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  • Jan. 1, 1798
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Jan. 1, 1798: Page 53

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    Article POETRY. ← Page 3 of 4 →
Page 53

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

Poetry.

And torn , by Fate ' s decree severe , From those my tortur'd soul held dear ; Of all thcjoys ' oflive bereft , And not a ray of comfort left ; Willi unavailing grief I mourn , Fori shall never home return ! Would I were number'd with the dead , Since . Hope is now forever fled :

My sleepless' nights are spent in sighs , The dews of sorrow dim my eyes , And when the tintsofmorning glow-, They bring but renovated woe . Alas ! it nought avails to mourn , For I shall never home return ! Perhaps even now , forlorn , distress'd , The much lov'd mistress of breast

my , May view with anxious eyes the main , And weep for me , but weep in vain . Long may she wander on the shore , And hear the winds and waters roar ; And long in silent anguish mourn , Fori shall never home return ! ALFilED .

MARY QUEEN . OF SCOTS . DOVE , o'er thy ampler wave projecting shine [ with sighs Those ivy-mantled towers ;* towers once Sadden'd of captive Mary , jocund once With minstrelsyubenLancastercoiiven'd

, The throng of Barons in his festive hall . . Stretch'd in her cell , with pallid cheek , the Oueen , [ eyes , AndTears fast dropping from her beamless Wore the long months of grief . With anguish faint . If ever thefresh gale she sought to breathe , The sullen portal thundering as it clos'd

, The huge portcullis rushing from above , The frowning battlement , and guarded wall , Prescribed her limits . Through the stony chink , Wont on the near aprroaching foe to pour The arrowy storm , on these wild banks she gaz'd ; While Fancy , minister of woe , with hand Officious

, to her view presented still Gay troops of forest deer , unprison'd airs Inhaling , and , as frolic spori inspir'd , Bounding unfetter'd . To new dungeon tost From dungeon , her unpityi- g rival's ear With fruitless prayer she " plied . ' The cold excuse , The tauntthe studied silence of lect

, neg , Silence , than cold evasion and than taunt More keen , she bore : yet dreams of brighter hours [ in vain , Still cherish'd , and still hop'd , but liop'd To burst the chains which envious hate had twin'd ;

Till freedom on the sable scaffold ' s height Stood hand in hand with all-subduing death , To end her bondage . EPITAPH OS A FRIEND .

BY E . S . J . AUTHOII OF WILLIAM AND ELI . E . T . TREAD softly o ' er this hallow'd ground , Pale Sorrow ' s child lies here ; ¦ Ye who have felt Misfortune ' s frowns Here pause , aud drop a tear ; And who ht but pleasures court

ye , noug , And bask in Fortune's ray , Here , learn how vain are earthly joys , I ^ o \ v * soon they fadeaway . Here , sleeps in peace , who often felt Compassion ' s kindly flame ; Oft dropt a tear at Piiy ' s shrine , — A shade without a name .

A GIPSY'S SONG . BY THE SAME . AE night , desponding o ' er a moor , When drizzling dews hung on the bow'r , Melane I took my pensive way , Without a hope encheering

ray ; I sudden spy'd a blinking light , Which trembled to the dreary night : ' I hied me to the place , to see If aught that human there might be ; And soon 1 heard a soothing song , Sweet warbling from a Gipsy ' s tongue ; Where in a kiln they sat carousing , Their asses round about them browsing

; A blanket served for a door , And kept thern from the tempest ' s stour : I pull'ri it by , and there were they , A lilting , singing , blithe and gay ; Ane a making supper ready , Ane a clouting claes sae duddy ; And some a ciatt'ring round the . fire , And ithers list ' i . ing to the Sire ;

Wha tauld tiie art in time o' need ; And what to say to beg for bread , Anither learning magic stuff , Token ane's fortunes by the iuffe ; Hut ane , wha pleas'd me best of a ' , Wha bore the gree fnie 'niang them a ' , She sat wi' sw \ -et simplicity , And Sang wi' great felicity " ; And

loosely wav'd her raven hair , In beauty far beyond compare ; Her lips were like the rose new blown , Hung with the dulcet dews of morn ; Her sparkling eyes my fancies fed , Like Lie modest Ally's head ; Still lookiig down , and nodding too , And quiv'ring with the glisi ' ning dew . Thou sweet dispeilerof desj-itjr , Thy voice still trembles in my ear J

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1798-01-01, Page 53” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 1 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01011798/page/53/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 3
LONDON: Article 3
TO CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 4
PREFACE TO VOLUME THE TENTH. Article 5
REFLECTIONS ON THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE YEAR M,DCC,XCVIII. Article 7
AN HISTORICAL ESSAY ON LONGEVITY. Article 10
A RETROSPECTIVE VIEW OF THE LITERATURE OF THE YEAR 1797. Article 13
A COLLECTION OF CHINESE PROVERBS AND APOTHEGMS, Article 16
ON THE INVASION. Article 17
COMPARISON BETIVEEN THE ANCIENTS AND MODERNS IN SCIENCE AND LITERATURE. Article 19
DESCRIPTION OF CANADA. Article 21
FURTHER MEMOIR OF JOHN WILKES. Article 24
ACCOUNT OF THE GRAND SEIGNOR, SULTAN SELIM III. Article 30
THE COLLECTOR. Article 32
THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 38
SYMBOLIC MASONRY. Article 41
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 42
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 43
POETRY. Article 51
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 55
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 58
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 59
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 60
OBITUARY. Article 71
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Page 53

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

Poetry.

And torn , by Fate ' s decree severe , From those my tortur'd soul held dear ; Of all thcjoys ' oflive bereft , And not a ray of comfort left ; Willi unavailing grief I mourn , Fori shall never home return ! Would I were number'd with the dead , Since . Hope is now forever fled :

My sleepless' nights are spent in sighs , The dews of sorrow dim my eyes , And when the tintsofmorning glow-, They bring but renovated woe . Alas ! it nought avails to mourn , For I shall never home return ! Perhaps even now , forlorn , distress'd , The much lov'd mistress of breast

my , May view with anxious eyes the main , And weep for me , but weep in vain . Long may she wander on the shore , And hear the winds and waters roar ; And long in silent anguish mourn , Fori shall never home return ! ALFilED .

MARY QUEEN . OF SCOTS . DOVE , o'er thy ampler wave projecting shine [ with sighs Those ivy-mantled towers ;* towers once Sadden'd of captive Mary , jocund once With minstrelsyubenLancastercoiiven'd

, The throng of Barons in his festive hall . . Stretch'd in her cell , with pallid cheek , the Oueen , [ eyes , AndTears fast dropping from her beamless Wore the long months of grief . With anguish faint . If ever thefresh gale she sought to breathe , The sullen portal thundering as it clos'd

, The huge portcullis rushing from above , The frowning battlement , and guarded wall , Prescribed her limits . Through the stony chink , Wont on the near aprroaching foe to pour The arrowy storm , on these wild banks she gaz'd ; While Fancy , minister of woe , with hand Officious

, to her view presented still Gay troops of forest deer , unprison'd airs Inhaling , and , as frolic spori inspir'd , Bounding unfetter'd . To new dungeon tost From dungeon , her unpityi- g rival's ear With fruitless prayer she " plied . ' The cold excuse , The tauntthe studied silence of lect

, neg , Silence , than cold evasion and than taunt More keen , she bore : yet dreams of brighter hours [ in vain , Still cherish'd , and still hop'd , but liop'd To burst the chains which envious hate had twin'd ;

Till freedom on the sable scaffold ' s height Stood hand in hand with all-subduing death , To end her bondage . EPITAPH OS A FRIEND .

BY E . S . J . AUTHOII OF WILLIAM AND ELI . E . T . TREAD softly o ' er this hallow'd ground , Pale Sorrow ' s child lies here ; ¦ Ye who have felt Misfortune ' s frowns Here pause , aud drop a tear ; And who ht but pleasures court

ye , noug , And bask in Fortune's ray , Here , learn how vain are earthly joys , I ^ o \ v * soon they fadeaway . Here , sleeps in peace , who often felt Compassion ' s kindly flame ; Oft dropt a tear at Piiy ' s shrine , — A shade without a name .

A GIPSY'S SONG . BY THE SAME . AE night , desponding o ' er a moor , When drizzling dews hung on the bow'r , Melane I took my pensive way , Without a hope encheering

ray ; I sudden spy'd a blinking light , Which trembled to the dreary night : ' I hied me to the place , to see If aught that human there might be ; And soon 1 heard a soothing song , Sweet warbling from a Gipsy ' s tongue ; Where in a kiln they sat carousing , Their asses round about them browsing

; A blanket served for a door , And kept thern from the tempest ' s stour : I pull'ri it by , and there were they , A lilting , singing , blithe and gay ; Ane a making supper ready , Ane a clouting claes sae duddy ; And some a ciatt'ring round the . fire , And ithers list ' i . ing to the Sire ;

Wha tauld tiie art in time o' need ; And what to say to beg for bread , Anither learning magic stuff , Token ane's fortunes by the iuffe ; Hut ane , wha pleas'd me best of a ' , Wha bore the gree fnie 'niang them a ' , She sat wi' sw \ -et simplicity , And Sang wi' great felicity " ; And

loosely wav'd her raven hair , In beauty far beyond compare ; Her lips were like the rose new blown , Hung with the dulcet dews of morn ; Her sparkling eyes my fancies fed , Like Lie modest Ally's head ; Still lookiig down , and nodding too , And quiv'ring with the glisi ' ning dew . Thou sweet dispeilerof desj-itjr , Thy voice still trembles in my ear J

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