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  • March 23, 1861
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  • Literature.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 23, 1861: Page 7

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    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article Literature. Page 1 of 4 →
Page 7

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Masonic Notes And Queries.

Then the Senior by election among the Deputy Grand Masters , for the Deputy Grand Masters and Princes ; the Grand Preceptor , for the Preceptoral Court ; the Primate , for the Ecclesiastical Militia ; the Grand Marshal , for the Consistorial and Palatinate Committees ; the Grand Prior General , for the Grand Priors ; the General Perfect of Legations , for the Magisterial Legates and Nuncios ; the Grand Bailiff for the Bailiffs ; the Grand Governor , for the

'Commanders ; the Conservator General , for the Priors and Knights ; the Senior by election among the Knights , for the Abbesses , Ladies , and Canonesses ; the General Leader of Esquires , for the Noviciate Esquires ; the General Proctor , for the Inferior Mouses ; all take the Oath of Fidelity to the Grand Master . Finally , and with one voice , the Brethren , Sisters , and Serving Brethren present , take the Oath of Fidelity to the Grand Master . Then the Primate and all present sing the Tilth Psalm .

3-T . The acts of enthroning being entered in the Records , aud read in a loud voice by the Magisterial Secretary , the Brethren ¦ and Sisters present subscribe their names , aud they are confirmed by the signature of the Grand Master , and by the signatures as well as the seals of the Regent and Princes present . The foregoing is all that relates to the ceremony of installation , hut there are other articles of the same Chapter defining the Grand Master ' s powers Avhich we may give , if required , on some other occasion . ]

Literature.

Literature .

REVIEWS . The Works of Virgil , translated by CHARLES BANS KENNEDY , late PelloAv of Trinity College , Cambridge ; Translator of Demosthenes , & c . Pive years ago , the late Dr . Donaldson wrote , of the first edition of this work" One of our best scholarsMr . C . R .

, , Kennedy , has completed his father ' s elegant translation of Virgil , and thus enables us to prove that we have still men capable uf appreciating f lionise ! ves , and conveying toothers , the characteristic beauties of the prince of Latin poets : " and it is not too much to say that this new edition , in which the entire translation is from Mr . Kennedy ' s own pen , fully sustains this praise , and proves not only the

ripeness , but the liberality of Englishs cholarship ; for , as -things now are , little gain can be expected from works of this nature , beyond that a man derives to himself from the knowledge that his Avorks inform his countrymen , and give them the power of seizing and using ideas Avhich , otherwise , the book of a foreign and dead language would have closed against them . This is

particularly true of Virgil , whose verse is often hard to be understood ; and it makes Mr . Kennedy ' s translation , considered as the expression of his meaning conveyed to a powerful and learned mind , all tho more valuable . The sense and spirit of Virgil are here rendered in nervous and sonorous lines , which carry with them the music of true poetry ; and the translation , as a Avhole , may bo . taken as the best that has 3 et been given to the English reader . The following , from the 4 th Georgic , is a fair passage : —

GEORGIC IV . v . 170 . " Now list , what instincts Jupiter the bees Endow'd withal , I teach ; their high reward , AVho , led by tinkling Corybantian brass , Fed in his Cretan cave the infant god . To them alone community of sons And fellowship of city-life are given , AA'ith laws and wisdom politic ; alone

A country and a sacred home they know , For winter's need by summer's toil provide , And store their earnings for the public weal . Part forage in the meads , their tasks arranged By distribution just ; part within doors The tear of daffodil and gum of bark Lay for the first foundation of their combs , Then build the waxen arches ; these are busy

Training the nation's hope , their youth adult , Those packing honey , and their little cells AVith nectar pure distending ; some are bid T o keep strict sentry at the outer gate , A nd take their turns of watching cloud and rain ;

Or booty from the gatherers they receive , Or forming in a body chase the drones , An idle race , away : warm glows the work , And all of thyme the rich confection smells . As in the forge Cyclopian , when they speed Jove ' s armoury of thunder , some the blast AVith bellows catch and render , some the metal Plunge hissing iu a lake ; with anvil-strokes

All iEtna groans ; they with a mighty force Alternately their arms in concert raise , And still with griping tongs the iron turn : Thus in their several offices of toil ( Great to compare with small ) Cecropian bees Engrossing store , their native passion , strive .. Grave elders have in charge the tower's affairs , To raise their rampiresshape their daidal roofs

, The younger bands at evening late return AVith thighs thyme-laden ; roaming all at large The arbute and the willow , saffron-buds , The dainty larkspur , lavender , and lime They rifle of their sweets : one lot for all Of labour and repose : at morning break Outpour the population of the hive , Impatient for their task ; when eve at length

Admonishes to quit the balmy field , Home to refresh their weariness they come , Awhile about the doors and avenues Thronging with drowsy hum , till in their beds Couch'd for the night , a silence o ' er them creeps , And all their busy life islull'd to rest . "

The speech in which Venus addresses iEneas , when she reveals to him the gods battling against Troy , is very good : — 2 ENEID II . v . 702 . " - AA hen lo , beside me shining thro' the gloom Visibly bright , as never I had seen , My lovely parent stood , displaying full

The godhead , such as to immortal eyes In majesty of beauty she appears .-Mo by the hand she took , and softly held , AVith rosy lips admonishing—AVhat passion Transports thee thus , my son ? what fit of rage Unseemly ? where is thy regard for us ? Sliouldst thou not rather look for him thou leftest , Thy sire infirm and old , if he is safe ?

If yet Creusa lives , Ascanius yet ; AVhom hosts of the Achaians hover round , And , but for . my precaution , flames ere this Had reach'd them , or the enemy surprised ? ISfot Spartan Helen ' s face which thou abhorrest , Nor Paris the reviled , but ruthless gods O ' erfcurn this empire , and the heights of Troy . Behold ; the misty damp , which intercepts Thy vision and bedims the mortal sense , I will remove : thou hearken to my voice , Nor fear a mother ' s counsel to obey .

AA'here strewn in heaps thou seest yon massy piles , Stone rent from stone , and wavy , rolling clouds Of dust and smoke , there Neptune at the walls Storms with his trident , shakes their solid frame , And all the city from her seat of power Hurls to annihilation : Juno here In ecstacy of fury and revenge Stands at the Seaman portal , prominent

In steely cincture , calling from the fleet Her fresh marauders : on the central tower Tritonian Pallas in a beamy cloud Effulgent sits , with Gorgon terrors arrn'd : Great Jupiter himself th' Achaian host Inspires with might invincible , himself Rouses the gods to mortal strife with Troy . " Virgil was not onlthe greatestbut the most moral of

y , Eoman poets ; and there aro many passages in this version to which the attention of our brethren may be seryiceably directed as suitable for quotation , when they expatiate on those princip les Avhich form the foundation of our Craft , such as that in tho 3 rd Georgic : — " The fairest days of life are first to flee ; Disease and pain ensue , and wistful age ,

And last stern death , to finish mortal toil . Still worse for better thou shalt wish to change ; Then , for the lost 'tis idle to regret , Keep in advance of time . "

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-03-23, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 31 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_23031861/page/7/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
VISIT TO STRATFORD-ON-AVON AND ITS VICINAGE. Article 1
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 4
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 5
Literature. Article 7
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 10
PROPOSED MASONIC HALL AT BRIGHTON. Article 11
HOW TO SPELL "SHAKESPEARE." Article 11
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 11
WATSON TESTIMONIAL FUND. Article 11
METROPOLITAN. Article 11
PROVINCIAL. Article 14
ROYAL ARCH. Article 19
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 19
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.

Masonic Notes And Queries.

Then the Senior by election among the Deputy Grand Masters , for the Deputy Grand Masters and Princes ; the Grand Preceptor , for the Preceptoral Court ; the Primate , for the Ecclesiastical Militia ; the Grand Marshal , for the Consistorial and Palatinate Committees ; the Grand Prior General , for the Grand Priors ; the General Perfect of Legations , for the Magisterial Legates and Nuncios ; the Grand Bailiff for the Bailiffs ; the Grand Governor , for the

'Commanders ; the Conservator General , for the Priors and Knights ; the Senior by election among the Knights , for the Abbesses , Ladies , and Canonesses ; the General Leader of Esquires , for the Noviciate Esquires ; the General Proctor , for the Inferior Mouses ; all take the Oath of Fidelity to the Grand Master . Finally , and with one voice , the Brethren , Sisters , and Serving Brethren present , take the Oath of Fidelity to the Grand Master . Then the Primate and all present sing the Tilth Psalm .

3-T . The acts of enthroning being entered in the Records , aud read in a loud voice by the Magisterial Secretary , the Brethren ¦ and Sisters present subscribe their names , aud they are confirmed by the signature of the Grand Master , and by the signatures as well as the seals of the Regent and Princes present . The foregoing is all that relates to the ceremony of installation , hut there are other articles of the same Chapter defining the Grand Master ' s powers Avhich we may give , if required , on some other occasion . ]

Literature.

Literature .

REVIEWS . The Works of Virgil , translated by CHARLES BANS KENNEDY , late PelloAv of Trinity College , Cambridge ; Translator of Demosthenes , & c . Pive years ago , the late Dr . Donaldson wrote , of the first edition of this work" One of our best scholarsMr . C . R .

, , Kennedy , has completed his father ' s elegant translation of Virgil , and thus enables us to prove that we have still men capable uf appreciating f lionise ! ves , and conveying toothers , the characteristic beauties of the prince of Latin poets : " and it is not too much to say that this new edition , in which the entire translation is from Mr . Kennedy ' s own pen , fully sustains this praise , and proves not only the

ripeness , but the liberality of Englishs cholarship ; for , as -things now are , little gain can be expected from works of this nature , beyond that a man derives to himself from the knowledge that his Avorks inform his countrymen , and give them the power of seizing and using ideas Avhich , otherwise , the book of a foreign and dead language would have closed against them . This is

particularly true of Virgil , whose verse is often hard to be understood ; and it makes Mr . Kennedy ' s translation , considered as the expression of his meaning conveyed to a powerful and learned mind , all tho more valuable . The sense and spirit of Virgil are here rendered in nervous and sonorous lines , which carry with them the music of true poetry ; and the translation , as a Avhole , may bo . taken as the best that has 3 et been given to the English reader . The following , from the 4 th Georgic , is a fair passage : —

GEORGIC IV . v . 170 . " Now list , what instincts Jupiter the bees Endow'd withal , I teach ; their high reward , AVho , led by tinkling Corybantian brass , Fed in his Cretan cave the infant god . To them alone community of sons And fellowship of city-life are given , AA'ith laws and wisdom politic ; alone

A country and a sacred home they know , For winter's need by summer's toil provide , And store their earnings for the public weal . Part forage in the meads , their tasks arranged By distribution just ; part within doors The tear of daffodil and gum of bark Lay for the first foundation of their combs , Then build the waxen arches ; these are busy

Training the nation's hope , their youth adult , Those packing honey , and their little cells AVith nectar pure distending ; some are bid T o keep strict sentry at the outer gate , A nd take their turns of watching cloud and rain ;

Or booty from the gatherers they receive , Or forming in a body chase the drones , An idle race , away : warm glows the work , And all of thyme the rich confection smells . As in the forge Cyclopian , when they speed Jove ' s armoury of thunder , some the blast AVith bellows catch and render , some the metal Plunge hissing iu a lake ; with anvil-strokes

All iEtna groans ; they with a mighty force Alternately their arms in concert raise , And still with griping tongs the iron turn : Thus in their several offices of toil ( Great to compare with small ) Cecropian bees Engrossing store , their native passion , strive .. Grave elders have in charge the tower's affairs , To raise their rampiresshape their daidal roofs

, The younger bands at evening late return AVith thighs thyme-laden ; roaming all at large The arbute and the willow , saffron-buds , The dainty larkspur , lavender , and lime They rifle of their sweets : one lot for all Of labour and repose : at morning break Outpour the population of the hive , Impatient for their task ; when eve at length

Admonishes to quit the balmy field , Home to refresh their weariness they come , Awhile about the doors and avenues Thronging with drowsy hum , till in their beds Couch'd for the night , a silence o ' er them creeps , And all their busy life islull'd to rest . "

The speech in which Venus addresses iEneas , when she reveals to him the gods battling against Troy , is very good : — 2 ENEID II . v . 702 . " - AA hen lo , beside me shining thro' the gloom Visibly bright , as never I had seen , My lovely parent stood , displaying full

The godhead , such as to immortal eyes In majesty of beauty she appears .-Mo by the hand she took , and softly held , AVith rosy lips admonishing—AVhat passion Transports thee thus , my son ? what fit of rage Unseemly ? where is thy regard for us ? Sliouldst thou not rather look for him thou leftest , Thy sire infirm and old , if he is safe ?

If yet Creusa lives , Ascanius yet ; AVhom hosts of the Achaians hover round , And , but for . my precaution , flames ere this Had reach'd them , or the enemy surprised ? ISfot Spartan Helen ' s face which thou abhorrest , Nor Paris the reviled , but ruthless gods O ' erfcurn this empire , and the heights of Troy . Behold ; the misty damp , which intercepts Thy vision and bedims the mortal sense , I will remove : thou hearken to my voice , Nor fear a mother ' s counsel to obey .

AA'here strewn in heaps thou seest yon massy piles , Stone rent from stone , and wavy , rolling clouds Of dust and smoke , there Neptune at the walls Storms with his trident , shakes their solid frame , And all the city from her seat of power Hurls to annihilation : Juno here In ecstacy of fury and revenge Stands at the Seaman portal , prominent

In steely cincture , calling from the fleet Her fresh marauders : on the central tower Tritonian Pallas in a beamy cloud Effulgent sits , with Gorgon terrors arrn'd : Great Jupiter himself th' Achaian host Inspires with might invincible , himself Rouses the gods to mortal strife with Troy . " Virgil was not onlthe greatestbut the most moral of

y , Eoman poets ; and there aro many passages in this version to which the attention of our brethren may be seryiceably directed as suitable for quotation , when they expatiate on those princip les Avhich form the foundation of our Craft , such as that in tho 3 rd Georgic : — " The fairest days of life are first to flee ; Disease and pain ensue , and wistful age ,

And last stern death , to finish mortal toil . Still worse for better thou shalt wish to change ; Then , for the lost 'tis idle to regret , Keep in advance of time . "

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