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  • Nov. 23, 1861
  • Page 11
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Nov. 23, 1861: Page 11

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    Article NOTES ON LITERATURE SCIENCE AND ART. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article NOTES ON LITERATURE SCIENCE AND ART. Page 2 of 2
    Article CORRESPONDENCE. Page 1 of 1
    Article PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF EAST LANCASHIRE. Page 1 of 1
    Article PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF NORTHUMBERLAND. Page 1 of 1
Page 11

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

Notes On Literature Science And Art.

At a time when everything connected with the growth and manufacture of cotton is of immense importance , the following statistics will be of value . They are taken from a report addressed to Edmund Ashworth , Esq ., Vice-president of the Cotton Supply Association , by Mr . G . R . f Haywood , dated Bombay , Sept . 26 th , 1861 . The number of spindles and looms working , at this date , in Bombay -. —¦

Spindles . Looms . Broach Spinning Company 15 , 000 — Oriental Spinning and Weaving Company 21 , 000 210 Bombay Spinning and Weaving Company 21 , 000 — Bombay Water Twist Company 20 , 000 — Victoria Spinning Company 5 , 000 — Ahmedabad Spinning Company 2 , 500 — Total at present working 90500 210

, Mills building , and extensions— Spindles . Looms . 'Great Eastern Spinning and Weaving Companv 30 , 000 600 Bombay Royal 30 , 000 600 Coorla 26 , 000 410 . Manocjee Pitty ' s 50 , 000 1000 Bombay United 20210 330

, Oriental 13 , 536 225 Total 170 , 176 3165 Two other companies formed , but have ? „„ „„„ 0 n „ not yet commenced building j ' "

Total mills , & c , at work , including ex- " ) < , „„ „„„ „ extensions , ccc j -JU , o / o ,. D ¦ and vice joined together in the same soul , and developed in a thousand different ways , according to an infinite variety of circumstances . But his female characters—that glorious gallery of everliving portraits—how beautifnl and womanly they are ; save his intention be to show how fallen , how depraved , even tbe gentle

heart of woman may become—as in the unkind daughters of poor King Lear , and the proud and cruel Lady Macbeth . Virtue with him is ever victorious ; it is undaunted under suffering , and triumphant even in death . What a fine philosophy pervades each of his dramas ; and weak indeed must be the penetration of the man who can discover no high moral purpose running , like veins of silver in the earth , through all the writings of Shakspere . We need not envy the soul that has never felt its self-reliance strengthened by

a perusal of these immortal dramas . They are not only moral , but ¦ reli gious , in the highest meaning of that word . " These are certainly very opposite views of the same subject , and we leave our readers to "look upon this picture and upon that . " Jffow that ifc is decided that Mr . Maciise ' s picture of " The Meeting of Wellington and Blucher after the Battle of Waterloo " is to he executed in stereochromy , or water-glass painting , for the new Houses of Parliament , there is a general wish to know in what the invention consists . Everybody knows what an oil-painting is ,

¦ though everybody may not be aware that the art is not five-hundred years old ; as it dates only from the days of Hubert and John Van Eyck , the "Flemish painters . The most ancient of all paintings are those called fresco , which are executed ivith water-colours whilst the plastering on which they are painted is still damp ; and if the artist wishes to correct his work , as often happens , it is

necessary to cut out the plastering- where the picture is defective , and to re-prepare the surface . For the invention of water-glass painting ive are indebted to the Germans , who adopted it ten years ago , when Herr Kaulback and his pupils ivere painting the staircase of the new museum at Berlin , when it at once rivetted public attention by its superiority over the old fresco-painting . Mr .

Maclise , in the true spirit of an artist , visited Berlin , as ive stated some time ago , to learn the new process ; for " a flint , " says he "in fluid form , was a mystery to me , even though I was told on good authority it was a fact ; and the fluidity of a flinty mass , as having ¦ been effected by combination with an alkali , such as potass , soda , or lime , appeared to me a state of such matter rendering it wholly

unfit to effect the desiderati of fixity and indelibility for a painting on a wall . The state of watery glass , even while I was looking at it , still no less than the state of stony water , seemed impossible . " To be brief , the painting is executed on the wall in water-colours as in fresco , but can be rubbed out ancl repainted before it is coated over with the new composition . Not only has Mr . Maclise

Notes On Literature Science And Art.

mastered the new German method , but improved upon it , for whereas Kaulbach required a rough surface , Maclise can execute his work as well on a smooth one . The new discovery promises fair to become of immense importance in , the decoration of public buildings .

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

The Editor is not responsible for the opinions expressed hij Correspondents . TO THE EDITOR OE TIIE FKEE 1 TASOXS 3 IAGAZIXE AXD 3 IASOXIC MIIiEOIt . SIR AND BEOTHEE . —If yonr correspondent ' ¦ f jjj j : will be good enough to favour me with a commiinicaton , I shall be most happy to afford him , in replyevery

informa-, tion in my power with reference to the Mark Degree , not doubting ray ability to remove the erroneous impressions convoyed in the editorial note attached to his letter in your publication of the 16 th inst . I am , Sir and Brother , Tours Fraternally , FBEDEEICK BINCKES , G . Sec . Grand Lodge of Mark Masters of England and Wales .

Office , 40 , Leicester-square , W . C . , Nov . 17 , 1861 . [ If our observations were erroneous , Bro . Binckes can answer them through THE FREEMASONS MAGAZINE . ]

Provincial Grand Lodge Of East Lancashire.

PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF EAST LANCASHIRE .

TO THE EDITOR OP THE FREESIASOXS' LTAGAZIXE AXD MASOXIC 3 IIRROR . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , — -Can any of your correspondents in East Lancashire enlig hten me on the following points ? viz .: —1 st . According to what principle are the appointments to Prov . Grand Lodge made ? 2 nd . How many lodges are at present represented in Prov . Grand Lodge ? 3 rd . Of the 47 lodges in the province , how many have never been represented in Prov . Grand Lodge ? I remain , dear Sir and Brother , , ; JONATHAN , " P . M . of one of the 47 .

Provincial Grand Lodge Of Northumberland.

PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF NORTHUMBERLAND .

TO THE EDITOR OF TIIE PEEEAIASOXS MAGAZINE AXD MASOXIC MIRROR . DEAR SIE AND BROTHER . —From the tenor of your report in last week ' s Magazine of the proceedings at the meeting of the Provincial Grand Lodge of . Northumberland , at North Shields , brethren at a distance may be led to believe that the motion of Bro . Barker , Provincial Grand Treasurer , "to invest annually or bienally , a sum of money towards

the forming every lodge in the province into perpetual life governors of the Masonic charities , " was defeated by uncharitable opposition—such was not the case , and I beg yon will be kind enough to insert the following particulars : — "At a Provincial Grand Lodge of Emergency , held at Newcastle on the Sth of March lastBro . Barker brought

, forward his motion , and entered into a lengthened explanation of the details of his scheme for carrying out such object , but , the arrangements being so very complicated , it was resolved that the Provincial Grand Secretary and Treasurer should draw up a circular , embodying the whole scheme , and send a copy to every officer—present and past—of the Provincial Grand Lodge—the W . Masters ,

Past Masters , and present Wai-dens of every lodge in' the province—so that the motion should be perfectly understood , discussed , and decided at the next meeting ofthe Provincial Grand Lodge—such circular was never issued , and it would have been irregular to have allowed the motion to be brought forward and decided at the meeting of the Sth inst . " Had the motion been brought forward in proper formthe

, brethren of Northumberland wonld gladly have supported Bro . Barker in his desire to aid the funds of the Masonic charities . I am , dear Sir and Brother , yours fraternally , North Shields , Nov . 20 th , 1861 . P . M . No . 624 .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-11-23, Page 11” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 7 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_23111861/page/11/.
  • 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.

Notes On Literature Science And Art.

At a time when everything connected with the growth and manufacture of cotton is of immense importance , the following statistics will be of value . They are taken from a report addressed to Edmund Ashworth , Esq ., Vice-president of the Cotton Supply Association , by Mr . G . R . f Haywood , dated Bombay , Sept . 26 th , 1861 . The number of spindles and looms working , at this date , in Bombay -. —¦

Spindles . Looms . Broach Spinning Company 15 , 000 — Oriental Spinning and Weaving Company 21 , 000 210 Bombay Spinning and Weaving Company 21 , 000 — Bombay Water Twist Company 20 , 000 — Victoria Spinning Company 5 , 000 — Ahmedabad Spinning Company 2 , 500 — Total at present working 90500 210

, Mills building , and extensions— Spindles . Looms . 'Great Eastern Spinning and Weaving Companv 30 , 000 600 Bombay Royal 30 , 000 600 Coorla 26 , 000 410 . Manocjee Pitty ' s 50 , 000 1000 Bombay United 20210 330

, Oriental 13 , 536 225 Total 170 , 176 3165 Two other companies formed , but have ? „„ „„„ 0 n „ not yet commenced building j ' "

Total mills , & c , at work , including ex- " ) < , „„ „„„ „ extensions , ccc j -JU , o / o ,. D ¦ and vice joined together in the same soul , and developed in a thousand different ways , according to an infinite variety of circumstances . But his female characters—that glorious gallery of everliving portraits—how beautifnl and womanly they are ; save his intention be to show how fallen , how depraved , even tbe gentle

heart of woman may become—as in the unkind daughters of poor King Lear , and the proud and cruel Lady Macbeth . Virtue with him is ever victorious ; it is undaunted under suffering , and triumphant even in death . What a fine philosophy pervades each of his dramas ; and weak indeed must be the penetration of the man who can discover no high moral purpose running , like veins of silver in the earth , through all the writings of Shakspere . We need not envy the soul that has never felt its self-reliance strengthened by

a perusal of these immortal dramas . They are not only moral , but ¦ reli gious , in the highest meaning of that word . " These are certainly very opposite views of the same subject , and we leave our readers to "look upon this picture and upon that . " Jffow that ifc is decided that Mr . Maciise ' s picture of " The Meeting of Wellington and Blucher after the Battle of Waterloo " is to he executed in stereochromy , or water-glass painting , for the new Houses of Parliament , there is a general wish to know in what the invention consists . Everybody knows what an oil-painting is ,

¦ though everybody may not be aware that the art is not five-hundred years old ; as it dates only from the days of Hubert and John Van Eyck , the "Flemish painters . The most ancient of all paintings are those called fresco , which are executed ivith water-colours whilst the plastering on which they are painted is still damp ; and if the artist wishes to correct his work , as often happens , it is

necessary to cut out the plastering- where the picture is defective , and to re-prepare the surface . For the invention of water-glass painting ive are indebted to the Germans , who adopted it ten years ago , when Herr Kaulback and his pupils ivere painting the staircase of the new museum at Berlin , when it at once rivetted public attention by its superiority over the old fresco-painting . Mr .

Maclise , in the true spirit of an artist , visited Berlin , as ive stated some time ago , to learn the new process ; for " a flint , " says he "in fluid form , was a mystery to me , even though I was told on good authority it was a fact ; and the fluidity of a flinty mass , as having ¦ been effected by combination with an alkali , such as potass , soda , or lime , appeared to me a state of such matter rendering it wholly

unfit to effect the desiderati of fixity and indelibility for a painting on a wall . The state of watery glass , even while I was looking at it , still no less than the state of stony water , seemed impossible . " To be brief , the painting is executed on the wall in water-colours as in fresco , but can be rubbed out ancl repainted before it is coated over with the new composition . Not only has Mr . Maclise

Notes On Literature Science And Art.

mastered the new German method , but improved upon it , for whereas Kaulbach required a rough surface , Maclise can execute his work as well on a smooth one . The new discovery promises fair to become of immense importance in , the decoration of public buildings .

Correspondence.

CORRESPONDENCE .

The Editor is not responsible for the opinions expressed hij Correspondents . TO THE EDITOR OE TIIE FKEE 1 TASOXS 3 IAGAZIXE AXD 3 IASOXIC MIIiEOIt . SIR AND BEOTHEE . —If yonr correspondent ' ¦ f jjj j : will be good enough to favour me with a commiinicaton , I shall be most happy to afford him , in replyevery

informa-, tion in my power with reference to the Mark Degree , not doubting ray ability to remove the erroneous impressions convoyed in the editorial note attached to his letter in your publication of the 16 th inst . I am , Sir and Brother , Tours Fraternally , FBEDEEICK BINCKES , G . Sec . Grand Lodge of Mark Masters of England and Wales .

Office , 40 , Leicester-square , W . C . , Nov . 17 , 1861 . [ If our observations were erroneous , Bro . Binckes can answer them through THE FREEMASONS MAGAZINE . ]

Provincial Grand Lodge Of East Lancashire.

PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF EAST LANCASHIRE .

TO THE EDITOR OP THE FREESIASOXS' LTAGAZIXE AXD MASOXIC 3 IIRROR . DEAR SIR AND BROTHER , — -Can any of your correspondents in East Lancashire enlig hten me on the following points ? viz .: —1 st . According to what principle are the appointments to Prov . Grand Lodge made ? 2 nd . How many lodges are at present represented in Prov . Grand Lodge ? 3 rd . Of the 47 lodges in the province , how many have never been represented in Prov . Grand Lodge ? I remain , dear Sir and Brother , , ; JONATHAN , " P . M . of one of the 47 .

Provincial Grand Lodge Of Northumberland.

PROVINCIAL GRAND LODGE OF NORTHUMBERLAND .

TO THE EDITOR OF TIIE PEEEAIASOXS MAGAZINE AXD MASOXIC MIRROR . DEAR SIE AND BROTHER . —From the tenor of your report in last week ' s Magazine of the proceedings at the meeting of the Provincial Grand Lodge of . Northumberland , at North Shields , brethren at a distance may be led to believe that the motion of Bro . Barker , Provincial Grand Treasurer , "to invest annually or bienally , a sum of money towards

the forming every lodge in the province into perpetual life governors of the Masonic charities , " was defeated by uncharitable opposition—such was not the case , and I beg yon will be kind enough to insert the following particulars : — "At a Provincial Grand Lodge of Emergency , held at Newcastle on the Sth of March lastBro . Barker brought

, forward his motion , and entered into a lengthened explanation of the details of his scheme for carrying out such object , but , the arrangements being so very complicated , it was resolved that the Provincial Grand Secretary and Treasurer should draw up a circular , embodying the whole scheme , and send a copy to every officer—present and past—of the Provincial Grand Lodge—the W . Masters ,

Past Masters , and present Wai-dens of every lodge in' the province—so that the motion should be perfectly understood , discussed , and decided at the next meeting ofthe Provincial Grand Lodge—such circular was never issued , and it would have been irregular to have allowed the motion to be brought forward and decided at the meeting of the Sth inst . " Had the motion been brought forward in proper formthe

, brethren of Northumberland wonld gladly have supported Bro . Barker in his desire to aid the funds of the Masonic charities . I am , dear Sir and Brother , yours fraternally , North Shields , Nov . 20 th , 1861 . P . M . No . 624 .

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