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  • June 1, 1879
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    Article NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. ← Page 3 of 6 →
Page 38

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Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

full milking , more than tivo quarts a day . The value of their milk for children and invalids has been admitted in all ages ; their milk makes excellent cheese alone , without the mixture of any other , and the whey is particularly nourishing and wholesome , as well as the curd which is produced a second time from boding the whey . Eads are always marketable , being excellent food , and their skins very valuable . " Why should not the mdk of goats—so much richer than that of cows—become a common article of trade in every town ? I know that a little put into a cup of coffee is equal to the cream from that of cows .

All that relates to the work of our ancient operative brethren shoidd be of interest to every Freemason . Of Thebes , Mr . A . Henry Ehind , F . S . A ., remarks , that its " period of greatest glory may be said to have been spread between fifteen hundred years and eleven hundred years before the Christian era . There are , indeed , imbedded in the mass of temples at Karnac , a few pillars of the time of Osirtasen I ., whose date goes back to two thousand years before Christ ; and half-buried fragments have been observed

by Sir G . Wilkinson at El Assasseef , near the Memnonium , with the name of a preceding -king , giving tangible evidence of full vitality , under the earlier of the Theban dynasties , whose memory the historic lists ancl genealogies have preserved . But it was during the reigns of the eighteenth , nineteenth , and twentieth of . those dynasties that the city , and indeed Egypt , attained their zenith . Then it was that all those temples were reared , whose existence the foregoing hasty glance at their sites will recall , and although

they were in some cases the subject of repairs and additions in subsequent years , their early splendour was barely maintained , rather than surpassed . It was then also that Egyptian influence was more dominant than ever before or afterwards , within the range of our knowledge , and really filled a cycle in the history of those eastern regions . " And he adds , as showing its great antiquity , that "during the period of Thebes' greatest vigourthe home of the HeUenic peopleif not itself absolutelunletteredleft no heritage

, _ , y , of writing . And when , somewhat later , the poems of Homer appear , as the first instalment of Greek literature , we have , indeed , presented to us a dim vision of the power and splendour of Thebes , by a twice-repeated reference to its wealth , "—alluding to the Lliad ix . 381 , and the Odyssey iv . 126 .

I am glad to see that Bro . W . F . Lamonby , P . M ., P . Prov . G . Eeg ., etc ., is about to publish , in a five shilling volume , a History of Graft Masonry in Cumberland and Westmoreland , from 1740 to [ the Present Day . As the work is " compiled from Provincial and Private Lodge Records , Grand ' Lodge Documents , and other authentic sources , " it will be a valuable acquisition to that small stock of real Masonic historical literature with which reliable writers like Bro . Hughan , "Masonic Student , " aud others ,

are seeking in this country to supersede the fabidous romances palmed upon mankind as the real chronicles of the Craft by writers of the Bro . Oliver school , who have coolly given us fancies for facts . The true history of Freemasonry , so far as it can be eoni ' e at , is interesting enough for any inquiring mind without resorting to fictions . which only in the end bring odium instead of honour . Strange that in an Order which inculcates Truth as one of its principal foundation stonesso who have ht to

, many soug become its _ poets and historians should have so little regarded the point within the circle . I sincerely wish success to Bro . Lamonb y in his searches into the History of Craft Masonry in Cumberland and Westmoreland , ancl hope that other competent brethren will do the same for every other Province , as we sadl y want " more light" thereon .

Dr . Newman remarks that "the valley of the Euphrates is destined to become one of the greatest commercial aud important political centres of the world . I have myself , " he adds , "seen whole caravans travelling through this region , bearing nothing but American petroleum . American petroleum now li ghts up the dark places of Nineveh , of Jerusalem , and all . the cities of the East . " Londesborough Park is one of those places in my native county which I have yet to see ; and , judging from the following fine pastoral poem , describing " a sylvan nook " therein—which I cull from the Lyrics , by the Eev . Richard Wilton , M . A ., noticed in the

“The Masonic Magazine: 1879-06-01, Page 38” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01061879/page/38/.
  • 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 38

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

Notes On Literature, Science, And Art.

full milking , more than tivo quarts a day . The value of their milk for children and invalids has been admitted in all ages ; their milk makes excellent cheese alone , without the mixture of any other , and the whey is particularly nourishing and wholesome , as well as the curd which is produced a second time from boding the whey . Eads are always marketable , being excellent food , and their skins very valuable . " Why should not the mdk of goats—so much richer than that of cows—become a common article of trade in every town ? I know that a little put into a cup of coffee is equal to the cream from that of cows .

All that relates to the work of our ancient operative brethren shoidd be of interest to every Freemason . Of Thebes , Mr . A . Henry Ehind , F . S . A ., remarks , that its " period of greatest glory may be said to have been spread between fifteen hundred years and eleven hundred years before the Christian era . There are , indeed , imbedded in the mass of temples at Karnac , a few pillars of the time of Osirtasen I ., whose date goes back to two thousand years before Christ ; and half-buried fragments have been observed

by Sir G . Wilkinson at El Assasseef , near the Memnonium , with the name of a preceding -king , giving tangible evidence of full vitality , under the earlier of the Theban dynasties , whose memory the historic lists ancl genealogies have preserved . But it was during the reigns of the eighteenth , nineteenth , and twentieth of . those dynasties that the city , and indeed Egypt , attained their zenith . Then it was that all those temples were reared , whose existence the foregoing hasty glance at their sites will recall , and although

they were in some cases the subject of repairs and additions in subsequent years , their early splendour was barely maintained , rather than surpassed . It was then also that Egyptian influence was more dominant than ever before or afterwards , within the range of our knowledge , and really filled a cycle in the history of those eastern regions . " And he adds , as showing its great antiquity , that "during the period of Thebes' greatest vigourthe home of the HeUenic peopleif not itself absolutelunletteredleft no heritage

, _ , y , of writing . And when , somewhat later , the poems of Homer appear , as the first instalment of Greek literature , we have , indeed , presented to us a dim vision of the power and splendour of Thebes , by a twice-repeated reference to its wealth , "—alluding to the Lliad ix . 381 , and the Odyssey iv . 126 .

I am glad to see that Bro . W . F . Lamonby , P . M ., P . Prov . G . Eeg ., etc ., is about to publish , in a five shilling volume , a History of Graft Masonry in Cumberland and Westmoreland , from 1740 to [ the Present Day . As the work is " compiled from Provincial and Private Lodge Records , Grand ' Lodge Documents , and other authentic sources , " it will be a valuable acquisition to that small stock of real Masonic historical literature with which reliable writers like Bro . Hughan , "Masonic Student , " aud others ,

are seeking in this country to supersede the fabidous romances palmed upon mankind as the real chronicles of the Craft by writers of the Bro . Oliver school , who have coolly given us fancies for facts . The true history of Freemasonry , so far as it can be eoni ' e at , is interesting enough for any inquiring mind without resorting to fictions . which only in the end bring odium instead of honour . Strange that in an Order which inculcates Truth as one of its principal foundation stonesso who have ht to

, many soug become its _ poets and historians should have so little regarded the point within the circle . I sincerely wish success to Bro . Lamonb y in his searches into the History of Craft Masonry in Cumberland and Westmoreland , ancl hope that other competent brethren will do the same for every other Province , as we sadl y want " more light" thereon .

Dr . Newman remarks that "the valley of the Euphrates is destined to become one of the greatest commercial aud important political centres of the world . I have myself , " he adds , "seen whole caravans travelling through this region , bearing nothing but American petroleum . American petroleum now li ghts up the dark places of Nineveh , of Jerusalem , and all . the cities of the East . " Londesborough Park is one of those places in my native county which I have yet to see ; and , judging from the following fine pastoral poem , describing " a sylvan nook " therein—which I cull from the Lyrics , by the Eev . Richard Wilton , M . A ., noticed in the

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