"The late Professor Leslie... [i]n his Philosophy of Arithmetic... entered... into much of its history. ...[O]ne principal, thing to be cautious of is, his almost monomaniac antipathy to every thing Hindoo—a most unfortunate turn... Leslie... generalises... fearfully every now and then. He informs us that it was the practice throughout Europe to reduce the rules of arithmetic to memorial verses, and that [William] Buckley's Arithmetica Memorativa appears at one period to have gained possession of the schools and colleges of England. Now the truth... the verses attributed to Sacrobosco had never... been printed when Leslie wrote; and Buckley... was printed only once... and two or three times as an appendix to a work on logic. Dr. Peacock expresses the truth in saying... before the invention of printing, the practice of writing memorial verses was common, as appears by manuscript libraries. ...[H]ad the practice of using them been common, the presses of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries would have given them forth in great numbers. But I cannot learn that any metrical work was printed in the fifteenth century, except the Compotus of [Magister] Anianus, and that only once."
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Augustus De Morgan, Arithmetical Books from the Invention of Printing to the Present Time being Brief Notices of a Large Number of Works Drawn up from Actual Inspection (1847) Introduction, p. xvi. Ref: John Leslie, Philosophy of Arithmetic; Exhibiting a Progressive View of the Theory and Practice of Calculation, with an Enlarged Table of the Products of Numbers under One Hundred (1817) pp. 237-240.
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