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  • May 19, 1860
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, May 19, 1860: Page 9

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Literature.

the enliro receipts of the Paris theatres from Jlay , IS ; " !) , to April , 1 SCO , amounted to more than ten million' ; of francs , oi- about £ -11 -l ., fiR 0 ; of this stun , £ ' 12 , 82-1 went into the authors' pockets . But , besides this , the fortunate writers and composers obtained lo , Kof . from the theatres outside Paris , 198 , 150 f . from the provinces , and Hi , S 25 f . from abroad ; making up the sum to £ 52 , 0 S 0 . Of the Paris theatres , the Opera Coniiquc , the Theatre Francais , and the Porte Saint Martin contributed

tho largest sums—or respectively , in round thousands , 130 , 98 , and 95 ; the lowest sum contributed by any of tho recognized Paris theatres was 26 , GS 2 f ., or £ 1 , 06-1 . The run of the Due Job at the Francais will give some idea of the value of a prize iu the dramatic lottery here ; this piece was played the other day for the 99 th time , and must have produced already , according to a standard derived from the above figures , more than £ 1 , 300 to the fortunate author . The Secretary of tho society said

that Belgium was the only country where literary treaties are loyally carried out ; with-England the case is very different . He then lashes your theatrical botchers in good style . " In England , " said he , ' ' certain literary men , begging pardon for such an application of the title ,

impudently take j'oiu- works and appropriate them to their own use . Translation is prohibited , but imitation in good faith is allowed . This is what good faith means in England . They take one of your pieces , they change the names of the characters , and the locality of Vie scenes . This done they are imitators in good faith , aud , although they translate literally , evade the text of the treaty . These pretended imitators , these gentlemen of the road , fatten themselves at your expense , without even

leaving to you ( the French authors ) the crumbs from their tables . " This is but too well deserved , aud , if it had been twice as severe , ive must have exclaimed with the Sydney jury , " Served them right . " " Memorials of Thomas Hood , " collected , arranged , and edited by his daughter , preface and notes by his son , are in the press of Mr . Moxon . Alexander the Great ( says a Paris letter ) is ouoe more on the brine ; or , in other words , Dumas Pere embarked ou Thursday last on board his

yacht Monte Christo , at Marseilles for Genoa . Before quitting , he delivered a glowing speech to his crew , and to as many more people as might by accident be within heaving , which was received with thunders of applause . This is not a bad mode of advertisement ; at any rate it is the manner adopted by M . Alexandre Dumas , and he finds his advantage in it .

Wo have to record the demise of the distinguished Swedish anatomist and ethnologist , Andreas Rctzius , Professor of Anatomy and Physiology at the Royal Caroline Institute , Stockholm . He expired , at the age of sixty-four , on the 18 th of April . He was the son of Prof . Retzius of Lund , graduated in 1 S 19 , and soon after was attached as Anatomical Lecturer to the Veterinary Institution in Stockholm , He received the appointment , which he held to the period of his decease , at the Caroline

Institute in 1830 . He is the author of numerous Anatomical aud Physiological Monograghs ; among ivhieh , the one descriptive of the Crania of Ancient Scandinavian Baces , in which the attention of ethnologists is especially called to the modifications of the skull , defined by Prof . Betzius as "dolichocephalic" and "brachyeepbalie , " has perhaps , made his name most generally known in scientific and literary circles iu tins country .

The Itev . Charles Hodgson , Rector of Barton-le-Sti-eet , Yorkshire , has offered prizes o £ £ 50 , £ 20 , £ 10 , and £ 5 respectively , for essays " On the . best Method of Infusing a Missionary Spirit into the Education of the Young . " These essays , the competition for which is entirely unrestricted , must be calculated to awaken the interest of teachers in tho progress of Christian missions , and suggest to them tho best practical measures for seeming the cordial , co-operation of their pupils . The Bev .

~ W . AV . Champuoys , M . A ., Canon of St . Paul ' s , London , the Bev . C . R . Alford , M . A ., Principal of tho Metropolitan Training Institution , Highbury , London , and the Rev . J . Ciabb , B . A ., Domestic Chaplain to the Earl of Carlisle , Castle Howard , Yorkshire , have consented to become the adjudicators . The successful essays arc to remain the property of the Rev . Charles Hodgson , and will be printed for circulation amongst the managers of schools and the instructors of youth . Mr . Hodgson is

District Secretary of the Church Missionary Society for Yorkslure . It is amusing to read foreigners ' , and especially Frenchmen's , account of London . One comic writer gives us to-day the impressions of his supposed residence iu the English metropolis during the last six months or so . He speaks of the May fay files as a kind of votive offering to spring ; talks of youths surrounded with boughs dancing in the streets , and says the display is highly picturesque . He has evidently not tho most remote notion , poor man , that the dreary exhibition is any way connected with the useful fraternity of chimney sweeps , Loudon , ho

says , is-plunged in a douse fog for six months , and the people attend to nothing but money making , by which alone they keep off the spleen . The streets , after five or six o ' clock , he says , are entirely deserted , except by a stray artisan , a drunkard , and a few unfortunates . But his account of a metropolitan Sunday presents the best idea of his power of observation aud his accuracy : He says that he asked a gentleman how the English " spent the Sabbathwhen the latter replied that they rose

, late in the morning , went to church , dined at two o ' clock , took tea at five , and wont to bed between six and seven . JSTOW as our good friend the traveller says he spent six months in London , he might have added the testimony of his own experience to the truth of this description . It is amazing how wonderfully well writers in tho press here are acquainted with England . '

Tho Zoological Society met on the 8 th May , E . W . H . Holdsworth , Esq ., in the chair . Mr . W . Goodwin pointed out the characters of a new species of paradise bird , a female of which was in his own collection , and a male in the British Museum , and proposed to call it Para ' disco , Bartletti , after Mr . Bartlett , from whom he had originally obtained his specimen . Dr . Crisp read a paper " On the oil glands of birds , " and exhibited drawings aud preparations illustrative of the structure of these

organs . Mr . Sclater called the Society ' s attention to the fine series ot strutliious birds in the society's gardens , embracing nine distinct species , and pointed out the characters of the new emu from Western Australia ( Dmnmis irroratus ) , and a third species of cassowary , ivhieh he proposed to name Casiutrius bicarunculatus . Papers were read by Dr . Gray , " On new species of coralline , of the genus distichopora , from New Caledoniadescribed as D . coccinca" —and by Mr . G . E . Gray , "On the

, birds collected by Mr . Wallace , in Batehian and adjacent localities , ' among which were many new and interesting species . Mr . Sclater read some notes on the birds from Southern Mexico , contained in a collection submitted to his examination by M . Salle ; among them was particularly

noticeable a now species of hawfinch , proposed to be called . Coccothranstes maculipcnnis . Mr . Sclater also exhibited some skins of mammals , from Angola , obtained by M . Mouteiro , and called attention to an imperfect skin of a monkey , of the genus eolobus , for which the specific term Angolensis was suggested as appropriate . The Council of the Royal Society have recommended the following fifteen gentlemen for election into the Society . The election will take

place on Thursday , the 7 th of June . P . A . Abel , Esq ., T . Baring , Esq ., M . P ., J . F . Bateman , Esq ., E . Brown-Sequard , M . D ., R . C . Carrington , Esq ., F . Galton , Esq ., 3 . H . Gilbert , Esq ., Sir'AY . Jardine , Bart ., T . H . Key , Esq ., J . Lister , Esq ., The Bev . B . Main , R . W . Mylne , Esq .., R . Palmer , Esq ., Q . C ., J . T . Quekett , Esq ., E . Smith , M . D . The Report of tlie Council of the Royal Astronomical Society gives the following account of astronomical progress . In the ordinary

operations of the Royal Observatory , Greenwich , very little change has taken place since tho preceding year . The observations are precisely of the same character as before , and the reductions have been made to keep pace with the observations . The volume of Observations for IS 58 has been very nearly passed through the press , and will be ready for publication iu a short time . The printing of the volume for 1 S 59 has commenced . The galvanic observations of the Observatory have been carried on without material alteration ; but considerable difficulty has

been experienced in keeping up the time communication along the lines of railway and for the drop of tho Deal ball , on account of the bad state of the wires leading from the Observatory to the Leivisham station of the North Kent Railway . Those wires pass underground , and the difficulty of examining and repairing them is found to be so great , that preparations aro being made for carrying another set above ground across tho Park and through the town to the station of the Greenwich

Railway . It has been the custom at tho Royal Observatory , since tho year 1835 , at the end of every sixth year to collect tho results of the observations of stars and of tho sun during the preceding period of six years , and thus to form a new and independent star catalogue , with independent place of equinox . The fourth of these six-yearly periods expires with tho termination of 1859 ; but as there is reason to think that in the course of another year the observations necessary for forming

a complete catalogue of stars of the fifth magnitude visible at Greenwich may be finished , the Astronomer Royal has decided to defer the preparation of the new or seven-year catalogue to the close of the year 1800 . The printing of the reduction of the Greenwich Lunar Observations from 1831 to 1851 ( in continuation of the reductions from 1750 to 1 S 30 , and on the same general system of calculations and the same elements of tables , as far as circumstances permitted ) is now advancing . The principal object in these reductions AYas , to deliver the

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-05-19, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 16 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_19051860/page/9/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE ROYAL ARCH. Article 1
THE MORGAN MYSTERY; Article 2
THE ORIGIN OF FREEMASONRY. Article 3
MASONRY IN AMERICA. Article 4
MASONRY, OPERATIVE. Article 5
THE MYSTERIES OF THE GREAT UNIVERSE OF GOD. Article 5
ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 6
Literature. Article 8
ERNEST II. Article 11
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 12
BLACKBALLED CANDIDATES. Article 12
VISITORS' CERTIFICATES: ALMONER OF LODGES. Article 12
ROYAL ARCH FEES. Article 12
SERVING BRETHREN. Article 13
AN IMPOSTOR. Article 13
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 14
METROPOLITAN. Article 14
PROVINCIAL. Article 16
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 17
COLONIAL. 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.

Literature.

the enliro receipts of the Paris theatres from Jlay , IS ; " !) , to April , 1 SCO , amounted to more than ten million' ; of francs , oi- about £ -11 -l ., fiR 0 ; of this stun , £ ' 12 , 82-1 went into the authors' pockets . But , besides this , the fortunate writers and composers obtained lo , Kof . from the theatres outside Paris , 198 , 150 f . from the provinces , and Hi , S 25 f . from abroad ; making up the sum to £ 52 , 0 S 0 . Of the Paris theatres , the Opera Coniiquc , the Theatre Francais , and the Porte Saint Martin contributed

tho largest sums—or respectively , in round thousands , 130 , 98 , and 95 ; the lowest sum contributed by any of tho recognized Paris theatres was 26 , GS 2 f ., or £ 1 , 06-1 . The run of the Due Job at the Francais will give some idea of the value of a prize iu the dramatic lottery here ; this piece was played the other day for the 99 th time , and must have produced already , according to a standard derived from the above figures , more than £ 1 , 300 to the fortunate author . The Secretary of tho society said

that Belgium was the only country where literary treaties are loyally carried out ; with-England the case is very different . He then lashes your theatrical botchers in good style . " In England , " said he , ' ' certain literary men , begging pardon for such an application of the title ,

impudently take j'oiu- works and appropriate them to their own use . Translation is prohibited , but imitation in good faith is allowed . This is what good faith means in England . They take one of your pieces , they change the names of the characters , and the locality of Vie scenes . This done they are imitators in good faith , aud , although they translate literally , evade the text of the treaty . These pretended imitators , these gentlemen of the road , fatten themselves at your expense , without even

leaving to you ( the French authors ) the crumbs from their tables . " This is but too well deserved , aud , if it had been twice as severe , ive must have exclaimed with the Sydney jury , " Served them right . " " Memorials of Thomas Hood , " collected , arranged , and edited by his daughter , preface and notes by his son , are in the press of Mr . Moxon . Alexander the Great ( says a Paris letter ) is ouoe more on the brine ; or , in other words , Dumas Pere embarked ou Thursday last on board his

yacht Monte Christo , at Marseilles for Genoa . Before quitting , he delivered a glowing speech to his crew , and to as many more people as might by accident be within heaving , which was received with thunders of applause . This is not a bad mode of advertisement ; at any rate it is the manner adopted by M . Alexandre Dumas , and he finds his advantage in it .

Wo have to record the demise of the distinguished Swedish anatomist and ethnologist , Andreas Rctzius , Professor of Anatomy and Physiology at the Royal Caroline Institute , Stockholm . He expired , at the age of sixty-four , on the 18 th of April . He was the son of Prof . Retzius of Lund , graduated in 1 S 19 , and soon after was attached as Anatomical Lecturer to the Veterinary Institution in Stockholm , He received the appointment , which he held to the period of his decease , at the Caroline

Institute in 1830 . He is the author of numerous Anatomical aud Physiological Monograghs ; among ivhieh , the one descriptive of the Crania of Ancient Scandinavian Baces , in which the attention of ethnologists is especially called to the modifications of the skull , defined by Prof . Betzius as "dolichocephalic" and "brachyeepbalie , " has perhaps , made his name most generally known in scientific and literary circles iu tins country .

The Itev . Charles Hodgson , Rector of Barton-le-Sti-eet , Yorkshire , has offered prizes o £ £ 50 , £ 20 , £ 10 , and £ 5 respectively , for essays " On the . best Method of Infusing a Missionary Spirit into the Education of the Young . " These essays , the competition for which is entirely unrestricted , must be calculated to awaken the interest of teachers in tho progress of Christian missions , and suggest to them tho best practical measures for seeming the cordial , co-operation of their pupils . The Bev .

~ W . AV . Champuoys , M . A ., Canon of St . Paul ' s , London , the Bev . C . R . Alford , M . A ., Principal of tho Metropolitan Training Institution , Highbury , London , and the Rev . J . Ciabb , B . A ., Domestic Chaplain to the Earl of Carlisle , Castle Howard , Yorkshire , have consented to become the adjudicators . The successful essays arc to remain the property of the Rev . Charles Hodgson , and will be printed for circulation amongst the managers of schools and the instructors of youth . Mr . Hodgson is

District Secretary of the Church Missionary Society for Yorkslure . It is amusing to read foreigners ' , and especially Frenchmen's , account of London . One comic writer gives us to-day the impressions of his supposed residence iu the English metropolis during the last six months or so . He speaks of the May fay files as a kind of votive offering to spring ; talks of youths surrounded with boughs dancing in the streets , and says the display is highly picturesque . He has evidently not tho most remote notion , poor man , that the dreary exhibition is any way connected with the useful fraternity of chimney sweeps , Loudon , ho

says , is-plunged in a douse fog for six months , and the people attend to nothing but money making , by which alone they keep off the spleen . The streets , after five or six o ' clock , he says , are entirely deserted , except by a stray artisan , a drunkard , and a few unfortunates . But his account of a metropolitan Sunday presents the best idea of his power of observation aud his accuracy : He says that he asked a gentleman how the English " spent the Sabbathwhen the latter replied that they rose

, late in the morning , went to church , dined at two o ' clock , took tea at five , and wont to bed between six and seven . JSTOW as our good friend the traveller says he spent six months in London , he might have added the testimony of his own experience to the truth of this description . It is amazing how wonderfully well writers in tho press here are acquainted with England . '

Tho Zoological Society met on the 8 th May , E . W . H . Holdsworth , Esq ., in the chair . Mr . W . Goodwin pointed out the characters of a new species of paradise bird , a female of which was in his own collection , and a male in the British Museum , and proposed to call it Para ' disco , Bartletti , after Mr . Bartlett , from whom he had originally obtained his specimen . Dr . Crisp read a paper " On the oil glands of birds , " and exhibited drawings aud preparations illustrative of the structure of these

organs . Mr . Sclater called the Society ' s attention to the fine series ot strutliious birds in the society's gardens , embracing nine distinct species , and pointed out the characters of the new emu from Western Australia ( Dmnmis irroratus ) , and a third species of cassowary , ivhieh he proposed to name Casiutrius bicarunculatus . Papers were read by Dr . Gray , " On new species of coralline , of the genus distichopora , from New Caledoniadescribed as D . coccinca" —and by Mr . G . E . Gray , "On the

, birds collected by Mr . Wallace , in Batehian and adjacent localities , ' among which were many new and interesting species . Mr . Sclater read some notes on the birds from Southern Mexico , contained in a collection submitted to his examination by M . Salle ; among them was particularly

noticeable a now species of hawfinch , proposed to be called . Coccothranstes maculipcnnis . Mr . Sclater also exhibited some skins of mammals , from Angola , obtained by M . Mouteiro , and called attention to an imperfect skin of a monkey , of the genus eolobus , for which the specific term Angolensis was suggested as appropriate . The Council of the Royal Society have recommended the following fifteen gentlemen for election into the Society . The election will take

place on Thursday , the 7 th of June . P . A . Abel , Esq ., T . Baring , Esq ., M . P ., J . F . Bateman , Esq ., E . Brown-Sequard , M . D ., R . C . Carrington , Esq ., F . Galton , Esq ., 3 . H . Gilbert , Esq ., Sir'AY . Jardine , Bart ., T . H . Key , Esq ., J . Lister , Esq ., The Bev . B . Main , R . W . Mylne , Esq .., R . Palmer , Esq ., Q . C ., J . T . Quekett , Esq ., E . Smith , M . D . The Report of tlie Council of the Royal Astronomical Society gives the following account of astronomical progress . In the ordinary

operations of the Royal Observatory , Greenwich , very little change has taken place since tho preceding year . The observations are precisely of the same character as before , and the reductions have been made to keep pace with the observations . The volume of Observations for IS 58 has been very nearly passed through the press , and will be ready for publication iu a short time . The printing of the volume for 1 S 59 has commenced . The galvanic observations of the Observatory have been carried on without material alteration ; but considerable difficulty has

been experienced in keeping up the time communication along the lines of railway and for the drop of tho Deal ball , on account of the bad state of the wires leading from the Observatory to the Leivisham station of the North Kent Railway . Those wires pass underground , and the difficulty of examining and repairing them is found to be so great , that preparations aro being made for carrying another set above ground across tho Park and through the town to the station of the Greenwich

Railway . It has been the custom at tho Royal Observatory , since tho year 1835 , at the end of every sixth year to collect tho results of the observations of stars and of tho sun during the preceding period of six years , and thus to form a new and independent star catalogue , with independent place of equinox . The fourth of these six-yearly periods expires with tho termination of 1859 ; but as there is reason to think that in the course of another year the observations necessary for forming

a complete catalogue of stars of the fifth magnitude visible at Greenwich may be finished , the Astronomer Royal has decided to defer the preparation of the new or seven-year catalogue to the close of the year 1800 . The printing of the reduction of the Greenwich Lunar Observations from 1831 to 1851 ( in continuation of the reductions from 1750 to 1 S 30 , and on the same general system of calculations and the same elements of tables , as far as circumstances permitted ) is now advancing . The principal object in these reductions AYas , to deliver the

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