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  • May 1, 1875
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The Masonic Magazine, May 1, 1875: Page 30

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Review.

Yet , dearest , ere they 7 seek the light , — These few stray thoughts of mine , — Forgive me , if around me crowd Some other forms than thine ; Forgive me , if like one who treads In slumber ' s tranced way ,

I seek awhile the haunts of youth , The long forgotten clay . " And then follow poetic pictures of his quiet rural birthplace or early home , ' ' girt all round with strips of wood , and meads with spring ' s first blossoms strewed . "

" For there , ' mid orchis blooms , we chased AVitli gauzy net , the summer fly , Or sought the dove ' s nest , wondrously In the oak ' s ivied hollow placed . " Then we have

" A wider range —the school—world hath the place Of that home circle , with its crowded gates AYhen the bell sends us forth , or bids retrace Each step , or graveor full of speed and

, grace , AVhere carven desk and class-room ' s awe awaits : The hour glides by , while student forms rehearse The legend ' s ancient lore , or shape the verse . "

A youthful training which has not been lost upon our author , as the present volume shows . But the scene changes : — " I mark no more where yon dark shade Shuts out the eve ' s slant rays ; I turn to where the white hih brow

g May meet my lon « in < r araze : T turn where eyes may answer mine , The trusting voice may sound;—One thought , one prayer , one heart alone To two whom love hath bound !

For thee my toil—nor thee alone ; Thy mother arms enfold That which a mother holds more dear Than all a kingdom ' s gold : The gem that fills the lost one ' s place , The two days' treasure riven , AVhose tiny limbs the green turf wraps

, Whose spirit smiles in heaven . AVhate ' er the toil , ' tis light and free , For thou wilt share the wei ght ; AA hate ' er the joy 7 , ' tis all for thee , AVho dost such joy create ;

Should grief arise , its spell is short , When those fond eyes are near ; Should darkness cloud , that presence makes The gloomiest nightfall clear . " There is true feeling in this , and one cannot help wishing as one reads itthat

, Mr . Emra may long be spared to his family and his parish , with leisure between his pastoral duties to send forth many more as pure poems as those now under review . The story of the Athenian king / Egeits , the son of Pandion . the faithless husband

of Jtithra , and the father of Theseus , has been , as Mr . Emra expresses it , " a theme which poets , painters , and sculptors , have already handled in no scanty measure . " But he has this to say in his defence , " that most of those who have employed pen , brushor chisel on this subject , have chosen

, a different phase of the story . Their scene has been the tangled labyrinth of Crete , or the lonely strand of Naxos . The central figure in their picture has been the hero , with the shaggy trophy in his blood-stained handsorstill more oftenthe maiden

; , , whom he has deserted , staring in stony horror over the surging sea , and imploring the deaf rocks to restore to her her Theseus . In the present case , " says he , " I have as it were filled in the shading of another scene in the fantastic

dramaa scene of which Catullus only gives the outline , even after his vivid and statuesque description of Ariadne . In my tableau , the interest centres round the aged king , looking out from his high watch-tower for the white sail that tells of safety and glory , with as anxious a gaze as that of the watchman who waited upon Agamemnon ' s palace-wall for the beacon-flame which should

announce the fall of Iroy . It is the doom of the father , and the coming of the son , who has unwittingly wrought that doom , which I have taken upon myself to describe ; nor it is not without much diffidence that I thus add a sequel to the Theseus-myths of Catullus and Ovid

among Latin authors , and Canon Kingsley among those of our own time . "' How he has acquitted himself in this task , we hope to show in the next number of the " Masonic Magazine . " GEORGE MARKHAM TWEDDELL .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1875-05-01, Page 30” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01051875/page/30/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
FREEMASONRY CONSIDERED IN ITS RELATION TO SOCIETY. Article 2
MURIEL HALSIE. Article 7
DAFFODILS. Article 12
LES MACONS INDIFFERENTS.* Article 12
OLD LONDON TAVERNS IDENTIFIED WITH MASONRY. Article 14
PADDY'S EXPERIENCE OF ' MASONRY. Article 18
POLLY RIVERS'S TRIP TE STOWSLAY CATTLE SHOW, AN' WHAT COM ON'T. * Article 19
AN ORIGINAL DISSERTATION ON PUBLIC SPEAKING. Article 22
LABOUR. Article 28
"LITTLE DAN." Article 28
Review. Article 29
MARK TWAIN'S ENCOUNTER WITH AN INTERVIEWER. Article 31
LOSSES. Article 31
A SYNOPSIS OF MASONIC PERSECUTION IN THE XVIII. CENTURY. Article 32
BE HAPPY AS YOU CAN. Article 32
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Review.

Yet , dearest , ere they 7 seek the light , — These few stray thoughts of mine , — Forgive me , if around me crowd Some other forms than thine ; Forgive me , if like one who treads In slumber ' s tranced way ,

I seek awhile the haunts of youth , The long forgotten clay . " And then follow poetic pictures of his quiet rural birthplace or early home , ' ' girt all round with strips of wood , and meads with spring ' s first blossoms strewed . "

" For there , ' mid orchis blooms , we chased AVitli gauzy net , the summer fly , Or sought the dove ' s nest , wondrously In the oak ' s ivied hollow placed . " Then we have

" A wider range —the school—world hath the place Of that home circle , with its crowded gates AYhen the bell sends us forth , or bids retrace Each step , or graveor full of speed and

, grace , AVhere carven desk and class-room ' s awe awaits : The hour glides by , while student forms rehearse The legend ' s ancient lore , or shape the verse . "

A youthful training which has not been lost upon our author , as the present volume shows . But the scene changes : — " I mark no more where yon dark shade Shuts out the eve ' s slant rays ; I turn to where the white hih brow

g May meet my lon « in < r araze : T turn where eyes may answer mine , The trusting voice may sound;—One thought , one prayer , one heart alone To two whom love hath bound !

For thee my toil—nor thee alone ; Thy mother arms enfold That which a mother holds more dear Than all a kingdom ' s gold : The gem that fills the lost one ' s place , The two days' treasure riven , AVhose tiny limbs the green turf wraps

, Whose spirit smiles in heaven . AVhate ' er the toil , ' tis light and free , For thou wilt share the wei ght ; AA hate ' er the joy 7 , ' tis all for thee , AVho dost such joy create ;

Should grief arise , its spell is short , When those fond eyes are near ; Should darkness cloud , that presence makes The gloomiest nightfall clear . " There is true feeling in this , and one cannot help wishing as one reads itthat

, Mr . Emra may long be spared to his family and his parish , with leisure between his pastoral duties to send forth many more as pure poems as those now under review . The story of the Athenian king / Egeits , the son of Pandion . the faithless husband

of Jtithra , and the father of Theseus , has been , as Mr . Emra expresses it , " a theme which poets , painters , and sculptors , have already handled in no scanty measure . " But he has this to say in his defence , " that most of those who have employed pen , brushor chisel on this subject , have chosen

, a different phase of the story . Their scene has been the tangled labyrinth of Crete , or the lonely strand of Naxos . The central figure in their picture has been the hero , with the shaggy trophy in his blood-stained handsorstill more oftenthe maiden

; , , whom he has deserted , staring in stony horror over the surging sea , and imploring the deaf rocks to restore to her her Theseus . In the present case , " says he , " I have as it were filled in the shading of another scene in the fantastic

dramaa scene of which Catullus only gives the outline , even after his vivid and statuesque description of Ariadne . In my tableau , the interest centres round the aged king , looking out from his high watch-tower for the white sail that tells of safety and glory , with as anxious a gaze as that of the watchman who waited upon Agamemnon ' s palace-wall for the beacon-flame which should

announce the fall of Iroy . It is the doom of the father , and the coming of the son , who has unwittingly wrought that doom , which I have taken upon myself to describe ; nor it is not without much diffidence that I thus add a sequel to the Theseus-myths of Catullus and Ovid

among Latin authors , and Canon Kingsley among those of our own time . "' How he has acquitted himself in this task , we hope to show in the next number of the " Masonic Magazine . " GEORGE MARKHAM TWEDDELL .

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