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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • March 1, 1879
  • Page 45
  • GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE.*
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The Masonic Magazine, March 1, 1879: Page 45

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    Article GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE.* ← Page 7 of 7
    Article NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Page 1 of 4 →
Page 45

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Gothic Architecture.*

down , it is t ° be done only under the cognisance of the said Board , and with our approval iu the requisite cases . 6 . If in digging , or on other occasions , relics of antiquity should be discovered , our public functionaries are to take care that they be carefully preserved ; and notice of then- discovery is to be immediately sent to the Board of "Works , or to the Managers of the Museum . 1 . All public functionaries are enjoined carefully to watch over the preservation of all the monuments recorded in the aforesaid catalogues , for which purpose the latter are to be pi-inted aud

communicated to them . ( Signed ) Louis . Darmstadt , January 22 nd , 1818 . ( To be continued . )

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

NOTES ON LITERATURE , SCIENCE , AND ART .

BT BRO . UEORCH * MARKKA !! TWEDDEI I I I . Author of " Slutlcspm . Ids Times and Contemporaries , " " The Bards and Authors of Cleveland and South Durham , " " The People ' s History of Cleveland and its Vicinage , " " The Visitor ' s Handbook to Redcar , Coatham , and Saltburn b y the Sea , " " The History of the Stockton and Darlington Railway , " etc ., etc .

TYR . OSGOOD , addressing the New York Genealogical ancl Biographical Society , in * - * April , 1878 , says of that metropolis : — " The old city has almost wholly passed away within this generation . The buildings most associated with life , our homes ancl churches , have disappeared , being crowded out by the pressure of business . Hardly a man lives where he lived thirty years ago , and few children of mature years live where their fathers lived before them . There is but one church of any great importance

( old St . Paul ' s ) that is a century old , ancl our most conspicuous chinches have sprung up within a few years . The old cit y has gone , ancl -the new city has been built too much in a hurry to admit of its being of a sufficiently memorial character . Our new wealth has not been associated with hi gh culture or artistic taste ; ancl costl y houses have been built by the acre , without much historical significance or [ esthetic ' dignity . With the rise of rents and the increase of luxury , the great middling class , which is so essential to the best interest ancl character of a community , has suffered , and , to a great extent , been driven away . In this way , and in many other ways , the city has lost

ws expected harvest of culture and numbers , and its face does not tell its history . What a pity it is that there is so little that meets the eye to remind us of the men who nave made their mark in the commiuiity , ancl of the nations that have built up the city in its greatness . Those of us who have paid our public tributes to Cooper , Irvinjj , Verplanck , Bethune , and other noted men , of our own citizens , and to the masters of European culture and civilization , would especially like to see their names , and , if possible their

, faces , in our public places . England has Shakspere in bronze here ; Aew England has "Webster and ih-anklin ; Germany has Schiller and Humboldt ; prance has Lafayette ; Italy is to have Mazzini ancl Victor Emmanuel . When will ¦ Qolland have Eembrandt?—Eenibrandt , the father of the new humanity in art ; the democrat of light , shade , colour , and form ; who put upon canvas what Dickens put into print , and who with his pencil affirmed the Protestant ri ght of private judgment , and brought out the from the

man pomp of courts and the conclaves of priesthoods mto open clay . Sons of Holland , make room for your Eembrandt here ! Something > as been done ancl is doing to meet this deficiency in our great Park . Some of our

“The Masonic Magazine: 1879-03-01, Page 45” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 10 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01031879/page/45/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Summary. Article 1
BY-LAWS OF AN OLD LODGE. Article 2
THE GREAT PYRAMID. Article 3
TORTURED BY DEGREES. Article 5
THE COUNTRY. Article 6
THE RELATION OF THEISM TO FREEMASONRY. Article 7
FAITH, HOPE, AND CHARITY. Article 10
WHIST. Article 11
KILLED BY THE NATIVES. Article 12
TIME'S CHANGES. Article 20
BEATRICE. Article 21
LES FRANCS-MACONS. Article 23
THE GRAVE OF WILL ADAMS. Article 28
THANKFULNESS.—A CONFESSION. Article 30
AN ALLEGORY. Article 31
THE PROPOSED RESTORATION OF THE WEST FRONT OF THE CATHEDRAL CHURCH OF ST. ALBAN'S, Article 38
GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE.* Article 39
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 45
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Gothic Architecture.*

down , it is t ° be done only under the cognisance of the said Board , and with our approval iu the requisite cases . 6 . If in digging , or on other occasions , relics of antiquity should be discovered , our public functionaries are to take care that they be carefully preserved ; and notice of then- discovery is to be immediately sent to the Board of "Works , or to the Managers of the Museum . 1 . All public functionaries are enjoined carefully to watch over the preservation of all the monuments recorded in the aforesaid catalogues , for which purpose the latter are to be pi-inted aud

communicated to them . ( Signed ) Louis . Darmstadt , January 22 nd , 1818 . ( To be continued . )

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

NOTES ON LITERATURE , SCIENCE , AND ART .

BT BRO . UEORCH * MARKKA !! TWEDDEI I I I . Author of " Slutlcspm . Ids Times and Contemporaries , " " The Bards and Authors of Cleveland and South Durham , " " The People ' s History of Cleveland and its Vicinage , " " The Visitor ' s Handbook to Redcar , Coatham , and Saltburn b y the Sea , " " The History of the Stockton and Darlington Railway , " etc ., etc .

TYR . OSGOOD , addressing the New York Genealogical ancl Biographical Society , in * - * April , 1878 , says of that metropolis : — " The old city has almost wholly passed away within this generation . The buildings most associated with life , our homes ancl churches , have disappeared , being crowded out by the pressure of business . Hardly a man lives where he lived thirty years ago , and few children of mature years live where their fathers lived before them . There is but one church of any great importance

( old St . Paul ' s ) that is a century old , ancl our most conspicuous chinches have sprung up within a few years . The old cit y has gone , ancl -the new city has been built too much in a hurry to admit of its being of a sufficiently memorial character . Our new wealth has not been associated with hi gh culture or artistic taste ; ancl costl y houses have been built by the acre , without much historical significance or [ esthetic ' dignity . With the rise of rents and the increase of luxury , the great middling class , which is so essential to the best interest ancl character of a community , has suffered , and , to a great extent , been driven away . In this way , and in many other ways , the city has lost

ws expected harvest of culture and numbers , and its face does not tell its history . What a pity it is that there is so little that meets the eye to remind us of the men who nave made their mark in the commiuiity , ancl of the nations that have built up the city in its greatness . Those of us who have paid our public tributes to Cooper , Irvinjj , Verplanck , Bethune , and other noted men , of our own citizens , and to the masters of European culture and civilization , would especially like to see their names , and , if possible their

, faces , in our public places . England has Shakspere in bronze here ; Aew England has "Webster and ih-anklin ; Germany has Schiller and Humboldt ; prance has Lafayette ; Italy is to have Mazzini ancl Victor Emmanuel . When will ¦ Qolland have Eembrandt?—Eenibrandt , the father of the new humanity in art ; the democrat of light , shade , colour , and form ; who put upon canvas what Dickens put into print , and who with his pencil affirmed the Protestant ri ght of private judgment , and brought out the from the

man pomp of courts and the conclaves of priesthoods mto open clay . Sons of Holland , make room for your Eembrandt here ! Something > as been done ancl is doing to meet this deficiency in our great Park . Some of our

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