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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Jan. 26, 1861
  • Page 4
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Jan. 26, 1861: Page 4

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    Article ANCIENT AND MODERN MASONRY. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆOLOGY. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 4

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

Ancient And Modern Masonry.

" And thus down the rushing current of time , sometimes submerged and out of sight in tho whirlpools that engulfed empires , and made nations their playthings , sometimes stamping its existence in the minsters and abbeys , cathedrals and palaces , which piety or luxury loved to erect , we traced the footprints of the successors of those who erected the pillars , ono on tho right and one on the left of tho beautiful porch that yielded access to tho Temple of God .

"Kilwinning and Melrose , York and Westminster , Strasbourg and Notre Dame , are memorials of our fathers in this great societ }' , and arc each canonised ancl made holy by all the gentle offices of kindness that distinguish and adorn the fraternity . " These strong old days are gone . No longer now does the Free ancl Accepted Mason in i * ery deed work out his

apprenticeship , and hew out testimonials from the solid rock . No longer now does the Pellow Craft adjust with square , plumb , and level , tho rough work of the apprentice . No longer does the Master or overseer of the work supervise the actual labour of his inferiors .

"But modern Masonry , abandoning all these grosser elements of toil , teaches all the great principles of religion aud morality , of common brotherhood and universal charity , through the medium of these symbols and tokens of an elder time .

" Deep m the mystic vaults of hor representative temple , she rehearses the lessons of bygone ages . Prom the very ground-floor which her acolyte presses his first step—on through the glorious porch , tho Winding Stairs , the Middle Chamber , the unfinished Holy of Holies—every footprint of the initiate is on hallowed ground . " Tbe absolute and final belief in God , ivhich admits him ,

is deepened and intensified as he goes on , and the life that is within tho man is cultivated , educated , and fitly taught in lessons of never-dying import , until the immortality that has been enforced upon his soul by indelible impressions , becomes his aotual and unquestionable belief . " Along ivith this faith in God and hope in himself and mankind , Masonry teaches to her followers the largest

charity for all—charity in that true and original sense , ivhich means unselfish lovo—that affection of the soul which survives tho wreck of matter and the crush of worlds , and is nearest akin to Deity . "The system of words , signs , tokens , grips , and symbols , which were tho protection and evidences of the operatives who travelled iu foreign land .-:, remains—but etherealised and . spiritualised into a higher meaning , a more effective union .

" Masonry is meant to bo as universal as the world , its love all embracing , extending wherever the cry of suffering and of innocence goes up to Heaven . " No miserable per centago of profit contains it ; no petty calculation of life and health insurance bounds it . It combines the largest liberty of individual benevolence with the advantages of association—rendering strength to each and dwarfiiio- neither .

'Fully combining in its own existence this groat original system of teaching hy symbols , and this other great element of enli g htened and systematic charity , Masonry survives to-day , in all the magnificence of its superb proportions , glorious in its original beauty , enriched by the labours of twenty centuries , filled with the spoil of all nations and tongues , founded on the solid rock , course upon course of

Solomonian Masonry , bearing aloft the glorious fabric , with doors inexorabl y closed against the base , the cowardly , and ever opening for the true and faithful ; there stands the cdifico of modern Masonry . " What son of hers that has ever penetrated the sacred portal , and ranged along the mi ghty walks , but bids her God speed ?

"Advance , then , fearlessly on thy mission of mercy—call m from all haunts of crime and of suffering tho brokenhearted and the weeping children of the Great Father . Inaugurate again in this world of ours tho reign of Love , and in the path way which Religion opens before thee—press on , noble Order of onr affections , and as the heaping harvest of good deeds crowns the progress , each humble , grateful heart of thy children shall say—AlEBX , so MOTE IT HE . "

Architecture And Archæology.

ARCHITECTURE AND ARCH ? OLOGY .

OX THE EXPEDIENCY OE FOUNDING A KEW ANNUAL EXHIBITION OE OENEE-AL SCULPTURE . While painting has four or five independent exhibitions , and architecture , which once was fain to be content with a much begrudged corner of a room , by name her own , now bas a large ancl convenient gallery to herself ,

Sculpturepoor Cinderella that she is !—is thrust by her more showy and to many more attractive sister into the cellars of the palace where painting , more favoured , holds her annual levees , and receives the first fresh devotions of her admirers , who , if they turn at all into the dreary and repelling apartments of the neglected sister , have , at best , but their second thoughts to give , and can , at best , but turn over-strained and weary

eyes to an art which , depending on the nicest proportions , most correct knowledge and greatest possible exercise of taste , demands , almost more than any of the arts , the untaxed attention of the clearest minds to appreciate tho less palpable ancl less evident beauties set before them . Ifc always seems to me that the sculptor is necessarily the most self-denying of all artists ; he seems to me to do more

unappreciated work ; the merest general effect is frequently all that is noticed by most observers , although every part has to bo designed , modelled , and finished in the strictest accordance with the divinely designed and created original , or the educated enthusiastic and beauty and nature-loving mind of the artist , and the sharply critical mind of the competent and discerning few will not be satisfied .

It is a curious thing at first sight , but I think none the less true , that although many talk a good deal about the ivorks of a few great sculptors , few persons seem really to care about them ; scarcely any love to look at them again and again as they do a favourite picture ; yon rarely see a crowd round a work of Gibson , Oalder , Marshal , or Bell , as you do up-stairs round Maclise , Millais , Frith , or Landseer ;

and I do not think this accounted for hy the extra charm of the painter ' s resources , but , at least , in part , by two things . 1 . The inconvenience aud unnecessary competition with

painting arising from the circumstances of the only sculpture exhibition at present , ivhich it will be at once seen it is my object to remedy by founding an additional exhibition . 2 . A mode of practice , whether regulated by patronage or not , I know not , nor does it matter for my object—namely , the constant practice of sculptors , of embodying the most subtle thoughts and deep poetic feeling under the refined ,

and to the ordinary public scarcely discernible , differences of form and expression of a single figure , and that with mere beauty of feeling ancl form without sufficient definite aim and teaching . This , although without explanation it may not bo so readily seen , it is my object to remedy by making the proposed additional exhibition also a different exhibition .

To my mind at the present time sculpture is , in vitality and progress , behind both painting and architecture , not in excellence in a peculiar walk , but because of the narroAvness of that Avalk . Painting has thi-OAvn off much of her conventionality , architecture much of its measured proportions , regulation capitals , and its cry of precedent . But sculpture still clings to its heathen mythologyits sameness of subject

, , its single figure , and want of aim . The enthusiastic rush of painters to nature herself , and also to her humbler forms , does not seem to have roused it . The change in architecture , groat as it has been , does not seem to have affected it . Mere poetical , or classical subjects , aro still all that occupy tho great sculptors , while reli gious art is left to men that , with every respect and honour to

them , can but be called superior architectural carvers ; while I may be permitted to ask ivhich branch of sculpture might be made tho hi ghest art . Is the one less noble than the other because it is to stand above the doorway of a church ? Now , let iigp not be misunderstood ; I do not expect , or wish that sculpture should confine herself to reli gious subjects ; nay , I would AA'ish to see her , at the same ' time that she aspires to excellence in that , the highest branch of art , and at the same time that some of her most gifted sons devote themselves to it , to see her moro human than she is at

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-01-26, Page 4” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 5 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_26011861/page/4/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
"THE FREEMASONS MAGAZINE" AND "THE VOICE OF MASONRY." Article 1
STRAY THOUGHTS ON THE ORIGIN AND PROGRESS OF THE FINE ARTS. Article 2
ANCIENT AND MODERN MASONRY. Article 3
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 4
THE TEMPERATE HOUSE, ROYAL BOTANIC GARDENS, KEW. Article 5
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 8
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 9
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 10
METROPOLITAN. Article 10
PROVINCIAL. Article 13
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 17
ROYAL ARCH. Article 17
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 18
IRELAND. Article 18
Poetry. Article 18
THE LUPRACAUN, OR FAIRY SHOEMAKER. Article 18
Obituary. 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.

Ancient And Modern Masonry.

" And thus down the rushing current of time , sometimes submerged and out of sight in tho whirlpools that engulfed empires , and made nations their playthings , sometimes stamping its existence in the minsters and abbeys , cathedrals and palaces , which piety or luxury loved to erect , we traced the footprints of the successors of those who erected the pillars , ono on tho right and one on the left of tho beautiful porch that yielded access to tho Temple of God .

"Kilwinning and Melrose , York and Westminster , Strasbourg and Notre Dame , are memorials of our fathers in this great societ }' , and arc each canonised ancl made holy by all the gentle offices of kindness that distinguish and adorn the fraternity . " These strong old days are gone . No longer now does the Free ancl Accepted Mason in i * ery deed work out his

apprenticeship , and hew out testimonials from the solid rock . No longer now does the Pellow Craft adjust with square , plumb , and level , tho rough work of the apprentice . No longer does the Master or overseer of the work supervise the actual labour of his inferiors .

"But modern Masonry , abandoning all these grosser elements of toil , teaches all the great principles of religion aud morality , of common brotherhood and universal charity , through the medium of these symbols and tokens of an elder time .

" Deep m the mystic vaults of hor representative temple , she rehearses the lessons of bygone ages . Prom the very ground-floor which her acolyte presses his first step—on through the glorious porch , tho Winding Stairs , the Middle Chamber , the unfinished Holy of Holies—every footprint of the initiate is on hallowed ground . " Tbe absolute and final belief in God , ivhich admits him ,

is deepened and intensified as he goes on , and the life that is within tho man is cultivated , educated , and fitly taught in lessons of never-dying import , until the immortality that has been enforced upon his soul by indelible impressions , becomes his aotual and unquestionable belief . " Along ivith this faith in God and hope in himself and mankind , Masonry teaches to her followers the largest

charity for all—charity in that true and original sense , ivhich means unselfish lovo—that affection of the soul which survives tho wreck of matter and the crush of worlds , and is nearest akin to Deity . "The system of words , signs , tokens , grips , and symbols , which were tho protection and evidences of the operatives who travelled iu foreign land .-:, remains—but etherealised and . spiritualised into a higher meaning , a more effective union .

" Masonry is meant to bo as universal as the world , its love all embracing , extending wherever the cry of suffering and of innocence goes up to Heaven . " No miserable per centago of profit contains it ; no petty calculation of life and health insurance bounds it . It combines the largest liberty of individual benevolence with the advantages of association—rendering strength to each and dwarfiiio- neither .

'Fully combining in its own existence this groat original system of teaching hy symbols , and this other great element of enli g htened and systematic charity , Masonry survives to-day , in all the magnificence of its superb proportions , glorious in its original beauty , enriched by the labours of twenty centuries , filled with the spoil of all nations and tongues , founded on the solid rock , course upon course of

Solomonian Masonry , bearing aloft the glorious fabric , with doors inexorabl y closed against the base , the cowardly , and ever opening for the true and faithful ; there stands the cdifico of modern Masonry . " What son of hers that has ever penetrated the sacred portal , and ranged along the mi ghty walks , but bids her God speed ?

"Advance , then , fearlessly on thy mission of mercy—call m from all haunts of crime and of suffering tho brokenhearted and the weeping children of the Great Father . Inaugurate again in this world of ours tho reign of Love , and in the path way which Religion opens before thee—press on , noble Order of onr affections , and as the heaping harvest of good deeds crowns the progress , each humble , grateful heart of thy children shall say—AlEBX , so MOTE IT HE . "

Architecture And Archæology.

ARCHITECTURE AND ARCH ? OLOGY .

OX THE EXPEDIENCY OE FOUNDING A KEW ANNUAL EXHIBITION OE OENEE-AL SCULPTURE . While painting has four or five independent exhibitions , and architecture , which once was fain to be content with a much begrudged corner of a room , by name her own , now bas a large ancl convenient gallery to herself ,

Sculpturepoor Cinderella that she is !—is thrust by her more showy and to many more attractive sister into the cellars of the palace where painting , more favoured , holds her annual levees , and receives the first fresh devotions of her admirers , who , if they turn at all into the dreary and repelling apartments of the neglected sister , have , at best , but their second thoughts to give , and can , at best , but turn over-strained and weary

eyes to an art which , depending on the nicest proportions , most correct knowledge and greatest possible exercise of taste , demands , almost more than any of the arts , the untaxed attention of the clearest minds to appreciate tho less palpable ancl less evident beauties set before them . Ifc always seems to me that the sculptor is necessarily the most self-denying of all artists ; he seems to me to do more

unappreciated work ; the merest general effect is frequently all that is noticed by most observers , although every part has to bo designed , modelled , and finished in the strictest accordance with the divinely designed and created original , or the educated enthusiastic and beauty and nature-loving mind of the artist , and the sharply critical mind of the competent and discerning few will not be satisfied .

It is a curious thing at first sight , but I think none the less true , that although many talk a good deal about the ivorks of a few great sculptors , few persons seem really to care about them ; scarcely any love to look at them again and again as they do a favourite picture ; yon rarely see a crowd round a work of Gibson , Oalder , Marshal , or Bell , as you do up-stairs round Maclise , Millais , Frith , or Landseer ;

and I do not think this accounted for hy the extra charm of the painter ' s resources , but , at least , in part , by two things . 1 . The inconvenience aud unnecessary competition with

painting arising from the circumstances of the only sculpture exhibition at present , ivhich it will be at once seen it is my object to remedy by founding an additional exhibition . 2 . A mode of practice , whether regulated by patronage or not , I know not , nor does it matter for my object—namely , the constant practice of sculptors , of embodying the most subtle thoughts and deep poetic feeling under the refined ,

and to the ordinary public scarcely discernible , differences of form and expression of a single figure , and that with mere beauty of feeling ancl form without sufficient definite aim and teaching . This , although without explanation it may not bo so readily seen , it is my object to remedy by making the proposed additional exhibition also a different exhibition .

To my mind at the present time sculpture is , in vitality and progress , behind both painting and architecture , not in excellence in a peculiar walk , but because of the narroAvness of that Avalk . Painting has thi-OAvn off much of her conventionality , architecture much of its measured proportions , regulation capitals , and its cry of precedent . But sculpture still clings to its heathen mythologyits sameness of subject

, , its single figure , and want of aim . The enthusiastic rush of painters to nature herself , and also to her humbler forms , does not seem to have roused it . The change in architecture , groat as it has been , does not seem to have affected it . Mere poetical , or classical subjects , aro still all that occupy tho great sculptors , while reli gious art is left to men that , with every respect and honour to

them , can but be called superior architectural carvers ; while I may be permitted to ask ivhich branch of sculpture might be made tho hi ghest art . Is the one less noble than the other because it is to stand above the doorway of a church ? Now , let iigp not be misunderstood ; I do not expect , or wish that sculpture should confine herself to reli gious subjects ; nay , I would AA'ish to see her , at the same ' time that she aspires to excellence in that , the highest branch of art , and at the same time that some of her most gifted sons devote themselves to it , to see her moro human than she is at

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