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  • March 1, 1874
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The Masonic Magazine, March 1, 1874: Page 11

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    Article THE DISAPPOINTMENTS OF LIFE. ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 11

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The Disappointments Of Life.

youth . We were Pylades and Orestes we were always together ; we shared the same " sock " we played in the same eleven , we rowed in the same boat , we agreed in everything , w e had the same likes and dislikes , the same political

opinion , the same Brittanic prejudices . But how is it now ? Life has passed on , we have found that we do not agree on many points , to say nothing of the politics of the houror the religious controversies of the

, season , and we especially divide about Ellen Dansey , and so we meet each other carelessly in the "Forum , " or greet each other distantly at the " Pieunion , " and think and talk of each other with much of cold constraint .

We , indeed , console ourselves by saying that ours are necessarily different ways of life now , different habits of thought , differing tastes and sympathies and aims . But yet , alas ! how disappointing it is to witness such a blight gather over the glowing friendship of earlier and happier years . Or that fair cousin of ours with whom we bad such

cheery romps , and walks , and rides in " life ' s young morn , " such scamperings overhedges , and ditches , and rural stiles . Well Ave had an intense sympathetic feeling between us , which the cold world coidd not , and would not

understand , and of which our prudent parents so entirely disapproved . How odd it is , that Ave met that once merry lass with the dishevelled hair , and those eyes of hers with the long lashes , that dejjtb . of gaze and sentiment , poetry and

pathos , in all her looks and motion , a stout , fat , good natured , motherly , elderly Avoman the other clay , with a daughter just coming out , and a son who has volunteered for the Ashantee War . How disappointing is this realization of a

passed primaeval dream . Or again , there is that old neighbour and crony of ours , whom Ave have known so intimately for so many long and happy years , " good old Jorum , " as be was called at school , at college , and still is termed by many admiring mates . How often have we stretched our legs

under his hospitable mahogany , and he under ours , for Ave have been fast friends through life . Nothing about him that we did not and do not think admirable , nay , deeply respect ; whether it was his Cook , or his Champagne , his old Port or

bis hand at whist . And what pleasant bachelor clays were ours , and what a comfortable bachelor ' s house AA as his . And there , lie ' s gone and married a most charming person indeed , very young , very pretty , very clever , very

decided , and AVIIO does not veryproperly , as her clear mother says , " mean to allow any more bachelor ways , for my Louisa Jane has been better brought rip . " And our good old Mend looks on ns when Ave meet , which is seldom noAA , with a rueful face , as much as to sajr , " Behold , old boy , my infatuation , be

warned , and wiser than poor old Jorum . " And then the wife of our bosom , our own admired and adored Emily , she who when we married was the gentlest of beings , the most sympathetic of turtle cloves , whose only wish , as she

bleated continually in our entranced ears , was to please her clear Ernest Sigismund . There she is—Ave hear her voice at this very moment , though at a considerable distance , we can swear to it under any circumstances , we know

it immediately ; there ' s no mistaking it—that elevated key-note , and that shrillest of all bronchial utterances . What good lungs that woman has , and bless her too , what a very decided will and way of her own ! And so we might go on in this Avay , through the various lots of us all , and depict the many disappointments Avhieh await us all .

Is not public life , for instance , full of disappointment , nay for the matter of that , is not private life too ? Yes , indeed must be our answer , for many are the petty cares and childish inanities , the " petites miseres de la vie humaine , "

which cast a shade of dejection on many a honest heart of us all , and throAV a colouring of disappointment over the outer broadway of society , and the inner " regime " of the family circle . Now do not suppose that I wish to be

“The Masonic Magazine: 1874-03-01, Page 11” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01031874/page/11/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
THE MARRIAGE OF THE DUKE OF EDINBURGH. Article 2
BISHOP HOPKINS AS A MASON. Article 3
THE LOVED AND LOST. Article 5
FUNERAL LODGES IN SCOTLAND HALF-A-CENTURY AGO. Article 6
ROOKSTONE PRIORY. Article 7
THE PILLAR OF BEAUTY. Article 10
THE DISAPPOINTMENTS OF LIFE. Article 10
A CURIOUS PAMPHLET. Article 12
TRUE COURAGE. Article 15
ODE ON THE DUKE OF LEINSTER. Article 16
THE MASONIC CHARITIES. Article 17
MS. MASONIC CONSTITUTIONS (OR CHARGES) No. 5. Article 23
THE FADED SHAWL . Article 24
Reviews. Article 25
THE HEART-CURE. Article 27
THE SEVEN MASONIC LOCALITIES OF THE HOLY LAND. Article 30
KING PRIAM'S TREASURE. Article 31
WATCHWORDS OF LIFE . Article 31
Questions and Answers. Article 32
Monthly Odds and Ends. Article 32
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Disappointments Of Life.

youth . We were Pylades and Orestes we were always together ; we shared the same " sock " we played in the same eleven , we rowed in the same boat , we agreed in everything , w e had the same likes and dislikes , the same political

opinion , the same Brittanic prejudices . But how is it now ? Life has passed on , we have found that we do not agree on many points , to say nothing of the politics of the houror the religious controversies of the

, season , and we especially divide about Ellen Dansey , and so we meet each other carelessly in the "Forum , " or greet each other distantly at the " Pieunion , " and think and talk of each other with much of cold constraint .

We , indeed , console ourselves by saying that ours are necessarily different ways of life now , different habits of thought , differing tastes and sympathies and aims . But yet , alas ! how disappointing it is to witness such a blight gather over the glowing friendship of earlier and happier years . Or that fair cousin of ours with whom we bad such

cheery romps , and walks , and rides in " life ' s young morn , " such scamperings overhedges , and ditches , and rural stiles . Well Ave had an intense sympathetic feeling between us , which the cold world coidd not , and would not

understand , and of which our prudent parents so entirely disapproved . How odd it is , that Ave met that once merry lass with the dishevelled hair , and those eyes of hers with the long lashes , that dejjtb . of gaze and sentiment , poetry and

pathos , in all her looks and motion , a stout , fat , good natured , motherly , elderly Avoman the other clay , with a daughter just coming out , and a son who has volunteered for the Ashantee War . How disappointing is this realization of a

passed primaeval dream . Or again , there is that old neighbour and crony of ours , whom Ave have known so intimately for so many long and happy years , " good old Jorum , " as be was called at school , at college , and still is termed by many admiring mates . How often have we stretched our legs

under his hospitable mahogany , and he under ours , for Ave have been fast friends through life . Nothing about him that we did not and do not think admirable , nay , deeply respect ; whether it was his Cook , or his Champagne , his old Port or

bis hand at whist . And what pleasant bachelor clays were ours , and what a comfortable bachelor ' s house AA as his . And there , lie ' s gone and married a most charming person indeed , very young , very pretty , very clever , very

decided , and AVIIO does not veryproperly , as her clear mother says , " mean to allow any more bachelor ways , for my Louisa Jane has been better brought rip . " And our good old Mend looks on ns when Ave meet , which is seldom noAA , with a rueful face , as much as to sajr , " Behold , old boy , my infatuation , be

warned , and wiser than poor old Jorum . " And then the wife of our bosom , our own admired and adored Emily , she who when we married was the gentlest of beings , the most sympathetic of turtle cloves , whose only wish , as she

bleated continually in our entranced ears , was to please her clear Ernest Sigismund . There she is—Ave hear her voice at this very moment , though at a considerable distance , we can swear to it under any circumstances , we know

it immediately ; there ' s no mistaking it—that elevated key-note , and that shrillest of all bronchial utterances . What good lungs that woman has , and bless her too , what a very decided will and way of her own ! And so we might go on in this Avay , through the various lots of us all , and depict the many disappointments Avhieh await us all .

Is not public life , for instance , full of disappointment , nay for the matter of that , is not private life too ? Yes , indeed must be our answer , for many are the petty cares and childish inanities , the " petites miseres de la vie humaine , "

which cast a shade of dejection on many a honest heart of us all , and throAV a colouring of disappointment over the outer broadway of society , and the inner " regime " of the family circle . Now do not suppose that I wish to be

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