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  • July 1, 1855
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, July 1, 1855: Page 14

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Untitled Article

" He that shall live this day , and see old age , Will yearly on the vigil feast his friends , And say—to-morrow is Saint Crispian . " " Shall witness live in brass "—( Act iv . sc . 2 . )

, Brass plates in memory of those " gone before" are always interesting , and the inscriptions upon them are not obliterated so readily as on stone , by the hand of time . There are several curious brasses in churches in Hampshire ; two in Alton Church bear the following : —

" Of your Charity pray for ye soul of Richard Clarke , which deceased the XVI . day of April / in the year of our Lord God tf & CQCLXXXV . ; and for the soul of Margery , his daughter , late the wife of Richard Fylder , the which deceased the XXV . day of April , in the year of our Lord God , mdxxxiv . " Whose soul , Jesu , have mercy . Amen . "

" Here under lyeth Xopher Walaston , who sometime was groom of the chamber , and one of the yostregere unto the late Kings and Queens of famous memory , Henry VIII ., Edward VL , Philip and Mary , and to our Sovereign Lady , Elizabeth , the Queen ' s Majesty , that now is , which Xopher departed this miserable world the xvi . day of the month of Janury , Anno Domini a ^ LX !!! , "

It will be as well to say that a yostregere , or an astringer , was a gentleman falconer , who contributed to the entertainment of royalty . The custom of placing memorial windows in churches , and brasses beneath them , is of late somewhat revived .

« _—— We will come to them , And make them shirr away , as swift as stones Enforced from the old Assyrian slings . "—( Act iv . sc . 7 . )

"We select these lines merely to show that " skirr away" is not , as some interpret it , " scout away . " A spy who is sent to observe the enemy ' s movements does not go about his work hastily . To skirr is doubtless to scour , to send or scuddle , to scuttle ; or as the schoolsboy , abbreviating the last-mentioned word , says , to scut , or cut away . In this play , which notwithstanding the beauties of the chorus is so

inferior to the preceding one , we have other words lost , or slightly changed in form ; among them may be mentioned " braggard , " which has lost the letter J , and received t instead \ " christom " ( chrisom ) ; " shog ( shove ) off ; " " ancients" ( ensigns who bear the colours ) ; <' fat-brained , " and " cut-purse . " Thus far have we dared to comment upon the words of Shakespeare , notwithstanding the fierce lines which an old gentleman wrote in a first folio of The Gentleman ' s Magazine , 1816 : —

" Goode frende , for Shakespeare ' s sake forheare To marre one jotte that ' s written here ; Bless'd bee they that rightlie conn him , And cursecl they that comment on him /'

Hereafter we shall again have recourse to Shakespeare , but architecture demands our attention ; and we trust , in describing several noble works of art , to interest our readers who are skilled in the science of Masonry . ( To be continued . )

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1855-07-01, Page 14” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01071855/page/14/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
ART. Article 40
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 41
LODGES OF INSTRUCTION Article 60
ST. MARTIN'S HALL, LONG ACRE. Article 39
A FLIGHT. Article 25
A POETICAL ANSWER IS REQUESTED TO THE FOLLOWING ENIGMA. Article 26
APHORISMATA MASONICA. Article 27
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 28
masonic songs-no. 1. Article 37
ON HEARING A LITTLE CHILD SAY THE LORD'S PRAYER. Article 37
MUSIC. Article 38
SPECULATIVE RAMBLES AMONGST THE STARS. Article 15
TRAVELS BY A FREEMASON. Article 20
PROGRESS. Article 1
NOTES ON ANTIQUARIAN RESEARCH. Article 9
NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 43
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 43
METROPOLITAN Article 44
PROVINCIAL Article 45
FRANCE. Article 57
GERMANY. Article 57
COLONIAL Article 59
NOTICE. Article 63
METROPOLITAN LODGE MEETINGS FOR JULY. Article 60
CHAPTERS OF INSTRUCTION Article 61
Obituary Article 62
LIFE AND DEATH. Article 62
NEW POSTAL REGULATIONS. Article 63
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 63
ERRATUM. Article 64
ANIMAL AND HUMAN INSTINCT. Article 6
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Page 14

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

Untitled Article

" He that shall live this day , and see old age , Will yearly on the vigil feast his friends , And say—to-morrow is Saint Crispian . " " Shall witness live in brass "—( Act iv . sc . 2 . )

, Brass plates in memory of those " gone before" are always interesting , and the inscriptions upon them are not obliterated so readily as on stone , by the hand of time . There are several curious brasses in churches in Hampshire ; two in Alton Church bear the following : —

" Of your Charity pray for ye soul of Richard Clarke , which deceased the XVI . day of April / in the year of our Lord God tf & CQCLXXXV . ; and for the soul of Margery , his daughter , late the wife of Richard Fylder , the which deceased the XXV . day of April , in the year of our Lord God , mdxxxiv . " Whose soul , Jesu , have mercy . Amen . "

" Here under lyeth Xopher Walaston , who sometime was groom of the chamber , and one of the yostregere unto the late Kings and Queens of famous memory , Henry VIII ., Edward VL , Philip and Mary , and to our Sovereign Lady , Elizabeth , the Queen ' s Majesty , that now is , which Xopher departed this miserable world the xvi . day of the month of Janury , Anno Domini a ^ LX !!! , "

It will be as well to say that a yostregere , or an astringer , was a gentleman falconer , who contributed to the entertainment of royalty . The custom of placing memorial windows in churches , and brasses beneath them , is of late somewhat revived .

« _—— We will come to them , And make them shirr away , as swift as stones Enforced from the old Assyrian slings . "—( Act iv . sc . 7 . )

"We select these lines merely to show that " skirr away" is not , as some interpret it , " scout away . " A spy who is sent to observe the enemy ' s movements does not go about his work hastily . To skirr is doubtless to scour , to send or scuddle , to scuttle ; or as the schoolsboy , abbreviating the last-mentioned word , says , to scut , or cut away . In this play , which notwithstanding the beauties of the chorus is so

inferior to the preceding one , we have other words lost , or slightly changed in form ; among them may be mentioned " braggard , " which has lost the letter J , and received t instead \ " christom " ( chrisom ) ; " shog ( shove ) off ; " " ancients" ( ensigns who bear the colours ) ; <' fat-brained , " and " cut-purse . " Thus far have we dared to comment upon the words of Shakespeare , notwithstanding the fierce lines which an old gentleman wrote in a first folio of The Gentleman ' s Magazine , 1816 : —

" Goode frende , for Shakespeare ' s sake forheare To marre one jotte that ' s written here ; Bless'd bee they that rightlie conn him , And cursecl they that comment on him /'

Hereafter we shall again have recourse to Shakespeare , but architecture demands our attention ; and we trust , in describing several noble works of art , to interest our readers who are skilled in the science of Masonry . ( To be continued . )

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