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Passages from the Life of a Philosopher

Chapter 5: CHAPTER II. CHILDHOOD.
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About This Book

This work presents a collection of reflections and experiences from the life of a prominent philosopher and mathematician, exploring his thoughts on various subjects, including science, technology, and society. It delves into the development of the Analytical Engine, highlighting the challenges and triumphs encountered in its creation. The author shares insights into his interactions with notable figures of his time and discusses the broader implications of his inventions. Themes of innovation, intellectual pursuit, and the relationship between knowledge and society are woven throughout, providing a glimpse into the mind of a pioneering thinker.

CHAPTER II. CHILDHOOD.


“The Prince of Darkness is a gentleman.”—Hamlet.

Early Passion for inquiry and inquisition into Toys — Lost on London Bridge — Supposed value of the young Phi­los­o­pher — Found again — Strange Coincidence in after-years — Poisoned — Frightened a Schoolfellow by a Ghost — Frightened himself by trying to raise the Devil — Effect of Want of Occupation for the Mind — Treasure-trove — Death and Non-appearance of a Schoolfellow.

FROM my earliest years I had a great desire to inquire into the causes of all those little things and events which astonish the childish mind. At a later period I commenced the still more important inquiry into those laws of thought and those aids which assist the human mind in passing from received knowledge to that other knowledge then unknown to our race. I now think it fit to record some of those views to which, at various periods of my life, my reasoning has led me. Truth only has been the object of my search, and I am not conscious of ever having turned aside in my inquiries from any fear of the conclusions to which they might lead.

As it may be interesting to some of those who will hereafter read these lines, I shall briefly mention a few events of my earliest, and even of my childish years. My parents being born at a certain period of history, and in a certain latitude and longitude, of course followed the religion {8} of their country. They brought me up in the Protestant form of the Christian faith. My excellent mother taught me the usual forms of my daily and nightly prayer; and neither in my father nor my mother was there any mixture of bigotry and intolerance on the one hand, nor on the other of that unbecoming and familiar mode of addressing the Almighty which afterwards so much disgusted me in my youthful years.

My invariable question on receiving any new toy, was “Mamma, what is inside of it?” Until this information was obtained those around me had no repose, and the toy itself, I have been told, was generally broken open if the answer did not satisfy my own little ideas of the “fitness of things.”