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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Sept. 1, 1856
  • Page 3
  • PENCILLINGS FROM THE SKETCH-BOOK OF A MADRAS OFFICER.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Sept. 1, 1856: Page 3

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    Article PENCILLINGS FROM THE SKETCH-BOOK OF A MADRAS OFFICER. Page 1 of 7 →
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Pencillings From The Sketch-Book Of A Madras Officer.

PENCILLIJSTGS FEOM THE SKETCH-BOOK OF A MADRAS OFFICES .

BY AN INFANTRY M . M .

CHAPTER I . RECOLLECTIONS OF A DEPARTURE FROM LOTOO ]* WHEK PIEST PROCEEDING TO INDIA .

u where the sun is very hot and fervent , — G-o to the land of pagod and rupee , Where every black will be your slave and servant : And think of me . "—Hood .

How rapidly does each succeeding year appear to pass after we hare reached the meridian of the age of man ! Methinks it cannot be , and yet it is true , that it is now twenty-eight years ago , when , having bid "farewell" to relatives , old friends , and associates , and being fully equipped as an infantry cadet , and prepared to say goodbye to Old England , I , on a cold and rainy day in the often dismal month of November , took my seat on the roof of one of those ancient vehicles , which ere the gigantic polypus of railways had cast its

netlike arms over the surface of our island-home , were the ordinary conveyances for travellers . To Gravesend , at that time the general depot for the East-India shipping , I now wended my way . There lay the vessel in which a passage had been taken for me to the shores of Ind . We had proceeded but a short distance through the streets of the metropolis , which were rendered almost impervious by a long train

of coaches , blocking up the passage , —not excepting the old hackney in those days so common , but long since gone no one seems to know whither , —when the atmosphere became more and more dense , and the rain fell in torrents . A thick fog , the frequent accompaniment of a winter ' s day in town , had now overspread the city , which , in combination with the black smoke of its millions of chimneys , enveloped it in uncomfortable obscurity , and so murky was the scene presented , that , by the time we had crossed the venerable old London Bridge ,

time-honoured , and of many arches , long since replaced by its modern substitute , the dome of St . Paul ' s was no longer visible . The abodes of commerce were lighted up , not as now with gas , but the more humble luminary of oil ; and it appeared as if night had stolen a march upon us ; but speedily emerging from our London gloom 7 Southwark and its suburbs were successively passed , and we soon found ourselves on the old Kent-road , rapidly driving towards our destination .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1856-09-01, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 2 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01091856/page/3/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE MARK DEGREE. Article 1
PENCILLINGS FROM THE SKETCH-BOOK OF A MADRAS OFFICER. Article 3
THE MONK OF ST. DUNSTAN. Article 10
A MASONIC BURIAL AT SEA. Article 13
MASONIC BONG. Article 14
TO THE OCEAN. Article 14
REVIEWS OF UEW BOOKS. Article 15
MUSIC. Article 18
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 20
MASONS IN THEIR HOURS OF RELAXATION. Article 29
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 30
METROPOLITAN. Article 31
PROVINCIAL. Article 32
SURREY. Article 46
ROYAL ARCH. Article 50
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 53
MARK MASONRY. Article 53
SCOTLAND. Article 54
COLONIAL. Article 55
INDIA. Article 56
AMERICA. Article 58
SUMMARY OE NEWS FOR AUGUST. Article 61
Obituary. Article 63
NOTICE. Article 64
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Pencillings From The Sketch-Book Of A Madras Officer.

PENCILLIJSTGS FEOM THE SKETCH-BOOK OF A MADRAS OFFICES .

BY AN INFANTRY M . M .

CHAPTER I . RECOLLECTIONS OF A DEPARTURE FROM LOTOO ]* WHEK PIEST PROCEEDING TO INDIA .

u where the sun is very hot and fervent , — G-o to the land of pagod and rupee , Where every black will be your slave and servant : And think of me . "—Hood .

How rapidly does each succeeding year appear to pass after we hare reached the meridian of the age of man ! Methinks it cannot be , and yet it is true , that it is now twenty-eight years ago , when , having bid "farewell" to relatives , old friends , and associates , and being fully equipped as an infantry cadet , and prepared to say goodbye to Old England , I , on a cold and rainy day in the often dismal month of November , took my seat on the roof of one of those ancient vehicles , which ere the gigantic polypus of railways had cast its

netlike arms over the surface of our island-home , were the ordinary conveyances for travellers . To Gravesend , at that time the general depot for the East-India shipping , I now wended my way . There lay the vessel in which a passage had been taken for me to the shores of Ind . We had proceeded but a short distance through the streets of the metropolis , which were rendered almost impervious by a long train

of coaches , blocking up the passage , —not excepting the old hackney in those days so common , but long since gone no one seems to know whither , —when the atmosphere became more and more dense , and the rain fell in torrents . A thick fog , the frequent accompaniment of a winter ' s day in town , had now overspread the city , which , in combination with the black smoke of its millions of chimneys , enveloped it in uncomfortable obscurity , and so murky was the scene presented , that , by the time we had crossed the venerable old London Bridge ,

time-honoured , and of many arches , long since replaced by its modern substitute , the dome of St . Paul ' s was no longer visible . The abodes of commerce were lighted up , not as now with gas , but the more humble luminary of oil ; and it appeared as if night had stolen a march upon us ; but speedily emerging from our London gloom 7 Southwark and its suburbs were successively passed , and we soon found ourselves on the old Kent-road , rapidly driving towards our destination .

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