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  • Nov. 12, 1859
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Literature.

which ho is the author , entitled " King Saul , " illustrating the power of madness , superstition , aud jealousy combined . It is a five-act tragedy , adhering throughout to the narrative as it appears in holy writ , and " containing on every page delineations of character , and fine dramatic taste , which would not disgrace the pen of the greatest dramatists . ' ' The secretary to the Brighton Mechanics' Institute has received a

letter from Mr . Edwin James , Q . C ., Recorder to tho borough , of which the following is a copy -. — " So little interest was felt in the competition for the prizes last year , that I am not inclined to renew them . I certainly should not give any unless twenty competitors for each prize were guaranteed . " Mr . Maeinillau ' s Magazine has made its appearance under the care of Professor Masson . It is a good opening number . A review of political

affairs , from the pliilosophieal rather than the parti-. au point of sight , three chapters of " Tom Brown at Oxford , " "Pen , Ink , and Paper , " by Professor George Wilson , and Mr . Lushingtoii ' s " Italian Freedom , " are magazine articles high above the average iu thought ancl style . The JAbro . rie Nourella has just published a translation of Mr . Thackeray ' s " Yellow-plush Papers . " This work has been admirably rendered into French by an Englishman , Mr . William L . Hughes , who has

contributed to several of the leading periodicals here , and even had oue or more dramas produced on the French stage . His perfect acquaintance with the language has enabled him to render Mr . Thackeray ' s work in the manner best calculated to convey the author ' s meaning to French

readers . Where close translation was applicable , he has adhered strictly to his original , but where the meaning could be better expressed by paraphrase ho has adopted that method ; and the result is a very successful rendering of a tale that offers unusual difficulties to a translator . Mr . Hughes has not attempted to imitate the extraordinary orthography of the famous Mr . Charles J . Yellowplush , ancl any such experiment would most probably have resulted in failure . The version , first

appeared in the Revue Europienne , and the foot of its now being brought out in a separate form proves that ithasbeen well received by the publichere . Tho Birmingham Journal says : —¦ " It may be recollected that some years ago , on the occasion of a visit by Mr . Dickens to Birmingham to attend the Literary aud Artistic dinner , a presentation was made to him , aud au address expressive of the admiration felt by the donors for his genius aud character . Iu Filth's portrait of Mr . Dickens , exhibited in the

Royal Academy last season , aud which , by the way , is about to be engraved , this address forms a portion of the ' still life , ' as appears by the following letter addressed to Mr . J . E . Walker , artist , lately a resident in Birmingham : — ' Tuesday , 20 th July , lSi . 9 . —Dear sir , —In reply to your letter , I have great pleasure in assuring you that tho framed address in Mr . Filth's portrait is the address presented to mo b y my Birmingham friends , and to which you refer . It has stood at my

elbow in that one place ever since I received it ; and please God it will remain at my side as long as I live and work . —Dear sir , faithfully yours , CHARLES DICKERS . '" Tho Corh Examiner publishes a correspondence between Mr . Charles Dickens and an ultramontane citizen of Cork . Tho

latter gentleman , feeling himself , as a Roman Catholic , aggrieved by oue or two articles exposing papal excesses in Italy , which appeared some time ago iu "All the Year Round , " wrote to Mr . Dickens on the subject . Mr . Dickens , in reply , denied that the complaint was reasonable , declared that ho had never " pandered to any acrimonious or intolerant feeling" against the Roman Catholic Church , aud added" Let me , iu all good humour , recommend you to observe whether its

( tho church ) accredited organs are as considerate towards Protestants , aud to give your judgment of me the benefit of the comparison . " The Standard says : — " Sir E . Bulwer Lytton has returned to England , and we are happy to state that the right hon . baronet is in the enjoyment of perfectly recovered health . " A collection of facts respecting the weather is in progress on a scale that includes tho North Atlantic and its several coasts . Contributions

will be thankfully used by the Meteorological Department of the Board ° f Trade and Admiralty . At the meeting of the Council of the Society of Arts , on AVednesday , it was announced that Dr . Lindley had consented to accept the office of Examiner in Botany for thc Society ' s examinations ' .

MEDITATION AND GRATITUDE . —He , in frequently reflecting on the Particular ample favours of God to him , should imitate the holy Psalmist , that illustrious pattern of great and fortunate men ; saying after him , With his spirit and disposition of soul , " Thou hast brought me to great honour , and comforted me on every side ; therefore will I praise thee and thy faithfulness , 0 God . "—Barrow .

Literature.

ANCIENT SYMBOLISM ILLUSTEATEP . —IT . BY BRO . BOB . MARTIN " , M . O ., PAST DEPUTY PROV . GR . VXT ) MASTER 01 ? SUFFOLK ; AXD P . E . COM . 01 ? KXICHTS TEMPLAR , ETC . THE JIYSTIC TRIANGLE . NOAH , I have already shown , was deified , so also were his

immediate descendants , and all inventors of the arts ivere noticed with divine honours . Tubal Cain , the first worker of metallic substances , was the Vulcan of the Greeks , nor did he lay slight claim to the honour awarded him , since his progress in science was unparalleled . Not only was he the first worker of metallic substancesand thus alike useful in

, the arts of war , and-agriculture , but he must have understood the principles of chemistry , especially the power of caloric in fusing metals and producing compound substances , for we read that he was the instructor of every- artificer in brass ancl iron . Now , brass being a factitious metal , formerly a mixture of lapis ccdaminaris with copper in fusion , he must

have advanced far du science ere he could have first formed the metal , and then converted it to the many purposes for ivhich it was employed . In like manner the god Hermes or Amiubis ofthe Greeks , the Toth or Taut of the Egyptians called Trismegisttis , that is " threefold great , " is proved to have been an ancestor , who

instructed the Egyptians in tho elements of astronomy , music , and letters , ancl was venerated by the Greeks and Romans as the god of eloquence , wisdom , and commerce . Two other sects have lon g divided between tliem the great body of the commonalty of China , that of the Tao-tse , and that of the priests of Fo , or Boodh—the first native , the

second of foreign origin . In a work recently translated by the Kev . Dr . Morrison , Tao , the founder of the former sect , is stated to have been born on earth under Woo-ting , the twentieth emperor of the Chang dynasty ; his mother , who conceived through the influence of a divinely transforming air , remained ei ghty-one years in a state of pregnancy , and her

offspring after living nine hundred and ninety-six years on earth , ascended to tho summit of the mountain Kwan-lun , His followers , in . describing the primeval state , assert that all the fruits of the earth grew spontaneously , and men dwelt unhurt amidst ferocious animals . Thc universe was onl y one family , they lived in innocence , nothing could be fatal , or cause death . The immoderate desire of knowledge ruined the human race ; the jierverscness of woman was the sonrco and root of all evil .

This bears a strong resemblance to the Mosaic history . I will also mention a striking similarity between the Chinese and Mosaic accounts of the deluge . Yu , the Chinese Noah , is celebrated for his painful and successful labour iu directing the waters to their proper channels . In tho time of Yu wine was first made ; but when Yu drank of it and relished

its flavour , he banished its maker , and prohibited the luxury , remarking that it would be ruinous to man . Noah having descended from the ark after a general deluge , must have found drainage necessary before he could till the earth ; ho planted a vineyard , and was drunken , the consequence of which was his banishment to slavery of the descendants of Ham .

The following description given of the Tao sect by Professor Kidcl , evinces a striking similarity between their theory of a trinity of gods and that rirofessed by ourselves , and symbolized by the triangle . The sect of Tao , says this learned author , was founded by Laou Iveuntsze , who flourished about four hundred years jn'ior to the Christian era , ancl was

contemporary with Confucius . The origin is described as the great supreme , threefold source , consisting of three personages , of whom the most honourable dwells in heaven , and bestows happiness . The next in rank grants forgiveness of sins on earth , and the inferior rules the water , ancl delivers from impending calamities ; yet these three sages are but one first cause , that is , the indivisible monad , to which we have already referred , called Tae-Keih ,

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1859-11-12, Page 11” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 12 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_12111859/page/11/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY. —V. Article 1
BASILICA ANGLICANA Article 2
EARLY HISTORY OF MASONRY IN TEXAS. Article 4
ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 5
HOW TO DO GOOD. Article 5
EXCELSIOR, A BETTER MOTTO. Article 6
Literature. Article 6
EXCELSIOR, A BETTER MOTTO. Article 8
Literature. Article 8
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 13
Poetry. Article 15
THE CHRISTIAN PHILOSOPHER. Article 15
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 16
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 16
ROYAL ARCH. Article 18
AMERICA. Article 19
Obituary. Article 19
THE WEEK. Article 20
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 22
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 22
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Literature.

which ho is the author , entitled " King Saul , " illustrating the power of madness , superstition , aud jealousy combined . It is a five-act tragedy , adhering throughout to the narrative as it appears in holy writ , and " containing on every page delineations of character , and fine dramatic taste , which would not disgrace the pen of the greatest dramatists . ' ' The secretary to the Brighton Mechanics' Institute has received a

letter from Mr . Edwin James , Q . C ., Recorder to tho borough , of which the following is a copy -. — " So little interest was felt in the competition for the prizes last year , that I am not inclined to renew them . I certainly should not give any unless twenty competitors for each prize were guaranteed . " Mr . Maeinillau ' s Magazine has made its appearance under the care of Professor Masson . It is a good opening number . A review of political

affairs , from the pliilosophieal rather than the parti-. au point of sight , three chapters of " Tom Brown at Oxford , " "Pen , Ink , and Paper , " by Professor George Wilson , and Mr . Lushingtoii ' s " Italian Freedom , " are magazine articles high above the average iu thought ancl style . The JAbro . rie Nourella has just published a translation of Mr . Thackeray ' s " Yellow-plush Papers . " This work has been admirably rendered into French by an Englishman , Mr . William L . Hughes , who has

contributed to several of the leading periodicals here , and even had oue or more dramas produced on the French stage . His perfect acquaintance with the language has enabled him to render Mr . Thackeray ' s work in the manner best calculated to convey the author ' s meaning to French

readers . Where close translation was applicable , he has adhered strictly to his original , but where the meaning could be better expressed by paraphrase ho has adopted that method ; and the result is a very successful rendering of a tale that offers unusual difficulties to a translator . Mr . Hughes has not attempted to imitate the extraordinary orthography of the famous Mr . Charles J . Yellowplush , ancl any such experiment would most probably have resulted in failure . The version , first

appeared in the Revue Europienne , and the foot of its now being brought out in a separate form proves that ithasbeen well received by the publichere . Tho Birmingham Journal says : —¦ " It may be recollected that some years ago , on the occasion of a visit by Mr . Dickens to Birmingham to attend the Literary aud Artistic dinner , a presentation was made to him , aud au address expressive of the admiration felt by the donors for his genius aud character . Iu Filth's portrait of Mr . Dickens , exhibited in the

Royal Academy last season , aud which , by the way , is about to be engraved , this address forms a portion of the ' still life , ' as appears by the following letter addressed to Mr . J . E . Walker , artist , lately a resident in Birmingham : — ' Tuesday , 20 th July , lSi . 9 . —Dear sir , —In reply to your letter , I have great pleasure in assuring you that tho framed address in Mr . Filth's portrait is the address presented to mo b y my Birmingham friends , and to which you refer . It has stood at my

elbow in that one place ever since I received it ; and please God it will remain at my side as long as I live and work . —Dear sir , faithfully yours , CHARLES DICKERS . '" Tho Corh Examiner publishes a correspondence between Mr . Charles Dickens and an ultramontane citizen of Cork . Tho

latter gentleman , feeling himself , as a Roman Catholic , aggrieved by oue or two articles exposing papal excesses in Italy , which appeared some time ago iu "All the Year Round , " wrote to Mr . Dickens on the subject . Mr . Dickens , in reply , denied that the complaint was reasonable , declared that ho had never " pandered to any acrimonious or intolerant feeling" against the Roman Catholic Church , aud added" Let me , iu all good humour , recommend you to observe whether its

( tho church ) accredited organs are as considerate towards Protestants , aud to give your judgment of me the benefit of the comparison . " The Standard says : — " Sir E . Bulwer Lytton has returned to England , and we are happy to state that the right hon . baronet is in the enjoyment of perfectly recovered health . " A collection of facts respecting the weather is in progress on a scale that includes tho North Atlantic and its several coasts . Contributions

will be thankfully used by the Meteorological Department of the Board ° f Trade and Admiralty . At the meeting of the Council of the Society of Arts , on AVednesday , it was announced that Dr . Lindley had consented to accept the office of Examiner in Botany for thc Society ' s examinations ' .

MEDITATION AND GRATITUDE . —He , in frequently reflecting on the Particular ample favours of God to him , should imitate the holy Psalmist , that illustrious pattern of great and fortunate men ; saying after him , With his spirit and disposition of soul , " Thou hast brought me to great honour , and comforted me on every side ; therefore will I praise thee and thy faithfulness , 0 God . "—Barrow .

Literature.

ANCIENT SYMBOLISM ILLUSTEATEP . —IT . BY BRO . BOB . MARTIN " , M . O ., PAST DEPUTY PROV . GR . VXT ) MASTER 01 ? SUFFOLK ; AXD P . E . COM . 01 ? KXICHTS TEMPLAR , ETC . THE JIYSTIC TRIANGLE . NOAH , I have already shown , was deified , so also were his

immediate descendants , and all inventors of the arts ivere noticed with divine honours . Tubal Cain , the first worker of metallic substances , was the Vulcan of the Greeks , nor did he lay slight claim to the honour awarded him , since his progress in science was unparalleled . Not only was he the first worker of metallic substancesand thus alike useful in

, the arts of war , and-agriculture , but he must have understood the principles of chemistry , especially the power of caloric in fusing metals and producing compound substances , for we read that he was the instructor of every- artificer in brass ancl iron . Now , brass being a factitious metal , formerly a mixture of lapis ccdaminaris with copper in fusion , he must

have advanced far du science ere he could have first formed the metal , and then converted it to the many purposes for ivhich it was employed . In like manner the god Hermes or Amiubis ofthe Greeks , the Toth or Taut of the Egyptians called Trismegisttis , that is " threefold great , " is proved to have been an ancestor , who

instructed the Egyptians in tho elements of astronomy , music , and letters , ancl was venerated by the Greeks and Romans as the god of eloquence , wisdom , and commerce . Two other sects have lon g divided between tliem the great body of the commonalty of China , that of the Tao-tse , and that of the priests of Fo , or Boodh—the first native , the

second of foreign origin . In a work recently translated by the Kev . Dr . Morrison , Tao , the founder of the former sect , is stated to have been born on earth under Woo-ting , the twentieth emperor of the Chang dynasty ; his mother , who conceived through the influence of a divinely transforming air , remained ei ghty-one years in a state of pregnancy , and her

offspring after living nine hundred and ninety-six years on earth , ascended to tho summit of the mountain Kwan-lun , His followers , in . describing the primeval state , assert that all the fruits of the earth grew spontaneously , and men dwelt unhurt amidst ferocious animals . Thc universe was onl y one family , they lived in innocence , nothing could be fatal , or cause death . The immoderate desire of knowledge ruined the human race ; the jierverscness of woman was the sonrco and root of all evil .

This bears a strong resemblance to the Mosaic history . I will also mention a striking similarity between the Chinese and Mosaic accounts of the deluge . Yu , the Chinese Noah , is celebrated for his painful and successful labour iu directing the waters to their proper channels . In tho time of Yu wine was first made ; but when Yu drank of it and relished

its flavour , he banished its maker , and prohibited the luxury , remarking that it would be ruinous to man . Noah having descended from the ark after a general deluge , must have found drainage necessary before he could till the earth ; ho planted a vineyard , and was drunken , the consequence of which was his banishment to slavery of the descendants of Ham .

The following description given of the Tao sect by Professor Kidcl , evinces a striking similarity between their theory of a trinity of gods and that rirofessed by ourselves , and symbolized by the triangle . The sect of Tao , says this learned author , was founded by Laou Iveuntsze , who flourished about four hundred years jn'ior to the Christian era , ancl was

contemporary with Confucius . The origin is described as the great supreme , threefold source , consisting of three personages , of whom the most honourable dwells in heaven , and bestows happiness . The next in rank grants forgiveness of sins on earth , and the inferior rules the water , ancl delivers from impending calamities ; yet these three sages are but one first cause , that is , the indivisible monad , to which we have already referred , called Tae-Keih ,

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