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  • Sept. 1, 1860
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Sept. 1, 1860: Page 10

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

Literature.

deal of matter attractive not only to members of tbe Jewish race , but to all readers who take an interest in the fortunes of the chosen people . Under tbe title of " Tbe Mountains , " Messrs Lippmcott ancl Co . of Boston , U . S ., publish a work from the pen of Dr . 11 . M . S . Jackson , giving a general , scientific , and popular description of the Allghames , treating of their geology , soil , waters , fauna , flora , climate , & c .

Messrs . Tilton and Co .., of Boston , U . S ., are , we understand , preparing for publication , " Tho Printer Boy ; or , How Ben Franklyn made his Mark , " by the author of the Bobbin Boy . " The author of "The Bobbin Boy" is said to be the most popular writer of works of this class in the States , bis books running from five to fifteen or twenty thousand copies .

Mr . Hawthorne ( says the United States correspondent of the Morning Post ) has resumed his abode at Concord , the Massachusets town of that name , some twenty miles from Boston , ancl which is still enough to meet even his requirements in the way of quiet . He is understood to be engaged on a new work , and tbe editors of the Atlantic Monthly , our best periodical , announce that he will be a regular contributor to its pages . His " Marble Fawn , " which was , I think , published in ; England under the name of " The Transformed , " though it has bad a good sale , is nofc a popular work . Its

want of clearness was very happily described by one of Ins critics , who said it began in mystery and ended in mist . By a new act , Oxford University is to retain tbe eustocty of certain testamentary documents , ancl to transmit an index thereof to the Court of Probate . The same statute ( 23 rd and 21 th Vict . c . 91 ) declares that the Craven scholarships are to bo deemed University emoluments .

The English lecturer at Corpus Christi College , Cambridge , will commence on September 1 st a course of lectures on "Public Reading , " with esjiecial reference to the Church service , for candidates for the September ordinations . The Caledonian Mercury announces that it is now pretty certain that Dr . M'Cosli , of Belfast ( formerly at Brechin ) , will be appointed to the newly-instituted Chair of Logic in the United Aberdeen

University . Tbe report that Mr . Main will be succeeded in the office of First Assistant at Greenwich by E . J . Routh , Esq ., Fellow ancl Tutor of St . Peter ' s College , Cambridge , is unfounded . Tho season of the Royal Academy which closed the other day has been the most successful on record . The receipts at the door have reached the very largo sum ol : £ 11 , G 00 . This is a considerable excess over the celebrated "Derby Day" year . The Council of the Art Union have not considered that ihe

statuettes sent m would justify tbe award of the prizes offered . They have , however , adjudged tho premium of thirty guineas to the group ( several figures ) , "Alfred in the Camp of the Danes . " The artist was found to be "Mr . Thomas Duckett , at Mr . Thornycroft ' s . " The premium of 100 guineas offered for the best set of drawings in illustration of " Tlio Idylls of the King , " has been awarded to No . IS , marked "Constancy , " subject to a safcisfactory

reply from the author ( who is understood to be a foreigner ) , to certain inquiries . The Emperor Napoleon is the purchaser of two large historical pictures in truly Napoleonic taste , by Gud ' m , the marine painter . Both tbe pictures the Emperor has purchased are about himself One represents him ' ¦ ' arriving at Genoa ; " the other " his nicotine : with Queen Victoria in the Harbour of Cherbourg . "

Mr . John David Barry , of Thurlow Square , Brompton , announces the discovery of a new material for making paper , by a patented process ; and lie also states that the pulp used for the manufacture of this paper is produced from the residuum of the plant , after chemical treatment for the production of a colouring' matter susceptible of cryst-ilization , and applicable ! to the dyeing of silk , wool , and all similar animal substances . There is now before the Academy of Sciences at Paris , " a wonderful invention " of Mons . lielvctins Otto , ofLeiiwie , by which

Literature.

bo promises to " insure fine weather . " He erects a platform at a considerable height in the air , on which he pilaces a "propeller , " or huge bellows , worked by steam . With these bellows , which are " very powerful , " he blows away the clouds as they gather , and as rain comes from the clouds , it must necessarily follow that were clouds are nofc allowed to gather there can be no rain . He maintains that if a certain number of his "Rain

Propellers , " or " Pluvifuges , " as he has named tbem , are placed at intervals over the city , be can provide for tbe inhabitants a continuance of fine weather , ancl a certain protection from sudden showers and muddy streets , so long the terror of fair pedestrians . The poor inhabitants of adjoining towns would be to be pitied . What would become of them ?—As lor the Pluvifuge proprietors , their motto ought to be " Aprh nous le delut / e . " Victims , however ,

as wc in England have of late been to wet weather , still ! ve cannot blame the " Pluvifuges , " inasmuch as France itself has been in nearly the same predicament , —at least the northern parts of it . A meeting was recently held for tho purpose of getting up a memorial to Eobert Stephenson , at which Lord Llanover presided ; be suggested that the memorial should be a statue , ancl that application should be made to the Government to place it in the area of

St . Margaret's Gardens , Westminster , where , beside that of Brunei , in the way between the scenes of their professional labours and the parliamentary contests in which they had been engaged , the effigies of the tivo men might stand as beacons of encouragement to the

j-ounger members of that profession to which great Britain owed so much of her present greatness ancl prosperity . It was stated that the subscription list would have been proceeded with more actively , but that a similar movement had been in progress to erect a statue to Brunei , so that until now it was thought inexpedient to advance the present object . The chairman stated , that the first subscriber would be Homy Weatherburn , formerly driver

of the " Harvey Coombe , " the first locomotive-engine on the North-Western Railway , who had written to express his desire to be so . The meeting came to a resolution to prosecute the object , ancl open subscription lists . Mr . J . P . Gassiot , on the part of the Royal and other scientific Societies of which Robert Stephenson had been a member , assured the meeting of tbe united co-operation of the members of those Societies .

Tbe statues of Lords Elelon and Stowcll , which were commenced by Chantrey , carried on by L . Watson , and after his death completed b 3 Mr . G . Nelson , have arrived at Oxford , to be placed in the new- Library of University College , on the foundation of which the famous judges were . These statues are said to be of the largest size in one block of Carrara- marble in England . Tbe . Chester monument to Matthew Henry , the commentator ,

was uncovered last week with considerable ceremony . Tbe monument , which stands near the south-west corner of St . Bridget ' s Cluu-cli-yarcl , consists of a handsome polished granite obelisk , loft . high , resting on a basement , which gives a total elevation of 2-1-ft . Sin .

Sonnet

SONNET

To CIIAHI . ES Sv . ' . vix , ESQ . ; on receicinrj a Presentation Copy of his "Mind anil other Poems . " 1 ) 1- KlIO . C ' lCOliGE 3 I . IBKIIAM TwiiDBUI , Author of "Shttl-xpcure : his Tiiues and C . rutcmporaries , " <*"' e . Thy many beautied Mind all must admire . Friend of the Muses , Heaven-inspired SIVAIJ , " 1 Long may thy heart be warm'd ivith hol y fire

And such soul-soothing strains burst from thy lyre , To cheer their drooping spirits who complain Of numerous ills on this abused globe , — Where man delights to nun * the beautiful , To curse his fellows , whom be ought to bless , To laugh and mock at Love ancl Gentleness , And e ' en the olive-branch from Peace to pull , Thafc Hate and Strife , and Jealousy , and War , May how each neck to Misery ' s iron car : But such sweet . sounds peal from thy gentle lute , They bid the discord oi' the soul be mute .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-09-01, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 1 April 2023, www.masonicperiodicals.org/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01091860/page/10/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—XXXI. Article 1
DRAWINGS BY SIR CHRISTOPHER WREN.* Article 2
KENT ARCHÆOLOGICAL SOCIETY. Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 8
Literature. Article 9
SONNET Article 10
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 11
GRAND LODGE. Article 11
PROVINCIAL. Article 11
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 18
MARK MASONRY. Article 18
INDIA. Article 18
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. Article 18
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.

Literature.

deal of matter attractive not only to members of tbe Jewish race , but to all readers who take an interest in the fortunes of the chosen people . Under tbe title of " Tbe Mountains , " Messrs Lippmcott ancl Co . of Boston , U . S ., publish a work from the pen of Dr . 11 . M . S . Jackson , giving a general , scientific , and popular description of the Allghames , treating of their geology , soil , waters , fauna , flora , climate , & c .

Messrs . Tilton and Co .., of Boston , U . S ., are , we understand , preparing for publication , " Tho Printer Boy ; or , How Ben Franklyn made his Mark , " by the author of the Bobbin Boy . " The author of "The Bobbin Boy" is said to be the most popular writer of works of this class in the States , bis books running from five to fifteen or twenty thousand copies .

Mr . Hawthorne ( says the United States correspondent of the Morning Post ) has resumed his abode at Concord , the Massachusets town of that name , some twenty miles from Boston , ancl which is still enough to meet even his requirements in the way of quiet . He is understood to be engaged on a new work , and tbe editors of the Atlantic Monthly , our best periodical , announce that he will be a regular contributor to its pages . His " Marble Fawn , " which was , I think , published in ; England under the name of " The Transformed , " though it has bad a good sale , is nofc a popular work . Its

want of clearness was very happily described by one of Ins critics , who said it began in mystery and ended in mist . By a new act , Oxford University is to retain tbe eustocty of certain testamentary documents , ancl to transmit an index thereof to the Court of Probate . The same statute ( 23 rd and 21 th Vict . c . 91 ) declares that the Craven scholarships are to bo deemed University emoluments .

The English lecturer at Corpus Christi College , Cambridge , will commence on September 1 st a course of lectures on "Public Reading , " with esjiecial reference to the Church service , for candidates for the September ordinations . The Caledonian Mercury announces that it is now pretty certain that Dr . M'Cosli , of Belfast ( formerly at Brechin ) , will be appointed to the newly-instituted Chair of Logic in the United Aberdeen

University . Tbe report that Mr . Main will be succeeded in the office of First Assistant at Greenwich by E . J . Routh , Esq ., Fellow ancl Tutor of St . Peter ' s College , Cambridge , is unfounded . Tho season of the Royal Academy which closed the other day has been the most successful on record . The receipts at the door have reached the very largo sum ol : £ 11 , G 00 . This is a considerable excess over the celebrated "Derby Day" year . The Council of the Art Union have not considered that ihe

statuettes sent m would justify tbe award of the prizes offered . They have , however , adjudged tho premium of thirty guineas to the group ( several figures ) , "Alfred in the Camp of the Danes . " The artist was found to be "Mr . Thomas Duckett , at Mr . Thornycroft ' s . " The premium of 100 guineas offered for the best set of drawings in illustration of " Tlio Idylls of the King , " has been awarded to No . IS , marked "Constancy , " subject to a safcisfactory

reply from the author ( who is understood to be a foreigner ) , to certain inquiries . The Emperor Napoleon is the purchaser of two large historical pictures in truly Napoleonic taste , by Gud ' m , the marine painter . Both tbe pictures the Emperor has purchased are about himself One represents him ' ¦ ' arriving at Genoa ; " the other " his nicotine : with Queen Victoria in the Harbour of Cherbourg . "

Mr . John David Barry , of Thurlow Square , Brompton , announces the discovery of a new material for making paper , by a patented process ; and lie also states that the pulp used for the manufacture of this paper is produced from the residuum of the plant , after chemical treatment for the production of a colouring' matter susceptible of cryst-ilization , and applicable ! to the dyeing of silk , wool , and all similar animal substances . There is now before the Academy of Sciences at Paris , " a wonderful invention " of Mons . lielvctins Otto , ofLeiiwie , by which

Literature.

bo promises to " insure fine weather . " He erects a platform at a considerable height in the air , on which he pilaces a "propeller , " or huge bellows , worked by steam . With these bellows , which are " very powerful , " he blows away the clouds as they gather , and as rain comes from the clouds , it must necessarily follow that were clouds are nofc allowed to gather there can be no rain . He maintains that if a certain number of his "Rain

Propellers , " or " Pluvifuges , " as he has named tbem , are placed at intervals over the city , be can provide for tbe inhabitants a continuance of fine weather , ancl a certain protection from sudden showers and muddy streets , so long the terror of fair pedestrians . The poor inhabitants of adjoining towns would be to be pitied . What would become of them ?—As lor the Pluvifuge proprietors , their motto ought to be " Aprh nous le delut / e . " Victims , however ,

as wc in England have of late been to wet weather , still ! ve cannot blame the " Pluvifuges , " inasmuch as France itself has been in nearly the same predicament , —at least the northern parts of it . A meeting was recently held for tho purpose of getting up a memorial to Eobert Stephenson , at which Lord Llanover presided ; be suggested that the memorial should be a statue , ancl that application should be made to the Government to place it in the area of

St . Margaret's Gardens , Westminster , where , beside that of Brunei , in the way between the scenes of their professional labours and the parliamentary contests in which they had been engaged , the effigies of the tivo men might stand as beacons of encouragement to the

j-ounger members of that profession to which great Britain owed so much of her present greatness ancl prosperity . It was stated that the subscription list would have been proceeded with more actively , but that a similar movement had been in progress to erect a statue to Brunei , so that until now it was thought inexpedient to advance the present object . The chairman stated , that the first subscriber would be Homy Weatherburn , formerly driver

of the " Harvey Coombe , " the first locomotive-engine on the North-Western Railway , who had written to express his desire to be so . The meeting came to a resolution to prosecute the object , ancl open subscription lists . Mr . J . P . Gassiot , on the part of the Royal and other scientific Societies of which Robert Stephenson had been a member , assured the meeting of tbe united co-operation of the members of those Societies .

Tbe statues of Lords Elelon and Stowcll , which were commenced by Chantrey , carried on by L . Watson , and after his death completed b 3 Mr . G . Nelson , have arrived at Oxford , to be placed in the new- Library of University College , on the foundation of which the famous judges were . These statues are said to be of the largest size in one block of Carrara- marble in England . Tbe . Chester monument to Matthew Henry , the commentator ,

was uncovered last week with considerable ceremony . Tbe monument , which stands near the south-west corner of St . Bridget ' s Cluu-cli-yarcl , consists of a handsome polished granite obelisk , loft . high , resting on a basement , which gives a total elevation of 2-1-ft . Sin .

Sonnet

SONNET

To CIIAHI . ES Sv . ' . vix , ESQ . ; on receicinrj a Presentation Copy of his "Mind anil other Poems . " 1 ) 1- KlIO . C ' lCOliGE 3 I . IBKIIAM TwiiDBUI , Author of "Shttl-xpcure : his Tiiues and C . rutcmporaries , " <*"' e . Thy many beautied Mind all must admire . Friend of the Muses , Heaven-inspired SIVAIJ , " 1 Long may thy heart be warm'd ivith hol y fire

And such soul-soothing strains burst from thy lyre , To cheer their drooping spirits who complain Of numerous ills on this abused globe , — Where man delights to nun * the beautiful , To curse his fellows , whom be ought to bless , To laugh and mock at Love ancl Gentleness , And e ' en the olive-branch from Peace to pull , Thafc Hate and Strife , and Jealousy , and War , May how each neck to Misery ' s iron car : But such sweet . sounds peal from thy gentle lute , They bid the discord oi' the soul be mute .

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