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  • Oct. 1, 1856
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Oct. 1, 1856: Page 10

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    Article PENCILLINGS FROM THE SKETCH-BOOK OF A MADRAS OFFICER. Page 1 of 13 →
Page 10

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

Pencillings From The Sketch-Book Of A Madras Officer.

PENCILLINGS FBOM THE SKETCH-BOOK OF A MADEAS OFFICER .

A PASSAGE KOTJKD THE CAPE IK 1826 . Heigh , my hearts ; cheerly , cheerly , my hearts ; yare , yare , take in the topsail ; tend to the master ' s whistle . —Tempest . Having kept notes of those days of yore , inclusive of what struck me as amusing 02 ? . the voyage out , long before the wonders of steam had annihilated time and space in reaching our eastern possessions , I proceed to present the same in a condensed form , and without laying too heavy a tax on the patience of my reader .

CHAPTER II .

BY AN IOANTRYM . M .

"Who that has ever sailed from Newhaven , does not feel most forcibly the truthfulness of Lord Byron ' s lines respecting the chalk cliffs of Albion : — recollect Great Britain ' s coasts look white , And almost every other country ' s blue : As gazing on them mystified by distance , We enter on our nautical existence /'

Leaving Portsmouth , however , we cannot witness this peculiarity so distinctly . Soon did we lose sight of her harbour and shipping , being favoured with brisk gales . " The ship got under weigh , The wind was fair , the water passing rough . "

"With an indefinable , and yet strong sensation of regret at quitting our birthland , mingled with a joyous lightness of heart at entering an honourable profession , in which , I believe , all of us youngsters participated , — I stood , and gazing from the stern ,

Beheld my native land receding far . At night we passed the Lizard point , in view of the Eddystone ' s brilliant light . Careering onwards , " o'er the glad waters of the dark blue sea , " by the 25 th of November we were on the confines of Biscay ' s stormy bay , where , by way of a remembrance , we got a

trifling squall , occasioning the loss of our jibboom . No steamers at that period ran their uniform course on the main , no regular overland transit was there to shorten the distance between the mother country and our Indian possessions ; a long and dreary voyage , as it often was , might in prospect be reckoned on , affording

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1856-10-01, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01101856/page/10/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
MASONIC PHILOSOPHY. Article 1
COMMON DESCENT OF OUR RACE. Article 9
PENCILLINGS FROM THE SKETCH-BOOK OF A MADRAS OFFICER. Article 10
AN INCIDENT. Article 22
THE NOAH'S ARK. Article 23
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 24
FINE ARTS. Article 25
CAUTIOUS SECRECY. Article 25
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE AND THE CRAFT. Article 26
THE GRAND MASTER OF WORCESTERSHIRE AND THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 27
VISIT OF THE FEMALE CHILDREN TO THE CRYSTAL PALACE. Article 28
MYSTERY. Article 28
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 29
METROPOLITAN. Article 37
PROVINCIAL. Article 38
WORCESTERSHIRE. Article 57
ROYAL ARCH. Article 58
MARK MASONRY. Article 60
SCOTLAND, Article 60
IRELAND. Article 65
INDIA. Article 65
SUMMARY OF NEWS FOR SEPTEMBER. Article 68
Obituary. Article 71
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Page 10

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

Pencillings From The Sketch-Book Of A Madras Officer.

PENCILLINGS FBOM THE SKETCH-BOOK OF A MADEAS OFFICER .

A PASSAGE KOTJKD THE CAPE IK 1826 . Heigh , my hearts ; cheerly , cheerly , my hearts ; yare , yare , take in the topsail ; tend to the master ' s whistle . —Tempest . Having kept notes of those days of yore , inclusive of what struck me as amusing 02 ? . the voyage out , long before the wonders of steam had annihilated time and space in reaching our eastern possessions , I proceed to present the same in a condensed form , and without laying too heavy a tax on the patience of my reader .

CHAPTER II .

BY AN IOANTRYM . M .

"Who that has ever sailed from Newhaven , does not feel most forcibly the truthfulness of Lord Byron ' s lines respecting the chalk cliffs of Albion : — recollect Great Britain ' s coasts look white , And almost every other country ' s blue : As gazing on them mystified by distance , We enter on our nautical existence /'

Leaving Portsmouth , however , we cannot witness this peculiarity so distinctly . Soon did we lose sight of her harbour and shipping , being favoured with brisk gales . " The ship got under weigh , The wind was fair , the water passing rough . "

"With an indefinable , and yet strong sensation of regret at quitting our birthland , mingled with a joyous lightness of heart at entering an honourable profession , in which , I believe , all of us youngsters participated , — I stood , and gazing from the stern ,

Beheld my native land receding far . At night we passed the Lizard point , in view of the Eddystone ' s brilliant light . Careering onwards , " o'er the glad waters of the dark blue sea , " by the 25 th of November we were on the confines of Biscay ' s stormy bay , where , by way of a remembrance , we got a

trifling squall , occasioning the loss of our jibboom . No steamers at that period ran their uniform course on the main , no regular overland transit was there to shorten the distance between the mother country and our Indian possessions ; a long and dreary voyage , as it often was , might in prospect be reckoned on , affording

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