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  • May 1, 1875
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The Masonic Magazine, May 1, 1875: Page 15

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    Article OLD LONDON TAVERNS IDENTIFIED WITH MASONRY. ← Page 2 of 5 →
Page 15

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

Old London Taverns Identified With Masonry.

amongst early booksellers . . . For inns , also , it [ the sign ] was not an uncommon decoration . Thus the White Lion in St . John ' s Street , Clerkenwell , was originally an inn frequented by cattle drovers and other wayfarers connected with

Smithfield market . On the 25 th November , 1723 , the Grand Loclge met at the Crown Tavern , in Threadneedle Street , and congregated at this place nine times . The Grown already noticed was in a different locality .

The records show that the Grand Lodge held a meeting at the Bell Tavern , Westminster , on the 17 th March , 1724 , and some four or five times afterwards . One of the oldest Bell taverns in Middlesex stood in King Street , AVestminster ;

it is named in the expenses of Sir John Howard ( Jockey of Norfolk ) , in 1466 . Pepys dined at this house , July 1 , 1660 , invited by purser Washington , but came away greatly disgusted ; for , he says , "the rogue had no more manners than to invite

me , and let me pay my club . " In November of the same year he was there again , " to see the 7 Flander mares that mv Lord has bought lately . " In Queen Anne ' s reign , the October club , consisting of about one hundred and fifty county members of Parliament , all unmitigated Tories , used to meet at this tavern .

The first session of the Grand Loclge at the Devil Tavern , Temple Bar , was ' held on the 20 th May , 1725 . Between that year and 1767 , it convened there about seventy-five times , showing that it was a favourite place of resort for that body .

St . Dunstan , the patron saint of the parish of that name in London , was godfather to the Devil , —that is to say , to the sign of the famous tavern of the Devil and St . Dunstan , within Temple Bar . The legend runs , that one day , when working

at his trade of a goldsmith , he was sorely tempted by the devil , and at length got so exasperated that he took the red-hot tongs out of the fire and caught his infernal majesty by the nose . The identical pinchers with which the feat was performed

are still preserved at Mayfield , in Sussex . They are of a very respectable size , and formidable enough to fri ghten the arch-one himself . This episode in the saint ' s life was represented on the sign-board of that glorious old tavern . By way of abbreviation , the house was called the Devil , though

the landlord seems to have preferred the other saint ' s name ; for on his token we read " The D ( sic ) and Dunstan , " probably fearing , with a classic dread , the ill omen of that awful name . Allusions to this tavern are innumerable in the dramatists : one of the earliest is in

1563 , in the play of "Jack Jugeler . " AVilliani Rowley thus mentions it in his comedy of a " Match by Midnight , " 1633 : Bloodhound . As you come by Temple Bar , make a step to the Devil . Tim . To the Devilfather ?

, Sim . My master means the sign of the Devil , and he cannot hurt you , fool ; there ' s a saint holds him by the nose . Tim . Sniggers , what does the devil and a saint both on a sign 1 Sim . AVhat a question is that 'i What

does my master and his prayer-book o ' Sundays both in a pew 1 So fond was Ben . Johnson of this tavern , that he lived " without Temple Bar , at a combmaker ' s shop , " according to Aubrey , in order to be near his favourite haunt .

It must have been therefore , in a moment of ill-humour , when he found fault with the wine , and made the statement that his p lay of the " Devil is an Ass " ( which is certainly not among his best ) was written " when I and my hoys drank bad wine at

the Devil . " The principal room was called "the Oracle of Apollo , " a large room , evidently built apart from the tavern ; and from Prior ' s and Charles Montagu ' s Hind and Panther Transversed , it is shown to have

been an upper apartment : " Hence to the Devil——Thus to the place where Johnson sat , we climb , Leaning on the same rail that guided him . "

Here the famous Apollo Club was accustomed to meet . Above the door was the bust of Apollo and "the welcome"by "Rare Ben Johnson . " Over the fireplace were the rules of the club , which were greatly admired for the conciseness and elegance of their Latinity , Over the clock in the

kitchen , in 1731 , there remained "Sinocturna tibi noceat potatio vird , hoc in mane bibes ilerum , et fuerit medicina *

“The Masonic Magazine: 1875-05-01, Page 15” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 6 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01051875/page/15/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
FREEMASONRY CONSIDERED IN ITS RELATION TO SOCIETY. Article 2
MURIEL HALSIE. Article 7
DAFFODILS. Article 12
LES MACONS INDIFFERENTS.* Article 12
OLD LONDON TAVERNS IDENTIFIED WITH MASONRY. Article 14
PADDY'S EXPERIENCE OF ' MASONRY. Article 18
POLLY RIVERS'S TRIP TE STOWSLAY CATTLE SHOW, AN' WHAT COM ON'T. * Article 19
AN ORIGINAL DISSERTATION ON PUBLIC SPEAKING. Article 22
LABOUR. Article 28
"LITTLE DAN." Article 28
Review. Article 29
MARK TWAIN'S ENCOUNTER WITH AN INTERVIEWER. Article 31
LOSSES. Article 31
A SYNOPSIS OF MASONIC PERSECUTION IN THE XVIII. CENTURY. Article 32
BE HAPPY AS YOU CAN. Article 32
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Old London Taverns Identified With Masonry.

amongst early booksellers . . . For inns , also , it [ the sign ] was not an uncommon decoration . Thus the White Lion in St . John ' s Street , Clerkenwell , was originally an inn frequented by cattle drovers and other wayfarers connected with

Smithfield market . On the 25 th November , 1723 , the Grand Loclge met at the Crown Tavern , in Threadneedle Street , and congregated at this place nine times . The Grown already noticed was in a different locality .

The records show that the Grand Lodge held a meeting at the Bell Tavern , Westminster , on the 17 th March , 1724 , and some four or five times afterwards . One of the oldest Bell taverns in Middlesex stood in King Street , AVestminster ;

it is named in the expenses of Sir John Howard ( Jockey of Norfolk ) , in 1466 . Pepys dined at this house , July 1 , 1660 , invited by purser Washington , but came away greatly disgusted ; for , he says , "the rogue had no more manners than to invite

me , and let me pay my club . " In November of the same year he was there again , " to see the 7 Flander mares that mv Lord has bought lately . " In Queen Anne ' s reign , the October club , consisting of about one hundred and fifty county members of Parliament , all unmitigated Tories , used to meet at this tavern .

The first session of the Grand Loclge at the Devil Tavern , Temple Bar , was ' held on the 20 th May , 1725 . Between that year and 1767 , it convened there about seventy-five times , showing that it was a favourite place of resort for that body .

St . Dunstan , the patron saint of the parish of that name in London , was godfather to the Devil , —that is to say , to the sign of the famous tavern of the Devil and St . Dunstan , within Temple Bar . The legend runs , that one day , when working

at his trade of a goldsmith , he was sorely tempted by the devil , and at length got so exasperated that he took the red-hot tongs out of the fire and caught his infernal majesty by the nose . The identical pinchers with which the feat was performed

are still preserved at Mayfield , in Sussex . They are of a very respectable size , and formidable enough to fri ghten the arch-one himself . This episode in the saint ' s life was represented on the sign-board of that glorious old tavern . By way of abbreviation , the house was called the Devil , though

the landlord seems to have preferred the other saint ' s name ; for on his token we read " The D ( sic ) and Dunstan , " probably fearing , with a classic dread , the ill omen of that awful name . Allusions to this tavern are innumerable in the dramatists : one of the earliest is in

1563 , in the play of "Jack Jugeler . " AVilliani Rowley thus mentions it in his comedy of a " Match by Midnight , " 1633 : Bloodhound . As you come by Temple Bar , make a step to the Devil . Tim . To the Devilfather ?

, Sim . My master means the sign of the Devil , and he cannot hurt you , fool ; there ' s a saint holds him by the nose . Tim . Sniggers , what does the devil and a saint both on a sign 1 Sim . AVhat a question is that 'i What

does my master and his prayer-book o ' Sundays both in a pew 1 So fond was Ben . Johnson of this tavern , that he lived " without Temple Bar , at a combmaker ' s shop , " according to Aubrey , in order to be near his favourite haunt .

It must have been therefore , in a moment of ill-humour , when he found fault with the wine , and made the statement that his p lay of the " Devil is an Ass " ( which is certainly not among his best ) was written " when I and my hoys drank bad wine at

the Devil . " The principal room was called "the Oracle of Apollo , " a large room , evidently built apart from the tavern ; and from Prior ' s and Charles Montagu ' s Hind and Panther Transversed , it is shown to have

been an upper apartment : " Hence to the Devil——Thus to the place where Johnson sat , we climb , Leaning on the same rail that guided him . "

Here the famous Apollo Club was accustomed to meet . Above the door was the bust of Apollo and "the welcome"by "Rare Ben Johnson . " Over the fireplace were the rules of the club , which were greatly admired for the conciseness and elegance of their Latinity , Over the clock in the

kitchen , in 1731 , there remained "Sinocturna tibi noceat potatio vird , hoc in mane bibes ilerum , et fuerit medicina *

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