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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Aug. 1, 1855
  • Page 25
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Aug. 1, 1855: Page 25

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Page 25

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

Untitled Article

- Whin * yard was a bent sword , or reaping-hook , used in cutting u whin " or furze . This reminds us of a story . A gentleman in Hampshire , who ordered very lately some furze to be cut down ,

received a long bill for " skeevenng , " and was consequently interested in endeavouring to discover the origin of the word . " It is doubtless , " said a great philologist , to whose works we are indebted for several suggestions , " a corruption of the Grerman word schleifen , to cut down or raze . "

Where leaving them i' th wretched hole . Dr . Nash says : " In the edition of 1704 , it is printed in Hockeyhole , meaning , by a low pun , the place where their hocks or ankles were confined . Hockley-hole , or Hockley-i ' -the-hole , was the name of a place resorted to for vulgar diversions . " It is not likely , we think , that so vile a pun was made use of in designating this place of

resort ; for it is derived doubtless from hoc , dirt ; and ley , lee , or lea , which forms the termination of so many names of places , and signifies pasture-land , or any ground which is not under the plough . Hockley-hole was not far from Clerkenwell-green , situated between the end of Mutton-lane and the fields westerly . The following advertisement , ^ which appeared in the "Weekl y Journal , " of June 9 , 1716 , shows what the sports at Hockley were : —

, At the beae gabden , at JLocMey-in-the-hole , at the request of several persons of quality , on Monday , llih of this instant June , is one of the largest and most mischievous bears that ever was seen in England to be baited to death , with other variety of bull-baiting and bear-baiting ; as also a wild bull to be turned loose in the game place , with fireworks all over him . To begin exactly at three o ' clock in the afternoon , because the sport continues long . "

There must have been a prodigious demand for bears in the days of Hockley-in-the-: hole , and the Paris Garden , to which , in Poor Pobin ' s Intelligence of Jan . 8 , 1677 , it was announced that 3 , 000 bears had gone to winter quarters . But there were other gardens beside these two , for there was a bear-garden to the Grlobe Theatre , and one on the Bankside , in which there were cock , ape , and prize fights with swords , and whipping of blind bears , with horse and lion baiting , and every species of barbarous amusement .

In Thomson ' s Loyal Protestant for April 8 , 1682 , is the following singular notice * : — " London , April 9 . —At the house on the Bank Side , being his Majesties Bear-garden , on Wednesday , the 12 th day of this instant April , at one of the clock in the afternoon , will be a horse baited to

death , of a most vast strength and greatness , being between 18 and 19 hands high , formerly belonging to the Earl of Rochester , and for his prodigious qualities in killing and destroying several horses , and other cattle , he was transmitted to the Marquis of Dorchester ; where doing the like mischief , and also hurting his keeper , he was sold to a * See " The Antiquary . " James II . FennelL VOL . r . 3 s

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1855-08-01, Page 25” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01081855/page/25/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
VOICES FROM DEAD NATIONS. Article 15
TRAVELS BY A FREEMASON. Article 11
ANASTATIC INK. Article 28
THE OUTCAST EMPIRE. Article 1
MASONIC SONGS.-N0. 2. Article 29
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 30
A GREEK FUNERAL. Article 39
FEMALE EDUCATION. Article 40
CORRESPONDENCE Article 41
NOTES ON ANTIQUARIAN RESEARCH. Article 21
ANSWER TO ENIGMA IN LAST NUMBER. Article 36
MUSIC. Article 37
A CORSICAN DIRGE. Article 38
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS MONTHLY MAGAZINE. Article 42
MADAME DE POMPADOUR AT HOME. Article 43
NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 44
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 46
MASONIC CHARITIES. Article 46
METROPOLITAN. Article 47
PROVINCIAL. Article 50
LIFE AND ITS MACHINERY. Article 5
COLONIAL Article 60
LONDON BON-ACCORD MARK MASTERS' LODGE. Article 60
SURREY ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY. Article 61
Obituary Article 63
NOTICE. Article 63
TO MASONIC TRAVELLERS. Article 63
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 63
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Untitled Article

- Whin * yard was a bent sword , or reaping-hook , used in cutting u whin " or furze . This reminds us of a story . A gentleman in Hampshire , who ordered very lately some furze to be cut down ,

received a long bill for " skeevenng , " and was consequently interested in endeavouring to discover the origin of the word . " It is doubtless , " said a great philologist , to whose works we are indebted for several suggestions , " a corruption of the Grerman word schleifen , to cut down or raze . "

Where leaving them i' th wretched hole . Dr . Nash says : " In the edition of 1704 , it is printed in Hockeyhole , meaning , by a low pun , the place where their hocks or ankles were confined . Hockley-hole , or Hockley-i ' -the-hole , was the name of a place resorted to for vulgar diversions . " It is not likely , we think , that so vile a pun was made use of in designating this place of

resort ; for it is derived doubtless from hoc , dirt ; and ley , lee , or lea , which forms the termination of so many names of places , and signifies pasture-land , or any ground which is not under the plough . Hockley-hole was not far from Clerkenwell-green , situated between the end of Mutton-lane and the fields westerly . The following advertisement , ^ which appeared in the "Weekl y Journal , " of June 9 , 1716 , shows what the sports at Hockley were : —

, At the beae gabden , at JLocMey-in-the-hole , at the request of several persons of quality , on Monday , llih of this instant June , is one of the largest and most mischievous bears that ever was seen in England to be baited to death , with other variety of bull-baiting and bear-baiting ; as also a wild bull to be turned loose in the game place , with fireworks all over him . To begin exactly at three o ' clock in the afternoon , because the sport continues long . "

There must have been a prodigious demand for bears in the days of Hockley-in-the-: hole , and the Paris Garden , to which , in Poor Pobin ' s Intelligence of Jan . 8 , 1677 , it was announced that 3 , 000 bears had gone to winter quarters . But there were other gardens beside these two , for there was a bear-garden to the Grlobe Theatre , and one on the Bankside , in which there were cock , ape , and prize fights with swords , and whipping of blind bears , with horse and lion baiting , and every species of barbarous amusement .

In Thomson ' s Loyal Protestant for April 8 , 1682 , is the following singular notice * : — " London , April 9 . —At the house on the Bank Side , being his Majesties Bear-garden , on Wednesday , the 12 th day of this instant April , at one of the clock in the afternoon , will be a horse baited to

death , of a most vast strength and greatness , being between 18 and 19 hands high , formerly belonging to the Earl of Rochester , and for his prodigious qualities in killing and destroying several horses , and other cattle , he was transmitted to the Marquis of Dorchester ; where doing the like mischief , and also hurting his keeper , he was sold to a * See " The Antiquary . " James II . FennelL VOL . r . 3 s

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