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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Feb. 1, 1877
  • Page 19
  • ST. PAUL'S CATHEDRAL.
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The Masonic Magazine, Feb. 1, 1877: Page 19

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    Article ST. PAUL'S CATHEDRAL. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article CHURCH GARDENS. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 19

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

St. Paul's Cathedral.

pezoidal form , containing the head of a / ; cherub in gold , surrounded by white iving 4 i on a dark ground . All the five lowei \ compartments have their figures in colours , aud all but the hig hest and lowest have grounds of gold ; the surrounding

mouldings are white relieved Avith gilding . Above the highest compartments round the opening to the lantern runs a blue band enriched with large gold stars . Over this is another band , with an inscription in blue or black letters on a gold

ground referring to the completion , not of the mosaic decorations , but of the construction of the cupola . Through the opening is seen the hemispherical ceiling of the lantern , on Avhich is a mosaic by Provenzale , representing the Almighty , dis

but , OAving to its distance , barely - tinguishable from beloAv . " Mr . Oldfield then asks wherein lies the superiority of the Dome of St . Peter ' s over the many other cupolas adorned in various colours with figure-subjects of the hig hest relig ious interest , Avhich since the days of Brunelleschi have sprung up

throughout Italy ; and he finds an answer in the fact that it conforms more nearly than any other he knows to the principles which ought to regulate the ornamentation of cupolas . The decorator , he says , has set off the size and form of the dome itself bappropriate treatment of its

sury face : second he has suggested by figure subjects such a tone of thought as accords with the purpose of the building ; third , he has gratified the eye by combining richness and harmony of colour ; the first an architecturalthe second a religiousand

, , the third a sensuous end . Such is the way in Avhich he would have the dome of St . Paul ' s decorated , and there are special reasons , he thinks , for now selecting this part of the Cathedral as the field for beginning the work of completion ,

particularly as this is the part of the work which may be attempted with least risk of fanning aneAv the noAV smouldering embers of former controversy . If his views are approved in princip le , Mr . Oldfield thinks the execution of them is a question of more detail .

Church Gardens.

CHURCH GARDENS .

u " x \ i iBBA ^ /" / \ sfo / m ^ " Garden . " ^ fvDo ^ y — THERE is no p lace Avhere our backAvardness in all that is best and most essential in gardening is more apparent than in the

churchyard . All the advantages that could be desired for a charming garden are sometimes combined in these places , yet the rule is to see them as bare as a housetop , ancl much less interesting as regards vegetation than the very ditches by Avhich

they are surrounded . This is true , not of churchyards in toAvns , but in the fairest parts of our fairest counties . Indeed , in cities and toAvns , trees and shrubs often embellish the space around the church , Avhereas in some beautiful parts

of Kent , or Surrey , or Warwickshire , it is common to see a church Avithout a particle of graceful vegetation on either the walls of the church , the ground , or the low walls that sometimes surround the Avhole , yet no spots are more easily converted into lovely gardens ; and in these days of costly church decorations from Southampton Street one may surely not in vain , call attention

to the wants of the church garden . Thousands spent on the most elaborate artistic decorations indoors Avill never produce such a beautiful and all-satisfying result as a few score pounds judiciously spent in converting the churchyard into a

church garden . There are several reasons Avhy churchyards are more than usually favourable spots for the formation of gardens of the best kind . The site and situation in the country at least are frequentlfavourable and icturesquethe soil

y p , is generally suitable , the tree planter has usually the assurance that what he does Avill remain ior ages , the associations of the spot are such as to make the mind aAvake to the influences of great natural beautythe walls of the church usually

, offer the finest opportunities for the disp lay of the noblest hardy climbers , the walls of the churchyard advantages for the development of those of more humble growth , the ground is generally admirably adapted for noble treesand the very turf

, may easily be converted into a garden of delight . These we should begin Avith trees . One , the yew , is even more endur-2 K

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-02-01, Page 19” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 10 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01021877/page/19/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 3
SONNET. Article 3
LETTER OF BRO. W. J. HUGHAN, OF ENGLAND, TO THE GRAND LODGE UF OHIO. Article 4
THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES AND MODERN FREEMASONRY; THEIR ANALOGIES CONSIDERED. Article 7
LINES TO THE CRAFT. Article 11
OLD LONDON. Article 12
ON READING. Article 13
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 15
ST. PAUL'S CATHEDRAL. Article 17
CHURCH GARDENS. Article 19
THE ENCHANTED ISLE OF THE SEA. Article 21
THE BYZANTINE AND TURKISH EMPIRES. Article 24
GERARD MONTAGU: Article 26
BURMAH.* Article 28
THE MASONIC ANGEL. Article 30
A LEGEND. Article 32
FREEMASONRY IN FRANCE. Article 33
" BLIND." Article 35
THE BRAKEMAN'S STORY. Article 35
A LAY OF MODERN DURHAM. Article 37
MEMBERSHIP OF LODGES IN ENGLAND AND IRELAND. Article 38
A CIGAR SCIENTIFICALLY DISSECTED. Article 40
NOTES BY FATHER FOY ON HIS SECOND LECTURE. Article 42
LINDISFARNE ABBEY. Article 46
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 47
THE WIDOWED SISTERS. Article 50
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

St. Paul's Cathedral.

pezoidal form , containing the head of a / ; cherub in gold , surrounded by white iving 4 i on a dark ground . All the five lowei \ compartments have their figures in colours , aud all but the hig hest and lowest have grounds of gold ; the surrounding

mouldings are white relieved Avith gilding . Above the highest compartments round the opening to the lantern runs a blue band enriched with large gold stars . Over this is another band , with an inscription in blue or black letters on a gold

ground referring to the completion , not of the mosaic decorations , but of the construction of the cupola . Through the opening is seen the hemispherical ceiling of the lantern , on Avhich is a mosaic by Provenzale , representing the Almighty , dis

but , OAving to its distance , barely - tinguishable from beloAv . " Mr . Oldfield then asks wherein lies the superiority of the Dome of St . Peter ' s over the many other cupolas adorned in various colours with figure-subjects of the hig hest relig ious interest , Avhich since the days of Brunelleschi have sprung up

throughout Italy ; and he finds an answer in the fact that it conforms more nearly than any other he knows to the principles which ought to regulate the ornamentation of cupolas . The decorator , he says , has set off the size and form of the dome itself bappropriate treatment of its

sury face : second he has suggested by figure subjects such a tone of thought as accords with the purpose of the building ; third , he has gratified the eye by combining richness and harmony of colour ; the first an architecturalthe second a religiousand

, , the third a sensuous end . Such is the way in Avhich he would have the dome of St . Paul ' s decorated , and there are special reasons , he thinks , for now selecting this part of the Cathedral as the field for beginning the work of completion ,

particularly as this is the part of the work which may be attempted with least risk of fanning aneAv the noAV smouldering embers of former controversy . If his views are approved in princip le , Mr . Oldfield thinks the execution of them is a question of more detail .

Church Gardens.

CHURCH GARDENS .

u " x \ i iBBA ^ /" / \ sfo / m ^ " Garden . " ^ fvDo ^ y — THERE is no p lace Avhere our backAvardness in all that is best and most essential in gardening is more apparent than in the

churchyard . All the advantages that could be desired for a charming garden are sometimes combined in these places , yet the rule is to see them as bare as a housetop , ancl much less interesting as regards vegetation than the very ditches by Avhich

they are surrounded . This is true , not of churchyards in toAvns , but in the fairest parts of our fairest counties . Indeed , in cities and toAvns , trees and shrubs often embellish the space around the church , Avhereas in some beautiful parts

of Kent , or Surrey , or Warwickshire , it is common to see a church Avithout a particle of graceful vegetation on either the walls of the church , the ground , or the low walls that sometimes surround the Avhole , yet no spots are more easily converted into lovely gardens ; and in these days of costly church decorations from Southampton Street one may surely not in vain , call attention

to the wants of the church garden . Thousands spent on the most elaborate artistic decorations indoors Avill never produce such a beautiful and all-satisfying result as a few score pounds judiciously spent in converting the churchyard into a

church garden . There are several reasons Avhy churchyards are more than usually favourable spots for the formation of gardens of the best kind . The site and situation in the country at least are frequentlfavourable and icturesquethe soil

y p , is generally suitable , the tree planter has usually the assurance that what he does Avill remain ior ages , the associations of the spot are such as to make the mind aAvake to the influences of great natural beautythe walls of the church usually

, offer the finest opportunities for the disp lay of the noblest hardy climbers , the walls of the churchyard advantages for the development of those of more humble growth , the ground is generally admirably adapted for noble treesand the very turf

, may easily be converted into a garden of delight . These we should begin Avith trees . One , the yew , is even more endur-2 K

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