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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Nov. 1, 1878
  • Page 36
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The Masonic Magazine, Nov. 1, 1878: Page 36

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    Article THE BENI MZAB. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article LEGENDS OF THE PAST. Page 1 of 3 →
Page 36

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

The Beni Mzab.

proces-verbeaux and the " Canon " of El-Atef . 12 . The Analyses of twelve " Shadjar . it , " long genealogical lists of different groups of the Mzab . These lists , veritable volumina , AA'ritten on skins and rolled into tubes , contain in themselves alone a curious subject of study . 13 . The Analysis of a certain number of " Nesab , " which indicate the ancestry of the principal groups of Mzabites , and explain the formation of the " coff" or hues . 14 . A registrar of notes containing all that the Beni Mzab themselves told M . Duveyrier

of interest as to manners , customs , contemporary history , organization , linguistic . 15 . Seventy draAAungs . The importance of this result of M . Duveyrier ' s journey cannot be overrated . The military commandant at Algiers has placed at his service a sufficient number of secretaries to copy the books he obtained , and which he must return by secret messengers AAdthin three months . He intends to begin by publishing the text ancl translation of the chronicle of Abi Zakariya . He proposes to include in this

series of publications all he has been able to collect during the last two years ancl a half , and first of all will be published a preliminary volume entitled , " Les Beni Mzab . "—We take this interesting paper from The Times .

Legends Of The Past.

LEGENDS OF THE PAST .

BY DE . DKYASDUST . No . I ^ PO fill up a comer in your Masonic Magazine , I send you , from my dusty library , two - * - little " legends , " though modern in guise and dressAvhich I think interest

, may your readers . I hope from time to time to forward similar ones , as I often think , old fogey as I am , that there is more romance and truth even in such forgotten legends than Ave like to belieA'e , or attempt to realize . The first is concerning CroniAvell ' s burial-place : —

NEAVBURGH PAEK . To Sir George WombAvell , of NeAvburgh Park , is devoted a descriptive sketch in one of the numbers of the World . By way of preparing the reader for his introduction to the baronet at home , the sketch opens Avith an accoimt of Sir George ' s hairbreadth escapes in early life , the first from being captured b y the Eussians Avhile taking part as a young cornet of Lancers in the celebrated Balaclava chargethe second from being

; droAvned about fifteen years later through the upsetting of a ferry boat in Avhich the York ancl Ainsty field Avere crossing the river Ure in pursuit of the fox . The writer thus continues : NeAvburgh itself is a inarvel of antiquity , many parts of it dating from the Plautagenets : it possesses the inestimable charm of a house Avhich has been added to often , but never destroyed or rebuilt . As Ave trot round the great fish-pond in front , over Avhich may be descried the jagged outline of the Hambleton hills , to the loAV-broAved thirteenth find

-century porch , we , standing on an emerald circle of greensward , a little active man , the beau ideal of a Hussar . Sir George WombweU is a country gentleman of country gentlemen ; his time is occupied in draining , clearing , and getting land under cultivation ; and he has increased the holdings of his cottages AA'ith a view to improving the condition of the labourers on his estate . With good old-fashioned courtesy , our ' host sees us bestowed in om * chamber at the end of a long gallery hung Avith portraits of the house of WombweU and

Fauconberg . We are here in the oldest part of NeAvburgh . The Avamscoted Avails are of enormous thickness , affording spaces for recesses and coffers m the AvindoAvs . Bating occasional repair and general furbishings upon the

“The Masonic Magazine: 1878-11-01, Page 36” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01111878/page/36/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
THE LOCKE MS. Article 2
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 3
THE PLATT MEMORIAL.—OLDHAM. Article 6
AUTUMN. Article 8
BEATRICE. Article 9
DO THY DUTY BRAVELY. Article 11
AN ELEGY. Article 12
ART-JOTTINGS IN ART-STUDIOS. Article 13
MILDRED: AN AUTUMN ROMANCE. Article 16
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 19
FAITHFULLY. Article 22
SOMETHING FOUND. Article 23
THE BROOK-SIDE. Article 24
LOST AND SAVED ; OR, NELLIE POWERS, THE MISSIONARY'S DAUGHTER. Article 25
FROM OXFORD TO LONDON BY WATER* Article 30
THE BETTER PART. Article 34
THE BENI MZAB. Article 35
LEGENDS OF THE PAST. Article 36
ASSYRIAN DISCOVERIES. Article 38
AN HERMETIC WORK. Article 42
THE WORDS OF STRENGTH. Article 48
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Beni Mzab.

proces-verbeaux and the " Canon " of El-Atef . 12 . The Analyses of twelve " Shadjar . it , " long genealogical lists of different groups of the Mzab . These lists , veritable volumina , AA'ritten on skins and rolled into tubes , contain in themselves alone a curious subject of study . 13 . The Analysis of a certain number of " Nesab , " which indicate the ancestry of the principal groups of Mzabites , and explain the formation of the " coff" or hues . 14 . A registrar of notes containing all that the Beni Mzab themselves told M . Duveyrier

of interest as to manners , customs , contemporary history , organization , linguistic . 15 . Seventy draAAungs . The importance of this result of M . Duveyrier ' s journey cannot be overrated . The military commandant at Algiers has placed at his service a sufficient number of secretaries to copy the books he obtained , and which he must return by secret messengers AAdthin three months . He intends to begin by publishing the text ancl translation of the chronicle of Abi Zakariya . He proposes to include in this

series of publications all he has been able to collect during the last two years ancl a half , and first of all will be published a preliminary volume entitled , " Les Beni Mzab . "—We take this interesting paper from The Times .

Legends Of The Past.

LEGENDS OF THE PAST .

BY DE . DKYASDUST . No . I ^ PO fill up a comer in your Masonic Magazine , I send you , from my dusty library , two - * - little " legends , " though modern in guise and dressAvhich I think interest

, may your readers . I hope from time to time to forward similar ones , as I often think , old fogey as I am , that there is more romance and truth even in such forgotten legends than Ave like to belieA'e , or attempt to realize . The first is concerning CroniAvell ' s burial-place : —

NEAVBURGH PAEK . To Sir George WombAvell , of NeAvburgh Park , is devoted a descriptive sketch in one of the numbers of the World . By way of preparing the reader for his introduction to the baronet at home , the sketch opens Avith an accoimt of Sir George ' s hairbreadth escapes in early life , the first from being captured b y the Eussians Avhile taking part as a young cornet of Lancers in the celebrated Balaclava chargethe second from being

; droAvned about fifteen years later through the upsetting of a ferry boat in Avhich the York ancl Ainsty field Avere crossing the river Ure in pursuit of the fox . The writer thus continues : NeAvburgh itself is a inarvel of antiquity , many parts of it dating from the Plautagenets : it possesses the inestimable charm of a house Avhich has been added to often , but never destroyed or rebuilt . As Ave trot round the great fish-pond in front , over Avhich may be descried the jagged outline of the Hambleton hills , to the loAV-broAved thirteenth find

-century porch , we , standing on an emerald circle of greensward , a little active man , the beau ideal of a Hussar . Sir George WombweU is a country gentleman of country gentlemen ; his time is occupied in draining , clearing , and getting land under cultivation ; and he has increased the holdings of his cottages AA'ith a view to improving the condition of the labourers on his estate . With good old-fashioned courtesy , our ' host sees us bestowed in om * chamber at the end of a long gallery hung Avith portraits of the house of WombweU and

Fauconberg . We are here in the oldest part of NeAvburgh . The Avamscoted Avails are of enormous thickness , affording spaces for recesses and coffers m the AvindoAvs . Bating occasional repair and general furbishings upon the

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