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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Jan. 29, 1870
  • Page 7
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Jan. 29, 1870: Page 7

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    Article HOW I SPENT MY FIVE WEEKS' LEAVE. ← Page 2 of 2
    Article HOW I SPENT MY FIVE WEEKS' LEAVE. Page 2 of 2
Page 7

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

How I Spent My Five Weeks' Leave.

Abyssinia when he conquered the island and subdued the natives A . D . 4868 ? We push on , and encamp on the heights of Lebanon , within three hours' ride of Beyrout , and next day ( 27 th ) , ride down , thoroughly enjoying the magnificent view .

We dine at the hotel , aud bidding adieu to our Dragoman , and giving bakshish to our attendants , with all of whom we part on excellent terms , I sally forth to refresh myself after my labours with a Turkish bath . This is very nice , but I must

say the baths , here and at Damascus , are not nearly so good as the Turkish bath in Jermynstreet , which is the best I ever was in . Bidding a hasty farewell to the Consul , Mr . Rodgers , whom I found extremely kind aud polite , we all go on board the Cupid , and are off at 8 p . m . to join the fleet at Rhodes .

We coast along Cyprus , but do not stop , and arrive at Rhodes on Friday , the 29 th of May . The fleet has not arrived yet , so we anchor , and I go ashore to see the place . " Stare super vias antiquas / ' to stare at old Rhodes ! This place is

very interesting to one well acquainted with Malta , ¦ on account of having so long been the stronghold ¦ of the Knights , whose two memorable sieges there will never be forgotten . It is said that they only gave iu at last when their stock of gunpowder was

exhausted . The Consul told me the following curious story : — " While the Knights held Rhodes an election of their Grand Master took place , and a Knight who was the unsuccessful candidate organised a conspiracy to make himself Grand Master by force of arms . Being joined by some discontented and

turbulent Knights , they began to lay in great stores of arms and amunition , and a large quantity of gunpowder was secretly stored in the vaults under St . John ' s Church . The conspiracy was discovered , and the would-be Grand Master hung ;

the other conspirators were banished , and no one "knew that the vaults were full of powder . The siege was past , and the place had surrendered for want of powder , whilst had the Knights but known of the twenty tons beneath their feet , they might

perhaps have held out successfully . As it was the Turks took possession , and for 350 years the posvder lay unsuspected . Then came the earthquake and split the tower from top to bottom , the rent extending to the foundations and the vaults . Some months

afterwards came a thunderstorm ; the lightning struck the tower , ran down the huge rock , fired the magazine , and sent the whole thing into the

How I Spent My Five Weeks' Leave.

air ! This reads like romance , but it is simple fact . Many people were killed or injured , and one young lady was buried beneath fragments , which , however , formed a sort of arch over her , and though thus shut up for three days , yet she recovered , "

Rhodes looks very pretty from the sea ; the queer old fortifications and towers , the cluster of windmills on the extreme right , the hill at the back of the town rising to a considerable elevation above it , covered with fruit trees , etc . ; the bright blue sky ,

and the beautiful clear sea , —all combine to form a most attractive picture . It is a pity that the most elegant and conspicuous of the towers , the Arab tower , has within the last few years fallen down . The " Street of the Knights" is most

interesting , where numerous shields , coats of arms , etc ., carved in marble , are built into the walls , and over the 'doors , very much as they are at Malta .

The site ofthe explosion is curious ; it looks like the crater of a volcano , and allround are fragments of the church ; here an entire wall of the building , laid upon its side , pillars and all ; there an arch still standing , though its centre part , keystone ,

etc ., are blown out . Good masonry to hold together like this ! We visit the site of the breach in the old walls , which was so nobly defended , and through which Solyman at last entered . I do not think in the annals of military achievement there

is a more splendid defence on record than that of the Knig hts of Rhodes . Two places are shown as the spot where the Colossus stood ; the Consul supporting one theory and the Vice-Consul the other . A beautiful little figure of Somnus ,

represented as a sleeping boy , ivas shown us by the Consul . It was dug up somewhere on the opposite coast , aud has been purchased for the British Museum .

On Monday evening , June 1 , Ave leave for Malta , coasting along Crete . We make a splendid run to Malta , where we arrive early on Thursday morning , June 4 . So bidding farewell to our kind and hospitable captain , I hurry ashore to report

myself to the " big wigs " and my adventures to my friends , who all agree that I have made good use of my time , and seen a good deal during MY FIVE AVEEKS' TOUK .

MASONIC MUSIC . —The choir of Lodges Concord and Emulation at Bornhay have heen united , and will hereafter assist iu the vocal part of the ritual at the meeting * of hot . !) lodges . Meetings for singing practice are helel weekly at the Masonic I Hall , JAazagon .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1870-01-29, Page 7” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_29011870/page/7/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
THE TEMPLARS AND FREEMASONRY. Article 1
A PUBLIC ORDER OF MERIT. Article 3
THE LODGE OF GLASGOW ST. JOHN. Article 3
Untitled Article 5
HOW I SPENT MY FIVE WEEKS' LEAVE. Article 6
MASONIC JOTTINGS.—No. 5. Article 8
THE RISE AND PURPOSES OF SPECULATIVE MASONRY. Article 8
THE ORIGIN OF THE LODGE ST. AYLES EAST ANSTRUTHER. Article 9
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 9
SPECULATIVE FREEMASONRY AND ITS ORIGIN (pp. 67, 69.) Article 10
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 11
Untitled Article 14
MASONIC MEMS. Article 14
ROYAL MASONIC BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION FOR AGED FREEMASONS AND THEIR WIDOWS. Article 14
Craft Masonry. Article 14
PROVINCIAL. Article 15
MALTA. Article 18
ROYAL ARCH. Article 19
REVIEWS Article 19
PROFESSOR ANDERSON AND THE FREEMASONS OF DUNDEE. Article 19
LIST OF LODGE, MEETINGS, &c., FOR WEEK ENDING 5TH FEBRUARY, 1870. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

How I Spent My Five Weeks' Leave.

Abyssinia when he conquered the island and subdued the natives A . D . 4868 ? We push on , and encamp on the heights of Lebanon , within three hours' ride of Beyrout , and next day ( 27 th ) , ride down , thoroughly enjoying the magnificent view .

We dine at the hotel , aud bidding adieu to our Dragoman , and giving bakshish to our attendants , with all of whom we part on excellent terms , I sally forth to refresh myself after my labours with a Turkish bath . This is very nice , but I must

say the baths , here and at Damascus , are not nearly so good as the Turkish bath in Jermynstreet , which is the best I ever was in . Bidding a hasty farewell to the Consul , Mr . Rodgers , whom I found extremely kind aud polite , we all go on board the Cupid , and are off at 8 p . m . to join the fleet at Rhodes .

We coast along Cyprus , but do not stop , and arrive at Rhodes on Friday , the 29 th of May . The fleet has not arrived yet , so we anchor , and I go ashore to see the place . " Stare super vias antiquas / ' to stare at old Rhodes ! This place is

very interesting to one well acquainted with Malta , ¦ on account of having so long been the stronghold ¦ of the Knights , whose two memorable sieges there will never be forgotten . It is said that they only gave iu at last when their stock of gunpowder was

exhausted . The Consul told me the following curious story : — " While the Knights held Rhodes an election of their Grand Master took place , and a Knight who was the unsuccessful candidate organised a conspiracy to make himself Grand Master by force of arms . Being joined by some discontented and

turbulent Knights , they began to lay in great stores of arms and amunition , and a large quantity of gunpowder was secretly stored in the vaults under St . John ' s Church . The conspiracy was discovered , and the would-be Grand Master hung ;

the other conspirators were banished , and no one "knew that the vaults were full of powder . The siege was past , and the place had surrendered for want of powder , whilst had the Knights but known of the twenty tons beneath their feet , they might

perhaps have held out successfully . As it was the Turks took possession , and for 350 years the posvder lay unsuspected . Then came the earthquake and split the tower from top to bottom , the rent extending to the foundations and the vaults . Some months

afterwards came a thunderstorm ; the lightning struck the tower , ran down the huge rock , fired the magazine , and sent the whole thing into the

How I Spent My Five Weeks' Leave.

air ! This reads like romance , but it is simple fact . Many people were killed or injured , and one young lady was buried beneath fragments , which , however , formed a sort of arch over her , and though thus shut up for three days , yet she recovered , "

Rhodes looks very pretty from the sea ; the queer old fortifications and towers , the cluster of windmills on the extreme right , the hill at the back of the town rising to a considerable elevation above it , covered with fruit trees , etc . ; the bright blue sky ,

and the beautiful clear sea , —all combine to form a most attractive picture . It is a pity that the most elegant and conspicuous of the towers , the Arab tower , has within the last few years fallen down . The " Street of the Knights" is most

interesting , where numerous shields , coats of arms , etc ., carved in marble , are built into the walls , and over the 'doors , very much as they are at Malta .

The site ofthe explosion is curious ; it looks like the crater of a volcano , and allround are fragments of the church ; here an entire wall of the building , laid upon its side , pillars and all ; there an arch still standing , though its centre part , keystone ,

etc ., are blown out . Good masonry to hold together like this ! We visit the site of the breach in the old walls , which was so nobly defended , and through which Solyman at last entered . I do not think in the annals of military achievement there

is a more splendid defence on record than that of the Knig hts of Rhodes . Two places are shown as the spot where the Colossus stood ; the Consul supporting one theory and the Vice-Consul the other . A beautiful little figure of Somnus ,

represented as a sleeping boy , ivas shown us by the Consul . It was dug up somewhere on the opposite coast , aud has been purchased for the British Museum .

On Monday evening , June 1 , Ave leave for Malta , coasting along Crete . We make a splendid run to Malta , where we arrive early on Thursday morning , June 4 . So bidding farewell to our kind and hospitable captain , I hurry ashore to report

myself to the " big wigs " and my adventures to my friends , who all agree that I have made good use of my time , and seen a good deal during MY FIVE AVEEKS' TOUK .

MASONIC MUSIC . —The choir of Lodges Concord and Emulation at Bornhay have heen united , and will hereafter assist iu the vocal part of the ritual at the meeting * of hot . !) lodges . Meetings for singing practice are helel weekly at the Masonic I Hall , JAazagon .

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