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  • March 1, 1880
  • Page 26
  • CHURCH BELLS AND THEIR ASSOCIATIONS.
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The Masonic Magazine, March 1, 1880: Page 26

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Page 26

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Church Bells And Their Associations.

CHURCH BELLS AND THEIR ASSOCIATIONS .

BY BRO . THOMAS B . TROAVSDALE , Author of " Glimpses of Olden Kent , " "Lore of the Months , " etc . THE tones of the church bell haA'e ever exercised a sort of mystic influence over the human mindand in the dark ageswhen ignorance stalked

, , abroad in our land , bells were regarded with superstitious veneration . Who amongst us can hear , without catching something of the spirit they joyously disseminate , the merry wedding chimes , throwing all around a spell of happy gladness ; who can listen unmoved to the tolling of the passing bell , so slow , so deep , so sad , telling how a soul is winging its flight away from the earth for eA'er . Who has not heard , ancl felt better for hearing , however

unmindful of spiritual things he may be , " The sound of the church-going bell , " sending forth on some calm Sabbath morning its hallowed music , seeming , as it were , to re-echo the glad , SAveet song of peace on earth carolled forth b y the angels to the wondering shepherds of Bethlehem eighteen centuries ago . - We cannot wonder , with such associations as these , that bells have become interwoven Avith many a legend , quaint ancl old , ancl formed the subject of

many a strange and interesting story . In the general destruction ancl distribution of church property which occurred in the reign of Henry VIII ., countless bells were melted down for the sake of the metal . Tales of many curious coincidences attending this wholesale appropriation have been related . Ships attempting to carry bells across the seas foundered shortly after leaving land , as at Lynn and Yarmouth ; ancl fourteen of the Jersey bells being wrecked at the entrance of the harbour of St . Malo , a saying arose to the effect that when the wind blows the drowned bells are ringing . A certain Bishop of Bangor , too , who sold the bells of his

cathedral , is said to have been stricken with blindness when he went to see them shipped ; and Sir Miles Partridge , AA'I IO won the Jesus bells of St . Paul's , London , from King Henry , at dice , was not long afterwards hanged on Tower Hill . These bells , four in number , were staked by King Henry against one hundred pounds , and his opponent won . Camden relates a singular legend having reference to the bells of Ledbury Church , Herefordshire . A chapel on the north side of Ledbury Church is dedicated to Saint Catherineof whom

, Camden gives the folloAving account : — " Catherine Audley , or , as she is commonly called , St . Catherine , was a religions woman in the reign of Edward the Second , and had a maid named Mabel , ancl not being fixed in any settled place , she had a revelation that she should not set up her rest until she came to a town where the bells should ring of themselves . She ancl her maid , coming near Ledbury , heard the bells ring , though the church doors were shut

ancl no ringers there . Here , then , she determined to spend the remainder of her clays , ancl build a hermitage , living on herbs and milk . The king , in consideration of her birth ancl piety , or both , granted her an annuit y of £ 30 . " The church at Boscastle , Cornwall ( anciently called Bottreaux ) , has no bells ; but tradition says a peal Avas ordered on the Continent ancl there cast , but the vessel which was bringing them oA'er to Boscastle sank within sight of the

church toiver , of course losing the bells beneath the waves . It was said that the cause of the ship ' s foundering was a direct intervention of Almighty power , in reproof of the irreverence of the captain . The pilot , so runs the story , was a Boscastle man , ancl on sighting his native coast , he exclaimed , "Thank God ! we shall reach the shore Avith evening ' s tide ; " to which the captain mockingly

“The Masonic Magazine: 1880-03-01, Page 26” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01031880/page/26/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE RECORDS OF AN ANCIENT LODGE. Article 1
THE OLD CHARGES OF THE BRITISH FREEMASONS. Article 6
AS WE MAKE IT. Article 11
THE LAWS OF THE CRUSADERS IN CYPRUS. Article 12
MASONIC STORIES. Article 13
A MASONIC DREAM. Article 14
A STRANGE LANGUAGE. Article 17
THE MYSTIC CHORD. Article 18
" GREAT ANNIVERSARY SPELL. Article 20
THE UNIVERSALITY OF MASONRY. Article 24
THE LONDON LIVERY COMPANIES. Article 25
CHURCH BELLS AND THEIR ASSOCIATIONS. Article 26
THE MASONIC VETERANS' ASSOCIATION OF CENTRAL NEW YORK. Article 29
FOUND. Article 33
LITTLE BRITAIN. Article 34
OUR GRAND BROTHERHOOD. Article 38
A CATALOGUE OF MASONIC BOOKS IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM. Article 41
NORAH'S REMONSTRANCE. Article 44
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Page 26

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

Church Bells And Their Associations.

CHURCH BELLS AND THEIR ASSOCIATIONS .

BY BRO . THOMAS B . TROAVSDALE , Author of " Glimpses of Olden Kent , " "Lore of the Months , " etc . THE tones of the church bell haA'e ever exercised a sort of mystic influence over the human mindand in the dark ageswhen ignorance stalked

, , abroad in our land , bells were regarded with superstitious veneration . Who amongst us can hear , without catching something of the spirit they joyously disseminate , the merry wedding chimes , throwing all around a spell of happy gladness ; who can listen unmoved to the tolling of the passing bell , so slow , so deep , so sad , telling how a soul is winging its flight away from the earth for eA'er . Who has not heard , ancl felt better for hearing , however

unmindful of spiritual things he may be , " The sound of the church-going bell , " sending forth on some calm Sabbath morning its hallowed music , seeming , as it were , to re-echo the glad , SAveet song of peace on earth carolled forth b y the angels to the wondering shepherds of Bethlehem eighteen centuries ago . - We cannot wonder , with such associations as these , that bells have become interwoven Avith many a legend , quaint ancl old , ancl formed the subject of

many a strange and interesting story . In the general destruction ancl distribution of church property which occurred in the reign of Henry VIII ., countless bells were melted down for the sake of the metal . Tales of many curious coincidences attending this wholesale appropriation have been related . Ships attempting to carry bells across the seas foundered shortly after leaving land , as at Lynn and Yarmouth ; ancl fourteen of the Jersey bells being wrecked at the entrance of the harbour of St . Malo , a saying arose to the effect that when the wind blows the drowned bells are ringing . A certain Bishop of Bangor , too , who sold the bells of his

cathedral , is said to have been stricken with blindness when he went to see them shipped ; and Sir Miles Partridge , AA'I IO won the Jesus bells of St . Paul's , London , from King Henry , at dice , was not long afterwards hanged on Tower Hill . These bells , four in number , were staked by King Henry against one hundred pounds , and his opponent won . Camden relates a singular legend having reference to the bells of Ledbury Church , Herefordshire . A chapel on the north side of Ledbury Church is dedicated to Saint Catherineof whom

, Camden gives the folloAving account : — " Catherine Audley , or , as she is commonly called , St . Catherine , was a religions woman in the reign of Edward the Second , and had a maid named Mabel , ancl not being fixed in any settled place , she had a revelation that she should not set up her rest until she came to a town where the bells should ring of themselves . She ancl her maid , coming near Ledbury , heard the bells ring , though the church doors were shut

ancl no ringers there . Here , then , she determined to spend the remainder of her clays , ancl build a hermitage , living on herbs and milk . The king , in consideration of her birth ancl piety , or both , granted her an annuit y of £ 30 . " The church at Boscastle , Cornwall ( anciently called Bottreaux ) , has no bells ; but tradition says a peal Avas ordered on the Continent ancl there cast , but the vessel which was bringing them oA'er to Boscastle sank within sight of the

church toiver , of course losing the bells beneath the waves . It was said that the cause of the ship ' s foundering was a direct intervention of Almighty power , in reproof of the irreverence of the captain . The pilot , so runs the story , was a Boscastle man , ancl on sighting his native coast , he exclaimed , "Thank God ! we shall reach the shore Avith evening ' s tide ; " to which the captain mockingly

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