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THE POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY.
to mark and to make an epoch in science. Early trained in chemistry, physics, and physiology, he pursued these subjects as an investigator, not only separately, but in their intimate and complex interactions, reading the mysteries of life by the light of chemical and physical principles. From 1836, onward for fifteen years. Dr. Draper conducted a comprehensive series of researches in the general field of radiant energy in its chemical relations which had been at that time but little explored. His elaborate papers giving shape and direction to this subtile research were published in American and foreign periodicals, and won the cordial applause of his appreciative coworkers in the same fields. Recognizing that he was a good deal in advance of his time, and that years must elapse before the significance of his results would be understood, he wisely collected his papers and had them published in a quarto volume, fully and clearly illustrated. An edition of this work was printed, but the expensive stereotype plates were destroyed in the great conflagration of Harper's establishment, so that no more volumes could be produced. With the recent progress of the subjects to which it was devoted, there has been an increasing demand for copies of the work, which consequently arose in price, and were prized by all who possessed them. In these circumstances Dr. Draper has thought it best to reproduce some of the most important papers, and they are now embodied in this volume of memoirs. In this he has but done an act of justice to himself and to American science, while his volume will prove of lasting interest as a contribution to the history of a most interesting and important branch of scientific inquiry, which is now undergoing rapid development, and will continue to be zealously cultivated in the future.
As to the special subjects considered. Dr. Draper's statement of them in his preface is so much better than any we could make that it is here subjoined: