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  • Dec. 22, 1860
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Dec. 22, 1860: Page 7

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    Article ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆOLOGY. ← Page 4 of 4
    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Page 1 of 1
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Architecture And Archæology.

feet by 22 feet ; class-room , 16 feet by 14 feet ; with teachers ' residence , all iu thc Earl y Decorated style of architecture , . and cost £ 1400 .

Masonic Notes And Queries.

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES .

MOILED 1 U 1 IY— ¦ THE ITvEEMASOx ' s SUPPED . ! I read in The Critic of December Sth that it is , and was 'formerly , believed our Saturday night ' s banquet ivas broiled baby ! " Where did tho tale originate ? — No CANNIBAL . — [ Wc cannot say . See the leader in tho present number entitled , " Freemasonry and the Press . " ] KXIGUTS OF MAMA .

In thc current number of our cotemporary , Notes and Queries , there is tho following , under tho above title : — " The best book on the present condition of the English La-ngue of tho Sovereign Order of St . John of Jerusalem , is the Synoptical ShetcJi- of the Order , printed a few years ago ; but I fear your correspondent will find a difficulty in procuring it , except from a member of the Order for which

it was printed . I shall bo happy to lend your correspondent my copy of thc General Ordinances of the Langno , with a list of its officers , if he will send me his address . —J . WOODWARD . " ST . CLAIR OP KOSLIX . Is there any portrait preserved of this eminent Grand Mason of Scotland?—PATOXEE . —[ Yes ; iu St . John ' s Chapel ,

Canongate , Edinburgh . See also a copy of this picture in Tho Laws ancl Constitutions of tha Grand Lodge of Scotland , 4 to ., Edin . 1848—a publication worthy of a Grand Lodge , and which totally eclipses our meagre affair . ]

BRO . DAT . CUO . In America , Bro . Dalcho seems to have been considered a great Masonic authority ; which was he , a parson or a -doctor?—P . P . —[ Both ; ho was the Rov . Frederick Dalcho , formerly a Doctor of Medicine , and afterwards Assistant Minister to St . Michael ' s Church , Charlestown , and Chaplain to the Grand Lodge , & c ] OLD 1-REEIIASON ' SEAL .

At thc meeting of the British Archaeological Society , on the 28 th ult ., " Mr . Wills exhibited thc brass matrix of an earl y seal of the Freemasons . " Can any brother furnish ] iarticulars of this seal?—GEORGE MAIUCHA . II TWEDDELL . IIKIiOlXES 01 ' JERICHO . Was the degree of Heroine of Jericho , or any other female order in connection with Freemasonry , ever practised in . England , Scotland , or Ireland ? if so , ivhieh , when , and whore ?—BROTHER P _ : TI : R .

WHAT IS A IlIEAlt ? Every now and then the studious Mason meets with terms wliich sadly puzzle him . I am in that predicament . I read in a Masonic song—Hark ! ( lie liiram sounds to close . What is the hiram?—F . E . L . —[ In the last century it was usual to call thc gavel of the W . M . a hiram . ]

IRISH BITES . In reply to " Ex Ex ., " in your last number , I can but state that , under the Constitution of Ireland , all legitimate rites are recognised and represented in the S . G . Council of Eites , including the S . S ., G . G ., I . I ., G . G ., 33 ' of tho Ancient and Accepted Eite , who are governed as to their dogmas , grades , Ac , by thc Constitutions and Statutes of September ,

1762 , and May , 1780 . — " ORDO . AB G ' UAO . " niSSEXTIXG J-imSTERS . Will you inform your correspondent "W . IL , " who has addressed a query under tho above heading in your last MAGAZINE , that George Dawson , M . A ., Minister of the Church of the Saviour , Birmingham , was initiated into Masonry in the Warden JLodge ( 1006 ) , in September , I 860 . — '

W . K . liiLAXo BEI > K > KD , P . M . 1096 . —P . S . Our Bro . Dawson repudiates the title of reverend . IHSMEXTISG MINISTERS . Iii reply to the question of WM . iu " Notes and Queries " last week , whether any Dissenting Ministers are Masons , I bog to inform him that the Rev . Thos . B . W . Briggs , of Dover , Unitarian Baptist Minister , is one . —TJsru . —C'iiit ' . 'i'li'rii , Dec 13 . 1860 .

Masonic Notes And Queries.

THE HEBREW CHERUBIM . As the banners of the four divisions of the Israelitish _ army formed tha essential points of the representation of the Hebrew cherubim depicted on our Grand Lodge seals , has the same symbolism been elsewhere employed ?—CALEB . —[ It has . " The Evangelists have been symbolised in tho primitiveaudindeedall other churches , thus— St .

, , , Matthew , by a man ; St . Mark , by a lion ; St . Luke , by a bull or ox ; and St . John , by an eagle . ] THE TEMPLAll CROSS . As the Supremo G . M . of the Knights Templar is now vacant , in whose possession is the Cross of the Order that is delivered from G . M . to G . M . ?—T . C . T . MASONRY INTRODUCED ] XTO 50 VEI . S .

Some one inquired , in a recent number , what authors had introduced Masonry into their writings ? I can't say it is pure Masonry , but I remember reading a very good story about two reefers in Captain Maryatt ' s Percival Keenc . —• T . T . A .

Literature.

Literature .

REVIEWS . Two Months in the Highlands , Oread la , and Shjc , By C . E . WELD , ESQ . Longmans and Co . We have before us a pleasant book of a holiday tour over ground which , though a portion of the British Empire , is as new to many of us as if it were a descrition of the interior

p of Cham-Tartary . Such a book does not come within , thc limits of strict criticism , because it is not one in which an occasional error here and there is of that importance which will mislead for a whole generation . It is the result of a man ' s eyesight during a time of leisure . - It propounds no new theories and deals with no momentous questions affecting religious , moral , or political life . In . short it must bo

taken for what it is—a very agreeable bit of gossip , such as a gentleman and scholar would pen , aud containing enoug h , to interest those who havo never seen the places visited . Our plan , therefore , in noticing this work will be confined to extract , as that will give a better insig ht into Mr . Weld ' s labours than any detailed remarks of ours . For this purpose , then , we append a picture of a Caithness laird and his neighbours : —•

Amidst Laity Sinclair's lovely flower-gardens , and tho surrounding thick woods in which the tress are of forest-like growth , I almost forgot that John o'Groat ' s house was only eighteen miles distant , llavroek is , indeed , in many respects , an oasis in the desert ; for ivhile the country generally is almost in a state of nature , Sir John Sinclair has not only reclaimed , but made many hundreds of broad , acres around his house smile with plenty ancl prosperity . Lukes and havo been drainedthousands of trees

plantedextenswamps , , sive farm-buildings erected , and a powerful steam-engine is made to do as much agricultural work as possible . Jsowheve will you . have a better opportunity of seeing how scientific agriculture may he made to trhmipli over sloughs of despond than here . JMor should it be forgotten that , while the land ministers to the wants of man , the peasant is advanced in civilisation . Loo '; at the old Caithness hovel , a mere mud structure , with often only

two openings ; the door , and a hole in the root' to allow the smoke to escape . While shooting one day , Capt . Sinclair introduced me to one of these primitive dwellings , liaising- the latch , we entered a room opaque with peat smoke , ivhicli , 1 . allied in its attempts to pass out of a hole in the roof , was rolling iu dense masses through the interior . The fire from which it proceeded was in the centra ofthe hovelbacked ba low wallbut theie was no attempt at a

, y ; chimney . Two ancient crones ivere crooked on their hams in front of the ' fire , one of whom was crooning a strange-sounding song , while the other was coaxing a noseless teapot to stand upright in the heap of hot peat ashes . Two small open recesses in the wall contained the crockery of the establishment ; ancl a bench , two chairs on their last legs , iuid : i couple of box beds , grimed with soot ar . cl . smoke leted the furuitiire \ ow will doubtless imagine

, comp . __ , you that this dismal hole belonged to a pauper . L ' . y no means . The proprietor was a prosperous blacksmith , who was , at the time of our visit , exercising his calling at a neighbouring hamlet , and tho cabin was precisely in the condition that he had inherited it from his father .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-12-22, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 22 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_22121860/page/7/.
  • 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.

Architecture And Archæology.

feet by 22 feet ; class-room , 16 feet by 14 feet ; with teachers ' residence , all iu thc Earl y Decorated style of architecture , . and cost £ 1400 .

Masonic Notes And Queries.

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES .

MOILED 1 U 1 IY— ¦ THE ITvEEMASOx ' s SUPPED . ! I read in The Critic of December Sth that it is , and was 'formerly , believed our Saturday night ' s banquet ivas broiled baby ! " Where did tho tale originate ? — No CANNIBAL . — [ Wc cannot say . See the leader in tho present number entitled , " Freemasonry and the Press . " ] KXIGUTS OF MAMA .

In thc current number of our cotemporary , Notes and Queries , there is tho following , under tho above title : — " The best book on the present condition of the English La-ngue of tho Sovereign Order of St . John of Jerusalem , is the Synoptical ShetcJi- of the Order , printed a few years ago ; but I fear your correspondent will find a difficulty in procuring it , except from a member of the Order for which

it was printed . I shall bo happy to lend your correspondent my copy of thc General Ordinances of the Langno , with a list of its officers , if he will send me his address . —J . WOODWARD . " ST . CLAIR OP KOSLIX . Is there any portrait preserved of this eminent Grand Mason of Scotland?—PATOXEE . —[ Yes ; iu St . John ' s Chapel ,

Canongate , Edinburgh . See also a copy of this picture in Tho Laws ancl Constitutions of tha Grand Lodge of Scotland , 4 to ., Edin . 1848—a publication worthy of a Grand Lodge , and which totally eclipses our meagre affair . ]

BRO . DAT . CUO . In America , Bro . Dalcho seems to have been considered a great Masonic authority ; which was he , a parson or a -doctor?—P . P . —[ Both ; ho was the Rov . Frederick Dalcho , formerly a Doctor of Medicine , and afterwards Assistant Minister to St . Michael ' s Church , Charlestown , and Chaplain to the Grand Lodge , & c ] OLD 1-REEIIASON ' SEAL .

At thc meeting of the British Archaeological Society , on the 28 th ult ., " Mr . Wills exhibited thc brass matrix of an earl y seal of the Freemasons . " Can any brother furnish ] iarticulars of this seal?—GEORGE MAIUCHA . II TWEDDELL . IIKIiOlXES 01 ' JERICHO . Was the degree of Heroine of Jericho , or any other female order in connection with Freemasonry , ever practised in . England , Scotland , or Ireland ? if so , ivhieh , when , and whore ?—BROTHER P _ : TI : R .

WHAT IS A IlIEAlt ? Every now and then the studious Mason meets with terms wliich sadly puzzle him . I am in that predicament . I read in a Masonic song—Hark ! ( lie liiram sounds to close . What is the hiram?—F . E . L . —[ In the last century it was usual to call thc gavel of the W . M . a hiram . ]

IRISH BITES . In reply to " Ex Ex ., " in your last number , I can but state that , under the Constitution of Ireland , all legitimate rites are recognised and represented in the S . G . Council of Eites , including the S . S ., G . G ., I . I ., G . G ., 33 ' of tho Ancient and Accepted Eite , who are governed as to their dogmas , grades , Ac , by thc Constitutions and Statutes of September ,

1762 , and May , 1780 . — " ORDO . AB G ' UAO . " niSSEXTIXG J-imSTERS . Will you inform your correspondent "W . IL , " who has addressed a query under tho above heading in your last MAGAZINE , that George Dawson , M . A ., Minister of the Church of the Saviour , Birmingham , was initiated into Masonry in the Warden JLodge ( 1006 ) , in September , I 860 . — '

W . K . liiLAXo BEI > K > KD , P . M . 1096 . —P . S . Our Bro . Dawson repudiates the title of reverend . IHSMEXTISG MINISTERS . Iii reply to the question of WM . iu " Notes and Queries " last week , whether any Dissenting Ministers are Masons , I bog to inform him that the Rev . Thos . B . W . Briggs , of Dover , Unitarian Baptist Minister , is one . —TJsru . —C'iiit ' . 'i'li'rii , Dec 13 . 1860 .

Masonic Notes And Queries.

THE HEBREW CHERUBIM . As the banners of the four divisions of the Israelitish _ army formed tha essential points of the representation of the Hebrew cherubim depicted on our Grand Lodge seals , has the same symbolism been elsewhere employed ?—CALEB . —[ It has . " The Evangelists have been symbolised in tho primitiveaudindeedall other churches , thus— St .

, , , Matthew , by a man ; St . Mark , by a lion ; St . Luke , by a bull or ox ; and St . John , by an eagle . ] THE TEMPLAll CROSS . As the Supremo G . M . of the Knights Templar is now vacant , in whose possession is the Cross of the Order that is delivered from G . M . to G . M . ?—T . C . T . MASONRY INTRODUCED ] XTO 50 VEI . S .

Some one inquired , in a recent number , what authors had introduced Masonry into their writings ? I can't say it is pure Masonry , but I remember reading a very good story about two reefers in Captain Maryatt ' s Percival Keenc . —• T . T . A .

Literature.

Literature .

REVIEWS . Two Months in the Highlands , Oread la , and Shjc , By C . E . WELD , ESQ . Longmans and Co . We have before us a pleasant book of a holiday tour over ground which , though a portion of the British Empire , is as new to many of us as if it were a descrition of the interior

p of Cham-Tartary . Such a book does not come within , thc limits of strict criticism , because it is not one in which an occasional error here and there is of that importance which will mislead for a whole generation . It is the result of a man ' s eyesight during a time of leisure . - It propounds no new theories and deals with no momentous questions affecting religious , moral , or political life . In . short it must bo

taken for what it is—a very agreeable bit of gossip , such as a gentleman and scholar would pen , aud containing enoug h , to interest those who havo never seen the places visited . Our plan , therefore , in noticing this work will be confined to extract , as that will give a better insig ht into Mr . Weld ' s labours than any detailed remarks of ours . For this purpose , then , we append a picture of a Caithness laird and his neighbours : —•

Amidst Laity Sinclair's lovely flower-gardens , and tho surrounding thick woods in which the tress are of forest-like growth , I almost forgot that John o'Groat ' s house was only eighteen miles distant , llavroek is , indeed , in many respects , an oasis in the desert ; for ivhile the country generally is almost in a state of nature , Sir John Sinclair has not only reclaimed , but made many hundreds of broad , acres around his house smile with plenty ancl prosperity . Lukes and havo been drainedthousands of trees

plantedextenswamps , , sive farm-buildings erected , and a powerful steam-engine is made to do as much agricultural work as possible . Jsowheve will you . have a better opportunity of seeing how scientific agriculture may he made to trhmipli over sloughs of despond than here . JMor should it be forgotten that , while the land ministers to the wants of man , the peasant is advanced in civilisation . Loo '; at the old Caithness hovel , a mere mud structure , with often only

two openings ; the door , and a hole in the root' to allow the smoke to escape . While shooting one day , Capt . Sinclair introduced me to one of these primitive dwellings , liaising- the latch , we entered a room opaque with peat smoke , ivhicli , 1 . allied in its attempts to pass out of a hole in the roof , was rolling iu dense masses through the interior . The fire from which it proceeded was in the centra ofthe hovelbacked ba low wallbut theie was no attempt at a

, y ; chimney . Two ancient crones ivere crooked on their hams in front of the ' fire , one of whom was crooning a strange-sounding song , while the other was coaxing a noseless teapot to stand upright in the heap of hot peat ashes . Two small open recesses in the wall contained the crockery of the establishment ; ancl a bench , two chairs on their last legs , iuid : i couple of box beds , grimed with soot ar . cl . smoke leted the furuitiire \ ow will doubtless imagine

, comp . __ , you that this dismal hole belonged to a pauper . L ' . y no means . The proprietor was a prosperous blacksmith , who was , at the time of our visit , exercising his calling at a neighbouring hamlet , and tho cabin was precisely in the condition that he had inherited it from his father .

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