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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Nov. 24, 1860
  • Page 5
  • STRAY THOUGHTS ON THE ORIGIN AND PROGRESS OF THE FINE ARTS.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Nov. 24, 1860: Page 5

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Stray Thoughts On The Origin And Progress Of The Fine Arts.

when compared with regard' to science , art . ancl mechanical resources , the difference becomes apparent . In Hindoo architecture , the most stupendous works are ¦ excavations from the solidrock , patience and perseverance being the chief requisites in their execution . Their mouldings and general ornaments are repeated to

excess , their figures display a preposterous reduplication of limbs , and monuments of great magnitude springing from the earth are seldom met with . The Egyptians have excavations quite as extensive as the Hindoos , and such edifices as the Temple of Thebes and the Pyramids bear ample testimony to their superior

-determination and mechanical skill . The ornaments and outline of their architecture is more varied than the Hindoo ; and though their figures are stiff and unA-aried in form , I hai'e already explained that this was in a great measure due to the peculiar institutions of the country , where , as the language was symbolical , it was

deemed important that the original forms should be retained , lest in process of time the meaning might be lost by the variation of the symbols . So many writers have entered into details concerning the Pyramids , colossal statues , mummy pits , obelisks , and sub--terranean temples of Egyptand the vast excai'ations

, , and enormous idol images of India , that most of my readers are familiar with them , and therefore I need not ¦ ¦ offer any description of them here . Alter India ancl Egypt , the most ancient ruins are those of Persia . The ruins of Persepolis are the remains of a once magnificent structure ; the architecture is said to be peculiarand

, remarkable for correct proportions and beautiful execution . These ruins consist of blocks of deep grey marble , orsrv h . i . r . -l n . rifl vylifm hio-hlv nolishfid . pearl v-bln . nl ? Vha

stones seem to have been united not by means of cement , but cramping irons , traces of which still remain . Some writers think the Persian style but one of the numerous offshoots ef the Egyptian ; others think it original , ancl that the resemblance is not imitative , but accidental , . and that from natural causes the Persians were eonstrained to build as the Egyptians ancl Hindoos did .

Lucian says that the Phoenicians built after the Egyptians , but no remains of their ancient architecture are left to confirm his opinion . It is hi ghly probable that the Phoenician architects used more timber than stone in their structures , Mount Lebanon ancl other places affording them an abundance of that material .

Sometimes a Avail was built alternately with cedar wood and stones ; this was probably the case AA'ith the temple at Jerusalem and King Solomon ' s palace , which Avas called "The House of the Forest of Lebanon , " in consequence of the great quantity of ivood used in its construction . Among the shepherd tribes of Israel there

seems to have been no impelling necessity for architectural structures . Saul , the first King of Israel , does not appear to have hacl a fixed habitation , and at Gilgal , where the most sacred rites of the Jewish faith Avere . solemnised , a pile of unhewn stones was raised by -J oshua , on taking possession of the promised landand

, making a covenant between Gocl ancl the people . There is no mention made of any other architectural work until the time of the building of the Temple of Jerusalem . 100-1 years B . C ., on the spot made sacred ty Ahraliaui ' s intended sacrifice !

THE CLA > - C- UIPBEIJ . IS THE HOCSE or LORDS . —On Monday , when Lord Clyde , the pacificator of India , who has served in every great battle in ivhich the British have heen engaged since Corunna , was installed as a Peer in the House of Lords , besides the hero being it Campbell the Lord Bishop of Bangor , ivho read prayers , was a Campbell ; the Lord Chancellor , who presided on the wool-SCICK , was a Campell ; and the new Peer was introduced by the Buke of Argyll , now Lord Privy Seal , mul ^ chiei' of the elan . —

Architecture And Archæloogy.

ARCHITECTURE AND ARCH ? LOOGY .

THE NATION'S PP . OGRESS IN AN ARCHITECTURAL POINT OF VIEW .

FAIRLY inaugurated now is the Architectural Session . The Eoyal Institute has opened its doors , the Architectural Association had previously done so ; the Architectural 3 Iuseum is beginning to stir while in Glasgow , Liverpool , Birmingham , and elsewhere , the Bodies have met and are preparing for action . There has been more than usual stir in architecture of late , and it will be well if in one

quarter or another a retrospective glance be taken at what has been achieved in that field during the last ten years - In the course of a long up-hill journey , it is sometimes desirable to pause and survey the difficulties that have been , surmounted . The sight of the long track behind , already accomplished , gives fresh energy to pursue the route . We hai'e got thus far , we reason , and the same A-igour that has

brought us to this stage will enable us to pursue our journey to the end . It has been a decade of great activity . The spirit of restoration has swept from Land ' s End to Berwickupon-Tweed , resting there but to illume her wings for a further flight across the border . The sister arts and industry have followed in her wake ; and ancient buildings haA-e been renovatedand modern edifices erected on all

, sides . A combination of circumstances , —the public baths and wash-houses movement , the Extra-mural Burial Act , the great improvement in the national appreciation of the > beautiful , —materially aided , we may be permitted to say , by the publication of illustrated periodicals of an art-teaching purpose ; ¦ the agitation of the educational question ;— -a combination , ive say , of these and other causes haA * e given an

impetus to the erection of public buildings that has no precedent . So much has been done , albeit so much remains to be accomplished , that we could scarcely realize the fact that the immense amount of work achieved is but the result of ten short years' labour , if we did not keep before our eyes the multitude of workers . Not only new churches , whose number at a moderate computation must considerably exceed a thousand , but new castles , IIOAV colleges , MAY schools , new town-halls , new vestry halls , new literary institutions , haA'e

arisen around us in incredible numbers . Countless new cemeteries clottkegreen landscape , as do numerous industrial schools , and asylums for lunatics , paupers , and invalids . All this speaks of vitality and of well-doing ; as well as of " faith , hope , and charity . " Britannia , in her time-honoured chariot , presses up the hill of progress through a country , which , if not flowing with milk and honey , is enriched with the wealth

accruing to industrious effort and thought-directed labour . May her shadow nei-er be less ! The battle of the styles has been fought in the progresspath . It is remarkable that the spectators of the great fight have not awaited tho result . They have gone to their homes , and , in their private capacity of peaceable citizens , have facilitated the building of town-halls , mechanics '

institutes , free libraries , and Avhatever else the spirit of tho times required of them , unbiassed by any opinions but their own . Those inclined to the Classic styles will point to St . George ' s Hall , Liverpool , the sets of "Chambers" ofthe same city , the Town Hall in Leeds , the warehouses of Manchester and Nottingham , railway stations in many parts of the kingdomclub-housesresidences such as Bridgeivater

, , House , and business-house premises in London ; while , throughout the country , Avhether in the recesses of Northumberland , in the Avoids of Yorkshire , in the labyrinths of streets in our cities , the public feeling , as evidenced by recent erections , such as All Souls , Halifax-, All Saints , Margaret-street , and a host of other instances , is seen to be in favour of Gothic architecture , as a fit rendering of

ecclesiastical expression . The Dissenter Avould appear to have the same feeling . Within tho last ten years the Wesieyans have built Gothic chapels at Ilkeston , Lincoln , . Liverpool , and many other places ; tho Independents at Lii-erpool , Weston-super-Mare , ancl , iiiA'arious other localities . Nor is Gothic without its important exemplars in other , departments , giving notably a museum to Oxford . The popular views respecting national education have called for the orectiou of numerous scholastic edifices—

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-11-24, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 14 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_24111860/page/5/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—XXXVII. Article 1
MASONIC JOTTINGS FROM ABROAD. Article 2
STRAY THOUGHTS ON THE ORIGIN AND PROGRESS OF THE FINE ARTS. Article 4
ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHÆLOOGY. Article 5
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 10
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY. Article 10
THE GRAND MASTER OF CANADA. Article 11
MASONIC HALLS. Article 11
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 12
GRAND LODGE. Article 12
METROPOLITAN. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 16
TURKEY. Article 18
Poetry. Article 19
THE SOUL'S MORNING. Article 19
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 19
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. Article 19
THE WEEK. Article 19
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Stray Thoughts On The Origin And Progress Of The Fine Arts.

when compared with regard' to science , art . ancl mechanical resources , the difference becomes apparent . In Hindoo architecture , the most stupendous works are ¦ excavations from the solidrock , patience and perseverance being the chief requisites in their execution . Their mouldings and general ornaments are repeated to

excess , their figures display a preposterous reduplication of limbs , and monuments of great magnitude springing from the earth are seldom met with . The Egyptians have excavations quite as extensive as the Hindoos , and such edifices as the Temple of Thebes and the Pyramids bear ample testimony to their superior

-determination and mechanical skill . The ornaments and outline of their architecture is more varied than the Hindoo ; and though their figures are stiff and unA-aried in form , I hai'e already explained that this was in a great measure due to the peculiar institutions of the country , where , as the language was symbolical , it was

deemed important that the original forms should be retained , lest in process of time the meaning might be lost by the variation of the symbols . So many writers have entered into details concerning the Pyramids , colossal statues , mummy pits , obelisks , and sub--terranean temples of Egyptand the vast excai'ations

, , and enormous idol images of India , that most of my readers are familiar with them , and therefore I need not ¦ ¦ offer any description of them here . Alter India ancl Egypt , the most ancient ruins are those of Persia . The ruins of Persepolis are the remains of a once magnificent structure ; the architecture is said to be peculiarand

, remarkable for correct proportions and beautiful execution . These ruins consist of blocks of deep grey marble , orsrv h . i . r . -l n . rifl vylifm hio-hlv nolishfid . pearl v-bln . nl ? Vha

stones seem to have been united not by means of cement , but cramping irons , traces of which still remain . Some writers think the Persian style but one of the numerous offshoots ef the Egyptian ; others think it original , ancl that the resemblance is not imitative , but accidental , . and that from natural causes the Persians were eonstrained to build as the Egyptians ancl Hindoos did .

Lucian says that the Phoenicians built after the Egyptians , but no remains of their ancient architecture are left to confirm his opinion . It is hi ghly probable that the Phoenician architects used more timber than stone in their structures , Mount Lebanon ancl other places affording them an abundance of that material .

Sometimes a Avail was built alternately with cedar wood and stones ; this was probably the case AA'ith the temple at Jerusalem and King Solomon ' s palace , which Avas called "The House of the Forest of Lebanon , " in consequence of the great quantity of ivood used in its construction . Among the shepherd tribes of Israel there

seems to have been no impelling necessity for architectural structures . Saul , the first King of Israel , does not appear to have hacl a fixed habitation , and at Gilgal , where the most sacred rites of the Jewish faith Avere . solemnised , a pile of unhewn stones was raised by -J oshua , on taking possession of the promised landand

, making a covenant between Gocl ancl the people . There is no mention made of any other architectural work until the time of the building of the Temple of Jerusalem . 100-1 years B . C ., on the spot made sacred ty Ahraliaui ' s intended sacrifice !

THE CLA > - C- UIPBEIJ . IS THE HOCSE or LORDS . —On Monday , when Lord Clyde , the pacificator of India , who has served in every great battle in ivhich the British have heen engaged since Corunna , was installed as a Peer in the House of Lords , besides the hero being it Campbell the Lord Bishop of Bangor , ivho read prayers , was a Campbell ; the Lord Chancellor , who presided on the wool-SCICK , was a Campell ; and the new Peer was introduced by the Buke of Argyll , now Lord Privy Seal , mul ^ chiei' of the elan . —

Architecture And Archæloogy.

ARCHITECTURE AND ARCH ? LOOGY .

THE NATION'S PP . OGRESS IN AN ARCHITECTURAL POINT OF VIEW .

FAIRLY inaugurated now is the Architectural Session . The Eoyal Institute has opened its doors , the Architectural Association had previously done so ; the Architectural 3 Iuseum is beginning to stir while in Glasgow , Liverpool , Birmingham , and elsewhere , the Bodies have met and are preparing for action . There has been more than usual stir in architecture of late , and it will be well if in one

quarter or another a retrospective glance be taken at what has been achieved in that field during the last ten years - In the course of a long up-hill journey , it is sometimes desirable to pause and survey the difficulties that have been , surmounted . The sight of the long track behind , already accomplished , gives fresh energy to pursue the route . We hai'e got thus far , we reason , and the same A-igour that has

brought us to this stage will enable us to pursue our journey to the end . It has been a decade of great activity . The spirit of restoration has swept from Land ' s End to Berwickupon-Tweed , resting there but to illume her wings for a further flight across the border . The sister arts and industry have followed in her wake ; and ancient buildings haA-e been renovatedand modern edifices erected on all

, sides . A combination of circumstances , —the public baths and wash-houses movement , the Extra-mural Burial Act , the great improvement in the national appreciation of the > beautiful , —materially aided , we may be permitted to say , by the publication of illustrated periodicals of an art-teaching purpose ; ¦ the agitation of the educational question ;— -a combination , ive say , of these and other causes haA * e given an

impetus to the erection of public buildings that has no precedent . So much has been done , albeit so much remains to be accomplished , that we could scarcely realize the fact that the immense amount of work achieved is but the result of ten short years' labour , if we did not keep before our eyes the multitude of workers . Not only new churches , whose number at a moderate computation must considerably exceed a thousand , but new castles , IIOAV colleges , MAY schools , new town-halls , new vestry halls , new literary institutions , haA'e

arisen around us in incredible numbers . Countless new cemeteries clottkegreen landscape , as do numerous industrial schools , and asylums for lunatics , paupers , and invalids . All this speaks of vitality and of well-doing ; as well as of " faith , hope , and charity . " Britannia , in her time-honoured chariot , presses up the hill of progress through a country , which , if not flowing with milk and honey , is enriched with the wealth

accruing to industrious effort and thought-directed labour . May her shadow nei-er be less ! The battle of the styles has been fought in the progresspath . It is remarkable that the spectators of the great fight have not awaited tho result . They have gone to their homes , and , in their private capacity of peaceable citizens , have facilitated the building of town-halls , mechanics '

institutes , free libraries , and Avhatever else the spirit of tho times required of them , unbiassed by any opinions but their own . Those inclined to the Classic styles will point to St . George ' s Hall , Liverpool , the sets of "Chambers" ofthe same city , the Town Hall in Leeds , the warehouses of Manchester and Nottingham , railway stations in many parts of the kingdomclub-housesresidences such as Bridgeivater

, , House , and business-house premises in London ; while , throughout the country , Avhether in the recesses of Northumberland , in the Avoids of Yorkshire , in the labyrinths of streets in our cities , the public feeling , as evidenced by recent erections , such as All Souls , Halifax-, All Saints , Margaret-street , and a host of other instances , is seen to be in favour of Gothic architecture , as a fit rendering of

ecclesiastical expression . The Dissenter Avould appear to have the same feeling . Within tho last ten years the Wesieyans have built Gothic chapels at Ilkeston , Lincoln , . Liverpool , and many other places ; tho Independents at Lii-erpool , Weston-super-Mare , ancl , iiiA'arious other localities . Nor is Gothic without its important exemplars in other , departments , giving notably a museum to Oxford . The popular views respecting national education have called for the orectiou of numerous scholastic edifices—

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