eee ee re ee Te 
‘ aes 
after of rocks, in the numerous caverns called a Blac 
re fhore, 
1erl 
_ Htchinfo s Hiftory and Antiquities 
Sais A wide fhort- canal falls into 
cal writer, was 
a ¢ of fifteen ; he took the degree 0 
ra a fellow of his solcnr His earlier ft ies were con- 
with a taking orders ; but re 
clofe conieration of the terms of  Nerical benkensney, 
erio wp wr igencins fcruples to in his mind aga 
relinquifhed. all I thoughts a 
ill continued to the end of his 
church of - England, approving of its par doérines, 
and conforming to its ‘pee worfhip. He now determined 
to enter upon the ftudy of medicine, for whi ch his talents 
and the fenfibility and humanity of his difpofition equally 
fitted him. “His m ing wes formed to benevolence an 
univerfal philanthro ays the author of the fetch of 
his life and harer « rhe died the healing art with anx 
ious and equal fidelity to the poor and to the rich. He vifited 
with ionate fympathy the humblett recefles of poverty 
and ficknefs, as well as the ftately beds of pampered dif- 
temper ‘ani mature decrepitude. His manners were 
gentle ; his countenance affable ; his eloquence moral an 
pathetic,’ ’ He commenced the practice of phyfic at New- 
ark, in Nottinghamfhire ; whence he removed to Bu 
parte mn Suffolk : after ‘this he fettled for fome time in 
went to Bath, where he {pent the re- 
mainder i his life, and died in the year 7 5 at the age of §2. 
he author es cal tracts rela- 
tive to the o operation of Mrs. ens’s patois fe the 
beat a Bifeate with which et was vthmtelf afflicted : he was, 
Es 
an 
Yh. 
uber in the gazette in _ I 44 
: “4 ee made o a Porte 
. % TS. : 
BOSS use of the: prefent Evidence for and againit te- 
phens’s M oe asa at ce for oe mee containin 
aM 
after havin be medicine, two h weight of Helle :" “ tix Rationalis, &c."’ an pub- 
mee in ingredient in its compofiti : i i n eighty differtati 
gentleman’s zine for February, 1746, Dr. Hart- TARTMANN, aati a phyfician, was > “4 An- 
publithed, ne ag re Di ions for g and berg, in Bavaria. the year I I he began to teach phi-_ 
Deering Mrs. - Medicine in a folid Form.” math at -Maxpurgs. where che tank. the. 
Poe *y is faid to have written in defence ul ae egrec le ses daighng 3 yetghte ve a Aes 
es » againft the objections of Dr. Warren, | chemiftry in 1 gt publicly taught that, 
maw St. Edmund's; and fome papers of his are to be met See ee, ie entered office Migs. tcl 
Vou, pyr tilofophical Tranfactions. "Haller informs us dour, and his method of Wt eouingae: hy ra 
ae eee 
from * Delaval’s Hartley-Main”’ to the me 
ical! and in 1739 his i 
Mrs ic 
ght il, 1 
Vidtoris I os Seseeg IL., &e.’’ 
Eloquentiz 
HAR 
that feveral letters from him, in eorrefpondence with Moraud, 
were inferted ina “ Collection’? printed at Paris in 3 = 
P 740, 
12mo. 
‘But the principal work of Dr. Harley, upon which his 
fame with potterity fecurely refts, is the great metaphyfical 
i eae which he prefented to the public in 1749: under the 
title of « Obfervations on Man, his Frame, his Duty, an 
his Expeétations, in two parts,’? 8vo. e rine of 
vibrations, indeed, upon which he attempts to explain the 
origin and propagation of fenfation, although fupported by 
much i ingenious reafoning, is not only built upon a gratuitous 
aflumption, but, as Haller has fhewn, it attributes properties 
, tothe medullary fubftance of the brain and nerves, w hich are 
totally incompatible with their nature. The metaphyfical. 
tot s of this work, however, and more efpecially his difqui- 
fition refpecting the power of affociation, are monuments of. 
great fubtlety of refearch, and of 29g ‘knowledge of 
the operations of the human mind. The’ moft valuable 
edition of this work was publifhed in 1791, 4to. er a fketch 
of the life and chara¢ter’of the author, by his fon David 
Hartley, including notes and additions to the fecond (or 
_— — re ligiew) part of his doétrines, tranflated from 
the Germ: he Rev. — Andrew Piftorius, reétor” 
- Pofeit, in he ifland of Ru ugen. See Gen. Biogra - 
phy. Ann. Reg: 1775. "Sketch prefixed to the edition of 
F794 
HARTLEY, or Hattley-Pans, i in Geography, a {ea-port and 
townfhip in the parifh of Earfdon cattle-ward, Northum-. 
nd berland, England, contained, in si year 1800, 348 houfes, 
and 1639 inhabitants. .A harbour has been recently made. 
- at this place, chiefly at ‘the eocae of lord Delayal. The 
artificial bafon meafures about goo feet’ in ied by 30 
in breadth, and is more than 40 feet.deep. This har- 
pense is moftly ufed by coal. veffels, which aie this fuel 
tropolis, 
ley is five miles north of Shiekls; and near it 1s Tia Sig 
laval, a noble manfien, built pe 2 John Vanburgh, for - 
Delaval family.. Though fmall, = compared with t 
{pacious palace of Blenhe at ufe, yet the manfion at Scatbo 
is a fine and interelting {pecimen of fr John’s ftyle of archi-. 
tectural defign. 
ARTMAN, Georce, in Biogr: hy, ae ae ma- 
thematician, who flourifhed in the 16th cen ny invented 
what is denominated the artillery -ftaff, ss Lops bombardi-. 
o 
4 
was very young.. 
seeecres the papal communion, and wu ott 
ds 
was profeffor of hiftory and eloquence at Marpurg, 
’ where he che died | in me ate “He was the author of many works, 
but ac pal are, * Vite Pontiicum Romanorum, 
«“ Theftate of fciences at 
Shs dnuher Sieh» 
o 
