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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Aug. 17, 1861
  • Page 15
  • THE MASONIC BANQUET AT NORWICH.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Aug. 17, 1861: Page 15

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    Article NOTES ON LITERATURE SCIENCE AND ART. ← Page 3 of 3
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Notes On Literature Science And Art.

influence of the belief , ancl took the precaution of observing in his very first page ' a reader of sense ancl taste never expects to find in the memoirs of a philosopher or poet the same species of entertainment or information which he would receive from those of a statesman or general / Some years after Anderson came out with a Life of Smollett—{ whose existence one would think had been adventurous enough)—and boldly laying down the old axiom , proceeded to exemplify it by writing one of the dullest biographies

on record . Much about the same time a worthy Scotsman—Sir AVilliam Forbes , of Pitsligo , —favoured the world with two quartos on Beattie , and produced the venerable fallacy in the beginningquite unconscious that he was justifying the public in never perusing his performance . Even Boswell ' s success , though it showed that such a 'life' as he produced might be more amusing than half the novels in existence , had failed to convert people . " And again : — " Hencein spite of the tradition as

, to the lives of authors being dull , they feel a vivid curiosity about them ; and , on the whole ( unless they themselves should have utterly failed in some literary undertaking ) , they are inclined to believe well of their characters , ancl hopefully of their conversation . Occasionally they track to then- source the anecdotes on which the popular impressions about great writers rest .

They find that the ' dead ass ancl living mother antithesis concerning Sterne occurs in the Watpoliana , ivhich excites scepticism ; that the original authority for Congreve's affected remark to Voltaire is difficult to get at ; that Rosseau was not always iu his right senses ; that Burns never came home in a state when he could not see the house was safe , and convey himself to bed somehow ; that there is no real evidence of Swift's marriage with Stella , though the story has so often sharpened an attack on his memory ; ancl they

make other discoveries , which rob some ugly traditions of their sting . Possibly , too , they discover , on the intellectual side of the inquiry , that it was only in large companies that Addison could not talk , while Swift , Bolingbroke , Voltaire , Berkely , Burns and Byron , Johnson and Burke , were all among the first talkers of their times ; as Congreve , Sheridan , and Colman , the wittiest writers , were also the wittiest talkers of their generation . In short , much of the traditionary mystification of the whole subject vanishes on inquiry

, and a man of plain good sense is likely to arrive at the conclusion , that authors are not a caste or peculiar class , such as the Strulclbrugs , but exceedingly like other specimens of the genus homo , with a little more faculty , the exertion of which is not so public , in its mode of action as the faculty of the majority , but ivhich is just as naturally related to character . "

It has been stated , that a small quantity of gold added to iron in the puddling-furnace greatly improves its strength , ductility , and . durability . The statement seems strange ; but to those who know the bad effects of a morsel of brass upon iron in the puddling process , the wonder is abated . That miserable monarch , Charles II . of Spain , is thus sketched

by Lord Macaulay , in the last volume of his History of Fngland- — " The Prince , on whom so much depended , was the most miserable of human beings . In old times he would , have been exposed as soon as he came into the world ; and to expose him would have been a kindness . From his birth a blight was on his body and on his mind . AVith difficulty his almost imperceptible spark of life had heen screened and fanned into a dim and flickering flame . His

childhood , except when he could be rockad ancl sung into sickly sleep , was one long piteous wail . Till he was ten years old his days were passed on the laps of women ; and he was never once suffered to stand on his ricketty legs . iSTone of those tawny little urchins , clad in rags stolen from scarecrows , whom Murillo loved to paint begging or roiling in the sand , owed less to education than this despotic ruler of thirty millions of subjects . The most

important events in the history of his own kingdom , the very names of provinces and cities which were among his most valuable possessions , wero unknown to him . It may well be doubted whether he was aware that Sicily was an island , that Christopher Columbus had discovered America , or that the English were not Mahometans . In his youth , however , though too imbecile for study or nonbusinesshe was not incapable of being amused . lie shothawked

, , , and hunted . He enjoyed with the delight of a true Spaniard two delightful spectacles , a horse with its bowels gored out , and a Jew writhing in the fire . The time came when the mightiest of instincts ordinarily wakens from its repose . It was hoped that the young king would not prove invincible to female attractions , and that he would leave a Prince of Asturia to succeed him . A consort was found for him in the royal family of France ; and her beauty ancl

grace gave him a languid pleasure . He liked to adorn her with jewels , to see her dance , ancl to tell her what sport he had had with his dogs and his falcons . But it ivas soon whispered that she was a wife only in name . "

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

KNIGHTS TEMPLAR . 10 THE EDITOK 01 ? TIIE FREEMASONS MAGAZINE AND MASONIC MIRROR . DEAB SIE AND BROTHER . —My attention has been directed to a paragraph in the FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE for April 11 th , in which a list of Prov . G-. Commanders of Knights Templars is given . Some surprise has been expressed here that the

name of our Prov . G . Commander has been omitted . Had K . T . been an attentive reader of your excellent Magazine , he would have seen in the number for February , 1860 , an account of the holding of a Prov . Grand Conclave of Bombay in January , of that year , and he would there havo seen the name of Sir Knt . Gustavus Septimus Judge , Prov . G . Commander , together ivith the names of the Grand Officers

by him appointed . That V . E . Sir Knt . G . S . Judge has not been installed is no fault of his , as there is no one here of rank sufficiently high to instal him , and Bombay is rather too far from head-charters for a commission to be sent . All hia acts , howei-er , as Prov . G . Commander are recognised by the Grand Conclave of England , and you will only be doing an act of justice by inserting his name in any future list of

Prov . G . Commanders . Yours faithfully and fraternally , J . J . FABNIIAM , Prov . G . Prelate Bombay .

The Masonic Banquet At Norwich.

THE MASONIC BANQUET AT NORWICH .

TO THE EDITOK OP THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE AND MASONIC MIRROR . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —As it might be imagined from the article in the Norwich Mercury , forwarded to you by a correspondent , and published in the same number of the MAGAZINE as the report of the late Masonic banquet in Norwich , that there was an important omission in the report , I beg to say that though it is unfortunately true that two

brothers , having imbibed too freely , were rather demonstrative and obstreperous in their conviviality . The Mercury ' s tremendous story about a disgraceful " scene" is a sreafc exaggeration . The very heading of the article— " Sudden Break-up of the Masonic Dinner" - —is as untrue as the positive assertion that the Prov . G . M ., Bro . Cabbell , ivas prevented by the " disorder and confusion" from stating

the circumstances as to his purchase of the Assembly Rooms , and his intention to dedicate them as a Masonic Hall . Bro . Cabbell is not very likely to have made the editor of the Mercury , who is not a mason , a confidant in . a matter about Avhich he has chosen , for the present , to maintain a degree of reserve , even with brethren of high standing in the Order ; but there is not the slightest reason for supposing that Bro . Cabbell ever intended to say anything more than he really did say . The hour at ivhich the banquet close d was not much earlier than usual , and may be simply

accounted for by the R . W . Prov . G . M . 's advanced age and feeble health . The article in the Norwich Mercury gives so exaggerated an account of the foolish escapade of two ofthe , guests at the banquet that it seems hardly probable that the information can have come directly through a brother : if so , it must have become distortedthrough the editorial medium , which is also improbable , as the editor is too high minded and

conscientious a journalist to be capable of so Avilful a perversion , even when smarting under a fancied slight to himself and his representative . It is evident , however , that somebody who ivas at the banquet must have spoken of what had occurred in the presence of non-Masons . It is greatly to be regretted that there is so much laxity among many Norwich Masons on this pointand that even personal matters of

, great delicacy which transpire in a lodge should be afterwards canvassed in general company . It cannot be denied that with respect to this aud some other of the social features of Masonry , the discipline in Norwich , might be greatly improved . The brother who appears to have been alluded to in a paragraph of the letter of " a Norivich Freemason " informs

ine that the writer ' s inuendo that the editor of the Mercury had receii'ed any information from him , as to what transpired at the banquet , is entirely unfounded , as ho never spoke to his employer on the subject . I should bo very

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-08-17, Page 15” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_17081861/page/15/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—XLTV. Article 1
MEMOIRS OF THE FREEMASONS OF NAPLES. Article 2
MASONIC ADVENTURE. Article 3
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHAÆOLOGY. Article 4
ARTISTIC LABOUR AT THE BUILDING OF ST. PAUL'S CATHEDRAL. Article 6
GENERAL ARCHITECTURAL INTELLIGENCE. Article 6
MEMORIAL TO BRO. SIR CHARLES BARRY. Article 8
CAVOUR AN ENGINEER. Article 10
THE GEORGE STREET "MODEL." * Article 10
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 12
NOTES ON LITERATURE SCIENCE AND ART. Article 13
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 15
THE MASONIC BANQUET AT NORWICH. Article 15
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 16
GRAND LODGE. Article 16
PROVINCIAL. Article 16
SCOTLAND. Article 17
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Notes On Literature Science And Art.

influence of the belief , ancl took the precaution of observing in his very first page ' a reader of sense ancl taste never expects to find in the memoirs of a philosopher or poet the same species of entertainment or information which he would receive from those of a statesman or general / Some years after Anderson came out with a Life of Smollett—{ whose existence one would think had been adventurous enough)—and boldly laying down the old axiom , proceeded to exemplify it by writing one of the dullest biographies

on record . Much about the same time a worthy Scotsman—Sir AVilliam Forbes , of Pitsligo , —favoured the world with two quartos on Beattie , and produced the venerable fallacy in the beginningquite unconscious that he was justifying the public in never perusing his performance . Even Boswell ' s success , though it showed that such a 'life' as he produced might be more amusing than half the novels in existence , had failed to convert people . " And again : — " Hencein spite of the tradition as

, to the lives of authors being dull , they feel a vivid curiosity about them ; and , on the whole ( unless they themselves should have utterly failed in some literary undertaking ) , they are inclined to believe well of their characters , ancl hopefully of their conversation . Occasionally they track to then- source the anecdotes on which the popular impressions about great writers rest .

They find that the ' dead ass ancl living mother antithesis concerning Sterne occurs in the Watpoliana , ivhich excites scepticism ; that the original authority for Congreve's affected remark to Voltaire is difficult to get at ; that Rosseau was not always iu his right senses ; that Burns never came home in a state when he could not see the house was safe , and convey himself to bed somehow ; that there is no real evidence of Swift's marriage with Stella , though the story has so often sharpened an attack on his memory ; ancl they

make other discoveries , which rob some ugly traditions of their sting . Possibly , too , they discover , on the intellectual side of the inquiry , that it was only in large companies that Addison could not talk , while Swift , Bolingbroke , Voltaire , Berkely , Burns and Byron , Johnson and Burke , were all among the first talkers of their times ; as Congreve , Sheridan , and Colman , the wittiest writers , were also the wittiest talkers of their generation . In short , much of the traditionary mystification of the whole subject vanishes on inquiry

, and a man of plain good sense is likely to arrive at the conclusion , that authors are not a caste or peculiar class , such as the Strulclbrugs , but exceedingly like other specimens of the genus homo , with a little more faculty , the exertion of which is not so public , in its mode of action as the faculty of the majority , but ivhich is just as naturally related to character . "

It has been stated , that a small quantity of gold added to iron in the puddling-furnace greatly improves its strength , ductility , and . durability . The statement seems strange ; but to those who know the bad effects of a morsel of brass upon iron in the puddling process , the wonder is abated . That miserable monarch , Charles II . of Spain , is thus sketched

by Lord Macaulay , in the last volume of his History of Fngland- — " The Prince , on whom so much depended , was the most miserable of human beings . In old times he would , have been exposed as soon as he came into the world ; and to expose him would have been a kindness . From his birth a blight was on his body and on his mind . AVith difficulty his almost imperceptible spark of life had heen screened and fanned into a dim and flickering flame . His

childhood , except when he could be rockad ancl sung into sickly sleep , was one long piteous wail . Till he was ten years old his days were passed on the laps of women ; and he was never once suffered to stand on his ricketty legs . iSTone of those tawny little urchins , clad in rags stolen from scarecrows , whom Murillo loved to paint begging or roiling in the sand , owed less to education than this despotic ruler of thirty millions of subjects . The most

important events in the history of his own kingdom , the very names of provinces and cities which were among his most valuable possessions , wero unknown to him . It may well be doubted whether he was aware that Sicily was an island , that Christopher Columbus had discovered America , or that the English were not Mahometans . In his youth , however , though too imbecile for study or nonbusinesshe was not incapable of being amused . lie shothawked

, , , and hunted . He enjoyed with the delight of a true Spaniard two delightful spectacles , a horse with its bowels gored out , and a Jew writhing in the fire . The time came when the mightiest of instincts ordinarily wakens from its repose . It was hoped that the young king would not prove invincible to female attractions , and that he would leave a Prince of Asturia to succeed him . A consort was found for him in the royal family of France ; and her beauty ancl

grace gave him a languid pleasure . He liked to adorn her with jewels , to see her dance , ancl to tell her what sport he had had with his dogs and his falcons . But it ivas soon whispered that she was a wife only in name . "

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

KNIGHTS TEMPLAR . 10 THE EDITOK 01 ? TIIE FREEMASONS MAGAZINE AND MASONIC MIRROR . DEAB SIE AND BROTHER . —My attention has been directed to a paragraph in the FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE for April 11 th , in which a list of Prov . G-. Commanders of Knights Templars is given . Some surprise has been expressed here that the

name of our Prov . G . Commander has been omitted . Had K . T . been an attentive reader of your excellent Magazine , he would have seen in the number for February , 1860 , an account of the holding of a Prov . Grand Conclave of Bombay in January , of that year , and he would there havo seen the name of Sir Knt . Gustavus Septimus Judge , Prov . G . Commander , together ivith the names of the Grand Officers

by him appointed . That V . E . Sir Knt . G . S . Judge has not been installed is no fault of his , as there is no one here of rank sufficiently high to instal him , and Bombay is rather too far from head-charters for a commission to be sent . All hia acts , howei-er , as Prov . G . Commander are recognised by the Grand Conclave of England , and you will only be doing an act of justice by inserting his name in any future list of

Prov . G . Commanders . Yours faithfully and fraternally , J . J . FABNIIAM , Prov . G . Prelate Bombay .

The Masonic Banquet At Norwich.

THE MASONIC BANQUET AT NORWICH .

TO THE EDITOK OP THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE AND MASONIC MIRROR . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , —As it might be imagined from the article in the Norwich Mercury , forwarded to you by a correspondent , and published in the same number of the MAGAZINE as the report of the late Masonic banquet in Norwich , that there was an important omission in the report , I beg to say that though it is unfortunately true that two

brothers , having imbibed too freely , were rather demonstrative and obstreperous in their conviviality . The Mercury ' s tremendous story about a disgraceful " scene" is a sreafc exaggeration . The very heading of the article— " Sudden Break-up of the Masonic Dinner" - —is as untrue as the positive assertion that the Prov . G . M ., Bro . Cabbell , ivas prevented by the " disorder and confusion" from stating

the circumstances as to his purchase of the Assembly Rooms , and his intention to dedicate them as a Masonic Hall . Bro . Cabbell is not very likely to have made the editor of the Mercury , who is not a mason , a confidant in . a matter about Avhich he has chosen , for the present , to maintain a degree of reserve , even with brethren of high standing in the Order ; but there is not the slightest reason for supposing that Bro . Cabbell ever intended to say anything more than he really did say . The hour at ivhich the banquet close d was not much earlier than usual , and may be simply

accounted for by the R . W . Prov . G . M . 's advanced age and feeble health . The article in the Norwich Mercury gives so exaggerated an account of the foolish escapade of two ofthe , guests at the banquet that it seems hardly probable that the information can have come directly through a brother : if so , it must have become distortedthrough the editorial medium , which is also improbable , as the editor is too high minded and

conscientious a journalist to be capable of so Avilful a perversion , even when smarting under a fancied slight to himself and his representative . It is evident , however , that somebody who ivas at the banquet must have spoken of what had occurred in the presence of non-Masons . It is greatly to be regretted that there is so much laxity among many Norwich Masons on this pointand that even personal matters of

, great delicacy which transpire in a lodge should be afterwards canvassed in general company . It cannot be denied that with respect to this aud some other of the social features of Masonry , the discipline in Norwich , might be greatly improved . The brother who appears to have been alluded to in a paragraph of the letter of " a Norivich Freemason " informs

ine that the writer ' s inuendo that the editor of the Mercury had receii'ed any information from him , as to what transpired at the banquet , is entirely unfounded , as ho never spoke to his employer on the subject . I should bo very

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