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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Oct. 25, 1862
  • Page 18
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Oct. 25, 1862: Page 18

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Poetry.

Poetry .

LOW TAVELA E . Br BRO . CIIABLES SCOTT . I see a Delta in the sky , AA'hich has a ray for every sigh ; And seven hues for every tear Falling for the departed dear . Good Enoch saw a Delta bright

E'en shining in the midst of night ; One , too , he saw beneath the ground , AA here all our bodies shall be found . True and beautiful—that we must Be wrapped in shroudy , silent dust ; And when tho great trump shall sound , To raise , exalt us from the ground .

Lord , may my dusty home be nigh , Where good ones sleep and gently lie ; AVhen all shall hear the call to rise , I would mount 'bove the burning skies . Let sun , and moon , and stars expire , And the darkness be set on fire ! The ashes shall tell Thy glory , Father , Son , and Spirit holy .

Obituary.

Obituary .

BRO . JOHN SHIRLEY . On the 4 th October died , aged 59 , Bro . John Shirley , P . Aland Treasurer of the Constitutional Lodge ( No . 63 ) , London-He was initiated in the lodge on the 17 th November , 1842 , and served the office of AA ' . AI . twice , continuing an active member and treasurer up to the time of his death . He was buried at the Tower Hamlets Cemetery , on Friday , the 10 th of October ,

the pall being home by Past Alasters of the lodge , and he was followed by many of the brethren , as also the present and past officers of the parish where he resided , ancl by whom , as well as the brethren , he was much beloved and respected .

The Week.

THE WEEK .

THE COURT . —Her Alajesty arrived at Brussels early on Saturday morning , on a visit to the K ' mg ' fif the Belgians at his palace of Laecken . There was a Court dinner on Saturday , and a breakfast on Sunday morning . Her Alajesty and the Royal Princes and Princesses by whom she is accompanied were to leave on Monday for Antwerp , there to embark for

England . The state of the weather , however , retarded her Majesty ' s return , and she still remains a guest at her royal uncle's palace . at Laecken . The Prince of AVales has arrived at Lyons with the Prince Royal of Prussia . His Royal Highness travels under the name of Baron Renfrew , and the Prince Royal as Count de Lingen . The royal party attended the

Grand Theatre the evening of their arrival , and were expected to leave Lyons the next day for Italy . GENERAL HOME NEWS . —The deaths in the metropolis last week rather exceeded the average mortality of the last ten years . The average , corrected to allow for the gradual increase of population , gives 1159 , while the deaths of the last week is

1181 , or 22 deaths above the average . The births are also above the average , the number for last week being 1863 , while the average births is only 1811 . In the causes of deaths typhus fever assumes an unpleasant prominence . The equinoctial gales have set in with more than their usual violence , and their

effects are to be traced in a long and in some cases fatal list of shipwrecks . The Downs formed no shelter from the fury of the elements , several vessels went down at their anchors , others broke from their moorings , came into collision with others , and finally sunk . On the east and north coast the tempest also raged , and several shipwrecks , accompanied with loss of life , are reported . On land also the effects of the storm have been felt .

The gale commenced on Sunday night , and seems to have been felt over the whole country . It raged with great fury along the coast ; and in some of the inland towns considerable damage was done to property . A large ship was driven ashore near Southport on AVednesday morning , having during the nig ht lost four ot her crew . From tiie Tyne ports we have

also sad intelligence—loss of life and serious injury to shipping and other property . On Monday ancl Tuesday , upwards of 100 wrecks and casualties at sea were posted at Lloyds , and this list , large as it is , is being still further swelled by reports of other disasters . A large East Indiaman , belonging to Liverpool , was lost in Bute's Bay , Cornwall , on Tuesday , and we

regret to state that of the 33 persons on board 28 perished . The Clarence steamer , the property of the General Steam Navigation Company , on her passage from Hamburgh to London , had a narrow escape of foundering in the Channel , and was only kept afioat by the strenuous exertions of the passengers and crew . The gale appears to have been equally destructive on the French coast . To show the value of the

observationsmade by the officers of the Meteorological Department , we may state that on Saturday Admiral Fitzroy despatched telegrams , to the out-ports ordering signals of an approaching storm to be hoisted . The London demonstration in favour of Garibaldi has taken place at the London Tavern , under the presidency of Air . AA'ood , one of the members for the City . No attempt was made to disturb the meeting , and resolutions were passed , expressing sympathy with the great Italian , and protesting against

the French occupation of Rome . Air . Lindsay , the member for Sunderland , is fond of communicating " exclusive information" to the world . Addressing an agricultural meeting at Chertsey the other night , he repeated the statement he made

some time ago that the Emperor of the French is " ready tocome to some tacit understanding with regard to the armaments of both countries , especially with regard to their naval armaments . " He next had to communicate something about a most interesting lady , —the Princess Alexandra of Denmark . He recently spent an evening with a family at Copenhagen , who were " intimately acquainted" with her Royal Highness , ancl , he remarked , it " was scarcely possible to conceive the high

terms in which that family , one and all , spoke of that young Princess . " In tho third and last place , he has " good reason to believe that some , at least , of the great powers of Europe have felt for some time that the Southern Confederacy ought to be received into the family of nations" —in point of fact , that the harrier which stops the way against such a recognition of the South " is not any of thegreat Powers of Europe , is not the unanimous Cabinet

of England , but is a section of that Cabinet . " Sir John Pakington and Lord Hardwicko have come to theconclusion that the Southern Confederacy ought to be acknowledged by our own Government and the other Powers of Europe . A third member of Lord Derby's Administration has now spoken ou the question , and he shares fully the views of his former colleagues . Sir William Jollhle , addressing an assemblage of farmerssubmitted that " we should be treating

, the Southern States of America in a very different way to what we had treated every other people , if we did not now , after they had for two years maintained their independence at an enormous cost , raised vast revenues , aud established enormous armies , recognise them . " The other day , Air . Gladstone wasappealed to by Air . Afoseley to explain the precise meaning of his statement , at Newcastle , that President Davis and his colleagues had made the South nationHe has since been

a . called upon by a Air . " hloore , of Northampton , to state his views on the subject of slavery . The right hon . gentleman in reply , through his secretary , says— "He hopes that the policy of this country will never be directed to the support or encouragement of slavery ; but , in viewing the conflict which now rages in America , we must all , Air . Gladstone thinks , wish it were in

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1862-10-25, Page 18” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 14 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_25101862/page/18/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
MY STARS AND GARTERS. Article 1
OUR MASONIC CONTEMPORARIES. Article 1
BRITISH ACHITECTS.—NEW MATERIALS FOR THEIR LIVES. Article 3
THE QUEEN'S CROSS, NORTHAMPTON* Article 5
PARIS OF TO-DAY. Article 8
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 9
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 10
THE QUESTION OF CERTIFICATES. Article 10
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 12
METROPOLITAN. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 13
AUSTRALIA. Article 14
ROYAL ARCH. Article 16
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 16
MARK MASONRY. Article 17
Poetry. Article 18
Obituary. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Poetry.

Poetry .

LOW TAVELA E . Br BRO . CIIABLES SCOTT . I see a Delta in the sky , AA'hich has a ray for every sigh ; And seven hues for every tear Falling for the departed dear . Good Enoch saw a Delta bright

E'en shining in the midst of night ; One , too , he saw beneath the ground , AA here all our bodies shall be found . True and beautiful—that we must Be wrapped in shroudy , silent dust ; And when tho great trump shall sound , To raise , exalt us from the ground .

Lord , may my dusty home be nigh , Where good ones sleep and gently lie ; AVhen all shall hear the call to rise , I would mount 'bove the burning skies . Let sun , and moon , and stars expire , And the darkness be set on fire ! The ashes shall tell Thy glory , Father , Son , and Spirit holy .

Obituary.

Obituary .

BRO . JOHN SHIRLEY . On the 4 th October died , aged 59 , Bro . John Shirley , P . Aland Treasurer of the Constitutional Lodge ( No . 63 ) , London-He was initiated in the lodge on the 17 th November , 1842 , and served the office of AA ' . AI . twice , continuing an active member and treasurer up to the time of his death . He was buried at the Tower Hamlets Cemetery , on Friday , the 10 th of October ,

the pall being home by Past Alasters of the lodge , and he was followed by many of the brethren , as also the present and past officers of the parish where he resided , ancl by whom , as well as the brethren , he was much beloved and respected .

The Week.

THE WEEK .

THE COURT . —Her Alajesty arrived at Brussels early on Saturday morning , on a visit to the K ' mg ' fif the Belgians at his palace of Laecken . There was a Court dinner on Saturday , and a breakfast on Sunday morning . Her Alajesty and the Royal Princes and Princesses by whom she is accompanied were to leave on Monday for Antwerp , there to embark for

England . The state of the weather , however , retarded her Majesty ' s return , and she still remains a guest at her royal uncle's palace . at Laecken . The Prince of AVales has arrived at Lyons with the Prince Royal of Prussia . His Royal Highness travels under the name of Baron Renfrew , and the Prince Royal as Count de Lingen . The royal party attended the

Grand Theatre the evening of their arrival , and were expected to leave Lyons the next day for Italy . GENERAL HOME NEWS . —The deaths in the metropolis last week rather exceeded the average mortality of the last ten years . The average , corrected to allow for the gradual increase of population , gives 1159 , while the deaths of the last week is

1181 , or 22 deaths above the average . The births are also above the average , the number for last week being 1863 , while the average births is only 1811 . In the causes of deaths typhus fever assumes an unpleasant prominence . The equinoctial gales have set in with more than their usual violence , and their

effects are to be traced in a long and in some cases fatal list of shipwrecks . The Downs formed no shelter from the fury of the elements , several vessels went down at their anchors , others broke from their moorings , came into collision with others , and finally sunk . On the east and north coast the tempest also raged , and several shipwrecks , accompanied with loss of life , are reported . On land also the effects of the storm have been felt .

The gale commenced on Sunday night , and seems to have been felt over the whole country . It raged with great fury along the coast ; and in some of the inland towns considerable damage was done to property . A large ship was driven ashore near Southport on AVednesday morning , having during the nig ht lost four ot her crew . From tiie Tyne ports we have

also sad intelligence—loss of life and serious injury to shipping and other property . On Monday ancl Tuesday , upwards of 100 wrecks and casualties at sea were posted at Lloyds , and this list , large as it is , is being still further swelled by reports of other disasters . A large East Indiaman , belonging to Liverpool , was lost in Bute's Bay , Cornwall , on Tuesday , and we

regret to state that of the 33 persons on board 28 perished . The Clarence steamer , the property of the General Steam Navigation Company , on her passage from Hamburgh to London , had a narrow escape of foundering in the Channel , and was only kept afioat by the strenuous exertions of the passengers and crew . The gale appears to have been equally destructive on the French coast . To show the value of the

observationsmade by the officers of the Meteorological Department , we may state that on Saturday Admiral Fitzroy despatched telegrams , to the out-ports ordering signals of an approaching storm to be hoisted . The London demonstration in favour of Garibaldi has taken place at the London Tavern , under the presidency of Air . AA'ood , one of the members for the City . No attempt was made to disturb the meeting , and resolutions were passed , expressing sympathy with the great Italian , and protesting against

the French occupation of Rome . Air . Lindsay , the member for Sunderland , is fond of communicating " exclusive information" to the world . Addressing an agricultural meeting at Chertsey the other night , he repeated the statement he made

some time ago that the Emperor of the French is " ready tocome to some tacit understanding with regard to the armaments of both countries , especially with regard to their naval armaments . " He next had to communicate something about a most interesting lady , —the Princess Alexandra of Denmark . He recently spent an evening with a family at Copenhagen , who were " intimately acquainted" with her Royal Highness , ancl , he remarked , it " was scarcely possible to conceive the high

terms in which that family , one and all , spoke of that young Princess . " In tho third and last place , he has " good reason to believe that some , at least , of the great powers of Europe have felt for some time that the Southern Confederacy ought to be received into the family of nations" —in point of fact , that the harrier which stops the way against such a recognition of the South " is not any of thegreat Powers of Europe , is not the unanimous Cabinet

of England , but is a section of that Cabinet . " Sir John Pakington and Lord Hardwicko have come to theconclusion that the Southern Confederacy ought to be acknowledged by our own Government and the other Powers of Europe . A third member of Lord Derby's Administration has now spoken ou the question , and he shares fully the views of his former colleagues . Sir William Jollhle , addressing an assemblage of farmerssubmitted that " we should be treating

, the Southern States of America in a very different way to what we had treated every other people , if we did not now , after they had for two years maintained their independence at an enormous cost , raised vast revenues , aud established enormous armies , recognise them . " The other day , Air . Gladstone wasappealed to by Air . Afoseley to explain the precise meaning of his statement , at Newcastle , that President Davis and his colleagues had made the South nationHe has since been

a . called upon by a Air . " hloore , of Northampton , to state his views on the subject of slavery . The right hon . gentleman in reply , through his secretary , says— "He hopes that the policy of this country will never be directed to the support or encouragement of slavery ; but , in viewing the conflict which now rages in America , we must all , Air . Gladstone thinks , wish it were in

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