Notes and Queries, Number 80, May 10, 1851 / A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc.
The first of May, eighteen hundred and fifty-one, will be remembered in the Calendar for centuries after those who witnessed its glories shall have passed away. Its memory will endure with our language; and the Macaulays and Hallams of the time to come will add brilliancy to their pages by recounting the gorgeous yet touching ceremonial of this great Apotheosis of Peace. Peace has occasionally received some foretaste of that day's glory; but only at times, when the sense of its value had been purchased by the horrors which accompany even the most glorious warfare. But never until the reign of Victoria were its blessings thus recognised and thus celebrated, after they had been uninterruptedly enjoyed for upwards of a quarter of a century. Who then, among the thousands assembled around our Sovereign in that eventful scene, but felt his joy heightened by gratitude, that his lot had been cast in these happy days.
It was a proud day for Queen Victoria, for her Illustrious Consort, for all who had had art or part in the great work so happily conceived, so admirably executed. And we would add (even at the risk of reminding our readers of Dennis' energetic claim, That's my Thunder! ) that it was also a proud day for all who, like ourselves, desire to promote intercommunication between men of the same pursuits,—to bring them together in a spirit, not of envious rivalry, but of generous emulation,—to make their powers, faculties, and genius subservient to the common welfare of mankind. In our humble way we have striven earnestly to perform our share in this great mission; and although in the Crystal Palace cottons may take the place of comments, steam-engines of Shakspeare, the palpable creations of the sculptor of the super-sensual imaginings of the poet, the real of the ideal,—still the GREAT EXHIBITION OF THE INDUSTRY OF ALL NATIONS is, in more senses than one, merely a MONSTER NUMBER OF Notes and Queries. So palpable, indeed, is this similarity, that, if the long-talked-of Order of Civil Merit should be instituted, (and certainly there was never a more fitting moment than the present for so honouring the cultivators of the peaceful arts), we make no doubt that Notes and Queries will not be forgotten. Should our prophecy be fulfilled, we need scarcely remind our readers of Captain Cuttle's injunction and our Motto.
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NOTES AND QUERIES:
A MEDIUM OF INTER-COMMUNICATION FOR LITERARY MEN, ARTISTS, ANTIQUARIES, GENEALOGISTS, ETC.
CONTENTS.
THE GREAT EXHIBITION, NOTES AND QUERIES, AND CHAUCER'S PROPHETIC VIEW OF THE CRYSTAL PALACE.
NOTES.
ON "THE LAY OF THE LAST MINSTREL."
POEMS DISCOVERED AMONG THE PAPERS OF SIR KENELM DIGBY.
FOLK LORE.
METROPOLITAN IMPROVEMENTS.
Minor Notes.
Queries.
NOTES AND QUERIES RELATING TO SCANDINAVIA.
THE ROTATION OF THE EARTH.
MINOR QUERIES.
Replies.
HISTOIRE DES SÉVARAMBES.
WAS THERE AN "OUTER TEMPLE" IN THE POSSESSION OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS OR KNIGHTS OF ST. JOHN?—(Vol. iii., p. 325.)
OBEISM.
SAN MARINO.
THE BELLMAN AND HIS HISTORY.
Replies to Minor Queries.
Miscellaneous.
NOTES ON BOOKS, SALES, CATALOGUES, ETC.
BOOKS AND ODD VOLUMES WANTED TO PURCHASE.
Notices to Correspondents.
COMMITTEE FOR THE REPAIR OF THE TOMB OF GEOFFREY CHAUCER.