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  • June 1, 1879
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    Article NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. ← Page 2 of 6 →
Page 37

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Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

mason are now issued . On referring to the life of that " meek old angler , knight of hook and line , " by Sir John Hawkins , I find he states : — " His first settlement in London , as a shopkeeper , was in the Eoyal Burse in Cornhill , budt by Sir Thomas Gresham , and finished in 1567 . In this situation he could scarcely be said to have elbow-room ; for the shops over the Burse were but seven feet and a half long , ancl five wide ; yet here did he carry on his trade , till some time before the year 1624 ; when ' he

dwelt on the north side of Fleet Street , in a house two doors west of the end of Chancery Lane , and abutting on a messuage known by the sign of the Harrow . ' Now , the old timber house at the south-west corner of Chancery Lane , in Fleet Street , till within these few years , was known by that sign : it is therefore beyond doubt that Walton lived at the very next door . And in this house he is , in the deed above referred to , which bears date 1624 , said to have followed the trade of a linen-draper . It farther appears by that deed , that the house was in the joint occupation of Izaak Walton and John Mason , hosier ; whence we may conclude , that half a shop was sufficient for the business of Walton . "

In 1632 , Walton was living in Chancery Lane , and left London about 1643 . Comparatively small as London then was to the mighty metropolis of our day , it was not the place for the bucolic mind of the good old angler , however often he may have stretched his legs up Tottenham Hill , or drank his morning's draught at the Thatched House in Hodsden , or angled in the Lea , or the upper portion of the Thames . As I publicly stated a quarter of a century ago : — " Of ad the writers who have made

angling their theme , none please us like honest Izaak . There is a quaint simplicity about his book , which shews us that he had not only made angling his study , but nature as well ; and the exquisite bursts of pathos and genuine sentiment to be met with in every page of The Complete Angler tell one at once that this prince of anglers possessed a mind ever awake to the beautif id , the good , and the true . I do not say that his intellect was of the very hihest orderbut his heart was in the riht laceand

overg ; gp , flowed with devotion to his Maker , and with love towards his fellowmen . He was not , like brave John Hampden , the man marked out by Heaven to resist the unconstitutional levying of taxes to which the representatives of the people had given no sanction in Parliament ; he was no Shakspere , with matchless skill , to delineate all possible phases of humanity , and then , having exhausted his theme , to conjure up a world of his own creation , filled with an infinite variety of strange sprites , from a lovely Ariel to a

loathsome Caliban ; he was no Bacon , to overturn the time-honoured philosophy of Aristotle , and replace it by a more reasonable one ; nor was he , like his contemporary , William Harvey , to benefit science , by discovering how the life-supporting fluid flows in scarlet streams , rich in oxygen , down human arteries , and returns , purpled with carbonic acid , up the veins , to be purified again in the lungs , ancl pumped once more to the remotest extremity of the bod : but in his own province—that of vividlrecalling to the ' mind ' s

y , y eye' of the reader some of the most lovely sylvan spots and quiet nooks of merry England , —he stands almost without a rival down to the present time , enriched though our literature has since become by the genial descriptions of such writers as Pemberton , the Howitts , Tom MUler , and Spencer Hall . "

" The mdk of that valuable animal , the Welsh sheep , " says Lady Llanover , " when mingled with that of the cow , produces cheese which is not only excellent to eat new , but , when old , is more like Parmesan than anything else I ever tasted . " Of the Welsh goats she remarks : — " They are much handsomer than the foreign goats with which I am acquainted . It is surprising that no specimen of the real Welsh goat is preserved in the Zoological Gardens . The Welsh goat , being an aboriginal of Britain , ought to be

specially protected , whereas it appears that the breed is likely to become extinct . The gallant regiment of the Welsh Fusiliers ought to protest against this neglect of an animal which has always been associated with Welsh regiments and the Principality of Wales . The Welsh goat has a very picturesque appearance , from its long coat and beautif idly formed head . There are two species equally aboriginal ; one with magnificent horns , and the other without horns . " And she adds : — " The she-goat gives , when in .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1879-06-01, Page 37” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01061879/page/37/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
TRANSMISSION OF MASONIC ART AND SYMBOLISM IN THE FOURTH CENTURY. Article 1
A QUEER CAREER. Article 6
THE PAST. Article 18
A PERFECTLY AWFULLY LOVELY POEM. Article 19
TO ARTHUR . Article 20
ARE YOU A MASTER MASON ? Article 21
THE LITERARY EXPERIENCES OF A YOUNG MAN WITH A FUTURE. Article 26
HERMES TRISMEGISTUS. Article 27
A CATALOGUE OF MASONIC BOOKS IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM. Article 29
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 36
GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE.* Article 42
ST. ALBAN'S CATHEDRAL. Article 46
TO HOPE. Article 48
THE DEPUTY GRAND MASTER OF ENGLAND. Article 49
CATHERINE CARMICHAEL; on, THREE YEARS RUNNING. Article 50
CHRISTMAS, 1878. Article 64
SONNET. Article 65
LIST OF "ANCIENT LODGES," 1813, WITH THEIR NUMBERS IN 1814, 1832, AND 1863. Article 66
THREE CHRISTMAS EVES. Article 73
GRADUS AD OPUS CAEMENTITIUM. Article 80
HOW I WAS FIRST PREPARED TO BE MADE A MASON. Article 83
CHRISTMAS DAY ON BOARD HER MAJESTY'S SHIP "NONSUCH." Article 92
A PHILOLOGICAL FANCY Article 95
ALONE. Article 97
DESCRIPTION OF A CHURCH SITUATED IN FORT MANOEL, MALTA, IN WHICH ARE SEVERAL INTERESTING MASONIC ILLUSTRATIONS. Article 98
THE LOVING CUP: OR, HOW THE DUSTMEN WERE DIDDLED. Article 102
A CHRISTMAS DAY BEFORE THE ENEMY. Article 105
GERMAN MASONIC TEACHING ONE HUNDRED YEARS AGO. Article 108
A MEMORY. Article 111
ROB MOORSON. Article 112
PARTED. Article 120
THE MAP OF EUROPE IN 1879. Article 121
SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LODGE OF ANTIQUITY, NO. 146, BOLTON. Article 124
AN UNKNOWN WATERING-PLACE. Article 127
SHAKSPERE, HIS FRIENDS AND ACQUAINTANCES. Article 131
SKETCHES OF CHARACTER. Article 138
SONNET. Article 139
THE VOLITATIONIST. Article 139
A SIMILE. Article 144
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Page 37

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

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

mason are now issued . On referring to the life of that " meek old angler , knight of hook and line , " by Sir John Hawkins , I find he states : — " His first settlement in London , as a shopkeeper , was in the Eoyal Burse in Cornhill , budt by Sir Thomas Gresham , and finished in 1567 . In this situation he could scarcely be said to have elbow-room ; for the shops over the Burse were but seven feet and a half long , ancl five wide ; yet here did he carry on his trade , till some time before the year 1624 ; when ' he

dwelt on the north side of Fleet Street , in a house two doors west of the end of Chancery Lane , and abutting on a messuage known by the sign of the Harrow . ' Now , the old timber house at the south-west corner of Chancery Lane , in Fleet Street , till within these few years , was known by that sign : it is therefore beyond doubt that Walton lived at the very next door . And in this house he is , in the deed above referred to , which bears date 1624 , said to have followed the trade of a linen-draper . It farther appears by that deed , that the house was in the joint occupation of Izaak Walton and John Mason , hosier ; whence we may conclude , that half a shop was sufficient for the business of Walton . "

In 1632 , Walton was living in Chancery Lane , and left London about 1643 . Comparatively small as London then was to the mighty metropolis of our day , it was not the place for the bucolic mind of the good old angler , however often he may have stretched his legs up Tottenham Hill , or drank his morning's draught at the Thatched House in Hodsden , or angled in the Lea , or the upper portion of the Thames . As I publicly stated a quarter of a century ago : — " Of ad the writers who have made

angling their theme , none please us like honest Izaak . There is a quaint simplicity about his book , which shews us that he had not only made angling his study , but nature as well ; and the exquisite bursts of pathos and genuine sentiment to be met with in every page of The Complete Angler tell one at once that this prince of anglers possessed a mind ever awake to the beautif id , the good , and the true . I do not say that his intellect was of the very hihest orderbut his heart was in the riht laceand

overg ; gp , flowed with devotion to his Maker , and with love towards his fellowmen . He was not , like brave John Hampden , the man marked out by Heaven to resist the unconstitutional levying of taxes to which the representatives of the people had given no sanction in Parliament ; he was no Shakspere , with matchless skill , to delineate all possible phases of humanity , and then , having exhausted his theme , to conjure up a world of his own creation , filled with an infinite variety of strange sprites , from a lovely Ariel to a

loathsome Caliban ; he was no Bacon , to overturn the time-honoured philosophy of Aristotle , and replace it by a more reasonable one ; nor was he , like his contemporary , William Harvey , to benefit science , by discovering how the life-supporting fluid flows in scarlet streams , rich in oxygen , down human arteries , and returns , purpled with carbonic acid , up the veins , to be purified again in the lungs , ancl pumped once more to the remotest extremity of the bod : but in his own province—that of vividlrecalling to the ' mind ' s

y , y eye' of the reader some of the most lovely sylvan spots and quiet nooks of merry England , —he stands almost without a rival down to the present time , enriched though our literature has since become by the genial descriptions of such writers as Pemberton , the Howitts , Tom MUler , and Spencer Hall . "

" The mdk of that valuable animal , the Welsh sheep , " says Lady Llanover , " when mingled with that of the cow , produces cheese which is not only excellent to eat new , but , when old , is more like Parmesan than anything else I ever tasted . " Of the Welsh goats she remarks : — " They are much handsomer than the foreign goats with which I am acquainted . It is surprising that no specimen of the real Welsh goat is preserved in the Zoological Gardens . The Welsh goat , being an aboriginal of Britain , ought to be

specially protected , whereas it appears that the breed is likely to become extinct . The gallant regiment of the Welsh Fusiliers ought to protest against this neglect of an animal which has always been associated with Welsh regiments and the Principality of Wales . The Welsh goat has a very picturesque appearance , from its long coat and beautif idly formed head . There are two species equally aboriginal ; one with magnificent horns , and the other without horns . " And she adds : — " The she-goat gives , when in .

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