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  • Sept. 1, 1890
  • Page 11
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The Masonic Review, Sept. 1, 1890: Page 11

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    Article Round and About. ← Page 11 of 11
Page 11

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

Round And About.

Amongst the theatrical profession Bros . George Grossmith , Rutland Barrington , Durward Lely , and Harry Payne ( the clown ) are all successful anglers ; Mr . Gus Wheatman and Mr . J . Brockbank , the smartest cricketers ; Bro . William Terriss , the fastest swimmer ; Bro . Irving , the most

accomplished fencer ; Mr . A . J . H . Byde the best boxer ; Mr . G . R . Sims can hold the reins against all comers ; Bros . Forbes Robertson and Bernard Gould are the best painters ; Bros . Leonard Boyne , A . W . Pinero , and Henry Irving all "know" a good dog ; whilst Bro . Penley does a bit of farming . As an all-round athlete Mr . F . R . Benson takes the lead .

The Red Indians of Fennimore Cooper's day would never have believed a £ 40 carpet could be the innocent means of destroying the friendship of two such intellectual beings as Bros . W . S . Gilbert and Sir Arthur Sullivan . A fortypound carpet ! Just think of it . Like little wanton boys ,

who not content with swimming on bladders in a sea of glory , must go and " bust" each other's float , because they think they can swim without them . And perhaps they can ; but what about that appreciative public who have encouraged in a very practical way these wanton

children until they have got independent and saucy , and gone and told mother that " Dolly " bit a bigger bit of butterscotch than he left !

Gilbert always was a crotchety man . But he was likewise a genius , and geniuses are supposed to be possessed of an ordinary amount of common sense . He is rich and lives in a beautiful house , holds the highest position in the ranks of living dramatists , and has for years lived upon

his satirical dealings with the weaknesses of eminent people , and yet a straw blown by a capricious wind across a friendship and a partnership of almost half a lifetime turns his crotchety genius into a snivelling " kid " who sacrifices the pleasure and gratification of millions of his fellow-creatures for what ? The third share of a forty-pound carpet .

To me it is lamentable . For the past three years a syndicate of country papers has favoured me with the position of dramatic critic ; and it has been my boast that , amid the drivelling nonsense the unfortunate penman has to get through in the course of a year , the one

redeeming reflection remained that there was a Savoy , a Gilbert , and a Sullivan always on tap . It is even worse than lamentable—it is almost a national calamity—that the delicious music of Sir Arthur Sullivan will no longer be wedded to the splendid lyrics of W . S . Gilbert . Fie

upon you , Sir Arthur ! Fie upon you , Mr . Gilbert Fie upon you , "Dolly" Carte , for the three knaves that you are ! Why , damn it , gentlemen ! poor as I am , I could have spared the £ ^ o to have saved your honour and that inimitable work , which you have no moral right now to rob us of .

Bro . Sir Edmund Currie—of course an authority upon the training of the masses—has hit the very centre peg of the social side , of popular education . " Now it needs to be properly understood by all men that the bestowal of instruction in book-learning and technics , vastly important as it of course is , is not , by itself , education . It is a part of education certainly , but of little use by itself as a humanising

agent . This fact is lost sight of , principally , I suppose , because an educated man acquires his social education unconsciously . Lie mingles , as a matter of course , with others of his own class , and exchanges ideas ; perhaps he travels , he dances , sees beautiful things—pictures and the

like—and hears good music , and although he may forget much of what he was made to learn at school , and may be unable to explain the use of the gerundive to save his life , he is still called , and is , an educated man . Of all these things the youth of the people gets , in most cases , nothing ,

and if he is to be educated he must be given not only his ordinary school training , but that social training which is its educational complement . Llis school teaching is a useful thing for him in a selfish view , but he needs social

training to make him tolerable to his fellow creatures . When he has received it he will adopt rational pleasures and more refined amusements , if only they are placed within his reach . He will read good novels—perhaps poetry ; he will drink less bad beer and will frequently

wash his hands ; he will join choral societies and train his voice , and the bray of his home-going concertina will no longer disturb the night ; his manners toward the opposite sex will no longer be either those of a bear or those of a sheep ; in fine , tangible results will be visible of all our

vast and expensive striving after popular education , and its effects will be seen where they will naturally be looked for —in the better behaviour and higher intelligence of what we call the working classes .

"To the old-fashioned school-book teaching in our elemen . tary schools I have lived to see added both physical training and instruction in the use of tools , and I do not despair of seeing education in its social form made a matter of more widely recognised necessity and general care than it now is . "

When the Duke of Bedford takes to anything his purse is open , but when he does not " take " it is very firmly closed . The . £ 5 , 000 he expended to popularise cremation is an instance of how mean one of the richest men in England can become . He would never expend any such

sum to benefit the living . So many people are curious enough to write me for my portrait—perhaps because I am always bothering people for

theirs that Bro . Bassano has kindly sent me a negative so that I may satisfy my many kind friends . THE DRUID .

“The Masonic Review: 1890-09-01, Page 11” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/msr/issues/msr_01091890/page/11/.
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Round and About. Article 1
Untitled Article 10
Untitled Article 12
Eminent Masons at Home. Article 12
Untitled Article 13
THE SESSION. Article 15
THE HISTORY OF FREEMASONRY. Article 16
Gathered Chips. Article 17
Sawdust. Article 18
ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 22
Untitled Ad 22
Untitled Ad 23
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Round And About.

Amongst the theatrical profession Bros . George Grossmith , Rutland Barrington , Durward Lely , and Harry Payne ( the clown ) are all successful anglers ; Mr . Gus Wheatman and Mr . J . Brockbank , the smartest cricketers ; Bro . William Terriss , the fastest swimmer ; Bro . Irving , the most

accomplished fencer ; Mr . A . J . H . Byde the best boxer ; Mr . G . R . Sims can hold the reins against all comers ; Bros . Forbes Robertson and Bernard Gould are the best painters ; Bros . Leonard Boyne , A . W . Pinero , and Henry Irving all "know" a good dog ; whilst Bro . Penley does a bit of farming . As an all-round athlete Mr . F . R . Benson takes the lead .

The Red Indians of Fennimore Cooper's day would never have believed a £ 40 carpet could be the innocent means of destroying the friendship of two such intellectual beings as Bros . W . S . Gilbert and Sir Arthur Sullivan . A fortypound carpet ! Just think of it . Like little wanton boys ,

who not content with swimming on bladders in a sea of glory , must go and " bust" each other's float , because they think they can swim without them . And perhaps they can ; but what about that appreciative public who have encouraged in a very practical way these wanton

children until they have got independent and saucy , and gone and told mother that " Dolly " bit a bigger bit of butterscotch than he left !

Gilbert always was a crotchety man . But he was likewise a genius , and geniuses are supposed to be possessed of an ordinary amount of common sense . He is rich and lives in a beautiful house , holds the highest position in the ranks of living dramatists , and has for years lived upon

his satirical dealings with the weaknesses of eminent people , and yet a straw blown by a capricious wind across a friendship and a partnership of almost half a lifetime turns his crotchety genius into a snivelling " kid " who sacrifices the pleasure and gratification of millions of his fellow-creatures for what ? The third share of a forty-pound carpet .

To me it is lamentable . For the past three years a syndicate of country papers has favoured me with the position of dramatic critic ; and it has been my boast that , amid the drivelling nonsense the unfortunate penman has to get through in the course of a year , the one

redeeming reflection remained that there was a Savoy , a Gilbert , and a Sullivan always on tap . It is even worse than lamentable—it is almost a national calamity—that the delicious music of Sir Arthur Sullivan will no longer be wedded to the splendid lyrics of W . S . Gilbert . Fie

upon you , Sir Arthur ! Fie upon you , Mr . Gilbert Fie upon you , "Dolly" Carte , for the three knaves that you are ! Why , damn it , gentlemen ! poor as I am , I could have spared the £ ^ o to have saved your honour and that inimitable work , which you have no moral right now to rob us of .

Bro . Sir Edmund Currie—of course an authority upon the training of the masses—has hit the very centre peg of the social side , of popular education . " Now it needs to be properly understood by all men that the bestowal of instruction in book-learning and technics , vastly important as it of course is , is not , by itself , education . It is a part of education certainly , but of little use by itself as a humanising

agent . This fact is lost sight of , principally , I suppose , because an educated man acquires his social education unconsciously . Lie mingles , as a matter of course , with others of his own class , and exchanges ideas ; perhaps he travels , he dances , sees beautiful things—pictures and the

like—and hears good music , and although he may forget much of what he was made to learn at school , and may be unable to explain the use of the gerundive to save his life , he is still called , and is , an educated man . Of all these things the youth of the people gets , in most cases , nothing ,

and if he is to be educated he must be given not only his ordinary school training , but that social training which is its educational complement . Llis school teaching is a useful thing for him in a selfish view , but he needs social

training to make him tolerable to his fellow creatures . When he has received it he will adopt rational pleasures and more refined amusements , if only they are placed within his reach . He will read good novels—perhaps poetry ; he will drink less bad beer and will frequently

wash his hands ; he will join choral societies and train his voice , and the bray of his home-going concertina will no longer disturb the night ; his manners toward the opposite sex will no longer be either those of a bear or those of a sheep ; in fine , tangible results will be visible of all our

vast and expensive striving after popular education , and its effects will be seen where they will naturally be looked for —in the better behaviour and higher intelligence of what we call the working classes .

"To the old-fashioned school-book teaching in our elemen . tary schools I have lived to see added both physical training and instruction in the use of tools , and I do not despair of seeing education in its social form made a matter of more widely recognised necessity and general care than it now is . "

When the Duke of Bedford takes to anything his purse is open , but when he does not " take " it is very firmly closed . The . £ 5 , 000 he expended to popularise cremation is an instance of how mean one of the richest men in England can become . He would never expend any such

sum to benefit the living . So many people are curious enough to write me for my portrait—perhaps because I am always bothering people for

theirs that Bro . Bassano has kindly sent me a negative so that I may satisfy my many kind friends . THE DRUID .

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