W hen any substances are brought together under circumstances under which they act chemically one upon another, a change takes place which consists in the disappearance of a part of the original substances and the appearance of an equal weight of other substances in their place. This change continues, if the circumstances remain the same, until the whole of one of the substances taking part in it has disappeared. Its total amount is therefore ultimately determined by the amount of that substance which was originally present in the smallest proportional quantity. The attainment of this limit, as will be shown, requires theoretically an infinite time, but the velocity of chemical change is so great that the practical limit of an inappreciable residue is in most cases speedily reached. Owing perhaps to this fact, chemists have been led to bestow their chief attention upon the result, and not upon the course of these changes. Occupied in investigating the relation between the reagents and the ultimate products of a reaction, and studying the chemical and physical properties of the thousand different substances thus produced, they are accustomed to regard the various conditions under which every chemical change takes place, and by which its amount is determined, chiefly as means to an end, as points to be attended to in a receipt for preparing one substance from another.