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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • April 20, 1861
  • Page 5
  • VISIT TO STRATFORD-ON-AVON AND ITS, VICINAGE.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 20, 1861: Page 5

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

Visit To Stratford-On-Avon And Its, Vicinage.

melody of music in what may indeed be called the land of Shakspere . On our Avay up to the inn , Mr . Philips introduced me to the vicar , whom we met on the way , and we immediately recognised each other as having met on the preiious Monday , at the dinner of the Beeeher Club at

Stratford . Like ourselves , he was going to be one of the guests of the village club . Whilst the dinner is being placed on the table , our merchant-prince is carefully scrutinising the balance-sheet of the society , and his business habits soon enable him to suggest a better mode of preparing it for the future , so that it may be

simpler for the members to understand ; and as he tests every column , one feels that he could evidently detect any inaccuracy , even to the seventy-fifth fraction of a farthing . The only speakers were the patron and president , Mr . Philips ; the rev . vicar , whose name I forget ; the village surgeon ( to whom the president playfully

advised the company to send a cock now and then , by way of sacrificing to old iEsculapius ) ; and that somewhat hackneyed labourer for benefit societies , who now pens these notes of his tour . But decidedly the best thing which occurred during the day ivas Mr . Philips ' s undertaking to increase the funds of the society a

hundred pounds by his OAATQ donation—a mode of ¦ charitable distribution of wealth infinitely superior to that indiscriminate common alms-giving which does so much harm to the morals of the people of this and every other country on the globe . It is the boimden duty of the rich to help the deserving poor , for wealthy men are but stewards of all they possess ; and I was happy to hear the chairman beg of his neighbours that , -as he had no Avife to find out their wants , they would

make them known to him without scruple . It is one of the most hopeful signs of the times that the wealthy classes , despite our mad competition for wealth , are awakening to a sense of what is not only their duty , but their own security from terrors worse than those of France in the last century , by mixing more with , and exerting themselves for the elevation of the bulk of the

, people . I could have wished to have seen the members of the Snitterfield Benefit Club thoroughly grappling Avith their Avork , so that their society might be rather managed by than yew- them , as is the case with the Odd Fellows and Foresters .

As we left the meeting , the lads of the village beset us like a swarm of bees : it is really astonishing how many children a small village can produce . The people ¦ evidentl y , like myself , believe in the good old command *—notivithstanding Ifaltfots on Population— " Be ¦ fruitful , and multiply , and replenish the earth , and

subdue it ; and have dominion over the fish of the sea , and over the fowl of the air , and over every living thing that inoveth upon the earth . " I soon found out that the worthy chairman had been annually in the habit of giving the lads a treat , by buying them a quantity of orangesnutsand gingerbread

, , to run races for ; but he thought the day was too hot for running , so they were to have the prizes given them without the usual exertion . I thought of Monteigne and his cat as we walked along , and wondered AA'hether the spending of this croAA'n-piece ga \* e most pleasure to the lord of the manor or fche lads .

Taking me to an elevation in his OAVU grounds , my kind entertainer pointed out to me the famous Edgehill , where the Royalist troops Avere routed by the Parliamentarians , under the command of my indomitable

Visit To Stratford-On-Avon And Its, Vicinage.

ancestor , 01 iA * er Cromwell . Happy are we who live in peaceable times , when brother is not called upon to fi ght against brother , and nei ghbour against neighbour , as must ever be the case in civil wars . Next morning , as soon as we had breakfasted , my noble-hearted friend sent me in his gig to the gates of

Warwick Castle ; and after having seen over that princely residence , I walked on to the neighbouring castle of Kenihvorth , the noblest ruins of a fortressmansion which I have ever beheld . It would occupy too much space in the present paper to describe Warwick and Kenilworth , each of ivhich will furnish a paper of

itself to a little work AA'hich I have projected for years , under the title of Rural Rambles and Town Visits . It may be my good fortune again to visit that beautiful district which has been the subject of the present paper . For the present , suffice it to say , that ( thanks to railway travelling ) though I had to pay second-class fare all the way home again , after a peep at Coventry , I succeeded

in reaching Bury at midni ght of the Thursday , so as to keep my engagement for the Friday . And now , when I read of Stratford-upon-Avon and its vicinage , I do so with tenfold zest ; and Avhether it may be my fate again to visit ( as I hope ) the counties of Worcester and Warwick , and to see more of them than I could possibly

do in six days , yet I have hung up in the halls of Memory a few glorious English landscapes , which I can conjure up of a Aiinter ' s evening , and see as AdvicUy as I did in my Whitsuntide Out . And if this relation of my rambles has amused or interested one reader of the Masonic organ in this country ; if it has strengthened

one brother ' s love for the beautiful , the good , and the true ; if it should aid one human soul in "looking through nature up to nature ' s God , " it will not have been written altogether in vain . And so , reader , shaking hands with thee in spirit , I bid thee Good-bye ,- and thus I close my " Visit to Stratford-on-Avon and its Vicinage . " StoJeesleti , YorJcsltire .

Architecture And Archæology.

ARCHITECTURE AND ARCH ? OLOGY .

ON THE ARCHITECTURE OE THE ELEVENTH CENTURY . ( Continued from page 287 . ) Ifc is recorded in the Saxon chronicles thatin the

, year 1020 , "King Canute caused to be built , afcAssingdon , a minster of stone and lime , for the souls of the men . who ivere there slain , and gave ifc to one of his priests , ivhose name AA'as Sfcigand . " William of Malmesbury adds that " Canute repaired throughout England the minsters ivhich had been partly destroyed by the military incursions of himself and his

father . He built churches in all places where he had fought , and more particularly at Ascbendome , and appointed ministers to them , who through the unending revolutions of ages might pray to God for the souls of the persons there slain . " At the consecration of this church he himself was present , and the English and Danish nobility made their offerings . " It is now [ says Malmesbury , in 1125 ] an ordinary church ,

under the care of a parish priest" ( B . ii . c . 11 ) . This church has , unfortunately , not been identified by modern antiquaries . There are sei'eral places of the same name . A . D . 1032 , " Over the body of the most holy Edmund , whom , the Danes had killed , he builfc a church with princely magnificence , appointed to ifc an abbot and monks , and conferred on ifc many large estates , lhe greatness of his donation , yofc eniira ( in . 1125 ) , stands proudly eminent at the

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-04-20, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 21 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_20041861/page/5/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
MEMOIRS OF THE FREEMASONS OF NAPLES. Article 1
VISIT TO STRATFORD-ON-AVON AND ITS, VICINAGE. Article 2
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 5
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 8
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 8
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 9
MASONIC RITUAL. Article 10
RETURNS TO THE CLERK OF THE PEACE. Article 10
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 11
BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 11
THE ROYAL BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION FOR AGED MASONS AND THEIR WIDOWS. Article 11
METROPOLITAN. Article 11
PROVINCIAL. Article 13
ROYAL ARCH. Article 17
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 17
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 17
MARK MASONRY. Article 18
Obituary. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 19
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Visit To Stratford-On-Avon And Its, Vicinage.

melody of music in what may indeed be called the land of Shakspere . On our Avay up to the inn , Mr . Philips introduced me to the vicar , whom we met on the way , and we immediately recognised each other as having met on the preiious Monday , at the dinner of the Beeeher Club at

Stratford . Like ourselves , he was going to be one of the guests of the village club . Whilst the dinner is being placed on the table , our merchant-prince is carefully scrutinising the balance-sheet of the society , and his business habits soon enable him to suggest a better mode of preparing it for the future , so that it may be

simpler for the members to understand ; and as he tests every column , one feels that he could evidently detect any inaccuracy , even to the seventy-fifth fraction of a farthing . The only speakers were the patron and president , Mr . Philips ; the rev . vicar , whose name I forget ; the village surgeon ( to whom the president playfully

advised the company to send a cock now and then , by way of sacrificing to old iEsculapius ) ; and that somewhat hackneyed labourer for benefit societies , who now pens these notes of his tour . But decidedly the best thing which occurred during the day ivas Mr . Philips ' s undertaking to increase the funds of the society a

hundred pounds by his OAATQ donation—a mode of ¦ charitable distribution of wealth infinitely superior to that indiscriminate common alms-giving which does so much harm to the morals of the people of this and every other country on the globe . It is the boimden duty of the rich to help the deserving poor , for wealthy men are but stewards of all they possess ; and I was happy to hear the chairman beg of his neighbours that , -as he had no Avife to find out their wants , they would

make them known to him without scruple . It is one of the most hopeful signs of the times that the wealthy classes , despite our mad competition for wealth , are awakening to a sense of what is not only their duty , but their own security from terrors worse than those of France in the last century , by mixing more with , and exerting themselves for the elevation of the bulk of the

, people . I could have wished to have seen the members of the Snitterfield Benefit Club thoroughly grappling Avith their Avork , so that their society might be rather managed by than yew- them , as is the case with the Odd Fellows and Foresters .

As we left the meeting , the lads of the village beset us like a swarm of bees : it is really astonishing how many children a small village can produce . The people ¦ evidentl y , like myself , believe in the good old command *—notivithstanding Ifaltfots on Population— " Be ¦ fruitful , and multiply , and replenish the earth , and

subdue it ; and have dominion over the fish of the sea , and over the fowl of the air , and over every living thing that inoveth upon the earth . " I soon found out that the worthy chairman had been annually in the habit of giving the lads a treat , by buying them a quantity of orangesnutsand gingerbread

, , to run races for ; but he thought the day was too hot for running , so they were to have the prizes given them without the usual exertion . I thought of Monteigne and his cat as we walked along , and wondered AA'hether the spending of this croAA'n-piece ga \* e most pleasure to the lord of the manor or fche lads .

Taking me to an elevation in his OAVU grounds , my kind entertainer pointed out to me the famous Edgehill , where the Royalist troops Avere routed by the Parliamentarians , under the command of my indomitable

Visit To Stratford-On-Avon And Its, Vicinage.

ancestor , 01 iA * er Cromwell . Happy are we who live in peaceable times , when brother is not called upon to fi ght against brother , and nei ghbour against neighbour , as must ever be the case in civil wars . Next morning , as soon as we had breakfasted , my noble-hearted friend sent me in his gig to the gates of

Warwick Castle ; and after having seen over that princely residence , I walked on to the neighbouring castle of Kenihvorth , the noblest ruins of a fortressmansion which I have ever beheld . It would occupy too much space in the present paper to describe Warwick and Kenilworth , each of ivhich will furnish a paper of

itself to a little work AA'hich I have projected for years , under the title of Rural Rambles and Town Visits . It may be my good fortune again to visit that beautiful district which has been the subject of the present paper . For the present , suffice it to say , that ( thanks to railway travelling ) though I had to pay second-class fare all the way home again , after a peep at Coventry , I succeeded

in reaching Bury at midni ght of the Thursday , so as to keep my engagement for the Friday . And now , when I read of Stratford-upon-Avon and its vicinage , I do so with tenfold zest ; and Avhether it may be my fate again to visit ( as I hope ) the counties of Worcester and Warwick , and to see more of them than I could possibly

do in six days , yet I have hung up in the halls of Memory a few glorious English landscapes , which I can conjure up of a Aiinter ' s evening , and see as AdvicUy as I did in my Whitsuntide Out . And if this relation of my rambles has amused or interested one reader of the Masonic organ in this country ; if it has strengthened

one brother ' s love for the beautiful , the good , and the true ; if it should aid one human soul in "looking through nature up to nature ' s God , " it will not have been written altogether in vain . And so , reader , shaking hands with thee in spirit , I bid thee Good-bye ,- and thus I close my " Visit to Stratford-on-Avon and its Vicinage . " StoJeesleti , YorJcsltire .

Architecture And Archæology.

ARCHITECTURE AND ARCH ? OLOGY .

ON THE ARCHITECTURE OE THE ELEVENTH CENTURY . ( Continued from page 287 . ) Ifc is recorded in the Saxon chronicles thatin the

, year 1020 , "King Canute caused to be built , afcAssingdon , a minster of stone and lime , for the souls of the men . who ivere there slain , and gave ifc to one of his priests , ivhose name AA'as Sfcigand . " William of Malmesbury adds that " Canute repaired throughout England the minsters ivhich had been partly destroyed by the military incursions of himself and his

father . He built churches in all places where he had fought , and more particularly at Ascbendome , and appointed ministers to them , who through the unending revolutions of ages might pray to God for the souls of the persons there slain . " At the consecration of this church he himself was present , and the English and Danish nobility made their offerings . " It is now [ says Malmesbury , in 1125 ] an ordinary church ,

under the care of a parish priest" ( B . ii . c . 11 ) . This church has , unfortunately , not been identified by modern antiquaries . There are sei'eral places of the same name . A . D . 1032 , " Over the body of the most holy Edmund , whom , the Danes had killed , he builfc a church with princely magnificence , appointed to ifc an abbot and monks , and conferred on ifc many large estates , lhe greatness of his donation , yofc eniira ( in . 1125 ) , stands proudly eminent at the

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