Page:Jesuit Education.djvu/253

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JESUIT EDUCATION IN THE 19th CENTURY.
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reviews.[1] Of his work on "Arthropoda" the Canadian Entomologist says: "Dr. Wasmann has given us the greatest contribution on this interesting subject ever made, and one that must become a classic in Entomology."[2] Other prominent biologists are the French Father Panthel who received the prix de Thore from the Institut de France for an anatomical work published in 1898; the Dutch Father Bolsius, an authority in microscopic anatomy; the Belgian Father Dierkx, whose important researches on morphology are published in La Celulle (Louvain, 1890-1900). These names suffice to prove that the Jesuits are by no means "enemies of progress and intolerant of everything new," as M. Compayré represents them.

Other departments of modern science are successfully cultivated by Jesuits. We mention only Father Strassmaier, who by experts is called one of the first Assyriologists.[3] Recently Father Dahlmann is becoming very prominent by publications on Indian and Chinese philosophy. His works have been greatly praised by Professor Max Müller of Oxford and other Orientalists. On the field of literature we call attention to a recent production of the German Jesuit Baumgartner: History of Universal Literature.[4] Sel-

  1. See, v. g., Nature, London 1901, Dec. 12, p. 136; and Professor Wheeler of Texas University in the American Naturalist, 1901, vol. XXXV, 414-418.
  2. Canadian Entomologist, January 1895, p. 23.
  3. See Oppert in Le Télégraphe, Nov. 27, 1887. – Dr. Bezold in Wiener Zeitschrift für Kunde des Morgenlandes, vol. II, p. 78. – Hugo Winkler in the Berliner philosophische Wochenschrift, 1888, p. 851.
  4. Geschichte der Weltliteratur. Up to 1900 four volumes were out: 1) Literature of Western Asia and the Countries of the Nile. 2) Literature of India and Eastern Asia (China