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  • May 1, 1878
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The Masonic Magazine, May 1, 1878: Page 47

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    Article NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 47

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Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

inspired ploughboy , Ave have the noble odes to his memory by Isabella Craig Knox , James Macfarlau , James Montgomery , and Dr . Spencer T . Hall , —the latter Avritten for a meeting of Scotsmen in Sheffield , on the anniversary of the bard ' s birth , thirty-seven years ago , and concluding as follows : — " Yes ! gather'd here or scatter'd there

, Britannia ' s sons , the wide world o ' er , Will hail him each returning year With offerings worthier than before : Yet , though more tuneful each acclaim , And richer in poetic flowers , No lay names Eums ' s dear-loved name With more devotedness than ours . "

I would recommend Mr . Andrews to give a Burns number every January , and advise him to quote in his next my friend Eta Mawr's beautiful poem on the poet ; also to give a Shakspers number every April ; for if the people of Hull are not far ahead of those of any other town I know in England , the majority of them have all yet to learn about the gifted ancl the good of their race . Mr . Andrews' idea is a good one , and only needs fully carrying out . As a Hull publication , he might also appropriately have an Andrew

Marvell number , a William Wilberforee number , a Col . Thompson number , and so on ; for though the learned Dr . Grosart has clearly shoivu that the incorruptible- Marvell was not born at Hull , as previous biographers had mistakenly stated , yet his whole life ivas devoted to that borough , and though he is as much ours as theirs as a poet , yet as a parliamentary representative Andrew Marvell was emphatically the member for Hull , and all parties now honour his patriotism .

In the January Notes , I quoted Sterne ' s genial description of the dance after supper , as practised by the peasantry at " the beginning of the ascent of Mount Taurina , " so finely described in his Sentimental Journey , —a passage which I enjoyed in boyhood , and still lo've in my declining years . But he ivho , according to the inscription on his tombstone , " did not live to be a member " of our " society , " need not have crossed the English Channel to find such a scene as he has so finely described ; his own native Ireland could have furnished it , long before he was born in the barracks of Clonmel ; and at least thirty years after his stolen corpse had been dissected by Professor Collignon , at his own university of Cambridge . George Holmes—the clever

grandsire of our well-known Brother , Emra Holmes , —a man who , I believe , was the rightful heir to an Irish peerage , with good broad acres to support the title , but who became an artist instead of a legislator—in his charming Sketches of some of the Southern Counties of Ireland , published in 1797 , on his visit to Holy Cross Abbey , ( ivhich , he says was , founded b y Donald , king of Limerick , and contained a shrine iu which the monks pretended to have deposited a piece of the Cross on ivhich Christ was

crucified—to whom it was dedicated in 11 Gd ) , after giving a description of the place , worth reproducing in a Masonic Magazine , pleasantly remarks : — ' After dinner , lured by the calmness of the evening , ive strolled along the banks of the river , highly delighted with the scenery . Here we met a truly rustic group ; the young men and women of the village were enjoying themselves by a dance ; a fidler and piper enivdousl y lent their strains , which were not ill bestowed upon their hearers , for they showed

, by their rude jokes and merry glee , hoiv open the mind is to the effects of music , even of the coarsest kind . Each young man , as he took his partner , gave a halfpenny to the piper , and then set to ivith all their heart and soul . Content and harmless tturth are , I am sure , acceptable offerings to our Creator , and in a much higher degree than all the gloomy self-denial of the cloistered monk : one voluntary sigh of humble thankfulness , springing from a grateful and cheerful heart , finds easier access to the throne of mercy than' all the raging sorrows and health-consuming abstinences of monastic discipline . Leaving them to their pastime , we rambled on still farther , till warned by the quick approach of evening , we returned . "

“The Masonic Magazine: 1878-05-01, Page 47” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01051878/page/47/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
In Memoriam. Article 1
"HIS END WAS PEACE." Article 1
AN HERMETIC WORK. Article 2
A BRIEFE OF THE GOLDEN CALF OR THEWORLDS IDOL. Article 4
THE EPISTLE OF W. C. TO THE READER. Article 4
PAPERS ON THE GREAT PYRAMID. Article 6
THE ADVENTURES OF DON PASQUALE. Article 9
BIDE A WEE, AND DINNA FRET. Article 11
THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS. Article 12
AMABEL VAUGHAN. Article 18
MASONIC HYMN. Article 21
DE. MOON'S WORKS FOE THE BLIND. Article 22
IS IT A PROMISE, OR A DECLARATION ? Article 24
THE SCOT ABROAD. Article 26
"HAIL AND FAEEWELL." Article 28
THE OTIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 29
ON THE TESTING AND STRENGTH OF RAILWAY MATERIALS, &c Article 32
A FAREWELL ADDRESS Article 36
DISCOVERY OF ROMAN REMAINS AT TEMPLEBOROUGH. Article 37
I WISH HE WOULD MAKE UP HIS MIND. Article 39
LOST AND SAVED ; OR NELLIE POWERS THE MISSIONARY'S DAUGHTER. Article 40
PRAYER ON THE SEA. Article 46
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 46
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

inspired ploughboy , Ave have the noble odes to his memory by Isabella Craig Knox , James Macfarlau , James Montgomery , and Dr . Spencer T . Hall , —the latter Avritten for a meeting of Scotsmen in Sheffield , on the anniversary of the bard ' s birth , thirty-seven years ago , and concluding as follows : — " Yes ! gather'd here or scatter'd there

, Britannia ' s sons , the wide world o ' er , Will hail him each returning year With offerings worthier than before : Yet , though more tuneful each acclaim , And richer in poetic flowers , No lay names Eums ' s dear-loved name With more devotedness than ours . "

I would recommend Mr . Andrews to give a Burns number every January , and advise him to quote in his next my friend Eta Mawr's beautiful poem on the poet ; also to give a Shakspers number every April ; for if the people of Hull are not far ahead of those of any other town I know in England , the majority of them have all yet to learn about the gifted ancl the good of their race . Mr . Andrews' idea is a good one , and only needs fully carrying out . As a Hull publication , he might also appropriately have an Andrew

Marvell number , a William Wilberforee number , a Col . Thompson number , and so on ; for though the learned Dr . Grosart has clearly shoivu that the incorruptible- Marvell was not born at Hull , as previous biographers had mistakenly stated , yet his whole life ivas devoted to that borough , and though he is as much ours as theirs as a poet , yet as a parliamentary representative Andrew Marvell was emphatically the member for Hull , and all parties now honour his patriotism .

In the January Notes , I quoted Sterne ' s genial description of the dance after supper , as practised by the peasantry at " the beginning of the ascent of Mount Taurina , " so finely described in his Sentimental Journey , —a passage which I enjoyed in boyhood , and still lo've in my declining years . But he ivho , according to the inscription on his tombstone , " did not live to be a member " of our " society , " need not have crossed the English Channel to find such a scene as he has so finely described ; his own native Ireland could have furnished it , long before he was born in the barracks of Clonmel ; and at least thirty years after his stolen corpse had been dissected by Professor Collignon , at his own university of Cambridge . George Holmes—the clever

grandsire of our well-known Brother , Emra Holmes , —a man who , I believe , was the rightful heir to an Irish peerage , with good broad acres to support the title , but who became an artist instead of a legislator—in his charming Sketches of some of the Southern Counties of Ireland , published in 1797 , on his visit to Holy Cross Abbey , ( ivhich , he says was , founded b y Donald , king of Limerick , and contained a shrine iu which the monks pretended to have deposited a piece of the Cross on ivhich Christ was

crucified—to whom it was dedicated in 11 Gd ) , after giving a description of the place , worth reproducing in a Masonic Magazine , pleasantly remarks : — ' After dinner , lured by the calmness of the evening , ive strolled along the banks of the river , highly delighted with the scenery . Here we met a truly rustic group ; the young men and women of the village were enjoying themselves by a dance ; a fidler and piper enivdousl y lent their strains , which were not ill bestowed upon their hearers , for they showed

, by their rude jokes and merry glee , hoiv open the mind is to the effects of music , even of the coarsest kind . Each young man , as he took his partner , gave a halfpenny to the piper , and then set to ivith all their heart and soul . Content and harmless tturth are , I am sure , acceptable offerings to our Creator , and in a much higher degree than all the gloomy self-denial of the cloistered monk : one voluntary sigh of humble thankfulness , springing from a grateful and cheerful heart , finds easier access to the throne of mercy than' all the raging sorrows and health-consuming abstinences of monastic discipline . Leaving them to their pastime , we rambled on still farther , till warned by the quick approach of evening , we returned . "

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