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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Nov. 23, 1861
  • Page 10
  • NOTES ON LITERATURE SCIENCE AND ART.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Nov. 23, 1861: Page 10

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    Article CURRENT TOPICS.* ← Page 6 of 6
    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Page 1 of 1
    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Page 1 of 1
    Article NOTES ON LITERATURE SCIENCE AND ART. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 10

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

Current Topics.*

London . In addition to the treatises on architecture and building before noticed , Mr . Hosking published an "Essay on the Construction of Bridges , " and a " Guide to the proper regulation of Buildings in Towns . " Some of his lectures at the College have appeared in the columns of the Builder journal . Mr . Henry Austin , formerly Secretary to the General Board of Health , and of late years Superintending Inspector of the department charged with the administration of the Local Act , died on

Sth October , 1861 . Mr . Austin was articled to Mr . Dixon , of Pm-nival ' s Inn , and subsequently entered the service of Mr . R . Stephenson during the construction of the Blackwall Railway . On the commencement of the sanitary movement , Mr . Austin appears to have succeeded in securing the attention of its leaders , and he was thus connected with the singular theories of sumpts , of small pipe drains , and pot-piped gathering grounds , which for so many years were forced upon the unfortunate towns who submitted to

the guidance of the General Board of Health . Mr . Austin , however , was a scholar and a gentleman , and in private life he was esteemed and beloved by those who knew him . Mr . John Clayton , the only Fellow of our Institute to whose loss I have yet referred , was known in early life hy the publication of an Ess . iy ou the Churches of London , and on half-timbered houses . He settled afterwards at Hereford ; but his pursuits do not seem to have been of a nature to have brought him very prominently

before the general public . At least I have not been able to obtain any particulars of them , beyond the fact of his having been engaged to construct the station buildings on the Hereford and Abergavenny Railway , and some private mansions in South AVales . Our late Fellow , Mr . George Bailey , was another of the fortunate men " who have no history . " He was originally a pupil of the late Sir John Soane , and he remained for some years in the office of that eminent architect after the expiration of his articles . On the

death of Sir John , Mr . Bailey was appointed Curator to the Soane Museum , and he held that post until his own death in the commencement of the spring of this year . *' Our late respected Honorary Solicitor , Mr . AV . L . Donaldson , had at all times so identified himself with the interests of our Institute , and had displayed so much talent , energy , and disinterestedness in advancing its prosperity in all matters which entered into his provincethat I fear we shall never be able to supplhis loss .

, y He carried us through the early period of our existence , and guided us by his friendly advice when we most needed both friends and advice . The tribute of respect ive can offer to his memory , is , I fear , but a feeble consolation to those who mourn his loss , but in the sincerest and most earnest manner do I now beg to express , in the name of the ivhole body of the Institute , our feelings of grief and of sympathy for the loss they have sustained . " All heads must come

To the cold tomb ; But still the actions of the just , Smell sweet and blossom in the dust . " The President having resumed his seat , again rose , and said there were two or three other cases worthy of notice ; one was the death of Mr . Thomas Finden , who died at the age of 77 , was a partner of Mr . Lewis , and surveyor of Hoare's brewery ; the death of Mr . Woodwardthe architect of the Oxford Museumof the firm

, , of Dean and Woodward , and who died of consumption ; and the death of Zwirner , the architect for the restoration of Cologne Cathedra ! . The Chairman proceeded to observe that there was a mode of ringing bells by electricity , so that in a short time a gentleman having an office in the City could carry on communications between his office and his residence , even if some miles distant .

Masonic Notes And Queries.

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES .

NEWTONIAN SALUTE . What is the JNewtonian salute ?—GYMNASIA . —[ AVe don't know . Enquire of the B . JB . at the Union . ] LODGE DECORATION . What is the simplest mode of decorating- a lodge P—I . G-. —[ By a floral display . Ifc is natural , elegant , and admits of a large amount of taste . ]

MASONIC HIGH TREASON . What punishment could be inflicted on a Mason ivho spoke disparagingly of the M . W . G . M . and Grand Officers ?—A . —[ None that we know of . Ton headed your query as ive

Masonic Notes And Queries.

have printed it , but we think ifc should have been " pettytreason , without rhyme or reason . " Don't ask such silly questions . When you have once seen the M . W . G . M ., or a Grand Officer , you ivill find them to be mortals afflicted with no right divine , and many of them without any divinity , right or wrong , about them . ] TAST MASTEll ' s DEGKEE .

When did tho Past Master ' s degree first arise ? The Look of Constitutions tells ns that ifc was " declared and pronounced that pure Antient Masonry consist of three degrees and no more , viz ., those of tho Entered Apprentice , the Fellow Graft , and the Master Mason , including the Supreme Order of the Holy Eoyal Arch . " This was so laid down in 1813 ; can any instance be given of the Past Master ' s

Degree being worked before that period ?—D . C . LATE 1 I 0 UES . Could not some agreement he come to amongst the brethren to conclude their festive meetings at seasonable hours , instead of keeping many a poor wife up expecting her husband long after midnig ht ?—HARRIET . EARLIEST RECORDS OP THE MARK DEGREE .

When did the earliest recorded meeting of Mark Masters take place F—M . 0 . —The earliest record at present known , which refers to conferring the Ark , Mark , Link , and Wrestle degrees , is dated 1780 . 1 MASONIC PLAYS . Wanted , a list of plays that contain Masonic allusions . — TEKELI .

GEAND STEIVAED ' S LODGE JEWEL . Passing down Wardour-street last week , I saw , in a refiner ' s window not far from Oxford-street , on the left hand side , one of the Hogarth jewels of the Grand Steward's lodge . Thinking it may interest some brother of that lodge , I send this note . —Ex . Ex .

Notes On Literature Science And Art.

NOTES ON LITERATURE SCIENCE AND ART .

Mr , O'JDoherty , " the sculptor of Erin , " is engaged on a statue - of " Alethe" ( from Moore's Fpicurean ) , for the Marquis of Downshire . General Sir Howard Douglas , author of several treatises on forti fications , gunnery , and other scientific subjects , died ou Friday , the Sth inst ., in the S 6 th year of his age . He served in the army

for several years ; was Governor of JNew Brunswick from 1823 to 1829 ; Lord High Commissioner of the Ionian Islands , from 1835 to 1842 ; and M . P . for Liverpool , from 1842 to 1847 . Mr . JNoel Paton ' s picture of "The pursuit of Pleasure , " is about to be engraved by Mr . H . T . Ryall , for an Edinburgh publisher . The people of Liverpool are about to erect a monument to the

late Duke of Wellington . The column , which is in course of erection , is to be a hundred and ten feet high , surmounted with a bronze statue , twelve feet high , executed by Mr . Lawson , of Edinburgh .

A Mr . ; 1 \ Watson , who ive understand is a schoolmaster at Congleton , in Cheshire , writing in a local paper , says of Chambers's new edition of Shakespere's Works;— "I have before me the purified edition of that author which I before referred to , and on comparing it with a genuine edition , I find no less than fifty-two suppressions or alterations , in half that number of pages taken consecutively ; and I repeat it , that even in this purified state ' no

Congleton father ivould dare to read it to his children . ' The fact is , rightly to purge him you ivould have to alter the very structure and aim of the plays ; you mig ht as well try to purify the atmosphere by eliminating the oxygen . " This is a very different estimate of the dramas of the hard of Avon to that given b y Bro Tweddell , in his Shahspere , his Times and Contemporaries , who : — "The great merit of Shakspereafter allhowever much we

says , , may love his sweetness ( and there is music sweeter than the trill of mountain streams in almost every sentence ) , is his truthfulness to nature , at all times , and under all circumstances possible or imaginable . He has not laboured to delineate a very good or a very bad character , but such persons as do really exist ; virtue

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-11-23, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 7 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_23111861/page/10/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
AN INNOVATION. Article 1
CONSTITUTIONS OF FREEMASONRY. Article 1
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆOLOGY . Article 3
CURRENT TOPICS.* Article 5
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 10
NOTES ON LITERATURE SCIENCE AND ART. Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 11
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF EAST LANCASHIRE. Article 11
PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF NORTHUMBERLAND. Article 11
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 12
METROPOLITAN. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 14
AUSTRALIA. Article 15
ROYAL ARCH. Article 17
MARK MASONRY. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 18
SPECIAL NOTICE. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Current Topics.*

London . In addition to the treatises on architecture and building before noticed , Mr . Hosking published an "Essay on the Construction of Bridges , " and a " Guide to the proper regulation of Buildings in Towns . " Some of his lectures at the College have appeared in the columns of the Builder journal . Mr . Henry Austin , formerly Secretary to the General Board of Health , and of late years Superintending Inspector of the department charged with the administration of the Local Act , died on

Sth October , 1861 . Mr . Austin was articled to Mr . Dixon , of Pm-nival ' s Inn , and subsequently entered the service of Mr . R . Stephenson during the construction of the Blackwall Railway . On the commencement of the sanitary movement , Mr . Austin appears to have succeeded in securing the attention of its leaders , and he was thus connected with the singular theories of sumpts , of small pipe drains , and pot-piped gathering grounds , which for so many years were forced upon the unfortunate towns who submitted to

the guidance of the General Board of Health . Mr . Austin , however , was a scholar and a gentleman , and in private life he was esteemed and beloved by those who knew him . Mr . John Clayton , the only Fellow of our Institute to whose loss I have yet referred , was known in early life hy the publication of an Ess . iy ou the Churches of London , and on half-timbered houses . He settled afterwards at Hereford ; but his pursuits do not seem to have been of a nature to have brought him very prominently

before the general public . At least I have not been able to obtain any particulars of them , beyond the fact of his having been engaged to construct the station buildings on the Hereford and Abergavenny Railway , and some private mansions in South AVales . Our late Fellow , Mr . George Bailey , was another of the fortunate men " who have no history . " He was originally a pupil of the late Sir John Soane , and he remained for some years in the office of that eminent architect after the expiration of his articles . On the

death of Sir John , Mr . Bailey was appointed Curator to the Soane Museum , and he held that post until his own death in the commencement of the spring of this year . *' Our late respected Honorary Solicitor , Mr . AV . L . Donaldson , had at all times so identified himself with the interests of our Institute , and had displayed so much talent , energy , and disinterestedness in advancing its prosperity in all matters which entered into his provincethat I fear we shall never be able to supplhis loss .

, y He carried us through the early period of our existence , and guided us by his friendly advice when we most needed both friends and advice . The tribute of respect ive can offer to his memory , is , I fear , but a feeble consolation to those who mourn his loss , but in the sincerest and most earnest manner do I now beg to express , in the name of the ivhole body of the Institute , our feelings of grief and of sympathy for the loss they have sustained . " All heads must come

To the cold tomb ; But still the actions of the just , Smell sweet and blossom in the dust . " The President having resumed his seat , again rose , and said there were two or three other cases worthy of notice ; one was the death of Mr . Thomas Finden , who died at the age of 77 , was a partner of Mr . Lewis , and surveyor of Hoare's brewery ; the death of Mr . Woodwardthe architect of the Oxford Museumof the firm

, , of Dean and Woodward , and who died of consumption ; and the death of Zwirner , the architect for the restoration of Cologne Cathedra ! . The Chairman proceeded to observe that there was a mode of ringing bells by electricity , so that in a short time a gentleman having an office in the City could carry on communications between his office and his residence , even if some miles distant .

Masonic Notes And Queries.

MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES .

NEWTONIAN SALUTE . What is the JNewtonian salute ?—GYMNASIA . —[ AVe don't know . Enquire of the B . JB . at the Union . ] LODGE DECORATION . What is the simplest mode of decorating- a lodge P—I . G-. —[ By a floral display . Ifc is natural , elegant , and admits of a large amount of taste . ]

MASONIC HIGH TREASON . What punishment could be inflicted on a Mason ivho spoke disparagingly of the M . W . G . M . and Grand Officers ?—A . —[ None that we know of . Ton headed your query as ive

Masonic Notes And Queries.

have printed it , but we think ifc should have been " pettytreason , without rhyme or reason . " Don't ask such silly questions . When you have once seen the M . W . G . M ., or a Grand Officer , you ivill find them to be mortals afflicted with no right divine , and many of them without any divinity , right or wrong , about them . ] TAST MASTEll ' s DEGKEE .

When did tho Past Master ' s degree first arise ? The Look of Constitutions tells ns that ifc was " declared and pronounced that pure Antient Masonry consist of three degrees and no more , viz ., those of tho Entered Apprentice , the Fellow Graft , and the Master Mason , including the Supreme Order of the Holy Eoyal Arch . " This was so laid down in 1813 ; can any instance be given of the Past Master ' s

Degree being worked before that period ?—D . C . LATE 1 I 0 UES . Could not some agreement he come to amongst the brethren to conclude their festive meetings at seasonable hours , instead of keeping many a poor wife up expecting her husband long after midnig ht ?—HARRIET . EARLIEST RECORDS OP THE MARK DEGREE .

When did the earliest recorded meeting of Mark Masters take place F—M . 0 . —The earliest record at present known , which refers to conferring the Ark , Mark , Link , and Wrestle degrees , is dated 1780 . 1 MASONIC PLAYS . Wanted , a list of plays that contain Masonic allusions . — TEKELI .

GEAND STEIVAED ' S LODGE JEWEL . Passing down Wardour-street last week , I saw , in a refiner ' s window not far from Oxford-street , on the left hand side , one of the Hogarth jewels of the Grand Steward's lodge . Thinking it may interest some brother of that lodge , I send this note . —Ex . Ex .

Notes On Literature Science And Art.

NOTES ON LITERATURE SCIENCE AND ART .

Mr , O'JDoherty , " the sculptor of Erin , " is engaged on a statue - of " Alethe" ( from Moore's Fpicurean ) , for the Marquis of Downshire . General Sir Howard Douglas , author of several treatises on forti fications , gunnery , and other scientific subjects , died ou Friday , the Sth inst ., in the S 6 th year of his age . He served in the army

for several years ; was Governor of JNew Brunswick from 1823 to 1829 ; Lord High Commissioner of the Ionian Islands , from 1835 to 1842 ; and M . P . for Liverpool , from 1842 to 1847 . Mr . JNoel Paton ' s picture of "The pursuit of Pleasure , " is about to be engraved by Mr . H . T . Ryall , for an Edinburgh publisher . The people of Liverpool are about to erect a monument to the

late Duke of Wellington . The column , which is in course of erection , is to be a hundred and ten feet high , surmounted with a bronze statue , twelve feet high , executed by Mr . Lawson , of Edinburgh .

A Mr . ; 1 \ Watson , who ive understand is a schoolmaster at Congleton , in Cheshire , writing in a local paper , says of Chambers's new edition of Shakespere's Works;— "I have before me the purified edition of that author which I before referred to , and on comparing it with a genuine edition , I find no less than fifty-two suppressions or alterations , in half that number of pages taken consecutively ; and I repeat it , that even in this purified state ' no

Congleton father ivould dare to read it to his children . ' The fact is , rightly to purge him you ivould have to alter the very structure and aim of the plays ; you mig ht as well try to purify the atmosphere by eliminating the oxygen . " This is a very different estimate of the dramas of the hard of Avon to that given b y Bro Tweddell , in his Shahspere , his Times and Contemporaries , who : — "The great merit of Shakspereafter allhowever much we

says , , may love his sweetness ( and there is music sweeter than the trill of mountain streams in almost every sentence ) , is his truthfulness to nature , at all times , and under all circumstances possible or imaginable . He has not laboured to delineate a very good or a very bad character , but such persons as do really exist ; virtue

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