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  • May 1, 1881
  • Page 26
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The Masonic Magazine, May 1, 1881: Page 26

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    Article FURNESS ABBEY. ← Page 3 of 3
    Article THE SECRET AT LAST. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 26

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

Furness Abbey.

monks be by Divine permission established ; and that it may remain firm and inviolable for ever , I subscribe it with my own hand , with the sign of the cross . Signed by HENRT—King of England . THURSTAN—Archbishop of York . ACJDIN 7 T . i blsll 0 P

BOAS j - ROBERT , keeper of the seal . ROBERT , Earl of Glo ' ster . " Need we wonder at the wonderful supremacy which the Roman Church gained over the minds at that age , when the great ones cast away their riches so contemptuously . At that time the words of the great Vatican orator would applto her with full force :

y " . Like the vast and universal arch of heaven , she overcanopies all christian climes and nations ; and like that arch she is one—unbroken wheresoever she appears . Cloud after cloud of sectarianism has broken away , or melted into the boundless fields of ether , while other vapours as fleeting and unsubstantial occupy their place . But the arch still stands—for the sacred word of everlasting truth is pledged for its stability . "

But the Church ' of Rome broke from her primitive Christianity , ancl commenced the system of inquisition ancl persecution , ancl she fell ; fell never to rise again , unless it be for a brief space by the heavy lumbering cavalry of brute force , with its concomitant appliances of the gibbet , rack , dungeon , and stake . Furness Abbey is no more . Within her sacred precincts the harsh scream

of the steam-engine is heard , and from the ruins of the abbot ' s house rise a stately hotel , replete with every modern comfort . Half-an-hour ' s walk brings you to the modern Chicago of Barrow , with its gigantic chimneys and forests of ships' masts . But in all her ruins , Furness Abbey serves one useful turn . The grounds are frequented on holidays by thousands , who seek respite from the glare , and noise , and turmoil of the busy town ; and under the precincts

where cowled monks have trod , the hard-working population—resting from their labours—worship nature , ancl through her they arrive at a knowledge of nature ' s God ; forming , perhaps , a truer estimate of His character than the former denizens of this romantic but deserted vale .

The Secret At Last.

THE SECRET AT LAST .

"BY BRO . R . HUNTER , NO . Ill , S . C . IN an auld burgh toon that I daurna' weel name , That boasts o' its heicht in the annals o' fame , There lived , at the time o' this short rhyming tale , A canty auld couple , baith hearty and hale . Fu' lang had they travelled thegether through life ,

Wi' a routh o' its joys and but little o' strife , For the worthy guidman , sae the neebours wad say , In settling disputes had a pawky auld way . And when oucht wad arise to annoy and harass-He wad quietly say , " There nao , Jenny , my lass , Since for weel or for wae we are tied to ae tether , Let's look ower ither ' s fauts and pn' cheerfu' thegether . " And sae , wi' a kindly bit word and a smile The auld wifie ' s anger he aft wad beguile .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1881-05-01, Page 26” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 29 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01051881/page/26/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
A CURIOUS MASONIC TRACT. Article 1
List of the Regular Lodges in England according to their seniority, year of erection, and time of meeting. Article 9
MASONIC RESEARCH. Article 12
SONG. Article 14
THE PRESENT POSITION OF MASONIC HISTORY AND CRITICISM. Article 16
OLD RECORDS OF THE LODGE OF PEEBLES. Article 17
A MASON'S STORY. Article 21
FURNESS ABBEY. Article 24
THE SECRET AT LAST. Article 26
CONSERVATION OF MASONRY. Article 28
AFTER ALL. Article 29
CHAPTER X. Article 32
HISTORY OF THE AIREDALE LODGE, No. 387, Article 37
APPENDIX. Article 40
THE PHILOSOPHY AND WORK OF PYTHAGORAS. Article 43
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Page 26

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

Furness Abbey.

monks be by Divine permission established ; and that it may remain firm and inviolable for ever , I subscribe it with my own hand , with the sign of the cross . Signed by HENRT—King of England . THURSTAN—Archbishop of York . ACJDIN 7 T . i blsll 0 P

BOAS j - ROBERT , keeper of the seal . ROBERT , Earl of Glo ' ster . " Need we wonder at the wonderful supremacy which the Roman Church gained over the minds at that age , when the great ones cast away their riches so contemptuously . At that time the words of the great Vatican orator would applto her with full force :

y " . Like the vast and universal arch of heaven , she overcanopies all christian climes and nations ; and like that arch she is one—unbroken wheresoever she appears . Cloud after cloud of sectarianism has broken away , or melted into the boundless fields of ether , while other vapours as fleeting and unsubstantial occupy their place . But the arch still stands—for the sacred word of everlasting truth is pledged for its stability . "

But the Church ' of Rome broke from her primitive Christianity , ancl commenced the system of inquisition ancl persecution , ancl she fell ; fell never to rise again , unless it be for a brief space by the heavy lumbering cavalry of brute force , with its concomitant appliances of the gibbet , rack , dungeon , and stake . Furness Abbey is no more . Within her sacred precincts the harsh scream

of the steam-engine is heard , and from the ruins of the abbot ' s house rise a stately hotel , replete with every modern comfort . Half-an-hour ' s walk brings you to the modern Chicago of Barrow , with its gigantic chimneys and forests of ships' masts . But in all her ruins , Furness Abbey serves one useful turn . The grounds are frequented on holidays by thousands , who seek respite from the glare , and noise , and turmoil of the busy town ; and under the precincts

where cowled monks have trod , the hard-working population—resting from their labours—worship nature , ancl through her they arrive at a knowledge of nature ' s God ; forming , perhaps , a truer estimate of His character than the former denizens of this romantic but deserted vale .

The Secret At Last.

THE SECRET AT LAST .

"BY BRO . R . HUNTER , NO . Ill , S . C . IN an auld burgh toon that I daurna' weel name , That boasts o' its heicht in the annals o' fame , There lived , at the time o' this short rhyming tale , A canty auld couple , baith hearty and hale . Fu' lang had they travelled thegether through life ,

Wi' a routh o' its joys and but little o' strife , For the worthy guidman , sae the neebours wad say , In settling disputes had a pawky auld way . And when oucht wad arise to annoy and harass-He wad quietly say , " There nao , Jenny , my lass , Since for weel or for wae we are tied to ae tether , Let's look ower ither ' s fauts and pn' cheerfu' thegether . " And sae , wi' a kindly bit word and a smile The auld wifie ' s anger he aft wad beguile .

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