing on an important discovery.— Translator. 
MISCELLANEOUS WORKS OF DR. YOUNG. 
The limits prescribed do not permit me even to quote 
the mere titles of all the numerous writings which Dr. 
Young published. Nevertheless, the public reading of 
so rich a catalogue would certainly have sufficed to 
establish the celebrity of our colleague. Who would not 
imagine in fact that he had before him the register of 
the labours of several academies, and not those of a sin- 
gle individual, on hearing, for instance, the following list 
of titles :— 
Memoir on the Establishments where Iron is wrought. 
Essays on Music and Painting. 
Remarks on the Habits of Spiders and the Theory of Fabricius. 
On the Stability of the Arches of Bridges. 
On the Atmosphere of the Moon. 
Description of a new Species of Opercularia. 
Mathematical theory of Epicycloidal Curves. 
Restoration and Translation of different Greek Inscriptions. 
On the means of strengthening the Construction of Ships of the 
Line. 
