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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • June 1, 1877
  • Page 4
  • WONDERS OF OPERATIVE MASONRY.
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The Masonic Magazine, June 1, 1877: Page 4

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Wonders Of Operative Masonry.

"Beware ! beware of the Black Friar , He still retains his sway , For he is yet the church ' s heir Whoever may be the lay . Amuudeville is lord b y day , But the monk is lord by night , rvor wine nor wassail could raise a vassal To question that friars right . "

In the lake , near the Abbey , some years ago , there was found a brazen Lectern , or reading desk , and inside of it a number of parchment deeds bearing the seals of Edward III . and Henry VIII . One of them Avas a lenary indul for several

p gence sins of a sensual and peculiarly unfriar-like character . So the Friars of Newstead Avereno better than those of Fountains and St . Albans . Byron often wrote of this Abbey . AVo quote as follows :

" Through thy battlements , Newstead , the hollow winds whistle , Thou , the hall of my fathers , art gone to decay . In thy once smiling garden , the hemlock and thistle

Have choked up the rose which once bloomed in the Avay . " Of the mail-covered Barons , who proudly , to battle Led thy vassals from Europe to Palestine ' s plain

, The escutcheon and shield , ivliicli with every wind rattle , Are the only sad vestiges IIOAV that remain . "

Visitors to Newstead are shown Byron ' s bath , a dark , cold hole in the basement : his bedroom—Avhich in monastic times was the Abbot ' s chamber , — IIOAV kept precisely as when the poet slept in it ; and the famous monk ' s skull which Byron transformed into a drinking gobletwith silver

, rim , the naked inner bone receiving the Avine , and holding over a pint . Odd as this freak Avas , it Avas not so revengeful as the conduct of him , who , Hawthorne tells us , fashioned the skull of his enemy into a spittoon ! The old Abbey garden is still

laid out in the same fashion as the monks left it , and near by it is the tree on which Byron carved his own name and that of his half-sister , Augusto . It is a tree of twin stems . The names are still legible , although the stem on which they wore cut

is dead , as though the inscription had proved fetal to it . In front of the Abbey is an oak that Byron planted—now a vigorous tree— and a marble monument which he erected to his Newfoundland do "

. Lhe front of Newstead Abbey is an exceedingly beautiful specimen of Early English . The south aisle of the Church is incorporated into the present mansion , but the western front remains , a picturesque ruin . It Avas founded by Henry II . as a peace-offering to the Church for having

added a martyr to its calendar , in the person of Archbishop Thomas-a-Becket , GLOUCESTER CATHEDRAL , at Gloucester , 100 miles Avest from London , is built upon the foundation of a Nunnery erected A . D . C 81 , under patronage of Ethelred King of Mercia . Afterwards it Avas altered into a

Benedictine Abbey , and in A . D . 1541 to a Cathedral . Its income at the Dissolution , Avas £ 1 , 550 , The Avest front Avas finished A . D . 1437 , and the central toAvor A . D . 1457 , Avhich latter is croAvned by singularly beautiful pinnacles . The Avfiole exterior is massivebut elegantly adorned . The

in-, terior has lofty Norman circular piers , and the prevailing character of the architecture is Norman . The 'Prentice ' s Bracket , ( a Masonic relic ) is in the south transept . Among the effigies here is that of Alderman Blackleeeh" Avho Avas admitted to the

, glory of eternity 1639 , " and of John Bower ( 1615 ) , " AVIIO had nyne sones and seaven daughters by his Avife , Anne Bower . " Above the name of the latter is this inscription : " Vay ne , Vany tie . All is but Vay ne .

Witnesse Solomon . ' The choir vaulting is one of the richest examples in England . The great East wiudoAV is the largest in England , containing 3 , 798 square feet of glass . It was built in the time of Edward III ., when it cost only £ 139 , being one shilling a square foot . Over the high Altar are

angels in full choir , with every instrument of music used in the 15 th century . Among the royal personages commemorated in this Cathedral are ; Osric , the founder of the first Nunnery ; Edward II . who has a superb altar-tombAvith effigyand canopied

, , by a mass of exquisite tabernacle work Avhich fills the entire aich . On the step of the Altar is the effigy of Robert , eldest son of William the Conqueror . The Crypt is one of five founded prior to 1085 , and is

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-06-01, Page 4” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01061877/page/4/.
  • 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.

"Beware ! beware of the Black Friar , He still retains his sway , For he is yet the church ' s heir Whoever may be the lay . Amuudeville is lord b y day , But the monk is lord by night , rvor wine nor wassail could raise a vassal To question that friars right . "

In the lake , near the Abbey , some years ago , there was found a brazen Lectern , or reading desk , and inside of it a number of parchment deeds bearing the seals of Edward III . and Henry VIII . One of them Avas a lenary indul for several

p gence sins of a sensual and peculiarly unfriar-like character . So the Friars of Newstead Avereno better than those of Fountains and St . Albans . Byron often wrote of this Abbey . AVo quote as follows :

" Through thy battlements , Newstead , the hollow winds whistle , Thou , the hall of my fathers , art gone to decay . In thy once smiling garden , the hemlock and thistle

Have choked up the rose which once bloomed in the Avay . " Of the mail-covered Barons , who proudly , to battle Led thy vassals from Europe to Palestine ' s plain

, The escutcheon and shield , ivliicli with every wind rattle , Are the only sad vestiges IIOAV that remain . "

Visitors to Newstead are shown Byron ' s bath , a dark , cold hole in the basement : his bedroom—Avhich in monastic times was the Abbot ' s chamber , — IIOAV kept precisely as when the poet slept in it ; and the famous monk ' s skull which Byron transformed into a drinking gobletwith silver

, rim , the naked inner bone receiving the Avine , and holding over a pint . Odd as this freak Avas , it Avas not so revengeful as the conduct of him , who , Hawthorne tells us , fashioned the skull of his enemy into a spittoon ! The old Abbey garden is still

laid out in the same fashion as the monks left it , and near by it is the tree on which Byron carved his own name and that of his half-sister , Augusto . It is a tree of twin stems . The names are still legible , although the stem on which they wore cut

is dead , as though the inscription had proved fetal to it . In front of the Abbey is an oak that Byron planted—now a vigorous tree— and a marble monument which he erected to his Newfoundland do "

. Lhe front of Newstead Abbey is an exceedingly beautiful specimen of Early English . The south aisle of the Church is incorporated into the present mansion , but the western front remains , a picturesque ruin . It Avas founded by Henry II . as a peace-offering to the Church for having

added a martyr to its calendar , in the person of Archbishop Thomas-a-Becket , GLOUCESTER CATHEDRAL , at Gloucester , 100 miles Avest from London , is built upon the foundation of a Nunnery erected A . D . C 81 , under patronage of Ethelred King of Mercia . Afterwards it Avas altered into a

Benedictine Abbey , and in A . D . 1541 to a Cathedral . Its income at the Dissolution , Avas £ 1 , 550 , The Avest front Avas finished A . D . 1437 , and the central toAvor A . D . 1457 , Avhich latter is croAvned by singularly beautiful pinnacles . The Avfiole exterior is massivebut elegantly adorned . The

in-, terior has lofty Norman circular piers , and the prevailing character of the architecture is Norman . The 'Prentice ' s Bracket , ( a Masonic relic ) is in the south transept . Among the effigies here is that of Alderman Blackleeeh" Avho Avas admitted to the

, glory of eternity 1639 , " and of John Bower ( 1615 ) , " AVIIO had nyne sones and seaven daughters by his Avife , Anne Bower . " Above the name of the latter is this inscription : " Vay ne , Vany tie . All is but Vay ne .

Witnesse Solomon . ' The choir vaulting is one of the richest examples in England . The great East wiudoAV is the largest in England , containing 3 , 798 square feet of glass . It was built in the time of Edward III ., when it cost only £ 139 , being one shilling a square foot . Over the high Altar are

angels in full choir , with every instrument of music used in the 15 th century . Among the royal personages commemorated in this Cathedral are ; Osric , the founder of the first Nunnery ; Edward II . who has a superb altar-tombAvith effigyand canopied

, , by a mass of exquisite tabernacle work Avhich fills the entire aich . On the step of the Altar is the effigy of Robert , eldest son of William the Conqueror . The Crypt is one of five founded prior to 1085 , and is

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