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  • April 6, 1861
  • Page 8
  • MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 6, 1861: Page 8

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    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. ← Page 5 of 5
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Page 8

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

Masonic Notes And Queries.

SOLOMON and SHEBA . ( Duett . ) o ' [ One gem beyond the rest I see , SHEBA . \ And charming Solomon is be . SOL . ) Fairest of fair ones , tbon art she . SHEBA . Oh thou , surpassing all men wise , SOL . . Ancl thine excelling women's eyes . HIRAM . ( RecUi )

Wisdom ancl beauty doth combine Our art to raise , and hearts to join . CHORUS . Give to MASONRY the prize , Where the fairest choose the wise ; Beauty still should Wisdom love , Beauty ancl order reign above . "

[ The foregoing cannot be adduced as an authority on matters of fact , but it asserts two things touched upon by former querists , and one heretofore altogether new in this form . It calls Sheba " fairest of fair ones , " in opposition to Bro . Passenger ' s " ebony Yenus . " It also pretty plainly intimates a liaison between Solomon and the Queen , and it brings Hiram on the scene after the completion of the Temple . —f * t- ]

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

NOTES ON LITERATURE , SCIENCE , AND ART .

A writer in the Comhill Magazine for the present month , whose theme is " The Morality of Advocacy , " says -. — " People read newspapers , ancl especially the trials reported there , almost exclusively for amusement . The most important cases brought into court ' possess , ' to use the reporter ' s phrase , ' no interest for the general public' Mercantile causes of all kinds , questions about dispositions of property , actions between landlord ancl tenant , proceedings

about the rights and duties of public authorities , such as corporations , questions as to rights of way , local customs , and other matters which it would be tedious to mention , are amongst the most important branches of litigation , ancl impose upon the advocates engaged in them their most laborious , ancl also their most lucrative duties ; but such matters as these are naturally passed over very shortly in the columns of newspapers . The cases which are reported there at full length are matters of a slihtl

gy scandalous kind . Actions for libel , assault , seduction , or breach of promise of marriage—actions by fraudulent bill-discounters—horse causes , in which whole days are spent in complicated perjury ; and , in fact , every suit which could be classed under the general title of 'Foolu . Knave , ' are the cases which are reported and read , and from which the public form their notion as to what sort of people

barristers are . These cases give far too low a notion of advocacy , and of those who practise it . The litigants are usually both rogues ancl fools ; they naturally resort to a low class of attorneys , who again have a natural affinity for the lowest kind of barrister . Those who have a special turn for this kind of business , and who are supposed to be the most distinguished members of the profession by those who measure professional eminence by the frequency with which a man ' s name in the form a class

appears newspapers , which is small , disreputable , and shut out to a great extent from really high professional distinction . After a shore experience of Westminster Hall , it woulcl be easy for any one to recognise at a glance the members of this class . The callous insensibility , the brutal indifference to the feelings of others , the hardened vulgarity which can never rise above a s sort of metallic bombast , tbe unvarying mannerism which makes speech subject

every upon every look like variations upon one tune , bave almost always made their mark on the features , the tone of voice , and tbe very gait and gesture . It is from this small section of a noble profession that too many persons form their opinion of the whole of it ; ancl it is not surprising that that opinion should be a low one . It is unfortunately true that there are amongst English barristers a certain number of ruffians as brutal and as false as any of their clients . "

Another strange freak has been played with the bust of Shakspere at Stratford , worse than that perpetrated by Malone . " It has been taken down from its niche in the wall of Trinity Church , " says the Aihenceum , " scraped , painted -red and black , and set up again , without a single soul out of Stratford hearing one ivhisper about it until all was done . " The article is from the pen

of Mr . Hepworth Dixon , and dated from Stratford-on-Avon , March 25 th , 1861 ; and he continues : — "That an unknown picturecleaner should have been suffered to take the bust from its niche ,

scrape , scratch , and rub , ancl then to lay on colour , to daub and splash as it seemed good to him , without consulting a single person connected with Shaksperian lore , or taking the opinion of a single artist , is a fact so strange and so incredible , that I almost expect the reader to say , ' This is a dream . ' It is too true . The bust is changed , and for the moment spoiled . The expression of

the stone is at best a little hard ancl rigid , as if the face had been modelled from a cast taken after death . It is now as hideous and idiotic as any bust can be made to look with that round head ancl mass of brain . The mouth is made to gape . The eyes stare and squint . The cheeks are daubed a villanous red . " After this , one could not be very much surprised to hear that the Stratford authorities hacl caused a short black pipe to be inserted in the bard'smouth .

Professor Temiant is to commence a course of lectures on geology ( having especial reference to the application of the science to engineering , mining , architecture , and agriculture ) , commencing on Friday morning , April 12 th , at King's College , London . Eugene Verboeckhoven ' s great picture , <• Cattle leaving the Farmyard , " on which the great Flemish master has been engaged

for the last three years , is to be publicly exhibited in Hanoversquare , on and after Monday next . , Mr . Richard Doyle , who withdrew from Punch some time ago on account of its attacks upon Popery , commences his " Bird ' s Eye-Views of Society " in the Comhill Magazine for this month ., Essays and Reviews has already reached an eighth edition ,

without any reduction in the original price of balf-a-guinea . In the first editions , we believe , only a thousand copies were printed at . one time , but now five thousand impressions are required for each issue . Mudie ' s library alone has taken two thousand copies , but the demand for the work is so great , that subscribers have to " wait till they get it . "

Mr . Alexander Smith , the talented secretary to the University of Edinburgh , has a new poem preparing for publication . Mr . Edwin Arnold , M . A ., has in the press two volumes on the Administration of British India under our lately deceased Bro . tbe Marquis of Dalhousie . My Own Life and Times , by the late Eev . Thomas Somerville ,.

D . D ., Minister of Jedburgh , and one of the chaplains in ordinary to George HI ., is now in the press , and will be out during tbe current month . The work was written in the years 1813 and 1814 , and the author , who was born February 26 th ( O . S . ) , 1741 , died on the 16 th

of May , 1830 , in his ninetieth year . He was the author of some historical ivorks on the Kevolution of 1688 ; and on the reign of Queen Anne , Lockbart , in a note to his Life of Sir Walter Scott ,. says : — " Some extracts from this venerable person ' s unpublished . Memoirs of his own Life have been kindly sent to me by his son , the well known physician of Chelsea College ; from which it appears that tbe reverend doctor , ancl more particularly still , his wife , a lady

of remarkable talent and humour , had formed a high notion of Scott ' s future eminence [ at a very early period of his life . Dr . Ssurvived to a good old age , preserving his faculties quite entire , and I bave spent many pleasant hours under his hospitable roof in company with Sir Walter . We heard him preach an excellent circuit sermon when be was upwards of ninety-two [ this must be an

error ] , and at the Judges' dinner afterwards he was among the gayest of the company . " And our gifted Brother , Sir Walter , hnnself mentions him under date of the 20 th of September , 1826 , in tbe following terms : — " Breakfasted with tbe Bev . Dr . Somerville . 'This venerable gentleman is one of the oldest of the literary brotherhood—I suppose about eighty-seven , —and except a little deafness , quite entire . Living all his life in good society as a

gentleman born—and having , besides , professional calls to make , among the poor—he must know , of course , much that is enrions concerning the momentous changes which have passed under his eye He talked of them accordingly , and has written something on the subject , but has scarce the force necessary to seize on the most striking points . The bowl that rolls eas 2 st along the green goes farthest , and bas the least clay sticking to it . I have often noticed that a liindly placid good humour is the com panion of longevity

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-04-06, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 6 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_06041861/page/8/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
MEMOIRS OF THE FREEMASONS OF NAPLES. Article 1
MASTERPIECES OF THE ARCHITECT URE OF DIFFERENT NATIONS. Article 2
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 3
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 4
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 8
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 9
CHARITY. Article 9
INSTALLATION OF THE RIGHT HONOURABLE THE EARL DE GREY AND RIPON AS RIGHT WORSHIPFUL PROVINCIAL GRAND MASTER OF WEST YORKSHIRE. Article 9
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 10
METROPOLITAN. Article 10
PROVINCIAL. Article 15
ROYAL ARCH. Article 17
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 18
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 19
Obituary. Article 20
THE WEEK. Article 20
TO CORRESPNDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonic Notes And Queries.

SOLOMON and SHEBA . ( Duett . ) o ' [ One gem beyond the rest I see , SHEBA . \ And charming Solomon is be . SOL . ) Fairest of fair ones , tbon art she . SHEBA . Oh thou , surpassing all men wise , SOL . . Ancl thine excelling women's eyes . HIRAM . ( RecUi )

Wisdom ancl beauty doth combine Our art to raise , and hearts to join . CHORUS . Give to MASONRY the prize , Where the fairest choose the wise ; Beauty still should Wisdom love , Beauty ancl order reign above . "

[ The foregoing cannot be adduced as an authority on matters of fact , but it asserts two things touched upon by former querists , and one heretofore altogether new in this form . It calls Sheba " fairest of fair ones , " in opposition to Bro . Passenger ' s " ebony Yenus . " It also pretty plainly intimates a liaison between Solomon and the Queen , and it brings Hiram on the scene after the completion of the Temple . —f * t- ]

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

NOTES ON LITERATURE , SCIENCE , AND ART .

A writer in the Comhill Magazine for the present month , whose theme is " The Morality of Advocacy , " says -. — " People read newspapers , ancl especially the trials reported there , almost exclusively for amusement . The most important cases brought into court ' possess , ' to use the reporter ' s phrase , ' no interest for the general public' Mercantile causes of all kinds , questions about dispositions of property , actions between landlord ancl tenant , proceedings

about the rights and duties of public authorities , such as corporations , questions as to rights of way , local customs , and other matters which it would be tedious to mention , are amongst the most important branches of litigation , ancl impose upon the advocates engaged in them their most laborious , ancl also their most lucrative duties ; but such matters as these are naturally passed over very shortly in the columns of newspapers . The cases which are reported there at full length are matters of a slihtl

gy scandalous kind . Actions for libel , assault , seduction , or breach of promise of marriage—actions by fraudulent bill-discounters—horse causes , in which whole days are spent in complicated perjury ; and , in fact , every suit which could be classed under the general title of 'Foolu . Knave , ' are the cases which are reported and read , and from which the public form their notion as to what sort of people

barristers are . These cases give far too low a notion of advocacy , and of those who practise it . The litigants are usually both rogues ancl fools ; they naturally resort to a low class of attorneys , who again have a natural affinity for the lowest kind of barrister . Those who have a special turn for this kind of business , and who are supposed to be the most distinguished members of the profession by those who measure professional eminence by the frequency with which a man ' s name in the form a class

appears newspapers , which is small , disreputable , and shut out to a great extent from really high professional distinction . After a shore experience of Westminster Hall , it woulcl be easy for any one to recognise at a glance the members of this class . The callous insensibility , the brutal indifference to the feelings of others , the hardened vulgarity which can never rise above a s sort of metallic bombast , tbe unvarying mannerism which makes speech subject

every upon every look like variations upon one tune , bave almost always made their mark on the features , the tone of voice , and tbe very gait and gesture . It is from this small section of a noble profession that too many persons form their opinion of the whole of it ; ancl it is not surprising that that opinion should be a low one . It is unfortunately true that there are amongst English barristers a certain number of ruffians as brutal and as false as any of their clients . "

Another strange freak has been played with the bust of Shakspere at Stratford , worse than that perpetrated by Malone . " It has been taken down from its niche in the wall of Trinity Church , " says the Aihenceum , " scraped , painted -red and black , and set up again , without a single soul out of Stratford hearing one ivhisper about it until all was done . " The article is from the pen

of Mr . Hepworth Dixon , and dated from Stratford-on-Avon , March 25 th , 1861 ; and he continues : — "That an unknown picturecleaner should have been suffered to take the bust from its niche ,

scrape , scratch , and rub , ancl then to lay on colour , to daub and splash as it seemed good to him , without consulting a single person connected with Shaksperian lore , or taking the opinion of a single artist , is a fact so strange and so incredible , that I almost expect the reader to say , ' This is a dream . ' It is too true . The bust is changed , and for the moment spoiled . The expression of

the stone is at best a little hard ancl rigid , as if the face had been modelled from a cast taken after death . It is now as hideous and idiotic as any bust can be made to look with that round head ancl mass of brain . The mouth is made to gape . The eyes stare and squint . The cheeks are daubed a villanous red . " After this , one could not be very much surprised to hear that the Stratford authorities hacl caused a short black pipe to be inserted in the bard'smouth .

Professor Temiant is to commence a course of lectures on geology ( having especial reference to the application of the science to engineering , mining , architecture , and agriculture ) , commencing on Friday morning , April 12 th , at King's College , London . Eugene Verboeckhoven ' s great picture , <• Cattle leaving the Farmyard , " on which the great Flemish master has been engaged

for the last three years , is to be publicly exhibited in Hanoversquare , on and after Monday next . , Mr . Richard Doyle , who withdrew from Punch some time ago on account of its attacks upon Popery , commences his " Bird ' s Eye-Views of Society " in the Comhill Magazine for this month ., Essays and Reviews has already reached an eighth edition ,

without any reduction in the original price of balf-a-guinea . In the first editions , we believe , only a thousand copies were printed at . one time , but now five thousand impressions are required for each issue . Mudie ' s library alone has taken two thousand copies , but the demand for the work is so great , that subscribers have to " wait till they get it . "

Mr . Alexander Smith , the talented secretary to the University of Edinburgh , has a new poem preparing for publication . Mr . Edwin Arnold , M . A ., has in the press two volumes on the Administration of British India under our lately deceased Bro . tbe Marquis of Dalhousie . My Own Life and Times , by the late Eev . Thomas Somerville ,.

D . D ., Minister of Jedburgh , and one of the chaplains in ordinary to George HI ., is now in the press , and will be out during tbe current month . The work was written in the years 1813 and 1814 , and the author , who was born February 26 th ( O . S . ) , 1741 , died on the 16 th

of May , 1830 , in his ninetieth year . He was the author of some historical ivorks on the Kevolution of 1688 ; and on the reign of Queen Anne , Lockbart , in a note to his Life of Sir Walter Scott ,. says : — " Some extracts from this venerable person ' s unpublished . Memoirs of his own Life have been kindly sent to me by his son , the well known physician of Chelsea College ; from which it appears that tbe reverend doctor , ancl more particularly still , his wife , a lady

of remarkable talent and humour , had formed a high notion of Scott ' s future eminence [ at a very early period of his life . Dr . Ssurvived to a good old age , preserving his faculties quite entire , and I bave spent many pleasant hours under his hospitable roof in company with Sir Walter . We heard him preach an excellent circuit sermon when be was upwards of ninety-two [ this must be an

error ] , and at the Judges' dinner afterwards he was among the gayest of the company . " And our gifted Brother , Sir Walter , hnnself mentions him under date of the 20 th of September , 1826 , in tbe following terms : — " Breakfasted with tbe Bev . Dr . Somerville . 'This venerable gentleman is one of the oldest of the literary brotherhood—I suppose about eighty-seven , —and except a little deafness , quite entire . Living all his life in good society as a

gentleman born—and having , besides , professional calls to make , among the poor—he must know , of course , much that is enrions concerning the momentous changes which have passed under his eye He talked of them accordingly , and has written something on the subject , but has scarce the force necessary to seize on the most striking points . The bowl that rolls eas 2 st along the green goes farthest , and bas the least clay sticking to it . I have often noticed that a liindly placid good humour is the com panion of longevity

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