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  • Dec. 1, 1880
  • Page 13
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The Masonic Magazine, Dec. 1, 1880: Page 13

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    Article BRO. SIR CHRISTOPHER WREN. ← Page 3 of 4 →
Page 13

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

Bro. Sir Christopher Wren.

in 1718 , revoked it . Wren had anything but an easy position . He succeeded a poet ( Denham ) ancl was himself succeeded by a poetaster ( William Benson ) in 1718 . Benson was a favourite Avith the Germans who accompanied King George from the Continent , and influenced him in many of his appointments . Sir Robert Walpole truly says , thus Avas removed the man " the length of whose life enriched the reigns of several princesand disgraced the last of

, them . " Even while Wren continued architect , his political enemies thwarted his plans , ancl vexed him in every possible manner . His salary as architect was but £ 200 per year , and his enemies secured an order that one half of this sum should remain uncollected until the completion of the edifice , ancl then , in his old age , they retarded its completion as much as they could , so as to prevent him from drawing the sum which had accumulated . Wren appealed to

the king in this matter , who referred the case to his attorney-general , but that officer gave no conclusive opinion . Wren then appealed to the House of Commons , which body ordered that his suspended salary should be paid on or before December 25 , 1711 . Thus for the small annual salary of £ 200 , and one half of that sum kept in abeyance , he yet directed the building with so much energy that the parsimonious Duchess of Marlboroughwhen contrasting the

, charges of her own architect with the scanty remuneration of Wren , observed , " he was content to be dragged up in a basket three or four times a week for £ 200 a year . " Steele sketched him in his Tatter , No . 52 , under the name of "Nestor , " and says of him , " His personal modesty overthrew all his public actions ' ; he was one of the most accomplished ancl illustrious characters iu history . " " The

modest man built the cit y , and the modest man ' s skill was unknown . " Steele also gives the following romance , " Wren knew to an atom what foundation would bear such a superstructure , ancl the record of him states that he was so prodigiously exact , that for the experiment ' s sake he built an edifice of great beauty ancl seeming strength , but contrived so as to bear only its own weight , and not to admit the addition of the least particle . This building was beheld Avith much admiration by the virtuosi of that time ; but fell down with no other pressure but the settling of a wren upon the top of it . " This is so palpable a romance that it must have been coined out of Steele ' s own brain !

Sir Dudley North was a great lover of building , ancl often visited St . Paul ' s while it was in process of erection . He says , " We usually went there on Saturdays , which were Sir Christopher Wren ' s days , who was the surveyor ; ancl we commonly got a snatch of discourse with him , who , like a true philosopher , was always obliging ancl communicative , ancl in every matter we inquired about gave short but satisfactory answers . " During the building of St . Paul ' sin 1695 Wren issued the following

, , order , which i * emiuds us of one issued by Gen . Washington to his soldiers : " Whereas , among labourers , etc ., that ungodly custom of swearing is too frequentl y heard , to the dishonour of God ancl contempt of authority ; and to the end , therefore , that such impiety may be utterly banished from these works , intended for the service of God ancl the honour of religion , it is ordered that customary swearing shall be sufficient crime to dismiss any labourer that comes to

the call ; and the clerk of the works , upon sufficient proof , shall dismiss them accordingly . " St . Paul ' s originally comprehended three churches—the Cathedral proper , St . Faith ' s ( of which nothing remains now but the Cathedral crypt , yet styled the _ Church of St . Faith ) and St . Gregory ' s , which was annexed to St . Paul ' s at its south-west corner . Old Fuller wittily described St . Paul's as being trul

y the mother-church , having one babe in her body—St . Faith ' s—and another in her arms—St . Gregory ' s . " After his dismissal Wren had a town residence in London , ancl cjuiiiimed to superintend the repairs to Westminster Abbey until his death , J ^^ S ^ fehi lowers are of his design . He also had a country house , r ?&!^ iMyj )^ m iifLo ^ e ^ in WV UBRf ^ / 1 ^ £ 007

“The Masonic Magazine: 1880-12-01, Page 13” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01121880/page/13/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CURIOSITIES OF THE SEARCH ROOM.* Article 1
MASONIC AND GENERAL ARCHAEOLOGIA. Article 8
MISTRYSTED. Article 10
BRO. SIR CHRISTOPHER WREN. Article 11
THE ALBION LODGE, QUEBEC. Article 15
OLD RECORDS OF THE LODGE OF PEEBLES. Article 19
BEHIND THE SCENES FOR THE FIRST TIME. Article 25
A SA MAJESTE L'IMPERATRICE EUGENIE LORS DE SON RETOUR DE ZULULAND. Article 28
MASONRY IN HERALDRY. Article 29
THE SUPPRESSION OF THE TEMPLARS IN ENGLAND. Article 32
IN MEMORIAM. Article 35
THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES. Article 36
NATURE'S VOICES. Article 39
THE ASTROLOGY OF SHAKESPEARE. Article 40
THE JEWELS OF THE LODGE. Article 43
THE RESCUE. Article 44
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Page 13

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

Bro. Sir Christopher Wren.

in 1718 , revoked it . Wren had anything but an easy position . He succeeded a poet ( Denham ) ancl was himself succeeded by a poetaster ( William Benson ) in 1718 . Benson was a favourite Avith the Germans who accompanied King George from the Continent , and influenced him in many of his appointments . Sir Robert Walpole truly says , thus Avas removed the man " the length of whose life enriched the reigns of several princesand disgraced the last of

, them . " Even while Wren continued architect , his political enemies thwarted his plans , ancl vexed him in every possible manner . His salary as architect was but £ 200 per year , and his enemies secured an order that one half of this sum should remain uncollected until the completion of the edifice , ancl then , in his old age , they retarded its completion as much as they could , so as to prevent him from drawing the sum which had accumulated . Wren appealed to

the king in this matter , who referred the case to his attorney-general , but that officer gave no conclusive opinion . Wren then appealed to the House of Commons , which body ordered that his suspended salary should be paid on or before December 25 , 1711 . Thus for the small annual salary of £ 200 , and one half of that sum kept in abeyance , he yet directed the building with so much energy that the parsimonious Duchess of Marlboroughwhen contrasting the

, charges of her own architect with the scanty remuneration of Wren , observed , " he was content to be dragged up in a basket three or four times a week for £ 200 a year . " Steele sketched him in his Tatter , No . 52 , under the name of "Nestor , " and says of him , " His personal modesty overthrew all his public actions ' ; he was one of the most accomplished ancl illustrious characters iu history . " " The

modest man built the cit y , and the modest man ' s skill was unknown . " Steele also gives the following romance , " Wren knew to an atom what foundation would bear such a superstructure , ancl the record of him states that he was so prodigiously exact , that for the experiment ' s sake he built an edifice of great beauty ancl seeming strength , but contrived so as to bear only its own weight , and not to admit the addition of the least particle . This building was beheld Avith much admiration by the virtuosi of that time ; but fell down with no other pressure but the settling of a wren upon the top of it . " This is so palpable a romance that it must have been coined out of Steele ' s own brain !

Sir Dudley North was a great lover of building , ancl often visited St . Paul ' s while it was in process of erection . He says , " We usually went there on Saturdays , which were Sir Christopher Wren ' s days , who was the surveyor ; ancl we commonly got a snatch of discourse with him , who , like a true philosopher , was always obliging ancl communicative , ancl in every matter we inquired about gave short but satisfactory answers . " During the building of St . Paul ' sin 1695 Wren issued the following

, , order , which i * emiuds us of one issued by Gen . Washington to his soldiers : " Whereas , among labourers , etc ., that ungodly custom of swearing is too frequentl y heard , to the dishonour of God ancl contempt of authority ; and to the end , therefore , that such impiety may be utterly banished from these works , intended for the service of God ancl the honour of religion , it is ordered that customary swearing shall be sufficient crime to dismiss any labourer that comes to

the call ; and the clerk of the works , upon sufficient proof , shall dismiss them accordingly . " St . Paul ' s originally comprehended three churches—the Cathedral proper , St . Faith ' s ( of which nothing remains now but the Cathedral crypt , yet styled the _ Church of St . Faith ) and St . Gregory ' s , which was annexed to St . Paul ' s at its south-west corner . Old Fuller wittily described St . Paul's as being trul

y the mother-church , having one babe in her body—St . Faith ' s—and another in her arms—St . Gregory ' s . " After his dismissal Wren had a town residence in London , ancl cjuiiiimed to superintend the repairs to Westminster Abbey until his death , J ^^ S ^ fehi lowers are of his design . He also had a country house , r ?&!^ iMyj )^ m iifLo ^ e ^ in WV UBRf ^ / 1 ^ £ 007

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