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Re: Nevil Maskelyne.
From: Aubrey O?Callaghan
Date: 2004 Nov 23, 08:52 +0000
From: Aubrey O?Callaghan
Date: 2004 Nov 23, 08:52 +0000
George visited Purton where Nevil Maskelyne is buried earlier this year.
Later in the summer I was at a loose end one weekend and prompted by his
email made the journey there. Feeling more comfortable in a church
than George I took the time to note down the latin text of the plaque in
the church and a colleague in our offices translated it for me (the joys
of living close to Oxford). I reproduce the original and the translation
below.
I have to say I was not as impressed as George in the local pub!
Aubrey.
In Lujus AEdis Caemeterio,
Depositae sunt Relliquiae
NEVIL MASKELYNE S.T.F.R.S.S.
Necon Astronomii Regii;
VIRI
Seu Morum Simplicitatem,
Seu Animi Benevolentiam,
Seu Vitae doctifsimae Utilitatem,
Spectrs,
Insignis Eximii, publice deflendi
Que Naturae Leges experimendo,
Auctorem Maximum potifsime coluit:
Sine fuco Pius,
Pietatem Officio exhibuit
Denique, non sibi, sed Christo fidens,
In gremium Patris Sempiterni,
Vitam bene actam
Futuri centa Spe praemii
Reddidit;
Quinto Id: Feb: Anno Domini 1811
In the stone of this building
are deposited the remains of
NEVIL MASKELYNE DD FRS (my interpretation: Doctor of Divinity Fellow of the Royal Society)
also the Astronomer Royal;
whether by the simplicity of his habits
or by the goodness of his spirit
or by the utility of his most learned life
you shall behold an
exceptional and distinguished man, publicly renowned
He who in the act of revealing the laws of nature,
worshiped the Great Author most capably:
Pious without pretense,
he showed his worth in office and
finally trusting not in himself but in Christ,
he returned a life well spent into the
bosom of the eternal father, sure in
the hope of future riches
9th. February 1811
At 19:18 13-07-04, you wrote:
I have to say I was not as impressed as George in the local pub!
Aubrey.
In Lujus AEdis Caemeterio,
Depositae sunt Relliquiae
NEVIL MASKELYNE S.T.F.R.S.S.
Necon Astronomii Regii;
VIRI
Seu Morum Simplicitatem,
Seu Animi Benevolentiam,
Seu Vitae doctifsimae Utilitatem,
Spectrs,
Insignis Eximii, publice deflendi
Que Naturae Leges experimendo,
Auctorem Maximum potifsime coluit:
Sine fuco Pius,
Pietatem Officio exhibuit
Denique, non sibi, sed Christo fidens,
In gremium Patris Sempiterni,
Vitam bene actam
Futuri centa Spe praemii
Reddidit;
Quinto Id: Feb: Anno Domini 1811
In the stone of this building
are deposited the remains of
NEVIL MASKELYNE DD FRS (my interpretation: Doctor of Divinity Fellow of the Royal Society)
also the Astronomer Royal;
whether by the simplicity of his habits
or by the goodness of his spirit
or by the utility of his most learned life
you shall behold an
exceptional and distinguished man, publicly renowned
He who in the act of revealing the laws of nature,
worshiped the Great Author most capably:
Pious without pretense,
he showed his worth in office and
finally trusting not in himself but in Christ,
he returned a life well spent into the
bosom of the eternal father, sure in
the hope of future riches
9th. February 1811
At 19:18 13-07-04, you wrote:
Nevil Maskelyne, the Astronomer Royal that compiled the first Nautical
Almanac, has always been something of a hero to me. He was vilified by
Sobel, in her book "Longitude".
At long last, after fruitless searching for over a year, a copy of Derek
Howse's biography "Nevil Maskelyne- the Seaman's Astronomer" (Cambridge
1989) has eventually come up on Abebooks, from a bookshop here in UK, and
now I have a copy, and at a reasonable price.
My wife grabbed it first, and has passed it on to me now she has finished
it (you can see how the priorities go in this house...).
She discovered that Maskelyne was buried in the village of Purton, North of
Swindon, only 40 minutes or so drive from here, so proposed a lunchtime
pilgrimage there. Anything for a pub lunch, I agreed, and we have just
returned from a pleasant visit to Purton. Even though, being a devout
atheist, I always feel rather uneasy in a church. Not much to report back,
of course, just a stone tomb in the churchyard shaded by a great gnarled
yew, and a Latin plaque inside the old church. And a pleasant village pub
that does a good lunch with a tasty pint.
Anyway, I recommend Howse's book for anyone that can find a copy.
George.
================================================================
contact George Huxtable by email at george@huxtable.u-net.com, by phone at
01865 820222 (from outside UK, +44 1865 820222), or by mail at 1 Sandy
Lane, Southmoor, Abingdon, Oxon OX13 5HX, UK.
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