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  • March 1, 1882
  • Page 16
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The Masonic Magazine, March 1, 1882: Page 16

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    Article MEMOIR OF ELIAS ASHMOLE. ← Page 3 of 5 →
Page 16

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Memoir Of Elias Ashmole.

of Clement ' s Inn ; while in December of the same year he lost his wife , to whom he was greatly attached , ancl whose death was the more acutely felt , seeing it occurred quite suddenly and unexpectedly . In the great struggle , which began in 1642 , between Charles I . and his Parliament , ancl terminated so fatally for the former , Ashmole , though we have but scant particulars of the part he playedattachedhimself most zealously to

, , the cause of his royal master . We react of him as being , on 9 th May , 1645 , one of the Gentlemen of the Ordnance in the garrison of Oxford , whence , for a time , he seems to have removed to Worcester , where he became Commissioner , Receiver , and Registrar of the Excise ; this post he . afterwards exchanged for a captaincy in Lord Ashley ' s regiment ancl the Comptrollership of the Ordnance . But though his loyaltto Charles I . was conspicuoushe does not

y , seem to have allowed it to interfere with his studies , for it was about this period that he entered himself of Brazenose College , Oxon , and devoted himself closel y to natural philosophy , mathematics , ancl astronomy , to which his intimacy with Mr ., afterwards Sir George , Wharton , induced him to add astrology . In July , 1646 , he hacl the misfortune to lose his mother , who would seem

to have been a lady possessing great mental and moral accomplishments . " She was , " writes Ashmole , " a discreet , sober , provident woman , and with great patience endured many afflictions . Her parents hacl given her exceedinggood breeding , and she was excellent at her needle , which ( my father beingimprovident ) served her in good stead . She was competently read in divinity , history , and . poetryand was continuallinstilling into my ears such reliious

, y g ancl moral precepts as my younger ears were capable of ; nor did she ever fail to correct my faults , always adding sharp reproofs and good lectures to boot . She was much esteemed ; she lived in much friendship among her neighbours , ancl left a good name behind her ; in fine , she was trul y religious and virtuous . "

This irreparable loss happened while the subject of this sketch was in in Worcester , and when the siege of that city came to a close , Ashmole went to reside in Cheshire , ancl it was during his stay in these parts that he and the Colonel Henry Mainwaring , of whom mention has already been made , were admitted into the membership of a lodge of Masons held at Warrington , in Lancashire , the exact date being , as before stated , the 16 th October , 1646 , and the presiding officer of the lod a Mr . Penketthe Warden . The year

ge , , following be sought retirement from the political troubles then prevailing , and went into Berkshire , where he selected the peaceful little village of Englefield as the place of his residence . It was here that Ashmole gave himself up to the pursuit of " simpling , " ancl very speedily became an eminent botanist . Here , too , it was , that he made the acquaintance of Mary , sole daughter of Sir William

Foster , of Aldermarston , Berks , Bart ., then a widow for the third time , having been married in the first instance to a Sir Edward Stafford , then to a Mr . Hamlyn , and thirdl y to Sir Thomas Mainwaring , Knt ., Recorder of Reading , ancl a Master in the Court of Chancery . This acquaintance , however , ripening , as it soon did into the stronger feelings of respect and love for Ashmole , was like to have cost him his life , for Lady Mainwaring ' s second

son by her first marriage , Mr . Humphrey Stafford , conceived so great an opposition to the match , that one day when Ashmole was lying ill in bed he broke into his apartment , and would have killed him , had he not been fortunately prevented . In 1648 Lad y Mainwaring conveyed to him her estate at Bradfield ; but a very short time afterwards , owing to Ashmole ' s loyalty to his sovereign , his newly-acquired property was put under sequestration . Fortunately , he hacl made the acquaintance of and possessed great influence with William Lilly ancl other upholders of the Parliament side , and through their exertions in his behalf no long time elapsed ere the sequestration was

“The Masonic Magazine: 1882-03-01, Page 16” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01031882/page/16/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE CARDINAL VIRTUES. Article 1
MAIDENHOOD. Article 6
DOCUMENTA LATOMICA INEDITA. Article 7
THE ROMAN COLLEGIA. Article 12
MEMOIR OF ELIAS ASHMOLE. Article 14
AN ARCHITECTURAL PUZZLE. Article 19
THE SUNDERLAND AND HAMILTON-BECKFORD LIBRARIES. Article 20
THE WORSHIPFUL MASTER. Article 23
NATIONAL SAXON MASONIC HYMN. Article 29
ECHOES OF THE LAST CENTURY. Article 30
LITERARY GOSSIP. Article 34
THE LEGENDS OF THE CRAFT. Article 36
A CURIOUS CORRESPONDENCE. Article 37
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Memoir Of Elias Ashmole.

of Clement ' s Inn ; while in December of the same year he lost his wife , to whom he was greatly attached , ancl whose death was the more acutely felt , seeing it occurred quite suddenly and unexpectedly . In the great struggle , which began in 1642 , between Charles I . and his Parliament , ancl terminated so fatally for the former , Ashmole , though we have but scant particulars of the part he playedattachedhimself most zealously to

, , the cause of his royal master . We react of him as being , on 9 th May , 1645 , one of the Gentlemen of the Ordnance in the garrison of Oxford , whence , for a time , he seems to have removed to Worcester , where he became Commissioner , Receiver , and Registrar of the Excise ; this post he . afterwards exchanged for a captaincy in Lord Ashley ' s regiment ancl the Comptrollership of the Ordnance . But though his loyaltto Charles I . was conspicuoushe does not

y , seem to have allowed it to interfere with his studies , for it was about this period that he entered himself of Brazenose College , Oxon , and devoted himself closel y to natural philosophy , mathematics , ancl astronomy , to which his intimacy with Mr ., afterwards Sir George , Wharton , induced him to add astrology . In July , 1646 , he hacl the misfortune to lose his mother , who would seem

to have been a lady possessing great mental and moral accomplishments . " She was , " writes Ashmole , " a discreet , sober , provident woman , and with great patience endured many afflictions . Her parents hacl given her exceedinggood breeding , and she was excellent at her needle , which ( my father beingimprovident ) served her in good stead . She was competently read in divinity , history , and . poetryand was continuallinstilling into my ears such reliious

, y g ancl moral precepts as my younger ears were capable of ; nor did she ever fail to correct my faults , always adding sharp reproofs and good lectures to boot . She was much esteemed ; she lived in much friendship among her neighbours , ancl left a good name behind her ; in fine , she was trul y religious and virtuous . "

This irreparable loss happened while the subject of this sketch was in in Worcester , and when the siege of that city came to a close , Ashmole went to reside in Cheshire , ancl it was during his stay in these parts that he and the Colonel Henry Mainwaring , of whom mention has already been made , were admitted into the membership of a lodge of Masons held at Warrington , in Lancashire , the exact date being , as before stated , the 16 th October , 1646 , and the presiding officer of the lod a Mr . Penketthe Warden . The year

ge , , following be sought retirement from the political troubles then prevailing , and went into Berkshire , where he selected the peaceful little village of Englefield as the place of his residence . It was here that Ashmole gave himself up to the pursuit of " simpling , " ancl very speedily became an eminent botanist . Here , too , it was , that he made the acquaintance of Mary , sole daughter of Sir William

Foster , of Aldermarston , Berks , Bart ., then a widow for the third time , having been married in the first instance to a Sir Edward Stafford , then to a Mr . Hamlyn , and thirdl y to Sir Thomas Mainwaring , Knt ., Recorder of Reading , ancl a Master in the Court of Chancery . This acquaintance , however , ripening , as it soon did into the stronger feelings of respect and love for Ashmole , was like to have cost him his life , for Lady Mainwaring ' s second

son by her first marriage , Mr . Humphrey Stafford , conceived so great an opposition to the match , that one day when Ashmole was lying ill in bed he broke into his apartment , and would have killed him , had he not been fortunately prevented . In 1648 Lad y Mainwaring conveyed to him her estate at Bradfield ; but a very short time afterwards , owing to Ashmole ' s loyalty to his sovereign , his newly-acquired property was put under sequestration . Fortunately , he hacl made the acquaintance of and possessed great influence with William Lilly ancl other upholders of the Parliament side , and through their exertions in his behalf no long time elapsed ere the sequestration was

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