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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • March 1, 1882
  • Page 36
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The Masonic Magazine, March 1, 1882: Page 36

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    Article LITERARY GOSSIP. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article THE LEGENDS OF THE CRAFT. Page 1 of 1
Page 36

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Literary Gossip.

title of " Old and New Hull . " This , we gather , will consist of twelve half-crown parts , each containing several beautifully executed lithographed views of Hull scenes and Hull architecture , past and present , ancl also portraits of local worthies . The illustrations are to be after original drawings from the well qualified pencil of Mr . T . Tindall Wildridge , Hon . Secretary to the Hull Art Clubwho will also furnish the elucidatory letterpress . The work is to be

, published by subscription , and will , doubtless , be a worthy addition to Torkshire literature . The Burlington of February is a very good number . The serial stories b y the editor , Miss Helen Mathers , and Dr . William Howard Russell , increase in interest as the narratives proceed , and all the miscellaneous papers are bright

and readable . An article by Dr . Milner Fothergill , sketching an imaginary picture of the dietary of A . D . 2000 , is at first sight amusing , but has a value beyond the entertainment it thus affords , in that it points to the clangers with which the vagaries of fashion at the dining-table are attended . There is also an exquisite little poem by George Barlow . The second number of Mr . Edward Walford ' s Antiquarian Magazine and

Bibliographer sustains the favourable estimate we formed of the initial issue , and contains several valuable contributions from pens of competent writers . An article on the Barony of Arklow , in Ireland , by Lord James Wandesford-Butler , has special interest , in that the title has recentl y been conferred upon Bro . H . R . H . Prince Leopold . The rest of the contents of the February part of this meritorious magazine are all of great interest and enduring value . Mr . Cornelius Walford ' s papers on the history of " Gilds " will be specially attractive to Freemasonic readers .

The Legends Of The Craft.

THE LEGENDS OF THE CRAFT .

From an Unpublished Volume of Masonic Sonnets , BY BRO . CrROTtGE MABKHAM TWEPDELL . TX 7 HETHER our Legends facts or fictions be , * ' Their teaching is the same ; and that man knows

Little of ethics , who too rashly vows All fiction must be falsehood . Do not we Find highest truths in Parables ? and He Who taught in Palestine so long ago , As none else taught , used them to strike a blow At all untruth . But we must have the key

To unlock symbolic teaching in the mind , Or Allegories ne ' er can benefit The sluggish brain of country elown or cit . He who knows how to search , will surel y find Truth hid in any well : but they who boast Their love of literal facts , oft err the most . Rose Cottage , Stokesley .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1882-03-01, Page 36” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01031882/page/36/.
  • List
  • Grid
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.

Literary Gossip.

title of " Old and New Hull . " This , we gather , will consist of twelve half-crown parts , each containing several beautifully executed lithographed views of Hull scenes and Hull architecture , past and present , ancl also portraits of local worthies . The illustrations are to be after original drawings from the well qualified pencil of Mr . T . Tindall Wildridge , Hon . Secretary to the Hull Art Clubwho will also furnish the elucidatory letterpress . The work is to be

, published by subscription , and will , doubtless , be a worthy addition to Torkshire literature . The Burlington of February is a very good number . The serial stories b y the editor , Miss Helen Mathers , and Dr . William Howard Russell , increase in interest as the narratives proceed , and all the miscellaneous papers are bright

and readable . An article by Dr . Milner Fothergill , sketching an imaginary picture of the dietary of A . D . 2000 , is at first sight amusing , but has a value beyond the entertainment it thus affords , in that it points to the clangers with which the vagaries of fashion at the dining-table are attended . There is also an exquisite little poem by George Barlow . The second number of Mr . Edward Walford ' s Antiquarian Magazine and

Bibliographer sustains the favourable estimate we formed of the initial issue , and contains several valuable contributions from pens of competent writers . An article on the Barony of Arklow , in Ireland , by Lord James Wandesford-Butler , has special interest , in that the title has recentl y been conferred upon Bro . H . R . H . Prince Leopold . The rest of the contents of the February part of this meritorious magazine are all of great interest and enduring value . Mr . Cornelius Walford ' s papers on the history of " Gilds " will be specially attractive to Freemasonic readers .

The Legends Of The Craft.

THE LEGENDS OF THE CRAFT .

From an Unpublished Volume of Masonic Sonnets , BY BRO . CrROTtGE MABKHAM TWEPDELL . TX 7 HETHER our Legends facts or fictions be , * ' Their teaching is the same ; and that man knows

Little of ethics , who too rashly vows All fiction must be falsehood . Do not we Find highest truths in Parables ? and He Who taught in Palestine so long ago , As none else taught , used them to strike a blow At all untruth . But we must have the key

To unlock symbolic teaching in the mind , Or Allegories ne ' er can benefit The sluggish brain of country elown or cit . He who knows how to search , will surel y find Truth hid in any well : but they who boast Their love of literal facts , oft err the most . Rose Cottage , Stokesley .

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