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  • Nov. 12, 1859
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  • HOW TO DO GOOD.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Nov. 12, 1859: Page 5

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

Archæology.

ARCH ? OLOGY .

ANGLO-SAXON ANTIQUITIES . As extensive and very interesting discovery of Anglo-Saxon antiquities has been made by Mr . Akerman , secretary of the Society of Antiquaries , during the present autumn , at Long Wittcuhani , near Abingdon . It appears that about ten years ago the skeleton of a man , together with the umbo of a shield , a sword , spear & c . was exhumed blabourers engaged in diing the

, , y gg foundations of some cottages near the entrance to the village . The circumstance becoming known to the incumbent , the Rev . J . C . Clutterbuck , that gentleman obtained possession of these relicts , of which a description was communicated to the Archaiological Institute .

On a visit to Long Wittenham , in March last , Mr . Clutterbuck , at the suggestion of Mr . Akerman , was induced to excavate near the spot , the result of which was the finding of more skeletons , showing that the locality had evidently been the burial ground of an Anglo-Saxon population . Accordingly in the autumn , Mr . Akerman , with thc consent of the owner of the laud , and by the direction of the council of the Society of Antiquaries , commenced loration of the

a systematic exp spot . Guided by long experience in researches of this description , Mr . Akerman soon obtained abundant evidence of the nature and character of the interments , which are of two distinct kinds—the one by cremation , presumed to be the older rite of burial of our Anglo-Saxon forefathers ; the other by inhumation , or the burial of the body entire , the males with their weapons , the females with their ornaments

personal . Among the former are nearly a score of iron bosses of shields , a great number of spears ancl knives , ancl a sword three feet long , the blade straight , broad , and two edged . The spears are of various forms and sizes , and were found even in the graves of boys . In the graves of the women were found a great number of amber and glass beads , brooches of various forms , toilette implementshair insthe whirls of indles & cThese

, p , sp , . objects are very significant of a people among whom male ancl female relationships were distinguished by the " spear half" and the " spindle half . " The urns are very numerous , amounting to nearly fifty . They are of black pottery , and many of them are

marked with an ornament which distinguishes them from the earthen vessels of the ancient British , Roman , and lloinaiio-British periods . The skeletons were of large and robust men , some of then being of gigantic size and in a remarkable state of preservation , every bone being preserved entire . They were deposited in rectangular graves , averaging three feet in depth , and had once probablbeen covered with tumuli

y , obliterated by the spade and the plough at a later period . The chief interest attaching to these discoveries is the evidence they afford of an early settlement of an Anglo-Saxon population along these upper valleys of the Thames ; no one looking at these remains can doubt that they are those of a people who lived and died iu the same neighbourhood in whicli their skeletons have

been discovered , and that it is not the relics of a battle field upon ivhich Mr . Akerman has fallen . We are bound to add , that the owner of the soil , in this instance , has with , the greatest liberality acceded to all Mr . Akerinan ' s requests , and that the excavator himself has met with every assistance and kind cooperation from the inhabitants of the little village of LongWittenhamand especiallfrom its excellent

_ , y vicar , the Rev . J . C . Clutterbuck . It is proposed to keep this collection together , and to place it , for future exhibition , in cases provided by the Society of Antiquaries , on whose account and in great measure by whose support these researches have been undertaken .

LA FOXTAIXE . — " He came the other day , " said Moliere , " so abstracted as to ask mo to call with him on the Chevalier de Loraine , at ivhose funeral w-o had both been present the day before . He did not knoiv who wrote the Lord ' s prayer . " — " Now , I say that's too bad , M . Moliere , " siud La Fontaine , suddenly waking up . " You are telling of somo of my folli . s , but I ' m up to you . I do know who wrote the Lord ' s Prayer . " - — - 'AVho . " we all cried , knowing the kind , foolish , blundering vanity of the mam— ' .-Who . —to think I don't know . " — " Who . "— " Why , Moses . " MRacine had maliciousl him that fit to the

. y whispered answer question . >> e laughed till the tears ran down our cheeks ; La Fontaine goodhumouredly joining us . " I'll turn you all into beasts to-morrow , " ho said " you shall all figlu . ; n my next fable . "— "M . la Fontaine , " said tne iU . bu , " if you make us talk like the beasts in your fables , wo could wish no greater flattery paid to our conversation . "— " His beasts talk « ke angels , " said a critic to me , under breath ; " but he himself talks bke a beast , " -C ? . 17 . Thornbwy .

How To Do Good.

HOW TO DO GOOD .

[ From Rob Morris s Voice of Masonry ., ] BROTHER , the old moralist , Franklin , used to tell his grancL children , after he had passed the age of seventy , that nothing had ever so much influenced his mind for good , or made so lasting an impression upon it , as a little book , read when a boy , entitled " How to do Good . " In fact , he attributes to the impressions made upon his mind by that publication much of the large , stated , and protracted benefactions of which it is known Franklin through all his lifp was tho . author .

Nothing can be truer than that plain and earnest advice upon a theme like this is likely to be productive of good results , and we the more readily set about the preparation of our little essay on the subject stimulated by the remembrance of Franklin ' s and kindred cases . How to do good / as Masons is in reality our text . To encourage an effort on the part of every reader , we append Preston ' s not too

enthusiastic sketch of the effects of Masonry in the hands and hearts of the virtuous and the feeling . "Masonry" he avers " strengthens the mind against the storms of life , paves the way to peace , and promotes domestic happiness . It ameliorates the temper and improves the understanding . It is company in solitude , aud gives vivacity ; -variety , and energy to social conversation . In youth it governs the passions and employs usefully our

most ' active faculties ; and in age , ivhen sickness , imbecility , and disease have benumbed the corporeal frame , and rendered the union of soul and body almost intolerable , it yields a fund of comfort and satisfaction . " We never read this extract without a glow of feeling and a desire ourselves to do good to a society that offers so much of good to usand we have quoted it in the hope that thc same impression

, may be made upon thc minds of our readers , and they thus prepared for the following suggestions , How to do good . 1 . Go always ' to your Lodge when circumstances permit , and let your accustomed scat be so rarely found vacant that , when from necessity it becomes so , the brethren naturally inquire , "Is Bro . A . sick ? " Do you ask how thc attendance on a Lodge is doing good ? Wc answerit is placing one ' s self in thc way of

, good , and the opportunity will not fail to turn up . 2 . Drop always a coin , large or small , into the charity box . Who knoweth whether this or that shall prosper ? Your gift will be transformed into two blessings , one will wing its way to some needy soul , one will return to your own breast . 3 . Carry some little fact to the Lodge , some scrap from tlie Voice , some new thought or incident , and at a proper moment

read it aloud . It excites no comment , but look on the faces of the hearers . There is aroused intelligence . That fact is laid away to be handled again . That fact will be told in the family at home and among the neighbours . That fact may make four good men Masons . It may make six Masons better Masons . It may excite five men who never read anything on Masonic themes to seek for books and papers . Nay , it may lead the Lodge to ask

for similar facts ancl information at every meeting . All these ive have known to result from the fruitful influence of a single well directed thought cast at random into the Lodge . 4 . Check the hasty word and oath on the brother ' s lips as soon as you can do it privately . To do it publicly would produce evil rather than good . Kindly asking the man of passion to give you his private ear to him in a few wordslovingly expressed

, say , , that " you have a charge to keep , " and cannot and dare not neglect it . Then give your message , asking no reply , and leave the results to God . Wonderful , wonderful are the oil-time effects of this covenanted method of doing good . 5 . Point out the errors , but always one at a time , and in no dictatorial manner , which exist in your Lodge . What if your views are smartly opposed and laid aside ? it only proves that you

struck home , and at the next meeting perhaps your very opponents will be with you . Magna est Veritas et prevakbit . The truth will always win in a Lodge , and for the simple reason that the whole system of Masonry is organized truth . AVe have been in a Lodge beforo now so rickety and near its dissolution that the brethren of which it was composed were fly ing about orbitless , and in dire confusion . We have thrown , as it were , headlong omitted heretofore

into that Lodge some central truth , somehow in the building , and lo ! the lost truths ranged themselves naturally and promptly around it , and by the intelligent appropriation ofthe Master , who had only needed a little Masonic light to make him everything that is useful and honourable , that Lodge became , what every Lodge was intended to be , a burning and a shining light . So much for pointing out an error . Do it at every meeting as for the sake of doing good .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1859-11-12, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 12 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_12111859/page/5/.
  • 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.

Archæology.

ARCH ? OLOGY .

ANGLO-SAXON ANTIQUITIES . As extensive and very interesting discovery of Anglo-Saxon antiquities has been made by Mr . Akerman , secretary of the Society of Antiquaries , during the present autumn , at Long Wittcuhani , near Abingdon . It appears that about ten years ago the skeleton of a man , together with the umbo of a shield , a sword , spear & c . was exhumed blabourers engaged in diing the

, , y gg foundations of some cottages near the entrance to the village . The circumstance becoming known to the incumbent , the Rev . J . C . Clutterbuck , that gentleman obtained possession of these relicts , of which a description was communicated to the Archaiological Institute .

On a visit to Long Wittenham , in March last , Mr . Clutterbuck , at the suggestion of Mr . Akerman , was induced to excavate near the spot , the result of which was the finding of more skeletons , showing that the locality had evidently been the burial ground of an Anglo-Saxon population . Accordingly in the autumn , Mr . Akerman , with thc consent of the owner of the laud , and by the direction of the council of the Society of Antiquaries , commenced loration of the

a systematic exp spot . Guided by long experience in researches of this description , Mr . Akerman soon obtained abundant evidence of the nature and character of the interments , which are of two distinct kinds—the one by cremation , presumed to be the older rite of burial of our Anglo-Saxon forefathers ; the other by inhumation , or the burial of the body entire , the males with their weapons , the females with their ornaments

personal . Among the former are nearly a score of iron bosses of shields , a great number of spears ancl knives , ancl a sword three feet long , the blade straight , broad , and two edged . The spears are of various forms and sizes , and were found even in the graves of boys . In the graves of the women were found a great number of amber and glass beads , brooches of various forms , toilette implementshair insthe whirls of indles & cThese

, p , sp , . objects are very significant of a people among whom male ancl female relationships were distinguished by the " spear half" and the " spindle half . " The urns are very numerous , amounting to nearly fifty . They are of black pottery , and many of them are

marked with an ornament which distinguishes them from the earthen vessels of the ancient British , Roman , and lloinaiio-British periods . The skeletons were of large and robust men , some of then being of gigantic size and in a remarkable state of preservation , every bone being preserved entire . They were deposited in rectangular graves , averaging three feet in depth , and had once probablbeen covered with tumuli

y , obliterated by the spade and the plough at a later period . The chief interest attaching to these discoveries is the evidence they afford of an early settlement of an Anglo-Saxon population along these upper valleys of the Thames ; no one looking at these remains can doubt that they are those of a people who lived and died iu the same neighbourhood in whicli their skeletons have

been discovered , and that it is not the relics of a battle field upon ivhich Mr . Akerman has fallen . We are bound to add , that the owner of the soil , in this instance , has with , the greatest liberality acceded to all Mr . Akerinan ' s requests , and that the excavator himself has met with every assistance and kind cooperation from the inhabitants of the little village of LongWittenhamand especiallfrom its excellent

_ , y vicar , the Rev . J . C . Clutterbuck . It is proposed to keep this collection together , and to place it , for future exhibition , in cases provided by the Society of Antiquaries , on whose account and in great measure by whose support these researches have been undertaken .

LA FOXTAIXE . — " He came the other day , " said Moliere , " so abstracted as to ask mo to call with him on the Chevalier de Loraine , at ivhose funeral w-o had both been present the day before . He did not knoiv who wrote the Lord ' s prayer . " — " Now , I say that's too bad , M . Moliere , " siud La Fontaine , suddenly waking up . " You are telling of somo of my folli . s , but I ' m up to you . I do know who wrote the Lord ' s Prayer . " - — - 'AVho . " we all cried , knowing the kind , foolish , blundering vanity of the mam— ' .-Who . —to think I don't know . " — " Who . "— " Why , Moses . " MRacine had maliciousl him that fit to the

. y whispered answer question . >> e laughed till the tears ran down our cheeks ; La Fontaine goodhumouredly joining us . " I'll turn you all into beasts to-morrow , " ho said " you shall all figlu . ; n my next fable . "— "M . la Fontaine , " said tne iU . bu , " if you make us talk like the beasts in your fables , wo could wish no greater flattery paid to our conversation . "— " His beasts talk « ke angels , " said a critic to me , under breath ; " but he himself talks bke a beast , " -C ? . 17 . Thornbwy .

How To Do Good.

HOW TO DO GOOD .

[ From Rob Morris s Voice of Masonry ., ] BROTHER , the old moralist , Franklin , used to tell his grancL children , after he had passed the age of seventy , that nothing had ever so much influenced his mind for good , or made so lasting an impression upon it , as a little book , read when a boy , entitled " How to do Good . " In fact , he attributes to the impressions made upon his mind by that publication much of the large , stated , and protracted benefactions of which it is known Franklin through all his lifp was tho . author .

Nothing can be truer than that plain and earnest advice upon a theme like this is likely to be productive of good results , and we the more readily set about the preparation of our little essay on the subject stimulated by the remembrance of Franklin ' s and kindred cases . How to do good / as Masons is in reality our text . To encourage an effort on the part of every reader , we append Preston ' s not too

enthusiastic sketch of the effects of Masonry in the hands and hearts of the virtuous and the feeling . "Masonry" he avers " strengthens the mind against the storms of life , paves the way to peace , and promotes domestic happiness . It ameliorates the temper and improves the understanding . It is company in solitude , aud gives vivacity ; -variety , and energy to social conversation . In youth it governs the passions and employs usefully our

most ' active faculties ; and in age , ivhen sickness , imbecility , and disease have benumbed the corporeal frame , and rendered the union of soul and body almost intolerable , it yields a fund of comfort and satisfaction . " We never read this extract without a glow of feeling and a desire ourselves to do good to a society that offers so much of good to usand we have quoted it in the hope that thc same impression

, may be made upon thc minds of our readers , and they thus prepared for the following suggestions , How to do good . 1 . Go always ' to your Lodge when circumstances permit , and let your accustomed scat be so rarely found vacant that , when from necessity it becomes so , the brethren naturally inquire , "Is Bro . A . sick ? " Do you ask how thc attendance on a Lodge is doing good ? Wc answerit is placing one ' s self in thc way of

, good , and the opportunity will not fail to turn up . 2 . Drop always a coin , large or small , into the charity box . Who knoweth whether this or that shall prosper ? Your gift will be transformed into two blessings , one will wing its way to some needy soul , one will return to your own breast . 3 . Carry some little fact to the Lodge , some scrap from tlie Voice , some new thought or incident , and at a proper moment

read it aloud . It excites no comment , but look on the faces of the hearers . There is aroused intelligence . That fact is laid away to be handled again . That fact will be told in the family at home and among the neighbours . That fact may make four good men Masons . It may make six Masons better Masons . It may excite five men who never read anything on Masonic themes to seek for books and papers . Nay , it may lead the Lodge to ask

for similar facts ancl information at every meeting . All these ive have known to result from the fruitful influence of a single well directed thought cast at random into the Lodge . 4 . Check the hasty word and oath on the brother ' s lips as soon as you can do it privately . To do it publicly would produce evil rather than good . Kindly asking the man of passion to give you his private ear to him in a few wordslovingly expressed

, say , , that " you have a charge to keep , " and cannot and dare not neglect it . Then give your message , asking no reply , and leave the results to God . Wonderful , wonderful are the oil-time effects of this covenanted method of doing good . 5 . Point out the errors , but always one at a time , and in no dictatorial manner , which exist in your Lodge . What if your views are smartly opposed and laid aside ? it only proves that you

struck home , and at the next meeting perhaps your very opponents will be with you . Magna est Veritas et prevakbit . The truth will always win in a Lodge , and for the simple reason that the whole system of Masonry is organized truth . AVe have been in a Lodge beforo now so rickety and near its dissolution that the brethren of which it was composed were fly ing about orbitless , and in dire confusion . We have thrown , as it were , headlong omitted heretofore

into that Lodge some central truth , somehow in the building , and lo ! the lost truths ranged themselves naturally and promptly around it , and by the intelligent appropriation ofthe Master , who had only needed a little Masonic light to make him everything that is useful and honourable , that Lodge became , what every Lodge was intended to be , a burning and a shining light . So much for pointing out an error . Do it at every meeting as for the sake of doing good .

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