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  • March 1, 1876
  • Page 44
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The Masonic Magazine, March 1, 1876: Page 44

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    Article NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. ← Page 5 of 6 →
Page 44

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Notes On Literature, Science And Art.

many dreams of erroneous belief and false philosophy , has given to this plant its proper place in the natural productions of the vegetable world , and has determined it to be the fourth variety of Cratcegus oxycantha ( from Kratos , strength—in reference to the

hardness ancl strength of the wood ); natural order , Applewarts or Romacece . ''' Not only did the monks of Glastonbury find the Thorn a source of profit to them , but even " the merchants of Bristol always carried with themon their continental

, trips , some leaves ancl blossoms of the Thorn , and sold them to foreigners for a fabulous sura , making their poor dupes believe that they were to consider themselves very fortunate to procure so admirable a panacea at even that price . " Nor did the

superstition die out at the Reformation . " British Solomon , " who , as Canon Barham sings , in his Ingoldsby Legends , " held in abhorrence tobacco and witches , " was very glad to buy " cuttings and leaves of the tree at an enormous price . " And in

1653 , the Bishop of Gloucester was as firm a believer in the miracle as any of his papist ancestors ; ancl I daresay , even at the present clay , ignorant Protestants may be found who prefer the lying legends to the truths of science . To relate these would

be to reprint Bro . Sampsons interesting little pamphlet . He , in the true spirit of speculative Masonry , applies the teaching to our morals , and benevolently remarks : " As the Sacred Tree put forth her cheering buds and blossoms during the dreariest winter dayssowhen we see the winter of

, , Want , Desolation , or Bereavement , withering those around us , may we be ever ready to yield our share of the sweet fruits of Charity , and to cheer the needy and the helpless by kind words and deeds . " To which every true Masonbe he Jew or

, Gentile , will earnestly respond . So mote it be ! Mr . Frederick Ross , author of several works which I have not seen , is about to publish a volume of two hundred pages on the " Celebrities of the Yorkshire Wolds

and the adjacent Borders . " The same author is busily engaged in the library of the British Museum , hunting up all the information he can find for a larger work on the Biography of Yorkshire . The late historian of Northallerton ( Dr . Ingledew ) was for several years collecting materials for a work on the Worthies of Yorkshire ,

which would doubtless be of great service to Mr . Ross if he could avail himself of that collection . Such undertakings ought to be encouraged in every way ; for , as Mr . Ross remarks : " Every district of country has its heroes and men of renown

its divines , philosophers , ancl poets ; a line extending backward , until lost in the mist y age of the remote past . Of the greater number of these , existing generations have but vague and shadowy conceptions ; some are only known to the antiquary or local

topographer ; whilst of others there remains a mere name , ancl nothing more . Occasionally will their names crop up in reading or conversation , when curiosity is excited to know something about them , and it is often only after a search through

half a score volumes that the desired information can be found ; whilst , in many cases , nothing whatever can be ascertained from the resources of a private or even a public provincial library . "

It was of John Dyer that Wordsworth wrote - . — " If you have not read ' The Fleece , ' I would strongly recommend it to you . " Ancl he adds : — "Its beauties are innumerable ancl of a high order . In point of imagination ancl purity of styleI am

, not sure that he is not superior to any writer of verse since the time of Milton . And he sings , in one of his beautifu sonnets - . —

" Bard of the Fleece ! whose skilful genius made That work a living landscape fair and bright ; Nor hallow'd less by musical deli ght Than those soft scenes through which thy

childhood stray'd , Those southern tracts of Cambria , ' deep embay'd , With green hills fenced , with ocean ' s murmur lull'd , ' Though hasty Fame hath many a chaplet

cull'd For worthless crowns , while in the pensive shade Of cold neglect she leaves th y head ungraced , Yet pure and powerful mindshearts

, meek and still , A grateful few , shall love thy modest lay , Long as the shepherd ' s bleating flock shall stray

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-03-01, Page 44” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01031876/page/44/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
THE INSTALLATION OF H.R.H. PRINCE LEOPOLD AS P.G.M OF OXFORDSHIRE. Article 1
THE SECOND MINUTE BOOK OF THE LODGE OF INDUSTRY, GATESHEAD. Article 4
TREED BY A TIGER. Article 5
DOES THE EARTH RECEIVE HEAT FROM THE SUN? Article 7
WHAT HAPPENED AT A CHRISTMAS GATHERING. Article 10
THE ARMAGH BELLS. Article 13
GODFREY HIGGINS ON FREEMASONRY. Article 13
THE ALBERT CHAPEL AT WINDSOR.* Article 17
SHALL MASONRY BE? Article 18
TO MY OLD APRON. Article 21
1876. PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE. Article 22
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 23
FREEMASONRY IN PERU. Article 25
AN INTERESTING EVENT. Article 26
A FUNERAL LODGE. Article 27
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 30
SONNET. Article 34
THE SITE OF SOLOMON'S TEMPLE DISCOVERED. Article 35
SONNET. Article 39
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 40
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 45
SONNET. Article 47
THE MEANING AND DERIVATION OF SYMBOL. Article 47
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Notes On Literature, Science And Art.

many dreams of erroneous belief and false philosophy , has given to this plant its proper place in the natural productions of the vegetable world , and has determined it to be the fourth variety of Cratcegus oxycantha ( from Kratos , strength—in reference to the

hardness ancl strength of the wood ); natural order , Applewarts or Romacece . ''' Not only did the monks of Glastonbury find the Thorn a source of profit to them , but even " the merchants of Bristol always carried with themon their continental

, trips , some leaves ancl blossoms of the Thorn , and sold them to foreigners for a fabulous sura , making their poor dupes believe that they were to consider themselves very fortunate to procure so admirable a panacea at even that price . " Nor did the

superstition die out at the Reformation . " British Solomon , " who , as Canon Barham sings , in his Ingoldsby Legends , " held in abhorrence tobacco and witches , " was very glad to buy " cuttings and leaves of the tree at an enormous price . " And in

1653 , the Bishop of Gloucester was as firm a believer in the miracle as any of his papist ancestors ; ancl I daresay , even at the present clay , ignorant Protestants may be found who prefer the lying legends to the truths of science . To relate these would

be to reprint Bro . Sampsons interesting little pamphlet . He , in the true spirit of speculative Masonry , applies the teaching to our morals , and benevolently remarks : " As the Sacred Tree put forth her cheering buds and blossoms during the dreariest winter dayssowhen we see the winter of

, , Want , Desolation , or Bereavement , withering those around us , may we be ever ready to yield our share of the sweet fruits of Charity , and to cheer the needy and the helpless by kind words and deeds . " To which every true Masonbe he Jew or

, Gentile , will earnestly respond . So mote it be ! Mr . Frederick Ross , author of several works which I have not seen , is about to publish a volume of two hundred pages on the " Celebrities of the Yorkshire Wolds

and the adjacent Borders . " The same author is busily engaged in the library of the British Museum , hunting up all the information he can find for a larger work on the Biography of Yorkshire . The late historian of Northallerton ( Dr . Ingledew ) was for several years collecting materials for a work on the Worthies of Yorkshire ,

which would doubtless be of great service to Mr . Ross if he could avail himself of that collection . Such undertakings ought to be encouraged in every way ; for , as Mr . Ross remarks : " Every district of country has its heroes and men of renown

its divines , philosophers , ancl poets ; a line extending backward , until lost in the mist y age of the remote past . Of the greater number of these , existing generations have but vague and shadowy conceptions ; some are only known to the antiquary or local

topographer ; whilst of others there remains a mere name , ancl nothing more . Occasionally will their names crop up in reading or conversation , when curiosity is excited to know something about them , and it is often only after a search through

half a score volumes that the desired information can be found ; whilst , in many cases , nothing whatever can be ascertained from the resources of a private or even a public provincial library . "

It was of John Dyer that Wordsworth wrote - . — " If you have not read ' The Fleece , ' I would strongly recommend it to you . " Ancl he adds : — "Its beauties are innumerable ancl of a high order . In point of imagination ancl purity of styleI am

, not sure that he is not superior to any writer of verse since the time of Milton . And he sings , in one of his beautifu sonnets - . —

" Bard of the Fleece ! whose skilful genius made That work a living landscape fair and bright ; Nor hallow'd less by musical deli ght Than those soft scenes through which thy

childhood stray'd , Those southern tracts of Cambria , ' deep embay'd , With green hills fenced , with ocean ' s murmur lull'd , ' Though hasty Fame hath many a chaplet

cull'd For worthless crowns , while in the pensive shade Of cold neglect she leaves th y head ungraced , Yet pure and powerful mindshearts

, meek and still , A grateful few , shall love thy modest lay , Long as the shepherd ' s bleating flock shall stray

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