Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Dec. 29, 1860
  • Page 5
Current:

The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Dec. 29, 1860: Page 5

  • Back to The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Dec. 29, 1860
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article CORRESPONDENCE. ← Page 3 of 3
Page 5

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

Correspondence.

first in rank were first in excess . People and king vied m debauchery , and the sottish king joined and encouraged the freethinkers and blasphemers of his court . The idolatrous priests loved . and shared in the sins of the people ; nay , they seem to have set themselves to intercept those on either side of Jordan , who would go to worship at Jerusalem , laying wait to murder them . Corruption had spread throughout the whole land : even the jilaees once sacred through God ' s revelations , or other mercies ,

to their forefathers—Bethel , Gilgal , Gilead , luizpah , Shoehornwere especial scenes of corruption or of sin . Every holy memory was effaced by present corruption . Could things be worse ? There was one aggravation more . Remonstrance was useless ; the knowledge of God was wilfully rejected ; the people hated rebuke ; tile more they were called , the more they refused ; they forbade their prophets to prophesy ; and their false prophets hated God greatly . All attempts to heal all this disease only showed its incurableness .

" Such was the condition of the people among whom Hosea had to prophesy for some seventy years . They themselves were not sensible of their decay , moral or political . They set themselves , in despite of the Prophet's warning , to prop up their strength by aid of the two heathen nations , Egypt or Assyria . In Assyria they chiefly trusted , and Assyria , he had to denounce to them , should carry them captive ; stragglers at least from them fled to Egypt , and in Egypt they should be a derision , and should find their

grave . This captivity he had to foretell as imminent , certain , irreversible . Once only , in the commencement of his prophecy , does he give any . hope that the temporal punishment might be averted through repentance . This , too , he follows up by renewing the declaration of God expressed in the name of his daughter , - ' I will not have mercy . ' He gives them , in God's Name , a distant promise of a spiritual restoration in Christ , and forewarns them that it is distant . But , that they might not look for any temporal restoration , he tells them , on the one hand , in peremptory terms , of their dispersion ; on the other , ho tells them of their spiritual restoration without any intervening shadows of temporal deliverance . "

Captain C . S . Forbes , K . N ., is preparing for publication The Campaign of Garibaldi in Hie Two Sicilies ; a Personal ffdrraiiiie . Matthew Davenport Hill , Recorder of Birmingham , in his new book , Our Exemplars , Melt and Poor , relates the following anecdotes of the present amiable King of Portugal : — " The king , who at the outbreak of the pestilence was onltwent oldfelt it

y y years , to be his duty to remain at his capital , and to do all he could towards mitigating the calamity . To effect this object , ho did not confine himself to presiding over councils , or to discussing means of alleviation in his cabinet ; he went himself among the sick . We were told that lie would continually visit the hospitals both by day and night , coming in a hired street-carriage , with a single companion , that he might prevent any preparations for his reception ,

and ascertain for himself in what manner the patients were triated . On one occasion , it is said , he found a medical man feeling the pulse of his patient with his glove on , hoping thereby to escape contagion . We may imagine the king's indignant reproof to the timorous doctor . At another time , the spectacle was more gratifying . He was just entering a ward when he heard a physician trying to re-assure a patient , who was in a drooping state , with kind and soothing words . Don Pedro remained outside until the

doctor had ceased speaking , when lie entered , extending his hand towards him . The physician , recognizing his sovereign , attempted to go upon his knee , and kiss the hand thus held out . ' No , ' said the king , ' you have behaved like a brother to that poor sick man , and I am proud to shake hands with you . ' " If the King of

Portugal is not a Ereemason , most assuredly he ought to be ; for his conduct , as related in the foregoing extract , was truly Masonic However much we may admire the bravery of ouv own troops , and that of our allies , the French , as lovers of literature , science , and art , we feel bound to express our sorrow at the modern Vandalism shown in the recent sack of the Emperor of China ' s palace at Pekin , as detailed in a letter from the camp , dated October 20 th ,

and published in the North China Herald . The following is the portion of the letter to which we refer : — "The summer palace is about five miles by a circuitous road north-west of tho camp , outside the earthwork . A description of it is given in Staunton's account of Lord Macartney ' s embassy , and other works on China , but no pen can describe correctly the scena that has taken place there within the two last daysIndiscriminate loot has been

. allowed . The public reception hall , the state and private bedrooms , ante-rooms , boudoirs , and every other apartment has been ransacked ; articles of vertu , of native and foreign workmanship , taken , or broken if too large to be carried away ; ornamental lattice work , screens , jade stone ornaments , jars , clocks , watches , and other

pieces of mechanism , curtains and furniture— -none have escaped from destruction . There were extensive wardrobes of every article of dress ; coats richly embroidered in silk and gold thread , in the Imperial Dragon pattern ; boots , head-dresses , fans , & o , in fact , rooms all but filled with them . Store rooms of manufactured silk in rolls , such as may be bought in Canton , at twenty to thirty dollars per piece . By a calculation made in the rooms , there must have been 70 , 000 or 80 , 000 pieces . Hundreds were thrown down and

trampled on , and the floor covered thickly with them ; men were throwing them at each other , and all taking up as many as they could carry . They were used instead of rope to secure the loading of carts filled with them . Throughout the French camp were hundreds of pieces , some heaped up , others used to make tents or beds and coverlids . In the afternoon , yesterday , a party of French went through the apartments with sticks , breaking everything that remained—mirrors , screens , panels , & c .

Owen Meredith has a book in tho press , entitled SerbsM Pesme ; or , National- Songs of Servia . A new work , entitled Health , Husbandry , and Handicraft , is in the press , from the pen of that female literary veteran , Miss Harriet Martineau .

To the intelligent Craftsman , who well knows the necessity of lleligion and Science going liand-in-hancl together , we present the following passage from Professor Philips ' s new book , Life on , the Farth : its Origin and Succession : — " It may be thought that , while professing to keep to the old ancl safe method of reasoning on known causes and ascertained effects , we deviate from this principle in regard to the origin of life , and introduce an unknown cause for

phenomena not understood , by calling to our aid an act of' creation . ' Be it so ; let the word stand for a confession of our ignorance of the way in which tho governing mind has in this case acted upon matter . "We are equally ignorant in every other instance , which brings us face to face with the idea of forces not manifested in acts . We see the stream of life flowing onward in a determined covu-se , in harmony with the recognised forces of nature , and yielding a , great amount of enjoyment and a wonderful diversity of beautiful

and instructive phenomena , in which mind speaics to mi ' rK .. jJiL through many long periods has been manifested in a countless host of varying structures , all circumscribed by one general plan , each appointed to a definite place , and limited to an appointed duration .

On the wivole the earth lias been thus , more ancl more , covered by the associated life of plants and animals , filling all habitable space with beings capable of enjoying their own existence or ministering to the enjoyment of others ; till , finally , after long preparation , a being was created capable of the wonderful power of measuring and weighing all the world of matter and space which surrounds him , of treasuring up the past history of all the forms of life , and of considering his own relation to the whole . When he surveys this

vast and co-ordinated system , and inquires into its history and origin , can he be at a loss to decide whether it be a work of Divine thought and wisdom , or the fortunate offspring of a few atoms of matter , warmed by the anima muudi , a spark of electricity , or an accidental ray of sunshine ?" Mr . James Blackwood has in preparation a book entitled , Arminius ; or , the History of the German People , and their Lecjcd

and Constitutional Customs , from the dags of Julius Ccesar to the days of Charlemagne . By the late Thomas Smith , F . S . A . The national monument , to bo erected in Trafalgar-square , to the memory of the Lite Sir John Franklin , and for which Parliament voted £ 2000 , is to be executed by Mr . Noble .

Mr . J . Phillip's painting of "The Marriage of the Princess Koyal" is about to be engraved , Her Majesty having lent it to a London printseller for that purpose . Two very generous donations have been made to the funds of the Koyal Dramatic College . Bro . Benjamin Webster , the Chairman of the Council , has received a letter from Clarkson Stanfield , Esq .,

the celebrated painter , inclosing his cheque for the liberal sum at £ 125 in aid of the Koyal Dramatic College . A similar letter , inclosing the like munificent sum ( £ 125 ) , has also been received from an equally celebrated painter , David Roberts , Esq . The aggregate sum ( i £ 250 ) is intended as a gift to be applied to the erection of one of the "Residences" of the College . The donors

request that their contributions may be accepted ' ' as a token of their grateful recollection of the theatrical profession , " for to that they owe their first steps in the art in which they have since attained such eminent distinction .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-12-29, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 11 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_29121860/page/5/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
MASONIC SYMBOLISM, Article 1
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 3
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 3
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 6
METROPOLITAN. Article 6
PROVINCIAL. Article 9
ROYAL ARCH. Article 10
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 10
TURKEY. Article 10
Obituary. Article 10
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 10
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. Article 12
THE WEEK. Article 12
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 12
Page 1

Page 1

1 Article
Page 2

Page 2

1 Article
Page 3

Page 3

4 Articles
Page 4

Page 4

1 Article
Page 5

Page 5

1 Article
Page 6

Page 6

2 Articles
Page 7

Page 7

1 Article
Page 8

Page 8

1 Article
Page 9

Page 9

2 Articles
Page 10

Page 10

7 Articles
Page 11

Page 11

1 Article
Page 12

Page 12

4 Articles
Page 5

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

Correspondence.

first in rank were first in excess . People and king vied m debauchery , and the sottish king joined and encouraged the freethinkers and blasphemers of his court . The idolatrous priests loved . and shared in the sins of the people ; nay , they seem to have set themselves to intercept those on either side of Jordan , who would go to worship at Jerusalem , laying wait to murder them . Corruption had spread throughout the whole land : even the jilaees once sacred through God ' s revelations , or other mercies ,

to their forefathers—Bethel , Gilgal , Gilead , luizpah , Shoehornwere especial scenes of corruption or of sin . Every holy memory was effaced by present corruption . Could things be worse ? There was one aggravation more . Remonstrance was useless ; the knowledge of God was wilfully rejected ; the people hated rebuke ; tile more they were called , the more they refused ; they forbade their prophets to prophesy ; and their false prophets hated God greatly . All attempts to heal all this disease only showed its incurableness .

" Such was the condition of the people among whom Hosea had to prophesy for some seventy years . They themselves were not sensible of their decay , moral or political . They set themselves , in despite of the Prophet's warning , to prop up their strength by aid of the two heathen nations , Egypt or Assyria . In Assyria they chiefly trusted , and Assyria , he had to denounce to them , should carry them captive ; stragglers at least from them fled to Egypt , and in Egypt they should be a derision , and should find their

grave . This captivity he had to foretell as imminent , certain , irreversible . Once only , in the commencement of his prophecy , does he give any . hope that the temporal punishment might be averted through repentance . This , too , he follows up by renewing the declaration of God expressed in the name of his daughter , - ' I will not have mercy . ' He gives them , in God's Name , a distant promise of a spiritual restoration in Christ , and forewarns them that it is distant . But , that they might not look for any temporal restoration , he tells them , on the one hand , in peremptory terms , of their dispersion ; on the other , ho tells them of their spiritual restoration without any intervening shadows of temporal deliverance . "

Captain C . S . Forbes , K . N ., is preparing for publication The Campaign of Garibaldi in Hie Two Sicilies ; a Personal ffdrraiiiie . Matthew Davenport Hill , Recorder of Birmingham , in his new book , Our Exemplars , Melt and Poor , relates the following anecdotes of the present amiable King of Portugal : — " The king , who at the outbreak of the pestilence was onltwent oldfelt it

y y years , to be his duty to remain at his capital , and to do all he could towards mitigating the calamity . To effect this object , ho did not confine himself to presiding over councils , or to discussing means of alleviation in his cabinet ; he went himself among the sick . We were told that lie would continually visit the hospitals both by day and night , coming in a hired street-carriage , with a single companion , that he might prevent any preparations for his reception ,

and ascertain for himself in what manner the patients were triated . On one occasion , it is said , he found a medical man feeling the pulse of his patient with his glove on , hoping thereby to escape contagion . We may imagine the king's indignant reproof to the timorous doctor . At another time , the spectacle was more gratifying . He was just entering a ward when he heard a physician trying to re-assure a patient , who was in a drooping state , with kind and soothing words . Don Pedro remained outside until the

doctor had ceased speaking , when lie entered , extending his hand towards him . The physician , recognizing his sovereign , attempted to go upon his knee , and kiss the hand thus held out . ' No , ' said the king , ' you have behaved like a brother to that poor sick man , and I am proud to shake hands with you . ' " If the King of

Portugal is not a Ereemason , most assuredly he ought to be ; for his conduct , as related in the foregoing extract , was truly Masonic However much we may admire the bravery of ouv own troops , and that of our allies , the French , as lovers of literature , science , and art , we feel bound to express our sorrow at the modern Vandalism shown in the recent sack of the Emperor of China ' s palace at Pekin , as detailed in a letter from the camp , dated October 20 th ,

and published in the North China Herald . The following is the portion of the letter to which we refer : — "The summer palace is about five miles by a circuitous road north-west of tho camp , outside the earthwork . A description of it is given in Staunton's account of Lord Macartney ' s embassy , and other works on China , but no pen can describe correctly the scena that has taken place there within the two last daysIndiscriminate loot has been

. allowed . The public reception hall , the state and private bedrooms , ante-rooms , boudoirs , and every other apartment has been ransacked ; articles of vertu , of native and foreign workmanship , taken , or broken if too large to be carried away ; ornamental lattice work , screens , jade stone ornaments , jars , clocks , watches , and other

pieces of mechanism , curtains and furniture— -none have escaped from destruction . There were extensive wardrobes of every article of dress ; coats richly embroidered in silk and gold thread , in the Imperial Dragon pattern ; boots , head-dresses , fans , & o , in fact , rooms all but filled with them . Store rooms of manufactured silk in rolls , such as may be bought in Canton , at twenty to thirty dollars per piece . By a calculation made in the rooms , there must have been 70 , 000 or 80 , 000 pieces . Hundreds were thrown down and

trampled on , and the floor covered thickly with them ; men were throwing them at each other , and all taking up as many as they could carry . They were used instead of rope to secure the loading of carts filled with them . Throughout the French camp were hundreds of pieces , some heaped up , others used to make tents or beds and coverlids . In the afternoon , yesterday , a party of French went through the apartments with sticks , breaking everything that remained—mirrors , screens , panels , & c .

Owen Meredith has a book in tho press , entitled SerbsM Pesme ; or , National- Songs of Servia . A new work , entitled Health , Husbandry , and Handicraft , is in the press , from the pen of that female literary veteran , Miss Harriet Martineau .

To the intelligent Craftsman , who well knows the necessity of lleligion and Science going liand-in-hancl together , we present the following passage from Professor Philips ' s new book , Life on , the Farth : its Origin and Succession : — " It may be thought that , while professing to keep to the old ancl safe method of reasoning on known causes and ascertained effects , we deviate from this principle in regard to the origin of life , and introduce an unknown cause for

phenomena not understood , by calling to our aid an act of' creation . ' Be it so ; let the word stand for a confession of our ignorance of the way in which tho governing mind has in this case acted upon matter . "We are equally ignorant in every other instance , which brings us face to face with the idea of forces not manifested in acts . We see the stream of life flowing onward in a determined covu-se , in harmony with the recognised forces of nature , and yielding a , great amount of enjoyment and a wonderful diversity of beautiful

and instructive phenomena , in which mind speaics to mi ' rK .. jJiL through many long periods has been manifested in a countless host of varying structures , all circumscribed by one general plan , each appointed to a definite place , and limited to an appointed duration .

On the wivole the earth lias been thus , more ancl more , covered by the associated life of plants and animals , filling all habitable space with beings capable of enjoying their own existence or ministering to the enjoyment of others ; till , finally , after long preparation , a being was created capable of the wonderful power of measuring and weighing all the world of matter and space which surrounds him , of treasuring up the past history of all the forms of life , and of considering his own relation to the whole . When he surveys this

vast and co-ordinated system , and inquires into its history and origin , can he be at a loss to decide whether it be a work of Divine thought and wisdom , or the fortunate offspring of a few atoms of matter , warmed by the anima muudi , a spark of electricity , or an accidental ray of sunshine ?" Mr . James Blackwood has in preparation a book entitled , Arminius ; or , the History of the German People , and their Lecjcd

and Constitutional Customs , from the dags of Julius Ccesar to the days of Charlemagne . By the late Thomas Smith , F . S . A . The national monument , to bo erected in Trafalgar-square , to the memory of the Lite Sir John Franklin , and for which Parliament voted £ 2000 , is to be executed by Mr . Noble .

Mr . J . Phillip's painting of "The Marriage of the Princess Koyal" is about to be engraved , Her Majesty having lent it to a London printseller for that purpose . Two very generous donations have been made to the funds of the Koyal Dramatic College . Bro . Benjamin Webster , the Chairman of the Council , has received a letter from Clarkson Stanfield , Esq .,

the celebrated painter , inclosing his cheque for the liberal sum at £ 125 in aid of the Koyal Dramatic College . A similar letter , inclosing the like munificent sum ( £ 125 ) , has also been received from an equally celebrated painter , David Roberts , Esq . The aggregate sum ( i £ 250 ) is intended as a gift to be applied to the erection of one of the "Residences" of the College . The donors

request that their contributions may be accepted ' ' as a token of their grateful recollection of the theatrical profession , " for to that they owe their first steps in the art in which they have since attained such eminent distinction .

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • 4
  • You're on page5
  • 6
  • 12
  • 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