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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • April 1, 1881
  • Page 24
  • A NEW HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY.
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The Masonic Magazine, April 1, 1881: Page 24

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    Article A NEW HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY. ← Page 4 of 4
    Article OLD BOOKS. Page 1 of 6 →
Page 24

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A New History Of Freemasonry.

The famous address of 1740 , in which the germ of the Templar movement is to be discovered , was delivered in 1737 , at the installation of the G . M ., and from that very date , owing to his correspondence with Cardinal Flenry and the objections of Louis XV ., Ramsay ' s connection with all Freemasonry seems to have closed . He died in 1743 , as is generally asserted . We fail to find any traces of him in reference to Freemasonry anywhere . The statements of some

writers in respect to him have been handed on \> j others , without inquiry or research , in a spirit of pure " sheepwalking , " as Sydney Smith has it , and it is all but impossible to ascertain what is fact or what is myth in respect of him . It is quite clear that he had nothing to do with the English Grand Lodge , and could have nothing to do with the "Antients . " We therefore quite agree with our contemporary , the Keystone , in its view of Bro . Grant ' s , with all respect to him be it said fraternally , " unhistorical propositions . " His new theory of Masonic history is , alas , like many other new theories to-day , an " unadulterated myth !"

Old Books.

OLD BOOKS .

THE taste for old books , if not increasing amongst ourselves , is remarkably developed in America , whither week by week a large quantity of scarce editions , and curious volumes , and quaint publications is dispatched . Not that , indeed , there does not linger in the old country a taste for books ; there does undoubtedly , but we fear that just now people are too busy to read , too excited to think . It seems to be the " order of the clay , " moreover , to sell old librariesand the price of rare volumes and unique issues is undoubtedlon

, y the rise . We regret , for many reasons , the dispatch of valuable libraries and careful collections , and wish now to express our opinion that " Bibliomania , " as it is termed by the ignorant , and thoughtless , and brainless , is a very innocent , nay elevating and improving , pursuit . The love of books is , "per se , " a healthy taste , and the liking for old books is , we venture to believea sign of much learningeducationand more culture .

, , , It is always the sign of a debased taste , and of an unthinking , unstudying , age , when we hear of worthless novels and childish catchpennies embedded in gorgeous bindings and adorned with " rococo" splendour . We trust , however , as all these "fads " have " only " a " day , " to hear soon of recurrine

good taste , and a healthier taste for old books and forgotten literature . Mr . Eliot Stock , 62 , Paternoster Row , has recently been issuing some ancient reprints of old books , of which from time to time reviews have appeared in the Freemason , and we wish to explain what we have touched upon above , with two illustrations from a recent circular of his . A FACSIMILE OF THE BOKE OK SAINT ALBANS , by Dame Juliana Berners : containing the

Treatises on Hawking , Hunting , and Cote Armour . Printed at St . Alban ' s , by the Schoolmaster-Printer , in 1486 . With an introduction by William Blades , Author of the " Life and Typography of Caxton . " —Of the printing presses established in England before tho close of the 15 th century , none exceed in interest that of the Schoolmaster-Printer of St . Alban ' s ; not only on account of the works known to have been printed by him , but by reason of the mystery which surrounds him as a man , and the work whichhe carried out . Of the works issued from this press none has drawn more attention than The Boke of St . Albans , by Dame Juliana Be ' rners . This interest is not to be accounted for entirely by the glamour which surrounds the origin of the press which produced the work , but is largely to be attributed to the importance which the readers of later times have attached to the subjects of which it treats , as well as to the kindly i ' eeling

“The Masonic Magazine: 1881-04-01, Page 24” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01041881/page/24/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
HISTORY OF THE AIREDALE LODGE, No. 387, Article 1
THE PRESENT POSITION OF MASONIC HISTORY AND CRITICISM. Article 6
CURIOUS LIST OF LODGES, A.D. 1736. Article 8
AUTUMN. Article 13
MYSTICISM. Article 14
WAS SHAKESPEARE A FREEMASON ? Article 15
A TWILIGHT SONG ON THE RIVER FOWEY. Article 19
A TALE OF VENICE IN 1781. Article 20
A NEW HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY. Article 21
OLD BOOKS. Article 24
SPRING. Article 29
CONISHEAD PRIORY. Article 30
LITERARY GOSSIP. Article 34
FAITH AND LOVE. Article 36
AFTER ALL. Article 36
NURSERY DECORATION AND HYGIENE. Article 41
BRO. THOMAS TOPHAM, THE STRONG MAN. Article 43
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Page 24

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

A New History Of Freemasonry.

The famous address of 1740 , in which the germ of the Templar movement is to be discovered , was delivered in 1737 , at the installation of the G . M ., and from that very date , owing to his correspondence with Cardinal Flenry and the objections of Louis XV ., Ramsay ' s connection with all Freemasonry seems to have closed . He died in 1743 , as is generally asserted . We fail to find any traces of him in reference to Freemasonry anywhere . The statements of some

writers in respect to him have been handed on \> j others , without inquiry or research , in a spirit of pure " sheepwalking , " as Sydney Smith has it , and it is all but impossible to ascertain what is fact or what is myth in respect of him . It is quite clear that he had nothing to do with the English Grand Lodge , and could have nothing to do with the "Antients . " We therefore quite agree with our contemporary , the Keystone , in its view of Bro . Grant ' s , with all respect to him be it said fraternally , " unhistorical propositions . " His new theory of Masonic history is , alas , like many other new theories to-day , an " unadulterated myth !"

Old Books.

OLD BOOKS .

THE taste for old books , if not increasing amongst ourselves , is remarkably developed in America , whither week by week a large quantity of scarce editions , and curious volumes , and quaint publications is dispatched . Not that , indeed , there does not linger in the old country a taste for books ; there does undoubtedly , but we fear that just now people are too busy to read , too excited to think . It seems to be the " order of the clay , " moreover , to sell old librariesand the price of rare volumes and unique issues is undoubtedlon

, y the rise . We regret , for many reasons , the dispatch of valuable libraries and careful collections , and wish now to express our opinion that " Bibliomania , " as it is termed by the ignorant , and thoughtless , and brainless , is a very innocent , nay elevating and improving , pursuit . The love of books is , "per se , " a healthy taste , and the liking for old books is , we venture to believea sign of much learningeducationand more culture .

, , , It is always the sign of a debased taste , and of an unthinking , unstudying , age , when we hear of worthless novels and childish catchpennies embedded in gorgeous bindings and adorned with " rococo" splendour . We trust , however , as all these "fads " have " only " a " day , " to hear soon of recurrine

good taste , and a healthier taste for old books and forgotten literature . Mr . Eliot Stock , 62 , Paternoster Row , has recently been issuing some ancient reprints of old books , of which from time to time reviews have appeared in the Freemason , and we wish to explain what we have touched upon above , with two illustrations from a recent circular of his . A FACSIMILE OF THE BOKE OK SAINT ALBANS , by Dame Juliana Berners : containing the

Treatises on Hawking , Hunting , and Cote Armour . Printed at St . Alban ' s , by the Schoolmaster-Printer , in 1486 . With an introduction by William Blades , Author of the " Life and Typography of Caxton . " —Of the printing presses established in England before tho close of the 15 th century , none exceed in interest that of the Schoolmaster-Printer of St . Alban ' s ; not only on account of the works known to have been printed by him , but by reason of the mystery which surrounds him as a man , and the work whichhe carried out . Of the works issued from this press none has drawn more attention than The Boke of St . Albans , by Dame Juliana Be ' rners . This interest is not to be accounted for entirely by the glamour which surrounds the origin of the press which produced the work , but is largely to be attributed to the importance which the readers of later times have attached to the subjects of which it treats , as well as to the kindly i ' eeling

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