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  • June 1, 1877
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    Article WONDERS OF OPERATIVE MASONRY. ← Page 2 of 4 →
Page 3

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Wonders Of Operative Masonry.

the Penitential Cell , only four feet and a half long by tAvo and a half Avide . There disobedient Templars Avere confined , " that their souls might be saved from the eternal prison of hell . " Among the eminent persons buried in the Temple Church , Avere Plowden , the great laAvyer of Queen Elizabeth ' s time ; Selden , the noted writer oil international laAV , and Oliver Goldsmith ; and there is a monument to Edmund

Gibbon . When the Order of the Templars was abolished , in A . D . 1312 , by Pope Clement V ., King Echvard II . granted the Temple to the Knights Hospitallers of St . John of Jerusalem ( who had their chief house Avhere St . John ' s Squaro , ClerkenAvell , noAv is ) who afterwards rented it to the

, lawyers , AVIIO have held it ever since . The old ceremony of creating serjeauts-at law resembled that used for receiving serving brothers into the Fraternity of the Temple . In 1 S 40 Temple Church Avas elegantly restored , at a cost of 350 , 000 dollars .

NETLEY ABBEY , a secluded picturesque and elegant ruin , is situated in Hampshire , three miles east of Southampton , and fiftyfive miles south Avest from London . It Avas founded by King Henry III ., in A . D . 1239 , and Avas cruciform , being 200 feet in length , Avith transepts of 120 feet . The monks do not appear to haA'e been very learned , for they owned but one book—Oicero ' s " Treatise on Rhetoric . " The

Abbey s roofless aisles have now scattered over them fragments sculptured with armorial bearings and other architectural devices , Avith great trees giwving Avhere the p illars of the nave used to stand , Avhile grass and ivy mantle the AvindoAvs and pointed archesand Avild roses bloom on

, the very top of one of the walls . The singular natural loveliness of the spot , and the romantic style in which art and nature are exemplified in this ruin , make it one of great interest to the tourist . Poets love to sing of it , and travellers to describe it .

In the Gentleman ' s Magazine for November 1 S 22 , a handsome lithographic engraving of this Abbey may be found . Its revenue at the Dissolution Avas . £ 160 . Netley is not without its legend . Its roof remained until 1704 , Avhen the materials of the Abbey were sold to a carpenter named William Taylor . While negotiating for them he was much troubled

by dreams , and saAv a phantom of a monk , Avho foreboded evil to him if he proceeded ; and one night he dreamed that a large stone fell upon him and killed him . A friend to whom he related this , advised him to drop the undertaking ; but others advising him to go onhe concluded bis

bar-, gain , Avhich ho believed to be a good one . Shortly after , Avhile endeavouring to take some stones from the Avest wall , the whole of the windoAV fell upon him , and crushed him on the spot . WhenHaAvthome visited Netley Abbey he said he saw a large mass

of conglomerate stone that had fallen from the wall , between the naA'e and the cloisters , and he thought that perhaps this Avas the very mass that killed poor Mr . Taylor ! NEWSTEAD ABBEY in Nottinghamshire ,

125 miles north-Avest of London , stands in . a legendary neighbourhood , in the heart of Sherwood Forest surrounded by the haunts of Eobin Hood . It was founded A . D . 1170 , by Henry II . At the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the reign of Henry VIII . it Avas given to Sir John Byronan

ances-, tor of Lord Byron , and it came into the poet's possession in A . D . 1798 . Then , one end of the Abbey remained , with portions of the cloisters . He restored a part of it for a dwelling , and fitted up a quaint library for himselfin which he had tAvo

, skulls of the old friars grinning at him . Lord Byron sold the Abbey to Col . Wildman , AVIIO spent over £ 80 , 000 in restoring the venerable pile . In " Don Juan " Byron Avroto , referring to himself and bride :

"To Norman Abbey whirled the noble pair An old , old , monastery once , and noAv Still older mansion—of a rich and rare Mixed Gothic , such as artists all allow FeAV specimens yet left us can compare Withal , it lies perhaps a little IOAV , Because the monks preferred a hill behind To shelter their devotion from the Avind . "

There is no better Guide Book to Newstead Abbey than the thirteenth canto of " Don Juan . " Of course the Abbey was haunted . A goblin Friar Avalked the cloisters by night , and his appearance usually portended evil . The poet claimed to have seen him just before he contracted his ill-starred marriage with Miss Milbanke . Hence he Avroto : 2 o 2

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-06-01, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01061877/page/3/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
WONDERS OF OPERATIVE MASONRY. Article 2
A TRIP TO DAI-BUTSU. Article 5
LECTURES ON "NUMBER ONE AND HOW TO TAKE CARE OF HIM." Article 6
GLEANINGS FROM OLD DOCUMENTS. Article 8
A YEAR AFTER: THE MAIDEN'S STORY. Article 10
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 11
NOTES ON THE OLD MINUTE BOOKS OF THE BRITISH UNION LODGE, NO 114, IPSWICH. A.D, 1762. Article 14
SOCIAL PROBLEMS AND THEIR PEACEFUL SOLUTION. Article 17
"THE DYING GLADIATOR." Article 21
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 22
THE OCEAN. Article 24
FREEMASONRY IN FRANCE. Article 25
DENTED HIM MASONIC BURIAL. Article 27
A TERRIBLE CATALOGUE. Article 29
FREEMASONRY—ITS PERSISTENCE AND WORK. Article 32
COUSIN WILL. Article 34
THE WOUNDED CAPTAIN. Article 35
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 36
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 37
FAITH, HOPE, AND CHARITY. Article 39
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 39
THE WAKENING. Article 43
A LONDON ADVENTURE: Article 43
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Wonders Of Operative Masonry.

the Penitential Cell , only four feet and a half long by tAvo and a half Avide . There disobedient Templars Avere confined , " that their souls might be saved from the eternal prison of hell . " Among the eminent persons buried in the Temple Church , Avere Plowden , the great laAvyer of Queen Elizabeth ' s time ; Selden , the noted writer oil international laAV , and Oliver Goldsmith ; and there is a monument to Edmund

Gibbon . When the Order of the Templars was abolished , in A . D . 1312 , by Pope Clement V ., King Echvard II . granted the Temple to the Knights Hospitallers of St . John of Jerusalem ( who had their chief house Avhere St . John ' s Squaro , ClerkenAvell , noAv is ) who afterwards rented it to the

, lawyers , AVIIO have held it ever since . The old ceremony of creating serjeauts-at law resembled that used for receiving serving brothers into the Fraternity of the Temple . In 1 S 40 Temple Church Avas elegantly restored , at a cost of 350 , 000 dollars .

NETLEY ABBEY , a secluded picturesque and elegant ruin , is situated in Hampshire , three miles east of Southampton , and fiftyfive miles south Avest from London . It Avas founded by King Henry III ., in A . D . 1239 , and Avas cruciform , being 200 feet in length , Avith transepts of 120 feet . The monks do not appear to haA'e been very learned , for they owned but one book—Oicero ' s " Treatise on Rhetoric . " The

Abbey s roofless aisles have now scattered over them fragments sculptured with armorial bearings and other architectural devices , Avith great trees giwving Avhere the p illars of the nave used to stand , Avhile grass and ivy mantle the AvindoAvs and pointed archesand Avild roses bloom on

, the very top of one of the walls . The singular natural loveliness of the spot , and the romantic style in which art and nature are exemplified in this ruin , make it one of great interest to the tourist . Poets love to sing of it , and travellers to describe it .

In the Gentleman ' s Magazine for November 1 S 22 , a handsome lithographic engraving of this Abbey may be found . Its revenue at the Dissolution Avas . £ 160 . Netley is not without its legend . Its roof remained until 1704 , Avhen the materials of the Abbey were sold to a carpenter named William Taylor . While negotiating for them he was much troubled

by dreams , and saAv a phantom of a monk , Avho foreboded evil to him if he proceeded ; and one night he dreamed that a large stone fell upon him and killed him . A friend to whom he related this , advised him to drop the undertaking ; but others advising him to go onhe concluded bis

bar-, gain , Avhich ho believed to be a good one . Shortly after , Avhile endeavouring to take some stones from the Avest wall , the whole of the windoAV fell upon him , and crushed him on the spot . WhenHaAvthome visited Netley Abbey he said he saw a large mass

of conglomerate stone that had fallen from the wall , between the naA'e and the cloisters , and he thought that perhaps this Avas the very mass that killed poor Mr . Taylor ! NEWSTEAD ABBEY in Nottinghamshire ,

125 miles north-Avest of London , stands in . a legendary neighbourhood , in the heart of Sherwood Forest surrounded by the haunts of Eobin Hood . It was founded A . D . 1170 , by Henry II . At the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the reign of Henry VIII . it Avas given to Sir John Byronan

ances-, tor of Lord Byron , and it came into the poet's possession in A . D . 1798 . Then , one end of the Abbey remained , with portions of the cloisters . He restored a part of it for a dwelling , and fitted up a quaint library for himselfin which he had tAvo

, skulls of the old friars grinning at him . Lord Byron sold the Abbey to Col . Wildman , AVIIO spent over £ 80 , 000 in restoring the venerable pile . In " Don Juan " Byron Avroto , referring to himself and bride :

"To Norman Abbey whirled the noble pair An old , old , monastery once , and noAv Still older mansion—of a rich and rare Mixed Gothic , such as artists all allow FeAV specimens yet left us can compare Withal , it lies perhaps a little IOAV , Because the monks preferred a hill behind To shelter their devotion from the Avind . "

There is no better Guide Book to Newstead Abbey than the thirteenth canto of " Don Juan . " Of course the Abbey was haunted . A goblin Friar Avalked the cloisters by night , and his appearance usually portended evil . The poet claimed to have seen him just before he contracted his ill-starred marriage with Miss Milbanke . Hence he Avroto : 2 o 2

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