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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Oct. 1, 1877
  • Page 42
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The Masonic Magazine, Oct. 1, 1877: Page 42

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    Article Architectural Jottings. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article Architectural Jottings. Page 3 of 3
    Article CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 42

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Architectural Jottings.

buildings , instead of by its natural bend round the north side . It appears to have come by the porter ' s lodge , kitchen , and south end of dormitory . All along the east side of the cloisters may be seen the hooked stone corbels , holes for roof timbers and springings of groining . On the south side of the cloisters has

been the Refectory . Its side walls have disappeared , but its two ends are standing . The east end is simply a dead wall ; the west has a radiating rose window like that at the west end of the nave at Jedburgh . Here also , we find a square locker , probably for mazer-bowls and plateand the hatch by

, which provisions were served from the kitchen , through the buttery . At the west end of the refectory outside , are traces of these buildings , and when the ivy is cut there may be seen a roof-mark running up to the rose window . By an unusual

arrangement , which however we find at Darham , the refectory has a vaulted substructure , which seems to have formed cellars , with a passage along the south side , and another from the cloisters to the south , which would pass under the dais , and correspond in . situation with the dark passages from the south-east corner of the cloisters

at Westminster , Durham , etc . In the west wall of the cloisters we have , near where the entrance to the refectory has been , a fine segmental headed recess for a lavatory , in which a modern stonebench has been placed . The recess is about half fairly in the west walk , and half facing the south walk . It

corresponds in situation with the lavatory at Westminster , except that as there is no passage out of the cloisters here , it is placed nearer to the refectory . In this wall again the hooked corbels and holes for roof timbers show very well . Facing the bookcase is a small door leading to vaults

, which have been under a range of buildings 00 the west side of the cloisters , now destroyed , probably the Abbot's lodgings , there are some remains of a porter ' s lodge With a bridge over the watercourse , and a garderobe , the upright drain of which remains

. Such are the remains of Dryburgh , certainl y not inferior in ecclesiological interest to those of Melrose , and very superior Jn their surroundings . Morton ' s view lows 'he cloister court planted as a flower garden . It is now , with much better taste , « " ! down with grass . But' -the air aronnd

Architectural Jottings.

is fragrant with the breath of flowers , shrubs , and especially those of a very fine large kind of syringa , described by the guide as quite a by-ordinar' kind of shrub . The trees and shrubs about the place are allowed to run almost wild , and so they greatly add to the beauty of the scene .

The birds that sing among their branches are the only creatures that enliven what would otherwise be a silence as of death , in a summer's afternoon . At night , no doubt as at Melrose , there are times " When distant Tweed is beard to rave

, And the owlet to hoot o'er the deadmau'a grave . '' aye , over the very grave of him who wrote those lines . J . T . F .

Contemporary Letters On The French Revolution.

CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION .

24 th July , 1790 . I CANNOT give you a stronger proof of the loyalty and attachment of the Deputies from the Provinces than the following circumstance will afford you : — "Some of the orators of the Palais

Royal having , on the 14 th , presumed to censure the form of that day ' s proceeding , particularly in the dignity that attended the Monarch—his being seated on a throne , and his not quitting the throne to take Ms oath of allegiance to the Sovereign , the Nation , they were immediately seized b y the Deputies , carried to the Corps de

Oarde , and irom tnence conducted to prison , where one has since put a period to his existence . "The Keeper of the Chatelet had received a sum of money to open the prisongates on the night of the 13 th , but being discovered , or rather apprehending that ho

was so , he stabbed himself , and hi his agony confessed his purpose ; he has since been constantly delirious . " The Duke of Orleans lives neglected , unheeded , and despised . It is reported ( but I believe it to be one of those reports which a fertile imagination invents , and then propagates ) , that he will soon hid a final adieu to a country where others have

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-10-01, Page 42” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 3 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01101877/page/42/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Momthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
TO BRO. S. B. ELLIS, W.M., SHEFFIELD. Article 1
THE BIBLE—ITS AUTHORITY. Article 2
OBJECTS, ADVANTAGES, AND PLEASURES OF SCIENCE. Article 4
A BIRTHDAY. Article 8
WONDERS OF OPERATIVE MASONRY. Article 8
MASONIC ODE. Article 12
THE ADVENTURES OF DON PASQUALE. Article 12
THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS. Article 15
THE TRUE MASON. Article 19
THE MASONIC LANGUAGE OF FLOWERS. Article 20
MY LORD THE KING; Article 22
SONNET. Article 25
THE ZEND AVESTA AND MASONRY. Article 26
TOM HOOD. Article 27
MAIMOUNE. Article 29
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 32
Untitled Article 33
FOR EVER AND FOR EVER. Article 34
Forgotten Stories. Article 34
Architectural Jottings. Article 40
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 42
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 43
Untitled Article 45
Untitled Article 46
NOTES ON LITERTURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 47
LET THERE BE LIGHT ! Article 49
ANSWER TO DOUBLE ACROSTIC, GIVEN IN LAST MONTH'S NO. Article 49
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Architectural Jottings.

buildings , instead of by its natural bend round the north side . It appears to have come by the porter ' s lodge , kitchen , and south end of dormitory . All along the east side of the cloisters may be seen the hooked stone corbels , holes for roof timbers and springings of groining . On the south side of the cloisters has

been the Refectory . Its side walls have disappeared , but its two ends are standing . The east end is simply a dead wall ; the west has a radiating rose window like that at the west end of the nave at Jedburgh . Here also , we find a square locker , probably for mazer-bowls and plateand the hatch by

, which provisions were served from the kitchen , through the buttery . At the west end of the refectory outside , are traces of these buildings , and when the ivy is cut there may be seen a roof-mark running up to the rose window . By an unusual

arrangement , which however we find at Darham , the refectory has a vaulted substructure , which seems to have formed cellars , with a passage along the south side , and another from the cloisters to the south , which would pass under the dais , and correspond in . situation with the dark passages from the south-east corner of the cloisters

at Westminster , Durham , etc . In the west wall of the cloisters we have , near where the entrance to the refectory has been , a fine segmental headed recess for a lavatory , in which a modern stonebench has been placed . The recess is about half fairly in the west walk , and half facing the south walk . It

corresponds in situation with the lavatory at Westminster , except that as there is no passage out of the cloisters here , it is placed nearer to the refectory . In this wall again the hooked corbels and holes for roof timbers show very well . Facing the bookcase is a small door leading to vaults

, which have been under a range of buildings 00 the west side of the cloisters , now destroyed , probably the Abbot's lodgings , there are some remains of a porter ' s lodge With a bridge over the watercourse , and a garderobe , the upright drain of which remains

. Such are the remains of Dryburgh , certainl y not inferior in ecclesiological interest to those of Melrose , and very superior Jn their surroundings . Morton ' s view lows 'he cloister court planted as a flower garden . It is now , with much better taste , « " ! down with grass . But' -the air aronnd

Architectural Jottings.

is fragrant with the breath of flowers , shrubs , and especially those of a very fine large kind of syringa , described by the guide as quite a by-ordinar' kind of shrub . The trees and shrubs about the place are allowed to run almost wild , and so they greatly add to the beauty of the scene .

The birds that sing among their branches are the only creatures that enliven what would otherwise be a silence as of death , in a summer's afternoon . At night , no doubt as at Melrose , there are times " When distant Tweed is beard to rave

, And the owlet to hoot o'er the deadmau'a grave . '' aye , over the very grave of him who wrote those lines . J . T . F .

Contemporary Letters On The French Revolution.

CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION .

24 th July , 1790 . I CANNOT give you a stronger proof of the loyalty and attachment of the Deputies from the Provinces than the following circumstance will afford you : — "Some of the orators of the Palais

Royal having , on the 14 th , presumed to censure the form of that day ' s proceeding , particularly in the dignity that attended the Monarch—his being seated on a throne , and his not quitting the throne to take Ms oath of allegiance to the Sovereign , the Nation , they were immediately seized b y the Deputies , carried to the Corps de

Oarde , and irom tnence conducted to prison , where one has since put a period to his existence . "The Keeper of the Chatelet had received a sum of money to open the prisongates on the night of the 13 th , but being discovered , or rather apprehending that ho

was so , he stabbed himself , and hi his agony confessed his purpose ; he has since been constantly delirious . " The Duke of Orleans lives neglected , unheeded , and despised . It is reported ( but I believe it to be one of those reports which a fertile imagination invents , and then propagates ) , that he will soon hid a final adieu to a country where others have

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