FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39  
>>  
nfer, that there must be land at the north pole, from which this body was separated; and that if it could have been entirely crossed, Captain Parry and his companions would have found a clear sea for the boats, and had little difficulty in reaching Polar Land.--_Literary Gazette_. _Pemecan._ This substance (mentioned in our recent abstract of the Polar Expedition as part of the provision for the crew) consists of meat prepared in the same way that the Indians prepare their provision of buffalo or deer. The flesh, _beef_ in this case, is cut into stripes, and dried by the smoke of wood. It is then beaten into a powder, and an equal proportion of fat being melted, the whole is mixed up together into a solid mass. It is evident that more of real sustenance from animal matter cannot be combined in any less bulky or burdensome compound. It makes an excellent and very nutritious soup. _Egyptian Architecture._ It is somewhat surprising, that among the crowd of novelties, and very especially of attempts to depart from the received models of architecture, the _Egyptian_ has not taken its share. It is true that some very partial attempts have been made; in the metropolis, we believe, not exceeding two; and if we add to these a school recently erected at Devonport, a mausoleum at Trentham for the Stafford family, and an iron-manufactory now erecting in Wales, we have probably enumerated the whole. Such as the examples have been, they have not spread; and, indeed, we may say, that they have scarcely attracted any notice, whether for good or evil; though the publicity and singularity of aspect of the most accessible specimen in Piccadilly might have at least been expected to distinguish it, in the general eye, from the buildings by which it is surrounded. As to the public, we find no difficulty in accounting for this. This style has not been pointed out to them, and they have not been desired either to admire or dislike it. Why the architects have neglected it, they must themselves explain, since we believe there have been but two in that profession who have been concerned with the buildings to which we have alluded, the last named of these being an attempt of a dillettante in the art. As to the specimens where it has been thought fit to introduce the Egyptian window or doorway in churches of a Greek design, we consider the attempt faulty and censurable. This is a false and misplaced ambition after novelty, which marks
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39  
>>  



Top keywords:
Egyptian
 

attempt

 

provision

 

difficulty

 

buildings

 

attempts

 
school
 

publicity

 

singularity

 

accessible


specimen

 

exceeding

 

notice

 

Piccadilly

 
aspect
 

scarcely

 

Trentham

 

enumerated

 

Stafford

 

erecting


manufactory
 

family

 

examples

 
recently
 
erected
 

mausoleum

 

Devonport

 

spread

 

attracted

 

thought


introduce

 

window

 

specimens

 

alluded

 

dillettante

 

doorway

 

churches

 
ambition
 

misplaced

 

novelty


censurable

 

design

 
faulty
 
concerned
 

accounting

 

metropolis

 
pointed
 

public

 
distinguish
 

expected