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  • The Freemasons' Quarterly Review
  • March 31, 1847
  • Page 46
  • THE GRAND CONCLAVE OF KNIGHTS TEMPLAR AND THE ROYAL ARCH DEGREE.
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, March 31, 1847: Page 46

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    Article THE GRAND CONCLAVE OF KNIGHTS TEMPLAR AND THE ROYAL ARCH DEGREE. ← Page 4 of 4
    Article ON THE NIGHT SCENE OF HOMER. Page 1 of 3 →
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The Grand Conclave Of Knights Templar And The Royal Arch Degree.

sonable and prudent course in the Grand Conclave . But to go further than this , and require the possession of the Royal Arch degree also , is a step in the svrong direction , and only rendering it more difficult at any future time to unravel the tangled sveb svhich nosv binds together the two Orders of Masonry and Christian Knighthood . As Royal Arch Masons , the members of the Grand Conclave may be desirous of

enforcing a measure svell calculated to foster and support that not very authentic or legitimate piece of Freemasonry , but as Knights of the Order of the Temple , acting as rulers and governors of that ancient Order , it is their duty , and ought to be their endeavour , to prepare the way for the attempt at the proper time to raise it to an independent position of its osvn , instead of more firmly binding it to the svheels and dragging it after the car of Masonry . THE KNIGHT OF SAINT JOHN .

On The Night Scene Of Homer.

ON THE NIGHT SCENE OF HOMER .

As when the stars in heav ' n round the ch ar moon Are beaming beautiful ; when ever } ' wind Is hushed , and ail the heights , and mountain peaks , And groves are seen ; while from below expands The boundless firmament revealing all The stars , and gladness fills the shepherd's heart . So numerous a \ t > iearcd tbe Trojan fixes Between the tieet and Zanthus , anil before Troy's walls illuminate . A thousand fires SVere burning on the plain , and by each blaze

Sat fifty warriors . By their chariots sto . ' . d The coursers champing I'arley white aud oats , SS'aiting the coming of the fair-throned morn . In Christopher North ' s attractive critique upon Sotheby ' s translation of Homer , sve find that a disputed meaning is attached to verses 554 , 555 ofthe Sth Iliad , in the famous night-piece , and svhich are thus literally rendered by him of the North : — " TVie -uuTneasuTaS ^ e firmarnDTi . S bursts \ or exi-iar ^ Ss ) from SieSow , And all the s ' ars are seen ; and the shepherd rejoices in his heart . "

faking this transcript by the modern Athenian to be all one svith the ancient Greek , what image , we svould ' ask , does it present to the reader ' s mind ? To us , who profess not to be either critics or commentators , but obedient to our natural perceptions , it seems , and has ahvays so seemed , to mean nothing more nor less than the apparent revolution of the stars by the earth ' s rotation , by svhich the immeasurable firmament appears to expand or burst from belosv the horizon , and all the stars and constellations are seen , pressing upsvards , as it svere , and disclosing successively

nesv numbers . Thus , it seems to us , svould the whole Homeric hemisphere pass in reviesv before the shepherd . Christopher , hosves'er , accounts for this bursting or expanding of the firmament from belosv , and the consequent panorama or vision of all the stars , by conjecturing that at first there svere only a few stars visible around the moon ( crescent , or " round as my shield , " for that too is a disputed point ) , but that by degrees the svinds , svhich at first were still , began to blosv , and break up the clouds , opening a nesv reach of heaven upsvards , until thess * holesky became clear , and all the stars svere seen .

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1847-03-31, Page 46” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_31031847/page/46/.
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Title Category Page
THK FREEMA-S.O-NS' QUARTERLYREVIEW, Article 1
A EEEEMASON, Article 2
CONTENTS. Article 3
TO THE FRIENDS OF THE WIDOW AND THE FATHERLESS, AT HOME AND ABROAD. Article 4
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEW. Article 5
QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION OF THE GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND, MARCH, 1S47. Article 11
TO THE R. W. BRO. ROWLAND ALSTON, ESQ.. Article 11
CITY OF LONDON MASONIC HALL. Article 12
ON THE STUDY OF MASONIC ANTIQUITIES. Article 13
MASONIC THOUGHTS ON THE DISTRESS IN SCOTLAND AND IRELAND. Article 27
THE FREEMASON'S LEXICON. Article 36
THE GRAND CONCLAVE OF KNIGHTS TEMPLAR AND THE ROYAL ARCH DEGREE. Article 43
ON THE NIGHT SCENE OF HOMER. Article 46
DISCOVERY OF THE CENTRAL SUN. Article 48
THE YOUTH'S VISION. Article 49
COLLEGE MUSINGS. Article 50
FREEMASONRY IN THE IRISH COURTS OF LAW, 1808. Article 53
ANECDOTES. Article 56
TO THE EDITOR. Article 58
TO THE EDITOR. Article 59
TO THE EDITOR. Article 59
TO THE EDITOR. Article 60
TO THE EDITOR. Article 60
TO THE EDITOR. Article 61
POETRY. Article 62
SONNET TO THE MOON. Article 63
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 64
UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 64
QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION.* Article 65
GRAND CONCLAVE OF ENGLAND AND WALES. Article 71
SUPREME COUNCIL 33RD DEGREE FOR ENGLAND AND WALES, AND THE DEPENDENCIES OF THE BRITISH CROWN. Article 72
THE CHARITIES. Article 73
ASYLUM FOR WORTHY AGED MASONS. Article 74
ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT ANNUITY FUND. Article 74
THE REPORTER. Article 75
CHIT CHAT. Article 78
Obituary. Article 84
PROVINCIAL. Article 87
SCOTLAND. Article 103
IRELAND. Article 108
FOREIGN. Article 114
AMERICA.—UNITED STATES. Article 119
I N D 1 A. Article 120
LITERARY NOTICES. Article 121
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 127
CONTENTS. Article 131
ASYLUM Article 132
INDEX. Article 133
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FREEMASONS' QUARTERLYADVERTISER. SECOND ... Article 139
ASYLUM FOR THE WORTHY AGED AND DECAYED F... Article 139
FREEMASON KY. BROTHER J. P. ACKLAM, MASO... Article 140
REBffOVAIi ! ! ! W. EVANS, MASONIC JEWEL... Article 140
FREEMASONRY. BROTHER W. POVEY, MASONIC B... Article 140
Just published, price Gs. 6d. bound in M... Article 141
Extract from " ELEMENTS OF ART," by J. D... Article 141
"DENIOWSKI'S ARTIFICIAL MEMORY. Lectures... Article 141
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Page 46

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

The Grand Conclave Of Knights Templar And The Royal Arch Degree.

sonable and prudent course in the Grand Conclave . But to go further than this , and require the possession of the Royal Arch degree also , is a step in the svrong direction , and only rendering it more difficult at any future time to unravel the tangled sveb svhich nosv binds together the two Orders of Masonry and Christian Knighthood . As Royal Arch Masons , the members of the Grand Conclave may be desirous of

enforcing a measure svell calculated to foster and support that not very authentic or legitimate piece of Freemasonry , but as Knights of the Order of the Temple , acting as rulers and governors of that ancient Order , it is their duty , and ought to be their endeavour , to prepare the way for the attempt at the proper time to raise it to an independent position of its osvn , instead of more firmly binding it to the svheels and dragging it after the car of Masonry . THE KNIGHT OF SAINT JOHN .

On The Night Scene Of Homer.

ON THE NIGHT SCENE OF HOMER .

As when the stars in heav ' n round the ch ar moon Are beaming beautiful ; when ever } ' wind Is hushed , and ail the heights , and mountain peaks , And groves are seen ; while from below expands The boundless firmament revealing all The stars , and gladness fills the shepherd's heart . So numerous a \ t > iearcd tbe Trojan fixes Between the tieet and Zanthus , anil before Troy's walls illuminate . A thousand fires SVere burning on the plain , and by each blaze

Sat fifty warriors . By their chariots sto . ' . d The coursers champing I'arley white aud oats , SS'aiting the coming of the fair-throned morn . In Christopher North ' s attractive critique upon Sotheby ' s translation of Homer , sve find that a disputed meaning is attached to verses 554 , 555 ofthe Sth Iliad , in the famous night-piece , and svhich are thus literally rendered by him of the North : — " TVie -uuTneasuTaS ^ e firmarnDTi . S bursts \ or exi-iar ^ Ss ) from SieSow , And all the s ' ars are seen ; and the shepherd rejoices in his heart . "

faking this transcript by the modern Athenian to be all one svith the ancient Greek , what image , we svould ' ask , does it present to the reader ' s mind ? To us , who profess not to be either critics or commentators , but obedient to our natural perceptions , it seems , and has ahvays so seemed , to mean nothing more nor less than the apparent revolution of the stars by the earth ' s rotation , by svhich the immeasurable firmament appears to expand or burst from belosv the horizon , and all the stars and constellations are seen , pressing upsvards , as it svere , and disclosing successively

nesv numbers . Thus , it seems to us , svould the whole Homeric hemisphere pass in reviesv before the shepherd . Christopher , hosves'er , accounts for this bursting or expanding of the firmament from belosv , and the consequent panorama or vision of all the stars , by conjecturing that at first there svere only a few stars visible around the moon ( crescent , or " round as my shield , " for that too is a disputed point ) , but that by degrees the svinds , svhich at first were still , began to blosv , and break up the clouds , opening a nesv reach of heaven upsvards , until thess * holesky became clear , and all the stars svere seen .

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