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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Feb. 1, 1877
  • Page 48
  • NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART.
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The Masonic Magazine, Feb. 1, 1877: Page 48

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    Article NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. ← Page 2 of 4 →
Page 48

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Notes On Literature, Science And Art.

the Latin monstro , to SIIOAV ) merely shoAvs the time by its hands . In ancient books the word cloche simply stands for a bellthe monks being accustomed to ring a bell at certain periods marked for them by their sun-dials or hour-glasses , aud ' What ' s o ' clock V in old Avriters is often merely

equivalent to the inquiry , ' What hour Avas last struck by the bell V " In the year 1292—Avheu Edward the First Avas forcing John Baliol upon the Scots as a king , and Dante had only made his unhappy marriage the year before—a clock Avas

procured for Canterbury Cathedral at a cost of . £ 30 ; and the great Italian poet a feAV years afterAvards alluded to a clock , or horologe Avhich struck the hours , in the conclusion of tho tenth canto of his Pan-adise , as thus Englished by Gary ( " the spouse of God , ' of course , meaning the church ) ¦ —

" As clock , that calleth up the spouse of God To Avin her bridegroom ' s love at matin ' s hour , Each part of other fitly draAvn and urged , Sends out a tinkling sound , of note so SAveet

, Affection springs in Avell-disposed breast ; Thus saw I move the glorious wheel , thus heard Voice ansAvering , so musical and soft , It can be known but Avhere day endless shines . "

I have quoted this passage in full because it is the earliest mention known in all literature of a clock striking the hours . Our OAVII Chaucer distinguishes between " a clock or any abbey orloge . " But , though 1 may glance from time to time at the amount of historical and scientific

information which iir . Benson has given us in his excellent volume , those whom I may succeed in interesting in the subject will do Avell to buy and study his interesting and instructive " Time and Time-Tellers . " A IIOAV Avhite violet , Avith double floAvers ,

has been raised as a seedling by a gardener of Ghent , and sent out under the impracticable name of Viola , odorata alba fragrantissima plena ; in other Avords , " Violet , odoriferous , Avhite , most fragrant , full . " The Low Countries have been lamous for centuries for the cultivation of

flowers ; ancl , though the old Dutch landscape gardening is far too formal for my taste , no doubt its introduction into England by the Prince of Orange did much for the civilization of " our tight little island . " And if poor Oliver Goldsmith had never done a more foolish thing than

to spend the last penny he had in the Avorld when in Holland over buying a fine assortment of tulip bulbs for his good uncle , the Rev . Thomas Contarine ( a man well Avorth spending one ' s last penny to please ) there would not have been so much

to shrug one's shoulders about after all . But surely the Ghent gardener cannot ho so ignorant of the ways of the world as to imagine that people will not speedil y abbreviate the long , stiff name he has given to his modest flower . The name of

a cabriolet is little knoAvn , even in London , whilst every child knows a cab ; omnibus is shortened into bus ; leading- members of a "literary ancl philosophical society " Avill constantly speak of it to one another as the " lit and phil " ; even the long names of many of the earth ' s greatest men are cut very short ; as , for instance , every well-read man is familiar Avith Horace ,

whilst only a feAV scholars knoAV the name of Quintus Horatius Flaccus . 1 hope , too , that the clay is not far distant Avhen a radical reform will be made in our English spelling , so as to economise the time poor children have to spend in learning to read , much of our present orthography being

realiy as cruel as it is ridiculous . The " Yorkshire Post" says : — "In the district round Ripon , Boroughbridge , Knaresborough , Wetherby , Tadcaster , Aberford , Pontefract , Wakefield , and Doncaster , arable husbandry is in an

advanced state . Beef and mutton are largely made from the seeds ancl turnips Avhich are so thoroughly cultivated , ancl wool of the first quality is raised . In Airdale , Wharfedale , Nidderdale , ancl on the pastures by the banks of the Nidd , the Ure ,

aud the Denvent , the grazing lands are full of the best beef . " And yet we are forced to go to Australia aud NeAV Zealand for tinned cooked meats , ancl glad of carcasses from America , and withal cannot succeed in bringing the price of butcher ' s meat Avithiu the reach of all the peop le . The fact is , the land in England might easily be made to produce double the food

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-02-01, Page 48” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 16 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01021877/page/48/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 3
SONNET. Article 3
LETTER OF BRO. W. J. HUGHAN, OF ENGLAND, TO THE GRAND LODGE UF OHIO. Article 4
THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES AND MODERN FREEMASONRY; THEIR ANALOGIES CONSIDERED. Article 7
LINES TO THE CRAFT. Article 11
OLD LONDON. Article 12
ON READING. Article 13
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 15
ST. PAUL'S CATHEDRAL. Article 17
CHURCH GARDENS. Article 19
THE ENCHANTED ISLE OF THE SEA. Article 21
THE BYZANTINE AND TURKISH EMPIRES. Article 24
GERARD MONTAGU: Article 26
BURMAH.* Article 28
THE MASONIC ANGEL. Article 30
A LEGEND. Article 32
FREEMASONRY IN FRANCE. Article 33
" BLIND." Article 35
THE BRAKEMAN'S STORY. Article 35
A LAY OF MODERN DURHAM. Article 37
MEMBERSHIP OF LODGES IN ENGLAND AND IRELAND. Article 38
A CIGAR SCIENTIFICALLY DISSECTED. Article 40
NOTES BY FATHER FOY ON HIS SECOND LECTURE. Article 42
LINDISFARNE ABBEY. Article 46
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 47
THE WIDOWED SISTERS. Article 50
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Notes On Literature, Science And Art.

the Latin monstro , to SIIOAV ) merely shoAvs the time by its hands . In ancient books the word cloche simply stands for a bellthe monks being accustomed to ring a bell at certain periods marked for them by their sun-dials or hour-glasses , aud ' What ' s o ' clock V in old Avriters is often merely

equivalent to the inquiry , ' What hour Avas last struck by the bell V " In the year 1292—Avheu Edward the First Avas forcing John Baliol upon the Scots as a king , and Dante had only made his unhappy marriage the year before—a clock Avas

procured for Canterbury Cathedral at a cost of . £ 30 ; and the great Italian poet a feAV years afterAvards alluded to a clock , or horologe Avhich struck the hours , in the conclusion of tho tenth canto of his Pan-adise , as thus Englished by Gary ( " the spouse of God , ' of course , meaning the church ) ¦ —

" As clock , that calleth up the spouse of God To Avin her bridegroom ' s love at matin ' s hour , Each part of other fitly draAvn and urged , Sends out a tinkling sound , of note so SAveet

, Affection springs in Avell-disposed breast ; Thus saw I move the glorious wheel , thus heard Voice ansAvering , so musical and soft , It can be known but Avhere day endless shines . "

I have quoted this passage in full because it is the earliest mention known in all literature of a clock striking the hours . Our OAVII Chaucer distinguishes between " a clock or any abbey orloge . " But , though 1 may glance from time to time at the amount of historical and scientific

information which iir . Benson has given us in his excellent volume , those whom I may succeed in interesting in the subject will do Avell to buy and study his interesting and instructive " Time and Time-Tellers . " A IIOAV Avhite violet , Avith double floAvers ,

has been raised as a seedling by a gardener of Ghent , and sent out under the impracticable name of Viola , odorata alba fragrantissima plena ; in other Avords , " Violet , odoriferous , Avhite , most fragrant , full . " The Low Countries have been lamous for centuries for the cultivation of

flowers ; ancl , though the old Dutch landscape gardening is far too formal for my taste , no doubt its introduction into England by the Prince of Orange did much for the civilization of " our tight little island . " And if poor Oliver Goldsmith had never done a more foolish thing than

to spend the last penny he had in the Avorld when in Holland over buying a fine assortment of tulip bulbs for his good uncle , the Rev . Thomas Contarine ( a man well Avorth spending one ' s last penny to please ) there would not have been so much

to shrug one's shoulders about after all . But surely the Ghent gardener cannot ho so ignorant of the ways of the world as to imagine that people will not speedil y abbreviate the long , stiff name he has given to his modest flower . The name of

a cabriolet is little knoAvn , even in London , whilst every child knows a cab ; omnibus is shortened into bus ; leading- members of a "literary ancl philosophical society " Avill constantly speak of it to one another as the " lit and phil " ; even the long names of many of the earth ' s greatest men are cut very short ; as , for instance , every well-read man is familiar Avith Horace ,

whilst only a feAV scholars knoAV the name of Quintus Horatius Flaccus . 1 hope , too , that the clay is not far distant Avhen a radical reform will be made in our English spelling , so as to economise the time poor children have to spend in learning to read , much of our present orthography being

realiy as cruel as it is ridiculous . The " Yorkshire Post" says : — "In the district round Ripon , Boroughbridge , Knaresborough , Wetherby , Tadcaster , Aberford , Pontefract , Wakefield , and Doncaster , arable husbandry is in an

advanced state . Beef and mutton are largely made from the seeds ancl turnips Avhich are so thoroughly cultivated , ancl wool of the first quality is raised . In Airdale , Wharfedale , Nidderdale , ancl on the pastures by the banks of the Nidd , the Ure ,

aud the Denvent , the grazing lands are full of the best beef . " And yet we are forced to go to Australia aud NeAV Zealand for tinned cooked meats , ancl glad of carcasses from America , and withal cannot succeed in bringing the price of butcher ' s meat Avithiu the reach of all the peop le . The fact is , the land in England might easily be made to produce double the food

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