Notice of the Revue Encyclopedique, &c. 395 
tion of public establishments, universities, museums, hos- 
pitals, savings banks, &c.; national remunerations, accord- 
ed by governments or by societies to learned men and te 
benefactors of the human race ; monuments consecrated to 
celebrated men ; the. phenomena of natural history or of 
meteorology, processes of domestic ee — ex- 
iracts, discoveries of objects of art or of a it u- 
scripts, the finest recent productions of caine e, sculp- 
ture or painting, the progress of mutual saasracgon pe Ri 
by all governments ae —— themselves in the well be- 
ing of their hed ice state of lithography ; the new dra- 
vhich obtain a ig BO of celebrity, and 
the theatres which ~ 
may be Baie iohac of public foeli es ; lastly, « fer 
tices SFinete men whose lives have been illustrated by poate 
tions or by good productions; such are the infinitely varied 
sptis which are created and multiplied in this pllees of 
Be ‘added, < <The Revue Encyclopedique is not then 
nerely a scientific work destined for the savans 3. or, leterary, 
for mere. scholars, or national, designed for one nation only. 
collection — 2 interesting facts, which 
st: man, t 
which all elevated minds ought to be~ all 
generous hearts summoned to form a kind ‘of eléctric and 
mysterious chain infinitely extended, embracing the desti- 
nies of man and which from age to age, from country to 
country, u unites all the rraees “all the works having refer- 
nee to the great end o oUF revagng P ecuee roy. and 
on of man, as well asto the more 
. ee ot pat A Paris of t 
work. - TAS fat as ete peng ye = 
