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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Oct. 1, 1857
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  • MASONIC EXeUESIOET TO BOSLIN GASTLE.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Oct. 1, 1857: Page 20

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    Article MASONIC EXeUESIOET TO BOSLIN GASTLE. ← Page 8 of 14 →
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonic Exeuesioet To Boslin Gastle.

any of the family died , a supernatural light was seen to illuminate the whole of the chapel . Sir Walter Scott has finely alluded to this tradition in the " Lay of the Last Min & rel , " when he makes Harold , the bard of the St . Glairs , recite the ballad of Bosabelle : —

" O ' er Boslin , all that dreary night A wondrous blaze was seen to gleam ; 'Twas broader than the watchfire light , And redder than the bright moonbeam It glared on Roslin ' s castled rock , It ruddied all the copse-wood glen ; 'Twas seen from Dryden ' s groves of oak , And seen from cavern'd Hawthornden .

Seemed all on fire that chapel proud , Where Roslin ' s chiefs uncofBued lie ; Each baron for a sable shroud , Sheathed in his iron panoply ; Seemed all on fire within , around , Deep sacristy and altar ' s pale , Shone every pillar foliage bound , And glimmered all the dead men ' s mail

Blazed battlement and pinnet high > Blazed every rose-carved buttress fair-So still they blaze when fate is nigh The lordly line of high St , Clair . "

The Bible is now placed on the altar covered with a fine linen cloth , the requisite number of tapers are lighted , and the Brethren range themselves round the centre aisle . The sombre light and the solemnizing aspect of the building at this moment must have made every Brother feel the desire expressed by Milton in his "II penseroso , " after he has so beautifully described the pleasures of straying and reposing amid " arched walks of twilight groves : "" But let my due feet never fail

To walk the studious cloister ' s pale , And love the high embowed roof , With antique pillars massy proof ; And storied windows richly dight , Casting a dim religious light . " The entrances to the chapel having been properly tyled , the R . W . M . standing in front of the high altar , with the assistance of the Wardens and Brethren , opens

a Lodge in due form . He then said , " Brethren , after a delightful stroll among the groves and glades of Hawthornden , and along the picturesque and romantic banks of the Esk , we are at length assembled in the ancient chapel of Boslin . A Masonic meeting in this place is no less novel than it is appropriate and imposing . One Mason Lodge , I believe , has met in it in recent times , but I question if a Lodge , for the purposes which we contemplate , has been opened in it , since the time that the ancient Masons were engaged in its erection . The founder of this chapel , as you are well aware , was William St . Clair , prince of Orkney , who

brought hither the most distinguished Masons whom he could find , both in this country and on the continent . For his devotion to architecture and the interests of the Craft , he was raised by James II . to the high honour of Grand Master Mason of Scotland , and this honourable office continued in his family for nearly three hundred years . The design of the founder was never completed ; but the part of it which we have , consisting principally of the choir , is one of the richest specimens of the florid style of Gothic architecture to be found in this country . Some of the Brethren may think the sculptures a little rude , but it must be

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1857-10-01, Page 20” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 12 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01101857/page/20/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
GRAND LODGE AND THE CANADAS. Article 1
CHIVALRY. Article 4
THE STRANGER, THE FATHERLESS, AND THE WIDOW. Article 12
MASONIC EXCURSION TO BOSLIN CASTLE. Article 13
CORRESPONDENCE Article 27
THE SPIRIT OF MASONRY. Article 31
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 32
METROPOLITAN. Article 45
PROVINCIAL. Article 47
ROYAL ARCH. Article 61
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR Article 62
MARK MASONRY Article 62
SCOTLAND Article 66
COLONIAL. Article 68
AMERICA Article 73
INDIA. Article 74
The choice of Smyrna as a site for a British hospital during the late war has been, under Providence* the means of planting Masonry in a truly rich soil. Amongst the civil and military staff attached to the important station were a few most zealous Brethren, who, under great difficulties, managed to muster enough to work: as a Lodge of Instruction, as often a quiet evening could be taken from the urgent duties of the hospital. One by one Brethren were discovered, of various languages and nationalities; but so powerful had been the social persecution—to TURKEY. Article 76
SUMMARY OF NEWS FOR SEPTEMBER Article 76
Obituary. Article 80
NOTICE. Article 83
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonic Exeuesioet To Boslin Gastle.

any of the family died , a supernatural light was seen to illuminate the whole of the chapel . Sir Walter Scott has finely alluded to this tradition in the " Lay of the Last Min & rel , " when he makes Harold , the bard of the St . Glairs , recite the ballad of Bosabelle : —

" O ' er Boslin , all that dreary night A wondrous blaze was seen to gleam ; 'Twas broader than the watchfire light , And redder than the bright moonbeam It glared on Roslin ' s castled rock , It ruddied all the copse-wood glen ; 'Twas seen from Dryden ' s groves of oak , And seen from cavern'd Hawthornden .

Seemed all on fire that chapel proud , Where Roslin ' s chiefs uncofBued lie ; Each baron for a sable shroud , Sheathed in his iron panoply ; Seemed all on fire within , around , Deep sacristy and altar ' s pale , Shone every pillar foliage bound , And glimmered all the dead men ' s mail

Blazed battlement and pinnet high > Blazed every rose-carved buttress fair-So still they blaze when fate is nigh The lordly line of high St , Clair . "

The Bible is now placed on the altar covered with a fine linen cloth , the requisite number of tapers are lighted , and the Brethren range themselves round the centre aisle . The sombre light and the solemnizing aspect of the building at this moment must have made every Brother feel the desire expressed by Milton in his "II penseroso , " after he has so beautifully described the pleasures of straying and reposing amid " arched walks of twilight groves : "" But let my due feet never fail

To walk the studious cloister ' s pale , And love the high embowed roof , With antique pillars massy proof ; And storied windows richly dight , Casting a dim religious light . " The entrances to the chapel having been properly tyled , the R . W . M . standing in front of the high altar , with the assistance of the Wardens and Brethren , opens

a Lodge in due form . He then said , " Brethren , after a delightful stroll among the groves and glades of Hawthornden , and along the picturesque and romantic banks of the Esk , we are at length assembled in the ancient chapel of Boslin . A Masonic meeting in this place is no less novel than it is appropriate and imposing . One Mason Lodge , I believe , has met in it in recent times , but I question if a Lodge , for the purposes which we contemplate , has been opened in it , since the time that the ancient Masons were engaged in its erection . The founder of this chapel , as you are well aware , was William St . Clair , prince of Orkney , who

brought hither the most distinguished Masons whom he could find , both in this country and on the continent . For his devotion to architecture and the interests of the Craft , he was raised by James II . to the high honour of Grand Master Mason of Scotland , and this honourable office continued in his family for nearly three hundred years . The design of the founder was never completed ; but the part of it which we have , consisting principally of the choir , is one of the richest specimens of the florid style of Gothic architecture to be found in this country . Some of the Brethren may think the sculptures a little rude , but it must be

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