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  • May 11, 1861
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  • MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, May 11, 1861: Page 10

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    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. ← Page 3 of 3
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Page 10

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

Masonic Notes And Queries.

HELE , CONCEAL , AND NEVER REVEAL . Are not the words " Hele , Conceal , and never Eeveal , " synonymous ? If so , why are they used ?—PHILOLOGICUS—[ They are of the earliest kind of rhyme known amongst primitive people , and called Head rhymes . For a very interesting disquisition on this subject , see our gifted Bro .

Dr . Hyde Clarke ' s Grammar for the English Tongue , p . 145 , et scq . ] THE TRIPLE CROSS OF SALEM . AVhere shall I find any account of the Triple Cross of Salem ; what are its symbolical peculiarities , and why it takes its name from Salem in particular!—J A . CAN A KNIGHT TE 3 IPLAR BE A KNIGHT OE MALTA ?

I am desirous of knowing if a Knt . Templar can , consistently , be a Knt . of Malta ?—Ex . Ex . —[ See Ilistoira des Secies lieligieuses , par . M . Gregoire , ancien civeque do Blois , Paris , 1828 , in which it is stated , — "Le primat actuel est vie-Cesarini , commandenr convontuel do l ' ordre de Malte . Les ci-devant Chevaliers de Malte qui , depuis trente ans , s ' efforcent de ressusciter leur ordre , avaient fait , dit-on , des avances pour s ' uuir aux Tcmpliers , et par ce moyen fortifier leurs reclamations . " ]

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

NOTES ON LITERATURE , SCIENCE , AND ART .

In noticing the present exhibition of the JN " ew Society of Painters in AVater Colours , the fine arts critic of the Athenamm remarks : — "Close to the floor will be found a charming study from a lovely phase of nature , by Mr . T . Satellite , An Evening Shy atBedcar ( 35 ) , the beach just at sun setting , wave upon wave creeping up the gently sloping shore , and reflecting in each sheeny surface the glorious

hues of the sk y above—deep violet ivhere the hollow tells of the horizon , and verging through red , scarlet , orange , and yellow , to where the zenith is reproduced on the levels that swim forward ; just in the breaking wave a fishing-craft comes ashore , the method of doing which is perfect in action . Bej-ond are the fresh waves crisply breaking ivith little petulant crests , and the sun purple of the evening slowly sweeping up , and merging into the sky itself with coming darkness . This is the most striking of Mr . Sutcliffo's studies , but we must commend them all , notwithstanding a certain sootiness in more than one , to our readers . "

A public dinner , to celebrate the inaugiiration " of the Havelock statue , is to be held at Sunderland , on AVhit Tuesday ( May 21 st ) , when Samuel Alcock , Esq ., the mayor , will preside . Mr . Hepworth Dixon has failed to convince the writers of the Edinburgh Bevicw of the purity of the groat Lord Bacon ; as the following extract will show : — " AVhen the main idea of a work is

unsound , it is little to the purpose that here and there it contains some new and original matter , and now and then some acute observations ; but , even in these subordinate respects , Mr . Dixon can claim but little commendation . AVhile we have no doubt that his theory is false , and that all he has said will not shake in the least the general opinion of Bacon ' s character ; and ivhile he has used all the artifices of an advocate in embellishing facts that tell

on bis side , and making enormous omissions and misstatements , we must also add that his original researches have not been fruitful of much new matter , on points at least of paramount importance . As for the manner , design , and style of this book , they appear to us to be in the worst possible state . A biography should be a portrait executed with manliness , simplicity , and truth , not a display of spasmodic rhetoric , tawdry ornament , and false effect ; ancl wo

regret to have so soon to notice another distressing example of those extravagances and deformities of style with which Mr . Carlyle has infected the English language . " And again : — " Mr . Dixon appears to us not to have materially altered the aspect of the case ; and certainly the declamatory vehemence and rhetorical artifices which he employs are altogether out of place . AVe still await with interest the more mature publication of the biographical volumes with

which Mr . Speckling has promised to complete his magnificent edition of the works of Bacon ; but we do not conceive that any fresh manipulation of historical evidence can change the moral conviction arising from a candid survey of Bacon's life . " Mr . G . II . R . Young is engaged in modelling a life-size bust of Sir John Fife , the eminent medical practitioner of Newcastle-upon-Tyne . The bust , which is to be afterwards sculptured in marble ,

is said to be a goocl likeness ; but , with singular bad taste , Sir John is represented in his uniform as Lieutenant Colonel of the Newcastle Rifles , —just as though he was some great warrior ,

instead of a scientific man , who has earned for himself a worldwide reputation by his skill in the healing art , and especially for his operations for diseases of the eyes . Mr . Horace Greeley , the able editor of the New York Tribune , commenting on the close of his twenty years' connection with that journalsays : — " The Tribune enters this day upon the twenty-first

, year of its existence , havingfirst been issued on the 10 th of April , 1841 . . . . The very few personal friends or political sympathisers who welcomed the first issue of this paper on that sour , sleety morning , have grown into a goodly company—the aggregate number of our regular patrons being hardly less than three hundred thousand , while our habitual readers must considerably exceed one , million . The current expences of the first week of our enterprise were 325

dollars ; the receipts , 92 dollars . Now , our expences are some 10 , 000 dollars per week , and our receipts—in spite of the hard times—rather exceed that sum . For telegraphing alone—an expense totally unknown to journalism twenty years ago—we pay more weekly than the entire cost of publishing the Tribune in 18-11 ; while the intellectual resources of a leading journal , for which 100 dollars per week was ' an ample provision twenty years ago , now costs us more than 1000 dollars per week .

Captain Mayne JReicUm his recent work , The Wild Huntress , thus pithily deseribesasquattcr'scIearingintheimmeiiseTennesseanforest — "Thesquatter ' s clearing is a mere vistal opening in the woods from which only tho underwood has been removed . The more slender saplings have been cut down or rooted up ; the tangle of the parasitical plants has been torn from the trees , the cane brake has been firedand the brushcollected in heapshas melted away

, , , upon the blazing pile ; only a few stumps of inferior thickness give evidence that some little labour has been performed by the axe . Even thus , the clearing is a mere patch , scarcely two acres in extent ; and the rude rail fence that zigzags round it attests that the owner is satisfied with the dimensions of his agricultural domain . There are no recent marks of the axe , not even the ' girdling' of a- treenothing to show that another rood is required . The squatter is

essentially a hunter , ancl hates the sight of an extensive clearing as he would the labour of making one . The virgin forest is his domain , and he is not the man to rob it of its primeval charms . The sound of the lumberer's axe , cheerful to the lonely traveller , has no music for his ear ; it is to him a note of evil augury , a knell of dread import ; it is not often that he hears it—he , dwells beyond the circle of its echoes . His nearest neihbour ; a squatter like himself

g , lives at least a mile off , and the most proximate ' settlement' is six times that distance from the spot he has chosen for his cabin . The smoke of his chimney mingles with that of no other ; its tall column ascends to heaven solitary as the squatter himself . " The Rev . Dr . Aliughan , in the second volume of his Bevolutimis

m English History , just issued , gives the following sketch of the character of Catherine of Arragon : — "The character of this ill-fated princess ' contrasted too strongly with that of her second husband to afford any large promise of happiness . In the love of literature , the king and queen possessed a taste in common ; and there were times when Henry seemed to regard the piety of Catherine with a feeling of reverence . Her religionhoweverwas of a kind that would have qualified her for

, , the head of a convent , hotter than for the head of a court . She had entered the third order of St . Francis , and always wore the habit of that order under her queenly vestments . Saturday ancl Sunday were her fast-days , ancl on the vigils of the Ali-gin she took only bread and water . In the middle of the night she rose to repeat her prayers , and by five in the morning she left her chamber dressed for the clay . Six hours every morning were spent in church

, her knees bent for long intervals on the bare floor . Twice a week all her feelings and thoughts were unbosomed to hev confessor . AVhen dinner was over , two hours were given to reading the lives of the saints . On these occasions her maids were with her , to be edified by her reading , her counsel , and her example . AVliat time remained was occupied with reading or prayer , until the hour for supper , which was always a simple repast . So the day ended .

Henry was a man of religious conviction and feeling ; but a wide gulph separated between the queen ' s temperament and his own on that subject . In many other respects the divergence between them was great . " A number of finished works of the late Francis Danhy , Esq ., A . R . A ., are about to be offered by public auction . The collection includes four important pictures exhibited at the Royal Academy ,

about a score of smaller pictures , several sketches in oil , watercolour drawings from nature , and pen-and-ink sketches ; many of them being the first thoughts for the pictures painted by Mr . Dauby , and others for works contemplated but never Jaccomplished .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-05-11, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 4 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_11051861/page/10/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
OUR CHARITIES. Article 1
MEMOIRS OF THE FREEMASONS OF NAPLES. Article 1
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 3
THE REMAINS OF ANCIENT ROMAN BATHS IN ENGLAND. Article 6
GENERAL ARCHITECTURAL INTELLIGENCE. Article 7
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 8
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 11
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 11
THE ASYLUM FOR AGED MASONS AND THEIR WIDOWS. Article 12
A CASE OF DISTRESS. Article 12
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 12
METROPOLITAN. Article 12
ROYAL BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION FOR AGED MASONS AND THEIR WIDOWS. Article 14
PROVINCIAL. Article 14
COLONIAL. Article 14
ROYAL ARCH. Article 15
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 15
SCOTLAND. Article 16
INDIA. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 18
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.

Masonic Notes And Queries.

HELE , CONCEAL , AND NEVER REVEAL . Are not the words " Hele , Conceal , and never Eeveal , " synonymous ? If so , why are they used ?—PHILOLOGICUS—[ They are of the earliest kind of rhyme known amongst primitive people , and called Head rhymes . For a very interesting disquisition on this subject , see our gifted Bro .

Dr . Hyde Clarke ' s Grammar for the English Tongue , p . 145 , et scq . ] THE TRIPLE CROSS OF SALEM . AVhere shall I find any account of the Triple Cross of Salem ; what are its symbolical peculiarities , and why it takes its name from Salem in particular!—J A . CAN A KNIGHT TE 3 IPLAR BE A KNIGHT OE MALTA ?

I am desirous of knowing if a Knt . Templar can , consistently , be a Knt . of Malta ?—Ex . Ex . —[ See Ilistoira des Secies lieligieuses , par . M . Gregoire , ancien civeque do Blois , Paris , 1828 , in which it is stated , — "Le primat actuel est vie-Cesarini , commandenr convontuel do l ' ordre de Malte . Les ci-devant Chevaliers de Malte qui , depuis trente ans , s ' efforcent de ressusciter leur ordre , avaient fait , dit-on , des avances pour s ' uuir aux Tcmpliers , et par ce moyen fortifier leurs reclamations . " ]

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

NOTES ON LITERATURE , SCIENCE , AND ART .

In noticing the present exhibition of the JN " ew Society of Painters in AVater Colours , the fine arts critic of the Athenamm remarks : — "Close to the floor will be found a charming study from a lovely phase of nature , by Mr . T . Satellite , An Evening Shy atBedcar ( 35 ) , the beach just at sun setting , wave upon wave creeping up the gently sloping shore , and reflecting in each sheeny surface the glorious

hues of the sk y above—deep violet ivhere the hollow tells of the horizon , and verging through red , scarlet , orange , and yellow , to where the zenith is reproduced on the levels that swim forward ; just in the breaking wave a fishing-craft comes ashore , the method of doing which is perfect in action . Bej-ond are the fresh waves crisply breaking ivith little petulant crests , and the sun purple of the evening slowly sweeping up , and merging into the sky itself with coming darkness . This is the most striking of Mr . Sutcliffo's studies , but we must commend them all , notwithstanding a certain sootiness in more than one , to our readers . "

A public dinner , to celebrate the inaugiiration " of the Havelock statue , is to be held at Sunderland , on AVhit Tuesday ( May 21 st ) , when Samuel Alcock , Esq ., the mayor , will preside . Mr . Hepworth Dixon has failed to convince the writers of the Edinburgh Bevicw of the purity of the groat Lord Bacon ; as the following extract will show : — " AVhen the main idea of a work is

unsound , it is little to the purpose that here and there it contains some new and original matter , and now and then some acute observations ; but , even in these subordinate respects , Mr . Dixon can claim but little commendation . AVhile we have no doubt that his theory is false , and that all he has said will not shake in the least the general opinion of Bacon ' s character ; and ivhile he has used all the artifices of an advocate in embellishing facts that tell

on bis side , and making enormous omissions and misstatements , we must also add that his original researches have not been fruitful of much new matter , on points at least of paramount importance . As for the manner , design , and style of this book , they appear to us to be in the worst possible state . A biography should be a portrait executed with manliness , simplicity , and truth , not a display of spasmodic rhetoric , tawdry ornament , and false effect ; ancl wo

regret to have so soon to notice another distressing example of those extravagances and deformities of style with which Mr . Carlyle has infected the English language . " And again : — " Mr . Dixon appears to us not to have materially altered the aspect of the case ; and certainly the declamatory vehemence and rhetorical artifices which he employs are altogether out of place . AVe still await with interest the more mature publication of the biographical volumes with

which Mr . Speckling has promised to complete his magnificent edition of the works of Bacon ; but we do not conceive that any fresh manipulation of historical evidence can change the moral conviction arising from a candid survey of Bacon's life . " Mr . G . II . R . Young is engaged in modelling a life-size bust of Sir John Fife , the eminent medical practitioner of Newcastle-upon-Tyne . The bust , which is to be afterwards sculptured in marble ,

is said to be a goocl likeness ; but , with singular bad taste , Sir John is represented in his uniform as Lieutenant Colonel of the Newcastle Rifles , —just as though he was some great warrior ,

instead of a scientific man , who has earned for himself a worldwide reputation by his skill in the healing art , and especially for his operations for diseases of the eyes . Mr . Horace Greeley , the able editor of the New York Tribune , commenting on the close of his twenty years' connection with that journalsays : — " The Tribune enters this day upon the twenty-first

, year of its existence , havingfirst been issued on the 10 th of April , 1841 . . . . The very few personal friends or political sympathisers who welcomed the first issue of this paper on that sour , sleety morning , have grown into a goodly company—the aggregate number of our regular patrons being hardly less than three hundred thousand , while our habitual readers must considerably exceed one , million . The current expences of the first week of our enterprise were 325

dollars ; the receipts , 92 dollars . Now , our expences are some 10 , 000 dollars per week , and our receipts—in spite of the hard times—rather exceed that sum . For telegraphing alone—an expense totally unknown to journalism twenty years ago—we pay more weekly than the entire cost of publishing the Tribune in 18-11 ; while the intellectual resources of a leading journal , for which 100 dollars per week was ' an ample provision twenty years ago , now costs us more than 1000 dollars per week .

Captain Mayne JReicUm his recent work , The Wild Huntress , thus pithily deseribesasquattcr'scIearingintheimmeiiseTennesseanforest — "Thesquatter ' s clearing is a mere vistal opening in the woods from which only tho underwood has been removed . The more slender saplings have been cut down or rooted up ; the tangle of the parasitical plants has been torn from the trees , the cane brake has been firedand the brushcollected in heapshas melted away

, , , upon the blazing pile ; only a few stumps of inferior thickness give evidence that some little labour has been performed by the axe . Even thus , the clearing is a mere patch , scarcely two acres in extent ; and the rude rail fence that zigzags round it attests that the owner is satisfied with the dimensions of his agricultural domain . There are no recent marks of the axe , not even the ' girdling' of a- treenothing to show that another rood is required . The squatter is

essentially a hunter , ancl hates the sight of an extensive clearing as he would the labour of making one . The virgin forest is his domain , and he is not the man to rob it of its primeval charms . The sound of the lumberer's axe , cheerful to the lonely traveller , has no music for his ear ; it is to him a note of evil augury , a knell of dread import ; it is not often that he hears it—he , dwells beyond the circle of its echoes . His nearest neihbour ; a squatter like himself

g , lives at least a mile off , and the most proximate ' settlement' is six times that distance from the spot he has chosen for his cabin . The smoke of his chimney mingles with that of no other ; its tall column ascends to heaven solitary as the squatter himself . " The Rev . Dr . Aliughan , in the second volume of his Bevolutimis

m English History , just issued , gives the following sketch of the character of Catherine of Arragon : — "The character of this ill-fated princess ' contrasted too strongly with that of her second husband to afford any large promise of happiness . In the love of literature , the king and queen possessed a taste in common ; and there were times when Henry seemed to regard the piety of Catherine with a feeling of reverence . Her religionhoweverwas of a kind that would have qualified her for

, , the head of a convent , hotter than for the head of a court . She had entered the third order of St . Francis , and always wore the habit of that order under her queenly vestments . Saturday ancl Sunday were her fast-days , ancl on the vigils of the Ali-gin she took only bread and water . In the middle of the night she rose to repeat her prayers , and by five in the morning she left her chamber dressed for the clay . Six hours every morning were spent in church

, her knees bent for long intervals on the bare floor . Twice a week all her feelings and thoughts were unbosomed to hev confessor . AVhen dinner was over , two hours were given to reading the lives of the saints . On these occasions her maids were with her , to be edified by her reading , her counsel , and her example . AVliat time remained was occupied with reading or prayer , until the hour for supper , which was always a simple repast . So the day ended .

Henry was a man of religious conviction and feeling ; but a wide gulph separated between the queen ' s temperament and his own on that subject . In many other respects the divergence between them was great . " A number of finished works of the late Francis Danhy , Esq ., A . R . A ., are about to be offered by public auction . The collection includes four important pictures exhibited at the Royal Academy ,

about a score of smaller pictures , several sketches in oil , watercolour drawings from nature , and pen-and-ink sketches ; many of them being the first thoughts for the pictures painted by Mr . Dauby , and others for works contemplated but never Jaccomplished .

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