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  • Sept. 1, 1855
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Sept. 1, 1855: Page 5

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    Article NOTES ON ANTIQUARIAN RESEARCH. Page 1 of 7 →
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Notes On Antiquarian Research.

NOTES ON ANTIQUARIAN RESEARCH .

( Continued from page 492 . ) CHAPTER VI . HirniBEAS , " Yet as a dog committed close , For some offence by chance breaks loose , And quits his clog . "

"We were enjoying the dog-days at Killarney some years ago , which is overrun with dogs , as every observer can testify . The dogs in that hot season presented a most ludicrous appearance , for during the heat of summer , they all , major or minor , wear in front of their necks , a clog , or round log of wood , which is innocently supposed to

hinder them from biting in the event of their going mad . Some wear so small a piece of wood , that one is inclined to think their masters imagine the wood to contain some secret virtue , while it is at the same time highly ornamental . "We have never seen the custom observed in England , and believe it to be truly Irish .

" And sage opinions of the moon sells . " It is a regular sell , " and " he is sold , " are common expressions ; and in lack of a better explanation of the word sell , we illustrate its meaning by this line . Moon sells are omens derived from the moon , and from their invariably turning out wrong , a hoax , or anything

which deceived , gained the name of a sell . May not from these " moon-sells" be derived the name of the good Irish family " Mansell ?" There are many surnames , the derivation of which would be a most interesting discovery , affording much more amusement to general readers than tables of genealogy . Thus the ancestors of the many

families named " Smith , " worked at the forge ; and the first Stephensons , Jacksons , Johnsons , Thomsons , Nicholsons , were the sons of Stephen , Jack , John , Tom , and Nichol . " How many scores a flea will jump . "

Upon this line Dr . Nash has the following note : — " Aristophanes , in his comedy of the ' Clouds , ' act i . sc . 2 , introduced a scholar of Socrates , describing the method in which Socrates , and his friend Choerephon , endeavoured to ascertain how many lengths of his own feet a flea will jump . — xf ^ vWav ' oiroaovg & X \ otro rov £ avrr ] q Aot ) ac ,

' quot pedes suos pulex saltaret . ' They did not measure , as our author says , by the length of the body ; they dipped the feet of the flea in melted wax , which presently hardened into shoes : these they took off , and measured the leap of the flea with them , " & c . This insect ( pulex irrit ^ ins ) , Maunder , in his " Natural History , " tells us attains its natural size in the course of ten or twelve days . Considering the short life of this species , much must we wonder that

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1855-09-01, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 10 Aug. 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_01091855/page/5/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
MASONIC CURIOSITIES. Article 16
The Freemason's Oath. Article 19
A Freemason's Health. Article 19
NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 42
NORTHUMBERLAND. Article 54
NOTES ON ANTIQUARIAN RESEARCH. Article 5
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 44
ROSE CROIX. Article 47
THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 47
METROPOLITAN. Article 48
IRELAND Article 60
COLONIAL Article 60
INDIA Article 61
TRAVELS BY A FREEMASON. Article 11
THE GRAND MYSTERY OF FREEMASONS DISCOVER'D. Article 17
Signs to Know a True Mason. Article 19
"SO MUCH FOR BUCKINGHAM." Article 20
OUR SONS AND THEIR INSTRUCTORS. Article 27
MYSELF AND MY NEIGHBOUR. Article 1
LIFE AND ITS MACHINERY. Article 33
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 39
MASONIC SONGS.-No. 3. Article 43
UNITED GRAND LODGE. Article 44
PROVINCIAL Article 48
PROVINCIAL LODGES AND CHAPTERS Article 62
Obituary. Article 64
NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 64
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Notes On Antiquarian Research.

NOTES ON ANTIQUARIAN RESEARCH .

( Continued from page 492 . ) CHAPTER VI . HirniBEAS , " Yet as a dog committed close , For some offence by chance breaks loose , And quits his clog . "

"We were enjoying the dog-days at Killarney some years ago , which is overrun with dogs , as every observer can testify . The dogs in that hot season presented a most ludicrous appearance , for during the heat of summer , they all , major or minor , wear in front of their necks , a clog , or round log of wood , which is innocently supposed to

hinder them from biting in the event of their going mad . Some wear so small a piece of wood , that one is inclined to think their masters imagine the wood to contain some secret virtue , while it is at the same time highly ornamental . "We have never seen the custom observed in England , and believe it to be truly Irish .

" And sage opinions of the moon sells . " It is a regular sell , " and " he is sold , " are common expressions ; and in lack of a better explanation of the word sell , we illustrate its meaning by this line . Moon sells are omens derived from the moon , and from their invariably turning out wrong , a hoax , or anything

which deceived , gained the name of a sell . May not from these " moon-sells" be derived the name of the good Irish family " Mansell ?" There are many surnames , the derivation of which would be a most interesting discovery , affording much more amusement to general readers than tables of genealogy . Thus the ancestors of the many

families named " Smith , " worked at the forge ; and the first Stephensons , Jacksons , Johnsons , Thomsons , Nicholsons , were the sons of Stephen , Jack , John , Tom , and Nichol . " How many scores a flea will jump . "

Upon this line Dr . Nash has the following note : — " Aristophanes , in his comedy of the ' Clouds , ' act i . sc . 2 , introduced a scholar of Socrates , describing the method in which Socrates , and his friend Choerephon , endeavoured to ascertain how many lengths of his own feet a flea will jump . — xf ^ vWav ' oiroaovg & X \ otro rov £ avrr ] q Aot ) ac ,

' quot pedes suos pulex saltaret . ' They did not measure , as our author says , by the length of the body ; they dipped the feet of the flea in melted wax , which presently hardened into shoes : these they took off , and measured the leap of the flea with them , " & c . This insect ( pulex irrit ^ ins ) , Maunder , in his " Natural History , " tells us attains its natural size in the course of ten or twelve days . Considering the short life of this species , much must we wonder that

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