Nicolson 1956
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Nicolson, Marjorie. Science and Imagination. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1956.
The Microscope and the English Imagination
Pepys buys microscope, Power's Experimental Philosophy, and Hooke's Micrographia; records many conversations on it during 1664-6 (169-170)
Abraham Cowley, "To the Royal Society" [[1]]
- Nature's great Workes no distance can obscure,
- No smalness her near Objects can secure
- Y'have taught the curious Sight to press
- Into the privatest recess
- Of her imperceptible Littleness.
- Y'have learn'd to Read her smallest Hand,
- And well begun her deepest Sense to Understand.
Samuel Butler, "The Elephant in the Moon" [[2]]
- about a society of men gathering to look through a telescope and see curious men on the moon
- includes satire of microscopists: "one, whose Task was to determin / And solve th' Appearances of Vermin; / Wh' had made profound Discoveries / In Frogs, and Toads, and Rats, and Mice"
other miscellaneous verse by Butler on the microscope:
- When one, who for his Excellence
- In height'ning Words and shad'wing Sense,
- And magnifying all he writ
- With curious microscopick Wit,
- Was magnify'd himself no less
- In home and foreign Colleges,
- He that would understand what you have writ
- Must read it through a Microscop of wit;
- For evry Line is Drawn so curious there
- He must have more then eies that reads it cleare.