JANUS DOUSA.
Lord Kingsborough’s Antiquities of Mexico.—Has Lord Kingsborough’s splendid work on Mexican hieroglyphics ever been completed or not?
J.A. GILES.
[This magnificent work has
been recently completed by the
publication of the eighth
volume, which may, we believe, be
procured from Mr. Henry Bohn.—ED.]
Aerostation (Vol. ii., p. 199.).—The article BALLOON, in the Penny Cyclopaedia, would give C.B.M. a good many references. The early works there mentioned are those of Faujas de St. Fond, Bourgeois, and Cavallo; to which I add the following: Thomas Baldwin, Airopaidia, containing the Narrative of a Balloon Excursion from Chester, Sept. 8. 1785. Chester, 1786, 8vo. (pp. 360.).
Vincent Lunardi published the account of his voyage (the first made in England) in a series of letters to a friend. The title is torn out in my copy. The first page begins, “An Account of the First Aerial Voyage in England. Letter I. London, July 15. 1784.” (8vo. pp. 66 + ii. with a plate.) It ends with a poetical epistle to Lunardi by “a gentleman well known in the literary world” (query, the same who is thus cited in our day?) from which the following extracts are taken as a specimen of the original balloon jokes:—
“The multitude scarcely believed
that a man,
With his senses about him could form such
a plan,
And thought that as Bedlam was so very
nigh,
You had better been there than turned
loose in the sky.
* * * * *
“In their own way of thinking, all
felt and all reasoned,
Greedy aldermen judged that your flight
was ill-seasoned,
That you’d better have taken a good
dinner first,
Nor have pinched your poor stomach by
hunger or thirst.
“In perfect indifference the beau
yawned a blessing,
And feared before night that your hair
would want dressing;
But the ladies, all zeal, sent their wishes
in air,
For a man of such spirit is ever their
care.
“Attornies were puzzled how now
they could sue you,
Underwriters, what premium they’d
now take to do you;
While the sallow-faced Jew, of his monies
so fond,
Thanked Moses he never had taken your
bond.”
Mr. Baldwin ascended in Lunardi’s balloon, the latter being present at the start, though not taking part in the voyage.
M.
Concolinel (Vol. ii., p. 217.).—I have been many years engaged in researches connected with {318} the original music of Shakspeare’s Plays, but it has not been my good fortune to meet with the air of Concolinel. The communication of your correspondent R. is of the greatest interest, and I should be for ever grateful if he would allow me to see the manuscript in question, in order that I might test the genuineness of the air “stated, in a recent hand, to be the tune of Concolinel mentioned by Shakspeare.”