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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Dec. 1, 1877
  • Page 44
  • A CHAPTER ON OAKS.
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The Masonic Magazine, Dec. 1, 1877: Page 44

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    Article THE ADVENTURES OF DON PASQUALE. ← Page 3 of 3
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The Adventures Of Don Pasquale.

Indeed , a young lady friend of mine , —artless and blushing as all our young ladies are , —says that she never could have supposed I Avould Avrite so uninteresting a chapter . I accept the compliment Avhile I deplore her disappointment . But , after all , which is the best—Patriotism or Love . As a hopeless old bachelor , I think it safer , in these excitable times , to go in for Patriotism . A young " fellah " of niy acquaintance remarks to me , " It ' s not a question of love , just now Avith us , old boy ,

its only a cpiestion of ' Tin !'" Well , I hope my fair readers will not deem me very unsentimental . But yet as variety is pleasing , ancl change is often Avelcome , I may not have disp leased some of my more serious readers , ancl , whether or no , they like still to folloiv the adventures of "Don Pasquale , " they will yet , I venture to hope , agree in the main Avith the opinions I have expressedancl the theories I have propounded . If they

, do not , if to them my free-spoken opinions savour a little of heterodoxy , let them bear in mind that we cannot ever here affect to settle Avhat another person ' s " Doxy " shall ancl must be , and if they do not relish any such remarks on my part , Avhy , then , —yes , they can and may , Avith my full permission , skip the entire chapter 1 ( To be Continued . )

A Chapter On Oaks.

A CHAPTER ON OAKS .

BY BRO . K . U . BANCROFT , Member of the Civil and Mechanical Engineers' Society . IN" the early books of Scripture the oak is ahvays mentioned as connected with some sacred place , rendered holy by the near neighbourhood of a sanctuary , au altar , a pillar of memorial , or the grave of some remarkable person . After Abraham had left the land of Haranat God's commandand had journeyed into Canaanhis first resting

, , , place was at the Oak of Moreh , * Genesis xii . 6 , and in the place of Sichem , which oak , even at that time , probably marked a sanctuary , for Avhen Joshua made a covenant at Sichem Avith that numerous people descended from Abraham , which Moses had led up out of Egypt , he placed the pillar of the covenant " under an oak that Avas by the sanctuary of the Lord . " Josh . xxiv . 26 . Again , Abraham came and dwelt in the

oak-grove of Mamre , | and built an altar unto the Lord . "And the Lord appeared unto Abraham in the oak-grove ( Plain ) of Mamre , ancl he sat in the tent door in the heat of the day . " Gen . xviii . 1 . Abraham ' s hospitable reception of the three strangers who bore the message of the Lord is thus related : —• " He said , let a little water , I pray you , be fetched , and wash your feet , ancl rest yourselves under the TREE . " He does not say " on the plain , " or ' * in the tent , " but " under the tree , " the chief tree of the grove .

The first time that our version mentions the oak , it refers to the oak in Sichem . When Jacob learned that his Avives , on leaving Padanaram , had brought away the famil y teraphim , or sacred images , of their father Laban , he collected them , and buried them under the oak in Sichem , already a consecrated place . Gen . xxxv . 4 . A feAV verses on we read of the death of Deborah , Rebekah ' s nurse ; ancl that Jacob buried her under the oak that was in Bethel , that is the very place where Abraham had rested , and built an altar to the Lord . And the place where Deborah was buried Avas called Alton

Bachuth , or , the Oak of Tears . Gen . xxxv . S . Under a peculiar oak the angel of the Lord appeared to Gideon , and gave him the divine commission to set Israel free ; and under the same oak Gideon built an altar to the Lord . But the grove hard by , belonging , as it would appear to his father's house , Gideon was commanded to destroy , because tbe offerings of Baal had polluted it . Judges vi . 25 . In the First Book of Samuel , chap . x . 3 , Saul is directed to go to the Oak of Tabor , J at which spot he should meet a man to conduct him to the high place of the

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-12-01, Page 44” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01121877/page/44/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
A christmas Greeting. Article 2
BRO. CAPTAIN JOHN N. PHILIPS. Article 3
SONNET. Article 3
OLD BUILDINGS IN FLEET STREET. Article 4
COLE'S LIST OF LODGES, 1763. Article 5
A LIST OF REGULAR LODGES, Article 5
LET US BE KIND. Article 14
ARRIVALS, SURVIVALS, AND REVIVALS. Article 15
A TALE OF LOVE. Article 21
MRS. FEBNBRAKE'S "LUCKY BIRD." Article 22
CHRISTMAS EVE. Article 28
THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS. Article 30
FROM LISBON TO BELEM. Article 37
A PORTRAIT. Article 41
THE ADVENTURES OF DON PASQUALE. Article 42
A CHAPTER ON OAKS. Article 44
MISERY. Article 49
MASONRY—ITS PAST AND FUTURE. Article 51
UNCLE CHARLES'S STORY. Article 54
FRIENDSHIP AND BROTHERHOOD. Article 57
SONNET. Article 59
EXTRACTS FROM THE RECORDS OF AN OLD ASSEMBLY OF KNIGHTS TEMPLAR MEETING AT BOLTON. Article 59
A MODERN NOVEL SOMEWHAT UNDERVALUED. Article 61
CABINET OF MASONIC CURIOSITIES. Article 63
TO MRS. BRYANT. Article 64
THE PROPOSED SPELLING REFORM. Article 64
REACHING AFTER THE UNATTAINABLE.* Article 66
Reviews. Article 67
THE POETIC INTERPRETATION OF NATURE.* Article 70
Untitled Article 70
HOW MR. JOSS FAILED TO BE MADE A MASON. Article 75
AMABEL VAUGHAN. Article 77
A CHRISTMAS MEMORY. 1877. Article 82
Untitled Article 83
LOST AND SAVED; OR NELLIE POWERS THE MISSIONARY'S DAUGHTER. Article 84
THE MAP OF EUROPE IN 1877. Article 88
A GOOD HONEST HEART. Article 90
THE INCONCLUSIVENESS AND ABERRATIONS OF SCIENTIFIC TEACHERS. Article 91
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 93
A FREEMASON'S CHRISTMAS THOUGHTS. Article 95
ANSWER TO ACROSTIC. Article 97
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Page 44

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

The Adventures Of Don Pasquale.

Indeed , a young lady friend of mine , —artless and blushing as all our young ladies are , —says that she never could have supposed I Avould Avrite so uninteresting a chapter . I accept the compliment Avhile I deplore her disappointment . But , after all , which is the best—Patriotism or Love . As a hopeless old bachelor , I think it safer , in these excitable times , to go in for Patriotism . A young " fellah " of niy acquaintance remarks to me , " It ' s not a question of love , just now Avith us , old boy ,

its only a cpiestion of ' Tin !'" Well , I hope my fair readers will not deem me very unsentimental . But yet as variety is pleasing , ancl change is often Avelcome , I may not have disp leased some of my more serious readers , ancl , whether or no , they like still to folloiv the adventures of "Don Pasquale , " they will yet , I venture to hope , agree in the main Avith the opinions I have expressedancl the theories I have propounded . If they

, do not , if to them my free-spoken opinions savour a little of heterodoxy , let them bear in mind that we cannot ever here affect to settle Avhat another person ' s " Doxy " shall ancl must be , and if they do not relish any such remarks on my part , Avhy , then , —yes , they can and may , Avith my full permission , skip the entire chapter 1 ( To be Continued . )

A Chapter On Oaks.

A CHAPTER ON OAKS .

BY BRO . K . U . BANCROFT , Member of the Civil and Mechanical Engineers' Society . IN" the early books of Scripture the oak is ahvays mentioned as connected with some sacred place , rendered holy by the near neighbourhood of a sanctuary , au altar , a pillar of memorial , or the grave of some remarkable person . After Abraham had left the land of Haranat God's commandand had journeyed into Canaanhis first resting

, , , place was at the Oak of Moreh , * Genesis xii . 6 , and in the place of Sichem , which oak , even at that time , probably marked a sanctuary , for Avhen Joshua made a covenant at Sichem Avith that numerous people descended from Abraham , which Moses had led up out of Egypt , he placed the pillar of the covenant " under an oak that Avas by the sanctuary of the Lord . " Josh . xxiv . 26 . Again , Abraham came and dwelt in the

oak-grove of Mamre , | and built an altar unto the Lord . "And the Lord appeared unto Abraham in the oak-grove ( Plain ) of Mamre , ancl he sat in the tent door in the heat of the day . " Gen . xviii . 1 . Abraham ' s hospitable reception of the three strangers who bore the message of the Lord is thus related : —• " He said , let a little water , I pray you , be fetched , and wash your feet , ancl rest yourselves under the TREE . " He does not say " on the plain , " or ' * in the tent , " but " under the tree , " the chief tree of the grove .

The first time that our version mentions the oak , it refers to the oak in Sichem . When Jacob learned that his Avives , on leaving Padanaram , had brought away the famil y teraphim , or sacred images , of their father Laban , he collected them , and buried them under the oak in Sichem , already a consecrated place . Gen . xxxv . 4 . A feAV verses on we read of the death of Deborah , Rebekah ' s nurse ; ancl that Jacob buried her under the oak that was in Bethel , that is the very place where Abraham had rested , and built an altar to the Lord . And the place where Deborah was buried Avas called Alton

Bachuth , or , the Oak of Tears . Gen . xxxv . S . Under a peculiar oak the angel of the Lord appeared to Gideon , and gave him the divine commission to set Israel free ; and under the same oak Gideon built an altar to the Lord . But the grove hard by , belonging , as it would appear to his father's house , Gideon was commanded to destroy , because tbe offerings of Baal had polluted it . Judges vi . 25 . In the First Book of Samuel , chap . x . 3 , Saul is directed to go to the Oak of Tabor , J at which spot he should meet a man to conduct him to the high place of the

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