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  • Dec. 22, 1860
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Dec. 22, 1860: Page 11

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    Article NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. ← Page 3 of 3
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Page 11

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Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

must confess it is with some difficulty I do myself recognise the ignorant , conceited , and arrogant power it was when 1 became acquainted with it . Most nations have undergone great changes during the last forty years , ancl the Burmese seem to have kept pace with them . " We are sorry to learn that the Schools of Design at York and Bath lack adequate support , as well as that of Wolverhampton The latter is to be carried on a little longer , to give it another chance of success .

The marble bust of Dr . Croly , by Behnes , presented to the poet some years ago by public subscription , is to be placed in the church of St . Stephen ' :., Walbrook , where the remains of the poet-rector have been interred . An exhibition of Stothard's paintings is to be held in London next spring . Mr . Henry Kingsley , brother to the Eev . Professor Kingsley ,

will commence a new novel in the January number of Macmillcui ' s Magazine , under the title of " 1 ' arenshoe ; or , the Adventures of a Young English Gentleman . " A national edition of the works of Dante is about to be issued , hy subscription , at Florence , the pvofit of which is to bti devoted to a monument to the bard .

Sir Benjamin Brodie , President of the JRoyal Society , has appointed General Sabine , Sir John Boilean , Sir Henry Holland , ancl Thomas Graham , Esq ., vice-presidents for the next year . The metal of the new bronze coinage is already complained of as scratching and breaking easily . A monument to Bessel , the late German astronomer , is about to

be erected at . Kom ' gsberg , by the Prussian Government . It is to consist of a bust of the astronomer , executed by Here Siemering , wliich is to be placed on the outside of the University buildings . Great complaints are being made at present of the practice of copying paintings regularly pursued in some of our public picture galleries , and then selling them for replicas , or duplicates .

An exhibition of the works of the late Trench painter Decamps will take place in Paris next spring . The French literature of the seventeenth century absorbs , almost exclusively , the Paris writing and reading world . Indeed ,

much labour and pains are bestowed in hunting up all the remains of the literature of that time , and in the attempt at reproducing the classical works of the time of Louis the Fourteenth in their original purity and correctness . Critical editions appear every clay ; manuscripts , or where they are wanting , first editions are compared ; and it is now evident , though hardly credible , what alterations these classical works have undergone in the course of time b y

the negligence and arbitrariness of the editors . Many things are lost , and past all hope of recovery , for instance , in the Letters of Madame de Sevigne ; but other works , which have suffered cruelly , jxiy for the trouble of restoring them to their original state . Thus , the Letters of Madame do Mainteiion , a genuine edition of which M . de Lavallce has undertaken . The Duke of JNoailles , who

is in possession of the family papers , has opened his archives to the -editor , which contain a great number of the original letters . Hitherto these letters were only known in the form which La JBeaumelle had given them . M . de Lavallce has found a great part of the original letters used by La Beaiimelle ; and it is astonishing how unscrupulously the first editor has handled them , —altering ,

leaving out , and changing the dates . There is preserved at tho Lord Chamberlain ' s Office a small folio volume , written about the year 1 G 39 , containing a great deal of curious information respecting masques ancl old English plays , performed before the Court . There is no notice of Shakspere in it ; hut there are very curious scraps about Ben Jonson , Inigo Jones ,

and other illustrious characters . JKTow , this volume is of no earthly use where it is , but it would be a very desirable acquisition to the British Museum ; ancl we cannot help thinking that if the matter wove properly represented to the Court , there would be si disposition to present tiie volume to the national library . Should

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

the transfer take place , it is not improbable that much new and important information , especially respecting Inigo Jones , would be accessible to the public . We understand that JMr . Eobert Browning , whose knowledge of the history and profound feeling for the theory of Art are evinced by hisposins , has been studying Art practically for some months past .

Poetry.

Poetry .

THE WOELD AKD THE CEAFT . ItEAIi AST ! IDEAL . A Dialogue in , Verse . ________ t . They write of your age— " immemorial" time ,

And date your maturity from Solomon ' s reign ; Speak of your virtues—throughout every clime , Profit and pleasure , morality , gain . Gained by your laws , if truly observed , Gained by the precepts , secretly thine (?) Those secrets of nature oft have I heard ,. To peer ancl to peasant alike are divine . Why hold your power as Prospero ' s rod

. Ancl arrogate virtues I doubt you possess ? Duty to neighbour , yourself , and your God ; Mere words , and not deeds , did you ti-uly confess . Do the virtues you claim really live in the heart ? Your precepts divine—do they always control ? Make perfect , as nature's counterpart , liaising tho man , and exalting the soul . It reads well , I own ; it sounds equally so :

All that is human must err—be not blind ; You have your shadows , clouding the glow;—Seek out this truth—seek , ancl you'll find . Look , look on that sign—the compass and square , — An emblem of duty , you'll say;—aye , 'tis well . Call out its owner—the mask—away , tear ! Pvofit , not pleasure , thus breaks the spell . Why such as these to thy order belong ? Eemodel your laws—blot out these stains ! Invited , I know , in numbers they throng : For morality ? JXo !—their own selfish gains !

IDEAL Truth !—thou spirit of morality , arise ! Thy aid I crave , false men to know , — Mercy's qualities—thy attributes I prize — And guided thus , . justice with these endow . My temple raised in God's holy name , Sacred 'gainst all who dare thus forget 'That solemn obligation .- I here claim—¦

Sealed by them—an eternal debt . Was it for these my holy ritual sung ? Was it for such as these I've toiled ? "Was it for man alone—thus begun ? jSJo—God eternal ! Am I foil'd ? My temple like unto Moses' tent—A tabernacle of wisdom , strength , and beauty ' . BAbrahaminspired sent

y , To teach honour , truth , and duty . The solemn covenant with Jacob made , With God ' s angels bright descending , Shall these from their memories fade ? Death were better than such ending . Emblems sacred ne'er were ordained For vain man or his false display ; In Masonry the reward that ' s gained

pure , Is an eternal , bright , continuous clay . The Square , the Level , ancl the Line , A moral deep applies to that human sod ; A token-present , as a sacred sign , To guide mortalitv unto its God . W . T . J .

[ We have been requested to publish the above as likely to tend to the suppression of the too common display of signs for trade purposes by the "brewer , thc baker , the candlestick maker , " & c . If it has the effect desired , we shall be most gratified ; but we are compelled to admit that the poetry far exceeds our understanding . —Ed . ]

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-12-22, Page 11” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 22 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_22121860/page/11/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
FREEMASONRY AND THE PRESS. Article 1
STRAY THOUGHTS ON THE ORIGIN AND PROGRESS OF THE FINE ARTS. Article 3
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 4
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
Literature. Article 7
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 9
Poetry. Article 11
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 12
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 12
METROPOLITAN. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 14
MARK MASONRY. Article 16
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 16
INDIA. Article 16
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.

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

must confess it is with some difficulty I do myself recognise the ignorant , conceited , and arrogant power it was when 1 became acquainted with it . Most nations have undergone great changes during the last forty years , ancl the Burmese seem to have kept pace with them . " We are sorry to learn that the Schools of Design at York and Bath lack adequate support , as well as that of Wolverhampton The latter is to be carried on a little longer , to give it another chance of success .

The marble bust of Dr . Croly , by Behnes , presented to the poet some years ago by public subscription , is to be placed in the church of St . Stephen ' :., Walbrook , where the remains of the poet-rector have been interred . An exhibition of Stothard's paintings is to be held in London next spring . Mr . Henry Kingsley , brother to the Eev . Professor Kingsley ,

will commence a new novel in the January number of Macmillcui ' s Magazine , under the title of " 1 ' arenshoe ; or , the Adventures of a Young English Gentleman . " A national edition of the works of Dante is about to be issued , hy subscription , at Florence , the pvofit of which is to bti devoted to a monument to the bard .

Sir Benjamin Brodie , President of the JRoyal Society , has appointed General Sabine , Sir John Boilean , Sir Henry Holland , ancl Thomas Graham , Esq ., vice-presidents for the next year . The metal of the new bronze coinage is already complained of as scratching and breaking easily . A monument to Bessel , the late German astronomer , is about to

be erected at . Kom ' gsberg , by the Prussian Government . It is to consist of a bust of the astronomer , executed by Here Siemering , wliich is to be placed on the outside of the University buildings . Great complaints are being made at present of the practice of copying paintings regularly pursued in some of our public picture galleries , and then selling them for replicas , or duplicates .

An exhibition of the works of the late Trench painter Decamps will take place in Paris next spring . The French literature of the seventeenth century absorbs , almost exclusively , the Paris writing and reading world . Indeed ,

much labour and pains are bestowed in hunting up all the remains of the literature of that time , and in the attempt at reproducing the classical works of the time of Louis the Fourteenth in their original purity and correctness . Critical editions appear every clay ; manuscripts , or where they are wanting , first editions are compared ; and it is now evident , though hardly credible , what alterations these classical works have undergone in the course of time b y

the negligence and arbitrariness of the editors . Many things are lost , and past all hope of recovery , for instance , in the Letters of Madame de Sevigne ; but other works , which have suffered cruelly , jxiy for the trouble of restoring them to their original state . Thus , the Letters of Madame do Mainteiion , a genuine edition of which M . de Lavallce has undertaken . The Duke of JNoailles , who

is in possession of the family papers , has opened his archives to the -editor , which contain a great number of the original letters . Hitherto these letters were only known in the form which La JBeaumelle had given them . M . de Lavallce has found a great part of the original letters used by La Beaiimelle ; and it is astonishing how unscrupulously the first editor has handled them , —altering ,

leaving out , and changing the dates . There is preserved at tho Lord Chamberlain ' s Office a small folio volume , written about the year 1 G 39 , containing a great deal of curious information respecting masques ancl old English plays , performed before the Court . There is no notice of Shakspere in it ; hut there are very curious scraps about Ben Jonson , Inigo Jones ,

and other illustrious characters . JKTow , this volume is of no earthly use where it is , but it would be a very desirable acquisition to the British Museum ; ancl we cannot help thinking that if the matter wove properly represented to the Court , there would be si disposition to present tiie volume to the national library . Should

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

the transfer take place , it is not improbable that much new and important information , especially respecting Inigo Jones , would be accessible to the public . We understand that JMr . Eobert Browning , whose knowledge of the history and profound feeling for the theory of Art are evinced by hisposins , has been studying Art practically for some months past .

Poetry.

Poetry .

THE WOELD AKD THE CEAFT . ItEAIi AST ! IDEAL . A Dialogue in , Verse . ________ t . They write of your age— " immemorial" time ,

And date your maturity from Solomon ' s reign ; Speak of your virtues—throughout every clime , Profit and pleasure , morality , gain . Gained by your laws , if truly observed , Gained by the precepts , secretly thine (?) Those secrets of nature oft have I heard ,. To peer ancl to peasant alike are divine . Why hold your power as Prospero ' s rod

. Ancl arrogate virtues I doubt you possess ? Duty to neighbour , yourself , and your God ; Mere words , and not deeds , did you ti-uly confess . Do the virtues you claim really live in the heart ? Your precepts divine—do they always control ? Make perfect , as nature's counterpart , liaising tho man , and exalting the soul . It reads well , I own ; it sounds equally so :

All that is human must err—be not blind ; You have your shadows , clouding the glow;—Seek out this truth—seek , ancl you'll find . Look , look on that sign—the compass and square , — An emblem of duty , you'll say;—aye , 'tis well . Call out its owner—the mask—away , tear ! Pvofit , not pleasure , thus breaks the spell . Why such as these to thy order belong ? Eemodel your laws—blot out these stains ! Invited , I know , in numbers they throng : For morality ? JXo !—their own selfish gains !

IDEAL Truth !—thou spirit of morality , arise ! Thy aid I crave , false men to know , — Mercy's qualities—thy attributes I prize — And guided thus , . justice with these endow . My temple raised in God's holy name , Sacred 'gainst all who dare thus forget 'That solemn obligation .- I here claim—¦

Sealed by them—an eternal debt . Was it for these my holy ritual sung ? Was it for such as these I've toiled ? "Was it for man alone—thus begun ? jSJo—God eternal ! Am I foil'd ? My temple like unto Moses' tent—A tabernacle of wisdom , strength , and beauty ' . BAbrahaminspired sent

y , To teach honour , truth , and duty . The solemn covenant with Jacob made , With God ' s angels bright descending , Shall these from their memories fade ? Death were better than such ending . Emblems sacred ne'er were ordained For vain man or his false display ; In Masonry the reward that ' s gained

pure , Is an eternal , bright , continuous clay . The Square , the Level , ancl the Line , A moral deep applies to that human sod ; A token-present , as a sacred sign , To guide mortalitv unto its God . W . T . J .

[ We have been requested to publish the above as likely to tend to the suppression of the too common display of signs for trade purposes by the "brewer , thc baker , the candlestick maker , " & c . If it has the effect desired , we shall be most gratified ; but we are compelled to admit that the poetry far exceeds our understanding . —Ed . ]

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