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  • Nov. 1, 1880
  • Page 12
  • RYTHMICAL SAYINGS.
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The Masonic Magazine, Nov. 1, 1880: Page 12

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Page 12

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

Rythmical Sayings.

in force in the greater part of England , that such lines as the following in their very reality must have had , ancl which Knighton , in his Chronicles , preserves for us . John Ball greoteth yon all , And doth for to understand , He hath rung your bell , Now right and might , And will and skill , God speed every dell * .

Here is another—Help truth , and truth shall help you Now reigneth pride in price , And covefcysef is counted nice , And lechery wifchouten shame , And gluttony withouten blame , God do bote j for now is tyme .

Let us take a third specimen—Jack Miller asketh help To turn his mill aright . He hath gronnden small , The king ' s son of heaven he shall pay for all , With might and with right , With skill and with will ;

Let might help right , And still before will , And right before might , So goath his mill aright .

And once more—Falseness and guile have reigned too long , And truth hath been set under a look , And falseness and guile reigneth in every stock . No man may come Truth to , But if he sings " si dedero , " § True love is away that was so good , And clerks for wealth work them woe , God do bote , for now is tyme .

In the rude jingle of these quaint , and , probably , most effective words , we note the germ of many a popular saw , and which is still preserved in some form or another in adagial or proverbial literature . Archbishop Trench , in his essay on proverbs , gives us several rhyming proverbs , and it mi ght form a very interesting paper , " per se , " if we could collect the rythmical proverbs of different nations . But on the present occasion we propose rather to fill up our pages with those local sayings or " topographical verses" which

linger in the retentive memories of the English people , or may be found in these "collections , " which ingenious archaeologists have made of similar vehicular remains . A great number have been sent to Notes aiid Queries , and other works , and are repeated still in their own localities , and we think deserve to find a place in the pages of the Masonic Magazine , always necessarily favourable to antiquarian research and archaeological memories . For instancelet us

, take the counties in England seriatim and al phabetically , and we shall find more local rhymes than preserved belonging to almost all of them , probably to all , as the list of such rhymes may be increased , we fancy , to almost any extent by local antiquaries .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1880-11-01, Page 12” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01111880/page/12/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
AN ORATION Article 1
THE NAME OF BURNS. Article 3
RABBINICAL PROVERBS AND SAYINGS. Article 4
A SERMON Article 6
RYTHMICAL SAYINGS. Article 11
THE VOICE OF NATURE. Article 16
THE TEMPLE OF MASONRY. Article 18
THE SUPPRESSION OF THE TEMPLARS IN ENGLAND. Article 19
BROTHER! WELL MET! Article 22
THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES. Article 25
AFTER ALL. Article 29
LITERARY AND ANTIQUARIAN GOSSIP. Article 37
"A JINER." Article 40
BRO. SIR CHRISTOPHER WREN.* Article 42
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Rythmical Sayings.

in force in the greater part of England , that such lines as the following in their very reality must have had , ancl which Knighton , in his Chronicles , preserves for us . John Ball greoteth yon all , And doth for to understand , He hath rung your bell , Now right and might , And will and skill , God speed every dell * .

Here is another—Help truth , and truth shall help you Now reigneth pride in price , And covefcysef is counted nice , And lechery wifchouten shame , And gluttony withouten blame , God do bote j for now is tyme .

Let us take a third specimen—Jack Miller asketh help To turn his mill aright . He hath gronnden small , The king ' s son of heaven he shall pay for all , With might and with right , With skill and with will ;

Let might help right , And still before will , And right before might , So goath his mill aright .

And once more—Falseness and guile have reigned too long , And truth hath been set under a look , And falseness and guile reigneth in every stock . No man may come Truth to , But if he sings " si dedero , " § True love is away that was so good , And clerks for wealth work them woe , God do bote , for now is tyme .

In the rude jingle of these quaint , and , probably , most effective words , we note the germ of many a popular saw , and which is still preserved in some form or another in adagial or proverbial literature . Archbishop Trench , in his essay on proverbs , gives us several rhyming proverbs , and it mi ght form a very interesting paper , " per se , " if we could collect the rythmical proverbs of different nations . But on the present occasion we propose rather to fill up our pages with those local sayings or " topographical verses" which

linger in the retentive memories of the English people , or may be found in these "collections , " which ingenious archaeologists have made of similar vehicular remains . A great number have been sent to Notes aiid Queries , and other works , and are repeated still in their own localities , and we think deserve to find a place in the pages of the Masonic Magazine , always necessarily favourable to antiquarian research and archaeological memories . For instancelet us

, take the counties in England seriatim and al phabetically , and we shall find more local rhymes than preserved belonging to almost all of them , probably to all , as the list of such rhymes may be increased , we fancy , to almost any extent by local antiquaries .

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