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  • March 30, 1859
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 30, 1859: Page 46

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    Article THE WEEK. ← Page 5 of 5
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Page 46

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The Week.

English army to Agincourt previous to the great fight , and tho king ' s triumphal entry into London . Air . Kean in the present instance has surpassed all his previous attempts , successful though they were to an eminent degree . The strictest attention has been paid to ensure accuracy of costume and correctness of detail in every particular . Thus wo have the English archers with their long bows and formidable arrows , a yard Jong , which committed such havoc in the ranks of the French at Agincourtand the primitive ordnance of the periodquaintlshaped

, , y and fixed on its low carriage , vomiting destruction in the shape of showers of stones into the beleaguered city . The thunder of the artillery , the rush and tramp , and shouting of the soldiery , the rapid flight of deadly arrows , tho clash of arms , and the brazen voices of the trumpets—the smoke—the vast breach in the city wall through which the English swarm to bo repulsed , only to mount again with renewed ardour—present a mimic scene of war so perfect as to delude the spectator , and is altogether without parallel . Then the marching of the English army to

Agincourt . The effect of ; this unique scene is perfectly surprising , and is , perhaps / , even more telling than the preceding one , or than the episode of the victorious monarch's return to London , between the fourth act and the fifth . Air . Kean could not represent the whole of the royal progress ; he has selected its most prominent incidents , and thrown them together in one locality , the approach to Old London-bridge . The street is crowded with sight-seers ; the bells ring a joyous peal , aud the people , all on the tip-toe of expectancy , shout and hurrah right

vigorously , while boys and men clamber up to elevated positions to obtain a good view of the pageant . The Lord Mayor and the corporation are in waiting to do honour to the monarch , and an entire army of boys , arrayed in white , and crowned with laurel , chauntthe actual " song on the victory of Agincourt , " sung oU the occasion ; the army enters , and touching recognitions take place between the warriors and their wives and children , and at length King Henry himself appears on horseback , aud is received with every demonstration of joy . The whole scene is

admirably plauned and carried out . Apart from the performance of Air . Kean , as the valiant monarch , terrible in wrath , calm in danger , philosophical in adversity , with now aud then , —as in the courtship scene with the Princess Katharine —a spice of humour and gaiety betraying itself , points which Air . Kean brought out most admirably , Mr . F . Matthews as Pistol , and Air . Aleadows as J'luellen , may be mentioned as having acted with great spirit and with a due appreciation of these difficult parts . The house was crammed to inconvenience , and Mr . and Mrs . Kean were most enthusiastically applauded . The success of this last revival is unquestionable .

Obituary.

Obituary .

BRO . CUQUEMELLE , M . D ., P . M . IT is with great regret that we announce the death of this much respected brother , which took place at the little town of Saint Heliers , Jersey , on the !) th inst ., in consequence of exhaustion , after undergoing the terrible operation of lithotomy . He had reached the age of sixty-seven years . The British- Press , a local paper , says : —'' Louis Francois Benjamin Cuqueinelle was born at Alonteburg , near Cherbourg , on the 12 th July , 1795 . His father , Peter Francis Cuquemelle , collector of taxes under the

was a Republic . Louis was by him placed at the College of A alognes , where he was educated . At the ago of fifteen he entered the guard of the King of Rome , as a sous-lieutenant . Ho formed part of the grande armee of Russia , was at Aloseow , and went through all the horrors of that celebrated campaign . On the restoration of Louis XA 1 II . he obtained a company , and served upwards of two years longer , after which he left the army , for political reasons , in the year 1819 . He then applied himself to the study of medicine , under the celebrated Dnpuytren and other professors of celebrity . His studies extended

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1859-03-30, Page 46” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 15 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_30031859/page/46/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 1
OUR ARCHITECTURAL CHAPTER. Article 2
THORNTON JOHN HERAPATH, F.C.S. Article 5
A VISIT TO THE ROYAL FREEMASONS' SCHOOL FOR FEMALE CHILDREN. Article 11
THE PROVINCE OF DEVON. Article 17
REVIEWS OF NEW MUSIC Article 18
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 20
THE GRAND LODGE PROPERTY. Article 20
THE LATE BRO. CUQUEMELLE. Article 22
THE PROVINCE OF DEVON. Article 23
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 25
METROPOLITAN. Article 25
PROVINCIAL. Article 27
ROYAL ARCH. Article 39
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 40
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 41
THE WEEK. Article 42
Obituary. Article 46
Untitled Article 48
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 48
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Week.

English army to Agincourt previous to the great fight , and tho king ' s triumphal entry into London . Air . Kean in the present instance has surpassed all his previous attempts , successful though they were to an eminent degree . The strictest attention has been paid to ensure accuracy of costume and correctness of detail in every particular . Thus wo have the English archers with their long bows and formidable arrows , a yard Jong , which committed such havoc in the ranks of the French at Agincourtand the primitive ordnance of the periodquaintlshaped

, , y and fixed on its low carriage , vomiting destruction in the shape of showers of stones into the beleaguered city . The thunder of the artillery , the rush and tramp , and shouting of the soldiery , the rapid flight of deadly arrows , tho clash of arms , and the brazen voices of the trumpets—the smoke—the vast breach in the city wall through which the English swarm to bo repulsed , only to mount again with renewed ardour—present a mimic scene of war so perfect as to delude the spectator , and is altogether without parallel . Then the marching of the English army to

Agincourt . The effect of ; this unique scene is perfectly surprising , and is , perhaps / , even more telling than the preceding one , or than the episode of the victorious monarch's return to London , between the fourth act and the fifth . Air . Kean could not represent the whole of the royal progress ; he has selected its most prominent incidents , and thrown them together in one locality , the approach to Old London-bridge . The street is crowded with sight-seers ; the bells ring a joyous peal , aud the people , all on the tip-toe of expectancy , shout and hurrah right

vigorously , while boys and men clamber up to elevated positions to obtain a good view of the pageant . The Lord Mayor and the corporation are in waiting to do honour to the monarch , and an entire army of boys , arrayed in white , and crowned with laurel , chauntthe actual " song on the victory of Agincourt , " sung oU the occasion ; the army enters , and touching recognitions take place between the warriors and their wives and children , and at length King Henry himself appears on horseback , aud is received with every demonstration of joy . The whole scene is

admirably plauned and carried out . Apart from the performance of Air . Kean , as the valiant monarch , terrible in wrath , calm in danger , philosophical in adversity , with now aud then , —as in the courtship scene with the Princess Katharine —a spice of humour and gaiety betraying itself , points which Air . Kean brought out most admirably , Mr . F . Matthews as Pistol , and Air . Aleadows as J'luellen , may be mentioned as having acted with great spirit and with a due appreciation of these difficult parts . The house was crammed to inconvenience , and Mr . and Mrs . Kean were most enthusiastically applauded . The success of this last revival is unquestionable .

Obituary.

Obituary .

BRO . CUQUEMELLE , M . D ., P . M . IT is with great regret that we announce the death of this much respected brother , which took place at the little town of Saint Heliers , Jersey , on the !) th inst ., in consequence of exhaustion , after undergoing the terrible operation of lithotomy . He had reached the age of sixty-seven years . The British- Press , a local paper , says : —'' Louis Francois Benjamin Cuqueinelle was born at Alonteburg , near Cherbourg , on the 12 th July , 1795 . His father , Peter Francis Cuquemelle , collector of taxes under the

was a Republic . Louis was by him placed at the College of A alognes , where he was educated . At the ago of fifteen he entered the guard of the King of Rome , as a sous-lieutenant . Ho formed part of the grande armee of Russia , was at Aloseow , and went through all the horrors of that celebrated campaign . On the restoration of Louis XA 1 II . he obtained a company , and served upwards of two years longer , after which he left the army , for political reasons , in the year 1819 . He then applied himself to the study of medicine , under the celebrated Dnpuytren and other professors of celebrity . His studies extended

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