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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • May 1, 1855
  • Page 12
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, May 1, 1855: Page 12

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oldest inhabitant . So ready , indeed , was he with reminiscences and yarns of all naval veterans , that I sometimes have expected to hear him bring forth some personal recollection of the Ark , when under the command of Noah . He was red in the face and nose from hard drinking , and as fat as Daniel Lambert ; in fact , he appeared composed of a series of globes ; his head being a small globe , his body a large one , and sections of globes forming his legs . Notwithstanding , he was an excellent sailor , had been tried in every sea , and was never at a loss for anything connected with the remotest branch of his profession .

.. We jogged lazily away from the white coasts of Old England , across the Bay of Biscay ; the Pump , on ordinary occasions , not exceeding five miles an hour . There was but little wind in the bay , but a gale the day before had left a fearful swell . People talk incredulously of waves " mountains high ; " I would recommend them to cross the Bay of Biscay in rough weather . I only know the height of the waves seemed terrific to me , unaccustomed , as I was , to the ocean . I could have sworn that they were fully as high as our mastheads , and felt as if each must infallibly whelm us beneath

its immense burden of water , nor did I wonder less at the ease and agility wherewith the brig mounted the billows . Let any one who has been to the lakes of Westmoreland , fancy Helvellyn or Skiddaw rushing at him one after the other , and he will form an accurate notion of the appearance presented to me by the bay . However , we safely surmounted all these perils , and sped on our outward voyage . There were three other passengers in the JPump also bound to Bio de Janeiro . One , a newly-appointed attache to our embassy ; the two others belonging to mercantile houses . We all messed with the

lieutenant in command , upon food certainly tougher than I at first at all relished ; but those were not the days for preserved meats and potted milk in the cabin . We had to content ourselves with salt junk , biscuit , and cocoa , washed down with plenty of " grog ; " the lieutenant took rather more than his share during the first part of the voyage , when his passengers had not become familiarised with the

taste of that beverage . Latterly he complained that he was not required to drink half of each passenger ' s grog as well as his own . It was singular to notice how well the attache adapted himself to these circumstances . Springing from fashionable London life and luxury , he fitted himself to the coarse food of his Majesty ' s brig Pump , and the society of her rough commander , with as much ease as if he had

been naturally bred to such a position . He talked with me , though knowing that I was going out as a clerk , in as friendly a way as he would have chatted with his friend the Honourable Captain Tomnoddy , of the Gruards . This was pleasant enough , allowing for the drawback of knowing that when we met on shore he would not interchange half a dozen syllables—so time passed on .

We ran along merrily before the north-east " trades , " having nothing to do but trim the sails , and sit down at our ease ; then came ft long delay in the neighbourhood of the equator , to which , finally ,

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1855-05-01, Page 12” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01051855/page/12/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
AMERICA. Article 54
TRAVELS BY A FREEMASON. Article 11
ON THE POLITICAL CONDITION OF THE ENGLISH PEASANTRY DURING THE MIDDLE AGES. Article 17
LONDON AND ITS MASONS. Article 1
ANIMAL AND HUMAN INSTINCT. Article 21
THE EMPEROR'S VISIT. Article 28
REV. BRO. OLIVER, D.D., VICAR OF SCOPWICK. Article 30
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 31
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 63
NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 38
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 40
METROPOLITAN. Article 43
PROVINCIAL. Article 45
SCOTLAND. Article 51
COLONIAL. Article 52
INDIA. Article 54
TURKEY. Article 56
METROPOLITAN LODGE MEETINGS FOR THE MONTH Of MAY. Article 57
LODGES OF INSTRUCTION. Article 59
CHAPTERS OF INSTRUCTION. Article 60
Obituary Article 60
NOTICE. Article 62
ROYAL MEDICAL BENEVOLENT COLLEGE. Article 62
NOTES ON ANTIQUARIAN RESEARCH Article 6
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Page 12

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

Untitled Article

oldest inhabitant . So ready , indeed , was he with reminiscences and yarns of all naval veterans , that I sometimes have expected to hear him bring forth some personal recollection of the Ark , when under the command of Noah . He was red in the face and nose from hard drinking , and as fat as Daniel Lambert ; in fact , he appeared composed of a series of globes ; his head being a small globe , his body a large one , and sections of globes forming his legs . Notwithstanding , he was an excellent sailor , had been tried in every sea , and was never at a loss for anything connected with the remotest branch of his profession .

.. We jogged lazily away from the white coasts of Old England , across the Bay of Biscay ; the Pump , on ordinary occasions , not exceeding five miles an hour . There was but little wind in the bay , but a gale the day before had left a fearful swell . People talk incredulously of waves " mountains high ; " I would recommend them to cross the Bay of Biscay in rough weather . I only know the height of the waves seemed terrific to me , unaccustomed , as I was , to the ocean . I could have sworn that they were fully as high as our mastheads , and felt as if each must infallibly whelm us beneath

its immense burden of water , nor did I wonder less at the ease and agility wherewith the brig mounted the billows . Let any one who has been to the lakes of Westmoreland , fancy Helvellyn or Skiddaw rushing at him one after the other , and he will form an accurate notion of the appearance presented to me by the bay . However , we safely surmounted all these perils , and sped on our outward voyage . There were three other passengers in the JPump also bound to Bio de Janeiro . One , a newly-appointed attache to our embassy ; the two others belonging to mercantile houses . We all messed with the

lieutenant in command , upon food certainly tougher than I at first at all relished ; but those were not the days for preserved meats and potted milk in the cabin . We had to content ourselves with salt junk , biscuit , and cocoa , washed down with plenty of " grog ; " the lieutenant took rather more than his share during the first part of the voyage , when his passengers had not become familiarised with the

taste of that beverage . Latterly he complained that he was not required to drink half of each passenger ' s grog as well as his own . It was singular to notice how well the attache adapted himself to these circumstances . Springing from fashionable London life and luxury , he fitted himself to the coarse food of his Majesty ' s brig Pump , and the society of her rough commander , with as much ease as if he had

been naturally bred to such a position . He talked with me , though knowing that I was going out as a clerk , in as friendly a way as he would have chatted with his friend the Honourable Captain Tomnoddy , of the Gruards . This was pleasant enough , allowing for the drawback of knowing that when we met on shore he would not interchange half a dozen syllables—so time passed on .

We ran along merrily before the north-east " trades , " having nothing to do but trim the sails , and sit down at our ease ; then came ft long delay in the neighbourhood of the equator , to which , finally ,

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