338 THOMAS YOUNG. 
ercised for hours on the privileges of a rotten borough, 
did not pronounce a single word in favour of genius. 
The Board of Longitude was suppressed without oppo- 
sition. The next day, it is true, the wants of an innu- 
merable marine service made their imperative voice 
heard, and one of the men of science who had been dis- 
placed, the former Secretary of the Board, Dr. Young, 
found himself recalled to his old labours. Paltry repar- 
ation! Would the man of science feel less the separa- 
tion from his illustrious colleagues,—would the man of 
feeling less perceive that the noble fruits of human intel- 
lect were subjected to tariff by the representatives of the 
country, in pounds, shillings, and pence, like sugar, pep=~.. 
per, or cinnamon ? 
The health of our colleague, which had already become 
somewhat precarious, declined from this sad epoch with 
fearful rapidity. Skilful physicians by whom he was 
attended soon lost hope. Young himself had a con- 
sciousness that his end was approaching, and saw it 
come with an admirable calmness. Until his last hour 
he occupied himself without intermission on an Egyptian 
dictionary then in the press, and which was not published 
till after his death. When his powers did not permit 
him any longer to sit up, or to employ a pen, he cor- 
rected the proofs with a pencil. One of the last acts of 
his life was to exact the suppression of a small publi- 
cation written with talent, by a friendly hand, and 
directed against all those who had contributed to the 
destruction of the Board of Longitude.* Young died 
* The whole account of the transactions connected with the abo- 
lition of the Board of Longitude must be received with some qualifi- 
cation. Arago writes on the subject in his usual vehement tone, and 
in the feeling in which the whole affair would naturally be viewed by 
a foreigner, perhaps not intimately acquainted with the minute points 
