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  • Dec. 1, 1860
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  • VISIT TO STRATFORD-ON-AVON AND ITS VICINAGE.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Dec. 1, 1860: Page 8

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Visit To Stratford-On-Avon And Its Vicinage.

the pedestal is very appropriately inscribed the words of his own "Hamlet : "" - Take him for all in all , AVe shall not look upon his like again . " Upon a scroll to which the poet points is inscribed the fine description of poetic imagination ancl inspiration

which Shakspere has put into the mouth of the Athenian Duke , Theseus , in the commencement of the fifth act of the " Midsummer Ni g ht ' s Dream : ""The poet ' s eye , in a fine frenzy rolling , Doth glance from heaven to earth , from earth to heaven ; And , as imagination bodies forth The forms of things unknown , the poet ' s pen Turns them to shapes , and gives to airy nothings A local habitation , and a name . "

This statue of Shakspere was presented to the town of Stratford b y the great actor , David Garrick , in 1769 , the year of the Shakspere jubilee . * As well as I can judge from memory , I should say that it is altogether , or partially , at least , a copy of Kent ' s and Scheemaker ' s statue ; but I have no engraving of either bme to

y enable me to write positively on the subject . The inscription on the scroll I know is different ; the one in Westminster Abbey bearing the ever-to-be-remembered words of Prospero , in the first scene of the fourth act of " The Tempest , " words which every Mason should ever have in mind : —

"The cloud capp'd towers , the gorgeous palaces , The solemn temples , the great globe itself , Yea , all which it inherits , shall dissolve , And , like the baseless fabric of a vision , Leave not a wrack behind . "

The Town-hall is in the Tuscan order of architecture , and was erected in the years 1767-S , and opened the year following , by Mr . Garrick , at the Shakspere jubilee . An older building , erected in 1633 , had stood on the same spot , and at the commencement of the great struggle between Charles I . and the Parliament , was used

as a store-room for arms and ammunition . In 1642 , a barrel of powder exploded in the building , and did considerable mischief both to this and the adjoiniug building . Had it not exploded , that gunpowder would have been used by countryman against countryman , by neighbour against nei ghbour , perhaps by brother against

brother . The arms of the corporation ( for Stratford lias had its mayor since the reign of Charles II . ) are on the front of the building—a chevron between three leopard ' s faces . On enterin g the great room upstairs—which is sixty feet long by thirty wide—I found the place crammed , with the exception of a few seats reserved for the honorary members , and mine being an "honorary member ' s ticket , " on presenting it , I was at once shown tomy

plaee . The room is ornamented with a few good fulllength portraits ; there is John Frederick , third Duke of Dorset , presented by his Duchess ; David Garrick , leaning on a pedestal , on which stands a bust of Shakspere , painted by Gainsborough ; and a painting of Shakspere , hy AVilson , in which the painter has thrown the face into strong shadeand represented the bard

, seated on an old-fashioned chair , with HolingshecVs Chronicles , Sir Thomas North ' s Translation of Plutarch , ancl Cynthia ' s Novels , at his feet—works from which the great dramatist drew the p lots and speeches of some of his inimitable plays , casting over all the halo of his own incomparable genius . The two latter paintings were

presented to the corporation by David Garrick , along with the statue before mentioned , in 1769 , when he opened the Town-hall , and dedicated it to Shakspere , speaking an ode which he had written for the occasion , and which the reader will find in his collected works . To render this name . Shakspere ' s Hall , more appropriate ,

I would humbly but earnestly recommend the corporation , of Stratford-on-Avon to form a good Shaksperian library in one of the rooms , for the free use of the inhabitants of the borough , and to have lectures on the life , times , and genius of the greatest of all bards , given by the most talented men they can obtainto all who

, will go and listen to them in the large room or hall ; for I have good reasons for believing that the works of him to whom pilgrims from the east , the west , the north , and the south , journey to Stratford to do honour at the shrine of genius , are not " read , marked , learned , and inwardly digested " as they ought to be by his

fellow-townsmen , and their immediate neighbours . This would indeed make it Shakspere ' s Hall , and the good which would result from such a step would be incalculable . For , as Garrick well observed at the jubilee ,

" Shakspere is , above all others , allowed to be the poet of nature ; and therefore , as an author , he stands hi ghest in the hi ghest Class . The beings exhibited by the poet of nature are men ; they are not creatures of 'the imagination , acting from principles by which human actions were never produced , and suffering distress which human beings never sufferedbut partakers of

; the same nature with ourselves , to whose hearts our own sensations are a clue ; beings of like passions , impelled by the same hopes and fears , and sacrificing virtue to interest , or interest to virtue , as circumstances concur with disposition , and opinion connects present and immediate good and evil with futureeither by necessary

, consequence or judicial determination . " " I will get you the history of the Beecher Club b y the time you arrive here . Lord Lei gh has promised to preside at the club dinner on " Whit-Monday . " Such was a passage in a letter which I had received from Mark Philips , Esq ., dated Snitterfield , Stratford-on-Avon , May

18 th , 1859 . I had therefore calculated on seeing and hearing one of our Masonic chiefs . In this , however , I was disappointed . Our E . AV . Brother was prevented being present by other engagements ; but I bad the p leasure of continually hearing " the tongue of Good " . Report" in his favour ; and I was told that his residence

, Stonelei gh Abbe }' , is a deli ghtful spot . Our noble Brother ' s place was well supplied by my friend , Mr . Philips , who filled the chair to every one ' s satisfaction . His fine flow of spirits seemed to act as a talisman on the whole company , and his speeches , like his actions , showed strong sympathy with the human race . He

comes , indeed , of a noble-hearted family , with whom benevolence seems to run in the blood ; and should ever one claiming their lineage turn a- deaf ear to the cry of distress , I for one would not believe that one single "ruddy drojj" of the blood of the Philipses circulated in

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-12-01, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 29 March 2023, www.masonicperiodicals.org/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01121860/page/8/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE BOARD OF BENEVOLENCE. Article 1
THE GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 2
MASONIC SYMBOLISM, Article 4
MASONRY IN THE REPUBLIC OF ST. DOMINGO. Article 6
VISIT TO STRATFORD-ON-AVON AND ITS VICINAGE. Article 7
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 10
THE GRAND MASTER AND VISCOUNT HOLMESDALE, PROV. G.M., KENT. Article 12
POOR AND DISTRESSED BRETHREN. Article 12
SOUTH AUSTRALIA. Article 12
Poetry. Article 13
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 14
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 15
GRAND LODGE. Article 15
METROPOLITAN. Article 15
INDIA. Article 17
Obituary. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 20
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Visit To Stratford-On-Avon And Its Vicinage.

the pedestal is very appropriately inscribed the words of his own "Hamlet : "" - Take him for all in all , AVe shall not look upon his like again . " Upon a scroll to which the poet points is inscribed the fine description of poetic imagination ancl inspiration

which Shakspere has put into the mouth of the Athenian Duke , Theseus , in the commencement of the fifth act of the " Midsummer Ni g ht ' s Dream : ""The poet ' s eye , in a fine frenzy rolling , Doth glance from heaven to earth , from earth to heaven ; And , as imagination bodies forth The forms of things unknown , the poet ' s pen Turns them to shapes , and gives to airy nothings A local habitation , and a name . "

This statue of Shakspere was presented to the town of Stratford b y the great actor , David Garrick , in 1769 , the year of the Shakspere jubilee . * As well as I can judge from memory , I should say that it is altogether , or partially , at least , a copy of Kent ' s and Scheemaker ' s statue ; but I have no engraving of either bme to

y enable me to write positively on the subject . The inscription on the scroll I know is different ; the one in Westminster Abbey bearing the ever-to-be-remembered words of Prospero , in the first scene of the fourth act of " The Tempest , " words which every Mason should ever have in mind : —

"The cloud capp'd towers , the gorgeous palaces , The solemn temples , the great globe itself , Yea , all which it inherits , shall dissolve , And , like the baseless fabric of a vision , Leave not a wrack behind . "

The Town-hall is in the Tuscan order of architecture , and was erected in the years 1767-S , and opened the year following , by Mr . Garrick , at the Shakspere jubilee . An older building , erected in 1633 , had stood on the same spot , and at the commencement of the great struggle between Charles I . and the Parliament , was used

as a store-room for arms and ammunition . In 1642 , a barrel of powder exploded in the building , and did considerable mischief both to this and the adjoiniug building . Had it not exploded , that gunpowder would have been used by countryman against countryman , by neighbour against nei ghbour , perhaps by brother against

brother . The arms of the corporation ( for Stratford lias had its mayor since the reign of Charles II . ) are on the front of the building—a chevron between three leopard ' s faces . On enterin g the great room upstairs—which is sixty feet long by thirty wide—I found the place crammed , with the exception of a few seats reserved for the honorary members , and mine being an "honorary member ' s ticket , " on presenting it , I was at once shown tomy

plaee . The room is ornamented with a few good fulllength portraits ; there is John Frederick , third Duke of Dorset , presented by his Duchess ; David Garrick , leaning on a pedestal , on which stands a bust of Shakspere , painted by Gainsborough ; and a painting of Shakspere , hy AVilson , in which the painter has thrown the face into strong shadeand represented the bard

, seated on an old-fashioned chair , with HolingshecVs Chronicles , Sir Thomas North ' s Translation of Plutarch , ancl Cynthia ' s Novels , at his feet—works from which the great dramatist drew the p lots and speeches of some of his inimitable plays , casting over all the halo of his own incomparable genius . The two latter paintings were

presented to the corporation by David Garrick , along with the statue before mentioned , in 1769 , when he opened the Town-hall , and dedicated it to Shakspere , speaking an ode which he had written for the occasion , and which the reader will find in his collected works . To render this name . Shakspere ' s Hall , more appropriate ,

I would humbly but earnestly recommend the corporation , of Stratford-on-Avon to form a good Shaksperian library in one of the rooms , for the free use of the inhabitants of the borough , and to have lectures on the life , times , and genius of the greatest of all bards , given by the most talented men they can obtainto all who

, will go and listen to them in the large room or hall ; for I have good reasons for believing that the works of him to whom pilgrims from the east , the west , the north , and the south , journey to Stratford to do honour at the shrine of genius , are not " read , marked , learned , and inwardly digested " as they ought to be by his

fellow-townsmen , and their immediate neighbours . This would indeed make it Shakspere ' s Hall , and the good which would result from such a step would be incalculable . For , as Garrick well observed at the jubilee ,

" Shakspere is , above all others , allowed to be the poet of nature ; and therefore , as an author , he stands hi ghest in the hi ghest Class . The beings exhibited by the poet of nature are men ; they are not creatures of 'the imagination , acting from principles by which human actions were never produced , and suffering distress which human beings never sufferedbut partakers of

; the same nature with ourselves , to whose hearts our own sensations are a clue ; beings of like passions , impelled by the same hopes and fears , and sacrificing virtue to interest , or interest to virtue , as circumstances concur with disposition , and opinion connects present and immediate good and evil with futureeither by necessary

, consequence or judicial determination . " " I will get you the history of the Beecher Club b y the time you arrive here . Lord Lei gh has promised to preside at the club dinner on " Whit-Monday . " Such was a passage in a letter which I had received from Mark Philips , Esq ., dated Snitterfield , Stratford-on-Avon , May

18 th , 1859 . I had therefore calculated on seeing and hearing one of our Masonic chiefs . In this , however , I was disappointed . Our E . AV . Brother was prevented being present by other engagements ; but I bad the p leasure of continually hearing " the tongue of Good " . Report" in his favour ; and I was told that his residence

, Stonelei gh Abbe }' , is a deli ghtful spot . Our noble Brother ' s place was well supplied by my friend , Mr . Philips , who filled the chair to every one ' s satisfaction . His fine flow of spirits seemed to act as a talisman on the whole company , and his speeches , like his actions , showed strong sympathy with the human race . He

comes , indeed , of a noble-hearted family , with whom benevolence seems to run in the blood ; and should ever one claiming their lineage turn a- deaf ear to the cry of distress , I for one would not believe that one single "ruddy drojj" of the blood of the Philipses circulated in

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