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  • May 18, 1861
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  • Fine Arts.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, May 18, 1861: Page 10

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    Article THE JEWELS—A TRADITION OF THE RABBINS. ← Page 2 of 2
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The Jewels—A Tradition Of The Rabbins.

to restore them without acquainting thee therewith . " She thenled him to the chamber . jand stepping to the bed , took the white covering from the dead bodies . — "Ah , my sons , my sons ! " thus loudly lamented the father ; " my sons , the light of mine eyes and the light of my understanding ; I was your father , but ye were my teachers in the law . " The

mother turned away and wept bitterly . At length , she took her husband by the hand , and said , "Rabbi , didst thou not teach me , that wc must not bo reluctant to restore that which was entrusted to our keeping ? Sec , the Lord gave , the . Lord has taken away , and blessed be the name of the Lord ! " "Blessed be tho name of the Lord , " echoed Rabbi Meir , " and blessed be his name for thy sake

too ; for well it is written , 'AVhoso hath found a virtuous wife , hath greater treasure than costly pearls ; she openeth her mouth with wisdom , and in her tongue is the law of kindness . '"

Fine Arts.

Fine Arts .

" MRS . FRY READING TO THE PRISONERS IN NEWGATE IN 1816 . "

A grand historical picture by Jerry Barrett , Esq ., painter of well-known pictures of " Miss Nightingale at Scutari , " and "The Queen visiting the wounded Crimean Soldiers at the Brompton Hospital , Chatham , " is now being exhibited at the Gallery , 191 , Piccadilly . Freemasons always boast they are of no sect or creed , so it is not as a sectarian

subject we notice this work of art , but our Craft is ever ready to assist in every good work that engages the sympathy of mankind . Such were Mrs . Fry's labours , and the reward of them is to be seen in our improved criminal discipline . This subject has been ably handled by Mr . Barrett . His picture is full of verve , capitally conceived and broadly executed . There is

a freedom of handling , a breadth of colour and a spirituality of design which does the artist great credit , and with a little more finish in certain minor portions , ivould make it one of the great pictures of the present day . Some of the figures are of the deepest interest ; the drawing being admirable for the close resemblance to nature in the various

dispositions of the human form . AVoe , guilt , and shame are most powerfully treated , and happily contrasted with the benignity of Mrs . Fry , whoso heaven-born mission radiates her countenance . Tho work of Mr . Barrett is one which should

bo seen to be properly appreciated , for if figures on canvass ever spoke conviction to the beholder , then " Mrs . Fry reading to the prisoners in Newgate , in 1816 , " tells tho talc at a glance . AVe do not intend to pay our readers such a bad compliment as to tell them who Mrs . Fry was , but we will merely refer to ono of the great wits of the present

century , to show what was thought of her labours . In one of the Rev . Sydney Smith ' s letters to Lady Asbburton , he says : — " I am glad to find you liked what I said of Mrs . Pry . She is very unpopular with the clergy : examples of living , active virtue disturb our repose , and give birth to distressing comparisons : wo long to burn her alive .- ' Never were truer wordsironical though they

, were , spoken , and in the painting by Mr . Barrett the evidence of her "living , active virtue" is prominently brought before us . AVe know this to bo high praise , but look upon the picture in what light wc will , cither as an incentive to golden deeds of love towards our fellow-sinners , or as a work of high art and an exposition ofthe beautiful , because true , wo feel assured that , as soon as the picture and its subject is fairlbefore the

y public , it will create an amount of interest that seldom falls to the lot of . in artist who has not grown grey from years of toil and study .

Masonic Notes And Queries.

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES .

IHE ESSENES AND KNIGHTS TEMPLAR . There is a most remarkable resemblance between the maxims and customs of the Essenes and the early Templars , as they have been handed down to us , and the resemblance both bear to Freemasonry is well known . This induces me to put the question , whether it is probable the Essenes existed down to the 10 th or 11 th centuries , and who

and of what country was Hugh of the Pagans , the first Master of the Temple ? The name would lead one to suppose he was a convert to Christianity . It is , I believe , a disputed point whether the Essenes professed patriarchal Jewish , or Christian principles , and also as to their origin . Later corruptions of this society may have originated the jlssassins , the Mysteries of the Druses , & c . The resemblance

to Freemasonry I can only account for by supposing that the Masons of the middle ages were Essenian architects , or that the Essenians were , or had been , connected in some way with the Dionisiacs . — -A .

EXCOMMUNICATION OP TIIE SCOTTISH TEMPLARS . Gregoire has tho'following : — " Upon these facts the Templars establish that the existence of the Order was never interrupted , assuring us that the Scottish Templars , excommunicated in 132-1 , by the Grand Master Larmenius , were but a counterfeit of the Order of tho Temple , which became afterwards the trunk of the Masonic societies . Query—from

whence does Gregoire derive the foregoing ? The article in which I find the quotation in the MAGAZINE ( par excellence ) states that , in 1840 , under the Duke of Sussex , the Earl of Durham and tho Duke of Leinster as Grand Priors , England Scotland , and Ireland were provinces of the French Order of the Temple , under Sir Sidney Smith as G . M . AVas there ever a body of so-called Chivalric Templars in England , or does this refer to the Masonic Templars ? I presume the latter ; and if so , the whole Order of the Templar was twenty years ago united . —A .

THE LECTURE OF BRO . WOODPORD . — " THERE SHALL BE LIGHT . " The eloquent lecture , " On tho early traces of Freemasonry , " which the Rev . Bro . A . F . A . Woodford delivered before the Britannia Lodge ( No . 162 ) , is the first step of the English brotherhood from darkness to tho light of true historical science . This unprejudiced brother is on the right way to clear up the horrible nonof

sense so many brethren who are still know-nothings relating the true history of the Craft . Bro . AVoodford would do a great service to the whole Fraternity , and especially to the Masonic science , if he would allow the Editor , Bro . AVarreiijto have his lecture printed , and not only the lecture , but also tho recent publication of the Surtees Society therein mentionedand the declaration which was made at York

, Minster by every Mason admitted to work . I should like very much to send ioBz-o . AVoodford , as a mark of my esteem , and as an acknowledgment of his valuable research , with which I agree , a copy of my newly published History of ' Freemasonry , 2 vols , and I will do so , if Bro . Woodford understands the German language . —F . G . FINDEL , Editor of The BauhiitteLeipzi . —[ The Surtees Society publication

, g is the property of its members , who are regular subscribers of an annual sum , ivhich they spend in printing books for their own exclusive use , and it is not likely they would allow a reprint of their private property . ] .

ANOTHER MASONIC MURDER . A brother has given mc the following title of a book , — Masonry ihe same all over the World ) Another Masonie Murder , which he says contains the affidavit of S . G . Anderton concerning the murder of AV . Miller , and was jirinted at Boston , U . S ., iu 1830 . AVhere can I see a copy of this work ? —C . E . T .

CENTENARY JEWELS . AVould you be kind enough to inform me if centenary medals arc presented to daughter loclges by the Grand Lodge , as a mark of esteem , or must the lod ge buy them?—WALTER Joss , J . D . 15 , Montrose , Kilwinning . —[ Under the English constitution , a lodge , on attaining its centenary , petitions the M . AV . G . M . for leave to wear a medal , according to a design submitted at the same time , in commemoration

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-05-18, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 11 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_18051861/page/10/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE NEW GRAND OFFICERS. Article 1
MEMOIRS OF THE FREEMASONS OF NAPLES. Article 3
MASONRY IN CEYLON. Article 5
STRAY THOUGHTS ABOUT BOOKS. Article 6
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 7
GENERAL ARCHITECTURAL INTELLIGENCE. Article 9
THE JEWELS—A TRADITION OF THE RABBINS. Article 9
Fine Arts. Article 10
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 10
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 11
Poetry. Article 12
SONNET. Article 13
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 13
RETURNS TO THE CLERK OF THE PEACE. Article 13
BRAHMIN MASONS. Article 13
MASONIC MEMS. Article 14
ROYAL BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION FOR AGED MASONS AND THEIR WIDOWS. Article 14
METROPOLITAN. Article 14
PROVINCIAL. Article 15
ROYAL ARCH. Article 16
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 17
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 17
MARK MASONRY. Article 18
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. 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.

The Jewels—A Tradition Of The Rabbins.

to restore them without acquainting thee therewith . " She thenled him to the chamber . jand stepping to the bed , took the white covering from the dead bodies . — "Ah , my sons , my sons ! " thus loudly lamented the father ; " my sons , the light of mine eyes and the light of my understanding ; I was your father , but ye were my teachers in the law . " The

mother turned away and wept bitterly . At length , she took her husband by the hand , and said , "Rabbi , didst thou not teach me , that wc must not bo reluctant to restore that which was entrusted to our keeping ? Sec , the Lord gave , the . Lord has taken away , and blessed be the name of the Lord ! " "Blessed be tho name of the Lord , " echoed Rabbi Meir , " and blessed be his name for thy sake

too ; for well it is written , 'AVhoso hath found a virtuous wife , hath greater treasure than costly pearls ; she openeth her mouth with wisdom , and in her tongue is the law of kindness . '"

Fine Arts.

Fine Arts .

" MRS . FRY READING TO THE PRISONERS IN NEWGATE IN 1816 . "

A grand historical picture by Jerry Barrett , Esq ., painter of well-known pictures of " Miss Nightingale at Scutari , " and "The Queen visiting the wounded Crimean Soldiers at the Brompton Hospital , Chatham , " is now being exhibited at the Gallery , 191 , Piccadilly . Freemasons always boast they are of no sect or creed , so it is not as a sectarian

subject we notice this work of art , but our Craft is ever ready to assist in every good work that engages the sympathy of mankind . Such were Mrs . Fry's labours , and the reward of them is to be seen in our improved criminal discipline . This subject has been ably handled by Mr . Barrett . His picture is full of verve , capitally conceived and broadly executed . There is

a freedom of handling , a breadth of colour and a spirituality of design which does the artist great credit , and with a little more finish in certain minor portions , ivould make it one of the great pictures of the present day . Some of the figures are of the deepest interest ; the drawing being admirable for the close resemblance to nature in the various

dispositions of the human form . AVoe , guilt , and shame are most powerfully treated , and happily contrasted with the benignity of Mrs . Fry , whoso heaven-born mission radiates her countenance . Tho work of Mr . Barrett is one which should

bo seen to be properly appreciated , for if figures on canvass ever spoke conviction to the beholder , then " Mrs . Fry reading to the prisoners in Newgate , in 1816 , " tells tho talc at a glance . AVe do not intend to pay our readers such a bad compliment as to tell them who Mrs . Fry was , but we will merely refer to ono of the great wits of the present

century , to show what was thought of her labours . In one of the Rev . Sydney Smith ' s letters to Lady Asbburton , he says : — " I am glad to find you liked what I said of Mrs . Pry . She is very unpopular with the clergy : examples of living , active virtue disturb our repose , and give birth to distressing comparisons : wo long to burn her alive .- ' Never were truer wordsironical though they

, were , spoken , and in the painting by Mr . Barrett the evidence of her "living , active virtue" is prominently brought before us . AVe know this to bo high praise , but look upon the picture in what light wc will , cither as an incentive to golden deeds of love towards our fellow-sinners , or as a work of high art and an exposition ofthe beautiful , because true , wo feel assured that , as soon as the picture and its subject is fairlbefore the

y public , it will create an amount of interest that seldom falls to the lot of . in artist who has not grown grey from years of toil and study .

Masonic Notes And Queries.

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES .

IHE ESSENES AND KNIGHTS TEMPLAR . There is a most remarkable resemblance between the maxims and customs of the Essenes and the early Templars , as they have been handed down to us , and the resemblance both bear to Freemasonry is well known . This induces me to put the question , whether it is probable the Essenes existed down to the 10 th or 11 th centuries , and who

and of what country was Hugh of the Pagans , the first Master of the Temple ? The name would lead one to suppose he was a convert to Christianity . It is , I believe , a disputed point whether the Essenes professed patriarchal Jewish , or Christian principles , and also as to their origin . Later corruptions of this society may have originated the jlssassins , the Mysteries of the Druses , & c . The resemblance

to Freemasonry I can only account for by supposing that the Masons of the middle ages were Essenian architects , or that the Essenians were , or had been , connected in some way with the Dionisiacs . — -A .

EXCOMMUNICATION OP TIIE SCOTTISH TEMPLARS . Gregoire has tho'following : — " Upon these facts the Templars establish that the existence of the Order was never interrupted , assuring us that the Scottish Templars , excommunicated in 132-1 , by the Grand Master Larmenius , were but a counterfeit of the Order of tho Temple , which became afterwards the trunk of the Masonic societies . Query—from

whence does Gregoire derive the foregoing ? The article in which I find the quotation in the MAGAZINE ( par excellence ) states that , in 1840 , under the Duke of Sussex , the Earl of Durham and tho Duke of Leinster as Grand Priors , England Scotland , and Ireland were provinces of the French Order of the Temple , under Sir Sidney Smith as G . M . AVas there ever a body of so-called Chivalric Templars in England , or does this refer to the Masonic Templars ? I presume the latter ; and if so , the whole Order of the Templar was twenty years ago united . —A .

THE LECTURE OF BRO . WOODPORD . — " THERE SHALL BE LIGHT . " The eloquent lecture , " On tho early traces of Freemasonry , " which the Rev . Bro . A . F . A . Woodford delivered before the Britannia Lodge ( No . 162 ) , is the first step of the English brotherhood from darkness to tho light of true historical science . This unprejudiced brother is on the right way to clear up the horrible nonof

sense so many brethren who are still know-nothings relating the true history of the Craft . Bro . AVoodford would do a great service to the whole Fraternity , and especially to the Masonic science , if he would allow the Editor , Bro . AVarreiijto have his lecture printed , and not only the lecture , but also tho recent publication of the Surtees Society therein mentionedand the declaration which was made at York

, Minster by every Mason admitted to work . I should like very much to send ioBz-o . AVoodford , as a mark of my esteem , and as an acknowledgment of his valuable research , with which I agree , a copy of my newly published History of ' Freemasonry , 2 vols , and I will do so , if Bro . Woodford understands the German language . —F . G . FINDEL , Editor of The BauhiitteLeipzi . —[ The Surtees Society publication

, g is the property of its members , who are regular subscribers of an annual sum , ivhich they spend in printing books for their own exclusive use , and it is not likely they would allow a reprint of their private property . ] .

ANOTHER MASONIC MURDER . A brother has given mc the following title of a book , — Masonry ihe same all over the World ) Another Masonie Murder , which he says contains the affidavit of S . G . Anderton concerning the murder of AV . Miller , and was jirinted at Boston , U . S ., iu 1830 . AVhere can I see a copy of this work ? —C . E . T .

CENTENARY JEWELS . AVould you be kind enough to inform me if centenary medals arc presented to daughter loclges by the Grand Lodge , as a mark of esteem , or must the lod ge buy them?—WALTER Joss , J . D . 15 , Montrose , Kilwinning . —[ Under the English constitution , a lodge , on attaining its centenary , petitions the M . AV . G . M . for leave to wear a medal , according to a design submitted at the same time , in commemoration

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