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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Oct. 1, 1878
  • Page 37
  • NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART.
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The Masonic Magazine, Oct. 1, 1878: Page 37

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Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

to the king . " The account , as given by Bro . Oliver , is very interesting , ancl might have been appropriately quoted by Mr Andrews ; for the sanctuary of Beverley proved much more potent to Holland than that of Gibeon did to Joash . There are also some passages hi Bro . Oliver ' s rival historian , Poulson , worthy of quotation . But Mr . Andrews probably was pinched for space . The abstract he gives of the Beverley Sanctuary Register at pages 11 ancl 12 is very interesting . The history of sanctuary in England , down to its final abolition seven years after the death of Shakspere , is yet to be written .

Alexander Wilson and John James Audubon , the great American naturalists , are names that will ever be clear to all who really wish to make the hidden mysteries of nature ancl science their especial study ; ancl yet Wilson was a Scotsman , who woidd not have left his native land if he could have made a bare existence by his apprenticed trade of handloom weaving , his adopted vocation of pedlar , or ( what ought , perhaps , as poor Walter Orel once remarked to me , to be above all pecuniary recompense ) the

hig her position of a . poet , which his " Pack , " his " Watty ancl Meg , " ancl many other of his poems , proved him to be not entirely unfitted for . Par below the eagle fli ght of our inspired Brother , Robert Burns , was that of Alexander A \ ilson ; yet a man may be a good portrait painter without being a Walter William Auless ; ancl the Paisley poet deserved a better fate than being literally " starved out , " ancl compelled to seek across the broad Atlantic that bread—even simple oatmeal porridge would have sufficed—ivhich

his native land denied . But niggard Scotland , ivhich erects monuments withbut number to her gifted children , generally puts them well through the discipline of poverty whilst alive . Audubon , on the other hand , was a Erenchman , born in Paris , about thirty years ancl nine months after Wilson ' s birth in the Seedhills of Paisley , ancl enjoyed that careful parental training which to poor Wilson was denied ; besides , Wilson had bravely acted as a pioneer before him , though it is said that on the Scotsman calling

upon the Frenchman when soliciting subscribers for his famous book on natural history , Audubon only gave'him the cold shoulder . I see the Henderson Reporter , one of the old Kentucky papers , ' gives the following interesting particulars of the latter naturalist ' s life there threescore years ago , which I am anxious to place on permanent record for the instruction and improvement of Craftsmen who really make the liberal arts and sciences their study : —•

" As near as we can learn , Mr . Audubon moved to the Bed Banks , or Henderson , about the year 1810 or 1 S 12 . He married Miss Louisa Bakcivell , of Louisville , who bore him two sons . Mrs . Audubon and tho two sons accompanied Mr . Audubon to his new homo , and they all lived here until about the year 1822 or 1823 . He was a I ' rencliman , and , possessed of all tho energy , fire , aud vim so characteristic of thc French people , he soon embarked in business . His first enterprise was to open a grocery and dry goods store in a little one-story log house which stood upon thc corner of Main and First Streets . He lived with his family in a little one-story brick building , just in the roar of whore the Oddfellows' building standsJust where thc Post Office is located

- now . now was a pond , in which he used to catch one or more turtles every day , ivhich he used in making into his favourite dish , turtle soup . Shortly after this ho operated a very large corn and ( lour mill at the foot of Second Street . This mill was of very large capacity for those days ; iu fact , it would be regarded as of very respectable size those times . In this mill , upon thc smooth surface of timbers , wore to be found thc most life-like paintings of birds , fowls , and animals of every description which inhabited this country at that time . Mr . William X . Barret has now , it is said , thc first painting Audubon ever Made of the woodpeckerTho bird is represented sitting the limb of old tree and listen

. as upon an - ing to the familiar call of its partner . So perfect is the picture that persons have frequentl y mistaken it for a genuine stuffed hird . "While Mr . Audubon was engaged in the milling business it ivas his custom to bathe in thc Ohio . This he continued until he became the most noted of all thc swimmers who indulged in that delightful pastime . It is said of him that when the first steam-boat landed at the town , some of her machinery had become disarranged , and the boat had to remain here for several hours making miht bo occasion thisthe le

necessary repairs . As g expected upon so extraordinary an as , peop turned out en masse to see something new under the sun—the steam-boat . A number of country visitors imagined the thing had life in it . Mr . Audubon and other citizens were among tho visitors , and . during the time they were on board concluded they would indulge in their favourite amusementswimming . They undressed and began to dive from tho side of the vessel . Several members of the swimming party made successful dives from the inside of the vessel next to the bank , coming up on the outside . This was regarded as wonderful , Mr . Audubon walked to thc bow of thc boat , sprang

“The Masonic Magazine: 1878-10-01, Page 37” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01101878/page/37/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
CHARTER OF SCOON AND PERTH LODGE, A.D. 1658. Article 2
THE SO-CALLED LOCKE MS. Article 4
AN OPENING ODE. Article 7
MASONRY AND CHRISTIANITY. Article 8
A SONG FOR SUMMER. Article 9
FIVE POINTS OF FELLOWSHIP. Article 10
BEATRICE. Article 11
ART-JOTTINGS IN ART-STUDIOS.* Article 14
LEND A HELPING HAND. Article 16
AUTUMN LEAFLETS. Article 17
AN IMPROMPTU. Article 19
LORELEI. Article 19
MILDRED: AN AUTUMN ROMANCE. Article 21
A VISIT TO ASHOVER CHURCHYARD. Article 25
LOST AND SAVED; OR, NELLIE POWERS, THE MISSIONARY'S DAUGHTER. Article 28
REVIEW. Article 32
SONNET. Article 34
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 35
THE MODERN ORDER OF "KNIGHTS TEMPLAR" IN THE BRITISH DOMINIONS. Article 38
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. 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.

to the king . " The account , as given by Bro . Oliver , is very interesting , ancl might have been appropriately quoted by Mr Andrews ; for the sanctuary of Beverley proved much more potent to Holland than that of Gibeon did to Joash . There are also some passages hi Bro . Oliver ' s rival historian , Poulson , worthy of quotation . But Mr . Andrews probably was pinched for space . The abstract he gives of the Beverley Sanctuary Register at pages 11 ancl 12 is very interesting . The history of sanctuary in England , down to its final abolition seven years after the death of Shakspere , is yet to be written .

Alexander Wilson and John James Audubon , the great American naturalists , are names that will ever be clear to all who really wish to make the hidden mysteries of nature ancl science their especial study ; ancl yet Wilson was a Scotsman , who woidd not have left his native land if he could have made a bare existence by his apprenticed trade of handloom weaving , his adopted vocation of pedlar , or ( what ought , perhaps , as poor Walter Orel once remarked to me , to be above all pecuniary recompense ) the

hig her position of a . poet , which his " Pack , " his " Watty ancl Meg , " ancl many other of his poems , proved him to be not entirely unfitted for . Par below the eagle fli ght of our inspired Brother , Robert Burns , was that of Alexander A \ ilson ; yet a man may be a good portrait painter without being a Walter William Auless ; ancl the Paisley poet deserved a better fate than being literally " starved out , " ancl compelled to seek across the broad Atlantic that bread—even simple oatmeal porridge would have sufficed—ivhich

his native land denied . But niggard Scotland , ivhich erects monuments withbut number to her gifted children , generally puts them well through the discipline of poverty whilst alive . Audubon , on the other hand , was a Erenchman , born in Paris , about thirty years ancl nine months after Wilson ' s birth in the Seedhills of Paisley , ancl enjoyed that careful parental training which to poor Wilson was denied ; besides , Wilson had bravely acted as a pioneer before him , though it is said that on the Scotsman calling

upon the Frenchman when soliciting subscribers for his famous book on natural history , Audubon only gave'him the cold shoulder . I see the Henderson Reporter , one of the old Kentucky papers , ' gives the following interesting particulars of the latter naturalist ' s life there threescore years ago , which I am anxious to place on permanent record for the instruction and improvement of Craftsmen who really make the liberal arts and sciences their study : —•

" As near as we can learn , Mr . Audubon moved to the Bed Banks , or Henderson , about the year 1810 or 1 S 12 . He married Miss Louisa Bakcivell , of Louisville , who bore him two sons . Mrs . Audubon and tho two sons accompanied Mr . Audubon to his new homo , and they all lived here until about the year 1822 or 1823 . He was a I ' rencliman , and , possessed of all tho energy , fire , aud vim so characteristic of thc French people , he soon embarked in business . His first enterprise was to open a grocery and dry goods store in a little one-story log house which stood upon thc corner of Main and First Streets . He lived with his family in a little one-story brick building , just in the roar of whore the Oddfellows' building standsJust where thc Post Office is located

- now . now was a pond , in which he used to catch one or more turtles every day , ivhich he used in making into his favourite dish , turtle soup . Shortly after this ho operated a very large corn and ( lour mill at the foot of Second Street . This mill was of very large capacity for those days ; iu fact , it would be regarded as of very respectable size those times . In this mill , upon thc smooth surface of timbers , wore to be found thc most life-like paintings of birds , fowls , and animals of every description which inhabited this country at that time . Mr . William X . Barret has now , it is said , thc first painting Audubon ever Made of the woodpeckerTho bird is represented sitting the limb of old tree and listen

. as upon an - ing to the familiar call of its partner . So perfect is the picture that persons have frequentl y mistaken it for a genuine stuffed hird . "While Mr . Audubon was engaged in the milling business it ivas his custom to bathe in thc Ohio . This he continued until he became the most noted of all thc swimmers who indulged in that delightful pastime . It is said of him that when the first steam-boat landed at the town , some of her machinery had become disarranged , and the boat had to remain here for several hours making miht bo occasion thisthe le

necessary repairs . As g expected upon so extraordinary an as , peop turned out en masse to see something new under the sun—the steam-boat . A number of country visitors imagined the thing had life in it . Mr . Audubon and other citizens were among tho visitors , and . during the time they were on board concluded they would indulge in their favourite amusementswimming . They undressed and began to dive from tho side of the vessel . Several members of the swimming party made successful dives from the inside of the vessel next to the bank , coming up on the outside . This was regarded as wonderful , Mr . Audubon walked to thc bow of thc boat , sprang

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