登陆注册
19413200000018

第18章

THE DISAPPEARANCE AND PRESERVATION OF INK WRITINGS, AS ESTIMATED BY LA CROIX--COMMENTS OFOTHER WRITERS--DE VINNE'S INTERESTING EXPLANATIONSOF THE STATUS QUO OF MANUSCRIPT WRITINGS DURING THE DARK AGES WHICH PRECEDED THE INVENTIONOF PRINTING--PRICES PAID FOR BOOKS IN ANCIENT TIMES--LIMITATIONS OF HANDWRITING ANDHANDWRITING MATERIALS AT THE BEGINNING OF THE FIFTH CENTURY--WHO CONTROLLED THE RECORDSABOUT THEM--INVENTION OF THE QUILL PEN--THE CAUSE OF INCREASED FLUIDITY OF INKS--ORIGIN OF THE SECRETA--CHARACTER OF INFORMATION OBTAINED FROM THEM--IMPROVEMENT OF BLACK INKS IN THE EIGHTH CENTURY AND EMPLOYMENTOF POMEGRANITE INK.

LA CROIX' preface to his "Science and Literature of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance," refers to the Dark Ages:

"In the beginning of the Middle Ages, at the commencement of the fifth century, the Barbarians made an inroad upon the old world; their renewed invasions crushed out, in the course of a few years, the Greek and Roman civilization; and everywhere darkness succeeded to light. The religion of Jesus Christ was alone capable of resisting this barbarian invasion, and science and literature, together with the arts, disappeared from the face of the earth, taking refuge in the churches and monasteries. It was there that they were preserved as a sacred deposit, and it was thence that they emerged when Christianity had renovated pagan society. But centuries and centuries elapsed before the sum of human knowledge was equal to what it had been at the fall of the Roman empire. A new society, moreover, was needed for the new efforts of human intelligence as it resumed its rights. Schools and universities were founded under the auspices of the clergy and of the religious corporations, and thus science and literature were enabled to emerge from their tombs. Europe, amidst the tumultuous conflicts of the policy which made and unmade kingdoms, witnessed a general revival of the scholastic zeal; poets, orators, novelists, and writers increased in numbers and grew in favour; savants, philosophers, chemists and alchemists, mathematicians and astronomers, travellers and naturalists, were awakened, so to speak, by the life-giving breath of the Middle Ages; and great scientific discoveries and admirable works on every imaginable subject showed that the genius of modern society was not a whit inferior to that of antiquity. Printing, was invented, and with that brilliant discovery, the Middle Ages, which had accomplished their work of social renovation, made way for the Renaissance, which scattered abroad in profusion the prolific and brilliant creations of Art, Science, and Literature."This author to some extent discredits himself, however, p. 455, where he remarks:

"Long before the invasions of the Barbarians the histories written by Greek and Latin authors concerning the annals of the ancient peoples had been falling into disfavor. Even the best of them were little read, for the Christians felt but slight interest in these pagan narratives, and that is why works relating to the history of antiquity were already so scarce."Another authority writing on the same subject discusses it from a different standpoint, remarking:

"As in the middle ages invention busied itself with instruments of torture, and as in our days it is taken up almost as much with the destructive engines of war as with the productive arts of peace, so in those early ages it applied itself to the fabrication of idols, to the mechanism and theatrical contrivances for mysteries and religious ceremonies.

There was then no desire to communicate discoveries, science was a sort of freemasonry, and silence was effectually secured by priestly anathemas; men of science were as jealous of one another as they were of all other classes of society.

If we wish to form a clear picture of this earliest stage of civilization, an age which represents at once the naivete of childhood and the suspicious reticence of senility, we must turn our eyes to the priest, on the one hand, claiming as his own all art and science, and commanding respect by his contemptuous silence; and, on the other hand, to the mechanic plying the loom, extracting the Tyrian dye, practising chemistry, though ignorant of its very name, despised and oppressed, and only tolerated when he furnished Religion with her trappings or War with arms. Thus the growth of chemistry was slow, and by reason of its backwardness it was longer than any other art in ridding itself of the leading-strings of magic and astrology. Practical discoveries must have been made many times without science acquiring thereby any new fact. For to prevent a new discovery from being lost there must be such a combination of favorable circumstances as was rare in that age and for many succeeding ages. There must be publicity, and publicity is of quite recent growth; the application of the discovery must be not only possible but obvious, as satisfying some want. But wants are only felt as civilization progresses. Nor is that all; for a practical discovery to become a scientific fact it must serve to demonstrate the error of one hypothesis, and to suggest a new one, better fitted for the synthesis of existing facts. But (some) old beliefs are proverbially obstinate and virulent in their opposition to newer and truer theories which are destined to eject and replace them. To sum up, even in our own day, chemistry rests on a less sound basis than either physics, which had the advantage of originating as late as the 17th century, or astronomy, which dates from the time when the Chaldean shepherd had sufficiently provided for his daily wants to find leisure for gazing into the starry Heavens."The observations of a still earlier commentator are of the same general nature. He says:

同类推荐
  • 净名经关中释抄

    净名经关中释抄

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 张太史明道杂志

    张太史明道杂志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 入若耶溪

    入若耶溪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Wyoming

    Wyoming

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 海琼传道集

    海琼传道集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 领先一步:大学生求职择业全攻略

    领先一步:大学生求职择业全攻略

    介绍了大学生求职择业全攻略。主要包括:做好职业生涯规划、职业环境分析、如何制作让你脱颖而出的简历、如何进行成功面试等。
  • 年月诗集 时光链环

    年月诗集 时光链环

    故乡山水,如诗如画,住净水器、触景生情,咏物明志。讽刺为了清明,离骚怒其不争。时光链环套住年月,火花飞溅,汇集成歌,一唱百年。
  • 复仇有误:大叔你在骚扰我试试

    复仇有误:大叔你在骚扰我试试

    她,萧氏集团总裁表姐,借着相亲的名义来找父亲报仇。他,是她相亲对象,知道她要来复仇,却一而再再而三的妨碍她。“喂!别以为你是总裁了不起,我照样打你”她说。“呵!你来试试,我等你”他轻笑道。几天后,他发给她一些资料,她看后知道,她输了几年后,她依偎在他怀里,问道:”黎~你当初~是怎么爱上我的?“”夫人~你要相信,你的魅力足以让看到你第一眼的人爱上你!“他望向她的眼里,满满的宠溺和情意。。
  • 瀚玄天穹

    瀚玄天穹

    虚无生混沌,混沌化无极,无极化太极,太极分两仪!天才之路难以行,虚无境界成于生死间的徘徊。瀚玄之命是否会改变?天才能否化解大陆的灾劫……
  • 明季遗闻

    明季遗闻

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 十年一刻

    十年一刻

    她叫夏宇。他叫路明。曾经的他们因为异地而分手,时隔七年,忘不了彼此的他们再次走到了一起,却因为受过的伤,爱自己胜过爱对方。本以为就要这样错过,却因为工作的关系重新认识多年后的彼此。十年,他们终于等到了修成正果的那一刻。
  • 等待十年

    等待十年

    当你第一次真的爱上一个人,你会为她等待十年么?那是属于我的青春年华,却把岁月留在了满腹的悔恨和无尽的懊恼里,我曾经努力过,失败过,但你说过要我等待,我决定等待,哪怕这种等待是那么的不值得。
  • 完美代入

    完美代入

    时间定格于这一刻,不知算喜或悲。夜游,21岁,一个平凡却被迫波澜的女人。那日晨,无喜不悲的日子,终于发生了改变。刚到公司门口,便被通知总裁,要见自己。在唯一知情的朋友,担忧的注视下,走进电梯,目的地30层的总裁办公室“咚”门刚敲了一下,屋内便响起了声音“进来”推门,便同男人冰冷的视线撞在了一起,一股凉意,由心涌起。从总裁办公室出来后,跌中走出了公司,“砰!”身体不由飞起,又重重落下,鲜红的血液,渐渐汇成血泊,飘着一张血染的支票…张了张嘴,无声嘴角泛起了苦涩,没人知道,天行集团的执行总裁其实是业务,一个小员工的未婚夫童养夫,更不会知道…
  • 禁法封尽

    禁法封尽

    孤身一人,置身于那无尽的黑暗。渐渐被忘却的记忆残像。虚无的心在这循环往复的世界中追寻着自己,禁法封尽,彼端却是污秽不堪的奇迹。“汝可愿在此寂灭为新纪元之神?过往一切羁绊消逝,汝之名将作为凌驾一切的概念永铸于众生意识之上。背负善与恶,罪与罚之所有过去,现在,未来因果律,神隐永不轮回,再也没有开始,结束!”
  • 觅仙路

    觅仙路

    九天之中,十地之内,有谁敢接我一剑。都仙路难觅,我叶晨倒要试上一试