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have a word for the wild goat of the mountains, from its climbing upwards; also for the leaf of a tree, from its superior situation; whence, with the f, or digamma prefixed, we have the Latin folium. It furnishes us also with a word for stairs, because people ascend by them; and for a lord or ruler, because he is over others: in alliance with which we have one of the names of God, my Olion, because he is over all; and it is rendered by the word Altissimus in Latin, in English the Most High.

Compare this set of words with one another in Latin, and you will find neither root, branch, nor relation among them. Super has no alliance with scando; nor scando with gradus; nor gradus with folium; nor folium with altus; nor altus with rupicapra: every word, when compared with the rest, is an unrelated individual; and the case would be found the same in the Greek, or any other language of more modern use and invention: so that when I view the Hebrew language, such as I have now represented it to you (in too small a compass for the greatness of the subject), I am persuaded it must either have been originally given to man by his Creator, or framed by men the powers of whose minds were very different from our own.

But give me leave to forewarn you, that caution is to be used, and great experience is requisite, in order to handle the Hebrew with safety; otherwise you may chance to make that ridiculous which you intend to magnify. For want of knowing better, we may give the lead to a wrong idea; that which is not the radical one: and then we shall be forced upon strange and unnatural alliances; and, from our imperfect insight into many things, we may not be able to discover that there is any leading idea at all. It is natural to follow with too much assurance the alluring pursuits of etymology; and, if we are found to do it without temperance or discretion, we shall find no mercy from those who are not well affected to the originalities of learning and religion; who may therefore treat us with a smile, meaning it for the smile of superior wisdom: but folly and ignorance are more given to smile than wisdom and science.

I have said enough to convince you, that the study of Hebrew, if you use it properly, will abundantly repay your labour; that it is even necessary and essential, if you

would be, what I may call (to speak after the Hebrew style) a radical scholar, and see into the originals of things both sacred and profane: that it is related to itself by associations and images, not merely curious, but often very beautiful and instructive: in short, that it communicates knowledge of the best kind under a singular form, no where else to be met with. I could have multiplied my examples in abundance; for there was a time of my life when I sat for half a year together to compare the Hebrew language with itself in every word of it (so far as it is retained and preserved), and I have loved and admired it ever since. You will do the same, if you take half as much pains as I did; and, for your encouragement, you will have an advantage which I had not, later years having produced that excellent work the Lexicon, Hebrew and English, of Mr. Parkhurst; who has made it a magazine of general learning, antiquity, divinity, and natural history; and has illustrated his Hebrew literature from the Greek and Roman classics, and from useful authors, ancient and modern, of every denomination.

In the modern Hebrew learning, you have another advantage, and a great one it is; that you are taken out of the hands of the Jews; who begin their teaching with the egregious absurdity of an alphabet without vowels, to make way for their Hebrew points, which are a modern invention, and overburthen you with an insupportable multiplicity of rules. Their notions of the Hebrew are much of a size with their sense of divinity. That noble instrument of wisdom, in their hands, is like an instrument of astronomy in the hands of a child, or like a telescope with the blind. Trust yourself to Mr. Parkhurst, a good Christian, and he will take you by the hand at the first step, and carry you as far as you will wish to go in CHRISTIAN HEBREW. That your success may be such as I augurate from a foreknowledge of your capacity and application, is the sincere wish of,

Dear Sir,

Your affectionate friend,

and obedient humble servant,
W. JONES.

A FAIR, CANDID, AND IMPARTIAL

STATE OF THE CASE

BETWEEN

SIR ISAAC NEWTON

AND

MR. HUTCHINSON:

IN WHICH IS SHOWN,

How far a SYSTEM of PHYSICS is capable of Mathematical Demonstration—how far Sir ISAAC's, as such a System, has that Demonstration-and consequently, what regard Mr. HUTCHINSON'S Claim may deserve to have paid to it.

He that answereth a matter before he heareth it, it is folly and shame unto him. PROV. XVIII. 13.

Non species virium et qualitates physicas, sed quantitates et proportiones mathematicas expendens. NEWT. PRINCIP. p. 172.

I attempt not to detract from the praise which is justly due to those who by diligent and constant observations and calculations have ascertained the proportions and measures of the motions of bodies; but only to discover the causes of those motions, which I think none ever pretended to show. HUTCH. vol. xi. p. 226.

K

STATE OF THE CASE,

&c.

THE attention of the learned world being at present wholly turned on physical speculations and inquiries, some embracing the method of philosophizing established by Sir ISAAC NEWTON, and others as warmly standing up for the opinions of Mr. HUTCHINSON; the public will not, I flatter myself, dislike to have a fair, candid, and impartial state of the case between these two authors laid before them, that so every one, seeing what the tenets of both are, and wherein they differ, may be enabled, with very little trouble, to judge and determine for himself. Nor can this be thought a useless undertaking by any one who considers the high opinion entertained from the remotest antiquity, by the good and great, of the importance of physical knowledge, and the benefits accruing from a right understanding of it to the sons of men; the brightest parts and ablest pens, in all ages and nations, having ever been exercised and employed in the researches of nature. The diligent application to the study of this science, of late years more than ever, amongst the moderns, and their unwearied endeavours to improve and enrich it with new observations and experiments, sufficiently shew how much they are persuaded of its superior worth and excellence : so that mankind, however they may have differed in their opinions concerning the various and almost numberless schemes and hypotheses that have been offered to the world to explain and account for the operations of nature, yet in this are unanimous, that the study and contemplation of them are well worthy the time and thoughts of every one who has them to spare. And very right and fit it is that they should be so; since he who best knows the wants of his creature man, has thought proper, in infinite

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