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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Nov. 1, 1856
  • Page 18
  • PENCILLINGS EROM THE SKETCH-BOOK OE A MA...
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Nov. 1, 1856: Page 18

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Page 18

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

Pencillings Erom The Sketch-Book Oe A Ma...

Having b ^ en led into the fo rt , where our arrival was registered at the town-major ' s office , and visited that of the adjutant-general , known best among the palanquin-bearers at Madras by the title of

" Conway ' s Office" from the distinguished cavalry officer of that name , many years the head of that department , we presented our certificates of admission to the service , given us in England , and were whisked away , in vehicles not unlike the old English postchaise , across the Esplanade , the roads being bordered with evergreen trees , which at this period of the year bore an abundance of fine

trumpetshaped yellow nowers . We soon reached the cadets quarters , where we were forthwith ushered into the presence of the superintending officer , a captain in the Madras army . The first thing we had to do was to sign our names , with what object I never understood—some one facetiously observed , it might possibly be done to show that writing" had not been neglected in our

education . Boards on the wall , with orders for the guidance of the cadets , were pointed out to our attention , and for the present we were left to the enjoyment of our own society , and that of some other jolly fellows who had preceded us some weeks from England . Ample leisure had we to review our past experiences , nor did we feel our position less agreeable at hearing that we were forthwith , according " to the custom of war in like cases , ' to receive a month ' s pay in advance !

The cadets' quarters , at the time I write of , were situate about a mile and a half from the fort , on the road to Poonamallee , the Queen ' s Begimental Depot here , as Chatham is at home : they were large , airy , and pleasant , but now were undergoing partial repair , and consequently we found , on arrival in the compound , or area on which they were built , tents pitched ready for our accommodation ,

so that on the first night of our being ashore in India we slept in a miniature camp . We were , however , lucky enough to have the benefit of a spacious hall in which to take meals , very desirable at this season of the year , when the great heat at Madras commences , increasing rapidly till July . The grounds round the house were several acres in extent , surrounded by a prickly pear hedge , a very

common mode of defining the boundaries of Indian compounds . The word compound is derived , I believe , from the Portuguese w ord campana , signifying " a plain . " Here it is applied to any space of ground belonging to a building , whether it be a garden , or simply an inclosed field . There was a neat flower-garden at the quarters , and a somewhat arid-looking lawn , but the eye found a relief from the glare of the white walls by resting on the flowering and odoriferous

shrubs dotted about - , and in the back-ground wore clumps of the deep green-leafed mangoa , and lighter-coloured cocoanut-trees , on which the lizards love to gambol , the former presenting a thick and umbrageous shelter from the sun , and neither being at any time destitute of foliage . Many houses at Madras boast of very pretty gardens , especially the mansions of the opulent ; these are beautifully kept , abounding with exotics , and all indigenous productions in the

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1856-11-01, Page 18” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01111856/page/18/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
MASONIC PHILOSOPHY. Article 1
« THINGS NOT GENERALLY KNOWN."* Article 6
LINES TO A NEWLY-INITIATED BROTHER. Article 11
PENCILLINGS EROM THE SKETCH-BOOK OE A MADRAS OFFICER. Article 12
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 20
ANNIVERSARY OF A LODGE. Article 22
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 23
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 36
METE0P0LITAN. Article 50
PROVINCIAL. Article 54
ROYAL ARCH. Article 72
THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED KITE. Article 74
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 74
MAKE MASONRY. Article 75
SCOTLAND. Article 75
COLONIAL. Article 77
INDIA. Article 79
AMERICA. Article 80
SUMMARY OF NEWS FOR OCTOBER. Article 82
OBITUARY. Article 83
NOTICE. Article 84
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Page 18

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

Pencillings Erom The Sketch-Book Oe A Ma...

Having b ^ en led into the fo rt , where our arrival was registered at the town-major ' s office , and visited that of the adjutant-general , known best among the palanquin-bearers at Madras by the title of

" Conway ' s Office" from the distinguished cavalry officer of that name , many years the head of that department , we presented our certificates of admission to the service , given us in England , and were whisked away , in vehicles not unlike the old English postchaise , across the Esplanade , the roads being bordered with evergreen trees , which at this period of the year bore an abundance of fine

trumpetshaped yellow nowers . We soon reached the cadets quarters , where we were forthwith ushered into the presence of the superintending officer , a captain in the Madras army . The first thing we had to do was to sign our names , with what object I never understood—some one facetiously observed , it might possibly be done to show that writing" had not been neglected in our

education . Boards on the wall , with orders for the guidance of the cadets , were pointed out to our attention , and for the present we were left to the enjoyment of our own society , and that of some other jolly fellows who had preceded us some weeks from England . Ample leisure had we to review our past experiences , nor did we feel our position less agreeable at hearing that we were forthwith , according " to the custom of war in like cases , ' to receive a month ' s pay in advance !

The cadets' quarters , at the time I write of , were situate about a mile and a half from the fort , on the road to Poonamallee , the Queen ' s Begimental Depot here , as Chatham is at home : they were large , airy , and pleasant , but now were undergoing partial repair , and consequently we found , on arrival in the compound , or area on which they were built , tents pitched ready for our accommodation ,

so that on the first night of our being ashore in India we slept in a miniature camp . We were , however , lucky enough to have the benefit of a spacious hall in which to take meals , very desirable at this season of the year , when the great heat at Madras commences , increasing rapidly till July . The grounds round the house were several acres in extent , surrounded by a prickly pear hedge , a very

common mode of defining the boundaries of Indian compounds . The word compound is derived , I believe , from the Portuguese w ord campana , signifying " a plain . " Here it is applied to any space of ground belonging to a building , whether it be a garden , or simply an inclosed field . There was a neat flower-garden at the quarters , and a somewhat arid-looking lawn , but the eye found a relief from the glare of the white walls by resting on the flowering and odoriferous

shrubs dotted about - , and in the back-ground wore clumps of the deep green-leafed mangoa , and lighter-coloured cocoanut-trees , on which the lizards love to gambol , the former presenting a thick and umbrageous shelter from the sun , and neither being at any time destitute of foliage . Many houses at Madras boast of very pretty gardens , especially the mansions of the opulent ; these are beautifully kept , abounding with exotics , and all indigenous productions in the

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