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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Aug. 5, 1865
  • Page 8
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Aug. 5, 1865: Page 8

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    Article BOHEMIANISM. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article ARCHITECTURAL REVERIES. Page 1 of 4 →
Page 8

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

Bohemianism.

ciation with men of unsettled habits , gradually degenerated into a schemer of probably the most unscrupulous class , and died miserably at whafc ought to be the prime of life . Men AVIIO live upon their Avits usually must haA'e a high degree of tension on the brain , AA'hich ,

aided by the excitement of their leisure hours , speedily perverts the judgment and destroys the just appreciation of strict honour , and this is of course furthered b y the struggle for life which is constantly present , because even Avhen a considerable sum of money is made , ifc is as rapidly disbursed .

Scarcely is ifc possible to caution those who are about to enter upon the world against CA'e . y form of Bohemianism which is at once the most seductive and the most deceptive of pretences , it ever holds forth promises of a tempting character , and those Avho belong to ifc are usually extremely

plausible , and , in fact , it cannot be knoAA'ii until it has been experienced not only in one detail but in all , hence the only maxim AA'hich can be laid down on the subject is this , "Whenever you meet a man Avho has no trade , profession , or regular occupation , you may be tolerably sure he is a

Bohemian , " and , in accordance thereAvith , be careful IIOAV you have any transactions AA'ith him . Ifc is a certain fact thafc those who are youn g Avill not avail themselves of the advice of more experienced persons , and a fair offer will but too often lead them to believe that those who make it

are in reality sincere , or , if they do not think this , they are apt to trust to their own shreAvdness for protection ; but that generall y proves but a feeble staff , for ifc is a weapon in the hands of the adversary Avho well knoAVS how to use it . The only safeguard Avhich can be universally applied is the

strict adherence to rigid honesty , AA'hich . must infallibl y triumph in the end , as ifc cannot be stultified , by reason of its sound foundation , whereas every turn and bend of tho tortuous course of nefarious scheming is a Aveak place , which may be broken through even by the most trivial accident .

Architectural Reveries.

ARCHITECTURAL REVERIES .

THE HOOF AKJD THE SMEE . One of tire most striking elegant features of the ecclesiastical architecture of central and Avestern Europe in tlie fourteenth and fifteenth centuries is undoubtedly the spire . Nevertheless , it is but a merelparasitic and decorative adjunct to the tower

y , AA'hich , as a structure devised for the reception of a peal of bells , either as a detached building or as forming an integral part of the sacred edifice , existed many centuries before its spiral completion vras realised hy the bold and graceful designs of the architects of Germany and France . In ItalyAvhile the Medireval

, architect often lavished his choicest devices on the bell toAver or campanile , which Avas generally detached from the main building , the spire never developed itself in its true Gothic glory of tracery and pinnacle ,

as at Antwerp or Strasbourg . In southern Italy , indeed , even the original germ of the spire , the acutely-pointed roof , seldom developed itself as an apex to the tower *; the roof being , as a general rule , nearly flat , and almost invisible from below . This is the case in the marvellously beautiful detached campanile of the Duomo afc FlorenceAvhich the Emperor

, Charles Y . regarded as a vast jewel , Avhich , despite its dimensions , should he shielded , like some precious piece of goldsmith's work , by a covering of glass ; but further north as in the campanile of the Piazza San Marco , at Venice , a high and acutely-pointed roof rises from fche top ofthe tower—and tower-roofs

of this kind are , undoubtedly , the germs of the true spire . In Italy , however , tlie germ appears to have possessed but a Aveak principle of vitality , and ifc never developed itself into architectural life ; veliile in central and western Europe—in Germany , Franceand Inlanders—the true germination took

, place , and plant-like , shot aloft into those exquisitely beautiful ramifications that rival the intricacy aud beauty of vegetation itself . Whether in leadwork or slatework , or more boldly composed of solid stone , the pointed roof may be traced in the Gothic edifises of central and western Europe through every

gradation of its progress , from the merely exaggerated roof , as an adjunct aud climax to the tower , till ib finally assumed the form of the perfectly defined spire ; Avhen ifc became the chief instead of the secondary feature , the tower , Avhich , in the neAV combination , sank into the inferior position of a mere base or pedestal to its own ambitious superstructure . The spire must therefore be considered as bufc a happy

exaggeration of au ordinary roof , just as the steepleshaped head-gear of the ladies of the fifteenth century was a fashionable exultation of a simple cap of earlier periods ; or the high-peaked hat of the Puritan a similar extension upward of the low close-fitting bonnet that had preceded it . In tracing the history of agricultural progress AVO

shall often find tliafc it is in exaggerations of this kind , Avhere some prominent feature of a building has been carried beyond its positive aud necessary limits into fanciful proportions , and where those new forms and limits have become dependent on the indiA'idual taste of the designer , that some of the most graceful features

in the art have been originated ; and in proportion to the appropriateness and the grace Avith which the earlier innovators in any branch of arfc have invested their innovations , such divergencies haA'e become more or less permanent features in the class of art to which they belong .

Pointed roofs of slate , as they grew higher and higher , under the guidance of fche quaint designs of the Flemish architect's , offer some of the most remarkable varieties of the steeple form in its transition from the high-peaked roof to the positive spire . After starting AA'ith gradual culmination towards a point ,

those ingenious slaters Avould , for instance , entirely change the direction of the ascending line , and make it suddenly bulge out , like the capital of a Hindoo column , or the massive shoulders of a Dutch figure , expanding above the scarcely adequate sujmort of a slender waist . The bulge would then , perhaps , he

narrowed again to a second Avaisfc , or rather neck , swelling , at last , into the final head , Avhich probably ¦ would assume the form of an inverted pear , the

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1865-08-05, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 15 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_05081865/page/8/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
MASONIC SAYINGS AND DOINGS ABROAD. Article 1
SYMBOLISM. Article 4
THE EARLY AGES OF SCIENCE. Article 5
BOHEMIANISM. Article 7
ARCHITECTURAL REVERIES. Article 8
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 11
Untitled Article 11
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 12
THE ROYAL MASONIC INSTITUTION FOR BOYS, WOOD GREEN. Article 12
Untitled Article 12
THE MASONIC MIRRGR. Article 12
METROPOLITAN. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 12
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 17
MARK MASONRY. Article 17
CHANNEL ISLANDS. Article 17
REVIEWS. Article 17
Poetry. Article 18
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Bohemianism.

ciation with men of unsettled habits , gradually degenerated into a schemer of probably the most unscrupulous class , and died miserably at whafc ought to be the prime of life . Men AVIIO live upon their Avits usually must haA'e a high degree of tension on the brain , AA'hich ,

aided by the excitement of their leisure hours , speedily perverts the judgment and destroys the just appreciation of strict honour , and this is of course furthered b y the struggle for life which is constantly present , because even Avhen a considerable sum of money is made , ifc is as rapidly disbursed .

Scarcely is ifc possible to caution those who are about to enter upon the world against CA'e . y form of Bohemianism which is at once the most seductive and the most deceptive of pretences , it ever holds forth promises of a tempting character , and those Avho belong to ifc are usually extremely

plausible , and , in fact , it cannot be knoAA'ii until it has been experienced not only in one detail but in all , hence the only maxim AA'hich can be laid down on the subject is this , "Whenever you meet a man Avho has no trade , profession , or regular occupation , you may be tolerably sure he is a

Bohemian , " and , in accordance thereAvith , be careful IIOAV you have any transactions AA'ith him . Ifc is a certain fact thafc those who are youn g Avill not avail themselves of the advice of more experienced persons , and a fair offer will but too often lead them to believe that those who make it

are in reality sincere , or , if they do not think this , they are apt to trust to their own shreAvdness for protection ; but that generall y proves but a feeble staff , for ifc is a weapon in the hands of the adversary Avho well knoAVS how to use it . The only safeguard Avhich can be universally applied is the

strict adherence to rigid honesty , AA'hich . must infallibl y triumph in the end , as ifc cannot be stultified , by reason of its sound foundation , whereas every turn and bend of tho tortuous course of nefarious scheming is a Aveak place , which may be broken through even by the most trivial accident .

Architectural Reveries.

ARCHITECTURAL REVERIES .

THE HOOF AKJD THE SMEE . One of tire most striking elegant features of the ecclesiastical architecture of central and Avestern Europe in tlie fourteenth and fifteenth centuries is undoubtedly the spire . Nevertheless , it is but a merelparasitic and decorative adjunct to the tower

y , AA'hich , as a structure devised for the reception of a peal of bells , either as a detached building or as forming an integral part of the sacred edifice , existed many centuries before its spiral completion vras realised hy the bold and graceful designs of the architects of Germany and France . In ItalyAvhile the Medireval

, architect often lavished his choicest devices on the bell toAver or campanile , which Avas generally detached from the main building , the spire never developed itself in its true Gothic glory of tracery and pinnacle ,

as at Antwerp or Strasbourg . In southern Italy , indeed , even the original germ of the spire , the acutely-pointed roof , seldom developed itself as an apex to the tower *; the roof being , as a general rule , nearly flat , and almost invisible from below . This is the case in the marvellously beautiful detached campanile of the Duomo afc FlorenceAvhich the Emperor

, Charles Y . regarded as a vast jewel , Avhich , despite its dimensions , should he shielded , like some precious piece of goldsmith's work , by a covering of glass ; but further north as in the campanile of the Piazza San Marco , at Venice , a high and acutely-pointed roof rises from fche top ofthe tower—and tower-roofs

of this kind are , undoubtedly , the germs of the true spire . In Italy , however , tlie germ appears to have possessed but a Aveak principle of vitality , and ifc never developed itself into architectural life ; veliile in central and western Europe—in Germany , Franceand Inlanders—the true germination took

, place , and plant-like , shot aloft into those exquisitely beautiful ramifications that rival the intricacy aud beauty of vegetation itself . Whether in leadwork or slatework , or more boldly composed of solid stone , the pointed roof may be traced in the Gothic edifises of central and western Europe through every

gradation of its progress , from the merely exaggerated roof , as an adjunct aud climax to the tower , till ib finally assumed the form of the perfectly defined spire ; Avhen ifc became the chief instead of the secondary feature , the tower , Avhich , in the neAV combination , sank into the inferior position of a mere base or pedestal to its own ambitious superstructure . The spire must therefore be considered as bufc a happy

exaggeration of au ordinary roof , just as the steepleshaped head-gear of the ladies of the fifteenth century was a fashionable exultation of a simple cap of earlier periods ; or the high-peaked hat of the Puritan a similar extension upward of the low close-fitting bonnet that had preceded it . In tracing the history of agricultural progress AVO

shall often find tliafc it is in exaggerations of this kind , Avhere some prominent feature of a building has been carried beyond its positive aud necessary limits into fanciful proportions , and where those new forms and limits have become dependent on the indiA'idual taste of the designer , that some of the most graceful features

in the art have been originated ; and in proportion to the appropriateness and the grace Avith which the earlier innovators in any branch of arfc have invested their innovations , such divergencies haA'e become more or less permanent features in the class of art to which they belong .

Pointed roofs of slate , as they grew higher and higher , under the guidance of fche quaint designs of the Flemish architect's , offer some of the most remarkable varieties of the steeple form in its transition from the high-peaked roof to the positive spire . After starting AA'ith gradual culmination towards a point ,

those ingenious slaters Avould , for instance , entirely change the direction of the ascending line , and make it suddenly bulge out , like the capital of a Hindoo column , or the massive shoulders of a Dutch figure , expanding above the scarcely adequate sujmort of a slender waist . The bulge would then , perhaps , he

narrowed again to a second Avaisfc , or rather neck , swelling , at last , into the final head , Avhich probably ¦ would assume the form of an inverted pear , the

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