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  • Nov. 10, 1860
  • Page 12
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Nov. 10, 1860: Page 12

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    Article NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article CORRESPONDENCE. Page 1 of 1
    Article PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF WILTSHIRE. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 12

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Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

Mr . J . Coidy Jeaffreson , in his Pooh about Doctors , just published , relates the following anecdote of an English physician of the days of our Grand Master Sir Christopher Wren . — " Dr . Cadogan , of Charles the Second ' s time , Avas , like Sir John Eliot , a favourite Avith the ladies . His wont was to spend his days in shooting , and his evenings in flirtations . To the former of these tastes the folloAA'ing lines refer : —

' Doctor , all game you either ought to shun , Or sport no longer with the unsteady gun ; But , like physicians of undoubted skill , Gladly attempt what never fails to kill , Not lead's uncertain dross , but physic's deadly pill . ' Whether he was a good shot we cannot say ; but he was sufficiently adroit as a squire of dames , for he secured as his wife a Aveaithy

lady , over wliose property he had unfettered control . Against the money , however , there Avere two important points figuring under the head of ' set-off '—the bride Avas old and querulous . Of course such a woman Avas unfitted to live with an eminent physician , on whom bevies of court ladies smiled , whenever he went west of Charing Cross . After spending a feAV months in alternate fits of

jealous hate and jealous fondness , the poor creature conceived the terrible fancy that her husband was bent on destroying her with poison , and so ridding his life of her execrable temper . One day , when surrounded by her friends , aud in . the presence of hex lovdanu master , she fell on her back in a state of hysterical spasms , exclaiming .- — ' Ah ! he has killed me at last . I am poisoned

!'—' Poisoned I' cried the lady friends , turning up the whites of their eyes . ' Oh ! gracious goodness!—you have done it , Doctor ! '' AVhat do you accuse me of ? ' asked the doctor , Avith surprise . — ' I accuse you—of—killing me—ee / responded the wife , doing her best to imitate a death struggle . — 'Ladies ' , answered the Doctor , with admirable nonchalance , bowing to Mrs . Cadogan's bosom

associates , ' it is perfectly false . You are quite welcome to open her at once , and then you'll disco \ 'er the calumny / " Mr . Hobbs , whose fame as a locksmith is world-Avide , is about to return to the United States , and to retire into private life , —at least so far as business is concerned .

Among the notices of literary auctions we observe that the entire stock remaining on hand of Mr . Henry Mayhew's London Labour and the London Poor , as also of his Great World of London , will be sold next month . The Illustrated Horse Doctor , by Mr . Edward MayheAv , appears to have been a success . A French firm is in treaty with ? . lessrs .

Allen and Co ., the English publishers , to produce a translation in that language , while American publishers are negotiating for its production in the United States . Beport says that the interesting article in the new number of the Comliill Magazines , entitled " The Eival Liberators of Italy " —i . e ., Cavour and Garibaldi—is from the pen of Mr . Thomas

Trollope , brother of the prolific and clever writer who has eclipsed , for this generation , his mother ' s reputation as a novelist . Mr . Thomas Trollope is well read in Italian history , medieval as well as modern , and is known both by his books on subjects from that history , and as Florentine correspondent of one of our contemporaries . The announcement of the approaching publication of the Neio

Encyclopedia , undertaken by the Brothers Pereire , has created a great sensation in France . Guizot and Cousin , Alllcmam and Thiers , are to be associated in its composition , Proudhon and the Pere Enfantin , with Gerge Sand and Michelet I An Account of the Late Indian Rebellion has recently apnea v cd at Paris , from the pen of the well-known litterateur , J , f . Einile

Forgues , and few books published in France have home such hish testimony to the character of the English Government , army , and people . AA ' e have much pleasure in stating that Avhile Sir E . Prodie ' s health is excellent ,-his eyesight has improved to such a degree as to give his friends the strongest hope that he will shortly regain to a very great extent the use of his eves .

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

[ T HE EDITOB does not hold himself responsible for any opinionentertained by Correspondents ^] MASONIC ARMS . TO TEE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE AND JTASONIC MIRROR . SIR , —I have been not a little intei'ested in the correspondence lately evoked in your columns by some remarks

upon the armorial insigna of the Oakley Lodge , Hants . The subject of the arms of private lodges has always appeared to me to be deserving of more attention than has hitherto been bestowed upon it by the Craft ; and I must enter my protest against the doctrine enunciated by one of your correspondents , that the insignia of private lodges are mere devices , and that disgrace to blazonry ( AA'hich looks as if it

had been stolen from an advertising undertaker ' s Avindow , or the banner of an odd-felloAvs' procession)—the arms of Grand Lodge—is the only authorised Masonic coat . But , though I cannot see anything in the letter or spirit of the Book of Constitutions to support this theory , yet I do not hesitate to express my conviction that the use of personal arms as insignia of lodges ( especially AA'hen , in the instance

referred to , the armorial bearings haA'e nothing of a Masonic character about them ) is , to say the least of it , undesirable , and that it Avould be hig hly beneficial to the Craft to make the office of Grand Pursuivant something more than a mere matter of form , by investing its holder Avith the supervision of the ornaments and especially the heraldy of each lodge . AVhile the Craft can boast such

names as those of our Bro . Albert AVoods and J . W . PapAvorth , there could be no want of ability to fulfil the duties of the office , and I may eveu say that nearly every province could furnish a brother fully competent to give effectual assistance in his OAAUI noighboui'hood . As a specimen of Avhat I consider a Masonic coat of arms , I append the description of one recently assumed by the

Howe Lodge ( No . 857 ) , Avhich your heraldic readers Avill observe combines the Avolves' heads of HoAve with the bend lozengy of Birmingham— thus : azure , on a bend argent cotised lozengy ; or , thi-ee wolves' heads coupled sable—on a coniton of the third a square and compasses of the first . I beg to remain fraternally yours , A PROV . G . OrncEii or WARWICKSHIRE .

Provincial Grand Lodge Of Wiltshire.

PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF WILTSHIRE .

TO THE EBITOR OE THE FREEMASONS MAGAZINE AND MASONIC MIRROR . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —I cannot allow your remarks on Bro . Oliver ' s speech at the late proA'incial grand meeting of AViltshire , and Avhich appeared in your last number , respecting the unbusinesslike manner in Avhich the scrutineers performed their duty Avith regard to the candidates for the Widows' Fund to pass unnoticed , as

you insert a paragraph at the foot stating , " That the Wiltshire brethren are notorious for never having supported that or cither of the other charities . Those always complain the most ivlw do Hie least . " Had you been able to refute thc charge as being an erroneous statement , it Avouldhave been more to the purposein removing the want of confidence thc country brethren

feel in the managers cf the charity , and would have , tended more to increase the funds from the provinces than such an observation applied to so Avortby a brother ' s remarks as the son of our justly-celebrated Masonic Avriter Dr . Oliver ,. AA'ho , the Wiltshire brethren feci satisfied , ivould not make such a statement unless Avarrantcd in so , doing . AA c ivill HOAV see how far the AViltshire brethren are

deserving your observations . In thc A"ol . for 1 S 57 of your MAGAZINE , page 751 , yon will find tho sum of £ 20 Avas voted at tho . Provincial Grand Lodge at Devizes toAvards the Masonic charities , being , I think , the first A'ote , as you must not forget that the Prov . G . L . Avas instituted , to thc best of my knowledge , in 1851 , On the 24 th of August , 1858 , at the Prov . G . L . held at TroAvbridge ( recorded in

page 422 ) , it Avas carried that £ 25 per annum be paid to the Provincial Charit y Committee in aid of the Masonic charities . Again , in page 154 , you have the report of the Prov . G . L . held at Chippenham , August 23 rd , 1859 , AA'hen it was resolved that the following plan be inserted in the bye-laws of thc different lodges in the jn'ovmcc to increase the fnnd

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-11-10, Page 12” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_10111860/page/12/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
MASONIC SYMBOLISM Article 1
CHRISTIAN MORALS. Article 3
VISIT TO STRATFORD-ON-AVON AND ITS VICINAGE. Article 4
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆLOOGY. Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 9
Literature. Article 11
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 11
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 12
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF WILTSHIRE. Article 12
THE CHARITIES. Article 13
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 13
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 14
METROPOLITAN. Article 14
PROVINCIAL. Article 17
MARK MASONRY. Article 17
ROYAL ARCH. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 19
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.

Mr . J . Coidy Jeaffreson , in his Pooh about Doctors , just published , relates the following anecdote of an English physician of the days of our Grand Master Sir Christopher Wren . — " Dr . Cadogan , of Charles the Second ' s time , Avas , like Sir John Eliot , a favourite Avith the ladies . His wont was to spend his days in shooting , and his evenings in flirtations . To the former of these tastes the folloAA'ing lines refer : —

' Doctor , all game you either ought to shun , Or sport no longer with the unsteady gun ; But , like physicians of undoubted skill , Gladly attempt what never fails to kill , Not lead's uncertain dross , but physic's deadly pill . ' Whether he was a good shot we cannot say ; but he was sufficiently adroit as a squire of dames , for he secured as his wife a Aveaithy

lady , over wliose property he had unfettered control . Against the money , however , there Avere two important points figuring under the head of ' set-off '—the bride Avas old and querulous . Of course such a woman Avas unfitted to live with an eminent physician , on whom bevies of court ladies smiled , whenever he went west of Charing Cross . After spending a feAV months in alternate fits of

jealous hate and jealous fondness , the poor creature conceived the terrible fancy that her husband was bent on destroying her with poison , and so ridding his life of her execrable temper . One day , when surrounded by her friends , aud in . the presence of hex lovdanu master , she fell on her back in a state of hysterical spasms , exclaiming .- — ' Ah ! he has killed me at last . I am poisoned

!'—' Poisoned I' cried the lady friends , turning up the whites of their eyes . ' Oh ! gracious goodness!—you have done it , Doctor ! '' AVhat do you accuse me of ? ' asked the doctor , Avith surprise . — ' I accuse you—of—killing me—ee / responded the wife , doing her best to imitate a death struggle . — 'Ladies ' , answered the Doctor , with admirable nonchalance , bowing to Mrs . Cadogan's bosom

associates , ' it is perfectly false . You are quite welcome to open her at once , and then you'll disco \ 'er the calumny / " Mr . Hobbs , whose fame as a locksmith is world-Avide , is about to return to the United States , and to retire into private life , —at least so far as business is concerned .

Among the notices of literary auctions we observe that the entire stock remaining on hand of Mr . Henry Mayhew's London Labour and the London Poor , as also of his Great World of London , will be sold next month . The Illustrated Horse Doctor , by Mr . Edward MayheAv , appears to have been a success . A French firm is in treaty with ? . lessrs .

Allen and Co ., the English publishers , to produce a translation in that language , while American publishers are negotiating for its production in the United States . Beport says that the interesting article in the new number of the Comliill Magazines , entitled " The Eival Liberators of Italy " —i . e ., Cavour and Garibaldi—is from the pen of Mr . Thomas

Trollope , brother of the prolific and clever writer who has eclipsed , for this generation , his mother ' s reputation as a novelist . Mr . Thomas Trollope is well read in Italian history , medieval as well as modern , and is known both by his books on subjects from that history , and as Florentine correspondent of one of our contemporaries . The announcement of the approaching publication of the Neio

Encyclopedia , undertaken by the Brothers Pereire , has created a great sensation in France . Guizot and Cousin , Alllcmam and Thiers , are to be associated in its composition , Proudhon and the Pere Enfantin , with Gerge Sand and Michelet I An Account of the Late Indian Rebellion has recently apnea v cd at Paris , from the pen of the well-known litterateur , J , f . Einile

Forgues , and few books published in France have home such hish testimony to the character of the English Government , army , and people . AA ' e have much pleasure in stating that Avhile Sir E . Prodie ' s health is excellent ,-his eyesight has improved to such a degree as to give his friends the strongest hope that he will shortly regain to a very great extent the use of his eves .

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

[ T HE EDITOB does not hold himself responsible for any opinionentertained by Correspondents ^] MASONIC ARMS . TO TEE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE AND JTASONIC MIRROR . SIR , —I have been not a little intei'ested in the correspondence lately evoked in your columns by some remarks

upon the armorial insigna of the Oakley Lodge , Hants . The subject of the arms of private lodges has always appeared to me to be deserving of more attention than has hitherto been bestowed upon it by the Craft ; and I must enter my protest against the doctrine enunciated by one of your correspondents , that the insignia of private lodges are mere devices , and that disgrace to blazonry ( AA'hich looks as if it

had been stolen from an advertising undertaker ' s Avindow , or the banner of an odd-felloAvs' procession)—the arms of Grand Lodge—is the only authorised Masonic coat . But , though I cannot see anything in the letter or spirit of the Book of Constitutions to support this theory , yet I do not hesitate to express my conviction that the use of personal arms as insignia of lodges ( especially AA'hen , in the instance

referred to , the armorial bearings haA'e nothing of a Masonic character about them ) is , to say the least of it , undesirable , and that it Avould be hig hly beneficial to the Craft to make the office of Grand Pursuivant something more than a mere matter of form , by investing its holder Avith the supervision of the ornaments and especially the heraldy of each lodge . AVhile the Craft can boast such

names as those of our Bro . Albert AVoods and J . W . PapAvorth , there could be no want of ability to fulfil the duties of the office , and I may eveu say that nearly every province could furnish a brother fully competent to give effectual assistance in his OAAUI noighboui'hood . As a specimen of Avhat I consider a Masonic coat of arms , I append the description of one recently assumed by the

Howe Lodge ( No . 857 ) , Avhich your heraldic readers Avill observe combines the Avolves' heads of HoAve with the bend lozengy of Birmingham— thus : azure , on a bend argent cotised lozengy ; or , thi-ee wolves' heads coupled sable—on a coniton of the third a square and compasses of the first . I beg to remain fraternally yours , A PROV . G . OrncEii or WARWICKSHIRE .

Provincial Grand Lodge Of Wiltshire.

PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF WILTSHIRE .

TO THE EBITOR OE THE FREEMASONS MAGAZINE AND MASONIC MIRROR . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —I cannot allow your remarks on Bro . Oliver ' s speech at the late proA'incial grand meeting of AViltshire , and Avhich appeared in your last number , respecting the unbusinesslike manner in Avhich the scrutineers performed their duty Avith regard to the candidates for the Widows' Fund to pass unnoticed , as

you insert a paragraph at the foot stating , " That the Wiltshire brethren are notorious for never having supported that or cither of the other charities . Those always complain the most ivlw do Hie least . " Had you been able to refute thc charge as being an erroneous statement , it Avouldhave been more to the purposein removing the want of confidence thc country brethren

feel in the managers cf the charity , and would have , tended more to increase the funds from the provinces than such an observation applied to so Avortby a brother ' s remarks as the son of our justly-celebrated Masonic Avriter Dr . Oliver ,. AA'ho , the Wiltshire brethren feci satisfied , ivould not make such a statement unless Avarrantcd in so , doing . AA c ivill HOAV see how far the AViltshire brethren are

deserving your observations . In thc A"ol . for 1 S 57 of your MAGAZINE , page 751 , yon will find tho sum of £ 20 Avas voted at tho . Provincial Grand Lodge at Devizes toAvards the Masonic charities , being , I think , the first A'ote , as you must not forget that the Prov . G . L . Avas instituted , to thc best of my knowledge , in 1851 , On the 24 th of August , 1858 , at the Prov . G . L . held at TroAvbridge ( recorded in

page 422 ) , it Avas carried that £ 25 per annum be paid to the Provincial Charit y Committee in aid of the Masonic charities . Again , in page 154 , you have the report of the Prov . G . L . held at Chippenham , August 23 rd , 1859 , AA'hen it was resolved that the following plan be inserted in the bye-laws of thc different lodges in the jn'ovmcc to increase the fnnd

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