Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 7.djvu/719

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EGG—EGI
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spat, as it is called, in a single mature oyster, numbers 1,800,000. Among vertebrate animals, fish are the most prolific; the eggs or roe, as they are called, however, often fail to get fertilized by the milt of the male, and great quantities are also eaten by fishes and crustaceans, so that they do not increase so rapidly as might be supposed from the enormous number of their eggs. Thus in trout and salmon there are over a thousand eggs to every pound of their weight. According to Buckland (Fish Culture) a roach weighing f tt> was found to contain 480,480 eggs; a herring weighing / Ib, 19,840; a turbot of 8 S> weight, 385,200 ; and a cod of 20 Ib, 4,872,000. Large quantities of the roe of the cod are used in France as food, and also as bait in the sardine fishery. The sturgeon is also exceed ingly prolific, the eggs usually forming one-third of the entire weight of the creature ; and in Kussia these, in a pre pared form known as caviare, are much esteemed as a table delicacy. The number of eggs in reptiles and birds is com paratively small, the common English snake depositing 16 to 20 of these in such situations as dung-hills, where they are left to be hatched by the heat generated in the decom posing mass. The crocodile buries about 25 eggs on the muddy banks of the rivers it frequents, and the turtle leaves the ocean to deposit from 150 to 200 on the shores of such oceanic islands as Ascension. The eggs of the crocodile are considered a luxury by the natives along the banks of the Nile, while those of the turtle are regarded as special delicacies by people of more refined tastes. Of birds, the most prolific in eggs are those domesticated forms which have been carefully selected by man for centuries, with a view to the improvement of their egg-laying capacity. The chief of these are the duck, which lays an egg daily during the season extending from March to July, and the barn-door fowl, which produces annually about 120 eggs. The rearing of the latter for egg-producing purposes has now become an important industry in France and Belgium, and in a customs return just issued (July 1877) it is stated that eggs were imported into Britain last year to the extent of 753 millions, valued at 2,620,000. The number has increased 41 per cent, since 1872, and it is now nearly seven times what it was in 1856. Besides these, the eggs of the turkey, the guinea fowl, the partridge, and other gallinace ous birds are in great request as articles of food. The eggs of the guillemot are also occasionally offered for sale in our markets, while these and the eggs of other opecies of sea- fowl form an important article of food among the western islands and along the north-western sea-coast of Scotland. The largest eggs are those produced by the emu and the ostrich, a single ostrich egg weighing as much as three dozen eggs of the barn-door fowl. These are eaten in Africa both by the natives and by Europeans. From two to five female ostriches are said to deposit their eggs (10 in number) in one nest, and the natives by removing, during the absence of the female, a few of these at a time, taking care not to touch them with their fingers, but using sticks to prevent any taint of their presence being left behind, get them to continue depositing eggs for a considerable time to supply the place of those removed. The shells are used through out Africa as drinking-cups. The egg of the moa, some specimens of which have been found buried in New Zealand, is much larger than that of the ostrich, measuring in one specimen 10 inches in length and 7 inches broad. A still larger egg has been found fossil in Madagascar, the produce of the extinct sepiornis, and having a capacity equal to that

of 148 eggs of the common fowl.


See Hewitson, Coloured Illustrations of the Eggs of British Birds, 8vo, 3d ed., London, 1856 ; C. F. Morris, A Natural History of the Acsts and Eggs of Birds, 3 vols., London ; Lefevre, Atlas des ceufs des oiscaux d Europe, 8vo, Paris, 1845 ; Brewer, North American Oology, 4to, Washington, 1859 ; Badeker, Die Eier der Europa- tschcn Vogcl, Leipsic, 1863.

(j. gi.)

EGG, Augustus Leopold (1816-1863), a painter, was born on 2d May 1816, in Piccadilly, London, where his father carried on business as a gun-maker. He had some schooling at Bexley, and was not at first intended for the artistic profession ; but, developing a faculty in this line, he entered in 1834 the drawing class of Mr Sass, and in 1835 the school of the Royal Academy. His first exhibited picture appeared in 1837 at the Suffolk Street Gallery. In 1838 he began exhibiting in the Academy, his subject being a Spanish Girl ; altogether he sent twenty-seven works to this institution. In 1848 he became an associate, and in 1860 a full member, of the Academy. In 1857 he took a leading part in selecting and arranging the modern paintings in the Art-Treasures Exhibition in Manchester. His constitution being naturally frail, he went in 1853, with Dickens and Wilkie Collins, to Italy for a short trip, and in 1863 he visited Algeria. Here he benefited so far as his chronic lung-disease was concerned ; but, riding out one day exposed to a cold wind, he caught an attack of asthma, which cut him off on 26th March 1863, at Algiers, near which city his remains were buried.

Egg was a gifted and well-trained painter of genre, chiefly in the way of historical anecdote, or of compositions from the poets and novelists. As years progressed, he developed in seriousness of subject-matter and of artistic treatment ; and at the time of his death he might be ranked among our best painters in his particular class clever, skilled, and observant although he had not any marked originality of point of view or of style. Among his principal pictures may be named : 1843, the Introduction of Sir Piercie Shafton and Halbert Glendinning (from Scott s Monastery) ; 1846, Buckingham Rebuffed; 1848, Queen Elizabeth dis covers she is no longer young; 1850, Peter the Great sees Catharine for the first time ; 1854, Charles I. rais ing the Standard at Nottingham (a study); 1855, the Life and Death of Buckingham; 1857 and 1858, two subjects from Thackeray s Esmond; 1858, Past and Present, a triple picture of a faithless wife; 1859, the Night before Naseby; 1860, his last exhibited work, the Dinner Scene from The Taming of the Shrew. The National Gallery contains one of his earlier pictures, Patricio entertaining two Ladies, from the Diable Boiteux; it was painted in 1844.

Egg was rather below the middle height, with dark hair and a handsome well-formed face; the head of Peter the Great (in the picture of Peter and Catharine, which may be regarded as Ids best work, along with the Life and Death of .Buckingham) was studied, but of course considerably modified, from his own countenance. He was manly, kind- hearted, pleasant, and very genial and serviceable among brother-artists ; social and companionable, but holding mainly aloof from fashionable circles. As an actor he had uncommon talent. He appeared among Dickens s company of amateurs, in 1852 in Lord Lytton s comedy Not so Bad as we Seem, and afterwards in Wilkie Collins s Frozen Deep, playing the humorous part of Job Want.

EGINHARD is best known as the biographer of

Charlemagne. His name is variously spelled in manuscripts. Einhardus, Einhartus, Ainhardus, Heinhardus, are the earliest forms. In the 10th century it was altered into Agenardus, and out of this form arose Eginardus and Eginhardus. The French and English languages have adopted this later form ; but it is unquestionably wrong, and the weight of authority is for Einhardus or Einhartus. The circumstances of his life are involved in considerable obscurity, owing partly to the want of information and partly to the doubtfulness or indefiniteness of our authorities. According to the statement of Walafridus Strabo, a contemporary, he was born in the district which

is watered by the river Maine in the modern duchy of Hesse-