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o send you a few "notes" on these heads, from the "household book," and, in contemplating the remains of this unrivalled collection of its day, I can well bespeak the sympathy of every true-hearted "Chartist" and Bibliographer, in the lament which has often been mine--"Quanta fuisti cum tantae sint reliquiae!" LAMBERT B. LARKING. Ryarsh Vicarage, Dec. 12. 1849. * * * * * BERKELEY'S THEORY OF VISION VINDICATED. In reply to the query of "B.G." (p. 107. of your 7th No.), I beg to say that Bishop Berkeley's _Theory of Vision Vindicated_ does not occur either in the 4to. or 8vo. editions of his collected works; but there is a copy of it in the library of Trinity College, Dublin, from which I transcribe the full title as follows:-- "The Theory of Vision, or Visual Language, shewing the immediate Presence and Providence of a Deity, vindicated and explained. By the author of Alciphron, or The Minute Philosopher. "Acts, xvii. 28. "_In Him we live, and move, and have our being_. "Lond. Printed for J. Tonson in the Strand. "MDCCXXXIII." Some other of the author's tracts have also been omitted in his collected works; but, as I am now answering "a _Query_," and not making "a _Note_," I shall reserve what I might say of them for another opportunity. The memory of Berkeley is dear to every member of this University; and therefore I hope you will permit me to say one word, in defence of his character, against Dugald Stewart's charge of having been "provoked," by Lord Shaftesbury's _Characteristics_, "to a harshness equally unwonted and unwarranted." Mr. Stewart can scarcely suppose to have seen the book upon which he pronounces this most "unwarranted" criticism. The tract was not written in reply to the _Characteristics_, but was an answer to an anonymous letter published in the _Daily Post-Boy_ of September 9th, 1732, which letter Berkeley has reprinted at the end of his pamphlet. The only allusion to the writer of this letter which bears the slightest tinge of severity occurs at the commencement of the tract. Those who will take the trouble of perusing the anonymous letter, will see that it was richly deserved; and I think it can scarcely, with any justice, be censured as unbecomingly harsh, or in any degree unwarranted. The passage is as follows:-- [After mentioning that an ill state of health had prevented his noticing this letter soon
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