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  • April 25, 1863
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, April 25, 1863: Page 3

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    Article BRITISH SCULPTORS. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article BRITISH SCULPTORS. Page 2 of 2
    Article KNIGHTHOOD. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 3

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

British Sculptors.

Joshua . * Edward lived in Fetter-lane , Fleet-street . This Aubrey assures us , and his information is confirmed by those curious MS . papers called " The Eire of London Papers , " now happily preserved in the British Museum . There I read as follows : — "Edward Marshall , Mason , a parcel of ground with

several tenements aud yards thereunto belonging , lying on the east to Eetter-lane , on the north to the passage called Bond Stables , on the south adjoining to the buildings of one John Bawling , gent ., and on the west butting on the garden of the Master of the Soils . "—Addit . M . S . Brit . Mm . 5068 , fol . 182 . ,

This Edward Marshall made the bust in Westminster Abbey of Michael Drayton the poet , f erected at the expense ofthe famous Anne Clifford , daughter of an Earl of Cumberland , and wife first of Saetville Earl of Dorset , and secondly of Philip Herbert Earl of Pembroke and Montgomery , aud who consequently

, throughout a long final widowhood , was obliged liy the rules of the Heralds' College to divide her titles as she had done her heart , between two dear defunct husbands , by signing herself " Anne Pembroke , Dorset and Montgomery , " according to the peerage

creations of her two lords ; a case without parallel , I believe , in the history or romance of the English peerage . Edward had , it would seem , a taste for poetry . He " wrought curiousl y in plaster" the bust of his " great friend , " Francis Quarles , " and "valued it for

Quarles ' s sake . " " 'Tis pity it should be lost , " Aubrey writes to old Antony Wood . Is its whereabouts at all known ? By Edward Marshall there are two white marble and Avell-executed monumental busts in Tottenham ChurchMiddlesexrepresenting Sir Eobert and Lady

, , Barkham , of Wainfleet , in the county of Lincoln , Sir Eobert died in 16-14 . Their eig ht children kneel near to the busts . This monument should be seen by all who are curious in identifying the works of our early sculptors . The editors of Walpole ' s " Anecdotes" Mr .

Dal-, laway in 1826 , aud Mr . Wornum in 18-1-9 , have wholly overlooked a printed notice of Edward Marshall . I shall , therefore , transcribe it entire for insertion by all Avho are curious in perfecting and illustrating that delightful work : —

" Barn-elms House in Surrey , with orchards , gardens , coach-houses , stable , grazing for a couple of geldings or cows , spring-water brought to the house in leaden p ipes , pleasant walks by the Thames side , and other accommodations , is to be let , or otherwise may be divided into two convenient dwellings , with

garden , orchard , and water to each of them . Inquire farther of Mr . Edward Marshall , a stone-cutter , living in Fetter-lane . "—Mcreuriiis Polilicus , Sth Mm / , 1659 . Among Edward Marshall ' s other works— " Marshall of Eetter-lane "—Walpole ' s editors should

, include the monument to Sir [ Richard Verney at Comptou , and of the Earl of Totness at Stratfordupon-Avon . Sir William Dugclale , in his Pocketbook for 1653 , records that thev came from the chisel of " Marshall of Eetter-lane . " ' II . Joshua ( whose best works are to be seen at

British Sculptors.

Campden , in Gloucestershire , and Swansea , in Cambridgeshire ) was employed on a well-known work in Westminster Abbey , as the following fragment ( now first published ) will convince my readers : — " To the executors of Joshua Marshall , deceased , for making a monument at Westminster , for the

bones of a prince found in the Tower of London . " — Works Accounts ofthe Grown for 1678-9 . The monument to the princes , King Edward V aud his brother , is a sarcophagus , neatly wrought in white marble . Sir Christopher Wren gave the design . And here I may ask , would my friend , the

distinguished scvrlptor , Mr . William Calder Marshall , E . A ., make a like sarcophagus for a like amount ? I wish Mr . Marshall would look at his namesake ' s work , and let the readers of the Builder know what a like work would cost at the present true . A practical opinion of what a duplicate would cost would give us

a further clue to the value of marble and labour in the years 1678 aud 1863 . III . Of William Marshall I can give no further account than that he was born on the 7 th of October , 1606 , and that the star—the figure of his nativity ascendant in the skies that day—is preserved among

vUhmole ' s MSS . at Oxford . This I have never seen . A sculptor ' s nativity cast by Ashmole might fitly find a p lace in a column of the Builder . My last new material relating to the Marshalls is from the MS . vestry minutes of St . Martin ' s-in-the-Eifilds : — -

" 1658 , September 24—Ordered that Mr . Marshall , stone-cutter , do pay twenty shillings per annum for the privilege he hath in laying stones in Hedgelane : to which Mr . Marshall being present consented ; the twenty shillings per annum to be paid from Michaelmas now next ensuinrr . "

Hedge-lane is a narrow but much frequented thoroughfare leading from Pall-mall East to Coventrystreet . Let us contrast it in 1658 , when Mr . Marshall Avas suffered to make a marble-yard of it , with the crowded and equally narrow Hedge-lane of 1863 . PETER CTJITH ' INGIIAM , in the Builder .

Knighthood.

KNIGHTHOOD .

The celebration of the marriage of the heir to the throne with all the heraldic magnificence— -with fane / fare of silver clarions , with processions of yeomen of the guard in their scarlet doublets barred with gold , gentlemen-at-arms with their whifco plumes , state drummers ancl trumpeters in coats of cloth of gold , heralds in their tabards , and pursuivants , kings-at-avms , and garter

kingat-arms with collar , badge , tabard , and scarlet satin mantle—has awakened a national interest in all the insignia of chivalry which has long reposed in the minds of a few antiquaries . All England has just seized heraldry as a voice with which to speak welcome to the beautiful daughter of sea-kings whom the Prince of Wales has chosen for his bride . Seldom have quartering . ?

been so assiduously studied , never have the heraldic emblems of a foreign nation been so multitudinously displayed in ' our streets , as in the decorations of our houses , bridges , and public buildings , not only along the line of route through which the procession was expected to pass , but in every town in the United Kingdomnorth , south , east , and west . Heraldic Latin and heraldic colouring have been diligently searched to find full and faultless expression of the public gratification . England has been one broad-spanned rainbow—one vast pageant .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1863-04-25, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 29 March 2023, www.masonicperiodicals.org/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_25041863/page/3/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE BUDGET. Article 1
FREEMASONRY AS A TEACHER. Article 1
FREEMASONRY IN FRANCE. Article 2
BRITISH SCULPTORS. Article 2
KNIGHTHOOD. Article 3
THE CORONATION CHAIR, WESTMINSTER ABBEY. Article 5
PROPOSED MEMORIAL OF THE LATE PRINCE CONSORT. Article 7
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 8
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 11
THE ROYAL ARCH DISPUTE IN SCOTLAND Article 11
MASONIC MEMS. Article 12
THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 12
METROPOLITAN. Article 13
PROVINCIAL. Article 14
ROYAL ARCH. Article 15
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 15
MARK MASONRY. Article 16
Poetry. Article 16
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 17
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

British Sculptors.

Joshua . * Edward lived in Fetter-lane , Fleet-street . This Aubrey assures us , and his information is confirmed by those curious MS . papers called " The Eire of London Papers , " now happily preserved in the British Museum . There I read as follows : — "Edward Marshall , Mason , a parcel of ground with

several tenements aud yards thereunto belonging , lying on the east to Eetter-lane , on the north to the passage called Bond Stables , on the south adjoining to the buildings of one John Bawling , gent ., and on the west butting on the garden of the Master of the Soils . "—Addit . M . S . Brit . Mm . 5068 , fol . 182 . ,

This Edward Marshall made the bust in Westminster Abbey of Michael Drayton the poet , f erected at the expense ofthe famous Anne Clifford , daughter of an Earl of Cumberland , and wife first of Saetville Earl of Dorset , and secondly of Philip Herbert Earl of Pembroke and Montgomery , aud who consequently

, throughout a long final widowhood , was obliged liy the rules of the Heralds' College to divide her titles as she had done her heart , between two dear defunct husbands , by signing herself " Anne Pembroke , Dorset and Montgomery , " according to the peerage

creations of her two lords ; a case without parallel , I believe , in the history or romance of the English peerage . Edward had , it would seem , a taste for poetry . He " wrought curiousl y in plaster" the bust of his " great friend , " Francis Quarles , " and "valued it for

Quarles ' s sake . " " 'Tis pity it should be lost , " Aubrey writes to old Antony Wood . Is its whereabouts at all known ? By Edward Marshall there are two white marble and Avell-executed monumental busts in Tottenham ChurchMiddlesexrepresenting Sir Eobert and Lady

, , Barkham , of Wainfleet , in the county of Lincoln , Sir Eobert died in 16-14 . Their eig ht children kneel near to the busts . This monument should be seen by all who are curious in identifying the works of our early sculptors . The editors of Walpole ' s " Anecdotes" Mr .

Dal-, laway in 1826 , aud Mr . Wornum in 18-1-9 , have wholly overlooked a printed notice of Edward Marshall . I shall , therefore , transcribe it entire for insertion by all Avho are curious in perfecting and illustrating that delightful work : —

" Barn-elms House in Surrey , with orchards , gardens , coach-houses , stable , grazing for a couple of geldings or cows , spring-water brought to the house in leaden p ipes , pleasant walks by the Thames side , and other accommodations , is to be let , or otherwise may be divided into two convenient dwellings , with

garden , orchard , and water to each of them . Inquire farther of Mr . Edward Marshall , a stone-cutter , living in Fetter-lane . "—Mcreuriiis Polilicus , Sth Mm / , 1659 . Among Edward Marshall ' s other works— " Marshall of Eetter-lane "—Walpole ' s editors should

, include the monument to Sir [ Richard Verney at Comptou , and of the Earl of Totness at Stratfordupon-Avon . Sir William Dugclale , in his Pocketbook for 1653 , records that thev came from the chisel of " Marshall of Eetter-lane . " ' II . Joshua ( whose best works are to be seen at

British Sculptors.

Campden , in Gloucestershire , and Swansea , in Cambridgeshire ) was employed on a well-known work in Westminster Abbey , as the following fragment ( now first published ) will convince my readers : — " To the executors of Joshua Marshall , deceased , for making a monument at Westminster , for the

bones of a prince found in the Tower of London . " — Works Accounts ofthe Grown for 1678-9 . The monument to the princes , King Edward V aud his brother , is a sarcophagus , neatly wrought in white marble . Sir Christopher Wren gave the design . And here I may ask , would my friend , the

distinguished scvrlptor , Mr . William Calder Marshall , E . A ., make a like sarcophagus for a like amount ? I wish Mr . Marshall would look at his namesake ' s work , and let the readers of the Builder know what a like work would cost at the present true . A practical opinion of what a duplicate would cost would give us

a further clue to the value of marble and labour in the years 1678 aud 1863 . III . Of William Marshall I can give no further account than that he was born on the 7 th of October , 1606 , and that the star—the figure of his nativity ascendant in the skies that day—is preserved among

vUhmole ' s MSS . at Oxford . This I have never seen . A sculptor ' s nativity cast by Ashmole might fitly find a p lace in a column of the Builder . My last new material relating to the Marshalls is from the MS . vestry minutes of St . Martin ' s-in-the-Eifilds : — -

" 1658 , September 24—Ordered that Mr . Marshall , stone-cutter , do pay twenty shillings per annum for the privilege he hath in laying stones in Hedgelane : to which Mr . Marshall being present consented ; the twenty shillings per annum to be paid from Michaelmas now next ensuinrr . "

Hedge-lane is a narrow but much frequented thoroughfare leading from Pall-mall East to Coventrystreet . Let us contrast it in 1658 , when Mr . Marshall Avas suffered to make a marble-yard of it , with the crowded and equally narrow Hedge-lane of 1863 . PETER CTJITH ' INGIIAM , in the Builder .

Knighthood.

KNIGHTHOOD .

The celebration of the marriage of the heir to the throne with all the heraldic magnificence— -with fane / fare of silver clarions , with processions of yeomen of the guard in their scarlet doublets barred with gold , gentlemen-at-arms with their whifco plumes , state drummers ancl trumpeters in coats of cloth of gold , heralds in their tabards , and pursuivants , kings-at-avms , and garter

kingat-arms with collar , badge , tabard , and scarlet satin mantle—has awakened a national interest in all the insignia of chivalry which has long reposed in the minds of a few antiquaries . All England has just seized heraldry as a voice with which to speak welcome to the beautiful daughter of sea-kings whom the Prince of Wales has chosen for his bride . Seldom have quartering . ?

been so assiduously studied , never have the heraldic emblems of a foreign nation been so multitudinously displayed in ' our streets , as in the decorations of our houses , bridges , and public buildings , not only along the line of route through which the procession was expected to pass , but in every town in the United Kingdomnorth , south , east , and west . Heraldic Latin and heraldic colouring have been diligently searched to find full and faultless expression of the public gratification . England has been one broad-spanned rainbow—one vast pageant .

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