Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Aug. 1, 1878
  • Page 40
  • NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART.
Current:

The Masonic Magazine, Aug. 1, 1878: Page 40

  • Back to The Masonic Magazine, Aug. 1, 1878
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. ← Page 2 of 4 →
Page 40

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

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

painting , now hung at the Birthplace , differs from the original picture . The rejection of this picture seems singular , Avhen there Avere exhibited so many draAvings and paintings of other subjects . " Now that Ave have proper medical men appointed throughout the country as paid officers of health , it strikes me forcibly that Ave might utilise their services much more than AA'e are doing ,, in gleaning a mass of useful information on the immutable laws of nature bearing on the health both of the human race and of our domestic animals ; as

their careful reports ( which shoidd be required periodically and their authors properly remunerated , the whole analysed , arranged , and systematically condensed by competent philosophers ) Avould gradually produce very important results . Take , for example , the bearings of electricity in the atmosphere on the health of the body , and through the body on the mind . The most uneducated must have noticed the difference on their own

nervous S 3 'stem before and after a thunderstorm ; and its effects on lmlk and on beer have long been proverbial . May not the clouds be in some measure compared to Leyden jars ? It is said that when that dreadful disease , Asiatic Cholera , was doing its most direful ivork in this country , there was a great absence of electricity in the ah ' Ave breathe , ancl in the condition of which AA'e all of us have an immense interest in keeping pure and abundantly supplied to rich and poor . I fuave no Avish to make electricity everything in relation to healthbut of its i r ast importance there can be no

, doubt iu the mind of anyone ivho has eA'er thought at all on the subject . I believe that diarrhoea , hooping-cough , scarlatina , small-pox , typhoid fwer , ancl many other diseases are strongest in the human frame as a ride when electricity in the atmosphere is the weakest . Then again , the peculiar manner in AA'hich the germs of disease are spread among the human family is a subject on Avhich the Avisest of us have much to learn . I have knoAvn a disease called infectious attack a family in an isolated dAvelling on a hill ,

none of whom ivere knoivn to have been Ai'ithin a dozen miles of any person suffering from such an illness . Mi ght not the germs of that disease have been borne on the breeze , breathed in , and germinated , where there AA'as a predisposition for illness in the person Avho had retained it , whilst a more robust constitution might have thrown it out again iu respiration along AA'ith the carbonic acid gas generated in the capillary fires ? Doctors often half poison then patients and those about them with stinking chloride of

lime , or ivith carbolic acid , but rarely recommend that most pleasant and efficacious of all disinfectants , Condy ' s Fluid—the permanganate of potass—nor are they sufficiently careful to instruct the nurses about their patients in the absolute necessity of disinfecting the filth thrown off from the boivels , skin , etc . ; poisons Avhich , I believe , may be borne on the air and sow their germs in the life-blood of people many miles off . We have yet much to learn , Avith all our boasted " march of intellect ; " and the more I study the sanitary laivs given to the children of Israel in the Volume of the Sacred Laiv , the more I am struck Avith their Aidse adaptability , under the circumstances , to the people to whom they ivere given .

Writing of Puget Sound— " that deep landlocked bay which stretches so far into the north shore of Washington territory "—Major W . F . Butler , C . B ., says : " The tide in the Sound rises hi gh and ebbs IOAV . At some of the stopping-places it was curious to ivatch the antics of certain croivs , Avhose livelihood was gained from the rocks left bare by the IOAV water . Around the base of the wooden piles upon which the landing-stages AA'ere built mussels thickl y clustered ; detaching these with their bills , the

crows Avoidd ascend some thirty or forty yards into the air , then dropping the shell-fish on to the rock , they would swoop after it to catch the fish detached b y the fall from the shattered shell . " Tins reminds one of the fine old legend that has come CIOAVU to us of the death of the Greek dramatist , iEschylus , 456 , B . C . Sitting bareheaded in a field , an eagle flying over him with a tortoise in its bill , ancl taking his . bald head for a stons , let fall its preyto break the shelland so crushed in the poor old poet ' s brain- that

, , pan he died on the spot . The legend , like the generality of such , may be taken for what it is ivorth ; Romance has its own world as well , as Fact ; but Major Butler ' s croivs dropping their mussels to smash the shells is so far in favour of eagles dropping their tortoises too , though one hopes their penetrating eyes never mistake the bald heads of

“The Masonic Magazine: 1878-08-01, Page 40” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01081878/page/40/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
SKETCH OF AN OLD LODGE AT FALMOUTH.* Article 2
ANTI-MASONRY.* Article 3
BEATRICE. Article 6
ART-JOTTINGS IN ART-STUDIOS. Article 8
A DREAM. Article 11
WHAT OF THE DAY? Article 11
A MEMORABLE DAY IN JERSEY. Article 12
A MASONIC ADDRESS. Article 14
AMABEL VAUGHAN.* Article 16
IN MEMORIAM. Article 19
GOD'S WAYS. Article 22
LOST AND SAVED; OR, NELLIE POWERS, THE MISSIONARY'S DAUGHTER. Article 23
WHAT IS TRUTH?* Article 25
AN HERMETIC WORK. Article 29
A REVIEW. Article 34
FREEMASONRY.* Article 36
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 39
SHE WOULD BE A MASON.* Article 42
AT THE LAST. Article 44
THE CONDITION OF ARTINTHIS COUNTRY. Article 45
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 46
Page 1

Page 1

1 Article
Page 2

Page 2

1 Article
Page 3

Page 3

2 Articles
Page 4

Page 4

1 Article
Page 5

Page 5

1 Article
Page 6

Page 6

1 Article
Page 7

Page 7

1 Article
Page 8

Page 8

2 Articles
Page 9

Page 9

1 Article
Page 10

Page 10

1 Article
Page 11

Page 11

2 Articles
Page 12

Page 12

1 Article
Page 13

Page 13

1 Article
Page 14

Page 14

1 Article
Page 15

Page 15

1 Article
Page 16

Page 16

2 Articles
Page 17

Page 17

1 Article
Page 18

Page 18

1 Article
Page 19

Page 19

2 Articles
Page 20

Page 20

1 Article
Page 21

Page 21

1 Article
Page 22

Page 22

1 Article
Page 23

Page 23

1 Article
Page 24

Page 24

1 Article
Page 25

Page 25

2 Articles
Page 26

Page 26

1 Article
Page 27

Page 27

1 Article
Page 28

Page 28

1 Article
Page 29

Page 29

1 Article
Page 30

Page 30

1 Article
Page 31

Page 31

1 Article
Page 32

Page 32

1 Article
Page 33

Page 33

1 Article
Page 34

Page 34

1 Article
Page 35

Page 35

1 Article
Page 36

Page 36

2 Articles
Page 37

Page 37

1 Article
Page 38

Page 38

1 Article
Page 39

Page 39

2 Articles
Page 40

Page 40

1 Article
Page 41

Page 41

1 Article
Page 42

Page 42

2 Articles
Page 43

Page 43

1 Article
Page 44

Page 44

2 Articles
Page 45

Page 45

1 Article
Page 46

Page 46

2 Articles
Page 47

Page 47

1 Article
Page 48

Page 48

1 Article
Page 40

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

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

painting , now hung at the Birthplace , differs from the original picture . The rejection of this picture seems singular , Avhen there Avere exhibited so many draAvings and paintings of other subjects . " Now that Ave have proper medical men appointed throughout the country as paid officers of health , it strikes me forcibly that Ave might utilise their services much more than AA'e are doing ,, in gleaning a mass of useful information on the immutable laws of nature bearing on the health both of the human race and of our domestic animals ; as

their careful reports ( which shoidd be required periodically and their authors properly remunerated , the whole analysed , arranged , and systematically condensed by competent philosophers ) Avould gradually produce very important results . Take , for example , the bearings of electricity in the atmosphere on the health of the body , and through the body on the mind . The most uneducated must have noticed the difference on their own

nervous S 3 'stem before and after a thunderstorm ; and its effects on lmlk and on beer have long been proverbial . May not the clouds be in some measure compared to Leyden jars ? It is said that when that dreadful disease , Asiatic Cholera , was doing its most direful ivork in this country , there was a great absence of electricity in the ah ' Ave breathe , ancl in the condition of which AA'e all of us have an immense interest in keeping pure and abundantly supplied to rich and poor . I fuave no Avish to make electricity everything in relation to healthbut of its i r ast importance there can be no

, doubt iu the mind of anyone ivho has eA'er thought at all on the subject . I believe that diarrhoea , hooping-cough , scarlatina , small-pox , typhoid fwer , ancl many other diseases are strongest in the human frame as a ride when electricity in the atmosphere is the weakest . Then again , the peculiar manner in AA'hich the germs of disease are spread among the human family is a subject on Avhich the Avisest of us have much to learn . I have knoAvn a disease called infectious attack a family in an isolated dAvelling on a hill ,

none of whom ivere knoivn to have been Ai'ithin a dozen miles of any person suffering from such an illness . Mi ght not the germs of that disease have been borne on the breeze , breathed in , and germinated , where there AA'as a predisposition for illness in the person Avho had retained it , whilst a more robust constitution might have thrown it out again iu respiration along AA'ith the carbonic acid gas generated in the capillary fires ? Doctors often half poison then patients and those about them with stinking chloride of

lime , or ivith carbolic acid , but rarely recommend that most pleasant and efficacious of all disinfectants , Condy ' s Fluid—the permanganate of potass—nor are they sufficiently careful to instruct the nurses about their patients in the absolute necessity of disinfecting the filth thrown off from the boivels , skin , etc . ; poisons Avhich , I believe , may be borne on the air and sow their germs in the life-blood of people many miles off . We have yet much to learn , Avith all our boasted " march of intellect ; " and the more I study the sanitary laivs given to the children of Israel in the Volume of the Sacred Laiv , the more I am struck Avith their Aidse adaptability , under the circumstances , to the people to whom they ivere given .

Writing of Puget Sound— " that deep landlocked bay which stretches so far into the north shore of Washington territory "—Major W . F . Butler , C . B ., says : " The tide in the Sound rises hi gh and ebbs IOAV . At some of the stopping-places it was curious to ivatch the antics of certain croivs , Avhose livelihood was gained from the rocks left bare by the IOAV water . Around the base of the wooden piles upon which the landing-stages AA'ere built mussels thickl y clustered ; detaching these with their bills , the

crows Avoidd ascend some thirty or forty yards into the air , then dropping the shell-fish on to the rock , they would swoop after it to catch the fish detached b y the fall from the shattered shell . " Tins reminds one of the fine old legend that has come CIOAVU to us of the death of the Greek dramatist , iEschylus , 456 , B . C . Sitting bareheaded in a field , an eagle flying over him with a tortoise in its bill , ancl taking his . bald head for a stons , let fall its preyto break the shelland so crushed in the poor old poet ' s brain- that

, , pan he died on the spot . The legend , like the generality of such , may be taken for what it is ivorth ; Romance has its own world as well , as Fact ; but Major Butler ' s croivs dropping their mussels to smash the shells is so far in favour of eagles dropping their tortoises too , though one hopes their penetrating eyes never mistake the bald heads of

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • 39
  • You're on page40
  • 41
  • 48
  • Next page
  • Accredited Museum Designated Outstanding Collection
  • LIBRARY AND MUSEUM CHARITABLE TRUST OF THE UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND REGISTERED CHARITY NUMBER 1058497 / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2025

  • Accessibility statement

  • Designed, developed, and maintained by King's Digital Lab

We use cookies to track usage and preferences.

Privacy & cookie policy