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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Sept. 1, 1860
  • Page 4
  • DRAWINGS BY SIR CHRISTOPHER WREN.*
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Sept. 1, 1860: Page 4

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    Article DRAWINGS BY SIR CHRISTOPHER WREN.* ← Page 3 of 4 →
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Drawings By Sir Christopher Wren.*

We have printed words erased m the MS . in smaller type , aud the corrections over them . " S ' A building of that consideration you goo about deserves good care in the designe , aucl able workemen to performc it , and that he who takes the gencrall management upon him may have a prospect of tho whole & make all inside & outside parts A corrcspondc well together , to this end I have comprissed the whole designe in 6 figures .

Pig . I Shelves halfc tho groundplot of tho Substruction , Cloister , & first flig htes of the Stairccascs . I have chosen middle pillars & a double porfcicoe & li g htes outward rather than a middle wall , as being the same expence , more gracefull , & according to the maimer of the auncicnts who made double walkcs ( with three roivcs of pillars or tivo rowes & a wall ) about the forum .

Pig . II . Shcwes half the gromidnlofc of the upper floor , the entrances from iho staireenses & the disposition of the shelves , both along the walls & breaking out from the walls . w must necdes prove very convenient & gracefull , & the best way for the Students will bo to have a little square table in each Celfe with 2 chaircs . The necessity of bringing ivindowes & dores to answer to tho old building leaves tivo

square places at the endes & 4 lesser Cellos not to study in but to be shut up with some neat Lattice dores for archives . Pig . III . Shcwes the face of the building next the court with the pavillions for tlio stairccascs and the sections of the old they buildings where . ljoync to the new . I chose a double order

rather than a single , because a single order must either have been mutilated in its members or have been very expensive , & if performed would not havo agreed ivith the lownesse of the porches iv cl 1 would liarc been , too clni-kc & tho solids too grosso for the openings . I have given the appearance of arches as the order required , fair and lofty : but I have layd ofthe Library

the floor A upon the impostes , iv * answer to the pillars in the cloister & the levells of the old floorcs , & have filled the Arches with relieves of stone , wlicro if you please you mayo of iv - ' ' I have seen the effect abroad in good building , & I assure you where porches arc lowe with flat ceelings is would be infinitely more gracefull than lowe arches A and is much more eyre open & pleasant , nor need the mason frcarc [ sic ] the performance because the Arch discharges tho weight , &

I shall direct him in a firmc maimer of executing the designe . By this contrivance the ivindowes of tho Library place rise high & give room for the deskes against the walls , and being high may bo afforded to be largo & being wide may have stone mullions & fche glassc pointed w after all inventions is the only durable way in our climate for a , publicum

building , where care must be hud that snoivo drive not in . frontispiece I have given noo other ornament to tho midlo than according to an ancient example statutes , because in this case I find anything else impertinent , the entrances being endwaies & the rootb not suiting it . This may be don if you please , you may make the three '

3 ita ' middle Arches with A colnmncs & the rest with pilasters of a third or llh of their module diameter , iv * - ' will save some charge in stone , bnt it is best as it is designed . " After describing Fi g . IV ., the document referring to Pig . V ., and speaking ofthe library , says : — "if the middle ally were paved of the Library were paved

for ¦ ivith small marbles 3-011 would much consult A the quiet of tbe place , & for the cleancsse of the books from dust , the Cellos may he floored with wain . scote , " and further , — large "the cornices divide the ceding into three rowes ot ' i square piuiimlls iinsivi . ring the pilasters w < - ' will proove the best I ' rot because in a long rooine it gives the most agreeable perspective . "

And as to Fig . VX , transverse section , it says as to the king-post roof , — "I have given tho ancient forme of roofe w ~! l the ex ] iericiicc of all ages hath found the surest , 110 c other is to bo trusted without doubling the thicknesses ofthe ivallcs . The Statues will bo a noble ornament , they are supposed of plaistcrthere are Flemish artists that doo them cheape .

, "I suppose 3-011 have good masons , how ever I would willingly take a farther paines to give all the mouldings in great ; woo arc scrupulous in small matters & yon must pardon us , the Architects arc as great pedants as Crit-iaks or Heralds . And therefore if 3-011 approve tho designes let the mason take his measures copies be taken of them A as much as is necessary for the present

getting out tlie worke & be pleased to transmit them to me again & I shall copj- out partes of them at large more proper for the use of the workmen and g ive 3-011 a careful estimate of the charge , & rctnnie you again the originall designes , for in the liandcs of the Workemen thc 3 ' will soon be soe defaced that they will not bo able from them to pursue the worke to a conclusion . I have made a cursory estimate &

it is not that at w 3-011 will grumble as not exceeding the charge proposed . " The date of this library has been variously given , as before and after the date of the Fire of London ; but a

quotation from the chronology 01 Wren ' s life and works derived from the Lansdowne MSS . ivould seem to settle the point . It is : — " 1077—1680 , ' Bibliothecam mngnificam collegii inccpit , S . S . Trinitatis Cantobrigim , et erexit . ' " In the second volume there are about forty of the draivings connected ivith the building of St . Paul ' s

Cathedral , or the reparation of the old fabric . There is a ground-plan of the cathedral " before Inigo Jones ' s portico , " as says the MS . catalogue , and carefull y drawn on vellum . There are also , a "Sketch of a doom for St . Paul ' s before IGG 6 , " in pencil , and resembling the dome of Sta . Maria , at Florence ; a p lan of one of the old Gothic p iers of St . Paul ' s , signed " C . Wren ; " a "Plan

of the intersection of the cross of the Church and the proposed doom in the middle , " also signed , —the angles being solid , with large niches , or four instead of eight arches ; a " Plan of the proposed doom , " and " Orihograph y of the doom ancl part of the old Church according to the same design . " Like the section which follows ifc in the cataloguethe " Orthograph y" has a signature

, , " C . Wren , 16 GG , " in small characters , amongst the timbers of the roof . The design lias , carried up to a great hei g ht , a gilt pine-apple hollow termination , which is very ugly . In the section , the choir remains Gothic , whilst the nave is Corinthian .

The appointment of architect to the new building , was made at the date named iu the following , as ive find it in Mr . Elmes ' s recent work , " Sir Christopher Wren and his Times" ( Svo ., London , 1852 ) . "' 1673 [ Nov ' . 13 ] Architcctns et commissionarius ad ajclificandum [ novam basilicam Dvi Pauli Loud , per mandatum regis sub magno sigillo , ex ruandato . & . '" After which there is : —

"' 1675 . Nova ) basilicas Dvi Paula : Lou . primum jiosic Lapidem . '" But at what date he entirely condemned the great tower of the old building is not clear , at least from the documents and authorities immediatel y before us . It appears , however , that he had , anterior to the occurrence of the Fire , proposed the removal , and that of the parts of the

old building adjacent to the tower , saying that theivhole ivere " such a heap of deformities , that no judicious architect will think it corri gible by airy expense that can bo laid out upon the dressing it , but that it will still remain unworth y the rest of the - "'ork , infirm & tottering . " He proposed , "by cutting off the inner corners of the cross , to render the middle part into a spacious rotunda , with a cupola , or hemispherical roof ; and

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-09-01, Page 4” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 1 April 2023, www.masonicperiodicals.org/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01091860/page/4/.
  • List
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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.

Drawings By Sir Christopher Wren.*

We have printed words erased m the MS . in smaller type , aud the corrections over them . " S ' A building of that consideration you goo about deserves good care in the designe , aucl able workemen to performc it , and that he who takes the gencrall management upon him may have a prospect of tho whole & make all inside & outside parts A corrcspondc well together , to this end I have comprissed the whole designe in 6 figures .

Pig . I Shelves halfc tho groundplot of tho Substruction , Cloister , & first flig htes of the Stairccascs . I have chosen middle pillars & a double porfcicoe & li g htes outward rather than a middle wall , as being the same expence , more gracefull , & according to the maimer of the auncicnts who made double walkcs ( with three roivcs of pillars or tivo rowes & a wall ) about the forum .

Pig . II . Shcwes half the gromidnlofc of the upper floor , the entrances from iho staireenses & the disposition of the shelves , both along the walls & breaking out from the walls . w must necdes prove very convenient & gracefull , & the best way for the Students will bo to have a little square table in each Celfe with 2 chaircs . The necessity of bringing ivindowes & dores to answer to tho old building leaves tivo

square places at the endes & 4 lesser Cellos not to study in but to be shut up with some neat Lattice dores for archives . Pig . III . Shcwes the face of the building next the court with the pavillions for tlio stairccascs and the sections of the old they buildings where . ljoync to the new . I chose a double order

rather than a single , because a single order must either have been mutilated in its members or have been very expensive , & if performed would not havo agreed ivith the lownesse of the porches iv cl 1 would liarc been , too clni-kc & tho solids too grosso for the openings . I have given the appearance of arches as the order required , fair and lofty : but I have layd ofthe Library

the floor A upon the impostes , iv * answer to the pillars in the cloister & the levells of the old floorcs , & have filled the Arches with relieves of stone , wlicro if you please you mayo of iv - ' ' I have seen the effect abroad in good building , & I assure you where porches arc lowe with flat ceelings is would be infinitely more gracefull than lowe arches A and is much more eyre open & pleasant , nor need the mason frcarc [ sic ] the performance because the Arch discharges tho weight , &

I shall direct him in a firmc maimer of executing the designe . By this contrivance the ivindowes of tho Library place rise high & give room for the deskes against the walls , and being high may bo afforded to be largo & being wide may have stone mullions & fche glassc pointed w after all inventions is the only durable way in our climate for a , publicum

building , where care must be hud that snoivo drive not in . frontispiece I have given noo other ornament to tho midlo than according to an ancient example statutes , because in this case I find anything else impertinent , the entrances being endwaies & the rootb not suiting it . This may be don if you please , you may make the three '

3 ita ' middle Arches with A colnmncs & the rest with pilasters of a third or llh of their module diameter , iv * - ' will save some charge in stone , bnt it is best as it is designed . " After describing Fi g . IV ., the document referring to Pig . V ., and speaking ofthe library , says : — "if the middle ally were paved of the Library were paved

for ¦ ivith small marbles 3-011 would much consult A the quiet of tbe place , & for the cleancsse of the books from dust , the Cellos may he floored with wain . scote , " and further , — large "the cornices divide the ceding into three rowes ot ' i square piuiimlls iinsivi . ring the pilasters w < - ' will proove the best I ' rot because in a long rooine it gives the most agreeable perspective . "

And as to Fig . VX , transverse section , it says as to the king-post roof , — "I have given tho ancient forme of roofe w ~! l the ex ] iericiicc of all ages hath found the surest , 110 c other is to bo trusted without doubling the thicknesses ofthe ivallcs . The Statues will bo a noble ornament , they are supposed of plaistcrthere are Flemish artists that doo them cheape .

, "I suppose 3-011 have good masons , how ever I would willingly take a farther paines to give all the mouldings in great ; woo arc scrupulous in small matters & yon must pardon us , the Architects arc as great pedants as Crit-iaks or Heralds . And therefore if 3-011 approve tho designes let the mason take his measures copies be taken of them A as much as is necessary for the present

getting out tlie worke & be pleased to transmit them to me again & I shall copj- out partes of them at large more proper for the use of the workmen and g ive 3-011 a careful estimate of the charge , & rctnnie you again the originall designes , for in the liandcs of the Workemen thc 3 ' will soon be soe defaced that they will not bo able from them to pursue the worke to a conclusion . I have made a cursory estimate &

it is not that at w 3-011 will grumble as not exceeding the charge proposed . " The date of this library has been variously given , as before and after the date of the Fire of London ; but a

quotation from the chronology 01 Wren ' s life and works derived from the Lansdowne MSS . ivould seem to settle the point . It is : — " 1077—1680 , ' Bibliothecam mngnificam collegii inccpit , S . S . Trinitatis Cantobrigim , et erexit . ' " In the second volume there are about forty of the draivings connected ivith the building of St . Paul ' s

Cathedral , or the reparation of the old fabric . There is a ground-plan of the cathedral " before Inigo Jones ' s portico , " as says the MS . catalogue , and carefull y drawn on vellum . There are also , a "Sketch of a doom for St . Paul ' s before IGG 6 , " in pencil , and resembling the dome of Sta . Maria , at Florence ; a p lan of one of the old Gothic p iers of St . Paul ' s , signed " C . Wren ; " a "Plan

of the intersection of the cross of the Church and the proposed doom in the middle , " also signed , —the angles being solid , with large niches , or four instead of eight arches ; a " Plan of the proposed doom , " and " Orihograph y of the doom ancl part of the old Church according to the same design . " Like the section which follows ifc in the cataloguethe " Orthograph y" has a signature

, , " C . Wren , 16 GG , " in small characters , amongst the timbers of the roof . The design lias , carried up to a great hei g ht , a gilt pine-apple hollow termination , which is very ugly . In the section , the choir remains Gothic , whilst the nave is Corinthian .

The appointment of architect to the new building , was made at the date named iu the following , as ive find it in Mr . Elmes ' s recent work , " Sir Christopher Wren and his Times" ( Svo ., London , 1852 ) . "' 1673 [ Nov ' . 13 ] Architcctns et commissionarius ad ajclificandum [ novam basilicam Dvi Pauli Loud , per mandatum regis sub magno sigillo , ex ruandato . & . '" After which there is : —

"' 1675 . Nova ) basilicas Dvi Paula : Lou . primum jiosic Lapidem . '" But at what date he entirely condemned the great tower of the old building is not clear , at least from the documents and authorities immediatel y before us . It appears , however , that he had , anterior to the occurrence of the Fire , proposed the removal , and that of the parts of the

old building adjacent to the tower , saying that theivhole ivere " such a heap of deformities , that no judicious architect will think it corri gible by airy expense that can bo laid out upon the dressing it , but that it will still remain unworth y the rest of the - "'ork , infirm & tottering . " He proposed , "by cutting off the inner corners of the cross , to render the middle part into a spacious rotunda , with a cupola , or hemispherical roof ; and

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