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  • March 31, 1846
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The Freemasons' Quarterly Review, March 31, 1846: Page 41

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    Article COLLEGE MUSINGS. ← Page 2 of 5 →
Page 41

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College Musings.

to his shipwreck grave among the roaring cavities of the froivning piles of granite-stone beneath . The shore loses its elevation at the other end of the bay , though not its rocky-bed , which , however less in magnitude , would be equally fatal to the hapless ship that adverse winds might drive upon them . The aspect of the country adjoining the coast is dreary in the extreme , as not a tree or shrub of any observation will

grow near the sea . The natives attribute this arborial barrenness to the violent winds which prevail during some months in the year , blowing from the sea ancl bringing with them clouds of briny mist . The air is certainly for the most part of the year very humid , and with some constitutions has a strong relaxing tendency . For myself I never enjoyed perfect health there , and was always ailing . Partook slightly of the breakfast viands which are generally profuse

in quantity in that hospitable part of the world . Afterwards resumed my studies . In the course of the day , going out for another stroll on the sea-shore , which being covered with shingles , and at low water by a fine , firm , level sand ( and upon which , being the only level ground in the parish , I had instituted the noble game of cricket , a science before unknown among the northern lads of the school ) makes a delightful promenadeI was hihly amused at seeing a large group of females

, g , being too far off" to distinguish their rank , bustling down to the water to bathe like so many Naiads of dripping Neptune ' s court . It is the custom there for the ladies to robe themselves in a sort of Esquimaux suit of flannel drapery , and when the tide is up to walk into the ocean . I believe my aristocratic squire-arch relative was the only person who introduced a bathing machine . I used to be surprised that some

speculative capitalist never tried to establish it as a watering-place for local resort . The situation , in many respects , for two or three months in the summer is so well adapted by nature , and the bathing ground so exceedingly agreeable , that I am satisfied it would answer . Dressed to pay a visit at the seat of my guardian , very pleasantly situated , as Robins , the prince of auctioneers would say , amid o ' erhanging groves , and from its adjacency to the sea and the lakes , affording a most eligible summer residence for a wealthy weaver who wished

to retire with his family , for the benefit of their health , from the smoke and steam of some cotton factory in one of the busy towns of Lancashire . N'importe . It is a delightful abode for those who can remove themselves at pleasure to gayer scenes and crowded cities . I found only Mrs . B . at home , and escorted her down into the hay-field , where I met with her husband , busy ( for he is a mighty active

personage ) among the " jovial crew of merry hay-makers . The whole scene , gilded by the rays of a setting sun , called forth involuntarily my rapturous admiration . Its extreme luxuriance , and the mansion peeping out through the interstices of the rich and variegated foliage of the woods around , —truly , I had not beheld a more picturesque scene of the kind since my sojourn hereabout . Mr . B . ancl his wife—the host and hostess—returned soon after my arrival . I met her cold ladyship on horsebackof which exercise she is remarkably fondand rides well

, , , but I do not admire its unfeminine character . We merely greeted each other with the ordinary enquiry , "How d ' ye do ? " There is too great a want of cordiality about the woman to please my ardent temperament . It is difficult to tell whether it proceeds from a natural iciness of disposition , or from hauteur , or from feminine reserve , or from an inward repugnance to her match . It was one of those sort of marriages which

“The Freemasons' Quarterly Review: 1846-03-31, Page 41” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fqr/issues/fqr_31031846/page/41/.
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Title Category Page
THE FREEMASONS 5 QUARTERLY REVIEW. Article 1
Untitled Article 2
TO Article 2
CONTENTS. Article 3
THE JEWISH BRETHREN. Article 4
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEW. Article 5
THE CHARITIES. Article 9
AWFUL RETRIBUTION. Article 11
ON FREEMASONRY. Article 13
STRICTURES UPON PAST AND PRESENT FREEMASONRY BY SIT LUX. Article 20
OUR JEWISH BRETHREN, ALSO SIT LUX. Article 23
ON THE STUDY OF MASONIC ANTIQUITIES. Article 24
FREEMASONRY IN LIVERPOOL. Article 29
A LEGEND OF SIRIAD. Article 33
THE FREEMASONS' LEXICON. Article 36
COLLEGE MUSINGS. Article 40
BROTHER WATSON'S GREAT PICTURE OF BURNS, Article 45
TO THE EDITOR. Article 46
TO THE EDITOR. Article 46
TO THE EDITOR. Article 46
TO THE EDITOR. Article 47
TO THE EDITOR. Article 48
TO THE EDITOR. Article 49
TO THE EDITOR. Article 49
TO THE EDITOR. Article 50
CONTINENTAL LODGES. Article 51
DUTCH AND BELGIAN LODGES. Article 51
POETRY. Article 65
THE THREE STARS. Article 66
LINES. Article 67
TO LADY C N, Article 68
THE MASON'S BOWL. Article 69
THE SWEET GIRLS OF DERRY. Article 70
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 71
UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND. Article 71
QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION. Article 72
GRAND CONCLAVE (OF ENGLAND AND WALES) OF THE ROYAL ORDER OF H.R.D.M., K.D.S.H., PALESTINE. Article 75
THE STATUE OF HIS LATE ROYAL HIGHNESS THE DUKE OF SUSSEX. Article 77
THE CHARITIES. Article 77
THE GIRLS' SCHOOL. Article 78
ASYLUM FOR AGED FREEMASONS. Article 80
CONTEMPLATED AMALGAMATION OF THE ASYLUM WITH THE BENEVOLENT ANNUITY FUND. Article 82
THE REPORTER. Article 82
CHIT CHAT. Article 85
Obituary. Article 90
PROVINCIAL. Article 92
SCOTLAND. Article 109
IRELAND. Article 111
FOREIGN. Article 117
WEST INDIES. Article 119
CANADA. Article 123
AMERICA—UNITED STATES. Article 124
INDIA. Article 128
LITERARY NOTICES. Article 137
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 139
CONTENTS. Article 143
TO THE FRIENDS OF THE WIDOW AND THE FATHERLESS, AT HOME AND ABROAD. Article 144
INDEX. Article 145
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEWS. Article 148
ROYAL FARMERS' AND GENERAL EIRE, LIEE, A... Article 149
FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY ADVERTISER, SECOND... Article 150
FREEMASONRY. ASYLUM FOR AGED MASONS. Article 150
FREEMASONRY. BROTHER J. P. ACKLAM, MASON... Article 151
FREEMASONRY. "DROTHER ROBERT C.TATE, Jew... Article 151
FREEMASONRY. W. E V A N S, MASONIC JEWEL... Article 151
FREEMASONRY. TV/FASONIC KNIGHTS TEMPLAR—... Article 152
FREEMASONRY*. "VTOTICE.—Bro. J. HARRIS b... Article 152
FREEMASONRY. Just Published, price 1*. A... Article 152
FREEMASONRY. In the Press, to form One V... Article 152
FREEMASONRY. Just Published, Vol. I, dem... Article 153
FREEMASONRY. BROTHER W. POVEY, MASONIC B... Article 153
"OOYAL ASYLUM OF ST. ANN'S SOCIETY, for ... Article 153
rpiIE LICENSED VICTUALLERS' AND GENERAL ... Article 154
f<lTY OF LONDON LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY. ... Article 154
THE SOCIETY OF GUARDIANS FOR THE PROTECT... Article 155
LIMBIRD'S MAGNUM BONUM STEEL PENS. AT 6d... Article 155
Untitled Ad 155
"WOOD'S CIGAR ESTABLISHMENT, No. G9, Kin... Article 156
ROBINSON'S PATENT BARLEY is the only gen... Article 156
COMPORT FOR TENDER FEET, &c. WELLINGTON ... Article 156
GALL'S ANTIBILIOUS PILLS.—The most usefu... Article 157
By Kor Mtajesty's Article 158
GREAT BRITAIN MUTUAL LIFE ASSURANCE SOCI... Article 159
THE FREEMASONS' QUARTERLY REVIEWS. Article 160
Untitled Ad 161
Untitled Ad 162
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Page 41

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

College Musings.

to his shipwreck grave among the roaring cavities of the froivning piles of granite-stone beneath . The shore loses its elevation at the other end of the bay , though not its rocky-bed , which , however less in magnitude , would be equally fatal to the hapless ship that adverse winds might drive upon them . The aspect of the country adjoining the coast is dreary in the extreme , as not a tree or shrub of any observation will

grow near the sea . The natives attribute this arborial barrenness to the violent winds which prevail during some months in the year , blowing from the sea ancl bringing with them clouds of briny mist . The air is certainly for the most part of the year very humid , and with some constitutions has a strong relaxing tendency . For myself I never enjoyed perfect health there , and was always ailing . Partook slightly of the breakfast viands which are generally profuse

in quantity in that hospitable part of the world . Afterwards resumed my studies . In the course of the day , going out for another stroll on the sea-shore , which being covered with shingles , and at low water by a fine , firm , level sand ( and upon which , being the only level ground in the parish , I had instituted the noble game of cricket , a science before unknown among the northern lads of the school ) makes a delightful promenadeI was hihly amused at seeing a large group of females

, g , being too far off" to distinguish their rank , bustling down to the water to bathe like so many Naiads of dripping Neptune ' s court . It is the custom there for the ladies to robe themselves in a sort of Esquimaux suit of flannel drapery , and when the tide is up to walk into the ocean . I believe my aristocratic squire-arch relative was the only person who introduced a bathing machine . I used to be surprised that some

speculative capitalist never tried to establish it as a watering-place for local resort . The situation , in many respects , for two or three months in the summer is so well adapted by nature , and the bathing ground so exceedingly agreeable , that I am satisfied it would answer . Dressed to pay a visit at the seat of my guardian , very pleasantly situated , as Robins , the prince of auctioneers would say , amid o ' erhanging groves , and from its adjacency to the sea and the lakes , affording a most eligible summer residence for a wealthy weaver who wished

to retire with his family , for the benefit of their health , from the smoke and steam of some cotton factory in one of the busy towns of Lancashire . N'importe . It is a delightful abode for those who can remove themselves at pleasure to gayer scenes and crowded cities . I found only Mrs . B . at home , and escorted her down into the hay-field , where I met with her husband , busy ( for he is a mighty active

personage ) among the " jovial crew of merry hay-makers . The whole scene , gilded by the rays of a setting sun , called forth involuntarily my rapturous admiration . Its extreme luxuriance , and the mansion peeping out through the interstices of the rich and variegated foliage of the woods around , —truly , I had not beheld a more picturesque scene of the kind since my sojourn hereabout . Mr . B . ancl his wife—the host and hostess—returned soon after my arrival . I met her cold ladyship on horsebackof which exercise she is remarkably fondand rides well

, , , but I do not admire its unfeminine character . We merely greeted each other with the ordinary enquiry , "How d ' ye do ? " There is too great a want of cordiality about the woman to please my ardent temperament . It is difficult to tell whether it proceeds from a natural iciness of disposition , or from hauteur , or from feminine reserve , or from an inward repugnance to her match . It was one of those sort of marriages which

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