A Popular History of France from the Earliest Times, Volume 6 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 664 pages of information about A Popular History of France from the Earliest Times, Volume 6.

A Popular History of France from the Earliest Times, Volume 6 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 664 pages of information about A Popular History of France from the Earliest Times, Volume 6.

Diderot died on the 29th of July, 1784, still poor, an invalid for some time past, surrounded to the end by his friends, who rendered back to him that sincere and devoted affection which he made the pride of his life.  Hearing of his sufferings from Grimm, the Empress Catherine had hired a furnished apartment for him; he had just installed himself in it when he expired; without having retracted any one of his works, nearly all published under the veil of the anonymous, he was, nevertheless, almost reconciled with the church, and was interred quietly in the chapel of the Virgin at St. Roch.  The charm of his character had often caused people to forget his violence, which he himself no longer remembered the next day.  “I should like to know this hot-headed metaphysician,” was the remark made to Buffon by President De Brosses, who happened to be then at Paris; and he afterwards added,

“He is a nice fellow, very pleasant, very amiable, a great philosopher, a mighty arguer, but a maker of perpetual digressions.  Yesterday he made quite five and twenty between nine o’clock and one, during which time he remained in my room.  O, how much more lucid is Buffon than all those gentry!”

The magistrate’s mind understood and appreciated the great naturalist’s genius.  Diderot felt in his own fashion the charm of nature, but, as was said by Chevalier Chastellux, “his ideas got drunk and set to work chasing one another.”  The ideas of Buffon, on the other hand, came out in the majestic order of a system under powerful organization, and informed as it were with the very secrets of the Creator.  “The general history of the world,” he says, “ought to precede the special history of its productions; and the details of singular facts touching the life and habits of animals, or touching the culture and vegetation of plants, belong perhaps less to natural history than do the general results of the observations which have been made on the different materials which compose the terrestrial globe, on the elevations, the depressions, and the unevennesses of its form, on the movement of the seas, on the trending of mountains, on the position of quarries, on the rapidity and effects of the currents of the sea—­this is nature on the grand scale.”

M. Fleurens truly said, " Bufon aggrandizes every subject he touches.”  Born at Montbard in Burgundy on the 7th of September, 1707, Buffon belonged to a family of wealth and consideration in his province.  In his youth he travelled over Europe with his friend the Duke of Kingston; on returning home, he applied himself at first to mathematics, with sufficient success to be appointed at twenty-six years of age, in 1733, adjunct in the mechanical class at the Academy of Sciences.  In 1739, he received the superintendence of the Jardin du Roi, not long since enlarged and endowed by Richelieu, and lovingly looked after by the scholar Dufay, who had just died, himself designating Buffon as his successor.  He had shifted from mechanics

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A Popular History of France from the Earliest Times, Volume 6 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.