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  • May 12, 1860
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, May 12, 1860: Page 3

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    Article CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—XX ← Page 2 of 2
    Article CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—XX Page 2 of 2
    Article MASTERPIECES OF THE ARCHITECTURE OF DIFFERENT NATIONS. Page 1 of 3 →
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Classical Theology.—Xx

imera , the Hydra Lernseus , Cacus and Casculus , the Cyciops , the Stymphaliades , and tho dragon which took possession of the garden of Hesperides . To embody them all under one head , the last mentioned anomaly might perhaps have been the veritable offspring of tho fable , Vulcan ' s soil Edchthonius , born with dragon ' s feet , said to have become the fourth king of Athenswhoto hide his monstrous malformations

, , , it is gravely stated , first invented chariots . If Vulcan lost Minerva , wc presume we have a right to suspect that although a cunning artificer , ho lacked wisdom . But what has been just asserted of him has likewise been said of Venus . There is a light as well as a dark side , or at all events two sides to everything ; of the best , none are all good , neither arc all

evil of the worst , in this world . The JEtu . ean temple was guarded , we are told , ( Var . apucl Lil . ) by dogs whose scent and sagacity was so exquisite that they could discern whether persons who sought to enter it were chaste and reli gious , or disorderly and wicked . They used to meetfawn upon aud follow the goodas well

, , knowing and estimating thorn amongst the honoured friends and acquaintances of their master , Vulcan ; but never ceased baying and tearing at those whom they discovered to be bad and unworthy of his regard , until they had entirely driven them beyond the precincts of the sanctuary over which they kept such diligent watch .

I ruth is admitted to be stranger than fiction ; but it is as bard , as paradoxical , to expect it in fables , where all is more or less metaphorically represented , from what we have learnt of Vulcan he is the last whom we should have selected from among tho gods as the wondrous artificer who made a woman ; nor as one who had moulded and formed a young girl into what a woman ought to beor was capable of

, imparting such instruction as should conduce to the . completion of her religious , moral and useful education . It is indeed feigned that the archetype of the fair sex was fashioned by the hammer of Vulcan , and that all the supercelestial gods and goddesses gave her seme . gift of personal and mental endowment . Minerva conferred on her the aid

of wisdom , Apollo presented her with the art of music , Mercury bestowed the grace of eloquence , Venus afforded the adornment of beauty , and the rest of those high immortals gave her other accomplishments , whence she received the name of Pandora . Vulcan had high and just cause to be proud of this feat of bis ingenuity and his hammer . Our

fair readers ( if we have any ) must doubtless feel often indignant— -if they will allow us to say so—with the liberties poets have wickedly taken with—their characters . " Most women have no characters at all , " says Pope ; but then , what says Byron 1 " Poets are such liars ,

And take all colours , like the hands of dyers . " Menandcr , so great an admirer of the sex—who in return honoured him with the title of " the squint-eyed poet "—goes out of bis way to insinuate—perhaps in retaliation , although he has as good as said he couldn ' t do without them—that the severe punishment Jupiter awarded to Prometheus , when he

commanded Mercury to hind him to the rock Caucasus , and set an eagle to prey upon his liver , was not in consequence of his having stolen fire from heaven , but "because he had made woman , which is the most pernicious creature in the world . " The account given by Pausanius may be regarded as equally right or wrong . He says , respecting the

abstraction of the heavenly fire , Prometheus stole it to animate the man he had made ; Jupiter thereat being incensed , sent for Pandora , in order that a sealed box ho had constructed for a particular purpose , not unlike that of an infernal machine , mi ght be conveyed by her to Prometheus . But no sooner had Pandora arrived with her treasure than Prometheus

, suspectin g Jupiter ' s extra polite attention , declined the honour , and would not receive it , being most desirous to send it back . The wife however of his brother Epimetheus , in a state of curiosity natural to her sex , could not refrain from

Classical Theology.—Xx

a little inspection of it , which ended , of course , in her opening the box ; whereupon all sorts of misfortunes , evils , and diseases it contained flew amongst mankind , aud have infested them inveterately ever since . Some insist that Epimetheus himself searched out the gift and secured Hope at the bottom of it , and that it was

he who having made an image of a maii in clay , for -this presumptuous , vain , or mad freak of artistic skill it is further recorded of this son of Japetus that he was turned into an ape . The true solution of the fable is , that it was Pallas , otherwise Wisdom , who conducted Prometheus to heaven . By the fable of Prometheus lihting his darkness

g , or torch , at tho sun , is meant his seeking , attempting , and gaining much knowledge from above . It was his crime in not being afterwards satisfied or turning his knowledge to a good end that brought on the cause of his punishment . Hard and passing strange indeed would it be to have condemned him for bringing light from heaven to man—since

he knew that man could not make light , nor could that blessing be derived except from heaven itself . We may all remember how sweetly Horace has expressed himself upon this subject , and find a good old revived translation a failure so far as it goes when compared with the original . " No power the pride of mortals can control :

Prone ( o new crimes , by strong presumption driven : AVith sacrilegious hands Prometheus stole Celestial fire and bore it down from heaven : That fatal present brought on man ' s whole race An army of diseases—Death began With a new vigour then to mend his pace And form a more compendious way to man . "

Masterpieces Of The Architecture Of Different Nations.

MASTERPIECES OF THE ARCHITECTURE OF DIFFERENT NATIONS .

UV J . G . LEGHAND . THE AKOIIITECTUUE OF THE GREEKS ( CONTISUED ) . The Tower of the Winds at Athens . —This singular monument is of the small number of those which Vitruvius has cited in his work , and which still remain . All the upper portion is iu a state of good preservation , and the bas reliefs ,

in which the eight principal winds are personified and distinguished by different attributes , without being of a very finished execution are of the grandest character . It appears that this exquisite edifice served at the same time as a public clock on account of some clepsydra or other mechanism to mark the hours at nighteven as solar dials traced on each

, of the eight places where the winds were personified , indicated them during the day . The Triton , of bronze , which served as a weathercock at the top of the roof , likewise indicated by day , with its vane , the quarter whence the winds blew ; but , as with a people who were navigators , it was also necessary that they should bo aware of this at night as well ,

it is supposed that small openings were contrived in the frieze , and , being made wider as they entered into the interior , they thus produced , when the wind entered them , a variety of sounds , or set in motion some tone by means of which a communication was imparted of from what quarter the wind was blowing . We knowfrom the sixth chapter of the 1 st Book of

Vitru-, vius , that the name of the architect who built the Tower of the Winds was Andronicus Cyrrhestes , but he does not give us the date of the erection of this monument ; it has been conjectured , however , from tho details of the edifice aud from the amount of knowledge in astronomy and gnomonics , that it may be supposed it could not have bceu erected until after

the ago of Pericles . ' The Monument of Thrasillus , executed in great pari in the Hock of the Acropolis , below the Parthenon . —This edifice was erected shortly after the death of Alexander the Great , by Thrasillus , who built and dedicated it , as an inscription informs us , after he had carried off the prize with theHipno-

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-05-12, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 21 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_12051860/page/3/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE GIRLS SCHOOL. Article 1
OUR ARCHITECTURAL CHAPTER. Article 1
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—XX Article 2
MASTERPIECES OF THE ARCHITECTURE OF DIFFERENT NATIONS. Article 3
CURSORY REMARKS ON FREEMASONRY. —V. Article 5
ARCHÆOLOGY. ROMAN REMAINS. Article 6
MASONIC FRIENDSHIP. Article 7
ISRAELITES AND EGYPTIANS. Article 7
PHILOSOPHY OF MASONRY. Article 8
SIGHTS WHICH THE POET LOVES. Article 8
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 9
Literature. REVIEWS. Article 11
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 13
YEAB BOOK FOR THE HIGH DEGREES. Article 13
GRAND STEWARDS' LODGE. Article 13
VISITORS' CERTIFICATES. Article 13
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 14
METROPOLITAN. Article 15
PROVINCIAL. Article 15
ROYAL ARCH. Article 17
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 17
IRELAND. Article 17
Obituary. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Classical Theology.—Xx

imera , the Hydra Lernseus , Cacus and Casculus , the Cyciops , the Stymphaliades , and tho dragon which took possession of the garden of Hesperides . To embody them all under one head , the last mentioned anomaly might perhaps have been the veritable offspring of tho fable , Vulcan ' s soil Edchthonius , born with dragon ' s feet , said to have become the fourth king of Athenswhoto hide his monstrous malformations

, , , it is gravely stated , first invented chariots . If Vulcan lost Minerva , wc presume we have a right to suspect that although a cunning artificer , ho lacked wisdom . But what has been just asserted of him has likewise been said of Venus . There is a light as well as a dark side , or at all events two sides to everything ; of the best , none are all good , neither arc all

evil of the worst , in this world . The JEtu . ean temple was guarded , we are told , ( Var . apucl Lil . ) by dogs whose scent and sagacity was so exquisite that they could discern whether persons who sought to enter it were chaste and reli gious , or disorderly and wicked . They used to meetfawn upon aud follow the goodas well

, , knowing and estimating thorn amongst the honoured friends and acquaintances of their master , Vulcan ; but never ceased baying and tearing at those whom they discovered to be bad and unworthy of his regard , until they had entirely driven them beyond the precincts of the sanctuary over which they kept such diligent watch .

I ruth is admitted to be stranger than fiction ; but it is as bard , as paradoxical , to expect it in fables , where all is more or less metaphorically represented , from what we have learnt of Vulcan he is the last whom we should have selected from among tho gods as the wondrous artificer who made a woman ; nor as one who had moulded and formed a young girl into what a woman ought to beor was capable of

, imparting such instruction as should conduce to the . completion of her religious , moral and useful education . It is indeed feigned that the archetype of the fair sex was fashioned by the hammer of Vulcan , and that all the supercelestial gods and goddesses gave her seme . gift of personal and mental endowment . Minerva conferred on her the aid

of wisdom , Apollo presented her with the art of music , Mercury bestowed the grace of eloquence , Venus afforded the adornment of beauty , and the rest of those high immortals gave her other accomplishments , whence she received the name of Pandora . Vulcan had high and just cause to be proud of this feat of bis ingenuity and his hammer . Our

fair readers ( if we have any ) must doubtless feel often indignant— -if they will allow us to say so—with the liberties poets have wickedly taken with—their characters . " Most women have no characters at all , " says Pope ; but then , what says Byron 1 " Poets are such liars ,

And take all colours , like the hands of dyers . " Menandcr , so great an admirer of the sex—who in return honoured him with the title of " the squint-eyed poet "—goes out of bis way to insinuate—perhaps in retaliation , although he has as good as said he couldn ' t do without them—that the severe punishment Jupiter awarded to Prometheus , when he

commanded Mercury to hind him to the rock Caucasus , and set an eagle to prey upon his liver , was not in consequence of his having stolen fire from heaven , but "because he had made woman , which is the most pernicious creature in the world . " The account given by Pausanius may be regarded as equally right or wrong . He says , respecting the

abstraction of the heavenly fire , Prometheus stole it to animate the man he had made ; Jupiter thereat being incensed , sent for Pandora , in order that a sealed box ho had constructed for a particular purpose , not unlike that of an infernal machine , mi ght be conveyed by her to Prometheus . But no sooner had Pandora arrived with her treasure than Prometheus

, suspectin g Jupiter ' s extra polite attention , declined the honour , and would not receive it , being most desirous to send it back . The wife however of his brother Epimetheus , in a state of curiosity natural to her sex , could not refrain from

Classical Theology.—Xx

a little inspection of it , which ended , of course , in her opening the box ; whereupon all sorts of misfortunes , evils , and diseases it contained flew amongst mankind , aud have infested them inveterately ever since . Some insist that Epimetheus himself searched out the gift and secured Hope at the bottom of it , and that it was

he who having made an image of a maii in clay , for -this presumptuous , vain , or mad freak of artistic skill it is further recorded of this son of Japetus that he was turned into an ape . The true solution of the fable is , that it was Pallas , otherwise Wisdom , who conducted Prometheus to heaven . By the fable of Prometheus lihting his darkness

g , or torch , at tho sun , is meant his seeking , attempting , and gaining much knowledge from above . It was his crime in not being afterwards satisfied or turning his knowledge to a good end that brought on the cause of his punishment . Hard and passing strange indeed would it be to have condemned him for bringing light from heaven to man—since

he knew that man could not make light , nor could that blessing be derived except from heaven itself . We may all remember how sweetly Horace has expressed himself upon this subject , and find a good old revived translation a failure so far as it goes when compared with the original . " No power the pride of mortals can control :

Prone ( o new crimes , by strong presumption driven : AVith sacrilegious hands Prometheus stole Celestial fire and bore it down from heaven : That fatal present brought on man ' s whole race An army of diseases—Death began With a new vigour then to mend his pace And form a more compendious way to man . "

Masterpieces Of The Architecture Of Different Nations.

MASTERPIECES OF THE ARCHITECTURE OF DIFFERENT NATIONS .

UV J . G . LEGHAND . THE AKOIIITECTUUE OF THE GREEKS ( CONTISUED ) . The Tower of the Winds at Athens . —This singular monument is of the small number of those which Vitruvius has cited in his work , and which still remain . All the upper portion is iu a state of good preservation , and the bas reliefs ,

in which the eight principal winds are personified and distinguished by different attributes , without being of a very finished execution are of the grandest character . It appears that this exquisite edifice served at the same time as a public clock on account of some clepsydra or other mechanism to mark the hours at nighteven as solar dials traced on each

, of the eight places where the winds were personified , indicated them during the day . The Triton , of bronze , which served as a weathercock at the top of the roof , likewise indicated by day , with its vane , the quarter whence the winds blew ; but , as with a people who were navigators , it was also necessary that they should bo aware of this at night as well ,

it is supposed that small openings were contrived in the frieze , and , being made wider as they entered into the interior , they thus produced , when the wind entered them , a variety of sounds , or set in motion some tone by means of which a communication was imparted of from what quarter the wind was blowing . We knowfrom the sixth chapter of the 1 st Book of

Vitru-, vius , that the name of the architect who built the Tower of the Winds was Andronicus Cyrrhestes , but he does not give us the date of the erection of this monument ; it has been conjectured , however , from tho details of the edifice aud from the amount of knowledge in astronomy and gnomonics , that it may be supposed it could not have bceu erected until after

the ago of Pericles . ' The Monument of Thrasillus , executed in great pari in the Hock of the Acropolis , below the Parthenon . —This edifice was erected shortly after the death of Alexander the Great , by Thrasillus , who built and dedicated it , as an inscription informs us , after he had carried off the prize with theHipno-

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