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  • June 27, 1863
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, June 27, 1863: Page 2

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    Article THE HIDDEN MYSTERIES OF NATURE AND SCIENCE.—PART 3. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article ARCHITECTURE, ITS PURPOSE AND PLACE AMONGST THE ARTS. Page 1 of 4 →
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Hidden Mysteries Of Nature And Science.—Part 3.

great altitude and narrow base ; but it is the noble prerogative of man to be able to support his lofty figure with great firmness on a very narrow base , and under constant change of altitude , for

" AVhen all creatures to the earth were prone , Man had an upright form to view the heavens , And was commanded to behold the stars . " Ovid , Metfc . A child does Avell who walks in twelve months , while the young of quadrupeds which have a broad supporting baseare able to stand and even walk almost

, immediately after birth . When a man walks at a moderate pace , his centre of gravity moves alternately over the right and over the left foot . This is the reason Avhy the body advances in a waving line , and why persons walking arm in arm shake each other , unless they make the movements of their feet

correspond , as soldiers do in marching . The action of the knee joint in animals has been copied by mechanists , in what is called , oblique action ; the pressure produced by the forcing dowmvards of the outer extremity of the lower bar ( the upper working against a fixed beam ) , is almost unlimited and so easily and

rapidly done , that it is applied to the printing press , wrought by the hand , instead of screw pressure . The design of the famous iron bridge at Bishops Wearmouth , says Paley , is taken from a neck of mutton . The idea of flour mills obviously arose from the teeth , as may be shown from the Latin words meaning a

mill and teeth . Mola , a mill ; molo , the p lural , millstones ; molaris , the adjective , derived from mola , of or belonging to a mill , the plural molares , the jawteeth , the grinders . The retired under jaw of a pig works in the ground after the protruding snout , hence the plough . When the skylark Avishes to ascend " to the last point of vision and beyond "—

" Sweetly gaining on the sky , Op ' ning with her native lay Nature ' s hymn . " ( Thompson . ) She gives a twist or semi-rotatory motion to the great feathers of her Aving , so that they strike the air with their flat sidebut rise from the stroke slantwise . The

, turning of the oar in rowing , whilst the rower goes forward for a new stroke , is a similar operation to that of the feather , and takes its name from the resemblance . —E . B . W .

Architecture, Its Purpose And Place Amongst The Arts.

ARCHITECTURE , ITS PURPOSE AND PLACE AMONGST THE ARTS .

The last of the present series of lectures at the Architectural Museum Avas delivered on Tuesday eveniug , the IGth , by Mr . T . Gambier Parry . After a few introductory remarks , the lecturer said : Before any subject can be studied Avith success , it is most necessary to begin with understanding what it really means .

Many definitions had been given of it , but he doubted the possibility of a perfectly full definition being given of any Pine Art . One most accomplished writer of the day has said that architecture is nothing more nor less than ornamental or ornamented " construction . " Another most original author has defined it as the art Avhich so disposes and adorns the edifices raised by man for Avhatever uses , that the sight of them may

contribute to his mental health , power , and pleasure . They both are very true . The first is very downrightthe second very aesthetic . But all fine art lies beyond the limit of a definition , because the very idea of a definition implies a limit . Art , in its nature , is illimitable . We love art , because it is like ourselves . We all love and long for sympathy—even the most ungracious

doalthough they would probably scout the idea . That is why all men love nature because it is sympathetic . The clouds which dance and shine about the setting sun , are to one man a perfect picture of happiness and fantastic gaiety ; to another their bri ght forms and changing colours find a counterpart in his mind

of bright and changing futures ; but still he has pleasure in gazing on them , because they are so beautiful , that they soothe Avhile they recall his sorrows . And thus it is Avith art . Its power is not in its representing nature , but that its mission is to seize those elements in the mystery of all Ave callnaturewhich

, , produce Avonderful effects upon us , and thus to interest our thoughts or to engage our affection . We certainly live , lor some reasons , in times of great advantage ; we are mounted so high up on the ladder of time , that our view is only limited by our own individual power of sight ; for the objects are

innumerable and the horizon boundless . Of all the avenues of the past , down Avhich Ave trace the history of our fellow-men , their aspirations and their Aveaknesses , there are few so full of interest as that of

architecture . In that still live thoughts m its ruins— -their concentrated thoughts . In all are marked the clear lines of their progress and decline . Look closer , and in the bold broad features of its monuments you trace the vigour of a rising race , the struggle of its youth , the development of its power ; and , still further , the refinement of its civilisationand then the too sure

, sign and symbol of its decay . All are there traced as with a finger of fire . Look closer still , and you see the individuality of a nation ' s character ; the nobility or the meanness of its social state ; its political worth ; its vigour or depravity . Thus it is that it may be most truly saidthe nations of the past still live in

, their monuments . The inscriptions may be ly inovanities , but in their architecture are records of certain truth . We read them as though of yesterdav , because art is a common language to all mankind . Architecture has had a common origin in all times and countries . He spoke of it entirely as a fine art ,

apart from building , just as thought is from pen and ink . But architecture is entirely a constructive art . Its Avhole beauty depends on its construction . The moment it trangresses good construction , it transgress the laws of good taste . That word " taste " is associated with the vaguest notions of variety . He did not believe that good taste Avas capable of varying .

He believed that its laws Avere capable of being most clearly written . Indeed , its whole code mi ght very clearly be comprised in the Avords " good sense . " These are delicate as well as strong Avords ; and , taken as a motto , they will bear no vulgar interpretation . The idea of architecture lies in the intention rather

than in the act of the builder ; ancl according to the success or priety in expressing that intention we call it good or bad architecture . The first work with a most genuine architectural intention , has been the mere setting up a stone to testify to an event , to record it for ever , and to tell all men the fact . A mere stone , without science in its erection or ornament on its

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1863-06-27, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_27061863/page/2/.
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Title Category Page
THE HIDDEN MYSTERIES OF NATURE AND SCIENCE.—PART 3. Article 1
ARCHITECTURE, ITS PURPOSE AND PLACE AMONGST THE ARTS. Article 2
ON THE ART COLLECTIONS AT SOUTH KENSINGTON, CONSIDERED IN REFERENCE TO ARCHITECTURE. Article 5
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 8
BOOK OF CONSTITUTIONS. Article 9
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 10
THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 10
THE GIRLS' SCHOOL. Article 10
METROPOLITAN. Article 10
PROVINCIAL. Article 10
SCOTLAND. Article 13
AUSTRALIA. Article 13
ROYAL ARCH. Article 16
FRIENDSHIP. Article 16
THE QUEEN AND THE SCOTCH FREEMASONS. Article 16
Poetry. 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 Hidden Mysteries Of Nature And Science.—Part 3.

great altitude and narrow base ; but it is the noble prerogative of man to be able to support his lofty figure with great firmness on a very narrow base , and under constant change of altitude , for

" AVhen all creatures to the earth were prone , Man had an upright form to view the heavens , And was commanded to behold the stars . " Ovid , Metfc . A child does Avell who walks in twelve months , while the young of quadrupeds which have a broad supporting baseare able to stand and even walk almost

, immediately after birth . When a man walks at a moderate pace , his centre of gravity moves alternately over the right and over the left foot . This is the reason Avhy the body advances in a waving line , and why persons walking arm in arm shake each other , unless they make the movements of their feet

correspond , as soldiers do in marching . The action of the knee joint in animals has been copied by mechanists , in what is called , oblique action ; the pressure produced by the forcing dowmvards of the outer extremity of the lower bar ( the upper working against a fixed beam ) , is almost unlimited and so easily and

rapidly done , that it is applied to the printing press , wrought by the hand , instead of screw pressure . The design of the famous iron bridge at Bishops Wearmouth , says Paley , is taken from a neck of mutton . The idea of flour mills obviously arose from the teeth , as may be shown from the Latin words meaning a

mill and teeth . Mola , a mill ; molo , the p lural , millstones ; molaris , the adjective , derived from mola , of or belonging to a mill , the plural molares , the jawteeth , the grinders . The retired under jaw of a pig works in the ground after the protruding snout , hence the plough . When the skylark Avishes to ascend " to the last point of vision and beyond "—

" Sweetly gaining on the sky , Op ' ning with her native lay Nature ' s hymn . " ( Thompson . ) She gives a twist or semi-rotatory motion to the great feathers of her Aving , so that they strike the air with their flat sidebut rise from the stroke slantwise . The

, turning of the oar in rowing , whilst the rower goes forward for a new stroke , is a similar operation to that of the feather , and takes its name from the resemblance . —E . B . W .

Architecture, Its Purpose And Place Amongst The Arts.

ARCHITECTURE , ITS PURPOSE AND PLACE AMONGST THE ARTS .

The last of the present series of lectures at the Architectural Museum Avas delivered on Tuesday eveniug , the IGth , by Mr . T . Gambier Parry . After a few introductory remarks , the lecturer said : Before any subject can be studied Avith success , it is most necessary to begin with understanding what it really means .

Many definitions had been given of it , but he doubted the possibility of a perfectly full definition being given of any Pine Art . One most accomplished writer of the day has said that architecture is nothing more nor less than ornamental or ornamented " construction . " Another most original author has defined it as the art Avhich so disposes and adorns the edifices raised by man for Avhatever uses , that the sight of them may

contribute to his mental health , power , and pleasure . They both are very true . The first is very downrightthe second very aesthetic . But all fine art lies beyond the limit of a definition , because the very idea of a definition implies a limit . Art , in its nature , is illimitable . We love art , because it is like ourselves . We all love and long for sympathy—even the most ungracious

doalthough they would probably scout the idea . That is why all men love nature because it is sympathetic . The clouds which dance and shine about the setting sun , are to one man a perfect picture of happiness and fantastic gaiety ; to another their bri ght forms and changing colours find a counterpart in his mind

of bright and changing futures ; but still he has pleasure in gazing on them , because they are so beautiful , that they soothe Avhile they recall his sorrows . And thus it is Avith art . Its power is not in its representing nature , but that its mission is to seize those elements in the mystery of all Ave callnaturewhich

, , produce Avonderful effects upon us , and thus to interest our thoughts or to engage our affection . We certainly live , lor some reasons , in times of great advantage ; we are mounted so high up on the ladder of time , that our view is only limited by our own individual power of sight ; for the objects are

innumerable and the horizon boundless . Of all the avenues of the past , down Avhich Ave trace the history of our fellow-men , their aspirations and their Aveaknesses , there are few so full of interest as that of

architecture . In that still live thoughts m its ruins— -their concentrated thoughts . In all are marked the clear lines of their progress and decline . Look closer , and in the bold broad features of its monuments you trace the vigour of a rising race , the struggle of its youth , the development of its power ; and , still further , the refinement of its civilisationand then the too sure

, sign and symbol of its decay . All are there traced as with a finger of fire . Look closer still , and you see the individuality of a nation ' s character ; the nobility or the meanness of its social state ; its political worth ; its vigour or depravity . Thus it is that it may be most truly saidthe nations of the past still live in

, their monuments . The inscriptions may be ly inovanities , but in their architecture are records of certain truth . We read them as though of yesterdav , because art is a common language to all mankind . Architecture has had a common origin in all times and countries . He spoke of it entirely as a fine art ,

apart from building , just as thought is from pen and ink . But architecture is entirely a constructive art . Its Avhole beauty depends on its construction . The moment it trangresses good construction , it transgress the laws of good taste . That word " taste " is associated with the vaguest notions of variety . He did not believe that good taste Avas capable of varying .

He believed that its laws Avere capable of being most clearly written . Indeed , its whole code mi ght very clearly be comprised in the Avords " good sense . " These are delicate as well as strong Avords ; and , taken as a motto , they will bear no vulgar interpretation . The idea of architecture lies in the intention rather

than in the act of the builder ; ancl according to the success or priety in expressing that intention we call it good or bad architecture . The first work with a most genuine architectural intention , has been the mere setting up a stone to testify to an event , to record it for ever , and to tell all men the fact . A mere stone , without science in its erection or ornament on its

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