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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Aug. 26, 1865
  • Page 6
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Aug. 26, 1865: Page 6

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    Article THE ANTIQUITY AND TEACHINGS OF MASONRY.* ← Page 4 of 4
    Article CURIOSITIES OF ARCHITECTURE. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 6

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

The Antiquity And Teachings Of Masonry.*

The beauty of Masonry consists not merely in the fair proportions of her design or the antique grandeur of her drapery , but in the magnitude and glory of hev operations . Through the long ages , as now , she b . i 3 stood the friend of man and the benefactor of society . In all the earth she has distilled her genial deAV of blessingand her path is everywhere marked with

, verdure and fruitfuluess . Her works praise her in the gates , and the grateful tears of the poor and unfortunate sparkle like jeAvels in her diadem of glory . Her very genius is love , the spirit of which connects her members in an unbroken phalanx as a band of brothersbut overfloAVS those bounds and expands

, itself in a stream of charity embracing all mankind . The identification of Masonry aud charity forms the popular idea of our Order . By general consent it stands at the head of charitable institutions .

But alms-giviug is not the most important part of charity in the Masonic sense . This consists rather in the cultivation and exercise of kindly dispositions and active sympathies . It is a charity Avhieli leads men to judge of others with lenity , and to speak of them without reproach—the charity which makes the good

name of another as precious as our own . It is exercised in the endeavour to do away with suspicions , jealousies , rivalries , and evil speakings—it is to sustain the wounded spirit , to afford consolation to the afflicted , to extend succour to the oppressed , to redress wrong . Such is Masonic charity , identical with the charity of Christianity , and Avhich , like that " Never faileth . "

An institution adorned Avith beauty like this must hold its place iu human affection Avhile misfortune and sorrow are the common lot , while human hearts cry out for sympathy , Avhile man continues frail and imperfect . If this faint sketch of some of the more prominent

principles of Freemasonry is correct , the reasons are sufficient to account for her unchangeable aud vigorous continuance until the present time . That this Order commends itself to the intelligence of the nineteenth century is evinced by its larger constituency than ever beforeand bits firmer hold on the

, y fovour of Avise and good men . We submit , therefore , that it is not presumptious to expect that , iu the long line of centuries to come , it -will still repose in undisturbed endurance upon the imperishable pillars of its support . Bslo perpetua !

Curiosities Of Architecture.

CURIOSITIES OF ARCHITECTURE .

lit this season of the year , many of our readers who are free to choose will visit celebrities in the Avay of architecture , such as our cathedrals and castles ; and , deterred by their magnificence from all attemjDts to make drawings of them , will return to their ordinary duties unenriched by a single

sketch . To these Ave would say , there are scattered in every county minor objects of which Ave have but scanty account , aud of which collections of sketches Avould be at once valuable and curious . We might instance as curiosities of architecture , whispering galleries , secret chambers , garrets , fortified church towers , chantries , market-crosses , wayside chapels , crypts , lych-gates , holy-wells

or lady-Avells , toAvn gateways , hermitages , the various ancient British remains , and tombstones Avith their crosses , sheals , keys , horse-shoes , chalices , hands , lambs , boAvs and arroAvs , horns , fishes , and other mystical devices ; and , as curiosities of detail , leper-AvindoAVS , hagioscopes , fonts ,

half-timbered churches , wooden churches , shingle spires , & c . It is remarkable IIOAV little is known of such objects , and IIOAV feAV residents in one county knoAV of similar curiosities in any other . The term garret , for instance , conveys to most minds only the idea of a room immediately under

the roof of a house ; but dwellers on the border country can still point to small toAvers , called garrets , built upon castle walls , and to places called garrets because in old times they possessed similar toAvers for the defence of a garrison . We have only to run through the list we have named to see hoAv much information remains to be

accumulated . A student preferring to cover a great deal of ground in a tour could take one class of object and pursue it , exclusively , through the country . Whispering galleries are curious , as being links in the chain of endeavour to lessen distance by

artificial contrivances ; and which , after germinating in men's minds for at least tAvo thousand years , have sprung forth in the advanced form of the telegraph . The Romans did a little pioneering work in this direction by the transmission of sound through pipeslaid in the long length of Vallum

, , knoAvn as the old Roman Avail , AAdiich , by the Avay , is a most wondrous curiosity of architecture itself . Mediaeval whispering galleries appear to have partaken more of the nature of echoes . In Stuart , times , the whispering place in Gloucester Cathedral Avas considered one of the Avonders of the land . It

is thus mentioned by Edward Phillips , the nepheAV of Milton " : — " A remarkable curiosity in the cathedral of Gloucester , being a Avail built so in an arch of the church , that if a man Avhisper never so low at one end , another that lays his ear at the other end shall hear each distinct sjdlable . " The

Avhispering gallery of Sir Christopher Wren in St . Paul ' s Cathedral may be said to be the only Avell-known example of this type of curiosity . The semicupola recesses on old Westminster Bridge have

gone . Secret chambers abound in old mansions of a certain age ; but Avhen Ave learn where they are to be found , or Avhat varieties of form they present , Ave are met Avith the obstacle of insufficient

information . We have recently given some account ot secret chambers in the old houses in Edinburgh , and " The Book of Days" affords a description of some others ; but a general account , Avith measurements and sketches , is not in existence . Here is an unexplored field for the curious .

The fortified church towers in Cumberland have met with a little more attention ; but not so those of Northumberland . Lysons mentions the towers of NeAV ton- Arlosh , Burgh-on-the-Sands , and

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1865-08-26, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_26081865/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
FREEMASONRY IN DENMARK. Article 1
SECRET SCIENCES OF THE ANCIENTS. Article 2
THE ANTIQUITY AND TEACHINGS OF MASONRY.* Article 3
CURIOSITIES OF ARCHITECTURE. Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 8
THE ORIGIN OF FREEMASONRY. Article 11
Untitled Article 11
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 12
MASONIC MEM. Article 12
METROPOLITAN. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 12
MARK MASONRY. Article 12
Untitled Article 12
COLONIAL. Article 13
INDIA. Article 15
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. Article 16
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 16
LITERARY EXTRACTS. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 17
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Antiquity And Teachings Of Masonry.*

The beauty of Masonry consists not merely in the fair proportions of her design or the antique grandeur of her drapery , but in the magnitude and glory of hev operations . Through the long ages , as now , she b . i 3 stood the friend of man and the benefactor of society . In all the earth she has distilled her genial deAV of blessingand her path is everywhere marked with

, verdure and fruitfuluess . Her works praise her in the gates , and the grateful tears of the poor and unfortunate sparkle like jeAvels in her diadem of glory . Her very genius is love , the spirit of which connects her members in an unbroken phalanx as a band of brothersbut overfloAVS those bounds and expands

, itself in a stream of charity embracing all mankind . The identification of Masonry aud charity forms the popular idea of our Order . By general consent it stands at the head of charitable institutions .

But alms-giviug is not the most important part of charity in the Masonic sense . This consists rather in the cultivation and exercise of kindly dispositions and active sympathies . It is a charity Avhieli leads men to judge of others with lenity , and to speak of them without reproach—the charity which makes the good

name of another as precious as our own . It is exercised in the endeavour to do away with suspicions , jealousies , rivalries , and evil speakings—it is to sustain the wounded spirit , to afford consolation to the afflicted , to extend succour to the oppressed , to redress wrong . Such is Masonic charity , identical with the charity of Christianity , and Avhich , like that " Never faileth . "

An institution adorned Avith beauty like this must hold its place iu human affection Avhile misfortune and sorrow are the common lot , while human hearts cry out for sympathy , Avhile man continues frail and imperfect . If this faint sketch of some of the more prominent

principles of Freemasonry is correct , the reasons are sufficient to account for her unchangeable aud vigorous continuance until the present time . That this Order commends itself to the intelligence of the nineteenth century is evinced by its larger constituency than ever beforeand bits firmer hold on the

, y fovour of Avise and good men . We submit , therefore , that it is not presumptious to expect that , iu the long line of centuries to come , it -will still repose in undisturbed endurance upon the imperishable pillars of its support . Bslo perpetua !

Curiosities Of Architecture.

CURIOSITIES OF ARCHITECTURE .

lit this season of the year , many of our readers who are free to choose will visit celebrities in the Avay of architecture , such as our cathedrals and castles ; and , deterred by their magnificence from all attemjDts to make drawings of them , will return to their ordinary duties unenriched by a single

sketch . To these Ave would say , there are scattered in every county minor objects of which Ave have but scanty account , aud of which collections of sketches Avould be at once valuable and curious . We might instance as curiosities of architecture , whispering galleries , secret chambers , garrets , fortified church towers , chantries , market-crosses , wayside chapels , crypts , lych-gates , holy-wells

or lady-Avells , toAvn gateways , hermitages , the various ancient British remains , and tombstones Avith their crosses , sheals , keys , horse-shoes , chalices , hands , lambs , boAvs and arroAvs , horns , fishes , and other mystical devices ; and , as curiosities of detail , leper-AvindoAVS , hagioscopes , fonts ,

half-timbered churches , wooden churches , shingle spires , & c . It is remarkable IIOAV little is known of such objects , and IIOAV feAV residents in one county knoAV of similar curiosities in any other . The term garret , for instance , conveys to most minds only the idea of a room immediately under

the roof of a house ; but dwellers on the border country can still point to small toAvers , called garrets , built upon castle walls , and to places called garrets because in old times they possessed similar toAvers for the defence of a garrison . We have only to run through the list we have named to see hoAv much information remains to be

accumulated . A student preferring to cover a great deal of ground in a tour could take one class of object and pursue it , exclusively , through the country . Whispering galleries are curious , as being links in the chain of endeavour to lessen distance by

artificial contrivances ; and which , after germinating in men's minds for at least tAvo thousand years , have sprung forth in the advanced form of the telegraph . The Romans did a little pioneering work in this direction by the transmission of sound through pipeslaid in the long length of Vallum

, , knoAvn as the old Roman Avail , AAdiich , by the Avay , is a most wondrous curiosity of architecture itself . Mediaeval whispering galleries appear to have partaken more of the nature of echoes . In Stuart , times , the whispering place in Gloucester Cathedral Avas considered one of the Avonders of the land . It

is thus mentioned by Edward Phillips , the nepheAV of Milton " : — " A remarkable curiosity in the cathedral of Gloucester , being a Avail built so in an arch of the church , that if a man Avhisper never so low at one end , another that lays his ear at the other end shall hear each distinct sjdlable . " The

Avhispering gallery of Sir Christopher Wren in St . Paul ' s Cathedral may be said to be the only Avell-known example of this type of curiosity . The semicupola recesses on old Westminster Bridge have

gone . Secret chambers abound in old mansions of a certain age ; but Avhen Ave learn where they are to be found , or Avhat varieties of form they present , Ave are met Avith the obstacle of insufficient

information . We have recently given some account ot secret chambers in the old houses in Edinburgh , and " The Book of Days" affords a description of some others ; but a general account , Avith measurements and sketches , is not in existence . Here is an unexplored field for the curious .

The fortified church towers in Cumberland have met with a little more attention ; but not so those of Northumberland . Lysons mentions the towers of NeAV ton- Arlosh , Burgh-on-the-Sands , and

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