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  • Dec. 28, 1861
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  • NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Dec. 28, 1861: Page 3

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Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

of Shan-tung , were in the habit of removing their limbs for the purpose of exciting sympathy , and that the operation was performed by a beggar who made it his profession . He ties a piece of thin string as tightly as possible round the middle of the calf , drawing it closer from time to time until mortification ensues . AVhen the soft parts are separated the bone is sawn through , and in time the stump is covered with skin . This operation causes great suffering , and many die in the process ; but those who survive the

amputation are congratulated by their friends , as having gained the loss of their limbs and an increase of fortune , from the contributions of the benevolent . " Nor is fortune-telling less practised than mendicity : — " These men cany on their profession in the streets of the city also , where there is space available . A mat is spread on the ground , with a stick fixed at each corner , around which a strip of cloth is cast to form an inclcsure for the fortune-teller and his hen , which is in a small bamboo cage . By his side is an open

box containing a number of very small rolls of paper with sentences or single characters written on them . In front of him is a long row of fifty or sixty small pasteboard envelopes , which also hold single characters , or the divination sentences . A little board painted white , for writing on , and the 'inkstone' and pencil are at hand ready for use . An inquirer who wishes to consult him , squats down on his heels outside the inclosure , pays three cash , ( half a farthing ) and tells his storystating what hewishes to

, . know . He is told to pick out a roll from the box , which having done , he hands it to the man , who unrolls it , and writes its contents on the board . He then opens the door of the cage , and the hen marches forward to the row of envelopes ; after peering over them inquisitively , she picks out one and lets it fall to the ground . A few grains of rice are thrown into the cage , and she returns . The envelope is opened , and the characters inside it also written on the board , from the two inscriptions on which the consulter ' s prospects

are announced . The hen is regarded as the arbiter of fate ,- incapable of moral motive in the selection ofthe roll ; and is therefore supposed to give the decree of fate , without the possiblity of collusion or misinterpretation of any kind . " Miss Agnes Strickland , in her Lives of the Bachelor Kings of TEngland , has the following notice of Nicholas Throckmorton , the

favourite of Edward the Sixth : — " On Edward ' s accession to the throne , Henry Sidney being about nineteen years of age , was appointed first gentleman of the household to his young royal friend , who subsequently knighted him . Edward appears to have taken especial pleasure in exercising this chivalric function of his regal office . Once , when in his privy chamber , unfettered by the restraining presence of his uncle , the protector , Craniner , or any other grave member of his councilhe offered to kniht his new

, g favourite Nicholas Throckmorton ; but Throckmorton , being more experienced in the stately etiquettes of a court than his juvenile sovereign , and probably apprehending that he should be brought into trouble if ho . availed himself without express leave from the protector or the council , of the proffered honour his majesty desired to confer upon him , treated " the matter as a joke , ran off into the back stairs lobby , and hid himself behind a piece of furniture there . The young king gave chase with a drawn sword

in his hand . Plato , Aristotle , Socrates , and all the philosophers of old , and , move than that , the grave theologians , pedants , and pedagogues of his schoolroom , were forgotten in the moment of mirthful excitement , when he tracked Trockmorton to his hiding place , and strove to pull him out . A romp-royal ensued , for a hoy in his tenth year , even if subjected to regal fetters , will sometimes act according to nature . Finding he could not succeed in dragging -the military courtierivho had so well earned his spurs at Pinkie

, field , from his entrenchment , the young king , who , Tudor like , was bent on accomplishing his royal will , bestowed the accolade of honour upon him then and there , to the scandal of some who were present , and murmured . The incident is thus quaintly versified in the Throckmorton MSS . -.

—'And on a time when I should knighted be , The king said ' Kneel , ' ' yet then I went my way ; But straight himself ran forth and spied me Behind a chest , in lobby where I lay , And there against my will he dubbed me knight , AA'hich was an eyesore unto some men's sight . ' The new knight had been for some time a married man , but having

no living , kept his wife in retirement , till encouraged by the favour of his young royal master , he confided the fact to him , and received his commands to present Lady Throckmorton to him . The result is thus related in the metrical chronicle of Throckmorton ' s life : —¦ ' When to the king my wife was showed , new brought To court , who for the nonce was meanly clad , lie told hev , ' that I was a husband naught , Because he saw her courtly robes so bad ;'

But she excused the fault , with 'poverty , AVhich me enforced to keep her beggarly / ' And I replied , Eor her it was no way , To bear the merchant's stock upon her hack , Unless I knew some means it to repay , Or ns to save from ruin , or from rack . '

He answered , ' Dost thou want , and blush to crave Of right the tongue-tied man should nothing have . '' But we are well contented for to give Something of profit , which thou shalt espy , AVhereby thou shalt be able for to live , If that before some further help we die . Rightly of us thou never shalt complain ,

That travail was thy sole reward for pain . '' " Mr . Edwin Forrest , the American actor , has commenced an action against Mr . G . H . Parker , of the Boston Courier , for certain theatrical criticisms . The following verses by the celebrated Charles James Fox appear in the new Life of Mrs . Piozzi , where they are said to be printed for the first time : —•

"Where the loveliest expression to features is joined , By nature's most delicate pencil designed ; AA'here blushes unbidden , and smiles without art , Speak the softness and feeling that dwell in the heart ; AA'heie in manners enchanting no blemish we trace , But the soul keeps the promise we had from the face ; Sure philosophy , reason and coldness must prove Defences unequal to shield us from love .

Then tell me , mysterious enchantress , oh tell , By what wonderful heart , by what magical spell My heart is so fenced , that for once I am wise , And gaze without rapture on Amoret's eyes ; That my wishes , which never were bounded before , Are here hounded hy friendship and ask for no more ?' Is't Reason ? No , that my whole life will belie , For who so at variance as Reason and I ?

Is't Ambition that fills up each chink of my heart , Nor allows any softer sensation a part ? Oh , no ! for in this all the world must agree One folly was never sufficient for me . Is my mind by distress too intensely employed , By pleasure relaxed , or by vanity cloyed ? For alike in this only enjoyment and pain Both slacken the springs of those nerves which they strain

That I've felt each reverse that from fortune can flow , That I've tasted each bliss that the happiest know , Has still been the whimsical fate of my life , AA'here Anguish aud Joy have been ever at strife . But tho' versed in th' extremes both of pleasure and pain , I am still but too ready to feel them again . If , then , for this once in my life I am free , And escape from a snare miht catch wiser than me

g , 'Tis that beauty alone but imperfectly charms , For tho' brightness may dazzle , 'tis kindness that warms ; As on suns in the winter with pleasure we gaze , But feel not their warmth tho' their splendour we praise : So beauty our just admiration may claim , But Love , and Love only , the heart can inflame . "

Mr . AA'alter Thornbury , in his newly-published Life of J . M . W . Turner , ___ . ___ ., relates the following anecdote illustrative of the doings of the artists : — "Turner ' s fun was often professional .. His detractors have mads mischief of even the following instance of his good-humouved raillery -. —In 1 S 2 G , that great ruler of 'the sea , Stansfield , painted a picture of a calm , which he named ' throwing the Painter . ' Unfortunatelhe was unable to get it finished in

y time for the exhibition , aud Calcott hearing of it , painted a picture whicli for fun he called ' Butch Fishing Boat missing the Painter . " Turner would chuckle rarely over these studio jokes , and quietly determing to cap them all , he came out next year with a work named , ' Now for the Painter , ' with all the laughing triumph of a boy who at leapfrog takes the last and highest back . "

Mr . . 1 . T . Burgess ( the editor ofthe Burg Guardian ) , has in the press a volume entitled L ' fe Scenes and Social Sketches , the profits from the sale of which are to be given in aid of the building fund of the new church of St . Thomas , at Radclifi ' e Bridge , iu Lancashire . In the recently-published memoir of the late Rev . John Clay , the well known prison chaplain of Preston , we are told that

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-12-28, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 28 March 2023, www.masonicperiodicals.org/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_28121861/page/3/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
MASONIC FACTS. Article 1
THE LODGE OF BENEVOLENCE. Article 1
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 2
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 2
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 4
THE TEMPLE AND THE GRAND CONCLAVE. Article 5
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 6
METROPOLITAN. Article 6
PROVINCIAL. Article 8
AUSTRALIA. Article 9
ROYAL ARCH. Article 10
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 10
MARK MASONRY. Article 10
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 10
Obituary. Article 11
LINES, Article 11
THE WEEK. Article 11
SPECIAL NOTICE. Article 12
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 12
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

of Shan-tung , were in the habit of removing their limbs for the purpose of exciting sympathy , and that the operation was performed by a beggar who made it his profession . He ties a piece of thin string as tightly as possible round the middle of the calf , drawing it closer from time to time until mortification ensues . AVhen the soft parts are separated the bone is sawn through , and in time the stump is covered with skin . This operation causes great suffering , and many die in the process ; but those who survive the

amputation are congratulated by their friends , as having gained the loss of their limbs and an increase of fortune , from the contributions of the benevolent . " Nor is fortune-telling less practised than mendicity : — " These men cany on their profession in the streets of the city also , where there is space available . A mat is spread on the ground , with a stick fixed at each corner , around which a strip of cloth is cast to form an inclcsure for the fortune-teller and his hen , which is in a small bamboo cage . By his side is an open

box containing a number of very small rolls of paper with sentences or single characters written on them . In front of him is a long row of fifty or sixty small pasteboard envelopes , which also hold single characters , or the divination sentences . A little board painted white , for writing on , and the 'inkstone' and pencil are at hand ready for use . An inquirer who wishes to consult him , squats down on his heels outside the inclosure , pays three cash , ( half a farthing ) and tells his storystating what hewishes to

, . know . He is told to pick out a roll from the box , which having done , he hands it to the man , who unrolls it , and writes its contents on the board . He then opens the door of the cage , and the hen marches forward to the row of envelopes ; after peering over them inquisitively , she picks out one and lets it fall to the ground . A few grains of rice are thrown into the cage , and she returns . The envelope is opened , and the characters inside it also written on the board , from the two inscriptions on which the consulter ' s prospects

are announced . The hen is regarded as the arbiter of fate ,- incapable of moral motive in the selection ofthe roll ; and is therefore supposed to give the decree of fate , without the possiblity of collusion or misinterpretation of any kind . " Miss Agnes Strickland , in her Lives of the Bachelor Kings of TEngland , has the following notice of Nicholas Throckmorton , the

favourite of Edward the Sixth : — " On Edward ' s accession to the throne , Henry Sidney being about nineteen years of age , was appointed first gentleman of the household to his young royal friend , who subsequently knighted him . Edward appears to have taken especial pleasure in exercising this chivalric function of his regal office . Once , when in his privy chamber , unfettered by the restraining presence of his uncle , the protector , Craniner , or any other grave member of his councilhe offered to kniht his new

, g favourite Nicholas Throckmorton ; but Throckmorton , being more experienced in the stately etiquettes of a court than his juvenile sovereign , and probably apprehending that he should be brought into trouble if ho . availed himself without express leave from the protector or the council , of the proffered honour his majesty desired to confer upon him , treated " the matter as a joke , ran off into the back stairs lobby , and hid himself behind a piece of furniture there . The young king gave chase with a drawn sword

in his hand . Plato , Aristotle , Socrates , and all the philosophers of old , and , move than that , the grave theologians , pedants , and pedagogues of his schoolroom , were forgotten in the moment of mirthful excitement , when he tracked Trockmorton to his hiding place , and strove to pull him out . A romp-royal ensued , for a hoy in his tenth year , even if subjected to regal fetters , will sometimes act according to nature . Finding he could not succeed in dragging -the military courtierivho had so well earned his spurs at Pinkie

, field , from his entrenchment , the young king , who , Tudor like , was bent on accomplishing his royal will , bestowed the accolade of honour upon him then and there , to the scandal of some who were present , and murmured . The incident is thus quaintly versified in the Throckmorton MSS . -.

—'And on a time when I should knighted be , The king said ' Kneel , ' ' yet then I went my way ; But straight himself ran forth and spied me Behind a chest , in lobby where I lay , And there against my will he dubbed me knight , AA'hich was an eyesore unto some men's sight . ' The new knight had been for some time a married man , but having

no living , kept his wife in retirement , till encouraged by the favour of his young royal master , he confided the fact to him , and received his commands to present Lady Throckmorton to him . The result is thus related in the metrical chronicle of Throckmorton ' s life : —¦ ' When to the king my wife was showed , new brought To court , who for the nonce was meanly clad , lie told hev , ' that I was a husband naught , Because he saw her courtly robes so bad ;'

But she excused the fault , with 'poverty , AVhich me enforced to keep her beggarly / ' And I replied , Eor her it was no way , To bear the merchant's stock upon her hack , Unless I knew some means it to repay , Or ns to save from ruin , or from rack . '

He answered , ' Dost thou want , and blush to crave Of right the tongue-tied man should nothing have . '' But we are well contented for to give Something of profit , which thou shalt espy , AVhereby thou shalt be able for to live , If that before some further help we die . Rightly of us thou never shalt complain ,

That travail was thy sole reward for pain . '' " Mr . Edwin Forrest , the American actor , has commenced an action against Mr . G . H . Parker , of the Boston Courier , for certain theatrical criticisms . The following verses by the celebrated Charles James Fox appear in the new Life of Mrs . Piozzi , where they are said to be printed for the first time : —•

"Where the loveliest expression to features is joined , By nature's most delicate pencil designed ; AA'here blushes unbidden , and smiles without art , Speak the softness and feeling that dwell in the heart ; AA'heie in manners enchanting no blemish we trace , But the soul keeps the promise we had from the face ; Sure philosophy , reason and coldness must prove Defences unequal to shield us from love .

Then tell me , mysterious enchantress , oh tell , By what wonderful heart , by what magical spell My heart is so fenced , that for once I am wise , And gaze without rapture on Amoret's eyes ; That my wishes , which never were bounded before , Are here hounded hy friendship and ask for no more ?' Is't Reason ? No , that my whole life will belie , For who so at variance as Reason and I ?

Is't Ambition that fills up each chink of my heart , Nor allows any softer sensation a part ? Oh , no ! for in this all the world must agree One folly was never sufficient for me . Is my mind by distress too intensely employed , By pleasure relaxed , or by vanity cloyed ? For alike in this only enjoyment and pain Both slacken the springs of those nerves which they strain

That I've felt each reverse that from fortune can flow , That I've tasted each bliss that the happiest know , Has still been the whimsical fate of my life , AA'here Anguish aud Joy have been ever at strife . But tho' versed in th' extremes both of pleasure and pain , I am still but too ready to feel them again . If , then , for this once in my life I am free , And escape from a snare miht catch wiser than me

g , 'Tis that beauty alone but imperfectly charms , For tho' brightness may dazzle , 'tis kindness that warms ; As on suns in the winter with pleasure we gaze , But feel not their warmth tho' their splendour we praise : So beauty our just admiration may claim , But Love , and Love only , the heart can inflame . "

Mr . AA'alter Thornbury , in his newly-published Life of J . M . W . Turner , ___ . ___ ., relates the following anecdote illustrative of the doings of the artists : — "Turner ' s fun was often professional .. His detractors have mads mischief of even the following instance of his good-humouved raillery -. —In 1 S 2 G , that great ruler of 'the sea , Stansfield , painted a picture of a calm , which he named ' throwing the Painter . ' Unfortunatelhe was unable to get it finished in

y time for the exhibition , aud Calcott hearing of it , painted a picture whicli for fun he called ' Butch Fishing Boat missing the Painter . " Turner would chuckle rarely over these studio jokes , and quietly determing to cap them all , he came out next year with a work named , ' Now for the Painter , ' with all the laughing triumph of a boy who at leapfrog takes the last and highest back . "

Mr . . 1 . T . Burgess ( the editor ofthe Burg Guardian ) , has in the press a volume entitled L ' fe Scenes and Social Sketches , the profits from the sale of which are to be given in aid of the building fund of the new church of St . Thomas , at Radclifi ' e Bridge , iu Lancashire . In the recently-published memoir of the late Rev . John Clay , the well known prison chaplain of Preston , we are told that

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