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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • April 28, 1860
  • Page 8
  • NOTES ON LITERATURE SCIENCE AND ART.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 28, 1860: Page 8

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Correspondence.

there be no such degree as that of Mark Master , a great many brethren have wasted much time and circumstance in supporting an immense fungus , and the sooner they be informed of their true position the bettei- for them anil their connections . Before proceeding further , I will await the remarks of any brother who will kindly give his attention to the subject . I am , clear Sir n ; :. ) : } rother , yours fraternall y , - 21 st April . 1800 . K . E . X .

Notes On Literature Science And Art.

NOTES ON LITERATURE SCIENCE AND ART .

— — ~ — ME . AOTISI-W AMOS died at Downing College , Cambridge , on Wednesday . He was educated at Trinity College , graduating as fifth wrangler in 1813 . He took the degree of M . A . in 1816 , having previously been elected a fellow . In November , 1318 , he was called to the bar by Lincoln ' s Inn . Subsequently lie was chosen . Downing Professor of Laws in this university , and Professor of English Law iu the University of

London . He was also for some time a member of the Supreme Council of India . On his return to this country be took up his abode near Hitchin , and was a most useful county magistrate , till ill health obliged him to retire from the bench . He likewise acted as judge of the Marylebone County Court . His works , which are numerous , are principally of a legal or historieo-legal nature . The salary of the Downing Professorship of Laws is £ 200 . the electors being the Archbishops of Canterbury

and York , and the Masters of St . John ' s , Clare , aud Downing colleges . Mrs . Gore , the novelist , who for some time past has been afflicted with blindness , has just undergone an operation which , it is hoped , will eventually restore her to sight . The anniversary dinner of . the Royal Literary Fund will take place on the 16 th May ; the bishop of St . David ' s will preside . Messrs . Blackwood ( says a paragraph in the Critic , which must be

received with caution ) give " George Eliot" ( Miss Evans ) for her new work , "The Milt on the Floss , " £ 2 , 000 down , £ 61 , 000 for the second edition , and £ 1 , 000 when the work reaches the fourth , with an extra bonus on its reproduction in a cheaper form . A meeting of the British Literary and Scientific Institution was held a fortnight ago . in the British School-room in Pera , for the purpose of electing officers for the ensuing y-ear . The Rev . C . Curtis was called to

the chair . On the motion of Mr . Teasdale , ^ seconded by Mr . Knight , the following scrutineers were appointed for the ballot : —Captain Ward , Messrs . Teasdale , Glover , Hopper and Baker . On a ballot being taken , his Excellency Sir Henry Bulwer was elected president , and the Rev . C . Curtis and H . T . Woroth , Esq ., vice-presidents . The election of the

committee and other officers was not declared till a late hour . The lion , secretary , Mr . Knight , has delivered the concluding lecture of the first course , subject— ' ' ¦ Four Hundred Years in Stamboul . " Tiie Stamford i / ercioy / records the death of Mr . Jos . Weils , well known in the vicinity of Boston as the " Fen Poet , " who was originally an agricultural labourer , but by assiduously using the scanty means at his command , fitted himself at the age of twenty-eight , to enter upon

the duties of a village school-master , which honourable post lie filled with great credit for more than sixty years . In common with other village school masters ho took up the work of land surveying , and did a great deal of work in the way of drawing up agreements and making out wills , being in fact a sort of fen lawyer . As a poet be contributed for a series of years to the far-famed " Noble ' s Compendium . " He was very benevolent , and much respected .

Wo iiave some interesting literary news from Paris ; M . de Lamartine ' s complete works will appear shortly , published by himself , in an " Edition Parsonelle , Definitive , Unique . " They will comprise forty volumes , of (' com 5 ( 10 to GOO pages each ; in the course of four years the work will be complete . The price will be three hundred franca for the whole if paid in advance at the delivery of the first volume ( " Meditations Poetiques et Religieuses " ); otherwise , every yearly course of ten volumes

will cost eighty francs . Every subscriber will receive Lumartine ' s portrait with his autograph . M . Barba , the enterprising publisher , has recently issued an excellent popular "History of the War in Italy , " and he has added as a pendant to the same a " Life of Garibaldi , " from the pen of M . Charles Paya , with illustrations by the well known Janet Lunge . The biography occupies little more than a hundred quarto pages , and is highly popular . The career of the famed guerilla- chief is

traced with care , and although the matter is authentic , the work reads really like a romance . Garibaldi ' s career from ( he time he entered the mercantile marine ; his engagement to command the navy of the Bey of Tunis , broken oft" by the awkward fact that the Bey had no navy to be commamied ; Ms daring exploits acjiiust the Brazilians : his bold deed

Notes On Literature Science And Art.

in behalf of the Boman Republic against the French forces : the offer and rejection of his services by Charles Albert , of Sardinia ; his escape from the division of the French army , under General Morris , sent in pursuit of him and afterwards from the Austrians—his expulsion from Sardinian territories ; lus sojourn iu New York , where he got bis living by making caudles , with a noble Genoese for his next door neighbour , a vendor of cigars ; his triumphal reception afterwards at Lima ; bis

disastrous voyage to China ; his return , and his recent achievements—are detailed with warm enthusiasm , and will doubtless be devoured by thousands who hope before long to see their hero occupy a place in the world that shall be worthy of his courage , his jiatriotism , and his services in the cause of Italy , and of liberty everywhere . M . Granier de Cassagnac , the well known Imperialist writer , has published a " History of the Girondius and of the Massacres of September , " as an autidote to

( what he considers ) the historical poison of Lamartiue . The Countess de Chalot ( Talma ' s widow ) , who has just died at a very advanced age , was the last surviving actress of the old French comedy . She first married a person named Petit , aud on being left a wictow married Talma . After Ms death she became the wife of tho Count de Chalot .

At Pans , M . Eugene Maron has made a curious little contribution to the history of the great revolution—a "Literary History of the National Convention , " while M . Bmile de Girardin , having exhausted France proper , is directing his attention to its African possessions . " Civilisation de l'Algerie" is the title of a pamphlet just published by him . M . Charles de Bussy has compiled a little volume , useful and interesting at the present juncture , " The Excommunicated , from the most Remote

Times to the Present Day . " The President of the Royal Society , Sir Benjamin Brodie , gave his second soiree for the season , on Saturday night , at Burlington House , Piccadilly . All the priucipal apartments of the noble mansion were thrown open , and a great number of very interesting objects in art aud science were exhibited . Among them were magnificent specimens of gold aud silk embroidery , from Japan , exhibited by Captain Osborn ,

R . N . ; and other Japanese curiosities , contributed by Dr . MacGowau ; M'Cullum ' s linograph , for recording train signals and time ; Melloni ' s apparatus for recording experiments in tbermo-electricity , made aud exhibited by Mr . Ladd ; a new ozone box , invented and exhibited by Mr . Lowe . Two cases of magnificent birds of paradise , from New Guinea , exhibited by Mr . Gould , F . B . S . ; tents used in the sledge expedition in the Arctic regions ; Sir John Franklin ' s pocket compass ; testimonial

enclosed iu carved oak , presented by a committee of Dublin gentlemen to Lady Franklin ; a series of deposit in gold , silver , and platinum , & c , from the negative terminal of an induction coil , exhibited by Mr . Gassiott , F . K . S . ; sections of Glasgow water works , aud photographs of the principal works on the line , exhibited by Mr . Bateman ; illustrations of the photographic effect of fluorescent substances , exhibited by Dr .

Gladstone F . B . S . ; Mr . Gal ton , sun signals ; a very interesting series of obsidian implements and Mexican carvings , exhibited by Mr . Christy ; a series of Celts exhibited by Sir Charles Lyell ; a deep sea pressure gauge , invented by Mr . H . Johnson ; and Hooper ' s application of india rubber for submarine cables . The arrival iu Paris of Dr . Czermak from Pestli , whence he had been fraternally summoned by the French Academy of Medicine , is considered

an event in medical annals . Dr . Czermak is a professor of physiology , whose recent discovery of an instrument whereby tho larynx : may he sufficiently lighted for medical inspection , has obtained great applause all over the Continent . This instrument , which he calls tho larynxoscope , has been on trial in every hospital in Paris , and lias succeeded perfectly . Every disease to which the human throat is subject will henceforth be rendered clear as noon-day to the surgical operator , and the

weaknesses and failings of the human voice are alike made manifest by the flood of light which is poured into the patient ' s throat by aid of a concave mirror reflecting the rays of a strong lamp before which the patient is seated with open mouth , and the introduction into the cavity of the throat on a line with the tonsils of a small mirror attached to a long wire which the operator holds while the examination is going forward . This little mirror being held on an inclined plane forty-five degrees ,

every organ is made visible on the larger one . Even the trachea is perfectly reflected thus , as far down as its bifurcation in the bronchia The interior of the larynx , until now comp letely hidden in the livingsubject , can be examined with the greatest minuteness , and for the first time the whole mechanism of tho human voice becomes manifest to the sight . Dr . Czermak has been received with much congratulation , as being the bearer of good tidings , , of the possibility in future of master

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-04-28, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_28041860/page/8/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
GRAND LODGE. Article 1
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—XIX. Article 1
FREEMASONRY AND ITS INSTITUTES.—VII. Article 3
ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 5
THE FRATERNAL ELEMENT. Article 5
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 6
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 7
THE MARK MASTER'S DEGREE. Article 7
NOTES ON LITERATURE SCIENCE AND ART. Article 8
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 9
UNITED GRAND LODGE. Article 9
METROPOLITAN. Article 11
PROVINCIAL. Article 12
MARK MASONRY. Article 15
ROYAL ARCH. Article 15
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 16
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 17
COLONIAL. Article 17
CONTINENTAL. Article 18
Obituary. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Correspondence.

there be no such degree as that of Mark Master , a great many brethren have wasted much time and circumstance in supporting an immense fungus , and the sooner they be informed of their true position the bettei- for them anil their connections . Before proceeding further , I will await the remarks of any brother who will kindly give his attention to the subject . I am , clear Sir n ; :. ) : } rother , yours fraternall y , - 21 st April . 1800 . K . E . X .

Notes On Literature Science And Art.

NOTES ON LITERATURE SCIENCE AND ART .

— — ~ — ME . AOTISI-W AMOS died at Downing College , Cambridge , on Wednesday . He was educated at Trinity College , graduating as fifth wrangler in 1813 . He took the degree of M . A . in 1816 , having previously been elected a fellow . In November , 1318 , he was called to the bar by Lincoln ' s Inn . Subsequently lie was chosen . Downing Professor of Laws in this university , and Professor of English Law iu the University of

London . He was also for some time a member of the Supreme Council of India . On his return to this country be took up his abode near Hitchin , and was a most useful county magistrate , till ill health obliged him to retire from the bench . He likewise acted as judge of the Marylebone County Court . His works , which are numerous , are principally of a legal or historieo-legal nature . The salary of the Downing Professorship of Laws is £ 200 . the electors being the Archbishops of Canterbury

and York , and the Masters of St . John ' s , Clare , aud Downing colleges . Mrs . Gore , the novelist , who for some time past has been afflicted with blindness , has just undergone an operation which , it is hoped , will eventually restore her to sight . The anniversary dinner of . the Royal Literary Fund will take place on the 16 th May ; the bishop of St . David ' s will preside . Messrs . Blackwood ( says a paragraph in the Critic , which must be

received with caution ) give " George Eliot" ( Miss Evans ) for her new work , "The Milt on the Floss , " £ 2 , 000 down , £ 61 , 000 for the second edition , and £ 1 , 000 when the work reaches the fourth , with an extra bonus on its reproduction in a cheaper form . A meeting of the British Literary and Scientific Institution was held a fortnight ago . in the British School-room in Pera , for the purpose of electing officers for the ensuing y-ear . The Rev . C . Curtis was called to

the chair . On the motion of Mr . Teasdale , ^ seconded by Mr . Knight , the following scrutineers were appointed for the ballot : —Captain Ward , Messrs . Teasdale , Glover , Hopper and Baker . On a ballot being taken , his Excellency Sir Henry Bulwer was elected president , and the Rev . C . Curtis and H . T . Woroth , Esq ., vice-presidents . The election of the

committee and other officers was not declared till a late hour . The lion , secretary , Mr . Knight , has delivered the concluding lecture of the first course , subject— ' ' ¦ Four Hundred Years in Stamboul . " Tiie Stamford i / ercioy / records the death of Mr . Jos . Weils , well known in the vicinity of Boston as the " Fen Poet , " who was originally an agricultural labourer , but by assiduously using the scanty means at his command , fitted himself at the age of twenty-eight , to enter upon

the duties of a village school-master , which honourable post lie filled with great credit for more than sixty years . In common with other village school masters ho took up the work of land surveying , and did a great deal of work in the way of drawing up agreements and making out wills , being in fact a sort of fen lawyer . As a poet be contributed for a series of years to the far-famed " Noble ' s Compendium . " He was very benevolent , and much respected .

Wo iiave some interesting literary news from Paris ; M . de Lamartine ' s complete works will appear shortly , published by himself , in an " Edition Parsonelle , Definitive , Unique . " They will comprise forty volumes , of (' com 5 ( 10 to GOO pages each ; in the course of four years the work will be complete . The price will be three hundred franca for the whole if paid in advance at the delivery of the first volume ( " Meditations Poetiques et Religieuses " ); otherwise , every yearly course of ten volumes

will cost eighty francs . Every subscriber will receive Lumartine ' s portrait with his autograph . M . Barba , the enterprising publisher , has recently issued an excellent popular "History of the War in Italy , " and he has added as a pendant to the same a " Life of Garibaldi , " from the pen of M . Charles Paya , with illustrations by the well known Janet Lunge . The biography occupies little more than a hundred quarto pages , and is highly popular . The career of the famed guerilla- chief is

traced with care , and although the matter is authentic , the work reads really like a romance . Garibaldi ' s career from ( he time he entered the mercantile marine ; his engagement to command the navy of the Bey of Tunis , broken oft" by the awkward fact that the Bey had no navy to be commamied ; Ms daring exploits acjiiust the Brazilians : his bold deed

Notes On Literature Science And Art.

in behalf of the Boman Republic against the French forces : the offer and rejection of his services by Charles Albert , of Sardinia ; his escape from the division of the French army , under General Morris , sent in pursuit of him and afterwards from the Austrians—his expulsion from Sardinian territories ; lus sojourn iu New York , where he got bis living by making caudles , with a noble Genoese for his next door neighbour , a vendor of cigars ; his triumphal reception afterwards at Lima ; bis

disastrous voyage to China ; his return , and his recent achievements—are detailed with warm enthusiasm , and will doubtless be devoured by thousands who hope before long to see their hero occupy a place in the world that shall be worthy of his courage , his jiatriotism , and his services in the cause of Italy , and of liberty everywhere . M . Granier de Cassagnac , the well known Imperialist writer , has published a " History of the Girondius and of the Massacres of September , " as an autidote to

( what he considers ) the historical poison of Lamartiue . The Countess de Chalot ( Talma ' s widow ) , who has just died at a very advanced age , was the last surviving actress of the old French comedy . She first married a person named Petit , aud on being left a wictow married Talma . After Ms death she became the wife of tho Count de Chalot .

At Pans , M . Eugene Maron has made a curious little contribution to the history of the great revolution—a "Literary History of the National Convention , " while M . Bmile de Girardin , having exhausted France proper , is directing his attention to its African possessions . " Civilisation de l'Algerie" is the title of a pamphlet just published by him . M . Charles de Bussy has compiled a little volume , useful and interesting at the present juncture , " The Excommunicated , from the most Remote

Times to the Present Day . " The President of the Royal Society , Sir Benjamin Brodie , gave his second soiree for the season , on Saturday night , at Burlington House , Piccadilly . All the priucipal apartments of the noble mansion were thrown open , and a great number of very interesting objects in art aud science were exhibited . Among them were magnificent specimens of gold aud silk embroidery , from Japan , exhibited by Captain Osborn ,

R . N . ; and other Japanese curiosities , contributed by Dr . MacGowau ; M'Cullum ' s linograph , for recording train signals and time ; Melloni ' s apparatus for recording experiments in tbermo-electricity , made aud exhibited by Mr . Ladd ; a new ozone box , invented and exhibited by Mr . Lowe . Two cases of magnificent birds of paradise , from New Guinea , exhibited by Mr . Gould , F . B . S . ; tents used in the sledge expedition in the Arctic regions ; Sir John Franklin ' s pocket compass ; testimonial

enclosed iu carved oak , presented by a committee of Dublin gentlemen to Lady Franklin ; a series of deposit in gold , silver , and platinum , & c , from the negative terminal of an induction coil , exhibited by Mr . Gassiott , F . K . S . ; sections of Glasgow water works , aud photographs of the principal works on the line , exhibited by Mr . Bateman ; illustrations of the photographic effect of fluorescent substances , exhibited by Dr .

Gladstone F . B . S . ; Mr . Gal ton , sun signals ; a very interesting series of obsidian implements and Mexican carvings , exhibited by Mr . Christy ; a series of Celts exhibited by Sir Charles Lyell ; a deep sea pressure gauge , invented by Mr . H . Johnson ; and Hooper ' s application of india rubber for submarine cables . The arrival iu Paris of Dr . Czermak from Pestli , whence he had been fraternally summoned by the French Academy of Medicine , is considered

an event in medical annals . Dr . Czermak is a professor of physiology , whose recent discovery of an instrument whereby tho larynx : may he sufficiently lighted for medical inspection , has obtained great applause all over the Continent . This instrument , which he calls tho larynxoscope , has been on trial in every hospital in Paris , and lias succeeded perfectly . Every disease to which the human throat is subject will henceforth be rendered clear as noon-day to the surgical operator , and the

weaknesses and failings of the human voice are alike made manifest by the flood of light which is poured into the patient ' s throat by aid of a concave mirror reflecting the rays of a strong lamp before which the patient is seated with open mouth , and the introduction into the cavity of the throat on a line with the tonsils of a small mirror attached to a long wire which the operator holds while the examination is going forward . This little mirror being held on an inclined plane forty-five degrees ,

every organ is made visible on the larger one . Even the trachea is perfectly reflected thus , as far down as its bifurcation in the bronchia The interior of the larynx , until now comp letely hidden in the livingsubject , can be examined with the greatest minuteness , and for the first time the whole mechanism of tho human voice becomes manifest to the sight . Dr . Czermak has been received with much congratulation , as being the bearer of good tidings , , of the possibility in future of master

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