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M I I •. 1 Ml' 1 1! :. 4 . -n ANNUAL ADDRESS. niLtvEnit) Br PROFESSOR JACK, A.M., PRESII)E\T, BIFORE THR FREDiRICTON ATHIMUM, FEBRUARY 20, 1854. PRINTED AT THE REQUEST OF THE SOCIETY PREDERICTON. '. «MP90«, ,mNfM TO TH« QW.h's Mo.T IXCHL.NT MUtSTT. 1854. X '/ -; ANNUAL ADDRESS. Gentlemen, One of the duties pertninin/nr to the high office which I have had the honor to hold among yon, requires me, before descend- ing from my temporary eminence, to furnish some account of the proceedings of tho- Society for the last twelve months. To this duty I have looked forward with no small degree of trepi- dation, knowing how much more worthily it could have been performed by many of those around me. On reviewing the transactions of the past year, it gives me. I assure you, no small pleasure to be able to say that, in my opinion, the Society has well maintained its ground. Its ranks have been strengthened by the addition of several new mem- bers ; and, although at our meetings we may have missed more frequently than we could have desired, or might have reason- ably anticipated, some old familiar foccs whose presence was wont to cheer and encourage us, yet upon the whole, the attendance has been pretty good. If we consider the many disadvantages under w! .-I a Society such as the Fredericton Athenaeum must necessarily labour, when established in so small a community as that to which we belong, we shall, I think, find an)ple reason to be satisfied with the measure of success it has hitherto enjoyed. It is true we have among us a more than average proportion of nen well versed in history, general literature, and science ; yet, taking them altogether, the number is so few, that we can scarcely aflford to dispense with the hearty co-operation of a single indi- vidual. Of these too. every one, as might be expected in this new country, has to toil for his livelihood; and professional duties or the cares of business occupy so much of his time, that lie »nn th.'volc but a scanty portion of it to other pursuits. — Moreover, as few of our members follow the same occupation, the course of reading an«l ihc train of reHcction into whicli they will b«; naturally led, will be varied and dissiur'ur ; and hence, the subjects brou<;ht before them must be of such a general nature as to secure, in some degree, the attention and interest of all. A learned discpiisition on some dark point in Chronology, a scientific discussion of some yet unsettled fpics- tion in Geology or Natural History, or an abstruse mathema- tical investigation of some problem in Philosophy, would be erpially out of place in such an assemblage. Hence it is that we can perhaps lay no claim to having made any really original contribution to the stock of knowledge in the world. Never- theless I am sure that many of the papers that have been laid before this Society during the seven years which it has now been in operation, would have been listened to with both plea- sure and profit by associations of mucii higher pretensions. Nor ought it to be forgotten that we have in various ways, by publications and otherwise, attem|)ted to do something for the general weal. For my own part, I am ready to confess that I have derived great benefit and satisfaction from our meetings; and I could adduce the published testimony of several of my predecessors in this chair, that in this respect I do not stand alone. I trust, therefore, that all will cordially unite, and zea- lously strive to maintain our yet youthful association in full life and vigour. Most of the Societies that now enjoy a world wide reputation, started into existence under no more promis- ing aspects; and, why may not we, or, at all events, our successors, accomplish something to make the Fredericton Athenteum famous, and its origin worth enquiring into ? I reluctantly acknowledge that during the past year we have lived more within and for ourselves than heretofore. No Almanac, prepared and issued under our auspices, has apprised the public of our existence ; nor have we made any further effort to benefit the mariner, and gain a better character for the Bay of Fundy, by urging those in authority to procure, through means of an accurate and systematic series of obser- ^ u vntions, reliubic information rcgardiii<; its iinrlioiirti nnd tides. It is, however, griitifying to learn that tliore i.s some prospect of the last mentioned subject being taken up in the proper quarters, and nieetiiigwith theattcntiun itsimportance disserves. Two years ago, the Government of the I tiitcd States proposed to that of CIrcat Britain that they shouhl oo-opcrate and collect facts for the elucidation of various oceanic pluuionienn, which not only possess general scientific interest, but the better under- standing of which would tend vastly to the improvement of navigation. Tlie proposal was favourably received ; and lately the commanders of the vessels of botii nations have been instructed to make regular observations on wimls, tides, cur- rents, temperature, ond sundry other matters, in conformity with a plan |)re3cribed by Lieutenant Maury of the I nited States Navy, who has for nmny years interested himself in such investigations. Last summer, Lieutenant Maury was sent to Europe for the express purpose of enlisting the Continental Powers in the same cause ; and in the object of his mission, he has, 1 believe, been generally successful. Indeed, a discussion of the facts he had previously and not without much dilHculty obtained, had already enabled him to reduce by nearly one half the voyages to Rio and to California ; so that with such practical demonstration of the advantages to be derived from carrying out his scheme, it could not fail to be well received. It may be thought tliat these proceedings have a more imme- diate reference to the open ocean ; but they will doubtless be gradually extended into every nook and corner of it, and we may fairly presume that the Bay of Fundy, which presents so many peculiar and highly interesting phenomena, will not be the last to be minutely examined. Nevertheless, it might has- ten the matter, if at this in some respects favourable juncture, our merchants, shipbuilders and legislators would nil bestir themselves, and exert their united influence to promote what so nearly concerns the commercial prosperity of the Province. When we first drew public attention to the subject, our views were approved of by His Excellency the Lieutenant Governor, and he was pleased to communicate them both to the Home e and tlic I'rovincinl Aiithoi ities'. IJiit if is uiUHjrcssary for mc to d to treat you with n cpiutation froni a recent American writer, ahhoiigh I mu'*t confess that to ordinary mortals Hke myself the grandilcxpienceof the hin^nnffo is so (\i\'/./.\'iug as somewhat to ohscurc the sense. — " If u Millennial period for this world ia (!ver to come, as many wise have dreamjd ansor|)tion of other and diverse systems into one, but rather by a compromise into which all may blend. When the Earth in her historical orbit shall have reached that point, (as it stood ere mankind were scattered from the plain of Shinar) and not till then, may we begin to hope that her revolutions will be stilled, and that before long the W^eights and Measures of fleeting time will be merged and lost in the infinite scales and illimitable quantities of eternity." In the second part of my paper, I showed that men of science bad long desired and anxiously sought a metrical unit whose value should be fixed and immutable, and which being derived from nature, might commend itself equally to the adoption of all nations, and thus relieve them from the many inconvcniencies and perplexities which chance had originally introdurod. 1 briefly explained the steps taken by the French to i)rocure such a unit from the measurement of a quadrant of the meridian, and pointed out two very obvious errors that had been committed in the process of reduction. The more unpre- tending effort of the English to give fixity to their existing standards by determining their relation to the length of the second pendulum was also shown to have been equally unsatis- factory. Thus it appears that the dimensions of no natural unit have yet been ascertained with such absolute precision as would enable us to replace, simply by means of it, lost standards of measure. 8 In the third part, I examined in detail our Tables of Money, Weights, and Measures ; and advocated the introduction of the decimal system to a considerable extent. This required a change of nomenclature ; and although for the purpose of "ivingasort of uniformity and symmetry to all the tables, and also of designating the relation of each denomination to its primary, I preferred the employment of general prefixes, yet whether owing to the genius of the English language, or my own want of invention, it must be confessed that the terms proposed are neither so simple nor euphonious as those which the French have so happily introduced intothcir metrical system. As the unsatisfactory state of the Weights and Measures of this Province first induced me to take up the subject, I ought not to omit referring to the Bill which was passed during the last Session of our Legislature. This enactment gives a stability and certainty to our system which it did not formerly possess; and although some may regret that, in deference to the order of things in the countries immediately surrounding us, we have been obliged to retain the old wine gallon as the standard of liquid capacity, and also the Winchester bushel as that of dry measure ; still the j)rovision of the Bill which authorizes the buying or selling of all grains, roots, Sec, by weight, renders this diversity less important. The abolition of heaped measure must also be regarded as a step in the right direction. I have likewise been given to understand that the Government has sent an order to Troughton and Simms of London, to prepare a superior set of standards to be kept at Head Quarters, and sixteen other sets with less pretensions to extreme accuracy, for the use of the diflferent Counties. At our meeting in April, Dr. Robb favoured us with a paper on Decimal Coinage. He ably insisted upon the many advan- tages of such a system, and urged the expediency of its speedy adoption. After enumerating various points which ought to be taken into consideration in attempting to eflfect the change, and showing that through want of attention to one or other of these, many erroneous views had been promulgated, he pro- f Money, net ion of required I r pose of bles, and ion to its ixcs, yet c, or my he terms se uhicli il system. asures of , I ought [1 during it gives a formerly jrence to rounding )n as the )ushel as 1 which «fcc., by abolition he right that the mms of kept at nsions to ;s. a paper J advan- s speedy ught to change, other of he pro- ! cccdcd to state the practical difliculties with which the subject was encumbered, and then showed how, in his opinion, they might best be smoothed over. He contended that l'n point ; more especially bccimse the book of Revelation and the book (»f Natur*; — works of the same di\ine author — in place of establishing and confirming each other, as they undoubtedly will when rightly interpreted, are in ninny instances supposed by some to be in direct opposition. This fallacy generally arises from not reflecting that each has in view a separate and distinct object. The one being intended to teach the whole of mankind religion, is written in such popular yet sublime language as to be easily understood by the most humble as well as the most enlightened, and not in such strict scientific terms as to satisfy — even granting that such a thing were possible — each and all of the successive and ever-varying phases of scientific discovery. It tells us that all things had a beginning, and that this beginning, no matter how far back, occurred in fi/ite, and was the result of the fiat of an eternal, self-existent, and independent Creator. After enun- ciating this grand and important truth, it passes over with little or no notice all intermediate events as irrelevant to the main end in view, and proceeds at once to give the history of God's dealings towards him to whom it is especially addressed, carefully and clearly pointing out man's high place in the creation, and the duties which it imposes. The other displays the power, wisdom, and beneficence of the Diety in the immen- sity, perfection, and harmony of his works, and opens to his intelligent creature, who was made but " a little lower than the angels," sources of the highest and purest delight, by afl^brding a glorious field whereon he may find the most ennobling exercise for the great faculties wherewith he has been endowed, and which he was intended to train to higher and higher perfection. Those who would have the Bible convey lessons in science as well as in religion, seem to forget the j>rogressive nature of the former. Do they wish to find in the teachings of the Holy Scriptures a perfect accordance with the knowledge of the present day ? May, or rather will not the very next gene- 20 ration prove timt inucli of tliu now existing wisdom is only foolislincij.s ? Would any of the greatest philosophers that have ever lived, have prestuncd to uflirm that more was known to him than remained unknown? Were a Newton or a Hum- holdt to answer the ({uestion, we are well assured that it would not be in the afllrmative. Was it not better then, that the inspired narrative should have been so worded as to be intelligible to the simple and uncultivated people to whom it was first addressed ? Would the Israelites, who were naturally hard of belief and prone to idolatry, have had their faith con- firmed by being told that the solid earth on which were planted the great pyramids of Egypt, was a round ball spinning rapidly on its axis ; that, properly speaking, the sun neither rose nor set ; that the soft silvery light of the moon was not her own but borrowed from the lamp of day ; and that each of the numberless stars that stud the firmament was a sun, the centre of a system of worlds each perhaps more grand and glorious than the tiny orb they inhabited. In my opinion, strong proofs of the inspiration of the books of Moses are furnished by the facts, that while they convey a meaning acceptable touninstructed minds which trust implicitly to appearances and the direct evidence of the senses, they are at the same time so readily susceptible of such a construction as to negative none of the established principles of science ; and that there are nowhere found in them any of the fallacies of the Egyptian philosophy, though we are told that " Moses was learned in all the wisdom of the Egyptians," and would, therefore, had he been left to himself, have been naturally anxious to display the knowledge he had acquired. To those who wish to sec how well the discoveries of modern science may be reconciled with the sacred narrative, I would recommend the perusal of " Hitchcock's Religion of Geology," or " Dr. John Pye Smith's Geology and Scripture." Last month, I regret that a variety of unfavourable circum- stances prevented our coming together in such numbers as to make a quorum. Those, therefore, who in spite of obstacles y> >> 21 fav(uircli<;e(l to separate witlioiit obtaining the object for which they iiud asscnibhd. It will be observed thut n my rom^rlcs upon each paper, I have carefully abstained from <'MloiTi/,ing the author, however sensible I may have been of his merits. I have, in every rase, been more concerned about the matter than the man ; and wherever I thoUj>rht I rould introduce some additional food for reflection, I have attempted to do so. I have no change to propose in the organization of the Society, as I can sec none of any importance that could be made without entirely altering its constitution ; and T am unwilling that this should be done. The Secretary will furnish you with a statement of our financial resources, and connected therewith I shall probably, when the occasion oflfers, make some suggestions. Gentlemen, allow me to employ the lust lirief moments of my authority among you in exhorting you to be more earnest in your endeavours to promote the welfare and success of this Society. I well remember the ardour of your zeal at our first meeting. Do not, I entreat you, allow it to cool, and bring upon us the common, and often, I fear, well deserved reproach of being too fond of following after novelties ! As our monthly meetings cannot be considered a severe tax upon the time of any of us, attendance upon them ought to be regarded as a duty, with the performance of which we should allow nothing short of pressing necessity to interfts^e. Every one of you, I am sure, wishes the Society continued existence and prosperity. Let each, then, labour as if its maintenance depended upon his individual exertions ; for, that this is pretty nearly the true state of the case, all of you will on reflection be ready to admit.