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  • Jan. 1, 1877
  • Page 63
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The Masonic Magazine, Jan. 1, 1877: Page 63

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    Article NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. ← Page 2 of 4 →
Page 63

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Notes On Literature, Science And Art.

dishness , we have from time to time most vigourously assailed . We have heard of that ' odious paper Tlie Dominie' —a stress of almost cannabalistic intensity being laid upon the descriptive adjectiveaud we have not been a bit offended , but

have grinned with pure delight , knoAving by this that the ' slings and arrows' of our armoury had done their work . Persistently and with an iteration almost tedious , but necessary , we have had our fling at those dishonest men Avho have

boug ht Avithout ever thinking of paying , who have lived in grand houses founded on fraud , or at best on unlawful speculation , ancl what do you think , dear readers , has been the consequence to us 1 Guess ! No you can ' t , you give it up 1 Well you may

do for only thinking of it is sufficiently incredible to make us strain our face into a preternatural length and breadth , before bursting out into a suffocating laugh at the impudence of those bankrupts . We have actually been cut by some of them !!!!

Fact ! Coldly and cruelly cut by debtors under the Bankruptcy Act . Ha ! ha The effect of this upon us has been to make us sadly and seriously contemplate a

' private arrangement ourself . We have not been perfect , and claim no more than honesty of purpose . Sometimes our advocacy of men and measures has been faulty , but we have never advocated Avhat Ave did not at the time honestly believe to be true and right . And we

believe it will be granted , whatever else criticism may say of us , that we have always been fearless , and whether it has been Capital or Labour , Money-bags or Penury , that has done wrong , or that has been unjustly treatedAA' 6 have spoken out

, a ' piece of our mind . ' We need say no more in the Avay of re-capitulation of what we have done . It is sufficient for us that we have had throughout , the approbation of the public , and of broad-minded friends , who have been capable and willing

to find and recognise good grain amongst the chaff , with which—in order to render it palatable to weak stomachs—it has been accompanied . " M . Melsons , of Paris , recommends small doses of Iodide of Potassium to be taken daily by all workmen whose calling requires them to handle lead or mercurial compounds , as this salt dessolves the mineral

poison imbibed by the system , and effects its removal . Ever since I knew anything whatever of the works of Shakspere , his delightful comedy of " As You Like It" has been an especial favourite of mine ; the woodland

scenes most of any ; and not the least of the undying characters that , for the last forty years at least , have charmed me alike in prosperity and adversity , is the melancholy Jaques ; for from every sentence that he utters I could preach a dozen lay

sermons , or write a score of essays . Take for instance , the Avell-known passage he addresses to the banished Duke , in the seventh scene of the second act •—

"A fool , a fool!—I met a fool i' the forest , A motley fool;—a miserable world !—As I do live by food , I met a fool ; Who laid him down and bask'd him in the sun , Ancl rail'd on lady Fortune in good terms ,

In good set terms , —and yet a motley fool . ' Goocl-mcrrrow , fool , ' quoth I . ' No , sir , ' quoth he , ' Call me not fool , till Heaven hath sent me fortune ' And then he drew a dial from his poke , And , looking on it with lack-lustre eye , Says very wisely , ' It is ten o ' clock : Tims may we see , ' quoth he , ' how the world

wags : 'Tis but an hour ago since it was nine ; And after one liour more ' twill be eleven ; And so , from hour to hour , we ripe cmd ripe , And then from hour to hour , we rot and rot ;

And thereby hangs a tale . ' When I did hear The motley fool thus moral on the time , My lungs began to crow like chanticleer . That fools should be so deep contemplative ; And I did laugh , sans intermission , An hour by his dial . —0 noble fool ! A Avorthy fool!—Motley's the only Avear . "

What a number of treatises might be written by Avay of g loss on this single speech of twenty-three lines . On fools alone one mig ht fill folios . And how the repeated mention of " the dial" which Touchstone drew " from his poke , " at once sets a contemplative mind a-thinking on the various modes of telling how time was passing both before and since , as well as in

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-01-01, Page 63” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01011877/page/63/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 2
FREEMASONRY IN ROME. Article 3
THE UNOPENED LETTER. Article 7
MASONIC NUMISMATICS. Article 7
THE ENCHANTED ISLE OF THE SEA. Article 10
LISTS OF OLD LODGES, No. 3. Article 13
A LIST OF THE WARRANTED LODGES Article 13
THE BIRTH OF THE ROSE. Article 17
BY THE "SAD SEA WAVES." Article 17
AN OLD, OLD STORY. Article 18
AN AMERICAN VINDICATION OF AMERICANS. Article 20
No. 194, UNDER THE "ANCIENTS" AND ITS RECORDS. Article 23
SONNET. Article 23
ALLHALLOWS, BREAD STREET. Article 24
GERARD MONTAGU: Article 26
FATHER FOY ON SECRET SOCIETIES. Article 29
SLEEP ON MY HEART. Article 34
PUT YOURSELF IN MY PLACE. Article 35
JOINING THE FREEMASONS. Article 37
THE PHILADELPHIA EXHIBITION. Article 39
LOVE'S UTTERANCE. Article 41
POETS' CORNER. Article 41
A PECULIAR CASE. Article 43
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 47
VULGARITY. Article 49
SONNET. Article 51
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 52
ADDRESS OF THE GRAND MASTER, J. H. GRAHAM, L.L.D., &c. Article 53
Reviews. Article 55
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 62
THE OBJECT OF A LIFE. Article 66
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Notes On Literature, Science And Art.

dishness , we have from time to time most vigourously assailed . We have heard of that ' odious paper Tlie Dominie' —a stress of almost cannabalistic intensity being laid upon the descriptive adjectiveaud we have not been a bit offended , but

have grinned with pure delight , knoAving by this that the ' slings and arrows' of our armoury had done their work . Persistently and with an iteration almost tedious , but necessary , we have had our fling at those dishonest men Avho have

boug ht Avithout ever thinking of paying , who have lived in grand houses founded on fraud , or at best on unlawful speculation , ancl what do you think , dear readers , has been the consequence to us 1 Guess ! No you can ' t , you give it up 1 Well you may

do for only thinking of it is sufficiently incredible to make us strain our face into a preternatural length and breadth , before bursting out into a suffocating laugh at the impudence of those bankrupts . We have actually been cut by some of them !!!!

Fact ! Coldly and cruelly cut by debtors under the Bankruptcy Act . Ha ! ha The effect of this upon us has been to make us sadly and seriously contemplate a

' private arrangement ourself . We have not been perfect , and claim no more than honesty of purpose . Sometimes our advocacy of men and measures has been faulty , but we have never advocated Avhat Ave did not at the time honestly believe to be true and right . And we

believe it will be granted , whatever else criticism may say of us , that we have always been fearless , and whether it has been Capital or Labour , Money-bags or Penury , that has done wrong , or that has been unjustly treatedAA' 6 have spoken out

, a ' piece of our mind . ' We need say no more in the Avay of re-capitulation of what we have done . It is sufficient for us that we have had throughout , the approbation of the public , and of broad-minded friends , who have been capable and willing

to find and recognise good grain amongst the chaff , with which—in order to render it palatable to weak stomachs—it has been accompanied . " M . Melsons , of Paris , recommends small doses of Iodide of Potassium to be taken daily by all workmen whose calling requires them to handle lead or mercurial compounds , as this salt dessolves the mineral

poison imbibed by the system , and effects its removal . Ever since I knew anything whatever of the works of Shakspere , his delightful comedy of " As You Like It" has been an especial favourite of mine ; the woodland

scenes most of any ; and not the least of the undying characters that , for the last forty years at least , have charmed me alike in prosperity and adversity , is the melancholy Jaques ; for from every sentence that he utters I could preach a dozen lay

sermons , or write a score of essays . Take for instance , the Avell-known passage he addresses to the banished Duke , in the seventh scene of the second act •—

"A fool , a fool!—I met a fool i' the forest , A motley fool;—a miserable world !—As I do live by food , I met a fool ; Who laid him down and bask'd him in the sun , Ancl rail'd on lady Fortune in good terms ,

In good set terms , —and yet a motley fool . ' Goocl-mcrrrow , fool , ' quoth I . ' No , sir , ' quoth he , ' Call me not fool , till Heaven hath sent me fortune ' And then he drew a dial from his poke , And , looking on it with lack-lustre eye , Says very wisely , ' It is ten o ' clock : Tims may we see , ' quoth he , ' how the world

wags : 'Tis but an hour ago since it was nine ; And after one liour more ' twill be eleven ; And so , from hour to hour , we ripe cmd ripe , And then from hour to hour , we rot and rot ;

And thereby hangs a tale . ' When I did hear The motley fool thus moral on the time , My lungs began to crow like chanticleer . That fools should be so deep contemplative ; And I did laugh , sans intermission , An hour by his dial . —0 noble fool ! A Avorthy fool!—Motley's the only Avear . "

What a number of treatises might be written by Avay of g loss on this single speech of twenty-three lines . On fools alone one mig ht fill folios . And how the repeated mention of " the dial" which Touchstone drew " from his poke , " at once sets a contemplative mind a-thinking on the various modes of telling how time was passing both before and since , as well as in

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