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  • Feb. 9, 1861
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Feb. 9, 1861: Page 6

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    Article NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. ← Page 2 of 2
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    Article CORRESPONDENCE. Page 1 of 1
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Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

Prince Albert has founded a military library at Aldershot , for the nse of officers in the camp . The books are of a military character ; being , with maps and plans , calculated for the professional improvement of the officers . It was the opinion of Camden and other writers that the Romans never penetrated into Cornwall . This opinion , however , must now give way . Traces of Roman occupation have been discovered on the north coast of Cornwall , near Padstow , and an inscription , bearing the name of the Emperor Constantius , has been found built into the wall of a church near Penzance .

At a sale of rare coins in London the other day , a penny of Cunohelinus sold for £ 30 10 s . ; a penny of Offa , JS 1 < __ 10 s . ; a penny of Ecgbearht , £ 4 . 12 s . ; a penny of Alfred the Great , £ 9 ; and one of Ceolnoth , Archbishop of Canterbury , £ 13 10 s . A beautiful coin of Panormus reached £ 70 , an ' d a very rare Tetradrachm of Segasta brought £ 71 . The report that the Great Exhibition of 1862 has been put off is entirely without foundation .

The Bury Times says : — " AA ' e are extremely sorry to see a respectable English journal like the Athenamm doing the wicked work of the slaveholder , by denouncing the too truthful pictures of American slave rule given by the gifted and pious Harriet Beecher Stowe , as 'the romantic exaggerations and extravagant misrepresentations of Uncle Tom ' s Cabin . ' Mr . Hepworth Dixon , if we are rightly informed , has sprung by merit to his present

honourable position from the lowly position of a poor lad employed for half-a-crown a-week as scavenger in a Manchester cotton mill . We honour him all the more for this ; it is more honourable to him than to be bred from the loins of kings . But it would be well for men like Mr . Hepworth Dixon now and then to think how different must have been their fate , even in the great

republic of the United States , had they been the property of the planter ; and we really should have given a man of Mr . Dixon's high attainments credit for better judgment than to libel the thrill of horror and holy indignation whicli animated the breasts of the men and women of England when they read , as most of them dill , the pages of Uncle Tom ' s Cabin , as—a ' morbid appetite for

scenes of cruelty . ' The Atlienantm must speak in other tones than this on the great question of slavery , if it wishes to be the exponent of British feeling in tlie days of Queen Victoria . " In the Lectures on the History of the Church cf Scotland , from the Reformation to ihe Devolution Settlement , by the late \ ery Rev . John Lee , D . D ., LL . D ., Principal of the University of Edinburgh published under the editorship of his son , the Rev . AVilliam Lee , we have the following picture of religious persecution -. — - " Dr . Alexander

Leighton , a Scotcn divine , father of the Bishop , having written and published a work entitled An Appeal to the Parliament ; or , Zion ' s Plea ayainsf Prelacy , which contained some strong expressions against the bishops , the canons , and the ceremonies , was tried by the _ Star-Chamber for 'framing a book , so full of most pestilent , devilish , and dangerous assertions , to the scandal ofthe King , Queen , and peers , especially the bishops . ' The words which were particularly charged against him were : * We do not read of greater

perse cution of God ' s people than in this our island , especially since the death of Queen Elizabeth . ' He confessed the words , and said that the thing was too true , by the prelates taking away life and livelihood from many ministers and private men , of whom many were pined to death in prison , and many wandered up and clown , their families being desolate and helpless ; that , besides this , the blood of souls had been endangered by the removal of the faithful shepherds from the flockThe court unanimousl

. y decreed that the Doctor should be ' committed to the Fleet Prison for life , and pay a fine of £ 10 , 000 to the King ' s use ; that the High Commission should degrade him from his ministry ; that he should then be brought to the pillory at AVestminster , while the court was sitting , and be whipped ; that , after his whipping , he should be set on the pillory a convenient timeand have one of his ears cut one side of his

, , nose slit , and be branded in the face with the letters S . S ., signifying Sower of Sedition ; that then he should be carried hack to prison " and after a few days be carried to the pillory in Cheapside on a market-day , and be there likewise whipped , and have the other side of his nose split , and his other ear cut oil ; and then he shut up in prison for the remainder of his life , unless his Majesty be graciously

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

pleased to enlarge him . ' While this unjust and unmerciful sentence was being pronounced , Bishop Laud , throwing himself into a devout attitude , aud pulling off his cap , gave thanks to God for his righteous judgments . No part of the crusl doom was remitted . That it was rigidly executed we learn indeed from * the Bishop's own journal , in which he has inserted a minute and circumstantial account of the whole transaction , as if he had delighted to dwell on the contemplation of a fellow-creature ' s sufferings . "

Mr . AV . H . Marshall , in his Four Tears in Burmah , thus describes a Burmese wrestling match which he saw at Rangoon , during the time he was editing the Rangoon Chronicle : — " Ivo-Phoo and the negro entered the arena first , and commenced operations . The preliminary manoeuvres between tlie opponents were exceedingly amusing . It appeals to me that Sambo did not exactly comprehend the kind of warfare in which he was to engage , for he commenced

sparring out after the most approved fashion , as if he were expected to take part in a pugilistic encounter . The Barman kept about him at a little distance , dodging round with a peculiar kind of hop , with his body slightly bent towards his antagonist , and thrusting out his hand and drawing it back again with a motion as if he wanted to touch the other's flesh , bat durst not for fear of getting burnt . Sometimes he would , with amazing quickness , thrust his face pretty closely within the other ' s reach , when the negro would

make a hit straight out , but would bo sure to miss his object , amidst screams of laughter from the spectators . Amusing as this sort of fun was , we were beginning to think it monotonous , when the Burman made a quick and sudden motion , seized Sambo near the hip with one hand , and with a manceuvre executed with such suddenness and dexterity as to be unobservable to any but the most attentive spectator , threw him over his head , and brought him flat on his back upon the sawdust . This was evidently a different sort of

thing from what Sambo had bargained for . He arose before the plaudits announcing Ko-Phoo's victory had ceased , and resolutely sparred out again . He made a blow at the champion , which that individual luckily contrived to avoid , or he would probably have been hurt , and ' followed up the attack vigorously . ICo-Phoo , however , watched his opportunity , ancl repeated the achievement , this time flinging Sambo with such force upon the ground that he was glad to retire from the arenaleaving Ivo-Phoo to his prize of

, silk and muslin . The artilleryman came next . He was a tall , stout , muscular Irishman , and apparently a scientific wrestler ; but he , too , turned out no match for Ko-Phoo . He was , however , to do him justice , a far more formidable opponent fo the Burman than was the negro , ancl Ko-Phoo seemed to appreciate the fact . He was unequal to the Burmau in skill , notwithstanding , and he also had to endure the mortification of defeat . "

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

[ THE EDITOR does not hold himself responsible for any opinion entertained by Correspondents . " ] THE EOYAL AECH DEGREE . TO THB EDIIOI- 01 ' THE _ . 1 U __ : __ AS 0 ; . S _ . _ AG . IZI _ . E AXD MASONIC MII-ROn . DEAB . SIR AND BKOTIIEE , —In reply to your correspondent ,

" One who esteems the Hol y Eoyal Arch Degree , " page 67 , January 26 , 1861 , of your invaluable Magazine , I beg to state that the province of North and East Yorkshire has a flourishing Provincial Grand Chapter , of ivhich our highly esteemed and M . E . Comp . George Marwood is Superintendent . That most expert and able companion formed a Provincial Grand Chapter at Yorkin April , 1859 , and

in-, stalled his Prov . G . Officers there for the current year . In 1860 , the Provincial Chapter was held at Hull , in the Humber Chapter House ( 65 ) . I can most cordially bear my testimony to the value of our Prov . G . Chapter , as by its means , and through the untiring self-denying zeal and liberality of Comp . Marwood , cur chapters in this province are much revived and encouraged . I trust that thc

example thus exhibited will induce other provinces to folloiv in our steps , being satisfied that one great means of strengthening and extending the knowledge of the most hol y rite would be the establishing throughout the empire of Prov . G . Chapters , thus giving an impetus to that degree , ivhich every true companion should feel to be the choicest part of our Ancient and Accepted Order .

Should any of your correspondents wish for further information , I shall he glad to stive them all in my power . JOHN COATSTTOETH , Past Prov . G . D . C , N . and E . Yorkshire , and S . E . Humber , 65 . Hull , 2 nd February , 1861 .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-02-09, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 21 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_09021861/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—XL. Article 1
STRAY THOUGHTS ON THE ORIGIN AND PROGRESS OF THE FINE ARTS. Article 2
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 3
Literature. Article 4
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 5
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 6
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 7
METROPOLITAN. Article 7
PROVINCIAL. Article 7
ROYAL ARCH. Article 14
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 15
COLONIAL. Article 17
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 18
Obituary. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 20
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

Prince Albert has founded a military library at Aldershot , for the nse of officers in the camp . The books are of a military character ; being , with maps and plans , calculated for the professional improvement of the officers . It was the opinion of Camden and other writers that the Romans never penetrated into Cornwall . This opinion , however , must now give way . Traces of Roman occupation have been discovered on the north coast of Cornwall , near Padstow , and an inscription , bearing the name of the Emperor Constantius , has been found built into the wall of a church near Penzance .

At a sale of rare coins in London the other day , a penny of Cunohelinus sold for £ 30 10 s . ; a penny of Offa , JS 1 < __ 10 s . ; a penny of Ecgbearht , £ 4 . 12 s . ; a penny of Alfred the Great , £ 9 ; and one of Ceolnoth , Archbishop of Canterbury , £ 13 10 s . A beautiful coin of Panormus reached £ 70 , an ' d a very rare Tetradrachm of Segasta brought £ 71 . The report that the Great Exhibition of 1862 has been put off is entirely without foundation .

The Bury Times says : — " AA ' e are extremely sorry to see a respectable English journal like the Athenamm doing the wicked work of the slaveholder , by denouncing the too truthful pictures of American slave rule given by the gifted and pious Harriet Beecher Stowe , as 'the romantic exaggerations and extravagant misrepresentations of Uncle Tom ' s Cabin . ' Mr . Hepworth Dixon , if we are rightly informed , has sprung by merit to his present

honourable position from the lowly position of a poor lad employed for half-a-crown a-week as scavenger in a Manchester cotton mill . We honour him all the more for this ; it is more honourable to him than to be bred from the loins of kings . But it would be well for men like Mr . Hepworth Dixon now and then to think how different must have been their fate , even in the great

republic of the United States , had they been the property of the planter ; and we really should have given a man of Mr . Dixon's high attainments credit for better judgment than to libel the thrill of horror and holy indignation whicli animated the breasts of the men and women of England when they read , as most of them dill , the pages of Uncle Tom ' s Cabin , as—a ' morbid appetite for

scenes of cruelty . ' The Atlienantm must speak in other tones than this on the great question of slavery , if it wishes to be the exponent of British feeling in tlie days of Queen Victoria . " In the Lectures on the History of the Church cf Scotland , from the Reformation to ihe Devolution Settlement , by the late \ ery Rev . John Lee , D . D ., LL . D ., Principal of the University of Edinburgh published under the editorship of his son , the Rev . AVilliam Lee , we have the following picture of religious persecution -. — - " Dr . Alexander

Leighton , a Scotcn divine , father of the Bishop , having written and published a work entitled An Appeal to the Parliament ; or , Zion ' s Plea ayainsf Prelacy , which contained some strong expressions against the bishops , the canons , and the ceremonies , was tried by the _ Star-Chamber for 'framing a book , so full of most pestilent , devilish , and dangerous assertions , to the scandal ofthe King , Queen , and peers , especially the bishops . ' The words which were particularly charged against him were : * We do not read of greater

perse cution of God ' s people than in this our island , especially since the death of Queen Elizabeth . ' He confessed the words , and said that the thing was too true , by the prelates taking away life and livelihood from many ministers and private men , of whom many were pined to death in prison , and many wandered up and clown , their families being desolate and helpless ; that , besides this , the blood of souls had been endangered by the removal of the faithful shepherds from the flockThe court unanimousl

. y decreed that the Doctor should be ' committed to the Fleet Prison for life , and pay a fine of £ 10 , 000 to the King ' s use ; that the High Commission should degrade him from his ministry ; that he should then be brought to the pillory at AVestminster , while the court was sitting , and be whipped ; that , after his whipping , he should be set on the pillory a convenient timeand have one of his ears cut one side of his

, , nose slit , and be branded in the face with the letters S . S ., signifying Sower of Sedition ; that then he should be carried hack to prison " and after a few days be carried to the pillory in Cheapside on a market-day , and be there likewise whipped , and have the other side of his nose split , and his other ear cut oil ; and then he shut up in prison for the remainder of his life , unless his Majesty be graciously

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

pleased to enlarge him . ' While this unjust and unmerciful sentence was being pronounced , Bishop Laud , throwing himself into a devout attitude , aud pulling off his cap , gave thanks to God for his righteous judgments . No part of the crusl doom was remitted . That it was rigidly executed we learn indeed from * the Bishop's own journal , in which he has inserted a minute and circumstantial account of the whole transaction , as if he had delighted to dwell on the contemplation of a fellow-creature ' s sufferings . "

Mr . AV . H . Marshall , in his Four Tears in Burmah , thus describes a Burmese wrestling match which he saw at Rangoon , during the time he was editing the Rangoon Chronicle : — " Ivo-Phoo and the negro entered the arena first , and commenced operations . The preliminary manoeuvres between tlie opponents were exceedingly amusing . It appeals to me that Sambo did not exactly comprehend the kind of warfare in which he was to engage , for he commenced

sparring out after the most approved fashion , as if he were expected to take part in a pugilistic encounter . The Barman kept about him at a little distance , dodging round with a peculiar kind of hop , with his body slightly bent towards his antagonist , and thrusting out his hand and drawing it back again with a motion as if he wanted to touch the other's flesh , bat durst not for fear of getting burnt . Sometimes he would , with amazing quickness , thrust his face pretty closely within the other ' s reach , when the negro would

make a hit straight out , but would bo sure to miss his object , amidst screams of laughter from the spectators . Amusing as this sort of fun was , we were beginning to think it monotonous , when the Burman made a quick and sudden motion , seized Sambo near the hip with one hand , and with a manceuvre executed with such suddenness and dexterity as to be unobservable to any but the most attentive spectator , threw him over his head , and brought him flat on his back upon the sawdust . This was evidently a different sort of

thing from what Sambo had bargained for . He arose before the plaudits announcing Ko-Phoo's victory had ceased , and resolutely sparred out again . He made a blow at the champion , which that individual luckily contrived to avoid , or he would probably have been hurt , and ' followed up the attack vigorously . ICo-Phoo , however , watched his opportunity , ancl repeated the achievement , this time flinging Sambo with such force upon the ground that he was glad to retire from the arenaleaving Ivo-Phoo to his prize of

, silk and muslin . The artilleryman came next . He was a tall , stout , muscular Irishman , and apparently a scientific wrestler ; but he , too , turned out no match for Ko-Phoo . He was , however , to do him justice , a far more formidable opponent fo the Burman than was the negro , ancl Ko-Phoo seemed to appreciate the fact . He was unequal to the Burmau in skill , notwithstanding , and he also had to endure the mortification of defeat . "

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

[ THE EDITOR does not hold himself responsible for any opinion entertained by Correspondents . " ] THE EOYAL AECH DEGREE . TO THB EDIIOI- 01 ' THE _ . 1 U __ : __ AS 0 ; . S _ . _ AG . IZI _ . E AXD MASONIC MII-ROn . DEAB . SIR AND BKOTIIEE , —In reply to your correspondent ,

" One who esteems the Hol y Eoyal Arch Degree , " page 67 , January 26 , 1861 , of your invaluable Magazine , I beg to state that the province of North and East Yorkshire has a flourishing Provincial Grand Chapter , of ivhich our highly esteemed and M . E . Comp . George Marwood is Superintendent . That most expert and able companion formed a Provincial Grand Chapter at Yorkin April , 1859 , and

in-, stalled his Prov . G . Officers there for the current year . In 1860 , the Provincial Chapter was held at Hull , in the Humber Chapter House ( 65 ) . I can most cordially bear my testimony to the value of our Prov . G . Chapter , as by its means , and through the untiring self-denying zeal and liberality of Comp . Marwood , cur chapters in this province are much revived and encouraged . I trust that thc

example thus exhibited will induce other provinces to folloiv in our steps , being satisfied that one great means of strengthening and extending the knowledge of the most hol y rite would be the establishing throughout the empire of Prov . G . Chapters , thus giving an impetus to that degree , ivhich every true companion should feel to be the choicest part of our Ancient and Accepted Order .

Should any of your correspondents wish for further information , I shall he glad to stive them all in my power . JOHN COATSTTOETH , Past Prov . G . D . C , N . and E . Yorkshire , and S . E . Humber , 65 . Hull , 2 nd February , 1861 .

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