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; and persons eminent in that science are termed "_good swots_." As I never heard the word except amongst the military, but there almost universally in "free and {353} easy," conversation, I am led to think it a cant term. At any rate, I shall be glad to be informed of its origin,--if it be not lost in the mists of soldierly antiquity. CANTAB. * * * * * REPLIES. THE DODO. Mr. Strickland has justly observed that this subject "belongs rather to human history than to pure zoology." Though I have not seen Mr. Strickland's book, I venture to offer him a few suggestions, not as _answers_ to his questions, but as slight aids towards the resolution of some of them. Qu. 1. There can be no doubt about the discovery of Mauritius and Bourbon by the Portuguese; and if not by a Mascarhenas, that the islands were first so named in honour of some member of that illustrious family, many of whom make a conspicuous figure in the Decads of the Portuguese Livy. I expected to have found some notice of the discovery in the very curious little volume of Antonio Galvao, printed in 1563, under the following title:--_Tratado dos Descobrimentos Antigos, e Modernos feitos ate a Era de 1550_; but I merely find a vague notice of several nameless islands--"alguma Ilheta sem gente: onde diz que tomarao agoa e lenha"--and that, in 1517, Jorge Mascarenhas was despatched by sea to the coast of China. This is the more provoking, as, in general, Galvao is very circumstantial about the discoveries of his countrymen. Qu. 5. The article in Ree's _Cyclopaedia_ is a pretty specimen of the manner in which such things are sometimes concocted, as the following extracts will show:-- "Of _Bats_ they have as big as Hennes about Java and the neighbor islands. Clusius bought one of the Hollanders, which they brought from the Island of Swannes (Ilha do Cisne), newly styled by them Maurice Island. It was about a foot from head to taile, above a foot about; the wings one and twenty inches long, nine broad; the claw, whereby it hung on the trees, was two inches," &c. "Here also they found a Fowle, which they called Walgh-vogel, of the bigness of a Swanne, and most deformed shape." (_Purchas his Pilgrimage_, 1616, p. 642.) And afterward, speaking of the island of Madura, he says,-- "In these partes are Battes as big as Hennes, which the people roast and eat." In the _Lett
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