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  • April 18, 1863
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 18, 1863: Page 7

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    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. ← Page 5 of 5
    Article BRITISH SCULPTURE.—A VISIT TO THE STUDIOS. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 7

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

Masonic Notes And Queries.

Capitular Commission never claimed to have the " executive government and power to regulate all civil and financial matters " concentrated in itself ; but invariably acknowledged and recognised the Supreme Authority of the Lieutenant of the Magistery and S . Council . 3 . That the Langues of Aragon and Castile , having ceased to belong to the Order in 1802 , could have had no

connection with the Capitular Commission of the three French Langues . 4 . That the Supreme Authority of the Order , the Lieutenant of the Magistery and S . Council , and the Languages of Italy and Germany , the only two Languages actually in existence at the period , were never consulted about the transactions of 1826-31 ; and never approved

of , nor sanctiohed , the re-establishment of the " English Langue . " 5 . That the only' grounds on which the " English Laugue" can claim to be re-established , rest upon the authority of the French Capitular Commission ; which , if ever legitimate in France , ceuld never be legitimately exercised in England . And the evidence of the "

Declaratory Resolution , " No . VI ., formed by the " Chapter General of the English Langue , presided over by the Grand Prior , " in 1841 , shows how it was then regarded here . 6 . That the "Articles of Convention , " by which the " English Langue" claims to be revived , are not worth the on which they are written . And no one who

paper reads the Syn . Sketch , and tests it by its own statements and by collateral evidence , as I have done , can fail to come to the same conclusion . I offer my thanks to your correspondent ( 2 S . x . 460 ) , for having drawn attention to it . —HISTOEICTJS .

In my communication in " N . & Q . " ( 3 " S . iii . 252 ) about the Knights of St . ' John , I mistook a date . The Paris Commission was dissolved on March 27 , 1824 , — two years before the execution of the instruments by which that commission has been supposed to have revived the Langue of England . I beg you to insert this material correction . —GEOKGE BOWYEE .

SISTEE CAUDLE . Where can I find a song , one verse of which is about Sister Caudle Masonry , and reads thus : — " In Masonry I find 'tis true , A brother they have made of you , A sister soon I will be too , Don't I always lecture

say ; A secret from your spouse—odds life Come tell it to your lawful wife j A secret , la ! how very queer , Come tell it to me—there ' s a dear . You won't!— ' Oh . ' Caudle , now I ken , The secret's in the Aprons then , Which makes you look like Turnpike Men , ' And that ' s the way she lectures . "

It was evidently founded on Mrs . Caudle ' s Lectures , but no one that I can find knows it . — -B . B . [ The song is entitled Rhyming Reminiscences of Mrs . Caudle ' s Lectures , arranged by E . Fawcett . The author of the original Caudle ' s Lectures was our late worthy Bro . Douglas Jerrold . l

SOLOMON ' S PILLAB . AT ROME . Weever , in his Funeral Monuments , fob , London , 1631 , page 160 , in his account of tbe various pardons and indulgences granted by divers Popes , says . — " Item : in the same chirche ( St . Peter ' s , at Rome ) , on the ryght side , is a pilour that was sometyme off Salamon ' s temple , at whiche ilour our Lord was wonte to rest himwhan

p , be preched to the people , at which pylour , if ther any be frentyk , or madd , or troubled with spyritts , they be deliveryd and made hoole . " Any other references to the pillars will be acceptable to—M . C .

British Sculpture.—A Visit To The Studios.

BRITISH SCULPTURE . —A VISIT TO THE STUDIOS .

( From the Art Journal . ) There have never , perhaps , been simultaneously so many public sculptural works commissioned and in progress as at present ; and it is remarkable that they generally coincide in a community of character that suggests a comparison between the existing state of our school of sculpture and the hard conditions of its rise and growth .

By critical visitors from the Continent during the season just passed , our sculptors have been placed at the bottom of the European catalogue . The quality of much of the art shown in our most public sites was enough for travellers , who came to us already unfavourably prejudiced . To them the selection of an incapable artist for the execution of a national memorial is an anomaly which no

explanation could render intelligible . It is certain that our school of sculpture has never been more liberally supported than at present ; but whether it is in a condition of advancement proportionate to that support , can only be determined hereafter , when the works now in hand shall be completed and placed in their appointed sites . Between the earlstate of painting and the infancy of

y English sculpture there is some analogy , inasmuch , aa each , though with different purpose , was intended for the interior decoration of churches . We are eminently conservative of the memory of our worthies ; and with the desire of a memorial rather of their life than of their

death , we have begun to throng our public places with statues removed as far as possible from tbe monumental , and bearing direct allusion to the business of life . It is in this direction that the stream of patronage has set in . The years are not many since the erection of the earliest of those works , which claim to be regarded as belonging to the modern series—each , according to its later date ,

having been modelled in a successively simpler spirit of portraiture . Chantrey was an accomplished master in the difficult arb of reconciling ancient and modern art . All his works date as of our time , but in bheir style there is a retrospect down a long vista of centuries . He was not defective on the side of pedantry ; he failed on that of vacancy—as witness the statue in Trafalgar-square .

On the other hand , his successes were more than artistic triumphs . Who that has seen them has forgotten his statues of Dalton , Grattan , Washington , and a few others ? for ib does not fall to the lot of one man to produce many such figures . When it is remembered how bitterly Bailey complained of the little discretion left him by the committee to accept an ideal design as a personal likeness . Bacon was unfettered in his " Doctor Johnson , " as was Gibson in bis "Huskisson ; " yet , notwithstanding the beauties , power , and learning displayed in those statues

our matter-of-fact days seem to reject classic allusion , and insist on personal identity . Some of the statues that have been got up by irresponsible committees are tbe very worst of our public works . In contrast to these , certain of the series in St . Stephen's Hall afford ample evidence in favour of the better part—that is , of selecting a sculptor of known talent , and confiding to him the

intended work . Few of our most eminent artists will enter the arena of competition ; this was seen in the exhibitions for tbe decoration of the Houses of Parliament ; and there continues to be shown a disinclination to competition in a- ratio inverse to the diminution of confidence in the judgment of committees , when exercised in selection from an exhibition of models or designs . When the statue of

Napoleon I . was set up in the Place Vendome , it was observed by an eminent artist that thenceforward the declension of Greek and Roman design in statues would be gradual but certain , and so ib has been . The memorial statues which are now in progress are so numerous and important as to demand notice . They also mark a complete revolution in this branch of art . The statue of the late Prince Consort for the Horticultural Gardens , which was described while in progress , is now being cast in bronze , and so also are the sup-

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1863-04-18, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_18041863/page/7/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—LXVI. Article 1
MOTHER KILWINNING. Article 2
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 3
BRITISH SCULPTURE.—A VISIT TO THE STUDIOS. Article 7
FURNITURE. Article 9
STRUCTURES IN THE SEA. Article 10
THE THAMES EMBANKMENT. Article 12
AN INCIDENT OF THE AMERICAN WAR. Article 12
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 13
METROPOLITAN. Article 13
PROVINCIAL. Article 13
ROYAL ARCH. Article 15
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 15
Obituary. Article 15
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS 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.

Capitular Commission never claimed to have the " executive government and power to regulate all civil and financial matters " concentrated in itself ; but invariably acknowledged and recognised the Supreme Authority of the Lieutenant of the Magistery and S . Council . 3 . That the Langues of Aragon and Castile , having ceased to belong to the Order in 1802 , could have had no

connection with the Capitular Commission of the three French Langues . 4 . That the Supreme Authority of the Order , the Lieutenant of the Magistery and S . Council , and the Languages of Italy and Germany , the only two Languages actually in existence at the period , were never consulted about the transactions of 1826-31 ; and never approved

of , nor sanctiohed , the re-establishment of the " English Langue . " 5 . That the only' grounds on which the " English Laugue" can claim to be re-established , rest upon the authority of the French Capitular Commission ; which , if ever legitimate in France , ceuld never be legitimately exercised in England . And the evidence of the "

Declaratory Resolution , " No . VI ., formed by the " Chapter General of the English Langue , presided over by the Grand Prior , " in 1841 , shows how it was then regarded here . 6 . That the "Articles of Convention , " by which the " English Langue" claims to be revived , are not worth the on which they are written . And no one who

paper reads the Syn . Sketch , and tests it by its own statements and by collateral evidence , as I have done , can fail to come to the same conclusion . I offer my thanks to your correspondent ( 2 S . x . 460 ) , for having drawn attention to it . —HISTOEICTJS .

In my communication in " N . & Q . " ( 3 " S . iii . 252 ) about the Knights of St . ' John , I mistook a date . The Paris Commission was dissolved on March 27 , 1824 , — two years before the execution of the instruments by which that commission has been supposed to have revived the Langue of England . I beg you to insert this material correction . —GEOKGE BOWYEE .

SISTEE CAUDLE . Where can I find a song , one verse of which is about Sister Caudle Masonry , and reads thus : — " In Masonry I find 'tis true , A brother they have made of you , A sister soon I will be too , Don't I always lecture

say ; A secret from your spouse—odds life Come tell it to your lawful wife j A secret , la ! how very queer , Come tell it to me—there ' s a dear . You won't!— ' Oh . ' Caudle , now I ken , The secret's in the Aprons then , Which makes you look like Turnpike Men , ' And that ' s the way she lectures . "

It was evidently founded on Mrs . Caudle ' s Lectures , but no one that I can find knows it . — -B . B . [ The song is entitled Rhyming Reminiscences of Mrs . Caudle ' s Lectures , arranged by E . Fawcett . The author of the original Caudle ' s Lectures was our late worthy Bro . Douglas Jerrold . l

SOLOMON ' S PILLAB . AT ROME . Weever , in his Funeral Monuments , fob , London , 1631 , page 160 , in his account of tbe various pardons and indulgences granted by divers Popes , says . — " Item : in the same chirche ( St . Peter ' s , at Rome ) , on the ryght side , is a pilour that was sometyme off Salamon ' s temple , at whiche ilour our Lord was wonte to rest himwhan

p , be preched to the people , at which pylour , if ther any be frentyk , or madd , or troubled with spyritts , they be deliveryd and made hoole . " Any other references to the pillars will be acceptable to—M . C .

British Sculpture.—A Visit To The Studios.

BRITISH SCULPTURE . —A VISIT TO THE STUDIOS .

( From the Art Journal . ) There have never , perhaps , been simultaneously so many public sculptural works commissioned and in progress as at present ; and it is remarkable that they generally coincide in a community of character that suggests a comparison between the existing state of our school of sculpture and the hard conditions of its rise and growth .

By critical visitors from the Continent during the season just passed , our sculptors have been placed at the bottom of the European catalogue . The quality of much of the art shown in our most public sites was enough for travellers , who came to us already unfavourably prejudiced . To them the selection of an incapable artist for the execution of a national memorial is an anomaly which no

explanation could render intelligible . It is certain that our school of sculpture has never been more liberally supported than at present ; but whether it is in a condition of advancement proportionate to that support , can only be determined hereafter , when the works now in hand shall be completed and placed in their appointed sites . Between the earlstate of painting and the infancy of

y English sculpture there is some analogy , inasmuch , aa each , though with different purpose , was intended for the interior decoration of churches . We are eminently conservative of the memory of our worthies ; and with the desire of a memorial rather of their life than of their

death , we have begun to throng our public places with statues removed as far as possible from tbe monumental , and bearing direct allusion to the business of life . It is in this direction that the stream of patronage has set in . The years are not many since the erection of the earliest of those works , which claim to be regarded as belonging to the modern series—each , according to its later date ,

having been modelled in a successively simpler spirit of portraiture . Chantrey was an accomplished master in the difficult arb of reconciling ancient and modern art . All his works date as of our time , but in bheir style there is a retrospect down a long vista of centuries . He was not defective on the side of pedantry ; he failed on that of vacancy—as witness the statue in Trafalgar-square .

On the other hand , his successes were more than artistic triumphs . Who that has seen them has forgotten his statues of Dalton , Grattan , Washington , and a few others ? for ib does not fall to the lot of one man to produce many such figures . When it is remembered how bitterly Bailey complained of the little discretion left him by the committee to accept an ideal design as a personal likeness . Bacon was unfettered in his " Doctor Johnson , " as was Gibson in bis "Huskisson ; " yet , notwithstanding the beauties , power , and learning displayed in those statues

our matter-of-fact days seem to reject classic allusion , and insist on personal identity . Some of the statues that have been got up by irresponsible committees are tbe very worst of our public works . In contrast to these , certain of the series in St . Stephen's Hall afford ample evidence in favour of the better part—that is , of selecting a sculptor of known talent , and confiding to him the

intended work . Few of our most eminent artists will enter the arena of competition ; this was seen in the exhibitions for tbe decoration of the Houses of Parliament ; and there continues to be shown a disinclination to competition in a- ratio inverse to the diminution of confidence in the judgment of committees , when exercised in selection from an exhibition of models or designs . When the statue of

Napoleon I . was set up in the Place Vendome , it was observed by an eminent artist that thenceforward the declension of Greek and Roman design in statues would be gradual but certain , and so ib has been . The memorial statues which are now in progress are so numerous and important as to demand notice . They also mark a complete revolution in this branch of art . The statue of the late Prince Consort for the Horticultural Gardens , which was described while in progress , is now being cast in bronze , and so also are the sup-

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