page 1059 note 2 See Jones, “Science and English Prose Style in the Third Quarter of the Seventeenth Century,” PMLA, xlv (1930), 978 ff., and “Science and Language in England,” JEGP, xxxi (1932), 323 ff., both rptd. in The Seventeenth Century (Stanford, 1951). Jones's view of the schemes as essentially scientific and Baconian in spirit is followed by Clark Emery, “John Wilkins' Universal Language,” Isis, xxxvm (1948), 184; Francis Christensen, “John Wilkins and the Royal Society's Reform of Prose Style,” MLQ, vii (1946), 179, 286–287; Harold Fisch, “Puritans and the Reform of Prose Style,” ELE, xlx (1952), 247; and Fisch and H. W. Jones, “Bacon's Influence on Sprat's History,” MLQ, xii (1946), 406.