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  • March 16, 1861
  • Page 12
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 16, 1861: Page 12

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    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 12

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

Masonic Notes And Queries.

stand , is allowed many privileges , but how comes it that the British Lodge ( No . 8 ) , is so distinguished ? What has it , ever done to merit . such a privilege , and when was it first legalised?—TEUE BLUE AND SILVER . ARMS IN LODGES . Who can tell me what is the usual plan . when , iu foreign countries , Masons hold a Blue Lodge aud admit members of the superior degrees , such as Knights Templar , Rose Croix , & c , to be present either by courtesy or by right—do the high Masons wear their swords ?—Ex . Ex .

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

NOTES ON LITERATURE , SCIENCE , AND ART .

The working men of Bolton , in Lancashire , have presented to Mr . Gilbert French , author of The Life of Samuel Grampian , a graceful and appropriate testimonial , in the shape of a writingdesk made from the wood ancl metal of a " mule " which formerly belonged to the inventor . E . A . Freeman , Esq ., M . A ., is to lecture at the Architectural

Museum , South Kensington , on Wednesday next , the 20 th inst . the title ofthe lecture being , "An Architectural Journey in Aquitaine . " Essays and Reviews has reached a sixth edition , ancl ivill soon reach a sixteenth if the excitement which the booh has called forth

continues . One adroit dodge we have already noticed in connection with this excitement . Some of the publishers who had on hand a stock of most unsaleable , heavy theology boots , which few hut their compilers ever cared to peruse , are now attempting to push them off in connection with this movement . Lady Mary Wortley Montague is thus " hit off" hi the Autobio grapjiy of the Eev . Dr . Carlyle , recently issued : — "Dr .

Gregoryhad met with Old Montague at the Eoyal Society in London , who was fond of all mathematicians , and had made himself master of his mind . Montague introduced him to his wife , a fine womim , who was a candidate for glory in every branch of literature hut that of her husband , and its connections and dependencies . She was a faded beauty , a wit , a critic , an author of some fame , ancl a friend ancl coadjutor of Lord Littleton . She had some parts and knowledgeand miht have been admired bthe first order of

, g y minds , had she not been greedy of more praise than she was entitled to . She come here for a fortnight , from her residence in Newcastle , to visit Gregory , who tool * care to show her off . hut she did not take here , for she despised the women , and disgusted the men with her affectation . Old Edinburgh was not a climate for the success of impostures . Lord Kames , who was at first catched with her Parnassian coquetry , said at last that he "believed , she had as much learning as a well-educated college lad here of

sixteen . I could have forgiven her for her pretensions to literary fame , had she not loudly put in her claim to the praise and true devotion of the heart , which belongs to genuine feelings and deeds , in which she was remarkably deficient . We saw her often in the

neighbourhood of Newcastle , and in that town , where there was no audience for such an actress as she was , her natural character was displayed , which was that of an active manager of her affairs , a crafty chaperon , ancl a keen pursuer of her interest , not to he outdone by the sharpest coal dealer on the Tyne ; but in this capacity she was not displeasing , for she was not acting a part . " In the first volume of The Constitutional History of England since the Accession of George III , by Thomas Erskine May , Esq .,

C . B ., we have the following remarks on the peerage . — " Meanwhile , the admission of Scottish peers to hereditary seats in the House of Lords is tending to a singular result . At no distant period the Scottish peerage will probably become absorbed in that of the United Kingdom . One half their number have already heen absorbed : more may hereafter he admitted to the House of Lords ; andas no new creations can be madeive foresee the ultimate

, , may extinction of all but sixteen Scottish peers , not embraced in the British peerage . These sixteen peers , instead of continuing a system of self-election , will then probably be created hereditary peers of Parliament . The Act of Union will have worked itself out , ancl a parliamentary incorporation of the two countries will he consummated—more complete than any which the most sanguine promoters of the Union couldin their visions of the futurehave

, , foreshadowed . A similar absorption of the Irish peerage into the peerage of the United Kingdom has also been observable , though , by the terms of the Act of Union , the full number of one hundred Irish peers will continue to be maintained . In 1 SC 0 there were one hundred ancl ninety-three Irish peers , of whom seventy-one had seats in Parliament as peers of the United Kingdom . Thus , ihe

peers of Ireland sitting in Parliament , including the representative peers , amounted to ninety-nine . " Dr . Knox , the eminent anatomist , read a paper at the meeting of the Ethnological Society , on the Gth inst ., " On the Collection of Human Crania and other Bones in the Crypt of the Church of Hythe , Kent ; " after which Mr . Lockliavt read , a paper " On the Miau-tsze , or Aborigines of China . "

At the meeting of the Institution of Civil Engineers on the Sth inst ., a paper was read by Mr . H . Hooper , entitled , " Description of a Pier erected at Southport , Lancashire ; " followed by one , " On the Construction of floating Beacons , " by Mr . Bindon B . Stoney . The Artists' Benevolent Fund appears to be worked with great economy , and we trust their dinner on the 23 rd inst . will he

productive of much good to the Charity . The next Congress of the Archssological Institute is to he holden at Peterborough , in the last week of July . The various editions of Shakepere ' s plays and poems , issued before the famous first folio of 1623 , are about to he reproduced in lithographed fac-similes , for the use of students . "We hope the

scheme will meet with that success whieh it merits . The famous Villa 3 Iassimo , near the baths of Diocletian , at Rome , is about to be transformed into a railway station . Mr . D . Ferguson has recently issued a handbook on Tiie Natural History of Pedcar and its Neighbourhood . The ancient Town-hall of Hereford , a timber structure which

antiquaries would fain have preserved , was wholly demolished about a month since . The present members of the corporation of that city will have earned for themselves a most unenviable notoriety . Mr . Augustus L . Egg , A . B . A ., we regret to learn , has been obliged to leave London for the South of France , in consequence of ill health . As the gifted artist is only in his forty-fifth year , we trust that he will be spared for many years to come , and that we shall see , from his easel , illustrations of our great national hard , superior to any which we have yet received from the same hand .

A book is in the press , under the somewhat singular title of Popular Authors and Great Authors at a Discount . The author of Adam Bede has a new work in the press , entitled , Silas Marner , the Wearer of Saveloe . The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals is now inviting all persons to lay before it any information they possess on the cruel practice of vivisection , or dissecting animals

alive , as practised both in this country and abroad . Surely , if ever the interests of science imperatively required such barbarities , the information that has been acquired hy dissecting so many millions of poor dumb creatures alive , can now be orally taught in colleges , or communicated and preserved by the printing press , ancl the revolting practice given up , as no fresh discoveries of importance are

likely to accrue from its continuance . We believe , with Dr . Millengen , " that if any such beneficial results did arise from the inquiries , they were not commensurate with the barbarity of the experiments . " That excellent writer remarks , that " millions of animals have had their bones broken , scraped , bruised in every possible manner , to discover the process of the formation of hone ,

called osteoge ny" ancl he asks , "has a single fracture of a human limb been more rapidly consolidated by these experiments , which flit hundreds of pages in the works of Duhamel , Haller , Scarpa , and other physiologists ? " As every true Freemason is not only a lover of science , but the chaivpion of all the injured and oppressed , be they human or merely belong to the dumb animal creation , we

trust that the numerous men of letters and of science who range under our banner , will not be indifferent to this appeal . The experiments of M . Majendie alone are sickening to read of . The next preliminary literary examination of candidates for the diploma of Member of the Boyal College of Surgeons will be held at London , on Monday and Tuesday , the 3 rd and 4 th of June . Mr . Hiram Power ' s statue of California , lately arrived from the artist ' s studio in Florence , is being shown in London . 'The Senate of ihe University of Loudon will proceed to elect

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-03-16, Page 12” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_16031861/page/12/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 1
MEMOIRS OF THE FREEMASONS OF NAPLES. Article 1
STRAY THOUGHTS ON THE ORIGIN AND PROGRESS OF THE FINE ARTS. Article 3
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY—XLI . Article 4
SOME OBSERVATIONS IN EGYPT. Article 5
FALL OF THE CENTRAL TOWER AND SPIRE OF CHICHESTER CATHEDRAL. Article 8
ALTERATIONS TO THE NATIONAL GALLERY. Article 10
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 11
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 12
Poetry. Article 13
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 14
METROPOLITAN. Article 15
PROVINCIAL. Article 16
ROYAL ARCH. Article 17
MARK MASONRY. Article 18
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 18
TURKEY. Article 18
AMERICA. Article 18
Obituary. Article 19
THE WEEK. Article 19
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. 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.

stand , is allowed many privileges , but how comes it that the British Lodge ( No . 8 ) , is so distinguished ? What has it , ever done to merit . such a privilege , and when was it first legalised?—TEUE BLUE AND SILVER . ARMS IN LODGES . Who can tell me what is the usual plan . when , iu foreign countries , Masons hold a Blue Lodge aud admit members of the superior degrees , such as Knights Templar , Rose Croix , & c , to be present either by courtesy or by right—do the high Masons wear their swords ?—Ex . Ex .

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

NOTES ON LITERATURE , SCIENCE , AND ART .

The working men of Bolton , in Lancashire , have presented to Mr . Gilbert French , author of The Life of Samuel Grampian , a graceful and appropriate testimonial , in the shape of a writingdesk made from the wood ancl metal of a " mule " which formerly belonged to the inventor . E . A . Freeman , Esq ., M . A ., is to lecture at the Architectural

Museum , South Kensington , on Wednesday next , the 20 th inst . the title ofthe lecture being , "An Architectural Journey in Aquitaine . " Essays and Reviews has reached a sixth edition , ancl ivill soon reach a sixteenth if the excitement which the booh has called forth

continues . One adroit dodge we have already noticed in connection with this excitement . Some of the publishers who had on hand a stock of most unsaleable , heavy theology boots , which few hut their compilers ever cared to peruse , are now attempting to push them off in connection with this movement . Lady Mary Wortley Montague is thus " hit off" hi the Autobio grapjiy of the Eev . Dr . Carlyle , recently issued : — "Dr .

Gregoryhad met with Old Montague at the Eoyal Society in London , who was fond of all mathematicians , and had made himself master of his mind . Montague introduced him to his wife , a fine womim , who was a candidate for glory in every branch of literature hut that of her husband , and its connections and dependencies . She was a faded beauty , a wit , a critic , an author of some fame , ancl a friend ancl coadjutor of Lord Littleton . She had some parts and knowledgeand miht have been admired bthe first order of

, g y minds , had she not been greedy of more praise than she was entitled to . She come here for a fortnight , from her residence in Newcastle , to visit Gregory , who tool * care to show her off . hut she did not take here , for she despised the women , and disgusted the men with her affectation . Old Edinburgh was not a climate for the success of impostures . Lord Kames , who was at first catched with her Parnassian coquetry , said at last that he "believed , she had as much learning as a well-educated college lad here of

sixteen . I could have forgiven her for her pretensions to literary fame , had she not loudly put in her claim to the praise and true devotion of the heart , which belongs to genuine feelings and deeds , in which she was remarkably deficient . We saw her often in the

neighbourhood of Newcastle , and in that town , where there was no audience for such an actress as she was , her natural character was displayed , which was that of an active manager of her affairs , a crafty chaperon , ancl a keen pursuer of her interest , not to he outdone by the sharpest coal dealer on the Tyne ; but in this capacity she was not displeasing , for she was not acting a part . " In the first volume of The Constitutional History of England since the Accession of George III , by Thomas Erskine May , Esq .,

C . B ., we have the following remarks on the peerage . — " Meanwhile , the admission of Scottish peers to hereditary seats in the House of Lords is tending to a singular result . At no distant period the Scottish peerage will probably become absorbed in that of the United Kingdom . One half their number have already heen absorbed : more may hereafter he admitted to the House of Lords ; andas no new creations can be madeive foresee the ultimate

, , may extinction of all but sixteen Scottish peers , not embraced in the British peerage . These sixteen peers , instead of continuing a system of self-election , will then probably be created hereditary peers of Parliament . The Act of Union will have worked itself out , ancl a parliamentary incorporation of the two countries will he consummated—more complete than any which the most sanguine promoters of the Union couldin their visions of the futurehave

, , foreshadowed . A similar absorption of the Irish peerage into the peerage of the United Kingdom has also been observable , though , by the terms of the Act of Union , the full number of one hundred Irish peers will continue to be maintained . In 1 SC 0 there were one hundred ancl ninety-three Irish peers , of whom seventy-one had seats in Parliament as peers of the United Kingdom . Thus , ihe

peers of Ireland sitting in Parliament , including the representative peers , amounted to ninety-nine . " Dr . Knox , the eminent anatomist , read a paper at the meeting of the Ethnological Society , on the Gth inst ., " On the Collection of Human Crania and other Bones in the Crypt of the Church of Hythe , Kent ; " after which Mr . Lockliavt read , a paper " On the Miau-tsze , or Aborigines of China . "

At the meeting of the Institution of Civil Engineers on the Sth inst ., a paper was read by Mr . H . Hooper , entitled , " Description of a Pier erected at Southport , Lancashire ; " followed by one , " On the Construction of floating Beacons , " by Mr . Bindon B . Stoney . The Artists' Benevolent Fund appears to be worked with great economy , and we trust their dinner on the 23 rd inst . will he

productive of much good to the Charity . The next Congress of the Archssological Institute is to he holden at Peterborough , in the last week of July . The various editions of Shakepere ' s plays and poems , issued before the famous first folio of 1623 , are about to he reproduced in lithographed fac-similes , for the use of students . "We hope the

scheme will meet with that success whieh it merits . The famous Villa 3 Iassimo , near the baths of Diocletian , at Rome , is about to be transformed into a railway station . Mr . D . Ferguson has recently issued a handbook on Tiie Natural History of Pedcar and its Neighbourhood . The ancient Town-hall of Hereford , a timber structure which

antiquaries would fain have preserved , was wholly demolished about a month since . The present members of the corporation of that city will have earned for themselves a most unenviable notoriety . Mr . Augustus L . Egg , A . B . A ., we regret to learn , has been obliged to leave London for the South of France , in consequence of ill health . As the gifted artist is only in his forty-fifth year , we trust that he will be spared for many years to come , and that we shall see , from his easel , illustrations of our great national hard , superior to any which we have yet received from the same hand .

A book is in the press , under the somewhat singular title of Popular Authors and Great Authors at a Discount . The author of Adam Bede has a new work in the press , entitled , Silas Marner , the Wearer of Saveloe . The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals is now inviting all persons to lay before it any information they possess on the cruel practice of vivisection , or dissecting animals

alive , as practised both in this country and abroad . Surely , if ever the interests of science imperatively required such barbarities , the information that has been acquired hy dissecting so many millions of poor dumb creatures alive , can now be orally taught in colleges , or communicated and preserved by the printing press , ancl the revolting practice given up , as no fresh discoveries of importance are

likely to accrue from its continuance . We believe , with Dr . Millengen , " that if any such beneficial results did arise from the inquiries , they were not commensurate with the barbarity of the experiments . " That excellent writer remarks , that " millions of animals have had their bones broken , scraped , bruised in every possible manner , to discover the process of the formation of hone ,

called osteoge ny" ancl he asks , "has a single fracture of a human limb been more rapidly consolidated by these experiments , which flit hundreds of pages in the works of Duhamel , Haller , Scarpa , and other physiologists ? " As every true Freemason is not only a lover of science , but the chaivpion of all the injured and oppressed , be they human or merely belong to the dumb animal creation , we

trust that the numerous men of letters and of science who range under our banner , will not be indifferent to this appeal . The experiments of M . Majendie alone are sickening to read of . The next preliminary literary examination of candidates for the diploma of Member of the Boyal College of Surgeons will be held at London , on Monday and Tuesday , the 3 rd and 4 th of June . Mr . Hiram Power ' s statue of California , lately arrived from the artist ' s studio in Florence , is being shown in London . 'The Senate of ihe University of Loudon will proceed to elect

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