Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Oct. 3, 1868
  • Page 20
  • TO CORRESPONDENTS.
Current:

The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Oct. 3, 1868: Page 20

  • Back to The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Oct. 3, 1868
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article MASONIC FETE CHAMPETRE. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article Poetry. Page 1 of 1
    Article METROPOLITAN LODGE MEETINGS, ETC, FOR THE WEEK ENDING OCTOBER 10TH, 1868. Page 1 of 1
    Article TO CORRESPONDENTS. Page 1 of 1
Page 20

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

Masonic Fete Champetre.

The weather was charmingly suitable to the occasion , and the grounds were in excellent order , and , with a social company present , the . day was devoted to enjoyment and the interchange of courtesies . It was four o ' clock before any considerable number of the picnickians were at the grove , but from that hour until nine o ' clock at night they came " afoot , " in buggies , and by the

street railroad cars . At six o'clock about four or five hundred pleasure seekers were hard at work enjoying themselves at clam counters , restaurant tables , in . " swinging boats , " on the turf ' neath the leafy trees , anel lastly , though to a decidedly predominating extent , in dancing on the floor of the pavilion devoted to the votaries of Terpsichore . The company present was , with

few exceptions , very respectable and precise in their deportment , and while displaying in a majority of cases evident attention in the matter of their attire , to the latest fashion bulletins , there were also a number of " old jokers" present who had evidently outlived the age they were intended to flourish in , and ( without intending any sarcasm ) appeared like " the light of other 1

days , ' though perhaps not quite so far agone as " the dark ages . " They were all men in tight-sleeved coats , of a greenish brown variety of shade and colour , with hats that would have concealed the wearer ' s ears if those organs would have submitted to be "hid under a bushel , " and these old gents shuffled round among the throng with sun-faded umbrellas under their arms and

were indiscriminately greeted by the patriarchial appellation of " pop " or " uncle . " A number of these fogies had their conjugal partners with them , attired in the plain old costume of the grandmothers of this generation , with bonnets of undoubted coal-scuttle proclivities and proportions . The later editions of these antique

works were also on hand , exquisitely gotten up in calf , cloth , and morocco , with occasional patent leather finishes and illuminated with gold . They were represented in almost every shade and tint , from the sombre black to the deep olive , with the blood flushing richly beneath the semi-transparent skin and the pale white that showed the blue veins traversing the cheeks and temples . Men

who might have been Othellos , had not " the accident of birth" made them American citizens , flirted with and cavaliered women who might have bamboozled a Mark Antony into fighting Caesar ' s navy with a fleet of sixty sail of Egyptian war vessels , as Cleopatra did . Fortunately , however , for ordinary mortals , the world is not now held by a Cassar , a Pompey , or an Antony , and

these courtly ladies , whose "infinite variety" perchance " age could not wither nor custom stale , " content themselves by enslaving the hearts of modern "Augustuses " and the " George Washingtons " of to-day ; and , instead of picknicking on the Nile in a sixty-oared galley , with a poop of gold , and sails whose perfumed surface the winds loved to kiss , were pleased to go to Boulevard

Grove for a day ' s amusement aba , fete eliamvpUra . But , though those who had assembled yesterday were not immortalized by Shakspeare , they were doubtless as happy , being devoid , apparently , of anxiety concerning kingdoms and crowns , and filled places in the community much more consonant with this progressive age and its institutions . They troubled no one , and enjoyed

themselves to the fullest extent , and to the music of " Champagne Charlie " and " Captain Jinks " " chased with flying feet the silver hours , " until near midnight , ab which seasonable time they betook themselves to their homes with pleasing recollections of a day harmlessly and enjoyably spent . —[ Neio York Herald- ]

PAKIT spirit consumes in idle contests that energy which the whole fraternity and humanity need ; . By the perpetual interchange of hard names , it makes the brethren suspicious and uncharitable ; or it makes them think lightly of tbe kind of offences which they hear so often charged against our most eminent brothers .

Poetry.

Poetry .

DAWN AND DEATH . By Bro . J . 0 . MANNING . Tho sobbing winds of winter Lingered sadly round tbe door , Then ran , in mystic meanings , Tbrougb tho dark across tbe moor . The window-panes were streaming

With tbe tears which Heaven wept , And a mother sat a-dreaming O ' or an infant as it slept ; Its little bands were folded , And its little oyos of blue Wore clothed in alabaster , With the azure peeping through . Its woowan faceso stariike

, , , Was as whito as maiden snow , And it breathed in faintest ripples , As tho wavelets come and go . Tho morn , in golden beauty , Through the lattice fairly peept , But muffled was tho window Of tho room wboro Darling slept 1

Tbe mother ' s heart was breaking Into tears , like summer cloud , For a starry face was circled With a little lily shroud ; And a soul from sunny features Like a beam of light bad fled ; Before hor , like a snowdrop , Her miracle lay dead I

Ab ! 'twas cruel thus to chasten , Though her loss was Darling ' s gain , And her heart would rifle hoaven , Could she clasp her babe again .

Metropolitan Lodge Meetings, Etc, For The Week Ending October 10th, 1868.

METROPOLITAN LODGE MEETINGS , ETC , FOR THE WEEK ENDING OCTOBER 10 TH , 1868 .

MONDAY , October 5 th . —Lodges : Robert Burns , 25 , Freemasons' Hall . Unity , 69 , London Tavern , Bishopsgate-sbreet . Royal Jubilee , 72 , Anderton ' s Hotel , Fleetstreet . St . Luke ' s , 144 , Pier Hotel , Cheyne-walk , Chelsea . Joppa , 188 , Albion Tavern , Aldersgate-street . Chapters : Old . King ' s Arms , 28 , Freemasons' Hall . Victoria , 1 , 056 , George Hotel , Aldermanbury .

TUESDAY , October 6 oh . —Colonial Board at 3 . Audit Com . of Female School at 2 . 30- Lodges : Albion , 9 , Freemasons' Hall , Temple , 101 , Ship and Turtle Tavern , Leadenhall-street . St . John ' s , 167 , Holly Bush Tavern , Hampstead . Old Concord , 175 , Freemasons' Hall . La Tolerance , 538 , Freemasons' Hall . St . James ' s , 765 , Leather Market Tavern , New Weston-streeb ,

Bermondsey . Chapter : Temperance , 109 , White Swan Tavern , Deptford . WEDNESDAY , October 7 th . — Lodge : Stability , 217 , George Hotel , Aldermanbury . Chapter : Prince Frederick William , 753 , Knights of St . John Hotel , St . John ' swood . THURSDAY , October 8 ch . —Quarterly Gen . Court Female

School , at Freemasons' Hall , ab 12 . Lodges : Lion and Lamb , 192 , George Hotel , Aldermanbury . Friendship , 206 , Ship and Turtle Tavern , Leadenhall-street . Lily Lodge of Richmond , 820 , Greyhound , Richmond , Surrey . Dalhousie , 860 , Anderton's Hotel , Fleet-street . Capper , 1 , 076 , Marine Hotel , Victoria-docks , West Ham . Chapters : Mount Lebanon , 73 , Bridge House Hotel ,

Southwark . Hope , 206 , Globe Tavern , Royal Hill , Greenwich . FRIDAY , October 9 th . —Lodge : Domatic , 177 , Anderton's Hotel , Fleet-street . Chapter : Britannic , 83 , Freemasons' Hall .

To Correspondents.

TO CORRESPONDENTS .

Dr . P . —We have received your letter , which we shall answer privately in a day or day .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1868-10-03, Page 20” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 14 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_03101868/page/20/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE KNIGHTS TEMPLARS. Article 1
ASSOCIATION OF GERMAN FREEMASONS.† Article 4
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 9
D.P.G.M. Article 10
RE S. SAX AND OTHERS. Article 11
ZETLAND TESTIMONIAL OR FESTIVAL. Article 11
A MASONIC AND GENERAL LIBRARY OF REFERENCE FOR THE FREEMASONS' HALL. Article 11
GRAND LODGE OF MARK MASTERS. Article 11
ZETLAND TESTIMONIAL OR MEMORIAL. Article 12
IMPORTANT MASONIC CONFERENCE. Article 12
MASONIC MEMS. Article 14
METROPOLITAN. Article 14
PROVINCIAL. Article 15
SCOTLAND. Article 17
IRELAND. Article 18
ROYAL ARCH. Article 18
MARK MASONRY. Article 19
RED CROSS KNIGHTS OF CONSTANTINE. Article 19
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 19
MASONIC FETE CHAMPETRE. Article 19
Poetry. Article 20
METROPOLITAN LODGE MEETINGS, ETC, FOR THE WEEK ENDING OCTOBER 10TH, 1868. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
Page 1

Page 1

2 Articles
Page 2

Page 2

2 Articles
Page 3

Page 3

2 Articles
Page 4

Page 4

3 Articles
Page 5

Page 5

2 Articles
Page 6

Page 6

2 Articles
Page 7

Page 7

3 Articles
Page 8

Page 8

2 Articles
Page 9

Page 9

2 Articles
Page 10

Page 10

3 Articles
Page 11

Page 11

6 Articles
Page 12

Page 12

3 Articles
Page 13

Page 13

2 Articles
Page 14

Page 14

3 Articles
Page 15

Page 15

3 Articles
Page 16

Page 16

2 Articles
Page 17

Page 17

3 Articles
Page 18

Page 18

4 Articles
Page 19

Page 19

5 Articles
Page 20

Page 20

4 Articles
Page 20

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

Masonic Fete Champetre.

The weather was charmingly suitable to the occasion , and the grounds were in excellent order , and , with a social company present , the . day was devoted to enjoyment and the interchange of courtesies . It was four o ' clock before any considerable number of the picnickians were at the grove , but from that hour until nine o ' clock at night they came " afoot , " in buggies , and by the

street railroad cars . At six o'clock about four or five hundred pleasure seekers were hard at work enjoying themselves at clam counters , restaurant tables , in . " swinging boats , " on the turf ' neath the leafy trees , anel lastly , though to a decidedly predominating extent , in dancing on the floor of the pavilion devoted to the votaries of Terpsichore . The company present was , with

few exceptions , very respectable and precise in their deportment , and while displaying in a majority of cases evident attention in the matter of their attire , to the latest fashion bulletins , there were also a number of " old jokers" present who had evidently outlived the age they were intended to flourish in , and ( without intending any sarcasm ) appeared like " the light of other 1

days , ' though perhaps not quite so far agone as " the dark ages . " They were all men in tight-sleeved coats , of a greenish brown variety of shade and colour , with hats that would have concealed the wearer ' s ears if those organs would have submitted to be "hid under a bushel , " and these old gents shuffled round among the throng with sun-faded umbrellas under their arms and

were indiscriminately greeted by the patriarchial appellation of " pop " or " uncle . " A number of these fogies had their conjugal partners with them , attired in the plain old costume of the grandmothers of this generation , with bonnets of undoubted coal-scuttle proclivities and proportions . The later editions of these antique

works were also on hand , exquisitely gotten up in calf , cloth , and morocco , with occasional patent leather finishes and illuminated with gold . They were represented in almost every shade and tint , from the sombre black to the deep olive , with the blood flushing richly beneath the semi-transparent skin and the pale white that showed the blue veins traversing the cheeks and temples . Men

who might have been Othellos , had not " the accident of birth" made them American citizens , flirted with and cavaliered women who might have bamboozled a Mark Antony into fighting Caesar ' s navy with a fleet of sixty sail of Egyptian war vessels , as Cleopatra did . Fortunately , however , for ordinary mortals , the world is not now held by a Cassar , a Pompey , or an Antony , and

these courtly ladies , whose "infinite variety" perchance " age could not wither nor custom stale , " content themselves by enslaving the hearts of modern "Augustuses " and the " George Washingtons " of to-day ; and , instead of picknicking on the Nile in a sixty-oared galley , with a poop of gold , and sails whose perfumed surface the winds loved to kiss , were pleased to go to Boulevard

Grove for a day ' s amusement aba , fete eliamvpUra . But , though those who had assembled yesterday were not immortalized by Shakspeare , they were doubtless as happy , being devoid , apparently , of anxiety concerning kingdoms and crowns , and filled places in the community much more consonant with this progressive age and its institutions . They troubled no one , and enjoyed

themselves to the fullest extent , and to the music of " Champagne Charlie " and " Captain Jinks " " chased with flying feet the silver hours , " until near midnight , ab which seasonable time they betook themselves to their homes with pleasing recollections of a day harmlessly and enjoyably spent . —[ Neio York Herald- ]

PAKIT spirit consumes in idle contests that energy which the whole fraternity and humanity need ; . By the perpetual interchange of hard names , it makes the brethren suspicious and uncharitable ; or it makes them think lightly of tbe kind of offences which they hear so often charged against our most eminent brothers .

Poetry.

Poetry .

DAWN AND DEATH . By Bro . J . 0 . MANNING . Tho sobbing winds of winter Lingered sadly round tbe door , Then ran , in mystic meanings , Tbrougb tho dark across tbe moor . The window-panes were streaming

With tbe tears which Heaven wept , And a mother sat a-dreaming O ' or an infant as it slept ; Its little bands were folded , And its little oyos of blue Wore clothed in alabaster , With the azure peeping through . Its woowan faceso stariike

, , , Was as whito as maiden snow , And it breathed in faintest ripples , As tho wavelets come and go . Tho morn , in golden beauty , Through the lattice fairly peept , But muffled was tho window Of tho room wboro Darling slept 1

Tbe mother ' s heart was breaking Into tears , like summer cloud , For a starry face was circled With a little lily shroud ; And a soul from sunny features Like a beam of light bad fled ; Before hor , like a snowdrop , Her miracle lay dead I

Ab ! 'twas cruel thus to chasten , Though her loss was Darling ' s gain , And her heart would rifle hoaven , Could she clasp her babe again .

Metropolitan Lodge Meetings, Etc, For The Week Ending October 10th, 1868.

METROPOLITAN LODGE MEETINGS , ETC , FOR THE WEEK ENDING OCTOBER 10 TH , 1868 .

MONDAY , October 5 th . —Lodges : Robert Burns , 25 , Freemasons' Hall . Unity , 69 , London Tavern , Bishopsgate-sbreet . Royal Jubilee , 72 , Anderton ' s Hotel , Fleetstreet . St . Luke ' s , 144 , Pier Hotel , Cheyne-walk , Chelsea . Joppa , 188 , Albion Tavern , Aldersgate-street . Chapters : Old . King ' s Arms , 28 , Freemasons' Hall . Victoria , 1 , 056 , George Hotel , Aldermanbury .

TUESDAY , October 6 oh . —Colonial Board at 3 . Audit Com . of Female School at 2 . 30- Lodges : Albion , 9 , Freemasons' Hall , Temple , 101 , Ship and Turtle Tavern , Leadenhall-street . St . John ' s , 167 , Holly Bush Tavern , Hampstead . Old Concord , 175 , Freemasons' Hall . La Tolerance , 538 , Freemasons' Hall . St . James ' s , 765 , Leather Market Tavern , New Weston-streeb ,

Bermondsey . Chapter : Temperance , 109 , White Swan Tavern , Deptford . WEDNESDAY , October 7 th . — Lodge : Stability , 217 , George Hotel , Aldermanbury . Chapter : Prince Frederick William , 753 , Knights of St . John Hotel , St . John ' swood . THURSDAY , October 8 ch . —Quarterly Gen . Court Female

School , at Freemasons' Hall , ab 12 . Lodges : Lion and Lamb , 192 , George Hotel , Aldermanbury . Friendship , 206 , Ship and Turtle Tavern , Leadenhall-street . Lily Lodge of Richmond , 820 , Greyhound , Richmond , Surrey . Dalhousie , 860 , Anderton's Hotel , Fleet-street . Capper , 1 , 076 , Marine Hotel , Victoria-docks , West Ham . Chapters : Mount Lebanon , 73 , Bridge House Hotel ,

Southwark . Hope , 206 , Globe Tavern , Royal Hill , Greenwich . FRIDAY , October 9 th . —Lodge : Domatic , 177 , Anderton's Hotel , Fleet-street . Chapter : Britannic , 83 , Freemasons' Hall .

To Correspondents.

TO CORRESPONDENTS .

Dr . P . —We have received your letter , which we shall answer privately in a day or day .

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • 19
  • You're on page20
  • Next page
  • Accredited Museum Designated Outstanding Collection
  • LIBRARY AND MUSEUM CHARITABLE TRUST OF THE UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND REGISTERED CHARITY NUMBER 1058497 / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2025

  • Accessibility statement

  • Designed, developed, and maintained by King's Digital Lab

We use cookies to track usage and preferences.

Privacy & cookie policy