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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • April 20, 1861
  • Page 8
  • NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 20, 1861: Page 8

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Masonic Notes And Queries.

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES .

STATUTES OP THE OBDEK OF THE TEMPLE . I should very much like to know where I can procure a copy of the book on the Erench Order of the Temple , from ivhich you have twice quoted . I visited almost every bookseller of importance in Liverpool , but without success . —A .

OLD LODGE . To what has the old lodge called the West India and American Lodge changed its title ? It used to meet at the Queen ' s Arms , in St . Paul's Churchyard , on the 2 nd Wednesday , and on the 4 th as a Master ' s lodge . —J . G .

AVAS EDMUND BUEKE A MASON ? Can any one tell the undersigned if Edmund Burke was a brother?—A . B . —[ He was , and a member ofthe Jerusalem Lodge , Clerkeiiwell , then No . 44 on the register . ] BEO : Sl'LVESTEK HARDING . Who was Bro . Sylvester Harding , and to what lodge did he belong ?—E . HARDING .

EOYAL AECH SCAEVES . What is the origin , or what is symbolised by the red and blue silk scarves worn on the top of their ivhite dresses by the Scribes and P . S . of an E . A . Chapter ?—ELLA . MAEK JEAVEL . AVho is the author of the whimsical rendering of the letters engraven on the Mark jewel ?—O'PusNIDOS .

MASONIC MAEEIAGE . We have heard of Masonic christenings and burials ; was there ever a marriage at which Masons attended clothed in the regalia of the Order ?—C . C . T . LODGE COLLAES . What remedy is there for an evil of great magnitude . I am a ivorking Mason , and frequently visit lodges ivhere I

am asked to take office , but alas ! I never find a collar that fits . Some cut one ' s ears nearly off , or else set out in the front , and make a poor fellow resemble a pouter pigeon . What can I do to avert either of such evils ?—X . E . L . — [ X . E . L . surely cannot be a working Mason , or he would soon have discovered the most easy avoidance of his difficulty is to have a collar made for himself , and use it on any occasion required . ]

ENGEAVINGS OE THE ASYLUM . T I have seen , in several brothers' residences , views of the Asylum at Croydon . Where can I procure one?—SES . MASONIC SIGNS IN PLAYS . I witnessed a play in which a Masonic sign was given . Can auy of your readers tell me the names and passages of similar productions ?—ELTON . —[ We have been obliged to

mutilate this query . Can the brother who sends us the question be so indiscreet as to think we should allude to fche piece , and the very words in question ? We too have seen the same play , and recognised the sign ; but deeply regret its being so introduced . If we knew a hundred siich , or our readers forwarded fchem fco us , ive should destroy the answers , and leave ELTON to get his information from some other quarter . These pages are to inform , and elicit correspondence on subjects interesting or useful ; but not to betray what we have no ri ght , or intention , to impart . ]

KNEE BUCKLES AND SHOE BUCKLES . [ We suppose they did . Don't tread on dangerous ground . As you grow older in the Craft you AA'ill leam better . ] LAEGEST ASSEMBLY OP MASONS . When , where , and on what occasion is the largest number of Masons known to have assembled together ?¦— STATIST . THE EEV . LAWBENCE STEENE .

When or where was the author of Tristram Shandy and the Sentimental Journey initiated into Freemasonry ? Allan Cunningham , in a note to his memoir of Sir Joshua Eeynolds , in Lives of the British Painters , says : — "To poor Sterne there is an inglorious memorial among the nettles of Bayswater burial-ground—a wretched headstone , inscribed with the more wretched rhymes of a tippling fraternity of

Ereemasons . The worst is not yet fcold : his body was sold by his landlady to defray his lodgings , and was recognised on the dissecting-table by one who had caroused with him , and enjoyed his witty and licentious conversation . " Erom this strange note I presume that Sterne was a Mason . Is the "inglorious memorial , " the " wretched headstone , " yet remaining ? As Sterne died on the 18 th of March , 1768 , it

Masonic Notes And Queries.

certainly ought to be in good condition . If so , I will feel obliged to any brother who will copy tho inscription , and send it to THE MAGAZINE . I must say that the latter half of Allan ' s abusive note seems rather in contradiction to the first . —G-EOBGE MARKHAM TWEDDELL .

IVHAT CONSTITUTES A DEGREE IN MASONEY ? [ Inreply to "Ex . Ex ., " I would offer the following explanation of the passage he epiotes , viz ., " Pure ancient Masonry , " & c . The Arch having been partly severed from the 3 ° , as the Mark has from , Hie second . A writer in the Masonic Mirror ( if I remember right , Dr . Arnott ) states that the P . M . formerly belonged to the Mark . My own opinion is that

the Mark , P . M . (?) , and E . A . were formed as separate degrees by Dermott , and the section that split off from the Grand Lodge about 1730 . However that may be , I take it to be indisputable that only the three degrees , which originally included the essential portion of Mark and Arch , are above two centuries old , and that the 3 rd degree was the distinguishing characteristic of the Master of a lodge

until the beginning of the eighteenth century , when it began to be given to every Mason as a right , after ivhich it became necessary for something else to be adopted to distinguish P . Ms . The ceremonies ivith the three degrees of the E . A . Principals appear to ] be partly formed from the Ancient and Accepted Eite , and are not above fifty years old ; so that , although " pure ancient Masonry consists of but three

degrees , including the Arch and Marie , " they have at length in practice resolved themselves into ten degrees ( including the Mark and their W . M . ) . If you will allow me to append the folloAving , from the Ahimon Bezon ( established 1778 ) , it will perhaps be neAV to some of your readers . "This is the case with all those who think themselves E . A . M .

without passing the chair in regular form , according to the ancient custom of the Graft ; to this I will add the opinion of our Worshipful Bro . Dr . Fifield d'Assigney , printed in the year 1744 . ' Some of the fraternity ( says he ) have expressed an uneasiness afc this matter being kept a secret from fchem ( since they have already passed through the usual degrees of probation ) . I cannot hel p being of opinion that they

haveno right to auy such benefit until they make a proper application , " and are received with due formality ; and as it is an organised body of men who have passed the chair , and given undeniable proofs of their skill in architecture , it cannot be treated with two much reverence , and more especially since the characters of the present members of that particularlodge are untainted , and their behaviour judicious and

unexceptionable . ' " The folloiving extract from the same book , I believe , refers to the Mark : — " He ( Dermott ) now positively asserts that he is able ( with a few Masonica-1 implements , i . e ., two squares , and a common gavel or hammer ) to convey any word or sentence of his own ( or the immediate dictation of a stranger ) , to skilful or intelligent Ereemasons of the ancient Order , without speaking , writing , or noise , and that

to any distance where the parties can see each other , and at the same time be able to distinguish squares from circles . " Query , —Can any of your correspondents forward us an earlier reference to the Arch or Mark degrees . —A .

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

NOTES ON LITERATURE , SCIENCE , AND ART .

The anniversary meeting of the fellows , associates , and honorary associates of the Literary and Art Guild of St . Nicholas is to be holden at Stratford-on-Avon , on Tuesday next , the 23 rd inst . ( the day on which the birth of Shakspere is celebrated ) , when all fellows present are requested to wear the gown , hood , and cap of the guild . The hood is of crimson silk , lined with blue silk ; the

gown of black mohair cloth ( or silk ) , edged with blue velvet ; ancl the cap , the ordinary college cap , with blue silk tassel . Gerald Massey has just ready a new volume , entitled Haveloclc's March ; with other National Poems and Ballads of Home . A new Guide to the Isle of Man , by the Eev . J . G . Gumming , is to be published next month , for the visitors to Hlona .

A neiv series of fche Cottage Gardenerhas just been commenceii , in weekly numbers , entitled The Journal of Horticulture , edited by George W . Johnson , F . R . H . S ., and Robert Hogg , LL . D ., F . E . H . S . Tlie Rev . Frederick Temple , D . D ., Chaplain in Ordinary to Her

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-04-20, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 11 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_20041861/page/8/.
  • 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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Masonic Notes And Queries.

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES .

STATUTES OP THE OBDEK OF THE TEMPLE . I should very much like to know where I can procure a copy of the book on the Erench Order of the Temple , from ivhich you have twice quoted . I visited almost every bookseller of importance in Liverpool , but without success . —A .

OLD LODGE . To what has the old lodge called the West India and American Lodge changed its title ? It used to meet at the Queen ' s Arms , in St . Paul's Churchyard , on the 2 nd Wednesday , and on the 4 th as a Master ' s lodge . —J . G .

AVAS EDMUND BUEKE A MASON ? Can any one tell the undersigned if Edmund Burke was a brother?—A . B . —[ He was , and a member ofthe Jerusalem Lodge , Clerkeiiwell , then No . 44 on the register . ] BEO : Sl'LVESTEK HARDING . Who was Bro . Sylvester Harding , and to what lodge did he belong ?—E . HARDING .

EOYAL AECH SCAEVES . What is the origin , or what is symbolised by the red and blue silk scarves worn on the top of their ivhite dresses by the Scribes and P . S . of an E . A . Chapter ?—ELLA . MAEK JEAVEL . AVho is the author of the whimsical rendering of the letters engraven on the Mark jewel ?—O'PusNIDOS .

MASONIC MAEEIAGE . We have heard of Masonic christenings and burials ; was there ever a marriage at which Masons attended clothed in the regalia of the Order ?—C . C . T . LODGE COLLAES . What remedy is there for an evil of great magnitude . I am a ivorking Mason , and frequently visit lodges ivhere I

am asked to take office , but alas ! I never find a collar that fits . Some cut one ' s ears nearly off , or else set out in the front , and make a poor fellow resemble a pouter pigeon . What can I do to avert either of such evils ?—X . E . L . — [ X . E . L . surely cannot be a working Mason , or he would soon have discovered the most easy avoidance of his difficulty is to have a collar made for himself , and use it on any occasion required . ]

ENGEAVINGS OE THE ASYLUM . T I have seen , in several brothers' residences , views of the Asylum at Croydon . Where can I procure one?—SES . MASONIC SIGNS IN PLAYS . I witnessed a play in which a Masonic sign was given . Can auy of your readers tell me the names and passages of similar productions ?—ELTON . —[ We have been obliged to

mutilate this query . Can the brother who sends us the question be so indiscreet as to think we should allude to fche piece , and the very words in question ? We too have seen the same play , and recognised the sign ; but deeply regret its being so introduced . If we knew a hundred siich , or our readers forwarded fchem fco us , ive should destroy the answers , and leave ELTON to get his information from some other quarter . These pages are to inform , and elicit correspondence on subjects interesting or useful ; but not to betray what we have no ri ght , or intention , to impart . ]

KNEE BUCKLES AND SHOE BUCKLES . [ We suppose they did . Don't tread on dangerous ground . As you grow older in the Craft you AA'ill leam better . ] LAEGEST ASSEMBLY OP MASONS . When , where , and on what occasion is the largest number of Masons known to have assembled together ?¦— STATIST . THE EEV . LAWBENCE STEENE .

When or where was the author of Tristram Shandy and the Sentimental Journey initiated into Freemasonry ? Allan Cunningham , in a note to his memoir of Sir Joshua Eeynolds , in Lives of the British Painters , says : — "To poor Sterne there is an inglorious memorial among the nettles of Bayswater burial-ground—a wretched headstone , inscribed with the more wretched rhymes of a tippling fraternity of

Ereemasons . The worst is not yet fcold : his body was sold by his landlady to defray his lodgings , and was recognised on the dissecting-table by one who had caroused with him , and enjoyed his witty and licentious conversation . " Erom this strange note I presume that Sterne was a Mason . Is the "inglorious memorial , " the " wretched headstone , " yet remaining ? As Sterne died on the 18 th of March , 1768 , it

Masonic Notes And Queries.

certainly ought to be in good condition . If so , I will feel obliged to any brother who will copy tho inscription , and send it to THE MAGAZINE . I must say that the latter half of Allan ' s abusive note seems rather in contradiction to the first . —G-EOBGE MARKHAM TWEDDELL .

IVHAT CONSTITUTES A DEGREE IN MASONEY ? [ Inreply to "Ex . Ex ., " I would offer the following explanation of the passage he epiotes , viz ., " Pure ancient Masonry , " & c . The Arch having been partly severed from the 3 ° , as the Mark has from , Hie second . A writer in the Masonic Mirror ( if I remember right , Dr . Arnott ) states that the P . M . formerly belonged to the Mark . My own opinion is that

the Mark , P . M . (?) , and E . A . were formed as separate degrees by Dermott , and the section that split off from the Grand Lodge about 1730 . However that may be , I take it to be indisputable that only the three degrees , which originally included the essential portion of Mark and Arch , are above two centuries old , and that the 3 rd degree was the distinguishing characteristic of the Master of a lodge

until the beginning of the eighteenth century , when it began to be given to every Mason as a right , after ivhich it became necessary for something else to be adopted to distinguish P . Ms . The ceremonies ivith the three degrees of the E . A . Principals appear to ] be partly formed from the Ancient and Accepted Eite , and are not above fifty years old ; so that , although " pure ancient Masonry consists of but three

degrees , including the Arch and Marie , " they have at length in practice resolved themselves into ten degrees ( including the Mark and their W . M . ) . If you will allow me to append the folloAving , from the Ahimon Bezon ( established 1778 ) , it will perhaps be neAV to some of your readers . "This is the case with all those who think themselves E . A . M .

without passing the chair in regular form , according to the ancient custom of the Graft ; to this I will add the opinion of our Worshipful Bro . Dr . Fifield d'Assigney , printed in the year 1744 . ' Some of the fraternity ( says he ) have expressed an uneasiness afc this matter being kept a secret from fchem ( since they have already passed through the usual degrees of probation ) . I cannot hel p being of opinion that they

haveno right to auy such benefit until they make a proper application , " and are received with due formality ; and as it is an organised body of men who have passed the chair , and given undeniable proofs of their skill in architecture , it cannot be treated with two much reverence , and more especially since the characters of the present members of that particularlodge are untainted , and their behaviour judicious and

unexceptionable . ' " The folloiving extract from the same book , I believe , refers to the Mark : — " He ( Dermott ) now positively asserts that he is able ( with a few Masonica-1 implements , i . e ., two squares , and a common gavel or hammer ) to convey any word or sentence of his own ( or the immediate dictation of a stranger ) , to skilful or intelligent Ereemasons of the ancient Order , without speaking , writing , or noise , and that

to any distance where the parties can see each other , and at the same time be able to distinguish squares from circles . " Query , —Can any of your correspondents forward us an earlier reference to the Arch or Mark degrees . —A .

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

NOTES ON LITERATURE , SCIENCE , AND ART .

The anniversary meeting of the fellows , associates , and honorary associates of the Literary and Art Guild of St . Nicholas is to be holden at Stratford-on-Avon , on Tuesday next , the 23 rd inst . ( the day on which the birth of Shakspere is celebrated ) , when all fellows present are requested to wear the gown , hood , and cap of the guild . The hood is of crimson silk , lined with blue silk ; the

gown of black mohair cloth ( or silk ) , edged with blue velvet ; ancl the cap , the ordinary college cap , with blue silk tassel . Gerald Massey has just ready a new volume , entitled Haveloclc's March ; with other National Poems and Ballads of Home . A new Guide to the Isle of Man , by the Eev . J . G . Gumming , is to be published next month , for the visitors to Hlona .

A neiv series of fche Cottage Gardenerhas just been commenceii , in weekly numbers , entitled The Journal of Horticulture , edited by George W . Johnson , F . R . H . S ., and Robert Hogg , LL . D ., F . E . H . S . Tlie Rev . Frederick Temple , D . D ., Chaplain in Ordinary to Her

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