Nor Did He
Omit To Chronicle The Envious Glances Cast, As He Alleged, By Some British
Men Of Science On The Splendours Of Foreign Academic Attire, On The Yellow
Robes Of The Sorbonne, And The Palms Of The Institute Of France!
Pasteur
was, he wrote, the one most enthusiastically acclaimed of all who received
degrees.
I think it was about the same time that M. Renan was in England, and
called upon Sir Henry Maine, Yule, and others at the India Office. On
meeting just after, the colleagues compared notes as to their
distinguished but unwieldy visitor. "It seems that le style n'est pas
l'homme meme in this instance," quoth "Ancient Law" to "Marco Polo."
And here it may be remarked that Yule so completely identified himself
with his favourite traveller that he frequently signed contributions to
the public press as MARCUS PAULUS VENETUS or M.P.V. His more intimate
friends also gave him the same sobriquet, and once, when calling on his
old friend, Dr. John Brown (the beloved chronicler of Rab and his
Friends), he was introduced by Dr. John to some lion-hunting American
visitors as "our Marco Polo." The visitors evidently took the statement in
a literal sense, and scrutinised Yule closely.[70]
In 1886 Yule published his delightful Anglo-Indian Glossary, with the
whimsical but felicitous sub-title of Hobson-Jobson (the name given by
the rank and file of the British Army in India to the religious festival
in celebration of Hassan and Husain).
This Glossary was an abiding interest to both Yule and the present
writer.
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