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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Sept. 7, 1861
  • Page 8
  • NOTES ON LITERATURE SCIENCE AND ART.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Sept. 7, 1861: Page 8

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Page 8

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Masonic Notes And Queries.

Bro . Heseltine , who wished at that time to publish an improved edition of the JBoo 7 i . of Constitutions , which would bring down the history of Freemasonry to his own time . Considering Preston tho most eligible to prepare the work for the printer , he gave him the entire charge of it , and free access to all the documents and papers of Grand Lodge . AVhen the most labourious part of the work

was performed , and it was nearly ready to go to press the G . Sec . wanted to give an acquaintance of his , Bro . JNoorfchouck , Treasurer of the Lodge of Antiquity , an interest in its publication , and appointed him to assist Preston iu completing it . Bro . Prestou having done all the work of selecting , arranging , etc ., thought he was entitled to the individual honour of his laboursand declined the

, offer , when the work was taken from him altogether and given to JNborfchouck . Seeing that the honours he had so well earned were taken from him , he remonstrated warmly and threw up the office of D . G . Sec . in disgust , and , some say , withheld a part of the material he had collected for the book . This displeased Bro . Heseltine , who was not long waiting for an opportunity of resenting the offence which

Preston had given him , and the latter was arraigned for a violation of the laws of the Grand Lodge in attending a sermon at church in Masonic costume ; aud in his defence Bro . Preston said that this regulation of the Grand Lodge —the one which they said he had violated- — -was " the height of absurdity , and could not be admitted by any person who in-ofessed himself a friend to the society . " He also said

that " tho Lodge of Antiquity had its own peculiar rights formally secured to it at the revival in 1716 , and was determined to preserve them inviolate , and it was very questionable if the Grand Lodge was empowered to make laws binding on a lodge which had acted on its own independent authority from a period long anterior to the existence of that body . " On the 30 th of January 1778 he ( Bro . Preston )

, , was "expelled from the Grand Lodge , and declared incapable of attending the same or any of its Committees . " In 1787 , when the Duke of Cumberland was Grand Master , the case of Bro . Preston was submitted to the Grand Lodge , who then , in a better aud more Masonic spirit , reconsidered all its former proceedings , and reinstated Brother Preston to all tho rights and honours of Freemasonry . ]

Notes On Literature Science And Art.

NOTES ON LITERATURE SCIENCE AND ART .

The British Archaeological Association , finding its journal too limited for all the papers which it wishes to make public , has just issued the first volume of a series of communications under the title of Collectanea Archmologia , from an able article in which , on the Local Legends of Shropshire , by the well-known antiquary , Mr . Thomas Wright , we cull the following : — " The giants are

frequently associated with ruins and ancient relics in the legends of this country . In the history of tbe JFitzwarine's ive are given to understand that the ruined Roman city of tfricomum , which we are now exploring at AVroxeter , had been taken possession of by the giants . Sometimes , in these legends , the very names of the Tuetonic mythic personages are preserved . Thus , a legend in Berkshire has presetved the name of the Northern and Teutonic smith-heroAA elanclthe representative of the classical Vulcan

, , . The name of Welaud ' s father , AA ade , is preserved in the legend of Mulgrave Castle , in Yorkshire , which is pretended to have heen built by a giant of that name . A Roman road which passes by it is called AVade ' s Causeway , and a large tumulus , or cairn of stones , in the vicinity is popularly called AVade's Grave . According to the legend , while the giant AVade was building his castle , he and his wife lived upon the milk of an enormous cow , which she was

obliged to leave at pasture on the distant moors . AAlule nude the causeway for her convenience , and she assisted him in building the castle by bringing him quantities of large stones in her apron . One day , as she was carrying her bundle of stones , her apron-string broke ancl they all fell to the ground , a great heap of about twenty cart-loads—and there they still remain as a memorial of her industry . Another castle in Yorkshire ing earlsite

, occupy an y , was said , according to a tradition mentioned by Leland in the sixteenth century , to have heen built hy a giant named Ettin . It is a mere corruption of the name of the Fotenas , or giants of Tuetonic mythology . " The legend of AVade ' s Causeway is noticed by Leland , Graves , Young , and others , and Mulgrave Castle , with

which it is connected , is in the interesting district called Cleveland , on a new history of which , Brother George Markham Tweddell is at present almost exclusively engaged , and for which he has been carefully collecting materials for upwards of eighteen years . A writer in the Fcclesiologist very rationally remarks : — " Before we look forward to the future of art , however hopefully

we may do so , this one work is of the first importance—to do what ive can to stay the ruinous hand of the restorer amongst the cities of Europe . Year by year fresh works of destructive renovations , are undertaken . It is too late already to save some of the very noblest works of the past ; it will be too late soon to raise a voice save in lament for the dead . At all events , let us take care of our own ancient buildings in England . To let well alone is prudent counselin this as in other matters . Let us learn to be more

, judicious and conservative in the restoration of our English mediawal remains , and so , perhaps , teach others to hesitate before they spend their means ancl labour in undertakings so ill devised . In all new work we have room enough to indulge without restraint in design , and to allow imagination a sober licence . But let us . pause before we lay a rude hand on the structures of earlier times . It is an ill preparation for our own works to show no reverence for

those of our fathers . There is a curse on the man that removes his neighbour ' s landmark ; there is , perhaps , a greater one for hini that destroys the earnest , faithful labour of the generationsbefore him . "

Sir John Richardson , L . L . D ., F . R . S ., in his recent volume on The Polar Regions , says , respecting the hundreds of meat-cannisters . bearing the label of J the contractor Goldner which were found at Beechy Island hy Captain Penney : — "So large a quantity could not have been needed during tho first winter from England . ^ It is therefore most probable that a survey was made of the provisions , and the bad cases iled in the order found . The loss of so large

p a proportion of the supply was doubtless a main cause of the disastrous fate of the expedition two winters afterwards . A record , in a tin case , was most probably exposed on the top of the cairn . The voyagers did not know that the Polar bear is in the habit of carrying off ancl gnawing such unusual objects , a fact subsequently learned by the searching parties . That their provisions were actually exhausted when they reached King William ' s Island was

made known to Dr . Rae by a party of Eskimos , who sold them Some seal ' s flesh . The number of deaths ( nine officers and fifteen men , up to the time of leaving the ships ) indicates that officers and men had gone on short allowance , an expedient wliich , however needful , cannot be resorted to in Arctic climates ivithout inducing scurvy . It is characteristic of that disease , that its victims are not aware of their weakness and the near approach of death , until , on some sudden exposure or unusual exertion , they expire ivithout warning . " A new edition , reconstructed and revised of Journeys and

Fxplorations in the Cotton Kingdom of America , by Frederick Law O'lmsted , brought down to the present time , will shortly he published . Two letters , entirely in the autograph of Oliver Cromwell , sold by auction the other day , in London , for £ 59 . They had been the property of the late Rev . Dr . Badinel .

The Homeioard Mail thus writes of the contemplated removal of the museum and library of the India House to the British Museum : — " AA e know something of the advantages which the old India House Library has conferred on literary mem who have illustrated the history , the geography , the manners and customs , and , above all , the philology of India . But why , ifc may be asked ,, cannot these same advantages he conferred upon them after the

reported change has taken plaee ? The answer is very obvious ; . because the system of the British Museum is not the system of theold India House Library . Iu the former you may read what you can get between certain stated hours . You may hunt your book through an incomprehensible catalogue , ancl having got it , you may sit clown at a common table ancl turn it to the best uses you can . But the India-house Library lent out its book and manuscripts to tbe home student , Few of those who have

contributed to our knowledge of the languages , the history , and the institutions of India could have prosecuted their studies between stated hours in a public room . There are many literary men in this country who never have been to the Library of the British Museum , who never will go , and never can go . If they cannot from some quarter or other obtain the books ancl manuscripts they require , with permission to use them at their own homes , they cannot do their work at all . Take , for example , the case of a man in the public service , compelled to attend a Government office between the breakfast and the dinner hours . How can he go to

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-09-07, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 29 March 2023, www.masonicperiodicals.org/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_07091861/page/8/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
UNITED GRAND LODGE. Article 1
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—XLVI. Article 2
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆOLOGY. Article 3
GENERAL ARCHITECTURAL INTELLIGENCE. Article 4
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 6
NOTES ON LITERATURE SCIENCE AND ART. Article 8
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 10
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 11
PRIVATE SOLDIERS. Article 11
ST. MARY, REDCLIFFE. Article 11
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 12
UNITED GRAND LODGE. Article 12
METROPOLITAN. Article 13
PROVINCIAL. Article 14
MARK MASONRY. Article 18
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 18
Obituary. 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.

Masonic Notes And Queries.

Bro . Heseltine , who wished at that time to publish an improved edition of the JBoo 7 i . of Constitutions , which would bring down the history of Freemasonry to his own time . Considering Preston tho most eligible to prepare the work for the printer , he gave him the entire charge of it , and free access to all the documents and papers of Grand Lodge . AVhen the most labourious part of the work

was performed , and it was nearly ready to go to press the G . Sec . wanted to give an acquaintance of his , Bro . JNoorfchouck , Treasurer of the Lodge of Antiquity , an interest in its publication , and appointed him to assist Preston iu completing it . Bro . Prestou having done all the work of selecting , arranging , etc ., thought he was entitled to the individual honour of his laboursand declined the

, offer , when the work was taken from him altogether and given to JNborfchouck . Seeing that the honours he had so well earned were taken from him , he remonstrated warmly and threw up the office of D . G . Sec . in disgust , and , some say , withheld a part of the material he had collected for the book . This displeased Bro . Heseltine , who was not long waiting for an opportunity of resenting the offence which

Preston had given him , and the latter was arraigned for a violation of the laws of the Grand Lodge in attending a sermon at church in Masonic costume ; aud in his defence Bro . Preston said that this regulation of the Grand Lodge —the one which they said he had violated- — -was " the height of absurdity , and could not be admitted by any person who in-ofessed himself a friend to the society . " He also said

that " tho Lodge of Antiquity had its own peculiar rights formally secured to it at the revival in 1716 , and was determined to preserve them inviolate , and it was very questionable if the Grand Lodge was empowered to make laws binding on a lodge which had acted on its own independent authority from a period long anterior to the existence of that body . " On the 30 th of January 1778 he ( Bro . Preston )

, , was "expelled from the Grand Lodge , and declared incapable of attending the same or any of its Committees . " In 1787 , when the Duke of Cumberland was Grand Master , the case of Bro . Preston was submitted to the Grand Lodge , who then , in a better aud more Masonic spirit , reconsidered all its former proceedings , and reinstated Brother Preston to all tho rights and honours of Freemasonry . ]

Notes On Literature Science And Art.

NOTES ON LITERATURE SCIENCE AND ART .

The British Archaeological Association , finding its journal too limited for all the papers which it wishes to make public , has just issued the first volume of a series of communications under the title of Collectanea Archmologia , from an able article in which , on the Local Legends of Shropshire , by the well-known antiquary , Mr . Thomas Wright , we cull the following : — " The giants are

frequently associated with ruins and ancient relics in the legends of this country . In the history of tbe JFitzwarine's ive are given to understand that the ruined Roman city of tfricomum , which we are now exploring at AVroxeter , had been taken possession of by the giants . Sometimes , in these legends , the very names of the Tuetonic mythic personages are preserved . Thus , a legend in Berkshire has presetved the name of the Northern and Teutonic smith-heroAA elanclthe representative of the classical Vulcan

, , . The name of Welaud ' s father , AA ade , is preserved in the legend of Mulgrave Castle , in Yorkshire , which is pretended to have heen built by a giant of that name . A Roman road which passes by it is called AVade ' s Causeway , and a large tumulus , or cairn of stones , in the vicinity is popularly called AVade's Grave . According to the legend , while the giant AVade was building his castle , he and his wife lived upon the milk of an enormous cow , which she was

obliged to leave at pasture on the distant moors . AAlule nude the causeway for her convenience , and she assisted him in building the castle by bringing him quantities of large stones in her apron . One day , as she was carrying her bundle of stones , her apron-string broke ancl they all fell to the ground , a great heap of about twenty cart-loads—and there they still remain as a memorial of her industry . Another castle in Yorkshire ing earlsite

, occupy an y , was said , according to a tradition mentioned by Leland in the sixteenth century , to have heen built hy a giant named Ettin . It is a mere corruption of the name of the Fotenas , or giants of Tuetonic mythology . " The legend of AVade ' s Causeway is noticed by Leland , Graves , Young , and others , and Mulgrave Castle , with

which it is connected , is in the interesting district called Cleveland , on a new history of which , Brother George Markham Tweddell is at present almost exclusively engaged , and for which he has been carefully collecting materials for upwards of eighteen years . A writer in the Fcclesiologist very rationally remarks : — " Before we look forward to the future of art , however hopefully

we may do so , this one work is of the first importance—to do what ive can to stay the ruinous hand of the restorer amongst the cities of Europe . Year by year fresh works of destructive renovations , are undertaken . It is too late already to save some of the very noblest works of the past ; it will be too late soon to raise a voice save in lament for the dead . At all events , let us take care of our own ancient buildings in England . To let well alone is prudent counselin this as in other matters . Let us learn to be more

, judicious and conservative in the restoration of our English mediawal remains , and so , perhaps , teach others to hesitate before they spend their means ancl labour in undertakings so ill devised . In all new work we have room enough to indulge without restraint in design , and to allow imagination a sober licence . But let us . pause before we lay a rude hand on the structures of earlier times . It is an ill preparation for our own works to show no reverence for

those of our fathers . There is a curse on the man that removes his neighbour ' s landmark ; there is , perhaps , a greater one for hini that destroys the earnest , faithful labour of the generationsbefore him . "

Sir John Richardson , L . L . D ., F . R . S ., in his recent volume on The Polar Regions , says , respecting the hundreds of meat-cannisters . bearing the label of J the contractor Goldner which were found at Beechy Island hy Captain Penney : — "So large a quantity could not have been needed during tho first winter from England . ^ It is therefore most probable that a survey was made of the provisions , and the bad cases iled in the order found . The loss of so large

p a proportion of the supply was doubtless a main cause of the disastrous fate of the expedition two winters afterwards . A record , in a tin case , was most probably exposed on the top of the cairn . The voyagers did not know that the Polar bear is in the habit of carrying off ancl gnawing such unusual objects , a fact subsequently learned by the searching parties . That their provisions were actually exhausted when they reached King William ' s Island was

made known to Dr . Rae by a party of Eskimos , who sold them Some seal ' s flesh . The number of deaths ( nine officers and fifteen men , up to the time of leaving the ships ) indicates that officers and men had gone on short allowance , an expedient wliich , however needful , cannot be resorted to in Arctic climates ivithout inducing scurvy . It is characteristic of that disease , that its victims are not aware of their weakness and the near approach of death , until , on some sudden exposure or unusual exertion , they expire ivithout warning . " A new edition , reconstructed and revised of Journeys and

Fxplorations in the Cotton Kingdom of America , by Frederick Law O'lmsted , brought down to the present time , will shortly he published . Two letters , entirely in the autograph of Oliver Cromwell , sold by auction the other day , in London , for £ 59 . They had been the property of the late Rev . Dr . Badinel .

The Homeioard Mail thus writes of the contemplated removal of the museum and library of the India House to the British Museum : — " AA e know something of the advantages which the old India House Library has conferred on literary mem who have illustrated the history , the geography , the manners and customs , and , above all , the philology of India . But why , ifc may be asked ,, cannot these same advantages he conferred upon them after the

reported change has taken plaee ? The answer is very obvious ; . because the system of the British Museum is not the system of theold India House Library . Iu the former you may read what you can get between certain stated hours . You may hunt your book through an incomprehensible catalogue , ancl having got it , you may sit clown at a common table ancl turn it to the best uses you can . But the India-house Library lent out its book and manuscripts to tbe home student , Few of those who have

contributed to our knowledge of the languages , the history , and the institutions of India could have prosecuted their studies between stated hours in a public room . There are many literary men in this country who never have been to the Library of the British Museum , who never will go , and never can go . If they cannot from some quarter or other obtain the books ancl manuscripts they require , with permission to use them at their own homes , they cannot do their work at all . Take , for example , the case of a man in the public service , compelled to attend a Government office between the breakfast and the dinner hours . How can he go to

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