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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 9

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Visit To Stratford-On-Avon And Its Vicinage.

his or her veins . Mark Philips ( like his benevolent brother , Eobert Philips , Esq ., of the Park , near Manchester ) , is a Freemason in his heart without knowing it ; and there is something radieallj wrong in the way the affairs of our beloved Craft are carried out , when one meets with such men in " the outer world , " and can find hundreds who have crept in amongst uswho

, ought never to have been initiated . Header , let thee and me firmly resolve , that every word we speak or write , and ( above all ) every action of om lives , shall be in conformity with the princip les of the Craft ; that we will not keep the object of our noble order from the public as though it were one of the secrets to which we have

pledged fidelity ; but that our whole influence in society shall be that which may truly be described as Masonic ; and when once our wide-spread fraternity remains thus true to our ancient landmarks , we shall not have to lament ( as every true Mason must do ) such failures in our mission as the one I have alluded to .

Of the Beecher Club I have only space to observe , that it is a benefit society for the people , in which the clergy and gentry of Stratford-on-Avon , Alcester , and vicinage , take much interest ; that its meetings are very properly held apart from taverns ; but in what other respects it eclipses such societies as those of the Manchester Unity

of the Independent order of Odd Fellows , or the Foresters ( to both which institutions I have the privilege to belong ) , I have not been able to perceive . Certainly , the great element of success amongst the Odd Fellows , Foresters , and similar societies , that of the class for which it is intended managing there own affairs , seems to be too little studied by the model society ; and the

speakers seemed rather too keen of throwing out inuendos against other benefit societies , who are all labouring for the same end , and perhaps not less effectually . I was glad to hear the chairman soften down these uncalled for remarks ; for the true Mason , whilst he will gladly welcome the light on every subjectmust ever feel pained

, when he sees his fellow-travellers through life squabbling , as it were , about the best way of doing a thing , instead of us each doing our own rjart manfully , according to what lig ht we ourseif possess , and allowing others to do their's as to their own convictions seem best . Success , thento the Beecher Club ; may its members never be

, less happy than they seemed to be at tlie festive board ; but success also to every institution whose object is the elevation of tlie people , the amelioration of humanity , and to make " the wilderness and the solitary place be glad for them , and the desert to rejoice ancl blossom as the rose . " *

"In man I love all thafc is noble and great , But war , and oppression , and falsehood , I hate ; And oft has my spirit burst forth into song Against every species of riot and wrong . I ' m a pleader for freedom in every form ; For my country I feel patriotic and warm , — - Yet still I ' ve no wish to disorder the land

With fche flame of the torch and the flash of the brand ; I'm for measures more gentle , more certain , in sooth—The movement of morals , the triumph of truth ; And m } ' hopes are thafc men who are toiling and grieving "Will make this fair Earth like the Heaven they believe in . " —J . ' 0 . PfllSCE . I made the acquaintance of one man only at the

anniversary dinner of the Beecher Club ; and that one man was old Kempe , the sexton . I have hacl from my childhood a strange liking for old sextons , parish clerks , and gravediggers , and many a curious fact and wild legend have I obtained from them ; for most of them may say with the late poet laureate , Southey— " I am skilled in legendary

lore . " As I wanted to visit the church , how could I do better than secure old Kempe when I had got him ? I therefore changed seats so as to make sure of him , treated , him with a quart of ale ( the only beverage he seemed to care for ) , and made a single glass of wine negus do duty for all the toasts ; for , as I wanted to remember all I sawand temperance being at all times a Masonic

, virtue , I thought I could not have a better example in this respect than good old Adam in " As Tou Like It " —a character which Shakspere not only created , but is said to have himself enacted on the stage of the Globe and the Blackfriar's Theatres -. — " Though I look old , yet I am strong and lusty ;

For in my youth I never did apply Hot and rebellious liquors in my blood ; Nor did not with unbashful forehead woo The means of weakness and debility : Therefore my age is as a lusty winter , Frosty bufc kindly . "—ACT II ., Scene 3 . The name of Kempe struck me forcibly , aud my first

question was , " Is yonr ' s a Stratford family ? " to which I was answered in the affirmative . "Who knows , thought I , that "William Kempe , the player , whose name occurs the thirteenth in the list of the fifteen shareholders in the Blackfriar ' s Theatre , and immediately after that of "William Shakspere in their petition to the Lords of the Privy Council , * in November , 1589 , and who was the

original performer of Dogberry , in Shakspere s comedy of " Much Ado About Nothing ; " who knows , I sav , that this fellow-player of Shakspere was not also a native of Stratford-on Avon , or its immediate vicinity ? There is nothing improbable in this conjecture ; Thomas Greene , the fourth player on the list , we are told , was a Stratfordon-Avon man ; and Shakspere ' s patronLord

South-, ampton , writing of our bard , and Eichard Burbage , the Eoscius of his day , whose name is second on the list of shareholders , says : — " They were both of one county , and , indeed , almost of one town . " Eitson , the eminent antiquary , in a note to his Sol / in Hood says : — " "Will Kempe " the playerwas a celebrated morris dancer ; ancl

, , in the Bodleian Library is the following scarce ancl curious tract by him - .. Kemps nine dales wonder , performed in a daunce from London to Norwich . Containing the pleasure , paines , and hind entertainment of William Kemp between London and that city in his late morrice . Wherein is somewhat set downe worth note - . to reprooce the

slaunders spretl of him , many things merry , nothing hurffull . Written by himself to saii >< fie his friends . London , printed b y E . A . for Nicholas Ling , 1600 , -i-to B . L . On the title-page is a wooden cut-figure of Kemp as a morris-dancer , preceded by a fellow with a pipe and drum , whom he , iu the hook , calls Thomas Slye , his taberer . " Ancl Eitson bids us " see , in Eichard Brathwayte ' s Remains after Death , 1618 . some lines ' upon Kempe and his morice with his epitaph . ' The lines by

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-12-01, Page 9” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 March 2023, www.masonicperiodicals.org/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01121860/page/9/.
  • 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.

his or her veins . Mark Philips ( like his benevolent brother , Eobert Philips , Esq ., of the Park , near Manchester ) , is a Freemason in his heart without knowing it ; and there is something radieallj wrong in the way the affairs of our beloved Craft are carried out , when one meets with such men in " the outer world , " and can find hundreds who have crept in amongst uswho

, ought never to have been initiated . Header , let thee and me firmly resolve , that every word we speak or write , and ( above all ) every action of om lives , shall be in conformity with the princip les of the Craft ; that we will not keep the object of our noble order from the public as though it were one of the secrets to which we have

pledged fidelity ; but that our whole influence in society shall be that which may truly be described as Masonic ; and when once our wide-spread fraternity remains thus true to our ancient landmarks , we shall not have to lament ( as every true Mason must do ) such failures in our mission as the one I have alluded to .

Of the Beecher Club I have only space to observe , that it is a benefit society for the people , in which the clergy and gentry of Stratford-on-Avon , Alcester , and vicinage , take much interest ; that its meetings are very properly held apart from taverns ; but in what other respects it eclipses such societies as those of the Manchester Unity

of the Independent order of Odd Fellows , or the Foresters ( to both which institutions I have the privilege to belong ) , I have not been able to perceive . Certainly , the great element of success amongst the Odd Fellows , Foresters , and similar societies , that of the class for which it is intended managing there own affairs , seems to be too little studied by the model society ; and the

speakers seemed rather too keen of throwing out inuendos against other benefit societies , who are all labouring for the same end , and perhaps not less effectually . I was glad to hear the chairman soften down these uncalled for remarks ; for the true Mason , whilst he will gladly welcome the light on every subjectmust ever feel pained

, when he sees his fellow-travellers through life squabbling , as it were , about the best way of doing a thing , instead of us each doing our own rjart manfully , according to what lig ht we ourseif possess , and allowing others to do their's as to their own convictions seem best . Success , thento the Beecher Club ; may its members never be

, less happy than they seemed to be at tlie festive board ; but success also to every institution whose object is the elevation of tlie people , the amelioration of humanity , and to make " the wilderness and the solitary place be glad for them , and the desert to rejoice ancl blossom as the rose . " *

"In man I love all thafc is noble and great , But war , and oppression , and falsehood , I hate ; And oft has my spirit burst forth into song Against every species of riot and wrong . I ' m a pleader for freedom in every form ; For my country I feel patriotic and warm , — - Yet still I ' ve no wish to disorder the land

With fche flame of the torch and the flash of the brand ; I'm for measures more gentle , more certain , in sooth—The movement of morals , the triumph of truth ; And m } ' hopes are thafc men who are toiling and grieving "Will make this fair Earth like the Heaven they believe in . " —J . ' 0 . PfllSCE . I made the acquaintance of one man only at the

anniversary dinner of the Beecher Club ; and that one man was old Kempe , the sexton . I have hacl from my childhood a strange liking for old sextons , parish clerks , and gravediggers , and many a curious fact and wild legend have I obtained from them ; for most of them may say with the late poet laureate , Southey— " I am skilled in legendary

lore . " As I wanted to visit the church , how could I do better than secure old Kempe when I had got him ? I therefore changed seats so as to make sure of him , treated , him with a quart of ale ( the only beverage he seemed to care for ) , and made a single glass of wine negus do duty for all the toasts ; for , as I wanted to remember all I sawand temperance being at all times a Masonic

, virtue , I thought I could not have a better example in this respect than good old Adam in " As Tou Like It " —a character which Shakspere not only created , but is said to have himself enacted on the stage of the Globe and the Blackfriar's Theatres -. — " Though I look old , yet I am strong and lusty ;

For in my youth I never did apply Hot and rebellious liquors in my blood ; Nor did not with unbashful forehead woo The means of weakness and debility : Therefore my age is as a lusty winter , Frosty bufc kindly . "—ACT II ., Scene 3 . The name of Kempe struck me forcibly , aud my first

question was , " Is yonr ' s a Stratford family ? " to which I was answered in the affirmative . "Who knows , thought I , that "William Kempe , the player , whose name occurs the thirteenth in the list of the fifteen shareholders in the Blackfriar ' s Theatre , and immediately after that of "William Shakspere in their petition to the Lords of the Privy Council , * in November , 1589 , and who was the

original performer of Dogberry , in Shakspere s comedy of " Much Ado About Nothing ; " who knows , I sav , that this fellow-player of Shakspere was not also a native of Stratford-on Avon , or its immediate vicinity ? There is nothing improbable in this conjecture ; Thomas Greene , the fourth player on the list , we are told , was a Stratfordon-Avon man ; and Shakspere ' s patronLord

South-, ampton , writing of our bard , and Eichard Burbage , the Eoscius of his day , whose name is second on the list of shareholders , says : — " They were both of one county , and , indeed , almost of one town . " Eitson , the eminent antiquary , in a note to his Sol / in Hood says : — " "Will Kempe " the playerwas a celebrated morris dancer ; ancl

, , in the Bodleian Library is the following scarce ancl curious tract by him - .. Kemps nine dales wonder , performed in a daunce from London to Norwich . Containing the pleasure , paines , and hind entertainment of William Kemp between London and that city in his late morrice . Wherein is somewhat set downe worth note - . to reprooce the

slaunders spretl of him , many things merry , nothing hurffull . Written by himself to saii >< fie his friends . London , printed b y E . A . for Nicholas Ling , 1600 , -i-to B . L . On the title-page is a wooden cut-figure of Kemp as a morris-dancer , preceded by a fellow with a pipe and drum , whom he , iu the hook , calls Thomas Slye , his taberer . " Ancl Eitson bids us " see , in Eichard Brathwayte ' s Remains after Death , 1618 . some lines ' upon Kempe and his morice with his epitaph . ' The lines by

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