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  • Sept. 30, 1854
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, Sept. 30, 1854: Page 87

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    Article CRITICAL NOTICES OF THE LITERATURE OF THE LAST THREE MONTHS, ← Page 15 of 18 →
Page 87

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Critical Notices Of The Literature Of The Last Three Months,

the building has been opened , but still in a state of great incompletenesscomparing the result Avith the original announcements and those which have appeared subsequently . The gardens , water-works , and fountains , and the lake and illustrations of geology , and other branches of science , put forward as main features in the undertaking , are still quite unfinished . The zoological and the ethnological collections are of great interest , and are arranged with no slight skill ; but they are small in extent when judged

by lists of desiderata which were published . The important departments of raw materials and machinery are only now beginning to be put in order . Under the head of Manufactures in general , there is so marked an inferiority in extent , quality of goods , and even in arrangement , to the collection in 1851 , that this circumstance has , we feel certain , very materially lessened the interest of the whole Exhibition to the general public . These slight discrepancies between the intention and the result ,

have , we believe , led to a very general idea that there is not much to see this year , and that it will be time enough to go when all is finished—a very mistaken notion , but one hardly to be wondered at , and one from which the Company will suffer very seriously . The extraordinary collection of sculpture and portrait busts , and architectural ornaments and reproductions , is alone worth a great number of visits—presenting , as it does , materials for all but a complete study of the works of the most

important races during various periods of history . There may be some exceptions to our approval of the manner in which these have been arranged and set forth ; but we are bound to confess that , if we do not agree with portions of the indiscriminate praise which seems lately to have become the cue of certain journals , we know not by whose hands the difficult task would have been better performed . What we have to regret

in the present state of the management—viewing the importance of the educational objects—are very different matters . They are simply features in the arrangements which interfere with the frequency of the visits required for the objects referred to . The difficulties of a visit to the Crystal Palace—so far as a very large number of individuals are concerned—are comprised in the time occupied , and the expense . At an occasional holiday these things may , perhaps , not be felt ; and asso farthe visitors have beenin great measureidle

, , , , people—country cousins , with money to spend , and holiday makers—¦ kindly suggestions and urgent remonstrances have been alike unattended to . The profits on cold fowl and lobster salad have been clutched exultingly ;—but they are " a delusion and a snare . " Yourself and family spend a sovereign with great unction and delight : but a certain question is considered , at the time when another visit is thought of , and perhaps your family may be left at home . This should not be the case—certainl

y not , either for the educational object , or the commercial one . The Company had better even retail their viands at cost price . What will the industrious artizan say to "dinner , " or rather luncheon , at 2 s . —what will the not more prosperous student P We recollect something was once said about charges such as those of an ordinary chop-house . We take the liberty to suggest both the charges , and the bill of fare . —The journey is a serious objection to frequent visits . Men of business are now not in

the habit of waiting half an hour in a railway carriage before the regular time of starting . The time in going to the Crystal Palace and returning from it , is equal to what can be spent in the building , and will be thought of during the winter months—tho experimentum crucis of the undertaking . The receipts are said to be satisfactory at the present moment ; and the working expenses are put at an amount which seems small , considering the

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1854-09-30, Page 87” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_30091854/page/87/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY MAGAZINE. Article 1
LEIBNIZ AND SPINOZA. Article 5
OPHIOLOGY AND SERPENT SYMBOLISM. Article 30
MADELAINE. Article 39
A SERVIAN WEDDING. Article 51
GENTLE SMILES. Article 55
WILLIAM SHAKSPERE. Article 56
CRITICAL NOTICES OF THE LITERATURE OF THE LAST THREE MONTHS, Article 73
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 91
FREEMASONRY AT MAURITIUS. Article 92
MASONIC MENDICITY. Article 93
ON THE JURISDICTION OF GEN. G. ENCAMPMENT OF THE UNITED STATES Article 97
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 99
LODGE OF BENEVOLENCE. Article 100
METROPOLITAN. Article 101
PROVINCIAL. Article 103
ISLE OF WIGHT. Article 110
ROYAL ARCH. Article 135
IRELAND. Article 136
SCOTLAND. Article 137
INDIA. Article 138
COLONIAL. Article 141
Obituary. Article 148
BIRTH. Article 150
NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 150
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Page 87

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Critical Notices Of The Literature Of The Last Three Months,

the building has been opened , but still in a state of great incompletenesscomparing the result Avith the original announcements and those which have appeared subsequently . The gardens , water-works , and fountains , and the lake and illustrations of geology , and other branches of science , put forward as main features in the undertaking , are still quite unfinished . The zoological and the ethnological collections are of great interest , and are arranged with no slight skill ; but they are small in extent when judged

by lists of desiderata which were published . The important departments of raw materials and machinery are only now beginning to be put in order . Under the head of Manufactures in general , there is so marked an inferiority in extent , quality of goods , and even in arrangement , to the collection in 1851 , that this circumstance has , we feel certain , very materially lessened the interest of the whole Exhibition to the general public . These slight discrepancies between the intention and the result ,

have , we believe , led to a very general idea that there is not much to see this year , and that it will be time enough to go when all is finished—a very mistaken notion , but one hardly to be wondered at , and one from which the Company will suffer very seriously . The extraordinary collection of sculpture and portrait busts , and architectural ornaments and reproductions , is alone worth a great number of visits—presenting , as it does , materials for all but a complete study of the works of the most

important races during various periods of history . There may be some exceptions to our approval of the manner in which these have been arranged and set forth ; but we are bound to confess that , if we do not agree with portions of the indiscriminate praise which seems lately to have become the cue of certain journals , we know not by whose hands the difficult task would have been better performed . What we have to regret

in the present state of the management—viewing the importance of the educational objects—are very different matters . They are simply features in the arrangements which interfere with the frequency of the visits required for the objects referred to . The difficulties of a visit to the Crystal Palace—so far as a very large number of individuals are concerned—are comprised in the time occupied , and the expense . At an occasional holiday these things may , perhaps , not be felt ; and asso farthe visitors have beenin great measureidle

, , , , people—country cousins , with money to spend , and holiday makers—¦ kindly suggestions and urgent remonstrances have been alike unattended to . The profits on cold fowl and lobster salad have been clutched exultingly ;—but they are " a delusion and a snare . " Yourself and family spend a sovereign with great unction and delight : but a certain question is considered , at the time when another visit is thought of , and perhaps your family may be left at home . This should not be the case—certainl

y not , either for the educational object , or the commercial one . The Company had better even retail their viands at cost price . What will the industrious artizan say to "dinner , " or rather luncheon , at 2 s . —what will the not more prosperous student P We recollect something was once said about charges such as those of an ordinary chop-house . We take the liberty to suggest both the charges , and the bill of fare . —The journey is a serious objection to frequent visits . Men of business are now not in

the habit of waiting half an hour in a railway carriage before the regular time of starting . The time in going to the Crystal Palace and returning from it , is equal to what can be spent in the building , and will be thought of during the winter months—tho experimentum crucis of the undertaking . The receipts are said to be satisfactory at the present moment ; and the working expenses are put at an amount which seems small , considering the

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