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  • Aug. 1, 1855
  • Page 27
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Aug. 1, 1855: Page 27

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species , and certain birds ' -nests , with great gusto . Montaigne , in his Essay on Custom and Law , * says : — " I believe Plato ' s Care in his Bepublic and the Physicians , who so often submit the reasons of their art to the authorities of habit ; as also the story of that king , who by custom brought his stomach ' to

that pass , as to live by poison ; and the maid that Albertus reports to have lived upon spiders ; and in that new world of the Indies , there were found great nations , and in very different climates , who were of the same diet , made provision of them , and fed them for their tables ; as also they did grasshoppers , mice , bats , and lizards ; and in a time of a scarcity of such rarities , a toad was sold for six crowns , all which they cook , and dish up with several sauces . "

" Honour is like that glasse ' s bubble That finds philosophers such trouble , Whose least part crack'd the whole does fly , And wits are crack'd to find out why . " Clarke mentions these glass-drops in his travels , which are known as " Rupert ' s drops" ( lacrymce Batavicce ) , because they were first

brought over from Grermany by that prince , who devoted the latter years of his life to the prosecution of chemical and other useful inventions . The drops were shown , we are told in Eae ' s " Cyclopedia , " to King Charles II ., and he communicated them to the Royal Society , who appointed a committee to examine them , and endeavour to account philosophically for the phenomenon . The pure green

glass , it appears , when dropped in a state of fusion into water , cools rapidly upon the surface , and the particles , previously in a state of repulsion , are brought within the power of each other ' s attraction . "When air is admitted by breaking off the tail of the " glassy bubble , " the condensed particles expand , and , with a slight explosion , the glass-drop is suddenly converted into a fine

powder . "Whether the Egyptians ever discovered this or not , may be a subject for speculation . Three thousand five hundred years ago , the Egyptians knew how to blow and colour glass , as may be seen in the hieroglyphical representations of glass-blowers , two of which are given in Ellis ' s " Chemistry of Creation , " an interesting work published by the Christian Knowledge Society .

They might distinguish different noise Of horns and pans , and dogs and boys , " & c . This refers to a procession in which the husband who had beaten his wife , or the wife who had belaboured her husband , was publicly exposed . At Alton , Hants , we have heard this " rough music , " as it is termed , played by the boyish populace round the cottage of some offenders . We have heard once the discord in the village of Crawley , Hants ; in which there was a procession of boys , who , with sheep-bells and old kettles filled with stones , walked up and down the street , thus publicly proclaiming the offence committed . We * Montaigne ' Essays , vol . i . p . X 10 ,

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1855-08-01, Page 27” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01081855/page/27/.
  • 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

species , and certain birds ' -nests , with great gusto . Montaigne , in his Essay on Custom and Law , * says : — " I believe Plato ' s Care in his Bepublic and the Physicians , who so often submit the reasons of their art to the authorities of habit ; as also the story of that king , who by custom brought his stomach ' to

that pass , as to live by poison ; and the maid that Albertus reports to have lived upon spiders ; and in that new world of the Indies , there were found great nations , and in very different climates , who were of the same diet , made provision of them , and fed them for their tables ; as also they did grasshoppers , mice , bats , and lizards ; and in a time of a scarcity of such rarities , a toad was sold for six crowns , all which they cook , and dish up with several sauces . "

" Honour is like that glasse ' s bubble That finds philosophers such trouble , Whose least part crack'd the whole does fly , And wits are crack'd to find out why . " Clarke mentions these glass-drops in his travels , which are known as " Rupert ' s drops" ( lacrymce Batavicce ) , because they were first

brought over from Grermany by that prince , who devoted the latter years of his life to the prosecution of chemical and other useful inventions . The drops were shown , we are told in Eae ' s " Cyclopedia , " to King Charles II ., and he communicated them to the Royal Society , who appointed a committee to examine them , and endeavour to account philosophically for the phenomenon . The pure green

glass , it appears , when dropped in a state of fusion into water , cools rapidly upon the surface , and the particles , previously in a state of repulsion , are brought within the power of each other ' s attraction . "When air is admitted by breaking off the tail of the " glassy bubble , " the condensed particles expand , and , with a slight explosion , the glass-drop is suddenly converted into a fine

powder . "Whether the Egyptians ever discovered this or not , may be a subject for speculation . Three thousand five hundred years ago , the Egyptians knew how to blow and colour glass , as may be seen in the hieroglyphical representations of glass-blowers , two of which are given in Ellis ' s " Chemistry of Creation , " an interesting work published by the Christian Knowledge Society .

They might distinguish different noise Of horns and pans , and dogs and boys , " & c . This refers to a procession in which the husband who had beaten his wife , or the wife who had belaboured her husband , was publicly exposed . At Alton , Hants , we have heard this " rough music , " as it is termed , played by the boyish populace round the cottage of some offenders . We have heard once the discord in the village of Crawley , Hants ; in which there was a procession of boys , who , with sheep-bells and old kettles filled with stones , walked up and down the street , thus publicly proclaiming the offence committed . We * Montaigne ' Essays , vol . i . p . X 10 ,

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