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  • Feb. 11, 1865
  • Page 17
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Feb. 11, 1865: Page 17

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    Article BAHAMAS. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article Obituary. Page 1 of 1
    Article REVIEWS. Page 1 of 1
    Article LITERARY EXTRACTS. Page 1 of 2 →
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Bahamas.

were given also to the Patriotic Fund—m fact , to everything tending to relieve the distressed , sums of money are yearly voted . Widespread then as those principles are , there is at the present time no part of the habitable globe in which Masonry does not flourish .- It has a universal language understood by the fraternity in every part of the world . That it neither threatened the state or true religion , but rather tended to insure the stabilitof bothis shown from the number of dignitaries

y , of the church and royal personages , who have since its introduction into England , 1600 years ago by St . Austin , presided over its councils — Alfred the Great , Edward the Confessor , Henry I ., Henry AT ., James I ., Charles I ., AVilliam III ., AVilliam Stapleton , Bishop of Exeter , AVilliam of Wykeham , Cardinal AVolsey , and the late Archbishop of Canterbury , and a host of others , such as Locke , Newton , Sir Ini

Christopher Wren , go Jones , ' AVellington , & c And the only distinction carried by that great , pure , aud patriotic Washington into his retirement was that of Grand Master of Freemasons in America . And even now in the present day , such names as the Earl of Zetland , the Earl de Grey and Ripon , the late Duke of Atboll , the Duke of Leinstev , the Marquis of HuntingtonViscount CombermereEarl Howe

, , , the Duke of St . Albans , the late Duke of Newcastle , the Earl of Fife " , and numbers of our own blood royal , have not thought it derogatory to lay aside their i-oyalty and preside over our councils ; whilst amongst foreigners of distinction we can at the present time name Charles XV . of Sweden , AVilliam I . of Prussia , the Prince of Prussia , the Prince of the Netherlands , & c . Such names as these surel ht to silence calumny and

y oug ridicule , and show that the views Freemasonry embrace has deep and abiding interests for the statesman , the minister of religion , the patriot , and the man of science . They prove that' Our order was designed

To expand the human race and elevate mankind . AVisdom herself contrived the mystic frame—Strength to support , to adorn it beauty came . It bids us ever gratefully to adore The God of all—the Universal power . ' " It should not militate against the Order that all its members have not profited by its teaching . There must bo imperfections and shortcomings in human institutionbnt Masonry

every ; would never make a good man bad , whilst the exhortations of better brethren have made many a bad man good . Such , then , are some of the principles of this Society . Many . may have laboured under a wrong idea of the Institution . If they have , and if these few remarks set them thinking and inquiring , the object of the writer will be obtained . "I ., Fidelity ( No . 230 ) . "

Obituary.

Obituary .

BRO . ROBERT WADISON We regret to announce the death , of Bro . Robert Wadison , which occurred at his residence , Birckin-lane , on Monday , the 23 rd ult ., after a feAV days' illness , in the 56 th year of his age . Bro . Wadison was initiated in the Wellington Lodge , Deptford , in October , 1854 , and passed through its various offices . He was also a member of the Domatic Chapter and the Thistle Lodge of Mark Masters .

Reviews.

REVIEWS .

The Dramatic Almanack for 1865 . By J . W . Axsox . Arliss , Great Queen-street . This is a most useful little almanack , aud contains a fund of information relative to the theatrical and musical professions which must prove extensively valuable to all who take an interest in public amusements . The general information is well selected ; and certainly not one of tho least recommendations of this annual is to be found in the fact "the profits aro devoted to the Dramatic , Equestrian , and Musical Sick Fund . "

Literary Extracts.

LITERARY EXTRACTS .

ABOUT WIIIST . —Whist is unquestionably of English origin , though as to the time aud place of its birth we do not possess any precise evidence . Whist is nob mentioned by Shakespeare , nor by any Avriter of the Eliza ; - bethan era , from Avhich Ave may infer that the game was then scarcely in existence . All that Ave know about the extreme childhood of whist is , that it was spent in

fcVte servants' hall . Its associates there , we are informed on the authority of Dailies Barrington , Avere " put" and " all-fours . " The game seems soon to have manifested seductive powers , for as early as 1630 Taylor , the Water Poet , mentions whist as inducing the prodigal to " fling bis money free Avith carelessnesse . " We cannot deny that at this period the character and friends of Avhist

Avere decidedly low . Whist even appears in a lock-up in the questionable company of Mr . Jonathan Wild . The great Fielding records that Avhen the ingenious Count la Ruse Avas domiciled with Mr . Geoffrey Snap ( who enjoyed office under the sheriffs of London and Middlesex ) , his countship sought to beguile the tedium of his in-door existence brecourse to the amusements

y of the day . Mr . Snap's two daughters benevolently aided him and chose Wild to make up their parties . Whisk and swabbers ( which is only whist under an . alias ) , Avas then ( 1682 ) greatly in vogue , and the ladies Avere consequently obliged to look out for a fourth person . In the " Memoirs of the Lives , Intrigues , and Comical . Adventures of tbe most Famous Gamesters" from the

timo of Charles II . to that of Queen Anne , we come across a sharper named Johnson , whose last adventure was that he was hanged in 1690 . Of him it is Avritten that he excelled in the art of " securing" honours for himself and partner Avhen playing at whist . We next hear of Avhist frequenting public-houses in the City . "The Compleat Gamester , " originally published in 1674 , does not mention Avhist at all ; but in later editions we are told that Avhist was a tavern game , and that

sharpers generally took care to put about the bottle before business began . For all this , whist never accommodated itself easily to the designs of card legs . It never took to them kindly , but , like Oliver Twist , it was the victim of circumstances and of its own inexperience . Whist was more sinned against than sinning . Accordingly it contrived , after a time , to escape from its

tavern acquaintances ; and early in tho eighteenth century , though not as yet fashionable , it had , at least , become respectable . Its principal friends at this epoch were country squires and country parsons . In the "Beaux Stratagem , " by Farquahar ( 1707 ) , Squire Sullen is said to be fond of whist , and Mrs . Sullen , Avho was a fine ladfrom Londonrefers to her husband ' s

prediy , lection in terms which imply that whist Avas then classed with rural rather than Avith West-end accomplishments . Pope , also , about this time ( 1715 ) alludes to whist in connection with the squirearchy ; and Swift , in his "Essay on the Fates of Clergymen" ( 1728 ) says that the clergy occasionally indulged in the society of whist . This patronage does not seem to have been equal

to the task of altogether retrieving whist from the character of vulgarity . Better days , however , were in store for it . About this time " The Compleat Gamester " became amalgamated with the " Court Gamester , " and whist Avas admitted into the first , the courtly division of the work , in company with " ombre , quadrille , quintille , picquet , and the royal game of chess . " About 1730 , a

party of gentlemen , of Avhom the first Lord Folkstone Avas one , frequented the Crown coffee-house in Bedfordrow , and there introduced whist , studied the game , and , it is believed , discovered some of its principles . They laid down the following rules : —Lead from the strong suit ; study your partner ' s hand , and attend to the score . Iu 1743 , whist Avas adopted by Edmund Hoyle , Avho is to this day called the father of the game . Under his auspices whist made the acquaintance of all the rank

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1865-02-11, Page 17” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_11021865/page/17/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE THREE GRAND LODGES. Article 1
BRO. FRANZ ANTON MESMER. Article 3
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 5
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 7
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 7
PROVINCIAL. Article 9
ROYAL ARCH. Article 12
MARK MASONRY. Article 12
KNIGHTS OF CONSTANTINOPLE. Article 12
IRELAND. Article 12
TURKEY. Article 12
CEYLON. Article 14
INDIA. Article 15
BAHAMAS. Article 16
Obituary. Article 17
REVIEWS. Article 17
LITERARY EXTRACTS. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Bahamas.

were given also to the Patriotic Fund—m fact , to everything tending to relieve the distressed , sums of money are yearly voted . Widespread then as those principles are , there is at the present time no part of the habitable globe in which Masonry does not flourish .- It has a universal language understood by the fraternity in every part of the world . That it neither threatened the state or true religion , but rather tended to insure the stabilitof bothis shown from the number of dignitaries

y , of the church and royal personages , who have since its introduction into England , 1600 years ago by St . Austin , presided over its councils — Alfred the Great , Edward the Confessor , Henry I ., Henry AT ., James I ., Charles I ., AVilliam III ., AVilliam Stapleton , Bishop of Exeter , AVilliam of Wykeham , Cardinal AVolsey , and the late Archbishop of Canterbury , and a host of others , such as Locke , Newton , Sir Ini

Christopher Wren , go Jones , ' AVellington , & c And the only distinction carried by that great , pure , aud patriotic Washington into his retirement was that of Grand Master of Freemasons in America . And even now in the present day , such names as the Earl of Zetland , the Earl de Grey and Ripon , the late Duke of Atboll , the Duke of Leinstev , the Marquis of HuntingtonViscount CombermereEarl Howe

, , , the Duke of St . Albans , the late Duke of Newcastle , the Earl of Fife " , and numbers of our own blood royal , have not thought it derogatory to lay aside their i-oyalty and preside over our councils ; whilst amongst foreigners of distinction we can at the present time name Charles XV . of Sweden , AVilliam I . of Prussia , the Prince of Prussia , the Prince of the Netherlands , & c . Such names as these surel ht to silence calumny and

y oug ridicule , and show that the views Freemasonry embrace has deep and abiding interests for the statesman , the minister of religion , the patriot , and the man of science . They prove that' Our order was designed

To expand the human race and elevate mankind . AVisdom herself contrived the mystic frame—Strength to support , to adorn it beauty came . It bids us ever gratefully to adore The God of all—the Universal power . ' " It should not militate against the Order that all its members have not profited by its teaching . There must bo imperfections and shortcomings in human institutionbnt Masonry

every ; would never make a good man bad , whilst the exhortations of better brethren have made many a bad man good . Such , then , are some of the principles of this Society . Many . may have laboured under a wrong idea of the Institution . If they have , and if these few remarks set them thinking and inquiring , the object of the writer will be obtained . "I ., Fidelity ( No . 230 ) . "

Obituary.

Obituary .

BRO . ROBERT WADISON We regret to announce the death , of Bro . Robert Wadison , which occurred at his residence , Birckin-lane , on Monday , the 23 rd ult ., after a feAV days' illness , in the 56 th year of his age . Bro . Wadison was initiated in the Wellington Lodge , Deptford , in October , 1854 , and passed through its various offices . He was also a member of the Domatic Chapter and the Thistle Lodge of Mark Masters .

Reviews.

REVIEWS .

The Dramatic Almanack for 1865 . By J . W . Axsox . Arliss , Great Queen-street . This is a most useful little almanack , aud contains a fund of information relative to the theatrical and musical professions which must prove extensively valuable to all who take an interest in public amusements . The general information is well selected ; and certainly not one of tho least recommendations of this annual is to be found in the fact "the profits aro devoted to the Dramatic , Equestrian , and Musical Sick Fund . "

Literary Extracts.

LITERARY EXTRACTS .

ABOUT WIIIST . —Whist is unquestionably of English origin , though as to the time aud place of its birth we do not possess any precise evidence . Whist is nob mentioned by Shakespeare , nor by any Avriter of the Eliza ; - bethan era , from Avhich Ave may infer that the game was then scarcely in existence . All that Ave know about the extreme childhood of whist is , that it was spent in

fcVte servants' hall . Its associates there , we are informed on the authority of Dailies Barrington , Avere " put" and " all-fours . " The game seems soon to have manifested seductive powers , for as early as 1630 Taylor , the Water Poet , mentions whist as inducing the prodigal to " fling bis money free Avith carelessnesse . " We cannot deny that at this period the character and friends of Avhist

Avere decidedly low . Whist even appears in a lock-up in the questionable company of Mr . Jonathan Wild . The great Fielding records that Avhen the ingenious Count la Ruse Avas domiciled with Mr . Geoffrey Snap ( who enjoyed office under the sheriffs of London and Middlesex ) , his countship sought to beguile the tedium of his in-door existence brecourse to the amusements

y of the day . Mr . Snap's two daughters benevolently aided him and chose Wild to make up their parties . Whisk and swabbers ( which is only whist under an . alias ) , Avas then ( 1682 ) greatly in vogue , and the ladies Avere consequently obliged to look out for a fourth person . In the " Memoirs of the Lives , Intrigues , and Comical . Adventures of tbe most Famous Gamesters" from the

timo of Charles II . to that of Queen Anne , we come across a sharper named Johnson , whose last adventure was that he was hanged in 1690 . Of him it is Avritten that he excelled in the art of " securing" honours for himself and partner Avhen playing at whist . We next hear of Avhist frequenting public-houses in the City . "The Compleat Gamester , " originally published in 1674 , does not mention Avhist at all ; but in later editions we are told that Avhist was a tavern game , and that

sharpers generally took care to put about the bottle before business began . For all this , whist never accommodated itself easily to the designs of card legs . It never took to them kindly , but , like Oliver Twist , it was the victim of circumstances and of its own inexperience . Whist was more sinned against than sinning . Accordingly it contrived , after a time , to escape from its

tavern acquaintances ; and early in tho eighteenth century , though not as yet fashionable , it had , at least , become respectable . Its principal friends at this epoch were country squires and country parsons . In the "Beaux Stratagem , " by Farquahar ( 1707 ) , Squire Sullen is said to be fond of whist , and Mrs . Sullen , Avho was a fine ladfrom Londonrefers to her husband ' s

prediy , lection in terms which imply that whist Avas then classed with rural rather than Avith West-end accomplishments . Pope , also , about this time ( 1715 ) alludes to whist in connection with the squirearchy ; and Swift , in his "Essay on the Fates of Clergymen" ( 1728 ) says that the clergy occasionally indulged in the society of whist . This patronage does not seem to have been equal

to the task of altogether retrieving whist from the character of vulgarity . Better days , however , were in store for it . About this time " The Compleat Gamester " became amalgamated with the " Court Gamester , " and whist Avas admitted into the first , the courtly division of the work , in company with " ombre , quadrille , quintille , picquet , and the royal game of chess . " About 1730 , a

party of gentlemen , of Avhom the first Lord Folkstone Avas one , frequented the Crown coffee-house in Bedfordrow , and there introduced whist , studied the game , and , it is believed , discovered some of its principles . They laid down the following rules : —Lead from the strong suit ; study your partner ' s hand , and attend to the score . Iu 1743 , whist Avas adopted by Edmund Hoyle , Avho is to this day called the father of the game . Under his auspices whist made the acquaintance of all the rank

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