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s, they are resolved to stretch everything to fit. A. E. B. Leeds. * * * * * GOETHE'S AUTHOR-REMUNERATION. The Note in your valuable Journal (Vol. vii., p. 591.) requires, I think, so far as it relates to Goethe, several corrections which I am in the position of making. The amount which that great man is said to have received for his "works (aggregate)" is "30,000 crowns." The person who _originally_ printed this statement must have been completely ignorant of Goethe's affairs, and even biography. Goethe had (unlike Byron) several publishers in his younger years. Subsequently he became closer connected with M. _J. G. Cotta_ of Stuttgardt, who, in succession, published almost all Goethe's works. Amongst them were _several_ editions of his complete works: for instance, that published conjointly at Vienna and Stuttgardt. Then came, in 1829, what was called the edition of the last hand (_Ausgabe letzter Hand_), as Goethe was then more than eighty years of age. During all the time these two editions were published, other detached new works of Goethe were also printed; as well as new editions of former books, &c. Who can now say that it was 20,000 crowns (_thalers?_) which the great poet received for each various performance?--_No one._ And this for many reasons. Goethe always remained with M. Cotta on terms of polite acquaintanceship, no more: there was no "My dear Murray" in their strictly business-like connexion. Goethe also never wrote on such things, even in his biography or diary. But some talk was going around in Germany, that for _one_ of the editions of his _complete_ works (there {30} appeared still many volumes of posthumous), he received the above sum. I can assert on good authority, that Goethe, foreseeing his increasing popularity even long after his death, stipulated with M. Cotta to pay his _heirs_ a certain sum for every new edition of either his complete or single works. One of the recipients of these yet _current accounts_ is Baron Wolfgang von Goethe, Attache of the Prussian Legation at Rome. A FOREIGN SURGEON. Charlotte Street, Bloomsbury Square. * * * * * Minor Notes. _Parallel Passages._-- "The Father of the gods his glory shrouds, Involved in tempests and a night of clouds."--Dryden's _Virgil_. "Mars, hovering o'er his Troy, his terror shrouds In gloomy tempests and a night of clouds."--Pope's _Homer's Ili
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