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  • May 1, 1855
  • Page 7
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, May 1, 1855: Page 7

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Page 7

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

Untitled Article

The two classes of antiquaries are treated of not more graphically , but rather more concisely , we think , in the article upon Tytier ' s Collection of Ancient Letters , which appeared in a number of the Quarterly Review " , for 1839 . " There are men , " says the writer , " who batten on the husk of antiquity , and never reach the kernel ; but pronouncing the outer rind inimitable nutriment , insist upon all

the world not only swallowing and digesting , but delighting in this pabulum . . But there is a better sort : these love ancient things , not because they are ancient , or even because they are rare , but because in the contemplation of them they are able to detect the spirit of ages gone by , to obtain a wider field for the exercise of their sympathies , to enlarge the sphere of their knowledge and intellectual enjoyment . "

At the risk of being esteemed untrue and superficial antiquaries , let us endeavour , in the words of the mighty Shakspeare , "to be instructed by the antiquary times , " and then may the succeeding line apply to us all individually :

" He must , he is , he cannot but be wise . " Certainly the olden days teem with instruction ; for , whether we trace out the curious etymology of common English words , examine old china with its strange hieroglyphical monograms , olden coins , and ancient tombs , or strive , with eagle eye , to decipher the records

of antiquity , there seems to be a silent voice preaching earnestly the while a great and solemn lesson , telling us by what means we may unite with golden cord the present with the past , and make it subservient to the requirements of the future . At the same time , it becomes us to remember that , among much sterling gold , there is a vast amount of ore and rubbish ; and it is the duty of the true

antiquary , as it is of the alchemist , to sever the good from the pernicious , to extract from the sham the true , and because true , the priceless sovereign metal . Look at the days when our ancestors dressed in the costumes which Sir Peter Lely has left upon the canvas , and Planche , in his " British Costume , " so ably depicteddays , when our great-great-grandmothers inflated themselves with

hoops , and lined their garments with so much " bombast , " that the word for cotton became gifted with a new meaning , and wore headdresses , a la lime , if we may be allowed the expression , and fans adorned with mirrors , to reflect beaming eyes , and highly rouged cheeks , and hair drawn tightly off the face . Those were days when our great-great-grandfathers adorned their legs with ruffs , and wore artificial calves , as some footmen may do in 1855 , for aught we know

to the contrary . There is nothing , surely , in those exaggerated fashions which we would desire to imitate ; yet , some who are wedded to olden things for the sake of their age , might think that there was ; and such should in the same spirit , if they wish to be at all consistent , prefer the gay , brilliant , and licentious Congreve , to the calm and cheerful Addison , because the one lived farther removed from us than the other in "the antiquary times . "

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1855-05-01, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01051855/page/7/.
  • 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 7

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

Untitled Article

The two classes of antiquaries are treated of not more graphically , but rather more concisely , we think , in the article upon Tytier ' s Collection of Ancient Letters , which appeared in a number of the Quarterly Review " , for 1839 . " There are men , " says the writer , " who batten on the husk of antiquity , and never reach the kernel ; but pronouncing the outer rind inimitable nutriment , insist upon all

the world not only swallowing and digesting , but delighting in this pabulum . . But there is a better sort : these love ancient things , not because they are ancient , or even because they are rare , but because in the contemplation of them they are able to detect the spirit of ages gone by , to obtain a wider field for the exercise of their sympathies , to enlarge the sphere of their knowledge and intellectual enjoyment . "

At the risk of being esteemed untrue and superficial antiquaries , let us endeavour , in the words of the mighty Shakspeare , "to be instructed by the antiquary times , " and then may the succeeding line apply to us all individually :

" He must , he is , he cannot but be wise . " Certainly the olden days teem with instruction ; for , whether we trace out the curious etymology of common English words , examine old china with its strange hieroglyphical monograms , olden coins , and ancient tombs , or strive , with eagle eye , to decipher the records

of antiquity , there seems to be a silent voice preaching earnestly the while a great and solemn lesson , telling us by what means we may unite with golden cord the present with the past , and make it subservient to the requirements of the future . At the same time , it becomes us to remember that , among much sterling gold , there is a vast amount of ore and rubbish ; and it is the duty of the true

antiquary , as it is of the alchemist , to sever the good from the pernicious , to extract from the sham the true , and because true , the priceless sovereign metal . Look at the days when our ancestors dressed in the costumes which Sir Peter Lely has left upon the canvas , and Planche , in his " British Costume , " so ably depicteddays , when our great-great-grandmothers inflated themselves with

hoops , and lined their garments with so much " bombast , " that the word for cotton became gifted with a new meaning , and wore headdresses , a la lime , if we may be allowed the expression , and fans adorned with mirrors , to reflect beaming eyes , and highly rouged cheeks , and hair drawn tightly off the face . Those were days when our great-great-grandfathers adorned their legs with ruffs , and wore artificial calves , as some footmen may do in 1855 , for aught we know

to the contrary . There is nothing , surely , in those exaggerated fashions which we would desire to imitate ; yet , some who are wedded to olden things for the sake of their age , might think that there was ; and such should in the same spirit , if they wish to be at all consistent , prefer the gay , brilliant , and licentious Congreve , to the calm and cheerful Addison , because the one lived farther removed from us than the other in "the antiquary times . "

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