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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Sept. 1, 1876
  • Page 46
  • NOTES ON LITERATURE , SCIENCE AND ART.
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The Masonic Magazine, Sept. 1, 1876: Page 46

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Notes On Literature , Science And Art.

NOTES ON LITERATURE , SCIENCE AND ART .

BY BRO . GEOBGE JIAKKHAJI TWEDDELL , Fellow of the Royal Society of Northern Antiquaries , Copenhagen ; Corresponding Member of the Royal Historical Society , London ; Honorary Member of the Manchester Literary Club , and of the Whitby Literary and Philosophical Society , & c , & c .

I AM such an enthusiastic admirer of fine old AVarwickshire , Avith all its sylvan scenery and historical associations , that any good book connected Avith that county is sure to give me pleasure . For the same reason , a bad book—literary work slovenl y

done—about " the Heart of England " and the land of her greatest son , might be reasonably expected to produce in me equal disgust . My various visits to the land of Shakspere , aud the unassuming hospitality of that dear friend Avhose hospitable doors

at Snitterfield Park and Welcombe House Avill open for me no more , have been such red-letter days in the calendar of a care-Avorn life , that AVarwickshire is to me as a fairy laud . Not a whit less interesting to me are its historic sites because remote

, dimly remote progenitors of my own , ( such as the Beauchamps , for so many generations among its mightiest Earis , ) have shone most conspicuously , for good or ill , in its long-gone-by transactions . But , above all , it is dear to my heartas it must be to

, that of eA'ery true Englishman , as the biithplace and home of our greatest poet ; ami wherever 1 wandered—whether by the quiet Avon , —

" Giving a gentle kiss to every sedge It overtaketh in its pilgrimage , " or in pleasant pastures , or in woods Avhere the warbling of birds Avere heard in the self-same songs as those they sang to Shakspere , all seemed part and parcel of

the mighty bard , and sank deeply into my soul . And at times the spirit of good old Michael Drayton too would seem to favour me with his company , even as he did his friend the poet of all humanity Avhen in the flesh ; and I felt as though I looked

into their eyes and listened to their elevating conversations . Imagination is a good gift of God , Avhich only needs to be reined by sober reason to give us pleasures

gold can never buy : and I know of no part of England where I can indulge in what my friend , the late John Bolton hogersou Avould have called " Rhyme , Romance , and Revery , " better than by the bosk y bauks of the Avon , the ruined castle of

Kenilworth , the vcalls of Coventry , the ancient city of AVarwick , the quiet glades of Snitterfield Bushes , the green hills of Welcombe , the cottage at Stratford where Shakspere Avas born , that at Shottery Avhere he Avooed and won his Anne

Hathaway , or that at AVilmecote from which his father brought away the gentleblooded Mary Arden , the church where their ashes repose in peace , or even beneatli the flamboyant chancel Avindow of " hungry Grafton" to say nothing of such historic

, places as Charlecote Park and Clopton House , and scores of others Avell known tu English readers . He would be a poor author indeed A ^ ho failed to make a good book Avith AVarwickshire for his theme .

Those who know Mr . J . Tom Burgess—Avhether by his very popular book on " Old English AVildflowers , " his little work on " The Last Battle of the Roses , " or his collection of " Legends of the Dalcassiaus , " or have heard him discourse , as he did to the Warwickshire Field Club and to the

Birmingham Natural History and Microscopical Society , in one clay , on the natural history and antiquities of Kenilworth , Guy ' s Cliffe , and Warwick , pointing out the objects of interest on the various spots—Avill not be surprised to learn that his newly published work on " Historic

AVarwickshire , its Legendary Lore , Traditionary Stories , and Romantic Ep isodes , " is as interesting iu the reading as it is showily got up . Of "Legends and My thical Lore " he says : — " The bards of the Gaels—the fathers of

the land—sang in forest and in temple the glories of the past . The young Avere incited to emulate the deeds of' heroes , and receive their reward iu the land of the blest . The gleemen of Woden and of Thor , the scalds of the north , took up the strain , and in the famed days of chivalry ths

romancer and the troubadour threw a poetic glamour OA'er the glories of the knightly deeds of baron and squire . In song , in story , and iu legend , many of these remnants of mythical lore have come down to us , and have bevu preserved in

“The Masonic Magazine: 1876-09-01, Page 46” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 20 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01091876/page/46/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
"THE GOOSE AND GRIDIRON," Article 2
DR. RAWLINSON'S MS. Article 3
THE CHARGE. Article 7
THE CREATION. Article 8
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 12
BE HAPPY AS YOU CAN. Article 14
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 15
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 18
THE WOMEN OF OUR TIME. Article 20
" GLAMOUR." Article 22
ZOROASTRIANISM AND FREEMASONRY. Article 22
OUT WITH THE TIDE. Article 25
TAKEN BY BRIGANDS. Article 26
MAGIC. Article 32
FAIRY TALES UTILISED FOR THE NEW GENERATION. Article 32
THE MUSICAL ENTHUSIAST. Article 34
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 34
Our Archaological Corner. Article 35
Untitled Article 36
ISRAEL AND ENGLAND. Article 36
REVIEWS. Article 39
ADDRESS OF P.G.M. BRO. HON. RICHARD VAUX, AT CENTENNIAL OF AMERICAN UNION LODGE. Article 43
A CONFESSION. Article 45
NOTES ON LITERATURE , SCIENCE AND ART. Article 46
Untitled Article 48
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Notes On Literature , Science And Art.

NOTES ON LITERATURE , SCIENCE AND ART .

BY BRO . GEOBGE JIAKKHAJI TWEDDELL , Fellow of the Royal Society of Northern Antiquaries , Copenhagen ; Corresponding Member of the Royal Historical Society , London ; Honorary Member of the Manchester Literary Club , and of the Whitby Literary and Philosophical Society , & c , & c .

I AM such an enthusiastic admirer of fine old AVarwickshire , Avith all its sylvan scenery and historical associations , that any good book connected Avith that county is sure to give me pleasure . For the same reason , a bad book—literary work slovenl y

done—about " the Heart of England " and the land of her greatest son , might be reasonably expected to produce in me equal disgust . My various visits to the land of Shakspere , aud the unassuming hospitality of that dear friend Avhose hospitable doors

at Snitterfield Park and Welcombe House Avill open for me no more , have been such red-letter days in the calendar of a care-Avorn life , that AVarwickshire is to me as a fairy laud . Not a whit less interesting to me are its historic sites because remote

, dimly remote progenitors of my own , ( such as the Beauchamps , for so many generations among its mightiest Earis , ) have shone most conspicuously , for good or ill , in its long-gone-by transactions . But , above all , it is dear to my heartas it must be to

, that of eA'ery true Englishman , as the biithplace and home of our greatest poet ; ami wherever 1 wandered—whether by the quiet Avon , —

" Giving a gentle kiss to every sedge It overtaketh in its pilgrimage , " or in pleasant pastures , or in woods Avhere the warbling of birds Avere heard in the self-same songs as those they sang to Shakspere , all seemed part and parcel of

the mighty bard , and sank deeply into my soul . And at times the spirit of good old Michael Drayton too would seem to favour me with his company , even as he did his friend the poet of all humanity Avhen in the flesh ; and I felt as though I looked

into their eyes and listened to their elevating conversations . Imagination is a good gift of God , Avhich only needs to be reined by sober reason to give us pleasures

gold can never buy : and I know of no part of England where I can indulge in what my friend , the late John Bolton hogersou Avould have called " Rhyme , Romance , and Revery , " better than by the bosk y bauks of the Avon , the ruined castle of

Kenilworth , the vcalls of Coventry , the ancient city of AVarwick , the quiet glades of Snitterfield Bushes , the green hills of Welcombe , the cottage at Stratford where Shakspere Avas born , that at Shottery Avhere he Avooed and won his Anne

Hathaway , or that at AVilmecote from which his father brought away the gentleblooded Mary Arden , the church where their ashes repose in peace , or even beneatli the flamboyant chancel Avindow of " hungry Grafton" to say nothing of such historic

, places as Charlecote Park and Clopton House , and scores of others Avell known tu English readers . He would be a poor author indeed A ^ ho failed to make a good book Avith AVarwickshire for his theme .

Those who know Mr . J . Tom Burgess—Avhether by his very popular book on " Old English AVildflowers , " his little work on " The Last Battle of the Roses , " or his collection of " Legends of the Dalcassiaus , " or have heard him discourse , as he did to the Warwickshire Field Club and to the

Birmingham Natural History and Microscopical Society , in one clay , on the natural history and antiquities of Kenilworth , Guy ' s Cliffe , and Warwick , pointing out the objects of interest on the various spots—Avill not be surprised to learn that his newly published work on " Historic

AVarwickshire , its Legendary Lore , Traditionary Stories , and Romantic Ep isodes , " is as interesting iu the reading as it is showily got up . Of "Legends and My thical Lore " he says : — " The bards of the Gaels—the fathers of

the land—sang in forest and in temple the glories of the past . The young Avere incited to emulate the deeds of' heroes , and receive their reward iu the land of the blest . The gleemen of Woden and of Thor , the scalds of the north , took up the strain , and in the famed days of chivalry ths

romancer and the troubadour threw a poetic glamour OA'er the glories of the knightly deeds of baron and squire . In song , in story , and iu legend , many of these remnants of mythical lore have come down to us , and have bevu preserved in

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