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  • Jan. 1, 1856
  • Page 37
  • EEVIEWS OF HEW BOOKS.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Jan. 1, 1856: Page 37

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    Article EEVIEWS OF HEW BOOKS. ← Page 6 of 8 →
Page 37

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Eeviews Of Hew Books.

few of the enemy were dead within our lines ; along the whole front of the position they lay in the coppice . Every bush hid a dead man , and in some places small groups lay heaped . In a spot which might have been covered by a common hell-tent , I saw lying four Englishmen and seven Russians . All the field was strewn ; but the-space in front of the two-gun battery , where the Guards fought , "bore terrible pre-eminence in slaughter . The sides of the hill , up to and around the battery , were literally heaped with bodies . It was painful to see the noble

Guardsmen , with their large forms and fine faces , lying amidst the dogged ^ lowbrowed Russians . One Guardsman lay in advance of the "battery on his back , with his arms raised in the very act of thrusting with the bayonet ; he had been killed by a bullet entering through the right eye . His coat was open , and I read his name on the Guernsey frock underneath—an odd name— ' Mustow . ' While I was wondering why his arms had not obeyed the laws of gravity , and fallen by his side when he fell dead , a Guardsman came up and told me he had seen Mustow rush out of the battery and charge with the bayonet , with which he was thrusting

at two or three of the enemy when he was shot . In their last charges , the Russians must have trodden at every step on the bodies of their comrades . In the bushes all around wounded men were groaning in such numbers , that some lay two days before their turn came to be carried away . I passed a Russian with a broken leg , whom some scoundrel had stripped to his shirt , and calling a soldier who was passing , desired him to take a coat from a dead man and put it on the unfortunate creature ; at the same time directing the attention of a party of men collecting the wounded to the place where he lay . Passing the same spot

next day , I saw the Russian lying motionless with his eyes closed , and told a French soldier who was near to see if he was dead ; the Frenchman , strolling up with his hands in his pockets , pushed his foot against the Russian ' s head ; the stiffened body moved altogether like a piece of wood , and the soldier with a shrug and one word ' mort , ' passed on . Large trenches were dug on the ground for the dead ; the Russians lay apart ; the French and English were ranged side

by side . Few sights can be imagined more strange and sad in their ghastliness than that of dead men lying in ranks , shoulder to shoulder , with upturned faces , and limbs composed , except where some stiffened arm and hand remain pointing upward . The faces and hands of the slain assume , immediately after death , the appearance of wax or clay : the lips parting show the teeth ; the hair and moustache become frouzy , and the body of him who , half an hour before , was a smart soldier , wears a soiled and faded aspect .

" Down the ravine along which the Woronzoff-road runs to the valley , the dead horses were dragged and lay in rows ; the English artillery alone lost eighty . The ravine , like all those channelling the plains , is wild and barren ; the sides have been cut down steeply for the sake of the limestone , which lies close to the surface , in beds of remarkable thickness . A lime-kiln , about ten feet square , built into the side of the hill , afforded a ready-made sepulchre for the enemy left on this part of the field , and was filled with bodies to the top , on which a layer of earth was tlven thro wn . ''

"PAMPHLETS . "We have received from India the copy of a Sermon preached in Christ Church , Massoorie , before the Officers and Brethren of lodge u I ) all tousle f No . 922 , of Mussoorie and Delira . Hy the Kev . and V . ~ W \ Bro . T . C . Sm ' ytii . Agra .- —One of

the most masterly defences of Masonry against its opponents we have ever read . It places the Craft in its proper position as an aider and abettor of that highest of all principles , Christian love , and the whole sermon is replete with vigorous thought and irrefragable argument . Some very common yet striking questions of conscience , relative to Masonry , receive here , in an appendix , a satisfactory and

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1856-01-01, Page 37” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 5 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01011856/page/37/.
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Title Category Page
THE FBEEMASONS' MONTHLY MAGAZINE. Article 1
JAIUARY 1, 1856. Article 1
TIME. Article 1
NOTES OE A YACHT'S CRUISE TO BALAKLAVA. Article 6
VOICES FROM DEAD NATIONS. BY KENNETH R. H. MACKENZIE, F.S.A., Ph.D. Article 13
THE SIGNS OE ENGLAND. Article 19
MASONIC REMINISCENCES. Article 24
TIME AND HIS BAG. Article 31
REVIEWS OF HEW BOOKS. Article 32
NOTES AHD QUERIES Article 39
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 40
THE MASONIC MIRROR Article 42
UNITED GRAND LODGE. Article 42
METROPOLITAN. Article 46
INSTRUCTION. Article 53
PROVINCIAL. Article 56
ROYAL ARCH. Article 65
SCOTLAND. Article 68
SUMMARY OF HEWS FOR DECEMBER. Article 70
NOTICE. Article 72
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 72
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Page 37

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

Eeviews Of Hew Books.

few of the enemy were dead within our lines ; along the whole front of the position they lay in the coppice . Every bush hid a dead man , and in some places small groups lay heaped . In a spot which might have been covered by a common hell-tent , I saw lying four Englishmen and seven Russians . All the field was strewn ; but the-space in front of the two-gun battery , where the Guards fought , "bore terrible pre-eminence in slaughter . The sides of the hill , up to and around the battery , were literally heaped with bodies . It was painful to see the noble

Guardsmen , with their large forms and fine faces , lying amidst the dogged ^ lowbrowed Russians . One Guardsman lay in advance of the "battery on his back , with his arms raised in the very act of thrusting with the bayonet ; he had been killed by a bullet entering through the right eye . His coat was open , and I read his name on the Guernsey frock underneath—an odd name— ' Mustow . ' While I was wondering why his arms had not obeyed the laws of gravity , and fallen by his side when he fell dead , a Guardsman came up and told me he had seen Mustow rush out of the battery and charge with the bayonet , with which he was thrusting

at two or three of the enemy when he was shot . In their last charges , the Russians must have trodden at every step on the bodies of their comrades . In the bushes all around wounded men were groaning in such numbers , that some lay two days before their turn came to be carried away . I passed a Russian with a broken leg , whom some scoundrel had stripped to his shirt , and calling a soldier who was passing , desired him to take a coat from a dead man and put it on the unfortunate creature ; at the same time directing the attention of a party of men collecting the wounded to the place where he lay . Passing the same spot

next day , I saw the Russian lying motionless with his eyes closed , and told a French soldier who was near to see if he was dead ; the Frenchman , strolling up with his hands in his pockets , pushed his foot against the Russian ' s head ; the stiffened body moved altogether like a piece of wood , and the soldier with a shrug and one word ' mort , ' passed on . Large trenches were dug on the ground for the dead ; the Russians lay apart ; the French and English were ranged side

by side . Few sights can be imagined more strange and sad in their ghastliness than that of dead men lying in ranks , shoulder to shoulder , with upturned faces , and limbs composed , except where some stiffened arm and hand remain pointing upward . The faces and hands of the slain assume , immediately after death , the appearance of wax or clay : the lips parting show the teeth ; the hair and moustache become frouzy , and the body of him who , half an hour before , was a smart soldier , wears a soiled and faded aspect .

" Down the ravine along which the Woronzoff-road runs to the valley , the dead horses were dragged and lay in rows ; the English artillery alone lost eighty . The ravine , like all those channelling the plains , is wild and barren ; the sides have been cut down steeply for the sake of the limestone , which lies close to the surface , in beds of remarkable thickness . A lime-kiln , about ten feet square , built into the side of the hill , afforded a ready-made sepulchre for the enemy left on this part of the field , and was filled with bodies to the top , on which a layer of earth was tlven thro wn . ''

"PAMPHLETS . "We have received from India the copy of a Sermon preached in Christ Church , Massoorie , before the Officers and Brethren of lodge u I ) all tousle f No . 922 , of Mussoorie and Delira . Hy the Kev . and V . ~ W \ Bro . T . C . Sm ' ytii . Agra .- —One of

the most masterly defences of Masonry against its opponents we have ever read . It places the Craft in its proper position as an aider and abettor of that highest of all principles , Christian love , and the whole sermon is replete with vigorous thought and irrefragable argument . Some very common yet striking questions of conscience , relative to Masonry , receive here , in an appendix , a satisfactory and

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