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  • Jan. 14, 1865
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Jan. 14, 1865: Page 7

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    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. ← Page 2 of 4 →
Page 7

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Masonic Notes And Queries.

much spoken of ; hence it was included among the symbols of Ereemasonry , which , in 1717 , underwent a complete revision . —M . 0 . THE TEACINO- BOAED . In his account of Mr . Suieaton ' s erection of the Eddystone lig hthouse , Mr . Smiles says' ( page 36 , note ) in

" Mr . Smeaton had considerable difficulty finding a room with a floor sufficiently large on which to fit all the moulds together in the order in which they were to be permanently fixed . The engineer applied to the mayor of Plymouth for the use of the Guildhall for the purpose , but he was refused on the pretence that the chalk-lines would spoil the floor . He was also refused the use of . the assembly-rooms for some Eimilar reason . "—M . 0 .

MAEKED , SQTJAEED , AND NUMBERED . Mr . Smeaton seems to have followed a plan that Freemasons know something of . Mr . Smiles ( page 38 ) tells us : " The manner in which the stones were prepared in the yard , arranged in courses , and brought off in the vessels , so that they could be landed in their proper order and fixed in their proper places

, was simple and effective . When the separate pieces of whicli a course was to consist were hewn , they ivere all brought together in the work-yard , fitted upon the platform in the exact sites they were to occupy in the building , and so marked and numbered that they could readily be restored to their proper

relative positions . So much preliminary care having been taken , no difficulty or confusion occurred in the use of the materials , whilst the progress of the building was also greatly accelerated . " The foregoing needs no comment . —M . 0 .

PEOEESSOE E 0 BIS 0 N . Professor Robison wrote a well-known book against Freemasons and the Illuminati . It is desirable we should learn all we can of our detractors , as well as our eulogists , and here are some items , from Smiles ' s Life of John Rennie ( vol . ii . of Lives of TEngineers ) , which speak of Professor Eobison . " Iu 1793 he had

, the advantage of much close personal intercourse with his old friend the professor , who paid him a visit at his house in London for the express purpose of conferring . with him upon mechanical subjects . In the letter announcing the object of his visit , Dr . Robison candidly avowed that it was in order ' that he might

extract as much information from him as possible . ' The doctor had undertaken to prepare the articles on ' Mechanics' for the " Eneyclopcedia Britannica , and he believed he should be enabled to impart an additional value to his writings by throwing upon them the light of Rennie ' s strong practical judgment . He

proposed to take a lodging in the immediate neighbourhood of Rennie ' s house , then iu the Great Surrey-road , and to board with him during the day ; but Rennie would not listen to this proposal , and insisted ou being the professor ' s entertainer during the period of his visit . " Mr . Smiles then goes on to tell

us that one of the doctor ' s points was to discuss the theory of the equilibrium of arches , but this is better omitted here ; and only quoting the close , we find — "when the doctor returned to his Edinburgh labours , he carried with him the cordial affection and respect of the engineer , who continued to keep up a correspondence with him until the close of his life . " Mr . Smiles says in a footnote ( page 172 ) , "Dr

Robison was the first contributor to the Mncyelopcedia who was really a man of science , and whose articles were above the rank of mere compilations . He sought information from all quarters—searched the works of foreign writers , and consulted men of practical eminence , such as Rennie , to whom he could

obtain access , and extraordinary value was thus imparted to his articles . " With such a character for talent , no doubt Robison was really a very dangerous foe to Ereemasonry at the time in which he wrote ; but as his book has really done little or no harm to the Order—although

occasionally quoted , even now , by adverse critics—it is quite as well to know something of the individual who was once so popular an authority against us . — M . C .

TELFOED ' S MAEK . In the life of Telford we read ( page 301)— "His apprenticeship over , Telford went on working as a journeyman at Langholm , his wages at the time being only eighteen-pence a day . What was called the New Town was then in course of erection , and there are houses still pointed out in it , the walls of which Telford helped to put together .

t In the town are three arched door heads of a more ornamental character than the rest , of Telford ' s hewing ; for he was already beginning to set up his pretensions as a Craftsman , and took pride in pointing to the superior handiwork which proceeded from his chisel . About the same time the

bridge connecting the Old with the New Town was built across the Esk at Langholm , and upon that structure he was also employed . Many of the stones in it were hewn by his hand , and on several of the blocks forming the land-breast his tool mark is still to be seen . " —M . 0 .

TEIIEOED ' S DODGE PITTING . S . Telford , having completed his work on Somerset House , was foreman of the Masons at Portsmouth ; and in a letter dated Portsmouth Dockyard , Feb . 1 , 1786 , Mr . Smiles says : — " At the same time he states that he is taking great delight in Ereemasonry , ancl is about to

have a lodge-room at the George Inn fitted up after his plans and under his direction . " What do the Portsmouth lodges know about this ? May it be reasonably hoped that some member will communicate the particulars , either from report or the lodge minutes ? We know absolutely nothing of the eminent men who have been members of the Craft , and our ignorance on such matters does not redound to our credit . — M . 0 .

THE THISTLE AND E 0 SE . An old Mason talks always about the thistle and rose , what does he mean ?—C . J . —[ He alludes to the old lectures , in which it was said , when alluding to a certain portion of the ceremony— " the Star and Garter , the Thistle or Rose , or any other Order whatever under the sun . " ]

" G . B . OE D . " AND CHAUCEll ' S CRAFT KNOWLEDGE . [ " G . 13 . of D . " is an enigma . At page 469 of the last volume of this MAGAZINE , we stated that the allegory of " Patient Grizel" was to be found in Chaucer ' s Canterbury Tales , under the name of " The Gierke ' s Tale . " Now , what other man on earth but " G . B . of D . " would read Dekker ' s play of Patient Grissell , and then complain that he cannot find a

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1865-01-14, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_14011865/page/7/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE PAST MASTER'S DEGREE. Article 1
HONORARY MEMBERS. Article 1
FREEMASONRY IN DENMARK. Article 3
STATISTICS OF FREEMASONRY . Article 4
THE STORY OF A WOOD-CARVER AT ST. PAUL'S. Article 4
MASONIC PRAYER. Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 6
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 9
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 10
METROPOLITAN. Article 10
PROVINCIAL. Article 10
ROYAL ARCH. Article 13
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 13
MARK MASONRY. Article 13
IRELAND. Article 14
INDIA. Article 15
Obituary. BRO. CHARLES JAMES COLLINS. Article 16
BRO. G. H. R. YOUNG. Article 16
LITERARY EXTRACTS. Article 16
THE WEEK. Article 17
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.

much spoken of ; hence it was included among the symbols of Ereemasonry , which , in 1717 , underwent a complete revision . —M . 0 . THE TEACINO- BOAED . In his account of Mr . Suieaton ' s erection of the Eddystone lig hthouse , Mr . Smiles says' ( page 36 , note ) in

" Mr . Smeaton had considerable difficulty finding a room with a floor sufficiently large on which to fit all the moulds together in the order in which they were to be permanently fixed . The engineer applied to the mayor of Plymouth for the use of the Guildhall for the purpose , but he was refused on the pretence that the chalk-lines would spoil the floor . He was also refused the use of . the assembly-rooms for some Eimilar reason . "—M . 0 .

MAEKED , SQTJAEED , AND NUMBERED . Mr . Smeaton seems to have followed a plan that Freemasons know something of . Mr . Smiles ( page 38 ) tells us : " The manner in which the stones were prepared in the yard , arranged in courses , and brought off in the vessels , so that they could be landed in their proper order and fixed in their proper places

, was simple and effective . When the separate pieces of whicli a course was to consist were hewn , they ivere all brought together in the work-yard , fitted upon the platform in the exact sites they were to occupy in the building , and so marked and numbered that they could readily be restored to their proper

relative positions . So much preliminary care having been taken , no difficulty or confusion occurred in the use of the materials , whilst the progress of the building was also greatly accelerated . " The foregoing needs no comment . —M . 0 .

PEOEESSOE E 0 BIS 0 N . Professor Robison wrote a well-known book against Freemasons and the Illuminati . It is desirable we should learn all we can of our detractors , as well as our eulogists , and here are some items , from Smiles ' s Life of John Rennie ( vol . ii . of Lives of TEngineers ) , which speak of Professor Eobison . " Iu 1793 he had

, the advantage of much close personal intercourse with his old friend the professor , who paid him a visit at his house in London for the express purpose of conferring . with him upon mechanical subjects . In the letter announcing the object of his visit , Dr . Robison candidly avowed that it was in order ' that he might

extract as much information from him as possible . ' The doctor had undertaken to prepare the articles on ' Mechanics' for the " Eneyclopcedia Britannica , and he believed he should be enabled to impart an additional value to his writings by throwing upon them the light of Rennie ' s strong practical judgment . He

proposed to take a lodging in the immediate neighbourhood of Rennie ' s house , then iu the Great Surrey-road , and to board with him during the day ; but Rennie would not listen to this proposal , and insisted ou being the professor ' s entertainer during the period of his visit . " Mr . Smiles then goes on to tell

us that one of the doctor ' s points was to discuss the theory of the equilibrium of arches , but this is better omitted here ; and only quoting the close , we find — "when the doctor returned to his Edinburgh labours , he carried with him the cordial affection and respect of the engineer , who continued to keep up a correspondence with him until the close of his life . " Mr . Smiles says in a footnote ( page 172 ) , "Dr

Robison was the first contributor to the Mncyelopcedia who was really a man of science , and whose articles were above the rank of mere compilations . He sought information from all quarters—searched the works of foreign writers , and consulted men of practical eminence , such as Rennie , to whom he could

obtain access , and extraordinary value was thus imparted to his articles . " With such a character for talent , no doubt Robison was really a very dangerous foe to Ereemasonry at the time in which he wrote ; but as his book has really done little or no harm to the Order—although

occasionally quoted , even now , by adverse critics—it is quite as well to know something of the individual who was once so popular an authority against us . — M . C .

TELFOED ' S MAEK . In the life of Telford we read ( page 301)— "His apprenticeship over , Telford went on working as a journeyman at Langholm , his wages at the time being only eighteen-pence a day . What was called the New Town was then in course of erection , and there are houses still pointed out in it , the walls of which Telford helped to put together .

t In the town are three arched door heads of a more ornamental character than the rest , of Telford ' s hewing ; for he was already beginning to set up his pretensions as a Craftsman , and took pride in pointing to the superior handiwork which proceeded from his chisel . About the same time the

bridge connecting the Old with the New Town was built across the Esk at Langholm , and upon that structure he was also employed . Many of the stones in it were hewn by his hand , and on several of the blocks forming the land-breast his tool mark is still to be seen . " —M . 0 .

TEIIEOED ' S DODGE PITTING . S . Telford , having completed his work on Somerset House , was foreman of the Masons at Portsmouth ; and in a letter dated Portsmouth Dockyard , Feb . 1 , 1786 , Mr . Smiles says : — " At the same time he states that he is taking great delight in Ereemasonry , ancl is about to

have a lodge-room at the George Inn fitted up after his plans and under his direction . " What do the Portsmouth lodges know about this ? May it be reasonably hoped that some member will communicate the particulars , either from report or the lodge minutes ? We know absolutely nothing of the eminent men who have been members of the Craft , and our ignorance on such matters does not redound to our credit . — M . 0 .

THE THISTLE AND E 0 SE . An old Mason talks always about the thistle and rose , what does he mean ?—C . J . —[ He alludes to the old lectures , in which it was said , when alluding to a certain portion of the ceremony— " the Star and Garter , the Thistle or Rose , or any other Order whatever under the sun . " ]

" G . B . OE D . " AND CHAUCEll ' S CRAFT KNOWLEDGE . [ " G . 13 . of D . " is an enigma . At page 469 of the last volume of this MAGAZINE , we stated that the allegory of " Patient Grizel" was to be found in Chaucer ' s Canterbury Tales , under the name of " The Gierke ' s Tale . " Now , what other man on earth but " G . B . of D . " would read Dekker ' s play of Patient Grissell , and then complain that he cannot find a

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