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  • Jan. 21, 1860
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Jan. 21, 1860: Page 7

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Literature. Reviews.

Literature . REVIEWS .

Personal Wrongs—Legal Remedies . By W . CAMPBELL SLEIGH , Esq ., Middle Temple . London : Longman , Green , Longman , ancl Roberts . WE have great pleasure in directing public attention to the above clear and excellent exposition of the laws governing and providingfor those conditions of personal injuries of most usual occurrence . The name of the authorand his hih position as a lawyerafford

, g , a guarantee for the integrity of the work , and an assurance that the most profound consideration has been g iven it . The author ' s celebrated work , " The Handy Book on Criminal Law , " published last year , having been recognized both by the profession and the public as an invaluable work of reference and guidance , has doubtless induced the writing of the present work , which may almost be considered a sequel to the Handy Book .

The law has been so long looked upon by the popular mind as a dark and mysterious oracle—only to be approached upon extremity—expressing itself in an almost unknown tongue , which few but the initiated can interpret—that for one like Mr . Slei gh to have cleared away the mist that enveloped it , and by letting in the light of common sense and common interpretation , is to have done a great public service . To possess such a work , and more , to study it , is to our minds a matter of duty on the part of every citizen iu such a

commumty as ours ; with all the knowledge we possess and daily acquire , that which would most benefit us is , as a rule , the least sought for and the least understood . Blackstone has well put it , " that it is incumbent upon every man to be acquainted with those laws at least with which he is immediately concerned , " and most distinctly expresses our opinion upon the subject . Mr . Sleigh , in treating upon personal wrongs and the remedies for each case

made and provided , has skilfully divided the class of these wrongs , and given under each class illustrated cases to render more clear by parallel cases the law and its operation . The wrongs treated of are defamation of character—malicious prosecution- —false imprisonment—assaults—malicious arrest and other malicious injuries—of injuries caused through negligence or unskilfulness;—of personal injury caused by public nuisance—of

breach pf promise of marriage—of seduction—and of personal wrongs , as between husband and wife , and herein of adultery , bigamy and divorce . A clear exposition in every case renders not only instructive but hi ghly interesting to the reader this statement of the law applicable to each subject , and we , in taking leave of the work , recognize in the popularity it will obtain , the advent , we trust , of many more works of the same beneficial tendency from the author .

Ceylon . By Sir JAMES EMERSOX TEXXEXT , IV . C . S . With Maps aud Plates . Two Volumes . Messrs . Longman & Co . LEARNED and exhaustive works , in general , are not interesting to the majority of readers ; but this is not the case with the work before us ; for although Sir J . E . Tenneut has crowded his pages with the most valuable and recondite information from the best and most authentic sourcesyet the interest of the reader increases

, at every page ; and the work contains such an amount of research on every subject connected with the famous island , that it will henceforth stand as the great authority to which all will appeal on matters connected with Ceylon . To mention all the topics which Sir J . E . Tenneut has introduced into his book would be to present a more extensive catalogue of subjects than our space will permitso it must suffice if we

, mention the following only . We have presented to us the opinions formed of Ceylon b y the Greeks , Indians , Chinese , and mediaeval European travellers ; its physical character , geology , currents and storms , natural history , its beautiful scenery , its races and their vicissitudes ; the connection of its history with the development and fortunes of Buddhism ; the more recent influence of the Portuguese , Dutch andBritish settlements ; its industry and commercial

prospects . Among a mass of authorities , geology , botany , and conchology , the reader will do well to peruse the very interesting description of the elephant and its ways—an account so readable , perfect , and characteristic , that no one can ever plead ignorance of the subject after reading the excellent description of the life and habits of the animal as shewn by Sir J . E . Tennent . We are told by the author that Ceylon is one of those islands which , through all ages , has found chroniclers who have paid a just tribute to its beauty and climate . We hare the various titles

I of honour which it has received from the Greek , the Indian , the Buddhist , and the Brahman , as follows : — " The Brahmans designated it by the epithet of Lanka , ' the resplendent , ' and in their dreamy rhapsodies extolled it as the region of mystery and sublimity ; the Buddhist poets apostrophised it as ' a pearl upon the brow of India ; ' the Chinese knew it as ' the island of jewels ;' the Greeks as the 'land of the hyacinth aud the ruby ; ' the Mahometans ,

in the intensity of their delight , assigned it to tho exiled parents of mankind as a new elysium to console them for the loss of Paradise ; and the early navigators of Europe , as they returned dazzled with its gems and laden with its costly spiees , propagated the fable that far to seaward tho very breeze that blew from it was redolent of perfume . In later and less imaginative times Ceylon has still maintained the renown of its attractions , and exhibits in all its varied charms the highest conceivable development of human nature .

" The nucleus of its mountain masses consists of gneissie , granatic , and other chrystalline rocks , which in their resistless upheaval have rent the superincumbent strata , raising them into lofty pyramids and crags , or hurling them in gigantic fragments to the plains below . Time and decay are slow in their assaults on these towering precipices aud splintered pinnacles ; and , from the absence of more perishable materials , there are few graceful sweeps along the higher chains or rolling downs in the lower ranges of the hills . Every bold elevation is crowned by

battlemented cliffs , and flanked by chasms in which the shattered strata are seen as sharp and as rugged as if they had but recently undergone the grand convulsion that displaced them . " The soil in these regions is consequently light and nnremunerative , but the plentiful moisture arising from the interception of every passing vapour from the Indian Ocean and the Bay of Bengal , added to the intense warmth of the atmosphere , combine to force a vegetation so rich and luxuriant , that imagination can picture nothing more wondrous and

charming ; every level spot is enamelled with verdure , forests of never fading bloom cover mountain and valley ; flowers of the brightest hues grow iu profusion over the plains , and delicate climbing plants , rooted in the shelving rocks , hang iu huge festoons down the edge o £ every

precipice . " Unlike the forests of Europe , in which the excess of some peculiar trees imparts a character of monotony and graveness to the outline and colouring , the forests of Ceylon are singularly attractive from the endless variety of their foliage , and the vivid contrast of their hues . The mountains , especially those looking towards the east and sonth , rise abruptly to prodigious and almost precipitous heights above the level plains ; and the emotion excited when a travellerfrom one of these towering

eleva-, tions , looks down- for the first time upon the vast expanse of the low lands , leaves an indelible impression on the memory . The rivers wind through the woods below like threads of silver through green embroidery , till they are lost in a dim haze which conceals the far horizon ; and through this a line of tremulous light marks where the sunbeams are glittering on the waves upon the distant shore . "

From the Sinhalese chronicles Sir J . E . Tennent has industriously culled a history of the people ; but it is the history of a romance , vague and shadowy , full of interruptions ; and were European history to consist of such materials , it would soon become a study lacking students ; but if we take into consideration that all these eastern traditions and chronicles have no kind of approximation to what we call history in the west , the difficulty

of collecting such an outline as the author has presented to us can only serve to increase our value for his labours . He tells us that his chief sources of information were " the chronicles , the Dipawanso , Mahawanso , and others ; of these , by far the most important is the Mahawanso , and its commentaries . It stands at the head of the historical literature of the east ; unrivalled by anything extant in Hindustanand unsurpassedif it be equalledby the native

, , , annals of China or Kashmir . " The history of Ceylon is that of a religious monarchy ; the history of Buddhism giving such a predominant colouring , and directing the national policy in the same manner as religion did the Hebrew nation , both under its commonwealth and kings , or as was the case in the west of Europe during the middle ages . Like many other nations , there was a conquest by an organized

race , ancl they came from the valley of the Ganges in the fourth century before the Christian era ; they were agriculturists , and introduced the doctrines of Buddha , which spread over the island , and was a part of the dynasty of their kings . A legend , marvellously like that of S . Hubert , relates that while hunting , the king was allured by au enormous elk to a spot where the great Buddhist preacher was waiting for him , and it goes on to state

how he ancl all his kingdom were converted , and Ceylon consecrated to the worship of Buddha by planting a branch of the sacred Botree , the tremulous Indian fig , which tree still exists ; our author having no doubt that it is the identical tree which was planted b y the devotees of Buddha two hundred and ei ghty-eig ht years u . c , as he fell us in the following extract : — "But that which renders the fallen city illustrious even iu ruins , is the possession of the Jmja Sri Malta Bgdm Wvttmwe , ' the victorious ,

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-01-21, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 27 March 2023, www.masonicperiodicals.org/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_21011860/page/7/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—VI. Article 1
FREEMASONRY AND ITS INSTITUTES Article 2
THE WORKING HOURS OF MASONS.* Article 4
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 5
Literature. REVIEWS. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 10
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 11
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 15
IRELAND. Article 15
SCOTLAND. Article 16
COLONIAL. Article 17
AUSTRALIA. Article 17
AMERICA. Article 18
GERMANY. Article 18
INDIA. Article 18
TURKEY. Article 19
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 19
Obituary. Article 19
THE WEEK Article 19
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Literature. Reviews.

Literature . REVIEWS .

Personal Wrongs—Legal Remedies . By W . CAMPBELL SLEIGH , Esq ., Middle Temple . London : Longman , Green , Longman , ancl Roberts . WE have great pleasure in directing public attention to the above clear and excellent exposition of the laws governing and providingfor those conditions of personal injuries of most usual occurrence . The name of the authorand his hih position as a lawyerafford

, g , a guarantee for the integrity of the work , and an assurance that the most profound consideration has been g iven it . The author ' s celebrated work , " The Handy Book on Criminal Law , " published last year , having been recognized both by the profession and the public as an invaluable work of reference and guidance , has doubtless induced the writing of the present work , which may almost be considered a sequel to the Handy Book .

The law has been so long looked upon by the popular mind as a dark and mysterious oracle—only to be approached upon extremity—expressing itself in an almost unknown tongue , which few but the initiated can interpret—that for one like Mr . Slei gh to have cleared away the mist that enveloped it , and by letting in the light of common sense and common interpretation , is to have done a great public service . To possess such a work , and more , to study it , is to our minds a matter of duty on the part of every citizen iu such a

commumty as ours ; with all the knowledge we possess and daily acquire , that which would most benefit us is , as a rule , the least sought for and the least understood . Blackstone has well put it , " that it is incumbent upon every man to be acquainted with those laws at least with which he is immediately concerned , " and most distinctly expresses our opinion upon the subject . Mr . Sleigh , in treating upon personal wrongs and the remedies for each case

made and provided , has skilfully divided the class of these wrongs , and given under each class illustrated cases to render more clear by parallel cases the law and its operation . The wrongs treated of are defamation of character—malicious prosecution- —false imprisonment—assaults—malicious arrest and other malicious injuries—of injuries caused through negligence or unskilfulness;—of personal injury caused by public nuisance—of

breach pf promise of marriage—of seduction—and of personal wrongs , as between husband and wife , and herein of adultery , bigamy and divorce . A clear exposition in every case renders not only instructive but hi ghly interesting to the reader this statement of the law applicable to each subject , and we , in taking leave of the work , recognize in the popularity it will obtain , the advent , we trust , of many more works of the same beneficial tendency from the author .

Ceylon . By Sir JAMES EMERSOX TEXXEXT , IV . C . S . With Maps aud Plates . Two Volumes . Messrs . Longman & Co . LEARNED and exhaustive works , in general , are not interesting to the majority of readers ; but this is not the case with the work before us ; for although Sir J . E . Tenneut has crowded his pages with the most valuable and recondite information from the best and most authentic sourcesyet the interest of the reader increases

, at every page ; and the work contains such an amount of research on every subject connected with the famous island , that it will henceforth stand as the great authority to which all will appeal on matters connected with Ceylon . To mention all the topics which Sir J . E . Tenneut has introduced into his book would be to present a more extensive catalogue of subjects than our space will permitso it must suffice if we

, mention the following only . We have presented to us the opinions formed of Ceylon b y the Greeks , Indians , Chinese , and mediaeval European travellers ; its physical character , geology , currents and storms , natural history , its beautiful scenery , its races and their vicissitudes ; the connection of its history with the development and fortunes of Buddhism ; the more recent influence of the Portuguese , Dutch andBritish settlements ; its industry and commercial

prospects . Among a mass of authorities , geology , botany , and conchology , the reader will do well to peruse the very interesting description of the elephant and its ways—an account so readable , perfect , and characteristic , that no one can ever plead ignorance of the subject after reading the excellent description of the life and habits of the animal as shewn by Sir J . E . Tennent . We are told by the author that Ceylon is one of those islands which , through all ages , has found chroniclers who have paid a just tribute to its beauty and climate . We hare the various titles

I of honour which it has received from the Greek , the Indian , the Buddhist , and the Brahman , as follows : — " The Brahmans designated it by the epithet of Lanka , ' the resplendent , ' and in their dreamy rhapsodies extolled it as the region of mystery and sublimity ; the Buddhist poets apostrophised it as ' a pearl upon the brow of India ; ' the Chinese knew it as ' the island of jewels ;' the Greeks as the 'land of the hyacinth aud the ruby ; ' the Mahometans ,

in the intensity of their delight , assigned it to tho exiled parents of mankind as a new elysium to console them for the loss of Paradise ; and the early navigators of Europe , as they returned dazzled with its gems and laden with its costly spiees , propagated the fable that far to seaward tho very breeze that blew from it was redolent of perfume . In later and less imaginative times Ceylon has still maintained the renown of its attractions , and exhibits in all its varied charms the highest conceivable development of human nature .

" The nucleus of its mountain masses consists of gneissie , granatic , and other chrystalline rocks , which in their resistless upheaval have rent the superincumbent strata , raising them into lofty pyramids and crags , or hurling them in gigantic fragments to the plains below . Time and decay are slow in their assaults on these towering precipices aud splintered pinnacles ; and , from the absence of more perishable materials , there are few graceful sweeps along the higher chains or rolling downs in the lower ranges of the hills . Every bold elevation is crowned by

battlemented cliffs , and flanked by chasms in which the shattered strata are seen as sharp and as rugged as if they had but recently undergone the grand convulsion that displaced them . " The soil in these regions is consequently light and nnremunerative , but the plentiful moisture arising from the interception of every passing vapour from the Indian Ocean and the Bay of Bengal , added to the intense warmth of the atmosphere , combine to force a vegetation so rich and luxuriant , that imagination can picture nothing more wondrous and

charming ; every level spot is enamelled with verdure , forests of never fading bloom cover mountain and valley ; flowers of the brightest hues grow iu profusion over the plains , and delicate climbing plants , rooted in the shelving rocks , hang iu huge festoons down the edge o £ every

precipice . " Unlike the forests of Europe , in which the excess of some peculiar trees imparts a character of monotony and graveness to the outline and colouring , the forests of Ceylon are singularly attractive from the endless variety of their foliage , and the vivid contrast of their hues . The mountains , especially those looking towards the east and sonth , rise abruptly to prodigious and almost precipitous heights above the level plains ; and the emotion excited when a travellerfrom one of these towering

eleva-, tions , looks down- for the first time upon the vast expanse of the low lands , leaves an indelible impression on the memory . The rivers wind through the woods below like threads of silver through green embroidery , till they are lost in a dim haze which conceals the far horizon ; and through this a line of tremulous light marks where the sunbeams are glittering on the waves upon the distant shore . "

From the Sinhalese chronicles Sir J . E . Tennent has industriously culled a history of the people ; but it is the history of a romance , vague and shadowy , full of interruptions ; and were European history to consist of such materials , it would soon become a study lacking students ; but if we take into consideration that all these eastern traditions and chronicles have no kind of approximation to what we call history in the west , the difficulty

of collecting such an outline as the author has presented to us can only serve to increase our value for his labours . He tells us that his chief sources of information were " the chronicles , the Dipawanso , Mahawanso , and others ; of these , by far the most important is the Mahawanso , and its commentaries . It stands at the head of the historical literature of the east ; unrivalled by anything extant in Hindustanand unsurpassedif it be equalledby the native

, , , annals of China or Kashmir . " The history of Ceylon is that of a religious monarchy ; the history of Buddhism giving such a predominant colouring , and directing the national policy in the same manner as religion did the Hebrew nation , both under its commonwealth and kings , or as was the case in the west of Europe during the middle ages . Like many other nations , there was a conquest by an organized

race , ancl they came from the valley of the Ganges in the fourth century before the Christian era ; they were agriculturists , and introduced the doctrines of Buddha , which spread over the island , and was a part of the dynasty of their kings . A legend , marvellously like that of S . Hubert , relates that while hunting , the king was allured by au enormous elk to a spot where the great Buddhist preacher was waiting for him , and it goes on to state

how he ancl all his kingdom were converted , and Ceylon consecrated to the worship of Buddha by planting a branch of the sacred Botree , the tremulous Indian fig , which tree still exists ; our author having no doubt that it is the identical tree which was planted b y the devotees of Buddha two hundred and ei ghty-eig ht years u . c , as he fell us in the following extract : — "But that which renders the fallen city illustrious even iu ruins , is the possession of the Jmja Sri Malta Bgdm Wvttmwe , ' the victorious ,

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