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  • Jan. 7, 1860
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Jan. 7, 1860: Page 14

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    Article MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. ← Page 2 of 2
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Page 14

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Masonic Notes And Queries.

1715 , Avhen Prince Charles Edward , the young Pretender , sidled from Port St . Nazaire , and succeeded in lauding in the Hebrides ; and as the Craft has ever been noted for its loyalty , it is interesting to know that Bro . Thomas Sandby ivas the first person who conveyed intelligence of that CA-cnt to government . His talents and loyalty immediately procured for him the appointment of draughtsman to William , Duke of Cumberland , and after the

rebellion ivas subdued in Scotland , he followed "the royal butcher" in his campaigns in Flanders . In 1740 , the duke appointed him deputy ranger of Windsor Great Park , an appointment Avhich he held until his death , fifty-two years afterwards . If "A Master Builder" has ever visited that lovely sylvan tract , stretching from Windsor Castle to the A'illagc of Siumyside , and has treasured up in the chambers of his brain ictures from the

p park and forest to gaze upon Avith his mental A'ision , when far away from the ori ginal scenes , he has just cause to be thankful for Bro . Thomas Sandby ' s appointment to the sub-rangcrship , for there ho made art ancl nature go hand in hand . That one instance is a sample of his true taste . Near the A'illagc I have just mentioned , until 1754 , there ivas a noisome swamp , into ivhich a Filstaff once pitched headlong Avould never have cvaAvled out

again to revel at the Garter . But Bro . Thomas Sandby , though lie could not drain this bog , on account of the lowness of the situation , hit upon the happy expedient of forming the largest artificial lake in the kingdom—Virginia Water . It is due to Bro . Thomas Sandb y to state that the bad taste of erecting artificial ruins belongs to a later period and a ivcaker brain . A scries of eight folio views , published by Bro . Thomas Sandby about that period , ivill give "A Master Builder" some idea of the architect's

abilities as a landscape gardener ancl artist , as they illustrate the improvements he had made about Windsor . His skill in drawing or delineating the intended building in a draft or plan Avas such , that he received tho appointment of architect to the king prcA-ious to his labours just mentioned . In 1755 , I find him labouring to establish an English academy for the cultivation of the arts ; in 17 ( i 6 he was a member of the Society of Incorporated Artists of

, Great Britain ; and Avhen the Eoyal Academy AVUS formed , iu 17 GS , he was considered qualified to be appointed the first Professor of Architecture , ancl he annuall y delivered lectures on architecture , illustrated b y his OAVU draAvings , from the opening of the Academy to the period of his death . In 1708 , he gained the first prize for a desi gn for the Dublin Eoyal Exchange , equally ivith Tiiomas Cooley , but the latter received the commission in

consequence of his being an Irishman . I need not tell "A Master Builder" that Freemasons' Hall , iii London , ivas erected in 1775 , from a design Avhich Bro . Thomas Sandb y drew for the guidance and instruction of the operative craftsmen ; though Bro . Preston , in the twelfth edition of his " Illustrations of Masonry , " 1812 , omits all mention of Bro . Sandby ' s name in his account of the hall . The lectures to the Eoyal Academicians never Avere published

, but the late John Britton presented the ori ginal manuscript to the library of the Eoyal Institute of British Architects ; and ' ^ A Master Builder" ivill find a great number of drawings b y Bro . Thomas Sandby iu the Soane Museum , and in the print room of the British Museum . He ivas the author of a much admired design for _ an ornamental bridge over the Thames at Somerset i louse , Avhich was never erected , on account of the expense . He died the

on 25 th of June , 1798 , in the seventy-seventh year ofhis age , and his bod y was interred at Old Windsor . Perhaps some other brother may be able to add to this information , so as full y to satisfy " A Master Builder" and other readers of your interesting " Masonic Notes ancl Queries , " —a feature in-the Maqazine likely to accomplish much good . —GEORGE MAIIKHAM TWEDDELL .

1 ? AUL SANDBY , K . A . Was the Paul Sandb y , E . A ., mentioned iu the foregoing ' Note , " a member of the Craft ' > And , if so , when and where ivas he initiated ?—GEO . M . TWEDDELL .

MASOXIC STATUE or AVASHINGI ' OX . —General Washington was a member ol the Masonic Lodge at Fredericksburg , Va ,, and ivas initiated November Sth , 1752 . Tho fact is especially a source of pride to the old Lodge at Frcdencksburgh . It has been deemed proper to procure a statu e of AVashington , by Powers , and an order to that effect Avas given some time since . The statue arrived at " Sew York from Leghorn a few dayssmcc . It is the property of tho h Lodgeand has

Fredericksburg , been , paid for by voluntary contributions of the Masonic Order generally It cost $ 5 , 000 , and is somewhat larger than life . It ivas proposed also to erect a building at Fredericksburg h suitable for the statue , and to inaugurate it with appropriate ceremonies . —Rob Morris ' s Voice of Masonry .

Literature.

Literature .

REVIEWS . A Life-Lung Story : or , Am I my Sister ' s Keeper ? Pacts and Phases for the Times . Dedicated to the "Women of England . By ONE OETIIEJISKLVES . London : Siuipkin , Marshall and Co . WE had hoped , for the honour of poor humanity , that the religious novel had become pretty nearly obsolete ; for it is a painful thing to find one sect bitterly accusing another , and that too in a Avork of

fiction , an acknowledged falsehood . With some persons the end is often pleaded as a sanction to the means , but try them on this ground and assail their Avcak points , and they -will burst forth in a mighty cry of shame . Then again the motive is paraded before us as an excuse for all the gall and bitterness that can be heaped on their opponents ' heads . This is lamentable , and such principles cannot expect to find favour among Masons , Avhose Avatclnvord is ,

" Peace on earth ; goodwill towards man . " AVe arc told in the preface that" To tho literary epicure , revelling in a measured and majestic How of thought , or to the reading dissipatiouist ( sic ) seeking to satisfy an unhealthy idealism iu records of startling adventures by ' flood and field , ' tlle story ivill have no charms . " This statement AVC can fully endorse ; for story , iu the usually

accepted sense of the Avord , there is none . The book is an indescribable jumble of unintelligible meaning , dealing freely Avith the name of the Author of all good , and perverting the holy scriptures in every possible Avay to Avrcst a meaning from them that ivill suit the preconceived intentions of the Avriter . So , also , Avith another ] iaragi-aph of the preface , cordially agreethat "there is nothing new under the sun" ancl"of

, , , making books there is no end ; " probably it may be less needful to produce "things new" than to reproduce the old Avith a fresher pathos . Many , if not all , of the subjects introduced into these pages have been dealt Avith , ancl dealt ivith infinitely better . AVe are then told that in the chronos " there arc some inaccuracies ;" AVC bclicA'c it . There arc not some , but many . AVe must not say Avhat AVC think of the performance of even the

preface , but Avill ask our readers if they can understand the following extracts , Avhich are far above our comprehension : — "ALL THINGS the last death-sob of those illustrious men—Lawrence , Havclock , Hodson , and a sacred baud—whose memory will never grow old , and from whose graves shall issue a stream of light and glory till the Heaping Angel shall lift up his hand and swear ' that time shall bo no longer . ' " AVe are then treated to three more paragraphs that touch on .

" ALL THINGS ! " and to a final " Ancl yet once more !" The force of folly can no further go . AVe come upon another passage , more painful , because of its utter profanity . AVe arc told , " There lacketh , even in the heart of God ' s people , more reverence for the teaching of God's word than at this day appcareth among us ;" , and then Ave have the name of the Great Architect of the universe bandied about in all

sorts of doggrcl lines , Avhich Ave pass OA * er , as they contain a long tirade against the Pope ancl in honour of the flag of Protestantism . And all this is part of the preface of a book , a novel , that is published to SIIOAV how badly sempstresses are treated , and in favour of the early closing movement . AVe have not patience to take our readers through the ivork , but offer a ious extracttaken haphazardto show the writer ' s

cop , , style : — " Say now , you Avhose hearts bave not been preserved iu ice , and are not cutting fragments of flint and steel , never Hearing each other to produce fire and warmth , is it wonderful that as her trusting cry fell on his ear , and her gentle bosom pulsated for one moment close to his own as the fair creature clung to his encircling arm , his love smouldering and stifled—down as it was , attracted by its kindred essence , should have out

leaped and united Avith hers into one pure , bright flame , destined to burn for ever and ever ?—and though , as some frigid beings—who would have made capital inmates of the ice-palace of the imperial murderess of Russia—declare that 'it is very wrong for ministers to have feelings and affection like other people , ' we prefer appealing to those who have loved , and struggled , and sorrowed , to judge our young pastor ; let the sinless cast the first stone . "Header , canyon ?

" - ® ° > you cannot ! Ah , 'tis even so . 'If we say Ave have no sin Ave deceive ourselves . ' " And now Ave may go over the old philosophically macadamized road , and acid to the skeleton-Avorn remarks , ' —hat a strange thing the human heart is ! How it is ever playing at cross purposes !' "' AVhat a mysterious thing love is , ever eluding the dictates of policy and prudence and ensconcing itself Avith a mischievous chuckle into the most unlikely corners ! '

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-01-07, Page 14” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 6 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_07011860/page/14/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
ADDRESS TO OUR READERS. Article 3
Untitled Article 5
LONDON v. COUNTRY. Article 9
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.-V. Article 11
THE SAILOR FREEMASON . Article 12
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 13
Literature. Article 14
Poetry. Article 17
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 17
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 18
AMERICA. Article 25
TURKEY. Article 25
Obituary. Article 26
THE WEEK. Article 26
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 27
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 28
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Masonic Notes And Queries.

1715 , Avhen Prince Charles Edward , the young Pretender , sidled from Port St . Nazaire , and succeeded in lauding in the Hebrides ; and as the Craft has ever been noted for its loyalty , it is interesting to know that Bro . Thomas Sandby ivas the first person who conveyed intelligence of that CA-cnt to government . His talents and loyalty immediately procured for him the appointment of draughtsman to William , Duke of Cumberland , and after the

rebellion ivas subdued in Scotland , he followed "the royal butcher" in his campaigns in Flanders . In 1740 , the duke appointed him deputy ranger of Windsor Great Park , an appointment Avhich he held until his death , fifty-two years afterwards . If "A Master Builder" has ever visited that lovely sylvan tract , stretching from Windsor Castle to the A'illagc of Siumyside , and has treasured up in the chambers of his brain ictures from the

p park and forest to gaze upon Avith his mental A'ision , when far away from the ori ginal scenes , he has just cause to be thankful for Bro . Thomas Sandby ' s appointment to the sub-rangcrship , for there ho made art ancl nature go hand in hand . That one instance is a sample of his true taste . Near the A'illagc I have just mentioned , until 1754 , there ivas a noisome swamp , into ivhich a Filstaff once pitched headlong Avould never have cvaAvled out

again to revel at the Garter . But Bro . Thomas Sandby , though lie could not drain this bog , on account of the lowness of the situation , hit upon the happy expedient of forming the largest artificial lake in the kingdom—Virginia Water . It is due to Bro . Thomas Sandb y to state that the bad taste of erecting artificial ruins belongs to a later period and a ivcaker brain . A scries of eight folio views , published by Bro . Thomas Sandby about that period , ivill give "A Master Builder" some idea of the architect's

abilities as a landscape gardener ancl artist , as they illustrate the improvements he had made about Windsor . His skill in drawing or delineating the intended building in a draft or plan Avas such , that he received tho appointment of architect to the king prcA-ious to his labours just mentioned . In 1755 , I find him labouring to establish an English academy for the cultivation of the arts ; in 17 ( i 6 he was a member of the Society of Incorporated Artists of

, Great Britain ; and Avhen the Eoyal Academy AVUS formed , iu 17 GS , he was considered qualified to be appointed the first Professor of Architecture , ancl he annuall y delivered lectures on architecture , illustrated b y his OAVU draAvings , from the opening of the Academy to the period of his death . In 1708 , he gained the first prize for a desi gn for the Dublin Eoyal Exchange , equally ivith Tiiomas Cooley , but the latter received the commission in

consequence of his being an Irishman . I need not tell "A Master Builder" that Freemasons' Hall , iii London , ivas erected in 1775 , from a design Avhich Bro . Thomas Sandb y drew for the guidance and instruction of the operative craftsmen ; though Bro . Preston , in the twelfth edition of his " Illustrations of Masonry , " 1812 , omits all mention of Bro . Sandby ' s name in his account of the hall . The lectures to the Eoyal Academicians never Avere published

, but the late John Britton presented the ori ginal manuscript to the library of the Eoyal Institute of British Architects ; and ' ^ A Master Builder" ivill find a great number of drawings b y Bro . Thomas Sandby iu the Soane Museum , and in the print room of the British Museum . He ivas the author of a much admired design for _ an ornamental bridge over the Thames at Somerset i louse , Avhich was never erected , on account of the expense . He died the

on 25 th of June , 1798 , in the seventy-seventh year ofhis age , and his bod y was interred at Old Windsor . Perhaps some other brother may be able to add to this information , so as full y to satisfy " A Master Builder" and other readers of your interesting " Masonic Notes ancl Queries , " —a feature in-the Maqazine likely to accomplish much good . —GEORGE MAIIKHAM TWEDDELL .

1 ? AUL SANDBY , K . A . Was the Paul Sandb y , E . A ., mentioned iu the foregoing ' Note , " a member of the Craft ' > And , if so , when and where ivas he initiated ?—GEO . M . TWEDDELL .

MASOXIC STATUE or AVASHINGI ' OX . —General Washington was a member ol the Masonic Lodge at Fredericksburg , Va ,, and ivas initiated November Sth , 1752 . Tho fact is especially a source of pride to the old Lodge at Frcdencksburgh . It has been deemed proper to procure a statu e of AVashington , by Powers , and an order to that effect Avas given some time since . The statue arrived at " Sew York from Leghorn a few dayssmcc . It is the property of tho h Lodgeand has

Fredericksburg , been , paid for by voluntary contributions of the Masonic Order generally It cost $ 5 , 000 , and is somewhat larger than life . It ivas proposed also to erect a building at Fredericksburg h suitable for the statue , and to inaugurate it with appropriate ceremonies . —Rob Morris ' s Voice of Masonry .

Literature.

Literature .

REVIEWS . A Life-Lung Story : or , Am I my Sister ' s Keeper ? Pacts and Phases for the Times . Dedicated to the "Women of England . By ONE OETIIEJISKLVES . London : Siuipkin , Marshall and Co . WE had hoped , for the honour of poor humanity , that the religious novel had become pretty nearly obsolete ; for it is a painful thing to find one sect bitterly accusing another , and that too in a Avork of

fiction , an acknowledged falsehood . With some persons the end is often pleaded as a sanction to the means , but try them on this ground and assail their Avcak points , and they -will burst forth in a mighty cry of shame . Then again the motive is paraded before us as an excuse for all the gall and bitterness that can be heaped on their opponents ' heads . This is lamentable , and such principles cannot expect to find favour among Masons , Avhose Avatclnvord is ,

" Peace on earth ; goodwill towards man . " AVe arc told in the preface that" To tho literary epicure , revelling in a measured and majestic How of thought , or to the reading dissipatiouist ( sic ) seeking to satisfy an unhealthy idealism iu records of startling adventures by ' flood and field , ' tlle story ivill have no charms . " This statement AVC can fully endorse ; for story , iu the usually

accepted sense of the Avord , there is none . The book is an indescribable jumble of unintelligible meaning , dealing freely Avith the name of the Author of all good , and perverting the holy scriptures in every possible Avay to Avrcst a meaning from them that ivill suit the preconceived intentions of the Avriter . So , also , Avith another ] iaragi-aph of the preface , cordially agreethat "there is nothing new under the sun" ancl"of

, , , making books there is no end ; " probably it may be less needful to produce "things new" than to reproduce the old Avith a fresher pathos . Many , if not all , of the subjects introduced into these pages have been dealt Avith , ancl dealt ivith infinitely better . AVe are then told that in the chronos " there arc some inaccuracies ;" AVC bclicA'c it . There arc not some , but many . AVe must not say Avhat AVC think of the performance of even the

preface , but Avill ask our readers if they can understand the following extracts , Avhich are far above our comprehension : — "ALL THINGS the last death-sob of those illustrious men—Lawrence , Havclock , Hodson , and a sacred baud—whose memory will never grow old , and from whose graves shall issue a stream of light and glory till the Heaping Angel shall lift up his hand and swear ' that time shall bo no longer . ' " AVe are then treated to three more paragraphs that touch on .

" ALL THINGS ! " and to a final " Ancl yet once more !" The force of folly can no further go . AVe come upon another passage , more painful , because of its utter profanity . AVe arc told , " There lacketh , even in the heart of God ' s people , more reverence for the teaching of God's word than at this day appcareth among us ;" , and then Ave have the name of the Great Architect of the universe bandied about in all

sorts of doggrcl lines , Avhich Ave pass OA * er , as they contain a long tirade against the Pope ancl in honour of the flag of Protestantism . And all this is part of the preface of a book , a novel , that is published to SIIOAV how badly sempstresses are treated , and in favour of the early closing movement . AVe have not patience to take our readers through the ivork , but offer a ious extracttaken haphazardto show the writer ' s

cop , , style : — " Say now , you Avhose hearts bave not been preserved iu ice , and are not cutting fragments of flint and steel , never Hearing each other to produce fire and warmth , is it wonderful that as her trusting cry fell on his ear , and her gentle bosom pulsated for one moment close to his own as the fair creature clung to his encircling arm , his love smouldering and stifled—down as it was , attracted by its kindred essence , should have out

leaped and united Avith hers into one pure , bright flame , destined to burn for ever and ever ?—and though , as some frigid beings—who would have made capital inmates of the ice-palace of the imperial murderess of Russia—declare that 'it is very wrong for ministers to have feelings and affection like other people , ' we prefer appealing to those who have loved , and struggled , and sorrowed , to judge our young pastor ; let the sinless cast the first stone . "Header , canyon ?

" - ® ° > you cannot ! Ah , 'tis even so . 'If we say Ave have no sin Ave deceive ourselves . ' " And now Ave may go over the old philosophically macadamized road , and acid to the skeleton-Avorn remarks , ' —hat a strange thing the human heart is ! How it is ever playing at cross purposes !' "' AVhat a mysterious thing love is , ever eluding the dictates of policy and prudence and ensconcing itself Avith a mischievous chuckle into the most unlikely corners ! '

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