33 



guished for the number of his discoveries, than 

 by the noble courage which he displayed in cir- 

 cumstances of extreme difficulty and danger. 



When I went into Spain I could not carry with 

 me the complete collection of my physical, geo« 

 desical, and astronomical instruments. I had left 

 the duplicates at Marseilles, with the intention 

 of ordering them to be sent to Tunis or Algiers, 

 when I should find an opportunity of passing 

 over to the coasts of Barbary. In peaceable times 

 travellers ought by no means to carry with them 

 the complete collection of their instruments : 

 they should on the contrary cause them to be sent 

 successively, in order to replace such as suffer 

 most by use and carriage. This precaution is 

 particularly necessary, when they are obliged to 

 determine a great number of points by means 

 merely chronometrical. But in times of maritime 

 warfare, it is highly prudent never to lose sight 

 either of instruments, manuscripts, or collec- 

 tions. Sad experience, as I have observed in the 

 introduction to this work, has confirmed the 

 justness of this observation. Our abode at Ma- 

 drid and Corunna had been too short, to trans- 

 port from Marseilles the meteorological appara- 

 tus I had left. 



It was in vain that I requested it's being sent 



raoir on the life of this traveller, by Mr. Deleuze, in his An- 

 nates du Museum, t. 17. 



VOL. I. d 



